Thursday, October 5, 2017

8 Freaky and Delicious Halloween Cocktails

Holidays are reason enough to fix yourself a stiff one, but Halloween concoctions are in a league all their own. Pick out a skull goblet and grab your cocktail shaker: we went behind the bar at Beetle House to find out how to make some scary good drinks.

Here are 8 more grown-up treats to get you in the holiday spirit.

1. BLOOD & SAND

blood and sand cocktail

Saveur

A sophisticated fright-night choice: Scotch, a touch of sweet vermouth, orange juice, and Cherry Heering, Denmark’s often-overlooked cherry liqueur. Here’s your excuse to pick up a bottle. Get the recipe.

2. BLEEDING HEART MARTINI

bleeding heart pickled beet martini

Martha Stewart

A standard gin or vodka martini with sinister-looking pickled baby beets in place of the olives. Go ahead: Pickle them yourself. Get the recipe.

3. JACK-O’-LANTERN

jack-o-lantern cocktail

The Spruce

The orange-wheel topper with a lime twist “stem” could garnish just about any drink, but this orange juice, ginger ale, Grand Marnier, and Cognac concoction is seasonally pitch-perfect. Cute and potent. Get the recipe.

4. ORIGINAL ZOMBIE

zombie cocktail

Chowhound

A bit summery for Halloween, but this tiki bar classic is a great choice for people who don’t like the taste of spirits but do appreciate their effects. Get our Original Zombie recipe.

5. GLOWING SEVERED-HAND PUNCH

glow in the dark halloween punch

Chowhound

A haunting big-batch option for parties—the quinine in the tonic water glows under black light, and the floating ice hands keep things cold and creepy. Get our Glowing Severed-Hand Halloween Punch recipe.

6. MAD EYE MARTINI JELL-O SHOTS

eyeball jello shots

Wikihow

Jell-O shots like you’ve probably never seen them: lychee and berry “eyeballs” suspended in a shot glass. Change up the colors and spirits, but vodka is your eyeball shooter of choice. Get the recipe.

7. EL DIABLO

blackberry cassis cocktail

The Kitchn

The combination of lime, tequila, ginger beer, and crème de cassis is delicious and not too sweet. Serve in skull glasses and everyone will be talking about your great ghoulish taste. Get the recipe.

8. DARK SKIES AHEAD

pumpkin rye cocktail

Serious Eats

A pumpkin rye cocktail with amaro. It’s also an innovative way to use up any pumpkin butter you might happen to have lying around. Get the recipe.



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What Is the Difference Between Sour Cream, Crème Fraîche, and Mascarpone?

mascarpone

At first glance, sour cream, crème fraîche, and mascarpone are easily interchangeable. All three are thick white condiments, typically seen posing atop soups in a rounded dollop, or used as an integral natural sweetener in desserts. They’re even packaged in similar-looking circular containers in the grocery store, so it’s not all that surprising that it can be a bit confusing when it comes to separating the three as similar—yet quite different—individual ingredients.

For starters, each condiment has its own geographic origin. Sour cream originated in Eastern Europe and Russia before migrating into North American cuisine, where it found its footing in an array of sweet and savory recipes (like sour cream doughnuts and beef stroganoff). Crème fraîche hails from France, where it’s still heavily produced and is often used as a final ingredient to finish off sauces. Mascarpone originated in Lodi and Abbiategrasso, Italy in the 16th and 17th century, and just like sour cream and crème fraîche, it’s incorporated into both sweet and savory dishes.

On the manufacturing side, all three share the same base ingredient: cream. While talk of cream tends to be met with wrinkled noses and heated “no thank yous,” these days it’s an integral foundational ingredient and the first listed on the back of the container. While sour cream, crème fraîche, and mascarpone all boast this shared ingredient, it’s the addition of different bacteria that turn it from its original cream form into a totally different food.

Sour cream is made by fermenting cream with a lactic acid bacteria culture, which naturally sours and thicken the cream. Common stabilizers are generally added during the fermenting process, such as polysaccharides (basically complex carbohydrates made of sugar molecules) and gelatin, which ultimately creates a smooth texture that is inherently part of sour cream’s DNA.

Like sour cream, mascarpone’s main ingredient is cream. But it’s the addition of acidic elements like vinegar, lemon juice, and citric acid that thickens the cream into mascarpone. Mascarpone’s uniquely rich and buttery flavor is derived from its high butterfat content, and the reason why it stars in desserts.

While the French traditionally make crème fraîche from unpasteurized cream—which naturally contains the necessary bacteria to thicken it—those living within the bounds of pasteurization laws must cope with incorporating a starter culture (a mix of bacterial agents) into heavy cream and processing until thickened. Unlike sour cream, there aren’t any thickening agents, and crème fraîche has a much higher fat content (30% compared to 18-20% for sour cream and 25% for mascarpone).

Mascarpone Recipes

Carrot Mascarpone Muffins with Mascarpone Filling

carrot mascarpone muffins

Food Lust People Love

Go crazy for these mascarpone muffins, featuring mascarpone both in the batter—which produces a thicker and denser muffin—and injected in the center. Get the recipe.

Classic Tiramisu

tiramisu cake

Life Love And Sugar

Ah, mascarpone’s classically known purpose in dessert: tiramisu. The Italian cake gets its fame from coffee-soaked ladyfingers layered with mascarpone filling and dusted with cocoa powder. Get the recipe.

Lemon Mascarpone Risotto

meon mascarpone risotto

Platings And Pairings

Mascarpone can star just as well in dinner as it does in dessert. This lemon risotto boasts a creamy sauce from the Italian cheese and its bright yellow color from lemon juice and saffron. Get the recipe.

Sour Cream Recipes

Old-Fashioned Sour Cream Doughnuts

old fashioned sour cream donuts

Handle The Heat

These dense, almost cake-like doughnuts, will make you nostalgic for old fashioned doughnut pubs and a mug of hot coffee. Get the recipe.

Slow Cooker Creamy Beef Stroganoff

creamy clow cooker beef stroganoff

Le Creme De La Crumb

Gear up for cold weather with this beef stroganoff. Just toss meat, mushrooms, beef broth, and some spices, and cook for eight hours. When it’s ready, stir in sour cream for a creamy, sweater weather meal. Get the recipe.

Easy Mashed Potatoes with Sour Cream

sour cream mashed potatoes

Platings And Pairings

Adding sour cream to mashed potatoes not only thickens the potatoes, but gives the finished product a tangy flavor and fluffy texture. Get the recipe.

Crème Fraîche Recipes

Coffee Crème Fraîche Cheesecake

coffee creme fraiche cheesecake

Butter And Brioche

Switch up your classic cheesecake recipe for something a bit more untraditional. Instead of garnering creaminess from just cream cheese, this recipe calls for the addition of crème fraîche, which makes the base sharper and more tangy. The instant coffee and espresso in the filling, and chocolate ganache on top make it a stand-out dessert. Get the recipe.

Roasted Stuffed Heirloom Tomatoes

roasted stuffed heirloom tomatoes with goat cheese and creme fraiche

Running To The Kitchen

Memorialize summer with these tomatoes that soften and burst in the oven. Stuffed with a filling made of goat cheese, crème fraîche, and a myriad of herbs, they’ll instantly melt in your mouth. Get the recipe.

Scrambled Eggs with Caviar and Crème Fraîche

scrambled eggs with caviar and creme fraiche

Taste With The Eyes

Caviar and crème fraîche are the epitome of perfect unions; the pungent salty and fishy flavors of caviar are balanced out by the docile smoothness of crème fraîche. Pair the two with scrambled eggs for a decadent take on a weekend breakfast. Get the recipe.



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An Exploration of Ginger Ale: The Champagne of Pop

gingerale

About 15 minutes into my flight, the captain comes on and says, “Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, we’ve now reached 10,000 feet. You are free to turn on your electronic devices. Today’s flight features beverage service which includes complimentary soft drinks, tea, and coffee. We also have select alcoholic beverages for purchase.” Ah, yes, the in-flight beverage cart. The last shred of decency in the commercial airline game (unless you’re on Southwest Airlines where your bags—two of them, at least—fly free!). I can’t wait for my nice cool beverage, poured over ice, in a tiny plastic cup. I’ll nurse that thing for as long as possible to make it last. Oh, and I hope they leave the can this time! I patiently wait my turn. Finally, the flight attendant, with raised eyebrows and an ever-so-slight turn-up of her nose asks, “what can I get you, sir?” Without hesitation, I reply, “Ginger ale, please.”

Ginger ale. Have you ever noticed how many people on planes drink ginger ale? I have. It’s a lot. A lot more than I’d guess considering most major fast food restaurants don’t serve it, and folks tend to stick to the standard colas, lemon-limes, and orange drinks to stock up at home. But on a plane, ginger ale is super popular. I wonder why that is. Could it be it’s a non-caffeinated option that allows for satiation and shut eye? Maybe. Is it because its carbonation and ginger taste help folks calm their stomachs and avoid air sickness? Perhaps. But I like to think it’s something else. I like to think people on planes are going somewhere special. Whether for work, or (hopefully) for pleasure, folks are breaking routine. So they ask for a drink that’s special. They want something cold and refreshing. Something out of the ordinary. Something juuuuuuust right, and befitting a special occasion. They want the champagne of pop (I’m from Chicago, so it’s not “soda” or “tonic,” and we don’t do the Atlanta thing and call everything “Coke,” it’s pop). They want ginger ale! Wise choice, my friends. Wise choice.

As a kid, I remember playing “grown ups” with my sister. In retrospect, it sometimes involved imitating some pretty unhealthy adult practices. We’d buy candy cigarettes from the store, pretend we were smoking cigars whenever we ate pretzel rods, or imagine we were drinking our after-work cocktail (like many 60s TV dads) using—you guessed it—ginger ale. Put it in a lowball glass and (especially if it were flat) it looked like you were enjoying a cocktail—scotch maybe. Put it in a champagne glass, and it could pass for a bit of the bubbly. Put it in a beer stein and you could even pretend it was beer! There just was something elegant and sophisticated about it—something grown up and adult. The color had something to do with it, but so did the scarcity. You couldn’t get ginger ale just anywhere. We’d go to a restaurant, and they’d say something like, “Sorry, we only have Sprite,” or, “We don’t have any, but we can make it for you.” The masses consumed Coke, or Pepsi. The enlightened preferred ginger ale. Kids think the darndest things, huh?

Now, as an adult, I still enjoy me some ginger ale. If I stock up on pop, I’ll typically skip the lemon-limes entirely and go with a cola and a ginger ale. If I’m hosting, this typically elicits some variation of the following comment: “Oh, wow, ginger ale. I actually forgot how good this was.” And that’s why I get it. Because it’s good. Very good. Great, even! Given all of this, I thought I’d explore this tasty, yet underrated beverage. What is it? Where did it come from? How can others enjoy it? I need to know! I need to spread the word! Too much is at stake (well, maybe not)! To help me figure this out, I looked up a high school classmate, Eric Kang, who tends bar (and practices law!), and boy, am I glad I did. Here’s my interview with Eric, and what I learned about this fantastic non-alcoholic libation.

Hey, Eric! Thanks for doing this. The first couple questions will be about you, to give the readers an intro to who you are and why they should listen to you. So, how long have you been a bartender?

It’s been a little bit over ten years. I don’t remember exactly when I started, actually, but it was at a place called Bar Chicago, in 2004 or 2005.

Where do you tend now?

I’m a part of the Four Corners Tavern Group, and I do most of my bartending at Benchmark [in Chicago’s Old Town neighborhood] right now.

What keeps you involved in tending bar?

First: Money. For the dollar per hour breakdown, it’s one of the best jobs out there. Second: Networking. I meet an incredibly diverse group of people. Everyone loves alcohol! I also find peace in the repetition, in making cocktails. It’s not work or effort anymore.

Thanks for sharing a little bit about you. Now, onto the drinks! I think ginger ale is a great, underrated drink, and I’m trying to learn more about it. Where did ginger ale come from?

There’s rich history behind ginger ale. It goes way back to the apothecary days. I consider bartenders to be the modern-day apothecary. Anyway, historically, they’d travel around and mix up different remedies, including drinks with ginger in them. Ultimately, that’s how ginger ale got its start. Oh, and I guarantee a huge ginger ale presence during prohibition because people needed to find a way to drink that moonshine from Canada.

[Upon further research, Eric was spot on! A 2016 Atlantic article attributes the first ginger ale to an American apothecary Thomas Cantrell, living in Ireland in the 1850s. Cantrell exported the drink to the United States, and that’s where it got its start. Shortly after, a Detroit pharmacist, James Vernor (of Vernors brand ginger ale), tasted his own homemade ginger infused elixir upon returning from the Civil War. This marked America’s first home-grown ginger ale. Finally, in 1904, Canadian pharmacist, John McLaughlin, mixed up a drier, lighter-colored ginger drink. This marked the first appearance of what we would consider modern-day ginger ale, and became Canada Dry. As for ginger ale during prohibition, that same Atlantic article claims it was the top-selling pop because it was such an ideal mixer. I guess that moonshine was really tough to take on its own!]

Are there different types of ginger ale?

Generally, there are two styles. The original [also called golden or mild], and the modern day, dry version. The original takes grated fresh ginger root, mixes it with soda water, and sweetener. Then, there’s the modern [or dry] style, like Canada Dry. If you make some fresh original-style ginger ale, you won’t recognize it as the same as Canada Dry. And if you try it once, you’ll never go back!

What’s the key distinction in taste?

First [if you make it yourself], the fresh ginger. You’ll immediately tell from that effervescent, nasal clearing smell. You’ll even get that sensation when you drink it! There are very few, if any, sodas that will get you that sensation. [As for the distinction between dry and mild], it makes sense that Canada Dry is named that way because it’s very dry! There’s a dry flavor. The original-style ginger ale doesn’t have that. Try something: Make your own fresh ginger ale. The perfect ginger to soda ratio will tickle the nose. It’s so good! The oils and minerals from the ginger immediately go in your drink, and shortly after, into your mouth. You can’t get that in a pre-packaged or pre-mixed drink. If you want to see the difference between dry and [mild], make your drink first without sweetener. Then, add different amounts of the sweetener and you’ll see the spectrum from dry to [mild]. The sweetener is where you’ll see the difference. The [mild] style will taste sweeter.

What are your preferred ginger ales?

That depends on what bar I’m at. At a volume bar, it all depends on your distributor. I don’t have a choice, so I use what they have, and it comes out of a soda gun because they’re all about getting as many drinks in hand as possible. When you take it a step up, a middle of the road bar, you’ll get bottled ginger ale. I don’t think there’s a difference between that stuff and the gun, but it looks better to the customer—more crafty. The true craft bar will have me make my own ginger ale. I love that because I get to show off my skill, make conversation, and it looks like I’m making the fanciest drink in the world.

What mixed drinks showcase ginger ale?

Whiskey, or bourbon, and ginger is iconic. Because ginger ale is sweet, it makes 100 proof bourbon palatable. Generally, [when it comes to ginger ale as a mixer] I’m making whiskey ginger the most. You’ll also see a lot of specialty cocktails that basically mix up fresh ginger ale, like a Moscow Mule. A very popular one right now involves a splash of pomegranate, or fruit puree, with ginger, liquor, and soda water.

What’s the deal with mixing Sprite and Coke when you don’t have ginger ale?

I totally forgot about that! When bars didn’t have ginger ale, they would do 7Up with a splash of Coke. This typically happens at a volume bar. It’s just about churning out drinks. These bars see if they can get away with it [they usually do] and adjust from there. You’ll see this a lot at college bars. I haven’t done that in about seven years.

I always thought ginger ale was kind of fancy and could pass for different alcoholic beverages to the naked eye.

Totally. If a person is over-intoxicated, I’ve used ginger ale to cut them off without making it awkward.

I don’t know about you, but after talking to Eric, I feel like ginger ale is more sophisticated than ever. Hopefully you learned as much as I did about this underrated drink. Now, my next move is to make some of my own. Remember: Take grated ginger to taste, mix with sweetener to taste, and add soda water. Seems pretty simple, but I bet you could impress a lot of folks mixing up some of this!



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Cuisine d’Auteur: For Chef Daniela Soto-Innes, Seafood Is the Star of Fall

This article is brought to you by our friends at Stella Artois. 

October may be most synonymous with fall flavors like pumpkin, cinnamon, apples, and ginger, but it also welcomes the arrival of seafood season. And with seafood season comes inspired dishes featuring underwater delicacies like scallops, shrimp, octopus, and sea urchin.

Chef Daniela Soto-Innes, in partnership with Chowhound and Stella Artois, took full advantage of these fresh ingredients in a sophisticated rooftop dinner where simplicity and taste reigned supreme.

“Sometimes it’s nice to keep it simple. I’ve learned, as I cook more, that the simpler, the better, ” she says.

Citrusy scallop aguachile and pistachio prawns were the night’s openers with a chargrilled, robust octopus as the main event. Paired with a drool-worthy pineapple butter, the sweetness of the sauce was a perfect segue to the meal’s final seafood course (and prelude to dessert): uni-topped apple butter brioche topped with salty caviar.

“I love seafood,” Soto-Innes says. “My favorite way to eat seafood is raw because I feel like it’s so delicious already.”

The entire dinner, from start to finish, illustrated the Cosme and Atla mastermind’s expertise in Mexican cooking, as well as the cuisine’s ability to impart bold, beautiful flavors in both raw and cooked proteins. Every ingredient served a purpose and worked harmoniously to capitalize on the oceanic tastes and textures, all while staying true to Soto-Innes’ culinary roots.

“Sometimes cooks…we get in our head,” she says. “You want to cook the way you feel at home. You want to cook in a way where you don’t scare people away or make them uncomfortable.”

If our suppressed appetites and pleased palates were any indication, everyone left the event quite comfortable, cloaked in the warmth of a satisfying meal from a James Beard Rising Star winner. In fact, we’ve probably never been more excited for fall.

Stay tuned for more chef stories as part of Stella Artois’ Cuisine d’Auteur series that highlights the process of conceptualizing, creating, and elevating food to the level of art. 



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Creamy Potatoes with Cheese and Tomatoes

New Potatoes with Cheese and Tomatoes

This recipe for creamy potatoes with cheese and tomatoes is adapted from one we found in Sunset Magazine years ago, and is inspired by a classic dish in Colombian cooking—papas chorreadas.

Potatoes are boiled in salted water, then smothered in a sauce made with fresh tomatoes, onions, cream, and cheese. So good!

Continue reading "Creamy Potatoes with Cheese and Tomatoes" »



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Win This Year’s Holiday Bakeoff with Help from Chefs Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh

It’s never too early to get a head start on your holiday cookie planning. Gifting the most memorable morsel is truly the reason for the season, right? Well, not so much, but it will surely make you the most talked-about employee at the annual office party. And who can put a price on workplace popularity?

Whether you’re a newb to the oven or hoping to perfect your baking skills, you’ll want to grab chefs Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh’s SWEET cookbook. Chockfull of tips, tricks, and drool-worthy recipes, the dynamic duo will have anyone feeling like a pastry pro in a matter of minutes.

We caught up with Chef Ottolenghi to ask him about his favorite food secrets, trends, and advice for the holidays. Scroll down to check them out, as well as three delicious recipes you can add to your upcoming dessert exchanges.

What’s an easy way to jazz up traditional holiday cookie flavors like sugar or gingerbread?

Add some pieces of finely chopped crystallized ginger to gingerbread cookie dough before baking. In terms of ground spices, play around with things like allspice and ground cardamom. Ground star anise is also a lovely addition to all sorts of cakes and cookies.

What is the most under-appreciated fall ingredient used in baking? 

Lemon zest, always lemon zest. Or any other citrus, as well…orange or lime. It just makes everything taste of fall.

Can you explain your approach to pairing different fruits with different chocolates and spices? How much of it is experimenting vs. tried and true flavor combos? 

I love fruits in all sorts of combination and with all sorts of chocolate. It’s often a really useful way to cut through the richness of chocolate—raspberries or blackberries, for example—or else it can be there to add a bit of welcome color. Against dark chocolate, pink raspberries or something orange like gooseberries look fantastic. To a certain extent you can’t really go wrong, though, within limits, in terms of experimenting with the fruit and spices you want to pair with chocolate. So long as the quantities stay in line with those given in a recipe, then home cooks should be led by what they like. There is no reason that a pinch of black pepper or chili flakes or some flaked sea salt can’t work in a chocolate cake, for example. These sorts of substitutes are not going to alter the consistency of the bake in a way that substituting one wet ingredient with another would.

What’s your favorite go-to dessert recipe that’s impressive enough to share with guests, but easy enough to throw together last minute?

I know it doesn’t seem like it, but a rolled pavlova is perfect for this. You can make the meringue well ahead of time and then just whip up the cream, dot it with fruit, and roll up before your guests arrive. Lots of puddings can be made well in advance, though, and just sit in the fridge until ready to serve…a little lime leaf posset, for example, panna cotta or crème caramel. Or something like a knickerbocker glory is great as you can get all the various elements ready in advance: the fruit and the cream and the semifreddo and the nuts, and then just assemble it when you’re ready to serve.

What is the most overrated dessert trend?

I was not at all convinced by cheesecake, to be honest, until Helen showed me the way in the making of SWEET. I’m now a convert. A heavy chocolate cheesecake is still a bit too epic for me, though.

Do you notice differences in British and American dessert palates? If so, what?

My hunch is that Americans have a sweeter palate, but I’m not actually sure how true this is. I think I’m just going by the chocolate, which can be a lot sweeter. Brits always say “I shouldn’t, I shouldn’t (have dessert),” but then invariably do. Is this just a British thing?

Chocolate, Banana, and Pecan Cookies

Chocolate, banana, and pecan are a tried-and-true trio. Enjoying them in cookie form is our new favorite holiday pastime. Get the recipe.

Middle Eastern Millionaire’s Shortbread

You don’t have to be a millionaire to make a shortbread that tastes like a million bucks. Give these halva and tahini caramel delights a shot and you’ll be one step closer to high roller status. Get the recipe.

Belinda’s Flourless Coconut and Chocolate Cake

These gluten-free loaves may lack flour, but not flavor. In fact, they are jam-packed with coconut and topped with a decadent chocolate syrup. Sounds like a good enough excuse to indulge. Get the recipe.



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Your Culinary Guide to Surviving The Walking Dead

campfire cooking

Appropriately enough, it seems the zombie craze will never die. Now they’re shambling into your kitchen too, with The Walking Dead: The Official Cookbook and Survival Guide. It debuts on October 10, just in time for Halloween (and the season 8 premiere of the show, of course), but it’s available for pre-order now at a discounted price. And hey, it’s not too early to holiday shop for your favorite horror fan/foodie, right?

The Walking Dead cookbook

Amazon

Unless you’re talking about the classic zombie cocktail, the undead are none too appetizing, but after the outbreak, the living do have to eat to stay that way (and avoid getting eaten themselves, of course). It couldn’t hurt to have a zombie survival plan in place; even if the zompocalypse is unlikely to ever happen, a lot of the ideas would be useful in other emergency situations. So here are some basic tips.

Stay Hydrated

And no, drinking pints while holed up in your local pub won’t do. Since you won’t last very long without it, take full advantage of any clean water source you come across. You can carry some with you in bottles or canteens, but your best bet is to always have a portable water filtration system, like the LifeStraw, so you can replenish your fluids even on the go. These are especially handy if you’re in the wilderness and there’s no time to boil water, but always have someone watch your back so nothing sneaks up behind you. If TV has taught us anything, it’s that zombies can go into ninja mode at the most inconvenient moments…

Have A Can-Do Attitude

The most obvious (and probably easiest) source of food after the electricity’s been out long enough to spoil most fresh meat and produce is any kind of canned good. If you’re lucky enough to get to grab your go-bag when the outbreak starts, make sure there’s a can opener included in your supplies so you can actually get at that shelf-stable nutrition. Otherwise, find yourself a suitable tool posthaste and start raiding pantries and grocery store shelves. If you have a moment to settle down with your pickings, you can get fancy and heat up the contents of your cans, even combine them in some approximation of a pre-apocalypse gourmet meal, but in a pinch just scoop those cold beans or peaches out of the tin and be grateful for them. Try checking the larders of abandoned prisons and hospitals too; if you’re lucky, you’ll find a cache of industrial-sized chocolate pudding—although, don’t go too overboard on junk food. You’ll have to stay in fighting (and running) shape, after all. Speaking of running, MREs and foil pouches are fantastic options if you can get them, since they’re lightweight and you can carry more of them with you.

Forage for Food

When you’ve left civilization behind, or if you’re sticking it out in the city or suburbs but the prepared food supply has dwindled, it’s time to forage for nature’s bounty. Since the goal is to survive, safety is paramount. That means watching out for the walking dead, of course, but also making sure you don’t eat anything that’s poisonous. Stick to what you know is edible, and be aware that many safe-to-forage plants have deadly doppelgangers. You might want to familiarize yourself with local wild produce now, not just in case of disaster, but because it’s a fun and rewarding pursuit. In addition to mushrooms, berries, and fruits like apples and pears, you can find edible greens (like chef-worshipped ramps and fiddlehead ferns), roots (like burdock), and nuts (which can be eaten as-is, or turned into flour once you’re in a settled community). If you’re on the coastline, seaweed is nutritious and delicious.

Go Fish

Should you find yourself near a freshwater pond, lake, or stream with a little time to relax before the z-words inevitably catch up to you, why not try to fish? You can attempt to fashion a hook and line from various materials in your environment if there’s no outdoor store or empty fishing cabin to loot nearby, but other options include fashioning a spear, improvising a net or seine, and building traps or pens. You could also try fishing with your bare hands, although you’re apt to expend energy better reserved for making your escape from the moldering horde.

Hunt and Gather

Nothing biting? That’s usually a good thing in the zombie apocalypse, but if it means no fish, try hunting. You can use a weapon if you have one, preferably a crossbow since they’re quiet, long-range, and theoretically allow you to retrieve your ammo. Alternatively, you can set snares and traps. Make sure you have a knife or sharp rock with which to prepare your quarry. Or, if you find yourself unable to catch fast-moving, wary mammals or birds, you can eat other, far less appetizing but perfectly adequate animals. Worms, snails, slugs, and snakes are all fair game (pun intended). If you’re by the shore, you can not only harvest kelp and seaweed at low tide, you can nab crabs, clams, limpets, and the like as well. Even more reason to head for an island if you can, assuming zombies won’t in fact be able to swim or shamble along the seafloor!

Bug Out

In a pinch (aka after the zombie outbreak), you can even eat bugs; crickets, grasshoppers, locusts, ants, and termites are all commonly consumed around the world, and can be quite tasty when cooked. Avoid spiders, bees, and centipedes—as if we need to tell you that. And although there are exceptions, generally speaking, anything with very bright colors is probably dangerous to eat. That goes for plants and insects (and frogs, if you happen to be making a go of it in the rainforest).

Avoid a Raw Deal

Always cook your wild proteins if you can, since they’ll not only taste better, but will be easier to break down and less likely to carry parasites and bacteria. After all, the last thing you want to do is get too sick to outpace the shuffling corpses that will relentlessly pursue you. You can devise numerous cooking contraptions, but the most popular set-up is probably the good ol’ campfire + pot or sharpened stick. Bonus if you boil your food: you can also drink the water once it cools so you don’t lose any precious nutrients.

If you’re fortunate, you’ll survive long enough to start rebuilding society, and maybe you’ll even get to bake a batch of cookies again some day!

The Walking Dead Carol with cookies

AMC

Although you’re not really likely to encounter any zombies in the flesh (save those that will be lurching around on Halloween), we recommend checking out The Walking Dead: The Official Cookbook and Survival Guide just for fun—and just in case.



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Sauces ’n Love’ Packaging Update

The novel idea behind Sauces ’n Love emerged in 1998 as owner and founder Paolo Volpati-Kedra was doing a lot of cooking and entertaining. Being Italian, a big component of his meals was pasta – and with pasta comes sauce. So, he started experimenting with different flavors and was rewarded with very positive feedback from hungry guests.

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Ethel M Chocolates Brings Back Original 1932 Mars Bar

Manufactured in 1932 by Frank C. Mars, the Mars Bar was known for its "honest to goodness" milk chocolate, creamy nougat, and whole toasted almonds.

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Niagara Bottling Acquires Bottled Water Business

Niagara Bottling, LLC has acquired the bottled water business formerly owned and operated by First Quality Water & Beverage, LLC of Lock Haven, PA. First Quality produced both private label and Pureau brand bottled water.

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BakeMark Acquires Best Brands

The Best Brands line includes bakery mixes, fillings, icings, as well as frozen bakery products.

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Favorite Products: August 2017

Voting for favorite new product introduction from August 2017 was an even  affair among Prepared Foods readers. Squeaking out the victory was KIND Fruit Bites with 27% of the total vote.

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