Most Americans Prefer Dining At Home, But Lack Cooking Skills
(NAPSA) – Home is where the happiest meals are.
According to the recent ‘Real Food’ survey* commissioned by Hellmann’s and Best Foods, 63 percent of Americans believe that eating at home is a better emotional experience than eating in a restaurant. Heightened comfort, intimacy and satisfaction are some of the reasons more than six in 10 surveyed prefer to have the dinner at the family table.
Defining ‘Real Food’ as ‘food that tastes great-made from simple, wholesome ingredients,’ Americans crave home cooking. Yet nearly half of adults (48 percent) admit to needing help with everyday cooking. Almost one-fifth of those surveyed would describe their culinary skills as ‘hit or miss’ or just plain ‘horrible.’
To help people bring Real Food to their families, Hellmann’s and Best Foods is partnering with acclaimed chef, author of ‘Grill It‘ (and many other cookbooks) and TV personality Bobby Flay to create the ‘Real Food Summer School.’ The online show, which can be accessed by visiting yahoo.com and searching for ‘Real Food,’ will take three self-proclaimed kitchen-challenged home cooks and give them a crash course with hands-on instruction.
The classes will capture the appeal of Real Food and provide viewers with ‘cook-along’ instruction and tips from Flay to enhance core cooking fundamentals, all as the determined chefs go from ‘barely able’ to ‘table-ready.’
‘There is nothing more delicious than good, honest food, cooked simply and with heart,’ said Flay.
Ingredients
- 2 lbs new potatoes scrubbed
- kosher salt
- black pepper
- 1 1/4 cups Hellmann's Mayonnaise or Best Foods Real Mayonnaise
- 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
- 1 or 2 jalapenos finely diced (depending on how spicy you like it)
- 6 green onions green and pale green part, thinly sliced
- 1/4 cup cilantro chopped fresh or flat leaf parsley
Instructions
- Place the potatoes in a large saucepan, add enough cold water to cover the potatoes by two inches and add one tablespoon of salt. Cook the potatoes over high heat until just cooked through (a small paring knife inserted into the center meets no resistance). Drain well, let cool for a few minutes (don't let them get cold; the potatoes should be mixed with the dressing while still warm) and slice into 1/4-inch-thick slices.
- While the potatoes cool, whisk together the mayonnaise, vinegar, jalapenos, two teaspoons of salt and one half teaspoon of black pepper in a large bowl. Add the potatoes, thinly sliced green onion and cilantro (with leaves taken off) and gently fold to combine. Taste for seasoning and add more salt and/or pepper, if needed.
Be the first to comment