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


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TIP OF THE DAY: Sautéed Mushrooms

September is Mushroom Month! In addition to their normal place in recipes, mushrooms can be served almost anywhere—atop pasta, as a side dish (great with meat and poultry), as an hors d’oeuvre on toasted baguette slices (topped with some fresh chives or parsley), on sandwiches, as a side with eggs at breakfast, as a plate garnish with most dishes—even as a snack on a slice of toast with a cup of tea. We sauté a large batch mixed mushrooms and keep them in the refrigerator, microwaving them as needed. Depending on what we find at the store, we’ll slice porcinis, portabellas, shiitakes, criminis or cultivated white mushrooms. Other times we’ll cook up whole chanterelles or trumpets. Whatever captures your fancy, slice and sauté 1 pound of mushrooms in 1/4 cup of butter or olive oil with 2 sliced garlic cloves and 1 tablespoon fresh herbs—sage, rosemary or thyme. Add good red wine if you have some. Cook over medium-high heat until browned, stirring frequently. Remove from the flame and stir in a 1/8 teaspoon of fresh lemon juice. The mushrooms will keep for a week or more.

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Gourmet Giveaway: Chobani Greek Yogurt

Love yogurt, but not the tart tanginess of traditional yogurt? Then check out this week’s Gourmet Giveaway for your chance to win Chobani Greek Yogurt, the thickest and most sour cream-like line of Greek-style yogurt we’ve found to date. It’s a very rich and ultra-creamy way to get your probiotics and protein.

Chobani Greek Yogurt is fat-free, all-natural and low in sugar; the line is made with hormone-free milk, contains probiotic cultures and has two times the amount of protein as traditional American yogurts. But, more importantly, it’s also absolutely delicious!

One winner will receive 32 containers of Chobani Greek Yogurt. You could feed a family of four one container a day for more than a week or keep them all for yourself for a month! Flavors include nonfat vanilla, honey, strawberry, blueberry, peach, plain, pomegranate and one low-fat flavor, pineapple. Eat it plain—it needs no embellishment—or toss granola on top for some fiber and crunch.

  • To enter this Gourmet Giveaway, see THE NIBBLE’s Best Yogurts Section and click on the link at the bottom. Enter your email address for the Gourmet Giveaway prize drawing. Good luck!
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The lucky winner gets 32 cartons of delicious, probiotic Chobani yogurt. Photo by Saidi
Granados | THE NIBBLE.

 

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TIP OF THE DAY: Low-Calorie Dips

Mix mustards, chutneys, pestos, and salsas with nonfat yogurt to create low-calorie, creamy dressings, dips and sauces. While condiments are great flavor-enhancers by themselves, transforming them into a creamy sauce adds versatility to your dishes. Using nonfat yogurt adds few calories compared with cream or sour cream. However, yogurt will separate when heated, so if you want a warm sauce, have the yogurt at room temperature and warm it ever-so-slightly. You can warm the mustard, chutney, pesto or salsa more easily, and then mix it with the yogurt.

  • See more yogurt recipes and reviews of our favorite artisan yogurts.

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RECIPE: Spicy Peanut Butter Burger

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A plump and juicy PB burger. Photo by Tanya F. | IST.

Put something different on the grill this Labor Day: a spicy peanut butter burger. Our recipe is courtesy of PB & Co., manufacturer of traditional and flavored all-natural peanut butter. For this recipe, they used “The Heat Is On,” their spicy PB, flavored with crushed red peppers, chili powder and a hint of vinegar. If you can’t pick up a jar, you can add these seasonings to your regular PB, to taste. You can use the recipe for beef, turkey or veggie burgers.

The PB adds richness and spice.If PB and burgers sounds strange to you, think of two classic dishes: chicken satay, with spicy peanut sauce (made with peanut butter); and a peanut butter and bacon sandwich.

 

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RECIPE: The Official Cocktail Of The U.S. Open

The U.S. Open runs through September 13. It has an official cocktail, the Honey Deuce, created by sponsor Grey Goose Vodka. If you’re watching the Open today, mix up a Honey Deuce and toast along with the crowds at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center at Flushing Meadows. You’ll save the $12 it costs at the Open, although you won’t get the souvenir cup.

Here’s the Honey Deuce recipe; it makes one drink:

Ingredients

  • 1-1/4 ounces Grey Goose Vodka
  • 1/2 ounce Chambord or another premium raspberry liqueur
  • Lemonade (homemade is best)
  • 3-4 honeydew melon balls, frozen
  • Ice (crushed ice recommended)

 

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Honey Deuce: the official cocktail of the 2009 U.S. Open Tennis Championships.

Preparation

1. Freeze melon balls: Place them in a the freezer in a single layer in a sealed plastic bag, for an hour or overnight.
2. Fill a chilled Collins glass with ice. Add vodka, then pour in lemonade to half an inch below the rim.
3. Sprinkle raspberry liqueur over the top of the ice, so it slowly trickles down.
3. Garnish with melon balls, speared on a long cocktail pick if you wish.

 

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