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DINING: Springtime Eating From A To Z


Stewed rhubarb, one of our favorite spring treats. Here’s a recipe (photo © Baltic Maid).

 

Have you been taking advantage of the edible joys of spring? Eat seasonally, not just because the products are fresher and less expensive, but because some of them are only available in spring.

  • Veggies: Steam low-calorie artichokes, asparagus, broccoli rabe and Swiss chard. Put marvelous morels, snow peas and sugar snap peas in just about anything. Try nettles (the leaves of a flowering plant with a flavor like robust spinach), ramps and fun fiddlehead ferns. Have some fava beans with a nice Chianti. Zucchini and yellow squash are in season and more reasonably priced. Take a look at spring lettuces such as mâche and mizuna—wonderful flavors! While radishes are available year-round, spring radishes are sweeter. And of course, take advantage of fresh green peas: As much as you may be satisfied with frozen peas, fresh peas are in a class all their own.
  • Herbs: Garlic chives and garlic scapes are a real treat. Garlic chives are immature garlic plants pulled to thin the field; garlic scapes are the flowering stalks of the plant that are cut to promote bulb growth. Both have a mild, garlic flavor and can be snipped into a salad or used in any way that you would use green onion (scallion).
  • Fruit: Blood orange, with a raspberry-orange flavor, and Meyer lemons with sweeter, less acidic juice, are two of our favorite citrus fruits. If you’re not using them, you’re missing out! While tree fruit won’t appear until summer, there are delicious (and low-calorie) strawberries galore. While rhubarb is a vegetable, not a fruit, stewed rhubarb, sweetened with sugar or agave, is one of our favorite spring desserts.
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    Find more of our favorite fruits and vegetables, plus recipes, by pulling down the menu at right.

     

     
      

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    ISSUE: Bee-Ware Of Dishonest Honey

    Do you care if your honey is “honest honey”—ethically sourced? Then read the labels.

    Last year, the U.S. produced only about 144 million pounds of the 382 million pounds of honey consumed. The remainder was imported from Argentina, Brazil, Canada and other countries.

    And it’s the “other countries” wherein the problem lies—specifically, Asian imports.

    Two years ago, the U.S. imposed a 500% tariff on honey from China because the Chinese government subsidizes Chinese honey makers, with the goal of driving U.S. producers out of the market. The practice nearly ruined the market for domestic honey.

    To get around the tariff, China has been using labels such as “Product of Thailand” or “Product of Indonesia” on 100% Chinese honey, rerouting its products through other countries and/or mixing tiny amounts of Thai or Indonesian honey into Chinese honey. This is neither ethical nor legal. And it’s certainly not sweet.

     

    Only buy “honest honey.” Photo courtesy
    National Honey Board.

    So keep your eyes open, read labels and strike a blow for justice by buying “honest honey.”

    Learn more at HonestHoney.com.

    Find the sweet side of honey in THE NIBBLE’s Honey Section: product reviews, recipes, food and honey pairings and articles all about honey.

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Smokin’ Mac & Cheese

    Smoke up your mac & cheese with smoked
    cheese and bacon. Photo courtesy
    MackenzieLtd.com.

    Add some smoke to your favorite mac & cheese recipe.

    Divide the total cheese in a 75:25 proportion and use 25% smoked cheese. For example, if 8 ounces of Cheddar cheese are called for, use 6 ounces of Cheddar and 2 ounces of smoked cheese (smoked Jack, smoked Gouda, etc.).

    If you’d like more smoke flavor after you’ve tasted the dish, use a 50:50 proportion next time.

    Here’s a recipe from Vermont’s Jericho Hill Farm:

    RECIPE: MACARONI & SMOKED CHEESE

    Ingredients
    – 1-1/2 cups uncooked elbow macaroni
    – 1/4 cup butter
    – 1/4 cup chopped onion
    – 1/4 teaspoon salt
    – 1/4 teaspoon pepper
    – 1/4 cup flour
    – 1-3/4 cups milk
    – 6 ounces Cheddar or Colby cheese
    – 2 ounces smoked Colby or other smoked cheese
    – Optional garnish: crumbled bacon, snipped chives

    Preparation
    1. Preheat oven to 375°F. Cook macaroni.
    2. Cook onion in butter with salt and pepper until onion is slightly tender.
    3. Blend in flour. Cook over low heat, stirring continuously, until mixture is smooth and bubbly.
    4. Remove from heat. Stir in milk. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly. Stir one minute at boiling.
    5. Remove from heat. Stir in cheese until melted.
    6. Mix with macaroni in a 1 ½ quart casserole dish. Cook uncovered in oven for 30 minutes.
    7. Garnish and serve with a mixed green salad dressed with a vinaigrette.

    See a wealth of award-winning mac & cheese recipes. There are some real dazzlers for Mother’s Day (with lobster, crab, truffle essence, etc.).

     

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    CONTEST: Call For Avocado Recipes

    If you’ve got a special avocado recipe with a culinary twist, it could win $3,000.

    Avocados originated in Mexico. Central Mexico’s sun-drenched climate; fertile, rich soil; and abundant rainfall combine to create a very creamy avocado. Check out the history of the avocado.

    The Hass variety of avocado, grown in Mexico, is prized by chefs as the world’s finest. It’s our favorite avocado. While Hass avocados grow elsewhere, it’s important to note that as with coffee, Cabernet Sauvignon and any agricultural product, not all Hass avocados are created equal.

    Mexico is the world leader in growing (and eating!) avocados. It’s also the only place in the world where the avocado tree blooms 4 times a year, so avocados are in season year-round. No wonder avocados are such a part of Mexican cuisine!

    But that’s not what this recipe contest is about. Your amazing guacamole recipe won’t cut it. The goal here is to show what Avocados from Mexico can do outside of Mexican cuisine.

     

    Take us beyond Mexican cuisine. Photo
    courtesy AvocadosFromMexico.com.

    So, enter an avocado recipe that introduce the fruit to another cuisine. Sure, avocados love cilantro and chiles. But how about avocados with pasta, chick peas, kasha or catfish? Add your own twist.

    Here’s how to enter:

    1. Post your recipe on your blog, community recipe site or Facebook page through May 12. (Only individuals 18 years or older living in the U.S. can enter). Write about it on your blog, if you have one, to fill us in on your avocado adventure!

    2. Then enter it on AvocadosFromMexico.com, also by May 12.

    3. Recipes will be judged on taste, creative use of the avocado and ease in preparation. The winner will be announced on May 24, 2010.

    Hungry right now? Make Avocado Shrimp Boats.

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    PRODUCT: Soft, Melt-In-Your-Mouth Cookies

    Make someone happy with a gift of Bake For
    You cookies. Photo by Katharine Pollak |
    THE NIBBLE.

    Some people only like crispy cookies. They’ll have to go somewhere else.

    For those who like soft, melt-in-your-mouth cookies reminiscent of cookie dough, Bake For You makes all the classics.

    Soft cookies In Chocolate Chip, Chocolate Chip & Coconut, Chocolate Chocolate Chip, Oatmeal Raisin, Oatmeal Cranberry, Peanut Butter and White Chip & Craisin are a different experience from most cookies we come across. They’re a refreshing change.

    And every batch is baked to order for you.

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