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


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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
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    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.
  •  
    You can also find left-handed versions.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Butter On Steak

    Want to perk up the flavor of a steak?

    Yesterday’s tip from THE NIBBLE’s chef was on steak seasoning. Today he says: brush a little butter on steak just before serving.

    The next time you grill, pan roast or broil a steak, brush a really light coating of melted butter over it before bringing it to the table.

    This gives steak added oomph: that little extra something that your guests won’t be able to detect, but will be sure to love.

    Our guests love truffles, so we use this truffle butter from D’Artagnan—one of our favorite luxuries and a Top Pick Of The Week. You can also use garlic butter.

    If you don’t have a pastry brush or basting brush, pick up a silicone brush. The bristle brushes look more picturesque, but they fray over time—and silicone is much easier to clean.

     
    Brush plain butter on your steak; or for a
    luxury treatment, use truffle butter. Photo
    courtesy iGourmet.com.
     
    Visit our Gourmet Butter Section for more of our favorite butters, recipes, and things you never knew about butter.
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Make Your Own Steak Seasoning


    Ready for seasoning! Photo courtesy
    Allen Brothers.

      Many people season a steak simply, with salt and pepper (see our chef’s technique for sprinkling salt from a height to get an even application). Some may add a bit of onion salt.

    THE NIBBLE’s chef recommends a touch of cumin in addition to the salt and pepper. It adds a slight warmth and earthiness to the steak as it enhances the meat’s natural sweetness.

    There are numerous steak seasonings in the supermarket’s spice rack, and budget-minded cooks make and bottle their own blends.

    Here’s a steak seasoning recipe used by one of THE NIBBLE editors. It approximates the recipe of McCormick’s Grill Mates Montreal Steak Seasoning, a favorite of many people (it gets a five-star rating from everyone on Amazon).

    You can shake it onto just about any meat (including burgers and pork chops) or poultry; plus seafood, potatoes, vegetables, even popcorn, cottage cheese and dips.

     
    HOMEMADE STEAK SEASONING

    Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons salt (too salty for us, so we cut it by half)
  • 1 tablespoon black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon dehydrated onion
  • 1/2 tablespoon dehydrated garlic
  • 1/2 tablespoon crushed red pepper
  • 1/2 tablespoon dried thyme
  • 1/2 tablespoon dried rosemary
  • 1/2 tablespoon dried fennel
  •  
    Preparation
    Combine ingredients. Shake or rub 1 tablespoon of seasoning per pound of meat before grilling or broiling.

    The recipe makes 8.5 tablespoons of seasoning, enough for 8 pounds of meat (and some extra). If you don’t think you’ll use that much, you may want to cut the recipe in half.

    As with all spices and dried herbs, keep the seasoning blend in an airtight container away from light and heat.

    Check out more of our favorite seasonings in our Salts & Seasonings Section.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: How To Waste Less Food

    Some sources say that about one-third of food worldwide is wasted. Fresh fruits and vegetables that go bad lead the list.

  • A report on FoodProductionDaily.com finds that the average American household throws out 14% of its food purchases: $590/year for a family of four, more than $43 billion/year combined.
  • Sodexo, one of the world’s largest foodservice companies, says that Americans throw out 25% of the food they prepare.
  •  
    It‘s not just a waste of money, and a nagging guilt that we are throwing away what would mean so much to so many who lack enough to eat.

    And food is not simply “biodegradable.” The decomposition of fruits and vegetables, for example, creates methane gas—a major factor in the depletion of the ozone layer, which creates climate change.

     
    Don’t let it rot. Follow these tips. Photo
    courtesy La Cuisine Du Marché.
     
    We are guilty of throwing out our fair share of food at home, as well as THE NIBBLE’s food supply:

  • Excited by favorable pricing, we buy more than we will realistically consume.
  • We realize the food needs to be eaten, but we’re not in the mood for it.
  • Food of all kinds gets pushed to the back of the fridge and we don’t find it until it’s too late.
  •  
    Here’s how we’re attacking the problem:

  • Anything that’s perishable gets written on a list that we keep on the refrigerator door. We use one of those magnetized shopping list pads. There are also wipe-clean plastic versions.
  • Every Saturday morning before breakfast, we go through the list and the fridge, hauling out things that should be consumed without further delay. Then, we attack the list: For starters, we throw lots of ingredients into breakfast omelets.
  •  
    Here’s our approach to “perishable food triage”:

    Fruits

  • If fruit is past its peak, we freeze it (cut into chunks as appropriate). It can then be used for smoothies or “blender sorbet,” where overripe fruit is a benefit.
  • Or, poach the fruit in sweetened water or a water/fruit juice mix (you can add maple syrup or other flavorings). It will look more tempting as a fruit compote—alone, with a garnish of whipped cream or sour cream, with yogurt or ice cream or blended into a fruit soup. If it isn’t eaten over the weekend, freeze it.
  •  
    Vegetables

  • If the broccoli, cauliflower, squash or whatever isn’t appealing as is, cook it and purée it as a side or a healthy snack. It’s delicious, and slides down with no resistance.
  • Make blender gazpacho.
  • Put all the veggies into a pot with salted water or a bouillon cube and make vegetable soup or stock. Reduce as desired. Eat (perhaps with some grated cheese) or freeze.
  •  
    Dairy, Meat & Fish

  • If you have more milk than you want to drink, turn it into a more appealing beverage: chocolate milk or coffee milk, hot chocolate/iced hot chocolate, cappuccino, etc. We love hot milk with a packet of Splenda; you can add cinnamon or nutmeg, too.
  • Pop cottage cheese and yogurt into the freezer. (Yogurt can remain fresh well beyond its stamped expiration date. It will start to mold when it’s going bad.)
  • Apply the sniff test to cooked and raw proteins. If it doesn’t smell right, toss it without further ado. If it’s OK but you’re not going to consume it promptly, wrap it well and stick it in the freezer.
  • Next, keep a list of what’s in the freezer. When you’re nosing around the kitchen trying to decide what to prepare, look at the list!
  •  
    If you end up with too much gazpacho—or if you’re not going to eat everything you’ve frozen—give them to friends and family. We’ll gladly take some soup/stock and frozen berries off your hands!

    How do you deal with perishables at the edge? Share your tips.

      

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