Paella is a saffron-flavored dish made with varying combinations of rice, vegetables, meat, chicken and seafood. Spain and the Catalan languages, paella means frying pan or pot. The traditional paella pan is flat and of large diameter, it can also have handles on each side.
In fact, paella is one of the most versatile dishes to make. Paella also has the advantage of being great to clean out the fridge and use up leftover meats and vegetables. Any combination will eventually be great the secret is in the chemistry. Spanish Paella is a dish that is generally made to feed several people. Moreover, Spanish Paella is quite flavorful the next day as the tastes have had time to mix together and become stronger.
Here are three basic steps to follow to make wonderful Spanish Paellas while leaving you the latitude to be creative and to make the dish their own by customizing it to their taste.
The Discerning Foodie aims to be a resource for those who not only have a discerning palate but who are also keenly aware of health and other issues that surround our dining indulgences. This blog focuses on good food, its benefits and sins, and the preparation or preservation of good food, thus becoming the essential guide for the modern connoisseur.
Showing posts with label foodie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foodie. Show all posts
The History and Journey of Curry
Curry features in the cuisine of almost every culture. A curry is a spicy recipe but the types of spices and herbs are used are different in each culture. Curry powder itself is not a single spice but a blend of different spices. However, this golden coloured spice is most often associated with Indian cuisine.
Curry’s Early Beginnings
The origins of curry go a long way back to 1700 BC Mesopotamia . The earliest known recipe for meat in spicy sauce with bread appeared written in cuniform on tablets found near Babylon .
A List of Coffee Health Benefits
Coffee has recently been proven to have a number of health benefits, and that list seems to be getting longer.
Cancer: Coffee has not been proven to cause cancer, and it even reduces the risk of mouth, throat, and colon cancer.
Heart Disease: Coffee does not raise the risk for heart disease, and it even offers preventative protection.
Diabetes: Coffee lowers the risk of developing type II diabetes.
Alzheimer’s: Coffee strengthens the blood-brain barrier, which often becomes damaged and leads to Alzheimer’s.
Osteoporosis: Excessive caffeine intake can lower bone density, which should not have an effect in moderate coffee drinking. Adding milk to your coffee on a regular basis can offer you the calcium you need to reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
Depression: Coffee can elevate energy levels and reduce depression.
Several more reasons to drink your cup of Joe!
Source: The Coffee BumpWine and Cheese Pairings
Pairing wine with gourmet cheese is more an art than a science. The great part about that is the trial and error process can be rather delicious. Here are a few guidelines to get you going in the right direction.
Play the match game. Match the boldness of your cheese with the boldness of a wine. If you have a slightly more subtle cheese like Brie, you need an equally medium intensity wine, otherwise one will overpower the other. Try to match the subtleties in a wine with the subtleties in a cheese. The nuttiness of a cheese like an aged Gouda works well with a slight nuttiness of a wine. The bright, tanginess of a fresh chevre (goat cheese) goes well with the bright, acidity of a Sauvignon Blanc.
Try sweet with salty for a classic combination. Off-dry and dessert wines like a Late Harvest Riesling balance the saltiness of cheeses like the Stilton or Gorgonzola.
Give Equal Opportunity. Just as with your cheese plate, you want a variety of grape varietals and regions represented. If you’re serving three cheeses, try to pair them with one sparkling, one white and one red wine from different regions.
Go Regional. As with food, cheese and wine from the same region have a natural inclination to pair well together. For hundreds and thousands of years, farmers and vintners have been creating their goods to work well with the local palate. So try Drunken Goat with a spicy Spanish wine from Rioja for a near foolproof pairing.
Serving Order. Keep your heaviest cheese and wine pairing until the end otherwise you’re apt to have your mouth coated in blue cheese early on making you unable to taste the nuances of delicate cheese and wine pairings.
Source: The Cheese Ambassador
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