Photo source: http://www.whitecastle.com |
Homemade Sliders - I know they're not square |
Looking at the grill
and these very tiny hamburgers and cheeseburgers with holes cut out of them, I
knew right away that one or two of them just wasn’t going to cut it. “I’ll take
six.” I replied. I proceeded to my car with my dinner in hand and proceeded to
scarf down each and every one of those sliders. I thought about going back to
order six more but didn’t. Like most foods that have withstood the test of
time, there will always be controversy as to who made the first slider and
when. The most common belief is that it was White Castle. The people that love sliders, and there are many are called "Craver's." There is actually a whole "Craver Nation." If you've never had a White Castle slider be sure to add it to your bucket list. Does a slider fit the criteria of "comfort food?" I think it does for many Craver's. To better serve their customers you can buy sliders in the freezer section of your local grocers. For more information about White Castle sliders, visit them at http://www.whitecastle.com/.
To thick I think. Back to the drawing board |
It seems that the older I get
the more concerned I am, or supposed to be about my health. In America we are
all familiar with the phrase “super-size it” when ordering fast food and getting
the most food and calories, or “bang for your buck.” Today, if we are trying to
be politically correct, we are supposed to be downsizing everything to keep
fit. Not just the food or drinks that we order, but the size of our plates, and
glassware as well. The theory is that a 9 inch plate full of food will satisfy
your cravings visually without the calories of a 12 inch plate full of food. The USDA's new food icon
is a brightly colored plate that breaks a healthy diet into four main
sections: fruits, vegetables, grains and proteins, with a small side of
dairy.
Over the past ten years “sliders”
have popped up on restaurant menus across the country. Not content with just
hamburger and cheeseburgers anymore, the “slider” has been born-again in many
forms. Today restaurants everywhere are capitalizing on the slider craze by offering every form of slider they can come up with. There are hamburger sliders, cheeseburger sliders, tenderloin, meatloaf,
crab cake, fish sliders, fried-chicken sliders, buffalo chicken sliders, pulled pork sliders… The list is
endless.
Today a slider can be served as a snack, a meal, or in a fancy-schmancy restaurant as a “Amuse Bouche,” pronounced ä-müz-'büsh. But in America we like to “super-size it.” So we don’t just settle for one slider. We want bigger, better and a whole plateful of them.
So one day I entered one of those stores that I am forbidden from entering alone and found a square slider press. I just had to have it and my wife would just have to understand that I needed to make square sliders.
Kobe Beef Sliders |
Today a slider can be served as a snack, a meal, or in a fancy-schmancy restaurant as a “Amuse Bouche,” pronounced ä-müz-'büsh. But in America we like to “super-size it.” So we don’t just settle for one slider. We want bigger, better and a whole plateful of them.
Three Sloppy Joe Sliders |
My new slider press |
Right shape, we're getting there |
Square sliders almost finished |
© TMelle 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment