Archive for Food
How To Buy Maine Lobster Wholesale For A Restaurant Or Party
Posted by: | CommentsIf you own a restaurant or are having a large family get together, serving lobsters for dinner isn’t as expensive as you think. While a fancy restaurant might charge 30-40 dollars a plate, you can order live Maine lobster for as little at 6 or 7 dollars a pound!

- Image by Jeremy Brooks via Flickr
The first step is finding a distributor. The Maine lobster industry is regulated by the state and remains for the most part family owned and operated. This is a good thing! While most large corporate distributors wouldn’t waste their time dealing with a small order, a family run lobster pound will most likely bend over backwards to obtain your business.
You can easily find a good lobster distributor using a search engine such as Yahoo or Google. I would use keywords such as “wholesale lobster” or “wholesale live lobster”. This will return a myriad of results, some better than others. Look for a lobster distributor who welcomes small orders. Many places will have a page devoted to wholesale inquires. Just submit an email and leave your name and number, along with how much lobster you want to order. Someone should return you email and give you price quote.
When you get the price quote, make sure it is broken down by pounds of lobster and shipping cost. Shipping can be rather expensive, so don’t be shocked if it is several hundred dollars.
Most distributors give two options for shipping. FedEx/UPS or Air Freight. FedEx/UPS is great because it is delivered right to your front door even on the weekend. This convenience comes at a cost, shipping 100 pounds overnight through FedEx will cost you over 200 dollars. FedEx should be used when your total weight is low, or you are unable to use air freight.
The second option, Air Freight, is much less expensive, but also less convenient. The lobster distributor will pack up your lobster and drive them to a local airport. The lobsters will be placed on an airplane and flown to an airport close to you. Most often you will be required to pick up the lobsters at the airport. Air freight will cost you between 50 and 75 cents per pound. So to ship 100 pounds may only cost 50-75 dollars, much less then if you used FedEx or UPS.
Your lobsters will arrive in a large box packed with ice packs and special pads to hold in ocean water. Lobster should be placed in refrigeration with the box open to the air. You should plan to have your lobster delivered on the day you wish to serve them.
About the Author: Ian Reardon owns Sagamore Lobster. Sagamore Lobster has been selling lobster wholesale for over 30 years
Tips and Suggestions Of Ingredients For the Making of Perfect Steak Marinates
Posted by: | CommentsCuisines from all over the world rely on a diversity of steak marinades to prepare meat for cooking. Wine, vinegar, lime juice or other acid ingredients are used to tenderize the texture of red meats: pork, veal, beef, lamb and venison. However, tenderizing is not the only great advantage of steak marinades, they also add up to the taste richness and make the dish twice more savory. Furthermore, given the fact that the alternative for marinade is either meat pounding or cooking it for hours on end until it gets soft enough to be stabbed with the fork, marinating remains the least time-consuming solution.
Regardless of which combination of ingredients you choose for the steak marinades, the important part is to leave the meat covered in the solution for at least six hours; the most advisable thing to do under the circumstances is to actually let

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it marinate over night. Here are some further tips and suggestions of ingredients for the making of perfect steak marinates; yet, mention must be made first that very often, creativity can help you improvise some wonderful recipes too, therefore, personal contribution should not be ignored either.
Let’s start by saying that at the basis of all steak marinades lies an acid ingredient which prevails in the composition: the most commonly used are vinegar, wine and lime juice. When it comes to vinegar, the best suggestion is to use a balsamic type that has the most pleasant flavor of all; then, red wine always works best than white wine too. The former is indicated for red meats while the latter for poultry only. Steak marinades also rely on a little oil added to the composition, and there are free variations here too: vegetable oil would be the general solution, however olive oil or peanut oil are also valid options.
Spices are next on the list for cooking steak marinades, and here improvisation works at its best. There are certain ones that are an absolute must like pepper and chilly, but for some very special dishes variations include cinnamon powder, garlic powder, ginger and so on. Instead of garlic powder, it is often recommended to use fresh cloves, not only for the natural flavor, as for the fact that a lot from the powder form consists of additives and taste enhancers. Various steak marinades are also include soy sauce, mustard or Dijon sauce as well, but in small quantities no larger than two teaspoonfuls.
By: Muna wa Wanjiru
Article Directory: www.articledashboard.com
Muna wa Wanjiru Has Been Researching and Reporting on Steak for Years. For More Information on Steak Marinades, Visit His Site at STEAK MARINADES
I Love German Wine and Food – A Franconian Riesling
Posted by: | CommentsIf you are looking for fine German wine and food, consider the Franconia region of southeastern Germany. You may find a bargain, and I hope that you’ll have fun on this fact-filled wine education tour in which we review a local Riesling.
Franconia is bordered by the Danube River on the south and by the Main River on the north. Both France and Franconia are named after the Franks, a Germanic tribe. Franconia had been independent for centuries but the Congress of Vienna in 1814-1815 joined it to neighboring Bavaria in southern Germany as part of the reshaping of Europe.
Franconia ranks sixth out of the thirteen German wine regions in both vineyard acreage and total wine production. Over 85% of Franconian wine is white. Its main grape varieties are Müller-Thurgau, a German hybrid, responsible for almost half the local production of white wine and Silvaner. Unlike many other German wine regions, here the Riesling grape is not a major player. About 40% of the region’s wine is middle-quality QbA wine, and almost 60% is the higher quality QmP wine. Only about 0.5% of Franconian wine is table wine. Read More→
The History and Production of Chocolate
Posted by: | CommentsCocoa powder and the many different types of chocolate are all derived from cocoa beans, the seeds of the fruit of the cacao tree. These small trees are native to the tropical America but are extensively cultivated elsewhere in the tropics.

- Image via Wikipedia
The tree begins to bear fruit when it is 4-5 years old. The small pink flowers and succeeding fruit pods grow directly from the trunk and main branches. On average a full grown tree may produce 6000 flowers, only twenty of which will become pods. A pod weighs about 1 pound (450g), and contains 20-40 seeds, or cocoa beans, which resemble plump almonds and are covered with a sweet white pulp. An ordinary bean has a dark brown or purple flesh, with a bitter, astringent and nutty taste.
The Mayas and Aztecs of Central America, or what is known as Mexico, were the first know drinkers of chocolate. In 1519 the Spanish explorer Cortes discovered the beverage and introduced it to the Spanish court, after observing the Aztec Emperor, Montezuma consuming it.
The drinking chocolate was made by drying the cocoa beans and roasting them over a fire. Water was then added and the beans pounded to a paste, often spices, nuts and powdered flowers were added.
The chocolate making process is somewhat long and involved. When the cocoa beans (seeds) have been scooped from the pods, they are piled onto leaves, covered with more leaves and left for several days. The sugary pulp surrounding the beans begins to ferment.
After fermentation the wet beans are dried, on mats, wooden platforms or in drying equipment. After drying, the beans are packed into bags ready for transportation to the next stage.
At the factory the beans are sorted, cleaned and roasted for an hour in rotating drums at 275′F (135′C).
The roasted beans are then “kibbled”, a process in which they pass between rolls of serrated cones placed at such a distance apart that the beans are cracked rather than crushed. The cracked shell is carried away by an air-blast (a process called winnowing).
The broken beans or nibs are then ground between steel rollers. Because the cocoa beans are 50% fat (cocoa butter) and the grinding process generates heat, the crisp nutty cocoa nibs emerge as thick brown liquid. When cooled this solidifies to a hard block of unsweetened chocolate known as a “mass”. This is the basis of all chocolate products.
Cocoa is made by extracting 70-80% of the butter. The hard dry cake which remains is then ground, reground and sieved.
To make plain chocolate, extra cocoa butter and powdered sugar are added to the “mass”.
Milk chocolate has sweetened full cream milk added which has been condensed into a rich creamy liquid At these stages the chocolate has a rough texture. After being ground and mixed the liquid chocolate is further ground (Conched) with heavy rollers to produce a smooth velvety texture.
This article was written by John Jarmola, a Consultant Food Technologist who specializes in the development of new food products. He is currently involved in a reviewing the benefits of the new “Superfood”, Acai Juice, to find out more visit http://acaijuicereview.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=John_Jarmola
Why Is The T-bone Steak Considered So Special All Over The World?
Posted by: | CommentsOn special occasions such as wedding parties, holidays, the Easter dinner or any personal celebration, a refined dish needs equally refined ingredients. Preparing a T-bone steak at home or serving it at the restaurant will definitely prove what a good meal really means. Why is the T-bone steak considered so special? The answer lies in the tenderness of the beef used to prepare it; the price for such steak cuts is pretty high too, not to mention that they are very peculiar to cook too. The main secret when grilling or broiling T-bone steak is not to leave it cook for too long. Why?
Before ordering a T-bone steak you should definitely know that this type of dish requires that the meat be cooked rare or medium rare. Leaving it too long on the grill reduces the softness of the tissue and makes it harden, whereas this actually means destroying the very property that makes it so special: texture tenderness. When you buy the T-bone steak cuts from the market, carefully look for the marble like lines specific to this beef tissue, such signs clearly indicate that the meat is high quality and you are not tricked into making a bad deal.
T-bone steak makes one of the delicacies of Italian cuisine, and it is truly unique from the type of fire used to grill the meat to the seasonings added to spice it up. Making an Italian T-bone steak on the stove would actually mean ruining it, when one of the secrets of bistecca alla fiorentina lies in the use of a wood fire to grill the meat over. The seasonings used include only olive oil and black pepper, but the taste is so rich that it makes you try it any time you get the chance.
Cooking T-bone steak does not require any form of marinade; some of the ingredients used for the marinade can nevertheless be added to the dressing. Dijon mustard and Worcestershire sauce are among the first to use in order to add flavor to this dish, together with balsamic vinegar or lime juice. The best wine to be served with T-bone steak is rich red wine, usually dry or semi-dry. French and Spanish wines go very well for the matter, but unless you’re ready to pay for a real treat, don’t order a full bottle. A glass should be enough to increase the aroma of the T-bone steak.
By: Muna wa Wanjiru
Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com
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