Posted on 12/08/2012 2:44:45 PM PST by nickcarraway
Chefs at some of the most cutting edge restaurants in the country are incorporating vegetables into their desserts in ways that, at first glance, might not seem very dessert-y.
In fact, a recent article in the trade magazine Food Technology lists things like celery sorbet with celery salad, goat cheese mousse balls, macerated figs and balsamic vinegar at Del Posto in New York; sweet corn crème brulée with popcorn shoots and candied bacon at Tilth in Seattle; and a candy cap mushroom ice cream sandwich at Americano Restaurant & Bar in San Francisco.
That made us here at The Salt wonder, is there any nutritional value in adding veggies to dessert?
Actually, the answer is yes.
Mary Ann Johnson, a nutrition professor at the University of Georgia and a spokesperson for the American Society for Nutrition, says the body is more able to process a group of vitamins found in vegetables called carotenoids when they're paired with a fat. "The fat helps the body absorb them," Johnson says.
It's the same reason why adding a little bit of butter or sour cream is to your potato is OK, or a little full-fat salad dressing is good for greens at least according to a recent small study.
Johnson also says these new kinds of desserts could help children develop a taste for vegetables, which will serve them well as they grow up unless of course the dessert is totally overpowered by the sugar and fat. As with everything, moderation is key.
But chefs are probably not making veggie desserts to boost our nutrition.
Karen Nachay, associate editor of Food Technology, says when restaurants base their menus on seasonal, farm-based goods, they often wind up with an abundance of one ingredient or another and have to find something to do with it.
"They have a lot of the produce, they have fun experimenting," Nachay says. "In turn you have a lot of these creative dishes being offered."
So, all you parents out there, consider swapping your cartons of chocolate and vanilla and replace them with mushroom ice cream and celery sorbet. We're sure your kids will thank you some day.
Now that sounds like a grandmother!
I love mushrooms! Steak and mushrooms, pepperoni and mushroom pizza, mushrooms sauteed in butter, salad with fresh mushrooms, Boeuf en Croute, the list is almost endless.
or a really really bad nursing home in your elder years.”
My son gave me a funny wall plaque a couple of years ago for Christmas that covers just this issue. This was in response to a statement I had made earlier about my taking a trip which was only possible because I was spending his inheritence.
Ice cream is eggs, real vanilla, half and half or half milk and half cream. Beat the eggs, mix thoroughly with remaining ingredients, freeze, top with loads of hot fudge or caramel and eat. If you’re going to use anything else, please don’t call it ice cream.
Yes, her natural unibrow is shaped in a perpetually angry scowl, so she shaves it and then pencils in two completely different lines.
Amen!!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.