THE NIBBLE BLOG: Products, Recipes & Trends In Specialty Foods


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.





TIP OF THE DAY: Caramel Apple Bar With Lots Of Toppings

How do you roll (your apple, that is)? Photo
courtesy Kimberly Reiner | The Sugar
Mommas.

 

For a family treat or Halloween entertaining, how about a caramel apple bar?

Unlike the crackling-hard red candy apple coating, caramel coating remains pliant and you can press in candies and other garnishes.

Start with this recipe for caramel apples; then pick your toppings.

Also check out our other food bar ideas: breakfast/brunch, lunch/dinner, desserts and drinks/snacks.

Candy & Snack Foods

Look for mini versions of chocolate chips, M&Ms and Reese’s Pieces.

  • Candy corn
  • Chocolate chips (dark, milk, white) and other flavored chips (butterscotch, mint, peanut butter)
  • Crystallized ginger pieces
  • M&Ms
  • Reese’s Pieces
  • Silver, gold or pearl dragées
  • Sprinkles (especially in Halloween colors)
  • Toffee/Heath Bar pieces
  • Plus

  • Cereals: Corn Flakes, Fruit Loops, granola, Rice Krispies, other favorite
  • Crushed cheese crackers, graham crackers or Oreos
  • Crushed pretzels and/or potato chips
  • Popcorn: salted and/or kettle corn
  • Spices: allspice, chili flakes, cinnamon, nutmeg
  •  

    Nuts

    Chop them so they’re easy to roll on.

  • Almonds
  • Peanuts: honey peanuts or salted
  • Pecans
  • Pistachios
  • Walnuts
  • Other favorites
  •  

    Fruits

  • Banana chips (pieces)
  • Dried blueberries, cherries, cranberries, pineapple
  • Shredded coconut
  •  
    THE PROCESS

    1. SET out the plain caramel apples and bowls of toppings with spoons or scoops. Give all participants a soup bowl on a larger dinner plate.

    2. SCOOP toppings of choice into the bowl, one-by-one or mixed together.

    3. ROLL the apple in the topping(s), pressing hard.

    4. TAKE a bite! People can adjust the toppings as they like (something saltier, something crunchier, etc.).

     
    A sophisticated approach. You can also use gold, silver or pearl dragées. Photo courtesy Cocosala.com.
     

    CARAMEL APPLES VS. TOFFEE APPLES: THE DIFFERENCE

    For the purpose of candy apples, there’s no difference between “caramel apples,” “taffy apples” and “toffee apples.” The coating is made from melted caramels.

    In the world of candy, however, there are distinct differences. Check out the difference between butterscotch, caramel and toffee.
      

    Comments off

    Popcorn Trivia For National Popcorn Poppin’ Month


    [1] Sophisticated: lemon-dill popcorn. Here’s the recipe (photos #1, #3, #4 © The Popcorn Board).

    A bowl of plain popcorn.
    [2] For the purist: plain popcorn with butter or flavored oil (photo © Charles Deluvio | Unsplash).

    A bowl of white chocolate peppermint popcorn
    [3] Seasonal: white chocolate peppermint popcorn. Here’s the recipe.


    [4] Hot stuff: cheesy jalapeño popcorn. Here’s the recipe.

     

    For more than 30 years, October has been celebrated as National Popcorn Poppin’ Month.

    It became “official” in 1999, when then-Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman proclaimed October as National Popcorn Poppin’ Month (see all of the October food holidays).

    It’s often shortened to National Popcorn Month.

    The popcorn industry chose the month of October because of the popcorn harvest which takes place each fall in the Midwest. Here are some “corny facts” from the Popcorn Board, the industry’s trade association.

    > The history of popcorn.

    > The history of popcorn salad (and recipe).

    > 20+ popcorn recipes.

    > Popcorn, a whole-grain food.
     
     
    POPCORN TRIVIA & FACTS

    The Grain

  • Popcorn is a type of maize (corn), a grain that’s a member of the grass family Poaceae. It originated in Mesoamerica. Maize/corn belongs to the genus Zea, the true grasses. Its botanical name is Zea mays everta. The word “maize” derives from the Spanish form the Taíno* word for the plant, maiz.
  • Of the 6 types of maize/corn—pod, sweet, flour, dent, flint and popcorn—only popcorn pops.
  •  
    Nutrition

  • Popcorn is a whole grain, good-for-you treat. Americans consume some 16 billion quarts of it annually. That’s 51 quarts per man, woman and child.
  • Compared to most snack foods, popcorn is low in calories. Air-popped popcorn has only 31 calories per cup and oil-popped has 55 calories per cup. A full whole-grain serving is 3 cups.
  • If you don’t like to eat dry popcorn, use olive oil (especially flavored olive oil), a heart-healthy fat. Butter is chock full of cholesterol.
  •  
    Growing & Popping

  • Popcorn differs from other types of maize/corn in that is has a thicker pericarp (hull). The hull allows pressure from the heated water to build, and it eventually bursts open. The inside starch becomes gelatinous while being heated; when the hull bursts, the gelatinized starch spills out and cools, giving popcorn its familiar shape.
  • Most popcorn pops into two basic shapes: snowflake and mushroom. Snowflake is used in movie theaters and ballparks because it looks and pops bigger. Mushroom is used for candy confections because it doesn’t crumble.
  • “Popability” is industry lingo that refers to the percentage of kernels that pop.
  • Popcorn kernels can pop as high as 3 feet in the air.
  • There is no such thing as “hull-less” popcorn. All popcorn needs a hull in order to pop. Some varieties of popcorn have been bred so the hull shatters upon popping, making it appear to be hull-less.
  • Most U.S. popcorn is grown in the Midwest, primarily in Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Ohio.
  • Many people believe the acres of corn they see in the Midwest during growing season could be picked and eaten for dinner, or dried and popped. In fact, those acres are typically field corn, which is used largely for livestock feed, and differs from both sweet corn and popcorn. It is inedible by humans.
  •  
    Fun Facts

  • Popping popcorn is one of the main uses for microwave ovens. Most microwave ovens have a “popcorn” control button.
  • The world’s largest popcorn ball was created by volunteers in Sac City, Iowa in February 2009. It weighed 5,000 pounds, stood over 8 feet tall and measured 28.8 feet in circumference.
  •  
     
    IF CORN IS A NEW WORLD GRAIN, WHY IS IT MENTIONED IN THE BIBLE?

    According to the Popcorn Board, a trade association, biblical accounts of “corn” stored in the warehouses of Egypt are misunderstood. The “corn” from the bible was probably barley.

    The reference comes from a changed use of the word corn, which used to signify the most-used grain of a specific place. In England, “corn” referred to wheat, and in Scotland and Ireland the word referred to oats.

    __________________

    *The Taínos were seafaring indigenous peoples of the Bahamas, Greater Antilles and Lesser Antilles.

     

     

    CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING ON OUR HOME PAGE, THENIBBLE.COM.
      
     
     

      

    Comments off

    TIP OF THE DAY: Use Grandma’s Tea Cups


    Buy some cookies, get out the tea cups.
    Photo by Elvira Kalviste | THE NIBBLE.
     

    If you’ve inherited a set of delicate tea cups or demitasse cups, don’t leave them in the back of the closet. They’re meant to be used and admired.

    The cups are long out of fashion, but you can bring them back. Start a tradition: An annual or bi-annual tea party.

    You don’t have to fuss: Just serve tea, coffee and cookies and invite as many friends as you have cups. The most laborious part of entertaining will be washing the cups.

    What if they break?

    Yes, it happens. But unless you want to sell the cups to a collector, they serve no purpose in deep storage. Nice things are meant to be used. Cups will break no matter how careful you try to be. Use them and enjoy them.

    (Our grandmother broke several of her own lovely cups. She glued them together and put them on display in the china cabinet. But she left more than enough intact, including the one in the photo.)

     
    JULES DESTROOPER COOKIES

    We’ve become very fond of these Belgian imports.

    You’ll only find a few of the company’s numerous cookie varieties in the U.S., but that’s plenty for a tea party.
    The selection includes Almond Florentines, Almond Thins, Belgian Chocolate Thins (shown in the photo, covered in dark, milk and white chocolate), Butter Crisps, Butter Waffles, Chocolate Covered Biscuits With Crispy Rice and Ginger Thins, among others.

    You don’t have to go out of your way to find them, either: We get ours at the local supermarket.
    Jules Destrooper was a trader in the second half of the 19th century. He imported spices from Africa and the Far East, and also used them to develop delicate cookie recipes. Biscuiterie Jules Destrooper was founded in 1886.

    For a product with a large production, distributed worldwide, the cookies are all natural and of very high quality—better than a lot of bakery cookies. While new recipes have been developed by the fourth generation of Destroopers, the recipes for the original cookies have never been changed.

    The box empties almost instantly at THE NIBBLE. Here’s the company website, which has some really interesting recipes for savory appetizers and hors d’oeuvre with a cookie base.

      

    Comments off

    HALLOWEEN: Bat Cookies

    You need a bat cookie cutter to make these cute cookies, but they’re worth it. If you can’t find one locally, buy a bat cookie cutter online and make bat cookies an annual tradition.

    The recipe is courtesy California Raisins, whose delicious raisins are used in the cookies. There are many more recipes on the website.
    RECIPE: HALLOWEEN BAT COOKIES

    Ingredients For 16 Cookies

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 6 tablespoons cold salted butter, cut into small
    pieces
  • 1 cup raisins, chopped fine
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 egg
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1/4 cup coarse-grain sparkling white sugar
  • Raisins and mini M&Ms for decoration
  • 3 ounces semi-sweet chocolate
  •  


    How cute are these? Photo courtesy
    California Raisins.

     

    Preparation

    1. MEASURE flour, sugar and baking powder into bowl for food processor with steel blade, and pulse a couple of times to combine. (*If mixing by hand, see footnote.) Then add cold butter and pulse until crumbly. Finally, add vanilla and ice water, a little at a time, and pulse until dough comes together and cleans sides of bowl.

    2. KNEAD in chopped raisins. Divide dough into 2 equal pieces, wrap in plastic wrap or wax paper and chill for 30 minutes.

    3. PREHEAT oven to 350°F. Line baking sheets with parchment; set aside.

    4. PLACE dough on lightly floured work surface, one piece at a time, and roll into a 10×12-inch rectangle about 3/8-inch thick. With bat-shaped cookie cutter, cut into 16 cookies. Arrange on cookie sheet close together.

    5. BEAT egg with pinch of salt and brush lightly onto cookies; sprinkle with coarse sugar. Bake at 350°F for 10 to 12 minutes until golden. Remove to cool on a wire rack.

    6. DECORATE. When cookies have cooled, melt semisweet chocolate and use a small amount to attach raisins for ears and M&Ms as eyes. Cool completely and store in an airtight container.

     


    You can use the cookie cutter to make iced
    shortbread or sugar cookie bats. Photo
    courtesy Old River Road.
     

    BAT TRIVIA

    Bats are furry mammals, not birds. Their forelimbs form webbed wings, making them the only mammals naturally capable of true and sustained flight. Other mammals said to fly can only glide for short distances.

    Bats look like flying mice, screech when scared, and get a bad rap for being dangerous. While some species consume animal blood, most do not, and are not harmful to humans.†

    Bats live throughout most of the world, performing the vital ecological roles of pollinating flowers and dispersing fruit seeds. Many tropical plant species depend entirely on bats for the distribution of their seeds. They are also important for consume insect pests, reducing the need for pesticides.

    Their “evil” reputation came from the Dracula stories.

     

    †They can spread disease if they bite—so don’t provoke them.
      

    Comments off

    RECIPE: Black & White Pizza

    October is National Pizza Month (although in our book, every month is Pizza Month).

    The folks at the California Olive Committee have taken a cue from the recently New York Fashion Week, where the trends included black and white. Hence, this recipe, for a black and white pizza.

    Not just another white pizza, this recipe includes Alfredo sauce, roasted garlic, smoked mozzarella, chicken and black olives. You can make or buy the Alfredo sauce (here’s the recipe to make it from scratch).

    Prep time is 20 minutes, cook time is 20-25 minutes.

    RECIPE: BLACK & WHITE PIZZA

    Ingredients For 4 Servings

  • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil, plus extra for pizza crust
  • 1 cup quartered and thinly sliced onion
  • 2 tablespoons minced, roasted garlic
  • 4 ounces small baby bella mushrooms, chopped
  • 1 sheet prepared pizza dough
  • 1 cup prepared Alfredo sauce
  • 1 cup shredded smoked mozzarella cheese
  •  


    Black and white pizza, chock full of yummy
    ingredients. Photo courtesy California Olive
    Committee.

  • 4 ounces fresh mozzarella, torn into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 1 can (6 ounces) extra-large black pitted black olives, drained and cut in wedges
  • 1 small boneless, skinless chicken breast, cooked and thinly sliced (or store-bought rotisserie chicken, torn in small pieces)
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh rosemary
  • Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
  •  


    Grated cheese atop a dish doesn’t blend into
    a recipe; it’s front and center. Use the best
    quality you can afford. Photo by Yin Yang |
    IST.
     

    Preparation

    1. PREHEAT oven to 450°F and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.

    2. HEAT 1 tablespoon oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion, garlic and mushrooms and cook, stirring frequently, for 10 minutes or until onions are very soft.

    3. ROLL pizza dough into a very thin oval on a lightly floured board. Transfer to prepared baking sheet and brush lightly with olive oil, then spread evenly with Alfredo sauce. Top with mushroom mixture, cheeses, chicken and rosemary. Sprinkle olives over pizza.

    4. BAKE for 10 to 15 minutes or until cheese is melted and lightly browned around the edges. Serve with grated Parmigiano-Reggiano.

     
    THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PARMESAN CHEESE AND PARMIGIANO-REGGIANO

    “Parmesan” cheeses are made in a variety of countries. But authentic Parmigiano Reggiano cheese is produced only in the Italian provinces of Parma, Reggio Emilia, Modena, Mantua and Bologna.

    By law, only the milk from local cows, whose diet is regulated according to a strict feeding discipline, can be used in the production of the cheese. The cheese is checked by an expert after 12 months; if it passes the test its rind is stamped and it continues aging for an average of 24 month, to develop prime flavors and aromas.

    In Italy, Parmigiano-Reggiano is more than a grating cheese for pasta: It is part of a fine antipasto and also enjoyed for dessert, with some balsamic vinegar and a glass of fine wine. Here’s a comparison of Italian grating cheeses.
     
    See more of our favorite pizza recipes.

      

    Comments off

    The Nibble Webzine Of Food Adventures
    RSS
    Follow by Email


    © Copyright 2005-2024 Lifestyle Direct, Inc. All rights reserved. All images are copyrighted to their respective owners.