HOME Discussion Boards Astrology Shopping / Refer this page

LIFESTYLE

SITE GUIDE

Beauty
Health
Home & Family
Crafts
Cooking
Finance
Cleaning
Gardening
Quotes

Cooking Guide

Cooking Center

Nutrition

Breakfast Meals

Egg & Cheese Dishes

Beans & Legumes

Casseroles

Crock Pot Cooking

Grill / BBQ

Sandwiches & Wraps

Oils

Dressing & Sauces

Cooking Techniques

Healthy Eating

Vegetarian

Salads

Smoothies

Meat & Seafood

Sweets & Treats

Preserves

Cooking Solutions

Home Brews

Soups & Stews

Kid Friendly Meals

Holidays/ Seasonal

Entertaining/ Parties

Pasta / Rice

Pizza

Baked Goods

Readers' Cooking Tips & Recipes

Home >> Cooking: Healthy Cooking:

Enjoying Apples a New Way

BY DANA JACOBI FOR THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR CANCER RESEARCH

My stay in northern California this summer was even more memorable thanks to the abundance of fresh seasonal fruits and vegetables. While visiting the Golden State, I indulged in sweet meiwa kumquats and tiny leaves of sharp, peppery wild arugula. At Chez Panisse, the famous restaurant in Berkeley, I enjoyed the perfect raspberry, with flavor beyond imagination. Finally, just before I headed home to New York City, tart-sweet Gravenstein apples, native only to northern California, came into season.

Gravensteins are a delicious example of the many apple varieties available across the country right now. Seeking inspiration for a new way to enjoy them, I turned to Alice Medrich, a San Francisco chef known for creative desserts. Her apple carpaccio, a treat low in sugar and fat and memorably delicious, provided the perfect model for this week’s Apple Spice Crostini.

Creating a carpaccio (traditionally an appetizer of thinly sliced beef or veal) from apples is unexpected and surprisingly simple. The apples are prepared in the microwave, a technique that cooks them quickly and helps to preserve water-soluble nutrients like vitamin C and folate. While this dish is a perfect way to highlight fresh, farm stand apples, the crostini can be made any time of year using supermarket varieties like Gala or Braeburn.

The rest of this recipe is as easy as making cinnamon toast. The robust, whole-wheat Italian bread used for the crostini compliments the lightly glazed apple perfectly. And the pairing of warm fruit and spice is a comforting combination, whether served as a light breakfast or a sweet afternoon snack.

Apple Cinnamon Crostini - 4 servings

  • 1 Gala or Braeburn apple
  • 1 tsp. granulated sugar, divided
  • 2 tsp. firmly packed brown sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
  • 4 (1/2-inch) slices whole-wheat Italian bread, cut diagonally
  • 4 tsp. unsalted butter

Peel and core apple. Cut in half vertically. Place each half cut side down on work surface and cut crosswise into even 1/8 inch slices. Keep slices together in shape of apple.

Set cut apple halves on small, microwaveable plate, still holding slices together. Sprinkle 1/2 teaspoon granulated sugar over each half and cover plate loosely with wax paper. Place plate in microwave, keeping paper tucked under plate, and microwave, about 45 seconds. Remove and let apple slices sit covered for 5 minutes. Uncover and cool to room temperature.

Meanwhile, in small bowl, mix brown sugar and cinnamon.

Toast bread for crostini. Spread each slice of toast with 1 teaspoon butter and sprinkle one-fourth of cinnamon sugar evenly over each. Cover bread with apples, placed diagonally. Depending on width of bread, ends of some slices may hang over sides. Serve immediately.

Per serving: 160 calories, 5 g total fat (2.5 g saturated fat), 25 g carbohydrate, 5 g protein, 6 g dietary fiber, 170 mg sodium.

 AUTHOR:

“Something Different” is written by Dana Jacobi, author of 12 Best Foods Cookbook and contributor to AICR’s New American Plate Cookbook: Recipes for a Healthy Weight and a Healthy Life.

The American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) is the cancer charity that fosters research on the relationship of nutrition, physical activity and weight management to cancer risk, interprets the scientific literature and educates the public about the results. It has contributed more than $86 million for innovative research conducted at universities, hospitals and research centers across the country. AICR has published two landmark reports that interpret the accumulated research in the field, and is committed to a process of continuous review. AICR also provides a wide range of educational programs to help millions of Americans learn to make dietary changes for lower cancer risk. Its award-winning New American Plate program is presented in brochures, seminars and on its website, www.aicr.org. AICR is a member of the World Cancer Research Fund International.

RECIPE POSTED OCTOBER 6, 2008

KITCHEN TOOLS
  1. Emergency Kitchen Substitutions
  2. Homemade Egg Substitute
  3. Converting Recipes To Lowfat
  4. Safeguarding Your Food
  5. Measurement Conversion Table

Google
Web PT

 

OUR NEWSLETTER
Enter your name and email address below to subscribe to our newsletter. It's FREE!
Name:
Email:

Health Talk
Karen Colins, MS, RD, CDN, answers questions about diet, nutrition, physical activity and weight management issues... read more

Pork Chops with Braised Red Cabbage, Apple and Cranberries

Soft Cornbread with Black Beans

Soft Cornbread with Black Beans

Curried Chicken Salad

Curried Chicken Salad

Great Greens

Great Greens

Egg and Roasted Red Pepper Wrap

Egg and Roasted Red Pepper Wrap

READERS TIPS

page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |

Share your cooking tips & recipes

ingredients for a simple life

[Beauty Center] [Health Center] [Home & Family] [Cooking Center] [Cleaning Center] [Garden Center] [Finance] [Craft Center] [Quotes] [P.T. Forums] [Astrology]
 
 Home / Contact Us / About Us / Advertising
 
 © Copyright 1999-2010 Pioneer Thinking Company. All rights reserved. Privacy & Terms of Use