Thursday, January 14, 2016

The Healing Power of Ginger


Exciting Ingredients Part 5: Ginger

Welcome back to Tiny’s Kitchen! Over the holidays, Tiny had a lot of fun cooking and catching up with her friends and family. But with the winter chill, she has come down with a bit of a scratchy throat. When her good friend Lydia decided to make some soothing honey ginger tea to calm Tiny’s cough, they got to talking about all of the wonderful ways the world uses this spicy tropical root.


A lovely, flowering plant, native to south China, Zingiber officinale has been used as a spice and a medicinal plant since at least as early as 220 BCE. It has since spread the world over, and ginger is now cultivated in subtropical regions around the globe. It is known to be anti-inflammatory and anti-microbial.

Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, Indian, South American, and Caribbean cooks, to name just a few, use it in savory and sweet dishes and beverages for its spicy and fragrant flavor. North American and European bakers use it dried, candied, or preserved, as a confection or in cakes and cookies.


When cooking with the fresh root, Tiny likes to peel away the papery skin with the side of a spoon, and slice or grate it across the stringy grain. It keeps well in the fridge, wrapped in paper towels and a plastic zipper bag, or tightly wrapped in the freezer. The dried spice, so handy in baking, loses its freshness quickly; buy it in small quantities and discard any unused powder after 3 to 4 months.

If you’d like to try a zesty side vegetable dish, these ginger garlic green beans are a yummy warm option.

This easy ginger-scallion sauce is delicious with grilled chicken or vegetable stir-fry. Or try it on Tiny’s salmon lettuce wraps.

If you’re a fan of sushi and sashimi, try making your own sweet pickled ginger, a classic Japanese accompaniment to fish and rice.

Poach some pears in ginger beer! The non-alcoholic spicy-sweet drink makes a perfectly seasoned poaching liquid for a light fruit dessert (or special occasion breakfast). If you don’t feel like fussing with the vanilla custard, leave it out; the pears are perfectly lovely on their own.

These chewy nonfat cookies from David Lebovitz have an extra kick from both powdered and candied ginger root. They are marvelous for ice cream sandwiches or on their own as a light dessert.

For a traditional Indian spiced tea, try this chai masala. Loaded with fresh ginger, cardamom, and milk, it will warm you right up on a chilly morning. 
If you prefer a non-dairy, non-caffeinated brew, give Lydia’s recipe a try! She has found it soothing for sore, scratchy throats and tummy aches alike, but Tiny thinks it is tasty enough to drink all winter long.

Lydia’s Honey Ginger Brew

1 ½ cups water
2-inch piece of fresh ginger root, peeled, sliced thin
1-2 tablespoons honey
1-2 tablespoons fresh or bottled lemon juice

Bring the water to a boil in a small saucepot. Add the ginger, cover the pot, and turn off the heat. Set a timer for ten minutes, and then strain the infusion into a teapot or 2 mugs. Add honey and lemon juice to your taste; Lydia likes to use both!

Visit us at  TinyTastesWorld.com

This post created by Kat Craddock

Photo credits: Cassie Sciortino


Friday, January 8, 2016

This is Fantastic! What's Your Secret Ingredient?


Meet The Family, Part 2: Garlic & Onions

The more Tiny cooks, the more she seems to come in contact with some of the same ingredients. Garlic and onions have made their way into many of Tiny’s meals lately. Turkey meatloaf, beet tzatziki, cauliflower soup, salmon lettuce wraps - they all get an extra boost of flavor from one or both of these ingredients! This week, Tiny decided to take a look into these veggies to see just how they help make her meals taste so delicious.

As it turns out, garlic and onions both belong to the Allium Family, which is a genus of flowering plants with over 750 different species! They grow mainly in Asia, the Mediterranean, and western North America. Not all alliums are edible, but those that are add a variety of flavors and textures into meals, which makes them popular ingredients around the world. Garlic, shallots, leeks, chives, and green, red, white, and yellow onions are just a few of the ones most commonly used. Raw or roasted, sauteed or pickled, this family of plants is incredibly versatile, which is what makes them so fun to cook with!


Tiny loves to eat alliums, but often wonders how something that smells stinky can taste so good! Plants in the allium family produce sulfuric compounds that give them their characteristic taste and odor. In fact, the word allium comes from the Greek word aleo, “to avoid”, due to their unpleasant scent. Cooking raw onion and garlic tends to lessen their sulfur taste. And the sulfur isn't just a flavor or smell - it is also known for its cancer-fighting properties!

By the way, have you ever cried while helping to cut an onion? Slicing onions breaks the cell walls, releasing an enzyme that reacts with the water in your eyes to form sulfuric acid. Your body naturally produces tears to help clean this acid out of your eyes! Here's a trick: an adult can use a very sharp wet knife when cutting onions, since a sharp blade will damage fewer of the onion's cells, creating less of this enzyme, causing less tears! 


Visit us at  TinyTastesWorld.com

Post and photo credits: Cassie Sciortino