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


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RECIPE: Strawberry Egg Cream

There is tuna in tuna noodle casserole. There are strawberries in strawberry shortcake. There’s ice cream in an ice cream soda.

But there’s no egg in an egg cream—and there’s no cream, either. The ingredients are milk, seltzer and chocolate syrup.

In other words, it’s a carbonated chocolate soda made creamy with milk, or carbonated chocolate milk.

There are riffs on the original chocolate drink, a long-ago staple of New York City soda fountains. So let’s make a strawberry egg cream.
 
 
STRAWBERRY EGG CREAM RECIPE

Ingredients

  • Strawberry preserves, strawberry syrup or fresh strawberries
  • Milk
  • Seltzer/club soda, regular or flavored
  •  
     
    Preparation

    1. ADD a generous dollop of strawberry preserves or strawberry syrup to the bottom of a glass.

    If using fresh or frozen strawberries, muddle them in the bottom of the glass and sweeten to taste (an opportunity to add a non-caloric or low-glycemic sweetener).

    2. ADD 1/4 cup cold milk, and whisk together.

    3. TOP off with vanilla seltzer, strawberry seltzer or plain seltzer. Be sure not to over-dilute the strawberry-milk mix.
     
    Variations

  • For a richer drink, use half and half.
  • Try other fruit variations. Blueberry egg cream, anyone?
  •  
     
    > EGG CREAM HISTORY
     
    > MARCH 15TH IS NATIONAL EGG CREAM DAY

     
    [1] Strawberry egg cream (photo © Polar Seltzer).


    [2] Mix strawberry preserves into seltzer: It’s that easy (photo © Bonne Maman | Facebook).

     

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Fruit Sushi Rolls


    Mango-tuna is one of the three mango sushi
    rolls at Whole Foods Markets. Photo courtesy
    Genjiweb.com.
      If you patronize a more creative sushi bar, you’ve probably seen mango in a couple of orientations: within a roll or as a wrap.

    While most sweet fruits don’t pair seamlessly with sushi, mango is an exception. Pineapple, which might seem a match in theory, is too acidic and at best complements a heavy flavored fish like mackerel. Others, like kiwi and strawberry, often don’t assert themselves enough.

    But the exotic flavors of mango seem to blend with all raw fish, as well as cooked items like shrimp and lobster; and the meaty mango texture has a similar consistency.

    If you’re near a Whole Foods Market, check out the sushi bar for three new mango-based rolls:

  • California Mango Fresh Roll, a piece of mango added to a California roll instead of tamago (egg custard); ours also included avocado and shredded carrot
  • Coconut Shrimp Mango Roll
  • Tuna Mango Roll
  •  
    The rolls are wrapped in rice paper and lettuce instead of nori, and served with a Thai-style peanut dipping sauce.
    Whole Foods’ in-store sushi bars are operated by Genji Sushi. The company started as a sushi bar in Philadelphia then expanded to Genji Express, a chain of grab-and-go sushi shops. Over time, the company developed partnerships with upmarket food chains, and are currently in 165 Whole Foods Markets nationwide.

    The menu includes raw, cooked, vegetarian and vegan-friendly sushi. The current executive chef, Takao Iinuma, is a protégé of Iron Chef Masaharu Morimoto. The creativity filters down: Sushi chefs at different locations create their own specialties. So drop in and take a look.

     

    FRUIT SUSHI

    Fruit sushi is not a conventional Japanese preparation; it’s American fusion. Beyond combining it with seafood, enthusiasts have turned it into dessert.

    Anything goes in the fruit department. Some fruits—kiwis, mangoes, peaches, strawberries—are pliant enough to be sliced and draped over nigiri-style rice pads. Others, like apple and pineapple, need to be cut into sticks or diced and added to rolls.

    Check out this recipe from Food-Like.com, which cooks the rice in coconut milk for an even richer effect.

    Purée fruit as a dipping sauce, and have fun with it.

     
    Dessert sushi. Photo courtesy Food-Life.com.
     

    If you’ve always wanted to make sushi, why not start with dessert sushi? You don’t have to worry about the freshness of the fish—or the expense.

    If you’re not the dextrous type, check out the Sushezi, which makes no-fail sushi rolls in a mold—no mat required. While we haven’t tried Sushi Magic, it provides molds for nigiri-style sushi in addition to rolls.
     
    WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT SUSHI?
    Check out our Sushi Glossary: the different types of sushi, related foods and beautiful photos.
      

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    FOOD FUN: Strawberry Footballs


    Go team! Jumbo strawberries dress up as
    footballs. Photo courtesy Godiva.

      It takes time and expertise to pipe decorations, so these chocolate-dipped jumbo strawberries from Godiva are priced at $7.50 each.

    If that’s too rich for your pocket, try making your own, and buy icing in an easy-squeeze tube instead of trying to pipe from a bag.

    Here’s how to make chocolate-covered strawberries.
    HOW ABOUT THAT PLATE!

    We found these plates/platters full of football spirit:

  • A gridiron plate, similar to the one in the photo, in ceramic or plastic
  • Referee shirt plate
  • Football platter
  •  

      

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    COCKTAIL: Cucumber & Vodka

    Cucumber vodka may not be a big trend, but it deserves more attention. It’s crisp and refreshing whether drunk neat, with a squeeze of lime, with ice and/or soda or in a Bloody Mary or Martini.

    A quick look of what’s available shows artisan American and European distillationns: Badcock from Oregon, Blackwood’s from Scotland, Crop from New York (organic) Effen from Holland, Pearl from Canada, Prairie from Minnesota (organic), Rain Organics (cucumber lime), Skinnygirl from Illinois and perhaps the original, Square One from California (organic), a NIBBLE favorite.

    You can also infuse your own cucumber vodka with the easy recipe below.

    Whether you’re buying cucumber vodka or plain vodka to infuse your own, don’t go for the cheapest vodka on the shelf—unless it’s Russian Standard or Wódka, both quality vodkas at bargain prices.

     

    Photo courtesy Windsor Restaurants | New York City.

     
    But don’t spend your money on Belvedere or Ketel One, either. Mid-priced Smirnoff vodka has won the gold medal in the San Francisco World Spirits Competition blind tasting.

    THE 411 ON VODKA

    Some people in the spirits business are amused by the lengths to which consumers fall for the marketing of “premium” vodka. Premium, super-premium and ultra-premium are marketing terms, not industry standards.

    There isn’t much quality difference between high-priced and lesser-priced vodkas. While both use distillation and carbon filtering to remove impurities, it is largely a question of quality control.

    Some producers brag that their vodka is distilled to remove impurities 20, 50, even 100 times. Don’t buy that story. According to an industry professional, vodka is typically distilled with a reflux column still, which produces the equivalent of 3-5 distillations in one pass. The number of distillations isn’t as critical as how carefully the distillation is controlled.

    The better vodkas use only the “heart” of the distillation, removing the “head” and “tail,” which contain more impurities. Then, it’s carbon filtered; the carbon removes impurities that cause off flavors and hangovers.

     


    Try a Vodka Tonic with cucumber vodka.
    Photo courtesy Square One.
      HOW TO MAKE HOME-INFUSED CUCUMBER
    VODKA

    If you can find them, seedless Persian cucumbers or other seedless cucumbers are the best choice here. You’ll save the time and mess of seeding conventional cucumbers.

    Ingredients

  • 2-3 Persian cucumbers or 1 large seedless
    cucumber
  • 750 ml bottle quality vodka
  • 1 quart or larger glass jar with a tight-fitting lid
  •  
    Preparation

    1. PEEL, seed, and roughly chop the cucumber. Place into jar.

    2. POUR vodka over the cucumber. Seal tightly. Reserve the empty vodka bottle and cap.

    3. PLACE in a dark spot for three days up to no longer than two weeks. Strain mixture into reserved vodka bottle and label the bottle to avoid a mix-up.

    4. TASTE the cucumber. If you like it, keep it for salads or snacking. Otherwise, discard.

     

    EASY CUCUMBER COCKTAIL RECIPE

    You can make this cocktail with cucumber vodka or regular vodka plus pressed cucumber juice, which is how they do it at The Windsor in New York City. They call the cocktail the Half Windsor.

    Ingredients

  • 1.5 ounces vodka
  • .75 ounce fresh pressed cucumber juice
  • .5 ounce agave nectar or editor’s substitution, lime juice
  • Ice
  • Garnish: cucumber wheel
  •  
    Preparation

    1. COMBINE ingredients in a cocktail shaker.

    2. SHAKE and strain into a rocks glass. Garnish and serve.
     
    Find more of our favorite cocktail recipes.
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Pretzel Rolls

    Pretzel rolls are a trend, delivered nationwide by Wendy’s Pretzel Bacon Cheeseburger, Dunkin’ Donuts’ Pretzel Roll Roast Beef Sandwich and Sonic’s pretzel hot dog.

    We’ve been making sandwiches on the pretzel rolls from Trader Joe’s since we discovered them a year ago.

    Or check your local market. Pretzilla, has a line of pretzel rolls that include burger buns, sausage/hot dog buns, mini buns (for sliders) and pretzel bites, with which you can for anything from dipping into fondue or making pretzel nachos. The products are sold nationwide (here’s the store locator).

    If you can’t find pretzel rolls, lobby your grocery store manager to bring them in.

     

    A new classic: hot dog or brat on a pretzel roll. Photo courtesy Pretzilla.

     

    Or, make your own with this recipe, which we found on the blog Jessie-Ordinary Days. Here’s another recipe from The Dutch Baker’s Daughter.

     


    Assorted sliders on pretzel rolls. Photo
    courtesy Pretzilla.
     

    PRETZEL ROLLS RECIPE

    Ingredients

    For The Dough

  • 2-3/8 cups unbleached, all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1-1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 1 teaspoons instant yeast
  • 1-1/4 cups milk, slightly warmed
  •  
    For The Bath

  • 7 cups water
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • 4 tablespoons baking soda
  •  
    Plus

  • Coarse salt for sprinkling
  •  
    Preparation

    1. MIX dough ingredients together in a stand mixer with paddle attachment until it forms a ball; then mix with dough hook. Says Jessie: “I found that I had to add flour until my dough came together, was no longer sticky and quite stiff. I added maybe another 3/8 of a cup gradually, until the dough looked right.” Let dough rise in mixer bowl, covered with plastic wrap, for 1 hour in a warm place.

    2. PUNCH down dough after the first rising and shape into balls. Place rolls onto well greased cookie sheet and let rise 15 minutes.

    3. PREHEAT oven to 400°F. While rolls are rising, mix the bath ingredients together and bring to a rolling boil. Once the 15 minute rise is over, poach 3 rolls at a time for 1 minute. Flip after 30 seconds. Place poached rolls on greased cookie sheet.

    4. MAKE two slashes with a serrated knife and sprinkle with sea salt. BAKE until a deep dark brown, approximately 20 minutes depending on your oven. Keep an eye on the rolls so they don’t burn.

    Freeze any extras. They thaw quickly.

      

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