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Burger King Fries to Appear in Frozen Section


king krinkz
King Krinkz
One fast food chain won't even make you get in the car to enjoy fried fare.

Burger King announced Tuesday that it is teaming up with ConAgra Foods Lamb Weston to launch a line of microwaveable Burger King-branded crinkle-cut french fries nationwide this fall. It seems now, you can "have it your way" in the comfort of your own home.

Burger King's microwaveable seasoned crinkle-cut fries, dubbed "King Krinkz" will be the first product in the line to hit stores, including Wal-Mart, in early September. King Kolossalz extra-large crinkle-cut fries and King Wedgez seasoned potato wedges will be released shortly after the King Krinkz hit stores.
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Filed under: Fast Food, New Products

Frozen Food Reviews

Slashfood stalwarts road-tested a month's worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.
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Frozen Food Reviews
by Kat Kinsman
A recent AOL Food survey revealed that 85% of respondents are toting their lunch to work these days. We've certainly noticed an uptick in waiting time at our break room's microwaves -- as well as co-workers scrounging for snacks after their lunch failed to fill them up. Our editors road-tested a month's' worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.
Rachel Been
Getty Images North America

Frozen Food Reviews

    by Kat Kinsman
    A recent AOL Food survey revealed that 85% of respondents are toting their lunch to work these days. We've certainly noticed an uptick in waiting time at our break room's microwaves -- as well as co-workers scrounging for snacks after their lunch failed to fill them up. Our editors road-tested a month's' worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.

    Rachel Been

    Monday
    Amy's Organic Ravioli Bowl

    Buy it again: Without a doubt
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Perfectly cooked pasta
    Taste: If we got it in a restaurant, we'd be happy. The sauce was gorgeously seasoned, the generously, fluffily filled ravioli neither limp nor leaden and heck -- it's even organic.
    Calories: 380
    Total Fat: 12 g
    Sodium: 680 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Tuesday
    Banquet Selects Classic Fried Chicken

    Buy it again: No way
    Fills you up: No
    Texture: Like deep-fried particle board
    Taste: The batter's seasoning wasn't so bad, but gnawing through it nearly undid years of orthodontia -- and for very little reward. The few shreds of meat within were stringy, gamey and overcooked, and the pool of grease in which the whole mess swam hardly added to the meal's appeal. The potatoes and corn are best left unmentioned -- and uneaten.
    Calories: 440
    Total Fat: 26 g
    Sodium: 1140 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Wednesday
    Lean Pocket Applewood Bacon, Egg, & Cheese Breakfast Pocket

    Buy it again: No
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Gummy
    Taste: We bit into what we thought was a potato cube, then checked the ingredient list. No potatoes. It would seem that the chewy, white blob was in fact the much-touted applewood bacon. It just got worse from there, with a creepy, over-processed filling.
    Calories: 290
    Total Fat: 8 g
    Sodium: 480 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Thursday
    Southwest Style Grilled Chicken

    Buy it again: Just the potatoes
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Misleadingly good
    Taste: If they'd just stuck with the taters, we'd be telling a different tale. Those spuds are fluffy, creamy and memorably savory. The chicken, however, was slathered in an inexplicably sweet and fruity goo that somehow lost direction on the way to the Southwest.
    Calories: 430
    Total Fat: 15 g
    Sodium: 1510 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Friday
    Lean Pockets Whole Grain Turkey, Broccoli & Cheese Pocket

    Buy it again: Only on sale
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: A bit doughy
    Taste: It would hardly be our first choice, but in a serious pinch, we wouldn't turn up our noses at it. Let's get one thing clear, though -- while the whole-grain wrapper is a cute little stab at nutrition, you're still chomping down processed cheese and nuked broccoli. Health food, this is not.
    Calories: 260
    Total Fat: 7 g
    Sodium: 390 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Monday
    Claim Jumper Chicken & Penne a la Vodka

    Buy it again: Maybe
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: A bit soggy
    Taste: We weren't immediately convinced and kept grabbing just one more forkful to figure out why. Wouldn't you know, we polished off the whole darned thing. It's not the most assertive sauce straight out of the box, but woke up with a dash of black pepper. Note -- while the prep notes call for a tablespoon of water on the broccoli, half that might have been a better idea to to avoid veggie sog.
    Calories: 500
    Total Fat: 20 g
    Sodium: 1350 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Tuesday
    Kashi Lemon Rosemary Chicken

    Buy it again: Happily
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Fresh
    Taste: If someone tried to pass this off as take-out from the health food place down the street, we'd take their word for it. Flavors popped, veggies crunched, chicken stayed moist, and our tastebuds rejoiced.
    Calories: 330
    Total Fat: 9 g
    Sodium: 640 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Wednesday
    Stouffer's Pepperoni & Provolone Stromboli

    Buy it again: Sure
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Better that we'd expected
    Taste: Holy stromboli! This is slightly dumbed-down pizza shop fare, but it's still a really solid surprise. While we'll nitpick that the bread could be a little better, the fillings proved hearty, meaty and overall pleasing. Keep a couple of 'em stashed in the freezer for lazy weeknight meals.
    Calories: 430
    Total Fat: 17 g
    Sodium: 1110 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Thursday
    Lean Cuisine Cheddar Potatoes with Broccoli

    Buy it again: No
    Fills you up: We can't imagine trying to eat the whole thing
    Texture: Mushy
    Taste: It doesn't bode well for a dish when the tasters are having a hard time distinguishing potatoes from broccoli florets. The whole bowl was gummed together by a soggy, flavor-free mess that was advertised as cheddar sauce, but could just as easily have been wheat paste. Sure, this cuisine is lean, but it's 'cause no one can bear to eat more than a few bites.
    Calories: 230
    Total Fat: 5 g
    Sodium: 640 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

Filed under: Taste Test

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Flashback to the Seventies: Microwaved Lime Cheesecake Tarts

sliced lime
Fresh Summer Limes. Photo: Flickr, Darwin Bell
In this weekly series, home cook Bruce Watson works his way through a decades-old family cookbook, adapting the best recipes exclusively for Slashfood.

Back in the early 1980s, when my Aunt Evie was putting together our family cookbook, my mother volunteered a recipe on my behalf. Titled "Brucie's Microwave Cheesecakes," it stood alongside my cousin Teddy's "Sesame Street Cookies" and my cousin Cathy's "Oven Fried Chicken," evidence that, at age 8, I was already a kitchen prodigy. However, it was all a lie: My recipe was stolen from the "Sunset Microwave Cookbook."

Years later, I found out that my cousins' recipes were also reprinted from various sources. In the meantime, however, I felt like a plagiarist and was always careful to point out that it wasn't my recipe, but rather one that I made a lot. Even so, there was something about my culinary larceny -- intentional or not -- that rubbed me the wrong way.

Recently, as I was working my way through various family dishes, I decided to give this one another shot. While the recipe that follows owes much of its inspiration to the fine folks at "Sunset," the ingredients, preparation method and taste are definitely my own, and I take full responsibility for all of the above!

Get the recipe for lime cheesecake tarts after the jump!
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Filed under: Retro cookery

Microwave Cooking Gets Haute With Wylie Dufresne

wylie dufresne microwavePhoto: Sara Bonisteel

A curious thing happened Tuesday in New York City. A Michelin-starred chef fiddled with a microwave.

It might not be considered so odd as the chef in question was culinary experimenter Wylie Dufresne, who took to the dining room of his restaurant, WD-50, to make an egg dish with a microwave.

"I think microwaves are pretty neat," Dufresne said before his demonstration. The chef uses three standard microwaves in his kitchen and has been testing out this new model for the last three weeks.

"We realized we could poach in the microwave," he said. But it takes time ... 29 minutes to be precise.

Hear how he uses metal in the microwave after the jump.
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Filed under: Chefs

Flashback to the '70s - Sweet and Sour Chicken

chicken
In the 1970s the handy little ovens we now use to reheat leftovers and frozen dinners experienced a brief golden age, with folks employing them for cooking everything from turkeys to cheesecake. This recipe dates from the glorious reign of microwaves.

Like many of Aunt Evie's recipes, her microwaved sweet-and-sour chicken is easy, convenient and surprisingly flavorful. However, it relies on hard-to-find, annoyingly coarse-textured pickling spice and employs an unnecessary amount of margarine. For the modern incarnation we selected only certain pickling spices and ground them up, resulting in a far more evenly flavored and pleasantly textured dish.

This was an interesting experiment with the tiny oven: Microwaving, which essentially cooks meat from the inside out, didn't really yield chicken that has fully absorbed its sauce (or its savory flavor). Consequently, this recipe yields meat that is tender but bland. With that in mind, stove-top directions are at the end of the recipe. Regardless of which cooking method you use, this is a fun, easy and surprisingly tasty dish. Go, Aunt Evie!
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Filed under: Retro cookery

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