Why does man kill? He kills for food. And not only food: frequently there must be a beverage. ~Woody Allen

Vegetarian


Green Giant Immunity Boost

June 16, 2008 | Reviewer: Abi

Photo of Green Giant Immunity BoostPrice: $2.00 on sale
Serving: 2/3 cup, 3.5oz.
Servings per package 2
Calories per serving: 50
Fat: 5%, 3g
Cholesterol: 0%, 0mg
Sodium: 5%, 115mg
Protein: 1g
Carbohydrates: 2%, 7g
Fiber: 9%, 2g
Sugar: 3g
Weight Watchers Points: 1 Point per serving

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Green Giant says: Broccoli Florets, Julienne Carrots and Red & Yellow Sweet Pepper Strips in a Garlic-Herb Infused Extra Virgin Olive Oil Seasoning

Abi says: These Green Giant nutriceuticals are the dietary equivalent of the “For Dummies” book line. Instead of “Dungeons and Dragons for Dummies” or “Heartburn and Reflux for Dummies” we’re being marketed to with “Immunity for Dummies” and “Weight Control for Dummies.” Granted, I still buy this stuff but that’s because it is easy and can sit in my freezer for weeks before being cooked. You can’t say the latter about fresh vegetables.

This vegetable combo steams up significantly better than the zucchini-focused Healthy Vision item, keeping the broccoli tender-yet-toothy and the potentially mushy red and yellow peppers to a minimum. The carrots are in cube/matchstick form, making them less stabbable than other carrot incarnations. This lack of fork-friendliness makes me think that these vegetables are better used as an integrated element in a pasta dish (or with some couscous) than as a stand-alone side.

In other Green Giant products the butter flavorings have always been so overpowering that I haven’t been willing to use the vegetables as an ingredient. In the case of the Immunity Boost pack, the “garlic-herb infused extra virgin olive oil” was negligible. This is bad if you want a lot of flavor, but great if you’re looking to combine your vegetables with other ingredients.

If you’re looking for an easy, healthy way to bulk up those Lean Cuisines, I highly recommend picking up a few packages of Green Giant vegetables when they go on sale. Your eyes and mouth will both enjoy this vibrantly hued, subtly-flavored vegetable mix. And you can leave them in your freezer for weeks without worry.

Eat Smart Santa Maria Style Broccoli Salad

June 9, 2008 | Reviewer: Abi

Photo of Eat Smart Santa Maria Style Broccoli SaladPrice: $2.50 on sale (usually $4.00)
Serving: 1 package, 4.25oz.
Servings per package 1
Calories: 180
Fat: 10%, 7g
Cholesterol: 15%, 5mg
Sodium: 17%, 400mg
Protein: 7g
Carbohydrates: 8%, 23g
Fiber: 20%, 5g
Sugar: 15g
Weight Watchers Points: 3 Points

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Eat Smart says: A local favorite here in the Santa Maria Valley, this salad combines our California Slaw with soy nuts, sunflower kernels, dried cranberries and a tangy low fat dressing.

Abi says: This salad consists of about a cup of vegetables, plus a small handful of fruits and nuts, plus an enormous package of dressing.

While that small a quantity of green items would never do in an at-home dining situation, it seemed a nice thing to keep in the fridge in anticipation of craving some green during the work day. And with the warmer weather (nearly 80 degrees in San Francisco!) I’m no longer ardent about the Green Giant Green Beans with almonds.

It is with great regret that I’m also not ardent about this salad. Instead of bringing fresh coolness to my afternoon, the broccoli acted as a delivery system for the mouth burningest salad dressing ever. I like vinegar. It makes egg salad zippy and brings pep to the easiest salad in the universe (also, the most universally loved salad I’ve ever made). It does not belong in this quantity in a salad dressing unless you are playing a cruel joke on a loved one. And that loved one better really, really love you if they’re going to get over this one.

At first I didn’t even think it was the fault of the dressing. It didn’t smell spicy, so perhaps the broccoli was extra astringent or the fruit and nut combo (soynuts, sunflower seeds and cranberries, yum) contained an unknown spicy element. Neither happened to be the case, but a girl can wish. I love spice and heat, but after a few minutes I was glad that I’d only used 1/3 of the dressing packet.

If you feel brave and not-too-hungry and this is on a tremendous sale, go for it. Otherwise, you’d be better off buying a head of broccoli (or purchasing a bag of pre-chopped, pre-washed broccoli) and keeping a bottle of your favorite salad dressing in the office fridge.

Pacific Natural Foods Buttery Sweet Corn Soup

June 3, 2008 | Reviewer: Guest Reviewers

Photo of Pacific Natural Foods Buttery Sweet Corn SoupPrice: $3.29
Serving: 8 fl. oz.
Calories: 120 per serving
Fat: 2%, 2g
Cholesterol: 2%, 5mg
Sodium: 31%, 750mg
Protein: 3g
Carbohydrates: 7%, 20g
Fiber: 8%, 2g
Sugar: 6g
Weight Watchers Points: 2

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Pacific Natural Foods says: The delicious taste of fresh picked sweet corn is blended together with black pepper and butter for a mouthwatering creamy new soup. Tastes like fresh corn right off the cob.

Davie says: Rhetorical question time! What vegetable says “summer” better than sweet corn? None, of course, especially if you’re from New York, like I am. Long Island sweet corn is some of the best you’ll taste in America. It is actually one of the few stomach-friendly things to sprout from Long Island during the summer—I mean, are you familiar with Ira Rennert and his Hamptons monstrosity?

In spite of it not actually being high season for the stuff yet, I’m starting to crave corn. Perhaps it’s my way of dealing with the impending temperature increase. (Gotta find SOMETHING about summer that makes me happy, after all.) And so today I pulled Pacific Natural Foods’ Buttery Sweet Corn Soup out of my pantry and got about snacking. I heated this up on the stove, but microwave directions are available as well (you have to heat it up in a nuking-appropriate bowl, not the box itself).

There are three major flavors working in this soup: sweet corn, “butter,” and pepper. The corn flavor is strong and tasty, and the pepper is more prominent than I expected it to be (not a problem for me personally). As for the butter flavor: it works, but according to the ingredients list, it comes from butter as well as “natural butter flavor.” The more I think about that “natural butter flavor,” the more I start to feel cheated by this “natural” soup. There are some other seemingly extraneous ingredients in it—nothing terribly offensive, mind you, but Imagine Organics makes a competitive product of more virtuous constitution that I’m inclined to try next. Too bad Imagine doesn’t package their soups with a convenient plastic flip-top the way Pacific does. I’m all about the flip-top making it easier to store your leftovers.

Anyway, what we have here is a solid B- of a soup that is creamy but not exactly thick. I’m not sure I would buy it again, but if you see it magically on sale, go for it. It would make a decent snack or buddy for a main dish—I’m thinking something like Trader Joe’s dee-lish vegan black bean & corn enchiladas.

Eating Right Vegetarian Masala

May 29, 2008 | Reviewer: Guest Reviewers

Picture of Eating Right Vegetarian MasalaPrice: $2.00 (on sale)
Serving: 10 oz.
Calories: 340 per serving
Fat: 11%, 7g
Cholesterol: 0%, 0mg
Sodium: 31%, 740mg
Protein: 11g
Carbohydrates: 19%, 57g
Fiber: 34%, 8g
Sugar: 4g
Weight Watchers Points: 7 Points

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Eating Right says: Indian-style vegetables, spices, and basmati rice in a flavorful masala sauce.

Alex says: This review comes with a bit of back-story. Let it be known that I am a huge fan of Amy’s Mattar Paneer. Imagine my shock and glee when I found a four-pack of Amy’s Palak Paneer and Mattar Paneer meals at Costco for a mere ten dollars. Cut to later that day when I come across this meal at Safeway. I thought it was my lucky day! Not only had I found a cheap source for some of my favorite frozen food, but I had also found a potential, economic alternative (sort of) for when Costco eventually stopped carrying them.

Later, I pulled out the meal to cook it and perused the ingredients list, seeing how it compares to Amy’s. The list looked dauntingly long at first, but closer inspection revealed that the ingredients are mostly spices, and that there’s nothing terribly questionable inside. My hopes soared further!

Boy, were those hopes crushed, stomped upon, and totally broken quickly enough. As I pulled back the sheath of plastic that covered the top, I unearthed some of the grossest looking food I’ve seen in a while. I can only describe it as pasty, an adjective that conjures up images of wallpaper paste, library paste, and the paste that kindergarteners consider highly appetizing, and worse yet, it was dried and crusty in some parts.

The meal consists of chana masala (garbanzo beans in a spicy sauce), cumin-studded “basmati” rice, and some kind of unidentifiable cannellini bean (Cannellini bean?! Come on.) product in a similarly spicy sauce that I’m pretty sure was supposed to be different from the chana masala. The chana masala was mostly that pasty sauce with fewer garbanzo beans than I expected. Sadly, all I could really taste was cinnamon, cinnamon, and more cinnamon. It way overpowered the rest of the myriad spices in the sauce/paste. The rice, though topped with cumin seeds and mysterious carrot pieces, only disappointed further. Other companies have figured out how to make rice for the freezer, but not Safeway (who makes all their products). This rice was overly bland and oddly watery and certainly didn’t have the wonderful aromatic qualities that real basmati rice has. The cumin helped a bit, but it was a lost cause. The carrots had a texture unlike any I’ve ever encountered in a frozen meal, floating somewhere between crunchy and soggy and not in a good way. The mysterious cannellini beans had little flavor to them except a mild heat.

Overall, this meal proved to be one of the saddest and most disappointing frozen food experiences I’ve had in a long time. Maybe it was the fact that it was crappy, or maybe it was my poor, shattered hopes begging me not to torture them further, but I could only manage a few bites of strange bean paste and watery rice. Instead, I heated up my second Amy’s Mattar Paneer and reminded my taste buds that there is worthwhile frozen Indian food out there.

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