Archive for May, 2007

ot: family treasure

Monday, May 28th, 2007

yuppers, the memorial day holiday means crab cakes. real crab cakes, not nasty hockey-pucks stuffed with bread.

long-time readers will recall that this family treasure recipe is here.

i serve these with a nice backdrop of organic baby lettuces and mesclun, along with steamed tender french green beans. . .if your family contains a lot of seafood lovers, go ahead, steal my recipe.

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Original post by fortune

That’s A What

Monday, May 28th, 2007

Hosted the tasting group outdoors - practically no one could figure out what we were drinking - maybe it was the fresh air -

Duckhorn - Napa - Sauvignon Blanc - 2003 - medium body - (big for SB) - Chardonnay nose - both my guest and myself swore there was oak - no grass - richness - not one of these quickie SBs with a twist off cap -

Hitching Post - Pinot Noir - 2005 - my evening’s guest brought this one - no one pegged it as a Pinot - myself - the self professed Pinot fan included - plus this is the SIDEWAYS Pinot that “started” it all -

Gigondas - 2002 - old world - new world - we moved north in our guesses - but the blend - Grenache -

Syrah - Mourvèdre - kept most off the mark - this is a big - rich - red -

Rodney Strong - Reserve - Zin - 2002 - tasted exactly how I expected - lots of refined spice - screamed Zin - the rest of the group was more inclined to push it as a Cab or Petite Syrah - Zin was the last letter in the alphabet - even when revealed - still a certain disbelief - this is a very stately wine -



Inniskillin - Vidal - Sparkling Ice Wine - 2004 - the stumper of the evening - “that’s a what??” - one of our group was in Toronto - wandered into a liquor store - happened upon the ice wine shelf - or perhaps what should be referred to as “department” - ice wine upon ice wine upon ice wine - pulled this one - which elicited guess of everything except Ice Wine - because it was Sparkling - therefore it couldn’t be - (click on link to learn how they do it) - but it was - wonderful - you can never stop thinking outside the box - or you would miss one like this - thank you Eldon -

Original post by hb Herr

Lunch without conflict

Monday, May 28th, 2007

Toronto Star

Open just eight days now, the first Canadian (and second North American) outpost of an Israeli espresso bar chain is raising the culinary bar for coffee houses.

Aroma Espresso Bar, at Bloor and Bathurst, does an impressive job with its espresso-based drinks ($1.80 to $4).

More intriguing, though, is how it prepares 12 sandwiches ($7.80 to $8.80, prices lower for half), four salads

Original post by Robert

Profiteroles & Cream Puffs

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce
Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce

Shaping Profiteroles

Profiteroles - Shaping Choux Paste
Shaping Profiteroles – Pipe out Profiteroles using a ½-inch round nozzle or drop teaspoonfuls of pastry onto baking tray for each Profiterole.

Profiteroles - Shaping Choux Paste
Profiteroles – For piped pastry, dip your fingers into water and press down the pointed ends.

Profiteroles - Baked Choux Puffs
Baked Profiteroles.

Profiteroles - Filling Choux Puffs with Crème Chantilly
Filling Profiteroles with Crème Chantilly (Sweetened Whipped Cream).

Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce
Serve filled Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

For Choux Pastry recipe, please see Mini Raspberry Éclairs’ post.

Original post by SeaDragon

Profiteroles & Cream Puffs

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce
Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce

Shaping Profiteroles

Profiteroles - Shaping Choux Paste
Shaping Profiteroles – Pipe out Profiteroles using a ½-inch round nozzle or drop teaspoonfuls of pastry onto baking tray for each Profiterole.

Profiteroles - Shaping Choux Paste
Profiteroles – For piped pastry, dip your fingers into water and press down the pointed ends.

Profiteroles - Baked Choux Puffs
Baked Profiteroles.

Profiteroles - Filling Choux Puffs with Crème Chantilly
Filling Profiteroles with Crème Chantilly (Sweetened Whipped Cream).

Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce
Serve filled Profiteroles with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

Cream Puffs with Chocolate Sauce
Cream Puffs served with Chocolate Sauce.

For Choux Pastry recipe, please see Mini Raspberry Éclairs’ post.

Original post by SeaDragon

Re-Collecting Our Tribe

Sunday, May 27th, 2007
Palermo’s DNA Dungeon

The 1960’s had ended. The economy was going into a tailspin, the sexual revolution was shifting into second gear, a war was killing too many young people halfway across the world, and I landed in Sicily, looking for my roots.

My Aunt Vittina and Uncle Peppino thought it would be good to take me around and visit the relatives. They started with the dead ones. Under the busy streets of Palermo another world could be found, layered, like a Sicilian Cassata. The catacomb was a cool, dark place. It was more a descent into a forgotten family museum than a neglected morgue.

Down in the cellars, families would bring their picnic baskets and have a little lunch with their departed families, an escape from the blistering heat and humidity of July in urban Sicily. One family I know kept their wine there, for it remained cool and, by custom, untouched by strangers.

Here was an Andrea, there was a Concetta, he was a priest, she was a baroness. They all rested quietly now. I asked my aunt, “Why did you bring me here first?” and she replied, “Because if we are going back, this is where we start.”

We made the procession, up onto the street and past the storefront that had once been my great-grandfather’s wholesale leather business. It was from here that he sent a 15-year-old, my grandfather, to Fort Worth, Texas, in search of new sources of leather, expanding his empire to the New World. What a place Fort Worth must have been 100 years ago, with the stockyards full of cattle, sheep and pigs. How it must have seemed a world away from the busy streets of Sicily.

We went past the store to the market place, La Vucciria, for a sip of Marsala in the wine bar, casks of different types: dry, old, new, virgine, vecchio, tan, tawny and fine. My uncle handed me a cup of Fine Secco. It had a light amber taste that was sharp and refreshing. Aunt Vittina was picking up some swordfish and tomatoes for supper.

Over the meal, a few more relatives poured into the house, a two-level affair in a building off the Via Roma, in old Palermo. They were curious about the young “Americano” relative with shaggy hair and blue jeans, a rare sight in those days. Friendly and curious, they talked about my grandfather and grandmother, my father and Aunt Mary. “You should meet old Guzzetta. He has been around the world. He knows many of our relatives.” A card was handed to me by a cousin; Jorge Zito C. was printed on it. He lived in Venezuela and was visiting Palermo while I was there. There were reports of relatives in China, South America, Australia, Torino - more stories came about the tribe I was part of. “What about the Scaloras who moved to Texas?” someone asked. “Michelangelo moved somewhere between Dallas and Houston, with his family.” I wasn’t to learn about them until decades later.

Sometime after the Averna, around midnight, kinfolk started heading to bed.


The next week or so we carouseled around Sicily, visiting and photographing family and ruins. Temples and cities now lying in piles waiting for the archaeologists (and tourists) to eventually give meaning to the scattered remains of history. It wasn’t dead to me, for my uncle and aunt made it seem like part of my history. Though the family was spread across earth, understanding them seemed within my grasp. But it would become more of a mystery as I headed down into that dark labyrinth of the family over the next 40 years.

Meanwhile, the new seed had sprouted and a young lion appeared, clutching his grapes and heading out into the world. Once the cord was cut, the next generation was in play.
Wine and humanity travel upon parallel paths. We need similar conditions; we depend upon each other in a strange, exotic way. We improve one another but we don’t really need each other. Like the winemakers from southern Italy discovered (about the same time I found my family), there are strains of grapes (and families) that have been lost among the weeds and brush of history. But once uncovered, if given a little care, they can be resuscitated and brought back to a place of beauty and health. This is the story of grapes like Minedda janca and Grecanico, and families like Scalora and Plescia.

Just as each new generation embarks upon its path, a once-young boy also calls, from the past and the ruins, that our tribe, though scattered, isn’t hidden. And while, in the future, we may be able to go back farther than that day my aunt took me into catacombs, I am getting restless. I’m running out of time.

Original post by Italian Wine Guy®

why not new york?

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

the vermont economic progress council is encouraging green mountain coffee roasters inc. to expand with US$1.56 million in job creation incentives.”

congrats to long-time bccy pals gmcr!

but at the same time, i wonder why famed biz guy and billionaire mean mayor mike bloomberg is trying to discourage the coffee industry in nyc? as it is, nyc is losing its important light manufacturing base:

manufacturing, which lost 13,000 jobs between 2005 and 2006, was the only private industry to lose jobs over the year,” says this state report.

these are good jobs, solid blue collar jobs with health benefits not everyone can be a hedge fund manager, after all.

bloomberg should take a hint from liberal and eco-friendly vermont on this one.

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Original post by fortune

ot: lunch

Saturday, May 26th, 2007

i just fell in love with some italian cheeses i had today for lunch:

on jaiku we had a little discussion as to what would have been the best wine to match. . .anyway, i highly recommend the sottocenere and the raschera!

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Original post by fortune

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake

Before I delve into this Japanese-style sponge cake, let’s talk about eggs! One of the most important things to remember about baking sponge cakes, chiffon cakes or any other cakes, is that the eggs used must be at room temperature! If you use eggs straight from the refrigerator, the coldness of the eggs somehow creates problems resulting in undesired outcomes. So keep in mind this fact before you tackle this sponge or any other cake recipes in the future.
Other than that, another problem with sponge recipes is the size of the eggs used especially if the recipe called for more than 3 or 4 eggs which could ‘make or break’ a cake. Take this recipe for example, it called for 6 eggs but did not specified what sized eggs to use! As I understand, this recipe is from Alex Goh’s ‘烘出蛋糕香 Cakes’ book. Since I do not own this book, I don’t know if inside the book the author had specified the size of eggs he used. So I had to go along with the recipe as given. Now the problem was, looking at the recipe, the amount of flour used compared to the liquids (melted butter, milk and eggs) was very small. I immediately was cautious about whether the cake would stand up with so little flour to bind it together. I had vision of the cake rising like a soufflé in the oven and collapsing as soon as it was out of the oven! So the problem came down to the size of eggs. Say for example if the eggs used were small, 50g each, so 6 x 50g = 300g. However if a larger size was used (I standardize all my recipes using only 60g-egg, as is usual with most recipes published in Australia), 60g each, then 6 x 60g = 360g. Now you see, a difference of 60g, which is a lot! It is like adding an extra egg to the recipe! Or if it is the other way round then it is one egg less!
Therefore, as my first try in making this sponge cake, I had to be a bit caution and assume the recipe called for smaller eggs. (But then, I could be totally wrong and the recipe actually called for large eggs!) Being on the cautious side, with so little flour, a bit less liquid was the way to go for a first try. So by my calculation, if I was to use 60g-egg, as per all my recipes, I should only use 5 eggs, 5 x 60g = 300g! I re-calculated using this assumption, and using a smaller baking tray (my Swiss roll pan or lamington tray is 30cm x 25cm x 2cm, which is smaller than the one specified in the recipe) to make it.

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake

Now, back to the cake itself. When I first saw the recipe for this sponge cake, I was intrigued to say the least. Give it to the Japanese to come up with this new method of making sponge cake, but of course we already know they can make the wonderfully delicious sponge cake, the Castella Cake.
The method is almost like making soufflé, that is, cook the flour in hot liquid first to gelatinize the starch in the flour. If anyone is familiar with making Japanese styled soft bread using the ‘warm-dough’ method (湯種), you would see the similarity. This process allows the flour to absorb more liquid (at the same time break down the gluten) which will make a tender moist cake. Even though I was worried with the small amount of flour used (its proportion of flour to egg ratio was even less than that for chiffon cakes), the gelatinization method makes sense here in allowing the larger amount of liquid to be absorbed by the small amount of flour used. Because of this, and to minimize the shrinkage, it is also baked in a tray like a Swiss roll rather than in a cake tin. The texture turned out moist, soft and very spongy, and this method of making is also very quick. I used a simple butter cream to sandwich the cake and voila, here it is!

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake

Adapted from the recipe ‘日本棉花蛋糕‘ from the blog ‘蔡師奶’, Hong Kong. (‘Japanese Cotton Sponge Cake’ recipe originally by Alex Goh.)

Makes one 30cm x 25cm sheet cake.

[Ingredients]
50g butter
65g plain flour, sifted
65ml milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 eggs, separated
pinch (abt 1/8 tsp) salt
100g caster sugar, sifted
http://cafeoftheeast.blogspot.com/
[Preparation]
1. Preheat oven to 160°C. Grease a 30cm x 25cm x 2cm lamington/Swissroll tin (or baking tray) then line base with baking paper.
2. Melt butter in a saucepan over gentle heat. Once the butter is melted, turn off heat and add all the flour at once. Whisk quickly into a smooth paste.

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake - flour cooked in melted butter

3. Add milk and whisk until smooth.
4. Add egg yolks, vanilla and whisk again until smooth. Pour into a large mixing bowl and set aside.

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake - after adding milk & egg yolks

5. In another mixing bowl, whisk egg whites with pinch of salt until foamy with uniform tiny bubbles. Gradually beat in caster sugar, spoonful by spoonful, until firm and glossy but just under stiff peaks stage.
6. Fold 1/3 of the meringue into the yolk mixture. Repeat two more times with the rest of the meringue.
7. Pour batter into the prepared tin. Give the tin a tap on the bench to get rid of any large bubbles. Bake for about 20 minutes, or until top is light golden brown and firm.
8. Turn out onto a cooling rack and remove baking paper from the base. Turn the cake right side up to finish cooling.
9. Cut the cake into even halves vertically (or in three equal pieces to make three layers), then sandwich with your favourite filling.

Japanese Cottonsoft Sponge Cake

[Note]
1. Please note this recipe uses 1 standard cup of 250ml, 1 tablespoon of 20ml and 1 teaspoon of 5ml.
2. The size of egg used is about 60g (includes shell) unless otherwise stated.

Original post by SeaDragon

the tanah tinggi as espresso

Friday, May 25th, 2007

ho! i bet you all thought i′d never get around to jessica’s batdorf organic sumatra tanah tinggi as a single-origin espresso.

but of course i pulled 2 doubles of this morning on beautiful caesar vibiemme. this coffee’s very easy to work with; i scarcely had to adjust the mazzer mini beyond the usual arrow point.

espresso preparation seemed to concentrate the tobacco & and spice in this bean. and of course as a sumatra it displayed thick, bountiful crema and a heavy, buttery body that clung to the back of a demitasse spoon like thick turkey gravy.

all good.

on a side note, long-time readers may recall my love song to da vinci gourmet. i do like their sugar-free simple syrup, and when my husband wants a flavored latte, he always takes their white chocolate syrup.

so today i get one of these email marketing surveys from them. i go over, and it’s just an endless slog, page after page of endless questions with repetitive answers on a scale of 1 to 5.

i got tired of it fast, and frankly abandoned it. why don’t online marketers learn to make these things short and sweet?

so i wrote the marketing guy and told him why i gave up on him. and you know what?

he actually wrote me back, offering a free bottle of syrup if i’d finish the thing! wow - see there’s a reason to fall in love with da vinci again, after all!

ok ok, i’ll put it on my list for this holiday weekend. . .

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Original post by fortune