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Food

May 4, 2010

Garlic yogurt

garlic yogurt

There are two kinds of people in this world: people who love garlic, and … um, actually, maybe there is only one kind of people in this case.  If you think that everything could be improved with the addition of a little (or a lot) of garlic, then this is the recipe for you. 

Savory flavors may not be the first thing that comes to mind when you think yogurt, but try not to think of this in the same vein as a Danon fruit-on-the-bottom cup.  This is more like garlic aioli, but much, much simpler.  It takes about 60 seconds to prepare, and is an awesome hit of garlic to add to just about anything.  I love to use Fage greek yogurt to make it, because it’s extra thick and creamy (watery yogurt is one of my pet peeves), but you could use any plain yogurt to make it.    

I love it with chicken or roasted root vegetables of any kind, or as a dip for carrots, or heck, just bread!  It also makes a kickin’ replacement for mayo in sandwiches, or a tzatziki stand-in for any other cucumber-haters out there.  60 seconds to punch up any meal.  Try it.

Garlic Yogurt

  • 8 oz. yogurt (one little container or 3 scoops from a big container)
  • 1 large clove garlic
  • 1/4 tsp. kosher salt, or to taste

Smash/slice/mince garlic, depending on how much garlic flavor you want.  The finer your garlic, the more garlic flavor.  Mix the garlic and salt into the yogurt. 

Try to make it at least 20 minutes before you eat, and stick it in the fridge to let the garlic permeate the yogurt.  Again, the longer it sits, the more garlicky the flavor.

from Bill Granger’s Sydney Food, one of my very favorite cookbooks

April 15, 2010

Lemon Granita

Granita!

Do you like to eat ice?  Not water ice, or ice cream, just pure ice?  I love to, and, believe it or not, it’s because I was anemic during my pregnancy.  I didn’t feel anemic, but a friend pointed out that the new ice-eating habit I had picked up was a side effect of my anemia.  I could and would consume two or three cups of ice in a few hours.  I ate it as a snack and as a dessert and as a movie-going treat.  Yum!

While pregnant and eating ice cube after ice cube, I wondered how I could do so without seeming like a giant freak.  Finally, I hit upon a dessert my mother-in-law had made one night pre-pregnancy — granita.  It’s perfect.  It’s icy, crunchy, flaky deliciousness.  And better yet, to my pregnant tastes which had demanded citrus twenty-four seven, it could be lemon-flavored. 

Now, nearly two years later, I’m still in love with ice, citrus, and lemon granitas.  I regularly make granitas and eat them all up all by myself.  With summer coming up, it’s time to share my recipe! 

I would caution about making this as the sole dessert for a dinner, however.  A friend I have calls this a faux dessert.  While I still count this currently honeymooning individual as a friend, I now know that for them, granita is either a palette cleanser or a part of a bigger dessert. 

By the by, my granita recipe is not that sweet.  If you like really sweet desserts, you might want to consider adding a few tablespoons of sugar to it.  If you like really tart desserts, either take out about half a cup of the water or add a lemon or two.

DSC_1407

Lemon Granita

From: combination of several online recipes

  • 3 lemons
  • 2 cups water
  • 1/2 cup sugar

1.  Get the water to boiling in a small pot.  Is it boiling?  Good!  Add your sugar and stir!

DSC_1431

2.  Turn the burner off, and get our your zester (or Microplane) and zest up your washed lemons.  I just zest directly into the pot of hot sugar water.  Put your zested lemons off to the side.

3.  Roll the lemon under your palm against your counter or cutting board.  What you’re doing here is softening it up, because I don’t believe in using a juicer to get juice from lemons.  Cut the softened lemon in half and using a fork, juice the lemons into the pot, seeds and pulp and all.  Really, just dig the tines in for all that they’re worth.

4.  Mix that all up and let it sit until the mixture has cooled to room temperature and then strain it into a glass pan that you can stick in your freezer.  I hope you have enough room in your freezer.  I always have to push over all the meals my husband makes for me that I never reheat.

5.  This is so super important — every twenty minutes promptly (and possibly a little more often near the end of this step), go in to your freezer, and stir up the granita with a fork.  Scrape the ice down.  When you near the end, try your hardest to break up the ice bits with your fork or you’ll not be eating flaky ice, you’ll be eating ice cubes.  Once your granita starts to look more like fluffy snow than frozen ice, you’ll be good to go!

DSC_1438

6.  At this stage, I get out a bowl and I scoop several spoons of granita into it and top the whole thing off with raspberries or candied lemon slices.  Then, I eat it as rapidly as possible and go back for more.

March 30, 2010

Candied Lemon Slices

Candied fruit always struck me as such an old-timey candy that I had actually never eaten any.  Since many candies now elicit the “ugh, too sweet!” reaction from me, I decided to give it a shot.  All you need is a lemon or two, sugar and water, right?

lemon slices

Okay, that’s not entirely true.  You also need a really sharp knife and a heavy-bottomed skillet.  A dull knife will avoid your lemon pits, instead of slicing through them, which means your slices will come out all funky.  And since half the appeal (to me) of candied lemon slices is how pretty they look, it would be a crying shame to have them look all messy.  Sharpen that knife first!  Your slices should be the same thickness all the way through, and thin enough that they are nearly translucent.  Too thin slices will lose their structural integrity during the candying process, though, so strike a balance.

DSC_0182.NEF

A thin-bottomed pan (like the one I was using) will make the sugar over the burner boil and bubble, while the sugar at the edges of the pan is too cool to candy.  I got around it by shifting my slices every few minutes, but this recipe would have required almost no oversight with a properly heavy pan.

getting candied

So, how much oversight did it take?  I made these while talking on the phone with Jane, so… still almost none.  They were dead easy to make, and they are a pleasingly tart, slightly bitter after dinner sweet.  Give them a shot!  Sometimes, those old-timey folks have a few tricks up their sleeve garters.

Candied Lemon Slices (from Martha Stewart Living)

  • 1 lemon (I used a Meyer lemon)
  • 2 cups of sugar
  • water
  • ice

Prepare an ice bath, while setting a pot of water on to boil.  Slice your lemon into thin, nearly translucent slices, removing seeds as you go.

When the water has boiled, turn off the heat and dump in your slices.  Stir for about a minute, until the slices are soft.  Drain and put the slices into the ice bath.

Set your heavy-bottomed skillet to medium heat, and dissolve the sugar into a cup of water.  When the syrup begins to bubble, reduce the heat to medium low, and add the lemon slices in a single layer.  Simmer the slices until the rinds are fully translucent, about an hour.

Remove to a wire rack over parchment so the excess sugar can drip off.  Beware, they’re very hot!  Let cool for two hours before eating.

cooling

Side note: I made something with hot sugar, and neither burned myself nor made anything catch on fire.  Take that, Bryan!

March 28, 2010

My Morning Coffee

Vietnamese coffee is simply the best: strong, dark coffee softened by sweetened condensed milk.  It’s a unique flavor and the softest possible landing in the morning.

Vietnamese coffee, halfway through the first percolation

Making it couldn’t be easier.  You’ll need ground coffee, sweetened condensed milk, and a Vietnamese coffee maker.  The makers can be had for under $4 from any of the Vietnamese markets down on Washington Avenue.  (More on them soon!)

The Vietnamese coffee maker isn’t much, just a filter and a screw-in press.  Drop in a a bit of coffee, tamp it down, then unscrew the press almost all of the way — you’re ready to go!

A few notes:

Just as when tamping espresso, the press has a sweet spot.  Press the coffee too much and it’ll run slowly or get stuck; press the coffee too little and it’ll taste thin.  You can jiggle the press or coffee maker to restart a stuck filtration.  Use a dark roast, like Café du Monde—the budget option at the Vietnamese markets. 

Don’t open the can of sweetened condensed milk all the way.  Make two diametrically opposite cuts with your can opener, one larger than the other; then bend the larger one open as a spout, leaving the small one as a vent.  Just rest the can on the rim of the glass, spout-end in.  As the can runs low, it may take a second for the can to find its balance.  I keep my can in the fridge with a bit of plastic wrap over it.

Pouring in the sweetened condensed milk

Vietnamese coffee (for one)

2T ground coffee (dark roast)
2T sweetened condensed milk, or to taste

  1. Heat 1 cup of water to the boil.  This takes two minutes in my microwave, which is ample time for the next two steps.
  2. Add the condensed milk to a glass that fits your coffee maker (and the forthcoming coffee!).  This is easiest with a can that has a spout and an air vent, which you can rest on the edge of the glass.
  3. Put the coffee into your coffee maker, screwing the press down until the coffee is packed.  Unscrew the press until it’s just barely screwed in.  Set the coffee maker on top of your glass.
  4. Fill your coffee maker with water, letting it percolate through.  When it’s run dry, fill it again.
  5. Mix, savor, and feel a little more awake.

As it gets warmer, try pouring the mixed coffee over ice!

February 16, 2010

Dulce de leche, can to pan

raw materials

If you would like to draw me to a recipe, here is the phrase that pays: “It only has one ingredient!”  (In my world, salt is not an ingredient.  It is a fact of life.)  It takes almost no prompting to get me to whip up a batch of butter.  So, the idea of boiling a can and getting out a tasty treat had immediate, obvious appeal to me.

Traditional dulce de leche requires you to spend one to two hours tending a pot of sweetened milk, until it has reduced down to a yummy goo.  Quick ‘n easy dulce de leche has you simmer a can of sweetened condensed milk for a few hours until it’s gone from a can of milk to a can of deliciousness.  What could be easier?

I paid attention in chemistry class, though, and I have a bad track record with sugar products.  (See: the time I set the roof of my oven on fire making baked apples.)   With Bryan out of town, the vision of dragging myself to the hospital covered with super-heated sugar globules after the can exploded ran rampant through my head.  That is, I chickened out.  After 3 hours of simmering, this is my can contents.

in the can

A change had happened.  Just not much of one.

It’s ok, though.  In the 3 hours it had been simmering, I had been looking at recipes.  I could add cinnamon!  I could add SALT.  Suddenly, the idea of finishing it off in a pot seemed very appealing.

in the pot

I simmered it on a stovetop at medium (to medium-low; my stove was a little too hot, and I did get some browned bits as you can see) for about 10 minutes.  I added about a quarter teaspoon of cinnamon and kosher salt.  It reduced by about 25%.

looks like peanut butter

I can see why people talk about eating jars in one sitting.  Yum!

Dulce de Leche

  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • cinnamon, nutmeg and/or salt, to taste

Place can in a pot of simmering water. Make sure there is enough water to keep the can covered at all times. Simmer for 3 hours.

If it’s still too thin, take it out of the can, season as desired, and simmer for another 5 to 15 minutes, until it reaches the desired consistency.  Place in a container, and eat!

dulce de leche

February 14, 2010

Hello, and Consommé

Hi!  I’m Michael.  I’m friends with Helen and company, and I’m excited to be share some of my cooking with you fine people.

This is my kitchen; it’s in Philadelphia.  (I mean, so am I.)

I love to cook: saute, steam, fry, bake, cure, smoke, brew, whatever.  (You can see evidence of most of those in this picture, actually.)  I like to make things myself, to a fault.

But enough about me.  Today we’re making consommé.  Consommé is the apotheosis of stock, made by clarifying a stock with egg whites.  (Yes, egg whites.) It’s something to sip piping hot on a cold, blizzard-y day, but it’s also great as a base for soups and sauces or as a braising liquid.

The technique here is Michael Ruhlman’s, as described in his book Ratio.  The idea is quite simple: to make X consommé, make X stock, then simmer the stock with a mixture of 3 parts (by weight) X, 1 part egg white, and 1 part mirepoix (which itself a 2:1:1 mixture of chopped onions, carrots, and celery).  Typically, X ranges over meat and poultry: veal, beef, and chicken are all common.  This time, it’s chicken consommé.  (This time…ha!  I’ve never made this before.  Here we go!)

Our plan:

  1. make a chicken stock
  2. strain
  3. cool (overnight)
  4. skim off the fat
  5. bring to a simmer, with more chicken, egg whites, and mirepoix
  6. cool again for bagging and freezing

It’s a long process, but there isn’t too much active time.  We’re going to use two stewing chickens and a bunch of chicken feet to build the stock.  (The feet will provide lots of gelatin, which will help provide a rich mouthfeel later on.)  For the clarification, we’ll use boneless thighs.

First, we’ll chop up the chicken feet and some scrap chicken from the freezer.

Small bits make sure we get all the goodness.

For kicks, I took apart the chickens neatly.  You can just maul them to small bits, if you like.  I went at them with the cleaver after taking this picture.

Cover with an inch or so of water and bring to a simmer, say around 180F.  Don’t let it boil, or the stock will be very hazy.  (Whether it’ll be so hazy that the clarification won’t work, I don’t know.  But why go looking for trouble?)

Eventually fat and foamy scum will rise to the top; keep skimming this off until it stops coming.

Rather than fiddling with the heat on my stove, I set my oven to 180F and simmered for four hours.

About two pounds of mirepoix.  Throw in some crushed peppercorns, bay leaves, garlic, herbs, or what-have-you, too.

Adding the mirepoix will cool the stock down again, so it’s easiest to finish it on the stove.  It takes another hour.

Another 45 minutes to an hour of simmering, and we’re ready for straining.  I used a sieve lined with a (very clean!) kitchen towel, but a colander will do just fine.

I should say: this is a perfectly good stopping point.  After it’s cooled a bit, you can see that we already have a tasty, relatively clear stock.  But we have not yet begun to fight!

We’ve been basically following Ruhlman’s recipe, though I’ve slightly increased his quantities: about 4lb of chicken made a little under a gallon of stock.  We’ll use about a pound of meat (15oz) and 5oz each of egg whites and mirepoix.  I’ve added some tomato, for both flavor and color.  (Plus a bay leaf and some ground black pepper.)

Apart from my knife, my most important piece of kitchen equipment is my scale.  Four eggs yielded 5oz of egg whites.

I forgot to photograph the chicken, but I chopped 15oz of boneless chicken thighs (with the fat cut out and rendered for something else) to a paste in the food processor.

We bring the stock, meat, egg whites, and mirepoix up to a simmer, stirring to avoid scorching.  I’m using a flat-edged spoon, as Ruhlman suggests.

As the egg whites congeal, they’ll form what’s called a “raft”, floating all of the other bits to the surface.  The proteins in the egg white will filter the stock as it floats to the top, like a French press in reverse.  This process is a little slow and requires some attention—it took about twenty minutes.

Now that we have a nice raft, we simmer for another hour.  Foam will rise up and over, filtering back through the raft, leaving the scum on top.  Ingenious!

After an hour has elapsed, we’re ready to strain.  The stock is already very clear (look at that shine!), but we’re going to use a sieve lined with a coffee filter to be extra certain.

It’s said that you should be able to read the date off a dime at the bottom a bowl of consommé.  (Ruhlman says the bottom of a gallon.)

Let’s have a closer look.

2007, if you squint.  Not bad.

So: consommé.  I served it garnished with beech mushrooms and scallion greens.  Definitely worth the effort.  I think it’s particularly interesting that unlike many other “luxurious” dishes, consommé is very low in fat.  (Not that I’m into that sort of thing, but still.)  I hope this little (?) walkthrough gives you confidence to try it yourself.

It’s been fun, and there’s more in the pipeline: tongue, morcilla de Burgos, and beer!

February 11, 2010

Mmmm, mushroom soup!

mushrooms

I grew up a vegetable hater.  Mushrooms were my first love of the vegetable world.  (Fungus world… whatever.  They were not a meat, fruit, grain, starch or fat, and you find them in salads.  Thus, they are vegetables.)  Why?  Because mushrooms have the delightful property of taking on a lot of the flavor of their environment.

So, for my Saturday snowday, I made a pot of stock, and then, mushroom soup.  Normally when I make a big pot of soup, I have a couple of bowls, then freeze the rest because I’m sick of eating it.  Maybe it was the extra snowfall, but this pot of soup got eaten by Tuesday!  I hear there is more snow coming.  Unless you are a mushroom hater, you may want to get the supplies for this soup, and spend your next snowday savoring this soup.

mushroom soup in motion

Mushroom Soup

(Based on Kalyn’s Kitchen double mushroom soup)

  • 1 lb crimini or button mushrooms, plus 6 mushrooms for garnish
  • 1/2 lb shitake mushrooms (or 1/4 lb dried shitakes)
  • 6 cups stock, or mix of stock, mushroom soaking liquid and water
  • 1/2 onion (or to taste)
  • 3 tbsp butter
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • heavy cream to finish

Slice your onion into thin half slices.  Melt 2 tbsp butter and the olive oil in a pot deep enough for the whole soup.  Sautée onions over medium heat until translucent, about 5 minutes.

onions

Clean mushrooms, and remove stems.  Rough chop the mushrooms.

chopped for the pot

Add the mushrooms to the pot, browning them until they release their liquid and the liquid has evaporated, about 10 minutes.  Add the stock/water/soaking liquid, and simmer for 60 minutes.

mushrooms cooking

Add salt and pepper to taste, and puree with an immersion blender to your desired consistency.  I like some mushroom bits, so I didn’t puree all the way.  If you aren’t going to eat your soup right away, stop here and stick it in the fridge.  I didn’t try freezing it, so let me know how it turns out if you do!

Cut 6 garnish mushrooms into thin slices.  Heat 1 tbsp butter in a frying pan over medium heat.  Brown slices until liquid is released.

garnish mushrooms

To finish, add heavy cream to taste, and simmer for a minute or two to bring the cream up to temperature.  Stir in slices, and serve immediately.

bowl o' soup

January 18, 2010

Stocking up: chocolate chip cookies!

DSC_0027.NEF

Come winter, stocking homemade cookie dough in your freezer is a game-changer for folks with a sweet tooth.  Those times when you were craving something sweet, but the thought of schlepping down to Wawa was giving you frostbite?  In the past!  A hot, fresh chocolate chip cookie straight out of the oven is basically the best thing you can ask for on a cold wintry night.

There’s just one teensy thing that makes it hard.  Instead of doing this:

in the oven

You have to do this:

in the freezer?!

Take a whole sheet of cookies, that could be plate of warm, gooey cookies in just 10 minutes, and stick them in your freezer instead.  I won’t lie.  It is hard.  Consider making a double batch.  Or you may end up with a mutiny on your hands.

weighing his options

The sad face of someone who knows that sometimes he has to sacrifice today’s cookies for tomorrow’s? Or the devious look of a hardened cookie dough poacher? You’ll find out which one you live with if that bag of frozen dough balls runs out in 3 days or less.

Chocolate Chip Cookies

This is a slightly oversalted variant of the Toll House recipe.  Most any cookie recipe will freeze, though, so use the one you like best! (and … tell me what it is!)

  • 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 3/4 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 bag semi-sweet chocolate chips

Beat butter, sugar, brown sugar and vanilla together until creamy.  Beat in eggs one at a time, mixing well after each addition.  Whisk together flour, baking soda and salt in a second bowl, then gradually incorporate the mixture into the first bowl.  When fully combined, stir in chocolate chips.

Prepare a level spot for a baking sheet in your freezer.  I use the top of my ice maker to hold up one side, and just stack to the same level on the other side.  (This is much easier to do without your dough balls on the sheet.)  Then cover the baking sheet with parchment or wax paper, because the frozen dough will stick a bit without it.  Scoop out your dough balls.  Remember, you’re not going to bake these, so you can cram your dough balls really tightly on the sheet.  Freeze for at least an hour, then dump the frozen balls into a ziploc bag or airtight container.

When you’re ready to eat them, preheat the oven to 375 degrees, then put the dough balls on a baking sheet and into the oven.  You can bake them straight from the freezer; they should be done in about 15 minutes.

December 21, 2009

Meringue Cookies

For Helen's Review

When Helen first mentioned that she would be leaving for several weeks and then asked if I’d mind posting several entries, I was thrilled.  I decided, immediately, that I wanted to blog several different types of cookies, combining my love of baking with my loves of Christmas and blogging!  This would be my opportunity to leave the safe world of chocolate chip cookies and snickerdoodles.

My first choice was the meringue cookie, as part of my plan to only blog about apple or egg white desserts!  Plus, they seemed so adorable.  White little clouds that crunch, then taste like sugar before dissolving on your tongue…  what wasn’t to like?  However, the whole recipe seemed a little too easy.  Sure, they were time intensive for the actual baking/drying part, but I was easily able to whip up a batch right before Nathan went to sleep, and then leave them in the oven to dry overnight.

As it turns out, these cookies were a complete success.  My son and I finished off quite a few of them in only one day, and I gifted the remainder to our next door neighbors.  They’re delicious, gorgeous, and great at using up extra egg whites.  If you don’t have egg whites stored in your freezer, like I do, consider making some ice cream, pots de creme, or gâteau breton first to get those yolks out of the way!

For Helen's Review

My only ahead-of-the-recipe advice for these cookies is to really mind the drying out in the oven stage.  I ate several before they completely dried out and they almost tore my fillings out.  I was worried that I had messed up the recipe, but the ones I had the next day were perfect.  Simply make these cookies at night, and leave them in your oven overnight after you’ve finished baking.

For Helen's Review

Recipe: Meringue Cookies

From: Baking Illustrated

Ingredients:

4 egg whites
1 cup granulated sugar
3/4 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar

1.  Set oven to 200 degrees and set your racks to the upper and lower middle positions.  Line 2 baking sheets with either parchment paper or Silpat.

2.  Beat the egg whites at a slow speed until they are frothy.  I stopped when I thought to myself, “That’s a lot of bubbles.”  As a side note, I used my Kitchen Aid stand mixer for this recipe, but I think it’d be doable with a hand mixer.

3.  Add the cream of tartar and take it up to medium-fast now, for about 90 seconds.  I didn’t count seconds, but looked for a ‘texture much like shaving cream’.  Sprinkle in about half the sugar, and beat for another 60 seconds or so.

4.  Add the vanilla and reduce the speed to the lowest setting.  Sprinkle in the remaining sugar, and mix until that sugar is incorporated into the ‘dough’.

5.  Dollop out the meringues about one inch apart.  I followed the instructions to do 3 rows of 5 each and got enough for nearly two trays.

6.  Bake for 1 and 1/2 hours.  Touch the cookies to see if they feel dry.  If they don’t feel firm and dry (or if they seem sticky still), go for another half hour.  If they are done, just turn off the oven and let them dry out for several hours.  Do not skimp on this step.

Supposedly these cookies will keep in an airtight container for weeks.  I wouldn’t know, and I suspect that you won’t either.

December 10, 2009

Chocolate covered pretzels

chocolate covered pretzels

Some people make Christmas cookies.  I make chocolate covered pretzels.  My great aunt Helen would send us a tin of chocolate covered pretzels every year, and I will forever associate them with Christmas. Plus, they are insanely easy to make!

everything you need.

The 3 things you need to make chocolate covered pretzels: chocolate, pretzels and wax paper.   Do not forget about the wax paper, or you will be eating pretzel bits you chip off your plate.

Also, buy more pretzels than you think you’ll need — about a third of any bag will be broken ones.  I also look for a slightly thicker pretzel (like Utz Sourdough Specials), so they don’t break during dipping.

underheat, not overheat

You can melt your chocolate in a double boiler, but I have always had better luck with the microwave.  It only takes 45 seconds to a minute to melt half a bag of chocolate chips in my microwave.  Underheat, don’t overheat!  If the chocolate gets too hot, your pretzels will have white marks on them.

The bowl and chocolate are both hot.  The top chips will still look dry when there’s plenty of heat to melt the whole bowl.  Start stirring.  If all the chips don’t melt, run the microwave in 10 second intervals until they’re all melted.

work in progress

Once you have a bowl of melted chocolate, start dipping!  Dip one side, then the other.  Make sure you have chocolate all over (I tend to miss the top edge if I’m not being careful.)

fresh dipped

Clearly, I am not an ace dipper.  That’s OK!

coverup!

That is why they invented sprinkles!  I’ve used jimmies, pralines, nuts, and sea salt (yes, really.)  You could use crushed up candy canes, Nerds, Heath bars, Oreos… you are limited only by your imagination.  Never has misdirection been so tasty!

pretzel stacks

Chocolate covered pretzels

  • 1 bag pretzels
  • 12 oz. (one bag) chocolate chips

Microwave the chips for 45-60 seconds.  Dip the pretzels in chocolate until they are covered.  Decorate.  Lay on a wax paper covered cookie sheet, and refrigerate.  Makes 25-30 pretzels.