Article Search Directory

Free Reprint Rights Articles

Search:

Food Articles

1: What can you Offer Customers with a Buffet Style of Restaurant?
There are plenty of things you can offer your customers with a buffet style of restaurant. Chances are you will have a number of people that come in on a regular basis. They love the convenience of a buffet and being able to eat as soon as they walk in. They can also control the portion sizes of what they want to eat, not take what you bring out to them on a plate.

2: Do You Know How To Help Someone Choking In Your Restaurant?
There are many things that a restaurant owner is prepared for, but what about assisting someone that ends up chocking while there are eating food? Some will say this is looking for the negative in things but the risk is very high since people will always show up to this type of business due to the fact that they are hungry. One moment a person can be talking and enjoying their food and they next they are panicked and fighting for air.

3: Healthy, Delicious Seafood - Easy To Prepare
No matter what anyone says, seafood is healthy and should be a part of everyone's diet. Seafood in general is high in nutrients and vitamins, which no other food group can provide. However, you have to be careful about where you get your fish from. Local waters, like lakes and rivers, can be contaminated and your fish could contain chemicals like mercury or PCBs. The easiest way to obtain a healthy serving of fish is to eat at your local restaurant or do some online shopping. Online vendors, located in coastal regions, can usually guarantee overnight shipping and freshness you cannot get from anywhere else.

4: Cereals and their Preparation
Cereal is the name given to those seeds used as food (wheat, rye, oats, barley, corn, rice, etc.), which are produced by plants belonging to the vast order known as the grass family. They are used for food both in the unground state and in various forms of mill products.

5: Fruit Cocktails
Cocktails made of a combination of fruits are often served as the first course of a meal, usually a luncheon or a dinner, to precede the soup course. In warm weather, they are an excellent substitute for heavy cocktails made of lobster or crab, and they may even be used to replace the soup course. The fruits used for this purpose should be the more acid ones, for the acids and flavors are intended to serve as an appetizer, or the same purpose for which the hot and highly seasoned soups are taken. Fruit cocktails should always be served ice cold.

6: Cooking of Grains
All grains, with the exception of rice, and the various grain meals, require prolonged cooking with gentle and continuous heat, in order to so disintegrate their tissues and change their starch into dextrine as to render them easy of digestion. Even the so-called "steam-cooked" grains, advertised to be ready for use in five or ten minutes, require a much longer cooking to properly fit them for digestion. These so-called quickly prepared grains are simply steamed before grinding, which has the effect to destroy any low organisms contained in the grain. They are then crushed and shredded. Bicarbonate of soda and lime is added to help dissolve the albuminoids, and sometimes diastase to aid the conversion of the starch into sugar; but there is nothing in this preparatory process that so alters the chemical nature of the grain as to make it possible to cook it ready for easy digestion in five or ten minutes. An insufficiently cooked grain, although it may be palatable, is not in a condition to be readily acted upon by the digestive fluids, and is in consequence left undigested to act as a mechanical irritant.

7: Different Ways to Cook Rice
Rice needs to be thoroughly washed. A good way to do this is to put it into a colander, in a deep pan of water. Rub the rice well with the hands, lifting the colander in and out the water, and changing the water until it is clear; then drain. In this way the grit is deposited in the water, and the rice left thoroughly clean.

8: ABC of Soup Making
Lean, juicy beef, mutton, and veal, form the basis of all good soups; therefore it is advisable to procure those pieces which afford the richest succulence, and such as are fresh-killed. Stale meat renders them bad, and fat is not so well adapted for making them. The principal art in composing good rich soup, is so to proportion the several ingredients that the flavour of one shall not predominate over another, and that all the articles of which it is composed, shall form an agreeable whole. To accomplish this, care must be taken that the roots and herbs are perfectly well cleaned, and that the water is proportioned to the quantity of meat and other ingredients. Generally a quart of water may be allowed to a pound of meat for soups, and half the quantity for gravies. In making soups or gravies, gentle stewing or simmering is incomparably the best. It may be remarked, however, that a really good soup can never be made but in a well-closed vessel, although, perhaps, greater wholesomeness is obtained by an occasional exposure to the air. Soups will, in general, take from three to six hours doing, and are much better prepared the day before they are wanted. When the soup is cold, the fat may be much more easily and completely removed; and when it is poured off, care must be taken not to disturb the settlings at the bottom of the vessel, which are so fine that they will escape through a sieve. A tamis is the best strainer, and if the soup is strained while it is hot, let the tamis or cloth be previously soaked in cold water. Clear soups must be perfectly transparent, and thickened soups about the consistence of cream. To thicken and give body to soups and gravies, potato-mucilage, arrow-root, bread-raspings, isinglass, flour and butter, barley, rice, or oatmeal, in a little water rubbed well together, are used. A piece of boiled beef pounded to a pulp, with a bit of butter and flour, and rubbed through a sieve, and gradually incorporated with the soup, will be found an excellent addition. When the soup appears to be too thin or too weak , the cover of the boiler should be taken off, and the contents allowed to boil till some of the watery parts have evaporated; or some of the thickening materials, above mentioned, should be added. When soups and gravies are kept from day to day in hot weather, they should be warmed up every day, and put into fresh scalded pans or tureens, and placed in a cool cellar. In temperate weather, every other day may be sufficient.

9: Get Seafood Overnight: Fresh and Tasty
Anyone loving seafood is well aware of the special delight brought to their palates by those succulent, fresh lobsters. There is no surprise that true food fanatics just love the taste of a high quality lobster. Unfortunately in America it may not be very easy to get fresh seafood if one lives away from coastal zones.

10: Sharp Multifunctional ovens that make cooking simple
Gone are the days when we home makers had to toil for hours in front of the hot stove to prepare a meal for the family. The latest addition in the wide range of high tech home appliances has just transformed everything and has made our lives so simpler. The high tech new ovens in the market come with automatic time and temperature controls that dinner is prepared in a jiffy on its own. Making a meal by the time you reach home after shopping was like a dream it is all possible now. The intelligent oven by TMIO keeps food in a frozen state until the cooking mode is selected. Thanks to the advent of internet this feature is controlled by your mobile phone or desktop. We are living in a global warming world so preparing energy efficient and environmental friendly recipes have become the need of the hour.

11: The Best Types of Patio Barbecues
When it comes to which kind of patio barbecues you want for your garden there are two basic styles that one can choose from. You can either choose to buy one that uses gas or else you can go the more traditional route and buy one that uses charcoal. But what you will soon discover when looking at each type is that they have their own particular advantages and disadvantages and the one you choose will be because it is the one that you prefer.

12: Fresh Shrimp Is Great For Your Health
It is also a perfect meal solution for all your outdoor summer parties and events. Fresh shrimp can be used in just about any dish. Add it to a pasta salad, slaw or appetizer plate. Fresh shrimp is both healthy and delicious. Topped with lemon juice and cocktail sauce, this refreshing food makes a great pre-dinner snack.

13: Fresh Shellfish, Great To Have For For Dinner?
A wonderful thing to eat all year round is fresh shellfish. It includes clams, scallops, mussels and more. Farm-raised cultured mussels are fresh and readily available. Wild varieties are equally delicious. Clams are a very popular addition to pasta dishes. Hard clams, also called quahogs, live in sandy coves and can be caught when the tide is low. A great dish to enjoy with butter and garlic is stuffed quahogs. And there is always clam chowder of course.

14: Never Make This Recipe With Your KitchenAid Mixer
I like to learn about different recipes online but sometimes I come across advice that I think is not the best. Case in point, the other day I was looking for KitchenAid Mixer recipes and I found one for pancakes. Now, the problem with the recipe wasn't in the list of ingredients. Rather, it was a problem with the preparation. It called for using an electric stand mixer to make the batter.

15: How To Select The Right Salad Ingredients
For a person to be able to make the perfect salad it is important that they know as much as possible about the kinds of ingredients that can be used in them. Often a salad will combine a number of different foods all of which provide a certain taste or texture to the recipe but which also complement each other. In this article we take a look at some of the kinds of salad ingredients that you may want to consider using and which are used the world over.


Page 1 of 4
[1]   [2]   [3]   [4]