T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2375.1 | Recipes for tomatoes/platanos | HPSCAD::BOOTHROYD | Buh'weet say Panky O'TAY! | Wed Apr 18 1990 13:44 | 58 |
| With the warmer weather here, tomatoes will be more plentiful. If
you're interested in drying tomatoes and bananas there's a few things
that you should be aware of.
1. Remember, if you dry plum tomatoes, some times they become
sweeter so be aware of what type of tomatoes your prefer
2. What type of banana chip are you looking for??? I prefer platanos
which are the dark brownish/green looking *bananas* that become
sweeter when they become too ripe. Note the coloring when you're
purchasing a bunch.
I'm going to assume that you want the non-sweet banana chips (note -
platanos not bananas). This is quite easy to prepare. Peel the
platano, slice it into 1/2 inch pieces and then flatten with a glass
or place between 2 sheets of wax paper and flatten it. Most people
lightly fry them in oil - I prefer, for this dish, an olvie oil that
doesn't have that much character to it. In other words, olive oil
that isn't golden in coloring and doesn't smell fruity (fruity olive
oil is the best)*** When they are golden brown remove and set them on
paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
For dried tomatoes the process is quite easy. Make sure the tomatoes
that you're using are ripe - good quality. Slice the tomatoes length
wise, as one would do for a salad. Don't slice them real thin. Place
the wedges of tomatoes on a type of baking sheet and drizzle with a
good olive oil*** Sprinkle them with fresh chopped basil (there is a
difference between dried and fresh). If you cannot find fresh then
place a small handful of dried in the palm of your hand and then rub
BOTH palms together in order to heat activate the flavor from the
basil ... sprinkling this over the tomatoes. Make sure the oven is
preheated between 300 and 325. Allow the tomatoes to *dry* out not
cook. It's a good idea to have an oven thermometer since some ovens
are heat faster and are higher in temperature. You don't want to bake
them!!! This can take a couple of hours, more or less, depending on
your oven. Once this is completed, allow the toms to fully cool and
then place in a sealed jar with fresh sprigs of basil, cloves of garlic
and good olive oil. These are great with fresh angel hair pasta and
seafood (adding some of the oil, a bit more garlic, dash of sugar,
fresh ground pepper, salt, more fresh basil and a dash of dry white
wine or vermouth)!!!
*** Most people think that Italian olive oil is the best but it isn't.
In order to allow olive oil into this country (aka FDA) it must be
pastuerized (heated like milk) to make it pure. Italian olives
cannot stand up to this type of abuse, hence the non-fruity
smelling olive oil. Spanish olive oil is the best. It can with
stand American standards. It is very dark golden in coloring and
has a fruit-like aroma. The best is Goya and cost approx. 1.69 a
bottle. Don't put a cap on olive oil when you get it home. Allow
it to breath like a bottle of fine wine.
The olive oils old in Spain/Italy/Greece, etc is 10 times stronger than
in what's sold here ... The olive oil capital of the world is in Madrid
That ought to say something.
Good luck
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2375.3 | YOu sure can!!! | HPSCAD::BOOTHROYD | Buh'weet say Panky O'TAY! | Wed Apr 18 1990 16:49 | 18 |
| It sure will .... without a doubt!!! It might be a good idea
to experiment a little. Try the banana and apples on a slightly
lower setting since I'm not quite sure what would be the most
appropriate tmeperature.
Banana chips (whether platanos or bananas) are 90% of the time fried
in soybean oil (coconut and a few others that clog the arteries. Olive
oil doesn't. I thought that you wanted a recipe that resembled the
type purchased in a supermarket or basically, a step up.
The oven method should work fine - jsut use a little imagination!!!
You pay a very high price in a health food store for good dried fruit.
Lots of times sugar is added as well. This way you'll know that it's
100% natural.
Good luck!!
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2375.4 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Thu Apr 19 1990 15:07 | 9 |
| My answer to .1
I agree with you in that Spanish olive oil is more aromatic and heavier
than Italian oil, but I don't agree with you in the capital of olive
oil being Madrid... If you want to know, olive oil is not produced
anywhere near Madrid, but in Andalucia, being the provinces of Cordoba
and Jaen the main producers followed by Sevilla and the rest of the
provinces. Madrid consumes oil, Andalucia produces it...take it from a
daughter of a former producer, I should know! Have you ever heard of
Aceites Angel Camacho? it comes from Moron de la Frontera....
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2375.5 | You're right!!!!! | HPSCAD::BOOTHROYD | Buh'weet say Panky O'TAY! | Thu Apr 19 1990 15:49 | 30 |
| I lived in Spain for a few years and I know that - it's called a focal
point, not the area it's is produced ... an area, so to speak. Madrid
is the art capital of Europe as well but that doesn't mean all is
*produced* there solely. I have been to Adalucia, Sevilla (that's where
Goya is produced), Barcelona, Valencia, Toledo, Cadiz, etc. *8-)
I was told by my *professor* (chef) that the olive trees in Italy were
diseased - something like that - and died. Italy is still rebuilding
it's crop to the level of excellence it once was. Still, they cannot
compete with the U.S. FDA requirements of
homogenization/pastuerization.
The reason I brought that up was to save folks alot of money that
could be wasted on expensive bottles of Italian olive oil. Two
weeks ago, a friend of mine spent $12.99 on bottle of olive oil
from Italy. It had very little character of aroma and was a waste
of money. You wouldn't continue to buy a bottle of wine that's
characterless and bland; the same holds true for olive oil. Do be
careful though. When a bottle says 'Light' it doesn't mean it's less
in calories, etc (it's low in sat. fats anyway), it means that the
taste is much lighter. Basically, it taste like vegetable oil. And,
not all Spanish olive oils are good. Iberia and Goya, off the top of
my head, are very good and notice the price difference between Spanish
and Italian.
Thanks,
/gail
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2375.6 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Thu Apr 19 1990 19:08 | 12 |
| RE: .2
>I'm trying to come up with low cal
>snacks, and olive oil just doesn't do it :^)
Dried bananas are not going to be "low cal" no matter what you do with them.
Granted, frying them in oil only makes it worse, but there's a considerable
amount of sugar (not to mention natural banana oil) in bananas to start with.
Drying in fact makes it worse by removing the moisture and thus increasing the
calories per unit weight.
--PSW
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2375.7 | Electric Drier | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Thu May 03 1990 05:47 | 3 |
| I have "fruit driers" for sale in places that sell toasters, yogurt
makers, etc. Don't know if they work but they must reproduce the "oven
method" to an exact degree.
|
2375.8 | sugared coated fruit | ROULET::ETHOMPSON | I`m the NRA | Thu Nov 01 1990 22:24 | 8 |
| I do not know where to put this so here goes.
My wife and I have been looking thorough some Victorian magazines for center
pieces and I am writing here to see if any one has a fast way to
make sugared fruit. The one recipe my wife found in her cookbook
takes more than a week to do from start to finish.
Also how does a person build a fruit pyramid.
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2375.9 | some suggestions | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Fri Nov 02 1990 11:56 | 18 |
| > My wife and I have been looking thorough some Victorian magazines for center
> pieces and I am writing here to see if any one has a fast way to
> make sugared fruit. The one recipe my wife found in her cookbook
> takes more than a week to do from start to finish.
My recipe takes the same amount of time...I think that's the best way to go.
>> Also how does a person build a fruit pyramid.
at a crafts store, buy a styrofoam pyramid form. Mount the fruit on the
pyramid by sticking long sticks into the pyramid, all around the form and
then propping the fruit on the sticks, side by side. If you are going to
make a pyramid of large fruits like pears and apples, simply stack the
fruit, making each layer up, smaller by placing a piece of fruit between
two pieces on the next lower layer. Fill in gaps in the pyramid with
unshelled nuts, such as walnuts, pecans, and hazelnuts which add texture
and color.
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2375.10 | Where to buy dried fruit? | STAR::LEWIS | | Thu Dec 07 1995 09:28 | 6 |
| I would actually like to buy some dried fruits -- specifically apples,
blueberries, peaches and pears. I've heard that Idylwild in Acton has
them, but I'd like to avoid that trip if possible. Has anyone
seen such items in the southern NH or central Mass area?
Thanks,
Sue
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2375.11 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Dec 07 1995 09:55 | 2 |
| I've seen dried apples, peaches and pears (mixed, with others) at the
wholesale clubs in Nashua.
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2375.12 | Bursey's Farm Stand | XANADU::PRINCIPIO | | Mon Dec 11 1995 07:41 | 7 |
|
Another place to try is Bursey's Farm Stand in Wilton. They
seem to have a good seletion. I have bought dried-fruits there
in the past and have always been pleased with the quality.
....helen
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