not-grilled cheese sandwich

I learned something useful today when I put Kosciusko mustard on bread, added some thick slices of cheddar, and stuck the whole thing dry into the toaster oven for a double toasting. And that lesson is that such a sandwich comes out even crispier, and stays crunchy longer, than a sandwich grilled in butter. WIN!

also: Kosciusko mustard is very likely the most delicious mustard on earth. yum.

some tasty-sounding beef braise recipes

I wound up making the moroccan one last night, with some variations due to lack of ingredients, but these all sounded quite good as different options for flavoring braised cow:

boeuf a la mode (beef with onions)

moroccan-style braised beef

chipotle beef stew

beef and carrot stew with dark beer

carne deshebrada en salsa rojo (shredded beef in guajillo sauce, awesome in tacos)

C25K

I have been struggling to actually exercise lately, aside from dragging my butt to the weekly swing dances. There never seems to be time to ride the bike to the store, and words are insufficient to express how much I hate getting up early to work out before breakfast. So tallasiandude has been trying to gently nudge me in various ways, and to his endless credit none of those ways have made me want to smack him (no small task when it comes to the topic of exercising). And one of those nudges appears to have managed the impossible, and I am now undertaking to learn to run.

For now it is “running” rather than actually running, but it does seem to be working. It is Couch to 5K, which is deliberately constructed for people who think they hate running and never exercise. I don’t hate it, and it’s quite pleasant to go outside now that it’s warming up a little, and I am not *completely* couchbound. And the online program and accompanying podcasts are I think what tipped the balance, by making it absolutely braindead-easy to follow the program.

The idea is that you start out by walking for the most part, with very short bursts of jogging in between. This allows you to “run” without getting knee strain or side stitches or generally hating each and every step. 60 seconds of jogging is over before you know it. But even this would never have worked for me if I had to constantly check or set my watch to tell me when the various timeperiods were over, or had to memorize the plan for the week — not gonna happen. This is where the Podrunner podcasts come in.

These are electronica/dance music mixes with the correct BPM for the walking and the running portions, stitched together with little beepy tones that signal you to switch from walking to running and vice versa. No thinking necessary! Just zone out, listen to the innocuous oontsa-oontsa music, look at the flowers, and whenever it beeps, do the thing you’re not already doing. There’s not even any annoying person-voice giving the instructions, just impersonal tones so you can do your thing without any cheerleading.

This means that all I have to do in the morning is get dressed, put on sunscreen, find my iPod, and leave the house. No additional preparation or thinking is required, which is essential for the pre-food pre-caffeine hours. And it seems to be working, inasmuch as I am still doing it in week 2 and my legs ache a lot less when I get home.

No one hates (hated?) running more than I do, so I figure it can help all the rest of the haters find their way too.

mid-atlantic food tour

My parents just went on a road trip through PA and NJ and VA visiting old friends, and they brought back some treasures.

Snapper soup from Ponzio’s diner, drizzled with sherry: goopy and brown and savory and delicious, just the way I remember it from childhood. Apparently the diner we used to go to has changed hands and no longer makes the soup, but there’s a vaguely affiliated alternate location elsewhere, so disaster was averted.

Scrapples: Dietz & Watson, Hatfield, Ed Hipp’s (made of turkey not pork), and Habbersett. Habbersett was the traditional one we used to get, but surprisingly we found that to be the blandest and starchiest of the 4. The turkey scrapple was remarkably good, so pork-avoiders should seek out Mr. Hipp’s product and enjoy. I liked the Hatfield and the Dietz & Watson the best, as they were most flavorful. All of these 4 were milder and less liver-rific than others I have eaten, and even the tallasiandude liked these pretty well.

Taylor Pork Roll: Presliced thick or thin and ready to go. Comes in the best retro packaging ever; I really should make the extra effort to get a picture up. Pink and porky and full of nitrates and delicious when fried golden in a pan.

Lebanon bologna & sweet bologna: hard sausages, classic with a sweet or spicy mustard and a cracker. We love a smoky in-your-face Lebanon bologna, but the sweet bologna was a surprise hit.

dill pickle Route 11 chips: DUH.

peanut butter opera fudge balls: apparently a regional favorite. Soft and velvety centers with a slight peanutty flavor, dipped in chocolate. They are downright delicate, almost like the fudge is made with confectioner’s sugar.

souse: head cheese pickled in vinegar. Not bad, soft in texture, lightly spicy, and not too many gnarly bits. Good dipped in dijon mustard, but not especially compelling.

relish from Rutt’s Hut: yellow, smushy, slightly sweet & tangy cabbage-based relish. Spectacular with the Lebanon & sweet bolognas.

suspicions confirmed: Ryo airport food

Last night en route to a dancing weekend, our AirTran flight got delayed 2.5 hrs, and because of some last-minute chaos as we were leaving, we didn’t know this till we got to the airport and parked. Sigh. So the cost-saving measure of eating some dinner before leaving was blasted to smithereens, and we needed to eat some more… airport food. SIGH.

My usual tactic for this in terminal C of Logan is Currito, which is at least recognizably food, if not especially good food. But tallasiandude was feeling cravey and his disgruntled innards and emotional state took him to the asiany rice offerings of Ryo. We got one rice plate with “orange chicken” which looked like standard-issue crappy-chinese-restaurant General Gao’s chicken in the steam table, and we got another rice plate with beef teriyaki, which seemed like a good idea when the place presents itself as mostly Japanese and the teriyakis are cooked to order.

The orange chicken wasn’t terrible, I’ve definitely had worse. It still had a little crunch, and every 4th or 5th bite was detectably spicy, and there was nothing too gristly about the chicken. But when I opened the styrofoam clamshell to behold the beef teriyaki I just broke up laughing. Not that it was especially amusing to find a gravy-soup containing sauteed cabbage shreds and gray bits of the gnarliest beef (sorry, “beef”) I’ve seen in some time, but it hit me funny that anyone would imagine such a thing to be teriyaki. It was more like the chop suey I used to eat from the Kahula Chinese-Polynesian restaurant as a kid, with cabbage instead of celery and a bit more sugar in the gray gravy. Yipes.

We ate most of it, because we were hungry and it didn’t taste so bad you couldn’t eat it. But it did make me sad, and even sadder to remember that this is what most Americans get when they eat Asian food. We’re making big strides in our cities and some suburbs, and urbanites are getting more exposure to genuine cuisines, but if you don’t have that advantage, you mostly get this kind of stuff, sometimes better quality but under no circumstances the real thing. Sigh.

Lay’s brings its flavor-crystal expertise back home at last

At the supermarket the other day, and I mean the mega-Shaw’s where we go to buy our Miracle Whip and M&Ms, I was passing through the salty snack aisle. And lo, I beheld two new potato chip flavors that were NOT BORING — and even more importantly, were not self-importantly, yuppily “exotic.” (I’m looking at you, Kettle Chips.) Obviously they went straight into the cart.

Both were from Lay’s, which is known to have some of the best flavors going in their overseas markets, especially the UK.

One was Carolina Barbecue, with vinegar featured prominently on the illustration. This is one of my favorite all-time flavors from Utz, and though this one isn’t quite as spectacular, it is very good indeed. Tangy and savory and tastes like what it claims to be.

The other was Pepper Relish, which could have been anything, but turned out to be just what you’d hope: a sweet-tangy flavor with strong vegetal notes that taste just like a fresh pepper. I very much appreciate the simplicity of the name, instead of something overly poncy like Artisanal Garden Sweet-Tangolicious Pepper Madness.

I think the Pepper Relish is my favorite, surprisingly enough, but they are both excellent and you should run out and buy some right now, so Lay’s gets the right idea and keeps churning out more like this!

just like old times: FoodNerd and WineNerd loose in Chicago, part 2 – Moto

I have been meaning to go to Moto for ages, since before I left Chicago.  I would bike past it every day on the way to work, and it was reputed to be a molecular gastronomy place as spectactular as Alinea.  So when C turned up in Chicago at the same time as me, it was really the perfect opportunity.  I hadn’t eaten at anyplace even remotely like Alinea, and I very much wanted to know if it was the style of food itself that was so amazing or if it was Grant Achatz’s particular genius.

When we walked in for our 7pm reservation on a Wednesday evening, there was one other table of 2, and that was it.  For the entire evening.  Not another soul.  Yikes.

We did the 20 course tasting, and shared one wine pairing.  This set us back an unholy sum, and though I don’t regret our meal, I have to say that it’s not worth the price.  Save your nickels and go to Alinea instead.

For one thing, it is downright inconsiderate to serve 20 courses when each of them is the size of a normal high-end appetizer portion.  We were 5 or 6 courses from the end when we started to dread them, and we were so uncomfortably full when we were done.  I woke up the next morning still full.  Compare this with the many 1- and 2-bite courses in Alinea’s 24 course barrage, which left us sated but not even a little bit uncomfortable.

The wines offered were all interesting, and several were very good, but we didn’t love all the pairings, and found all the whites to be served much too cold.  C can fill you in on the wine specifics in the comments.  🙂

Here’s the course by course rundown:

Moto - menu

First, your Edible Menu.  Actually rather tasty: a crispy toast with the menu pasted on, plus a roasted garlic clove, some salted butter and a balsamic drizzle.  The cheesy presentation started here, unfortunately, in the “here’s the dazzle you’ve come for, rubes” tone in which they let you know the menu is food.

Instant Risotto – freeze dried rice and peas, with a hot liquidy sauce poured over to rehydrate, plus a bit of fried fish.  Tasty enough, but I didn’t love the texture of the peas.

Moto - instant risotto

French Onion Soup – a broiled smear of pureed bread and cheese on the side of the dish, a tangle of braised onions, and a tableside pour of broth.  Plus a handmade “funyun,” and I can’t lie, I love that kind of high-low irreverence.  A little weird scraping gummy toast-cheese off the side of the bowl, but again, tasty and I did enjoy this one.  However, this is one place where they really suffered from a direct comparison to Alinea: the spoon had a spiraled metal handle, which held a few sprigs of fresh thyme, in order to provide the scent of thyme to the diner while eating, similar to the olfactory components Alinea adds to some dishes — but the metal coil was awkward to hold, and was thick enough to keep your hand far enough off the herb that it couldn’t warm the thyme to release the scent, so instead of being clever and pleasurable it was mostly just annoying.

Moto - french onion soup

Urban Garden – here’s where the trompe l’oeil really kicked in: a tiny clay flowerpot arrived, filled with a dirt made from crispy brown balsamic-flavored breadcrumbs and topped with a scrap of edible paper trash and a “packing peanut” amid the microgreens sprouting in the dirt.  There were bits of heirloom tomato and mozzarella under the crumbs.  I enjoyed the crispy crumbs, and the presentation was mildly amusing (if perhaps with a little too much “oh we are witty, see how we are slumming” about it for my taste), but overall a mostly ordinary dish.

Moto - urban garden

Deconstructed French Fries – This one was awesome.  Teeny brunoise of cheese, bacon, and jalapeno confettied over a smear of potato and butter and sour cream puree, with a drizzle of french fry oil.  Again you had to kind of scrape it off the side of the dish, but it tasted perfectly of french fries and all the toppings, with a smooth, unctuous mouthfeel.  Completely compelling and freaking delicious.

Moto - "french fries"

Red Bull Paella Shooter – Essentially all the flavors of a paella chucked into a blender and turned into a thick soup.  Delicious and deeply savory but I wanted it just a bit looser, so half of it didn’t stay stuck to the shotglass. It was served from a Red Bull can direct at table into the shotglass for the full faux impress-the-rubes effect. They drilled a hole into the back of the can to drain it then fill with the soup, so they could pull the pop-top and everything. (The craft-project nerd in me totally digs that, and I wonder if the server had been less of a hipster poseur — or more convincingly theatrical — if I might have appreciated this more.)

Moto - paella shooter

Cuban Cigar – A cheapo ashtray with an extremely convincing half-smoked cigar ashed out in it.  The cigar wrapper was braised collard greens, and the filling was a pulled pork barbecue, with a red pepper sauce at the tip for glowing ash.  I forget what the gray ash was, I think maybe some crushed sesame.  Rich flavors that all worked together, and a clever conceit.  A little awkward to eat, and again with the slumming — I think my issue with it was that it was pervasive rather than an accent.  This dish would have been fine if it was the only low-rent joke in the bunch, in the way that a crude joke is funny when an otherwise sophisticated person tells it, but cringe-inducing when your lecherous drunken uncle tells 20 of them in a single evening.

Moto - "cuban cigar"

Rabbit Maki – Looks like I forgot to photograph this one.  Oops.  A loose rice roll with tender rabbit meat inside; we liked it, as I recall, and it was a well-balanced blend of Japanese and French but it ate a little messier than I’d hoped.

Pork Belly – Absolutely perfect preparation on the square of pork belly.  Crispy skin, softly rendered fat, tender moist meat.  The equal of any pork belly I’ve had in the Chinese restaurants of LA.  This one came with Vietnamese flavors, which worked really well with the pork, and were nicely balanced by the bitter broccoli rabe.  The trompe l’oeil mushroom was made from mushrooms turned into powder and reformed with the magic powder they use to make cornstarch packing peanuts, and was mostly pointless in terms of flavor even with the maitake ragu underneath it.

Moto - pork belly viet style

Reuben – An unnecessarily huge schmear of Russian dressing (let’s be real, if it’s there I am totally going to eat it), plus a wedge of a Reuben sandwich with lasagne pasta sheets instead of bread, and a dusting of dried dill flowers.  If I am remembering properly, a pickle-flavored potato chip is what’s leaning up against the wedge.  Delicious and rich, and a much better deployment of the slumming aesthetic.

Moto - Reuben lasagne

Umami Cappuccino – By this time I was tired of the trompe l’oeil gag, so I lost patience with this dish, a savory broth with edamame and something else I’ve forgotten, plus a pitcher of mushroom foam “cream” and a square of truffle butter “sugar.”  Too salty and a little disjointed, though truffle butter does make just about anything taste better.

Moto - "cappuccino"

Duck Cannoli – Yet more trompe l’oeil, but this was freaking delicious.  If they were all this masterfully orchestrated, I might not have lost my patience at all.  A rich duck shredded into a mole sauce, stuffed into a crispy shell and topped with crema and crushed peanuts.

Moto - duck mole "cannoli"

Crepes that are cheese – Ew.  For real, I have never been served anything this bad ever.  We took one bite of each item and sent the plates back.  The two on top are big blobs of mostly-raw crepe dough formed and dyed to look like two different types of cheese.  The one at bottom is a fried piece of cheese stuffed with marmalade to look like a crepe.  I still can’t believe they fucked that last one up so bad — I actually clapped my hands in glee when they told me what it was as they set the plate down, but the fried cheese had the texture and taste of plastic.  They should be ashamed to have their heads so far up their conceptual asses as to let this anywhere near a paying customer.

Moto - crepes that are cheese

Cereal & Milk – At least they made it up to me with the next dish.  Freeze-dried strawberry slices full of berry flavor and fluffy crispy cereal flakes, with a dry ice vanilla soy milk poured over the top.  It exploded in your mouth, literally, setting off little sparkly barrages on your tongue.  We giggled like little girls and loved it unreservedly.

Moto - cereal & milk!

Foie Gras Cupcake – A little weird but it worked.  A glistening bit of pan-seared foie gras with a foie-gras flavored mini-cupcake, berry reduction, and truffled milk.

Moto - foie gras cupcake

Unknown – They told us they brought this dish to make up for the horrible crepes.  I remember really enjoying this, but I completely forget what it was.  Damn me for not writing this up sooner.  I think there was a grapefruit involved.

Moto - i forget, doh!

Snow Balls – I forget this one too.  Crap!  C, help me out here?

Moto - snow ball

Cheese Burger – Yet more trompe l’oeil.  This time it’s a tiny 3-bite burger built completely out of sweet dessert ingredients.  Not that good and a little too sweet for me. Adorable presentation on a flanged white dish.

Moto - "cheese burger"

Acme Bomb – Self-explanatory.  I don’t remember this one either.  We were so full by this point, and tending to obsess over the minutiae of the wines instead.  The dessert wines were so badly matched to the sweet dishes it was absurd.  They were all nice wines, though.

Moto - Acme bomb

Truffle – Hey, guess what?  A trompe l’oeil dish!  Sigh.  A “whole truffle” made from chocolate mousse and cocoa and so forth.  Pleasant to eat.

Moto - "truffle"

Root Beer Float – Another fun one.  Tasty, spicy homemade root beer, with dry ice doing something or other, and a homemade marshmallow.  Light and refreshing, the right thing to have at this point in a very long, heavy meal.

Moto - root beer float

And then we were done.

The restaurant was empty, we had a forest of wine glasses in front of us (we were definitely causing the waitstaff some grief keeping all those glasses going at once, but it’s not like they had anything ELSE to do so we didn’t feel too bad), and we were full past the eyeballs.  It was really nice to have a long, extravagant, absurdly foodie meal with C again — I miss him and it was awesome to be able to hang out and bullshit for a few hours.

spaetzle semi-fail

Tallasiandude came home from the H-Mart with a big pack of meaty pork neck bones that cost all of $3.50. He figured I could come up with something cool to do with them. (This blind faith in my cookery is another reason why I love my husband.)

I decided that I wanted to cook them with sauerkraut, at least partially because the recipe in Craig Claiborne’s New New York Times Cookbook sounded both simple and delicious. So I did that yesterday, browning the meat off in bacon fat and smoked salt, and then putting in onions and garlic, then topping it with 4 pounds of fresh sauerkraut, 13 juniper berries, 2 cloves, 1/2 tsp caraway seeds, cracked pepper and a bay leaf, and setting it to stew with just over a cup of white vermouth and a can of chicken broth.

It came out yummy, and the house has smelled like kraut and pork since yesterday. My intention was to make some spaetzle to go with it, since there was another easy-sounding recipe in the same book. So today, when we had some guests over, I put the water on to boil and whipped up the recipe — 2 cups flour, 3 eggs, 2/3 cup milk, salt & nutmeg. But the batter was sticky and elastic, and would NOT go through the holes of the colander no matter what I did. So I scraped it back out, added about 50% again more milk, and tried again with marginally better luck: I could get the dough out of the holes, but only slowly and with great efforts.  After about an hour standing over the stove, with various helpers holding the colander or taking over completely, we did actually have enough spaetzle to eat, so we quit.  I cooked the rest of it in huge lumps later on, being unable to completely give up and throw out the rest of the dough.

I suspect that I should not have used the stand mixer. Too much beating made it elastic? But it said to beat continually, and did say something about an electric mixer as an option to the hand whisk. A hand whisk would have been a complete pain with the original dough, as thick as it was. Sigh. I wish I knew what went wrong for sure. They came out tasty enough, with the right texture and taste, but it just CANNOT be that hard. Yipes.