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Four Things That the Good Coffee Shops Have in Common

Coffee is everything. It’s a huge staple in our diets. Our brains can’t run without it. It’s also a huge social thing. There is nothing more comforting to the soul than sitting down with a cherished friend at a local coffee shop and enjoying quality 

Three Things to Keep in Mind with X-Ray Food Inspection and How it Can Benefit Consumers

X-ray food inspection is important, because if provides companies the opportunity to screen various types of food that are packaged to ensure consumer safety. This is helpful, since sometimes incidents can occur when items are packaged in the food that should not be there. This 

Four Ways People Ruin Their Micro Green Dishes

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If you have ever watched any of the many hit cooking TV shows on right now, you know about the many micro green varieties that are sweeping the culinary world. Micro greens are leafy vegetables or herbs that are harvested right after their true leaves appear, when they are at the peak of their flavor and nutritional potency, elevating any dish that they are graced with.


There are micro green varieties that are specialty produce for decorating pastries and desserts. There are micro green varieties that are meant for taking a fresh summer salad from “meh” to “WOW!”. There are micro green varieties that add that pop to a already nice soup that make it a culinary masterpiece. You cook with microgreens and the guests of your dinner table will be awed.


However, microgreens themselves are tiny works of art. You can’t just sprinkle them generously over anything you make without understanding the power you harness. You need to understand what you’re cooking with and use it wisely. If you’re going to cook with organic micro greens, make sure you avoid these common mistakes:


Four Ways People Ruin Their Micro Green Dishes

  1. MISTAKE: Not allowing the micro green to be the star of the dish.

    Micro greens are delicate. They are small. They are easily overpowered by strong flavors. If you aren’t making the dish to glorify the micro green itself, it can easily get “lost in the sauce.” And if this is the case, why bother going through the trouble of using the micro green at all? Cooking with micro greens isn’t just for bragging rights. Do it right, and the micro greens themselves will do the talking. You won’t have to tell your guests that they’re there.


    How to fix it: Use your micro greens on dishes that don’t have a “star”. Using micro greens on a garlic butter lobster tail is a waste of magic. We like to sprinkle them on top of fresh salad greens. Or you can incorporate it into a blended soup for added color, texture, and flavor.
  2. MISTAKE: Overworking your micro greens before you serve them.

    Your micro greens do the most for your dish the less that you touch them. If you bake, steam, boil, or broil your micro greens before you serve them, what lands on your guests plates are tiny, indistinguishable, soggy greens that really don’t serve any purpose.


    How to fix it: Err on the side of freshness. Use your micro greens straight from Mother Nature, untouched by man, as often as you can. At most, you can pop them in a super hot cast iron for a few seconds to do a quick saute that doesn’t compromise the value of the micro green itself. The longer it is in the heat, the more the nutritional and flavor value is compromised.

  3. MISTAKE: Getting your micro greens from the wrong source.

    There are a lot of suppliers of micro greens that were never intended to be eaten. If you get your micro greens from your local florists shop or a plant nursery, or even the plant section of your grocery store, there’s a good chance they were never meant for human consumption. These micro greens were likely treated with pesticides and herbicides and fertilizer that make them unsafe to be eaten.


    How to fix it: Always look for that “certified organic” symbol on your micro greens. When you buy micro greens from a supplier that is certified organic, you know that they are untouched by chemicals and toxins that are meant to kill bugs and weeds, and could be harmful to your health.
  4. MISTAKE: Killing your micro greens before you serve them.

    Even after they’re cut, micro greens are living organisms with needs. The longer you keep them alive before serving, the better they look and taste in your dish. If you buy your micro greens a week before you cook with them, and treat them like a sack of potatoes, they’ll look pitiful on your plate.

    How to fix it: Buy your micro greens as close to serving time as you can. Keep them on the stem in the fridge. If it’s going to be more than a few days, add a wet paper towel or mist with a water bottle to keep them fresh.

What Free Range Meat Really Means

When it comes to the food industry today we hear a lot of buzzwords like “organic,” “free range,” and “cruelty free.” It’s not always apparent what all these terms actually mean, though. Some cynical consumers might see these terms and dismiss them as marketing tricks 

The Perfect Honey Gifts for the Honey Enthusiast

Are you looking for the perfect gift for that unique honey lover? Do you know someone who could put honey on anything? Are they constantly eating something that is honey flavored? Do they always have a large jar of royal jelly capsules made of honey 

Bizarre Booze Laws Around the United States

License

The United States is often called a collection of different countries and not just one unified country. This can be seen in a lot of ways. The way Medicaid is dealt with, what speed limits are imposed and where and how alcohol is served and sold are all left to the states to determine. For business who want to sell alcohol, there are different ways to get the right licenses. Some states require businesses to take ABC classes to get the right ABC permits, while others do not.

The granting of ABC permits is not the only way states can differ in how they treat booze. Here are some of the more strange laws that govern alcohol.

  • If you like wine from the Fat Bastard vineyard, you will be unhappy in Texas and Ohio. Both states have banned the wine because they think the name is offensive.
  • You need to be careful when it comes to giving animals alcohol. Alaska has made it illegal to give the substance to moose. Ohio has banned giving booze to fish, at least if you have given the fish enough to get it drunk.
  • Colorado has very specific laws that govern the amounts of booze you can buy. If you want wine, it has to be sold in containers with at least 24 ounces. If you want to buy liquor, you need to get at least a fifth of a gallon. If you are at your hotel, you can only keep the mini-bottles of booze in your mini-bar refrigerator. Remember, this is also the state that has made pot legal.
  • If you want to sell beer in Nebraska at your bar, you need to also sell soup. Preferably from a big pot.
  • Utah has some interesting laws, which should not come as a big surprise. Given the large Mormon population, they do not drink alcohol or coffee, it makes sense. They do allow people to buy two drinks but prohibit the sale of a “double.” They also require people who are drinking to order some food with it. This is also the only state to have set the legal limit for a person’s blood alcohol level at .05% vs. the .08% allowed everywhere else.
  • If you want a gift wine bag, you will be out of luck in New York. They allow people to buy a lot of wine items. You are ok buying whatever kind of wine, glasses for wine, corkscrews to open the wine and stoppers to keep it fresh. Any store that sells a wine gift bag can face up to $10,000 in fines.
  • Texas really does not want its residents to brew their own beer. They banned the Encyclopedia Britannica set because you can find at least one recipe to brew the substance at home. Maybe they have not heard of the internet where there are tons of those.
  • If you have a large party celebrating in Florida, do not get a larger champagne bottle. While in most places, you can get bottles called Salamanazars, Nebuchadnezzars or Balthazars. They are all illegal in the Sunshine State.
  • California does not ban certain kinds of alcohol but it is picky about where in a store it can be placed, For gas stations that sell booze, the displays must be kept at least five feet from the register.
  • Some cities have their own rules for alcohol consumption as well. If you like to drink your beer or ale from a bucket, do not try that in St. Louis, Missouri. At least do not sit on the curb when you do it because that can land you in jail.

While the way they handle things such as ABC permits is left to the states, the federal government does have some ways to control what states do. For instance, the drinking age is 21 years old in all 50 states. Louisiana allows parents or guardians of minors under 21 to buy it for them but they cannot purchase it themselves.

Businesses who want to sell liquor, beer or wine should check with their state government to find out what, if any, ABC permits they need and what the process is to get them. Each state can set the procedures and the cost for ABC licenses and permits for local businesses.

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Establishing Your Catering Needs For Your Next Event

Catering an event is a lot of work. You not only have to estimate how much food is enough for everyone, without having too much in leftovers, but you also have to find a wide assortment of food items that match all of your guests 

The Most Common Preferences And Dislikes Among Coffee Drinkers In America

America is a country on the go. Everyone has a meeting they were supposed to be at fifteen minutes ago or an errand that needs to be completed as quickly as possible to make room for another obligation. As you can imagine, this affects American 

4 Tips and Tricks to Make the Best Home Brew

Liquor

More and more Americans are turning away from mass produced beer. Today, at last 12% of the beer industry market belongs to small and independent craft brewers. At least 24.5 million barrels of beer were produced throughout the country in 2015. That represented a 13% increase in the volume of craft beer that was was produced. These local brews were worth about $22.3 billion, which represents a 16% increase in value. That same year, there was an increase of 15% in the number of local breweries around the nation. The growing popularity of micro-brews and craft beers has made home brewing a lot more popular. Here are some tips to help you get started brewing your own beer.

  1. Be careful when you go to bottle your beer. It does not matter if you are handling growler fills or basic bottles, this can be a very messy part of your home brew process. First of all, if you bought a kit that has a bottling process, make sure you read all of the instructions. Some systems need two people to manage the bottling process. If you try to do this by yourself when the manufacturer recommends two people, you will end up with your local beer everywhere in your space. Another good tip for this part of the process is to do it on your dishwasher. Put the bottles or growlers in the dishwasher and the bucket of brew on your counter. Any beer that you spill will just go harmlessly into your dishwasher. This will make any spills much easier to deal with.
  2. Spring for the larger kettle. Even if you have a kit, you need to get a brew kettle. If you think that creating your own local brew is something you are going to want to do more than once, you are going to need a larger kettle. There are several reasons you should just start out with the larger equipment. First of all, when you are cooking it, you will have less of a chance that it will boil over. In the second place, you are going to want to make more product than you can make in a smaller kettle. It just makes more sense to buy the larger equipment early in the process. Cleaning up your stove after your product has boiled over is a horrible experience that you should do whatever you can to avoid. Larger kettles can be very helpful in this process.
  3. Just as you want a larger kettle, you should get a larger auto siphon. Your auto siphon is crucial to move your product from the different places it is housed during the process. You will have an easier time doing just that if you have an auto siphon that is larger. You can lose a lot of product when you are transferring it from one container to another. After you have spent a lot of time working on your precious home brew, you will not want to lose even a drop.
  4. Go the extra mile and invest in a wort chiller. When you are making your local brew, the last thing you want is to find you have a contaminated product. The best way you can prevent that from happening is to chill your wort. The quicker this can be accomplished, the lower the chances are that it will end up being contaminated in the process. Even if you buy a ton of ice to bath your kettle in, the cooling can still take a while. Most people report this needs between 40 minutes to more than 60. That may not seem like a lot of time but bacteria does not need long to grow and reproduce. With a wort chiller, you can get up to five gallons cooled in under 20 minutes. When you brew own beer, you are going to want to share it with your friends and family. The last thing you want is to serve contaminated beer to the people you know and care about.

More and more people are looking to buy local products. From local produce to local brews. You do not get much more local than beer you made in your home!

Want to Make that Cake Really Special? Add Edible Candy Flowers!

andnbsp; If you are looking to create special garnishes for drinks or cakes, you may need to head out to your garden or florist. There are a number of edible flowers and plants that people have growing in their yards and gardens that may be