Friday, July 27, 2007

Holiday Candy Canes Are Festive and Fun

by: Donna Monday

Candy canes are everyone’s favorite holiday treat. Just think about how versatile they are. Not only do candy canes look great hanging from Christmas trees, but their versatility makes them perfect for all kinds of decorative uses.

Candy canes can be crushed or used whole in holiday arts and crafts projects. How about adding candy canes to your homemade holiday gift baskets?

Peppermint candy canes are usually red and white, but they can also be found in fun colors like red, green and white, and also flavors like orange, cherry, and even chocolate!

You can find candy canes sprinkled inside of cookies and other delicious Christmas recipes.

Candy canes make great ornaments. You can buy real ones and hang them around the house or the plastic version works fine too.

To create a festive mood on the holiday dinner table you can put out a couple of candy cane candles.

Got a wreath? Stick a few candy canes inside and watch your guests smile. Candy canes always seem to make people happy.

Mini candy canes can be crafted into a candy cane tree and used as a centerpiece. Another fun idea is to make your own candy cane pins and hand them out as gifts or stocking stuffers.

Some people even put large candy cane decorations outside of their houses. Some of these giant candy cane replicas even light up inside!

No matter how you enjoy candy canes, they are sure to make your holiday celebrations much more delightful.


About the author:
****************
Copyright 2004
Donna Monday
Love Cookies? All Your favorites here
http://www.best-cookie-jar-recipes.com



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Friday, July 20, 2007

Make Your Own Gourmet Gift Baskets

by: Donna Monday

Everyone loves to receive a gift basket. Corporate gift baskets are often given by businesses to their customers as a token of their appreciation. However, most gift baskets are person to person expressions of love and friendship.

You can find a great selection of online gift baskets from the very expensive to the cheap. Or, you can come up with your own unique gift basket idea and surprise a cherished friend or loved one.

It’s not difficult to make your own personalized gift baskets. Most gift baskets involve a theme.

Here are some sample ideas to get you started:

** Cookie Gift Basket – bake up some homemade cookies and enclose them in colorful plastic wrap, include a personal card or poem.

** Chocolate Lovers Gift Basket – include individual fancy chocolates, boxed chocolates, or the person’s favorite chocolate bars along with hot chocolate mix.

** Holiday Gift Basket #1 – a Christmas holiday gift basket idea could include small stocking stuffers, candy canes and homemade Christmas cookies.

** Holiday Gift Basket #2 – a Halloween holiday gift basket can be stuffed with candy, throw in some plastic skulls, spiders, cob webs and assorted creepy items.

** Wine Country Gift Basket – wine and cheese baskets are favorites, include two bottles of choice wine from your favorite winery or wine shop, add cheese and crackers.

** Coffee Gift Basket – Your favorite coffee lover will enjoy fresh gourmet ground roasted coffee (or their favorite brand), flavored creamer, cookies and a fun coffee mug.

** Italian Gift Basket – include a variety of dried gourmet pasta like spinach, whole wheat, or dried tomato, two jars of pasta sauce, fresh mozzarella and parmesan cheese, garlic bread and fancy olive oil.

** Tea Lovers Gift Basket – you can include several varieties of black tea, green tea and herbal teas, a mug and homemade butter cookies adds a nice finishing touch.

** Champagne or Beer Gift Basket - the champagne basket would be elegant: includes a bottle of fine champagne, cheese and crackers, and fancy chocolates; the beer basket includes several domestic and/or imported beers, lagers, or ales, chips, pretzels and nuts.

** Pet Gift Basket – dog and cat gift baskets are the most popular. For a dog you can include: homemade doggie biscuits or cookies, a doggie collar, doggie toys. For a cat you can include: cat treats, cat nip and cat toys.

Now you know that all it takes to make a unique gift basket that will be treasured is a little ingenuity and your personal touch.


About the author:
****************
Copyright 2004
Donna Monday
Love Cookies? All Your favorites here
http://www.best-cookie-jar-recipes.कॉम
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Friday, July 13, 2007

Pan-Frying, Shallow-Frying, Sautéing

by: ARA

(ARA) - Jamie Oliver, Food Network star and best-selling cookbook author, is on a mission -- to make cooking at home easy and fun for everyone. He bills his new book, “Jamie’s Kitchen,” as a “cooking course for everyone.” Armed with this cookbook, fresh ingredients and a good set of kitchen tools, there is no technique a new cook can’t master.

Jamie Oliver offers the following tips for one of his favorite and most healthy cooking techniques, sautéing, or what he calls “pan-frying:”

1. Get Yourself a Pan and Make It Hot

“The single biggest mistake that new cooks make is cooking in a cold pan,” Oliver explains. “You must heat the pan before you start cooking. If you start to cook before the pan is hot enough, the food steams instead of caramelizing and frying. You want the heat of the pan to sear in the juices, making the food taste better.”

2. Size Matters

“When it comes to frying pans, size matters! If your pan is too small, the ingredients will crowd each other, and they’ll end up steaming instead of sautéing. But if the pan’s too big, all those great pan juices will end up evaporating too fast and you may burn what you’re cooking,” Oliver points out. “So be sure to use the right size pan for the amount of ingredients you have. Also, look for some key features in the pan such as a good heavy bottom that distributes the heat evenly, shallow with rounded sides to make food easy to toss, and an easy-to-hold handle -- long enough to be comfortable to grasp, not slippery, and cool to the touch even when the pan is hot.”

3. Want Less Fat? Use Nonstick Pans

“Using nonstick pans lets you use less oil or butter, which means healthy cooking. To get great flavor, what you really need is a good sear. And a good sear doesn’t necessarily require lots of fat in the pan,” notes Oliver. “When you do this properly, not only do you end up with glorious, flavorful food, but you also seal the juices and the nutrients right in with the flavor and you’re cooking healthy food as well.”

Oliver has just worked with T-FAL to design his own line of stainless steel cookware, the Jamie Oliver Professional Series. The cookware comes with either pure stainless or nonstick coated sauté pans.“My wife loves my new T-FAL stainless steel nonstick pans because they’re easy to clean and the cool little red Thermo-Spot lets her know when it’s ready to go. Her cooking has already improved,” he says.

4. Your Mum was Right! The Gear’s the Thing

“You don’t have to go crazy buying equipment, all you need to cook well is a good set of pots and pans (I’m partial to my own!), a couple of good knives, including an 8-inch chopper, a heavy mortar and pestle, a set of tongs and a speed peeler,” says Oliver.

5. So What’s for Dinner?

“This is the fun part -- planning what goes into the pan. Think seasonally and try to shop for organic products if you can when you’re at the market,” Oliver urges. “Be intuitive; pan-frying is a fast cooking method, so you want things that are thinly sliced and cook quickly (unless you are finishing in the oven.) You can also score thicker cuts of meat and fish to speed up the cooking time and add more surface area to the food. But what gets me going? Chicken marinated in some fresh herbs and garlic that you’ve pounded in a mortar and pestle. Steaks that have been liberally seasoned with salt and freshly cracked pepper. Or this fantastic salmon dish that I am including a recipe for below. “Go ahead guys. Get stuck in!”

Jamie Oliver’s Pan Roast Salmon with Green and White Asparagus, Rosemary, Wrapped in Bundles with Pancetta and Red and Yellow Cherry Tomatoes

“The lovely thing about this recipe is that everything in the pan takes the same time to cook,” Oliver comments. “Try to get the salmon cut no more than an inch thick or it might need a little longer.”

Serves 2

16 spears of asparagus - green or white or a mixture of both

2 sprigs of fresh rosemary

6 slices of pancetta

2 thin salmon fillets, weighing around 7 ounces each

sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

olive oil

a handful of red and yellow cherry tomatoes

a small handful of Kalamata olives

1/2 a lemon

Preheat your nonstick T-FAL frying pan until the Thermo-Spot turns solid red.

Snap the woody bottoms off the asparagus spears and divide the tops into 2 bunches. Add a sprig of rosemary and wrap each bunch up in 3 slices of pancetta to form a neat bundle.

Season the salmon steaks with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper and drizzle with a splash of olive oil. Place the salmon in the hot pan with the cherry tomatoes, the olives and the two bundles of asparagus and fry on each side, turning the asparagus over in the pan from time to time so that the pancetta and salmon brown evenly.

By the time the salmon's cooked, the pancetta should be lovely and crisp, the asparagus just cooked and the cherry tomatoes softened and bursting with sweet sticky juices. Squeeze the 1/2 lemon over the whole dish to finish off, and tuck in! Courtesy of ARA Content
Resource: http://delicious-recipes2.blogspot.com




About the author:
Courtesy of ARA Content



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