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


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COOKING VIDEO: Alton Brown’s Christmas Soup

 

What does Alton Brown eat for Christmas?

A hearty, peppery soup that’s been a family favorite for generations.

Tangy with red wine vinegar and nicely peppery, the hearty winter soup is packed with kale, kidney beans, kielbasa and potatoes.

Whether or not you serve it on Christmas, this soup can be enjoyed all winter.

  • Check out the video below.
  • Find your favorite soups in our Soup Glossary.
  • The best garnishes for 20 popular soups.
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    Check The Ingredients In White Chocolate Chips

    We love to bake with white chocolate chips—real white chocolate chips, that is.

    Much of the “white chocolate” out there isn’t real chocolate. Check the label: If you see “vegetable oil” instead of “cocoa butter,” it’s an inferior product without delicious chocolate flavor.

    White chocolate is made from sugar, milk, cocoa butter, vanilla and lecithin (a natural emulsifier to smooth the chocolate, also listed as soy lecithin). That’s it.

    If you care about the best ingredients, buy real white chocolate. We use the real deal from Guittard of San Francisco and Callebaut of Belgium. Otherwise, it’s analogous to using margarine instead of butter. You’ll really notice the difference in flavor.

    Both of these white chocolate chip brands have a sweet, fresh cream flavor. The Guittard chips we’re currently using have nutty undertones and hints of citrus and vanilla. (Vanilla is an ingredient in white chocolate, while citrus notes come from the type of cacao beans used to make the cocoa butter.)

     

    Buy the real deal, made with cocoa butter,
    not vegetable oil. Photo courtesy Lake
    Champlain Chocolate.

     

    If there’s no cocoa butter, a product can’t be called chocolate. It can be called “imitation chocolate,” but no major brand wants that on its label! Thus:

  • Nestle’s white chips are called “Premier White Morsels” and the ingredients are sugar, palm kernel oil, lactose, whey (milk), milkfat, nonfat milk, sodium caseinate (milk), buttermilk solids, hydrogenated palm oil, soy lecithin, artificial flavors and natural flavors.
  • Ghirardelli’s white chips are called “Premier Baking Chips [in] Classic White.” The ingredients include sugar, palm kernel oil, whole milk powder, nonfat dry milk, palm oil, soy lecithin and vanilla.
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    Where To Find White Chocolate Chips

  • White chocolate chips by Guittard are available at better supermarkets, baking supplies stores and online. Guittard products are certified kosher by OU.
  • White chocolate chips from Lake Champlain Chocolates are made from Callebaut and certified kosher. Callebaut products are certified kosher by OK.
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    If you can’t find white chocolate chips, chop up a white chocolate bar. Our favorite—for eating as well—is from Green & Black’s, available at Whole Foods Markets, many other retailers and online.
     
     
    FOOD TRIVIA: A bonus for the caffeine-conscious, there’s no caffeine in white chocolate.
     
     Chocolate Lover? Find our favorite chocolate in the pull-down menu in the right column.

      

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    GIFT OF THE DAY: Original Moonshine, Delicious & Fun

    This glass jug holds some mighty tasty
    moonshine. Photo courtesy Stillhouse
    Distillery.

      Moonshine, a clear, unaged corn whiskey, has been produced in still houses in the hills of the southern U.S. since the country was settled.

    Moonshine was an illegal product: The “moonshiners” who made it not only avoided paying state and federal taxes on their hooch, but they had no license to produce it in the first place.

    The product got its name because it was made in the light of the moon—late at night, away from prying eyes.

    As you can imagine, it wasn’t the purest product—and some people actually went blind from bad hooch. But that didn’t stop others who were thirsting for a drink.

    Now, this most downscale of drinks has been given the star treatment by the manufacturers of Original Moonshine. Made from “100% estate-grown corn” in Culpeper, Virginia, it’s charcoal-filtered four times for the highest purity, quality, and smooth taste—in a Prohibition-era copper pot still.

    It’s made in the same authentic tradition that moonshine has been made for hundreds of years. It’s all-natural, gluten-free, and 80-proof.

    In a beautiful glass jug—definitely a keeper for serving other beverages—Original Moonshine has the subtle aroma and sweet flavor of corn. And it delivers a novelty factor like nothing else we’ve seen in a while.

     
    You can use Original Moonshine in any cocktail, but we enjoy ours Clampett-style: neat from the jug. Yes, we’ve even taken a swig from the jug—while wearing Armani, not overalls. Welcome to the new age of moonshine.

    Kick back with a jug as you watch The Beverly Hillbillies—or Deliverance.

    Original Moonshine makes a memorable gift for about $35.00. It can be purchased online.
     
     
    Find more of our favorite spirits by pulling down the menu bar on the upper right, and selecting “Cocktails & Spirits.”
     
     

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

     
     
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Make Cranberry Liqueur & Cranberry Vodka Cocktails

    You can buy cranberry liqueur, of course; but it’s fun to make your own and serve it in holiday drinks.

    You have just enough time to make a batch and serve it on Christmas.

    Homemade liqueur can be stored in the fridge or at room temperature for up to a year. Chill the bottle before making the cocktails below.

    We love to garnish holiday cocktails with a rosemary sprig, which resembles the branch of a pine tree.

    CRANBERRY LIQUEUR RECIPE

    Ingredients

  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1 cup water
  • 12 ounces cranberries (1 package fresh
    cranberries)
  • 3 cups vodka
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    Serve cranberry cocktails for the holidays.
    Photo courtesy Grey Goose.

     
    Preparation

    1. Combine sugar and water in a medium saucepan. Stirring constantly, cook over medium heat for 5 minutes or until sugar dissolves. Remove from heat; set aside to cool.

    2. In a food processor, process cranberries for about two minutes, until finely chopped. Combine with sugar syrup in a large bowl. Add vodka and blend thoroughly.

    3. Pour the vodka mixture into a large, airtight jar (or two smaller jars). Place in a cool, dark place for at least three weeks, shaking every other day.

    4. Line a sieve with cheesecloth and strain into a pitcher or a bowl with a lip. Discard solids in cheesecloth (you can wash and reuse the cheesecloth).

    5. Pour liqueur into a clean bottle. You can reuse a wine bottle or the vodka bottle.
     
     
    CRANBERRY LIQUEUR COCKTAILS

    Cranberry Sparkler

    Here’s the cranberry version of a Kir Royale, substituting cranberry liqueur for the traditional crème de cassis (blackcurrant liqueur). For a nonsparkling version (analogous to a regular Kir), mix the cranberry liqueur with white wine.

  • Place 1 ounce cranberry liqueur in a Champagne flute (or a white wine glass for the non-sparkling version).
  • Top with Prosecco or other sparkling wine.
  • Garnish with a rosemary sprig.
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    Cranberry Martini

  • Place 1 ounce cranberry liqueur and two ounces of vodka or gin in a cocktail shaker with ice.
  • Shake and strain into a Martini glass.
  • Garnish with a rosemary sprig.
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    Cosmo Royale

  • Combine 2 ounces cranberry liqueur, one ounce orange liqueur (Grand Marnier, Cointreau or other) and two ounces vodka in a shaker with ice.
  • Shake and strain into a Martini glass. Garnish with a rosemary sprig.
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    TIP OF THE DAY: Get Your Liquor Gifts For The Next 10 Months

    During the holiday season, some makers of spirits, wine and Champagne, among others, package their bottles with additional gifts such as glasses, cocktail shakers and related accouterments.

    Often, the price for gift box packaging and the extra item is nothing beyond the cost of the regular bottle—or only a small additional amount.

    Either way, the box and its contents appear to be worth twice the bottle alone.

    We added the red ornaments to this photo, but the “added value” holiday gifts are typically in packaging that works year-round.

    Think of the anniversaries, birthdays and other special occasions you anticipate in 2012.

    Then, when you’re out holiday shopping, stop at the wine and spirits store and check out the “gift bargains” to be had.

    Even if you don’t anticipate gifts, stock up for your own needs. It can be a bargain: the holiday Grey Goose package shown is $29.99, whereas the MSRP for the 750ml bottle only is $34.99!

     

    Buy a bottle in gift packaging with an extra gift thrown in—for less than the cost of a regular bottle! Photo courtesy Grey Goose.

     

    Find reviews of our favorite spirits in our Cocktails & Spirits Section.

      

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