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By JANET K. KEELER, Times Staff Writer A weekly serving of food news and views
cold snap iceberg lettuce
Crunchy iceberg lettuce gets a bad rap these days. Trendy greens such as tatsoi, mizuna, frisee and lolla rosa slipped into our salads, leaving iceberg for people who don't know any better. Even romaine and red leaf lettuces are more desirable. But those pedigreed greens -- even the tender baby leaves -- are no consolation when you're in need of a nosh with the power to cool. Even the name iceberg is refreshing; picture a large chunk of ice floating in a frigid sea. Cut a big wedge of compact iceberg and drape it with cold Thousand Island dressing or chunky blue cheese. Ahhh. Iceberg lettuce is a variety of crisphead lettuce, which is characterized by tight, firm heads of light-green leaves. Other varieties are imperial and Great Lakes. According to the Web site www.foodreference.com, iceberg got its name from California growers who shipped the heads covered with crushed ice in the 1920s. Before that, it was called crisphead. Iceberg is largely water and doesn't have a lot of nutritional value compared with darker greens. However, it has a good amount of folate, the B vitamin that may help prevent birth defects, stroke and disease. Plus, it's more than 90 percent water, just what we need when it's hot. this web site cooksKetchup -- red, purple or green -- just might be the final frontier. These are the voyages of www.ketchupworld.com. Its mission: to explore strange new worlds in ketchup and to boldly go where no Web site has gone before. The site explores everything from Boar's Breath Jalapeno Pepper Ketchup to organic ketchup. This site challenges all those who claim salsa has made ketchup a dying condiment. constant comment"About all I can make is a bag of chips open." -- rapper Grandmaster Flash cooking classWhen an entire pie, crisp or cobbler is too much, scale down the recipe and bake individual portions in custard cups or ramekins. You will need to cut the baking time by at least 10 minutes. watch what you eatEthnic foods may taste good, but they may not always agree with a healthful diet. The American Heart Association offers tips on making global fare a little better for you. In Chinese restaurants, choose entrees with lots of vegetables. Steamed dumplings are a better idea than egg rolls and wontons. When eating Mexican food, ask the waiter for soft corn tortillas instead of chips to dip in the salsa. Corn tortillas are made with almost no fat. Sour cream and guacamole can be left off your dishes, and diners can use salsa instead to flavor food. caffeine card
chocolate bliss
is this for real?
- Compiled by Janet K. Keeler, from staff and wire reports
© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
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From the Times Taste section From the features wire |
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