Dana McCauley's food blog

Updated:
2009-11-25 20:44
Published:
2007-10-01 00:00
By 
Homemakers

Week of Jan. 14 entries

Friday, January 18

Have a stew-pendous weekend!

 


There's something wonderfully comforting about the aroma of a simmering pot of stew on the stove. Beyond the soothing psychological benefits of stewing, simmered dishes can be a lifesaver for busy people since they require very little last minute preparation, often use pantry staples and can be reheated when you need them most.

Almost every culture has a repertoire of stews and, no matter what these recipes contain, almost all of them follow the same blueprint for success. Visit www.toptentable for a basic stew recipe that epitomizes the classic stewing method as well as for a few of my other recipes you can try this weekend and freeze for later.)

Ready to give stewing a try? Use these tips to make your next stewing effort a delicious success:
1. Choose less tender cuts of beef such as shoulder, rump, sirloin tip, inside round or chuck.

2. Meat for stewing needs to be well-trimmed of gristle and fat before it's cut into evenly sized cubes no larger than 2-in (5-cm).

3. Puréed vegetables such as potato, tomato or celeriac can be added to the stew for thickness and to add nutrients and fibre.

4. You need enough liquid to cover the meat entirely but not so much that the meat is lost in the pan.

5. Pan juices should be thick and full-bodied in a good stew. If the meat becomes tender before this happens. Strain off some of the juices, thicken with a little extra flour and cook in a separate saucepan, stirring, until mixture comes to a boil and thickens. Reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes. Return to stewing pan.


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Thursday, January 17

Are men cooking more or less nowadays?

 


As frequent readers of this blog have likely gleaned, I watch a lot of TV. Although I try to justify it as part of my job, (once a food or food trend makes its way into pop culture I need to know about it, right?) the truth is, I just like sitting around.

Last week I was watching the pilot of Cashmere Mafia and I was struck not only by how boring it was, but by how the men were portrayed as the castrated, compromised subordinates to the hyper successful female main characters.

A little later that same evening I saw a preview for a show I don't watch called Big Shots. It featured a vaguely familiar, very dishy actor having a revelation: “We're the new women,” he bemoaned to his equally dishy friends. All characters looked crestfallen. I guess the idea of cooking on a daily basis isn't every man's idea of bliss!

Both of these shows (which are presumably written for women viewers) underlined an interesting point. Although droves of women work and have busy lives, the number of men who cook dinner daily has increased only by a small amount. Yes, statistics show that more men are cooking but they aren't necessarily doing more weeknight meal preparation. From the research I've read, moms are still doing the day-to-day cooking while dads and single men are sauntering into the kitchen in their spare time to experiment with recipes for yeast breads, fresh pasta or slow-cooked roasts.

Men treat cooking like their other traditional hobbies such as carpentry and landscaping, spending considerably more on appliances, ingredients and tools than a woman typically spends. Bottom line: Men aren't the new women. They're just men who've discovered another room where they can relax.

A is your ninth and final letter for the mystery word. Go on, unscramble that word and enter it in the Homemakers Slow Cooker Mystery Word Contest. You have until midnight on March 3, 2008 to figure it out and enter to win a Hamilton Beach slow cooker plus a copy of my cookbook, Dana's Top Ten Table (HarperCollins, 2007). Good luck!


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Wednesday, January 16

The ultimate comfort food

 


Moms have been pleasing their families by making scratch mac and cheese for decades. And since the late 1930s when Kraft first started making packaged macaroni and cheese, many moms have served make-do versions on busy nights when they lacked the necessary time to make the real thing. With generations of us having grown up eating these cheesy pots of noodles, macaroni and cheese has become if not the singular dish that epitomizes comfort food, one of the top 10.

I think my version is one of the best -- B is your mystery letterfor today. Not only is it supremely cheesy and smooth, but this mac and cheese can be customized to suit your own definition of macaroni and cheese. For those who grew up on the packaged stuff, it can be served creamy and slightly fluid from the cooking pot. And, for those who crave the old school, Mom's kitchen variety, this version can be topped with buttery crumbs and baked until the sauce penetrates the noodles and a golden crust forms. Either way, this mac and cheese is sublimely delicious and iconically orange!

For more classic and inspiring pasta recipes, check out Ruth Daniel's Presto Pasta Night, a Friday feature in her Once Upon a Feast Blog.

Double Cheddar Mac and Cheese

Preparation time: 5 minutes
Cooking time: 15 minutes

3 cups (750 mL) dry macaroni noodles
2 tbsp (30 mL) butter
1/4 cup (50 mL) very finely chopped or coarsely grated onion
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 tsp (2 m L) pepper
1/2 tsp (1 mL) nutmeg
1 tbsp (15 mL) all-purpose flour
1-1/2 cups (375 mL) milk
1 pkg (250 g) cold pack Cheddar cheese
1 cup (250 mL) shredded aged Cheddar cheese

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil Add the macaroni and cook according to package directions. Drain well.

Meanwhile, melt the butter in a deep skillet set over medium heat. Add the onion and cook, stirring often, for 5 minutes. Stir in the garlic, pepper and nutmeg. Sprinkle the flour evenly over the onion mixture and blend well. Add a splash of the milk and blend until smooth.

Gradually add remaining milk, stirring constantly. Bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to low and simmer, stirring frequently, for 5 minutes. Break up the cold pack cheese and add it a little at a time to the milk mixture until completely incorporated. Gradually add the grated cheese, stirring well between additions. When all the cheese is incorporated into the sauce, remove pan from heat.

Blend the macaroni into the sauce mixture, stirring until evenly coated. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

Variation: For baked Mac & Cheese, transfer the macaroni mixture to to a buttered 8-cup (2L) casserole dish. Preheat the oven to 400F (200C). Toss 1 cup (250 mL) fresh bread crumbs with 2 tbsp (30 mL) each melted butter and chopped fresh parsley. Sprinkle the crumb mixture evenly over the casserole. Place in the oven and bake for 10 minutes or until bubbly and browned.

Cook once, eat twice: Double this recipe and freeze one half as a casserole for another time. Thaw in the refrigerator overnight before baking, covered in foil, for about 40 minutes or until heated through. Broil until browned on top.

Text and recipe excerpted from Dana's Top Ten Table: 200 Fresh Takes on Family-Favorite Meals. Published by HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. Copyright (c) 2007 by Dana McCauley. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.


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Tuesday, January 15

Knife shopping: size matters

 


Pictured above, from left: carving knife, chef's knife, serrated knife, boning knife, paring knife

I'm not the only one who has said that a good kitchen knife should be an extension of your hand. Likewise, in the same way that your hand only needs five fingers, a well-outfitted kitchen needs no more than five types of knife. To take the analogy even farther, you'll likely use two of your knives more often than you use the other three -- much the same way most people use their thumb and forefinger more than the other three digits.

1. The Thumb -- Chef's Knife: If you buy just one knife, this is the one to get. Also called a chopping knife, this style of knife has a heavy wide blade that tapers down to a thin point. Its shape makes it ideal for chopping vegetables, herbs and other ingredients. The side of a chef's knife is often used to flatten thinly sliced meats or to crush garlic cloves.

Although Cosmopolitan magazine may beg to differ, size really doesn't matter -- when it comes to chef's knives at least. If you feel uneasy brandishing a 10-inch (25 cm) chef's knife, try an 8-inch (20 cm) or even a 6-inch (15 cm) blade instead. Good knives of any size are made in proportion and most home cooks will be able to chop as much and as fast with any blade size if they use proper technique.

2. The Forefinger -- Paring Knife: A small knife for trimming and peeling vegetables and fruit is a kitchen essential you'll use many times a day. Some paring knives (called turning knives by professional cooks) have curved blades but most have straight blades from 2-inches (5 cm) to 4-inches (10 cm) long.

3. The Middle Finger -- Carving Knife: These knives with long, slender blades are excellent for cutting even slices from large pieces of cooked meat; however, carving knives aren't very useful for chopping since the thin, light weight blade doesn't facilitate the rocking action necessary for efficient chopping.

4. Ring Finger -- Serrated Knife: A is your mystery lettertoday and a large serrated knife is ideal for slicing breads, pastries, citrus and tomatoes. A serrated knife has an edge that is uneven and rippled on the side; its sharpness usually lasts indefinitely but serrated knives can be sharpened professionally if they become dull.

The Pinkie - Boning Knife: these elegant, thin blades are usually about 6-inches (15 cm) long and may be flexible or rigid. Since the tip of the knife is used most, a fine point is essential. When skinning fish or removing the fell from meat, the entire blade of the knife may be used (which is why a flexible blade can be desirable). Since most home cooks buy meat that is already clean and off the bone, this knife -- like your pinky -- is mostly for show in most home kitchens.


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Monday, January 14

Warm the house: Bake!

 


Although research shows that many people deem cooking a chore, baking falls into another category entirely. Since it isn't a necessary day-to-day task, it's viewed as a hobby. Canadians report that baking is a favourite wintertime activity (I once read that flour sales spike in January -- J is your mystery letter for today). While January days are often too harshly cold to enjoy outdoor activities, the bulky sweaters you wear at this time of year hide excess cookie pounds well.

I learned to bake from my grandmother, Mary Badiuk. She was a self-taught, wonderful baker. She didn't use written recipes and her tools were humble -- a faded flower-patterned teacup with a broken lug for measuring flour, a worn silver teaspoon for measuring pretty much everything else. Because Mary knew what the dough or batter was supposed to look and feel like, it wasn't important for her to use proper baking cups and spoons or even written recipes.

Hers was a large prairie farm family so, daily, she baked bread for sandwiches, pies and cakes for lunch and dinner, dessert, and then cookies or squares for evening snack time.

Today, very few of us scratch bake everyday so we don't develop my grandmother's intuitive baking skills. In fact, after telling her story, I feel like I should add the proviso: Don't try this at home!

For most of us, taking the time to measure exactly is essential to guarantee good results both when cooking and baking. So, to help you to get the best out of your baking efforts, check out my test kitchen tips:

-Read the recipe all the way through before beginning to ensure you have everything you'll need. Baked goods depend on specific chemical reactions to succeed so you need to use the exact amounts and the specific ingredients called for in the recipe.

-Measure dry ingredients such as flour and sugar into spoutless measuring cups by scooping the ingredient into the cup and then levelling it off with the flat edge of a knife. Don't shake or tap the measure on the counter to even out the ingredients.

-Always preheat the oven until it reaches the required temperature before adding filled pans.

-Make sure your oven temperature is accurate -- it's a good idea to invest in an inexpensive oven thermometer to double check even if your oven is new.

-Don't sift flour or cocoa unless specified in the recipe. Also, do not substitute an equal amount of one type of flour for another. Every type of flour has a unique gluten (protein) content, which will affect the texture of the finished baked goods.

-Pack brown sugar lightly into a dry measuring cup.

-Remember when reading recipes that a baking pan is metal while a baking dish is glass. Substitutions in baking pans can affect results and change baking times.


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Week of Jan. 7 entries

Friday, January 11

The joy of grilled cheese

 

If you aren't dieting, the cold, crisp days of January are the perfect time of year to enjoy one of my favorite childhood lunch combinations: cream of tomato soup and grilled cheese. Although I've developed many recipes for tomato soup over the years, I'm always content with Campbell's condensed cream of tomato soup (in fact, the Soup-at-Hand version of that soup is always on reserve in my office in case of soup-related emergencies). I'm more particular about grilled cheese sandwiches though.

My grilled cheese doesn't have to be fancy but it must be made with real Cheddar and real butter and the bread, if white, has to be crusty and fresh. That said, I usually use whole grain sandwich bread at lunchtime. By the way, A is today's mystery letter but let's get back to grilled cheese, shall we? Over the holidays, I sliced a baguette into thin disks and made appetizer-sized grilled cheeses for the kids who attended our Christmas Eve soiree and these two-bite sandwiches were a hit with kids of all ages!

When making a grilled cheese sandwich, please remember that slow and easy wins the race; you can't rush a good grilled cheese. My preferred method is to keep the heat under a heavy bottomed skillet medium so that the inside of the sandwich becomes molten and the outside doesn't go beyond golden. If using a panini press, leave a cheese-free border around the edge so that the melted cheese doesn't ooze out and burn.

I've made grilled cheese sandwiches with sliced cheese and with shredded. You can get good results with either but I've found that for most home cooks, it's easier to shred the cheese than to slice it evenly.

Although I always dip my grilled cheese sandwich in ketchup (the soup isn't tangy enough for me), I can acknowledge that there are other good condiment options such as sun dried tomato pesto, branston pickle and Bengal chutney that can be spread right inside the sandwich before grilling to make a very tasty lunch!


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Thursday, January 10

Grilling year-round

 

Statistics reveal that many Canadians now use their grills year round. I wouldn't be surprised if part of this interest in winter grilling is that low-fat foods taste great when they're cooked over a flame.

Although the basic principles of grilling apply in every season, there are a few safety considerations that are unique to winter grilling that are important to keep in mind.

At our test kitchen we're always working out of season. That means that we develop turkey recipes all summer for winter publications and then grill all through February for summer magazine articles. (In the picture above that's recipe tester Rob Heidenreich and test kitchen manager Sabrina Falone's arm cooking up summer recipes last week).

After years of shoveling snow off the patio to spend the day grilling, we've become savvy and safe cold-weather grillers. Here are our tips for cold-weather grilling success:

1. Gas grills with higher BTU ratings heat up quickly even when it's very cold so if you're purchasing a gas grill and know that you want to use it in cold weather, opt for a unit with a BTU rating per square inch that is higher than 125.

2. If you haven't used the grill recently, check all gas lines, burners and jets for possible blockages. Insects such as spiders may pick these places to build cocoons for the winter and their homes will prevent fuel from flowing freely to the burners.

3. Avoid wearing scarves or wide-sleeved jackets that may dangle into the flames and catch fire. Instead, opt for snugly fitted sleeves and a turtleneck sweater or a fleecy neck warmer.

4. Although the garage may seem like a wind-sheltered, inviting spot to grill, the comfort is not worth the safety risk. Instead, set up the grill at least 10 feet away from the house to avoid the risk of a fire or an explosion that can result when grill flames and stray vapours from the gas furnace, water heater or the lawn mower's fuel tank meet one another in an enclosed space.

5. If necessary, brush off all snow on the grill to speed preheating and shovel the surrounding area to prevent a dangerously slippery skating rink from forming under and around your grill.

6. Position your grill out of the wind to conserve heat.

7. Many metals and almost all plastics get brittle in very cold weather so handle the knobs on the grill gently to avoid snapping them off.

8. To ensure that foods cook evenly and that cooking times aren't unreasonably lengthened in cold weather, make sure the lid of the barbecue is closed during cooking. Peeking too often will allow heat to escape and extends cooking time.

A final word for today's entry: M is your mystery letter for the day.


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Wednesday, January 9

Feel free to insult me

 

There are occasions when an insult is a compliment. For instance, if you (or pretty much anyone) were to call me a “skinny bitch” I'd be flattered and add your name on my list of favorite people.

I'm not the first to recognize this fact. The authors of
Skinny Bitch and Skinny Bitch in the Kitchen correctly recognized this fact and turned their knowledge into a successful book franchise.

What this example proves to me is that our culture has developed a rather strange connection to food. We love it and celebrate it with glossy cookbooks, $100+ restaurant meals and success stories such as the popular shows on Food Network Canada. Then, as evidenced by my blog posts so far this week, we spend just as much energy trying to avoid food and calories so that we can look and feel attractive.

The ultimate expression of this societal quirk was made obvious to me last autumn at the gala for the 2007 Toronto Art Fair. On opening night the convention centre was packed with stylish art lovers. Almost everyone in attendance was dressed fashionably and the group was generally thin and chic. Surprisingly, I found my dieting self (see Monday's post) drooling not over the catered canapés on offer but over many of the paintings. Food was a very prominent theme at this art fair which needed a 300 page catalogue to showcase all the art on display. From the ubiquitous fruit pictures (among the best were 2-foot square canvasses featuring bigger than life apples for $9,000 each) to a minimalist painting of a single sprinkle-topped donut which sold for $12,000, it was obvious that not only do the culinary arts now extend out of the kitchen and into the artist's studio but that there is a lot more money in selling pictures of donuts than the real thing!

You didn't think I'd forget to mention today's mystery letter, did you? I didn't. It's an L.


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Tuesday, January 8

Cooking light for one

 

Late in December Dayna Boyer, the technatrix extraordinaire who magically makes these words and pictures appear on the Internet, passed to me a letter from a dieting reader who needed suggestions for cooking for one.

Anne Cotter's note revealed that she was frustrated that most diet-related cookbooks offered recipes for four and six diners. As a single person, she always had to divide recipes or deal with leftovers --something that she didn't find desirable given her love of variety and lack of fridge and freezer space.

After reading Anne's letter (hey, Anne's first initial, A, is today's mystery letter) I realized how right she was to complain about this feature in diet-style cookbooks. While I was dieting with earnest (see yesterday's post) I was basically preparing food for one. Now that I have only a few pounds left to lose, I am just eating smaller portions of the food I prepare for the rest of the family. And, when I think about most dieters I know, it's seldom that the whole family is eating diet food. More often, only one or two people in the household are dieting.

So, what can lone dieters do? Here are a few suggestions from my experience.

-Stick to very basic entrees such as a grilled skinless, boneless chicken breast, veal or turkey scaloppini sauteed in cooking spray. Finish these meats with small amounts of light cooking sauces, salsa or calorie-reduced salad dressing to add flavour.
-Buy 100-calorie packs of treats so that you can at least snack easily.
-Consult a book such as Going Solo in the Kitchen and use the seasoning proportions in the recipes but make the substitutions necessary to remove calories from fat such as using cooking spray instead of butter or oil and substituting light dairy products for full fat, etc.
-Making single-portion versions of most casseroles is fussy if you eschew batch cooking. So, if making your own freezer entrees isn't desirable, buy frozen or store-prepared, refrigerated light versions of casseroles from a grocery store and save your cooking energies for making faster-to-prepare foods like the ones mentioned above.

Do you have dieter's cooking tips you'd like to share? If so, please share them with us by clicking the Comments link below.


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Monday, January 7

Resolution reinforcement

 


So how are you doing with your New Year's resolutions to get fit and get rid of your gut? It's difficult, isn't it? I truly can sympathize with what you're going through since I recently went through the same nightmare myself.

I planned ahead this year by losing weight before the holidays so that my resolution can be to keep it off. It's so nice to wake up to on Jan. 1 without dieting on your mind. (Here's something else to keep in mind: today's contest mystery letter is Y). I lost almost all of the 20 pounds that were making me sad and ugly. In fact, as I write these words, post Christmas indulging, I have only six more pounds to lose in order to meet my original goal. (That's them in the picture, cleverly disguised as butter).

I lost my weight much more quickly than most experts advise as being ideal for your health. I chose a super aggressive regime (less than 1,000 calories per day, and those calories had to come from low-fat foods and only a few complex carbs) because I knew two things about myself:
1. My resolve might be short-lived.
2. I couldn't avoid professional eating responsibilities and social events indefinitely.

I was lucky that I had a relatively easy-to-manage amount of weight to lose -- if I had many more pounds to lose, there's no way I could have handled the prolonged social isolation and lack of lattes. Realizing that rickets and similar diseases are something even thin people can't wear attractively, I took supplements such as potassium, calcium and vitamin B complex each day while dieting. Long term, I strive to get my nutrients from food sources. These were desperate measures I chose for fast weight loss.

Although I'm happily a loser, I'm not sure what advice I can offer to others who resolve to lose weight and get fit. The strategies that will work for each person are so individual. What I can tell you is that once you set your mind to losing weight, the hard part is over. And, once you start to lose, it gets easier. In fact, it feels freakin' fantastic to put on a pair of slim-fitting pants and feel like you rock them! So, stick to your goals -- you'll be glad when you see results.



Hey there, readers!
Find two of the ultra low fat, ultra low calorie entrees for one I ate often while losing weight at toptentable.com.

Dana


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Week of Jan. 2 entries

Friday, January 4

Q & A with author of 125 Best Entertaining Recipes

 


When I can't get to a trend setting destination myself, I turn to savvy food lovers who can give me the latest info second hand. Julia Aitken, author of 125 Best Entertaining Recipes and a former Homemaker's food editor just like me, is one of my favourite sources. She travels often and brings home great insights. Check out what she had to say about the London food scene when she and I chatted recently:

Dana McCauley: You're a savvy traveller who keeps up with the latest food trends. What surprised you about the restaurants and food stores in London when visited late last year?

Julie Aitken: The quality of the food in London's restaurants astounds me. It's absolutely world-class cuisine and, in the capital at least, the tradition of bad British food no longer applies. There's a huge emphasis on locally produced, organic seasonal food, both in restaurants and supermarkets, and Brits seem to be far more interested in the provenance of what they eat than the average Canadian.

DM: Did you have any rocking chair moments? In other words, did you taste one quintessential dish or food that you'll still be thinking about as you wile away the hours in the old folks home?

JA: I enjoyed so much good food; it's hard to pinpoint one particular meal as being the finest but a lunch at Petersham Nurseries (and, yes, it really is a garden centre!) stands out. Chef Skye Gyngell excels in using seasonal foods in a simple way that makes each flavour shine. An appetizer of roasted Jerusalem artichokes teamed with creamy buffalo mozzarella and aged Parmesan then dressed with a mint-anchovy dressing was pretty as a picture and slap-the-table good.

DM: You mentioned that the grocery stores in the UK were filled with foods that were semi-prepared and ready to be combined and cooked. What foods did you want to smuggle home in your luggage?

JA: I'm amazed anyone cooks in Britain these days. The quality of the ready-prepared food was so high and the selection so broad. The heat-and-serve versions didn't interest me as much as the value-added items in the produce aisles. These included peeled and sliced potato wedges packaged with duck fat and fleur de sel that came complete with roasting instructions. And, there were wonderful trimmed green vegetables, such as asparagus, snow peas and broccoli, in microwaveable trays with herb butter or white wine sauce.

DM: What lesson can the London food scene teach Canadian chefs, grocers and home cooks?

JA: For all the ethnic diversity of Canada's cities, I think Britain's proximity to Europe means the average Brit has access to a much more varied range foods and so perhaps has a more sophisticated palate than their Canadian counterpart. I think we'll catch up eventually but it will take time. Meanwhile, I'd love to see more interesting and imaginative value-added items (like the vegetable dishes described above) in Canadian produce departments. A bag of stir-fry vegetables or cubed squash just doesn't cut it!


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Thursday, January 3

More 2008 food trends

 


Jelly: Whether it's used to make a traditional jellied candy with a new twist (such as the addition of red pepper sauce or sage) or on the cocktail menu as a more sophisticated version of that dorm party stand-by electric jell-o, jellied novelties are that latest foodservice fad. If you didn't see this trend at any of the holiday get-togethers you attended in December, mark my words; caterers will be pushing these cold and jiggly delights as the signature cocktail next holiday season.

Food on Wheels: Street food is becoming the new gourmet playground. In Toronto changing by-laws will soon allow street food offerings to go beyond tube steaks and fries while in L.A. mobile catering trucks that offer premium foods and drinks such as Joes on the Nose and Café Nagomi are zipping around town. In NYC, where diversity in street food is better established, the Vendy Awards annually award the best street food venders and are encouraging street venders to improve their offerings.

Cup Cake Pull-A-Parts: Although cupcakes have been (deservedly) popular for several years, recently cupcake sellers have been arranging their wares in clever configurations and applying frosting so that a cluster of cupcakes look like a one piece cake. These pull-a-part, no-slice cakes are selling well for birthday parties and buffets. Click here for visual examples.

Blended Reality: Expect the line between actual and virtual contact in the shopping experience to blur as more retailers integrate customized video and touch screen communications into their shopping experiences. Likewise ipod and cell phone components such as downloadable recipes and shopping lists are becoming more important in food seller and manufacturer's marketing plans. Check out Captive Channel, a point of purchase TV marketing solution that is catching on quickly with retailers and leading the way to a blended shopping reality.


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Wednesday, January 2

Food trends to watch for in 2008

 


One of the things I love most about the beginning of the New Year is sitting back to take stock of what happened in the last 12 months and then applying that thinking to guess at what might be ahead in the near future.

Over the next three days I'll share my musings about what food trends you'll be seeing more of in the coming year. To start us off, let's look at what's brewing in the healthy eating sector:

Goth Food: According to a number of international sources, the next healthy food trend may be black coloured foods. Becoming increasingly popular in Japan, foods that contain black soybeans, black vinegar, black rice and jet-black nigella seeds are prized because of their anthocyanin content. Anthocyanins are powerful antioxidants that have anti-inflammatory properties and may protect against heart disease and cancer.

Kale: From recipes in consumer magazines and newspaper food sections, to stories in foodservice newsletters, how to use kale was a popular topic of discussion this fall. Expect to see kale move from garnish to side dish more often in 2008.

Caffeine: Beyond products such as super premium priced caffeinated products such as kopi luwak (also called civet coffee), caffeine coated foods (from bagels to potato chips and donuts) continue to be launched. Beyond these stimulating uses for adults, look for more medicinal uses caffeine now that a study linking caffeine supplements with cognitive development in premature babies has gained acceptance.

Licorice: Our team noted black licorice as a prominent flavor in health skewed snacks launched at a number of food shows we attended in 2007. This distinctive flavour was also noted on an increasing number of restaurant menus where chefs have been using it in savoury applications (such as braised short ribs) as well as in desserts.

-December 2007 entries


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