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


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ENTERTAINING: Hummus Swans

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Hummus glides in a flatbread swan. Photo
courtesy Kabobs.com.

How cute are these hummus swans?

We saw them at Kabobs.com and will have to call to see if they can teach us to fold flatbread into swans.

In the interim, if you need a tasty hors d’oeuvre, combine the same flavors without the swan:

1. Cut squares or wedges of flatbread.
2. Pipe a red pepper hummus “rosette” from a pastry bag.
3. Add a small bit of feta cheese, a slice of kalamata olive and a slice of peppadew.
5. Garnish with a slice of chive.

Find more hors d’oeuvre recipes in our Hors d’Oeuvres & Cocktail Snacks section.

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RECIPE: Eggs Benedict & Eggs Benedict History

April 16th is National Eggs Benedict Day.

Credit for this recipe is given to Chef Charles Ranhofer of Delmonico’s Restaurant in New York City—which also happened to be the first restaurant opened in the U.S., starting with a small pastry café in 1827 and expanding into a restaurant two years later.

At that time there were no public dining rooms or restaurants. Men could stop into a tavern for a beverage and what amounted to “bar food.”

People ate all their meals at home or, if traveling, at the inn or hotel. Otherwise, hungry people got food from street vendors.

In the 1860s, a regular patron of Delmonico’s, Mrs. LeGrand Benedict, arrived for lunch and found nothing appealing on the menu.

She discussed her tastes with the chef, who created on the spot what would become an iconic recipe.

In his cookbook, The Epicurean, published in 1894, he called the recipe called Eggs à la Benedick, inadvertently misspelling her name.

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Photo of Portabella Eggs Benedict courtesy
of the Mushroom Council.

The recipe is relatively easy: toasted English muffins topped with a round of cooked ham “an eighth of an inch thick and of the same diameter as the muffins one each half.” A poached egg is placed atop each muffin half, and the whole is covered with Hollandaise sauce.
 
 
VARIATIONS: MORE EGGS BENEDICT RECIPES

Here’s an updated version of the Eggs Benedict recipe, substituting a portabella mushroom for the English muffin.

Here are substitutes for the English muffins, ham/bacon and hollandaise:

  • American Casual: Burger Eggs Benedict.
  • Comfort food: Grilled Cheese Eggs Benedict.
  • Custom Eggs Benedict: Mix & Match Your Favorite Ingredients.
  • Down-Home: Corned Beef Hash Eggs Benedict.
  • Down Home 2: Corned Beef Hash Patties.
  • Format: Eggs Benedict Casserole.
  • From A Sandwich Favorite: BLT & BLAT Eggs Benedict.
  • Fusion Food: Grilled Cheese Eggs Benedict.
  • Luxury: Surf & Turf Eggs Benedict (lobster and filet mignon).
  • No Carbs: Portabella Eggs Benedict.
  • Reinvented Eggs Benedict.
  • Scandinavian: Icelandic Eggs Benedict, with smoked salmon and skyr.
  • Steak Lovers: Filet Mignon Eggs Benedict.
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    Plus A Related Recipe:

  • Potato & Crab Hash With Poached Eggs.
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    Find more egg recipes on the pull-down menu at the upper right.

     
     

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

     
     
      

    Here are updated versions of the Eggs Benedict recipe, but don’t forget Classic Eggs Benedict.

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Multi-Tasking Parmigiano

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    Checking the quality of an aging wheel of Parmigiano-Reggiano (photo ©
    Parmigiano-Reggiano Consorzio).

     

    October 27th is National Parmigiano-Reggiano Day.

    Parmigiano-Reggiano is more than a great cheese for pasta, pesto, risotto and Alfredo sauce.

    Shave it onto salads, eggs and sandwiches. Add it to cheese plates. Enjoy it with a glass of hearty red wine.

    It loves to be paired with apples, figs, grapes, kiwi, peaches, pears and walnuts. Italians enjoy it for dessert, drizzled with a few drops of aged balsamic vinegar. Guests love large chunks of the cheese with a variety of dipping sauces—like pesto, garlicky tomato sauce, olive tapenade, parsley sauce and fruit chutney—on individual plates, or on a communal plate of skewers.

  • Learn more about this great cheese.
  • Here’s the difference between Parmigiano-Reggiano, Asiago, Grana Padano and Pecorino Romano, the great Italian grating cheeses.
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    THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PARMIGIANO-REGGIANO & GENERIC PARMESAN

    Anyone, anywhere can make and sell a cheese called “Parmesan.” They follow a basic recipe and are under obligation to nobody to adhere to any standards, including aging it until full flavors develop.

    Parmigiano-Reggiano, on the other hand, is D.O.P. name-protected (Denominazione d’Origine Protetta). This is a legal protection for the consumer that guarantees that you are buying an authentic Parmigiano-Reggiano, made by a trained artisan to exacting specification, produced in a specific geographical area, from milk from specific herds of animals raised in the same area, using techniques honed for centuries. Even the feed of the cows is dictated.

    All of this activity is strictly supervised by a consortium (“consorzio”) that ensures that every wheel stamped with the official seal tastes exactly as it should.

    After 12 months of aging (the minimum), each wheel is inspected and sometimes, if other tests for flaws fail, a thin probe will be inserted to draw out a small piece of the interior core (see photo). If the cheese does not pass, the exclusive pin-dot pattern on the sides is scraped off. The cheese can be sold as cheese for grating, but not as Parmigiano-Reggiano.

    If it does pass, it can go on aging for up to 36 mnths.

    Why are the words, Parmigiano-Reggiano and Parmesan, capitalized? Because they refer to the city of Parma in Italy, the center of making this great cheese.

    However, both cheeses have a place at your table.

  • For occasions where the flavor of the cheese will shine through—on pasta, risotto, or a cheese plate, for example, go for authentic Parmigiano-Reggiano.
  • When the flavor of the cheese will be largely blended into other ingredients—breading, cheese balls or recipes with hot chiles, for example—you can go for the generic parmesan and save money.
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    > THE HISTORY OF PARMIGIANO-REGGIANO CHEESE
     
    > THE DIFFERENT ITALIAN GRATING CHEESES
     
    > THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF CHEESES
     
    > THE HISTORY OF CHEESE 
     
      

      

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    RECIPE: Egg Salad For National Egg Salad Week

    National Egg Salad Week is the first week in April, reason to explore what makes a really great egg salad.

    Hard-cooked eggs with mayo isn’t egg salad, but a recipe called Eggs Mayonnaise.

    It’s pretty dull.

    You can add celery and onions to make egg salad and call it quits at that—but you can do so much better!

    Check out our deftly seasoned egg salad recipes and many variations of the basic recipe.

    We’ve also included the history of mayonnaise—because where is egg salad without it?

    And to follow it up, the history of egg salad (which, needless to say, comes after the invention of mayonnaise).

  • You can make your own mayonnaise for the egg salad—much more delicious than store-bought. Here’s Julia Child’s mayonnaise recipe.
  • Find more of our favorite egg recipes, and how to make the perfect hard-cooked eggs.
  •  

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    Check out our yummy ideas for egg salad (photo by Falcatraz | iStock Photo).

     

      

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    EVENT: Share Our Strength’s Taste Of The Nation

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    Enjoy something spectacular so kids can get
    basic nutrition. Food shown is not part of the
    event, but similar in spirit. Photo courtesy
    Restaurant Tru.

    Even in the world’s wealthiest nation, nearly 17 million children worry about where their next meal will come from. That’s nearly one in four children at risk of hunger, with limited access to the basic nutrition they need to develop to their full potential.

    Last night, Share Our Strength’s Taste Of The Nation tour launched in Charlotte, NC and Manchester, NH. It continues to 25 other cities from now through the end of June.

    Billed as “the nation’s premier event to end childhood hunger in America,” the event raises money by serving affluent food enthusiasts elegant fare from top chefs.

    Food, drink and services are donated, so 100% of ticket sales support Share Our Strength’s programs.

    In Philadelphia, one of the tour cities, 24.5% of residents live below the poverty line and 260,000 people are “at risk for hunger.”

    That’s why those who can afford as much food as they’d like—and who appreciate the best food—are encouraged to take part.

    We won’t list all 25 cities here, but see if your city is on the tour and purchase tickets at Share Our Strength/Taste Of The Nation.

    You can also make a donation directly or in someone’s name. Maybe that’s what Mom would really prefer for Mother’s Day (May 9th).

     

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