Korean Spicy Braised Tofu — In Minutes

A quick and easy tofu banchan that explodes with punchy flavors.
A quick and easy tofu banchan that explodes with punchy flavors.

Like many people, I often have a love-hate relationship with ingredients new to me — and the recipes that require them.

The loathing comes, albeit halfheartedly, when I realize that getting my hands on them requires an extra trip to a specialty grocery store or a search online to find a source.

The adoration comes when I unexpectedly discover a product that not only delights, but opens up a whole new world of new possibilities to me.

That was the case with maesil cheong or Korean plum extract syrup.

Made by fermenting unripe green plums with sugar, it’s used in Korean marinades, sauces and drinks. It’s even thought to aid digestion and combat fatigue.

Korean plum extract syrup.
Korean plum extract syrup.

It’s slightly viscous, sweet, floral, and a little tart. It reminds me of Japanese ume plum, of which I already can’t get enough. I’m already thinking how fantastic a splash would be in a cocktail or iced tea or a glass of club soda.

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Get to Know Effie’s Homemade Biscuits

Effie's Homemade Hazelnut Biscuits are a natural for a thick smear of Nutella.
Effie’s Homemade Hazelnut Biscuits are a natural for a thick smear of Nutella.

They may be called biscuits, but they’re not the mile-high, flaky layered ones that immediately jump to mind.

Instead, Effie’s Homemade Biscuits are more like Scottish oatcakes.

Now, don’t let the term “oatcakes” fool you into thinking these must be so healthful that they taste like cardboard.

On the contrary, these thin, cookie-cracker-like hybrids are deceptively buttery, delightfully crunchy, subtly sweet, and gently salty. And they are positively addicting, as I found when I received samples to try.

The company is named for Effie MacLellan, who brought with her a generations-old, family recipe for the biscuits when she moved from Nova Scotia to Massachusetts.

Her daughter Joan MacIsaac, along with Joan’s best friend Irene Costello, started the company in 2008. They now make nine different flavors.

Lean into the savory, sweet, or nutty varieties of Effie's.
Lean into the savory, sweet, or nutty varieties of Effie’s.

I had a chance to try four of them: original Oatcakes, Gruyere, Hazelnut, and Corn.

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Italian Venchi Chocolates Debut Two New Flavors

Sampler box of Venchi Cocovair bonbons.
Sampler box of Venchi Cocovair bonbons.

Just in time for the start of the major holidays, Italian chocolate maker, Venchi, has added two new flavors to its popular line of individually wrapped Chocoviar bonbons.

This company has been in business since 1878, when founder Silviano Venchi bought two bronze cauldrons and started crafting chocolates to sell in his small shop in Turin when he was all of 20 years old.

Venchi has since expanded into gelato, too. It sports shops worldwide, including in New York, London, Hong Kong, Buenos Aires, and Dubai. There’s even one at Westfield Valley Fair in Santa Clara.

Unwrapping the Chocovair chocolates.
Unwrapping the Chocovair chocolates.

I had a chance to try samples of the staple Chocoviar flavors, as well as the two new ones. Wrapped in foil, each one is enrobed in both a chocolate shell and either fine chocolate grains or toffee pieces.

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Kat Lieu’s Bodacious Black Sesame-White Chocolate Cookies

Black sesame paste plus black sesame seeds give these cookies a deep nutty taste.
Black sesame paste plus black sesame seeds give these cookies a deep nutty taste.

What’s black and white — and delicious all over?

These “Black Sesame-White Chocolate Cookies” by Kat Lieu.

It’s from her new “108 Asian Cookies” (Little, Brown & Company), of which I received a review copy. Based in Washington State, Lieu is a food writer, recipe developer, and founder of Subtle Asian Baking, the global online group focused on spreading the deliciousness of Asian baking, and fundraising for Asian American and Pacific Islander communities.

Born in Canada to a Chinese mother from Hong Kong and a Chinese Vietnamese father from Vietnam, she readily admits that she didn’t even baker her first cookie from scratch until 5 years ago. The former doctor of physical therapy found herself embarking on a baking spree that year as a way to heal from the sorrow of her father’s death.

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Eva Longoria’s Comforting Tex-Mex Chili Enchiladas

Cheesy, beefy, soul-satisfying enchiladas.
Cheesy, beefy, soul-satisfying enchiladas.

It would be impossible to completely fill the void that the late-great Anthony Bourdain left, but I will say that I am a huge fan of Eva Longoria’s CNN series, “Searching for Mexico” and “Searching for Spain.”

She may lack his unbridled snark and bravado, but she brings warmth, compassion, and enthusiasm in spades. And no shade to Stanley Tucci in his Italy series on CNN and National Geographic, but Longoria does a far better job of actually describing the food on her shows that she’s lucky enough to enjoy.

It’s that same type of exuberance and down-to-earth charm that permeates her cookbook, “My Mexican Kitchen” (Clarkson Potter, 2024), of which I received a review copy.

The actor, director, and producer of Mexican heritage grew up in Corpus Christi, Texas. In fact, she often identifies herself as “Texican.” She now splits her time between Mexico and Spain.

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