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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.
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.
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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.
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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.
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