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RECIPE: Tomato & Watermelon Salad With Ricotta Salata


Tomato and watermelon salad: delicious! (photo © McCormick).

[2] Ricotta salata, a good “salad cheese.” There’s more about ricotta salata below(photo © Good Eggs).
 

It‘s not red, white and blue, but we can’t wait to serve this salad over July 4th weekend. It’s a riot of different flavors, accented with ricotta salata, a firm Italian cheese with a mildly salty flavor. (If you can’t find it, substitute feta.)

The summer salad recipe is courtesy McCormick.com, which has many yummy recipes.
 
 
HEIRLOOM TOMATO & WATERMELON SALAD
WITH RICOTTA SALATA

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons raspberry vinegar
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper, coarsely ground
  • 2 tablespoons julienne-cut fresh basil
  • 2 tablespoons julienne-cut fresh mint
  • 2 to 3 cups loosely packed arugula leaves
  • 4 large heirloom tomatoes, assorted varieties, cut into 1/4-inch thick slices (about 3 pounds)
  • 16 wedge-shaped slices ricotta salata, 1/4-inch thick (about 6 ounces)
  • 16 wedge-shaped slices seedless watermelon, 1/4-inch thick
  • 1/4 cup thinly sliced red onion
  • 8 diagonally sliced French bread slices, 1/2-inch thick, grilled (optional)
  •  
    Preparation

    1. MIX oil, vinegar, sea salt and pepper in small bowl until well blended. Mix basil and mint in small bowl. Set aside.

    2. ARRANGE 1/4 cup loosely packed arugula leaves on each of 8 plates. Divide tomato slices, ricotta salata and watermelon among plates. Arrange decoratively as desired.

    3. SPRINKLE basil-mint mixture and red onion evenly over each salad. Drizzle with dressing. Sprinkle with additional sea salt and pepper, if desired. Serve with grilled bread slice, if desired.


    ABOUT RICOTTA SALATA

    Most people are familiar with the fresh, soft form of ricotta. As a fresh cheese, it has a limited shelf life.

    To extend its life, long ago the ricotta was salted, baked and smoked. Today the pressed, salted, dried and aged version of ricotta is known as ricotta salata (salted ricotta).

    The cheese, made in wheels, is milky-white and firm. It is used for grating or shaving. In addition to salads, grate it over potatoes, rice, soups and grilled vegetables.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Your Own Signature French Fries

    While the Belgians may or may not have invented what we call French fries (see the history below), they do consume the most French fries per capita of any country in Europe. And we would have thought that Americans took that prize!

    Call them French fries or simply fries in America, chips in the U.K. or American fries in many parts of the non-European world: It’s hard to find anyone who doesn’t like julienned, fried potatoes and the other shapes that evolved from them: crinkle fries, curly fries, shoestring fries, steak fries, waffle fries, wedges, etc.

    And then, there are French fry toppings that create new dishes, from chili cheese fries to the beloved Canadian dish, poutine: brown gravy and cheese curds atop fries.

     

    Fries Greek-style, with crumbled feta and oregano. Photo courtesy Stix Mediterranean Grill | New York City.

     
    So your culinary challenge of the week is to come up with your own own signature topping for fries. Here are some categories to choose from and some examples in each:

  • Cheese: blue, cheddar, feta, goat, parmesan, truffle cheese
  • Condiments: aïoli (garlic mayonnaise) or other flavored mayo (curry, dill, horseradish, parsley, etc.), barbecue sauce, chutney, Dijon or honey mustard, flavored ketchup, hot sauce, seasoned salt, sour cream, tartar sauce
  • Fresh herbs & spices: capers, chili flakes, cracked pepper, curry, dill, oregano, parsley, scallions or other favorite
  • Proteins: bacon, chili, cooked chopped beef with onions, fried/poached egg, pulled chicken or pork
  • Sauces & oils: flavored olive oil (we love truffle oil), gravy, malt vinegar or vinaigrette, salad dressing (blue cheese, ranch, thousand island), salsa, tomato sauce, yogurt sauce (like this tzatziki recipe)
  •  
    The photo above shows the Greek fries from Stix Mediterranean Grill in New York City: crumbled feta cheese and oregano. Flex Mussels, one of our favorite specialty restaurants, serves truffle fries with grated parmesan and truffle oil. It’s worth the $11! (Check out the 20 different flavors of steamed mussels.)

    THE HISTORY OF FRENCH FRIES

    French fries are not French in origin, experts agree. Credit may go to the Belgians. But let’s start in the beginning.

    The potato is a New World food which grew wild in Peru. It was cultivated and spread to other parts of Latin America.

    In 1537, Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, a Spanish explorer and conquistador, was exploring a village in Colombia. He and his troops found the locals eating potatoes, which were small and bitter. Initially, the Spaniards called them “truffles” because they grew underground. Samples were brought back to Europe and bred into larger, less bitter versions. But they were used as animal feed: Along with tomatoes, they were thought to be poisonous to humans.

    We don’t know exactly when the first human ate a batch of sliced, fried potatoes. Historical accounts indicate that the Belgians might have been frying up thin strips of spuds in the late 17th century, as a substitute for fried fish when the rivers were iced over.

     


    Burbank, Idaho and russet potatoes are
    best for fries. Photo courtesy Idaho Potato
    Commission.
     

    What was happening in France? Like other Europeans, the French were growing potatoes for hog feed. In fact, convinced that potatoes caused leprosy, the French Parliament banned cultivation of potatoes in 1748.

    Potatoes as human food had one champion, a French army medical officer named Antoine-Augustine Parmentier. While a prisoner of war, he was forced to eat potatoes and found the “poison” theory simply wasn’t true. In 1772, the Paris Faculty of Medicine finally proclaimed that potatoes were edible for humans, though it took a famine in 1785 for the French to start eating them in earnest.

    In 1802, Thomas Jefferson’s White House chef, Honoré Julien, a Frenchman, served “potatoes served in the French manner” at a state dinner. The potatoes were “deep-fried while raw, in small cuttings.” This is one of the earliest references to “French” fries. You can read the details here.

     
    FRENCH FRY TRIVIA

  • What’s in a name? The word “potato” comes from the Haitian word “batata,” which is their name for the sweet potato. It entered Spanish as “patata” and eventually into English as “potato.”
  • Why a spud? The slang term for potato, “spud,” comes from a spade-like tool used to harvest potatoes in earlier times.
  • Condiments. In the U.S., ketchup is typically the condiment of choice. In the U.K., it’s malt vinegar. In much of Europe, it’s mayonnaise. But the French typically enjoy their fries without condiments.
  • Belgian-style fries. In Belgium, a raw egg is sometimes cracked over French fries hot from the fryer. The heat cooks the egg, leaving a runny the yoke as a dip for the fries.
  •  
    WHY DO ONLY SOME TYPES OF POTATOES MAKE GOOD FRIES?

    You need a floury/starchy potato variety, which is lower in moisture (drier). Examples include Idaho, russet and russet Burbank. Check out the different types of potatoes.

      

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    PRODUCT: Megaload, Chocolate Candy With Double The Pleasure

    Megaload isn’t the name we’d have given to this candy line. It’s more like “double the fun.”

    Created by someone who obviously couldn’t decided among different treats, Megaload offers peanut butter cups and caramel cups topped with other favorite sweet snacks:

  • Almond buttercrunch
  • A chocolate chip cookie
  • A chocolate-covered pretzel
  • A chocolate sandwich cookie (think Oreo)
  • Candy coated chocolate pieces (think M&Ms)
  • Peanut buttercrunch
  •  
    Hmm…where to start? Photo courtesy Megaload.
     

    Packages of three cups include:

  • “Sweet and Salty,” peanut butter cups topped with different chocolate-covered pretzels
  • “Caramel Crunch,” caramel cups topped with buttercrunch or candy coated chocolate pieces
  • “Original,” peanut butter cups topped with chocolate chip cookie, “Oreo” and “M&Ms”
  • This is fun “kids’ candy,” not gourmet chocolate. But adults who enjoy PB cups and caramel cups will like them just as much.

    Right now they’re available at Amazon.com, and soon will be coming to a Walmart near you.
      

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    Boozy Milkshake Recipe For National Vanilla Milkshake Day


    [1] Celebrate with a vanilla milkshake (photo © Inga Nielsen | iStock Photo).

    Two Chocolate Milkshakes In Tall Milkshake Glasses
    [2] The original milkshakes were alcoholic. You can add a shot of Irish cream liqueur or even rum or whiskey to your shake (photo © Gelson’s Markets).

    Toasted Marshmallow Garnish on  Peanut Butter Milkshake
    [3] A peanut butter milkshake with a toasted marshmallow garnish. Here’s the recipe (photo © The Thirsty Feast | Honey And Birch).

     

    June 20th is National Vanilla Milkshake Day, and we’ve got some delicious recipes.

    A milkshake is a simple combination of ice cream, milk, and syrup, combined in a blender and optionally garnished with whipped cream, a maraschino cherry, or sprinkles (you can be more daring with chocolate-covered coffee beans, mini chips, etc.).

    Adults can add a shot of whiskey or liqueur.

    You can also substitute another flavor of ice cream.

    > The history of the milkshake is below.

    > Also below is the difference between a milkshake, float, malt, and thick shake.

    > Plus, more milkshake recipes below.

     
     
    VANILLA MILKSHAKE RECIPE

    Ingredients For 6 Half-Cup Servings

  • 1 pint vanilla ice cream
  • 1 cup milk
  • Optional: 2 tablespoons to 1 shot of spirits: bourbon, whiskey, liqueur/schnapps (try butterscotch, chocolate, coffee, or vanilla), cream liqueur
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla syrup or pure vanilla extract
  • Optional garnish: cherry, sprinkles, whipped cream
  •  
    Preparation

    1. PLACE ice cream, milk, alcohol, and syrup/vanilla in a blender. Cover and blend on high speed until smooth.

    2. POUR into glasses. Garnish as desired and serve immediately.

    More ice cream in the mix makes a thicker shake.
     
     
    MORE MILKSHAKE RECIPES

    If you like cardamom, try this delicious vanilla cardamom milkshake shooter.

    How about a milkshake with gin? The original milkshakes were alcoholic!

  • Boozy Mojito Milkshake
  • Classic Chocolate Milkshake
  • Easter Milkshake (Change The Colors For Other Holidays)
  • Frappe, A New England-Style Milkshake
  • Gin Martini Milkshake
  • Orange Mezcal Milkshake
  • Patriotic Milkshake
  • Pumpkin Milkshake With Bourbon
  • Salted Caramel Milkshake With Guinness & Spiced Rum
  • Salted Watermelon Milkshake
  • Vanilla & Pear Milkshake With Beer & Vodka
  •  
    The history of the milkshake follows.

     
     
    MILKSHAKE HISTORY

    Most people know a “milkshake” as a cold beverage made from milk, ice cream, and often, syrup, served in a tall, fluted glass with a straw (the classic milkshake glass is known as a Y glass).

    The Random House Dictionary describes a milkshake as an American creation, “a frothy drink made of cold milk, flavoring, and usually ice cream, shaken together or blended in a mixer.” And it states that the word dates to 1885.

    That’s when the word “milkshake” is first found in print. But that original milkshake was not suitable for children or teetotalers. It was an alcoholic drink, a “…sturdy, healthful eggnog type of drink, with eggs, whiskey, etc., served as a tonic as well as a treat.”*

    By 1900, the whiskey and eggs were out, and the term “milkshake” referred to “wholesome drinks made with chocolate, strawberry, or vanilla syrups.”*

    Yet, the milkshake still contained no ice cream.

     

    THE MODERN MILKSHAKE

    The modern milkshake was born in 1922, when an employee at a Chicago Walgreens, Ivar “Pop” Coulson, was inspired to add two scoops of ice cream to malted milk. Malted milk was a drink made by blending milk, chocolate syrup, and malt (malt was invented in 1887—as a nutritional supplement for infants).

    The malted milkshake shot to stardom nationwide. By the 1930s, soda fountains were known as “malt shops.” In 1937 two milkshake-worthy events occurred: A superior blender was invented by Fred Waring, and the flexible straw was invented by Joseph Friedman.

    But not all milkshakes were malted milkshakes. Many people preferred their milkshakes malt-free.

    By the late 1930s, the term “frosted” was being used to describe maltless milkshakes that blended ice cream and milk into one smooth drink, while a “float” had scoops of ice cream “floating” in milk.

    Soda fountain owners also came up with their own names. In New England, milkshakes were variously called frappes (Massachusetts), velvets, frosteds, and cabinets (Rhode Island, referring to the freezer cabinet from which the ice cream was scooped).

     
    [4] Vanilla cardamom milkshake shooter with a whoopie pie. Here’s the recipe (photo © McCormick).
     
    Someone in a drive-through restaurant in St. Louis invented the concrete, a milkshake so thick that it was handed out the order window upside down for a wow factor. (We’ve had a few, and would argue that the concrete is not really a milkshake, but ice cream that’s been blended with just enough milk to turn it into a malleable form. It needs to be eaten with a spoon: It’s so thick it can’t be drunk through a straw).
    ___________________

    *Source: Stuart Berg Flexner, Listening to America (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1982) p. 178.
    ___________________
     
     
    FOOD TRIVIA

    In the 1950s, a milkshake machine salesman named Ray Kroc became the exclusive distributor of a speedier milkshake machine, the Multimixer. He inadvertently invented modern fast food with his vision of franchising a McDonald’s hamburger stand in San Bernardino, California—in order to sell several Multimixers to each location.
     
     
    FLOAT, MALTED, MILKSHAKE: THE DIFFERENCE

    A float, also known as an ice cream soda, is a carbonated soft drink—cola, root beer, etc.—with one or more scoops of ice cream “floating” in it.

    A milkshake, “shake” for short, is a blend of ice cream, milk, and flavoring. The scoop of ice cream is blended into the milk; you can’t see the ice cream.

    A thick shake has multiple scoops of ice cream, which thicken the drink—“So thick,” advertised one soda fountain, “that the straw stands up straight.”

    A malt, short for malted milk, is a milkshake with added malted milk powder. The powder is made from a mixture of malted barley, wheat flour, and evaporated whole milk. It was originally developed, in 1897, by a pharmacist, James Horlick. He intended it as a gruel—a nutritional supplement—for infants.

    Soon enough, parents discovered how tasty it was…and the rest is history.
     
     

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

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    TIP OF THE DAY: A Red, White & Blue Drink With Iced Tea


    Green iced tea with berries (photo by Eugene Bochkarev | Dreamstime).

     

    To quench thirsts over July 4th weekend, brew up a special batch of red, white and blue iced tea.

    Use red and blue berries and a white fruit to garnish:

  • Green iced tea
  • Hibiscus iced tea
  • Rooibos (red) iced tea
  •  

    White fruits can include:

  • Apple
  • Coconut chips
  • Lychee
  • Pear
  •  
    If you don’t want to add a white fruit, default to a white straw!

     

    ICED TEA TIPS

  • Brew tea correctly. Here’s how to do it.
  • Use tea ice cubes: Make those cubes from the same iced tea, to prevent dilution (recipe). You can also drop a piece of fruit into each compartment of the ice cube tray.
  •  
     
    ICED TEA FUN

    Take our iced tea trivia quiz.

    Learn all about tea in our Gourmet Tea Section.

    Talk tea like a pro: See our Tea Glossary.

     


    Tart and terrific hibiscus iced tea. For a fourth of July drink, substitute red, white and blue fruits for the lime. Photo courtesy Republic Of Tea.

     

      

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