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


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.





EASTER: Colorful Candies

Fill your candy bowl with a colorful mix of chocolate-covered nuts, dried fruits and sunflower seeds.

The Cocoa Room sells mixtures of egg-shaped chocolate-covered almonds, dried cherries, sunflower seeds and other favorites.

In addition to making your candy bowl look seasonal, it’s a great gift for people who don’t like big bites of chocolate (yes, such people exist!).

The mixes are sold in a variety of sizes, in clear boxes that are perfect for gift-giving. The small box makes a welcome party favor. Available at TheCocoaRoom.com.

Find more of our favorite Easter gifts.

easter-mix-230

Choose from different Easter mixes. Photo
courtesy TheCocoaRoom.com.

Comments off

TIP OF THE DAY: Salmagundi (Salad)

mediterran_potato_salad-230b

Start a Salmagundi Salad tradition. Photo
courtesy ParmaHam.com.

Looking for a new idea for entertaining?

Celebrate spring with a Salmagundi Brunch.

“Salmagundi“ means a heterogeneous mixture or a mixed salad of various ingredients in addition to the greens. A Cobb Salad—avocado, bacon, blue cheese and chicken—is an example of salmagundi.

The word derives from the French salmigondis, “seasoned salted meats,” most likely from the Latin words salemine (salted food) and condir (to season).

Invite friends to a Spring Salmagundi Feast:

1. You provide a large salad bowl and salad greens, plus vinaigrette, artisan bread, butter and anything else you’d like to round out the menu (beverages, soup, dessert).

2. Each guest brings a non-greens item to put into a huge salad: anchovies, avocado, baby corn or corn kernels, beets, boiled potatoes, eggs, carrots, cheese, Chinese noodles, croutons, dried fruit/fresh fruit, grilled meats, ham/bacon/prosciutto, marinated or roasted vegetables, nuts, olives, onions, seafood, tomatoes/sundried tomatoes, seeds, water chestnuts and so forth. You can assign ingredients, but it’s more fun if what they bring is a surprise.

3. As guests arrive, arrange these ingredients in rows atop the greens, so everyone can see what the salad will consist of.

Red, white and rose wines, plus beer and artisan soft drinks (think Fizzy Lizzy, GuS and Steaz) will pair well with the salmagundi.

Find more salad ideas in our Vegetables Section.

 

Comments off

PRODUCT: Rouge et Noir Champion Cheeses

In 1865, Abraham Lincoln was president and San Francisco was known as Yerba Buena.

Since 1865, artisans have been making Brie, Camembert and other cheeses at Marin French Cheese Company, in the rolling hills of Petaluma, California (north of San Francisco in Marin County and just south of Sonoma County).

In the old days, the cheeses were transported in a horse-drawn wagon to the town of Petaluma, where they were loaded onto a paddle wheeler and headed for the shipping port then known as Yerba Buena. The first cheese, a breakfast cheese, became a favorite with Yerba Buena dock workers.

These days, the company makes more than 30 different types of cheeses. We had the opportunity to taste the Brie and Camembert, made with Old World cultures. We were in buttery cheese heaven, enjoying the cheeses for breakfast, lunch, dinner and in-between. (Read the difference between Brie and Camembert).

We can’t wait to try the rest of the line, including the quark in blackberry, garlic, herb, jalapeño, plain, strawberry and triple onion!

packaged-brie-230

Look for Rouge et Noir at fine grocers.
Photo by Evan Dempsey | THE NIBBLE.

The family owned and operated company is the oldest continually operating cheese factory in the U.S., selling cheese names under the brand name Rouge et Noir. The cheeses are hand-crafted, one batch at a time. They are rBST-free and vegetarian (no animal rennet).

Made from extra-rich Jersey cow’s milk, in 2005, Rouge et Noir’s Trple Creme Brie beat its French competitors in the annual World Cheese Awards in London, and took two other golds as well. Original Camembert was voted America’s best Camembert by the American Cheese Society in 2004 and 2006. There are many more medals in the company’s trophy case.

If you’re in the area, there are four tours daily. Call 1.800-292.6001 for information. Learn more at MarinFrenchCheese.com.

  • Find more of our favorite cheeses in our Cheese Section, which is packed full of information about cheese. 

Comments off

EASTER: Ribbon Chocolate Box From See’s Candies

If you know a woman who loves See’s Candies, she’ll love them even more in this lovely keepsake ribbon box.

The woven ribbon, in lavender, green and purple, the color of spring. The box holds 11.3 ounces of milk and dark chocolates along with beautiful White Chocolate Raspberry and Lemon Truffle Eggs topped with icing flowers. And it will remind the recipient of spring long after the Easter candy is gone.

Buy the Ribbon Chocolate Box for $19.90 at See’s stores or online at Sees.com.

sees-easter-ribbon-box-230

This Easter gift is a “keeper”: the ribbon box
remains after the chocolate is gone. Photo courtesy Sees.com.

Comments off

Easy Gorgonzole Dolce Appetizer & How It Differs From Gorgonzola Naturale

creamy-gorgonzola-fig-230
[1] Top Gorgozola with fig preserves or fig jam and serve (photo © Bella Chi Cha).

Goat's Milk Gorgonzola Dolce
[2] Gorgonzola Dolce, mature and oozing, served with fruit-and-nut cracker. Also good: a square of dark chocolate (photos #2, #3, and #4 © Murray’s Cheese).

Gorgonzola Dolce With Fig Jam On A Cracker
[3] You can pre-prepare the crackers and cheese.

Gorgonzola Dolce And A Spoon
[4] Mature Gorgonzola Dolce is spoonable and spreadable.

Slice Of Gorgonzola Dolce Cheese
[5] A slice of Gorgonzola Naturale, Dolce’s firmer, sharper sibling (photo © A.G. Ferrari Foods).

 

In Italy, Gorgonzola Dolce (gohr-gohn-ZOH-lah DOHL-chay), or sweet Gorgonzola cheese (in this case, “sweet” means mild), is often served for dessert with a drizzle of honey and perhaps some figs.

But you can turn the tables and serve it as an appetizer that’s easy to make and put out on the coffee table as everyone arrives for dinner.

It has a slightly salty aftertaste that is a nice counterpoint paired with the fig jam.
 
 
PREPARATION

Get a slab of Gorgonzola Dolce, a spreadable and elegant version that lacks the sharpness of of Gorgonzola Naturale (there’s more about the latter and its different names below).

Spread the gorgonzola dolce with fig preserves or fig jam (the Dalmatia fig spread brand has very good retail distribution).

Place it on a platter with crackers—those made with dried fruits and nuts are ideal.

You can also pre=spread the crackers for ready-to-grab finger food.

Serve your pre-dinner nibble with a fruity red wine, marsala, or port. Or to celebrate a special occasion, serve Champagne!

You can also serve this preparation as a cheese course, after the main course. It can be served before, or instead of, dessert.

Bella Chi Cha sells a ready-made Creamy Gorgonzola Torta With Fig (photo #1), but you need to live in California to buy it. (Retailer elsewhere: please bring this line in!)
 
 
GORGONZOLE DOLCE VS. GORGONZOLA NATURALE

Gorgonzola Dolce has only one name. But the firmer version of Gorgonzola has multiple names: Gorgonzola Naturale, Gorgonzola Piccante, Gorgonzola di Monte, and Gorgonzola Stagionato.

  • Gorgonzola Dolce is soft and sweet, mild and a bit salty.
  • Gorgonzola Naturale is firm and sharp, and as it ages, it acquires a powerful blue cheese punch.
  •  
    In the U.S., when you ask for “Gorgonzola,” you will get the Naturale cheese. If you want Gorgonzola Dolce, you need to specify the “dolce.”
     
    ABOUT GORGONZOLA CHEESE

    Gorgonzola is an ancient cheese, dating back to around 879 C.E. It is native to Lombardy, a part of Italy that is also home to Grana Padano, Mascarpone, Provolone, and Taleggio. among others.

    The blue mold comes from the injection of Penicillium glaucum. Other blues, such as Roquefort, use the Penicillium roqueforti. Gorgonzola Naturale can use either.

    The choice of mold has to do with differences in color and taste.

  • Producers of Gorgonzola Dolce seek a green/grey mold with flavors that are a bit sweeter, not too aggressive.
  • Producers of Gorgonzola Naturale may seek a darker blue/green mold with stronger aromas and flavors [source]
  •  
    Gorgonzola (both types) is washed with brine as it ages, encouraging the development of bacteria that give off its distinctive aroma (this is true for all washed-rind cheeses).

    In the European Union, Gorgonzola has Protected Designation of Origin (P.D.O.) status; in Italy, it is a D.O.C. cheese (Denominazione di Origine Controllata, Protected Designation of Origin).

    Gorgonzola Dolce is a popular ingredient in risotto and polenta. It can be made into a dip, mixed into vinaigrette, melted on a pizza, or used wherever cheese is called for. Serve it for dessert with berries, figs, pears, peaches, or plums.

  • An overview of blue cheese.
  • How blue cheese is made.
  • Great American blue cheeses.
  • Check out the history of cheese and discover which of your favorites are the oldest-known cheeses.
  • The different types of cheese: a glossary.
  • More ways to use fig spread and fig jam.
  •  

     
     

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

      

    Comments off

    The Nibble Webzine Of Food Adventures
    RSS
    Follow by Email


    © Copyright 2005-2024 Lifestyle Direct, Inc. All rights reserved. All images are copyrighted to their respective owners.