Beginner Blogger

July 31, 2007

Ugly Post, Good Food (playing around with placing/sizing images)

It's not often you one-up a recipe from a seasoned chef...well, ok, it is often.  It happens all the time -- to everyone, apparently.  Go to any recipe site and read the comments:  everyone has doctored the recipe they attempted and it supposedly comes out even better!  Although I never quite understand how they know it's better when they didn't make the recipe as it was written...but that's no matter. 

Tonight I made Ina Garten's Eggplant Gratin.  Though I made a big improvement (so I think):  instead of using a "good-quality store bought marinara sauce" as she directs, I used my own, homemade sauce right out of the freezer (Literally, right out.  I was crumbling frozen marinara over my gratin.  Kind of strange.).  Here's my frozen sauce.

Frozen_sauce
Anyway, I sliced some slender, lavender Japanese eggplant and shiny, globe eggplant into 1/2 inch rounds. 
Raw_eggplant I pan-fried them in some olive oil, layered with a ricotta/egg/
halCheese_mixturef-and-half/
Parmigiano Reggiano (the good stuff!) mixture, topped with homemade marinara and extra cheese and slid that sucker in the oven!






Before_baking_2

Meanwhile, I made a bowl of my version of Greek salad, with plenty of fragrant fresh dill.
Dill
Salad_with_dill

Another lovely summer meal prepared with farmers' market produce in a steamy, stifling apartment kitchen.  But no complaints. Not with food looking and tasting so good...
Baked
2_plates_4    

July 22, 2007

Back on Track -- Thanks, Joe

Sitting with my back against the pale ochre-colored wall in Joe, The Art of Coffee on East 13th Street, sunlight pouring in the huge front windows.  It’s my second time here, the first experience over 2 months ago. I’d had a fresh-squeezed lemonade on that steamy early May Saturday and the tart sensations are still imprinted in my taste memory.  Now I sit with a perfect cappuccino, heady and heavy, yet naturally candied with a beautiful flower design flourishing atop the thick foam. 

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This coffee shop gets notable mention in Adam Roberts’ debut book, Amateur Gourmet:  How to Chop, Shop, and Table-Hop Like a Pro (Almost), newly published by Bantam.  Roberts, the creator of well-known, witty food blog amateurgourmet.com, recently came to my New School journalism class to talk about his upcoming cookoir (cookbook/memoir).  I had devoured the galley we were given in class, absorbing every word.  While lighthearted, his words were heavy hitting for me as they chronicled a food affair akin to my own.  I, too, began cooking about three years ago, and fell madly in love with the art of cookery (and eating the rewards!).  Here is a note I jotted down while reading his book:  “I think in many ways Adam Roberts and I are kindred spirits.  I keep agreeing whole and a half heartedly with what he says!!!”  Throughout the pages of the book, I starred things, folded down page corners, underlined intensely, and jotted notes in the margin such as “Oh my god!  Yes!  Exactly!”  One could confuse my bliss for that of a different sensory experience.

Even though I knew very little about the qualities of good meals growing up in a house of part fresh Korean cuisine and part boxed potato flakes and Hamburger Helper, I have always felt connected to food.  It has been my comfort, from spoonfuls of ice cream snuck from the freezer before bedtime to salty, buttery Handi-Snak cheese and cracker packs for breakfast before I put myself on the school bus.  As I grew older, I found myself nibbling Fritos and Funyons and yogurt -covered pretzels in my college's library and forming a secret addiction to my neighborhood’s local 3-cheese nachos from Qdoba.  My palate was immature.  Then a new vegetarian boyfriend inspired me to cut out a butternut squash lasagne recipe from a magazine and tackle a large squash with my dull Ikea knife in my kitchen one day.  I’ll leave that story for another day, and just say the resulting rich, deep flavorful dish prompted me to become obsessed with cooking.  I’ve now been known to lug armfuls of cookbooks from the library and spend hours tabbing off ones I want to make, feed my appreciative friends delectable dishes, and then have to remove the tabs when the books are due back 2 weeks later.  Which is why I use those colorful re-usable Post-it plastic-y tabs; I love those!

But back to Joe.  And today.  Roberts said he wrote his whole book here, and being as I just watched a movie at the Quad Cinema one block south and I am meeting a friend for dinner one block north, I thought coming here to write a blog entry and get back into the swing of writing would be apropos.  It feels good.  My iced peppermint rooibois tea is helping.  Mmm, winning combination, although the mint is slightly overpowering.

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Waitress was a great movie.  Feel good, feel bad, feel nervous, feel empathetic, feel hungry – it evoked many feelings.  Those pies…I loved how inventive they were!  You weren’t watching a movie about a pie diner of the same old apple, cherry, and peach variety.  Jenna (Keri Russell) conjured and created original pies with names like I Hate My Husband Pie, or This Baby is going to Scream His Head Off in the Middle of the Night and Ruin My Life Pie.  My favorite character, Old Joe (wonderfully casted Andy Griffith, bow tie and all), who thought the pie shop was his because it was called “Joe’s Pie Diner,” loved the Jenna’s Strawberry Chocolate Oasis Pie the most.  He describes the layers of flavors and if every mouth in the theater wasn’t salivating, there must have been some dead taste duds in there.  Joe was outwardly crochety, but inwardly caring and his instructions for Jenna to start fresh was precisely what the emotionally drained, financially poor, abused woman needed to hear.  I believe it’s what many people need to hear and believe can come true.

The pie-making scenes were my favorite, from the delicate music to the delectable ingredients being lovingly added to the various pie crusts.  Loads of glossy, dark melted chocolate, magenta, plump raspberries, gloppy, pale yellow custard cream…makes me want to go home and create my very own pie.  One of my favorite elements of the movie is that the character came up with her own pies – it provides inspiration to those of us who have difficulty writing our own recipes.  It takes an abundance of self-esteem to make moves to change your life, and it takes loads of the same esteem to think you can put ingredients together and make something taste good without following expert instructions.  I am positive I will come up with my own pie within the week. Old Joe and Joe’s coffee shop provide the muse.

January 21, 2007

Do I begin now or at the beginning?

One year and eight months ago, I started writing down some thoughts in an e-mail to myself.  If I'd been more web-savvy, I would have posted them on a blog, but there I was, with a new Gmail account and considering myself pretty advanced.  Here's what I wrote to myself on 5/13/06:

I am positively giddy with excitement.  I've been doing some research online, and by that I mean googling.  Googling different ideas about food writing and cooking and health food magazines.  These things that have come up from beneath the ground, like snow pea shoots or something, to take over my life.  If only these tendrils of thought could bring something fulfilling; if only I would act on them and do something productive.  I need to learn from Charlie and his friends in The Perks of Being a Wallflower.  I need to participate in this whirlwind game of life, no matter if the rules change every couple of minutes. I need some sort of inspiration, and I think food may be it.  I am obsessed with food.  Absolutely mesmerized, and always have been.  From the days of eating Handi-Snacks and Klondike bars for breakfast before putting myself on the school bus, to days of nibbling Fritos or Funyons or yogurt-covered pretzels in my college's library, to going through 50 to 100 recipes a day tabbing off ones I want to make – I am a food junkie.  I have spent half my life feeling guilty about eating because I craved junk food, but now as I, along with many others, am becoming more aware of what I put into my body, I have become enamored with the ideals and beliefs behind organic, seasonal, vegetarian, and healthful cooking, shopping, and eating.  I love farmers’ markets, bodegas, specialty stores, gourmet shops, you name it - if there's food there, I'm bound to bound in unbounded.

Ok, ok.  I know what you must be thinking.  For one thing, you know what book I was reading in March of '06.  But I know what else you're thinking.  I sounded cheesy.  Nacho cheesy.  So maybe it's good that I didn't have a blog back then.  Maybe now I can produce a blog where I sound much more mature and dignified (note the nacho cheesy comment).  But I was excited.  And a year and eight months later, I'm still excited.  Probably even more so.  I've been reading and cooking up a storm.  And I'm ready to throw writing into the mix. 

Taking a break before I begin

Quick break from my blogging research.  After all, I'm already this late to blogging, so who's going to notice?
How incredible is it to be able to type in "how long white wine fridge" into a search engine and have an answer appear before your very eyes?
'Know what's even better?
Reading all kinds of answers and choosing the one you like best:
"NO LONGER THAN 2 DAYS!" --but...it still tastes good
"Wine never goes bad."  --ok, now that's taking it too far
"For those with a decent palate for wine, after 2 days, it is piss.  Of course it is drinkable for a couple of weeks..."  --stop right there, i have my answer. now back to research.
White_wine