Farmers Market Drop Off

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Thank you for your patronage during the holidays. It is the best gift we could wish for! tapasandpaellas.com 772-217-360...
12/19/2022

Thank you for your patronage during the holidays. It is the best gift we could wish for! tapasandpaellas.com 772-217-3608

Our new cheese season has started! see our full selection at https://cheflipprshop.com or come see us at Vero Beach Farm...
10/23/2022

Our new cheese season has started! see our full selection at https://cheflipprshop.com or come see us at Vero Beach Farmers Market 3000 Ocean Drive, Vero Beach, FL 32963 from 8 AM to Noon every Saturday. 772-217-3608

Next Saturday, September 24 2022 Chicken & Chorizo Paella @ Vero Beach Farmers Market 9 AM to Noon. $10.00 portions to g...
09/19/2022

Next Saturday, September 24 2022 Chicken & Chorizo Paella @ Vero Beach Farmers Market 9 AM to Noon. $10.00 portions to go - Free samples.

This Saturday September 17, 2022, you are invited to taste free paella samples as long as supplies last. Chef Lippe will...
09/14/2022

This Saturday September 17, 2022, you are invited to taste free paella samples as long as supplies last. Chef Lippe will be celebrating World Paella Day. Just come by Chef Lippe’s stand (the cheese stand) and claim your sample of authentic mixed paella. You will also be able to purchase a to-go portion for $10.00

Recipe of The WeekThe Origins of PizzaBy The Well Seasoned TravelerThe “official” story of the birth of pizza is that it...
12/01/2021

Recipe of The Week
The Origins of Pizza
By The Well Seasoned Traveler

The “official” story of the birth of pizza is that it was born in Naples, Italy from a baker honoring Queen Margherita. I do not subscribe to this theory and propose a totally different origin.
We go back ten thousand years to the Neolithic period, to the Fertile Crescent, Mesopotamia, Babylon, and the Natufian people of what is today Jordan and surrounding areas who baked a form of flatbread used as plates to hold food to be eaten with the right hand, the left hand being reserved for less savory tasks. This carried on to Egypt and its civilization, where the dry hot climate of the Nile would make these tough flat dough cookies an ideal reusable dinnerware for centuries. You put your food on them, ate with your hands, washed them in water, dried them in the hot sun, and they were ready for the next meal. This bread “cookie” was popularly known as “pita” name given to a modified version that prevails in some regions of the area until present times.
With the conquest of Egypt by the Romans, and the love affair between Mark Antony and Cleopatra around 41 BC, Pretorian presence in the Nile was so pervasive, that centurions had to be housed as “guests” in peasant Egyptian households. To the dismay of Egyptian housewives of the time, the roman soldiers ate the flatware cookies along with the food, forcing the manufacture of fresh ones. This practice reached Rome, where it was incorporated by imperial cooks into the menus of the infamous roman or**es, softening the dough and adding toppings to it. The name of the flatbread was corrupted linguistically to “Pinsa” from “Pita” and remained a popular way of eating until it was lost during the dark ages around 500 AD, resurfacing around the late Middle Ages, as a cheap ingredient where the largely poor peasant population could top with whatever they could find to make a meal.
Once more linguistically corrupted from its original name, it came up as “Pizza’ made famous by a pie created by the Neapolitan baker Raffaele Esposito for Queen Margherita of Savoy in the 1800s. Contrary to popular belief, the round pie known as “pizza” today was not created in Italy, where “pizza” is largely baked in square format, and cut in bite-size squares, but by Italian immigrants in New York and Chicago. The first successful pizza parlor was Lombardi’s in Little Italy, New York City. A plethora of styles have been created ever since, “deep dish” “Chicago” and more. I encourage you to make your own variation and enjoy the ride. If you grab a round piece of dough, fill it and fold it like a turnover, you can call it a “calzone” if you make it into a longer rolled shape, it becomes a “Stromboli”.
Be it how it may, making a pizza from scratch, putting your own toppings on it, and enjoying it with your loved ones is a very gratifying experience. Auguri per tutti!

Recipe of The WeekThe History of Chile Peppersby The Well Seasoned TravelerAround eight thousand years ago, the first wi...
11/17/2021

Recipe of The Week
The History of Chile Peppers
by The Well Seasoned Traveler

Around eight thousand years ago, the first wild chili pepper plants appeared in what is today the Iguazu Falls basin at the convergence of modern Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay in South America. This region still accounts for ninety percent of today’s wild chili pepper varieties known to exist.

Migrant birds fleeing the harsh winter weather of the Patagonia plains of modern Argentina, flying north, fed on the berries of the chili plants. The seeds of the fruit, not digested, were expelled during flight encapsulated in convenient fertilizer drops. Thus, chili plants spread throughout modern Brazil, the Amazon Forest, and through successive migratory waves, reached the north of South America, Central America, and eventually Mexico and North America. The varieties of chilies spread on these migratory patterns were of the genus Capsicum Annuum, Capsicum Frutescens, Capsicum Pubescens and the most common Capsicum Chinense. Not to get too scientific here, that means most of all of the varieties of chili we know today from Jalapeño to Bird’s Eye.

Capsicum belongs to a botanical family of plants known as “night shade” or Solanaceae, along with the tomato, eggplant and to***co among others.

One single other genus of Capsicum not spread with the other varieties was Capsicum Baccatum. Capsicum Baccatum was spread exclusively westward, towards the Andes Mountains, and today can only be found in Northern Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru and southern Ecuador. What prompted this weird episode in the dissemination of this particular strand of chili is a mystery. Could it have been a specific kind of bird that had this migration pattern? But if so, why did it only spread this particular type of pepper and not the rest? And if so, why did the rest of the migrating bird population not spread Baccatum to the rest of South America as well? There is no explanation to this phenomenon. If you are reading this, and have the answer, please email me. We will update the story.

We have evidence through archeological and anthropological data that Chili plants were cultivated by the people of the Americas as far as six thousand years ago. The evidence points to the use of chili not only as food and medicine, but as currency as well. In fact, as late as early twentieth century, you could use “rantii” or chili ristras as bartering tools around Cuzco, Peru. We also have evidence that the Inca considered Chili as a deity and integrated it in religious ceremonies. Aya Uchu or “brother pepper” was one of the four deities of creation.

Domestication and harvesting of chili can be seen in most pre-Columbian societies including the Inca, the Aymara, the Tehuelche, the Tupinambá, Carijó, Tupiniquim, the Charrua, the Huari, the Aztec, the Maya, the Toltec and others. The Aztecs consumed a drink made of cocoa “cacao” and chili in a drink called “chicahuatl”. We find a very similar drink consumed by the Cicatec people of the Mexican southern highlands they call “Tepache” made with chocolate, fermented sugar cane juice and chilies.

Upon the arrival of the Spaniards in the New World in the 1500’s, chili pepper found its way in cargo sent to Europe. Not noticed at first, and given to monastic orders for aesthetic purposes, it was given importance by sailors, who discovered that its use would prevent scurvy during long journeys due to its high content of vitamin C. In fact, one cup of chopped bell peppers has more vitamin C content than an orange. Sailors in merchant ships were maybe the most common reason for the spread of chili peppers around the world. By 1600 chili had become staple in diets across the globe, from Northern Africa to Southeast Asia and beyond.

In a mere hundred years since its “discovery” by Europeans, chili pepper had taken over the diet and cuisines of countless people around the map that to this day cannot do without it. Try telling a Vietnamese country farmer that chilies are not native of Viet Nam; you will be laughed at in the face and regarded as a foolish foreigner.

That is the history of the origins of the chile plant as I know it. Any contributions to these facts are more than welcome. Enjoy your chili.

HOMEMADE CHILI SAUCE

INGREDIENTS
1 pound fresh chiles such as Jalapeño, Habanero, Poblano or a mixture of y our choice
3 garlic cloves, peeled
1 tablespoon kosher salt
¼ cup distilled white vinegar
¼ cup fresh lime juice
1 teaspoons sugar
1 layer of cheesecloth

STEP1
Pulse chiles, garlic, and salt in a food processor to a fine paste. Transfer to a glass jar; cover with cheesecloth and secure with a rubber band. Let sit at room temperature 5–7 days to ferment (the longer it sits, the more pronounced the flavor will be).

STEP 2
Transfer chile mixture to a blender; add vinegar, lime juice, and sugar and purée until smooth. Transfer to a clean jar, cover with cheesecloth, and secure with rubber band. Let sit at room temperature at least 2 days and up to 5 days to ferment more.

STEP 3
Transfer hot sauce to a blender and blend again, then strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a clean jar. Cover and chill.

STEP 4
Do Ahead: Hot sauce can be made 6 months ahead. Keep chilled.

Recipe of The WeekFettuccine Alfredoby The Well Seasoned TravelerAlfredo is not a sauce. Not in Italy anyway. It is howe...
11/07/2021

Recipe of The Week
Fettuccine Alfredo
by The Well Seasoned Traveler

Alfredo is not a sauce. Not in Italy anyway. It is however a method of pasta preparation. Born from the traditional “al burro” or “in butter” an Italian "home cooking" recipe, one of the simplest ways to dress up your favorite pasta.
Let me explain. The whole Alfredo story points to Alfredo di Lelio, in 1908 at a small restaurant run by his mother Angelina at the now-extinct Piazza Rosa in Rome, Italy. The story goes that Alfredo’s wife, after giving birth to their first son, had trouble eating. As any good Italian grandmother knows, in a case of lack of appetite, make the food richer, heavier and fattier and serve it in larger quantities! You didn’t know that? Well now you are in the know, a little closer to being a true Italian.
So on with the story. Di Lelio decided to make a fettuccine “triplo burro” for his wife, meaning with three times the amount of butter, and three times the amount of cheese than the traditional recipe called for. He used young un-aged Parmigiano cheese, some say because his purveyor had not arrived with his order of aged cheese, but nobody really knows. Maybe he was just frugal that way and would not use his expensive aged Parmigiano cheese for himself.
When he was done frothing the piping hot pasta into the butter and cheese, magic happened. The rest is history. When you mix fatty cheese with butter and froth them with heat, in this case piping hot fettuccine, it creates an emulsion, not unlike what happens when you vigorously beat olive oil and vinegar, this emulsified butter and cheese mixture coats the pasta, giving it a creamy gooey delicious quality only attainable by doing it this way.
Serving fettuccine with butter and cheese was first mentioned in a 15th-century recipe for macaroni romaneschi ('Roman pasta') by Martino da Como, a northern Italian cook active in Rome at the time; the recipe cooks the noodles in broth or water and adds butter, "good cheese" (the variety is not specified) and "sweet spices".
Alfredo di Lelio opened his first restaurant “Alfredo alla Scrofa” in 1914 at Via Della Scrofa, Rome. With his main dish being called “Fettuccine all ‘Alfredo” The reputation of Alfredo’s pasta dish spread through Rome, then internationally mainly because of the way it was prepared at tableside. A cart would be rolled in to the table with a deep wide vessel, about a kilo (2.2 lb.) of piping hot pasta, a bowl of grated young Parmigiano cheese, a block of soft room temperature butter, and a kettle of hot water. After pouring the butter and cheese into the mixing bowl, the pasta was introduced and mixed with a dash of hot water, lifting the pasta high up in the air dramatically, frothing it in the mixture, and lifting it up again until a golden creamy sauce had been obtained, then moving this into a large plate on the table.
Alfredo’s place became so famous that by 1927 it was talked about all over the world, with raving reviews in socialite and high-end magazines and main newspapers from Paris to New York. Two American silent movie stars Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford celebrated their honeymoon in Rome and ate at Alfredo’s. To show their gratitude for his legendary hospitality, they sent di Lelio a fork and a spoon made of gold with the inscription “To Alfredo, the king of noodles” engraved on the handles. These pieces of silverware, or rather goldware, became the frothing tools for the pasta from thereon.
Since then, endless celebrities and dignitaries have frequented and eaten the famous dish. President Kennedy, Sophia Loren, Elizabeth Taylor, Pele and Sylvester Stallone to name a few.
His celebrity earned Alfredo di Lelio a knightship in the Cavaliere dell'Ordine Della Corona d'Italia (Knights of The Order of the Italian Crown). In 1946 di Lelio retired from the restaurant, leaving it in the hands of Armando di Lelio (Alfredo II) the son for which the whole thing had started in the first place. Di Lelio and his son Armando sold Alfredo alla Scrofa to two waiters that had been with them from the start named Urbano and Ubaldo in 1946.
In 1950 Alfredo di Lelio and his son Armando (Alfredo II) opened “Il Vero Alfredo” or "Alfredo di Roma" in Piazza Augusto Imperatore 30 in Rome, where it can still be found to this day March 21, 2020, managed by his son Armando until 1982 and now by his son Alfredo (Alfredo III) with his sister Ines Di Lelio.
With the spread of popularity in the United States, cooks and food entrepreneurs made certain modifications to the original recipe, adapting it from the famous method, to a sauce that could be made – and sold – on its own.
The first knowledge I have of such an attempt is on the carton of “Dried Fettuccine Egg Noodles” by the Pennsylvania Dutch Noodle Company in 1966.
The introduction of heavy cream to a traditional béchamel sauce with the addition of some grated cheese and garlic laid the foundation of what would become “Alfredo Sauce” in America today.
One of the pioneers of modern Alfredo sauce marketing is the casual dining franchise “Olive Garden” where you can order “Alfredo” sauce drenched meats such as “Chicken Alfredo" among others.
Following please find a recipe for the sauce I found online called “Better than Olive Garden’s Alfredo” and a recipe from the Food Network's Network’s celebrity chef Ree Drummond. Last but not least the list of ingredients from a jar of Walmart “Great Value” brand “Classic Alfredo Pasta Sauce” “Made with Real Cheese”.
- “Better than Olive Garden’s Alfredo” by Parker’s Mom on Food.com
INGREDIENTS
3 tablespoons sweet butter
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 garlic cloves, minced
2 cups heavy cream
1⁄4 teaspoon white pepper
1⁄2 cup grated parmesan cheese, plus more for garnish
3⁄4 cup grated mozzarella cheese
1 (12 oz) box angel hair pasta (or fettuccini)
2 tablespoons chopped parsley, for garnish (optional)
• freshly cracked black pepper, for garnish (optional)
DIRECTIONS
• Melt butter in a medium saucepan with olive oil over medium/low heat.
• Add the garlic, cream, white pepper, and bring mixture to a simmer.
• Stir often.
• Add the Parmesan cheese and simmer the sauce for 8-10 minutes or until the sauce has thickened and is smooth.
• When the sauce has thickened add the Mozzarella cheese and stir until smooth. STIR FREQUENTLY.
• While the sauce cooks, boil noodles for 3-5 minutes.
• Place pasta on serving plates and spoon sauce over pasta.
• Garnish with parsley, freshly cracked black pepper, and more grated parmesan (optional).
- The Food Network Alfredo Sauce by chef Ree Drummond.
Ingredients
1 stick butter
1 cup heavy cream
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 cups freshly grated Parmesan
Pasta cooking water, as needed
Directions
1. In a saucepan or skillet, warm the butter and cream. Season with salt and pepper. Add the Parmesan and stir until melted.
2. Toss to combine, thinning with pasta water if necessary.
- “Great Value” brand “Classic Alfredo Pasta Sauce” “Made with Real Cheese”.
Ingredients:
Water
Cream
Modified corn starch
Sunflower oil
Parmesan cheese
Dairy product solids
Modified egg yolk (egg yolks, salt, phospholipase)
Salt
Contains 5% or less of the following:
Romano cheese, natural flavors, roasted garlic powder.
Autolyzed yeast extract, xanthan gum, blue cheese, spices, lactic acid, onion powder.
Contains milk, eggs, and traces of anchovies wheat, and soy.
Well, there you have it. Enjoy!

Post Scriptum (P.S.) - Today, March 22, 2020, I received a message on this post, by no other than Ines di Lelio, sister of Alfredo III who currently own "Alfredo Vero - Alfredo di Roma. She kindly corroborates our story, and adds the following:
"I must clarify that other restaurants "Alfredo" in Rome do not belong and are out of my brand "Il Vero Alfredo – Alfredo di Roma".
The brand "Il Vero Alfredo - Alfredo di Roma" is present in Mexico with 2 restaurants (Mexico City and Puebla) and 2 trattorias (Mexico City and Cozumel) on the basis of franchising relationships with the Group Hotel Presidente Intercontinental Mexico.
The restaurant “Il Vero Alfredo” is in the Registry of “Historic Shops of Excellence - section on Historical Activities of Excellence” of the Municipality of Roma Capitale.
Grata per la Vostra attenzione ed ospitalità nel Vostro interessante blog, cordiali saluti
Ines Di Lelio"

10/31/2021

The best once-a-week job you will ever have. It is very busy; if you cannot count it is not for you. Female & minority-owned business. We strive to empower young females to break into the food business, so they can move on to make a difference in the industry. Having said that, it is not a walk in the park, although it is only on Saturdays, it is fast-paced, starts early, and you are done by 1PM. You should be able to lift weight up to 50lb. You should like cheese and charcuterie, and be able to make sandwiches on demand, although it is not the main focus of the business, it happens. Here are the requirements. You must be available Saturdays from 6AM to 1PM. You should have reliable transportation. You should live in Vero Beach, or within 5 miles thereof. We are a drama-free environment. Leave yours at home. If you are applying just because, save us both the rap, if we cannot talk to you on day one, you are probably not fit for the team. Have a valid drivers license. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, sexual orientation, religion or social status, but if you talk politics like its your main objective in life you are probably not going to be a good fit. Hope to hear from you by next week.

Goulash in A Bread Bowl.  Recipe of the week
10/29/2021

Goulash in A Bread Bowl. Recipe of the week

Recipe of The WeekSaumon et Asperges au Beurre Blanc - Pan Seared Salmon and Asparagus with Creamy Butter Sauce.by The W...
10/21/2021

Recipe of The Week
Saumon et Asperges au Beurre Blanc - Pan Seared Salmon and Asparagus with Creamy Butter Sauce.
by The Well Seasoned Traveler

Chef Clémence Lefeuvre invented beurre blanc, like many things are, apparently by accident sometime around the beginning of the 20th century. She served this sauce at her restaurant "La Buvette de la Marine" in the hamlet of La Chebuette in the village of Saint-Julien-de-Concelles on the banks of the Loire River a few kilometers upstream from Nantes. Legend holds that she intended to prepare a béarnaise sauce to go with pike but forgot to add the tarragon and egg yolks. Some sources claim that this invention occurred while she worked as a cook for the Marquis de Goulaine at the famous Château de Goulaine in the family for over a thousand years. Although not one of the mother sauces of France, it is very much appreciated for its versatility in absorbing flavors.

In this recipe, we pan sear salmon in butter, in which we also sauté asparagus and cover them with the sauce, for a simple and tasty meal.

INGREDIENTS (get your ingredients here)
https://farmersmarketdropoff.com/collections/recipe-of-the-week

1 4oz salmon steak (middle cut about 2 to 3 fingers wide)

4oz stick unsalted butter cut in ½ inch cubes

2 shallots finely chopped

1 clove of garlic finely chopped

½ lb. asparagus bottom ¼ cut off and blanched

1 cup of white wine

1 tablespoon white wine vinegar

1tablespoon herbes de Provence

¼ cup heavy cream

Salt and freshly cracked black pepper

METHOD

Drop ¼ of the wine in a small pot and over low heat boil the herbes de Provence until the liquid has all but evaporated. Drop in the butter 1 cube at a time and whisk constantly until they melt and reach an emulsion. Add the minced shallots and the garlic, keep whisking until it reaches a homogeneous consistency. Use the vinegar to control the thickness. At the end of the process salt and pepper and add a little cream to stabilize the sauce and avoid separation. Keep warm, if it goes under 80 degrees Fahrenheit the butterfat will solidify, if it goes over 136 degrees the sauce will separate and curdle.

Heat a frying pan and melt 1oz of butter. Sauté the salmon until the bottom is blackened. Remove from butter and sauté the blanched asparagus. Assemble asparagus on a plate, cover with the butter sauce and place the salmon on top, sprinkle salt and crack fresh pepper on top.

Bon Appétit

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In 2020