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Posts Tagged ‘Taste-Gadgets’

Food2: A hip second helping of the Food Network

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
The new online-only Food2 is desiged to appeal to a younger audience, with youung chefs sharing tips, blogs and other site-specific content.

The new online-only Food2 is desiged to appeal to a younger audience, with youung chefs sharing tips, blogs and other site-specific content.

The parent company of the Food Network is dishing up a hip second helping of the popular cooking channel.

The online-only Food2 (food2.com) from Scripps Networks will be a video-driven rethinking of the 16-year-old cable food channel. Combining traditional how-to content with blogging, Twittering and other social networking elements, the new network will target 21- to 34-year-olds.

But Deanna Brown, president of Scripps Networks Digital, says Food2 won’t be just a digital knockoff. Because young consumers view and use content differently than their older peers, the format, content and even hosts will be different.

“This is not Food Network light,” she said in a recent telephone interview. “It’s not a farm team. This is intended from start to finish to be a real offering for this audience.”

The videos, for example, will have a casual vibe and stick closer to 2 to 3 minutes, rather than the more traditional 30-minute format. Users will be invited to participate in various challenges and to submit content, and the content itself won’t live solely on the Food2 site.

Much of the content and activity will live on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, Brown said.

Because of that, Scripps isn’t concerned about siphoning viewers from Food2′s older sibling. “This is a different audience. While this audience may be spending time at FoodNetwork.com, it’s probably not in volume,” she said.

Among the new shows being launched on Food2 is “Kelsey and Spike Cook,” which features Kelsey Nixon, 24, of “The Next Food Network Star” and Spike Mendelsohn, 28, of “Top Chef” offering different takes on the same dish.

“What we’re trying to do is break down cooking, make it a little more fun,” Mendelsohn, a former contestant on the Bravo cooking show, said of Food2. “Sometimes on these food shows it’s taken a little too seriously.”

Where there’s smoke, there’s . . . flavorful food

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Method makes for more healthful fare than cooking in oil or butter

Nordic Ware offers one of several available stovetop smokers.

Nordic Ware offers one of several available stovetop smokers.

Want to adopt a healthier lifestyle? Take up smoking.

Smoking is the new frying, as it allows you to achieve flavorful, heart-healthier meals without saturating food with oil, butter or other fats.

While indoor stovetop units, ranging in price from about $30 to $150, won’t give that full-on smoky payoff of traditional, outdoor smoking techniques, they can get pretty close, said Wayne Bennett of Barbecue World, 5068 N. Oracle Road.

There’s a learning curve with indoor smokers, as they can be a little tricky, notes Aaron “The Smoker King” Ralston of Victor, Texas. Use too much liquid and too little ventilation, and you’ll cross the line between smoking and plain-old steaming. Use too much wood and too little ventilation and you’ll smoke a bitter, acrid flavor into your food. Use too much temperature and ventilation and you’ll be poking a broom toward your ceiling to turn off your blaring smoke alarms.

With a little practice and persistence, indoor smoking can become a fun and flavorful habit, said Ralston, a lifelong south Texas barbecue buff who runs a popular Web site and forum devoted to all things barbecue and smoking (thesmokerking.com).

“I prefer smoking the old fashioned way, but I have one of those stovetop smokers, and it actually works quite well,” said Ralston, who works as a financial consultant to support his smoking habit. “What’s nice about it is the temperature is easier to control than with charcoal, where you have to keep working with the amount of charcoal.”

The smoker’s mantra of “low and slow” still holds for indoor smoking, as keeping the temperature below 250 degrees will yield the best results, he said.

That’s complicated with indoor units, as they work by heating smaller, sawdust-type wood chips to about 375 degrees to get them to smolder, Bennett said. If you don’t initially heat the unit up to at least that temperature, you won’t get any smoke going. If you leave it at that temperature, however, you’ll have dry, bitter results, he said.

There’s an easy workaround to that problem, Bennett said: start the smoker on the the stovetop at 375 for about 30 minutes, then transfer it to the oven heated to 200 to 250 degrees.

That’s a tactic that outdoor smokers have long used Ralston said, as the meat is smoked conventionally, then wrapped in foil and finished low and slow in the oven.

You only need about a quarter-inch depth of liquid (water or otherwise) in the drip pans of stovetop smokers. Bennet’s liquid of choice is beer. Wine and orange juice are also popular alternatives, though they’re usually diluted with water, he said.

Ralston likes to cut up onions and garlic and toss them in the water, depending on what he’s smoking.

Good choices for beginners to optimize your chance of success are lighter meats or vegetables.

“Salmon or trout,” Ralston said, “come out nice in the stovetops with a nice, light wood like Alder.”

STOVETOP SMOKERS

• Camerons Stovetop Smokers: Models can be used to smoke or steam. The 3-inch deep, 11- by 15-inch oventop model retails for $49.50, while the Gourmet Mini Smoker (3x7x11 inches) is $29.50. cameronscookware.com/Smokers.aspx

• Emerilware 5-in-1 Smoker: Cast iron unit can be used to smoke, roast, grill, broil and deep fry. $100, emerilware.com

• Nordic Ware Kettle Smoker Indoor/Outdoor Cooker: Domed top allows for larger capacity. Includes removable thermometer. $100. nordicware.com

PICKING THE RIGHT CHIP

Half the fun of smoking is experimenting with different types and combinations of wood.

With outdoor smokers, you want to use wood chips that you soak in water, beer, wine or the liquid of your choice. Stovetop smokers use much smaller chips or sawdust. A less-expensive way to get small chips for stovetop smokers is to buy the cheaper, larger chips, drill holes in them and collect the sawdust, Bennett said.

If you’re using your own wood, make sure it’s dry, as green wood is a recipe for inedible bitterness.

Here is a primer on popular wood types from Ralston:

LIGHT TOUCH:

• Alder: Delicate wood is mild and smooth with a hint of sweetness. Good for fish, pork, poultry and vegetables.

• Apple: Gives off less smoke than other types. Imparts a sweet, fruity flavor and is often used in combination with mesquite or hickory.

• Cherry: Mild and fruity. Often combined with other woods.

• Grapevine: Brings a fruity, tart quality, but can be too acidic, so it’s not usually used solo.

• Pecan: Often used with mesquite for ribs. If used by itself, can actually result in meat that is too sweet.

HEAVY HITTERS:

• Hickory: Good for smoking pork ham and beef. A powerful wood that imparts a lot of smoke flavor but can result in bitterness if you use too much or smoke for too long.

• Mesquite: Burns hot and is also very powerful. Raslton’s favorite, though it must be used carefully to avoid overwhelming food.

• Oak: Red Oak variety is the most popular, but Ralston finds oak to be “superstrong and smoky,” thus he normally cautions against its use.

• Acacia: Similar to mesquite but less powerful. A good choice for softer meats and vegetables.

Restaurant Revolution? Cooking center wows chefs with capabilities

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009
The panel on the Rational allows chefs to specify what they wan to cook and how they want to cook it.

The panel on the Rational allows chefs to specify what they wan to cook and how they want to cook it.

It’s just after 8:30 a.m. in the banquet kitchen at Loews Ventana Canyon Resort, and true to the name he gave his popular East Side eatery, chef Alan Zeman is on fire.

The chef/owner of the former Fuego!, Zeman is one part culinary master, one part televangelist and one part that uncle everyone seems to have who is always asking you to pull his finger.

He’s a charismatic blur of sight and sound as he pushes colorful buttons on a futuristic-looking contraption known as the Rational SelfCooking Center and pulls out exquisitely prepared beef tenderloin, trout, chicken, breaded eggplant and other fare.

“You have to have demonstrations so chefs can see this technology first-hand, because if I just tell chefs that were trained in the classical way what it can do, they say, ‘there’s no way it can do all that,’ ” says Zeman, a regional manager for Rational USA.

It’s a revolutionary way to cook that Europe has already embraced – 85 percent of commercial kitchens across the pond use the technology. The German-based company has unleashed a cadre of chefs like Zeman to show American chefs the considerable money and time the units can save, not to mention the considerable upgrade in the consistency and quality of the fare they serve. Less than 7 percent of American commercial kitchens use the technology, he says.

“The next generation of chefs are already familiar what they can do, because they’ve got them in all the culinary schools now, but it’s the older chefs that have to be convinced,” said Ben Sikora, a contract specialist with Standard Restaurant Equipment Co., a local Rational dealer.

The units, which start at about $10,000 but can pay for themselves in less than a year and last for 12 to 15 years, can essentially replace most of the traditional equipment in a kitchen – convection ovens, steamers, grill tops, broilers and deep fryers.

Rational isn’t the only player in Jetsons-style cooking technology. Competitors include Wisconsin-based Alto-Shaam and Ohio-based Cleveland-Enodis, though Zeman can, of course, give chefs scores of reasons why Rational is superior, he said.

A Germany company that first made convection ovens, Rational invented Combi-steamer technology in the 1970s, which combined a steamer and a convection oven. The technology has since evolved into a programmable system that continuously monitors the food and varies the temperature, airflow and humidity inside the unit to achieve the desired result.

“In 2004, they came up with a cooking process so that now, all you have to do is press the button, choose what you want to cook and tell it your desired results, and the unit does the rest,” Zeman said. “You can roast, saute, steam, pan fry, bake broil, deep fry . . . ”

The units, which are even self-cleaning, are already in use at local establishments such as Ventana Canyon, Beyond Bread and kitchens at hospitals, schools, casinos and hotels.

“It’s the most important piece of equipment in this kitchen, by far,” said Ken Harvey, banquet chef at Ventana Canyon. “Couldn’t do without it.”

Ralph Chavez, executive chef at La Posada, a retirement resort in Green Valley, said a lot of chefs are just scratching the surface on what the units can do in saving time, money and energy, and freeing up chefs to be more creative with other aspects of cooking.

“It’s almost like the sky is the limit. The uniformity of the product and the increased yield you get because everything is moister and not overcooked, there are just so many things about it that are superior to the old way of doing things,” said Chavez, who oversees a kitchen that serves an average of 1,100 meals a day. “We can do 96 omelettes in I think about five minutes, and they all come out perfectly, and you can slow-cook things like prime rib and pork loin overnight, and it will cook them and hold them at just the right state.”

The overnight process is a huge selling point for chefs, Zeman said.

“All the braising and slow-roasting that kitchens do is something that a chef always needed to constantly monitor, and it also tied up your cooking equipment,” he said. “With these, you load them up with food for a hundred people, push a couple buttons, go home, come back the next morning and it’s done.”

Zeman spritzes a tiny bit of oil onto breaded eggplant, puts them into the unit, and minutes later pulls out golden, crispy wafers that look every bit as if they were dunked in a deep fryer.

“People just can’t fathom not having a deep fryer and all the grease, but that’s what you can do with these centers,” Sikora said. “It’s a much healthier way to cook, and saves up to 60 percent in energy costs and a tremendous amount in food loss.”

The savings in energy come from the fact that the first thing a chef does in the morning with a conventional kitchen is turn every piece of equipment on full blast, Zeman said.

“They have to have all the ovens and fryers and fans on and water boiling, and they have to keep all that stuff on full blast all day even when they’re not cooking anything so it’s ready to cook when they need it,” he said. “With the SelfCooking Center, it’s off until you program it to cook something; when it’s done, it shuts itself off.”

That means chefs are not only saving on the energy that would be pulled by all the traditional equipment, but also on all the energy it takes for air conditioners to cool down the kitchen, Sikora said.

“With a regular kitchen, you go outside and the electric meter is spinning like a top,” he said. “With this system, it takes about 30 seconds to preheat the whole thing, and when you’re not using it, it’s not using any power.”

Executive chefs can even program, control and monitor the unit remotely, ensuring a level of consistency that’s all but impossible with different cooks with different levels of experience and competency, Chavez said.

“What this really does is kind of modernizes your technique, because you’re getting the same results as when you did things the old-fashioned way, but you’re technique has been modernized and streamlined,” Zeman said. “But you’re also getting a level of quality and consistency with all your product that you could never get before, because the unit is cooking everything to the exact specifications you want every time.”

So how soon will it be before such units are available for home kitchens? Don’t hold your breath. You just can’t put a SelfCooking Center into your average home kitchen, Sikora said.

“Everybody wants to put one in their house, but they don’t realize how much equipment and insulation you have to have for something this powerful,” he said. “It would burn your house down.”

Zeman is still burning down the house at Ventana Canyon two hours into his demonstration, showing no signs of petering out.

“It’s a fun job. I get to see a lot of chefs I’ve worked with over the years and meet new ones, and once they see for themselves how much money and time they can save and how much easier it can make their lives, the product just kind of sells itself.”

Chef Alan Zeman and the Rational SelfCooking Center

Chef Alan Zeman and the Rational SelfCooking Center

Fire up the grill

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Name: Best of Barbecue Ultimate Chimney Starter by Steven Raichlen

Features: Holds 425 cubic inches (seven pounds) of charcoal – enough for at least one hour of direct or indirect grilling; square shape helps to direct pouring of the embers; includes heat shield.

Cost: $19.99 at www.barbequesgalore.com or call two Tucson locations for availability: 5616 E. Broadway (790-0660) or 5068 N. Oracle Road (887-0378)

Chinese tea pot

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Name: Dragon and Phoenix Yi Xing Pot

Features: Round body symbolizes earth that dragon (lid handle) and phoenix (pouring handle) encircle. The spout is the phoenix’s tail; Body of pot reads “Long Feng Chen Xiang” (“The Dragon and the Phoenix Bring Good Fortune”); brown; made with zisha clay; about 10.5-ounce capacity; recommended for serving puer, rock or Dan Cong oolong teas; weighs about two pounds.

Cost: $68, plus shipping, from Web site of Seven Cups Teahouse, 2516 E. Sixth St., www.sevencups.com.

Courtesy of Table Talk

Do a dot of dessert

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Name: Polka Dot Dessert Plates by Yedi Houseware

Features: Set of six dessert plates in assorted colors; 7.5-inch diameter; packaged in a satin-lined hatbox.

Price: $34.95 at three Table Talks, Table Talks – 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road – or online at www.tabletalk.com (additional shipping and handling charges may apply).

‘Greener’ paper plates

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Name: 7-inch Round Plate 50 pack by EATware

Features: Decompostable and biodegradable; oil, water and heat resistent up to 140 degrees Celsius; microwave, freezer and steamer safe; made from all-natural fibers with no chemical additives.

Price: $5.50 at Earth-Friendly Home site, earth-friendlyhome.com.

Courtesy of earthfriendlyhome.com

Holy guacamole!

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Name: Guacamole Bowl by Progressive International

Features: Hand-painted ceramic bowl shaped like an avocado; for serving guacamole or dips; includes lid and 6-inch ladle; 1-cup capacity

Price: $8.95 at three Table Talks, Table Talks – 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road – or online at www.tabletalk.com (additional shipping and handling charges may apply).

Snazzy salsa server

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Name: Salsa Bowl by Progressive International

Features: Hand-painted ceramic bowl shaped like a chile pepper; for serving salsa or dips; weighs 2 pounds; includes lid and 6-inch ladle; 1-cup capacity

Price: $8.95 at Table Talks – 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road or 7876 N. Oracle Road – or online at www.tabletalk.com (additional shipping and handling charges may apply).

For oven or stovetop

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Name: Enameled Cast-Iron 2-Quart Round French Oven by Le Creuset

Features: Round, 2-quart pot can be used in oven or on stovetop; made of enameled cast iron with a heavy, tight-fitting lid (total weight with lid, 5.4 pounds); plastic knob on lid ovenproof to 450 degrees; dishwasher-safe; Flame colored (other colors subject to availability)

Price: $124 at three Table Talks, Table Talks – 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road – or online at www.tabletalk.com (additional shipping and handling charges may apply).

Ease ham-handed slicing

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Name: Classic Forged 8-Inch Stainless Steel Utility Knife by J.A. Henckels International

Features: Slices roasts, poultry and ham; forged stainless-steel blade; black plastic, three-rivet, full-tang handle; made in Spain; lifetime warranty

Price: $37.80 at three Table Talks, Table Talks – 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road – or online at www.tabletalk.com.

Measure, sift, measure

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Name: Measuring Flour Sifter by Progressive International

Features: First measure unsifted flour, then measure again after sifting; measurements in cups and milliliters; cups nest on sifter for compact storage; sifter comes with fine mesh screen for dusting flour or powdered sugar directly onto a surface; covered removable measuring cup collects sifted flour; dishwasher safe.

Price: $12.95 at three Table Talks, Table Talks, 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road, or online at www.tabletalk.com or www.progressiveintl.com.

Add whimsy to brunch

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Name: Egg Cups with Feet by BIA Cordon Bleu Inc.

Features: Set of four porcelain egg cups with whimsical feet; each stands 2 1/2 inches tall.

Price: $12.95 at three Table Talks, Table Talks, 2936 E. Broadway, 6842 E. Tanque Verde Road and 7876 N. Oracle Road, or online at www.tabletalk.com.

Serve artfully

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Name: Night Lights Nesting Bowl Set by Berryware Inc.

Features: Set of four nesting bowls from local ceramic artist Berry Silverman’s Night Lights collection; hand-painted; full set is one each 4-, 6-, 8- and 10-inch diameter bowl; dishwasher and microwave safe; imported; lead-free glaze.

Price: $60 (includes shipping and handling), online at www.brightfungifts.com.

Try wok cooking

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

Name: 14-inch Carbon Steel Wok by Joyce Chen

Features: 14-inch flat-bottomed, 1.8-millimeter carbon steel body; blond wood grip and helper handle; body made for use on gas or electric burners

Cost: $21.99 at 17th Street Market, 840 E. 17th St., or online at www.treasureshidden.com.