{Eating, Health}

Bundles of Joy

2.9.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

The other day, when trawling the aisles of a favorite ethnic market in my quest for inspiring ingredients, I came across a package of brined grape leaves in the refrigerator section. It has long been my intention to try my hand at stuffing these, part of the tradition of dolma, the stuffed vegetable dishes prevalent in the cuisines of the former Ottoman Empire and surrounding regions such as Russia, the Middle East, the Caucasus, and Central and South Asia. In addition to grape leaves, onion, zucchini, eggplant, tomato and peppers are also stuffed with either a meat filling (lamb, beef or pork) or a rice- or grain-based mixture that often includes dried fruit and/or nuts. This summer I plucked handfuls of grape leaves off the vines at River Brook Farm, carefully blanched, rolled and tied them, then placed them in the freezer chest in our basement where they now languish, buried somewhere beneath the bags of golden raspberries, jars of shrimp stock and legs of goat. So I was quite pleased to find the ready-packaged alternative.

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—baba ganoush, dolmades, eggplant, grape leaves, jasmine rice, pomegranate, stuffed grape leaves, tahini

spacer 9 Comments

{Eating, Health}

Little Lamb

2.8.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

Valentine’s Day is less than a week away. And? you say. Surely you don’t buy into such a trumped-up, commercialized holiday! Ah, but love. Love. How can you resist a day set aside especially for the celebration of Love? Consider dispensing with the chocolate and fancy reservations and wrapped presents, but do compose a poem or arrange a fragrant nosegay. Draw a hot bath, or proffer a massage. And by all means, cook something indulgent for your beloved. Rather than the rich, heavy foods that seem to be the norm—how sad that short ribs have been rendered cliché—you may want to consider something a bit lighter. Fondue or a Japanese hot pot, perhaps, to underscore the shared nature of the meal. Is there anything more intimate than two forks clinking together in the same bowl? Serve a dry martini or a delicious fruity wine to set the mood. Whip up a sweet finish that lingers in the mouth as you sing each other’s praises. If you are not in love at the moment, it’s also wonderful to be with close friends, and celebrate another kind of love. There are so many. Take it wherever you can find it. It’s healing, energizing, essential. It’s everywhere. All you need is love. (And this wonderful recipe from Dan Barber, chef/owner of Blue Hill.)

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—Blue Hill, buckwheat, carrots, Dan Barber, emmer, gluten-free, lamb, lamb shanks, porridge, Valentine's Day, wheat

spacer 7 Comments

{Eating}

Flava Flav

2.6.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

I have a big collection of salts—Indonesian, Himalayan, Japanese, smoked, curried—and I am not shy about liberally sprinkling them as finishing touches on everything from salad to oatmeal. I’ve also experimented with adding my own flavors (black trumpet mushroom, wild lime, shiso seed) and recently was inspired by this lovely post to try some new ones. If you have not yet discovered the wonders of sea salt in all its sparkling, saline glory (maybe you missed this post?), this is your chance. Of late I have sprinkled black trumpet salt on mushroom risotto, smoked salt on ricotta, cacao salt on beans, citrus salt on tempura and cumin salt on lamb. It adds a wonderful crunch and a pure burst of flavor that dissolves on the tongue. Irresistible.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—101 Cookbooks, askinosie, cacao nibs, cacao salt, citrus salt, cumin, cumin salt, flavored salt, Maldon salt, sea salt

spacer 2 Comments

{Eating, Health}

Seafood Diet

2.2.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

You go along in life, understanding the course of things, but never really imagining that what you see others endure will befall you. That might be the definition of youth. Because, inevitably, it happens to you. To paraphrase Mia Farrow, life is a series of losses and it’s all about the grace and resilience with which you respond. My former mother-in-law once looked at a photo of Liv Ullman on the cover of the New York Times Magazine and said, “Ugh, she’s really let herself go.” Never mind that the Swedish actress was being lauded for directing a film, what mattered to this woman was that a former beauty now looked like the 62-year-old she was. And I remember feeling disgusted by that, and vowing to forever construe “letting oneself go” as something quite liberating and wonderful.

 

I let my grey hair come in over the past 2 years and there was a certain loss that needed to be mourned there; quietly, mind you. I went from a tousled brunette to an elegant silver without more than a whimper. But now that I am finding it difficult to fit into any of my clothes, now that my skin is becoming slacker and my muscle tone less defined—all those clichés of middle age—I begin to feel a bit of that desperation that sends women under the scalpel. I’m not going to start in with the whole I’m invisible routine. Unless you’re Elle Macpherson, that pretty much sets in after age 40. And I’m lucky enough to have a husband who tells me I’m beautiful all the time. But, pathetic as it may be, I am newly committed to holding on to what I have for as long as possible. That entails lots of exercise and watching what I eat. Because, to me, being a glutton is all about expanding your palate not your waistline. It’s being greedy for the things that are good and good for you. It means that lunch is about salad.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—fish, light lunch, lunch, mustard oil, salad, smoked fish, smoked trout

spacer 7 Comments

{Eating, Garden}

Angel of the Garden

2.1.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

Angelica, known in some parts as Holy Ghost or Wild Celery, is a member of the genus Umbelliferae, which also endows the kitchen with parsley, carrot, parsnip, fennel, anise, coriander, celery, dill, cumin, lovage and caraway. Its subtly sweet flavor hints at many if not all these sister plants, with prominent notes of licorice and celery. Its botanical name, angelica archangelica, derives from the legend that it was the archangel Michael who told of its medicinal use, and every part of the plant has been prized for centuries for remedies addressing diverse complaints, especially digestive and bronchial problems. The leaves are used for tea; the roots and seeds flavor wine and spirits, including gin, Chartreuse, Bénédictine, vermouth and absinthe; the ground dried root and candied stems are added to baked goods; and the fresh leaves enliven salads, soups, stews, custards and ice cream. A flute-like instrument with a reedy sound can even be made of its hollow stem (entertaining for kids), and I’ve also seen the stems used as straws for drinks.

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—angelica, angelica archangelica, candied angelica, fruitcake, herb, Martha Washington, medicinal herb

spacer No Comments

{Eating, Health}

Pomnipotent

1.31.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

A much heralded character throughout history, the virtues of the pomegranate are extolled in the Koran, the Book of Exodus and Homer’s Hymns. Punica granatum has been cultivated in the Caucasus since ancient times and continues to be popular amongst the antioxidant-slurping, fountain-of-youth-seekers of modern day. It’s in season now in the Northern Hemisphere and widely available in supermarkets and Korean delis near you. The name comes from the Latin for “seeded apple” and, indeed, its leathery red shell breaks apart to reveal a spongy web nestling a treasure trove of glittering garnet jewels. So glorious is this fruit that the ancient city of Granada in Spain was renamed for the pomegranate during Moorish reign. The flavor is most often a combination of sweet and tart, with a mouth-puckering quality from the tannins contained in the juice of the aril, as the watery part surrounding the seed is called. These have a slight crunch to them and a hint of bitterness that adds to the complex flavor of this fruit, as delicious eaten out of hand as it is mixed fresh into salads, cooked in stews, or rendered into syrup to flavor all manner of drinks and traditional dishes from the Middle East.

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—antioxidant, pomegranate, pomegranate molasses, saffron, the red sea, vodka

spacer 6 Comments

{Eating, Health}

Juicy Breasts

1.26.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

I’m not one of those people who’s at a loss for what to cook. I have a repertoire of favorites and a list as long as my arm of new things I want to try. This is not bragging. There are plenty of things I do not have: Children. A Pulitzer Prize. Thin thighs. Yet on some nights even I don’t have it in me to start whirling around the kitchen like a culinary dervish. On those nights, I just want something delicious to appear on my plate. But there’s no takeout up here, remember? So I like to store a few tricks up my sleeve. Nothing wrong with a little help from your friends, though I can’t recommend fast food. Nor canned food, for that matter. Not to harsh your mellow, but do you know about the epoxy liners in most cans? They’re made with Bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical that can mimic human estrogen and is linked to breast cancer and early puberty in women. (The horror, the horror.) The Environmental Working Group tested canned food bought across America and found BPA in more than half, at levels they call “200 times the government’s traditional safe level of exposure for industrial chemicals.” So much for those canned beans, my darlings.

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—bok choy, chicken, Master Stock, mushrooms, poached chicken breasts, poaching, stir fry, wood ear mushrooms

spacer 3 Comments

{Eating, Health}

Beets Me

1.24.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

I have always had a passion for beets. Never a picky eater, I enjoyed these somewhat polarizing purple root vegetables from an early age. I can still remember the thrill of seeing my pee, subtly pink, circling the bowl. In college, I seemed to be the only one helping myself to Harvard beets, a sweet-tart staple of the dining hall salad bar. Although beets are now widely embraced as part of the unavoidable farm-to-table syndrome, they rarely make an appearance in our home as they are one of the few things for which my husband simply does not care. With their assertive color and distinctive earthy sweetness, they’re not exactly the sort of thing you can just slip into a dish. Although I may roast a few on occasion for my own consumption, I am not in the habit of adding them to our morning juice or recreating the divine beet crumble from The Fat Radish. So you can imagine my delight when G urged me to go ahead and make that borscht I was daydreaming about. Not that I needed his permission, but it’s kind of lonely to cook up a whole pot of soup and then have to eat it alone. Cooking for one is a very specific thing that lends itself more to simple pastas, elaborate salads and the occasional pot pie, don’t you think? Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—beef, beets, borscht, cabbage, oxtails, parnsip, potato, turnip, Ukrainian

spacer 12 Comments

{Eating}

Top Banana

1.23.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

I turned 49 yesterday. Slightly surreal. I’m a little thicker around the middle than I’d like to be, but otherwise I’m pretty damn happy with things. I’ve always been a little superstitious about the evil eye, never wanting to call too much attention to my good fortune. I remember my mother telling me about a moment she had while driving, feeling the sun on her face, the breeze in her hair, and thinking to herself Everything is wonderful and then, suddenly, my dad was diagnosed with cancer and her own health began to fail rapidly. Life can change seemingly in an instant, which is why we must pay such close attention to the here and now, seeking joy in the moment. Lofty ambitions and long-term plans have their place, but there’s also something invaluable in the simplest pastimes: a long walk in the snow; organizing your drawers; playing catch; baking a loaf of banana bread.

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—baking, banana, banana bread, gluten-free, quick bread

spacer 3 Comments

{Eating, Health}

Dry Run

1.20.12

spacer photos by gluttonforlife

I’m about to pick a major bone, so if you’re not in the mood—and I’m not talking about steak for dinner—turn away now. There’s been a media pigpile on Paula Deen this week and I’ve got to get in my licks. It’s not just that she has consistently used her Food TV show to promote unhealthy (and foul) food and been a longtime paid shill for industrial-meat giant Smithfield (whose inexcusably raised products are proven to increase the risk of diabetes), but now she’s a spokesperson for Novo Nordisk’s diabetes treatment Victoza (the 2010 FDA approval of which came amidst powerful evidence of a link to thyroid cancer), after disclosing that she was diagnosed with the disease three years ago. I find this all so deeply disturbing. And then I read a review by Nigella Lawson on the Piglet, Food52′s wonderful Tournament of Cookbooks, where she writes about being suspicious of Heidi Swanson’s excellent Super Natural Every Day “because I always fear a certain smuggery, and words like ‘my natural kitchen’ set off the alarm bells.” How have we come to this place where natural and healthy are deemed “smug,” and doughnut burgers for breakfast are the order of the day? As I used to say in junior high, gag me with a fork. I think you know where I stand on all this. Bacon and kale are both welcome in my kitchen…

Read the rest of this entry »

Tagged—dehydrator, mushroom, mushroom jerky, vegan, vegetable, vegetarian

spacer 8 Comments

Newer  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 42 43  Older