A Salty Adventure

Hawaiian Sea Salts: Red & Pink

Last month I saw a tweet from Marx Foods about a photography challenge they were having for salt. I told them I was interested and I received 5 samples of cooking and finishing salts: Hawaiian Red Salt, Hawaiian Pink Salt, Ginger Salt, Espresso Salt & Flor de Sal. I was tasked to create two photographs: one of just salt, and the other of a finished dish that shows the salt well.

Immediately, the dish kālua pig popped into my head. I’m in the process of planning a vacation with my family and my sister’s Girl Scout troop to Hawai’i, so Hawai’i has been on my mind. We intend to have a “Hawai’i Day” next spring before going on the trip to expose the girls to the food and culture of Hawai’i so they don’t experience culture shock when they land on the island.

Kālua pig is one of the most popular dishes in Hawai’i, and is featured everywhere from the diner-style mix plate lunches locals eat midday, or the elaborate luau feasts held for special occasions (or tourists). It’s also one of the hardest dishes to find on the mainland, especially the east coast! We usually bring our kālua pig with us from Hawai’i on the plane, frozen, or have it shipped to us from the islands.

But, seeing the Hawaiian red & pink salt in the package from Marx Foods reminded me that the only ingredients in kālua pig are pig and Hawaiian sea salt. I then began to research how to recreate a mini imu in my oven at home. It seemed that all the recipes were for larger pieces of meat, and varied on temperature and time.

I settled on a 1.75 piece of pork butt and cooked it at 350 for  2 hours and 45 minutes. I cut 1/4 inch deep slices every inch and rubbed it with 2 tablespoons of a mixture of red and pink Hawaiian salt and 2 tablespoons of liquid smoke. I wrapped the pork with banana leaves secured with toothpicks and then wrapped with aluminum foil. I set it in a small baking dish and then put it in a larger dish. I added 2 cups water in the outer dish and set in the oven. I took the pork out after 2 hours to check on it, added 45 more minutes and 1 more cup of water around the dish. After 2:45 the pork was perfectly tender and easy to shred with 2 forks. I would suggest serving this dish hot and fresh. If you have leftovers, sprinkle with water before heating up or serve with a sauce to add some moisture back in. I ate some with rice and some red chile tortillas for lunch.

Flor de Sal, Ginger, and Espresso Salts with Milk Chocolate Caramels

In my excitement to make this dish, I forgot that all of the beautiful salt would dissolve when cooking! I then used the other three salts on some milk chocolate caramels and shared them with my friend Stephanie.

The ginger salt was surprisingly very strong and spicy flavored. After eating the caramels, the spice lingered in the back of our throats for a while. The espresso salt was a tad milder and sweeter than the ginger salt. The flor de sal was strong and straight-forward and paired perfectly with the sweet chocolate and gooey caramel.The salt granules were softer and smaller than the other two flavors, so the salt was easier to mix with the chocolate and caramel while tasting.

While we were tasting pork and caramels, we also decided to try the new Top Chef: Just Desserts truffles from Godiva that I had picked up over the weekend.

From top left, clockwise: Acai Berry – Dark chocolate ganache layered with acai, rose, and berry ganache in a dark chocolate shell decorated with a red heart; Passion Fruit – White chocolate and passion fruit ganache in a white chocolate shell; Chocolate Mendiant – Dark chocolate ganache between two dark chocolate disks, topped with bits of organic dried apricot, tart cherry, and sea salt; Green Tea – Matcha tea mousse center in a white chocolate shell decorated with green stringing.

The berry ganache tasted like alcohol or cough syrup, the passion fruit was bright, fresh, and smooth, the mendiant was rich but balanced with the salt, and the green tea was far too rich with the white chocolate and too much artificial green tea flavor in the center.

Buitoni Frozen Meals for Two

In July I received a nice, shiny coupon for a free “Buitoni Frozen Meals for Two” package as part of the Foodbuzz Tastemaker program.

I didn’t see Buitoni meals in the freezer section at first, then realized that it just looked exactly like our local Wegman’s “Italian Classic” generic brand and grabbed a package. Out of the available options, I chose the Four Cheese & Spinach Ravioli.

A few days later, we cooked the pasta and sauce according to the package directions and plopped ourselves down to eat. The pasta tasted alright, though a little bit soggy. As is the case with all frozen pasta, the flavors were a bit muted in the filling. The spinach was basically just for decoration, not for taste. The sauce was alright as well, though too sweet for my tastes.

At the check-out register, I remember the frozen meal being around $8. While this does feed two people, I could see some people being left hungry. I also think that this is a fairly easy meal to make yourself for much cheaper. Cheese Ravioli + Pasta Sauce? That’s one of the cheapest, easiest meals to make, and I didn’t see a big flavor payoff to justify the price increase.

Thanks Buitoni, but I don’t think I’ll buy these again!

Below is a picture of the product from their website, for comparison.

Nature’s Pride Bread

A few weeks ago my doorbell rang and I opened it to find a large box from San Francisco. I opened it to find three packages of Nature’s Pride Premium Harvest Hamburger Buns and Deli Rolls from the Foodbuzz Tastemaker program! Three packages of bread is a lot for us to eat, considering we’re a household of only two, but we tried our best! We ate sandwiches every day and grilled yummy Snappys on the weekend.

Unfortunately, we don’t like white bread, so the Country White buns didn’t really get eaten. I ate the Whole Wheat buns for lunches, and thought they were quite yummy. Many rolls we buy at the store for lunch sandwiches have too much bread and have a bad, chalky powder on the outside, leaving you with white-dusted lips. Not these! These were just the right amount of bread and I loved the dark, rich color.  I liked the fact that the buns were dense, but my boyfriend did not. I could see this bun standing up to a hamburger in strength, but it might stuff you until you were about to explode.

We like to think of buns and rolls as “treats” for a fancy sandwich, not for every day use. These would be great buns to buy for a grill-out, but my family is a potato-roll family! We can’t get away from that nice, orange-y color and mild, sweet after taste. I’m fine eating regular sandwich bread, or even sandwich “thins” since I like to taste my sandwich innards first, before the bread.

Vosges Haut Chocolat

http://www.vosgeschocolate.com

Rating: ★★★★★★½☆☆☆

Bars, Take 2

I wanted to give Vosges another try, determined to find at least one more bar that would keep me entertained or justify their price tag. The Red Fire bar was good, but not $7.50 good. Fortunately (or unfortunately?), I spotted some interesting flavors at my local Wegman’s and picked them up. Flavors I still haven’t tried: Dark Bacon Bar, Black Pearl, Creole, Gianduja, and Matcha.

Goji Bar

GojiThis bar was also recommended to me as a must-try. Promising, since I do like Goji berries (the one time I ate them), and usually simpler is best when it comes to chocolate. Unfortunately, this fell a little flat. Instead of complementing each other, the sweet goji and Himalayan salt just cancel each other out, leaving just the 41% milk chocolate, which is too sweet (website says 41%, package says 45%). When left to melt on the tongue, the goji does provide texture–not flavor– and the pockets of salt make this bar taste more nutty and less fruity. If this is a Goji bar, shouldn’t I taste the goji? I think this should be renamed to the Pink Himalayan Salt Bar. Maybe it will taste better if I pop it in the fridge before eating…

Calindia Bar

CalindiaOut of all of the bars I’ve tried so far, this was the one that had the most going on. It smells strongly of cardamom (similar to the Naga Bar in smell), but has much more flavor and texture. The bad thing about this bar is that it has so many physical elements in it (walnuts and dried plums) that I don’t think they are distributed evenly. The 65% chocolate straddles the fine line between sweet and bitter, but tastes are hit or miss. The first taste had large, leathery chunks of plum that refused to leave my mouth minutes after I was finished with the chocolate. The walnut is overpowered by the cardamom and plum in flavor, texture, and aroma. After some editing, this bar could be quite good, but for now it’s a tad too floral and tastes like chocolate-y potpourri.

Oaxaca Bar

Oaxacan Chile I thought this bar was going to be just like the Red Fire, but darker. Unfortunately, the chocolate itself turned me completely off. In fact, I think I might just refuse to take a second bite. The chocolate itself is only 75% cacao, and I’ve had 82% and been perfectly happy with it. Instead, I think it’s the type of cacao used (Tanzanian) and the flavors paired with it. I couldn’t get past the overwhelming dryness and chalkiness to taste the chiles, and unfortunately, this bitterness stayed in my mouth almost an hour after I tasted it. I also didn’t get the pleasant, mild burn from the chile like in the Red Fire.

Barcelona Bar

BarcelonaThis was the most disappointing bar that I’ve tried so far. There wasn’t anything really interesting (good or bad) about it. In fact, it tasted just like a Godiva Milk Chocolate Almond / Hershey Almond Bar. Well, not as bad as Hershey. I don’t really remember what that tastes like anymore, but still–this bar is plain. There is nothing “exotic” about it at all to my taste buds. This would be a great find for people that like a little more salt in their chocolate/nut combos, so give it to European friends or people that will nostalgically declare this reminds them of the chocolate they nibbled on in the Mediterranean x-amount of years ago.

Woolloomooloo Bar

My friend let me take a hunk out of her semi-melted Woolloomooloo Bar one evening. She had bought the Woolloomooloo with me when I had bought the first batch at Teaism in Penn Quarter. Since it was partially melted, I can’t fully judge it, but it was just alright. I don’t care for milk chocolate, so it was too sweet for me. I also didn’t get a sense of the depth of flavor that’s advertised on this bar. The salted macadamia nuts were plentiful and gave a nice crunch to the bar, but where was the coconut and hemp?

WEIL by Nature’s Path Chia Razz Bar

http://www.naturespath.com

Rating: ★★★★★★☆☆☆☆

Chia Razz BarIf you really like raspberry, you’re going to love this bar. Unfortunately, I don’t. Truthfully, the only reason I purchased this bar was because it has chia in it and I wanted to try chia!

The first few bites of this bar were sticky and sweet, but I became accustomed to it and quickly finished it off as breakfast.

This one is the healthiest (?) so far with 180 calories, 3 grams of fat (0.5 of which are saturated), but 28 sugar.

Again, the first ingredient is not one from the namesake of the bar: dates. In fact, raspberry, cashew, and chia appear fifth, third, and sixth (respectively) in the list. I’m also not too sure how I feel about the ingredient “organic flavor” . All proceeds from this bar go to the Weil Foundation, so I guess that’s a redeeming factor.