I went. I saw. I tasted it all. These were my favorite discoveries at the Fancy Food Show, held last week at San Francisco’s Moscone Center.
POCO DOLCE Sesame Toffee Bittersweet Chocolate Tiles with Grey Sea Salt are divine. So’s the Burnt Caramel Toffee Tile. These are chocolates to savor slowly, with lots of oohing and aahing. I was also fascinated by the company’s new Bittersweet Bar flavored with California olive oil and grey sea salt. This is one to eat slowly, allowing it to melt on your tongue and the olive oil essence to linger
Say cheese, as in CAPRICHOS DE LA PASTORA TORTA DE OVEJA, and get ready to smile. This unusual spreadable cheese from Spain is sensational. It’s called a torta because it looks like a little cake. Let it come to room temperature, lop off the top, grab a spoon, a bottle of wine and a couple of dear friends and get ready to dine. It will be available on-line at The Rogers Collection, but the price hasn’t been determined as I write this.
The folks at POWELL AND MAHONEY must have felt bad for all us aspiring bartenders who desperately need a bottle of SIMPLE SYRUP simple syrup to create the cocktails of our dreams. (Sure, you can make it yourself, but it’s a messy operation.) The company introduced Simple Syrup in a neat and tidy bottle at the show, so it won’t be in stores for a month or so. Look for it in gourmet shops and upscale liquor emporiums. Let Happy Hour begin.
All hummus is not created equal. In fact, all hummus is not even made from the traditional chickpeas. At last week’s show, Tryst Gourmet unveiled an EDAMAME HUMMUS that is scrumptious and really good for you too. Made from baby soy beans, it’s flecked with yellow peppers, black sesame and ginger and is smooth, creamy and totally addicting. The Eat Well Enjoy Life line also includes edamame hummus with minced red pepper and toasted sesame, as well as a terrific Spicy Yellow Lentil Hummus (with sunflower seeds and apricot) and Tuscan white bean hummus with roasted pine nuts and herbs. I love them all. Not yet available in supermarkets, but watch for the groovy green lids in the refrigerator case of your market in the next few months.
I’ve always been a fan of LUCINI extra virgin olive oil, which sits in front of a dozen or so olive oils on my pantry shelf. Nonetheless, I shied away from their new line of bottled vinaigrettes because I’m simply not a fan of bottled salad dressings. Wow, did I get a surprise when I tasted the new Delicate Cucumber & Shallot Artisan Vinaigrette. Its light, creamy texture and bright flavors are a perfect match for salads, cooked salmon, steamed veggies, cole slaw, and even couscous fluffed with minced chives. A bottle costs about $7; Lucini is widely available in Whole Foods and most upscale supermarkets.
The newest pasta sauce from perennial award-winner DAVE’S GOURMET is a supremely satisfying merger of cultures called Masala Marinara. Its sweet-tangy flavor will do the obvious wonders for a bowl of bucatini, but I’m looking forward to experimenting with lasagna, lamb stew, chicken cacciatore and even pizza. A 25-ounce jar retails for $6 to $8; available in many upscale markets.
NUVOLA DE PECORA is a semi-soft sheep’s milk cheese from Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region. The square, soft-rind cheese, which translates poetically as sheep clouds, has a bone-white interior and an awesome velvety texture. There’s a hint of sweetness playing games with the characteristic sheep’s milk tang. It’s distributed by Forever Cheese in Long Island City.
Gluten-free items continue to be big news. I was blown away by Stonewall Kitchen’s rich, satisfying GLUTEN-FREE-BROWNIE-MIX. (There’s also a gluten-free vanilla cupcake mix that I didn’t try.) I was also enchanted with the coastal Maine company’s Cinnamon Sugar Doughnut Mix. The doughnuts are light and fluffy, with a heavily dusted, lip-smacking exterior. They’re baked, not fried so that makes them guilt-free in my book. They’re also easy to whip up (with egg, butter and milk) using the molded mini donut pan that’s sold with the mix. (A package of mix is $8.95; the pan is $14.95.)
LAVENDER SHORTBREAD schmeared with mascarpone….be still my heart. This was my favorite cookie from two-year-old, Napa-based Botanical Bakery which uses premium ingredients from Strauss Family Creamery and calls the cookies “Our take on butter, flour and sugar.” The Ginger Squared and Cardamom shortbreads are yummy too. A 3.5-ounce bag of bite-sized Shorties costs about $6.
Ever since the MAYA KAIMAL line of Indian simmer sauces was introduced in 2003, these savory sauces have made my Fancy Food Show Ten Best list every year. Originally available only in the refrigerated cases of the supermarket, the sauces are now available in shelf-stable glass jars, with a two-year shelf life. The line includes about a half dozen types of sauce, including Kashmiri Curry, Vindaloo and Madras Curry, but my absolute favorite continues to be the Tikka Masala Simmer Sauce with its cinnamon, cardamom and clove notes and perky tomato-ginger flavor. The sauces are available in upscale supermarkets; a 15-ounce container is about $8.
SWEET-RIOT calls itself an alternative to a chocolate bar. I see it more as an alternative to pigging out. This clever product consists of the tiny nibs from the cacao bean, roasted and cloaked in three intensities of dark chocolate (50-, 65-or 70 percent). Just two or three nibs give a blast of flavor and a pleasing tickle to the tongue. Only 1 or 2 calories per bite, 140 in the whole tin. About $5 per tin.
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