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


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PRODUCT: “Instant” Warm Chocolate Pudding Cake

Exquisite warm chocolate “pudding,” or
steamed cake. Photo by Jody Horton | Sticky
Toffee Pudding Co. Garnishes not included.

The New Year’s diet starts tomorrow, but today we’re celebrating with the new Warm Chocolate And Almond Pudding from the Sticky Toffee Pudding Company, a NIBBLE Top Pick Of The Week.

These English “puddings” are steamed cakes. Steaming—instead of conventional baking—creates a super-dense and super-moist cakelike dessert that is simply irresistible. One can only wonder why steamed puddings haven’t replaced the ubiquitous chocolate lava cake on restaurant menus.

We love every product from the Sticky Toffee Pudding Company, which include English Lemon Pudding, Molten Chocolate Baby-Cake, Sticky Ginger Pudding and Sticky Toffee Pudding. The new Warm Chocolate and Almond Pudding is just as spectacular—even more so for chocolate lovers. It’s a celestial chocolate experience, worth going out of your way for. (Warning: THE NIBBLE is not responsible for any addiction that ensues—we’ve got our own to deal with.)

These desserts are the epitome of “rich and moist.” With its intensely fine chocolate flavor, Warm Chocolate And Almond Pudding is worthy of being our last indulgence of 2010. It is an ultimate chocolate experience. (The almond component is the rich and flavorful almond meal used instead of white flour.)

The individual puddings are easy to heat in their ovenproof containers in a microwave or conventional oven.

More good news: The desserts are shelf stable, although refrigerating upon arrival is recommended to extend the shelf life. The puddings can be refrigerated for four weeks, and freeze beautifully for up to 6 months. Plan ahead and you’ll always have a pudding in the fridge or freezer when you need a great dessert.

If you owe someone a belated holiday gift, he/she won’t complain that these arrived late.

 

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TIP OF THE DAY: Ice Cream Cupcakes

Create a fun and easy party dessert, a variation on the ice cream cupcake.

All you need are cupcake liners, a muffin tin, chocolate wafer cookies, a quart of your favorite ice cream (we like a pint each of chocolate chip or mint chocolate chip, but any flavor is delicious) plus the chocolate whipped cream topping: heavy cream, cocoa powder and confectioners’ sugar.

While these “cupcakes” use cookie crumbs to simulate the cake, you can substitute actual cake or brownies, using a cookie cutter to cut rounds that fit into the cupcake wrappers.

Makes 12 cupcakes.

ICE CREAM CUPCAKES RECIPE

1. Leave ice cream on counter to soften slightly (or you can microwave a quart for 20 seconds).

Turn ice cream and cookie crumbs into an
Ice Cream Cupcake. Photo courtesy
Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board.

2. Place 24 wafer cookies in a large plastic storage bag and seal. With a rolling pin, turn the cookies into coarse crumbs.

3. Insert 12 cupcake wrappers into a large muffin tin. Line each cupcake wrapper with cookie crumbs, 2 to 3 tablespoons per cupcake.

4. Scoop ice cream into large round balls and add a ball to each cupcake wrapper. (If you can’t make the scoops round enough, shape them with your hands.) Place muffin tin in freezer.

5. Make whipped cream topping: Sift 1/4 cup confectioners’ sugar and 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa onto a sheet of waxed paper. Begin to whip 1 cup of cold, heavy cream, gradually adding in the sugar-cocoa mixture. Whip for approximately 4 minutes, until the whipped cream is the consistency of shaving cream.

6. Using a spatula, frost the ice cream cupcakes with the whipped cream and sprinkle the whipped cream with any remaining cookie crumbs. (You can use other garnishes you have at hand: chocolate chips, coconut flakes, nuts and so forth.) Return cupcakes to freezer until ready to serve.

Find more recipes in our Ice Cream Section.

 

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Savory Cheesecake Recipes For An Appetizer Or First Course

Basil Cheesecake Recipe
[1] Nacho cheesecake (photo © TasteOfHome.com).

Nacho Cheesecake Recipe
[2] A no-bake savory basil cheesecake (photos © Eat Wisconsin Cheese).

 

What’s a savory cheesecake?

Using a base of cream cheese—just like dessert cheesecake—it’s an unsweetened cheesecake that combines savory ingredients: herbs, vegetables, seafood, and/or other cheeses.

A savory cheesecake:

  • Can be a spread for party bread and crackers.
  • Can be a first course or cheese course consisting of a slice of cheesecake eaten with a fork. (We serve ours on a plate with a mesclun salad and vinaigrette.)
  • Can be large cheesecakes or individual cheesecakes.
  • Can combine just about any flavor, from shrimp to jalapeño to Roquefort.
  • Are great for special occasions.
  • Are always a big hit, because few people have ever had one.
  •  
    Try these delicious recipes, courtesy of the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board, representing the dairy farmers who create some of the world’s best cheeses. Just take a look at the photos: You’ll want to make them all!

  • Blue Cheese Cheesecake Recipe
  • Cool & Creamy Tuna Cheesecake Recipe
  • Grand Cru Gruyère & Lobster Cheesecake Recipe
  • Nacho Cheesecake Recipe
  • No Bake Savory Basil Cheesecake Recipe
  • Provolone & Corn Cheesecake Recipe
  •  
     
    WANT MORE CHEESECAKE RECIPES?

    Head to our Cheesecake Section on TheNibble.com, and pull down the Gourmet Foods menu for the blog, above right.

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

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    TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: Best Sweet Gourmet Foods Of 2010 (PART II)

    Our favorite sweet treats of 2010 are luxurious but very affordable—most under $10.00.

    The honors go to:

     

    If you missed Part I, Best Savory Gourmet Foods Of 2010, here they are.

    Wishing you a cornucopia of treats in the New Year!

    Indulge Caramels in Cinnamon. Photo
    by Evan Dempsey | THE NIBBLE.

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Salted And Unsalted Butter


    [1] The only salted butter we buy (photo © Vermont Creamery).


    [2] A modern salt cellar. Today you can find them in wood as well. Older styles were ceramic, crystal or glass. You can find it and other styles on Amazon and elsewhere (photo © KooK | Amazon).

     

    Some people prefer salted butter, others prefer unsalted butter. Can you use them interchangeably in baking and cooking?

  • Use unsalted butter for baked goods such as cake, cookies, pastry and pie crusts, and salted butter for general cooking.
  • If you are using salted butter in a recipe that specifically calls for unsalted butter plus additional salt, simply omit 1/4 teaspoon of salt per 1/2 cup of butter.
  •  
    The salt in salted butter acts as a preservative, allowing for a slightly longer shelf life; but that’s not a concern with modern refrigeration.

    We prefer to keep just one type of butter—unsalted—adding salt to recipes as needed.

  • We keep a salt cellar (see below) of coarse-grained sea salt at the table.
  • Those who want to salt their butter can add a pinch—which also adds a delightful crunch.
  •  
     
    MORE ABOUT BUTTER

  • Our favorite salted butter—the best we’ve ever had—is from Vermont Butter & Cheese Creamery. Made in the style of the finest European butters (higher in butterfat than standard U.S. butters), it has a salt content significantly lower than typical salted. The “less is more” approach produces a spectacular salted butter.
  • How many types of butter are there? See our Butter Glossary.
  • Check out the history of butter.
  •  

    THE HISTORY OF THE SALT CELLAR

    Since ancient times, people kept a small container of salt on the table, so people could add more salt if desired. Today we call them salt cellars (photo #2).

     
    The term salt-cellar appears in English in the 15th century. It combines the English word salt with the Anglo-Norman word saler, which meant “salt container.”
    Salt cellar, name most often used today, were known by a number of different names, names including master salt, open salt, salt dip, salt dish, standing salt and trencher salt.

  • A master salt is the large receptacle from which the smaller, distributed, salt dishes were filled. According to the local fashion, it was lidded, open, or covered with a cloth.
  • A standing salt is a master salt, so-called because it remained in place as opposed to being passed.
  • A trencher salt is a small salt cellar located next to the trencher.
  • Open salt and salt dip refer to salt dishes that are uncovered (source).
  • A salt pig is a container with a large round opening on the side that looks like a pig snout. A small spoon allowed the salt to be scooped out, or one could take a pinch with one’s fingers. Modern versions can be found on Amazon and elsewhere.
     
    Subsequently, salt and pepper shakers, also called salt and pepper pots, were purportedly invented in 1858 by John Mason, the man who invented the screw-top Mason jar. He created a receptacle that had several holes punched into a tin cap. Salt would evenly distribute onto the food, just by shaking it (source).

    Salt shakers became increasingly common after anti-caking agents were introduced by the Morton Salt company in the 1920s (source).

    The term salt cellar is used generically, to describe any container that holds table salt, thus encompassing salt shakers and salt pigs.

    These can be kept on the kitchen counter for cooking. Smaller sizes, two inches in diameter or less, are traditionally used on the table; although in these casual days, a large salt pig or salt cellar can be brought there, too.
     
      

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