Minggu, 27 Desember 2009

Hummus Recipe - How to Make Hummus


Learn how to make the best hummus dipping dish. Easy and delicious recipe for middle eastern hummus. This recipe consists of chickpeas, tahini paste, olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, paprika and parsley. This flavorful chickpea (garbanzo bean) and sesame party dip recipe is a nice departure from cream cheese and sour cream based recipes. It's yummy...Enjoy!

Hummus is the Arab word for chickpea, more commonly known in the United States by its Spanish name, ‘garbanzo’ bean. But ‘Hummus’ has become synonymous with the dip, not just the one ingredient.

Ingredients
2 cups canned chickpeas (garbanzo beans), liquid reserved
2/3 cup tahini paste*
5 tablespoons olive oil , divided
1/4 cup lemon juice
3 cloves garlic
Salt and pepper to taste
1 teaspoon paprika
1 tablespoon fresh parsley, chopped (optional)

Preparation
  1. *You can make your own tahini paste in a food processor or blender by grinding toasted sesame seeds. Toast the sesame seeds over medium heat until golden brown, about 3 minutes.
  2. In a food processor, puree the chickpeas, tahini, 3 tablespoons olive oil, lemon juice and garlic until smooth, adding a little of the reserved liquid if the mixture seems too thick; it will be slightly grainy. Season with salt and pepper.
  3. Transfer to a shallow bowl or plate.
  4. Combine the paprika and the remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil, drizzle the mixture over the top, and garnish with chopped parsley, if desired.
  5. Serve with pita bread triangles. Makes about 3 cups.
Save and share Hummus Recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Selasa, 22 Desember 2009

Fried Kibbe Recipe - How to Make Fried Kibbe


Easy and delicious recipe for middle eastern fried kibbe. Learn how to make the best fried kibbe dish. Kibbe is one of the most characteristic foods of Middle eastern cuisine. It is widespread in Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Jordan, Iraq, Turkey, Cyprus (where it is called koupes or koubes), Egypt (where it is called koubeiba), and the Arabian Peninsula. Kibbe is served as an appetizer or side dish.

Preparation time : 30 minutes
Cooking time : 20 minutes

Ingredients
1¾ cups burghul or 350 g, fine
500 g lean minced beef
1 small onion or 100 g, chopped
1 tablespoon fresh mint, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground cumin

For the stuffing:
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 medium onions or 250 g, chopped
½ kg minced lamb
2 cubes MAGGI® Mutton Bouillon, crumbled
½ teaspoon seven spices
3 tablespoons pine seeds, toasted
1 teaspoon dried mint
1 tablespoon pomegranate molasses
2 cups vegetable oil or 440 g, for deep frying

Preparation
  1. Wash burghul and drain then cover and set it aside for 1 hour.
  2. Combine in a mixing bowl the prepared burghul, minced beef, onion, mint, salt and spices. Mince the ingredients 3 times using the meat electric mincer (add some cold water to have soft dough if needed). Cover and set in the fridge.
  3. Heat oil in a pan, add onion and cook until tender. Add the minced lamb and stir until cooked and brown in color. Add the crumbled MAGGI® Mutton Bouillon cubes, Arabic seven spices, pine seeds, dried mint and pomegranate molasses and stir to combine well.
  4. With wet hands, take medium sized pieces of the kibbeh dough mixture, form each portion into an oval shape, making a space in the center by pushing your finger through from one end.
  5. Stuff with some cooked lamb mixture, close by pressing firmly.
  6. Fry the kibbeh in hot deep oil until golden brown.
  7. Serve hot with green salad and fresh yogurt.
Serving tips : This dish can be prepared and freezed up to 6 months, and fried before serving.

Save and share Fried Kibbe Recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Pistachio Baklava Recipe - How to Make Pistachio Baklava


Easy to prepare Middle Eastern Pistachio Baklava Recipe. Learn how to make Pistachio Baklava amazing Middle Eastern treats.

Ingredients

½ cup butter, melted
1 package (16 ounce) phyllo dough, thawed
¾ cup unsalted pistachio nuts, finely chopped
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup honey
2 teaspoons cinnamon
2 teaspoons juice from lemon

Preparation
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 15-in. x 10-in. x 1-in. baking pan.
  2. In a bowl, combine pistachio nuts and butter. Take eight sheets of phyllo dough and layer them in the pan, spreading each sheet with melted butter. Spread about half of the nut mixture over the phyllo dough and cover with a buttered sheet of phyllo dough.
  3. Layer five more sheets of phyllo dough, buttering each sheet. Add remaining nut mixture and layer with remaining sheets of phyllo dough, buttering each sheet.
  4. Using a knife, cut the baklava into 1 ½” diamonds.
  5. Bake for 50 minutes or until golden brown. About 30 minutes before Baklava is finished, combine sugar, honey, cinnamon, and lemon juice for glaze in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil, making sure that the sugar is completely dissolved. Reduce heat and allow the mixture to simmer for five minutes. When Baklava is finished cooking, drizzle syrup over top and let cool.
Try: Easy Recipe for Baklava

Save and share Pistachio Baklava Recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Sabtu, 19 Desember 2009

How to Make Stuffed Cabbage Rolls


Learn how to make easy stuffed cabbage rolls (Malfouf Mehshi,l ملفوف محشي). A cabbage roll (also stuffed cabbage) is a dish consisting of cooked cabbage leaves wrapped around a variety of fillings. The filling is traditionally based around meat, often beef, lamb, rice and is seasoned with garlic, onion and spices. Cabbage leaves are stuffed with the filling which are then baked, simmered or steamed in a covered pot and generally eaten warm. You are invited to try a delicious recipe for stuffed cabbage rolls.

Ingredients

1 1/2 kg (48 oz) cabbage
1 cup short grain rice
400 g (14 oz) minced meat
1/4 cup lemon juice (as desired)
1/4 cup shortening or butter
1/4 cup Seville orange juice
1 tspn salt
a dash of ground paprika
a dash of ground cinnamon
a dash of ground cumin
3 cups water
1 medium head crushed garlic
1/2 tspn dried mint (as desired)
1 tbls pomegranate thickened juice

Preparation
  1. Peel off cabbage leaves. Blanch some leaves in boiling water for few minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon and put in cold water then put in a colander. Repeat same procedure with remaining leaves.
  2. Mix rice with minced meat, spices and salt. Place cabbage leaf, shiny side down, on a work surface. Cut into 2 or 3 pieces (depending on size of leaf).
  3. Place crosswise about a tbls of stuffing (depending on the size of leaf), and fold ends. Roll firmly and repeat procedure with remaining leaves.
  4. Place 1/2 cup of butter in a pot. Pack leaf rolls close together in layers. Invert a heavy plate on top to keep rolls in shape during cooking.
  5. Add to pot lemon juice, Seville orange juice, 3 cups of water, pomegranate juice, garlic, dry mint, and a dash of salt. Bring to a boil on moderate heat. Cover pot. Cook on low heat for 2 hours or until tender (add water if evaporated).
  6. Serve hot accompanied by radishes.
Note: you can add some stuffed zucchini.

Save and share Stuffed Cabbage Rolls Recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Selasa, 15 Desember 2009

Turkish Delight Pistachio - Turkish Delight with Pistachio


Delicious Turkish Delight with Pistachio truffles desserts. Turkish delight is the in-built surprise in these two-toned chocolate-covered gifts. Enjoy preparing this pistachio Turkish delight recipe. If you don't have a trip to Turkey, you can do it at home using your kitchen appliances.

Preparation Time 30 - 460 minutes
Cooking Time 15 minutes
Makes 36

Ingredients
55g (1/3 cup) unsalted pistachio kernels
2 x 180g pkts Nestle Milky Bar, coarsely chopped
125ml (1/2 cup) pouring cream
100g Turkish delight, cut into 1cm pieces
2 tsp finely grated orange rind
1 x 375g pkt white chocolate melts
100g good-quality dark cooking chocolate, coarsely chopped
Pistachio kernels, extra, coarsely chopped, to decorate

Method
  1. Preheat oven to 180°C. Place the pistachio kernels on a baking tray. Bake for 4 minutes or until lightly toasted. Set aside for 5 minutes to cool slightly. Finely chop the pistachio.
  2. Place the Milky Bar and cream in a heatproof bowl over a saucepan half-filled with simmering water (make sure the bowl doesn't touch the water). Stir with a metal spoon until the chocolate melts and mixture is smooth. Set aside for 10-15 minutes to cool.
  3. Add the pistachio, Turkish delight and orange rind to the Milky Bar mixture, and stir until well combined. Place in the fridge for 4 hours or until firm.
  4. Line a baking tray with non-stick baking paper. Roll heaped teaspoonfuls of the truffle mixture into balls and place on the prepared tray. Place in the fridge for 2 hours or until firm.
  5. Meanwhile, place the chocolate melts in a heatproof bowl over a saucepan half-filled with simmering water (make sure the bowl doesn't touch the water). Use a metal spoon to stir occasionally until the chocolate melts and is smooth.
  6. Line 2 baking trays with non-stick baking paper. Use a truffle dipper or fork to dip 1 truffle in the melted chocolate to coat. Remove the truffle, tapping the dipper handle or fork gently on the edge of the bowl to shake off excess chocolate. Place on the prepared tray. Repeat with the remaining truffles and melted chocolate. Set aside for 30 minutes to set.
  7. Place the dark chocolate in a bowl over a saucepan half-filled with simmering water (make sure the bowl doesn't touch the water) and stir with a metal spoon until the chocolate just melts.
  8. Use a teaspoon to drizzle a little of the dark chocolate over each truffle. Top with chopped pistachio to decorate. Place the truffles in the fridge for 20 minutes to set.
Notes & tips
  • To make grating easy, wrap a piece of non-stick baking paper around the grater to stop the orange rind from getting stuck in the holes.
  • Freezing tip: At the end of step 4, place in an airtight container. Label, date and freeze for up to three months. Continue from step 5.
  • These delicate bite-sized beauties need to be wrapped with care, so pop them in a gift box lined with soft white paper or doilies.
  • Allow 20 minutes cooling, 6 hours chilling and 50 minutes setting time.
Source: Lebanese Recipes

Save and share this Turkish Delight Pistachio recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Turkish Delight Candy - Turkish Delight Candy Recipe


Wonderful Turkish delight candy recipe. During your visit to Turkey you can easily buy excellent Turkish Delight Candy (lokum ), but after you return home you'll want more. Make it yourself! Here's a recipe to make several dozen squares of lokum candy:

Ingredients
5-1/2 cups water
5 cups granulated sugar
1/4 cup confectioners (powdered) sugar
1-3/4 cups cornstarch
1 cup nuts: pistachios, hazelnuts or walnuts
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 teaspoon lemon juice

Preparation
  1. In a saucepan, mix 4-1/2 cups water, 5 cups granulated sugar and 1 tsp lemon juice. Bring the mixture to a boil, then simmer for 10 minutes, dissolving the sugar to make syrup.
  2. In a bowl, mix 1 cup water and 1 cup cornstarch, then blend in the cream of tartar.
  3. Gradually blend the cornstarch mixture into the simmering syrup while vigorously stirring with a wire whisk. Stir frequently while cooking for 1-1/2 to two hours, until the mixture forms a soft ball with an internal temperature of about 235°F (113°C).
  4. Test the mixture by dropping a small amount into ice water. It should form a ball. When picked out of the ice water and held between two fingers, it should easily flatten.
  5. Stop cooking the mixture, and mix the nuts in well. Hazelnuts or walnuts should be broken into smaller pieces.
  6. Pour the mixture into an eight-inch-square flat cake pan (greased) and spread it evenly throughout the pan. Sprinkle two tablespoons of cornstarch on top of the mixture and let stand for at least three hours, or preferably overnight.
  7. Mix 1/4 cup confectioners (powdered) sugar and 3/4 cup cornstarch. Grease a knife with butter and cut the Turkish Delight into squares. Lift the squares out of the pan, sprinkle with the cornstarch and sugar mixture, and place on a rack to "cure" for 12 hours. Sprinkle again with the sugar and cornstarch, and serve, or keep in a box. Do not refrigerate.
Source: Lebanese Recipes

Save and share this Turkish Delight Candy recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Senin, 14 Desember 2009

Harissa Recipe - How to make Harissa


Spicy harissa recipe. Learn how to make best harissa and add it to couscous, soups, pastas and other recipes. Harissa is a hot chili paste that is commonly found in North African cooking, mainly Moroccan, Algerian, and Tunisian cuisine. It can also be purchased from Middle Eastern stores in a can. This spicy harissa consists of dried red chili peppers, garlic, salt, olive oil, ground coriander, ground caraway seeds, and cumin.

For a very spicy harissa: use a blend of cayenne, chile de arbol, or cayenne with a milder chile like ancho chilies

For a medium spiciness: use a blend of New Mexico chilies with guajillo chilies

Preparation Time: 10 minutes

Ingredients
10-12 dried red chili peppers
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon ground caraway seeds
1/2 teaspoon cumin

Preparation
  1. Soak the dried chilies in hot water for 30 minutes. Drain. Remove stems and seeds.
  2. In a food processor combine chili peppers, garlic, salt and olive oil. Blend.
  3. Add remaining spices and blend to form a smooth paste.
  4. Store in airtight container. Drizzle a small amount of olive oil on top to keep fresh. Will keep for a month in the refrigerator.
Save and share harissa recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Falafel Sauce - Recipe for Falafel Sauce


Easy recipe for falafel sauce. Falafel sauce can be drizzled into a falafel pita sandwich or used for dipping. This recipe consists of tomato paste, harissa, garlic, lemon juice, and parsley. Enjoy falafel.

Preparation Time: 5 minutes
Cooking Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients
3/4 cup tomato paste
1/4 cup water
1/2 teaspoon harissa or hot sauce
2 cloves garlic, pressed
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon fresh parsley, finely chopped

Preparation
  1. In a medium saucepan, combine all ingredients. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and allow to simmer for 15 -20 minutes. Sitting frequently.
  2. Serve falafel hot immediately as a dip for falafel or drizzle onto falafel pita sandwich. Falafel sauce is great at room temperature and even cold!
  3. Store in refrigerator for up two weeks.
Save and share falafel sauce recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Sabtu, 12 Desember 2009

Turkish Coffee Recipe - How to Make Turkish Coffee


Learn how to make delicious Turkish coffee with this easy recipe. Turkish coffee is very popular worldwide for its unique way of preparation and taste.Turkish coffee is a method of preparation, not a kind of coffee.

Turkish coffee is famed for the way it is made. It is prepared in an ibrik, a small coffee pot that is heated. Sugar is added during the brewing process, not after, so the need for a serving spoon is eliminated. Cream or milk is never added to Turkish coffee, and sugar is optional. It is always served in demitasse cups. In some regions, your fortune is told by the placement of the coffee grinds left in the cup!

Ingredients
1 cup water
1 tablespoon of extra finely ground coffee (powder consistency)
1/8 teaspoon ground cardamom, or 1 cardamom pod
sugar (optional)

Preparation
  1. Bring water and sugar to a boil in ibrik. If you do not have an ibrik, a small saucepan will work.
  2. Remove from heat and add coffee and cardamom.
  3. Return saucepan to heat and allow to come to a boil. Remove from heat when coffee foams.
  4. Again, return to heat, allowing to foam and remove from heat.
  5. Pour into cup, and allow to sit for a few minutes for the grounds to settle to the bottom of the cup.
Tips
  • Turkish coffee must always be served with foam on top.
  • If you can't find finely ground Arabic coffee, you can purchase a bag of coffee at any coffeehouse and ask them to grind it for Turkish coffee. You need to have a powder-like consistency.
  • Do not stir after pouring into cups; the foam will collapse.
  • Always use cold water.
Save and share Turkish coffee recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Jumat, 11 Desember 2009

Layali Lubnan Recipe - Recipe for Layali Lubnan


Easy recipe for layali Lubnan/layali Lebnan (Lebanese Desserts). Learn how to make best Layali Lubnan. This recipe for the Lebanese Dessert consists of milk, semolina, eggs, rose water, chopped pistachio nuts, and toasted flaked almonds.

Ingredients
2½ cups water or 625 ml
1 tin NESTLÉ® Sweetened Condensed Milk or 397 g
½ cup fine semolina or 80 g
2 eggs
1 tablespoon rose water
1 tablespoon blossom water
1 cup liquid cream or 250 ml, whipped
3 tablespoons pistachio nuts, chopped
3 tablespoons flaked almonds, toasted

Preparation
1. In a medium saucepan, place water and NESTLÉ® Sweetened Condensed Milk . Stir occasionally to boil.
2. In a separate bowl, beat semolina and eggs together. Add this mixture to the simmering milk, stirring vigorously for 3 minutes or until it thickens.
3. Remove the saucepan from the heat; add rose water and orange blossom water. Stir and pour over individual bowls or a large serving plate. Set aside until it cools.
4. Decorate with the whipped cream all over the top then sprinkle with pistachio and the toasted almond flakes.

Serving tips : Serve sugar syrup if desired.

Save and share layali lubnan recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Rabu, 09 Desember 2009

Lebanese Fattoush salad Recipe - Recipe for lebanese Fattoush Salad


Easy recipe for fattoush Salad. Enjoy a delicious lebanese salad dish (Fattoush), traditional Lebanese recipe.

Ingredients (serves 4)

Preparation
  1. Preheat oven to 190°C.
  2. Brush bread pieces with 2 tablespoons of the oil. Place on a baking tray and bake for 10-15 minutes until crisp and golden. Transfer to a plate lined with paper towel to drain and cool.
  3. Combine the garlic, lemon juice, remaining olive oil and herbs in a large bowl and season with salt and pepper. Add the onion, tomato, cucumber and capsicum and toss to combine. Just before serving, break the bread into rough pieces, add to the salad and toss well. Serve with grilled meat or fish.
Save and share Fattoush salad Recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Spinach Pie Triangles Recipe - Recipe for Spinach Pie Triangles


Easy recipe for Spinach Pie Triangles. This is an authentic Lebanese recipe , really rich pie stuffed with fresh spinach, onions, green onions, allspice that are all enfolded by crispy, flaky phyllo dough.

Ingredients
  • 2 bunches fresh spinach
  • 1 bunch of green onions
  • 1 medium onion
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 3/4 cup lemon juice
  • 1 tsp. allspice
  • 2 lbs. flour
  • 1 package dry yeast
  • 1 Tbsp. salt
  • 3 cups lukewarm water
For basic dough:
  1. Combine flour, yeast, 1 Tbsp. salt and 3 cups lukewarm water, mix well and knead until smooth. Cover with a cloth and let rest in a warm place until dough rises, about 1 1/2 hours. Roll dough like pie crust and cut into 4-inch rounds.
  2. Cover with a cloth and allow to sit an additional 30 minutes.
For the filling:
  1. Wash spinach and drain well. Finely chop onions and leave them on top. Add 1 tsp. allspice and salt and pepper to taste and work with fingers, mixing well. Add oil and lemon and mix well.
  2. After dough rounds are ready, place a heaping teaspoon of spinach filling on each round and close in the shape of a triangle. When closing pies, be careful not to get juices on edges, which makes them difficult to close. If this happens, dip fingers in flour and close.
  3. Cover bottom of baking pan with oil, place pies in rows and bake at 400 degrees until golden brown.
  4. Lightly brush with butter after baking.
Makes 3-4 dozen pies.

Save and share this recipe

Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Minggu, 06 Desember 2009

Mansaf - How to make Mansaf


Enjoy the best mansaf recipe. Learn how to make Jordanian mansaf. The national dish of Jordan is Mansaf: lamb seasoned with aromatic herbs, sometimes lightly spiced, cooked in yogurt, and served with huge quantities of rice. Feasting on Mansaf is taken seriously, and hours are spent in its preparations. Mansaf is usually served in lunch occasions when a lot of people are attending specially weddings.

Ingredients
  • Lamb, cut up in large pieces with bone
  • Jameed, which is Low fat Yogurt, mixed with salt,then strained in cotton bags and dried in apple-sized balls
  • water
  • turmeric powder, for coloring
  • pine nuts, fried in corn oil until golden
  • Almonds, boiled, peeled, and fried in corn oil until golden
  • Calrose rice(medium grain, egyptian)
  • Vermicelli, for rice
Preparation
  1. Jameed is soaked overnight in water. If in large balls, it is broken to smaller pieces before soaking. It is mixed with water in a blender the next day, to make a thick creamy consistency.
  2. Meanwhile lamb pieces are boiled in water with salt and pepper and optional, a large onion, whole.
  3. The creamy jameed pot is brought to a boil on medium heat, easily stirred constantly to prevent seperation. Turmeric powder(1/2 teaspoon) is added to give a sunny color for the jameed sauce.
  4. Lamb broth is added to jameed pot to dilute the thick jameed then lamb pieces are added.
  5. Rice is soaked in boiling water ans salt for at least 30 minutes and up to two hours. Vermicelli is fried in oil until golden then water is added.Quantity of water is one and a half times therice.ie for each cup of rice, a cup and a half water.
  6. Large trays are covered with the large flat Arabic bread (SHRAAK)and dampened with jameed
  7. On top of this, a layer of rice is heaped.
  8. The meat is then piled on top.
  9. Fried nuts decorate the top and all around which gives a great sight and greater taste.
Save and share this recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Jumat, 04 Desember 2009

Mujadara Recipe - Recipe for Mujadara


Easy recipe for mujadara. Learn how to make best Lebanese mujadara (lebanese lentil dish). Let's try this vegetarian mujadara recipe, it's cheap, healthy, and tastes great.

Ingredients:
  • 1 cup of lentils
  • 1/2 cup of rice
  • 3/4 cup of oil
  • 3 big red onions (Chopped into wings)
  • Salt to taste
  • Pepper to taste
Preparation
  1. Filter the lentils and clean very well.
  2. Put the lentils in a cooking pan and pour on water until covered.
  3. Cook them on a high fire until well done.
  4. From time to time uncover while cooking and take out the ones floating on the top.
  5. Clean the rice and pour over the cooked lentils.
  6. Cook over medium fire until the rice is well done.
  7. Add the Salt and Pepper
  8. Mix very well in one direction to avoid having them muddled.
  9. Fry the onions until they get a light brown color.
  10. Pour the Majaddara in the serving pan and cover with fried onions over the top.
Save and share this recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Kamis, 03 Desember 2009

Sugar - About Sugar


About Sugar
The granular sweetener we use to make cakes and sweeten cups of tea originates from two sources: the sugar-cane, grown in the tropics; and sugar beet, grown mainly in warmer climates.

There are several different types of sugar which add a range of textures, tints and flavours to cooking.

BROWN SUGARS
Golden caster sugar: Loosely packed with a warm, golden colour, golden caster sugar is great in tea or sprinkled over fruit. It is also great for making meringues and cakes.
Demerara/raw sugar: Darker in colour than golden caster sugar but still free flowing, crunchy demerara is great for sprinkling but also for baking and in coffee and tea.
Dark brown soft sugar: Looks as its name suggests and great in cakes, gingerbread, pickles and chutneys.
Light brown soft sugar: The most popular sugar for making fruit cakes and puddings where a richer, fuller flavour is required.

WHITE SUGARS Simply refined brown sugar. Equally sweet, but because the granules are finer it seems sweeter.
Granulated sugar: Used for sweetening tea and coffee and is a good, basic all-purpose sugar for cooking too.
Caster sugar: Has fine crystals that dissolve easily making it the best sugar to cream into custards, mousses and for sprinkling over fruit.
Icing sugar: Granulated sugar that has been ground into a powder with an anti-caking agent such as calcium phosphate. Dissolves on contact with liquid and used to make icings for cakes and syrups for fruits.

Store it
Store in sealed canisters in a cool, dark cupboard.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Walnut - About Walnut

About Walnut
Walnuts are one of the most popular and versatile of all nuts. When picked young, they're known as wet and their milky white kernels are mainly used for pickling. Far more common is the dried nut, either shelled or unshelled. The brown-skinned kernel has a ridged surface, which looks like two halves of the brain.

Slightly bitter in flavour, walnuts are good eaten raw or cooked, in either sweet or savoury dishes, and are particularly useful for baking.

Availibility
Shelled walnuts are available all year round. Unshelled walnuts tend to be available in our winter.

Choosing the best walnuts
If buying unshelled walnuts, look for those that are uncracked, with no holes. Shelled walnuts should be plump and crisp. Avoid any that look shivelled.

Prepare it
Walnuts in their shells can be opened using a nut cracker. To avoid damaging the nut inside, squeeze the shell gently until it cracks, then extract the nut - there are lots of different nut crackers available, so find one that's easy for you to use.

Walnuts can be eaten raw, as they are, or toast to bring out more of their flavour: place the nuts on a baking sheet in a single layer and bake on a medium heat for 10-12 minutes. They are ready when the kernels turn golden. You can achieve the same effect by dry frying them: put in a dry frying pan over a medium heat, and keep the pan moving to make sure they colour evenly and don't burn. Leave whole, halve or chop, as required.

Storing walnuts
Unshelled walnuts should be stored in an airtight container in a cool, dark place - they'll last for around three months. Shelled walnuts should be kept in an airtight container in the fridge - they'll last for up to six months.

Cook it
Add to salads (particularly Waldorf salad, with apple, celery and raisins) or muesli; use for baking cakes, biscuits or pies. Eat as a snack.

Health benefits of walnuts

Nutrients
Walnuts are an excellent source of antioxidants and the minerals manganese, copper, phosphorus, and magnesium. Walnuts are a very good source of protein, dietary fiber, the amino acid arginine, omega-3 fatty acids and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA). Walnuts are unique because they are rich in n-6 (linoleate) and n-3 (linolenate) polyunsaturated fatty acids.

Cardiovascular Health
Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) is an n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid found mainly in plant sources, especially walnuts. There have been numerous clinical studies that suggest that alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) intake reduces the incidence of coronary heart disease. Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) in walnuts may reduce cardiovascular risk through a variety of biologic mechanisms, including platelet function, inflammation, endothelial cell function, arterial compliance, and arrhythmia.
Walnuts also contain other potentially cardioprotective constituents including phytosterols, tocopherols, squalene and the amino acid arginine.
Walnuts are rich in the antioxidant ellagic acid, and in a preliminary study, it has been suggested that the ellagic acid present in walnuts has a high anti-atherogenic implicating the beneficial effect of a walnut-enriched diet on cardio protection.

Cholesterol
A diet supplemented with walnuts has been shown to significantly reduce total and LDL cholesterol levels.

Alzheimer’s Disease
Fibrillar amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) is the principal component of amyloid plaques in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Over 90% inhibition of Abeta fibrillization from walnut extract was observed in a laboratory study, suggesting that walnuts may reduce the risk or delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease by maintaining Abeta in the soluble form.

Weight Loss
There is some concern amongst dieters about incorporating walnuts into a weight loss program due to the high fat content. A 12-month study of 90 participants has demonstrated that weight gain from daily consumption of walnuts has been shown to be insignificant.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Rabu, 02 Desember 2009

Honey - About Honey


About Honey
Honey is made by bees from the nectar they collect from flowers. Viscous and fragrant, it's a natural sweetener and can be used just as it is to spread on bread or toast, or added to sweet and savoury dishes.

The flavour, colour and consistency vary, depending on the flower(s) the nectar was collected from and the production method used - as a general rule, the darker the colour, the stronger the flavour.

Honey is available clear and runny, thick and opaque, in a honeycomb or as a chunk of cut honeycomb suspended in runny honey.

Availibility
All year round.

Choose the best honey
There are many different flavours of honey. Some of the most commonly available honeys with delicate tastes and aromas include clover (mainly from Britain), orange blossom (from the US, Mexico and Europe), lemon blossom (Mexico), acacia (China, Canada, Europe) and leatherwood (New Zealand).

More intensely flavoured honeys include Scottish heather, eucalyptus (Australia and the Mediterranean), Manuka (New Zealand), lavender (France), Hymettus (Greek, named after the mountain of the same name). Runny honey is easier to cook with.

Prepare it
Honey doesn't need any preparation. If clear honey becomes cloudy (as a result of the natural process of crystallisation) just stand the jar in a bowl of very hot water for 15 minutes or so, or give it a blast in the microwave (with the lid removed, if it's made of metal) for around 30 seconds.

Storing honey
In a tightly sealed container in a cool, dark place for up to a year. Comb and cut comb honey will last for around six months.

Cook it
Add to marinades, salad dressings or smoothies. Drizzle over Greek yoghurt or fruit salads. Pour over soft cheeses and grill. Use to add sweetness and a moist consistency to baking.

Health benefits of honey

The health benefits of honey include the following:
  • Sweetener: Sugar can be substituted with honey in many food and drinks. Honey contains about 69% glucose and fructose enabling it to be used as a sweetener.
  • Energy Source: Honey is also used by many as a source of energy as it provides about 64 calories per tablespoon. One tablespoon of sugar will give you about 50 calories. Further the sugars in honey can be easily converted into glucose by even the most sensitive stomachs. Hence it is very easy to digest honey.
  • Weight Loss: Though honey has more calories than sugar, honey when consumed with warm water helps in digesting the fat stored in your body. Similarly honey and lemon juice and honey and cinnamon help in reducing weight.
  • Improving Athletic Performance: Recent research has shown that honey is an excellent ergogenic aid and helps in boosting the performance of athletes. Honey facilitates in maintaining blood sugar levels, muscle recuperation and glycogen restoration after a workout.
  • Source of Vitamins and Minerals: Honey contains a variety of vitamins and minerals. The vitamin and mineral content of honey depends on the type of flowers used for apiculture.
  • Antibacterial and Antifungal Properties: Honey has anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties and hence it can be used as a natural antiseptic.
  • Antioxidants: Honey contains nutraceuticals, which are effective in removing free radicals from our body. As a result, our body immunity is improved.
  • Skin Care with Milk and Honey: Milk and honey are often served together as both these ingredients help in getting a smooth soothing skin. Hence consuming milk and honey daily in the morning is a common practice in many countries.
Save and share this post

Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Baklava Recipe - Easy Recipe for Baklava


Easy recipe for Baklava. Learn how to make the best homemade Middle Eastern baklava desserts. Baklava is a rich, sweet pastry made of layers of phyllo dough filled with chopped nuts and sweetened with syrup. Become the master chef for this recipe.

Makes about 20 slices

Ingredients
Method
  1. Preheat oven to 180°C. Spray a 20cm x 30cm slab pan with oil. Combine 4 x 150g pkt walnuts, chopped, 1/3 cup (80g) caster sugar and 1 tsp cinnamon.
  2. Use 20 sheets filo and 80g butter, melted. Make 4 stacks, layer 5 sheets per stack, brushing layers with butter. Put a stack in pan. Top with one-third of walnut mixture. Repeat layers, finishing with filo. Cut into four. Bake for 25-30 minutes.
  3. Stir 2 cups (220g) caster sugar, 1 1/2 cups (375ml) water, 2 cinnamon sticks, 1 tbs lemon juice over low heat until sugar dissolves. Bring to boil, add 1/4 cup (60ml) honey. Remove sticks. Pour over hot slice and cool.
Source
Fresh Living - 2 August 2004, Page 55
Recipe by Michelle Southan

Save and share this recipe

Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Rabu, 25 November 2009

Broad Beans (Fava Beans)


A member of the legume family, broad beans are pretty hardy and adaptable - they grow in most soils and climates. They're a great source of protein and carbohydrates, as well as vitamins A, B1 and B2. In the US, they're known as fava beans.

Availability
At their peak from the end of June to mid September. Broad beans are easy to grow in a veg patch or allotment.

Choose the best
Buy broad beans as fresh as possible; pods should be firm and crisp. Avoid any that feel soft, with pockets of air inside.

Prepare it
Broad beans should be podded, unless they are very young and tender. Put the beans in a pan, cover with boiling water, return to the boil and cook for 3-5 minutes. Then drain, empty into cold water, slit each pod along its seam and run your thumb along the furry inside to push the beans out.

To double pod - or remove the thin skin that covers each individual bean - use your nail to slit the skin, then pop out the bright green bean.

Store it
Keep in a perforated bag in the fridge for up to five days.

Cook it
Pod, purèe and serve with a little fried garlic; parboil podded broad beans and peas, add some fried onion and serve with grilled halloumi and torn mint leaves. Top and tail very young broad beans and serve whole, in their pods, with a chunk of pecorino and some bread.

Can't find it
Try French beans, flat beans or runner beans.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Cayenne Pepper


Cayenne pepper takes its name from its supposed centre of origin - the Cayenne region of French Guiana, Cayenne deriving from a Tupi Indian name. It is now grown largely in India, East Africa, Mexico and the United States, in fact most tropical and sub-tropical regions. Chiles originated in South America, where they have been under cultivation since prehistoric times. The seed's long viability facilitated the rapid spread of the plant throughout the tropics and sub-tropics by the Spanish and Portuguese, the spice becoming as popular there as vine pepper. Chiles were long known as 'Indian' pepper - meaning 'of the New World' rather than 'of India'. Despite its specific name, and the supposed use of special chiles for it, there is little to distinguish cayenne from ordinary pure chilli powder, except that commercial 'chilli powder' usually contains other spices such as garlic or cumin, and is rougher in texture.

Spice Description
Cayenne pepper is a finely ground powder prepared from the seeds and pods of various types of chilli. The cayenne variety is commonly called 'Bird Chile', and the botanical name variously given as C. minimum or C. baccatum. As most powders are blends, the names of the varieties used are not very important. The capsicums used are the small-fruited varieties: thinnish tapered seed pods up to 12cm (5in) long and 2.5cm (1") in diameter. Cayenne is made from the ripened fruit, varying from red to yellow. The powder is red or red-brown in colour. Some cayennes include the ground seeds and are hotter than those which exclude them. Cayenne pepper is well known and easily available in the West. It should not be confused with the vine peppers which yield common black pepper.
Bouquet: Dusty but slightly aromatic.
Flavour: Hot, pungent and biting, although not as powerful as the hotter chillies.

Preparation and Storage
Cayenne should not be used to the same degree as paprika, which it resembles, for it is much stronger. When used as a condiment it should be sprinkled sparingly. It should be kept in a dark container as it is affected by sunlight, and bought in small quantities as it deteriorates rapidly, losing its pungency.

Culinary Uses
Cayenne pepper can be used as a spice in cooking; or as a condiment at table, generally with seafoods, such as oysters, sardines, smoked salmon and trout, scallops, fried mussels, crab, lobster and crayfish. It may be sprinkled over soups and hors d'oeuvres. It can be eaten with eggs cooked in any way, and egg dishes such as omelettes and souffles. It is good with roasted, grilled, fried or stewed meats. It can be sprinkled on bacon prior to frying and used in the dusting flour for fried chicken, fish and vegetables. It adds piquancy to stews, casseroles and sauces, especially cheese, barbecue and shellfish sauces. It can be used in the making of cheese straws and biscuits, marinades, pickles, ketchups, chutneys and smoked foods. It is an ingredient of Worcestershire sauce and is frequently used in curries.

Health benefits
Cayenne pepper exerts a number of beneficial effects on the cardiovascular system. It reduces the likelihood of developing arteriosclerosis by reducing blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels. Cayenne also reduces the platelet aggregation and increases fibrinolytic activity. Cultures consuming a large amount of Cayenne pepper have a much lower rate of cardiovascular disease. Cayenne has been used as medicine for centuries. It was considered helpful for various conditions of the gastrointestinal tract, including stomachaches, cramping pains, and gas. Cayenne was frequently used to treat diseases of the circulatory system. It is still traditionally used in herbal medicine as a circulatory tonic (a substance believed to improve circulation). Rubbed onto the skin, Cayenne is a traditional, as well as modern, remedy for rheumatic pains and arthritis due to what is termed as a "counterirritant" effect. A counterirritant is something that causes irritation to a tissue to which it is applied, thus distracting from the original irritation (such as joint pain in the case of arthritis). Many people consume lots of hot peppers in tropical climates as the heat will induce perspiration, which actually helps a person to cool off. Cayenne's primary chemical constituents include capsaicin, capsanthine, beta carotene, flavonoids, and vitamin C. Cayenne causes the brain to secrete more endorphins. It is considered thermogenic, meaning it can "rev up" metabolism and aid in weight loss. Cayenne also improves circulation. Cayenne helps to relieve pain, not only due to its endorphin enhancing properties, but also when diluted and used topically it helps to block the transmission of substance P, which transports pain messages to the brain.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Baking Powder


About Baking Powder
A raising agent used in baking that combines mild acid (usually cream of tartar) with mild alkali (such as bicarbonate of soda). When mixed with liquid the powder generates carbon-dioxide forming bubbles that cause a mixture to expand.

Availibility
Can be bought in a packet or tin or buy a self-raising flour that already contains it.

Prepare it
Make it yourself by combining half a teaspoon of tartar and quarter of a teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda. This will make the equivalent of 1 teaspoon of baking powder.

Store it
In a cool, dry place. S

Save and share this post
Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Falafel - How to Make Best Falafel

Learn how to make the best Middle Eastern Falafel from scratch.



Serves: 8
Difficulty: medium
Prep & Cook time: 2 hours

Ingredients - Falafel Recipe
Preparation
  1. Soak the garbanzo beans and fava beans in water over night before the day of cooking.
  2. Chop and blend the garbanzo beans and fava beans in a food processor until the beans are the consistency of fine bread crumbs. Put in a large bowl. Next put the onion, garlic, cilantro and parsley in the blender and blend until it is a paste consistency, add to bean mixture. To the bowl add the cumin, coriander, salt, black pepper, bread crumbs and cayenne pepper and mix very well. Taste to see if you would like to add more salt or not.
  3. Heat about 1 inch of vegetable oil in a 2 to 3 inch frying pan, turn to medium-low heat. Add the baking soda to the bean mixture and mix well.
  4. Mold the falafel mixture into small balls and drop into oil to fry, continually turn over the falafel balls to keep the color an even brown on all sides, when they are a medium brown color, remove the balls and drain on a paper towel for a minute. Serve warm and fresh with tahini sauce and vegetables.
Save and share this recipe
Want to share this recipe with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Cabbage

The cabbage, or brassica, family is huge, and includes everything from the familiar red, white or green varieties with tightly packed leaves, to cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts as well as pak choi, popular in Asian cookery.

The round, crinkle-leafed Savoy cabbage and the pale, lozenge-shaped Chinese leaf are considered to be two of the best to cook with. The flavour of cabbage varies from type to type, ranging from savoury to gently sweet, but one thing they all have in common is a rank smell if overcooked, so brief cooking is key.

Availibility
Different varieties of cabbage are available all year round.

Choose the best
All cabbages should look bright, with crisp leaves. Avoid those that feel puffy, whose leaves have holes (an insect might have burrowed its way in) or whose outer leaves have been stripped away, which some retailers do to cabbages that start to loose their freshness. Varieties with tightly packed leaves should feel heavy.

Prepare it
For loose-leaved varieties, remove old or damaged outer leaves, cut the leaves free of the core and slice out any tough central stalks. Rinse if necessary, then chop or slice. For tightly-packaged cabbages, strip the outer leaves in the same way, wash, then slice into quarters, cut out the hard central core on each one, then chop or shred. When cooking red cabbage, add a little vinegar to the water to stop the colour running. Boils in 4-6 minutes; steams in 4-8 minutes; stir fries in 2-4 minutes.

Store it
Loose leaved cabbages will keep in a cool, dark place for several days. Tight leaved varieties will last even longer.

Cook it
Stir fry Savoy cabbage with garlic, ginger and chilli, plus a dash of soy sauce; slice green cabbage with carrots, toasted nuts, raisins and dress with olive oil and lemon juice for a salad; slice white cabbage and add to chopped ripe mango, red onion and walnut pieces, dressed with vinaigrette.

Health and Nutritional Benefits of Cabbage
  1. Being rich in vitamin A, cabbage is said to be very good for your eyes as well as your skin.
  2. Cabbage contains phytonutrients that helps the body in fighting against the free radicals responsible for damaging the cell membranes. At the same time, phytonutrients aids the production of enzymes that help in detoxification.
  3. Cabbage has been found to be associated with lower incidence of cancer, especially lung, stomach and colon prostate cancer.
  4. Cabbage is very good for building of muscles and thus, getting a healthy body.
  5. Researches have proved that fresh cabbage juice helps in healing of stomach ulcer.
  6. Fresh cabbage juice comprises of sulfur and is thus, very effective in treatment of fungus infection.
  7. Cabbage has been related to lowering of serum cholesterol.
  8. The vitamin B in cabbage helps in sustaining veracity of nerve endings as well as boosting of energy metabolism.
  9. Red cabbage contains an antioxidant known as anthocyanin. This antioxidant is believed to be helpful in protection of brain cells and thus, in the avoidance of Alzheimer's disease.
  10. Cabbage also contains lots of vitamin C and vitamin D. The former helps in the burning of fat, while the latter helps maintain skin vigor.
  11. Sulforaphane, found in cabbage, augments the production of antioxidant and detoxification enzymes in the body.
  12. Cabbage has anti-inflammatory properties. It also contains lactic acid that acts to disinfect colon.
  13. Drinking 25-50 ml of cabbage juice helps treat headache, asthma, bronchitis and digestion problems.
Save and share this post
Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Eggs

The ultimate convenience food, eggs are powerhouses of nutrition, packed with protein and a range of 18 vitamins and minerals. They're also hugely versatile. Almost all eggs are edible but the most commonly consumed are hen's eggs. Bantam, quail, duck and goose eggs are also readily available and vary in size and flavour.

Availibility
All year round.

Choose the best
Always select eggs marked with the most distant 'best before' date (28 days after they have been laid) and eat them before it expires. Never buy eggs that are broken or cracked. The colour of the shell isn't an indication of quality, or the bird's feed - it's dictated by what breed of bird the egg came from.

Hen's eggs come in different grades (Grade A or Class A are the best) and sizes, which are defined by weight, rather than volume (S, 45g; M, 53g; L, 63g; XL, 73g). While most Good Food recipes call for large-sized eggs, for individual servings, such as when frying or poaching, size doesn't matter so much. But baking is different - if you can't find the egg size that the recipe calls for, make sure you're using the right volume.

The way in which the bird that laid the egg is reared is also an important factor in making your selection. Organic eggs are most expensive, as they are laid by hens who have been reared in the most humane way possible, with strict criteria to govern their housing, freedom of movement, feed (all-organic) and environment (organic land). Free-range is next, then barn eggs. Caged eggs are the cheapest eggs, as the hens who lay them are farmed in the cheapest manner, stocked at the highest densities, with very limited room to move around and no access to direct sunlight.

Another label to look out for is the Lion Quality stamp - eggs marked with this will have been laid by hens vaccinated against salmonella.

Read more about standards in egg production at British Egg Information, the official site for British Lion Quality eggs.

Prepare it
Just crack them open, and you're ready to go: tap the middle of the egg against the rim of a bowl to crack the shell; insert the tips of your thumbs into the crack; draw the two halves apart, allowing the egg to drop into the bowl; using a teaspoon, fish out any fragments of shell that may have fallen into the bowl.

It's a good idea to crack each egg into an empty bowl before adding to your mixing bowl, just in case one is bad. If you're in any doubt about how fresh an egg is before you crack it open, drop it in a glass of water. A fresh egg will drop to the bottom of the glass and stay there. A slightly older (but still safe to eat) egg will hover in the middle, while a stale egg will float on the surface - a sure sign that it should be thrown away. Once cracked open, a very fresh egg will have a plump yolk that stands proud from the white, and the white itself will have two layers, the one that surrounds the yolk being the higher of the two.

Store it
Store in their carton, or upright, in a cool, dark, dry place away from strong smells such as onion.

Cook it
Cook eggs on their own, either scrambled, poached, boiled or fried, or use to make dishes such as omelettes, frittatas, soufflés, pancakes, sauces or cakes, or use to glaze breads and pies.

Benefits of Eggs
1. Eggs are great for the eyes. According to one study, an egg a day may prevent macular degeneraton due to the carotenoid content, specifically lutein and zeaxanthin. Both nutrients are more readily available to our bodies from eggs than from other sources.

2. In another study, researchers found that people who eat eggs every day lower their risk of developing cataracts, also because of the lutein and zeaxanthin in eggs.

3. One egg contains 6 grams of high-quality protein and all 9 essential amino acids.

4. According to a study by the Harvard School of Public Health, there is no significant link between egg consumption and heart disease. In fact, according to one study, regular consumption of eggs may help prevent blood clots, stroke, and heart attacks.

5. They are a good source of choline. One egg yolk has about 300 micrograms of choline. Choline is an important nutrient that helps regulate the brain, nervous system, and cardiovascular system.

6. They contain the right kind of fat. One egg contains just 5 grams of fat and only 1.5 grams of that is saturated fat.

7. New research shows that, contrary to previous belief, moderate consumption of eggs does not have a negative impact on cholesterol. In fact, recent studies have shown that regular consumption of two eggs per day does not affect a person's lipid profile and may, in fact, improve it. Research suggests that it is saturated fat that raises cholesterol rather than dietary cholesterol.

8. Eggs are one of the only foods that contain naturally occurring vitamin D.

9. Eggs may prevent breast cancer. In one study, women who consumed at least 6 eggs per week lowered their risk of breast cancer by 44%.

10. Eggs promote healthy hair and nails because of their high sulphur content and wide array of vitamins and minerals. Many people find their hair growing faster after adding eggs to their diet, especially if they were previously deficient in foods containing sulphur or B12.

Nutritional Value
The egg is not a complete food as it lacks sugars and vitamin C, but it is rich in other valuable nutrients 100g of whole egg (2 eggs weighing 50g net each) contains 12.4% proteins 8.7% fats, a good amount of vitamin B1,B2,PP, A and D, and a good quantity of iron phosphorous, sulphur and potassium up an energy value of 128kcal (food composition tables National Institute ed 1997).

Proteins have considerable nutritional value; they contain amino acids that the human organism has difficulty producing therefore they must be introduced through diet to ensure growth and reconstruction of tissues proteins contained in the white and the yolk of an egg are the best source of protein for man albeit certain proteins in the white can cause allergic reaction in individuals with particular sensitivity.

Fats; Eggs contain a modest quantity of fats (compared to 16-47% found in cheese and 35% in salami and sausage products) with various chemical structures; eggs contain triglycerides rich in saturated fat phospholipids and cholesterol Note that eggs now contain one forth less cholesterol than in the past at 371mg/100g. for this reason Indications on weekly consumption of egg given to hypercholesterolemia sufferers are now less restrictive but there is still a ban on packaged products with a high yolk content e.g. mayonnaise custards certain desserts (typically tiramisu) or pasta dishes containing which is also rich in cholesterol.

Phospholipids are highly unsaturated lipid molecules of which lecithin is the most important; lecithin abounds in the yolk and contains choline which is indispensable to cell nuclei and particularly to nerve cells These compounds are useful for contrasting hypercholesterolemia and are necessary for the metabolism of the liver.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Saffron


Spice Description
Saffron is the three stigmas of the saffron crocus. They are delicate and thread-like, each measuring 2.5 - 4 cm (1 -1.5 in). Its colour is a bright orange-red, and in high quality saffron this is uniform. Saffron bearing white streaks or light patches is inferior and when light specks appear in its powdered form it suggests adulteration.
Bouquet: Strongly perfumed, with an aroma of honey
Flavour: A pungent bitter-honey taste.

Where to Buy Saffron
Most specialty food shops carry saffron, though if it has sat on the shelves for too long it may have lost flavor, so look for bright color. There are a number of places to purchase online, though we recommend purchasing through one of the reputable dealers associated with Amazon and their trusted and secure online ordering.

Preparation and Storage
Because of its expense, intense flavour, and strong dying properties, very little saffron is required for culinary purposes and the key is to distribute it evenly throughout the dish being prepared. It can be crushed to a fine powder in a mortar and pestle. It is easier however, to steep the saffron in hot water— a pinch to a cup will create the desired flavour and colour. Good saffron should expand on contact with the water and a cup should be sufficient for 0.5 kg (1 lb) of rice. Powdered saffron is added directly to the required ingredients of a dish, though we recommend against buying saffron powdered, as it is so frequently adulterated. Store in a cool dry place, out of the light.

Culinary Uses
Saffron appears in Moorish, Mediterranean and Asian cuisines. Its most common function is to colour rice yellow, as in festive Indian pilaus and risotto Milanese, where its delicate flavour make it the most famous of Italian rice dishes. It combines well with fish and seafood, infamous as a key ingredient of Spanish paella as well as bouillabaisse. In England, saffron is probably best known for its use in Cornish saffron buns where it is paired with dried fruit in a yeast cake.

Health Benefits Of Saffron
Herbalists claim that American saffron possesses anti-cancer activity, but these claims are yet to be evaluated critically by medical experts. However certain compounds and saffron have positive effects in lowering blood cholesterol and triglycerides among heart patients. In ancient cultures, saffron was used to relieve stomach aches and kidney stones and also as an agent in improving the circulation of blood.

Some independent studies suggest that the use of saffron meet have beneficial effects on enhancing memory. While some medical research demonstrates the beneficial properties and activities of saffron such as memory enhancing, anti-cancer and antioxidant properties, the medical lobby at large is skeptical about the many claims of saffron.

Cooking with saffron is popular in the Middle East, Spain and Italy. It imparts a wonderful aroma as well as color to the food. Saffron contains carotenoids and medical studies have proven to show that it helps in enhancing oxygen diffusivity in the plasma and other liquids while improving pulmonary oxygenation. The carotenoids in saffron are known to inhibit skin tumors and improve arthritis in various independent medical studies. The numerous active constituents in saffron are also known to bring about a positive effect on people with neurodegenerative disorders and memory impairment. Massaging the gums with saffron helps in reducing soreness and inflammation of the mouth and the tongue.

Saffron is usually used in its dried form and is expensive as a spice and as an herbal supplement. When choosing saffron as an herbal supplement, opt for whole saffron threads instead of powdered saffron, as the threads tend to have more medicinal properties and the powder is likely to be adulterated.

Saffron must be used sparingly when cooking as too much of it can impart a bitter flavor to the food and cause people to fall sick. In large quantities saffron is known to be lethal. Saffron is also used in many cosmetic preparations for enhancing and lightening the skin. However utmost care must be taken in the consumption of saffron. Doctors strictly recommend the use of saffron during pregnancy as the herb possess the property of raising the body temperature.

Save and share this post
Want to share this post with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.

Eggplant


About Eggplant
You've probably seen eggplants at your local supermarket. With their shiny purple skin, rather large shape and unique size, they're hard to miss. You may have even eaten them as a side dish or in a hearty stew. Many people mistakenly believe the eggplant to be a vegetable, mostly because it's treated and prepared that way in most of the world. Technically, the eggplant is a fruit and belongs to the berry family. It can be used in many different recipes and comes in a variety of colors and sizes, depending on where it is grown.

Eggplant History
The eggplant is native to Southeast Asia and India, and has been eaten there for thousands of years. The first written mention of this plant comes from a Chinese book on agriculture dating from the sixth century. It likely wasn't introduced to the western world until the 15th century, when people began to use it as a vegetable when cooking. Today, China and India produce the majority of the world's supply of eggplants, which are shipped worldwide.

Eggplant Selection
Today, eggplants (called aubergine in France) come in all shapes, from small, round fruits (about two inches in diameter) to the popular large oblong Black Beauty variety, which can range up to 12 inches long. A newer variety (called Japanese eggplant) is long and thin, resembling zucchini, and has fewer seeds. (The seeds are edible in all varieties.)

Eggplant colors range from white to lavender to dark purplish-black as well as pale green, yellow, and reddish. There are even some striped varieties. Various eggplant varieties may be used interchangably in most recipes, unless the skin color is a specific visual factor in the dish.

Although available year-round, prime time for eggplant is August and September in the United States. Look for eggplants with smooth, shiny skin, heavy for their size, and having no blemishes, tan patches, or bruises. Wrinkled, loose skin is an indication of age, and the fruit will be more bitter. Smaller eggplants have fewer seeds, thinner skin, and tend to be sweeter, more tender, and less bitter.

Press your finger lightly against the skin. If it leaves a light imprint, it is ripe. If it is too soft, it is too old and will be bitter. Looking for less seeds? Check the blossom end of the fruit. A larger scar generally means fewer seeds.

Eggplant Storage
Eggplant is quite perishable and will not store long. Depending on the freshness factor of the eggplant at the time of purchase, it may be refrigerated for up to 4 days (up to 7 days if you pick right from the garden). However, it is best to use them as soon as possible, preferably within a day.

Handle eggplants gingerly, as they bruise easily. If you purchase them wrapped in plastic wrap, remove the wrapper, wrap in a paper towel, and place in a perforated plastic bag before storing in the refrigerator vegetable bin. Do not store raw eggplant at temperatures less than 50 degrees F (10 degrees C).

Cooked eggplant may be refrigerated up to 3 days (it will get mushy when reheated) or frozen up to 6 months in puree form (add a little lemon juice to discourage discoloration). It holds up fairly well in chunks in soups and stews when thawed in the refrigerator, but not as chunks on its own.

Eggplant Cooking Tips
  • Eggplant may be steamed, fried, baked, sauteed, boiled, microwaved, stir-fried or stuffed. They are eaten as an appetizer, main dish or as part of a melange of vegetables.
  • Eggplant skin is edible. However, some find it bitter, thus some recipes require peeling.
  • The flesh is very sponge-like and will soak up juices and oils. Coat slices with flour, beaten egg, and bread crumbs to avoid soaking up too much oil. Let breaded patties dry for half an hour in the refrigerator before frying.
  • Par-boiling slices for 1 to 2 minutes can also help reduce the absorbancy of eggplant while ridding it of moisture. Be sure to thoroughly drain and pat dry with paper towels before further cooking.
  • Once cut, eggplant flesh will begin to darken with exposure to air. A saltwater bath or a brushing of lemon juice will keep the flesh light.
  • Do not use aluminum cookware with eggplant as it will cause discoloration.
  • Some cooks salt the cut eggplant and let it sit for up to an hour to leach out water and bitterness before cooking. Today's varieties should not need this step, but follow the directions of your specific recipe.
  • Bitterness is concentrated just under the skin, so peeling will also work on especially large eggplants.
  • Eggplant may be microwaved to remove excess water. Microwave slices on high for 4 to 6 minutes, remove, cover and let stand for a minute or two. Use paper towels and press lightly to soak up the water.
  • If you are baking whole eggplant, be sure to puncture the skin in several places so it does not burst.
  • Add eggplant to soups and stews during the last 10 minutes to avoid overcooking.
  • Popular eggplant dishes include Caponata, Moussaka, Ratatouille, Eggplant Parmigiana, and Poor Man's Caviar.
Health Benefits Of Eating Eggplant
  1. Although iron is essential for many biological process in the body, excess accumulation of iron is not beneficial and causes certain harmful effects in the body. Increased accumulation of iron causes rise in the production of free radicals in the body and is associated with high risk of heart disease and cancer. Hence, it is necessary to remove the excess iron to reduce the free radical production. This can be done by nasunin, a phytonutrient present in eggplant.
  2. Other beneficial effects of chelating iron are protecting blood cholesterol from peroxidation, reducing the rate of free radical damage in joints and preventing cellular damage that can promote cancer formation.
  3. Nasunin, the potent antioxidant, also shields the brain cell membranes from any kind of damage and injury. This is really important as the membrane protects the cells from free radicals, allowing the entry of nutrients and exit of harmful wastes. It also receives instructions from messenger molecules telling what activities the different cells should perform.
  4. Another important function of eggplants are that they act as antimicrobial, antiviral, antimutagenic and anti LDL, all of which is attributed to the action of a phenolic compound, chlorogenic acid, found in abundance in the vegetable. The acid is one of the most potent free radical scavengers found in the tissues of plants.
  5. The plant also has a high source of dietary fibers, which is helpful for the proper functioning of the digestive system, and also acts against coronary heart disease.
  6. The potassium content in the vegetable helps to strike a balance in the salt intake and maintain a good hydration level.
  7. The potassium level also plays a vital role in regulating the blood pressure of the body.
  8. For those of you who are planning to go easy on your diet and lose some extra weight, you can opt for eggplants as they are very low in calories and also have high moisture content. Hence, brinjal or eggplants can be safely and effectively used to control obesity.
  9. Eggplants are also used to reduce glucose levels of type II Diabetes. This is attributed to the fact that the vegetable contains low levels of carbohydrates and high fiber levels. In fact, the vegetable is regarded as a natural method of controlling diabetes.
Save and share this post
Want to share this post with your family and friends? Click the button below to send them an email or save this to your favorite social network.