Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Eat Like an Italian

 





A Typical Italian Fruiet & Vegetable Stand

Jesus & The Virgin Mary




Is this Fesh or What ?

Beautifully ripe Tomatoes

The freshest Mozzarella, Basil

And tasty Italian Bread

For BRUSCHETTA alla CAPRESE

RECIPES of NAPLES & The AMALFI COAST

ITALY





A perfectly simple Panino di MORTADELLA

"LOVE IT"





The Tastiest PORCHETTA

For the BEST SANDWICH EVER !








PROVALA

Make a sandwich with Sorpessata & Smoked Provala

Yumm !!!!






POSITANO The AMALFI COAST

COOKBOOK / TRAVEL GUIDE

RECIPES of NAPLES - POSITANO - CAPRI

The AMALFI COAST - ITALY







"GABAGOOL" !!!!






POLPETTE

"MEATBALLS"





PIZZA



The Legendary Dom DeMarco

BEST PIZZA EVER





PASTA



The TASTIEST DISH EVER !!!

PASTA BOLOGNESE




La VIGILIA

The FEAST of The 7 FISH

ITALIAN CHRISTAS




STUFFED CALAMARI & Other RECIPES


ITALIAN CHRISTMAS















Friday, May 28, 2021

The TV Dinner Fried CHicken

 
 
FRIED CHICKEN
 
 

FOOD PORN ???
 
 
Or NOT ???
 
 
 
If you were a little kid in the 1960's, this Fried Chicken TV DINNER
 
may very well been FoodPorn to you ...


A BRIEF HISTORY of The TV DINNER

In 1925, the Brooklyn-born entrepreneur Clarence Birdseye invented a machine for freezing packaged fish that would revolutionize the storage and preparation of food. Maxson Food Systems of Long Island used Birdseye’s technology, the double-belt freezer, to sell the first complete frozen dinners to airlines in 1945, but plans to offer those meals in supermarkets were canceled after the death of the company’s founder, William L. Maxson. Ultimately, it was the Swanson company that transformed how Americans ate dinner (and lunch)—and it all came about, the story goes, because of Thanksgiving turkey.

According to the most widely accepted account, a Swanson salesman named Gerry Thomas conceived the company’s frozen dinners in late 1953 when he saw that the company had 260 tons of frozen turkey left over after Thanksgiving, sitting in ten refrigerated railroad cars. (The train’s refrigeration worked only when the cars were moving, so Swanson had the trains travel back and forth between its Nebraska headquarters and the East Coast “until panicked executives could figure out what to do,” according to Adweek.) Thomas had the idea to add other holiday staples such as cornbread stuffing and sweet potatoes, and to serve them alongside the bird in frozen, partitioned aluminum trays designed to be heated in the oven. Betty Cronin, Swanson’s bacteriologist, helped the meals succeed with her research into how to heat the meat and vegetables at the same time while killing food-borne germs.

The Swanson company has offered different accounts of this history. Cronin has said that Gilbert and Clarke Swanson, sons of company founder Carl Swanson, came up with the idea for the frozen-meal-on-a-tray, and Clarke Swanson’s heirs, in turn, have disputed Thomas’ claim that he invented it. Whoever provided the spark, this new American convenience was a commercial triumph. In 1954, the first full year of production, Swanson sold ten million trays. Banquet Foods and Morton Frozen Foods soon brought out their own offerings, winning over more and more middle-class households across the country.




Whereas Maxson had called its frozen airline meals “Strato-Plates,” Swanson introduced America to its “TV dinner” (Thomas claims to have invented the name) at a time when the concept was guaranteed to be lucrative: As millions of white women entered the workforce in the early 1950s, Mom was no longer always at home to cook elaborate meals—but now the question of what to eat for dinner had a prepared answer. Some men wrote angry letters to the Swanson company complaining about the loss of home-cooked meals. For many families, though, TV dinners were just the ticket. Pop them in the oven, and 25 minutes later, you could have a full supper while enjoying the new national pastime: television.

In 1950, only 9 percent of U.S. households had television sets—but by 1955, the number had risen to more than 64 percent, and by 1960, to more than 87 percent. Swanson took full advantage of this trend, with TV advertisements that depicted elegant, modern women serving these novel meals to their families, or enjoying one themselves. “The best fried chicken I know comes with a TV dinner,” Barbra Streisand told the New Yorker in 1962.



 

WANT to KNOW HOW
 
to MAKE AWESOME FRIED CHICKEN ???
 
 


RECIPES in The BADASS COOKBOOK
 
 
SECRET KFC KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN RECIPE
 
BADASS FRIED CHICKEN Recipe
 
and More ...











ANTHONY BOURDAIN

"CONTEMPLATION"



 
 
 

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Daniel Bellino Talks Tony Tenneriello Mulberry Street Bar

 
Mare Chiaro
 
"TONY'S NUT HOUSE"
 
 
Italian-American Writer in Greenwich Village, New York, Daniel Bellino-Zwicke "talks" Tony Tenneriello and his Mulberry Street Italian Bar Mare Chiaro aka "Tony's Nut House."
 
 

Sunday, April 27, 2008

A COOL RESTAURANT I BET You Don't KNOW ABOUT

This joint is one of my FAVES!!!! Nobody knows about it! Garaunteed if ask 1,000 New Yorkers if they've ever heard about this place or ever went there, you be hard pressed to find a one. I'm gonna let the "Cat Out of the Bag." People should start paying me for this.

Yes native-newyork-pics.blogspot.com F. Restaurant on Clinton Street down on the Lower East Side (LES) of New York is without a doubt one of the Coolest restaurants you could ever dream of going to. Paris Hilton has never been there.

F. Restaurant is a restaurant that serves incrediably tasty Puerto Rican Cusine. "Bet you've never had any? Yes you!"
You will pretty much only find Lationos and Latinas at this joint. i've been going their for about 15 years now. "Love It!"

The food is oh so tasty, and the prices are tailor made for the sluggish ecconmic times we now live in (2008). Hope we go on a upswing soon. "Very soon." Most dishes are about $1.20 or $1.50 a piece. Yes this is not a typo, dishes that cost $1.20 a piece. You can make a small meal out of just two. if you're Papa Relleno which is a Fried Potato Ball that isstuffed with ground beef as well. "Yum!" They also have wonderful Morcilla (Blood Sausage) and Pollo Fritto (fried chicken).

The have this great sign hanging over the counter area that says in both Spanish and English, and reads like this, "If your wife can't COOK, Don't Divorce Her, Bring her here to eat with you."
You've gotta LOVE IT, and if you ever go, you'll just Love "F. Restaurant" down on the Lower East Side

by DBZ