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


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NEW PRODUCT: Starbucks Thanksgiving Blend Pairs Perfectly With Your Turkey Dinner

Here’s a timely hostess gift to pick up for Thanksgiving…or the perfect coffee to add to your own menu. Starbucks Thanksgiving Blend is a bold blend of beans created to pair perfectly with the flavors of the Thanksgiving meal. Starbucks coffee experts worked with Seattle chef Tom Douglas, 2008 Bon Appétit Restauranteur of the Year, to select full-bodied Sumatra beans with their hint of fine herbs, and combined them with Guatemalan beans from the famed coffee-growing region of Antigua, which add subtle spice and cocoa notes. The result is a coffee that pairs beautifully with both sweet and savory foods—from the sage-rubbed turkey and herbed stuffing and green beans to spicy pumpkin pie, sweet potato pie, cheesecake, gingerbread and the cheese course. We couldn’t wait for Thanksgiving: We’ve enjoyed half a bag already!  
Douglas, whose restaurants include Dahlia Lounge, Etta’s, Lola, Palace Kitchen and Serious Pie (plus catering venues and a bakery), whipped up an early Thanksgiving dinner at his Palace Kitchen restaurant, trying different coffees with turkey in a sage and sweet onion gravy. The herbs in the turkey brought out the herbalness in the Sumatran beans, and a more acidic coffee was used to break the fattiness of the gravy. (Pairing coffee with food really is a science!) Thanksgiving Blend is the house coffee at all his restaurants throughout November.

The coffee, in one-pound bags, is $10.95. While this is the first year for Thanksgiving Blend, Christmas Blend, which has been popular for 20 years (and is based on aged Indonesian coffee beans), will be available beginning November 28th.

-Demystify coffee in our glossary of coffee terms.
-Learn about the aromas and flavors of coffee.
-Check out the tricks for making good coffee.
-Explore the history of coffee.
-Take our coffee trivia quiz.

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RECIPE: Turkey, Puerto Rico Style

Still not sure about how to prepare the Thanksgiving bird? While the Pilgrims didn’t get anywhere near the Caribbean, it doesn’t mean you can’t groove to Roasted Turkey with Puerto Rican Flavors, courtesy of Chef Patricia Wilson of Johnson & Wales University and Restaurants & Institutions magazine.

TURKEY

Ingredients

-1/4 cup olive oil
-1 teaspoon achiote seeds
-6 cloves garlic, minced
-1 tablespoon powdered cumin
-2 tablespoons sea salt
-2 tablespoons black pepper
-1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
-14-pound whole turkey, fresh or froze/thawed
-Ripe plantain stuffing (recipe follows)

Preparation

1. Gently heat olive oil and add achiote seeds. Steep for 10 minutes and allow oil to turn a bright red/orange color. (Do not fry seeds or the oil will become bitter.) Strain.
2. Mix garlic with spices. Stir in achiote oil until it forms a paste.
3. Pat turkey dry with paper towels. Rub turkey with a thin layer of the spice rub. Cover and marinate turkey in the refrigerator for about 10-15 hours.
4. Loosely fill turkey cavity with the plantain stuffing. Fold turkey wings under the back of the turkey and return legs to the tucked position. Place turkey on rack, and set in large shallow roasting pan. Roast turkey in a 325°F oven, basting occasionally with pan drippings. Roast for approximately 3-1/2 to 4 hours or until the internal temperature of the turkey reaches 180°F in the thigh and the stuffing reaches 165°F.
5. Loosely tent the turkey with foil and allow turkey to rest for about 15-20 minutes prior to carving.
6. Place on a platter and garnish with chili peppers and orange slices.
Yield: 12 servings

RIPE PLANTAIN STUFFING

Ingredients

-1/2 cup golden raisins
-1/4 cup gold rum
-10 plantains, very ripe
-8 ounces unsalted butter
-1/2 cup water
-Sugar to taste
-1 cinnamon stick

Preparation

1. Plump raisins in rum.
2. Peel and cube the plantains. Melt butter in a skillet and sauté plantains.
3. Add water, sugar and cinnamon stick. Cook until the plantains are soft, about 25 minutes. Add rum and raisins and cook for 10 more minutes.
4. Slightly mash plantains. Let cool.

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RECIPE: Pumpkin Mousse

Don’t want a traditional pumpkin pie for dessert this Thanksgiving? Try our glamorous pumpkin mousse recipe.

Other pumpkin recipe favorites:

Bourbon Pecan Pumpkin Pie
Cranberry Pumpkin Crumble Cheesecake
Pumpkin Cheesecake
Pumpkin & Habañero Cheddar Soufflés
Pumpkin Cocktail

And these Top Picks Of The Week:

Rossi’s Pumpkin Fettuccini
SuperSeedz Flavored Pumpkin Seeds
Buffalo Bill’s Pumpkin Ale


Pumpkin mousse combines the best of both
worlds: the flavor of spiced pumpkin pie with
elegant, creamy mousse.
FOOD FACTS: The Big Pumpkin

The pumpkin is a winter squash, like acorn squash and butternut squash. Winter squash have hard, thick rinds that enable them to stay fresh for up to three months when stored in a cool, dark place. Summer squash are thin-skinned and bruise easily (think zucchini); they contain more water than winter squash. These days, winter squash and summer squash varieties are available year-round.

Take a gander at our Squash Glossary, THE NIBBLE’s most popular article (and out of thousands of articles on TheNibble.com, that’s a feat!).

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CONTEST: Peanut Butter Holiday Recipe Contest

Do you have a favorite holiday recipe that includes peanut butter? Then Peanut Butter & Co. invites you to enter their contest. They’re looking for great eats for the table: appetizers, main courses, sides, desserts–you name it. Have a crazy idea for a Peanut Butter Roast Chicken? Let’s see it! Secretly plotting a Peanut Butter Fondue? Let us know. At least 1/4 cup of peanut butter must be in the recipe. More information can be found here.

While you’re at it, try their new Mighty Maple peanut butter (blended with real maple syrup) with bacon on whole grain or white toast. Garnish with some apple slices. Buy $30 worth of PB&C products online, and you’ll receive a free jar of Mighty Maple peanut butter. Enter coupon code MM888 in the “Coupon Code” field located in the online basket (reachable by clicking the “My Shopping Cart” link in the upper-right hand side at the company website, ilovepeanutbutter.com). The offer ends November 30, 2008.

-Find more of our favorite PBs in THE NIBBLE’s Jams & Nut Butters Section.
-Read the history of peanut butter.
-Take our peanut butter trivia quiz.

Cooking With Peanut Butter

-This peanut soup recipe is a great first course for Thanksgiving.
-Try this award-winning Peanut Butter & Jelly Ravioli recipe from NIBBLE writer Marissa Goldberg, plus other award-winning peanut butter recipes.
-Make this easy Peanut Butter Fudge recipe for holiday gifts.
-Make a peanut butter pound cake.
-Make some peanut butter banana bread.

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ENTERTAINING: Have A Hard Cider Party

Fall is apple cider season. While in the U.S. and parts of Canada, the term “apple cider” is interchangeable with apple juice, in Europe a glass of cider is not kid stuff: It’s an alcoholic drink that many prefer to beer. Usually made from fermented apple juice (although pears can be used—pear cider is known as perry in the U.K.), the juice ferments for eight weeks after the apples are pressed. The cider then matures or several months, is blended, filtered and carbonated. The result is a drink with the carbonation and alcohol of beer and the flavor of apples. As with beer, each brand has a distinct flavor profile and alcoholic content, generally from 3% ABV (alcohol by volume) or less to 8.5% or more.

In the U.S., alcoholic cider is called hard cider, and it’s becoming more popular. Like wine, it has a relatively high concentration of antioxidants—but enjoy it for the crisp, refreshing taste!

 
-Hard cider is best served chilled or over ice.
-Cider is naturally gluten-free.
-Cider is less filling than beer.
-The apple flavor is all-natural (as opposed to artificially-flavored malt beverages).

Gather up as many brands as you can, and invite friends over for a hard cider tasting. You can serve hard cider with any snack or food you’d serve with beer, but the sweetness of cider allows you to serve desserts with it, too, especially apple desserts (pie, crumble, bread pudding). For snacks, hearty cheeses and charcuterie; for main courses, pork, chicken and sausages, soups, stews, fondue. In fact, you can substitute hard cider for wine in most recipes and drink the cider along with the meal.

You’ll find hard ciders from the U.S., England, and Magners Irish Cider, the only hard cider imported from Ireland (and made from 17 varieties of apples). It has 4.5% alcohol and only 215 calories per pint bottle. You can learn more about Cider production at Magners.com.

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