2 posts tagged “resources”
While I don't know how many people really read this, I've been uncharacteristically quiet here lately -- Mea culpa. I've been tied up in a project over at LiveJournal -- Two Ingredients, a food-challenge community. (My co-moderator came up with the idea, and I just couldn't say no. I've been taking the odd weeks, which strikes me as appropriate.)
There've been some really interesting things to come out of that place, so far.
Also, I'm amused that my typically assigned ingredients seem to be a main ingredient and a spice: Fish and capers. Tomatoes and thyme. Chocolate and garlic.
... All right, I'm kidding with the last one, though I keep threatening to actually do it. ;)
I'm also currently trying to mock up our journal icon, since I already have the perfect image... Now, I just need a line drawing of a chef hat or a spoon, and the thing can go up.
GimpShop is nice and mostly works for what I need, but I kind of miss my student copy of Photoshop: I knew exactly how to get what I wanted from Photoshop, right down to the filters. Darn you, Adobe, why do you have to be so freakin' expensive?
Anyway! Point is, there's been a lot of food over the past month, and I suspect I'll be back-dating some of the recipes and the like, as well as more knitting talk. I still haven't really posted anything about my No Sheep Swap experience with pictures, and I would still really like to -- so, that'll be going up, too.
(Not to mention the stuff that came with a recent-ish Etsy purchase from one of my downstream No Sheep buddies. Seriously, there was some REALLY cool stuff that came out of that package!)
Side note: I'm also contemplating a move for this journal to Wordpress, since I get the feeling I may be a little too dependent on Six Apart for my blogging needs. Alternately, some folk I know on LJ seem to be dual-posting from their Wordpress journals... So when I'm feeling a little less technologically lazy, I think I may look at trying to link this journal in that way. Wish me luck!
A few weeks ago, I went and wrote up an info-dump on cooking sites to share with my friends: After all, there are so many good places for recipes out there.
I'd hope that any Internet foodie already knows about the good places for recipes: Epicurious.com. Epicurean.com. Myriads of food blogs like 101 Cookbooks and Simply Recipes. And as for community sites -- I had my start with AllRecipes.com, but when it comes to that sort of site, I'm personally fond of Recipezaar.
But did you ever think of NPR as a source of recipes?
They are. I've added their feed to my iGoogle page, and I pounce the moment I see a new link -- It's not the best place for searching for a specific recipe, true, but they seem to have some of the more interesting food-related articles out there.
Today's love fest is for NPR's Kitchen Window: Granita by Any Name -- Call it an extension of my Spice Cream obsession, especially when considering the offerings of Sangria or Orange, Grand Marnier and Lavender Granitas. Coupled with the hot weather, I can hardly think of anything better.On the News with Food front, I'm also terribly fond of the LA Times' every-Wednesday Food section, but word to the wise if you want to look -- You need to be subscribed to even be able to peek at most of the articles. Boo hoo.
I know I've had a link-dump before on other places with recipes: I remember going on and on about Williams-Sonoma's recipe and technique pages, though you really have to be relentless in searching that site sometimes. Cooking.com. Café Beyond -- Two out of three of these contain recipes and techniques, so I usually end up saving the page in some format for the info as there doesn't appear to be an archive. (Alas.)
Plenty of good resources out there.
I must have been on to something, since I've added not one, but three
new food blogs to my reading collection from the time I originally shared that information. I found
Orangette thanks to following a link out of NPR's Kitchen Window, my dear friend C. glibly sent me a link to Heather Christo ("My co-worker's friend is launching her foodie website and I thought it was nifty," she says. "Take a peek!"), and Simply Recipes linked to Tea & Cookies two days ago. (Two days that I've spend going through Tea's blog, deciding amidst the travel, tea, grilling lessons, and keys to a well-prepared kitchen that she's a person I wish I had the chance to get to know in person.)
Clearly, the Internets are plotting toward inundating me with food blogs to get back at me for going all knittery.
So.
There's a world of intimidatingly good cooks out there that are also
really fascinating people... Not that the two are mutually exclusive.
Actually, seems to me most interesting people are foodies or otherwise
passionate about something.
... Tea may also have posted
this meme in one of the more recent (but still older) posts. I'll admit to a weakness for interesting memes, so...
EIGHT FOOD THINGS YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW ABOUT ME
1) WHAT ARE YOUR FAVORITE FOODS?
Sushi. I can't narrow it down more than this, because that's just cruel. Shiro-Maguro nigiri (albacore sushi) is a favorite, but so are hamachi (yellowtail), toro (the fatty tuna), anago/unagi (eels), and my crispy, ever-present spider roll or salmon-skin handrolls. There's so many different flavors, textures, and colors that there's no bigger pleasure for me than a nice selection of different sushi, set at center for everyone at the table to share.
Dim Sum. I regret that I
have not yet had the chance to go to a 'true' dim sum restaurant in the
local Chinatown, but oh. My 'secret' dim sum stop on PCH and Oak is
always a pleasure to take friends to, as much because said friends (and
family!) let me stop the carts and order for everyone as the morsels
laid on the table. I'm always partial to the steamed char siu bao, the
deep-fried hom suey gok, the steamed Shanghai bao with their rich, brothy centers plus the plum
vinegar / shredded ginger dip, and the slick 'rice noodle' dish hiding
their delicious meaty centers between rolled sheets of rice flour and
sweet vinegar sauce... Though I can never forget the honey-like thick
lotus seed center of my favorite sesame balls.
Sundays are also a
treat at that restaurant, because that's when they pull out the things
they don't make the rest of the week, and I'm personally of the mind
that the char siu flakey pastries are to die for.
Creme Brulée. If you've never sat down with me in a restaurant that has this on the menu, then it's likely that you don't know about my utter weakness against this dessert: I'm an addict. The last two times I went with my mother to the Hamburger Hamlet, I saved room for dessert because they have a peach creme brulée. (Also, serving it with a quarter cup of diced peach pieces served in their own juice and tossed with mint doesn't hurt.) -- When my favorite French restaurant Le Chalet de France was closing, I made it a point to run back from college for the weekend solely to go on their last Saturday open and asked (bold as brass) for their recipe. They gave it to me, and I still have that napkin the maitre'd scribbled the note on hidden away. Ever since then, I collect creme brulée recipes like another of my friends has been known to collect recipes for shortbread and trifles.
Blood Oranges. I do have a fondness for citrus, but blood oranges always take the metaphorical cake for me. There's just something about cutting into a light orange skin and finding that dark purple-red center. It could just be a 'weird color' food thing, but I also still remember one trip out of Green Valley Falls (I think) in El Cajon when I still had friends down that way, and stopping at a roadside stand on a whim, I found them, fragrant and sweet. Just the thing for someone parched out by the sun and hiking through forests -- and I peeled the thing, not knowing any better, dripping the bloody juice all over my shirt while attempting to separate it into the familiar neat orange wedges and getting shredded pulpy pieces instead, but still licking my fingers clean of the juice. Yum.
2) WHAT FOODS DO YOU HATE?
Eggs and catsup. Which is unfortunate, since the fiancé only eats his eggs that way -- but it turns my stomach and I just cannot get through to whatever it is that people see in that combination. It also extends to eggs and any tomato-esque product, be it tabasco, salsa...
Liver. The only liver you'll ever catch me eating is rumaki, and even that's usually just for the bacon and the water chestnut. I used to eat it as a kid, but the flavor's just too heavy or something for me -- and I can't stand the smell when it's cooking.
Celery. Everyone tells me it has no flavor, but I beg to differ. It tastes bitter and sour to me, and not in a way I find pleasant, so I just don't eat it.
3) FOODS YOU LIKE BUT ARE EMBARRASSED TO ADMIT?
BBQ Chips and Ice Cream. Whenever I tell someone about this, they always immediately ask if I'm pregnant. I started eating this at the tender young age of eleven, so I'd sure as hell hope not. ;) It was a combination I read about in a story from my Cricket magazine -- potato chips and chocolate ice cream -- so I was curious enough to try it: We only had the BBQ Lays, so that's what I used. The salt-spice is an interesting addition to the sweet of the ice cream.
4) STRANGEST FOOD YOU'VE EATEN AND ENJOYED?
Does the BBQ chips and ice cream count?
All right, seriously...
Emu. Not terribly weird, but I was amazed to find out it's a bird that cooks up and vaguely resembles red meat. A former boyfriend snuck it into meat sauce in place of beef, and it was terribly good.
Beefalo. Mom saw it in the market once and brought it home: A cross between a cow and a buffalo. I don't remember ever having it again, but the burgers were pretty tasty.
5) COOKING FAILURES THAT STILL RANKLE?
Bad Meatloaf.
My mother makes a mean meatloaf, made even funnier by the fact that she
can't stand the stuff. My brother, Dad and I can't get enough, so she
made it -- but it wasn't her thing. Unsurprisingly, shortly after first
moving into my old apartment, I wanted meatloaf. I had all the
ingredients necessary except for tomato paste... But I had tomato soup.
Oh God, it was awful. Too sweet, too liquid, even undiluted -- I ended up throwing the meatsplat
away (because it certainly wasn't going to be mistaken for a loaf, even
with all the breadcrumbs I put in to try and compensate) and just
eating the german potatoes I'd fried up as dinner instead.
I did get
better, and each time I make meatloaf, it's to thumb my nose at that
first attempt... But I'm not ready to forget it just yet.
Runny Cookies.
This one still bothers me, because unlike the meatloaf above, I have no
idea what went wrong. It was a year ago and I followed the instructions
to the letter, used the right amounts of butter / flour / sugar -- and
I mixed and chilled and baked like mad, trying to make a small army of
chocolate chip cookies that had been requested to go with a friend's All-American Dinner party. I've got the third and fourth sheets ready to go when I open
the door to the oven and find the four dozen cookies I'd put in ten
minutes prior had all merged into one large, overcooked cookie.
Panic
ensued. I thinned out the number of cookies, hoping it had just been a
fluke while I willed the first two sheets cool so I could clean and get
to the next batch -- and eight minutes after putting them in, I had
cookie puddles that much closer resembled chocolate-studded burnt
pizzelles than your all-American chocolate chip. Lessening the time
further meant they were still puddles and half-raw.
With twenty
minutes before we had to leave for the get-together, I ended up
dropping dough into my one lonely muffin tin, just desperate to get
something semi-presentable: I only had about a dozen and a half of the
planned seventy-two cookies and a large amount of frazzled nerves.
Insult to injury: I tried the same recipe the next week, and it went off without a hitch. Maybe it was the sheer volume I was attempting -- Can't say.
6) INGREDIENTS YOU DON'T WANT TO CONSIDER LIVING WITHOUT?
Garlic. I know that there's been a recent movement to try and remove garlic from Italian cooking, since it overwhelms the taste: Wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong, and you're never taking my garlic from me -- You can steal my stinking rose from my cold, dead fingers. If I didn't think it'd get me smacked by all my friends, I'd use it in everything except my baking. (Although, there are several things I can picture that being good in... Foccaccia or popovers, anyone?)
Smoked paprika. I don't use it frequently, but there are just some comfort foods I make that can't do without it -- Chicken paprikash being the primary example, but I also like to sprinkle a little of it into my stews and eggs. There's really no other spice like it, in my opinion.
Balsamic Vinegar and Olive Oil. The two are always paired in my mind, and always made better with garlic: Still, there's so much I use balsamic in when I'm making dinner, the thought of going without makes me sad. Once I started using balsamic, it was love: I don't understand how my mom can turn her nose up at using it when she's never given it a try.
Cheese. I use cheese at the smallest provocation. It doesn't necessarily matter what kind: I try to keep a selection of blue, asiago or romano, parmesan, sharp cheddar, and brie in my fridge at all times, and I'm even happier if I have a little goat cheese, aged white cheddar, or swiss there, too. The simple act of having gnocchi in the pantry is enough to send me after a double handful of shredded cheese while I brown them in the pan. Yum.
Gnocchi. Certainly the most recent of my pasta-related loves, it nonetheless manages to be my favorite. I will take gnocchi (dried, frozen, packaged fresh or homemade) over any other pasta -- and that's high praise, given my surely inborn, cultural love for spaetzle and my fondness for all things rice noodles. If I had to forgo pasta entirely except for one kind, this would be the one I'd choose to keep. Versatile, able to be a side or a main course, and varying from satisfyingly hearty to temptingly light... There's no question that I'm all about the gnocchi, especially now that I know what to do with them.
Beans. These are a recent addition to my repertoire, but I'm experimenting with them. Fresh beans, canned beans, frozen beans, dried beans -- I already knew I loved green beans, the proof along the bottom shelf of my freezer and pulled out whenever I thought we needed more green in our diet, but having recently found the baked beans recipe, I'm all about broadening the spectrum to include legumes regularly. Also, as someone who's mad about hummus and already has olive oil and garlic listed as ingredients not to be lived without -- Sounds perfect to me.
7) CUISINE YOU'D LIKE TO KNOW MORE ABOUT?
I know surprisingly little about Mexican, Mediterranean, and Persian cuisines. I can do Italian, a little, but even with that there's still a lot of room to learn. (Not that I'm an expert on Asian and French cuisine, by any means... But I feel a little more well versed in those. I can handle coq au vin or off-the-cuff veggie sushi rolls, which must count for something.)
8) FOODS YOU HATED BUT HAVE GROWN TO LOVE?
Avocados. Okay, this is going to have some of my friends gaping at me if not actively laughing or teasing: Oh, how I love avocados. Of course, I only started eating them outside of guacamole during college, and wow. All I need now is a ripe avocado, a spoon, and a little salt and/or a dribble of pure citrus, and yeah. I'm in heaven.
Eggs. Don't look at me like that -- I really didn't like them as a kid, and the parents finally stopped asking me to choke them down when one slid back up at about the age of seven. I was re-introduced to eggs in omelettes, and then I deigned to have scrambled, and by late high school, I was almost willing to eat poached eggs. It took me a while, but now they're one of those ever-present ingredients in my fridge, and not just because you can't make a cake without them... I mean, there's quiche.
Beets. Yeah, I know, show me a kid who ever liked beets -- but I'll have you know, I've always loved the other traditionally hated veggie, the brussel sprout. Beets never really appealed to me 'til I found a beet salad calling for diced roasted beets, shredded mint and olive oil. I've been partial ever since.
Tomatoes. This is the most recent food ideology changes, since it seems to me that I've only been eating raw tomatoes with anything approaching pleasure for the past year or two (which means it's probably more like five). I couldn't stand them before, the slimy texture of the seeds enough to send me running away -- and truthfully, I still have that issue with cherry tomatoes, but I'm happily eating about every other variety there is. Strawberry tomatoes are a decided favorite, and I really, desperately need to find a plant that grows those for my front yard. Sugar plum and grape tomatoes are a brilliant snack, and the roma will forever be my first tomato love, especially with a little fresh basil and mozzarella. Yum.
So. Anyone else want to answer this one?
