Author Archives: j

urban gardens

animal, vegetable, miracle has changed the way i look at food in so many ways and reaffirmed my healthy/political view of food and food production in general. i have quite a few things i want to write about, but first, i want to take a trip down memory lane and recall all the urban gardens m and i have had.

our first foray into growing veggies and herbs took place in chicago on a deck overlooking the eisenhower expressway. i must admit, i was a hesitant urban gardener. m was the one all gung-ho about growing tomatoes in late summer sun and having fresh herbs and hot chile peppers at her disposal. we bought a number of small and large plastic terra cotta colored planters and some round ones with tomato stands. we bought seeds of bell peppers and chile peppers and basil. i think we also bought tomatoes from seed and started them in small pots inside. we bought and grew lettuce that quickly became covered in small bugs despite our best organic pest spray efforts. m just couldn’t stomach the thought of eating it and potentially digesting a few small bugs that didn’t die in a vinegar rinse. i can’t remember if i ate it or not…i eat just about anything.

the chile peppers were a huge success. the tomatoes were also a huge success. so simple to grow and yet so tasty. unfortunately, i don’t have any pictures as my documentation of these days was virtually zero. (i was saving up for these current days when i start any project armed with no less than 2 cameras and one videocamera.)

our first la apt didn’t have an outdoor space. correction: it had an outdoor space that was turned into an indoor space. the result is the same: couldn’t grow anything but a small pot of basil so planters went into storage and basil was successful for a few weeks but neglect eventually killed the poor herb.

san francisco was the perfect climate for growing foods outside and our 25 foot long deck accommodated our urban garden nicely. we started with a bonsai tree we ordered from overstock.com. weird, i know, but it thrived for many moons before frying on our deck in la in 2007. next, we filled all of the aforementioned planters with romaine, arugula, chard, cilantro, sugar snap peas, spinach, and a number of herbs. safer spray kept most of the bugs away. as i recall, the romaine and spinach and peas were particularly tasty. i didn’t really know how to prepare the chard, but it certainly was pretty. and the herbs were indestructible – especially the thyme. i loved growing peas because they grew up along the chopstick in the planter and literally took over the railing on the deck spewing pods all over the place. we ate every single pod and licked our fingertips afterward. lastly, we followed that up with a peach tree which is known in feng shui circles as being good for personal health. see pics of our sf urban garden below:

disclaimer: our garden flourished due to a lot of love and advice from a miss NM who still, much to our chagrin, remains in sf despite all of our pleas and attempts to get her to move to la. she helped us pick out the peach tree in sonoma and helped us plant it and prune it and keep it pest-free. she also recommended growing certain veggies together…but now, of course, i can’t remember what that sage advice was. she also gave me an aloe plant that refuses to stay restrained by the tiny studio apartment of a pot that contains it. she also gave me an orchid, my first, (for my birthday) that i kept blooming twice a year for almost 3 years. it liked la ok but it *loved* sf.

our first (and so far only) bonsai

our first (and so far only) bonsai

lettuces

lettuces

i love peas!!!

i love peas!!!

arugula, spinach and romaine - tasty spoils of our labor

arugula, spinach and romaine - tasty spoils of our labor

basil grown from seed + ready for the outside world

basil grown from seed + ready for the outside world

the first peach - the tree only grows 1 each year

the first peach - the tree only grows 1 each year

sweet rice

despite our rice cooker’s claim that it can’t make sticky rice, we attempt it anyway. tonight was attempt #2 resulting in excellent rice (i have no idea how sweet rice is supposed to be made or how it is supposed to look/taste so our result seems perfect). the formula so far: 3 hours of soaking (don’t forget to rinse it first!) and then 2.25 “cups” of water. maybe i’ll try 2.125 next time because it was still a little gooey when the cooker stopped. after it warmed for almost 5 hours in the rice cooker, it became less globby as the rice kernels separated from each other and it dehydrated a bit. like i said, i have no idea if this 9 hour rice is the proper consistency, but sure is tasty. we topped it with honey and cinnamon. (sorry, no pictures. i just finished it.)

in other news, we just finished our last true bottle of chinese longan honey. this new bottle is “honey flavored syrup” and tastes more sweet with less longan. sadness. i miss the bees already.

slow food

page 92 of my edition of animal, vegetable, miracle explains how the slow food organization attempts to save delicious foods in danger of extinction by, ironically, consuming them. kingsolver’s description of their 2003 campaign to save heritage turkeys makes me want to buy a fresh heritage turkey for our next dinner party. slow food ran a membership drive by allowing the public to join for whatever donation s/he wanted to make. m and i became members of the slow food la chapter today for $37.50 (because we are cheap, but $36.50 more thoughtful than really cheap).

clam chowder…take 2

this time m bought cockles from costco and we used a weird uncured bacon from whole foods (never again). this version was tasty but not as tasty as the first. sometimes the first is always the best. i also thought the potato chunks were too large this time, but that’s just my opinion – it doesn’t really change the flavor of the chowder. the bacon and the cockles definitely affect the flavor. i liked the cockles. they were cute and small and easy to clean and shuck. we just bought too many of them. this second chowder was definitely…how can i put this?…richer? seafoodier? clammier? i’d buy cockles again, but probably not 7 lbs of them. below is my first stab at incorporating video. i love the gurgling sounds the cockles make…i just can’t think about throwing them into boiling hot water. makes me want to become a vegetarian.

(ok, so embedding the video is gonna need some work…here’s the link instead):
gurgling cockles

disclaimer: i am not a movie maker. i most certainly won’t become rich and famous shooting video on my little canon p+s.

tacos por favor

L-R: al pastor, chorizo+cheese, mahi-mahi

L-R: al pastor, chorizo+cheese, mahi-mahi

yes, please. mas tacos. the westside isn’t really known for its taco trucks. m heard that tacos por favor is an excellent taqueria so i indulged myself today since i just happened to be in that neighborhood. i ordered a mahi-mahi, al pastor, and the chorizo + cheese that is recommended on chowhound here, here and here.

the mahi mahi was pretty good – had diced green chiles on it. the al pastor was dry and tasted vinegar-y to me. not my favorite tender, spicy al pastor. i saved the chorizo + cheese for last because it was the least delicate in flavor but i’m not sure that was a good idea. now i have this big cheesy rock sitting in my stomach. but it was good, and i’ve never had a chorizo + cheese taco before. i would order it again. and i’m sure it’s best when it’s eaten right away. i only live a few blocks away but by the time i got home and ate the other two, the cheese had definitely solidified.

animal, vegetable, miracle

i finished eugenia kim’s the calligrapher’s daughter yesterday and started barbara kingsolver’s food memoir today. i am plowing through books like i just discovered the written word (having time to read on the bus helps). i’m only 20 pages into this new book and i’m hooked. granted, i’m a willing audience: i shop and adore my farmers’ market, i try to use as few bags/sacks/plastic as possible, i recycle, i believe in reusable everything (travel mugs, silverware, tupperware, fixing the appliance rather than buying new), and i grow my own herbs and produce in my small urban planters as often as i can. so ms. kingsolver and her family have already convinced me of their message and the way she writes is just the topping on the cake. if i didn’t already care so much about locally grown food, she could convince me with little resistance.

www.animalvegetablemiracle.com

pet halloween costumes

we were driving home along wilshire today and i saw at a local pet store that they have pet halloween costumes. our conversation went something like this:

j: “we could dress anna up as a dog…”
m: “…we could…”
j: “…instead of the human she parades around as on a daily basis.”

we chuckled.

terroni – 2nd of 99 + pink martini

RGG+SGG helped us with our #2/99 restaurants: terroni. south italian cuisine. sadly, no pictures this time so how can i best convey the fresh tomato and basil of SGG’s dish, the perfect crust on RGG’s ‘za con funghi, my earthy porcinis with handmade/homemade tagliatelle noodles, and, well, m’s capunti w/ lamb (that should’ve been a linguine w/ clam dish, but she just couldn’t decide). according to jgold, we really should’ve ordered espresso but we had to jet to the bowl for pink martini (!).

terroni was good, i’d go back. a bit too loud, eclectic interior design, an extensive menu, reasonable italian food (which i find peculiarly hard to find in lalaland). but the real highlight of the evening was pink martini. O.M.G. they are soooooo great in concert. the bowl performance was even better than their new years’ eve performance at the disney concert hall. china forbes has a fabulous voice – so deep and clear; thomas lauderdale is so dopey and cute and geeky and talented. my favorite pieces were u plavu zoru with pansy chang on cello, their live version of amado mio, cante e dance (my new favorite PM song) and the first encore featuring a pianist and her violinist husband. wow. they have a new album releasing in october and i can’t get my hands on it fast enough.

terroni | 7605 Beverly Blvd 90036 | 323.954.0300

gourmet gumbo

literally. i got the recipe from gourmet. my one requirement was that the recipe had to ask for fish stock and this one did. i personally wanted an all-seafood gumbo. gourmet bills this gumbo as a “heady, fragrant slurry thick with seafood.” they ain’t lyin’. but, then again, what *doesn’t* taste good when you add a 1/2 lb of bacon and then make a roux using 3/4 cup of fat and 3/4 cup of flour?

i did my own mise en place, cleaned up after myself as i went along, and even managed to snap a few photos of my progress. i cannot be modest: this gumbo was hella good.

left to right – row 1: [1] stirring the roux [2] bacon-y goodness [3] the roux 30 mins later (wb is betraying me here. both were shot with the same wb setting, but digicam has trouble with my 2 competing light sources)

left to right – row 2: [1] onions, sweet italian peppers, celery + roux [2] one of many mise on place (L: thyme, salt, cayenne, bay leaf / R: scallions, parsley [3] #1 but 8 minutes later

left to right – row 3: [1] bubbling nicely (see how well my gas stove simmers my wobbly soup pot?) [2] my signature shishito peppers with hot chili oil (they don’t really go with gumbo but they are fresh from the farmers market) [3] the final product