Monday, November 29, 2010

Brown eggs, oily coffee beans and more

Peanut butter is a semi-solid and can therefor...Image via Wikipedia
Peanut butter, jelly or preserves and sliced cucumbers make a great sandwich.


The woman behind me in the checkout lane today at Fairway Market in Paramus put down a dozen brown eggs, prompting me to say that I prefer them, too, but don't know whether they are nutritionally better than white-shell eggs.


Check out this Egg Facts 101 video on white and brown eggs from the American Egg Board, an industry group: 

Chapter 2: The Hen

We also talked briefly about losing weight by cutting down on bread, but she said life is too short for her to give up her bagel with peanut butter. I suggested she try a peanut butter, jelly or preserves and sliced cucumber sandwich.


I drove to Fairway in search of "dry" coffee beans for my built-in Bosch coffee machine, which has a grinder that has trouble with oily beans. They apparently don't go down the chute as easily as dry beans and can get hung up, prompting a message on the machine to "add beans."


But usually, I don't have to add beans. I do, however, have to pull out the sliding chassis, open the coffee-bean receptacle and stir the beans a bit with my fingers. Inconvenient. For the last few weeks, I have been using Jamaican Blue Mountain beans, which are dry, not oily, that my wife brought back from the island, but I'm running low.

First, I went to Jerry's Gourmet & More in Englewood for whole beans, but the store is no longer selling them loose. I have never used the Lavazza or Caffe Kimbo bagged espresso beans from Italy and don't know if they're oily.

Beans in open sacks

I went to Fairway for the beans, because they are displayed in open sacks and it's easy to see which ones are glistening with oil and which ones are dry. I chose a pound of dark roast from Brazil for $7.99.


I also picked up two pounds of Colombian Supremo, Turkish grind, for my drip coffee maker ($5.99 a pound); Fairway roasted garlic pasta sauce ($2.99 for a 32-ounce bottle), and fruit.


My wife went shopping at Costco in Hackensack today, and bought fresh, wild-caught flounder fillets for dinner ($8.49 a pound). 

So at Jerry's, I only looked over the complete $6.99, restaurant-quality dinners still available at lunchtime: stuffed flank steak, grouper or roast chicken. Each one comes with pasta, rice or potato  and vegetable side dishes. Great food at a great price.


Fairway Market, 35 E. Ridgewood Ave., Paramus, 
in the Fashion Center mall; 201-444-5455.

Jerry's Gourmet & More, 410 S. Dean St.,
Englewood, 201-871-7108.

Costco, 80 S. River St., Hackensack.


Enhanced by Zemanta

3 comments:

  1. Just a reminder, make sure the grinder is turned off when you stir the beans with your finger.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That's right, Aaron. I have only one finger left to stir the beans.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Besides, some people like their coffee oily. I like mine very oily, like around 6 a.m.

    ReplyDelete

Please try to stay on topic.