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


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TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: Bacon And Chocolate


Chocolate with bacon and pistachios, chocolate bacon peanut butter cups and spicy bacon toffee. Photo by Elvira Kalviste | THE NIBBLE.

  From coast to coast, from farmers’ markets to fine restaurants, the pairing of chocolate and bacon is the hottest combination to come along since salted caramels. Artisan confectioners have hopped onto the chocolate-and-bacon bandwagon.

For this week’s Top Pick, we sampled 37 products from 27 confectioners who make chocolate and bacon confections.

We tasted bacon chocolates, bacon-chocolate cupcakes, chocolate bacon caramels, chocolate bacon marshmallows, chocolate bacon marshmallows, chocolate-covered bacon strips and other chocolaty, bacony confections.

What did we discover?

Six winners and five runners up that make for delicious eating and gifting.

Just about everything we tasted was good; but we sought a balance of chocolate and bacon. In more than a few examples, you couldn’t taste the bacon. In others, the bacon element was too salty (and we love salted chocolate and caramels).

 
So take a look and discover a new way to enjoy chocolate…and bacon:

  • The history of bacon chocolate.
  • Why the flavor combination works.
  • What we reviewed: contestants, winners and runners up.
  • The individual product reviews.
  •  
    Find more of our favorite chocolates in our Gourmet Chocolate Section.

    Find our favorite chocolates in TheNibbleGourmetMarket.com.
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: How Not To Overeat On Thanksgiving

    Thanksgiving dinner has some favorite foods that we only have once a year. The temptation is to have your fill on this special occasion.

    However, no one gives thanks for the opportunity to overeat. Here’s how to avoid stuffing yourself while still enjoying a great holiday meal:

  • Avoid finger foods, which tend to be the highest in calories and fat. Stick to raw vegetables. We find that one way to avoid the hors d’oeuvre is to chat with everyone there instead of obsessing about the food. Besides, eating the hors d’oeuvre fills you up for the main event.
  • Stick to wine, sparkling water or other judicious choice during cocktail hour. Mulled wine, toddies and other tempting choices may be loaded with sugar.
  •  
    Freedom From Want by Norman Rockwell.
     

  • Don’t eat the turkey skin. While most advice suggests white meat over dark meat, if you eat the skin on one but not on the other, and add cholesterol- and carb-laden gravy to moisten the white meat, the difference washes out (see the chart below).
  • Have a roasted sweet potato (no butter—the potato doesn’t need it) instead of candied yams.
  • Eat all the vegetables. Lay off the heavy sauces and salad dressings. Eat seconds of vegetables and salad before having any other seconds.
  • Avoid the bread basket. If you love biscuits, cornbread, etc., you probably just can’t have just one piece. Pass them by and treat yourself to a biscuit or some corn bread on another day of the year that doesn’t include a huge holiday meal.
  • Have a small piece of pie. By the time dessert comes, you may only have room for a small piece, anyway. Skip the whipped cream or ice cream.
  •  
    TURKEY MEAT: CALORIES & FAT

    Per 3-1/2 ounce (100 gram) portion:

    Image courtesy University Of Illinois.

    Now that we’ve given our “public service announcement,” have a great holiday and enjoy a spoonful of anything—just don’t pile it onto your plate.
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: American Cheeses For Thanksgiving


    A tempting selection of cheeses from Jasper
    Hill Farm
    in Greensboro, Vermont.

      We’ve gotten a spate of emails from cheese purveyors, recommending cheeses for Thanksgiving dinner.

    Amazingly, not one of them has suggested an American-made cheese! American cheeses have taken top honors in competitions worldwide. Attention must be paid!

    So we say to those vendors: On this most American of holidays, why serve something from France or England when there are so many magnificent cheeses made in America?

    Go to your town’s best cheese store and ask for recommendations for an all-American cheese plate.

    While we love every cheese produced by these cheesemakers, we picked our favorites to serve on Thanksgiving, as a dessert cheese plate:

     

  • Some of the heavenly goat cheeses from Vermont Butter & Cheese Creamery—and their butter, too (the butter is amazing, and the salted variety is the only salted butter we eat).
  • Truffle Tremor goat cheese from Cypress Grove Chevre of Arcata, California. Truffle Tremor and Humboldt Fog are icons to goat cheese lovers.
  • Red Hawk from Cowgirl Creamery, of Point Reyes Station, California.
  • The brilliant Point Reyes Original Blue, blue cheese made in Point Reyes, California (the blue cheese dip is to-die-for, too).
  • Barely Buzzed Cheddar, rubbed with ground coffee, from Beehive Cheese of Uintah, Utah.
  •  
    The great state of Wisconsin makes so many great cheeses, they could fill an entire cheese store (and in Wisconsin, they do!).

    On Thanksgiving, among our many blessings, we’ll give thanks for American cheeses.

    Find more of our favorite American cheeses in our Cheese Section.

      

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    RECIPE: Chicken Liver Stuffing

    As part of the Pepperidge Farm Challenge, we were inspired to make a chicken liver stuffing recipe in honor of our beloved grandmother (a.k.a. Nana), a terrific cook who made many Thanksgiving dinners for our family.

    While Thanksgiving is an all-American holiday, some families add foods from their ancestral lands to the traditional Thanksgiving menu. Our friend Ruth’s mother, an American of Italian descent, always had a lasagne course.

    Nana, an American of European Jewish descent, always made chopped liver as an appetizer. It was served with party pumpernickel and rye slices. As a child, we were delighted by the miniature pieces of bread.

    While we know more than a few people who “hate liver,” if they had only had Nana’s chopped liver from early childhood, they might be fans.

    This recipe is truly delicious. If your guests are all adults who drink alcohol, add 1/4 cup of good spirits to the mix. The alcohol will burn off, leaving a delicious note of “something special.” See if your guests can guess what it is!
     
     
    CHICKEN LIVER STUFFING HOMAGE TO NANA

  • 2 tablespoons any vegetable oil (more as needed; taste oil for freshness first)
  • 2 large onions, finely chopped
  • 2 stalks celery, small dice
  • 2 small or 1 large clove garlic, minced
  • 1/2 pound chicken livers, cut into quarters (toss in the turkey liver if you have one, cut to the size of the chicken livers for even cooking)
  • 2-3 cans chicken broth (12 ounce cans), or homemade stock
  • 1 pound turkey sausage (you can substitute a half pound of pancetta for the turkey sausage if you want a smoky, bacony flavor)
  • 8 ounces mushrooms (your choice of type), sliced
  • 1/4 cup fresh sage, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons fresh tarragon, finely chopped
  • 1 stick (1/4 pound) unsalted butter, melted, for mushrooms and drizzling over the
    casserole, plus one stick, melted, to mix with the bread cubes
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons freshly-ground black pepper
  • 1/4 cup bourbon, brandy or whiskey (optional)
  • 2 packages Pepperidge Farm Stuffing (14 ounce packages)
  •  
    Preparation

    1. In a large, deep skillet over a low flame, add the cooking oil. When hot, add the celery, onions, and garlic. When the vegetables are semisoft, remove and aside. Raise heat to medium add the livers, which cook quickly, 3 to 5 minutes, until pink in the middle. Don’t overcook.

    2. Purée livers in a food processor, or can mash them with your fingers and remove the center vein. Add to sautéed vegetable mix.

    3. Remove the turkey sausage meat from the casings and add to the pan. Add a teaspoon of oil or butter if needed. Cook until just until the meat loses the pinkness and add to the vegetable/liver mix. Do not brown the turkey; it will finish cooking in the oven. Add mushrooms to the pan and sauté with butter until soft. Add to the vegetable/liver/turkey mix. (By using the same pan, the foods pick up the flavors from the previously cooked ingredients.)

     
    [1] We cooked the stuffing on the stovetop (photo ©Tony Segielski | iStock Photo).


    [2] Lovers of chicken liver will love this stuffing (photo © Anu’s Healthy Kitchen).


    [3] Turkey sausage (photo © Butterball).

    Fresh Sage
    [4] The flavor of fresh—not dried—sage makes a big difference (photo © Good Eggs).

     
    4. In a large bowl, blend the Pepperidge Farm stuffing with a can of chicken broth. Add 1/4 cup melted butter, then the second can of broth. Add the bowl of vegetables, liver, and sausage, along with the sage, tarragon, pepper, and brandy. Add more broth as needed to moisten. Drier stuffing will be crunchy, wetter stuffing will cook up moister. Taste and add the salt as needed. Drizzle the top of each casserole with 1/4 stick (1/4 pound) of melted butter.

    5. Transfer to a butter-greased casserole dish (we used two three-quart casseroles). Cover and bake in a preheated oven at 350°F for 45 minutes.

    Enjoy, and have a happy Thanksgiving!
     
     

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

      

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    NEWS: Dine In A Life-Size Gingerbread House


    Inside this life-size gingerbread house: a
    dining room waiting for you! Photo
    courtesy The Great Wolf Lodge.

     

    Nibble, nibble little mouse. Who’s that nibbling at my house?

    You may remember those words from Hansel and Gretel. They also gave birth to the name of THE NIBBLE webzine and blog…

    Not because there’s a cannibal witch living here, but because Hansel and Gretel couldn’t believe their eyes when they saw the big gingerbread house, decorated with the confections of their wildest dreams. Every week, we at THE NIBBLE also go wide-eyed when we discover something new and fabulous.

    You don’t have to enter a fairy tale to nibble in a life-size gingerbread house.

    All you have to do is head for Niagara Falls, Ontario.

     
    The Great Wolf Lodge, a year-round indoor water park, goes into holiday mode this month. Opening on November 24th, Wiley’s Winter Wonderland—of which the gingerbread house is just one feature—will enable fortunate families to cloak themselves in the holiday spirit. You can have breakfast, lunch or dinner in the gingerbread house. Reservations are available to the general public as well as to Lodge guests. We’re not sure if Hansel and Gretel will be your servers—but we hope so!

    It takes more than 300 hours, hundreds of pounds of gingerbread, chocolate, cookies, pretzels and candy to build the house. During construction the entire lodge is filled with the sweet aromas of gingerbread and chocolate (no extra charge to inhale all you want!).

    On the 24th, families will be able to walk through the front door of the gingerbread house and sit down for a holiday meal. Dining reservations are available to the public, as well as to Great Wolf Lodge guests.

    Each year, diners make a charitable contribution via a $20 reservation fee (which is apart from the cost of the meal). This year, the recipient of the donations is Child Advocacy Centre Niagara, which helps abused children.

    For gingerbread house dining reservations, call 1.905.354.4888 ext. 5718. Select holiday dining times are available. through January 9th, 2012. If you go, send us some photos!

      

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