Saturday, May 26, 2012

Peachy!


Peaches might be my favorite fruit. But I'm not talking about the crappy, hard, flavorless peaches you can get at Kroger any time of year. I'm talking about in-season, make-a-juicy-mess-all-over-your-shirt, daydream-about-them-over-the-winter peaches. I got a craving last night, so we went to ValuMarket and picked up our first peaches of the summer. I got home, selected the ripest one, and it exploded all over my face as soon as I bit into it. Perfect!

My very favorite thing to eat for breakfast during the summer is yogurt with granola and peaches. The tartness of the yogurt, the crunch of the granola, and the sweetness of the peaches is a perfect combination. So this morning, peaches in hand, I set about making some granola so I could enjoy my first bowl of breakfast bliss.


I have written about Ellie Krieger's granola recipe before. It's still my go-to granola recipe because it's so easy and because I usually have most of the ingredients on hand. Today it turned out that I was out of almonds, so I substituted sunflower seeds. Honestly, it's better with almonds, but the sunflower seeds were okay in a pinch. The great thing about this recipe is that you can throw in pretty much any combination of nuts, seeds and/or dried fruit that you happen to have. I think my next batch will be almond-coconut, and I'd like to try a cranberry-orange version, too.

After this photo was taken I totally cut up the other half of the peach and threw it in the bowl all willy-nilly!
It's Memorial Day Weekend and I have one or two interesting recipes on the agenda. Here's hoping they turn out blog-worthy!

Friday, May 25, 2012

Two Things

1. My oil and vinegars from Oleaceae arrived yesterday. (We had them shipped as opposed to wrapping them in dirty laundry, crossing our fingers, and flying home with them.) I wasted no time trying them out, making a vinaigrette with the olive oil and the fig balsamic to go on a salad with last night's dinner. Having this olive oil in my own kitchen made it obvious how very different it is from the grocery store stuff I use for most applications. It's fragrant, green, grassy, and has a really peppery finish.

Anyway, I used this fig vinaigrette on a salad of spring mix, blue cheese, and walnuts. Oooooohmygod. I see many repetitions of this salad in my future. Like, maybe around lunchtime.

1.5. Related to my trip to New Mexico, we were watching Breaking Bad last night (we're still on Season 2) and there was a bottle of Santa Fe Pale Ale in Walt's fridge and I was all "Eeeee, I drank that beer!" Because I'm a giant nerd.

2. This fake restaurant menu, which was handed out at Brooklyn's Great GoogaMooga Festival, had me laughing until I couldn't breathe. It's in tiny print so you might have to zoom in to read it (Command-+, Mac users!), but it's totally worth the trouble. It features such delicacies as Stanza Cotta: "Accidentally dropped in a honeydew stuttering, with a poo-poo-berry possibility." And Mini-Hrak Cuddles with Malonies. And Panty Slaw. Just go read it.

I have some cooking-related posts in mind for the near future, so stay tuned!

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Santa Fe: An Epic Food Adventure

New Mexico's nickname is the Land of Enchantment, and I am duly enchanted. Beautiful weather, breathtaking scenery, and friendly people made New Mexico easy to love. But this is Blog Tartare, and what we're really here to talk about is the food, right? Brace yourself, because we did a hell of a lot of eating in the few days we were there! (Disclaimer: This post will be a mix of nice DSLR photos [mostly taken by Neil] and crappy iPhone photos [mostly taken by me]. We apologize if you find this visually jarring. Be sure to click on them if you want to see bigger versions. Also, I didn't really take notes about anything, so restaurants that don't have menus online are going to get some pretty vague descriptions.)

Day 1
We arrived in Albuquerque at 12:00 local time, which was 2:00 our time, which meant that we were more than ready to eat lunch. I employed Yelp to locate something that was on the way from the airport to Santa Fe and came up with the Red Ball Cafe.


This historic eatery dates back to 1922 and is located on part of what used to be Route 66. The original owners adopted a Popeye theme, selling Wimpy burgers for 5 cents. The Red Ball closed in the late 1970s and was finally resurrected by the current owners almost 20 years later.

I decided to waste no time getting acquainted with the local flavors and ordered a green chile cheeseburger.

 Here it is with the lid off:


Delicious! Unfortunately, this relatively mild burger lulled me into a false sense of comfort as far as chiles were concerned. I had no idea what was in store for me in the coming days.

After lunch we drove up to Santa Fe. For dinner I employed Yelp once again and came up with Casa Chimayo, which was a short walk from where we were staying. We sat out on their patio and enjoyed some delicious beer from Santa Fe Brewing as well as some fantastic food.

This is Neil's dinner. He describes it as "a chicken taco, a cheese burrito in a blue corn tortilla, and a pork tamale in red chile. And it was delicious." 


I had two tamales, one with pork and red chile, the other with vegetables and green chile. Both of these were pretty spicy, but totally delicious. That squashy business next to the green chile tamale is calabacitas, a mixture of sauteed squash and onions. I love squash to begin with, but this was way tastier than I even expected to be. I'm definitely going to be making some of this myself this summer.


We were also serenaded by this guy while we ate. He sang the Habanera from Carmen. Impressive!

Day 2
Our plan for the day was to visit the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and then do some wandering around and shopping. But of course we had to eat breakfast first. So off we went to the Tecolote Cafe. This restaurant's tagline is "Great breakfast - no toast," a nod to the fact that they provide baskets of muffins and other baked goods instead of toast with their meals. Yes please!




Neil had the carne y huevos, which is described on the menu as a "Heaping serving of lean pork, cooked in a blend of red chiles, two eggs any style, and our famous potatoes." Neil comments, "It was spicy as hell, but the pork was very tender. That was our first helping of that style of potatoes as well." Indeed, potatoes that were very thinly sliced and then fried up together seemed to be the typical preparation method for breakfast.


I had the breakfast burrito. "Eggs scrambled with ham, bacon, or sausage [I chose sausage], rolled in a flour tortilla, topped with red or green chile [I chose both, which is referred to as "Christmas style"] and melted cheddar; choice of beans, posole, or potatoes [those are potatoes on the far side of my plate]." This was so hot. SO HOT. I laughed. I cried. I blew my nose. It was right on the border of being too hot to eat. This was by far the spiciest meal of the trip. Tecolote Cafe does not eff around with its chile sauce!

My dad, who is apparently known as El Niño at one of our local Mexican restaurants because of his absolute inability to handle anything spicy, wisely ordered the French toast.


Not pictured is the bakery basket, which included green chile muffins (mmmm), chocolate chip muffins, and plain biscuits. Thank god for the biscuits; when I was finally bested by my burrito, I slathered half a biscuit in an unreasonable amount of butter in order to soothe my poor scorched mouth.

After an enjoyable morning at the museum, we proceeded downtown to do some wandering around. One of the first places that Neil and I came across was Oleaceae Olive Oil. "Do you want to go in?" Neil asked. "Yeah, I guess," I said. I like olive oil, but how interesting could it really be to go look at a bunch of bottles of it? It's not like I can't buy good quality olive oil at home.

I laugh now at my naïveté.

This is what it looked like inside of Oleaceae:


Those are tanks full of different flavors of olive oil and balsamic vinegar, and customers are invited to taste as many as they like. And did we ever. Then we were approached by a very friendly salesperson who introduced us to the concept of mixing the oils and vinegars together in the little paper cups. Sweet basil olive oil and ripe fig balsamic. Citrus limon olive oil with lavender balsamic. Chipotle olive oil with dark cocoa balsamic. I quickly lost track of all the combinations that we tried.

In the end we bought the Arbequina olive oil and the ripe fig and Tahitian vanilla vinegars. We also picked up a jar of campfire smoked sea salt. I easily could have purchased everything we tasted there, and I will definitely be ordering more.

We were so full from breakfast that we more or less skipped lunch, instead stopping for a quick snack at a frozen yogurt place.

When dinner time rolled around we headed to a place up the street from where we were staying called Agave Lounge. I was a little worried that it described itself as a "hip, sophisticated Santa Fe lounge," both because I am neither hip nor sophisticated and because any place that describes itself that way very well may be trying too hard. But Agave Lounge turned out to be a comfortable place with nice ambiance and friendly service. I had a pomegranate margarita while Neil opted for the smokey one. Then we split lobster sliders, mini fajita steak tacos, and calamari fritti. Everything was delicious, and a welcome respite from the chile-drenched meals we'd experienced so far. Meal in progress:


Day 3
The plan for this day was to drive up to Taos to visit Taos Pueblo. But first, breakfast at the Tune-Up Cafe. This was probably the least impressive meal I had there. My mom had some weird brown sludge in her coffee cup, which got the meal off to a rather unappetizing start. I ordered the house-made corned beef hash. Corned beef hash is one of my favorite childhood comfort foods, and although I virtually never indulge in it anymore, when I have it I want it like this:


The hash at Tune-Up Cafe was, in a way, too high quality. The meat was not mushy enough. The potatoes were in large chunks and not fully integrated. It was good, but it did not quite meet my hash expectations.

This is Neil's breakfast burrito, of which he says: "I know it was some kind of avocado & egg burrito with red & green chile and it was one of my favorite breakfasts of the trip. One of my favorite meals, really."


After a fascinating trip to the beautiful pueblo (where I got to try Indian frybread, mmmm), we stopped at Michael's Kitchen in Taos for a late lunch.


Okay, now this place is just ridiculous. Our meals were so big that we all saved half and ate the rest for dinner. Fortunately, they were as delicious as they were huge!

Neil had the Indian taco, "A grand sopapilla heaped with ground beef, beans, onions, cheese, chile and garnished with lettuce and tomatoes. Don't forget the guacamole!" Neil comments, "It was good, but honestly it was SO MUCH FOOD and I think my opinion of it was tempered by eating half of it at slightly lower than room temperature later in the day. Which is unfair, I know. Also, I'm still not sure how it was really all that different from what you had."


As Neil mentioned, I had the similar stuffed sopapillas, "Two delicate sopapillas stuffed with beans, cheese, onions and ground beef. Your choice of chile is ladled on, then crowned with guacamole and sour cream." This was delicious, and I was relieved that the red chile was tolerable. Despite the pain of the chile sauces, I just couldn't stop ordering them!


Not pictured are the plain, unstuffed sopapillas that came to the table in a basket with a side of honey butter. Oh my god, they were good. The sopapillas that you get in Kentucky are essentially just fried tortillas served with honey, and they're tasty, but they don't begin to compare to these delicate little pillows of fried dough.

Day 4
Neil and I decided to split off from my parents and do our own thing for the day, but first we all went to breakfast at The Pantry.


Neil had the daily special, bread pudding french toast with bacon and eggs over easy. He reports that it was "tasty, but not mind-blowing."


Believe it or not, in real life, I'm about 75% vegetarian, so I decided to lay off the meat and have a veggie omelet with a side of delicious potatoes. But if you look closely you'll also see a bowl of sausage gravy to the left of my plate; the two choices for sides were toast or biscuits and gravy, and how could I turn down biscuits and gravy?


After breakfast, Neil and I set out on foot to see more of Santa Fe. By the time we reached the plaza I was thirsty, so I bought a cup of fresh watermelon juice from a vendor, which was delicious. We did some shopping and some art-viewing (the galleries are amazing!), and eventually we stumbled upon Secreto Lounge at the Hotel St. Francis. This place was already on our list of things to do because I'd read great things about their innovative cocktails, so we were happy to stop there and have an afternoon drink. I had the Spicy Secreto, "Cucumbers, lime juice, cane syrup, Cabana Cachaça, St Germain and a touch of spice," while Neil opted for I'll Take Manhattan, "A spicy Southern twist on the classic Manhattan using Maker’s Mark Bourbon, sweet vermouth and locally made Bitter End Memphis Barbeque Bitters." Both were fantastic.


Neil enjoys his I'll Take Manhattan.


For dinner that night we partook of the buffet at the Buffalo Thunder Casino, which was decidedly mediocre and doesn't merit any additional commentary. I did thoroughly enjoy the slot machines, though, especially the ridiculous Kitty Glitter.


Day 5
This post is so long that I'm afraid it's going to break Blogger. Fortunately, I only have one more meal to report on. Our final New Mexico meal took place in Albuquerque on the way to the airport at Loyola's Family Restaurant. This place was located on yet another strip of road that used to be Route 66 and was surrounded by amazing signs for old motels, some of which were still standing.



Loyola's itself was a Route 66 relic, with a vintagey atmosphere and delicious diner food.


I had an omelet with chorizo and yes, one last bout of red chile sauce.


Neil had the same thing, but he went with with green chile. Because he is insane.


Aside from the casino, we didn't have one bad meal the entire trip. I was also impressed by the friendly, attentive service that we received virtually everywhere. Most of all, I'm inspired to learn much, much more about southwestern cooking. The food in New Mexico is obviously different from the Tex-Mex stuff that dominates most of the Mexican dining scene in Louisville, but it's also very different from the few places that purport to do more authentic Mexican-style food here. I'm very interested in exploring the regional food differences in the southwestern United States as well as Mexico. This is not a hard thing to be interested in, given how delicious all of it is.

One last note: If you're planning to travel to Santa Fe, especially if you're going with a group, I highly recommend Casas de Santa Fe as an alternative to a hotel. We stayed in the delightful Casa Tisnado. The house was beautifully decorated, very comfortable, and just a short walk away from downtown. I'd love to stay there again when it's cold enough to use the kiva fireplace!

Sunday, May 13, 2012

The Imminent Return of Blog Tartare

So. Blog Tartare. It moved over to Tumblr for a bit, but even there it has been languishing. Graduate school was taking up entirely too much of the time that I used to use to cook things (and then blog about them), and since I've been only marginally employed for most of the last two years, we haven't had the money to do the kind of dining out we used to.

However!

Yesterday I graduated with my master's degree, and I start a new job next month. My hope is to start cooking interesting dinners again several times a week now that my evenings aren't dominated by academic reading and writing. (It helps that the Root Cellar will be on my way home from work!) I'm also looking forward to getting caught back up on the local restaurant scene. I feel incredibly out of the loop in that regard, because most of our dining out over the last couple years has consisted of old familiar (and cheap) favorites.

In honor of this new chapter in my life and the impending return of Blog Tartare, allow me to share a recipe that made an appearance at my graduation party last night. I found this on AllRecipes and was pretty impressed by how easy it was and how delicious these margaritas turned out!

Bucket of Margaritas
4 1/2 cups water
1 1/2 cups tequila
1 (12 fluid ounce) can frozen limeade
1/2 cup triple sec (orange-flavored liqueur)
1 whole lime, cut into 6 wedges

Mix the water, tequila, limeade, and orange liqueur in a freezer-proof container with a lid; stir. Cover and store in freezer until it reaches a slush-like consistency, about 24 hours. Serve in glasses garnished with lime wedges.
We made four gallons of this using freezer bags, and it was pretty awesome to be able to take a new bag out of the freezer and refill the margarita pitcher when it started getting low. Some of the comments on AllRecipes also mention making individual servings in sandwich bags and then taking them camping, to the beach, on picnics, etc, which I think is a great idea. The next time I do this I will probably try adding mango nectar, because I do love a mango margarita!

In other news, we're heading to New Mexico for a quick vacation later this week, and I am SO EXCITED about the food there. Hopefully my next entry will have lots of photos and descriptions of all the southwestern deliciousness I encounter there. I also want to write soon about my recipe for panang curry, which I adapted from another recipe several years ago and have finally perfected. This recipe has the distinction of being the first one that I know by heart and can prepare from memory.

'Til soon, Blog Tartare readers! <3

Friday, August 6, 2010

We've moved!

Blog Tartare can now be found over on Tumblr. Please join us there!

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Another blog recommendation

Speaking of the Dining Popitos, I have to mention that my soon-to-be second cousin-in-law (I think) Angie also has a food blog, Glutîre. Like Amanda, Angie focuses on vegan cooking, but don't let that turn you off. I doubt you'd kick her
Pistachio-Ginger-Crusted Sweet Potato with Green Curry Sauce
out of bed!

Dragon King's Daughter

Neil has a lot of family members, and the other day I started working on a family tree for both our families so I could try to get a handle on some of his extended relations. If you take a look right here you can see the tree starting with Albert Andriot, Neil's great-grandfather, also known as Pop.

When Neil's great-aunt Betty passed away a few months ago, the funeral turned out to be a bit of a family reunion, and it was decided that everybody should start trying to get together for dinner once a month. In honor of Pop, the Andriot family patriarch, the group named itself the Dining Popitos (which people keep accidentally calling the Flying Popitos, which is awesome).

The Dining Popitos met this week at Dragon King's Daughter. This place is owned by the same folks as my beloved Maido, but it's very different, with a lot of fusiony stuff; there's sushi, but also sushi-inspired pizzas and tacos, as well as a variety of other Asian-flavored small plates. (Although I haven't had it, I love the fact that there's a tako taco.)

Neil and I had been to Dragon King's Daughter twice before, and the last time the service was pretty bad. Not so bad that I refused to return, as I did with Third Avenue Cafe for almost two years, but bad enough to put me off of the place a little bit. Still, I was excited when it was announced that this was the Dining Popitos' selection for April, and I looked forward to trying it again.

I want to love Dragon King's Daughter the way I love Maido, but the fact is, it's just pretty good. The food is tasty, but it doesn't totally blow my mind, and the service is friendly but remains inattentive.

We started with some edamame, which is more or less the same wherever you get it, and that was fine. Next we had tuna tataki (which we didn't photograph until we'd already dug into it):


Slightly seared ahi tuna slices on a bed of fresh organic spring mix, served with Hawaiian pink salt, avocado-wasabi and fried garlic chips.

Neil didn't care for the fried garlic chips, assessing them as "just little bits of burned garlic," but I did. I actually thought this whole thing was pretty divine; the tuna was fresh and perfectly seared, and the avocado-wasabi mixture was a nice complement, although it could have used some more wasabi. I was a little sad we had to share this with the rest of the table.

Next up was a sushi roll, Sushi and the Banshees. Neil didn't email me a photo of this, so I'll have to check with him later and see if he has one. Cream cheese, garlic, avocado inside... salmon and basil outside. This was just okay. I thought the basil was an interesting flavor to encounter in a sushi roll, but there was a little too much cream cheese and it overwhelmed the roll's other components.

Then we had the unagi pizza:


Unagi, avocado, scrambled eggs and cheese—topped with unagi sauce.

In the last, oh, six months or so, I have realized that I am totally batshit in love with unagi. I remember trying it and not liking it at some point, and I didn't eat it for years. But then I tried it again and it totally rocked my world. I admit that I was a little unsure about the scrambled eggs and cheese on this pizza, but the idea of an unagi pizza was too compelling for me not to try it. So we did. Neil really liked it, but for me the flavors just didn't work together very well. The baked avocado was especially off-putting; I would have preferred for that to be added after the fact.

We ended the meal with a tempura fried Snickers bar with red bean ice cream. Yes, really.



What can you even say about a tempura fried Snickers bar? It's a fun novelty of a dessert, not orgasmically delicious, but worth trying at least once.

We also had tastes of a few things that other people were eating, and I especially liked the wasabi salsa: Fresh wasabi, diced tomato , avocado, mango, jalapeños, red onions, garlic, cilantro and lime juice mixed together and served with fried wonton chips. The wonton chips were outstanding, although for something with wasabi in the name, the salsa didn't have much of a kick to it.

Our server was friendly (and didn't make condescending comments about our beer choices the way our server did the last time we were there), but he disappeared for long stretches of time, and we had to wait quite a while before he came back to take our dessert orders.

Overall, I like Dragon King's Daughter, and I think to a big extent it just requires some tolerance for trial and error; I won't order the unagi pizza again, but I know from previous visits that I like the sashimi pizza. The tuna tataki was a big hit, and I could totally make meal out of that and some salsa and wontons. I'm also looking forward to trying their happy hour; that sounds like just the thing for the band of food- and booze-loving freelancers I hang out with. (The best thing about freelancing is - by far - drinking beer with my self-employed friends while the rest of you poor suckers are at work. Too bad I'm about to give all that up this fall so I can go back to school and become a social worker!)

Anyway, Dragon King's Daughter, final verdict: Try it. You might like it!