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


Also visit our main website, TheNibble.com.





RECIPE: Pumpkin Milkshakes For Adults

Pumpkin Milkshake
It may look innocent, but there’s 1/4 cup bourbon in it (photo courtesy Broma Bakery).

 

Thanks to Sarah Fennel at Broma Bakery for this seasonal snack.

Before you dig in, check out the history of milkshakes—originally alcoholic drinks!

Sarah restores the alcohol by adding bourbon to the shake.

Prep time is 10 minutes.

RECIPE: PUMPKIN MILKSHAKE

Ingredients For 2 Milkshakes

  • ¼ cup caramel sauce, warmed
  • ½ cup graham cracker crumbs
  • 1 pint vanilla ice cream
  • 6 tablespoons pumpkin purée
  • ½ teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 3 tablespoons milk
  • ¼ cup bourbon
  • Optional: straws
  •  
    Preparation

    1. RIM the glasses. Place the graham cracker crumbs on a plate. Dip the rims of the glasses 1/4 inch into a saucer of water, then dip the wet rim into the crumbs and twist to coat.

    2. DRIZZLE the warm caramel sauce up and down the insides of the glasses. Set aside.

    3. COMBINE the remainder of the ingredients in a blender. Blend on high until fully combined. Pour into serving glasses and serve immediately.
      

    Comments off

    FOOD FUN: Good & Plenty

    October 24th is National Good & Plenty Day, celebrating the oldest branded candy in the U.S.

    It’s an American version of the licorice pastilles that have been made in Europe for hundreds of years.

    Good & Plenty candies are narrow capsule shapes of sweet black licorice, coated in both bright pink and white hard candy shells (both colors taste the same).
     
    GOOD & PLENTY HISTORY

    The licorice candies were first produced by the Quaker City Confectionery Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1893 (the brand is now owned by Hershey Foods, after changing ownership multiple times).

    The box and its contents have a percussive quality. Since there’s a lot of air space in the box (it’s perhaps half full), shaking the box creates a cadence that’s fun. It’s fun, also led to the kids’ slogan disparaging the low fill:

    Good & Plenty,
    Hardly Any!

    Evidently, Good & Plenty executives or their advertising agency also noticed the percussive quality, which sounded like the chug-a-chug produced by the pushrods that linked the wheels on older trains.

    More than 50 years after the candy was introduced, the brand developed a cartoon character, Choo Choo Charlie, an engineer on a steam locomotive.

    Charlie shook the box to make the sound, with this jingle (to the tune of a popular folk song, “The Ballad of Casey Jones”):

    Once upon a time there was an engineer
    Choo Choo Charlie was his name, we hear.
    He had an engine and he sure had fun
    He used Good & Plenty candy to make his train run.
    Charlie says “Love my Good & Plenty!”
    Charlie says “Really rings my bell!”
    Charlie says “Love my Good & Plenty!”
    Don’t know any other candy that I love so well!

    The brand has extended to Good & Fruity, in blue raspberry, cherry, lemon, lime and orange, with colored candy shells to match.

    Try either variety as a cupcake garnish, or on top of ice cream or sorbet.

      Good & Plenty Box
    [1] What kids know: Shake the box for a chugga-chugga sound (photo courtesy Candy Warehouse)

    Good & Plenty Bowl
    [2] The pink and white capsules may look delicate, but they pack a licorice punch (photo courtesy Hershey’s).

    Good & Plenty Interior

    [3] The licorice core (photo courtesy Hershey’s).

     

      

    Comments off

    RECIPE: Mutant Mary Cocktail, A Halloween Bloody Mary


    [1] The Bloody Mary becomes a Mutant Mary with eyeball ice cubes (photo courtesy Elegant Affairs Caterers).

    Pimento Stuffed Olives
    [2] For Halloween, Andrea replaces the red “eyeball pupil” with a black one (photo courtesy Recipeland).

      Counting down to Halloween, we received this cocktail recipe from Andrea Correale of Elegant Affairs Caterers.

    Just add eyeball ice cubes to a Bloody Mary in a rocks glass (photo #1).

    To make the optics more Halloween-y, Andrea replaces the red pimento centers in stuffed olives (photo #2) with black olives. But if you prefer the look of the red, you can save yourself the step.

    You can also take pitted black olives and add red pimento pupils—perhaps even spookier!

    NOTE: A traditional rocks/Old Fashioned glass holds 6–8 ounces total, whereas a highball/Collins glass can hold 12–14 ounces.
     
     
    RECIPE: MUTANT MARY, A HALLOWEEN BLOODY MARY

    Ingredients Per Drink/Rocks Glass

  • 3 eyeball ice cubes
  • 2 ounces vodka
  • 4 ounces Bloody Mary mix
  •  
    Plus

  • 1 jar stuffed green olives
  • 1 jar black olives
  •  
    For The Bloody Mary Mix (Per Drink)

    You can, of course, use a commercial Bloody Mary mix.

  • 1/2 cup tomato juice
  • 1/2 teaspoon horseradish or to taste
  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 4 dashes hot sauce
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice, fresh squeezed
  • Black pepper and celery salt to taste
  •  
    Preparation

    1. FREEZE ice cubes in a tray. While the ice freezes, remove the green olives from the jar and replace the red pimento pieces with black olive slices. When the cubes are slushy, insert the eyeball, with the pupil face up.

    2. MAKE the Bloody Mary mix; add the vodka and chill.

    3. ASSEMBLE: Place the ice cubes in the glass, top with Bloody Mary mix and serve.
      

    Comments off

    HALLOWEEN & THANKSGIVING: Pumpkin Fudge Recipe

    Here’s an easy recipe for family, party favors and other gifting, developed by Deborah of Taste And Tell Blog.

    “This Pumpkin Fudge is seriously super simple,” she says, “No candy thermometer, no special equipment.”

    And, it’s done in 22 minutes: Prep time is 10 minutes, cook time is 12 minutes.

    You can serve the fudge plain, but we have some suggestions for holiday-themed garnishes:

    HALLOWEEN GARNISHES

  • Bat confetti
  • Bloody bone sprinkles
  • Candy skulls
  • Ghost sprinkles
  • Halloween sprinkles
  • Mini eyeball candy
  •  
    If you’re wary of fudge because it has “too much sugar,” the solution is simple: Cut the squares to half the size. You don’t really need a two-inch square: a one-inch square is fine. We even cut them into half-inch squares and served one or two pieces on the saucer of an espresso or coffee cup.

    You can also thread the fudge squares on fruit skewers.
     
    THANKSGIVING GARNISHES

  • Edible gold pearl dust
  • Fall leaves sprinkles
  • Round fall color confetti
  •  
    EITHER HOLIDAY

  • Candy corn
  • Jelly pumpkins
  • Pumpkin spice sprinkles
  • Seasonal sprinkles
  •  
    RECIPE: PUMPKIN FUDGE

    Ingredients For 48 Pieces

  • 1½ cups sugar
  • 2/3 cup evaporated milk
  • ½ cup pumpkin purée (not pumpkin pie filling)
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
  • 12 ounces white chocolate chips
  • 2 cups miniature marshmallows
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  •   Pumpkin Fudge
    [1] Cut pumpkin fudge into small squares for a holiday treat (recipe and photo courtesy Taste And Tell Blog).

    Wilton Pumpkin Sprinkles
    [2] Seasonal-colored sprinkles work for either holiday (photo courtesy Wilton).

    [3] Fall leaves edible confetti (photo courtesy Creative Converting).

     
    Preparation

    1. LINE an 8 x 8-inch baking pan with foil and spray with nonstick cooking spray.

    2. COMBINE the sugar, evaporated milk, pumpkin, butter, salt and pumpkin pie spice in a medium saucepan. Heat over medium to a boil; allow the mixture to boil for 12 minutes, stirring often.

    3. REMOVE from the heat and stir in the white chocolate chips and marshmallows. Stir in the vanilla.

    4. POUR into the baking pan and chill until set. Cut into squares.

    5. TO STORE: Layer the pieces on wax paper, then place in an airtight container. A sealable plastic bag works as an airtight container, but to keep it horizontal and flat, place a piece of cardboard on the bottom.
      

    Comments off

    TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: Farmer’s Pantry Cornbread Crisps … & More

    Farmer’s Pantry Cornbread Crisps
    [1] Cornbread Crisps are great for soups, salads and snacks (photos courtesy Farmer’s Pantry).

    Farmer’s Pantry Cornbread Crisp
    [2] In original plus three flavors, it’s our new favorite snack cracker (photo courtesy Beaches And Brie).

    Pompeian Olive Oil
    [3] In original plus three flavors, it’s our new favorite snack cracker (photo courtesy Pompeian).

    Pompeian Organic Olive Oil
    [4] In original plus three flavors, it’s our new favorite snack cracker (photo courtesy Pompeian).

     

    1. FARMER’S PANTRY CORNBREAD CRISPS

    Farmer’s Pantry, a snack brand that launched last year, has generated feelings of snack-love in our home and office.

    Farmer’s Pantry Cornbread Crisps are the first cornbread cracker snack to hit the market—and if that doesn’t sound exciting, let us restate:

    The crisps are like cornbread in a crunchy chip.

    Our bona fides: We love cornbread, we can’t get enough cornbread, when we have extra time, we bake cornbread. Ditto for corn muffins.

    So after a few chips, when the cornmeal flavor and texture had titillated our taste buds, we:

  • Headed to Amazon to order more.
  • Prayed to the supermarket gods that Cornbread Crisps will get lots of distribution, so everyone can grab a bag (and thus keep this wonderful product in production).
  •  
    There are three flavors, equally worthy of your attention:

  • Original
  • Honey Butter
  • Jalapeño
  •  
    The chips are all-natural and certified kosher (OU).

    They crisps are available in 6-ounce bags of regular size crisps and 2-ounce bags of bite-sized crisps—although the regular size are bite-size enough for us.
     
    We enjoy them:

  • Snacking from the bag.
  • As croutons on salads.
  • With soups.
  • With dips.
  •  
    Another fan turned them into cornbread stuffing, and inspired us to make a savory pie crust.

    About the company:

    Farmer’s Pantry gives back to American farmers, and is a proud sponsor of the National FFA Organization (formerly Future Farmers Of America), supporting students interested in a future in agriculture.

    Look at your local food markets or do what we did: race to buy them online so you won’t be without for long.

    See more at FarmersPantry.farm.
     
     
    2. POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL

    Recently we were treated to an olive oil tasting led by Dr. Luisito Cercaci, one of the most experienced olive oil scientists in the world. Our team was guided through the professional olive oil tasting technique used by official grading panels.

    Luisito is Pompeian’s Vice President of Quality and Research & Development, following decades of work at the Department of the Food Quality Authority of the Italian Ministry of Agriculture, and other Italian food quality authorities.

    Some of us were already users of Pompeian olive oils, but pretty soon into the tasting, all of us became converts.

    How good is it? We drink two tablespoons of heart-healthy olive oil daily (the FDA’s suggestion). We’d been drinking pricey olive oil from a variety of California artisan producers.

     
    The quality of Pompeian is so good—and at a fraction of the cost of the olive oils we’d been using—that the day was a win-win overall.

    Not to mention, we’ve also converted to Pompeian Extra Virgin Olive Oil for salads, and are using the Classic Pure Olive Oil for cooking.

    There’s a Pompeian Olive Oil for every palate and every purpose:

  • Robust Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Smooth Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Classic Pure Olive Oil
  • Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil
  •  
    You’ll no doubt find the line of Pompeian oils at your local markets. Buy them and taste the quality for yourself.

    Discover more at Pompeian.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.