Thursday, July 13, 2017

Four Creative Things to Do With Cookie Dough (Aside from Baking)

It’s a proven fact that the only thing more delicious than fresh-baked cookies is the dough that makes them. Frankly, I enjoy sticking my hands in a bowl and eating raw globs more than noshing on the cookie itself. (Unless there’s ice cream involved, in which case, I retract this statement. Ice cream changes everything.)

Since I am clearly not the only one who shares this preference, it came as zero surprise when NY-based, scoopable cookie dough shop  opened its doors to lines around the block. Offering dozens of delicious varieties, from classic chocolate chip to seasonal inspirations like “Frosted Fork,” the doughs are scooped into a cup and then topped with items of the customer’s choosing. Needless to say, it’s a heavenly experience for any gooey dessert connoisseur.

Aside from being addictive, cookie dough also happens to be versatile. We’ve rounded up four innovative ways to enjoy the treat within the comfort of your own home. Turn off the oven and check out the video above.

Editor’s Note: We don’t encourage the consumption of raw cookie dough unless it is prepared with proper food safety precautions (i.e. the use of pasteurized eggs).

Cookie Dough Milkshake

A wise man once said “if you can’t eat it, drink it.” Or maybe that’s just what we said after brainstorming what else to do with cookie dough.

Cookie Dough Ice Cream Sandwich

We retract our original statement. You don’t need baked cookies to make ice cream sandwiches, which means cookie dough does, indeed, reign supreme in the world of desserts.

Cookie Dough Pops

Cake pops may be played out, but cookie dough pops are in. Dip them in whatever your heart desires.

Cookie Dough Mini Pretzel Sandwiches

If there’s one thing 2016 taught us, it’s that salt tastes delicious on anything sweet (salted caramel, anyone?). When you combine cookie dough with pretzels, there’s obviously no exception.



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Kancor’s TastyKan

Kancor’s Savory Solutions Team has developed TastyKan, a line of concentrated multi-spice liquid blends made with spices sourced directly from regions worldwide.



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A Guy Fieri Bathing Suit Exists and It’s as Terrifying as it Sounds

Beloved

There are certain terrible, horrible, no good, very bad things in life that you simply can’t un-see and we’re pretty sure this foray into fashion tops that list.

Celebrity chef and Food Network personality Guy Fieri may be the fun-loving (or insufferable), platinum-haired host of Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives, but this time he’s now the inspiration behind a “trendy” women’s bathing suit. And it ain’t pretty.

Crafted by online clothing retailer Beloved, the flaming sunglasses, beard-heavy one-piece is either the most hilarious or horrifying thing you’ll come across during a summer pool party. And while it’s our inclination to side with the latter (just look at that beard placement), we have to applaud the company for sticking to their original mission: “a brand that says it’s ok to wear pizza on your clothing. Or anything else you want, really.” (By the way, you can actually wear pizza on your clothing with their line of shirts, swimsuits, joggers, and accessories).

Those interested in rocking the chef’s face can purchase the suit for $49.95, but can you really put a price on being the center of attention? No, you certainly cannot.
Not feeling Fieri? The site offers a bevy of other unique options, like a man’s chest, Donald Trump, Steve Buscemi, and our personal favorite, avocado. Frankly, we’d also like to put in an early request for Ina Garten swim trunks for summer 2018. It’s basically the only thing we’re missing during a trip to the Hamptons. Well, that and a Land Rover, oceanside home, and linen shirt. We’re definitely missing those too.

(h/t The Daily Meal)

If you love Guy Fieri, but don’t want to wear him in the pool, try his twice-baked sweet potato recipe. It’s the perfect side dish for any meat-heavy barbecue. Or just roast a sweet potato and top it with Donkey Sauce to keep things extra thematic. The choice is yours. 



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El Derby Ahumado (Basil Julep With Cucumber, Jalapeño, and Mezcal)

El Derby Ahumado (Basil Julep With Cucumber, Jalapeño, and Mezcal)
This cocktail is admittedly quite far from classic julep territory, but it's as drinkable as it is atypical. The name means "the smoked derby" in Spanish, a nod to the mezcal that lends the drink its campfire aroma. Mixed with it are muddled cucumber (for thirst-quenching freshness); jalapeño (for green, vegetal spice); basil (for an herbal note); and agave syrup—which is made from the same Mexican succulent that mezcal is, though sugar would work just fine in its place. Get Recipe!


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Dark and Stormy Julep Cocktail (With Ginger and Rum)

Dark and Stormy Julep Cocktail (With Ginger and Rum)
A Dark and Stormy is made with Gosling's rum, ginger beer, and lime, so the idea here is to loosely play with those flavors in the format of a mint julep. The result has the rich, round, sweet base flavors of rum and maple syrup, the freshness of the mint, and then that zesty spiciness of ginger, which wakes the whole thing up and pulls the sweetness into focus. Get Recipe!


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Chocolate Mint Julep Cocktail

Chocolate Mint Julep Cocktail
Twisting the classic mint julep idea just a bit, this variation substitutes crème de cacao for the sugar. It's a liqueur that's sweet enough to do the work of the sugar, while adding a chocolate flavor that pairs perfectly with both the vanilla-caramel bourbon notes and the fresh mint. Get Recipe!


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Why Foil Packs Are Your Camping Best Friend

Becoming one with nature may require a sleeping bag, tent, insect repellant, and first aid kit, but it also requires food (because the goal is to survive, right?) And while inclinations may lead you to believe that camp food tastes disgusting and one-dimensional from an overused grill in the middle of a shared camping ground, you may not know about the joys of cooking meats, vegetables, and starches with foil packs.

So what exactly is a foil pack? Well, it’s pretty self-explanatory. The technique requires you to take a standard roll of aluminum foil, place the food in the center of a large sheet, seal the foil so that it’s snug over the food (almost like an envelope), and then grill or set over a fire. It’s a simple process with easy clean-up (hoorah!), allowing you to focus more on concocting drool-worthy recipes and less on whether or not they will end up in the trash.

Some overall tips:

  • It’s important to create some room between the food and the foil so that the heat can build up and cook your dinner. Think of it as a mini oven, but with steam inside.
  • Pack some gloves or tongs so you can easily handle the pouch as you remove it from the fire.
  • Definitely invest in the heavy-duty variety of foil for your heavier items like meat and potatoes.

Since cooking times vary and depend entirely on your ingredients, we’ve rounded up a variety of recipes for you to try during your next camping trip. But don’t make these too delicious or the bears will surely pay you and your group a visit.

Foil Pouch Sea Bass

Chowhound

This sounds more like an entree for glampers than campers. Either way, steamed fish over a grill is going to taste moist and delicious. Get the recipe.

Grilled Herb Chicken and Potato Foil Packs

Le Creme de la Crumb

If you’re looking for a protein-packed, wholesome meal after a day of hiking, this is the dish for you. In fact, it will help you prep for that five mile journey tomorrow. Get the recipe.

Butter Garlic Herb Steak Foil Packets

The Recipe Critic

We get it, carnivores. Shaking a red meat craving is hard. Satisfy it with this decadent approach to campfire cuisine. Get the recipe.

Shrimp Boil Foil Packs

Le Creme de la Crumb

It’s no New Orleans, but we love the idea of being able to nosh on seafood and corn on the cob in the middle of the woods. Get the recipe.

Zucchini Parmesan Foil Packets

Damn Delicious

Anything with melted cheese is going to taste delicious, so you may as well put it on a vegetable a get your daily dose of vitamins. Get the recipe.

Campfire Banana Boat Foster

Chowhound

Don’t rule out dessert! The open flame creates a perfect caramelized glaze on a standard banana. Who needs a s’more when you can make your own caramel? Get the recipe.



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Why Is Coffee So Expensive?

In the grand scheme of things, coffee’s not that expensive—it’s certainly not as much as car insurance, or a mortgage, or college tuition, or national debt. For a daily, sometimes multiple-times-daily habit, however, the costs can absolutely rack up over a relatively short period of time. It’s also easy to fall into the trap of reminiscing about when all coffee was $1 or less, and that seemed good enough for everybody. Certainly, this idea of paying wine-bottle prices for a bag of whole beans is new and alarming.

What’s the deal? Are coffee companies gouging customers, taking advantage of (I’ll just go ahead and say it) our addiction? Well, yes and no. The truth of coffee’s seemingly high (and rising) price is more complicated than that. Here’s a little sense behind the cents that add up to your morning splurge.

It’s risky business. Coffee is a volatile industry in more ways than one: The plants themselves can be delicate and vulnerable; innovation and experiment come with the potential for loss as well as for reward; the commercial market fluctuates due to unseen forces; and shifts in consuming trends create ripples that can be felt like a tidal wave across producing countries. In a lot of cases, the motivation for paying higher process—and, therefore, charging higher prices—for coffee is a way of compensating for those risks, and creating incentive for coffee farmers, roasters, and even baristas to take those risks, in hopes that the end result will be something worth paying for.

Less is always more. There are lots of actual threats to the world’s good-coffee supply (I just mentioned a few of them), and they all come with a hefty price tag. Climate change is shrinking the average farm size, harvest season, and available arable land around the world, and it creates ecological nuisances like disease and infestation as well as natural disasters and frost—all of which lower yields and drive up prices. Then we add in labor shortages due to immigration, industrialization, or low wages; and political or cultural unrest that stalls production or exports. The more obstacles there are that face coffee production, the lower supplies are—the lower the supply, the higher the price.

Many hands make craft. There’s an estimate out there that says each coffee bean is handled by more than 30 pairs of hands before it gets to you, and some of them are more obvious than others. We kind of know about the planters and the pickers, and we all know about the roaster and the barista, but in between those entities there are actually also a bunch of hands that drive up costs. This doesn’t mean we need to “cut out the middleman” in coffee production—most of the actors in the grand opera of coffee are essential to its creation. They sort out defective beans for quality; they push rakes across piles of coffee as it dries in the sun; they fill jute bags and stack them in enormous piles in the warehouse; they carry them slung over a shoulder to or from a shipping container; they blend, bag, and seal roasted coffee; they deal with a mountain of paperwork and postage and tax information and forms. Those are just some of the people behind those scenes.

It’s a luxury item. Yeah, I know—I’m not human before I’ve had coffee either, and that itchy, irritable feeling can make the stuff seem absolutely necessary. The truth is, however, that coffee is nonessential for survival—you can’t eat it, you’d have a hard time staying hydrated if it were all you drank. (You’d probably also start to smell weird and get twitchy.) Like all luxury items, really fine coffees can get pretty pricey, especially since it sometimes is a matter of money to convince a farmer to continue growing coffee, rather than switching to a crop that can actually feed a family.

You like sitting in beautiful, expensive cafés. Look, those beautiful reclaimed-wood tables and the sleek espresso machines and the perfect Edison lighting and the bathrooms with the adorable wallpaper and the roll-open garage doors—you know, all the stuff that draws you in to a coffee shop and makes you want to buy a $4 coffee there—don’t come free, and something’s got to earn the money to keep the lights on. Coffee isn’t a high-margin product in most cafés, and it’s a tough gig to make bank on repeated small-ticket sales (you have to ring up a lot of $5 purchases to make what a restaurant or bar recoups in a single check), so the overhead needs to be built into the cost of goods sold, across the board and across the counter.

Specialty coffee isn’t expensive; commercial coffee is just cheap. You know what kinds of things are really cheap? Mass-produced stuff, full of sugar and fat and salt and orange-colored cheese powder. They’re cheap in part because of the sheer scale of the production—it’s actually easier and more efficient to make a lot of something that is mediocre than it is to make even a little of something that’s fantastic—and also because of the quality. Commercial coffee, the bottomless-cup kind, what you’d buy for less than a buck at a deli, the flavor crystals, are all typically blends of good and bad coffee, roasted in a way that is designed to create a uniform but not necessarily delicious “generic coffee flavor.” Sure, you can have this coffee anytime, pretty much anywhere, and it will cost next to nothing.

You, my friend, you want the really good stuff—you want to taste the coffee’s origin and process, you want to be able to tell right away that it was grown, picked, processed, sourced, roasted, and brewed with the utmost care. And, well, you’re gonna have to pay just a little bit more for it.

It’s worth it. I mean, honestly—is there anything that feels as heavenly as that perfect cup of coffee, right when you need it? Is there anything more satisfying than the exquisite espresso, the refreshing cold brew, the decadent mocha? Considering how great it makes you feel, considering how much work goes into it, considering how much the stuff exists purely for pleasure and can provide it in spades, even $5 seems like a comparable bargain. That’s what? The cost of a slice of pizza and a soda? Two subway rides? A pint of kind-of-crappy domestic beer at a bar? A small box of popcorn at the movies? Come on—you’re worth coffee that costs more than that.

— Head photo: Pixabay.



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Consumers Eat Fewer Burgers

These shifts in consumption align with the increased availability of other foodservice options, especially at fast casuals and retailers, and the 15% increase in burger prices at leading chains since 2013 (compared to about 11% for all entrees).

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Lindor Swirl Truffles

The truffles contain a milk chocolate shell that envelops smooth white and dark chocolate truffle fillings

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T. Hasegawa USA Acquires of Affinity Flavors

Following its prior investment in South East Asia, via the acquisition of Peresscol in Malaysia, and new capital investment in China, the acquisition of Affinity Flavors is aimed at strengthening its American market position.

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Summer Sprite Cold Lyrics Series Packaging

The lyrics will appear on 16-ounce cans and 20-ounce bottles of Sprite and will be available for a limited time in convenience stores and other retail outlets nationwide.

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Pereg Raw Bars

Pereg Raw Bars are vegan, kosher certified, dairy and lactose-free, and all natural, with no additives or preservatives.

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