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TIP OF THE DAY: Regifting Food Gifts

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If you aren’t going to eat it, regift it!
Photo courtesy SXC.

If you received a food gift for Christmas that wasn’t to your particular liking—spicy cocoa, lavender-flavored vinegar, whatever—don’t stick it in the back of the cabinet and forget about it. Regift it, sooner rather than later.

Food products should be used within 12 months, or they begin to deteriorate—some items like cookies and candy, much sooner.

Many products have expiration dates, but if you don’t like the food to begin with, the dates don’t really matter. It’s better to share the item now, with people who will enjoy it.

Bring the food to your favorite cook, to your co-workers, be a friendly neighbor or donate it to a volunteer enterprise.

Or, call a Christmas White Elephant Party. Invite friends to bring a gift they’d like to trade. Let everyone draw a number from a hat for “picking order,” and choose their new gifts in from other people’s “white elephants.”

  • Take an hour this weekend to go through your pantry and fridge and throw out expired items. Look at dates that are at or near expiration, and put them on the counter to decide to eat them or give them away while they’re still good.

 

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National Cream Puff Day & The History Of Cream Puffs

One might ask why the holiday-scheduling powers that be allowed January 2nd to become National Cream Puff Day. Haven’t we just finished six weeks of heavy eating? Don’t we have resolutions to diet in the New Year? Aren’t we running out of gyms?

But, since it is National Cream Puff Day, a few words of puffery:

Cream puffs are made from pâte à choux (pot-ah-shoo), also called choux paste, cream puff paste or puff pastry.

This very versatile dough is used for both sweet and savory pastries.

  • Savory examples include gougères (cheese pastry) and pommes dauphine (crisp potato puffs).
  • Sweet pastries include éclairs, cream puffs, profiteroles (cream puffs served cold with an ice cream filling instead of pastry cream), and croque-em-bouche.
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    Pâte à choux is made by combining flour, butter, and boiling water, then beating eggs into the mixture until it becomes very sticky and pastelike. During baking, the eggs create irregular domes in the pastry.
     
    > Learn how to make pâte à choux.

    > Here’s a cream puff recipe from chocolatier Michael Recchiuti.
     
     
    CREAM PUFF HISTORY

    Of those two pastries that people consider siblings, the cream puff and the éclair, the cream puff is the elder, dating back to the late 16th century. The elongated éclair did not appear until 200 years later, in the late 18th century.

    Originally, the cream puff was filled with whipped cream and served plain (or late, dusted with powdered sugar). Now, the round pastry, which is piped from a bag and baked, is often halved horizontally, as in the photo at right. Profiteroles, cream puffs stuffed with ice cream and topped with chocolate sauce, are a 20th-century dish.

    Today, both can be prepared in any way that the pastry chef can conceive, from pistachio whipped cream and glaze to saffron custard with caramel glaze to blueberry jam with cassis whipped cream and cassis glaze. Some cream puffs have chocolate-glazed tops, similar to the éclair.

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    [1] Who can turn down a cream puff (photo courtesy American Egg Board)?


    [2] There are also savory cream puffs, like this one of mozzarella and porcini mushrooms in choux paste (photo © Balsamic Vinegar of Modena The Original).

     
     
     
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    TIP OF THE DAY: A Better Bloody Mary

    BLOODY MARY COCKTAIL IN GLASS

    Start the new year with a new Bloody
    Mary recipe. Photo © S. Mario | Fotolia.

    January 1 is Bloody Mary Day. Sure, you can reach for your favorite mixer and a bottle of vodka. But consider if there’s a better Bloody Mary waiting for you.

    The world is full of them:

    • Bloody Mary variations without tomato juice: Bloody Bull, Bloody Eight Ball, Bloody Mariner and even the Bloody LeRoy, which replaces the tomato juice with barbecue juice (in case you have some barbecue in the fridge to go with it).
    • Latin-inspired Bloody Marys: Bloody Maria and Chipotle Maria
    • International Bloody Marys that replace vodka with the local favorite: Danish Mary, Highland Mary, Russian Mary and more.

     

    As cocktails go, the Bloody Mary, with vodka, tomato juice, citrus juice, seasonings, and a celery stick, is as healthy as it gets. If your New Year’s Resolutions include dieting, switch that sugar-laden Appletini, Cosmo, Mojito or Margarita for the Mary of your choice (well, maybe not the Bloody LeRoy).

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    CLASSES: Butcher Classes

    What do you do after your blog has been turned into a highly-noticed book and Meryl Streep and Amy Adams have starred in the film version?

    You become a butcher! “Julie And Julia: My Year Of Cooking Dangerously” author Julie Powell has released her next book, “Cleaving: A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession”, her “Julie and Julia” marriage gone awry “set against a backdrop of butchery.”

    Most of “Cleaving” was written while Powell was an apprentice at Fleisher’s, a grass-fed and organic meat butcher shop in Kingston, New York. We haven’t read the book, but a colleague who did passes on her wishes for “more food and less sex—does anybody care about Julie Powell’s sex life?” (Yes: People who buy books to make into films will probably like it just the way it is.)

    Fleisher’s has launched a formal butchery apprentice program that has already graduated three successful butchers. If your New Year’s plans include training in the culinary arts, learn more about Fleisher’s butcher classes.

    As the Fleisher’s folks say, Carne diem!

     

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    This could be you, learning the craft (and
    trade) of fine butchering. Photo courtesy Fleisher’s.

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    TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: The Best Foods Of 2009, Part 2, Sweet Foods

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    A brownie with Somebody’s Mother’s heavenly white chocolate sauce. Photo by Corey Lugg | THE NIBBLE.
     

    This is the second part of our “The Best Of 2009”: the Top Pick Of The Week specialty and gourmet food products that have become a permanent part of our lives. This week, our picks are the sweet stuff.

    Since we’ve chosen “everyday foods,” our list doesn’t include the fabulous boxes of gourmet chocolate that are special-occasion buys. But don’t worry: All of our picks are indulgences.

    You can click to the original reviews via the bulleted links below, or read our “Best of 2009” full review to learn why these have been added to our favorite treats list.

  • Olympic Granola Bars, the best granola bars we tried (and we’ve tried hundreds!)
  • Somebody’s Mother’s Dessert Sauces, the best chocolate and white chocolate fudge sauces available commercially
  • Spread Peanut Butter, the best gourmet peanut butter we’ve found to-date
  • Sprinkles Cupcake Mixes, the easiest and best-tasting cupcakes to come out of our oven
  • Way North Biscotti, incredible flavors and textures, our new favorite biscotti
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    The links above click through to the original reviews; or you can read this Top Pick of The Week to see, in brief, why we liked each one of these products so much. (And we’ll be eating our fair share of them in 2010, as we search for new Top Picks.)
     
    SEE PART 1 OF THIS ARTICLE, THE BEST SAVORY FOODS
      

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