Saturday, January 21, 2012

Five Fave Products of 2011 + bonus recipe

Apparently I am not that adventurous in this category. While I tried lots of new spices, not many new-to-me convenience products made it into my cart last year. These five products are new "pantry staples" in the Stuff kitchen. Let me know in comments - what make-life-easier cooking products have you found lately? 




5. Black salt


Hmm, maybe this is a spice and doesn't belong on this list. But I wanted an excuse to rave about its deliciousness. I bought this on the Indian spice tour with Anupy Singla, and when I got it home I couldn’t remember what I was supposed to do with it. I believe I found its highest calling when I bought my favorite new kitchen gadget of 2011: the Whirley Pop. Black salt makes the best buttered popcorn you’ve ever tasted. Crazy-expensive in the gourmet aisle, so look for this in an Indian market or on Devon Avenue.



4. Flavored, diced canned tomatoes 


I was snooty about this product when I first saw it in the grocery store. I worried that the flavor would be odd or artificial tasting. I was completely wrong – good stuff, great to have on hand to add quick flavor to a dish when you don’t have the time to season and simmer yourself. The ingredients on the label are, yay, all things that sound like food. 


Tomatoes, tomato juice, sugar, salt, dried onion, dried celery
dried bell pepper, calcium choride, citric acid, natural flavors





3. Food in a tube: Garlic 

Like pretty much every one else in the world, I bought jarred minced garlic as soon as it was introduced. I’s not bad stuff, it’s just not fresh garlic. This pureed garlic in a tube has a fresh garlic taste and bite. 








2. Soy Chorizo


I’ve been disappointed often enough (veggie hot dogs: need I say more?) that I don’t experiment much with meat substitutes beyond meatless burgers. But chorizo has such distinctive spices and we like it so much that Tom decided to give this a try. I’ll have an upcoming blog post with more about this piquant, spicy ingredient, but for a quick meal - sauté it with some onion until cooked (maybe 5 min.), then add some beaten eggs. The kids loved it as taco filling.


1. Food in a tube: Basil 

Dried basil is not a bad thing, but it doesn’t taste like fresh basil at all (not even freshly bought from Penzey’s.) This stuff does. I substituted it for basil pesto (along with a hunk of parmesan rind) in minestrone and no one noticed the difference. Love.






Food-in-a-tube Flounder (aka Italian-style Flounder with Garlic and Basil)
2 thin flounder filets (defrost if frozen)
1 roma tomato chopped fine (or diced canned tomatoes, above!)
About 1.5 inches of fresh garlic in a tube
About 1 inch of basil in a tube
About 2 tablespoons lemon juice (fresh if you have it)
1 tablespoon olive or vegetable oil
Salt and pepper to taste


Heat oven to 350. Place filets in a baking dish and cover with the chopped tomato. In a small container, use an immersion blender or whisk to mix together the garlic, basil, lemon juice, and oil. Pour over the fish. Salt and pepper the flounder to taste. Cover and bake 20-30 minutes, depending on thickness of filets, until fish can be easily flaked with a fork.