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


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.





COOKING VIDEO: Watermelon Sorbet

 

The only problem with watermelon sorbet is how difficult it is to find it. If you live near a motherlode, consider yourself fortunate.

Otherwise, if you have an ice cream maker, you can make it yourself. So light and delicious, watermelon sorbet is more than worth the effort.

Use red or yellow watermelon. Fortunately, a number of breeds have been hybridized so that there are just a few, white and very light, watermelon seeds. So you don’t have to de-seed the watermelon—a time savings that makes the rest of the recipe a breeze.

Find more of our favorite sorbet recipes.

   

   

Comments off

PRODUCT: Sweet Leaf Diet Tea

We prefer iced tea with no sweetener, or a just a touch, such as the bottled teas crafted by Honest Tea and Inko’s White Tea.

So we are not a prospect for Sweet Leaf Tea, a brand we’ve tasted on numerous occasions. In organic and all-natural, original and flavored variations (lemon-lime, mint & honey, peach, raspberry, etc.), it is Southern-style sweet tea. Made with excellent tea, it’s a hit with many, but too sweet for us.

So we were excited when the brand introduced two flavors of Diet Sweet Leaf Tea, The Original and Citrus.

They’re absolutely delicious, and some kind of magic incantation must have been cast over the sucralose to make the drinks taste so natural.

Diet “The Original” Sweet Leaf Black Tea

If you doubt our word that a zero-calorie sweet tea can taste as good as this, company owners Clayton Christopher and David Smith recount the true story of how they ran out of Original Sweet Tea at an Austin City Limits Music Festival. They served Diet The Original for a few hours and no one noticed.

 
Sweet Leaf’s two diet tea flavors. Photo by Elvira Kalviste | THE NIBBLE.
 
Diet “Citrus” Sweet Leaf Green Tea

As with The Original, Diet Citrus is made with filtered water, plus organic green tea, natural flavors, citric acid and ascorbic acid (vitamin C).

While Diet The Original has very fine tea flavor, Diet Citrus has layers and layers of flavor: not just citrus but peach and pineapple, as well.

We’ll be ordering them in bulk. Fortunately, both flavors are made in 64-ounce plastic jugs along with 16 ounce glass single-serves. Buy them by the jugful.

The line is certified kosher by OU.

Here’s a store locator. You can also buy Sweet Leaf on Amazon.com.

Find more of our favorite iced tea brands, plus recipes.

  

Comments off

TIP OF THE DAY: Make Grilled Ravioli


Ravioli cooked on the grill. Photo courtesy
PastaPrima.com.

  Have you ever grilled pasta? Pop some fresh or thawed ravioli onto the grill and become a believer.

We got such good response to our recent Pasta Primavera recipe that we’re sharing another take on it—grilled ravioli with grilled vegetables.

Pasta Prima, a specialist in handcrafted ravioli, developed this recipe using its Pasta Prima Frozen Spinach and Mozzarella Ravioli. You can try other ravioli flavors, as well. Consider a ravioli “mixed grill.”

Prep time: 20 minutes. Cook time: 4 minutes. Yields: 4 servings.

GRILLED RAVIOLI PRIMAVERA RECIPE

Ingredients

  • 24 fresh or thawed frozen spinach ravioli
  • 2 medium zucchini, sliced
  • 1 large sweet onion, sliced
  • 2 yellow squash, sliced
  • 2 large red bell peppers, sliced
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Skewers
  • Optional garnishes: fresh basil leaf, grated
    Parmesan or crumbled goat cheese
  • Marinade

  • ½ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 crushed garlic cloves
  • 8 leaves fresh basil, chopped
  • 2 pinches each rosemary and oregano (fresh if possible)
  • Splash of red wine vinegar
  • Salt and pepper
  •  
    Preparation

    1. MARINATE. Slice the vegetables into half inch pieces, large enough to fit on a skewer. Put the vegetables into a sealed plastic bag with the marinade ingredients, shake, and marinate in the refrigerator for 4-6 hours or overnight.

    2. THAW. While the vegetables are marinating, thaw the ravioli and soak the skewers so they will not burn. For quick thawing of frozen ravioli, soak in tepid water for about half an hour, or defrost in the refrigerator for 6 hours. Soak skewers for several hours.

    3. PREHEAT. Preheat grill to medium-high heat. Let the marinade drain off the vegetables in a colander, to prevent flare-ups.

    4. GRILL. Slide vegetables onto skewers. Place ravioli on the grill. Cook vegetables apart from the ravioli on the other side of the grill. Both will take about 2 ½-3 minutes to cook. Keep the grill lid open.

    5. SERVE. Top with the optional garnish(es).
    Find more of our favorite pasta recipes.

      

    Comments off

    TIP OF THE DAY: Tea Ice Pops

    Some days are so hot and humid that iced tea isn’t quite enough.

    So freeze it into ice pops.

    Favorite herbal teas make tasty pops. Just brew them to twice the concentration—two tea bags or two teaspoons of loose tea per cup.

    Add your sweeter and freeze. You can also add a half teaspoon of spirit (gin, tequila, vodka), liqueur, or a splash of wine.

    In the photo, chef Michael O’Boyle of Chicken Fried Steak.com has made ice pops with hibiscus tea, using round ice cube molds instead of conventional ice pop molds.

    Make some and cool off!

    Find more of our favorite recipes for sorbet and other frozen desserts.

     
    Photo courtesy chef Michael O’Boyle, ChickenFriedSteak.com.
     

      

    Comments off

    PRODUCT: Courvoisier Rosé


    Photo courtesy Courvoisier.
      Rosé wine* is a summer favorite, lighter in alcohol and lighter on the palate than red wines. Last year, in the spirit of summer, Courvoisier, one of the world’s leading Cognac houses, launched Courvoisier Rosé.

    With the color of a rosé wine, Courvoisier Rosé is a blend of Cognac—made from distilled grapes—and red wine grapes, pressed as they are for wine.

    The color and flavor of Courvoisier Rosé are equally exquisite: a rosy-hued spirit with notes of blackberry, black currant, cherry, honey, peach and vanilla. It gives the impression of a fine liqueur rather than Cognac (liqueurs are distilled alcohol flavored with cream, flowers, fruit, herbs, nuts and spices, with added sugar).

    Traditional Cognac is 40% alcohol alcohol by volume (80 proof), while Courvoisier Rose is only 18% (36 proof); the full flavor belies the lower alcohol.

     

    Easy drinking Courvoisier Rosé is an innovation in the Cognac category, and can be enjoyed on every occasion, year-round. Try it with dessert!

    A 750ml bottle has a suggested retail price of $24.99. Different and delicious in a handsome bottle, it’s a great gift item.

    *The juice of both red and white wine grapes is white (or light) in color. The color of red wine comes from extensive contact the juice has with the pressed wine skins. Rosé wines, also called blush wines, are made from red wine grapes that are only allowed minimal skin contact—just enough to achieve the rosy color. The skins are then discarded, rather than left in contact throughout fermentation, as they are with red wine production.

      

    We enjoy sipping Courvoisier Rosé as is, or added to sparkling wine—an update of the Kir Royale:

    ROSÉ SPARKLER

    Ingredients

  • 1 part Courvoisier Rosé
  • 1 part berry liqueur (blueberry, raspberry,
    strawberry)
  • 3 parts Champagne or other sparkling wine
  • Garnish: fresh berries
  •  
    Preparation

    1. Shake Courvoisier Rosé and liqueur together; strain into a chilled Champagne flute.

    2. Top with Champagne. Add 3 blueberries or 1-2 raspberries to the flute or on a cocktail pick, or perch a notched strawberry on the rim.
     
     
    Find more of our favorite cocktail recipes.

     


    The handsome bottle begs to be given a gift. Photo courtesy Courvoisier.

    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.