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The Italian Market and Tailgating - The Philly Inquirer in 60 Seconds

shoppers at Philadelphia's Italian Market

Filed under: In Sixty Seconds

The Baltimore Sun in 60 seconds: Creme fraiche and apple beer

spoonful of homemade creme fraiche
  • Creme fraiche is a great way to perk up soups, desserts and anything else that could do with a bit of extra creamy zing.
  • Nine Baltimore-area cooks stretch and flex their cassoulet muscles at the eighth annual cassoulet cook-off.
  • Just in time for harvest, Rob Kasper checks out beers made with apples and narrows the field down to some of his favorites.
  • This week's Wine Find is the Dow's Trademark Finest Reserve Porto - a creamy, sweet and balanced dessert wine.
  • Elizabeth Large's Top Ten is a round up of restaurants that aren't quite institutions but still reserve that sense of permanence.
  • It's time, once again, to send in your favorite cookie recipes for this year's cookie contest. Recipes must be in by Nov. 5th to be considered.

Filed under: In Sixty Seconds

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What is crème fraîche?

An ever-growing number of restaurants are putting it on their menus and it is more frequently called for in recipes than it was even a year or two ago, but crème fraîche is still not an easy-to-find ingredient, nor is it one that everyone is familiar with. Crème fraîche is a thickened cream, with a slight tang and a texture that is somewhere between sour cream and whipped butter. In France, the cream is made with unpasteurized cream and is allowed to thicken naturally with bacteria already present in the milk. In the US, the cream must be pasteurized (heated to kill bacteria), so crème fraîche is made by adding a small amount of buttermilk or sour cream to get the thickening process started, then it is pasteurized again to kill the bacteria before sale.

Sour cream makes a good substitute for crème fraîche in most recipes, but unlike crème fraîche, sour cream can break or curdle when exposed to high heat. Fortunately, it is easy to make a version of crème fraîche at home. Simply add 2 tbsp buttermilk to 1 cup of heavy cream and let the mixture stand at room temperature for 8-24 hours, until thickened, before refrigerating.

Filed under: Did you know?, Ingredients

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