Number your curry and plan your stocking stuffers

By Darragh Doiron
The Port Arthur News

October 25, 2006 02:43 pm



Curry Curry
You know that joke about the seniors at the rest home who know their stories by heart, and they just call out numbers and laugh? Extreme curry lovers can get a taste of that familiarlity with the currycurry.net starter kit. Ol’ No. 1 was mild enough for an omlette with garam masala, chili and ginger, but No. 3 is a sturdy addition to a stew with coriander, cumin, chili, enugreek, paprika nd garam masala. While we think of curry as what comes out of the spice jar, indian famlies have their own blends as personalized as gumbo. No. 4 features tumeric. Silver-topped jars have color coded lables that look great in your pantry. Love ‘em all.

It’s just “plaintain” good
Plaintains are cousins to the banana. Chips made from them tend to put one in an exotic frame of mind. Grab Em Snacks puts them smack in the middle of Louisiana … with flavor. This New Jersey-based company figured flavoring them with Cajun spices ought to work, and it did. I’m a sucker for the red chili, myself. The chips — also in jalapeno, sea salt and black pepper — are a welcome addition to lunch boxes. I reckon Elvis would have liked them with his fried peanut butter and banana sandwiches.

Holiday flair
Little jars of coffee Vienna mix could be your family’s gift project this season.
Taste of Home’s Holiday & Celebrations Cookbook 2006 includes the recipe: In an airtight container combine the following and store in a cool, dry place for up to two months: 2/3 cup nondairy creamer, 2/3 cup sugar, 1/2 cup instant coffee granules, 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon. For one serving, dissolve 2 tablespoons of mix in a cup of boiling water, stir well. This recipe makes 12 servings.
Try packaging it in a travel coffee mug. The book has creative packaging tips like packing cookies in office supply bins, seasonings in salt shakers and popcorn flavors in sectioned dip bowls.
These curried pecans would also make tasty tokens: In a bowl combine 3 tablespoons melted butter, 1 1 /4 to 1 1/2 teaspoons curry and 1/2 teaspoon salt. Add 1 cups pecan halves and toss to coat. Transfer to a foil-lined pan and bake 15 to 20 minutes or until toasted and crisp, stirring three times. Cool on a wire rack and store in an airtight container.

Check before you bake
My mother tried new Clabber Girl baking mix in a plastic tub and was underwhelmed with her experimentation. It came with a suggestion for drop biscuits that came out more like muffins and she ate them “without enjoyment.” She Instead of following the directions for a poured batter, she later tried a kneadable dough and ruled it a messy disaster. It went from a muffin to a biscuit, but a bad biscuit. The third try she added margarine and sour cream.
“I wish I could say the result was spectacular, but it was a much improved version and we did have a measure of enjoyment eating them,” she said.
Next grocery outing, she will stick to the oldies.
Contact this reporter at ddoiron@panews.com.

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