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food for fun and thought

Try These To Tame A Way Too Spicy Dish

February 1, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN 3 Comments

Have you ever gotten a little too overzealous with the chili powder – or with the amount of peppers you’ve added to that fantastic dish you’re cooking?

It happens — but what do you do?  You can burn the heck out of everyone’s mouth, toss the whole dish into the garbage, feed the compost pile, or maybe somehow salvage what you’ve made.

There are those of you who routinely look for the spiciest food around and are probably thinking – so what’s the problem?  But, for those of you – like me – who would prefer not to have your mouth on fire – there are ways to calm down an over-spiced dish. After some research, here’s a bunch of suggestions (in no particular order). Maybe some will work for your dish, and maybe not, but file them in your memory and give one or two a try when you’re staring at a pot of over-spiced food.

  • First, know your peppers — they vary in the amount of heat they have.  You can always decrease the amount you use. Be sure to remove the inner membranes and seeds which is where the majority of the heat resides. Capsaicin is the active component in chili peppers and the amount varies according to the variety and maturity of the pepper. Habanero peppers are always extremely hot while ancho and paprika peppers can be as mild as a bell pepper.
  • For three alarm dishes, one prime suggestion is to dilute the heat. Make another batch of the recipe and omit the “overly used” or the “heat” ingredient and combine it with the over-spiced batch. Now you have a double recipe with diluted heat and you can freeze the extra. You can also add more stock, broth, canned tomatoes, or beans depending on the recipe – just make certain there is no added seasoning. A can or two of refried beans or mashed canned beans helps  dilute spiciness, helps thicken chili, increases the fiber and protein content, and gives you more servings without the higher cost of more meat.
  • Dairy helps neutralize the spice in a dish (and in your mouth). You can use (full fat is best) milk, sour cream, or yogurt.  Other suggestions are whipping cream or evaporated milk. If you can’t or don’t have time to incorporate dairy into the dish, offer sour cream or yogurt on the side.
  • Serve chili or curry over rice.  The rice tones down the spices and adds bulk to the recipe. Bread and other grains also help.
  • Add some potatoes or another starchy vegetable like corn. You probably won’t even notice the corn in chili.  If you use potatoes, peel and cube a couple and mix them in. Leave them in until they are cooked through. Remove them (or not, depending on taste) and serve.
  • Try stirring in a couple tablespoons of peanut butter (you could also use almond or other nut butters or tahini) to cut the heat. Depending on the dish it won’t really alter the taste but might give a little more depth to the flavor and make chili seem a little creamier.  Because it may not be an expected ingredient, be certain that no one has nut or peanut allergies.
  • Add some lime, lemon, vinegar or something acidic that won’t mess with the other flavors. Acid cuts through heat.
  • You don’t want to turn your dish into dessert, but sugar goes a long way toward neutralizing the spiciness. So does honey. Add a teaspoon at a time and keep tasting.  Some people use sweet or semi-sweet chocolate to mask the spice, but not so much that the dish ends up tasting like chocolate. Sugar combined with an acid like vinegar or lemon or lime juice works particularly well.
  • Any number of additions can help tame the heat without radically affecting flavor.  Add a can of crushed pineapple to your chili — it will essentially disappear but will also helping to counteract the heat.  Other kinds of fruit and carrots may work, too.

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Shopping, Cooking, Baking, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting Tagged With: chili, cooking, cooking tips, food facts, food for fun and thought, food prep, spice, spicy food

When Your Mouth’s On Fire From Red Hot Chili Peppers

January 28, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

I was recently in a restaurant that specializes in chili – hot, hotter, and hottest.  I happened to be facing a table of four large thirtyish guys. One guy cherrily ordered, “hottest.”

Shortly after this big, burly guy dug into his chili – with gusto, I might add, he was sitting glassy eyed, rivulets of sweat dripping off of his bald head, practically unable to speak.  The waitress, obviously having seen this reaction before, came running over with a glass of milk with orders to, “Drink up.”

Have you ever had this reaction to very spicy food — maybe from that dish you made when you got a little too zealous with the chili powder? Or perhaps, like this guy, from being a little too macho and ordering “hottest” after assuring everyone that you love really hot and spicy food.  Or maybe when you accidentally grabbed the wings known as red hots at a Superbowl party.

What Causes The Burn?

Capsaicin is mostly responsible for the “heat” in chili peppers.  To stop the mouth flames you need to neutralize capsaicin’s burning heat that binds to your taste buds. Capsaisin is soluble in both alcohol and fat so full fat dairy and alcohol are solutions.

What To Do To Tame The Flame

What do you do as your mouth is sending a five-alarm signal, your face is on fire, and you are sweating enough to water every plant in the room?  Here are some solutions that are easy – even when you’re in a restaurant or someone else’s home.

  • The most common flame relievers are full fat dairy, acid, and sugar – although some people also swear by nut and seed butters  (peanut, almond, tahini).  They may all have some degree of effectiveness.
  • Ice and water will feel pretty good, but only temporarily. The burning pain will come roaring back. Because capsaicin is soluble in alcohol and fat, sometimes beer is suggested as a solution. The alcohol helps neutralize the capsaicin molecules.  But beer is about 95% water and won’t really neutralize the capsaicin clinging to your tongue.
  • High fat dairy products like milk, cheese, sour cream, yogurt, and ice cream coat your mouth and can break the bonds capsaicin forms with the nerve endings – and, since they’re cold, they feel good, too. Aha! An explanation for why spicy Mexican food is often served with sour cream.
  • Sugars bind to pain receptors more readily than capsaicin so sweet things may work, too.   Sugar, fruit, honey, molasses, even carrots have all been used.  Highly sweetened non-carbonated drinks may work.  Try some sweet tea.   Hoisin may work for Asian dishes, Lassi (sweet and dairy combination) if you are in an Indian restaurant.
  • Acid can cut through the heat so use vinegar, lemon or lime juice, anything acidic that doesn’t mess with the taste.  Beer with lime?

Ever over spice something that you’ve cooked?  There are ways to remedy that, too.  Check out my next post.

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Shopping, Cooking, Baking, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting Tagged With: beer, chili, cooking tips, dairy, food facts, food for fun and thought, kitchen mistakes, spicy food, sugar

Happy And Healthy Holidays to You And Your Pets

December 23, 2010 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

It’s a time of celebration for both you and your pets.


As the big week of celebrations approaches, here are some quick tips to keep your pet family members safe and healthy during the winter holidays.

  • If the weather turns nasty and you need to use salt and de-icing materials, remember that they can get into your pet’s paws and onto their stomachs as they climb over snow mounds.  Wipe their paws and tummies with a damp rag.  Antifreeze tastes sweet to dogs and cats so  mop up any spills and bottle drips.
  • We find tree ornaments fun to look at and pets absolutely adore them, but metal, glass, ribbons, styrofoam and tinsel can cause serious medical emergencies for your pet.  So can artificial snow and the snow in snow globes.  Ditto for holiday wrappings that get thrown around and fall everywhere.   These can be a hazard for little kids, too.
  • We may want our homes to look festive, but ivy, holly, mistletoe, lilies, poinsettia, and some Christmas greens can be toxic to pets if they nibble on them.  Christmas tree water with tree preservative can be attractive to thirsty pets — and harmful, too.
  • The holidays are a time to welcome visitors into your home.  Too much activity and too many people can frighten your pets — and sometimes cause them to run away.  Consider putting them in a room away from the roaring crowd and make certain they are wearing  collars with current tags.
  • Oh how we love to feast on our holiday treats!  So do our pets. My Golden Retriever, Rufus, was carbo-dog and adored desserts.  Spike, my pug, given his druthers, would eat anything, anytime, anywhere.  Some foods can be harmful and cause GI or choking problems.  Chocolate that is so prevalent in holiday treats can be quite harmful to our pets.  We truly love out animals, but giving them table scraps is not a good way to show it.  And — if you don’t want the leftovers, send them home with visitors or toss them– don’t feed them to the dog — not all of them are healthy for animals.

Have a wonderful, safe, happy, and healthy holiday.

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought Tagged With: celebrations, Christmas, food for fun and thought, holidays, pet safety, pets

Moms: Here’s Another Responsibility To Shoulder

November 2, 2010 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

caraman/photoexpress

I’m a Mom, too, and I don’t know about you, but sometimes I feel as though I carry both the blame and responsibility for just about everything.

Mom’s Role in Preventing Obesity

Well, here’s one more thing.  A recent online survey of 1,037 women, 18 and older, by HealthyWomen, an independent online health information source for women, determined that most women underestimate their role in preventing obesity in their children.

87% of the women surveyed believe that a parent’s obesity can influence a child’s risk of becoming obese, but only 28% of women surveyed assigned the responsibility to themselves.

Research has shown that mothers have a greater effect on their child’s weight  than fathers.
 Only 11% of the surveyed women knew that the risk of a child becoming obese more than doubled if the mother is obese during her first trimester of pregnancy.

It Can Be Tough To Get Kids To Eat Produce

Another study conducted by Working Mother magazine and the Dole Food Company found that 56% of moms say that getting kids to eat fruit and vegetables is either not easy or impossible. Based on my own experience with my sons, I totally agree.

How do you encourage better eating habits in your kids? The Dole study found that persistence, convenience, and creativity are key. Over half of the surveyed moms said that repeated attempts to serve certain foods is the best way to get their kids to eat produce.

Role Models And Gatekeepers

Mothers are role models and are commonly the main food gatekeepers for their families.  By taking charge of their eating and activity behavior during pregnancy and afterwards they have a real opportunity to influence their families’ health.  Kids mimic what their parents do and both moms and dads can demonstrate healthy eating habits and expose their kids to nutritious foods. When parents make good choices they are modeling that good behavior for their children.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Eating with Family and Friends, Food for Fun and Thought, Manage Your Weight, Shopping, Cooking, Baking, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting Tagged With: food for fun and thought, gatekeeper, habits, mom's responsibility, obesity, obesity in children, overweight children, role model, weight management strategies

What Do You Do With The Part Of the Pumpkin You Don’t Eat Or Carve?

October 29, 2010 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

If you’ve ever carved (or tried to carve) a pumpkin, one thing you know for sure:  the pulp and the pumpkin seeds that fill the inside of the pumpkin are stringy, slimy, and slippery as all get out.

Halloween And Kitchen Plumbing Problems

Apparently, this causes lots of kitchen plumbing problems.

How do I know this?  I got an emailed “Pipeline Newsletter” from Roto-Rooter (and away go troubles down the drain). No kidding.   Last year, in the middle of an antarctic cold spell, I had to call them to churn through what seemed like an iceberg, but in reality was a large clump of ice lodged in the pipes somewhere in the bowels of my house.  I guess they saved my email address!

They just wanted to let their clients know that plumbers can get very busy around this time of year.

Why?  During the Halloween season an incredible amount of pumpkin pulp is scraped out of pumpkins by big and little hands using all kinds of utensils.  Although the scooped out flesh might end up in fantastic pies and bread, the seeds and pulp stuff can cause some plumbing nightmares.  The plumbers get called to repair garbage disposers and kitchen sink drains that have been clogged with the slimy, stringy pumpkin pulp and seeds.

What To Do

To help guard against Halloween drain disasters Roto-Rooter suggests that you never put pumpkin pulp or seeds down the toilet, sink drain, or in the garbage disposer.  The slimy, stringy, sticky pumpkin innards clog drains and pipes and can eventually form a hardened blockade inside your plumbing.

They suggest that you carve your pumpkins on a thick pile of newspaper that you can wrap up and take it to the compost pile or garbage pail.

If you separate the seeds out from the slimy stuff before you toss it you can save them and plant then them in the spring for homegrown crop of pumpkins next year.

Or, you can roast them for a healthy, tasty treat. Roasted pumpkin seeds taste great and have contain lean protein and essential minerals like zinc, iron, copper and magnesium. One ounce of pumpkin seeds (28 grams, or about 85 seeds) has 126 calories, 5 g fat (1g is saturated), 15g carbohydrate, and 5g protein.

Some Halloween Trivia:

In case you get involved in a Halloween trivia contest, according to the Guinness World Records:

  • the world’s largest jack o’lantern was carved from a 1469 pound pumpkin on October 31, 2005 in Northern Cambria, Pennsylvania
  • the fastest time on record for carving a face into a pumpkin is 24.03 seconds, recorded in Orlando, Florida on July 23, 2006

Happy Halloween!

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: cooking with pumpkin, food for fun and thought, Halloween, holidays, pumpkin

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