EntriesI'm giving up pork
TJ's Mushroom Ravioli Pasta Kit
Safeway's Tri-Tip
Tandoori & Brownie Mixes
Pineapple Slicer
Coke
Entally sausage?
Good Stuff
Kangaroo
Green garlic
Wiltery Celery
Birthday Gift!
TJ's Thai Yellow Curry Sauce
Bottle Green Lemon Lime Soda
Barilla Plus Pasta
TJ's Pad Thai
Indian at TJ's (and pasta)
Juan J's CreamyFlan
Trader Joe's Mole Sauce
Trader Joe's Thai Green Curry Simmer Sauce
Patak's Korma Sauce
Stonehouse Olive Oil - Olio Nuovo
Artisan Asiago bread
Patak's Tikka Masala
Harris Ranch Beef Stroganoff
Le Superbe Fondue
Sharon's Coconut Sorbet
Apple & orange marmalade
Bread pudding at the farmer's market
Barbara's Puffins Cereal & Milk Bars
Safeway Coconut Cake
Del Monte Gold Extra Sweet Pineapple
Trader Joe's goodies
Stouffers Lasagna
TJ's Gnocchi
Costco's Flan
Trader Joe's Mushroom Turnovers
Kheema Turkey Paratha
Albertson's chicken salad
Trader Joe's Swiss Almond Crunch Cookies
Casa Sánchez Guacamole
Emeril's BBQ Sauce
July 6, 2007
I'm giving up pork
I'm not a big pork eater in the first place, but once in a great while I'll have pork ribs or pork tenderloin. No more. This article by Rolling Stones magazine has convinced me not only that eating pork is unethical, but that it's also bad for my health. Thanks god my children have only had it a handful of times in their lives.
Here is an excerpt:
Smithfield's pigs live by the hundreds or thousands in warehouse-like barns, in rows of wall-to-wall pens. Sows are artificially inseminated and fed and delivered of their piglets in cages so small they cannot turn around. Forty fully grown 250-pound male hogs often occupy a pen the size of a tiny apartment. They trample each other to death. There is no sunlight, straw, fresh air or earth. The floors are slatted to allow excrement to fall into a catchment pit under the pens, but many things besides excrement can wind up in the pits: afterbirths, piglets accidentally crushed by their mothers, old batteries, broken bottles of insecticide, antibiotic syringes, stillborn pigs -- anything small enough to fit through the foot-wide pipes that drain the pits. The pipes remain closed until enough sewage accumulates in the pits to create good expulsion pressure; then the pipes are opened and everything bursts out into a large holding pond.
The temperature inside hog houses is often hotter than ninety degrees. The air, saturated almost to the point of precipitation with gases from shit and chemicals, can be lethal to the pigs. Enormous exhaust fans run twenty-four hours a day. The ventilation systems function like the ventilators of terminal patients: If they break down for any length of time, pigs start dying.
From Smithfield's point of view, the problem with this lifestyle is immunological. Taken together, the immobility, poisonous air and terror of confinement badly damage the pigs' immune systems. They become susceptible to infection, and in such dense quarters microbes or parasites or fungi, once established in one pig, will rush spritelike through the whole population. Accordingly, factory pigs are infused with a huge range of antibiotics and vaccines, and are doused with insecticides. Without these compounds -- oxytetracycline, draxxin, ceftiofur, tiamulin -- diseases would likely kill them. Thus factory-farm pigs remain in a state of dying until they're slaughtered. When a pig nearly ready to be slaughtered grows ill, workers sometimes shoot it up with as many drugs as necessary to get it to the slaughterhouse under its own power. As long as the pig remains ambulatory, it can be legally killed and sold as meat.
October 3, 2006
TJ's Mushroom Ravioli Pasta Kit
I wanted a quick and easy dinner last night and this kit from TJ's seemed to fit the bill. And it would have, had it been good - alas, it wasn't.
The kit is, in theory, a good idea. All you have to do is microwave a bag of ravioli for 3 minutes, and then the bag of sauce for 1 1/2 minutes. I can't imagine a quicker meal. And while the sauce was pretty nice, albeit a bit mild, the ravioli itself were quite tasteless. Indeed, if they tasted of anything at all, it was of staleness. That's too bad because I love mushroom ravioli - the Safeway brand portobello mushroom ravioli are particularly good. Even with the convenience, and despite the fact that the kit is supposed to last you a month in the fridge so it could be there whenever you need it, I can't see myself buying it again.
September 10, 2006
Safeway's Tri-Tip
Last night, and agains today for lunch, we had "Rancher's Reserve" tri-tip, grilled on the BBQ. Rancher's Reserve is select grade meat (i.e. fit for human consumption) that for whatever reason is supposed to be more tender than it should. And indeed it is. Flavor wise it's clearly inferior to Costco's choice meat, but it is probably just as tender. I'd probably buy it again if I couldn't get Costco beef.
September 7, 2006
Tandoori & Brownie Mixes
Yesterday I made tandoori chicken and brownies. We didn't eat them at the same time, so I can't tell you how well they work together, but they were pretty good separately.
The tandoori chicken was bone-in chicken, skinned and marinated for a while on yogur mixed with Parampara Tandoori chicken mix. We then grilled it on the BBQ. Mike thought it was quite good, I was less enthusiastic. I liked the charred parts, but I think the other parts might have had too much marinade. Next time I'll make sure to wipe some off before grilling. Parampara has a lot of other mixes, which I'll probably try as well.
The brownies where Trader Joe's Truffle Brownie Mix. They were also very easy to make (add a lot of butter and eggs) and they were scrumptious. Soooo good, so moist. I'll definitely not make them again, so I can avoid eating the whole tray.
August 29, 2006
Pineapple Slicer
A friend of a friend recommended this pineapple slicer (which turned out to be the "Vacuvin Pineapple Easy Slicer") available at Safeway and I wanted to try it. She was kind of embarrased about having bought it - it seemed to her like the type of products they advertise on TV and you pay a fortune for - but she loved it anyway. She was so enthusiastic that I thought it was worth a try. At $10 I was a little hesitant, but we're pretty bad about eating our pineapples once we buy them. Not any more.
This "easy slicer" is a true wonder. It allows you to easily slice the pineapple into perfect rounds, keep a perfect pineapple shell and easily core it. And with pineapples bred to be sweet, sweet, sweet, the girls love it and we're eating pineapple galore. OK, the girls are - we don't get to eat any.
I'm still looking forward to using the shells for some mixed drinks - something tropical and rumy sounds perfect.
August 22, 2006
Coke
Is it just me or do cans of Coke have less gas now? Maybe it is me, but they just seem flatter lately.
July 11, 2006
Entally sausage?
A reader writes telling me that Entally sausage "is the best sausage ever to come out of Calcutta, India" and asking me for the recipe. I've never even heard of it - but if you have, please e-mail me!
Good Stuff
I couldn't find it in their product list, and I don't have a picture of it, but Ghirardelli Bittersweet Chocolate Fudge Sauce is just delicious. Dark, intense, creamy, perfect over ice cream or from a spoon. I know it's available at their factory store in San Leandro. You should certainly try it.
I found Sunny Harvest Blueberry Preserves at the 99cents only store and, after looking at the ingredients and noting the use of sugar and not corn syrup, I just had to try it. They were great. I served them at my last tea party along with a large selection of jams and spreads, and these were the favorite ones (after dulce de leche, of course). They have a very strong and definite blueberry taste. Interestingly, they are made in China, which I'd never pegged as a big producer of blueberries.
I've said it before, but I love going to the 99-cents store and seeing what treat I can find for my 99-cents. They are particularly strong on preserves of all kinds, which come from all over the world. I suspect much of it could be sold by European-type stores for many times as much.
What a difference a butter makes. I got some President Unsalted Butter at the EuroMix deli on Piedmont Ave. and I'm in heaven. That butter is just so, so good. I recognize it as being the butter I enjoy at many high-class restaurants (which, I'm sure, don't churn their own). It also wasn't particularly expensive given the quality.
June 10, 2006
Kangaroo
Last week I went to London for a meeting, and I got to taste kangaroo. Needless to say, it was the first time. It was served in a salad, and the vinagrette dressing overpowered the flavor of the meat (served medium rare), but it had the look and texture of beef, but a milder flavor, sort of like venison. I'm not sure I'd go out of my way to order it again, but I'm glad I tried it.
Indeed, this is the second exotic meat I've tried recently. On my trip to the northwest of Argentina last December I had the opportunity to try llama - both in empanadas and as a steak served with the sauce. I found the meat reminiscent to pork, rather dry and not very flavorful in itself, but good with other condiments or sauces. Again, not something necessarily worth ordering but for the novelty aspect.
Alas, what I did not have in this very brief trip to London was either Indian food or fish & chips. Or anything, really. I had a couple of pasties - self contained bready pies with meat fillings - and they were very good. I imagine they are full of calories, but they do make a cheap and convenient meal. Other than that, I either ate at the conference or at the home of the friends I was staying with. And given the prices of the food in London (and everything else for that matter), I can't say I feel too bad about that.
May 8, 2006
Green garlic
A week or so ago I found (organic) green garlic at the farmer's market. I'd had heard of it for the first time only recently, when it was featured in one of the dishes we ate at Chez Panisse. But I figured it was worth trying to cook with it.
You basically use it like green onions or leeks, slice/chop the bulb plus the white and light green parts of the stem. It has a much milder taste than regular garlic. I tried mine both chopped and mixed in with mashed potatoes and mixed with cheese as a stuffing for hamburgers. In both situations we really liked it, though I think it's particularly flavorful when it's been browned.
Green garlic has a short season in the spring so get it now and give it a try.
Wiltery Celery
A couple of weeks ago I bought organic celery at the Farmer's Market - it came in a bag. I left it out on the table that afternoon, in moderate heat. By the evening it had completely wilted. Or had it? Had it been like this all along? I must confess that I've never seen such flacid celery in my life - not that I'm a celery connoisseur or anything. Weird.
May 3, 2006
Birthday Gift!
Today is my birthday (yay!) and my friends Victoria and Penelope got me a great (and very appropriate) gift of yummy, exotic foodstuff. They went shopping to the Euro Mix Deli in Oakland, a place I'll definitely have to check out. Their comprehensive gift basket included:
Gia Russa Artichoke Bruschetta Topping from Italy. Haven't opened it yet :)
ZerGüt brand Ikra. This is an Eggplant "caviar" spread from Bulgaria. It's made with eggplant, carrots, tomatos, oil and spices and it's quite good. I'd served some of it at a Bulgarian dinner for Victoria and her husband Geoffrey a few weeks before. It has a pleasant smokey flavor, and it's good both as a dip for bread and a spread for sandwiches.
Ararat Young Walnut preserves, from Armenia. I have no idea what this is going to be like, I can see the young walnuts floating in a viscous liquid. I think I'm going to wait until I have a "tea" at home to open these.
Tkemali is a Georgian sauce made with sour plums. There seem to be at least three varieties, and the one I got is from red (as opposed to yellow or green, per the drawings on the bottle) plums. This is suppose to be Georgia's version of ketchup and it's used to accompany grilled meats and vegetables. I served it with plain grilled chicken breast and it didn't do too well. It had a very vinegary taste, though the hints of plum were nice. I think it may go better with lamb and I'll try it on that next.
Bliny mix from "JSC "Atlanta-Service". Blinis are small, delicate crepes from Russia. I've heard of them but have never tried them. They sound delicious. Yum, yum, yum.
Bahlsen's Kipferl were small hazelnut cookies from Germany. The croissant-shaped cookies are small, somewhat dry (which is why it's suggested they go very well with tea or coffee) and quite addictive. It didn't take me long to finish the package.
Tula honey cake or Tulsky Pryanik is a traditional dessert from the Russian city of Tula. This one came with apricot-flavored apple sauce as filling, though they have other flavors as well. It was interesting, but I also found it a bit dry and not really something I'd be hankering over. I ate all, though :)
Costworld Double Gloucester with Onions & Chives is also called "pub cheese", it's supposed to have a strong cheddar flavor and I can't wait to try it.
Finally, I got and envelope of Pilau seasoning and one of schaschlik seasoning, both from Russia as well.
Truth be told, I can't believe just how generous Victoria and Penelope were. And I'm of course thrilled :)
February 27, 2006
TJ's Thai Yellow Curry Sauce
In one word: yummy. I've had Trader Joe's Green Curry and Red curry sauces before and I had enjoyed them, but I have to say this one is my favorite. It's thick and creamy and sweet and spicy (good spicy, but too spicy for my kids) and pretty well balanced. Mike found it a bit too sweet for his taste, and I almost agree, but I like sweet food. In all, a great sauce to have in the pantry for when you want something quick and easy.
July 24, 2005
Bottle Green Lemon Lime Soda
I found these Canadian sodas (also available on Cranberry & Raspberry, Cranberry & Blueberry and Cherry flavors) at the 99-cents store and I was intrigured enough to try them. They are organic, and GMO free, and have no artificial colors or flavors. They also come with the recommended daily value of vitamin C. And at 3 for 99cents, they're pretty cheap.
Alas, I didn't really like it. It's too sweet for my taste, it tastes mostly of lemon oil with a hint of coconut (must be the "oil" aspect of it). I couldn't even finish the bottle.
June 12, 2005
Barilla Plus Pasta
I just tried Barilla Plus Spaghetti, from the new pasta line from Italian pastamaker Barilla. It was surprisingly good. It's a little bit darker (and the spaghettis seemed cut a little thinner) than regular Barilla pasta, but it tasted pretty much the same. That's not too surprising as its main ingredient is still semolina - but what makes this pasta special is that the semolina is mixed in with a mix of ground lentils, chick peas, oats, spelt, barley and flaxseeds) which give the pasta extra fiber and protein (4g of fiber and 10g of protein per 2 oz portion). The flaxseeds also give it a lot of omega3. The pasta still has a lot of carbs (38g) and calories (200), but it does seem a healthier alternative to regular pasta. For me it's particularly enticing as Mika doesn't like sauce on her pasta, so when she eats it she has it plain - which doesn't do much for balanced nutrition.
Anyway, I think it was about 2.50 at Safeway for a 1lb box - expensive but I think worth it. I'll definitely continue buying it.
June 8, 2005
TJ's Pad Thai
Trader Joe's frozen pad thai is surprisingly good, it's sweet and spicy, with nice chunks of chicken. The noodles are a tad too soft (and I like soft noodles) but all in all it's one of the better frozen entries I've had.
June 6, 2005
Indian at TJ's (and pasta)
During my last trip to Trader Joe's I stocked up on bottled and frozen items. I tried the Trader Joe's korma simmering sauce. It didn't taste at all like a korma, it wasn't creamy, it was sort of spicy and quite acidic, in other words, it tasted just like their curry sauce. I wouldn't buy it again.
I also got the frozen nan bread. At $2 for 4 pieces it's kind of expensive, but I think worth it. In all it's pretty good, it tastes just like the nan bread from a good Indian restaurant, it's light and fluffy. Plus as you cook it yourself it's also quite warm when you get it. The only minus is taht you have to preheat the oven for 10 minutes before cooking it, though I've done it for less time in my toaster oven.
Finally, I got a bowl of tortellini with pesto sauce - not worth it. The tortellini themselves were good, nice al-dente consistency, yummy cheese filling, but the sauce was completely tasteless. They were actually better without the sauce.
May 22, 2005
Juan J's CreamyFlan
I got this already made flan at Casa Lucas. Heed my advise and stay away from it. This thing was vile. Even though sugar is its second ingredient after milk, it wasn't very sweet at all. Mostly, however, it had a bitter, medicine-like taste that I can only imagine comes from the artificial vanilla extract. All I can say is "yucky".
March 28, 2005
Trader Joe's Mole Sauce
Tonight for dinner we had grilled chicken thighs served with heated up Trader Joe's Mole sauce and couscous. This is the sauce that is labeled under TJ's name and comes in the small jar - they also serve another one. We were not happy with it. The sauce had a distinctive chocolate flavor and was slightly spicy, but it had no complexity of flavor a all. It was monotonous and slightly bitter. I wouldn't buy it again.
March 10, 2005
Trader Joe's Thai Green Curry Simmer Sauce
Last night I made chicken simmered in Trader Joe's Green Curry sauce. It was yummy. The sauce is a little bit too spicy for my taste, but it had a very light and yet full flavor, with a strong hint of cilantro. Its high fat content made the chicken feel wonderfully buttery and in all it was very enjoyable. I added some orange bell pepper to the chicken and served it with rice. In all, a thumbs up.
February 24, 2005
Patak's Korma Sauce
We got Patak's Korma sauce along with its tika masala sauce a couple of months ago at Cost Plus ($3.50). We didn't like the tika masala, but the korma was much better. It wasn't as sweet or delicious as a restaurant korma, but it was creamy and tasty enough for a quick, weekday dinner. I browned and simmered some cubed beef on it for about an hour (with some extra water), and served it over cuscus. Next time I'm at Cost Plus, I'll probably pick up a couple of more jars.
December 29, 2004
Stonehouse Olive Oil - Olio Nuovo
Our friends Charlotte & Daniel got us a bottle of Stonehouse "Olio Nuovo" for Xmas. This is a very fresh olive oil (pressed two weeks before we got it) and it's delicious. It's taste is actually much fresher than that of regular olive oil and I like it more. Mike doesn't seem to like it as much, which is great as it means there is more for me! I'm using it just for dipping, though I imagine it could also be used on salads.
Artisan Asiago bread
I really like the Asiago Cheese from Safeway. Actually, most of their premium (and non-premium) breads are pretty good, but the Asiago one is delicious. It's not cheap (about $3.50 I think), so I don't see it as an every day sort of bread, but once in a while I really crave it.
December 23, 2004
Patak's Tikka Masala
A couple of nights ago I served chicken with Patak's Tikka Masala simmering sauce which I bought at Cost Plus ($3.50 for a 15 oz jar, enough for 1 lb chicken and 2 1/2 people). It was OK but it didn't taste at all like tikka masala. Mostly it tasted like other generic jarred or frozen Indian curries. Its main ingredient was oil, so it's very fatty (but it gave a wonderfully tender consistency to the chicken), followed by lemon juice, so it's also very sour. I don't feel any compelling reason to buy it again.
December 19, 2004
Harris Ranch Beef Stroganoff
I'm getting tired of take-out and I'm often too tired to cook (not to mention that my kitchen is too much of a mess to cook in), so the other night I decided to try one of those ready-made entrees available in the refrigerated meats section of the supermarket. I'd had a craving for Beef Stronganoff before and while I didn't have high expectation of this version, I figured it was as good a choice as any.It was OK. The meat was tender and not very fatty; the sauce tasted like a sour gravy, and not at all like Stroganoff, but it was perfectly edible. I served it over spaghetti and it was OK with the pasta. I don't think I'll buy this again, but I may try one of the other entrees.
December 16, 2004
Le Superbe Fondue
Last night we had fondue for dinner, from a box. It was Le Superbe Fondue, imported from Switzerland, which we got at Trader Joe's. It was quite good, a little bit less alcoholic tasting than the ones from the red boxes we usually get at tthe supermarket, which is good. Of course, home-made fondue is often better, and it is really easy to make, but last night I wanted something that took no time at all. And that would save us having to wash the food processor (after grating all those cheeses). Anyway, we liked it.
Sharon's Coconut Sorbet
Yesterday we went shopping to Trader Joe's. As usual, most of what we bought were impulse buys including a pint of Sharon's Sorbet, coconut flavor that I got a craving for. That's the problem with being pregnant, you see something and you want it.
I've never had coconut sorbet before but I liked it. Unlike other sorbets, it's quite creamy, which makes sense given that its main ingredients are coconut milk and coconut cream. Still, it's lighter than regular ice cream which I liked. It had a nice coconut flavor, though I would have preferred more coconut and less sweetness. It wasn't as refreshing as I wish it was. But it was good.
December 6, 2004
Apple & orange marmalade
Growing up, I was never too fond of orange marmalade. As the cheapest of all the fruit preserves, it was ubiquitously served by all the old aunts and their friends with whom I had the misfortune of having tea at some point or another. I am sure they were great ladies on limited budgets trying to save a few pennies, but as a child I wasn't that understanding. At home, I insisted on strawberry jam, or if we were lucky and found it available at the store, on rapsberry jam. Even as a kid, I felt sophisticated eating toast with butter and those exotic berries.
I still prefer berry jams, which in the US are as obiquitous as orange marmalade was in Argentina. All jams & jellies here seem to be priced identically, regardless of flavor, so there isn't an incentive to buy any but the one you like.
I hadn't given a second thought to orange marmalade for at least twenty years, until I ran into this product at the 99-cents store. I could recognize the brands, they were imported from Argentina. I was intrigued, it had been sooo long since I had tasted it and it could indeed bring memories back of home and childhood. And yet, I hadn't liked it as a child so why should I like it now? So I didn't get any.
I kept thinking about it, though, so when we visited the 99-cents store again last weekend I decided to get a jar of orange marmalade along with one of apple jam, also a product of Argentina. Today I tried it and was very pleasantly surprised by how much I liked it. Perhaps its sweet and sour taste is more pleasing to adults, or perhaps it's just nostalgia speaking, but I thought it was great on a slice of toast, and even better in a peanut butter & jelly sandwich. At 99 cents it cannot be beat.
The apple jam is quite good also, it tastes like a sweeter, denser apple sauce. This is something I might have had once as a kid, so it didn't any evoque any particular feelings, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.
October 23, 2004
Bread pudding at the farmer's market
I hadn't been to the farmer's market in quite a while. Generally, Mike and Mika go there on Saturday mornings letting me sleep late. But I was awake today so I tagged along. I discovered that there was a new stand I hadn't seen before, staffed by two African-American older ladies and selling seafood gumbo, cobblers, cheesecake, pecan pie and the like. I wanted to try something, of course, and I settled on the bread pudding. I LOVE bread pudding but as Mike doesn't, I seldom feel inclined to make it.
Unfortunately, this bread pudding wasn't very good. It was too dry and while it came with a sauce, there wasn't enough of it and it hadn't permeated the pudding enough. As a result, the pudding didn't have much flavor. It was a large portion and it satisfied my hunger but not my desire for good bread pudding. I guess I'll have to make my own after all - maybe a savory one. Anyone has a great recipe?
September 13, 2004
Barbara's Puffins Cereal & Milk Bars
We got these bars (peanut butter chocolate chip) at Trader Joe's for Mika's school lunches. Unfortunately they are too tough for her to bite into. I don't particularly like the flavor either. They taste too much of plain cereal and they are too sweet. I wouldn't buy them again.
August 15, 2004
Safeway Coconut Cake
Safeway refrigerated cakes are often very good, the best cakes I can get in my little city (but if you know of a good source for cakes & desserts in San Leandro, please let me know). Unfortunatelly, their non-refrigerated cakes are not as successful.
Yesterday we were going to Charlotte's for dinner and, as usual, I figured I'd take dessert. The dessert had to stay in the car for several hours so I didn't want something that would have to be refrigerated, thus I decided to get the non-refrigerated coconut cake. It was OK but not great. The cake itself was a little bit dry and the frosting too-sweet and artificial tasting. I wouldn't get it again.
August 12, 2004
Del Monte Gold Extra Sweet Pineapple
I got one of the gold pinapples at Safeway. I don't know if they had other kinds, I just picked up what I saw. It's a special variety (genetically modified, no doubt) twice as sweet as regular pineapple. It's delicious, without a doubt, but perhaps too sweet. Even Mike, who doesn't always like pineapple because he finds it too sour, thought it wasn't sour enough. After all, the combination of sweet and sour is what makes pineapple so great.
Still, this was really, really good. We'll see how it works out on the pizza tonight.
August 8, 2004
Trader Joe's goodies
We just made another trip to Trader Joe's so I figure I'll write a few words about new products we'd bought. I'll keep adding more items to this posting as we try them.
-Corinthians Chocolate Cream Wafers. These are very long cylinders filled with dark chocolate cream. They are very brittle and most of them seemed to have broken at least in two even before we open the can. They are good and addictive but not as good as others I've had. I probably shouldn't buy them again.
-Think Thin Sugar Free Sour Citrus Slices. These are little soft candies in sour flavors. Mike bought then and didn't like them as they weren't very sweet, though he says they are growing on him.
-Piccolo Limone Italiano. This pre-squeezed lemon juice comes in a little plastic bottle in the shape of a lemon. Unlike other commercial lemon juice, it's neither lemon juice from concentrate, or pure-lemon juice. Instead it's a mixture of water, lemon juice, citric acid and lemon oil. It does need to be refrigerated after opening it. It was quite good, it had a distinctive lemon-oil flavor that I actually found quite pleasant on top of last nights milanesas. Of course, fresh lemon is better - but if you don't have your own lemon tree it can be quite expensive.
-Kettle Corn. Though obviously not as freshly made as the kettle corn from the farmers market, it tasted quite fresh. It was very good, but much sweeter than the farmer's market stuff. That's not bad in itself, though a concern if you're watching your sugar intake.
-Orange Chicken. This is a frozen product that has to be heated by baking or sauteeing (in 1/2 cup vegetable oil!). I was VERY dissapointed. The chicken was pretty tasteless without the sauce, and the sauce was too runny and not very good. It didn't really taste much like orange and not at all like the sauces you get at Chinese restaurants. Given how much time it takes to make this dish, and how it's not microwabable, it's certainly not worth it. It probably wouldn't be worth it either if it was microwabable.
-Chicken Curry. This is a frozen entree under TJ's label. It was very disappointing, much worse than the other frozen Indian entrees that TJ sells under a different label. The "basmati rice" was long-grain and may have been basmati, but it was completely tasteless. The curry had very few pieces of chicken and the spicy sauce tasted mostly of cinnamon. It was edible but not enjoyable.
Stouffers Lasagna
I'm ashamed to say it but I love Stouffers lasagna. The small ones are OK, but they can't compete with the large party-tray size. For some reason, maybe the long, slow baking, it tastes much better.
I don't even want to look at the list of ingredients as I'm sure I'd be apalled. But it tastes sooo good, it's such the perfect comfort food. Plus, if you bake a tray you'll have dinner/lunch for at least a couple of days.
July 30, 2004
TJ's Gnocchi
Michaela and I have fallen in love with Trader Joe's frozen gnocchi. Both their Gnocchi alla Sorrentina, with a tomato sauce and mozarella cheese and their Gnocchi al Gorgonzola are great. We specially like the gorgonzola one, though it's terribly caloric. One 1lb. package has almost 1,000 calories and while it's supposed to be four servings, that would only be if you served them as a side dish. Mika and I had no problem devouring one whole package for dinner last night, and she was even hungry enough to have some more gnocchi from my mom's plate.
The gnocci alla sorrentina is much healthier, with 510 calories for the 1lb package. Of course it's not as yummy, but it's quite good nonetheless.
You can make them with less sauce for less calories and less mess.
They are made in Italy, without any artificial ingredients, though the gorgonzola gnocchi has margarine in addition to butter. You can heat them on the microwave or in a frying pan (7 minutes). In all, it's a delicious and quick meal.
July 28, 2004
Costco's Flan
I just tried the flan from costco. AFAIK it's a new item and was in the cakes section (next to a fruit cake and a cheesecake). It's delicious. It tastes just like great flan, but it's incredibly smooth and creamy. I actually missed the rough texture I get when I make flan, but my mom loved the smoothness. It's also very, very rich. Yummm.
Of course it has some ingredients I don't like (like corn syrup), and at $13 for the 3 lbs flan it's not exactly cheap. Plus it's very flat so I wouldn't serve it to guests. But lord, is it good!
July 19, 2004
Trader Joe's Mushroom Turnovers
They were very good. At 450 calories for the 12 containers in the package, a little bit too caloric for an everyday meal - but very, very tasty. All ingredients look good as well.
July 17, 2004
Kheema Turkey Paratha
Today we got some Kheema Turkey Paratha (Indian flatbread filled with minced turkey) made by Shukkhi's Freshables and sold at the farmer's market. It's really good, not in the least spicy but very, very tasty. Much tastier than the keema nam usually served at Indian restaurants. It doesn't seem to have anything "bad" in it either, though it doesn't spicify which "spices" it uses.
The one down side could be the price, Mike didn't remember if he paid $4 or $6. It would be OK, though not cheap, at $4 but defnitely very expensive at $6.
Albertson's chicken salad
I like Albertson's chicken salad. It's nothing out of the ordinary, but it's tasty and crunchy and just like chicken salad should be. It's also very convenient, not having to make it myself.
July 13, 2004
Trader Joe's Swiss Almond Crunch Cookies
They're so good they are evil. Mike warned me against getting them. He knew I'd not be able to stop myself from eating them. He even took them off the cart (but then went and got himself some shortbread!). But I had to have them.
They are sooo good, so crunchy, they taste just like you expect them too.
Obviously, I won't be buying any more tubs.
April 5, 2004
Casa Sánchez Guacamole
Casa Sanchez guacamole is the best commercial guacamole I've tasted so far. It's available at Albertsons and Beverages & More for about $6-7 for a 12-oz tub. It's expensive, but it's fresh, it contains no preservatives, oils or fillers. The next best thing to home made.
April 1, 2004
Emeril's BBQ Sauce
I should have known better. I knew better. A brand of BBQ sauce (or anything else for that matter) that needs a celebrity to put their name behind them cannot be very good. And I already had an idea that that guy, Emeril, was a joke. For the first time I saw his show on the Food Network (in Oregon, at the Weasku Lodge, while Mika slept in my arms). He looked like a construction worker... no, he talked like a construction worker. He was making steak tartare (which turns out to be an uncooked ground beef patty) and he was going through the steps as if instructing us how to change a faucet. Is that the deal with him? How unlikely he seems to be a top chef? Is he a top chef, anyway, or a joke to everyone but himself - or is he in in the joke as well?But I digress, I should have known better but I bought the damn BBQ sauce (Emeril's Sweet Original BAM B-Q). It was on sale at Safeway - Jack Daniels wasn't. I needed two bottles. It tasted exactly like Heinz. Even Mike thought that.
If the guy is not a joke, how sad for him! I mean, to give up your whole professional credibility in order to make a few bucks! How greedy or desperate do you have to be to put your name on such a low quality product?
Now for the review: If you like Heinz BBQ sauce, you'll like this, if not, or you've never tasted Heinz, avoid it.