Category Archives: Flavors

Liquid bacon flavoring

liquid bacon flavoring
Torani Bacon Flavoring

I am really not sure what you would do with liquid bacon flavored syrup, but you can find it if you look hard enough. Bacon has a huge following behind it with a driving force that propels the food into certain area of flavoring that it probably should never have belonged to.

Nevertheless, if you love bacon, love it to the point that you would put some maybe… in your coffee for example… then you should check out the Torani Bacon flavored syrup. Specially made for bacon enthusiasts and people who are just insane crazy about the flavor it delivers.

“Bacon enthusiasts will recognize the same savory, meaty flavor as authentic bacon in this salty, sweet syrup. Torani Bacon syrup adds savory bacon flavor to cocktails, lattes, sauces and more. Just add 1/2 – 1 oz. of syrup to a 6-8 oz. beverage, and enjoy this innovative new flavor from Torani.” Ref: Torani.com

You can visit their site if you are unable to locate the Liquid bacon flavoring syrup at your local grocer. Good luck and happy Bacon-ing!

Blue Bell ice cream Flavors for August

Blue Bell Ice cream rotates out ice cream flavors on a particular schedule that they set. The flavor rotations seem to be set by season and demand for the particular ice cream in combination with demand and the supplies of the ingredients.

For the month of August there are a few flavors being introduced into the three month cycle. The ice cream flavors that debut are chocolate chip and birthday cake. These particular flavors might not be a brand new creations necessarily but are entering the cycle for new sales.

Along with those two there are others that have already begun their rotation schedule.This is the rest of the list currently available for purchase at your local grocer.

Ice cream Bluebell
Blue Bell Dessert Trio

Chocolate Mud Pie
Dessert Trio
Southern Blackberry Cobbler
Southern Hospitality
Peaches & Homemade Vanilla
Strawberry Cheesecake
Tin Roof
Triple Chocolate
Century Shade

(Ref: Bluebell)

For a more accurate and up to date list of Blue Bell ice cream flavors visit Bluebell.com

Mango extract flavoring


mango extract flavoring
Mango

Mango extract flavoring can be found in online if you are unable to locate it down the spice aisle of your local super market. You should also try looking down the specialty section to see of the market has sorted the mango extract to another aisle.

Mango extract for cooking:

Mango extract can be used for cooking and in the kitchen with many different purposes. It can be used to add flavor to your homemade whipped cream and can also be used for adding the flavor to different baked goods that come out of your oven. If you enjoy the flavor of mango you might try the extract to add a different flavoring to your next dish.

Medical studies for mango:

In 2010 an article published in the science daily indicated that mango and its vitamins were in fact related to cancer fighting properties. In the study it was found that mango “prevented or stopped” certain cancer cells from forming in the human body.

What is Flavour?

Flavour:

fla·vour  (flvr)

n. & v. Chiefly British 

Variant of flavor.
flavour USflavor [ˈfleɪvə] 

n 

1. taste perceived in food or liquid in the mouth
2. (Cookery) a substance added to food, etc., to impart a specific taste
3. a distinctive quality or atmosphere; suggestion a poem with a Shakespearean flavour
4. a type or variety various flavours of graphical interface
5. (Physics / General Physics) Physics a property of quarks that enables them to be differentiated into six types: up, down, strange, charm, bottom (or beauty), and top (or truth)
flavour of the month a person or thing that is the most popular at a certain time
vb 

(tr) to impart a flavour, taste, or quality to 

[from Old French flaour, from Late Latin flātor (unattested) bad smell, breath, from Latin flāre to blow]
flavourer USflavorer n
flavourless USflavorless adj
flavoursome USflavorsome adj

Ref: flavour. (n.d.) The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. (2003). Retrieved July 9 2011

 

Green Tea and Black Tea Flavors

One of the nice things about tea, is that it can come in almost any flavor you can imagine. Tea comes in all flavors including many herbs, fruits, or spices for example; there is Almond Tea, Amaretto Tea, Apricot Tea, Banana Tea, Blackberry Tea, Blueberry Tea, Caramel Tea, Chai Tea, Chocolate Tea, Lemon Tea, Mint Tea, Orange Tea, Honey Tea, Passion Fruit tea, French Vanilla Tea, and the list goes on and on….

But lets stop talking about the exotic tea flavors, and mention two of the most common tea flavors you’re likely to encounter, they include:

Green Tea – Green tea has it’s roots going back thousands of years, and is often accredited as the world’s first drink containing caffeine. The tea leaves come from a particular plant called the Camellia sinensis which come mostly from China.

Black Tea – Tea is the second most commonly drunk drink – second to water – and with all the flavors, you can certainly see why. Black tea is typically associated with Europeans who preferred the darker stronger taste of the tea leaves. In the early years of the tea distribution to Europe of the Black Tea they got came from India and a couple of other countries.