Powered by Blogger.

Tuesday, 3 February 2015

10-tasty-lunchbox-alternatives-sandwiches

I pack my own lunch while I prepare my daughter's. Hers goes in a purple lunch sack with kittens on the front. Mine simply goes back into the fridge for me to eat later. I work from home, so having it ready to go saves me time and helps me stay focused. I was in a sandwich rut for a while, but have broken free!

Here are some alternatives to packing a sandwich every single day.

Make your own "lunchable"

Slice your favorite deli meats and cheeses into cracker size pieces. Add crackers and a piece of fruit. I've used left over slices of chicken, steak or kielbasa in place of the lunch meat.

Wrap it up

Tortillas are a fun alternative to bread. You can fill them with whatever you'd put on a sandwich. Roll them up tightly and either leave them whole or cut them into spirals. My daughter loves peanut butter, honey and banana inside a whole wheat tortilla.

Homemade pizza

Use a pita, pizza crust (either store-bought or homemade), tortilla or hamburger roll to make your own pizza. Top it with sauce, cheese and anything else you need to use up in your fridge. I love to make mine with pesto, feta and leftover veggies.

Dip it!

I always pack lots of extra napkins for this one! Put a hearty, protein filled dip in a container. Turkey chilli, hummus or black bean dip are good options. Throw in veggie slices and tortilla chips for dipping.

Throw in leftovers

Some leftovers taste fine cold. Leftover slices of grilled chicken or steak are great lunch starters. Add yogurt, baby carrots and whole grain crackers to complete the meal.

Use the thermos

In the age of reusable water bottles and juice boxes, most thermoses go unused. My daughter's lunchbox didn't even come with one, but it was inexpensive to purchase. I fill it with soup or macaroni and cheese.

Food on a stick

Use a straw instead of wooden skewers for little ones. This is a fun way to use up leftovers. Put chunks of meat, cheese, veggies or bread cubes on the stick. I like to include honey mustard for dipping.

Use your fingers

Kids love being encouraged to eat with their fingers - and I do, too! Fill individual baggies with rolled up ham slices, chunks of cheese, grapes, a hard-boiled egg, Teddy Grahams and celery sticks.

Pasta salad

This is another way I use up leftovers. I start with plain leftover pasta. Then I add in either leftover meat or slice up deli meat. I throw in whatever fruits, vegetables or cheese looks appealing, along with some salad dressing. Toss it together for a delicious meal.

Salad bar

Start with a container of lettuce or baby spinach. Add in baggies of other toppings, such as additional veggies, fruits, meats, cheeses or nuts. Include a small container of dressing. You or your child can add the other ingredients to the lettuce bowl at lunch time, put the lid back on and shake it all up to distribute the dressing.

My daughter's friends are always jealous when she has something other than a sandwich in her lunchbox. There are still plenty of days I just throw in a PB&J sandwich, but mixing it up saves us from boredom. We're also eating a great variety of foods, including vegetables.

Publisher: uuibbui - 05:57

10-salt-alternatives-spice

It has been more than 15 years since I have used salt in my cooking. I only have salt in my house for three reasons:
1. For dying fabric, salt will help the dye absorb better

2. Salt sometimes helps with cleaning projects

3. Every now and then I have a guest who is so used to shaking lots of salt they just need to put salt on an apple slice or something else that makes me cringe.

In my mind salt has no place in cooking because it does nothing to enhance the flavor, and it only ends up making you thirsty. Additionally, as health resources repeatedly tell us, salt and high sodium content is dangerous to one's heart health, circulation and blood pressure. High sodium and salt diets can literally kill you over time.

The good news is that throwing away the salt shaker is not much of a sacrifice when you become tuned in to the true flavors of food and flavors of alternative spices.

The reason people tend to like salt is because it adds some kind of kick or zing or wakes up the tongue in the taste process. Fortunately, salt alternatives can act just as perky and be a lot more exciting.

Here are 10 salt alternatives you can start incorporating into your diet and cooking right away.

1. Use garlic powder as a salt alternative. Do NOT use garlic salt or you defeat the purpose. The garlic powder enhances most cooking and livens it up, from meat to fish to poultry to soups, pastas, stir fry and more.

2. Fresh ground black pepper is a great salt alternative. There is a huge difference between shaking black pepper and using fresh ground black pepper. Fresh ground black pepper is a more intense and aromatic flavor. It is not expensive either and you don't need to have a pepper grinder or mill. In fact you can get black pepper in its own grinder at the dollar store, or at walgreens for about a buck. It will last a good long time. You simply unscrew the cap and you twist the grinder top clockwise and counter clockwise in an alternating fashing and you instantly produce the black pepper flakes to season your food. It smells wonderful and tastes delicious. In fact 90% of my cooking I just use garlic powder and fresh ground black pepper and it seems to be perfectly seasoned!

3. Soy sauce is another great salt alternative. It packs far less sodium than salt and gives a good salty punch if you like the taste of salt. You can also buy reduced sodium soy sauce or "lite" soy sauce.

4. Onion powder, NOT onion salt, is another salt alternative. Be sure to go easy when you first start using it because it is a fairly concentrated taste.

5. Fresh squeezed lemon juice is a wonderful salt alternative. Fresh squeezed is so much better than concentrate. One of the easiest and cleanest ways to squeeze a lemon is with a citrus juicer. It will maximize the juice yield and filter out those seeds. Lemon juice can be added after the item is cooked or in the case of raw produce, right before serving. Lemon juice also acts as a natural preservative, so it will keep fresh cut fruit from turning brown.

6. Lime juice is another salt alternative. Try adding it to water instead of drinking soda or pop. It will give your drink a kick. Lime is also great for making homemade salsa's. Do an internet search on recipes using lime and you will be pleasantly surprised out how many meal ideas can be enhances with a splash of freshly squeezed lime juice.

7. Fresh roasted garlic. If you love garlic, nothing beats fresh. You can mince garlic, or grate garlic or chop it or even slice it thin. You know the powerful taste of garlic and you won't miss salt at all because garlic as a salt alternative is a real taste sensation. Try roasting garlic with olive oil also.

8. For a crunchier salt alternative, try using unsalted ground sunflower seeds or sesame seeds, they make great toppings to salads, stir fry and other roasted foods too.

9. For cold deli style salads, try using mustard or some pickle juice for notching up the salty taste but reducing the salt and sodium level way down. Just learn to ignore the salt part of recipes. It usually has no taste effect to just skip the salt part of a recipe!

10. Don't forget about the sweet. Sweet can add zing to foods and cooking also. Try cooking chicken in orange juice and reduced sugar marmalade for wonderful orange chicken! Try using sweetened dried cranberries (such as craisins) to perk up a carrot salad, or other meal. Sweet and sour and tart tastes often satisfy the taste buds and provide a great salt alternative.

Start looking at your cooking in a new way and you will realize giving up salt is hardly sacrifice and can be fun. You will probably become a better cook because of it
Publisher: uuibbui - 05:48

Monday, 2 February 2015

10-blogs-food

Everyone has to eat, therefore if you spend any amount of time in front of a computer screen you can't claim you would have no interest in reading about food. Okay, maybe if you're in prison and have no say over what you consume then you may lack interest. But all others, you've got no excuse. If you're not already, start treating your tastebuds. You can begin by getting ideas of places to eat or recipes to cook by visiting these blogs about food.
1. SLICE - Pizza is a great equalizer of food. No matter where you go in the world you're likely to find a some form of the cheesy treat. At Slice "America's Favorite Pizza Weblog" you can find out about fantastic pizza joints all over the world. While Slice does feature much of its pizza related reviews on parlors in and around New York City there are posts on this blog about pizza in Japan, Russia, and even Vietnam. Besides reviewing pizza restaurants, Slice even reviews take-home pizza-like items such as pizza rolls. A surprising post from last week included a note about a chocolate pizza being served at the just opened Max Brenner chocolate shop.

2. HOT SAUCE BLOG - An entire blog dedicated to hot sauce? With the growing popularity of hot wings it shouldn't really come as such a surprise. The creator of the blog, Nick Lindauer knows what he's talking about having created his own line of hot sauce, Sweat 'N Spice Hot Sauces. This food blog is not just an advertisement for his own products though. When you visit Hot Sauce Blog you can expect to find reviews on all types of hot sauces (be honest, aren't you a little lost when you look at the many different hot sauces staring back at you at the grocery store?) which rate the sauces on a number of categories including packaging, aroma, appearance, taste, and heat.


3. A HAMBURGER TODAY - This food blog is a sister site to Slice, but of course they aren't identical twins as A Hamburger Today features what else? Hamburgers! At this blog you will find all things hamburger - hamburger toys, hamburger cakes, interviews with hamburger "experts" (such as one with a general manager of a Sonic Drive-In), and yes, even reviews about hamburgers.


4. CHUBBY HUBBY - Though Chubby Hubby is written out of Singapore, eyeballs all around the world will marvel at the professional style food photography on this site. Don't be surprised if you find yourself wanting to lick your computer screen. In addition to the photographs there are recipes for finer food dishes like creme brulee and Moroccan chicken with tomatoes and saffron-honey jam.

5. DINER'S JOURNAL - Diner's Journal by Frank Bruni is actually a New York Times blog. Food snobs, those especially of New York City, will thoroughly enjoy this food blog. In New York City chef are often treated as rock stars, and so in a way this is like their own Page 6. I did expect to be turned off by this blog, but after reading through a few posts, I found that it appealed to even the average food consumer.

6. ACCIDENTAL HEDONIST - The Accidental Hedonist is less recipe and review based and more reading about actual food. Whether the bloggers are talking about whether to freeze or can vegetables for the winter months or what happened to the popularity of donuts, this is a different spin on the food blog.

7. THE BREW LOUNGE - Some people, and by "people" I mean college students, consider beer to be the sixth food group. In going with that thinking, The Brew Lounge blog makes the list of food blogs. If you're interested in home brewing you'll get a lot out of this site (homebrewing recipes) and if you're just a beer drinker you can find out when beer festivals are and where breweries are located.

8. JIMSEVEN - Technically coffee isn't food either, but plenty of people call it their breakfast, and well, breakfast is a meal. This blog is written by a coffee expert. Really. Blogger James Hoffman is the 2006 UK Barista Champion, and placed 5th at the World's, so you can trust him. Come here to read about coffee and coffee shops all around the world.


9. CUPCAKE BAKESHOP - Just like a meal ends with dessert, so does this list of food blogs. Cupcake Baskeshop is a blog devoted to cupcakes. Learn how to bake cupcakes in surprising flavors - caramel apple cupcakes, green tea, lavendar and honey cupcakes, or pistachio cupcakes.


10. COOKIE MADNESS - Cookie Madness is similar to Cupcake Bakeshop, except of course about cookies. It takes the standard cookie and puts a whole new spin on it, finishing with a product you would never have thought to make yourself.

Publisher: uuibbui - 04:28

Sunday, 1 February 2015

7-great-appetizers-offer-guests

I just came from a wedding at the Westin in Detroit, Michigan. It started at about 5pm in the evening and the reception was soon to follow. It was a beautiful wedding and I'm glad that I was able to go, but I know given the events of the day I was quite hungry. After the wedding we were escorted downstairs to the convention level where there was music playing and waiters passing out light appetizers. Can you say, "thank you Jesus!" You could also get a beverage from the bar if you were thirsty; they offered alcoholic as well as non-alcoholic beverages. Needless to say by that time I was very appreciative of the appetizers and the waiters.
For about an hour the appetizers kept coming out and you could dine before the reception and mingle with the guests who were in attendance. It was a great atmosphere for an event like this and I know I enjoyed those shrimp egg rolls and chicken appetizers that seemed to flow like a waterfall. If I had it to do all over again, I would consider a venue like that and I might even consider having a "pre-reception" event where people can just mingle and have fun.

For those of you who are having an event like this, you may be trying to figure out what to offer your guests. I know given that we were in a hotel that the menu was probably fixed and/or you had a limited selection as far as appetizer options. I want to give you some suggestions as far as appetizers you can offer your guests before the main reception that will take the edge off the hunger...

Egg Rolls - the most common ones are shrimp or vegetable. Consider both for those who may be allergic to shellfish.

Wingettes - you have many options here. You can do BBQ, Jerk, buffalo, plain, or any other assortment of flavoring that you desire.

Crab Rangoon - if you're not familiar with this one it's basically crabmeat with cream cheese in a fried wonton wrapper.

Vegetables with dressing - yes, the traditional celery, carrots, broccoli and cauliflower with ranch dressing or perhaps Italian dressing

Cheese - provolone, swiss, Colby, cheddar... there are a number of cheese options you can have

Meatballs with sauce - you can have turkey or beef meatballs for this option. The only thing I'd be hesitant about is that the sauce may be a bit messy.

Sliced fruit - a classic favorite of sliced pineapple, apple, grapes, strawberries, blueberries, and honeydew for a healthy appetizer option

Publisher: uuibbui - 04:41

Friday, 9 January 2015

5-nonalcoholic-beverages

I've read a lot of pieces online that talk about having a romantic dinner with a glass of wine, or a bottle of wine. I see recipes often that mention what kind of wine to drink with your entrée. What if a person doesn't have a bottle of wine available... or even drink wine for that matter? I know me personally I'm not one to drink liquor. I've tasted wine before and have cooked with wine, but I don't normally have a glass even on special occasions.

  • Bottles of wine at a good place (this is for a romantic dinner right? So we need to have the good stuff!) can easily go for $20... $30... $100. Of course if you just frequent the local grocer for something reasonable I'm sure you can get away with $5 or $10 for a bottle. I want to provide some alternatives for people who don't drink or need a more cost-efficient beverage alternative with a romantic meal.


Let's consider the following:

1. Sparkling Cider or Sparkling Fruit Juice


I'd recommend sparking apple cider, sparking peach juice, or sparking grape juice in particular. These are great non-alcoholic options for a romantic dinner. You can usually find them for about $3.00 (give/take) per bottle. If you can't get to a place where you can get a bottle, the alternative would be to puree some fruit, or get some fruit nectar and add some seltzer water or club soda. It doesn't have quite the same effect, but it's close.

2. Ice Cream Float


I know many of you are thinking that an ice cream float is NOT romantic... but remember, romance is not so much in the content, but it's also in the presentation. Let me explain. What is an ice cream float made of? Ice cream and pop, right? Well, here's your chance to be romantic with some ice cream and pop... get a flute (not the musical instrument, the glass) or a goblet, put in 1-2 small scoops of ice cream and your favorite soda, and let it come as close to the top as possible. Add a cherry on top, or whipped cream, and you have a fun, romantic beverage. I can hear some of you saying, "yeah right." I really believe some couples will find this romantic.

3. Strawberry Virgin Daiquiri


I found a good recipe base for a virgin strawberry daiquiri here. If you read that recipe, what I'd recommend you do afterwards is to blend it so that everything blends together. If you don't have strawberries, consider using peaches.

4. Shirley Temple


A Shirley Temple consists of cranberry juice and a carbonated lemon/lime beverage. Some use 7-Up, some use Sierra Mist, some use Sprite. Whatever your choice is, be sure to add a cherry on top and enjoy this potent beverage.

5. Smoothies


Make your own smoothie combination for your romantic dinner. Smoothies are great if you have particular theme in mind. For example, for the fall, you can go with an orange/brown theme and make a smoothie with fall fruits, or fruits with fall colors like cantaloupe, honeydew, or strawberry. Try something new and exciting with your spouse. Each of you pick two fruits that you want to put in and let the blender do the rest.

Hopefully this will help you find a beverage that will be romantic and be fun to make. Remember, romance isn't just about elegance; it's also about enjoying one another and having fun together.

Publisher: uuibbui - 08:50

5-halloween-candy-alternatives

Halloween is usually the time in which children stuff themselves so full of sugar that they're up all night vomiting. Guardians warn their children about the dangers of upset stomachs and rotten teeth, but children hardly heed these well-meaning pieces of advice. Whether you're looking to save the neighborhood children of root canals or protecting the health of your own children, the following are five fun alternatives for the usual Halloween sugar-laden mischief.

  • Be warned: you will inevitably be labeled "that lame house on the corner that doesn't hand out the good stuff," with most things you can think of. That's just life. The fact of the matter is that children don't want raisins, and they think candy bars are lame. As much as they'll be quite happy to eat them every other day of the week and thoroughly enjoy them during snack time, there's something inherently insipid about raisins on Halloween night. They might even resent you, but this won't last forever. They'll enjoy having teeth in ten years.


Sugar-Free Candy


With diabetes on the rise, sugar free candy has seen a market increase in recent years. Sugar free candy is available at the majority of grocery stores, and even some gas stations. Most would agree that these sugar-free varieties taste just as good as the normal candy, so kids won't feel like they're missing out on anything.

Temporary Tattoos


What's more Halloween than spider webs and witches tattooed across your kid's forehead?

False Teeth


Buy them the nastiest variety and tell your children that's what their teeth will look like if they continue to eat so much candy. Force them to wear them out in public and smile a lot. It just might work.

Bubbles and Silly Spray


Bubbles are always fun, but silly spray is just deliciously mischievous. The neighborhood parents will hate you, but the children will hardly notice the lack of candy when they're running around screaming and spraying each other with pink liquid plastic.

General Party Favors


You know the isle - the one where your kid gets wide eyed and suddenly disappears, only to be found shortly thereafter gazing longingly at the colored whistles? If it excites them at birthday parties, it will excite them at Halloween too. Put together little goody bags and load them up with only the best items.

With a little effort and thought, you might able to avoid being that lame house that passes out the apples. But only with some careful consideration.

Publisher: uuibbui - 08:07
,

5-great-side-dishes-Of-duck

A very sophisticated, delicious main course to serve during a dinner party is duck. And you can truly appreciate duck only with a side dish that enhance the savor of duck meat. If you intend to cook a duck for your guests or for your family, you need to pick the perfect side dish. Duck meat is tender, sweet and, unlike turkey or chicken, there's a lot of meat on the bones. The best side dishes for duck are those based on vegetables, accompanied by sour and sweet gravy.

  • Cabbage works great with duck. It might not sound so glamorous, but if it's cooked right, cabbage is an extraordinary side dish for duck. Chop the cabbage as finely as you can. Put a large pan on fire and add some sort of fat. If you have duck fat, it's perfect. If not, you can simply replace the duck fat with butter or a good quality vegetable oil. Wait until the fat from the pan heats up and add the finely chopped cabbage. For about 15 minutes, keep stirring inside the pan, to avoid burning the cabbage. After the cabbage turns softer and gets some color, you can put a few drops of water, to help the cabbage cooks better. The cabbage is done when it becomes really soft and tender and gets a caramel-like flavor and color. Generally, you need about 30 minutes to cook the cabbage. It's a very simple, but sweet and flavored side dish, that works great with duck.



  • Roasted vegetables are another great side dish you can serve with duck. It's very easy to make, it will take you only 10 minutes to prepare and another about 50 minutes in the oven. You can use all your favorite vegetables: carrots, celery and parsley roots, onions or garlic. Cut all the vegetables in pieces that have about the same size, wash them in cold water and let them dry. In the mean time, take a large pan, add some olive oil inside and start flavoring the oil with salt, pepper, smoked paprika, rosemary and oregano. Mix the olive oil and the flavors very well, and then add the vegetables. Make sure that the vegetables picked up some flavored oil on all sides. Cover the pan with some aluminum foil and place it in the hot oven for about 30 minutes. Then uncover the pan and let it inside the oven for another 20 minutes, until all the vegetables are well roasted.



  • A warm red beet salad also goes very well with duck. Although it might take you a while to cook the red beet, the savor of this salad will perfectly complement the taste of duck meat. The first step is to cook the red beet. Wash them really well and put them inside the hot oven, in a pan covered with parchment paper. That step will take a while '" red beets taste much better if you bake the entire root, without cutting it in small pieces. However, it will take about two hours for the red beets to be bakes. Once they are ready, you have to chop the as finely as you can. Flavor the red beet salad with olive oil, salt, a pinch of sugar, a small quantity of horseradish and a generous amount of caraway seeds.



  • Mashed potatoes with caramelized onions are a sweet and flavored side dish, ideal for duck. Prepare the mashed potatoes as you normally do, with plenty of butter and milk. Cut the onions in slices and put them in a hot pan with olive oil, stirring continuously. In about 20 minutes, the onions will become soft and caramelized '" they are ready when the color is light brown. The combination between the mash potatoes, caramelized onions and duck is just divine.



  • Mashed pumpkin is simply delicious with duck. Bake the pumpkin in the oven, and after is completely cooked just mash it with butter, milk, salt and pepper, until it becomes a rich, creamy paste.


Jamie Highland writes about events and parties, like weddings and baby showers. To read more articles or to find out more themes for a baby shower like duck baby shower theme or to check out some more baby shower favors, visit My Baby Shower Favors.

Publisher: uuibbui - 08:03
 

 

do what you fear and fear disappears

You are Most trustful for you

// This Pinterest Hover Button is brought to you by blogger.com. // Visit http://www.blogger.com // Feel free to use and share, but please keep this notice intact.