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


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RECIPE: The New Sausage Sandwich & A $25,000 Recipe Contest

The “new” sausage sandwiches: chicken
apple sausage with pineapple salsa on a
sandwich roll or ciabatta roll. Photo
courtesy Mezzetta.

Say “sausage sandwich” to someone, and the image that comes to mind is most likely an Italian sausage, pepper and onion sandwich on a hero roll.

That’s the old sausage sandwich. The new sausage sandwich lightens things up with chicken sausage, different sauces and gourmet breads.

This recipe, by Virginia Suddath of Kihei, Hawaii, is called “Kona Po Boy.” It substitutes chicken apple sausage for pork sausage and pineapple salsa for tomato sauce.

The recipe was a finalist in Mezzetta’s 2009 “Make That Sandwich” Contest. Get the recipe.

Do you love to make complex sandwiches that push the envelope? Enter the 2010 contest.

Vote For The Best Celebrity Sandwich
Seven chefs, including Jamie Oliver and Top Chef Stephanie Izard, have entered their own sandwich recipes. The chef whose sandwich gets the most votes will receive $10,000 for his or her charity. Check out the sandwiches and cast your vote.

Find recipes for more gourmet sandwiches in our Bread Section.

 

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FATHER’S DAY: A Bottle (Or Wedge) & A Book

Speaking of cheese (as we did in our prior post), if Dad is a cheese lover, there’s a book about “life on the wedge” written by a cheesemonger—someone who pursued his passion to work in cheese.

Dad might enjoy it along with a pound of something special, or a gift certificate to the local cheese store.

If Dad prefers Scotch, he most assuredly would like a copy of Michael Jackson’s Complete Guide To Single Malt Scotch…perhaps with a bottle of his favorite Single Malt.

Bourbon aficionados will want a copy of The Kentucky Bourbon Cookbook, with tempting ideas for appetizers, soups, salads, side dishes and main courses in addition to the more frequently found cocktail and dessert recipes.

See our Father’s Day book ideas for more choices.

Cheesemonger: A Life On The Wedge will appeal
to cheese-loving dads.

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TIP OF THE DAY: Leftover Cheese Bits & Scraps

A salad pleading for those leftover cheese
bits. Photo by Kelly Cline | IST.

What to do with those bits of cheese left over from the party cheese board?

Don’t toss the tiny pieces or wrap up the bigger ones and stash them away. Instead, plan some recipes to use them up ASAP. Our favorites uses:

• Cheese omelets and “mixed grill” grilled cheese sandwiches

• Slice and add to a pizza, burger, sandwich or salad

• Dice into a garnish for other foods, from soup to rice, potatoes and vegetables

If there’s enough cheese, make:

• Quesao asado (baked cheese, but you can microwave it), and eat it with tortilla chips

Fondue or macaroni & cheese

Don’t hesitate to mix up the cheese flavors—some of the tastiest fondues are made from blends of four or five different cheeses.

Visit our Cheese Section for more cheese tips, reviews and recipes.

 

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PRODUCT: Zoku Ice Pop Maker

You can become the most creative glacier in town with the Zoku Quick Pop Maker from Williams-Sonoma.

It’s easy to create your own customized frozen pops, including cream-filled varieties, in as little as seven minutes.

Use your favorite juices and other beverages (coffee, tea, kefir, smoothies) or fresh fruit purées to make the gourmet pops of your dreams.

Designed to be very user friendly—quick freezing, easy release from molds, reusable plastic pop sticks that have drip guards—Zoku looks to be the best pop-making option we’ve seen.

Why should you give up storage space to a pop-making machine?

It’s easy to make gorgeous ice pops with
your favorite flavors and add-ins. Photo
courtesy Williams-Sonoma.

• You can make gourmet pops in the exact flavors you want, and express yourself artistically in flavors, colors and patterns. (One of our favorites is to freeze cocktail mixes into Margarita Ice Pops and savory Bloody Mary Mix ice pops. Alcohol doesn’t freeze well, but you can try a teaspoonful per pop.)

• You have something new and special to serve guests.

• Things you’d normally drink for health can be turned into pops—from pomegranate juice to probiotic peach kefir.

• You can control for dietary needs—reduced sugar, no sugar or kosher, for example—and allergies.

• Ice pops have fewer calories than ice cream and are fat- and cholesterol-free (unless you elect to make cream pops).

• It’s a fun way to teach the whole family that they can enjoy preparing their own food.

• And thanks to the plastic sticks, there’s no yucky wood flavor that we so dislike with commercial ice pops.

Find more of our favorite frozen treats, plus recipes, in our Ice Cream Section.

 

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TIP OF THE DAY: “Instant” Green Tea Ice Cream

Make your own green tea ice cream from
vanilla. Photo © Subsociety | Dreamstime.

Do you like green tea ice cream? Would you like to enjoy it at home?

Green tea ice cream is one of our favorite flavors, although we rarely come across it outside of Asian restaurants. Ciao Bella Gelato sells it in pints, but it’s not easy to find.

In the absence of ready-made green tea ice cream, we make a quickie version by softening a pint of vanilla ice cream and mixing in matcha green tea powder:

1. Add two tablespoons of matcha, blend thoroughly and taste.
2. If you want a more vivid green tea flavor, add an additional half-tablespoon (1-1/2 teaspoons).

Matcha, which literally means “powdered tea,” is a flour-fine, chlorophyll-green tea powder made from the finest young leaves from spring’s first tea harvest. It is the tea used in the famed Japanese tea ceremony, cha no yu, where it is whipped into a froth in a ceramic bowl with a bamboo whisk.

Matcha is also used in recipes with green tea flavor—ice cream, cake, other baked good, tiramisu, green tea lattes and smoothies and more. Here’s a website with an extensive selection of green tea recipes for every course.

You can find Matcha in supermarkets that have Asian products sections, in Asian markets and online.

Here’s a recipe to make green tea ice cream from scratch.

Find more recipes and reviews of our favorite ice cream brands in THE NIBBLE’S Ice Cream Section.

 

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