At the Market

Fancy Food Show Brings Colonial Fruit Drinks and Our Old Friend Kulfi

Prepare to be assimilated.
Prepare to be assimilated.hahaPhoto: Zoe Singer


We took a break from our regularly scheduled Greenmarket food fest to hike through acres of fancy foods from the world over at last week’s Fancy Food Show. Over 2,000 displays filled the Javits Center with everything from antifreeze-green Chilean avocado oil to Brooklyn-made gummy bears that were actually the size of honey bears. To avoid going into fancy-food shock, we honed in on the (often overlapping) new and organic/natural categories. Here’s highlights, all currently available in thecity.

What to Look For
If you spend much time in India — or Jackson Heights — you may have enjoyed a refreshingkulfi pop在一个炎热的一天。这浓缩,ultradairy egglesstreat is marvelously chewy-creamy. Kool Freeze Kulfi pops are not only made with natural, primarily pronounceable ingredients like milk and organic evaporated cane juice, they also feature fresh-fruit purées; exotic flavors like saffron, rose-water-imbued falooda, and chikoo (a.k.a. sapote, a tropical fruit that resembles sweet-potato pie); and more mainstream flavors like pistachio, coconut, and strawberry ($5.99 per four-pop box atWhole Foods).
Related:Exotic Dessert (Supposedly) Enrapturing NewYorkers

Fruit shrubsare not short trees but rather fermented fruit syrups meant to be mixed with water or sparkling wine. Tait Farm consulted eighteenth-century cookbooks likeThe Frugal HousewifeandThe Accomplish’d Gentlewoman’s Companionto arrive at tart, fruity, colorful recipes for cherry, ginger, raspberry, cranberry, and strawberry shrub ($7.99 per 12.7-ounce bottle atMurray’s Cheese).

First we loved fresh mozzarella; then we discovered even richer, more flavorful buffalo-milk mozzarella. Now those brilliant Campanian cheese makers have gone and truffled it.Fresh buffalo-milk mozzarella studded with black-truffle bitscan be melted over asparagus, pasta, or pizza, or served with heirloom tomatoes for an extreme umami experience ($6.95 per 200-gram cup atD. Coluccio&Sons— call ahead to be sure it’s instock).

Raw organic dairy-free agave gelato? Yes, indeed, and it really tastes good! Primarily made from organic, enzymatically active cashews, this remarkably creamy substance from Organic Nectars comes in delectable flavors like maple-walnut, goji-strawberry, and vanillagave ($7.19 per half-pint atWesterly Natural Market, $7.99 per half-pint atIntegral Yoga).

Fair-trade, organic chocolatekeeps getting better as more products enter this niche. One of the latest is also one of the tastiest: Seattle-based Theo Chocolate creates wonderfully snappy, smooth-textured, deep-flavored bars that showcase single-origin cacao beans at varying percentages. Theo also makes a sweet, super-crunchy brittle studded with cacao nibs ($6.98 per three-ounce bar at亚米希人的市场.)
— Zoe罪ger

Fancy Food Show Brings Colonial Fruit Drinks and Our Old Friend Kulfi