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


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PRODUCT: Boylan’s Mash

What’s mash? Not something made in a still. According to Boylan’s, one of our favorite brands of all-natural soda (and a NIBBLE Top Pick Of The Week), mash is not a soda, it’s not a sparkling juice, it’s not a fizzy water. It has attributes borrowed from sparkling juice, and it’s sweetened with sucralose. The flavors employ 1% to 2% juice, sweetened with a touch of sugar and sucralose (Splenda); the whopping 20-ounce bottle has only 100 calories (or, 40 calories per 8-ounce serving). You may just develop a mash (crush) on it.

Read our review of Boylan’s Mash, in lovely two-note flavors including Grapefruit Citrus Zing, Ripe Mango Blood Orange, Lemon Peel Ginger Root and Pomegranate Blueberry. The drinks are certified kosher.

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A great summer refresher, just 40 calories per 8-ounce serving.

 

  • See more of our favorite soft drinks in THE NIBBLE’s Beverages Section.
  • Read our review of Boylan’s All Natural Old-Fashioned Soda.
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    PRODUCT: Best Wine Box Chardonnay

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    Don’t give this boxed wine the fish eye—it’s good stuff!

    Think inside the box, says Consumer Reports magazine, evaluating boxed chardonnays in its July 2009 issue. While our own wine collection includes cases of DRC and Yquem (don’t even think of breaking into our place—they’re not stored here), we love a good boxed wine. They’re great for parties and picnics and they’re hands-down environmentally superior to recycling (or landfilling) glass and using cork or metal caps. You can keep an open box of wine in the refrigerator for four to six weeks, enjoying a glass whenever you want one, with wine on hand for cooking.

    And when you can pay $4 per 750 ml (the size of a regular bottle of wine), you’d be foolish not to declare to everyone you know that wine boxes are cool, wine boxes are green, never whine about a good wine box. So, speaking of good, here’s what Consumer Reports recommends.

    • Fish Eye Chardonnay 2007, $16 (about $4 per 750 ml). A nice mix of fruit and oak: Juicy fruit and apple flavors balanced by hints of butterscotch and vanilla.
    • Banrock Station Chardonnay 2007, $19 (about $4.75 per 750 ml). Full, rich and slightly sweet; apple, pear and honey flavors accompanied by vanilla and buttery notes.
    • Black Box Monterey County Chardonnay 2008, $25 (about $6.25 per 750 ml). Understated, clean and balanced, with crisp acidity and light citrus and apple flavors.

     

    If you can’t find the vintage tested, try another. Manufacturers strive to achieve consistency from one vintage to another.

    Merlots tested by the CR team didn’t fare as well. The 2008 Banrock Station merlot, $19, and the 2007 Black Box California, $25 were deemed to be lower in quality: not very complex with overripe fruit. But, the tasters concluded, “if you’re having a big party and not a wine tasting, they could fill the bill. ”

    So here’s your summer entertaining idea: A boxed wine tasting party. Let the group vote, and then let everyone pick numbers from a hat. In order, the guests get to take what’s left of their favorite boxed wine home. If your guests are big drinkers, can the prize drawing or buy extra boxes.

    See THE NIBBLE’s Wine Section for more tips and entertaining ideas, including wine and cheese pairings, wine and chocolate pairings and wine and dessert pairings.

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    RECIPE: Share A Pink Cocktail With Michelle Pfeiffer

    This summer’s hot period movie is “Cheri,” adapted from Colette’s 1920’s novel of the same name and starring Michelle Pfeiffer, Rupert Friend, and Kathy Bates.

    Colette transformed from a convent girl to one hot mama, inciting a near riot by kissing a female lover in a 1907 performance at the Moulin Rouge in Paris.

    This inspired Noilly Pratt Vermouth to create a cocktail for the film’s premiere called Le Baiser de Noilly (“Noilly’s Kiss”).

    The NYC premiere was Tuesday night, and the stars and other revelers sipped away.

    Girly pink in color, it’s perhaps an appropriate tribute to Cheri, the aging prostitute in 1920s Paris (Pfeiffer) who educates a younger man (Friend) in the ways of love. Oh la la!

    > The history of gin.

    > More gin cocktails.
     
     
    RECIPE: LE BAISER DE NOILLY PINK COCKTAIL
     
    Ingredients Per Drink

  • 1¼ ounce Noilly Pratt vermouth
  • ¼+ ounce Bombay Sapphire or other gin
  • ¾ ounce fresh pineapple juice
  • ¼ ounce grenadine (pomegranate syrup)
  • Pink grapefruit twist
  • Grated grapefruit zest for garnish
  • Garnish: 1 fresh raspberry
  •  
    Preparation

    1. COMBINE the ingredients except for the raspberry in a cocktail shaker. Shake and double strain into a glass.

    2. RUB a piece of pink grapefruit peel on the rim of the glass to impart the flavor of the oil from the peel.

    3. SPRINKLE the grapefruit zest on top of the drink, letting the oil from the grapefruit’s skin absorb into the foam to make the cocktail even more flavorful.

    4. FLOAT the raspberry on the drink and serve.
     
     
     

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

     

    Vermouth Cocktail
    [1] Enjoy this pink “kiss” (photo © Noilly Prat).

    2 Bottles Of Bombay Sapphire Gin
    [2] Bombay Sapphire gin (photo © Bacardi Limited).

    Can Of Dole Pineapple Juice
    [3] Pineapple juice is a great pairing with gin and vermouth (photo © Dole Food Company).

     

      

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    CONTEST: Guiltless In Sin City

    Guiltless Gourmet

    Enter to win the Guiltless Gourmet Sweepstakes

    Eat chips, feel no guilt and maybe win a trip to Vegas or other prizes. You read correctly—buy any flavor of Guiltless Gourmet tortilla chips, in tempting choices such as Spicy Black Bean and Chili Lime. Check the code on the bag online for a chance to win coupons for free products and American Express gift cards. Everyone who enters a code on the Guiltless Gourmet site by September 30th will also be registered for a shot at the Grand Prize: three nights for the winner and a guest at a five-diamond Las Vegas resort, a $1,500 world class spa package and a fat stack of cash. (BYO chips?)
    Speaking of fat, all Guiltless Gourmet products have 3 grams or less per serving. Please pass the salsa.

  • See reviews of our favorite tortilla chips in our Snacks Section.
  • See reviews of our favorite salsas to go with them.
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    GOURMET TRAVEL: Beaujolais Wine Tourist Route

    If you love a glass of red and aren’t limited to a stay-cation these days, Inter Beaujolais and Destination Beaujolais have developed the first-ever Beaujolais wine tourist route to help you explore France’s Beaujolais region. Discover the “real” Beaujolais—it bears little resemblance to the fresh juice that is Beaujolais Nouveau. You can even start your wine-cation in Burgundy, to the north; then pick up the Beaujolais route where the Burgundy wine route leaves off. Crossing through 36 villages, you can hit all the “must-see” destinations of Beaujolais: the 12 appellations including Beaujolais, Beaujolais-Villages and the 10 Cru.

    Imagine yourself in Beaujeu, the historical capital of Beaujolais in the heart of the Beaujolais “crus” region. Traveling on to the village of Vaux-en-Beaujolais (a.k.a. Clochemerle), past the Romanesque cloisters of Salles-Arbuissonas and Villefranche-Sur-Saône—the economic capital of Beaujolais. Visit the “land of golden stones,” le Pays des Pierres Dorées, where you’ll find the village Oingt, which has been called the most beautiful village in France. Your Beaujolais tour ends in the gastronomic capital of Lyon—France’s second-largest metropolitan area, which is older than Paris, has more Roman ruins and a host of 1-, 2- and 3-star Michelin restaurants,including the 3-star Paul Bocuse.

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    Start at the top of Beaujolais and taste your way down to the restaurant capital of Lyons.

    You can download a copy of the guidebook from www.beaujolais.com. Please, take us with you!

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