Receta Nudo’s Italian Torrone and Adopt A Tea Garden Program; Plus A Food Gal Giveaway
An Italian specialty candy perfect for the holidays.
Sticky, sweet and crunchy — that’s Italian torrone.
This traditional confection is made the time-honored way by hand by Torronificio Trapani in Southern Italy with a family recipe that’s more than 200 years old.
Now, Nudo Italia has made it available in the United States. The gourmet food company sells a 7-ounce, 10-inch-long slab for $15.
Recently, I had a chance to try a sample.
The white nougat looks like Christmas, itself. It’s packed to the gills with almonds, too. Orange honey gives it a rounder flavor. And the bitter edge of the almonds ensures this treat isn’t cloying.
It’s a stick-to-your-teeth candy that’s fairly addictive.
A nice up of tea is a perfect accompaniment, what with its welcome tannins to counteract the sweetness.
A sample from the Darjeeling Adopt-A-Tea-Garden program.
Nudo offers a unique way to enjoy its tea by offering a Darjeeling Adopt-A-Tea-Garden program. Here’s how it works: Choose one of five Nudo tea gardens in Darjeeling, India to adopt for a year. Each features a different flavor profile. Then, each quarter for $29 per quarter, you’ll receive a 125-gram tin of loose leaf tea straight from your garden. Each container is enough for 40 cups.
In this way, you’re helping to support a local, family tea farm in India.
You’ll also get quite the tea education in the process by being able to taste tea from the same garden throughout the year, discovering how the flavors change over time. For instance, I found the First Flush (summer harvest) I sampled to be quite delicate and green tasting. In comparison, the Monsoon Flush (winter harvest) was quite robust and earthy.
CONTEST: One lucky Food Gal reader will win not only a sample of Nudo Italia’s torrone, but a membership in the Darjeeling Adopt-A-Tea-Garden program that includes an “adoption certificate” plus one shipment of Golden Harvest Darjeeling tea. Entries, limited to those in the continental United States, will be accepted through midnight PST Nov. 30. Winner will be announced Dec. 2.
How to win?
Playing off the sticky nature of torrone, tell me what really sticks in your craw. Best answer wins the prize.
Here’s my own response:
“Litterbugs. I have seen people leave coffee cups on parking lot staircases when a garbage can was three feet away. I have seen drivers toss a still-full soda cup out their window on the road. I have witnessed a teenager waiting at an airport gate, spill her french fries on the floor, then walk away without even attempting to pick them up. And I have done laundry in an apartment complex where a woman has walked in, emptied the dryer screen, and actually tossed the mound of lint on the floor rather than deposit it in the waste can right next to her. Somehow, I doubt these people would do this in their own home. But they feel they have the license to do this in public spaces? Come on, people, clean up your act.”
WINNER OF LAST WEEK’S CONTEST: In the previous Food Gal contest, I asked you to tell me about a random act of kindness you performed recently. The winner will receive three bags of KIND Healthy Grains Clusters.
Big clusters of granola you can eat with your fingers.
Congrats to:
Jeffrey, who wrote, “My recent gesture of kindness was more or less an act of mutualism in my eyes but it meant a lot to my neighbors. The leaves have been falling and the elderly couple across the street have been unable to care for their yard. She has been in and out of the hospital and he has been caring for her day and night. My sons and I spent the evening raking their yard and hauling off the leaves. The benefits I received was not only the exercise but teaching my kids invaluable life lessons that will help mold them into proper gentlemen.”
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