Category Archives: food

800 degrees

no, it’s not a steakhouse. it’s a pizza place in westwood. a cheap, pretty good pizza place. surprising…

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i love the counter full of toppings!!! and we ordered extra oregano and chiles on both pizzas (carni and piccante). the burrata was mech. the chopped salad was full of chiles. yesssss!

still doesn’t make up for the huge loss in my life, but i did enjoy myself.

fire roasted guacamole

this recipe is courtesy of gilt taste. i have never cooked with tomatillos and was curious about this guac – it was so different than any other guac recipe i’ve seen. i love all the charred bits and the smoky flavor (really, i just wanted to play campfire over my stove)! i made the mistake of not salting the avocado cubes before i added them to the salsa (note to self: try to make the salsa without the avocado; it totally reminds me of salsa verde). i also only added pith and seeds from half of one jalapeno. it wasn’t nearly spicy enough so next time i’ll keep the pith from a whole or 1.5 jalapenos or use serranos like they suggest. see the garlic? perfectly browned (i have a nasty habit of burning garlic and ruining and nearly ruining dishes). we ate this with homemade nachos and i licked the bowl clean of whatever guac was leftover in the bowl.

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Serves 6-ish

6 ounces tomatillos (about 4 medium-sized ones)
3 jalapenos (If you like it hotter, use more, or use a chile with more kick)
1 ounce onion, chopped (about ¼ cup)
1 fistful cilantro leaves (about 1 cup, very loosely packed), plus more for garnish
2 limes
5 cloves garlic, minced
4 teaspoons olive oil
5 medium, really ripe avocados (I prefer Hass)
Salt, to taste

1. If your tomatillos are still in their papery husks, unhusk them, pop off the stem, and rinse in water to get that gummy stuff off. Dry them. You can do the responsible thing and set them high under a broiler for a few minutes to char the top, flip them, then char the other side, but you know and I know what you really want to do: Fire up the stove, get a pair of tongs or long skewer, and roast them like the marshmallows of the vegetable world. You’re not really looking to turn them into naughty-boy lumps of coal, but burn them until they’re evenly blackened all over. Set them in the bowl of a food processor.

2. Char the chile peppers the same way, and let them cool enough so you can handle them. Trim off the stem end, open them up, and cut out the seeds and ribs. (If you like more heat, you can keep them in.) Chop the peppers reasonably fine and add to the food processor.

3. Add onion, cilantro, the juice of 1 lime, and a generous pinch of salt to the tomatillos and peppers in the food processor and pulse until it’s basically a liquid. Taste, and add more salt if necessary to make it savory and balance the sourness somewhat.

4. In a small pan, heat the garlic and oil over medium heat. Swirl it a bit, and smell the goodness. When it turns slightly golden, swirl constantly until the garlic is a rich golden brown (but not, you know, brown-brown). Stir it into the tomatillo puree until the oil incorporates. (At this point, you’ll have a delicious salsa, which you can use on its own.)

5. Split the avocados: Slice into the fruit with your knife from top to bottom and “roll” the avocado along the knife so you make one cut all the way around. Put down the knife and twist the halves in opposite directions, like you’re opening a jar, and they will come apart, exposing the pit. If your knife is sharp, give the pit a good, careful thwack to embed the blade in it. Twist and it will come out. (If your knife isn’t very sharp, or you’re nervous about thwacking your hand instead, just dig it out with a spoon.) Gently peel off the skin, and cut the avocado flesh into either ¼” or ½” dice (your call; the bigger, the more of a contrast between flavors. If your avocados are fantastic, go big; if merely very good, go small.). Spritz them with a little bit of lime as you work to keep them from turning brown.

6. Season avocado chunks with salt, until they taste really good. Gently fold in the salsa. Adjust seasoning with salt, in necessary, and garnish with some more chopped cilantro. (By the way, I know I’m a fiend with this stuff, but if you really want to send the guacamole over the edge, substitute a little bit of the salt with fish sauce. Your friends will never know what hit ’em.)

Note: Make this a few hours or up to a day ahead, and the flavors will mingle together nicely, without losing the texture.

craving tea

i haven’t been in the mood for coffee since november. our shipment of MLT arrives today and i can’t wait. i love MLT. we also drink serendiptea, but we haven’t tried as many teas from them and i don’t like their blends as well as i like those from MLT. i am also biased because i hate their web site and their xocalatl chai brewing instructions suck. but i love their chamomile flowers and, someday, i would entertain a taste test of regular chai (no more rooibos chai for me) from both companies.

we tried 2 lupicia orzo teas a while back. orzo is an ancient italian barley. we smelled them in the store, thought we’d be adventuresome and ultimately tossed them, it pains me to say. we tried the recommended brewing method (blech!) and then we modified it to see if it would taste better (still blech!). we drank it unsweetened and hella sweetened (even more blech!). so we gave up.

i was poking around in the cupboard this morning and found another lupicia tea that we had forgotten about (that’s the problem with high cupboards and being short). i discovered adagio: green rooibos with lemongrass and pink grapefruit. i brewed it this morning according to the directions and it seems to be ok. recommended brewing: 2.5-3g / 150ml water / steep 3-5 minutes. my scientific measuring compulsions yielded: 2 level tsp = 3g. i steeped it in 150ml (5 oz) of hot water for 4 minutes. rooibos should take a longer steep (according to MLT whose recommendations haven’t yet led me astray), but it turned out ok. i don’t generally like fruity teas, but that is starting to change. KCL and ML sent us the best mango flavored black tea. i’ve never had a fruity tea taste that good. i supposed the black tea base helps.

back to my adagio, it’s the color of orange kool-aid and pretty much tastes like warm grapefruit juice. next, i will try it with sugar/honey and perhaps steep it for 5 minutes.

mmm, i am so looking forward to my tea.

cornbread

i am baking cornbread from a recipe in a bread book NM gave me for xmas. if you’re lucky, you may see photos of the finished product. if not, then rest assured that it was tasty and maybe i’ll take pictures next time. such a simple recipe…(will include later…)

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(it had to rest, so i was able to sneak a quick pic! if i eat a wedge out, it will look like pac-man!)

taste test: honey

after our rediscovery of acacia honey, we splurged on 2 other acacia honeys at bay cities deli. the one on the left tastes like sue bee honey, orange blossom honey, whatever. nothing special. the one in the middle is an italian acacia honey and has a complexity and floral aspect that exceeds the french acacia at the far right. don’t misunderstand me, the french acacia honey is light and delicate and adds doesn’t overpower with its sweetness, but the italian acacia honey is perfect for that yogurt, pom, chocolate mixture that i love so much and is perfect in tea – just the right amount of taste and smell that accentuates the tea instead of smothering it.

acacia honey

taste test: caperberries

sometimes, the most expensive thing isn’t the thing that tastes the best. the 2 cheapest caperberries at bay cities deli are the most flavorful and are my favorite and the 2 most expensive caperberries have no flavor or have a nasty aftertaste.

caperberries taste test

aicha (far left): the cheapest. the sweetest in flavor and the smallest in size. good texture – not mushy. roland (second, from left): second cheapest. the most sour in flavor and my favorite. delicia’s (second, from right): the most expensive and has the funny aftertaste. miguel (far right): second most expensive. has no flavor whatsoever.

pickles

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persian cukes. dill. allspice. 2 vinegars. shallots. garlic (lotsa garlic). some chili flakes. they are so good, i don’t need to buy pickles again. no, seriously.

leek tart

i have a list of things to cook for m, but am always somewhat overwhelmed by the sheer length of the list and the complexity of the recipes. tonight, i faced those fears head on and made a leek shiitake gorgonzola tart. a leek tart has been on her list for years. in building up to tonight’s culinary adventure, i looked for all sorts of recipes in all sorts of places. one recipe called for “your favorite savory pastry crust recipe” – i don’t have a favorite savory pastry crust recipe. i finally decided on the cook’s illustrated recipe because i wanted to stop thinking about whether i had the proper sized pie tin or what kind of pastry crust to use and if i could even find a crust that would taste good.

this leek tart was no small feat. it is currently in the oven and it took me over 4 hours to prepare (mind you, 1.5 hours of that was dough sitting in the refrigerator). the hardest part was the dough. i am a chickens**t when it comes to dough. i now bake bread but only found confidence after the 25th loaf when i started producing consistent results. i look in the oven constantly to check whether something is done. souffles – ha! a baker i probably won’t be. i rely on m’s expertise when we make gnocchi and pierogies. i don’t know proper rolling technique. but most of my stuff comes out tasting pretty good, so i guess i can get away with my rudimentary skill set. for now.

i am particularly proud of myself and this tart because all of my steps and results looked like the steps and results in the cook’s video. i produced pea-sized pieces of butter in my dough mixture. i achieved a loose, shaggy mass of dough as required in step 2. i rolled and folded my (very) buttery dough in the same way as shown in step 3. i didn’t roll my dough out into a proper 14-inch circle, but i was able to fold the dough and pinch the edges over the filling in a shape reminiscent of a circle. it looked more like an oval, but i think that’s what you get when you roll dough into a rectangle and then bring the sides in.

as i type this, i smell buttery, warm dough. my labor of love for my one and only is almost done cooking. i can’t believe i made a proper dough. and i don’t know how the french do it. in every brasserie, there must be a grandmother slaving away over a table of flour with a rolling pin that sees no rest. making a crust from scratch is quite involved. this tart is not a quick evening, post-work meal. it is a significant endeavor. i protest and say that i’ll never make this tart again, but making that dough was deeply satisfying and i may have to try it again just so i can be certain that i actually made it.

leek tart/galette

quinoa veggie loaf

quinoa loaf

m saw this recipe on the whole foods app on her phone. we love quinoa and the recipe sounded good, so we tried it. it was *excellent*. way better than i had anticipated. and so easy to make. note to self, it could probably stand to be baked a little longer than the 1.25 hours the recipe calls for, but i think the middle will still be mushy and need a quick pan fry to warm up and crisp up.

parmesan

chestnut parsnip soup

chestnut parsnip soup

thanksgiving left us with some jarred chestnuts that i wanted to use before they went bad and moldy. fortunately, tasting table sent me a very timely recipe for chestnut parsnip soup. i forgot to use veggie broth so it was a little heavy-handed with the flavor from the chicken broth, but wasn’t as parsnip-y as i had anticipated. and i’m not really sure i taste the chestnuts but i definitely taste the nutmeg and clove and allspice (the last two ground up very easily in my mortar and pestle and have the most brilliant color). and see that little pile of parm on top? i’ve been eating little piles of parm on almost everything since thanksgiving…salad, soup, gnocchi.

apparently, anna likes it, too. there is just no arguing with expensive taste.