Sunday, June 7, 2009

Dinner Parties and Elegant Home Cooking

I love having people over to dinner or lunch. I probably have little eating parties about once a week, often for my friend Sam when our spouses are out of town and regularly for four or six of us. Once the number gets bigger than six, I move into a different mind set that is more like catering than having folks over for dinner. I prefer small.

When I started out, I would spend days getting ready for a graduate student dinner party, finding just the right menu of things that we could afford on my tiny University of California at Berkeley secretary salary and my husband’s graduate student stipend. I wanted to wow and dazzle our friends. But mostly I befuddled them. Aspic, who cares about aspic, even though it took me days of preparation. I wanted effusive compliments for my efforts and invitations to come to their houses for dinner. I got neither—or at least not as many as I wanted.

I had set up a situation in which our friends were intimidated and scared to reciprocate. Who wants that? With a thunk on the side of my head, I realized that I could cook a nice borscht (Coop Low Cost Cookbook) or lentil soup (Pellaprat’s Modern French Culinary Art) with fresh bread, a crisp salad, a brownie (Better Homes and Gardens) for dessert and everyone, including me, had a better time. And so my version of elegant home cooking was born.

















On Thursday, dear friends, Rivka and her daughter, Aden, drove up to Sonoma for lunch. We had mushroom pâté (see below) with slices of bread; spicy cauliflower soup (modified from The Art of Simple Food); beet, goat cheese and watercress salad; strawberries and store-bought oatmeal cookies (Whole Foods). It was really tasty and definitely not intimidating. Elegant home cooking. I made the soup and the pâté the day before and did the rest in the morning. It was fun to cook for them, to share a meal, to celebrate Aden’s graduation from Brown, to walk with Rivka to my favorite store on the plaza, Bram. Keeping it easy and enjoying myself.

Appetizers

So far I’ve given you three menus consisting of a main dish, a starch, and vegetable side dishes. If you were cooking one of the menus for a dinner party, you might want to add an appetizer and a dessert which you can purchase or make yourself. If you decide that you are up to making an appetizer, I’m going to give you three: two are truly easy and one is a little more complicated—maybe more the sort you would take to someone’s house if you were assigned the “pre-eating” course with drinks. Except that it is so good that you might want to eat it for dinner.

Apricot Thrones

















25 pecan halves
2 ounces cream cheese at room temperature
2 ounces blue cheese
25 dried apricots

1. Preheat the oven or toaster oven to 325ºF. Place the pecans on a baking sheet and toast in the oven until golden brown. Watch carefully. Let them cool.
2. Combine the cheeses and stir until evenly mixed. If the mixture doesn’t get smooth, microwave for 10 seconds to soften slightly and stir again.
3. Scoop up small amount of the cheese mixture and place on top of each apricot. Start with a small amount. You can always add more later. Note: You can use a pastry bag if you are doing a large number of these.
4. Top with a toasted pecan, rounded side up, if you are fussy about it. Transfer the apricots to a serving plate, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate.
Note: The recipe can be completed to this point up to 8 hours before serving.
5. Serve at room temperature.

6-10 servings
Adapted from Hugh Carpenter and Teri Sandison’s Fast Appetizers

Dates Stuffed with Almonds


















24 blanched whole almonds, toasted or untoasted
24 medium dates, pitted
12 thin slices bacon, cut in halves

1. Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
2. Stuff an almond inside each date. Wrap each date with bacon and secure with a toothpick crosswise.
3. Bake in the 350ºF oven on a baking sheet for 20-30 minutes or until the bacon is crisp.
If the bacon isn’t browned enough for you, place the dates under a hot broiler for a minute or two, watching them closely.
Note: Can make the day ahead and bake for 20 minutes. Reheat at 350ºF before serving.

8 servings (about 3 per person)
Adapted from Marimar Torres’ The Catalan Country Kitchen

Mushroom Pâté

















½ ounce dried porcini mushrooms
1 cup boiling water
¼ cup butter (½ stick)
1 pound fresh cremini mushrooms, thinly sliced, tough stems discarded
1 garlic clove, coarsely chopped
2 tablespoons oyster sauce
½ teaspoon hot sauce
½ teaspoon sugar
6 ounces cream cheese
Salt and pepper
¼ cup chopped fresh chives, parsley or cilantro or a mixture
Edible flowers, like society garlic flowers, optional
Crackers, thinly sliced French bread, or crostini

1. Place the dried mushrooms in a small bowl and cover with 1 cup boiling water. Let sit for 30 minutes. Remove the mushrooms from the soaking liquid. Pour the liquid through a coffee filter or a double layer of paper towels in a sieve (to catch the dirt from the dried mushrooms). Reserve both the mushrooms and the water.
2. Heat a 12-inch sauté pan over high heat. Add the butter and when it begins to brown, add the softened dried mushrooms, the fresh mushrooms, and garlic. Sauté until the mushrooms begin to wilt and squeak, about 5 minutes.
3. Add the reserved mushroom water, oyster sauce, hot sauce, and sugar. Cook over high heat until all the moisture disappears. Remove from the heat and let cool to room temperature.
4. Transfer the mixture to a food processor and process until smooth. Cut the cream cheese into bits and add it to the mushroom mixture along with 2-3 tablespoons of the herbs. Process until very smooth, adding salt and pepper to taste.
5. Line the bottom of a 6½ or 7-inch springform pan with parchment paper and butter the sides.
6. Transfer the pâté to the prepared pan, and press a layer of plastic wrap over the surface. Refrigerate.
Note: You can also put the pâté in a pretty bowl.
7. To serve, run a knife around the edge of the pan, remove the sides and bottom of the springform pan. Peel off the parchment paper by flipping the pâté on to your hand, paper side up. Then flip the pâté right side up onto a flat serving plate. Decorate with the reserved herbs and the flowers. Serve chilled or at room temperature with crackers, baguette slices, or crostini.

Serves 6-12
Adapted from Hugh Carpenter and Teri Sandison’s Fast Appetizers

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Week 7 Road Trip, Markets and more food .

Some food from Week 7
Week 6 we had our herb and salad leaf Identification exam and also a technical exam.
I did extremely well and am starting to get my stuff together for week 12 exams where we have 3 written and a 3 hour cooking exam.





Rachael with ox tail

Beef kidney






Making Apple jelly
Its Elderflower season




Road Trip

The Tannery



We Visited the Tannery In Dungarvan Paul Flynn owns this He is is regarded as one of the foremost Irish chefs, cooking exciting and modern Irish food. It was wonderful that he allowed us to wonder into his restaurant cooking school and vegetable gardens.
We also had the pleasure of having a wonderful Dessert in the Tannery while Paul Talked to us about the reality of the restaurant business.

The Tannery Cooking school Blog Is Here http://tannery.wordpress.com/

The Tannery Cooking school is amazing .

Paul and Rory


The food at the TanneryThe gardens
The drive there


At Mahon Point market

If your into food and this end of the country this is a not to be missed Market . Every Thursday
With 43 wonderful stalls
http://www.mahonpointfarmersmarket.com/


At Frank Hederman Smoke house

http://www.frankhederman.com/

At the cheese Farm



Cutting the curds
Curds and whey


The Cliff House
Head Chef Martijn Kajuiter

http://www.thecliffhousehotel.com/dining.html


Kajuiter's kitchen and restaurant is acclaimed by guests and destination diners from Waterford and all over Ireland, uses only the finest of local ingredients. "I want to work with seasonal products from the Irish soil and sea





The Chefs table

cuba [faizal tahir]

RULES:
1. Put your iTunes, Windows Media Player, etc. on shuffle.
2. For each question, press the next button to get your answer.
3. YOU MUST WRITE THAT SONG NAME DOWN NO MATTER HOW SILLY IT SOUNDS.
4. Tag 25 friends.
5. Everyone tagged has to do the same thing.
6. Have Fun!

IF SOMEONE SAYS 'ARE YOU OKAY' YOU SAY?
tak mungkin kerna sayang [alyah]
- cam org sasau gile angau?

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF?
i can wait forever [simple plan]
- haha... setemmmpekkk dkt muke!

WHAT DO YOU LIKE IN A GUY/GIRL?
halo [beyonce]
- uish? maybe part nih "Baby, I can feel your halo..."

HOW DO YOU FEEL TODAY?
aku dan dirimu [BCL + Ari lasso]
- apakah? erm. no comment.

WHAT IS YOUR LIFE'S PURPOSE?
dengar bisikku [the rain]
- maka... tlg la dgr! plz plz plz. =P

WHAT'S YOUR MOTTO?
selalu mengalah [seventeen]
-Ya Allah... perli ke ape? hukkk...

WHAT DO YOUR FRIENDS THINK OF YOU?
fire burning on the dancefloor [sean kingston]
- haha...terima kasih. terima kasih!

WHAT DO YOUR PARENTS THINK OF YOU?
right round [flo-rida]
- ish3... mmg sah selalu peningkan kepala mama n abah~

WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT VERY OFTEN?
starstruck [lady gaga]
- huh? no laaaaa. haha...

WHAT IS 2 + 2?
womanizer [britney spears]
- owh la la~~~

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR BEST FRIEND?
superhuman [chris brown + keri hilson]
- gile gempak... betol betol betol!!! thanks!!! =]

WHAT IS YOUR LIFE STORY?
ternyata indah [estrella]
- huhu... sy bersyukur seadenye. eheh... mendlm mskd nih.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW UP?
terima kasih cinta [afgan]
- huuu... sy x kan jd kacang lupekan kulit!

WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU SEE THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
selalu setia [romance]
- hahahaha... x de lagu lain nak shuffle? XP

WHAT WILL YOU DANCE TO AT YOUR WEDDING?
disturbia [rihanna]
- wakakaka... the funniest! kene panggil tok imam ramai2...

WHAT WILL THEY PLAY AT YOUR FUNERAL?
cela [boneca]
-hukkk... mintak jauh~~~

WHAT IS YOUR HOBBY/INTEREST?
boom boom pow [BEP]
- a'ah...ye la tuh. roti boom~

WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST FEAR?
no surprise [daughtry]
- hikkk3... betul3!!! x bermakne je hidup nnt...

WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST SECRET?
dibius cinta [melly goeslow + yusri]
- hahahahah... abaikan~

WHAT DO YOU WANT RIGHT NOW?
single ladies (put a ring on it) [beyonce]
- hehehehe...elok lah tuh! betol3...

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR FRIENDS?
sampai syurga [faizal tahir]
- haaaaaaa... gile hebat teka~

WHAT WILL YOU POST THIS AS?
cuba [faizal tahir]
- sila cuba tag ni. tQ =P


Friday, June 5, 2009

Happy Doughnut Day

June 5

June 5 is apparently National Doughnut Day, and if I were really on the ball I would have alerted you sooner that participating Dunkin’ Donuts are handing out free doughnuts with the purchase of a drink.

Please note that I wrote “participating” stores. Dunkin’ Donuts is all franchised and it’s up to each franchisee whether to participate or not.

In other Dunkin’ news, the company just announced that Jeff Hager of Hoover, Ala., is the winner of its “Create Dunkin’s Next Donut” contest. His “Toffee for your Coffee” is a glazed sour cream cake doughnut topped with chopped Heath Bar.

Hager gets $12,000, and his creation will be available at Dunkin’ Donuts (participating ones, I imagine) this fall.

I asked Dunkin’ Donuts if they made up National Doughnut Day, but they said they didn’t. I wonder if it was Winchell’s.