Food + Drink
I’m sorry, bitter melon, but I don’t think it’s going to work out between us. No, hush, just listen. I remember when I first saw you at the farmers market. You were so different from all the other vegetables, all rough around the edges. I admit I was afraid to approach you, and I had […]
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| Apologia, Bitter Melon, Midtown Farmers Market
As I was wracking my brain trying to come up with a Saint Patrick’s day post for this blog that wasn’t corned beef and cabbage – because I had to post something, right? – I kept coming back to bangers and mash. I’ve never been to the Emerald Isle, and while like many Americans I […]
4 comments
| Bangers, Britain, Cumberland, Cumbria, Ireland, Mash, Mashed Potatoes, Pork, Potatoes, Saint Patrick's Day, Sausage
In a world where many people don’t get enough to eat, the fact that Americans waste nearly half their food represents a moral failure. What’s more, with the economic crisis in this country family food budgets are stretched tighter than ever; American families can ill-afford to waste so much. A lot of this waste results […]
2 comments
| Appetizer, Chicken, Fried, Schmaltz, Skin, Snack
It’s safe to say that unless I hit the internet blogging jackpot and finally get to cash in on marthaandtom.com, I’m never going to own the recently-published Modernist Cuisine. $600 for a cookbook is just a little beyond this blogger’s budget. It’s a shame, because everything I’ve seen about the book (eGullet has some of […]
3 comments
| Lemon, Meyer Lemon, Modernist Cuisine, Pasta, Ravioli, Xanthan Gum
There are few things more satisfying on a cold winter’s evening than sitting down to a meal brought about by your own craft and ingenuity. When a morning spent tracking rabbits across the snowed-in woodlands yields a young hare to serve as the centerpiece to a meal, garnished by shallots from the root cellar, carefully […]
3 comments
| Bacon, Butter, Cornichons, Cream, French, Goat Cheese, Leeks, Local, Pickles, Rabbit, Seasonal, Shallots, Stew
Not three hours after Martha published the news yesterday that we had taken delivery of a winter-blues-banishing box of limes and Meyer lemons from the good people at FruitShare, we received an email from one of their marketing people thanking us for the post. Lest you think something untoward has taken place behind your innocent […]
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| Blogging, fettuccine, Italian, lemons, limes, Marketing, Meyer lemons, Pasta, Pesto
Last Wednesday night I hustled from a meeting near the Mississippi to Cooks of Crocus Hill in Edina before their 9 o’clock closure, refusing the freeway. Our tropical jewel fruit share had arrived. I had called the shop earlier to find out exactly how long I had to drop in and pick up the fruit and […]
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| Citrus, Cooks, cropshare, Fruit, fruitshare, Green, lemons, limes, Yellow
There are plenty of fast foods that you can make better at home: this burger will beat anything that ever crawled out from under any golden arches, or, if Taco Bell is your thing, you can easily beat the experience at home by cooking up a bowl of oatmeal and throwing it in a tortilla. […]
4 comments
| chickpeas, Egypt, Lentils, middle east, Pasta, Rice, Starch, vegan, vegetarian
Cookbooks have a life cycle: when a book is new, it’s exciting, it might get cover to cover, torn bits of paper sprouting up like so many shoots in the spring marking promising recipes. Then comes experimentation: making each of those recipes, seeing which work and which don’t. And finally – tragically – the third age […]
2 comments
| Cabbage, chickpeas, Chole, cookbooks, Curry, Indian
Besides being delicious, cooking a variety of cuisines is educational – you learn the quirks of the cuisine itself, and tricks and techniques from one cuisine can enhance the understanding of others. Take the fritter: practically every culture has its little fried ball of something, its croquette, pakora, hush puppy, etc. The methods for producing […]
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| falafel, Fritters, Indian, Judaism, Latkes, middle eastern, Ta'amiya