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Pat

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Everything posted by Pat

  1. There's nothing I won't cook because of the smell, but fish and cabbage are foods that linger in the air long enough that I don't make them frequently. Reheating leftover fish is pretty bad, so I try to make small portions so as not to have leftovers. When I lived in a university dormitory in England as a student, there was a lot of curry cooked in the kitchen near my room. It got to me at first, but I got used to it and now the smell of curry doesn't bother me. It even makes me nostalgic, I suppose. The absolute stinkiest our house gets, though, is when our cat gets her favorite canned food: California Naturals Salmon and Sweet Potato. She devours this stuff. It's her absolute favorite food and it reeks to high heaven. When I just stocked up on some more and was taking to the women at the pet store, they commented on how it's notoriously stinky and some people won't buy it because they don't want their house to smell. I guess it's obvious who rules our house .
  2. bread, cookies, roasted meats and chicken, and (oddly?) fried onions and garlic
  3. leftovers... puff pastry cups with smoked salmon and cream cheese puff pastry with whitefish spread stuffed mushrooms steak and cheese sandwich (leftover t-bone, sliced, on multigrain baguette, with fried onions, garlic, mushrooms, and melted p'tit basque cheese)
  4. Last night butter lettuce salad with tomato, cucumber, chopped ham, and balsamic vinaigrette broiled t-bone steak stuffed mushrooms, more or less according to this recipe. I used whole grain bread crumbs and red onion instead of green. Tonight I'm making a stuffed boneless leg of lamb with meat from Costco. After attempting to remove the netting, stuff, and then put the netting back on, I think I'm going back to cutting off the netting and using kitchen twine in the future. Unless there's a secret. Is there a secret to getting the net back over the lamb? The stuffing is an enhanced version of the leftover stuffing from last night. There wasn't much, but I'm glad i saved it. The stuffing is last night's whole grain bread crumbs, garlic, onion, spinach, and ham...with more bread crumbs, garlic, thyme, parsley, proscuitto, and crumbled feta. Otherwise, just olive oil and black pepper. I'm roasting potatoes and carrots to go with the lamb. ETA: Everything came out well. My husband particularly loved the potatoes. I threw a couple of tablespoons of duck fat into the roasting pan to roast them . They were most excellent.
  5. That's an interesting point. I like to dip fries into mayo but having them drowning in it is not appealing. The only thing I like poured onto fries is ketchup, and I don't like too much of that. If fries get too soggy with ketchup to pick up and eat, blech. Some vinegar sprinkled onto fries is okay, but I don't like too much of that either.
  6. Something inexplicable possessed me (actually it was a friend I was with who wanted to order it ), and several months ago I ordered fried calamari at 3 Brothers :). Being short, I couldn't see too well into the back, but my friend watched them dump the tiny frozen uniform rubber bands into the fryer. That was some bad fried calamari. At least we got it really quickly .There are places that do it well, but it seems like one of those foods that varies a lot in terms of how it comes out. I don't know what the reason for that is, but, in my experience, there seems to be a lot of variability even at places where I have thought it good. One place that I recall thinking it was fabulous (maybe faulty memory) was whatever the restaurant-bar was in the space where Kinkead's is now. I used to go there just for the calamari, but I can't remember the name of the place now.
  7. These sound like Chinese tea eggs. I've only heard of them but haven't made them. You want to marble them and infuse them with flavor. I'd say do the first boil for 3 minutes or so.I think I'd just tap them on the counter or in the empty pan to crack the shells. Steep should mean turn the heat off and let them sit in the water.
  8. I read that in one of those two publications and can't find a link either. Could it have been in City Paper? It said the movie theaters would likely be shut down and that the only restaurant with a contract well into the future was Thunder Grill, but that America and others were confident they could renegotiate and stay.I think it might be that the new owner already took over and the past fuss about problems the one food court vendor had with them was an early sign of what was to come. from Tim Carman last year: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=2170 I'm pretty sure Ashkenazy is the same company I saw mentioned in the recent article I read about the upcoming changes.
  9. I have not made those, but I have a smoked salmon gougeres recipe I was planning to try tonight that only uses Parmesan. I can tell you if that one works, but I don't know if that's too helpful .
  10. Chicken andouille sausages wrapped in puff pastry Smoked salmon and dilled cream cheese on puff pastry squares Broccoli slaw with dried cranberries and marcona almonds
  11. multigrain baguette slices with a deli assortment: homemade cream cheese spread with capers, dill, and horseradish smoked salmon* proscuitto whitefish spread* cucumber slices red onion slivers green olives with pimentos My husband also had a leftover piece of the chicken cordon bleu-ish. *from Costco--Blue Hill Bay, distributed via Acme in Brooklyn
  12. I just finished some tiger's eye beans from last night--in their pot liquor with a little P'tit Basque cheese melted over the top. Very hearty, filling, and delicious
  13. I know someone who happened to be eating dinner there the night it was taped. He said that his meal was great but that's always the case when he eats there.ETA Eric Ripert was in the kitchen with Bourdain that night.
  14. chicken andouille sausages with onions and garlic brown rice tiger's eye beans from Rancho Gordo I cooked the beans in the crockpot, which I hadn't tried before. Since it was already pretty well into the day, I started them on high, figuring I'd get a head start and then turn them down. I waited too long to check, and after 2 hours on high, they were at a hard boil and had been for some time. They were already starting to break open. I turned them down to low for 2 hours and then kept them on warm until dinner. They tasted fine but were fairly mushy from overcooking . I had no idea beans could cook that fast.
  15. green salad with anchovy-balsamic vinaigrette cordon bleu-ish chicken baked sweet potatoes with soy spread and maple syrup
  16. I know I've posted about the Alpine around here somewhere. When we redid our kitchen (the planning of which took seemingly forever, plus the execution), the cabinet store we used was Voell Custom Kitchens, in the strip mall next to the restaurant. We ate a number of meals at the Alpine while visiting Voell, and I have a soft spot for it. It reminds me of Italian places I went to while growing up in PA.
  17. We spent the day up in the Philadelphia area yesterday and stopped at Fork for dinner before the drive home. I mentioned my interest in the place upthread. I loved the decor and feel of the place, though the seat cushions are so soft that I felt like I needed a booster seat . I'm very short, so those kinds of things affect me more than other people. I really liked the diner tables. The service was very good, though they had to get creative when it hit a brief packed full period--not too much room there to circulate. I loved my warm escarole salad with brussels sprouts, bacon, poached egg, and sherry-shallot vinaigrette. The sprouts were perfectly done and worked wonderfully with the other flavors and textures. The vinaigrette had just the right bite to it. I polished off the entire large bowlful of salad and could have eaten more. My husband had a bowl of black bean soup with ham, sour cream, and scallions, which was good, but I was quite happy with my escarole. For a main I had braised lamb shoulder, cooked with red wine, cumin, and maybe (?) tomato. It was fork tender and delicious. The accompanying polenta was a bit on the dry side but worked nicely for mopping up the lamb juices. The broccoli rabe that came with it was fine, but maybe I'd just had my fill of bitter greens by that time. My husband had the braised free range chicken with the giant corn posole, mole, corn tortillas, and cucumber salad. He ordered without really looking at the description--just going for chicken--and I don't think it was probably the best choice for him. I might have said that if I had noticed it on the menu. I had only a bite--to identify the posole--and the mole seemed pretty heavy on cinnamon. Hard to conclude much from one bite, though . He thought the chicken slightly dry but that didn't stop him from cleaning his plate. We needed to get back on the road and were pretty stuffed, so we didn't have dessert. I had a beer early on but mentioned to the server that I'd probably order a glass of red wine with my lamb. It got so crowded, it was too hard to track her down to get the wine before the lamb arrived. I'd decided I didn't really need it, but as soon as she got back to the table to check on how our meals were, she recalled my earlier comment and asked if I wanted to order the glass of wine. She suggested a glass of, I believe (consulting the online bottle menu) M. Ercolino, “Memo”, Montepulciano D’Abruzzo, 2006, which I received promptly, with plenty of time left to enjoy it with my meal. It wasn't too easy to get there at Friday rush hour on the route we were taking (an hour to go 7 miles ) but I'd love to head back there again on the way north on 95, since it's right by the exit at Penn's Landing.
  18. Green salad with balsamic anchovy vinaigrette Pizza bread* using striata baguette pieces Leftover baked chicken legs, rice pilaf, and peas *Homemade pizza sauce from the freezer, roasted red and yellow peppers, and fontina cheese
  19. My brain isn't working today. The results it gave were wrong for me, but not as wrong as I first thought.
  20. striata baguette with olive oil for dipping baked rigatoni with basil-tomato-roasted pepper sauce with two meats; cinnamon and black pepper; grated Romano
  21. If I'm recalling correctly, Hogs on the Hill used to be where Kenny's is now, by the old hospital.
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