Showing posts with label canned food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canned food. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Trader Joe's Tomato Sauce
An ordinary, humble item, to be sure, but important to keep around for recipes. I've been buying it lately to use with TJ's Taco Seasoning Mix, and it's perfect. Plus, organic, in case you care about that sort of thing.
Will I buy it again?
Yep. Because I like the taco mix so much, this has become a permanent pantry item for me.
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Trader Joe's Low Fat Tuscano Marinana Sauce
I went to grab another can of my newly-beloved green-can marinara sauce when I spotted this next to it. It's apparently not new, as I find it archived in old online Fearless Flyers at least as far back as 2012, yet somehow I had never noticed it before.
It's not nearly as good as its shelfmate. It's chunkier, which I don't care for. But more importantly, it's just bland and boring. It has no zing to it.
It is lower in fat than the other one (presumably because of less olive oil), but the trade-off is more sugar and salt:
Note that this one does have added sugar, while the green-can version does not.
Will I buy it again?
Nope.
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Trader Joe's Mandarin Oranges
I used to eat canned Mandarin oranges a lot when I was young--usually Three Diamond brand, I think. These from Trader Joe's seem identical to my memory of those. Maybe the syrup is a little less sweet, or maybe that's just my imagination working, as prompted by the "light syrup" on the label.
Will I buy it again?
I doubt it. It had been at least 20 years since I had bought any canned Mandarin oranges before this. They're OK, but when I get a yen for something snacky, it's never this. But if I did suddenly develop such an urge, or needed Mandarin oranges for a recipe, these would do as well as any others.
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Trader Joe's Giant Baked Beans In Tomato Sauce
This is a new product that appeared on the shelves about a month ago. I love baked beans--eat 'em once or twice a week on average. I've tried practically every brand that I've had access to. These are distinctly different in two ways. First, as the name implies, they're huge. I don't think that's either good nor bad; it's just different.
The second difference, though, is the dealbreaker. The sauce is heavy with dill. I like dill in some things, but as a strong flavoring in baked beans it doesn't work. It makes me feel like I'm eating pickled beans instead of baked beans.
Will I buy it again?
No. I finished eating them, so they weren't so horrible as to require throwing away, but I was left with no desire for more.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Trader Joe's Matar Paneer
This is Day Four of Indian Food Week:
Several weeks ago, Trader Joe's introduced a trio of canned Indian sauces. My first introduction to the new products was somebody on Twitter posting a photo of all three cans, and declaring them "inedible." I was certainly sympathetic to the view that "canned Indian food" seemed like an intrinsically questionable concept. But I was willing to give them a try.
This was the first one I opened. I heated it and poured it over some rice as the centerpiece of a dinner with Nina.
I thought it was better than canned Indian food could be expected to be--but that's a pretty low bar. It was kind of boring, and, as you'd probably guess, not particularly fresh-tasting. But it's far from the "inedible" that I had first been informed--at least if you have crude, uneducated taste buds like mine.
Will I buy it again?
Nope. Not good enough to bother with. Also, a little birdie tells me that all three of these products have been halted temporarily for reformulation. If that's really true, it's surprising--the fastest introduction/withdrawal I've ever seen for TJ's products.
Nina's View
I give this product a resounding meh.
Sunday, August 21, 2016
Trader Joe's Lentil Soup
I liked this, though mostly for an idiosyncratic reason. Most lentil soups go heavy on onions, and this one did not. They're still in there, but in low enough numbers that I could basically ignore them. That quality alone elevates it above most brands of canned lentil soup that I have tried.
Sadly, however, the Trader Joe's Blandification Committee got all up into this product. It could really use some zesting up. (But not with onions, obviously. Onions do not zest anything up. They ruin things.)
Will I buy it again?
Probably, though rarely.
Nina's View.
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
Sunday, July 3, 2016
Trader Joe's Dolmas
I saw a photo of one of these cans on Twitter months ago and thought, "Leaves stuffed with rice? What has crazy Trader Joe's gone and done now?" I bought a can on my next trip. (They weren't easy to find in the store, though--must not be a big seller.)
I subsequently learned that dolmas are not a Trader Joe's thing, they're just a thing. Amazingly enough, it turns out, there are foods that everybody knows about except me. This is one of them.
They sat in my cupboard for months, victim of a syndrome with which I am commonly afflicted: I work up enough food adventurism to buy some odd thing, but not enough to actually eat it. Every time I thought the dolmas might be a nice side dish for one of my weekly dinners with Nina, I would think of something that would be even better, and let them sit for another week. (Even so, we were still a year from their expiration date when they were finally consumed.)
But finally I was trying a new recipe for chili, from a new cookbook, and decided that as long as I was going out on a limb, I might as well make the whole meal a risky experiment by adding dolmas to the menu. I looked around on line, trying to figure out whether to serve them chilled, room temperature (which is what the can recommends), or heated. I went with room temperature.
In the can, they are bathed in soy oil--not the olive oil you might expect. They need some serious degreasing with paper towels.
By far the strongest part of both the smell and taste was the dill. (Fortunately, it was strong enough to completely disguise the onion.) Overall, the eating experience was kind of weird, in terms of both taste and texture, but not gag-me unpleasant.
Each of the next two days, I ate a few of them with my lunch of leftover chili and salad, so I basically had the same meal three times in a row. I found that I liked them better cold. Maybe because the texture was a little firmer and they held together better that way? Maybe because the flavors are somewhat attenuated by the cold? I don't know.
But the point is that I ate them all, except for the couple that Nina had. This is another small personal achievement in food exploration for me. Where's my participation trophy?
As for the TJ's product, of course I have no prior experience with which to compare them. To the extent that there is a consensus opinion about TJ's dolmas in online chat groups, it seems to be approximately this: (1) TJ's used to sell, at least in its California stores, house-made dolmas, which were to die for, and which would literally get purchased the minute they were put out. (2) The canned variety, by contrast, were not worth bothering with. (3) However, if you must degrade yourself with canned dolmas, they may be about as good as you can buy.
Will I buy it again?
No. It was a successful experiment personally in that I didn't die, didn't gag, and even finished them off. But they fell short of being something I want more of in my life.
Nina's View
I know stuffed grape leaves as dolmades. When they are
good, they are divine—tender leaves, moist and succulent rice, savory herbs and
spices. Toothsome. Delicious!
When they're not good, they pretty atrocious. Tough, veiny leaves. Gummy
rice. Single note seasoning. Stale.
For what it's worth, these are not the worst dolmades I've ever had. At
least the leaves were tender. But the rest? An extreme lack of freshness and
un-nuanced seasoning made them unpalatable. One day, I hope Bob will have the
pleasure of really good stuffed grape leaves. Until then, we can leave these on
the shelf.
Friday, May 6, 2016
Trader Joe's Organic Vegetarian Chili With Red Beans & Onion
Trader Joe's carried a vegetarian chili for a long time, but then it disappeared before I got around to trying it. Now it's back, reformulated with all organic ingredients. (It's not explicitly labeled as vegan, but that's not because of any dairy ingredients. No explanation is given for why it doesn't get the "V" symbol. I'm guessing it has something to do with being made in a facility that also makes stuff with milk products, so they can't guarantee that there isn't some trace of such things making its way into this stuff.)
I was worried about buying something with "onion" in the product name, but I was relieved to find that the onion is not prominent in either taste or appearance. In fact, the only thing that's prominent in taste is pepper. There's a moderate level of hotness, but not a lot else going on. That is, there's not the happy party of flavors that characterize really good chili.
I didn't mind eating it for dinner last night. And today I'll polish off the leftovers for my lunch, and be content. But it basically leaves me bored.
Will I buy it again?
No.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Trader Joe's Refried Black Beans With Jalapeno Peppers
Day 3 of Mexican Week.
No surprises here. Or maybe it's more accurate to say that there is one surprise: the jalapeno peppers add nearly nothing. They are either so few or so mild (or both) that it's almost as if there were none at all. After you taste black beans, you get a faint aftertaste of pepperiness--and that's it.
Will I buy it again?
I've had two cans now, because when I sat down to write the review of the first one, I thought maybe I was missing something, and I set it aside until I could try them again. After a second one, I'm now comfortable saying that I was not wrong. So, no.
Monday, September 28, 2015
Trader Joe's Refried Pinto Beans Salsa Style
This is Day 2 of Mexican Week.
I really didn't know what to expect from these. What is "salsa style" as applied to refried beans? I couldn't guess. So I avoided them for a long time even after purchasing them. It was always easier and safer to go for the plain refried beans. But when Nina was over for dinner one night and I was going to be making tostadas with beans and Soy Chorizo, I gave her the choice of several different kinds of refried beans I had on hand, and she choose this one.
Maybe it should have been obvious, but they're just like plain refried beans if you stirred in some generic salsa. Which is to say, a little spicier and livelier than the regular version, but not a radical departure.
Will I buy it again?
Probably not. When I make tostadas with Soy Chorizo (my preferred way), they don't need any more hotting up. When I make them without, there's another brand of spicy refried beans that I like better than this TJ's product.
Nina's View
To be honest, all I could tell about these beans when prepared tostada
style was that they had a vaguely tomatoey undertone. I would not describe them
as spicy in any way. Don't bother.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Trader Joe's Albacore Tuna
If you didn't think buying tuna was already complicated enough, what with the skipjack and yellowfin and bluenose and bigeye or whatever, Trader Joe's goes and throws three different albacore tunas at you.
The only difference appears to be the salt. They have no salt added, salt added, and then one in between--half salt.
I made each of these into tuna salad sandwiches two days in a row, with a few days between each experiment. I could tell no difference between them. Maybe I could if I tried them side by side, but not the way I did it. Which means that I would probably just go for the no salt added, or maybe the half salt variety.
Or at least I would if I were planning to keep getting this--which I'm not. I like light tuna better than albacore (white), perhaps just because that's what I was raised with. Light is also cheaper. As a final benefit, it has only about 1/3 as much mercury as albacore, on average, according to a recent article I read in Consumer Reports magazine.
Will I buy it again?
I'm not planning to.
Monday, April 20, 2015
Trader Joe's Organic Joe's O's Pasta
I liked SpaghettiOs as a kid. As an adult, my pattern has been this: (1) Go a few years without eating any. (2) Notice them on a grocery store shelf. (3) Remember that I liked them as a child. (4) Purchase a can. (5) Eat the SpaghettiOs. (6) Be instantly and vividly reminded of how vile they are, and why I don't usually keep them around. (7) Eventually forget what happened in step 6. (8) Repeat. I've been through that cycle more times than I care to admit, because I am a slow learner.
But I guess the lesson has sunk in enough that I was wary of the Trader Joe's version of the same basic idea. I passed it by several times before tossing it into my basket one day, and then it sat on my shelf uneaten for close to a year before I finally decided to try it today.
And ya know what? It wasn't half bad. The sauce is tangier than I remember that of the more famous brand being. It didn't feel or taste like pabulum, like something meant only for the weird palate of a child. I had planned to have just half of the can as part of my lunch today, saving the rest for tomorrow, but I enjoyed it enough that it just kept going down, and before long was all gone.
I can't say that I loved it, or that I'm eager to have it again. I do recognize that I can make much, much better pasta with not much investment of time or effort. But it exceeded expectations simply by not being vile mush.
Will I buy it again?
I have no plans to do so. However, it's entirely possible that at some point I will forget today's experience, and will decide that I ought to try that Trader Joe's SpaghettiOs stuff.
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Trader Joe's Turkey Chili With Beans
I had hoped that this chili would be very much like the excellent Premium Select Chicken Chili With Beans. Instead, it's virtually indistinguishable from the mediocre Beef Chili With Beans--i.e., mediocre.
Will I buy it again?
No.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Trader Joe's Premium Select Chicken Chili With Beans
First, let's establish that I have eaten a lot of canned chili. I'm confident that I have averaged more than one can a month for my entire adult life. I'm 53. Something like 400 cans of it, then, including a wide variety of brands and styles.
So please understand that it means something serious when I say this: I believe that the above-pictured item may be the best can of chili I've ever had. (I've had better homemade chili, of course--hence the qualifier "can.")
It's spiced exactly to my taste. There aren't a lot of hunks of onion/celery/peppers. The beans and pieces of chicken have distinct flavors when you bite into them, rather than having one homogeneous flavor permeating everything. The proportions of beans to meat and solids to the liquid base are just right. It's really excellent in every way.
After one trial, it has knocked everything else off of my list of mainstay chilis. I didn't have one favorite, but had preferences for several that were pretty good. Now I have one favorite.
Will I buy it again?
It just became one of those items that I will always keep on the shelf for when the urge strikes. So yes, in a big way. Additionally: Top Ten. Yep--it's that good.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Trader Joe's Yellowfin Tuna In Olive Oil
Unlike the skipjack tuna, this stuff tasted exactly the way I have come to expect tuna to taste after 50 years of eating it. However, as far as I can tell, TJ's does not sell a version of this packed in water.
Will I buy it again?
Maybe if I'm in a pinch. But I would prefer water-packed tuna to cut down on the calories, so for the most part I anticipate continuing my practice of buying mass quantities of Bumblebee brand when I find it at a good price.
Note
While looking to see if TJ's had this same thing packed in water (thinking that perhaps it was just out of stock at my store), I came across this announcement from TJ's last year, about switching their sources of tuna and other seafood to more sustainable sources. A couple of months ago National Geographic magazine had an article about the overfishing of some types of tuna. It's possible that I should reconsider my purchasing habits on the basis of this concern. After all, I doubt that Bumblebee, Star Kist, and Chicken of the Sea will pay as much attention to this issue as TJ's does.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Trader Joe's Beef Chili With Beans
I suppose I eat canned chili about once a month on average. It's always when I'm feeling lazy or in a hurry. The ability to dump it in a bowl and be eating it after three minutes in the microwave is the main appeal. I've never found any varieties of it that I love, but some go down unobjectionably, even pleasantly. Others, not so much.
I'm afraid that TJ's offering goes in the "not so much" category. It's too spicy, and too loaded up with chunks of onion and pepper. (Yes, I voluntarily ate something knowing it had onion in it. I almost died, but not quite.) It wasn't awful, just not to my taste.
Will I buy it again?
No. There are too many competing products that I like a lot better.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Trader Joe's Organic Baked Beans
In a post a couple of days ago, I explained my love of the combination of potato chips and baked beans. This post is kind of the second half of that one, since I was trying both of these items at the same time.
Somewhere between 15 and 20 years ago, I made a mid-life switch of preferred baked beans. I had grown up with Van Camp's. But my wife preferred Bush's, specifically the vegetarian variety. For the sake of marital harmony, I tried them--and liked them even better than my old standbys. If we could have agreed on other things as easily as we did on beans, we might still be married. But that's kind of going off on a tangent....
Getting back to the matter at hand: I didn't like TJ's as much as I do Bush's. They're not bad. If all other baked beans in the world disappeared and I was stuck with TJ's forever, I would eat them almost as often as I do the Bush's now. Sure, I'd be a little nostalgic for Bush's, but I'd shrug my shoulders and get on with life, and with the bean-eating.
Put another way, they're second-tier stuff. Runners-up. Perfectly acceptable, just not the best. If I had to put my finger on what's not quite right about them, I'd guess that it's not enough molasses.
Incidentally, though they don't proclaim "vegetarian" or "vegan" up front, these beans are, in fact, vegan-friendly. They're on TJ's very long list of vegan products.
Will I buy it again?
Probably not unless something happens to the availability of Bush's.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Trader Joe's Skipjack Tuna In Water
Trader Joe's has too many kinds of tuna. You go looking for a simple can of tuna, and you're presented with this overwhelming barrage of different types. There's albacore and skipjack and yellowfin and bluefin and redguts and purplenose and I don't even know what-all. OK, I may have made some of those up. But the point is, THERE ARE TOO MANY!
I didn't know which one to get. I don't know what kind of tuna is usually found in the national and store brands, except that it's clearly not albacore, which is always a premium-priced product. I usually get Bumblebee brand, both because it tends to be a tad cheaper than Chicken of the Sea or Star Kist, and because in my experience it's more consistent from one batch to another than either of the bigger brands.
So at TJ's I did eenie meenie, and came up with skipjack, whatever the hell that is. Made it into tuna salad and had some on a sandwich today. Didn't care for it. It was quite a bit, I dunno, sharper, I guess, than what I'm used to. More pungent. It wasn't terrible. I'll eat the rest of it tomorrow. But then I'll have to go back to TJ's and try one of the other kinds next time.
Will I buy it again?
No.
ADDENDUM:
A reader emailed me with pointers to two articles that help explain some of the differences in types of tuna available on store shelves:
http://www.beewellforlife.com/the-difference-between-various-types-of-canned-tuna/
http://www.epicurious.com/articlesguides/everydaycooking/tastetests/cannedtunatastetest
Friday, August 22, 2014
Trader Joe's Fat-Free Refried Beans
As I explained in the last post about TJ's Soy Chorizo, one of the most common things I make for myself is refried beans slapped on a tortilla, plus a variety of other things added, depending on what I have on hand. So I always, always, always keep a healthy stock of refried beans in the cupboard.
If we set aside the specially flavored varieties of refried beans, such as those with added peppers or spices, you're left with basically two choices: with or without added lard. I can tell the difference between with and without, if I'm doing a side-by-side comparison. But once I started buying the vegetarian varieties (so that I could use them in meals I was making for Nina), I found that I didn't like them any less than the added-fat ones that I had always used before. So now the veggie versions are all I ever purchase. (The front of the label here doesn't proclaim "vegetarian," but a look at the list of ingredients on the back confirms that it qualifies.)
I, for one, can't tell a lick of difference between any of the several different brands of vegetarian canned refried beans I've tried since cooking for Nina became part of my life. So what I buy just depends on which grocery store I happen to be in when they're on my shopping list. They're all interchangeable, as far as I'm concerned. TJ's are no better and no worse than any other.
Will I buy it again?
Certainly, anytime I need to replenish the cupboards, and TJ's is the place I'm next shopping. But I'll also use any other brand just as happily. Beans are beans.
Nina's View
I think I CAN tell the difference between varieties of vegetarian (non
lard) refried beans. I find these TJ ones to be quite bland. I generally buy the
El Paso brand ones in my local supermarket, and am perfectly happy with the
no-fat-added version too.
But I suppose I could be proven wrong with a blind taste test.
Next post: Cold Pressed Juice--Green
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