Category: Food

Even More Baltimore Crabs

In what looks set to become an annual tradition, Peter and I attended the St. Francis of Assisi Crab Feast in Baltimore again this year. Karine, ever willing to pull an ocean crustacean limb from limb, came along.

For our benefit–Peter and I were out of practice, and Karine was new to the sport–Curtis demonstrated his masterful crab-picking skills:

Notice how he moves so fast at some points that our video camera could just not keep up. For every crab I ate, Curtis probably had three or four. And by the time Karine and I were kind of getting the hang of it, we were already full. I should’ve worn an elastic waistband–what was I thinking?

Otherwise, it was a highly successful day. We didn’t win any peach schnapps in the liquor raffle, but Sandy gave me her mums she’d scored (that’s Sandy buying her raffle tickets in the video in the beginning), and I was almost moved to do the chicken dance. Afterward, Peter got schooled in Dance Dance Revolution by Curtis’s daughter, even though she’d spent the day waiting tables at the crab feast and Peter had just spent it sitting down. We capped it off with some $1.50 Natty Bohs in the kind of dive bar that just doesn’t exist in NYC. Oh, Baltimore.

(Read the account of last year’s feast here.)

Mange du Kebab

I think I’m in love.

I know it sounds silly, but I’m a sucker for French rap. Especially goofy French rap from the counter of a kebab joint! (For those who may not be instantly charmed by a Turkish guy dressed in kitchen whites and wielding a sharp knife, I’ll point out that there are also some adorable French girls featured in the video.)

Lil’Maaz is a Turkish guy (real name: Yilmaz Karaman) who has been rapping his way through his job at a kebab place in Paris, and some customers helped him produce the single and the video. Good article here (the Independent via Syria Comment; scroll down), avec a little translation.

The Tyranny of Christopher Kimball

It seems like every time I click over to the Cook’s Illustrated website, the whole operation has gotten even more oppressive.

Don’t get me wrong–Cook’s Illustrated was an essential tool in my learning how to cook, and I suppose it is still helping many people out there. By “perfecting” only known and classic recipes, however, it had a built-in lifespan, and I’m not sure how the editors are managing today. I know they lost me when they had the recipe for school-lunch-style tacos about five years ago.

And now, maybe because I’ve shaken myself free, it appears to have gone from just geeky and twee (cute bow tie!) to downright evil.

The website livened up with a big splash photo of CI minions hard at work in “America’s Test Kitchen.” Unfortunately, everyone looks like they’re about to slit their wrists. This may be because Christopher Kimball is a pompous ass, and also that cutting things into tiny, tiny pieces all day, and then cooking the same recipe over and over and over is the closest thing to hell on earth.

Don’t you agree?
liz
Assistant equipment editor Liz Bomze tosses beef while testing pans to determine which is best for stir-frying.

The quiet desperation.
charles
Test cook Charles Kelsey calculates how to best position sauteed pears to maximize caramelization.

The tyrant himself:
ribs
While filming the next season of America’s Test Kitchen, Bridget Lancaster and Christopher Kimball debate just how much magic is needed for perfect Kansas City Ribs.

A lot of magic, people. A lot would be needed to reel me back in to the maddening world of Herr Kimball.

Tap Water–OMG, You Can Drink It!

I was at my office job the other day, filling up my cup from the tap. An impressionable young intern walked into the kitchen and gasped. “You can drink that?!” she asked.

Oh dear.

Here’s a sensible op-ed in the NY Times on the subject.

It’s basically the polite version of what I would write here, except the ever-succinct Gwyneth Doland beat me to it, in an essay that begins, “Buying bottled water is completely retarded. (Well, not retarded because using retarded in that context is totally gay.)”

I personally am so grateful to live in a country where the tap water doesn’t make your GI tract collapse and your eyes swell up that I drink it every chance I get. We Americans are lucky people, and I don’t think it’s totally gay to say that.

Formative Dinner Parties

The other night I realized that the guy who runs a blog about Syria that I read frequently is actually the very same person I maintained an eight-hour-crush on at a dinner party in London in 1995. He had long, curly red hair then, and knew about the Middle East, which was part of the reason for the crush.

The other reason for the crush was the party itself, which still stands out in my mind as a model for a brilliant night at home. I don’t remember the food, except for the fact that the blowsy British hostess was cheerfully serving us canned Tesco tomato soup, and she got so drunk that she actually fell down in the kitchen while she was doing it. Actually, I suppose I’ve conflated those memories, because what was nice about the dinner was the slow pace–the hostess got up to cook the next course only when we were done with the current one. So I guess she probably fell down while she was fixing dessert? A technicality.

Falling down drunk and canned soup are horrific dinner-party no-nos in the US, and I do try to avoid them myself. But when I feel myself getting a little too uptight about cooking dinner for people, I actively remind myself about this particular British dinner, which was so much more about a bunch of grad students sitting around bullshitting by candlelight and drinking wine until our teeth were deadly gray than it was about the tastiness of the food.

An even earlier formative dinner party came when I was just a sophomore in college, and my not-really-anymore-because-he’d-graduated-boyfriend invited me to NYC to spend the weekend at his friends’ apartment in Brooklyn with him. This was in 1991, before a lot of people had gotten used to saying “Hoyt-Schermerhorn” out loud. I took the train up with another not-yet-graduated friend of the larger crew, and followed her off the subway, down the shady block in Boerum Hill and up the winding staircase in the old brownstone. Dinner was delicious and eaten in a cramped dining room with a happily-reunited crowd packed around a tiny table–as the youngest and most peripheral of the bunch, I felt lucky to be there.

I still make the salad we had that night, with slices of red pepper and dried currants, and it still makes me think I’m adventurous and grown-up. Never mind that the next day was technically a reversion to college–White Castle hamburgers while watching Dune, the movie–we also consoled my not-anymore-boyfriend about his car getting broken into, and that felt edgy and grown-up.

Truth be told, the really formative dinner parties were the ones my parents had, which were exactly the same kind of thing. Candles would melt down into waxy pools on the table, the grown-ups would starting talking extra loud, and I do remember one person falling down, while carrying about twenty plates–not easy to forget. And the food was always special in some way.

But I couldn’t just spring into the world and do exactly what my parents did. Everybody knows that would be totally lame. I had to follow in the footsteps of people just slightly older–and a lot cooler–than me.

And fortunately I had that model, because I guess a lot of people don’t. Or they have their own brief phase of wine drinking and kitchen experimentation, and then it slips away when the primary crew disperses. I’ve been fortunate to have always had friends who got this general concept of fun (duh–that’s why they’re my friends), but I guess that’s not surprising, since I hung out in grad school for a while and then was pretty broke for a long time in New York. Just like it took me until last year to buy a piece of actual firsthand furniture, I still have not shed the habit of saying, “Let’s just stay in for dinner–it’ll be cheaper.” Even though at this point it wouldn’t kill me to pay to eat in a restaurant.

Of course the friend who liked my style and ran with it most has been Tamara, and Sunday Night Dinners are very often an exercise in “Oh well–there’s always wine” but with the best possible results. I don’t think anyone has even been injured in four years!

So, a belated toast to Ariel K., whose idea I think that red-pepper salad was, and to Name-Forgotten Tesco-Heater-Upper. You made me the (sloppy, in a good way) hostess I am today.

A *Real* Revelation

While I was sitting on the beach in Greece, staring thoughtfully into my frappe glass (as you do), I figured something out.

That crazy cappuccino Tamara and I had in Rome in 2003? The super-charged stuff that had this super-sweet coffee foam spooned on top in addition to the milk foam?

I think it’s made with Nescafe.

The woman at the coffee joint in Rome told us this crema was the foam from the espresso, whipped up with a ton of sugar, to make this almost meringue-like goo, which you then dollop onto your coffee. The woman also warned us not to put additional sugar in our coffee–we wouldn’t be needing it.

Mind you, all this happened in Italian, which Tamara and I don’t really speak. So we missed some of the finer points.

Which is why for years I’ve been pondering this problem. Did they really make lots of cups of espresso, scoop the foam off and mix it with sugar? Then what did they do with the foamless espresso? Because everyone knows that espresso with no foam is crap espresso–you couldn’t serve it to anyone. And it would take a million shots of espresso to make this crema.

Enter the frappe. The frappe, when done by Greek professionals, is a spoon of Nescafe (the Greek formulation, by the way–it’s stronger than what you get here) and a spoon or two of sugar and a very small amount of water. You whiz that up with one of those things made for ice-cream shakes, which creates a glass half-filled with hardy coffee foam. You then add water (and maybe milk) to fill the glass, and maybe ice.

And that foam, which can sit around for the entire life of the frappe–hours, if you’re a frappe-drinker with restraint–without deflating, is almost exactly like what I had on my cappuccino four years ago. The crema had more sugar, and was glossier because of it, but same idea.

To be “authentic” I will look around for some Italian instant espresso crystals, but I betcha Greek Nescafe would do the trick as well.

Ratatouille and Pirate Chefs

I was all set to write a gushing little commentary about Ratatouille starting with, “OMG! Go NOW!”

But then I realized you probably already have. I’m a little late to the table.

But I did see it last night at the Ziegfeld (largest movie theater in NYC), and laughed, cried, etc. So many brilliant details about kitchen life. They even make fun of “a revelation”–I am vindicated!

One offhand line stuck with me–a comment by the one woman cook at the restaurant, saying the kitchen staff is like a pirate crew.

Which now seems wildly obvious, but I don’t think it had occurred to me before. Now I see that the current obsession with life in the pro kitchen is just a subset of the larger “pirate renaissance” (Chuck Klosterman’s term) we’re enjoying at the moment. Anthony Bourdain is the culinary Jack Sparrow.

I guess I should start wearing an eye patch.

Summer Trip: The Food

About the time I was eating the most amazing mussels in the world, on the beach in Greece, I realized I should cut a teensy bit of slack to all those lazy food writers who overuse the phrase “a revelation” to describe whatever they’re eating. (I loathe this, for the record.)

I’m not saying the hand of God reached down and chucked me under the chin while I was eating, but I did have a moment of “a-ha” that was close to revelatory.

The next thought I had was: Maybe American food writers use “a revelation” so often because Americans have such awful food. In a cosmopolitan place like NYC, you can eat duck confit, medium-rare pork chops, assorted artisanal cheeses, and fresh veggies of all kinds, but very often you’re just eating a flawless simulacrum of the real thing…and probably paying a lot for it.

I use the prefix “art” to describe this, as in “an art pork chop.” Not at all to disparage the field of art or the process or art-making, but a food item that resembles food in every way but flavor may as well be an object placed on a plinth and lit with halogen bulbs. Then people can come peer at it and call it “cunning” in their critical reviews.

Because our food production system is so fucked up, and our palates so stunted by a relative lack of food tradition and our demand for cheap over tasty, we Americans eat art food all the time–and a lot of the time we don’t even know it.

It’s not till you eat a mussel that is briny and sexy like an oyster, but also sweet like a scallop, and sitting in a gorgeous translucent green shell that you realize exactly why people like mussels so much. It’s not till you eat a green fig off the tree that you realize what all the hype is about. And of course there’s always the “real tomato” issue.

So part of the problem I have with food writers having “revelations” all over the damn place is that they’re just showing exactly how little experience they have eating good food. If you’re having a revelation in print over some duck confit, it means you haven’t eaten good duck confit before. And shouldn’t that be just the barest qualification for getting paid to write about food?

Also, of course, food writers are always getting rapturous about their meals in France. Every food magazine every month has something about France–even Saveur, which is the most worldly of mags, and I admire them for it, still does the fallback “X region in France is amazing” story every couple of months.

I know France is great and all, but again, food writers are just revealing how un-stamped their passports are if all they’ve got to talk about is the charming village market and the authoritative French woman who prepares a revelatory lunch with her strong, assured hands.

Anyway, what I ate on my trip, which was soooo much more adventurous, and for which I was a million times better informed than even the most highly paid professionals:

1) Those motherf***ing mussels. We went back and had them a second time, and they weren’t as good–maybe they’d been overcooked, maybe they were not as fresh. It was good to know at least that Greeks in Eressos weren’t sitting around smugly eating mussels behind our backs every day.

2) Quick salt-cured sardines. Also in Greece, from a nice old lady in the village of Andissa. They were plump and succulent. A little obscene, like if you really did bite off your husband’s nice plump lip and ate it.

3) Pigeon in Cairo. I’ve already mentioned it, but that was truly, truly delectable. (And not a single bite of birdshot–there’s an urban legend in the city that all the pigeon comes from the shooting club, and friend-of-a-friend broke a tooth on birdshot once.) The pigeon gets stuffed with rice or freekeh (cracked green wheat), then it gets simmered for a while to cook the stuffing, and then it gets plopped down in a searing hot pan, to crisp up the skin. The broth from the simmering is served on the side in a mug, and it’s incredibly peppery and delicious. I would drink just the broth, but the resto has a policy that you also must order pigeon–but once you do, it’s all-you-can-drink broth.

4) Malta plums in Turkey. Not that these were the world’s most delicious fruit–just that I’d never had them before, and they were sweet and fascinating. They’re the color of apricots and have big, slippery seeds in the center, and they’re outrageously sticky. In the same day, I also got to sample some fresh chickpeas. Cool-looking, but enh.

5) Olive-oil-stewed sea beans, served cold, at Ciya in Istanbul. Every time, this restaurant has something delightful. They were still a little crispy-bouncy in texture, and the sort of salty you know comes from the inside rather than being added in the kitchen. (Incidentally, this is why Mediterranean fish are so delicious, claimed the fish grill man at our resto in Eressos.)

6) Ayran in Syria and Turkey. I’ve had it a lot before, but it’s always remarkable just how thirst-quenching salty, watered-down yogurt can be.

7) The world’s sweetest yogurt in Ayvalik, Turkey. We were eating a basic little lunch while waiting for the ferry, and I saw the guys at the next table had big plates of homemade yogurt. We got some for ourselves, and it was dairy-product heaven–light, not heavy like Greek strained stuff, and sweet-sour, and with a nice crusty layer of cream on top. Costa in Greece insisted it was because the Turks put sugar in everything–or at least used grape must to start the souring process. Which is interesting on its own. (On a separate dairy-product topic, I saw rennet for sale in a grocery store in Ayvalik–made by the major milk producer, and in a little bottle, right there next to the premade cheese. Great that there’s an assumption your average shopper would make cheese at home.)

8) Everything in Syria.

9) Apricots right off the tree in Greece, and even a few cherries. The local cherries (some we actually paid for, from the fruit stand) were exactly the sort of thing that make people say “a revelation.” They just kept tasting and tasting and tasting and tasting.

10) Best. Beans. Ever. in Istanbul. Fittingly, the name of the restaurant was ‘bean.’ At first, we ordered only one serving, and the waiter looked nervous. After I’d had a couple spoonfuls of Peter’s, and ordered my own, he looked relieved. Order and balance were restored. These beans were perfectly tender, just so they gave a bit when you bit into them, but held their shape. And they were swimming in this tomato-ish sauce that can only be described as pure umami. I have no idea what the magic ingredient was, but it did make me realize I hadn’t eaten pork in many, many weeks. Because that kind of tastiness I associate with pork bits, and here, they’d managed to get it by other means.

11) Assorted other things: kalkan (turbot) in Istanbul, baklava in Istanbul, borek in Istanbul, ice cream in Istanbul. Oh, and did I mention the man selling sardines, who had a beautiful silvery pile, but also a bucket of live ones, and periodically he’d grab a live one and throw it down on top of the silvery mound, where it would jump and thrash, as if to say, “These fish are soooo fresh…” Maybe a little sadistic, but a genius sales technique (right up there with the bra vendors I saw on the street in Cairo, tossing the biggest bras up in the air like pizza dough).

**For the record, Peter and I decided we’re against Turkey getting into the EU. Sure, some people might be a little less poor, or something. But it will inevitably make food worse, as produce-starved northerners demand Turkey’s farms yield bigger and more stuff. Currently, tomatoes are sweeter and cucumbers are crispier than anywhere but Syria, and I don’t want that to get fucked up by greenhouses. (Egypt, incidentally, has started using greenhouses–retarded, considering the one thing Egypt doesn’t lack is sun and dry weather. The tomatoes now suck.) Also, Turkey is already perfectly functional in other respects: you can drink the water, and you can even buy train tickets online. They don’t need the damn EU.

That is all. Must go eat breakfast/lunch. Probably no revelations to be had, alas.