Towse: views from the hill

July 27, 2008

Neighborhood dinner

Filed under: food,life — Tags: , , — Towse @ 6:59 pm

And so it came to pass that we had our second annual neighborhood progressive dinner last night.

As usual, I skipped town — after offering my minimal help in designing the flyer and settling on dates (dinner scheduled for a week and a day after we got back) — and left the delivery of invites, acceptance of RSVPs, and scheduling to my charming co-conspirator, co-host and next-door neighbor.

We got back from Africa and I sent a note: Is dinner still on? Did we get enough RSVPs? Indeed it was. Indeed we did.

Some last minute re-shuffling of venues and a dinner we had. First stop, Napier Lane for kickoff and appetizers. Next stop our lane (and the charming next-door neighbors’) for appetizers. Then upstairs next-door for salads. Then here for tapas (goat-cheese-stuffed Anaheim peppers, chicken piccata empanadas, beef and pepita sauce empanadas from me and vegetable frittata from a Napier neighbor). Then back next door and yet another floor up for dessert and coffee.

Neighbors included a couple who is putting their San Francisco life on hold and heading to Malaysia for a few years, a neighbor I’d never met but whose apartment I’d wandered through on one of our open house Sundays a couple months back, a neighbor who has left her job to go back to school for a post-graduate degree, the neighbors who have the colossal re-model just uphill from us, others, and the chocolate guy.

The chocolate guy lives on Napier Filbert but, because his life is still in boxes, decided he couldn’t host and in lieu brought the desserts for the final gathering on the top floor next door. He had chocolate bars

 

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and two types of chocolate gelato (chocolate/cardamom ym!) and I went home the happy owner of a bag of chocolate nibs from his latest tonnage. My assignment: think up new ways of using chocolate nibs.

“add to salads” is already a known use.

I finally put the bag away this morning. I’d been nibbling out of hand during and after breakfast, over reading the Sunday papers. Nibbling out of hand is good enough for me.

Say, Timothy. Why not just sell nibs as a straight-to-the-vein snack for chocolate lovers who don’t want to wade through all the other ingredients needed to make a chocolate bar?

Tcho — the chocolate guy’s chocolate — is that good. Tcho is a San Francisco company, working out of Pier 17.

Buy online! but only if you think milk chocolate is not worth the paper it’s wrapped in and dark chocolate with chocolate content > 70% is the way to go.

April 24, 2008

Home again, home again, and wilted spinach salad and garlic bread for dinner

Filed under: food,life — Towse @ 6:19 pm

We got back from our flying visit to Obama country late Tuesday.

 

Posted by Picasa   (One of the reasons we visit Obama country. …)

Weather when we landed was spitting. (Oh, please give us more rain before the dry summer months kick in.)

We caught the Super Shuttle in from the airport. His nibs had signed and paid online (cheaper that way) before we left home. There were two other guys in the van before us and we wondered where we’d be taken on our way home. Super Shuttle is a fantastic random way to see parts of the City that we don’t usually see.

Both guys — turned out — lived in the Sunset, just a few blocks from each other. One was like at 26th and Noriega, the other at 27th and Judah, maybe?

After dropping the second guy off, the driver drove like a bat outta hell to get from the Sunset to Telegraph Hill, through the park, up Park Presidio to 101 to Lombard then over on Larkin and up Union, down Montgomery.

Home again, home again. Drop the bags on the floor. Pick up the mail that’s sitting where it fell after the mail carrier stuffed it through the door slot.

By now it was past 7:30p and our usual behavior would’ve been to walk down to Mario’s Bohemian Cigar Store and order a large carafe of cheap red wine and two orders of canneloni. Soul soothing food for tired people. Ymmm. But there was this drizz, see? and I was tired and … I can make dinner quicker than we could walk the four blocks down to Mario’s and wait for our order. Not to mention I didn’t feel like walking uphill home after dinner.

Dinner Tues

Preheat oven to 375dF or so. Set the rice cooker cooking rice. Fish from the freezer, thawed in the microwave. Place on aluminum foil. Sprinkle with mixed herbs. Squeeze half lemon on top. Wrap up and put in oven for 15min. (~$3)

Prep broccoli and put in microwave for 3min. (~$0.50)

Hmmm. Hmmm. Start sorting through mail. 15min up. Check fish. Put back in for another five minutes. Check broccoli. Zap for another minute. Rice is done. Fish is done. Broccoli is done. Dinner is served ~ twenty-five minutes after we decided not to walk down to Mario’s.

Cost: maybe $4 for the two of us. ($0.50 for broccoli. $0.20 for rice, maybe? $0.20 for lemon. $3 for fish. … Cheaper than Mario’s, that’s for sure.)

Dinner Wedn

Last night I just wanted something simple. Still lagging from the trip. His nibs had stopped off in Chinatown on his way back from his doctor’s appointment and stocked up on fresh veggies and fruit. What sounded good?

Hardboil two eggs. Well, three eggs, really. Save one for an egg salad sandwich Thursday or Friday. Peel and chop two eggs.

[How to boil an egg. Place egg in small pot. Cover with cold water. Place pot on burner. When water boils, turn off heat, put lid on pot and wait ten minutes. After ten minutes, pour hot water from pot and cool egg(s) by filling pot with cold water.]

Rinse bag of spinach from Chinatown. Shake dry. Put in large heat-proof bowl. Cost: $0.50

Toss chopped egg on top. Cost: $0.40 +/- for two eggs.

Take about 1/3 lb bacon and cut into small bits. Fry. Cost: ~$0.70 (bacon 4lbs/$8 @ Costco)

While waiting for bacon to crisp, slice a chunk of sour batard in half, butter, sprinkle with garlic herb sprinkle, put back together, butterside<->butterside, wrap in aluminum foil and heat in 400dF oven. Cost: ~$0.60

Take fried bacon bits out of frying pan and toss onto spinach in bowl. Pour off all but 3T of bacon fat. (Save remainder of bacon fat in refrigerator dish with bacon fat already saved there for another day. …)

Add 2T olive oil to bacon fat in frypan. Heat. Add 1/2 onion, chopped. Brown. Add ~ 3T balsamic vinegar and scrape up bits from bottom of frypan. Cost olive oil/onion/vinegar ~ $0.50

When hot through, pour onion/vinegar/fat over spinach/egg/bacon and toss. Serve with garlic bread.

Cost for tasty, nutritious (well, except for the bacon and bacon fat) dinner for two: $3, if that.

Home again, home again. Let’s take a boat to Bermuda. Let’s grab a plane to Saint Paul. Let’s take a kayak to Quincy or Nyack. Let’s get away from it all.

But it’s oh. so. nice. to come home.

April 13, 2008

Dinner last night – give me that old time sauce and sole

Filed under: food,life — Towse @ 2:35 am

Simple really.

We buy fish at Costco in big cheaper-by-the-pound lots and then divvy it up into 1/2lb. bags for the freezer.

Cost of fish ~$3.

1C of dry white wine. (Doesn’t need to be the pricey stuff, but at least make it something you’d drink out of a glass without spewing. Peter Vella Chardonnay out of the box we stash in the hall closet for just such uses.)

Chopped onion. I used maybe half an onion. (onion $0.39/lb in Chinatown)

Add wine and onion to saute pan and heat to boiling. Add fish. Cook until fish flakes easily with a fork. Take fish out of pan and put in a glass baking dish.

While the fish is cooking. Melt a cube [1/2C] of butter in a measuring cup in the microwave. Butter melted? Fish done and removed to baking dish? Good.

Boil down the wine and onion until reduced to about 1/3C. Add the hot wine/onion reduction to the melted butter in the measuring cup.

Separate two egg yolks.
(We used the egg whites in the scrambled eggs this morning. …)

Put two egg yolks in blender and whirl. You see where we’re going right? While the yolks are whirling, pour the wine/onion/melted-butter mix into the blender and whirl until it all thickens up. Call this a Hollandaise variant if you must.

Pour the sauce over the fish that’s in the baking dish. Sprinkle with a bit of shredded Parmesan cheese. On top of that, sprinkle a dusting of paprika.

Put under a broiler until the sauce browns lightly.

Served with rice and asparagus, which happens to be 99c/pound in Chinatown and local, not shipped in from Chile or some such place. We had about half a pound between us.

Total cost something like $4, maybe $4.50 for the two of us.

Delish. Hard on the arteries, but delish.

April 5, 2008

"Gordon Ramsay always advises his victims on Kitchen Nightmares to simplify, and it’s good advice."

Filed under: food,video — Towse @ 12:24 am

Ah, jeez.

I don’t watch TV. Period. None. Zip. Even if I did, I don’t think I get the Fox Network in the subset of available channels that comes with our barebones ($2.80/mo in addition to my computer connection) from Comcast.

After SG’s comment (see title of this post), I hied off to Google with a /kitchen nightmares gordon ramsay/ search.

First up: the Fox Kitchen Nightmares Web site. Entertaining little itty-bitty less-than-a-minute clips.

After some poking and prying around in YouTube, HotDiggity! a stash of episodes (which I have, with great reluctance, set aside until later. … His nibs doesn’t care to be forced to listen to YouTube clips I’m playing while he’s plunked in the chair of the desk face-to-face with me. … Later!)

Thanks, SG! I just caught up on the season finale of Project Runway yesterday and was wondering what I’d do … Gordon Ramsay it is!

April 4, 2008

Cookbooks as Anthropology and the art of cooking

Filed under: books,food,life — Towse @ 8:15 pm

comment on the cookbooks post:

Mainly, though, I don’t use cookbooks for meals any more. Everything we eat seems to be variations on about ten themes. Gordon Ramsay always advises his victims on Kitchen Nightmares to simplify, and it’s good advice.

Of course cookbooks are not only, or sometimes hardly at all, for cooking. From the pure book POV I love David, and Claudia Roden. I have a fat tome of classic techniques in Italian cooking by Antonio Bugialli, which is only for thumbing through.

We pretty much stopped cooking from cookbooks when the youngsters were in the house. No time for browsing through cookbooks when you are working and raising, and it’s disappointing to spend time prepping something that’s downed in ten minutes and appreciated just as much as if you’d made them their favorite meatloaf. We had dishes we knew they liked that we varied in one way or another but yeah, ten themes is probably accurate for our cooking repertoire then too.

I like cookbooks, whether I’m cooking from them or not. I sit and read them and I’m in another world, a world with cuttlefish on the table or an endless number of cabbage recipes, or no eggs-milk-butter. You can tell a lot about how people live by looking at the cookbooks written for them.

A friend once asked, “But really. How many cookbooks do you need?” What can I answer to something like that?

Cookbooks aren’t just something for checking out a recipe for mu-shu pork or Char Siu Bao or gingersnaps. No, when I need a recipe, it’s usually not a specific cookbook I head for. I pull out five cookbooks and find five recipes and mix them up, or I go to the Web and do something similar with Google.

Cookbooks are for dreaming over, for sitting curled up in a chair with a breeze coming in off the Bay with a pad of sticky notes, marking pages with possibilities for future dishes or snacks or desserts.

Dinner the other night (and last night as leftovers) was a variant on shrimp à la king, made without recipes. Simple, ready?

Olive oil. A small red onion. Garlic.
Bell pepper strips from Trader Joe’s, mélange à trois green/yellow/red: frozen. (16oz bag)
Medium-sized shrimp from Trader Joe’s: cleaned, cooked, frozen. (16oz? bag)

Butter. Flour. Heavy whipping cream.
Parmesan cheese. Pale dry sherry.

Olive oil in pan. Heat. Add garlic and sliced onion. Cook until browned. Add red-yellow-green pepper strips. Cook some more. Add shrimp and stir until shrimp is hot. Set aside.

Butter in pan. Add flour for roux. Add cream for Béchamel sauce. Toss in shredded Parmesan cheese and sherry and then fiddle with cream and cheese/sherry until you have a nice thick not-too-cheesy sauce. Grind of pepper. Stir sherry sauce into shrimp/pepper medley. Serve with rice.

Total cost ~ $10, if that. From that we had two dinners, or four meals. It was delicious.

Would I have known to toss those things together if I hadn’t already made seafood enchiladas =and= chicken with the sherry Parmesan sauce? Would I have tossed the melange à trois peppers with the shrimps if there hadn’t been a shrimp à la king in my past? I don’t know. I think, like many things, it’s easier to cook without recipes, once you have enough time booked using someone’s tried and true directions.

Natural cooks do not spring from Zeus’ brow.

Oh, how I love cookbooks.

Update: “So, what are you planning for dinner?”
“I dunno. Haven’t decided yet. Have any preferences?”
“I’d like meatloaf.”

Meatloaf for dinner tonight — “Cottage Cheese Meat Loaf,” to be exact.

from "the spillover effect" to the dance of knives: restaurants in San Francisco

Filed under: food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:24 pm

comment on the cookbooks post:

I love the spillover effect. Do you use double-sided tape?

I assume you mean the paper bits behind the picture of the younger younger guys?

Those bits are on a French board, or whatever you call it, that hangs over the edge of the counter. Had to hang over because if I gave it a 90deg turn, it wouldn’t fit under the upper shelf.

French board: padded board with criss-crossed ribbons that you tuck your bits of whatever under. Seems to me Sabrina had one where she kept her memorabilia and spent tickets and pictures and invitations and whatever.

The original plan — still in general play — was to use this board for restaurant business cards and menus for places we might want to return to. The cards would not only remind us of places we’d liked but also provide reservation # and address information.

Alas, as we’ve found, this town has thousands of restaurants and they are constantly changing chefs or closing or deciding they want to be small plates or deciding they want to change direction or …

Keeping business cards and/or menus doesn’t mean the restaurant will be the same or even in business should we decide we want to go again.

We try to keep up. Every Wednesday The Inside Scoop column in the Chron food section covers the who’s leaving, who’s arriving foodista gossip. Cortez on Geary (yummy food) just sold. New owner says food and chef will stay the same. Sure. Michelle Mah (formerly of Ponzu) will be the chef at Midi, which is taking over the Perry’s space on Sutter. Bruno Viscovi has sold Albona Ristorante Istriano to his nephew and the chef who’s been there ten years. Nothing will change. Sure the food won’t change, but you won’t have Bruno going over the menu with you in caring detail, telling you exactly how the soup was prepared and which vegetables go in the beef stock. sigh. Shuna Lydon left Sens before we had a chance to taste her desserts. Scott Howard closed recently. A loss.

And the knives dance. ‘Round and ’round we go.

April 3, 2008

The Best Cookbooks

Filed under: books,food,life,photographs — Towse @ 10:46 pm

Mark Bitten is asking for help updating his “50 Cookbooks I’d Rather Not Live Without” cookbooks list.

417 comments so far.

I don’t know what I’d do if I had to choose my fifty favorite cookbooks. I have bookcases filled with cookbooks elsewhere and maybe a foot-plus of cookbooks above the bar sink here. Are the cookbooks here the ones I’d rather not live without? Are there fifty of them?

On the shelf above the bar sink:
[* means that this blog post accomplished its purpose of making me think about the cookbooks I have here and I'm taking this book elsewhere and freeing up some shelf room ...]

  • The Microwave Guide and Cookbook (no author given) *

  • Eliason, Harward, Westover – Make-A-Mix Cookery – a classic used constantly while raising my family. I still pull it out to make cream cheese swirls, a coffee roll with cream cheese filling sort of like a cheese Danish, which I make for Easter brunch and other special occasions.
  • More Make-A-Mix Cookery … vol 2. of the classic
  • Sunset Chinese Cook Book – this book falls open to the kung pao chicken recipe page, now stained and splattered and no longer attached to the binding it’s been used so much
  • Sunset Cooking Bold & Fearless: a cook book for men *
  • Sunset Cook Book of Favorite Recipes *
  • Betty Crocker’s Bisquick Cookbook * – used constantly while raising kids. I’d make the biscuit mix from Make-A-Mix Cookery and use the Bisquick recipes from this book
  • Shinojima – Authentic Japanese Cuisine for Beginners – picked up on our trip to Japan last year. [or not. When I was going through it, I noticed the price information on the back was in $$$. Picked up where, then?] I need to sit down with it to see if it deserves to be kept in the limited space here. [Made the cut. Keeping here.]
  • Mabel C. Lai – Chinese Cuisine Made Easy – “Hot & Spicy Soup” (p32) ’nuff said. I always need to check how many golden needles, wooden ears and bamboo shoots the recipe takes. Gee, I haven’t made the soup in a long time. Need to get some fresh tofu and check the cupboards for golden needles, wooden ears and bamboo shoots. The “Ginger Broccoli Beef” recipe is exceptional too.
  • Ranck, Good – Fix-It and Forget-It Cookbook: feasting with your slow cooker – another classic.
  • Shirley – Wonderful ways to prepare chicken – bought for $1.95 at some Gemco/KMart-like store more years ago than I can remember. (c1979). “Piquant Chicken” (made with honey, lemon juice and ginger) is a favorite. “Chicken Diva” (with a sherry-Parmesan white sauce and broccoli) is another. “Sherry Creamed Chicken.” Maybe chicken tonight. Hm.
  • Sunset Recipes for Ground Beef – falls open to the splattered page showing “Cottage Cheese Meat Loaf.” The recipe not only includes cottage cheese but also uses rolled oats instead of bread cubes. Delish. When the young ones were MUCH younger, I’d cook the meatloaf with carrots, beans and/or peas mixed in as the accompanying vegetable. I tend not to look at the other recipes for meatloaf (24 variations …) but say, “Almond Studded Curry Loaf” using Major Grey’s chutney sounds not half bad. Am I in a rut?
  • Killeen – 101 Secrets of Gourmet Chefs: unusual recipes from great California restaurants *
  • Goldstein – From Our House to Yours: comfort food to give and share – provenance unknown. I need to sit down with this one. I really liked Joyce Goldstein’s cooking at Square One decades back and enjoy her articles in the Chron food section. [Made the cut. Keeping here.]
  • Duchess of Devonshire – Chatsworth Cookery Book. Signed. Picked this book up when we were back visiting the relatives last fall. Need to sit down with this book too. Should it be taking up space here? [Made the cut. Keeping here.]
  • America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook – a new classic. I love this stuff.
  • Rombauer, Becker – Joy of Cooking. ’nuff said. I love the nitty gritty detail but don’t much love the “see White Sauce 111, 341″ and “Please read About Doughnuts, 244″ sorts of forward and back references in practically every recipe. Still. If you’ve never quite got the hang of preparing sweetbreads, the Rombauer clan will set you straight. Superb indexing.
  • The Best of Bon Appetit (1979) – Ginger Cream Chicken (p69) (madeira, ginger, chopped up candied ginger, cream — what’s not to like?)
  • Cooking Light 5 Ingredient 15 Minute Cookbook – Goodwill purchase. I don’t know if I’ve ever cooked from this book. I need to sit down with this book.
  • America’s Best Lost Recipes – I adore Christopher Kimball and his crew at Cook’s Magazine and America’s Test Kitchen and all the affiliated incarnations.
  • Betty Crocker’s Cookbook – the classic. The cookbook I used most after I moved out on my own. Splattered. Marked. Oooh. Here’s a piece of folded paper with a recipe for “Rasa Malaysia Portuguese Egg Tarts” Those were exceptionally tasty. BCC is my go-to book when I can’t remember how long to cook a roast because it’s been so long since we had one.
  • The Silver Spoon from Phaidon Press. 1263pp. Can’t remember where this one came from either, but like the America’s Test Kitchen books, it’s just a fun read. Perch: four recipes. Octopus: six recipes Catfish and tench: four recipes. Cuttlefish: six recipes. How can you not like a cookbook with recipes for “Heart Kabobs” and “Cream of Fennel Soup with Smoked Salmon”?
  • Eichelbaum – Cooking for Heart & Soul: 100 delicious lowfat recipes from San Francisco’s top chefs * a cookbook to benefit the San Francisco Food Bank – this was a prize from a drawing at a Food Bank event. I need to sit down with this one. [Made the cut. Keeping here.]
  • Bon Appetit – Too Busy to Cook? Also kept (it seems … page falls open) for the Ginger Cream Chicken recipe. That is one delicious recipe. I make it these days with boneless, skinless chicken thighs instead of chicken breasts, but then I make most of my chicken recipes with thighs instead of breasts. I don’t hack up whole chickens like I did back when now that there are only two of us to feed so we have neither chicken breasts nor chicken livers as much as we did then. A large bag of chicken thighs from Costco is in the freezer and we take what we need for whatever we’re cooking. Buy a new bag when the current bag is getting near gone.
  • seven different editions of the Presto pressure cooker recipe book and a Wards Cooker (pressure cooker) recipe book from 1947 and a Wards Magic Seal Pressure Saucepan recipe book. How many books do I need to look up how long to cook artichokes or beets or pot roast in a pressure cooker? I think I need to re-think this stash.
  • Royal Cook Book (from the Royal Baking Powder Co)(1925) – classics like “Eggless, Milkless, Butterless Cake” “Lady Baltimore Cake” “Royal Sponge Cake” but also a bunch of recipes that don’t use baking powder at all. I’m assuming the Royal Baking Powder company wanted a free giveaway that the fickle homemaker would hold on to, that would keep their name front and center even if she didn’t =yet= use their baking powder..
  • Recipe Finder Index – a critical item back in the days before I could find a recipe for just about anything on the Web. Once the number of cookbooks in the house reached a certain point, there were times when I was all,”Oh, I’d like to make that sausage pie thing with spinach and basil again but which cookbook has the recipe?” The Finder Index is broken into categories (Appetizers & Snacks, Beverages, Desserts — Pies). Space for recipe name, source & page#, date tried, and notes. I’d forgotten about most of these: “Nanking Liver” from the New Poor Poet Cookbook, “German style Kidneys” from Sunset Cooking with Wine, “Migg’s Fish” from the Southern Junior League Cookbook, “Sherried Chicken Livers” from Sumptuous Indulgence on a Shoestring.
  • Law – Pacific Light Cooking. Another Goodwill purchase. Need to look at this one.
  • Child, Bertholle, Beck – Mastering the Art of French Cooking. A classic. I have no idea why it falls open to the section with onion recipes. Looks like something spilt there once upon a time. Heavily stained page: “Navarin Printanier” [Lamb Stew with Spring Vegetables] I love this cookbook for its sense and its recipes and the way they laid out the pages. Its sequel is over with the other cookbooks,as is Simca’s Cuisine and two and a half shelves of books on French cooking: Beck, Child, Pepin, others.
  • Dailey – The Best Pressure Cookbook Ever – so why all the Presto recipe books? Oh, look! There’s yet another Presto recipe book inside! That settles it. The batch listed earlier is going elsewhere.
  • McLaren – Pan-Pacific Cook Book: savory bits from the world’s fare (1915) e.g. #63 Tchi – a Russian national soup. “Chop fine half of a small cabbage and a large onion and fry in dripping for a few moments; stir in two tablespoons of flour. Cook for three minutes, then add slowly two quarts of beef stock. Simmer for half an hour, add a few forcemeat or sausage balls and a wineglass of white wine. Simmer twenty minutes more and serve.” Fun. His nibs’ great great aunt was involved with committee work for the 1915 Fair so we pick up books and whatever we can find about it, if they can be had for a reasonable price. This cookbook was $15.
  • The Daily Echo (Halifax) – Good Housekeeping Everyday Cook Book. Very beat up. Of uncertain age. Falling to bits. First six pages gone, which is probably where the date information was. Recipes provided by the Daily Echo, plus handwritten recipes inside in various hands and pasted-in recipes cut from papers or magazines. A look into the past.
  • Small-ish book with many pages, separated by alpha dividers. May have been intended as an address book but used instead for recipes. Recipes written in different hands. Provenance? Recipes assigned to letters higgly-piggly. “Pots de creme” recipe under “P” and a different “Pot de Creme” recipe under “D” for “dessert” Also under “D” “Iced Tea” … “drinks,” I suppose. Also in “D” “Daiquiri” with a note, “Edie, Ethel and Emily liked”
  • Robertson, Flinders, Godfrey – Laurel’s Kitchen. (1976). This book was my second go-to book after Betty Crocker. Vegetarian. The younger ones consider “Chillaquillas” (or ChileeKillees, as we called them) comfort food. Cheap, tasty, good.
  • Ayer y Hoy de la Cocina Navarra – with a handy dandy translation of the recipes into English. A goodie gift from the Kingdom of Navarra during a meet the winemakers of Navarre event. I need to check out the recipes. This book probably belongs elsewhere.

    and last but not least

  • Stewart – The Martha Stewart Living Cookbook. 1200 recipes. Tasty.

What does that add up to? Thirty-plus. I’ll weed through the ones I set aside and take them elsewhere, opening up space for other cookbooks I’d be happier to have close by. For now, here’s what the shelves above the bar sink look like.

 

 
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January 24, 2008

Five in the fridge, tagged by Paula

Filed under: food,life — Towse @ 5:41 pm

Five in the fridge. Tagged by Paula.

We ate out last night: winemaker’s dinner at Spruce Restaurant on Sacramento. Walked down to Sansome. Caught the 10 to Sacramento. Caught the 1 California at Sacramento and rode allz the way to California and Spruce. Walked up Spruce a block, hung a right. Spruce Restaurant is between Locust and Spruce on Sacramento. Took us forty minutes door-to-door, which made us half an hour early. We hung out in the bar.

Dinner was delish. Klaus-Peter Keller was in America for the first time. He provided eight different German wines. Dade Thieriot (of DeeVine wines, which was sponsoring Keller and the dinner) brought two old Rieslings from his cellar. Well, more about all that later. So. No dinner at home last night.

Dinner on Tuesday was at La Trappe (corner of Columbus and Greenwich) because I had a hankering for their moules frites and they aren’t open on Mondays so I had to wait. Moules. Frites. Koningshoeven La Trappe Quadrupel. Probably more about that later too. So. No dinner at home since Monday.

Here’s the fridge (after that long explanation)

Messy, eh? The instant coffee in the back is for a frequent guest. Lots of leftovers. We had dinner guests on Saturday. And bits and pieces from other meals which, when the stars align, come together for another meal. Not tonight, though. Tonight is Good Eats and Zinfandel with ZAP over at Fort Mason.

Here, front and center, though, is evidence of my split personality. [1] Trader Joe’s Heavy Whipping Cream. The best when you’re making scrambled eggs or omelets.

Two shelves down? Trader Joe’s 1% milk, which I put in my mug of espresso, which I drink as I’m eating the fat-laden eggs. Cheese on the eggs too, did I mention? Sometimes bacon too. Oh, noze! Oh, yesss!

… on the mornings I’m not having oatmeal (real oatmeal, the kind you cook on the stove and let sit for three minutes to firm up) with raisins and 1% milk.

[2] Here’s the 1% milk I mentioned. The yellow dish has bacon fat from bacon cooked for something and saved. Sometimes I fry the potato skin from the night before’s baked potato in bacon fat and serve with egg for breakfast. The red dish right behind it has duck fat for similar fattery. The 1% milk, though, is good for me.

The bottled water in the back has been there for months. We’re tap-water people. San Francisco’s public water comes straight from the Sierras. That’s why we dammed up Hetch Hetchy back a hundred years or so after all. Might as well drink the water. The dam’s not coming down.

The Trader Joe’s grapefruit juice is for the days his nibs has to leave for work at 7:10A and doesn’t have time for a leisurely breakfast and his usual grapefruit dismantling.

[3] Fish sauce, just soze you know we’re Californians.

[4] Salumi from Boccalone. Don’t know if I mentioned that the older younger guy and his partner gave his nibs a 3-month subscription to Boccalone’s Tasty Salted Pig Parts club. We go by 2d and 4th Saturdays of the month and pick up a small box with TSPPs. This Saturday we’re due for more and we haven’t finished the last. (Evidence above.)

And so good for you! Chris Cosentino (he of Incanto Restaurant, where we pick the box up, and Boccalone and, of course, Offal Good) tells us that pork is the new vegetable.

Not Paula’s idea of terrific, I think, but there you go.

[5] Top shelf needs restocking. Currently one bottle of Sauvignon Blanc and one of Chardonnay. Room for three more bottles. Next shelf again shows our Trader Joe’s dependence. Eggs. Sour cream. Cottage cheese. Crumbled bleu cheese. Also non-TJ cut onion, cut lemon, some other cheese (bleu variety).

The lower drawers are filled with veggies from Chinatown and mixed greens from Costco. The freezer is filled with frozen stuff. A pint of coffee ice cream takes about three months to get through. By the end it’s crystally and only good for putting in the morning espresso.

Oh, and for those who wonder, yes, there are a lot of zip-lock bags in that fridge. We wash and reuse the zip-lock bags, unless they’ve been used for holding meats, so we’re not quite as dismissive of “where do plastics come from, eh?” as it may seem.

And that’s the refrigerator of Sal and five things therein.

Next!

January 15, 2008

Looking very grumpy …

Filed under: culture,food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:04 am

Went to a Vintners’ Club event at the Bankers’ Club on 08Jan. … a pinot tasting.

Interesting!

We went because his nibs lurves pinot noir and because David Bruce was going to speak.

One of his nibs’ students at UCSB (who grew up just a stone skip from the bucolic ville we used to call home) is someone with whom we still hang out and whose ballpark tickets HipLiz sometimes buys.

This guy, as a teenager, spent his weekends at his dermatologist’s Santa Cruz mountains home (dermatologist being Dr. David), digging dirt to plant the vines that became David Bruce’s foray into pinot making.

Here’s me looking very grumpy … ah… focussed.

Look at those glasses! We had twelve pinot noirs to taste. They were lined up and poured before we came in: six up, six down.

I am such a naïf. I could say, “Here are my top three. Here is my least favorite.”

Ask me to rate the intermediate eight wines, given forty-five minutes?

No can do.

But we had fun. …

Each person (who wanted) sent in their scores.

Each table put together their tasting notes.

The guy clockwise plus one was the winemaker for one of the wines being tasted (Domaine Chandon Reserve. Russian River Valley) and served as table chair.

I’d rated his wine [2] but the accumulated crowd wasn’t so generous.

The experience was interesting. What was really interesting was looking at the accumulated scores. Here’s a top scorer: five people rated it #1; five people rated it #2; six people rated it #12.

Whah?

It really is all about what you like in a wine.

Really!

So for the Vintners’ Club events, you rate the wines you’re tasting with no regard to what your spouse, best friend or most erudite wine snob might think.

Then you go ’round the table and seat#2 says, “This was my favorite wine because …” and everyone else goes round and says “Well … this is what I thought of the wine …”

Next person (seat #3) says, “This was my favorite wine because …” (or my least favorite wine or my second favorite wine because someone else already mentioned my favorite wine.) …

… until all the twelve wines have been discussed.

David Bruce (the gentleman on the left in the photo)… scored highest when the overall wine scores were totted up, and well he should.

We had a splendid time.

Afterwards, we said farewell to the amazing views from the Bankers Club and said farewell to our co-conspirators and headed up hill and home, stopping off at Boccadillos on Montgomery for some tasty pig parts before we walked the rest of the way … home

December 9, 2007

Welcome to FoodieBytes – eat something new

Filed under: food,San Francisco,URL — Towse @ 1:12 am

Welcome to FoodieBytes – eat something new

Choose your city (Boston, Chicago, New York, San Francisco, DC) and fill in “what” you are looking to eat.

Choose “San Francisco”
Enter: foie gras

Read entries for 142 (mas o menos) restaurants that serve foie gras in San Francisco (mostly, found one listed in Larkspur). Some restaurants are listed multiple times for multiple items on the menu. Brief (lunch, appetizer, &c.) indication of where on the menu, brief detail (“with stone fruit mostarda and cornbread”) and a click to View Menu.

Don’t know how current the menus are as the listings included an entry for Monte Cristo which died a while back.

[via Eater SF]

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