documenting all you can eat: #5 & 6

leftover_collage

I am sick to death of leftovers. Sick… to… death. If I never eat another heritage turkey again, I can’t say I’ll be disappointed. No matter how much homemade cranberry sauce you eat it with, turkey gets a little old when you’ve been eating it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner for, oh, I don’t know… four days straight. Of course, by next year I’ll have forgotten all about the horror of leftovers and go through the whole silly ritual all over again.

Note to self: next year make ten pounds of pie instead of turkey. Leftover problem solved.

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documenting all you can eat #4

It takes only one holiday full of cooking, eating, overeating, and endless cleanup to smash a twenty two day NaBloPoMo streak. By the time the last dish was in the dishwasher and the kitchen counter was white again, I was thirty minutes past the daily deadline and several minutes away from collapsing into bed. But I’ve continued taking photos of all my meals, although, strangely, I only have a few photos of some of the numerous dishes served at the Thanksgiving meal.

breakfast

251106_breakfast

Welcome to breakfast on Thursday, November 23rd. This is my attempt at photographing the usual shake from a different angle.

snack

251106_snack_am

For my mid-morning snack, I ate a slice of sourdough bread dredged in a little bacon grease and spread with a bit of butter. I had just prepared the dressing for the turkey. The herbed bacon grease that coated the otherwise empty cast-iron skillet smelled so delicious, I had to taste it.

lunch

251106_lunch

Lunch was a brief, hurried affair, consisting of a slice of buttered sourdough bread and the remaining tofu cilantro salad.

thanksgiving dinner!

turkey2

The heritage turkey was gorgeous and delicious. I slipped herb-infused butter under its skin and stuffed the cavity with a quartered lemon, half an onion, some unpeeled garlic cloves, a carrot, a celery rib, and some sprigs of fresh thyme. The turkey baked for about an hour or so at 450° F (232° C). I baked it breast-side down, then turned it breast-side up about halfway through baking. The turkey was evenly browned all over, and had wonderfully crisp skin and succulent meat.

veggie_stuffing

Vegetarian cornbread stuffing, made with Anson Mills cornmeal (great stuff!). I combined a few recipes to make this stuffing. It features pomegranate seeds, leeks, and celery. Tasty, but a bit crumbly. It might’ve needed more vegetable stock, or perhaps some MEAT to make it stick together.

cakes

These are chocolate birthday cake, flourless chocolate birthday torte, and pecan-crust pumpkin pie, all prepared by my brother d, all delicious. The chocolate cake is based on a very caramelly Callebaut, whereas the flourless torte includes a smokey Valrhona.

Stay tuned for more reports on Thanksgiving dinner…

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documenting all you can eat #3

Hanging out with your 3 and 5 year old nephew and niece while trying to prepare a Thanksgiving meal is exhausting. Ask me how I know. Tonight’s post will be minimalist in nature, as I’m about to pass out. Just thinking about all the cooking I’ll be doing tomorrow makes me question my sanity.

To those of you who feel as though they too have been passed through a salad spinner one too many times, I have a suggestion. Sometime between now and tomorrow afternoon, take 10 minutes and meditate. Or do yoga. Take a cat nap. Daydream. Draw a picture with crayons. Eat some chocolate while lying on the grass and staring at the clouds (or lying on the bed and staring at the ceiling, if the grass is too wet and the sky is too gray). Just take a few minutes for yourself, breathe deeply, and smile. It’ll help you panic that much less later on.

Here are my food photos for today. You can fill in the blanks.

breakafst

snack_am

lunch

snack_pm

dinner

Yes, my afternoon snack was pie dough scraps. What? Like you’ve never eaten raw cookie dough?

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documenting all you can eat #2

This post is day two of documenting all you can eat, a blogging event hosted by Sam of Becks and Posh.

I spent the day at the de Young Museum with my family visiting from out of town. We had lunch at the museum cafeteria, which is actually pretty good.

breakfast

breakfast_211106

Breakfast was a strawberry, almond milk shake with half a banana, coconut butter, ground flax seeds, and cinnamon. Yes, it’s exactly the same as yesterday. I like a simple breakfast—one that requires little to no thought this early in the morning. My five-year-old niece would be overjoyed to eat a pink breakfast.

My French butter with fleur de sel sits quietly in the background, just waiting to be spread on some crusty bread.

lunch

lunch_salad lunch_burger

The lovely salad was baby spinach and arugula with goat cheese and fresh sliced beets. The beets were rather mild, but tasty. The burger was medium rare Niman Ranch with provolone cheese on an Acme bun. Pretty good burger (although not rare as I ordered it), with a rich, beefy flavor. The bread was several notches above typical burger buns, with a pleasantly firm texture that withstood the meaty juices.

snacks

eggplant_snack cookie_snack

My mid-morning snack was eggplant spread samples with crisp flatbread chips at the Ferry Building farmers market. The smoky fire-roasted eggplant spread was my favorite. Sadly, I don’t remember the name of the producer.

For an afternoon snack I had about a quarter of a large shortbread cookie with nuts from Bakesale Betty (purchased at the Temescal farmers market on Sunday). These are some buttery cookies, and not too sweet. The nuts add both flavor and texture, rounding out the cookie.

dinner

dinner_211106

My brother-in-law cooked a great dinner tonight! We had barbecued burgers with barbecued bacon and aged cheddar cheese on English muffins. I put together some home made ketchup by cooking down overripe heirloom tomatoes with apple cider vinegar, brown sugar, salt and pepper. There was also a garden salad with a balsamic vinegar dressing and oven baked potato wedges. I took the opportunity to finish up my broccoli, bok choy, and seaweed from yesterday.

The bacon-burger-cheddar combination is brilliant, I highly recommend it. Barbecuing the bacon gives it a smokier taste, which complements the burgers very well. The cheddar adds a tangy flavor and a creamy texture (I didn’t melt the cheese). The ketchup was quite good, if I do say so myself. I threw in the tomatoes, seeds, skin and all, which produced a chunky, more natural tasting ketchup.

afterward

Looking over these photos, I’m a little shocked at today’s menu. I don’t think I’ve ever eaten that much beef in a day. I think tomorrow will be a vegetarian day, otherwise I might start growing horns and udders. And blimey, I’ve been eating a lot of junky snacks. Shall I eat more fruits and vegetables tomorrow? Will I abstain from meat? Stay tuned to find out.

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documenting all you can eat #1

Sam of Becks and Posh has issued a challenge: document everything you eat between November 20th and 26th. Being a word-centric person, I completely forgot that this challenge involved photographing everything I eat (duh!). So I’m afraid today’s entry is missing a breakfast photo, and, er, the lunch photo is a little unusual. But all of this week’s breakfast photos should be much the same as today’s, so worry not.

Wait a minute, I hear you say. What’s this all about anyway?

Sam thought it might be fun to see what food blogger’s actually eat on a daily basis, as opposed to the usual foie gras with calvados reduction served on a bed of dry-farmed heritage xanga. (What’s xanga, you say? It’s such a rare heritage plant that nobody’s ever heard of it. Pronounced ZANE-gah.)

Here’s all I could eat, day 1.

breakfast

My usual almond milk smoothie with fresh strawberries, half a banana, coconut butter, cinnamon, and ground flax seeds. It’s a very portable breakfast, which you can drink in the car or on the train. It’s usually quite tasty, depending on the combination of berries I use and the sweetness of the berries. Sometimes I throw in some raw chocolate nibs for zip and zing.

lunch

lunch veggies_at_lunch

Due to last night’s laziness, I relied on the cafes at work for sustenance. Not the best idea. I had teriyaki chicken breast with cilantro rice and tempura butternut squash. The chicken was alright, only a little dry, and the teriyaki sauce wasn’t too sweet. The cilantro rice was a bit mushy, but it had a nice cilantro flavor (I ate it despite myself, just for the cilantro). The tempura squash was neither tempura, nor squash (discuss). The tempura coating was soggy with oil (ugh!) and the vegetables weren’t squash at all, but rather somewhat flavorless string beans. To their credit, the flavor of the string beans was probably overpowered by the tempura coating. I bought some greens at another cafe, to make sure I had enough veggies. These were a perfectly reasonable steamed baby bok choy, broccoli, and seaweed. I nibbled at them and then rushed off to a meeting.

It’s a good thing I scroll through foodblogs while eating my lunch, otherwise I would have completely forgotten to snap any photos. Think of the first photo as the absence of teriyaki chicken and cilantro mushy rice with soggy tempura green beans. It’s better that way.

snacks

challah cake

My mid-morning and afternoon snacks consisted of a slice of buttered challah which I prepared this morning with French fleur de sel butter. Oh how I love that butter.

I also ate one bite of some cake I found in the break room. I decided it wasn’t nearly worth the calories and promptly disposed of my slice.

dinner

spinach_salad afghan_spinach_crepe humus_and_tofu_salad

I arrived home from work at around 7:30, and threw together the following:

  • Baby spinach salad with winesap apples, peppercress, and hazelnuts sprinkled with olive oil and pomegranate molasses
  • An Afghan crepe filled with mildly spicy spinach, bought from the Afghan food stand at the Temescal farmers market on Sunday
  • A spoonful of hummus bought from the same stand (great hummus!)
  • A couple spoonfuls of tofu cilantro salad from Hodo Soy Beanery, also purchased at the Temescal farmers market. I love their tofu, and this was quite a good salad.
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pie dough with the eggbeater

Pies are all about the crust, which is to say they’re all about the dough. Well, not really. At least half the fun is eating the gooey sweet fruit that fills the buttery cavern of your pie. But the best filling in the world won’t save a poor crust, turning an otherwise tasty pie into an abject failure. Knowing this, and with Thanksgiving just around the corner, I signed up for Shuna’s pie dough class in Berkeley. Let me tell you, having been to that class, I now recognize all the horrible errors I had previously thought were standard pie-making protocol.

For example:

  • Fancy, high-fat, European style butter isn’t necessarily better. If you do use fancy butter, cut back a bit on the amount you use (six ounces rather than eight is a rule of thumb).
  • Processing the dough until it forms a ball is a very bad idea. If your dough has formed a ball, your crust will be be tough.
  • Roll your dough from the middle outwards, not from the edge.
  • Once a crack, always a crack. If your dough starts cracking as you begin to roll, the cracks will stay and grow. To fix the crack, gently mush together the cracked dough back together with the blade of your hand.
  • Rotate pie dough frequently when rolling so as to avoid it sticking to the work surface.
  • Lightly rolled dough produces a light crust. A large, fairly heavy rolling pin is preferable, and easier to use. It requires less physical effort on your part, resulting in a flakier crust.
  • Use a whole lotta beans. When baking blind, fill the entire shell with beans.

These are just a few salient points. By touching the dough at various stages of processing, listening to it (a dough that makes lip-smacking noises is not only rude, it’s way too wet), tasting it blind-baked and non-blind baked, I began to see pie dough as its own unique creature. A professional pastry chef is a dough psychologist, gently coaxing the dough to wellbeing while working through its potential for multi-faceted neuroses. Warm pie dough is insecure, resulting in a melted, self-conscious crust. Over-working the dough results in an aggressive, tough pastry. A dough might look perfectly well-adjusted in the mixing bowl, but do anti-social bits of flour and butter lurk at the bottom?

The ingredients themselves have their own unique personalities. Flour must be aerated and weighed. Butter must be kept as cold as possible and chopped coarsely. Water must be absolutely ice cold. Understanding the behavior of each ingredient—and why it behaves the way it does—is just as important as understanding the whole. A pastry chef is both scientist and artist.

After all you learn about pie-making, Shuna’s pie is magic. How can flour, butter, sugar, and water produce such ethereal flakiness? And how do crunchy apples become sweet, buttery velvet in your mouth? To me it’s alchemy.

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nyc: in photos

arch_detail

church_detail

central_park

church_detail_arch

church_circle

flw_chair

flw_clock

graffiti_art

trompe_loeil

moma_detail

grand_central_station

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food destinations roundup

The foodblogging event, Food Destinations #3: My Favorite Chocolate Shop, has officially closed. Emily of Chocolate in Context kindly hosted the event originated by maki, and posted a roundup of chocolatey entries today. If you’re a chocolate enthusiast, you must check out the entries for this event. Even if you aren’t a big chocolate fan (is that possible?), it’s fascinating to make the virtual acquaintance of chocolate shops and their very dedicated patrons in Switzerland, Australia, New York, and Italy. I lost count of all the chocolate retail websites I must’ve added to my del.icio.us today, as a result.

The greatest eye opener for me, however, was the video in Ed’s post over at Tomato. The video is a short PR film on Grenada Chocolate company, called “Radical Chocolate” by Eti Pelig. I’ve seen a bar or two of Grenada chocolate at my local chocolate shop, but haven’t really gotten around to picking some up. Its packaging is bright and playful, almost the sort of packaging you’d associate with candy for children. I like my chocolate bitter and intense, so perhaps maybe that’s why I never tried it out. According to the film, Grenada Chocolate is perhaps the first solar-operated chocolate producing cooperative in the world. This is a far cry from the behemoth chocolate producers who engage in appalling labor practices, particularly in some parts of Western Africa. In contrast, founder Mott Green decided to revive the dying cacao industry in Grenada by developing a small-scale chocolate production facility owned by workers. The company provides dignified, safe work to the people in the area, and the cacao is sustainably, and ecologically grown. It’s really an amazing story, but Pelig’s video tells it best. As soon as I saw the film, I understood that Grenada Chocolate’s colorful packaging is simply an accurate reflection of the vibrant Caribbean community where the factory resides.

Many thanks to Emily for hosting this fun event, and for choosing an open cupboard as the winner.

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nyc: photographic interlude

Some photos from my recent trip to New York City. Can you guess what they are and where they were taken?

lamp_post

lamp_post

church

met_arch

met_arches

heirloom_tomatoes

moma_chairs

nolita

sculptures_ppl

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dishes of comfort: kashe varnishkes

kashe_varnishkes

This is my post for the Dishes of Comfort blogging event, hosted by Cream Puffs in Venice and Viaggi & Sapori.

One of my favorite foods growing up was kashe varnishkes, an Eastern European Jewish side dish full of carbs and mushrooms. As a child, I enjoyed nothing more than a bowl of steaming, sticky white rice, a slice of crusty bread or challah, or a bowl of pasta, hot or cold, with olive oil and salt. I was, and still am, enthralled by the texture, flavor, and the soulful satisfying nature of carbs.

Kashe varnishkes, however, stands apart. A combination of pasta, buckwheat, and mushrooms, kashe varnishkes is the Eastern European answer to Egyptian kushari and Yemeni majadra. The unique pleasure of Kashe varnishkes lies in its combination of nutty, tender buckwheat kernels, with earthy, juicy mushrooms, along with al dente pasta. Kashe varnishkes is pleasantly toothsome, yet very warming on a cold night.

Kashe varnishkes is one of the few dishes that my mother learned to cook from her Eastern European mother. Back in pre-WWII Europe, my great-grandmother enforced the rule that the kitchen was no place for children. Consequently, my grandmother didn’t learn much in the way of cooking, and my mother was often shooed from her mother’s little kitchen in Israel. Kashe varnishkes was one of the few dishes that survived the broken chain of culinary tradition, along with gorgul morgul—a peculiar yet tasty concoction made of egg yolk, lemon juice, and honey—which was meant to soothe a sore throat.

My mother would prepare kashe varnishkes as a treat for a Friday night Sabbath dinner, perhaps with chicken and salad or broccoli. I loved the steaming kernels of toasted buckwheat as much as I loved the big, chewy pasta bowties that poked through the mound of grain. The mushrooms were little buried treasures that exploded with earthy flavor in my mouth.

On Saturday afternoons when everyone napped, I would tiptoe to the refrigerator and fix myself a bowl of leftover kashe varnishkes. They were cold, and I couldn’t reheat them on the Sabbath, but I didn’t care. I would correct the seasoning with salt and perhaps a little pepper. Satisfied, I would take the bowl and a soup spoon and go to the living room, where I would choose an interesting book from my father’s extensive library. Maybe Jonathan Swift, or Dickens, perhaps Aldous Huxley. I’d climb into the big leather Eames chair and cross my legs Indian style. I’d pick up the book and cradle the bowl in my lap. As I disappeared into the universe of my book, I’d dig in my spoon and take a big, luscious bite.

kashe varnishkes

butter
150-200 gr pasta, preferably bowtie (I used fettuccine, which I broke into large-ish bite-size pieces)
3/4 c buckwheat, toasted
1/3 lb mushrooms (I used shitakes and chanterelles)
salt and pepper to taste

  • Cook the pasta as you usually would, rinse it to stop it from cooking.
  • In a large skillet, melt a little butter and fry the buckwheat until fragrant.
  • Add one cup of water to the buckwheat and bring to a boil. Then lower to a simmer and cover.
  • Meanwile, slice the mushrooms and fry them in a skillet with butter.
  • Season the mushrooms to taste with salt and pepper.
  • After a few minutes of simmering, check to see whether the buckwheat needs more water. If it looks dry and isn’t yet tender, add a little more water. You want to add just enough water to keep the buckwheat from drying out. The goal here is tender, yet slightly firm buckwheat, as opposed to buckwheat mush. Towards the end of cooking, remove the cover so that excess liquid evaporates. If a little buckwheat sticks to the pan, do not scrape it up.
  • Season the buckwheat with salt and pepper to taste, bearing in mind that you’ve already seasoned the mushrooms.
  • Combine the pasta, mushrooms, and buckwheat and correct seasoning. Serve at room temperature or briefly reheat in a pan.

Serves 3-4

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