Entries Tagged 'what i’m eating' ↓

between breakfast and brunch

A wonderful time for strawberry/balsamic vinegar .

Next time, I’ll use a little less sugar, but overall it is amazingly yummy. And pretty.

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the best dinner.

Oh wow, Warner and I whipped up the best dinner I’ve had at home in a very long time.

He made tomato pudding. I made sweet potato curry and lemon-roasted asparagus. It was all so good and pretty on the plate–red and orange and green and yellow.

I made up the sweet potato curry as I went along, so I’ll jot it down before I forget…

  • Peel 4 small-to-medium sweet and cut into 1/2 inch cubes.
  • Cut one onion and one green pepper into approximately 1 x .25 inch strips.
  • Heat up a generous pour of vegetable oil in a large-ish heavy bottomed pan.
  • Fry onion and green pepper over medium-high heat until getting a bit soft.
  • Add a tablespoon or two of jarred (I had vindaloo on hand, but others I have tried would have worked just as well.)* Stir to mix well until the fragrance seems to peak.
  • Lower heat a bit and dump in a can of . Stir to mix well.
  • Add and bring to simmer.
  • Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, about 20 minutes or until the sweet potatoes are cooked through.
  • Serve with rice.

I’ll write up the lemon-roasted asparagus later. It is one of my mottoes that roasting is the best way to cook nearly anything…

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* I get these on the cheap at the Indian grocery and they are very handy.

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religious experience.

My beautiful friend Maria‘s lovely husband gave her a box of Vosges Collezione Italiano truffles for Valentine’s Day. Lucky girl. Maria was kind enough to give me two of the truffles, as we have been lusting after these particular confections together for years.

And so I came into the possession of the Balsamico truffle (12-year aged balsamic vinegar + dark chocolate + Sicilian hazelnuts) which I have not yet tried. And… the Rooster, described as follows:

Your tasting begins with the Rooster truffle, a mélange of Taleggio cheese, organic walnuts and Tahitian vanilla beans draped in bittersweet dark chocolate. A bit salty, slightly tannic and rich in mouth-feel with an undercurrent of sweetness.

And it may be one of the most exquisite things I have ever eaten. On par with the pink grapefruit at Berthillon, which stopped me in my tracks on the rue saint Louis en l’ile so that I could lean against a building and taste

sigh.

After that truffle, I had to pour a glass of –the cheapo Alcion Malbec I get by the case at Weaver Street Market that is actually very delicious, especially for being so ridiculously inexpensive. If I were a smoker, I might have had a cigarette… :-)

And, speaking of Berthillon, the making is so far successful. I am trying the coconut recipe from the previous post. I have succeeded in not boiling the cream or ending up with chunks of egg yolk floating in the cream.

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bottom of the barrel.

Last night I had dinner at Il Palio with Diane Kelly and a faculty position candidate, Jenna Hartel. Jenna’s dissertation was on information behavior in the hobby of gourmet cooking. At one point during dinner, she explained that there are two categories of food hobbyists: the gourmets and the down-home cooks. The latter are concerned with simplicity and low cost, while the former love the exotic and the complicated, which tends to translate (in my experience) to the more expensive.

Anyway, last night at Il Palio, I ate:

  • Local Bibb Lettuces – Oven Dried Tomatoes, Radishes and Parmesan Dressing
  • Bucatini all’Amatriciana – House Cured Guanciale, Onion and Spicy Tomato Sauce
  • Bailey’s Crème Brulée – Bailey’s, Kahlua, Vanilla Bean Custard

The crème brulée was probably the best I ever remember eating, but the rest was just ok.

And I actually got ill when I got home. Blech.

Tonight is a much more down-home night.

Actually the truth is that I’ve had too much going on to feel like I can stop and figure out what to cook at home, so I don’t have a plan and I don’t have supplies. Sometimes it seems too overwhelming to think about what to eat for the next week and I just blank on it and ignore it. Then nights like tonight happen.

I had a bag of pre-soaked in the freezer, so I put those in a pot, covered them with water, brought that to a boil, covered the pot and stuck it in the oven at 250°F for 45 minutes while I made a phone call to a friend and folded my laundry.

When the beans were cooked, I drained them. Diced an onion. Sauteed it in veg oil until it was soft. Threw in the beans. Threw in a couple of cups or so of mixed frozen vegetables, a frozen tablespoon lump of ,* and a jar of . Added some salt, a healthy amount of dried , and a bit of . Cooked until everything was hot and cooked through.

I cooked a couple of in the microwave.

Then a big pile of the mush from the stove was piled on top of a potato and that whole mess was covered with shredded “Italian style” cheese, and popped back into the microwave to melt the cheese.

I’m eating it now as I type. Actually it isn’t terrible. It isn’t good, but I’ve thrown together much worse.

And so it goes. After dinner I’ll make a menu for the next few days. And a grocery list.

I’m thinking some sort of curried winter squash. I have a surfeit of and basmati rice. Yum.

* I freeze the leftover tomato paste when a recipe doesn’t use a whole can. I wrap individual lumps in plastic wrap and put all the lumps in a storage bag in the freezer.

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current addiction.

Hot white basmati rice.
Add a large dollop of a mango pickle heavy on the methi (fenugreek) (extra points for mango pickle in which the mango is shredded).
Mix well.

Devour.

This makes a wonderful lunch. Never mind that it is pretty much nutritionally devoid and full of salt. It is delicious.

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