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The Fruitcake Capital of the World
Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern Management Faculty Presentations Management, Department of 2013 The Fruitcake Capital of the World Sara J. Grimes Georgia Southern University, [email protected] Michael P. McDonald Georgia Southern University, [email protected] John Leaptrott Georgia Southern University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/management-facpres Recommended Citation Grimes, Sara J., Michael P. McDonald, John Leaptrott. 2013. "The Fruitcake Capital of the World." Management Faculty Presentations. Presentation 27. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/management-facpres/27 This presentation is brought to you for free and open access by the Management, Department of at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in Management Faculty Presentations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. OC13061 The fruitcake capital of the world Jan Grimes Georgia Southern University Michael McDonald Georgia Southern University John Leaptrott Georgia Southern University Abstract Two different fruitcake companies in the same small town are discussed and their widely different strategies are presented. Each of the entrepreneurs began working with a “master baker” as little boys but later followed different paths to develop a successful fruitcake business. A brief history of the fruitcake is offered as evidence that the product has been around for hundreds of years and will likely not go away anytime soon in spite of the ridicule and humor that has surrounded fruitcakes during the past twenty-five years. Keywords: fruitcake, entrepreneurship, family-owned business, strategy, competition The fruitcake capital OC13061 INTRODUCTION According to legend, the fruitcake, was first made during the Roman Empire. -
Tasman Foods Full Product Brochure
TRADITIONAL STEAMED DUMPLINGS & SELECTION PRAWN HARGOW An all time Yum Cha favourite made of fresh, plump prawn pieces delicately wrapped in a light dumpling pastry * Packing Size: 23g x 44pcs/pack x 5packs/ctn PREMIUM PRAWN HARGOW An all time Yum Cha favourite made of fresh, plump prawn pieces delicately wrapped in a light dumpling pastry * Packing Size: 40g x 25pcs/pack x 5packs/ctn GINGER PRAWN DUMPLING Succulent prawn with a hint of ginger encased in a traditional wonton. Best served with light soy sauce * Packing Size: 30g x 30pcs/pack x 5packs/ctn PRAWN & SCALLOP DUMPLING A delicious fusion of tender scallops and prawns wrapped a delicate pastry * Packing Size: 30g x 33pcs/pack x 10packs/ctn TRADITIONAL STEAMED DUMPLINGS & SELECTION PORK & CHIVE DUMPLING Juicy delicious pork combined with Chinese chives wrapped in a light rice flour pastry * Packing Size: 18g x 33pcs/pack x 20packs/ctn PORK SHAO MAI Traditional Chinese dim sum handwrapped in a soft wonton pastry loaded with a fusion of quality Australian pork, fresh cabbage & carrot * Packing Size: 30g x 30pcs/pack x 12packs/ctn CHICKEN SHAO MAI Traditional Chinese dim sum handwrapped in a soft wonton pastry filled with a fusion of quality Australian chicken, fresh cabbage & carrot * Packing Size: 30g x 30pcs/pack x 12packs/ctn PRAWN SHAO MAI A fusion of fresh prawn & fish wrapped in a traditional wonton pastry * Packing Size: 25g x 40pcs/pack x 10packs/ctn TRADITIONAL STEAMED DUMPLINGS & SELECTION FISH & GINGER DUMPLING Fresh barramundi seasoned with ginger and spices and handwrapped -
Degree Applicable Glendale Community College October, 2008
Degree Applicable Glendale Community College October, 2008 COURSE OUTLINE Culinary Arts 224 Advanced Baking and Pastry Arts I. Catalog Statement Culinary Arts 224 focuses on advanced aspects of baking and pastry for retail pastry shops, hotels, restaurants and catering operations. Students will apply advanced techniques through practical laboratory experience in high-quality pastry production. The focus will be on European-style products, including laminated dough, pastries, cakes, petit fours, fancy desserts, confections, tortes, mousses, chocolate, and confections. Decoration is strongly emphasized. Units – 5.0 Lecture - 3.0 hours Laboratory - 6.0 hours (Faculty Laboratory Hours 6.0 + Student Laboratory Hours 0.0 = 6.0 Total Laboratory Hours) Prerequisite: Culinary Arts 124 or equivalent. II. Course Entry Expectations Skill Level Ranges: Reading 5; Writing 5; Listening/Speaking 5; Math 3 Prior to enrolling in the course, the student should be able to: 1. recognize and operate bakery equipment; 2 describe the proper utilization of raw material used in various baking process and products; 3. produce quick breads, fried goods, custards and creams; 4. explain and demonstrate proper production methods relating to short dough varieties; 5. explain and demonstrate the proper methods of various cookie preparations; 6. produce basic dessert sauces; 7. produce pastry, pie and tarts; 8. produce frozen desserts. Culinary Arts 224 Page 2 III. Course Exit Standards Upon successful completion of the required coursework, the student will be able to: 1. recognize puff pastry dough categories and methods of introducing fat to dough; 2. identify leavening agents of puff pastry and Danish dough; 3. identify three categories of sponge cake and their ingredient ratios, mixing methods and preparation; 4. -
Guide for Food Businesses Safe Preparation of Raw Egg Products
Guide for food businesses Safe preparation of raw egg products Contents What is a raw egg product? .................................................................................................................................1 Foods that contain eggs need extra care.................................................................................................................1 Use safer alternatives .............................................................................................................................................1 Steps to make sure raw egg products are safe to eat ..............................................................................................2 Food laws ...............................................................................................................................................................3 Restaurants, cafés, bakeries and caterers that prepare raw egg products need to follow safe handling practices or use a safer alternative What is a raw egg product? Raw egg products are ready-to-eat foods that contain raw egg and have not been processed to reduce bacteria levels to safe levels. This includes foods that contain raw egg and are not heated to 75 °C or equivalent when undergoing a light cooking process, such as hollandaise sauce or fried ice cream. Foods that contain eggs need extra care Products with raw eggs have been responsible for some of the largest foodborne illness outbreaks in Victoria. This is because the disease-causing organism, Salmonella, may be found on the -
Buccini the Merchants of Genoa and the Diffusion of Southern Italian Pasta Culture in Europe
Anthony Buccini The Merchants of Genoa and the Diffusion of Southern Italian Pasta Culture in Europe Pe-i boccoin boin se fan e questioin. Genoese proverb 1 Introduction In the past several decades it has become received opinion among food scholars that the Arabs played the central rôle in the diffusion of pasta as a common food in Europe and that this development forms part of their putative broad influence on culinary culture in the West during the Middle Ages. This Arab theory of the origins of pasta comes in two versions: the basic version asserts that, while fresh pasta was known in Italy independently of any Arab influence, the development of dried pasta made from durum wheat was a specifically Arab invention and that the main point of its diffusion was Muslim Sicily during the period of the island’s Arabo-Berber occupation which began in the 9th century and ended by stages with the Norman conquest and ‘Latinization’ of the island in the eleventh/twelfth century. The strong version of this theory, increasingly popular these days, goes further and, though conceding possible native European traditions, posits Arabic origins not only for dried pasta but also for the names and origins of virtually all forms of pasta attested in the Middle Ages, albeit without ever providing credible historical and linguistic evidence; Clifford Wright (1999: 618ff.) is the best known proponent of this approach. In AUTHOR 2013 I demonstrated that the commonly held belief that lasagne were an Arab contribution to Italy’s culinary arsenal is untenable and in particular that the Arabic etymology of the word itself, proposed by Rodinson and Vollenweider, is without merit: both word and item are clearly of Italian origin. -
Sex and the City 2 Uncovered
ISSN: 1465-1998 WEDDINGCakes WIN A DESIGN SOURCE a glamorous stay Issue 36, autumn 2010 £4.99 in the city for two plus fabulous Over 250 wedding inspirational accessories new designs Hundreds Sex and of top cake designer the City 2 contacts SECRETS UNCOVERED Ron Ben-Israel reveals how he made the star wedding cake SQUIRES KITCHEN MAGAZINE PUBLISHING The UlTimaTe gUide To choosing yoUr wedding cake Sex and the City 2 UnCoVered If you’ve already watched Sex and the City 2 then you’ll have seen the stunning tiered white wedding cake dripping with Swarovski crystals – an inspiration for brides and cake designers alike. We spoke to American cake decorating sensation, Ron Ben-Israel (right), who revealed how he and his team made the star wedding cake. How did it come about that you made the wedding cake for Sex and the City 2? We were contacted by the team of set designers for the movie who had seen our work in the media. We’ve also cooperated in the past with Swarovski Crystal to showcase their newest products on cakes. How did you come up with the design? We were given the parameters by the set designers: an elegant, white, over-the-top wedding setting. Interestingly, the design didn’t call for the use of sugar flowers, for which we are well known; the key words were “frozen water” and “sparkle”. There was to be no colour in the cake, just white, transparency, and reflection of light. We started looking at chandeliers for inspiration, but most of the shapes had too much flare on the bottom to become elegant cakes. -
Sauces Reconsidered
SAUCES RECONSIDERED Rowman & Littlefield Studies in Food and Gastronomy General Editor: Ken Albala, Professor of History, University of the Pacific ([email protected]) Rowman & Littlefield Executive Editor: Suzanne Staszak-Silva ([email protected]) Food studies is a vibrant and thriving field encompassing not only cooking and eating habits but also issues such as health, sustainability, food safety, and animal rights. Scholars in disciplines as diverse as history, anthropol- ogy, sociology, literature, and the arts focus on food. The mission of Row- man & Littlefield Studies in Food and Gastronomy is to publish the best in food scholarship, harnessing the energy, ideas, and creativity of a wide array of food writers today. This broad line of food-related titles will range from food history, interdisciplinary food studies monographs, general inter- est series, and popular trade titles to textbooks for students and budding chefs, scholarly cookbooks, and reference works. Appetites and Aspirations in Vietnam: Food and Drink in the Long Nine- teenth Century, by Erica J. Peters Three World Cuisines: Italian, Mexican, Chinese, by Ken Albala Food and Social Media: You Are What You Tweet, by Signe Rousseau Food and the Novel in Nineteenth-Century America, by Mark McWilliams Man Bites Dog: Hot Dog Culture in America, by Bruce Kraig and Patty Carroll A Year in Food and Beer: Recipes and Beer Pairings for Every Season, by Emily Baime and Darin Michaels Celebraciones Mexicanas: History, Traditions, and Recipes, by Andrea Law- son Gray and Adriana Almazán Lahl The Food Section: Newspaper Women and the Culinary Community, by Kimberly Wilmot Voss Small Batch: Pickles, Cheese, Chocolate, Spirits, and the Return of Artisanal Foods, by Suzanne Cope Food History Almanac: Over 1,300 Years of World Culinary History, Cul- ture, and Social Influence, by Janet Clarkson Cooking and Eating in Renaissance Italy: From Kitchen to Table, by Kath- erine A. -
P19ia7lkcjedllcn861dn845j9.Pdf
1 Introduction. 7 Baking 8 Apple Syrup Cake 8 Buttermilk Rusks 9 Chocolate Pepper Cookies 11 Coconut Tart - Klappertert 12 Cornbread - Mieliebrood 13 Easy Spinach and Mushroom Tart 14 Leek Apple and Feta Bake 15 Meat and Vegetable Pot Pie Pies 17 Picnic Bread 18 Soetkoekies – Sweet Wine and Spice Cookies 19 South African Crust less Milk Tart 20 South African Ginger Cookies 21 Melktert or Milk Tart Custard Pie 22 Vetkoek Bread Machine Recipe 23 Spiced Melktert - Dutch Milk Tart 24 Sweetened Condensed Milk Biscuits (Cookies) 25 Sweet and Savoury Cheese Cookies 26 Veggie Loaded Side Dish Bake 27 Whole Wheat Buttermilk Rusks 29 Zuries Tomato and Cream Cheese Tart 30 Buttermilk Rusks 31 “Koeksisters” 35 Mealie Bread 38 Milk Tart 39 “Mosbolletjie” 41 Roosterkoek Recipes 43 2 Beef 45 Arabic Green Beans with Beef 45 Bobotie South African Curried Meat Casserole 46 Bobotie South African Curry Meat Loaf 48 Cape Town Beef Potato Stew 49 Curried Meatballs 50 Deep Dark Delicious Oxtail Stew 51 Ground Beef Roll with Stuffing 52 Helene’s South African Casserole 54 Smothered Oxtails over Spinach and Sweet Corn Mash 55 South African Steak with Sweet Marinade Sauce 57 “Skilpadjies”(mince, bacon and ox liver that's spiced) 58 All In One Potjie 60 Beef Curry Soup 61 Bobotie 62 Oxtail “Potjie 64 Traditional “Frikkadels” Meat Balls 66 Biltong, Boerewors and Dried Wors (Sausage) 68 BILTONG History and Hints 68 HINTS AND TIPS FOR MAKING BILTONG 69 THE MEAT 69 Biltong Recipe 72 Biltong & Peppadew Terrine 74 Biltong Pasta potjie recipe 75 Biltong Potjie Recipe -
Bakery and Confectionary HM-302 UNIT: 01 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND of BAKING
Bakery and Confectionary HM-302 UNIT: 01 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF BAKING STRUCTURE 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Objective 1.3 Historical Background of Baking 1.4 Introduction to Large, Small Equipments and Tools 1.5 Wheat 1.5.1 Structure of Wheat 1.5.2 Types of Flour 1.5.3 Composition Of Flour 1.5.4 WAP of Flour 1.5.5 Milling of Wheat 1.5.6 Differences Between Semolina, Whole Wheat Flour And Refined Flour 1.5.7 Flour Testing 1.6 Summary 1.7 Glossary 1.8 Reference/Bibliography 1.9 Terminal Questions 1.1 INTRODUCTION BREAD!!!!…….A word of many meanings, a symbol of giving, one food that is common to so many countries….but what really is bread ????. Bread is served in various forms with any meal of the day. It is eaten as a snack, and used as an ingredient in other culinary preparations, such as sandwiches, and fried items coated in bread crumbs to prevent sticking. It forms the bland main component of bread pudding, as well as of stuffing designed to fill cavities or retain juices that otherwise might drip out. Bread has a social and emotional significance beyond its importance as nourishment. It plays essential roles in religious rituals and secular culture. Its prominence in daily life is reflected in language, where it appears in proverbs, colloquial expressions ("He stole the bread from my mouth"), in prayer ("Give us this day our daily bread") and in the etymology of words, such as "companion" (from Latin comes "with" + panis "bread"). 1.2 OBJECTIVE The Objective of this unit is to provide: 1. -
Juice of The
BREAKFAST (available throughout the day) STARTERS (available throughout the day) SPECIALS (minimum of two people, after 16.30 hr) 1 Extra Bazar, large breakfast with: pide, açma and simit, marinated feta cheese, 25 Sigara Böregi, deep fried yufka roll filled with feta, mint and parsley (x 3) 5,50€ All Bizar Bazars are served with rice, Shiraz mix, fried potatoes, yoghurt sauce with moesir and seasoned cream cheese, kaymak (clotted cream), apricot jam, honey, thousand holes pancake, 26 Sarma, marinated vine leaves filled with pilau rice and a yoghurt sauce with moesir (x 4) 4,95€ tabouleh salad. yoghurt with fresh fruit, boiled egg, young matured cheese, sucuk, one fresh orange juice and 27 Calamari, fried calamari with garlic sauce 7,50€ 50 Bizar Bazar (meat), grilled kebab with veal, chicken and vegetables with a mushrooms, coffee or tea 10,00€ 28 Humuz, creamy mousse made of chickpeas with olive oil, tahini and bread 5,50€ almonds and chickpeas stew and kofta of minced beef and lamb p.p. 15,90€ For two people 19,00€ 29 Haydari, savoury buttermilk curds and bread 5,50€ 51 Bizar Bazar (fish), grilled kebab with fresh tuna and prawns with a fish, mussels and tomato 2 Healthy breakfast, ‘mild’ Turkish yoghurt, rye bread and honey with a fruit salad and a glass of 30 Falafel, with harissa and bread (x 4) 5,50€ sauce stew p.p. 16,75 freshly squeezed orange juice 6,90€ 31 Irfan’s starter (minimum of two people), zaalouk, humuz, haydari, sarma, peynir ezme, 52 Bizar Bazar (vegetarian), grilled mushroom kebab with a stew of mushrooms, almonds and 3 Thousand holes pancake (bahgrir), North African pancake with honey and butter 5,90€ sigara böregi and bread p.p. -
歡迎光臨 Welcome to China Garden
歡迎光臨 welcome to china garden 大廚推薦 Chef’s Recomendations 花卷北京鴨 Peking Duck Half $21.75 Whole $41.50 大廚推薦 chef’s recomendations 1 2 3 4 清蒸鮮鱈魚 薑蔥焗龍蝦 漢宮牛柳粒 清蒸鮮鱈魚 煙焗原隻大生蠔 Steamed Fresh Cod Fish Sautéed Fresh Maine Lobster Filet Mignon Steamed Fresh Cod Fish Smoked Baked Oysters “Cantonese” Style w/Ginger, Spring Onion (in shell) “China Garden” Style “Cantonese” Style S.P. $33.75 S.P. $19.75 $33.75 5 6 7 8 椒鹽大明蝦 ★ 香骨龍利球 沙汁玻璃蝦 金沙焗龍蝦 Salt & Pepper Sautéed Filet of Whole Sautéed Crystal Shrimp Lobster With Salty Eggs Jumbo Shrimp Flounder With Vegetables With House Salad Dressing S.P. $24.75 S.P. $18.75 9 10 11 12 椒鹽軟殼蟹★ FRESH SOFT SHELL CRABS W/CHILI & SPICY SALT .............................................................$23.75 鐵板黑椒牛仔骨★ 京都焗排骨 豉油皇大頭蝦 上湯海瓜子粉絲 Choice fresh Maryland blue crabs, fried w/chopped onions, hot chili pepper & salt Sizzling Black Pepper Delicious Kingdom King Prawn With Soy Sauce Braised Clams With Rice XO醬炒雙蚌★ sautÉed DELICIOUS DOUBLE SEA CUCUMBER INTESTINE WITH XO SAUCE ........... Short Ribs Spare Ribs $18.75 Noodles In Supreme Clear Broth $28.75 $17.75 $15.75 $18.75 韭黃炒雙蚌 sautÉed DELICIOUS DOUBLE SEA CUCUMBER INTESTINE WITH YELLOW LEEKS..$28.75 XO醬炒貴妃蚌 atlantic clam WITH XO SAUCE ......................................................................................................$25.75 XO醬韭黃螺片★ sautÉED FRESH SLICED CONCH & YELLOW LEEKS WITH XO SAUCE ............................$35.75 臘味田雞煲 13 14 15 16 SIZZLING FRESH FROG WITH CHINESE SAUSAGE & PORK IN CASSEROLE .......$25.75 避風塘加拿大蟹 西施炒飯 乾燒大明蝦 琵琶釀豆腐 蘿蔔牛腩煲 SIZZLING STEWED BEEF BRISKET WITH TURNIPS IN CASSSEROLE ........................ Dungeness Crab In XiShi Fried Rice W/Dried Scallops, Jumbo Shrimp in Stuffed Bean Curd & $15.75 Typhoon Shelter Style Fresh Seafood & Egg Whites Kingdom Sauce Chinese Seasonal Greens S.P. -
Quicke's Barbers 1833 Grilled Cheese
E P I C U R E Quicke’s Artisanal, handmade clothbound cheddar p. 2 Barbers 1833 Vintage Reserve block cheddar p. 26 Grilled cheese Better than your mother's sandwiches p. 32 April 2017 www.epicurefoodscorp.com CHECK OUT THIS MONTH’S DEMOS Page 36 Quicke’s Traditional Cheddar As we toured Quicke’s, we began to understand the careful consideration that went in to each step of the cheese making process. From the length of the grass that the cows graze on throughout the year to the types of racks used to store each and every clothbound wheel, evey aspect was intentional. While other producers can claim to be Farmhouse, meaning they produce the milk which is used to make their cheese, Quicke’s is truly artisanal. Each step in the back- breaking cheddaring process is done by hand to maintain a dedication to quality that spans generations. Beginning the process on Quicke’s approximately 300 acres of grazing land, their cows are some of the happiest around. That is because they use what is commonly known as the New Zealand grazing system. Cows are rotated on a 24 hour basis between different, relatively smaller paddocks of grass. This ensures that the grass they are eating is neither too long, which would be too fibrous and not nutritious enough, nor too short, which would not be good for the grass. Starting from Valentine’s Day and lasting until Christmas time, Quicke’s cows are grazing outside, making a happier and healthier animal. Each cow is milked twice a day and fresh milk is piped in for cheese making each morning.