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Cherry Almond Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream

Spoon - You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb (buy)

As seems to be the case with a lot of completely delicious foods, I came late to cherries. Maybe I had a bad maraschino experience somewhere in there (I maintain that those are not cherries), but for years I swore off the fruit entirely. My mother thought I was crazy, and now that I also know how wonderful the cherry is, I think I must have been crazy too.

Cherries dole out a lot of tough love, though. They're sweet and juicy and completely addictive, but of course if you eat too many of them... well. It ain't pretty. So when I walked by my Wednesday Greenmarket last week and saw that it was brimming with pints of cherries, I thought I was in some serious trouble.

Then it occurred to me. There is a way to eat all these cherries with some restraint: surround them with heavy cream and sugar and chocolate, and you'll feel a little guiltier about shoveling them all into your face in one afternoon. Maybe.

Continue reading "Cherry Almond Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream" »

July 20, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (3)

Strawberry Ice Cream, Strawberry Sorbet, Food Coma

Guess what I did this weekend.

What can I say? I'm the type of lady who likes to deliver on her promises.

While I was home this weekend, my parents were hosting some folks who'd come down for a nearby wedding. Turns out, they were part of the family that runs Butterworks Farm in Westfield, Vermont, and they arrived with arm loads of fresh yogurt and heavy cream for the wedding brunch and as thank you gifts. Between that and the pint of deep red strawberries awaiting us when we woke up Saturday morning, I took it as a sign. A rich, delicious sign.

Continue reading "Strawberry Ice Cream, Strawberry Sorbet, Food Coma" »

June 25, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (5)

Summer Just Got Even More Awesome

It seems summer has already picked up in earnest, if you take my lack of updates as any indication. But there's so much good stuff happening food-wise right now that I just had to shun my responsibilities at work in favor of catching up on things here. You understand.

So I'd like to talk about how excited I am that local strawberries are in season. I'm SO EXCITED. This is something I await with just as much anticipation as tomatoes at the end of the summer, and the rewards are equally as sweet. Last year, my mom made some incredible strawberry ice cream with the tiny wild strawberries that grow near my parents' place in Massachusetts, and it was the fruitiest, freshest tasting strawberry ice cream I've ever had. Now that the season has come around again, I find myself daydreaming uncontrollably about the deliciousness.

(This pint of strawberries was waiting for me when I stopped by my folks' place on the way back to NYC from Martha's Vineyard last weekend. It survived for approximately 4 hours.)

Now, since wild strawberry season up in MA is barely three weeks long, I realized this spring that I could easily miss my window for mom's ice cream this year if I didn't plan my visits home right. That's when I decided I'd better develop a contingency plan:

That's right, gentlemen. I have the capability.

When it gets so hot in the city, it's impossible to motivate myself to make food that requires use of the stove or oven, but anything involving a frozen canister is something I can definitely get behind. Strawberry ice cream is first up, but if anyone out there has a favorite recipe or flavor combination, you know how to find me.

June 16, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Happiness is a Cookie Sandwich

I just spent a stellar weekend in Philadelphia, primarily to attend the wedding of one of my best friends from college but also to stuff my face with Greek food, peek in on open houses for depressingly cheap apartments (damn you, New York, for your unreasonable real estate market!), and do other lovely weekendy-type things.

As a delayed thank you to the friend who hosted us on our last trip to Philly and a preemptive thank you to the friend we stayed with this time, I decided to try my hand at an irresistible recipe I stumbled upon over at Smitten Kitchen: homemade Oreos.

Little known fact about yours truly: I can (and WILL) eat an entire box of Oreos in one sitting if left to my own devices. That magical combination of crunchy and smushy, salty and sweet, all topped off with that permanent Oreo goo that sticks in the corners of your mouth? Perfection. So naturally, when I found Deb's entry with this recipe, I couldn't resist.



Continue reading "Happiness is a Cookie Sandwich" »

June 03, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

A (Miraculously) Successful Experiment: Espresso Cayenne Cookie Sandwiches

I spent this past weekend at my folks' temporarily empty house on the coast of southern Massachusetts with a fire in the fireplace, five excellent human beings, and lots and lots of food. Sadly the weather wasn't so great, so after a gray walk on the beach, there really was just one way to spend the rest of Saturday afternoon: making cookies.

Dinelle, friend and frequenter of Brooklyn bakeries, opened my eyes to a peculiar but delicious espresso and sea salt cookie a couple weeks ago, and it inspired me to do something I'd never done before: make up my own cookie recipe. I don't bake much (I was abysmal at chemistry), so this was kind of an adventure. After doing some thinking and surveying what my mom had in her kitchen cupboards, I settled on a variation: espresso and ancho chilli.

Everything was going fine until I discovered that the dried ancho chillis I had weren't brittle enough to be finely ground. Since larger chunks of chillis didn't really mesh with my idea for the cookies, I ended up changing them out for ground cayenne. I think I liked these results better, anyway.

The cookies are very chewy, and it turns out that the heat that creeps up at the end of each bite is perfectly offset with some cool, creamy vanilla ice cream. Yeah, you might know where I'm going with this...

Ice cream sandwiches! And now that there's a solid chance it'll break 65 here in Brooklyn tomorrow, I feel fully justified in thinking ahead to summer eating.

Continue reading "A (Miraculously) Successful Experiment: Espresso Cayenne Cookie Sandwiches" »

April 09, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Happy Balumtimes

So I hate Valentine's Day. Not in a jilted lover kind of way, but in a do you really need a fake holiday to express your love kind of way. I also hate it because babies wielding bows and arrows kind of freak me out. So this year, big D and I decided to stick it to the man and stay home. It worked out pretty well, actually, because we ate exactly what we wanted and we didn't have to put on shoes.

I had been craving fried plantains something fierce for the last few days, so we planned the whole meal around those. In the end, we ended up with pan-seared pork chops with mango and pineapple salsa, fried plantains, and greens dressed with a lime, mint, and cilantro dressing. Not too shabby.

Those plantains really hit the spot, especially with a little hot sauce. I needed a little something tropical to brighten up this most dismal of months. And it didn't hurt that I got a little something hokey (but delicious) from D to top it all off:

The name says it all. The Chocolate Room has only been in the neighborhood for just about two years, but it's established quite a fan base (apparently it was full to brimming when D stopped in, though of course there was a run on chocolate fondue for two that particular evening). Inside this little bag were three each of the Antoinette, Kelly, Cleopatra, and Donna, descriptions of which can be found in their chocolate profiles. They were all incredible, but the Donna and Antoinette definitely win points for their unusual flavors.

It was about as pleasant a Valentine's Day as I could have asked for.

Continue reading "Happy Balumtimes" »

February 15, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Officially Ridiculous: Pre-Melted Chocolate

Please see past the terrible quality of this camera phone picture and marvel at the absurdity that is Nestlé Choco Bake Pre-Melted Unsweetened Chocolate Flavor:

Does this do something magical that I don't know about? I had no idea that enough people had concerns about melting chocolate as to warrant the creation of this product, but discovering it just made me a weep for humanity a little bit.

Nestlé Choco Bake Pre-Melted Unsweetened Chocolate Flavor, thanks for brightening my day. I hereby declare you Officially Ridiculous.

January 25, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

In Pursuit of Pie

Last winter, I made my first successful dessert pie ever. Successful, of course, is a relative term. But compared to my previous attempts, it was a masterpiece. I’d made it under the guidance of my best friend’s mother while I was home over Christmas break,  so once I returned to Brooklyn I just had to give it another try without adult supervision. That one… didn’t go so well.

After the whole wheat pie crust fiasco, I pretty much gave up. Clearly I didn’t have what it takes to be a pie baker, and I should just leave it to the professionals, or at least just the people whose pies don’t end up looking like that. But about a month ago, I got an email from a friend who was taking part in a pie-baking contest right here in Park Slope. It prompted me to give pie baking another chance.  Although I wasn’t able to take part in the contest in the end, I went ahead and made the two pies I'd come up with anyway, just to see if they could pass muster. 

Based on what I’d find at the farmer’s market and what was likely to win me points for originality of filling in my imaginary one-woman pie contest, I decided to make a sweet green tomato pie and a Concord grape pie. The grape was easily the crowd favorite when I served the two up at a friend’s apartment that night, but the tomato was intriguing. It had a similar consistency to apple pie, and though the green tomatoes had a milder flavor than ripe ones, the pie was decidedly tomato-y.   

The real triumph of these pies, though, was in the crusts. I’d mixed and rolled out – count 'em – four 9-inch pie crusts, and not a single one caused me mental anguish. So what was it about pie crust that had been so daunting? Simple: no one had ever explained to me exactly why you make pie crust the way you do, so I never worried about how strictly I adhered to the rules.   

Everyone will tell you that the key to making good crust is keeping all the ingredients cold, and the reason why is actually quite simple: if the fat in your dough melts before the pie is in the oven, it will become heavy and dense, both making it harder to work with when you’re rolling it out and preventing the crust from getting flaky in the oven. The key is to cut the fat into the dry ingredients without letting it soften enough to actually mix completely with the flour. 

My problem last winter was that, without this understanding, I’d been letting my dough get too warm, either from sitting out while I cut fruit or from overworking. It would fall apart in my hands, and rather than recognizing that it was exactly the warmth of my hands that was causing the problem, I’d just squish everything back into a ball and try to start over again. 

So young, so naïve. 

Now that crust and I have developed this deep spiritual connection, I’ve really come to love it. Making pie is deceptively easy and tremendously rewarding. The smell of a baking pie on a Sunday afternoon? Not much can beat that. Except maybe the smell of a baking pie on a Sunday afternoon when the Patriots are winning.

Traditional pie crust is a little bland for my taste, though, so last weekend, when I decided on a whim to make an apple pie, I worked on perfecting my own version.

Happy fall (even though it’s 85 degrees in New York today), and happy pie baking. 

Continue reading "In Pursuit of Pie" »

October 05, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Catastro-pie

So I had this lovely afternoon over the holiday break with my best friend Abby and her mom, who taught us the finer points of homemade pie crust.  Making a successful pie crust is no easy task for a beginner, and I was so proud of my pie that I served it to my family for dessert with Christmas Eve dinner.

When my friend called the other night to see if I wanted to come over and cook some dinner, I decided it was the perfect opportunity to show off my new skills.  It was just after the holidays, though, so in an effort to make a slightly healthier pie, I used whole wheat pastry flour.  In hindsight, this was a Very Terrible Idea.  The crust kept cracking when I rolled it out, and I got so frustrated that after my third attempt at the top crust, I gave up and just flopped what I had over the apples (Jonareds, which are my new favorite pie apples).  After all, it would still taste good, right?  It would just look like hell.

And how.

It smelled incredible, but let's just say I wasn't too proud of this one.

Thanks to Ryan, for allowing me to make a fool of myself in front of his fancy, fancy camera.

January 09, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

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