Showing posts with label foods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foods. Show all posts

07 August 2013

Ah, A Good Photo Deluge.

How I love thee.

First gay couple to be married in MN!




I actually did something akin to this in my first ballet class.
Kay pulled me right outta THAT one.

Throwin' up their ovaries!

Splendid suit

Some pastas, more here


Enviable noms via Wednesday Chef


Wiseness via  < House of Alpha > 
(and Snoop Lion, duh)

*Guffaw*

24 July 2013

Epicurious

Oh Molly Wizenberg, you are so wise (and entertaining).
"I cook because it grounds me; because it connects me to the place where I live; and because afterward, I get to sit down and eat with the people I care about.  I don't need cooking to be anything more."
-via the column called "Cooking Life" that she wrote for Bon Appétit


One of these days I'm going to delve into her books A Homemade Life and Delancey: A Man, a Woman, a Restaurant, a Marriage.  Props to my wife for turning me on to Orangette (Wizenberg's long-standing, delightful blog with ethereal photos,  sophisticated/seasonal/crunchy recipes, and a personal and intimate writing style ) years ago - I've been reading it, trying her recipes, and getting inspired since.  Also, the blog gets its name from the lovely Parisian candy which I've held dear to my heart ever since watching a chef friend make a massive amount of them from scratch for Hanukkah gifts during the year that I took off to work as a server in the restaurant industry (aka to find myself.) The warm farro salad with chickpeas, feta, and spicy (thai-ish style) dressing is my favorite "recette" off Orangette so far, and a great way to utilize that fish sauce that's been sitting in the fridge for a while now.

18 January 2013

I've Gone a Little Insane.

Spinach, alfalfa sprouts, blueberries, tangerine, gorgonzola, balsamic, and chia seeds. Yup, chia seeds - inspired by healthy-eating HalBal.  Also, kind of fascinated with the gel-like texture they take on when they're in a little liquid for a tiny bit.


21 December 2012

Oh, Cookies.

So into it, this year and forever more - gave some to my auto mechanic, the mailman, my one co-worker, and boss.  Now onto holiday party tomorrow!  Good God.



05 July 2012

Fresh, Peas

Wish I could say they were from our garden, but they ARE from the Audobon Park Farmer's Market down the road. And they WILL be a sweet addition to some healthy-ish carbonara tonight. Mm.


04 May 2012

SoulPancake.com

oohpanda says:

"How do we turn happiness into something constant and non-fleeting?"

Kirbonicus says:

"Harpoon your white whale.

But seriously... happiness is just a chemical reaction... like love and model volcanoes.

Find a way for your brain to constantly release the chemicals and you'll always be happy.

BUT... if you're ALWAYS happy, doesn't it lose it's flavor?"

-via this website.

26 February 2012

The Depravity

Laying here in goddess pose in bed as I wince over the undercooked salmon that I ate last night, wishing my study date wouldn't be weirded out by me asking her to not only meet at my house in our bedroom instead, but if she could also just recite the electrical-chemical muscle contraction sequence while spoon-feeding me tepid broth. Ug.

23 February 2012

So I Went a Little Nuts...

...but then it was really worth it.  Labor intensive, but worth it, and way better than the Christmas attempt.  I wish I could remember the recipe I used, but it was a basic sugar cookie that used both white and brown sugar.  Then I used sugar to roll them out instead of flour because, well, you can never have enough sugar, right?

15 February 2012

Serious Food'rotica

"We ate and drank all day long. Brendan shucked eighteen very fresh raw Maine oysters, which we ate on ice by the fire with shallots in white wine vinegar and a sauce of lemon juice, ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, Tabasco, and horseradish.

I dismantled 2 small endives and, on twinned pairs of the crisp, subtly bitter leaves, I slathered sour cream and loaded each with capers, fresh basil, and oil-packed artichoke hearts. We ate the whole plateful with a fresh batch of blini with slabs of two rather spectacular mild cheeses and some seedless purple grapes.

Then I steamed a bunch of slender asparagus spears and served them with a fantastic dipping sauce made of the rest of the white wine vinegar-and-shallots mixed with mayonnaise and Dijon mustard. After this, I steamed eighteen clams, which we dipped in hot butter.

Later, I melted a bar of very dark chocolate in a double boiler while I cut the stems off some eerily ripe, preternaturally juicy California strawberries. I dipped ten of them in the chocolate and put them into the fridge on waxed paper. While they set, we revisited the blini and cheese course.

And then, with small glasses of Marques de Caceres, to finish this day of insanely luxurious, happy eating, we ate the chocolate-dipped strawberries."

-via katechristensen, via orangette

17 January 2012

Work it, egg salad!


*Little less mayo (canola oil mayo is a nice alternative), little more thyme, and load on the alfalfa sprouts.  W00t!

Stuff:
  • 4 large eggs, hard-boiled, peeled
  • 1/4 cup chopped red onion
  • 5 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
  • 2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme
  • § cup alfalfa sprouts or radish sprouts
  • 2 large slices multi-grain bread, toasted

Place eggs in large bowl; mash coarsely with back of fork. Mix in onion, mayonnaise, mustard and thyme. Season salad with salt and pepper. Mound salad, then sprouts on bread, dividing equally.

29 September 2011

Cracked at Work

I see these and then read the name, and all there is is screaming.

02 September 2011

Treasures from Kris and Jeff's Garden

Mmm, kale-y

I went a little overboard on Monday and made a very large amount of red-skinned potato salad with some pesto I had frozen and the above green beans which is good for the soul but a little, well, heavy (especially when there's a mixing bowl-sized portion in the fridge staring you down, daring you to let the whole thing go bad.) Sigh. Guess what's for lunch today.

18 July 2011

Food and Cats
















After the lamest weekend ever (not really, but like, Harry Potter and a kids b-day party?) I thought I'd make it a little lamer and post these. THAT said, I'm obsessed with making and eating food. Can't stop, wont stop. Also, I'm dropping off Harold at his adoptive mother's home tonight - oi.

25 April 2011

Happy Easter and One Day


I think I maybe get why broken, stereotypical housewives made funny cocktail foods and drank martinis and did Valium back in the 50s. You'd probably see Jesus in the yolks or something. These were hilarious and finicky and time-consuming little things to make but I'd definitely do it again. They were quite delicious with a beer (kind of salty, would cut down next time) and I was rewarded by seeing some guy at this party eat one and mumble to himself about forgetting how much he loved deviled eggs. I guess I'm holding true happily to what the checkout guy at the co-op said to me yesterday: "Every holiday's a food holiday now, ya know?"

***
"Deviled Eggs Also Known As Oblong Heaven" (taken from Epicurious, taken from Brini Maxwell's Guide to Gracious Living.

Note: Points ON for the title of course, points off for amount of salt - only do 1/4 tsp, if at all. Also, I think it would be nice if the filling ended up a little more creamy (it was kind of like clay that you had to smoosh smooth) but hey, nothing a tablespoon or so of cream or water couldn't accomplish next time, or just boiling the eggs themselves a little less.
  • 12 hard-boiled eggs, cooled completely
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 1 tablespoon white vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon dry mustard
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon pepper
  • 1/8 teaspoon paprika
  • 1/4 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese
  • Chopped fresh chives, for garnish
Preparation:

"Shell the eggs, cut them in half lengthwise, and remove the yolks carefully. (We don't want messy broken whites, do we?) Put the yolks in a bowl and mash with a fork. Add all the remaining ingredients (except the chives) to the yolks and mix well. Place a dollop of the yolk mixture in the indentation in each of the egg white halves and garnish with chopped chives.

Here's a hint: Cut your chives up with scissors instead of a knife. The process will go much more quickly.

Shelling eggs
Getting those hard-boiled eggs out of the shell can be quite a chore. I've found that the best way begins with the cooking. Boil your eggs for exactly ten minutes, then transfer them to a bowl of cold water immediately and leave them there for at least another ten minutes. This will stop the cooking of the eggs and ensure the easy removal of the shells. Once your eggs have cooled, take one and crack the shell, starting at the large end, where the little pocket of air usually is, and continue all the way around. Then, under running water, find or make a small tear in the membrane beneath the shell and let the water run between the membrane and the egg. The water will do most of the work for you and the egg will practically peel itself"

29 May 2010

Oh hai fresh eggs. How you do, warm from the chicken?

Oh and yeah: that's a verse from the Bible on the carton, "This is the day that the Lord has made..." Gotta love the midwest.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

27 July 2008

Really Pritty Photo Shoot.


So I read food blogs in a half-hearted way, and a lot of them have gorgeous pictures of the food like this one. This is my slacker comeback; Punch Pizza at 11:30 in the morning this past Saturday. The place is actually the best I've been to for pizza here in le twin cities (and obviously excluding Antonio's in Amherst). The crust of these are thin and soft and cooked fast in an 800 degree (F) oven. Also, my boss Alberto is from Naples and swears by it, which may count for something; either way, anywhere where I can combine pizza and a photoshoot is fine by me: