Wegmans Adds Veggie Noodles to Prepped Vegetable Kit Offerings
Sweet Potato Noodles, Beet Noodles and Butternut Squash Noodles are the newest members of its selection of prepped vegetable kits.
January 1, 2018
Wegmans Food Markets has added new varieties of prepped vegetable kits to its produce department. Sweet Potato Noodles, Beet Noodles and Butternut Squash Noodles are the newest members of its selection of prepped vegetable kits. The "noodles" are thin spiral cuts of an uncooked sweet potato, beet or butternut squash. When cut this way, the vegetable acquires a fresh personality. Sautéing takes about five minutes, roasting takes 10-12 minutes.
Another recent arrival in fresh-cut veggies is cauliflower “rice,” featured in the fall 2016 issue of Wegmans Menu magazine with an array of serving ideas. Extremely versatile, cauliflower rice can replace rice in favorite dishes such as beans and rice or peppers stuffed with meat and rice, and also tastes great cooked by itself with just a little basting oil. Cauliflower rice is also makes a crunchy addition to a salad.
Other fresh-cut veggie noodle kits include: veggie spaghetti, which features green and yellow zucchini and red bell pepper, cut in thin strands; and veggie noodle kits, which are spiral cuts of green and yellow zucchini.
For complete instructions on preparing any of these fresh-cut veggies, customers can see the recipes in the fall 2016 issue of Wegmans Menu Magazine, or find them on wegmans.com.
“Most Americans don’t eat enough vegetables,” says Wegmans nutritionist Kirby Branciforte, RDN. “That’s true for both genders, across all age groups. Most people know they should eat more vegetables, and the kits make it easy to do that. I think the kits are here to stay, because the vegetables taste great in so many different preparations.”
The veggie kits make a great substitute for pasta or rice, without having to sacrifice taste and satisfaction. “Roughly speaking,” says Branciforte, “if you compare same-size portions of one of these veggies with a grain-based food like rice or pasta, the veggie serving will have about half of the calories. Of course, grain-based foods, especially those from whole grains, can also be part of a healthy diet. But these veggie kits are just one more way to help people keep a check on calories when they want to.”
Wegmans focuses on ways to help families put easy, healthy, delicious meals on the table, and vegetables have been at the center of many culinary innovations.
“We’ve experimented with new ways to cut and finish vegetables so they pack a lot of taste appeal,” says Wegmans produce category merchant Joe Pucci. “We started with squash planks—squash cut the long way and thin that you can grill or use to replace broad noodles in lasagna. That idea set off a chain reaction of new ideas from different areas of the company. Our Harrisburg team started making veggie spaghetti. Our New Jersey team came up with the cauliflower rice.”
When the spiral vegetable slicer called “Veggetti” arrived at Wegmans stores, it sparked a fresh surge of interest in these cuts of vegetables among customers, so Wegmans chefs took the idea to other vegetables, and pretty soon sweet potatoes, butternut squash and beets had joined the “noodle” family.
The new vegetable kits have been a solid success with customers, Pucci says. “I give a lot of the credit to our people in the stores who demonstrate easy ways to finish the veggies, so customers have the confidence to do it at home themselves,” he says. Wegmans chefs have been working on new recipes for upcoming seasons so their fresh appeal will remain high.
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