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


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TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: The Best Coconut Water

You can buy lychee-coconut water or take
advantage of lychee season and enjoy
fresh lychee. Photo by Deasy Setiawati
Widjaja | Dreamstime.

 

If you’ve seen the uber-trendy Rihanna posing in ads with a container of Vita Coco coconut water, you know that chilled juice from green coconuts is a hot drink.

When Vita Coco was introduced in the U.S. in 2004, coconut water had minimal visibility and sales were confined to certain ethnic communities. A mere five years later, sales of coconut water were about $35 million. And two years after that—this year—U.S. coconut water sales will top $350 million.

That’s impressive—and the reason why we set out to taste the different brands of coconut water to see how much they differ.

We’ve looked at:

  • The different types of coconut water.
  • The different health benefit claims.
  • General nutrition.
  • How the nutrition and flavor vary in 14 different coconut water brands—and among different flavors in the brands.
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    Start at the beginning with the overview.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: The Burger Dimple & Butter Pat

    You can take two simple steps to grill a better burger.

    Dimple It
    If your burgers tend to puff up, here’s a tip to keep them looking good: Use a spoon to press a dimple into the top before placing them on the grill. The burgers will rise while remaining shapely.

    Butter It
    We had burgers at the home of a friend who shaped her patties around a pat of butter, like Martha Stewart does. We were shocked at the addition of cholesterol to cholesterol, but decided to taste it before passing judgment.

    It was luscious, and inspired us to do the same, with our own improvement: compound (flavored) butter (see here for our favorite compound butter recipes).

    More burger cooking tips.

    Fifty burger variations—including turkey burgers and veggie burgers—plus condiments and toppings you haven’t tried.

     
    If your burgers puff up, put a dimple in
    them. Photo by FCA Foto Digital | IST.
     
      

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    PRODUCT: Dinosaur Cakes

    T-Rex and Triceratops in a Jurassic food fight.
    Our money’s on T-Rex. Photo by Jaclyn
    Nussbaum | THE NIBBLE.

    We’ve all seen films of massive dinosaurs eating their prey. Although mankind and dinos did not walk the earth at the same time, films like Jurassic Park have remedied that fact: We’ve seen more than a few dinosaurs make a meal of man.

    And now, man can eat dinosaurs.

    Although we didn’t have anyone’s birthday to celebrate, when we saw this Nordicware Dinosaur Cakelet Pan from our favorite cake pan manufacturer, we knew we had to bake a batch.

    The pan yields two each of Apatosaurus (formerly known as Brontosaurus), Stegosaurus, Triceratops and the king himself, Tyrannosaurus Rex.

    Both kids and adults will delight in taking a bite of the ginormous antediluvian reptiles—here, reduced to the size of a large cupcake, or cakelet.

    Getting all the tiny details in the mold to come out perfectly is a piece of cake (pun intended): Just follow a few simple baking tips.

    Use your favorite cake recipe or a mix. We used White Chocolate Hazelnut Cake Mix from The King’s Cupboard.

     

    Nordicware E-Z Deco Icing Pen

    As cool as the dinosaurs looked when we popped them out of the pan, we couldn’t leave them unadorned. We used Nordicware’s E-Z Deco Icing Pen to create the fine lines outlining each dinosaur.

    For those of us who would never be invited to assist the Ace Of Cakes, the Icing Pen combines a basic pastry bag with a pen-like applicator. Simply fill the bag with icing, insert it into the applicator and start decorating your cake. The easy-to-hold ergonomic handle lets you “write” as if you were using a pen.

    It’s easy to hold and to apply pressure evenly. Even if all you do is write “Happy Birthday” on a cake twice a year, this little gadget is worth its drawer space.

    One tip: Don’t forget to unscrew the two parts of the plastic coupler before you begin. We didn’t even realize there were two parts until we were finished, but the cakelets turned out just fine.

    Nordicware’s E-Z Deco Icing Pen. Photo courtesy Nordicware.

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    FOOD HOLIDAY: Celebrate National Peach Month With Fresh Peach Recipes

    Each week for the past five weeks, we’ve been buying a box of peaches from Trader Joe’s. Sweet and juicy, they are grown by farmers who should take pride in producing such nice peaches.

    August is National Peach Month. Brush up on your peach facts and trivia:

    Peaches originated in China, traveled west over the silk roads to Persia, were brought to Greece by Alexander the Great and were introduced to America by the French. The French brought them to Louisiana, and the English colonists brought them to the Jamestown and Massachusetts colonies.

    12 Peach Recipes

  • Try these peach recipes: bars with cream cheese frosting, bruschetta, cobbler, ice cream, muffins and salsa
  • An entire peach dinner: sangria, peach chipotle chicken salad, shrimp and peach kabobs, ginger pecan peach pie
  • Peaches and cream popsicles
  • Peach honey ice cream
  •  
    Favorite Peach Products

  • Frog Hollow Organic Peach Conserve
  • Inko’s Peach White Iced Tea
  • San Saba Peach Pecan Preserves
  • Honest Tea Peach Ooh-la-long
  • White Peach Purée
  •  
    Peaches are the oldest cultivated fruit. Photo
    courtesy Washington State Fruit Commission.
     
    We end with a lovely quote from 17th-century poet Andrew Marvell:

    The nectarine, and curious peach, / Into my hands themselves do reach; / Stumbling on melons, as I pass, / Ensnared with flowers, I fall on grass.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Get A Fish Spatula (Fish Turner)


    Use a slotted fish spatula to flip everything
    on the grill. This one is a Tom Douglas by
    Pinzon Dexter Russell, available on Amazon.

      Grilling tools sets generally include a chef’s spatula, grill tongs, two-prong fork, silicone basting brush and cleaning brush for the grill. But if you grill fish, that chef’s spatula is a bit clunky to turn a fillet easily, without breaking it.

    THE NIBBLE chef suggests a grilling tool that is equally wonderful in the kitchen: a good quality fish spatula or fish turner. He uses it for grilling both burgers and fish, and finds it preferable to the conventional head-on chef’s spatula.

    It’s a great utensil whether you’re grilling, sautéing or broiling.

    Designed to turn and lift delicate seafood, a fish spatula, also known as a fish turner, is thinner and lighter and works from an angle. The long vents mean less sticking.

    A fish spatula is a multi-tasker. We use it to turn fried eggs and omelets, pancakes, crêpes, cutlets, enchiladas and quesadillas—even to lift delicate baked pasta such as lasagne and manicotti.

     

    Fish Spatulas We Like
    A good fish turner is flexible enough to bend, but not flimsy. If you want to use it on scratch-coat cookware, you’ll also need a non-scratch version. Also look for a handle that won’t melt if you leave it in a hot pan.

  • OXO Good Grips, stainless steel with a black handle.
  • Amco Fish Turner, all stainless steel.
  • Master Chef Spatule Pelton Spatula, made of fiberglass and safe with nonstick cookware.
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    You can also find left-handed versions.

      

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