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


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.





Frozen Yogurt Recipes & Yogurt History For National Frozen Yogurt Day


[1] For National Frozen Yogurt Day, make a special sundae (photo © Ali Express).


[2] Or head to your favorite yogurt shop for a cup or a cone (photo © Mr. Tin DC (CC-BY-ND-2.0 License).


[3] Add some fruit (photo © Hannah Kaminsky | Bittersweet Blog).


[4] Kefir, a probiotic drink, is made into delicious frozen yogurt (photo © The Nibble).


[5] There’d be no frozen yogurt without plain yogurt, which led to even more popular flavored and frozen yogurt (photo © FAGE Yogurt).


[6] Back in ancient times, the original yogurt garnish was honey. Sweet spices like cinnamon, fruits, and nuts followed (photo © Fage Yogurt).


[7] A healthy snack: yogurt dip with crudites (photo © Elea Restaurant | NYC).


[8] We used one of our favorite snacks to create a savory Greek yogurt pretzel sundae (photo by Elvira Kalviste | The Nibble).

Blueberry Yogurt Parfait
[9] Yogurt parfaits with fruit and granola have become popular for breakfast (photo © Fruits From Chile).

  February 6th is National Frozen Yogurt Day (June is National Frozen Yogurt Month). From a DIY frozen yogurt bar to a variety of frozen yogurt pies and cakes, ice cream sandwiches, and frozen yogurt pops.

If you like frozen yogurt, try frozen kefir (photo #4).

Kefir is a probiotic drink, like buttermilk (here’s the difference). Unlike buttermilk, it is available sweetened and flavored. The next step was to freeze it into a dessert.

When yogurt (or kefir) is frozen, do the probiotics stay alive? Here’s the scoop on the live cultures in frozen yogurt.

While frozen yogurt seems ubiquitous today, it is only some 40 years old. The first brand, Frogurt, was a soft-serve introduced in New England in the early 1970s by H. P. Hood.

Here’s the history of frozen yogurt.
 
 
FROZEN YOGURT RECIPES

While we mostly pick up a soft-serve cone or purchase a pint of frozen yogurt of kefir, here are some of our favorite frozen yogurt recipes.

  • Frozen Yogurt Pie
  • Frozen Yogurt Pops With Berries
  • Frozen Yogurt Sundae Toppings
  • Homemade Yogurt Pops
  • Maple Bacon Frozen Yogurt
  •  
     
    THE HISTORY OF YOGURT

    Way back in 2005, we created a glossary of the different types of yogurt, which starts with a brief history of yogurt. Here’s more of the story.

    It’s believed that milk products were incorporated into the human diet between 10,000 and 5000 B.C.E., with the domestication of milk-producing animals: camels, cows, goats, horses, sheep, water buffalo, and yaks.

    Fresh milk spoils easily. When herdsmen in Central Asia (the broader Middle East and North Africa) stored their extra goat’s milk in containers made out of animal stomachs to preserve it while on the go. Some of the milk stored in these skins, to their surprise, became thick and tart.

    More importantly, it was still edible — even after a surprisingly long period of time in the hot sun. Voilà: yogurt!

    The milk in contact with the wild bacteria in the goatskin, the warm temperatures, plus the agitation of the milk in the pouch when walking or riding, caused spontaneous fermentation. The milk is curdled into yogurt.

    (The origin of cheese was the same—here’s the history of cheese.)

    As a fermented food, yogurt was a great way to preserve milk since the acidity slows the growth of harmful bacteria. Yogurt was a well-known food in the Greek and Roman empire and has played a major role in Mediterranean cuisine since 800 BCE.

    The exact origin of yogurt is uncertain, but it is thought to have appeared in Mesopotamia around 5000 B.C.E.

    Ancient Mesopotamia included the modern lands of Iraq, southeast Turkey, west Iran, northeastern Syria, and northern Kuwait.

    The word “yogurt” is believed to have come from the Turkish yoğurmak, to thicken, coagulate, or curdle.

    Yogurt is mentioned from ancient times.

    The Turks were the first to evaluate yogurt’s medicinal use for a variety of illnesses and symptoms—diarrhea, cramps, and to alleviate the discomfort of sunburned skin.

    One of the oldest written documents is about the health-promoting properties of yogurt, which appears in Indian Ayurvedic scripts of about 6,000 B.C.E.

    In the Bible’s Book of Job, written in the 6th century B.C.E., Abraham owed his longevity and fecundity to yogurt consumption. The reference to the “Land of Milk and Honey” is interpreted by many historians as a reference to yogurt [source 1, source 2].

    References to yogurt appear in the records of ancient Greece, India, and Persia. These references often mention consuming honey along with yogurt. Even before yogurt, in Greece, oxygala, a distant ancestor of yogurt, was made from sour milk and sweetened with honey.

    Yogurt was well known to the ancient Greeks and Romans, including a written Greek reference in 100 B.C.E. [source].

    Pliny the Elder (23 C.E.-79 C.E.) remarked that certain “barbarous nations” knew how “to thicken the milk into a substance with an agreeable acidity” [source].

    Yogurt was a part of the diet in many ancient civilizations. It has had a major role in Mediterranean cuisine since 800 B.C.E. [source].

    It has been part of in nearly every culture that has kept animals for milk and it was likely discovered in similar ways in each region [source].

    Medieval Turkish sources in the 11th century describe the use of yogurt by nomadic Turks. Sources suggest that Mughal Indian emperor Akbar’s (1605-1556) cooks would flavor yogurt with mustard seeds and cinnamon.

    Yogurt became a staple of the Mongolian diet. Genghis Khan (1162-1227), the founder of the Mongol Empire, purportedly fed his warriors yogurt based on the belief that it instilled bravery.

    In 1542, King François I of France (1494-1547) introduced yogurt to Western Europe after it cured him of severe diarrhea. No French doctor could help him, but his ally Suleiman the Magnificent of Turkey (1494-1566) sent a doctor, who cured the patient with Turkey’s remedy, yogurt.
     
     
    Yogurt As A Modern Health Food

    Until the 1900s, yogurt (also spelled “yoghurt” or “yoghourt”) was a staple in the diets of people in the Russian Empire, especially in Central Asia and the Caucasus, Western Asia, South-Eastern Europe/The Balkans, Central Europe, and the Indian subcontinent.

    For centuries, yogurt was made only in homes for family consumption. That all changed in 1905 when Bulgarian microbiologist Stamen Grigorov (1878–1945) discovered Lactobacillus bulgaricus, the bacteria strain that ferments milk into yogurt.

    When a medical student in Geneva, he undertook the first scientific study of yogurt. He examined the microflora of yogurt and described it as consisting of spherical and rod-like lactic acid-producing bacteria. In 1907, the rod-like bacterium was called Bacillus bulgaricus (now Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus).

    The Russian biologist and Nobel laureate Ilya Mechnikov, of the Institut Pasteur in Paris, was influenced by Grigorov’s work and hypothesized that regular consumption of yogurt was responsible for the unusually long lifespans of Bulgarian peasants.

    Believing Lactobacillus to be essential for good health, Mechnikov worked to popularize yogurt as a foodstuff throughout Europe.

    Food scientists combined selected strains that would culture reliably for commercial creameries, making it possible for a manufacturer to make a consistent yogurt every time.
     
     
    Yogurt Gets Industrialized

    Mechnikov’s efforts worked. In 1919, Isaac Carasso, originally from the city of Salonica in the Ottoman Empire (today Thessaloniki, Greece), started a small yogurt business in Barcelona, Spain. He named the business Danone (“little Daniel”) after his son. The brand later expanded to the U.S. under the name Dannon.

    Influenced by Élie Metchnikoff’s 1908 book, The Prolongation of Life; Optimistic Studies, yogurt was introduced to the U.S. in the first decade of the 20th century as a health food.

    Yogurt was popularized by John Harvey Kellogg at the Battle Creek Sanitarium (1876 to 1943), and later by Armenian immigrants Sarkis and Rose Colombosian, who established Colombo and Sons Creamery in Massachusetts in 1929.

    Yogurt’s popularity in the U.S. evolved in the 1950s and 1960s when it was presented as a health food by scientists like Hungarian-born bacteriologist Stephen A. Gaymont (1905-1994).

    But it remained an item for health food stores and ethnic groceries, like the Greek-American brand Colombo. You wouldn’t find it in a supermarket until Dannon, a brand that had been selling classic tart yogurt to New York City’s immigrant communities.
     
     
    How Modern Yogurt Is Made

  • Fresh milk or cream is pasteurized to eliminate bacteria. It is then homogenized to provide a smooth, creamy texture.
  • Lactic bacteria starters (cultures) are added to begin the fermentation process. Different brands may use a combination of different cultures, but all use Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus bacteria. These two strains are required by the FDA in order for a product to be called yogurt.
  • The yogurt is then kept at specific temperatures to stimulate bacteria activity.
  • The bacteria convert the lactose (the sugar naturally found in milk) to lactic acid, which thickens the milk and generates yogurt’s signature tangy yogurt flavor. The lactic acid produced by the fermentation process also acts as a preservative, helping the cultured milk stay fresh longer.
  • The cooled plain yogurt is packaged as is, or flavored first.
  •  
     
    Sweetened Yogurt Emerges

    Even though it could be drizzled with honey, plain yogurt proved too tart for the American palate.

    So in 1966 Colombo sweetened its yogurt by adding fruit preserves, inventing the “fruit on the bottom” style of yogurt, later called sundae style in the industry. It was a big success, causing other brands like Dannon to do the same.

    That, along with the health claims, convinced American tastebuds to add yogurt to their diets.

     
    Today, flavored yogurt is made sundae-style and custard-style (also called French- and Swiss-style). The thickest variety of sundae style is Greek style, which is triple-strained to remove more moisture (the others are double-strained).

    By the late 20th century, yogurt had become a common American food item and Colombo Yogurt was sold in 1993 to General Mills—which discontinued the brand in 2010. Today, the number of yogurt brands in a supermarket is dazzling, including not just American products but imports.

    In the U.S., most yogurt is fermented milk that is acidified with the bacteria Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophiles.

    It is often fortified with added probiotics, fibers, vitamins, and minerals. Non-dairy yogurts are produced from plant milks: coconut, nuts (almonds, cashews), oat, rice, and soy.

    Yogurt has become a mainstay among health-oriented consumers. Studies show them to be younger, white, female, more educated, nonsmokers, nondiabetic, nonhypertensive, and from higher socioeconomic levels.

    Nutritionally, yogurt is rich in calcium and potassium, a good to excellent source of highly bioavailable protein, an excellent source of calcium, and a source of probiotics that may provide a range of health benefits.

    It can be consumed with any meal and as a sweet or savory snack.

    Research has demonstrated that yogurt can have positive effects on the gut microbiota and is associated with a reduced risk for gastrointestinal disease and improvement of lactose intolerance (especially among children), cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes, allergies and respiratory diseases, as well as improved dental and bone health and pregnancy outcomes [source].

    So if you’re not eating yogurt on a regular basis, consider expanding your horizons.

    According to YogurtNutrition.com, the countries that consume the most yogurt per capita are (in order): France, Ireland, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, Brazil, United States, Russia, China, India and Indonesia.

     
     

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

    Comments off

    Valentine’s Day Popcorn Recipe: Pink & Dotted With Chocolate


    [1] Valentine popcorn: white chocolate drizzle, M&Ms and pink sprinkles (photo © National Popcorn Board).


    [2] First take popped popcorn… (photo © Crunch Daddy).


    [3] Use red food coloring to tint it pink… (photo © McCormick).


    [4] Drizzle with melted white chocolate… (photo © Lake Champlain Chocolates).


    [5] Quickly scatter M&Ms or other red candies… (photo © M&Ms)


    [6] And add Valentine sprinkles on Amazon (photo © Sweets Indeed).

     

    What’s pink, whole grain, and drizzled and dotted with chocolate? This Valentine’s Day popcorn snack, which you can customize to your heart’s content. It’s so easy to make, you can delegate the task to any family member whom you can trust with food coloring. And you don’t have to wait for February 14th. As far as we’re concerned, Valentine’s Day Fortnight (we made that up) begins on February 1st. In addition to Valentine Popcorn, there are many more Valentine’s Day recipes below.

    > The history of Valentine’s Day.

    > The history of popcorn.
     
     
    RECIPE: VALENTINE POPCORN

    There are two ways to approach this recipe.

  • You can tint the popcorn itself pink.
  • Or, you can tint the white chocolate drizzle pink.
  •  
    Ingredients

  • 8 cups popped popcorn
  • 1 cup white chocolate chips
  • Red candies (choose one):
  • red/pink/white M&Ms
    jelly beans
    gummi rings
    mini Swedish fish
    – or other red candy

  • Valentine confetti and/or sprinkles
  •  
    Ingredients For The Popcorn Tint

  • 1/4 cup butter
  • Red food coloring
  •  
    Preparation For Tinted Popcorn

    Use this recipe to color popcorn in whatever shade you need, for any occasion.

    If you don’t want to tint the popcorn pink, skip to the next section, Preparation For Valentine Popcorn.

    1. PREHEAT the oven to 300°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set it aside.

    2. MAKE the pink tint. Melt the butter in a small pot over medium heat. Remove from the heat and add 2 drops of food color. Go for a faint pink tint.

    3. ADD the popcorn to a large mixing bowl. Make sure it’s big enough so that you’ll be able to reach in toss the popcorn with the pink butter to coat evenly.

    4. POUR the pink butter over the popcorn and stir. You can use a long-handled wooden spoon; we found it more effective to wear food service gloves (powder-free, latex-free) and toss the popcorn by hand.

    5. SPREAD the popcorn on the baking sheet. Use the spoon to spread it into a single layer. Remove any unpopped kernels. BAKE the popcorn for 5 minutes to set the butter. Remove and let cool before proceeding to the next step.
     
    Preparation For Valentine Popcorn

    If you have a heart-shaped tin or box that’s appropriate for the popcorn, take it out and line it with wax paper or parchment. A bowl will do, of course; but make it festive by draping it with a red napkin before adding the popcorn.

    1. SPREAD the popcorn in a thin layer in a pan or on a platter.

    2. MELT the chocolate chips over a double boiler or in the microwave. Drizzle over the popcorn.

    3. IMMEDIATELY SPRINKLE the desired amount of sprinkles over warm chocolate-coated popcorn.

    5. Allow drizzle to set up until firm. Serve.
     
     
    MORE RECIPES FOR VALENTINE’s DAY

    Sweet Snacks & Desserts

  • Apple Rose Mini Pies
  • Boozy Strawberry Shortcake
  • Broken Heart Peanut Butter Cups Or Chocolate
  • Cherry Tart With Mascarpone Filling
  • Chocolate & Cheese Plate
  • Chocolate Ice Cream Ice Cubes For Cocktails, Milk Or Soda
  • Chocolate Pudding With Strawberry Rose
  • Chocolate Raspberry Bundt Cake
  • Coeur À La Crème
  • Easy Chocolate Pudding Pie
  • Heart-Shaped Ice Cream Sandwiches
  • Frozen Raspberry Soufflés
  • Heart Fruit Skewers
  • Meringue Drops
  • Red Velvet Pizookie
  • Red Velvet Raspberry Truffles
  • Rice Pudding Brûlée With Passion Fruit
  • Rosewater Raspberry Meringues
  • Strawberry-Brownie-Marshmallow Skewers
  • Strawberry Ice Pops With Rosé Wine (low calorie)
  • Strawberry Tart With Strawberry “Rose” Top
  • Valentine Brownies
  • Valentine Cheese Plate
  • Valentine Pita Chips, Chocolate Dipped
  •  

     
     

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

     
     
     
      

    Comments off

    Easy Scallion Pancakes Recipe For The Lunar New Year

    The Year Of The Tiger began February 1st and lasts through February 15th. There’s lots of time to celebrate with traditional dishes. We’re having one a day—as simple as a few dumplings and ending up the celebration with Peking Duck (roasted and served with pancakes, scallions, and hoisin sauce). There are more recipes below. Also check out…

    Good luck foods for the Lunar New Year.
     
     
    RECIPE: KOREAN SCALLION PANCAKES

    Savory pancakes are a great way to use up leftover vegetables. You can shred anything including beets, but most popular re shredded cabbage, carrots, celery, and/or summer squash.

    Korean Chinese pancakes, called pajeon or pa jun (photo #1), are crisper and chewier than Chinese scallion pancakes, called cong you bing.

    Korean pancakes are thin and crêpe-like, made from a combination of rice flour and all-purpose wheat flour.

    However, since most of us don’t have rice flour, this recipe uses only all-purpose flour.

    The sauce calls for Gochujang sauce, a fermented hot pepper paste similar to Sriracha sauce (photos #3 and #4).

    You can find bottles or small rectangular tubs in most grocery stores—either by the condiments (like ketchup) or in the Asian section. Or, you can use the hot sauce you have, or even chili flakes.

    These yummy scallion pancakes are ready in 20 minutes, prep time is 5 minutes, and cook time is 15 minutes.

    Thanks to Pampered Chef for the recipe.
     
    Ingredients For 6 Servings

    For The Pancakes

  • 1 cup (250 mL) all-purpose flour
  • 2 green onions with tops, thinly sliced
  • 1 garlic clove, pressed
  • ½ teaspoon (2 mL) salt
  • ¼ teaspoon (1 mL) black pepper
  • ¼ teaspoon (1 mL) sugar
  • 1 cup (250 mL) cold water
  • 1 egg, lightly beaten
  • ½ teaspoon (2 mL) toasted sesame oil
  • 2 teaspoons (10 mL) canola oil, divided
  •  
    Ingredients For The Dipping Sauce

  • 2 tablespoons (30 mL) low-sodium soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons (30 mL) rice wine vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon (5 mL) gochujang
  •  
    Preparation

    1. COMBINE the flour, green onions, pressed garlic, salt, pepper, and sugar in the large bowl; mix well. Add the water, eggs, and sesame oil, and mix just until the ingredients are incorporated. Do not overmix.

    2. ADD the canola oil to a nonstick 8″ sauté pan and heat over medium heat for 1–3 minutes or until shimmering.

    3. POUR ¼ cup (50 mL) of the batter into the pan, immediately tilting and swirling the pan so the batter covers the pan bottom. When the pancake starts to bubble and the edges are golden brown…

    4. FLIP the pancake and cook an additional 45–60 seconds or until the bottom of the pancake is golden brown.

    5. REMOVE the pancake from the pan and repeat the process for the remaining pancakes.
     
     
    MORE RECIPES FOR THE LUNAR NEW YEAR

  • Asian Wings
  • Chinese Egg Rolls
  • Chinese Long Beans
  • Chinese Steamed Dumplings With A Twist (Buffalo-Style)
  • Egg Drop Soup
  • Ginger Fried Rice From Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten
  • Korean Bibimbap
  • Peking Duck
  • The Most Popular Chinese Dishes In The U.S.
  • Pork & Apricot Fried Rice
  • Pork & Potato Stew With Red Cooking, A Traditional Chinese Braising Technique
  • Potstickers & Potsticker Dumpling Salad
  •  
    Plus, while not an authentic Asian drink like sochu, to start we have some cocktails:

  • Ginger Joy Cocktail
  • Ginger Vodka Cocktails
  • Lychee Luqueur Cocktails
  • Saké Sangria
  •  
    For dessert we have:

    Green Tea Fortune Cookie Cake

     


    [1] Crisp scallion pancakes, Korean-style (photo © Pampered Chef).


    [2] Chopped scallions. If you really love them, add more (photo © Karolina Grabowska | Pexels).

    Gochuchang Sauce
    [3] Gochuchang, the Korean version of Thai Sriracha sauce (photo © Chung Jung One).


    [4] You can serve it in a dish at the table (photo © Trifood).


    [5] Make Chinese egg rolls at home. Here’s the recipe (photo © Red Stixs | NYC [now closed]).


    [6] Korean bibimbap, one of our favorite Korean foods. Here’s the recipe (photo © Bibigo Ready Meals).

     

     
     

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

     
     

      

    Comments off

    Supplant Chocolate Bars By Chef Thomas Keller~ Chocolate Innovation


    [1] New Supplant chocolates bars by Chef Thomas Keller are available in 45% cacao milk and 70% cacao dark chocolate (all photos © Supplant Company).


    [2] There’s a 15% discount for Valentine’s Day.


    [3] Plan ahead for Easter!


    [4] Supplant chocolate melts in your mouth.


    [5] Supplant benefits.


    [6] Supplant sugar from fiber.

     

    Thomas Keller is one of the country’s most famous chefs—if not the world’s. He currently holds seven Michelin stars, making him the most decorated chef in the U.S. His restaurants, French Laundry in Napa Valley and Per Se in Manhattan (three stars each*), set a standard for creativity, innovation, and excellence of execution. Now, Chef Keller has crafted chocolate bars made with sugars that are extracted from fiber, a new ingredient brought to consumers for the first time.

    The fiber-based sugar is called Supplant, as are the chocolate bars Chef Keller makes from it. These bars, in 45% cacao milk chocolate and 70% cacao dark chocolate, are our Top Pick Of The Week.

    Both have a silky-smooth texture and, like all fine chocolate, melt in your mouth. You won’t notice the difference between Supplant and chocolate made with granulated (table) sugar.

    Supplant is a new type of sugar made not from sugar cane, beets, maple sap, or other conventional sweeteners, but from upcycled plant fibers that bake and taste just like sugar.

    Supplant has half the calories of sugar, and a lower glycemic index! It also is prebiotic†.

    There’s more information about Supplant, the sugar, below. But first, more about the chocolate.

    The Supplant Company enlisted Chef Keller to create the chocolate bars. With a palate and skill set as fine as his, he was able to Supplant chocolate that is indistinguishable from chocolate made with table sugar.

    The bars are made in Napa Valley in small batches, using Venezuelan cacao beans and sugars from fiber.
     
     
    GET YOUR CHOCOLATE BARS!

    The chocolate bars were first released last November.

    You can now purchase both dark and milk chocolate bars from the company website.

    There’s 10% off and free shipping using code SOMUCHLOVE at checkout (until February 14, 2022).

    These bars were designed to demonstrate how delicious chocolate (and other recipes) can be when swapping out table sugar for a new type of sugar that’s healthier for humans and kinder to the planet.

    They’re a great gift for the environmentally conscientious as well as the chocolate lover, as a small gift, a party favor, or a stocking stuffer.
     
     
    WHAT IS SUPPLANT?

    Cambridge, England-based Supplant Company is a plant-tech innovator that has created “sugars from fiber,” a revolutionary new ingredient that can change the standards of baking and other foods that use sugar.

    What are “sugars from fiber?”

    They’re a brand-new blend of sugars found naturally in plant fiber.

    The scientific definition of fiber is the parts of food components such as fruits, vegetables, and nuts that don’t break down during human digestion. This is why fiber is low in calories and supports digestive health.

    The scientific definition of sugar includes any disaccharides and monosaccharides. Stated slightly less scientifically, the chemical term “sugar” usually refers to all carbohydrates of the general formula Cn(H2O)n.

    Most of us think of sugar as a sweet, crystalline substance that is produced from the juice of sugarcane or the flesh of the sugar beet. Other sweeteners are made from bee honey, corn kernels, maple sap, rice bran, and sorghum. Here’s more about them.

    Fiber is mainly made up of sugars bound together in long chains. In fact, plant fiber is the most abundant source of sugars in the natural world. Supplant Company has harnessed agricultural side-streams†† and created a new category of sugar from “leftovers” that are often discarded.

    These fiber-rich parts of crops are hugely abundant but don’t typically make their way into the food system.

    Because it’s made from fiber, Supplant is lower in calories, has a lower glycemic response, and is prebiotic.

    There are health benefits because Supplant behaves not like traditional sugar, but like the fiber one eats in carrots and Brussels sprouts.

    How does it work?

    Sugar is pulled sugar from the fiber in the stalks and stems of grains instead of from sugar cane.

    Those stalks into a pulp; then an enzyme from fungi breaks down the longer molecular chains (polysaccharides) into shorter ones (oligosaccharides and sugars).

    After the broken-down pulp is cleaned and dried, the result is a white powder now known as Supplant (photo #6).

    They company wants Supplant to replace sugar at scale at multinational companies that make sugar-packed snacks and other foods.

    In testing Supplant with shortbread, for example, Chef Keller noted that the aroma, texture, and taste of the cookies replicate that of shortbread made with 100% sugar.

    We look forward to more foods made with Supplant. But in the interim, try the chocolate!

    Discover more at Supplant.com.

     
     
    THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF SUGAR & OTHER SWEETENERS

     
     
    ________________

    *His more casual restaurant, Bouchon, also in Napa Valley, has one star.

    †Prebiotic foods are high in special types of fiber that support digestive health. They promote the increase of friendly bacteria in the gut, help with various digestive problems, and boost the immune system. Prebiotic foods have also been shown to improve metabolic health and even help prevent certain diseases. Here’s more about them.

    ††For example, sugar is extracted from corn cobs, and from the straw of wheat and rice (what’s left over when the kernels and grains are processed).
     
     

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

     
     

      

    Comments off

    Limited-Edition Heart-Shaped Cheesy Bread At Aldi’s

    Bread lovers take note: heart-shaped cheesy bread goes on sale today at Aldi’s. Mama Cozzi’s Pizza Kitchen, which sells take-and-bake pizzas at Aldi’s, has created a limited-edition cheesy bread for Valentine’s Day, for $4.99.

    While “cheese bread” is typically a loaf made from dough that’s mixed with cheese, this cheesy bread is a heart-shaped crust topped with shredded cheese.

    Pop it into the oven, and enjoy it as a snack or with dinner (it can be the “first course”).

    Then, head to Aldi for another one.
     
     
    The history of bread.

    The history of Valentine’s Day.

    The different types of bread.

     



    For your bread-loving valentine (photo © Aldi).

     

     
     

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

     
     

      

    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.