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Showing posts from June, 2007

Fine Art Friday

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A Glass and a Pear by Jeff Hayes

Kao Mok Gai (a.k.a. Thai-Style Chicken Biriyani)

Or as we will be calling this in our household, Thai Chicken and Rice. This came from Saveur, who got it from "Nancie McDermott's seminal cookbook Real Thai." It was simple and delicious. I originally planned to make this over the weekend but when felled by a virus had to adapt plans for after work yesterday. I skipped the marinating time and didn't skin the chicken (no time!) ... it was simply wonderful. Step 1 1-1/2 tablespoon ground coriander 2 teaspoons ground cumin 1 teaspoon ground turmeric 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground white pepper (I used plain old black pepper) 6 shallots, roughly chopped 5 cloves garlic 1 5"-inch piece fresh peeled ginger, roughly chopped 1 teaspoon salt 1/3 cup water In a blender, combine all, puree to a paste. Step 2 6 skinless chicken thighs, halved crosswise through the bone (I used regular whole thighs) 6 skinless chicken drumsticks Toss chicken and spice paste together in a large bowl to coat. Cover with plastic

Now Serving Hot Links: The Recipes Edition

These recipes just sounded so good, I'm sending you round to see them for yourselves. Panang Curry Meatballs Simple Summer Pastas : this one made me think of a recipe I made just a couple of days ago. My family got it from a James Beard column in the paper I believe so it always was Beard's Tomato Pasta for us: Melt a stick of butter, crush 4 cloves of garlic and saute a bit, cut up 6 tomatoes into chunks and toss in the pan along with a few torn leaves of fresh basil. Heat until tomatoes are warmed through and then toss all with a pound of freshly cooked and drained spaghetti. Heavenly! Sichuan Classic Shredded Chicken with Garlic Sauce : the perfect recipe or so Barbara says and I believe her. Salmon Cakes with Cilantro Lime Mayonnaise

Pace Chicken Vegetable Salad

My mother picked this up either from a Pace Picante label or from their website . Either way, it is absolutely simple and simply delicious. It is especially nice to grill extra chicken on the weekend and then make this salad during the week. Step 1: 1 pound chicken breasts, grilled, diced 2 tomatoes, chopped 1 medium zucchini, quartered, sliced 1 cup frozen corn, defrosted 1 avocado, diced 1/2 cup green onions Combine all ingredients. Step 2: 1/2 cup Pace picante 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons cilantro, minced 1/2 teaspoons cumin Make Dressing: Combine all. Add to salad. Let set an hour, chilling. Serves 4. This is infinitely adaptable … try black beans, grilled steak, etc.

Fine Art Friday

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Jadeite & Cherries by James Neil Holligsworth

A True Artist Looks Only to Results, Not to Time Spent

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That explains why this baker is the artist that I never will be ... 4 hours of working with marzipan is something I never will do. Check out the post for upclose photos and a a link to a photo-tutorial. Simply amazing! Via Bill and Slashfood .

Fine Art Friday

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Via The Roving Medievalist

Summertime and the livin' ain't easy in ...

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Somehow I didn't get the premiere taped last week but Fox showed it before this week's episode and we caught up last night. Just a few things stand out so far: We have never seen any kitchen team get their service finished on the second evening of serving, much less finish the service for the other kitchen. We were so happy to see egotistical, backstabbing Tiffany leave. We couldn't believe that Rock didn't nominate Aaron. Was it that he was trying to eliminate possibly better competition? It seems that it would have been a kindness to send Aaron home. He really can't take any pressure at all. Gordon Ramsay showed a newer, softer side when dealing with building up Aaron. There's the hidden "management" side that a good leader must have. Know when to yell and know when to support. So far we are pulling for Rock, Julia, and Melissa. One of the guys said that when Ramsay is yelling he has wrinkles like a shar pei. Nope. We go with the English bulldog ...

Ratatouille ... Something for Foodies

Although the story line has its charms, the precisely rendered detail of a professional kitchen will appeal to the food-obsessed. The Pixar crew took cooking classes, ate at notable restaurants in Paris and worked alongside Mr. Keller at the French Laundry in Yountville, Calif. “As a former actor and dancer, I have spent a lot of time in restaurants, but I had no idea of that vast difference between France and America, and especially the three-star restaurants in Paris,” said Brad Lewis, the producer. ... Throughout the film, the characters work on dishes like steamed pike with butter, braised fennel and heirloom potatoes or grilled petit filet mignon with oxtail and baby onion ragout topped with truffled bordelaise and shaved Perigord truffle. The idea was to create food so authentic that people would leave the theater with an urge to cook and eat. But it turns out that computer-generated food can look much scarier than a computer-generated bug or car. “We didn’t want something to loo

Frito Pie, How Do We Love Thee? Let Us Count the Ways ...

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Photo source: Roadfood Back in 1932, a year generally regarded as the nadir of the Depression, a San Antonian named C.E. "Elmer" Doolin tasted a home-fried corn chip in a Mexican cafe. He was so intrigued by its taste that he paid $100 for the chip's recipe and the right to market it. Not that Mr. Doolin actually had $100 cash. He borrowed the money from his mama, Daisy Dean Doolin. Mrs. Doolin must have had an unshakable faith in her son, because she gave C.E. her diamond wedding ring to pawn for that $100 loan. What's more, she let him set up shop in her kitchen and mix batch after batch of corn dough, which was shaped into strips by extruding the dough through a converted potato ricer. And she fried innumerable strips of ground corn in hot vegetable oil while C.E. and his brother, Earl, experimented with perfecting the chips. One can only imagine how many hours she must have spent scrubbing oil splatters from the walls and floor. ... Dallas Morning News It is Frit

DMN's New Food Blog

Eats is off to a running start with where to pick blueberries near Dallas, restaurant news, and various other interesting posts. If you live in Dallas it definitely is worth checking out.

Fine Art Friday

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Kebap by Edward B. Gordon

Poetry Thursday

Oh, cinnamon toast So fragrant, crisp and golden Such a tasty snack Monkey

Let Me Tell You a Story ...

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A podcast featuring great authors and stories that should be better known. A little about the authors and their stories, with samples. Yep, that's right. It's the special, mystery project. You wanted to know what I sound like? Here's your chance. And that's Tom on the intro so you get a two-for-one deal here. You can download the file from Forgotten Classics or subscribe through iTunes .

Gimme a dip of Strawberry-Celery and ... ummm ... one of Sweet Corn and Italian Thorntree Honey

You may never take the kids to Paciugo for veggies. But, this summer, the Dallas-based gelateria is introducing a dozen new flavors that include stealth carrots and beets as well as creative adult combinations based on vegetables and herbs. For the kids, "sometimes we need to win with appearance first," owner Cristiana Ginatta says. You know: Kids order by color, not flavor. So Banana-Beet entices with its maroon hue, and Banana-Carrot is a cool cantaloupe orange. Like all of Paciugo's gelatos, the colors come from fruits and vegetables, not additives. Banana trumps, straight up and simple, in these kid-friendly flavors, with just a whisper of veggies. Not so the adult hybrids. Ms. Ginatta says she started searching for combinations with the most popular fruit flavors: strawberry, mango and banana. "Then, I looked for a vegetable to pair with these three," she says. Dallas Morning News (free registration required) Okaaaaaaay .... Actually some of the flavors do