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


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COOKING VIDEO: Pea Soup With Ham Recipe

 

What do do with those Easter ham leftovers: make a fresh, spring pea soup with diced ham.

Peas are in season, and soup never tastes better than when made with fresh peas.

Fresh pea soup (you can substitute frozen green peas) tastes brighter and more luscious than split pea soup. Just watch this video with Chef Peter Sherlock.

   

   

  • Do you know your peas and legumes? Check them out in our Beans & Legumes Glossary.
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    TIP OF THE DAY: Make A Change For Earth Day

    Kermit the Frog said that it isn’t easy being green.

    But in one sense, at least, he’s wrong. It’s easy to be green (or greener) by making some simple lifestyle changes.

    Today is Earth Day, so our tip is to make the Earth a healthier place by making one change from this list:

  • Eat fewer animal products. Much as we love meat, cheese and ice cream, the methane from manure is the #1 contributor to climate change. Compounding this, consumer demands for more meat result in the felling of forests to create more grazing land. Forests trap carbon dioxide, playing a major role in mitigating climate change.
     
    Help save the planet by developing a repertoire of great vegan and vegetarian dishes and go meatless one day a week (build up to two days). Today we’re having falafel—a vegan crowd pleaser we bought frozen at Trader Joe’s—for dinner, and making a concerted effort going forward to switch our ice cream habit to dairy-free sorbet.
  •  
    Eat more vegetarian and vegan foods. Falafel
    and hummus, very popular foods, are both
    vegan. Photo © J. Java | Fotolia.
     

  • Eat seasonally, buy locally. You’ve heard a lot about this. Buying local, seasonal food reduces the amount of fuel (“food miles”) used to bring the food to your table.
  • Carry a BPA-free water bottle. Models like this one from Watergeeks have an internal water filter, so any tap water you add to the bottle will taste good. Spare the landfill from disposable water bottles.
  • Avoid products with excess packaging. The less packaging, the less waste. Look at the bulk food bins to see what you can purchase unpackaged. Refuse to buy over-packaged products.
  •  
    Eco Glossary: Twelve terms you should know.

    Organic Food Terms: Everything you need to know about sustainable foods.
      

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    The History Of Jelly Beans For National Jelly Bean Day


    [1] Jelly beans are mostly sugar. No wonder they are so popular! (photo by River Soma | © THE NIBBLE).


    [2] Today, jelly beans are associated with kids’ Easter candy. But they’re fun year-round; and were President Ronald Regan’s favorite candy (photo © Williams Sonoma).


    [3] Jelly beans became associated with Easter because of their egg-like shape (photo © Jelly Belly).

     

    Today is National Jelly Bean Day. It’s also the 35th anniversary of the best-known brand of jelly beans, Jelly Belly, which petitioned for the holiday.

    So let’s check out the history of jelly beans!
     
     
    THE BEGINNINGS OF JELLY BEAN HISTORY

    Many sugared confections are the ancestors of jelly beans.

    Turkish Delight, which is jelled sugar and rosewater coated with powdered sugar, is one well-known candy that, accordg to Candy Warehouse, is mentioned in the Bible (see the photo for the resemblance to jelly beans).

    Centuries later, an unknown confectioner switched the powdered sugar for granulated sugar, added some flavors, and created the gumdrop.

    Then, in the 17th century, a French confectioner invented a process called panning, which created a hard sugar coating by stirring candies in a mixture of sugar and syrup.

    Nuts were panned (such as Jordan almonds); later, chocolate was used to create chocolate-covered nuts and other candies.

    Take a gooey mixture called a sugar slurry, add a coating and you get a jelly bean.

  • Jelly beans are made from sugar, corn syrup and starch, with small amounts of anti-foaming agent, flavoring, lecithin and salt.
  • To make them shiny, they’re coated with edible wax and confectioners’ glaze.
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    MODERN JELLY BEAN HISTORY

    The modern jelly bean is believed to have been invented in the U.S., sometime after 1850.

    The earliest recorded advertisement for jelly beans is from Boston confectioner William Schrafft, who may have also been the creator.* The ad promoted sending jelly beans to Union Soldiers engaged in the Civil War (1861-1865).

    By the early 1900s, jelly beans had become a staple penny candy. Possibly, they were the first bulk candy.

    Jelly beans became part of the Easter tradition in the 1930s, when somebody connected their egg shape with the eggs symbolic of the spiritual rebirth of Easter. Their festive colors made them a perfect celebratory candy.

    During World War II, much of the chocolate produced in the U.S. was sent overseas to soldiers. Americans focused on other sweets; flavorful, colorful jelly beans became popular.

    And, if you’re old enough to remember, they were the favorite candy of president Ronald Regan.

    He persuaded the Jelly Belly company to make a blueberry jelly bean so that he could serve red, white and blue jelly beans in the Oval Office.

     

    JELLY BEAN TRIVIA

    Here’s some jelly bean trivia:

  • Americans will eat some 15 billion jelly beans over the Easter holiday.
  • Boys are more likely to eat a handful at a time while girls eat them one by one.
  • Given an assortment, most people eat them in this order: red, purple, green, yellow and black.
  •  
    Happy National Jelly Bean Day!

    ____________________

    *Schraft’s candy company was established in Charlestown, Massachusetts in 1861, by William F. Schrafft. Succeeding him in 1898, Frank Shattuck expanded the company to include restaurants, most located in Manhattan. The ice candy and cream sundaes were very popular when Pet, Inc., makers of Pet evaporated milk, purchased Schrafft’s in 1967. They broke the ice cream, restaurant, and candy operations into separate companies. Alas, it is no longer in businesses.

    †From CandyWarehouse.com.

      

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    MOTHER’S DAY: Beautiful Chocolate


    Hearts and flowers: Beautiful hand-painted
    chocolates from Anna Shea, available at
    TheNibbleGourmetMarket.com.
      Mother’s Day? It isn’t even Easter yet.

    True, but Mother’s Day falls a scant two weeks after Easter. You need a gift strategy.

    As far as gourmet chocolate goes, Anna Shea creates chocolate “haute couture”: beautiful, artisan-crafted and hand-decorated chocolate designs.

    This may be the best-looking box of chocolates we’ve ever seen. And beyond impeccable appearances, each piece is delectable.

    Each jewel-like chocolate is handmade and then hand-painted (that’s edible paint, of course) with a design that evokes the flavor of the delicious ganache inside.

    If Mom loves a box of fine chocolate, she’ll be delighted to receive a box of Anna Shea chocolates—whether for Mother’s Day, as a thank-you for Easter dinner or for no occasion in particular.

  • Purchase a box.
  •  

    TheNibbleGourmetMarket.com, created in response to the many requests we get from readers for gift recommendations, has just launched. It includes our favorite gift items—something for everyone, from $15.00 and up.

  • We’re adding new products regularly, so if you don’t see what you want, sign up for Alerts on the website and you’ll be sure to get the 411 when there’s something new.
  • Also use the feedback device to let us know what you’d like to see more of—and to share any other comments and suggestions.
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    TIP OF THE DAY: Crafts Easter Basket

    This lovely “nest” basket from Williams-Sonoma is crafted out of oak moss, lavender, pink globes, white ammobium and oregano. It’s filled with 24 “robin’s eggs” that have champagne, amaretto and kirsch-flavored chocolate centers.

    It makes a charming centerpiece, not just for Easter but year-round.

    If you can’t get to a Williams-Sonoma store, head to your nearest crafts store and buy the materials to make your own basket arrangment.

    Then head to the candy store to fill the basket. It doesn’t need to be with blue robins’ eggs. There are plenty of delicious Easter egg candies that can fill the basket—until people catch sight of them. So make sure to buy refills!

     
    Handy with crafting? Make this charming
    centerpiece for Easter. Photo courtesy
    Williams-Sonoma.
     
      

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