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


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.

PRODUCT: Chocolate Covered Banana Bites

Kopali Organics specializes in chocolate-covered snacks: banana, cacao nibs, espresso beans, goji, goldenberry, mango, mixed fruits, mulberry and pineapple.

The products are also Fair Trade Certified, which means that the enterprise supports thousands of family farmers and communities worldwide (more about Fair Trade certification).

Plus, 100% of profits go to The Sylvia Center, a garden-to-table program that inspires young people to discover good nutrition on the farm and in the kitchen. You can feel good about your purchase.

We’re become enamored of Kopali’s Organic Chocolate Covered Banana snacks, bits of banana covered in delicious semisweet chocolate.

 
Even better than a plain chocolate snack! Photo courtesy Kopali.
 
AND THEY’RE ON SALE!

For a limited time, you can save more than $1 a bag by purchasing a 12-pack of Kopali Chocolate Banana (normally $3.99 a bag, now $2.92). Buy them directly from the company website.

Don’t worry that 12 bags might be too many. These treats may become your favorite snack…and are certain to earn the appreciation of any friends you share them with.

Learn more about Kopali Organics snacks at Kopali.net.
  

Comments off

TIP OF THE DAY: Save Money With Organic Bulk Foods


Buy nuts in bulk for daily healthful snacking
and recipe ingredients. Photo courtesy The
Almond Board.
  April is Earth Month; April 22 is Earth Day. You can make every day Earth Day and do something sustainable.

Research findings show compelling reasons for shoppers to buy in bulk (from the bulk bins at the grocery store). If you don’t buy organic because of the higher price, you can save an average of 89%* by purchasing natural and organic foods in the bulk foods aisle of the grocery store (we get ours at Whole Foods Market).

What can you buy in organic bulk?

  • Baking & Cooking Ingredients, Beans & Legumes
  • Candy & Snacks, Cereals & Granola
  • Coffee, Dried Fruits, Flour & Grains
  • Nuts & Seeds, Pasta
  • Spices & Herbs, Sweeteners
  •  
    Bulk doesn’t mean “jumbo amount”: You scoop what you need from the bin into a bag, and pay by weight. When you get the food home, you can transfer it into a canister or other storage container.

    *The study was conducted by the Portland State University’s Food Industry Leadership Center (FILC) on behalf of The Bulk is Green Council (BIG). Conducted in the fall of 2011, researchers studied three main areas: cost comparisons (to packaged counterparts), environmental impact and consumer attitudes toward buying in bulk. To arrive at the overall average cost savings of 89%, researchers made cost comparisons between organic bulk foods and organic packaged foods in a number of key categories, including coffee and tea, nut butters, flour and grains, dried fruit, spices, beans, pasta and confections. The percentage of savings when buying in bulk differed from category to category, but averaging the savings across all categories resulted in an average of 89% lower costs. For more information, visit BulkIsGreen.org.

     

    In addition to lower costs and the general benefits of organic food (pesticide-free, GMO-free food, sustainably grown), there is a big environmental advantage to buying in bulk: reducing the amount of product packaging that goes into landfills. According to the findings, for example:

  • If Americans purchased all of their coffee in bulk for one year, nearly 240 million pounds of foil packaging would be saved from becoming landfill.
  • If Americans purchased all their almonds in bulk for one year, 72 million pounds of packaging waste would be saved from landfills.
  •  
    TAKE THE PLEDGE

    To help celebrate Earth Month, the Bulk is Green Council (BIG) invites eco-conscious consumers to take the pledge to “Love Bulk Foods,” for the chance to win a gift basket filled with everything needed to help create a natural and organic pantry filled with eco-friendly bulk foods.

     
    Do you blow through boxes of cereal? Look at the options in the bulk foods aisle. Photo courtesy Grape Nuts.
     
    Just head to the Love Bulk Foods pledge page on and sign a digital pledge to purchase bulk foods once a week during Earth Month.

    Pledgers automatically will be entered in a weekly drawing for a gift basket.

    Here’s the Love Bulk Foods pledge:

    I pledge to purchase natural and organic foods from the bulk bins of my local grocer once a week during Earth Month. By purchasing bulk foods, I am helping to reduce the amount of packaging waste that enters landfills each year. I also pledge to spread this message to my family, friends and neighbors.

    Don’t you feel good already? It’s a good teaching moment for the kids.
      

    Comments off

    EVENT: Best Hot Sauces & The NYC Hot Sauce Expo


    It’s the first annual New York City Hot Sauce
    Expo! Image courtesy Expo.
      Our palate is so sensitive that a hot chile will wipe it out for 45 minutes. But three members of THE NIBBLE team leaped at the opportunity to attended a media preview for the first annual New York City Hot Sauce Expo. If you’re a hot sauce fan, get thee to East River State Park in the trendy Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, the weekend of April 20th and 21st. General admission tickets are $10.00; for $100.00 you can be a VIP.

    An expo just for hot sauce? “Hot sauce production has been rated one of the 10 fastest-growing industries in the U.S.,” say the event organizers. “The trend shows no sign of cooling off.”

    If two days of fiery food is your idea of the ultimate endorphin rush, the weekend promises to be packed with live music, fire breathers, spicy food vendors, eating challenges and contests, adult beverages and the best hot sauce producers in North America.

    Awards will be presented on Saturday afternoon in categories that include Chipotle, Fruit Based, Fruit Based Hot, Habanero, Jalapeño, Louisiana Style, Novelty Hot Sauce, People’s Choice, Pepper Blend, Scorpion and a category we always appreciate, Best Label Artwork.

     

    We grew up in a household that used hot sauce for Bloody Marys. Everything else was flavored with fresh-cracked pepper and fresh herbs. True hot sauce fans shake the condiment on just about everything, from grilled cheese and other sandwiches, eggs, fried foods, French fries and hash browns, meat loaf, ribs, soups and anything else you can think of, including, of course, chili and Tex-Mex cuisine.

    Dave Pace, founder of Pace Foods, who began to manufacture hot sauce in Texas in 1947, would even shake hot sauce into his coffee. Whether he added sugar and milk as well, we don’t know. But we do know people who sprinkle hot sauce on their oatmeal and ice cream. (More about hot sauce.)

     

    Leah Hansen was one of THE NIBBLE writers who tasted her way through the media preview. “It was so much fun, and the hot sauces so terrific, that I’m going to attend the two-day Expo,” she reports.

    Here are the favorites of all she tried. Even if you can’t get to the Expo, you can order the sauces online.

    1. NYC Hot Sauce Co. A traditional red hot sauce with more depth of fruit flavor (from the flesh of the chiles) than the large commercial hot sauce brands. It‘s heavy on the vinegar flavor in a good way, and went really well on the mini grilled cheese sandwiches served with it. I loved the squeeze bottle too; it made it easy to squirt as much sauce you want. Ingredients: habanero peppers, carrots, onions, celery, garlic, fresh squeezed lime juice and creole seasonings. More about NYC Hot Sauce Co.

     
    The favorite in THE NIBBLE’s tasting, from locally grown chiles. Photo courtesy NYC Hot Sauce Co..
     
    2. High River Sauces ”Rogue.” This company makes a line of attractively-packaged and named hot sauces, including Grapes Of Wrath, Hellacious and Tears Of The Sun (the fourth favorite—see below). We all liked Rogue: very hot, but with a nice depth of flavor. It was a third-place winner of the 2013 World Championship Golden Chile Award in the Pepper Blend category. The ingredients include moruga scorpion, jolokia and red serrano chiles; blood oranges, apples and pears; apple cider vinegar, brown sugar, lime juice, garlic and ginger. More about High River Sauces.

    3. Big Fat’s 7 to 8. Big Fats makes an impressive array of hot sauces, all with number names. This super-hot sauce started out with a pleasant, subtle sweetness and a good depth of flavor with a big burst of citrus, quickly swirling into a vortex of spices. I really like the Trinidad 7 Pot Peppers used (they appeared in a few sauces, one of the super-hot chiles that have yet to enter commercial production). It takes a whole minute to hit you, but then the heat is pretty extreme and stays with you for a good 20 minutes. Ingredients: orange juice concentrate, onion, water, Trinidad 7 pot peppers, pineapple concentrate, garlic, pomegranate molasses, sea salt, coriander, cumin, cinnamon, and white pepper. Learn more at BigFatsHotSauce.
    4. High River Sauces “Tears of the Sun.” The different fruit ingredients make this my favorite of the sweeter sauces. It’s not too sweet, with pretty high heat and a lingering aftertaste. How it got its name: “Your taste buds are greeted by the sweetness,” says the manufacturer; then the heat rises like the sun on a hot summer day.” Ingredients: habanero peppers, peaches, papaya, pineapple, mango, cider vinegar, brown sugar, ginger, red pepper, salt and garlic. More about High River Sauces.
    DO YOU KNOW YOUR CHILES (PEPPERS)?

    See the different types of chiles in our Chile Glossary.

    What’s the deal with “chiles” versus “peppers?” Chile is the correct word, alternatively spelled chili and chilli; chilli is the original spelling in Nahuatl, the Aztec language.

    When one of Columbus’ crew first tasted a chile in the Caribbean Islands, he likened the heat to the black pepper known in Europe. Hence, chilli became pepper, or chile/chili/chilli pepper.

    To us purists, pepper should only refer to Piper nigrum, the peppercorn, which has no relationship to the chile plant. Capsicum is the genus for chiles, fruits that, when cut in half, have a white spine and seeds that contains the heat (or, in the case of bell peppers, no heat at all). For us, chile/chili/chilli is the way to go.

      

    Comments off

    TIP OF THE DAY: How To Soften Brown Sugar ~ Fast!

    Even though we stored our brown sugar in a supposedly airtight glass canister, it invariably became rock-hard in a few weeks, its natural high level of moisture evaporating into…well, who knows where it went?

    The old “Hints From Heloise” on how to soften brown sugar don’t work if you’re in a hurry. They include putting slices of apple or a slice of fresh bread into the airtight container. In a day or so, the moisture from the apple or bread will infuse into the sugar and soften it.

    But if you discover, as you’re making a recipe, that your brown sugar is one big hard lump, you need a fast solution.

     
    This simple gadget keeps brown sugar soft. Photo courtesy Improvements.
     
    Our friend Rose offered the solution: Place the brown sugar in a plastic bag (or in a microwavable container) with moist paper towel and microwave it for 20-30 seconds. Voilà, soft brown sugar.

    We subsequently came across these Terra Cotta Brown Sugar Disks. Soak a disk in water for 15 minutes, then add it to the container of brown sugar. The terra cotta (which is porous, unglazed baked clay) holds moisture, and releases it slowly to keep brown sugar or other foods moist for weeks.

    You can pick up a set of Terra Cotta Brown Sugar Disks ($8.99 for three) and give the other two to friends.

    Should you happen to have a small piece of terra cotta hanging around, you can try it first. We used a shard from a broken flower pot, wrapping it in cheesecloth to ensure that none of the broken surface would come into contact with the sugar.
      

    Comments off

    PRODUCT: Best Frying Pan For Eggs


    Two happy eggs in The Egg Expert, GreenPan
    USA’s perfectly sized pan. Photo by Elvira
    Kalviste | THE NIBBLE.
     

    If you have a kitchen with limited storage space, you’re constrained in the number of pots and pans you can keep.

    As petite as it is (five inches in diameter), we would never have thought to buy The Egg Expert, a pan whose unique selling proposition is that it can fry two eggs perfectly.

    But when tried this little sweetheart sent to us by the folks from GreenPan USA, we fell in love: It’s the perfect pan for making fried eggs—at least, if you want your eggs to come out perfectly round and pretty.

    The ceramic coating (Thermolon) in superb searing and creating crispy surfaces.

    The heat distributes evenly, it browns food beautifully. The only caveat: The handle does warm up, so you may need a pot holder.

    And it cleaned up more easily than any cookware we’ve ever used. After a dozen sets of eggs were fried, the pan still looks brand-new.

     
    The Egg Expert is currently an exclusive item at KitchenCollection.com. At only $9.99 (special pricing), how can you not buy one for everybody on your Mother’s Day and Father’s Day lists?

    In addition to its cooking prowess, GreenPan environmentally responsible cookware.

  • The products are cadmium- and lead-free.
  • There is 60% less carbon dioxide emitted during the curing phase of production of its Thermolon coating (a ceramic coating with excellent non-stick properties), compared to traditional coating.
  • Thermolon has an extra safety feature: If you overheat your pan, even up to 450°F, no toxic fumes will be released and the coating will not blister or peel. The coating is healthy, safe and does not contain any toxic chemicals or persistent pollutants.
  • The products incorporate previously used materials: upcycled stainless steel for the handles and upcycled aluminium for the cookware bodies (here‘s the difference between upcycled and recycled).
  •  
    Discover the whole line at Green-Pan.com.

    GreenPan products are available at retailers nationwide (store locator).

      

    Comments off

    The Nibble Webzine Of Food Adventures
    RSS
    Follow by Email


    © Copyright 2005-2026 Lifestyle Direct, Inc. All rights reserved. All images are copyrighted to their respective owners.