• 31Jan

    can_tuna.gifThe other night I came home, out of the bitter cold and falling snow, and (predictably) wanted dinner. Since it was so cold and nasty out, I did not want to go to the store to buy ingredients, and so I just started looking through my cookbook collection for ideas. One jumped out at me: crab cakes.
    Being a good almost-Bay-Area kid, I love me some crab cakes. The problem, of course was that the only listed ingredients I actually had in my kitchen were oil and green onions. So, as per my usual M.O., I decided to improvise. What follows is my version:
    1 can white albacore tuna, drained.
    1 habanero pepper, chopped.
    3 green onions, chopped.
    Garlic salt.
    Fresh ground pepper.
    1 tbsp mayo.
    2 tbsp grapefruit juice.
    Half cup of walnuts, powdered in your food processor.
    Shape into ball. Sautee in oil until brown, bake on a greased pan at 450 for 7 min on each side. Garnish with Old Bay Seasoning.
    I recommend that you use 2 eggs instead of the mayo, as that will ‘glue’ the cake together better. For those who keep such things around, a sprinkle of breadcrumbs would help too.

  • 31Jan

    barleymiso.jpgMiso is one of Japan’s oldest traditional ingredients and was made as early as the 12th century. Today it is produced by combining boiled and crushed soybeans with a culture comprised of wheat and rice, barley, or other beans. The fermented mixture is allowed to mature for up to three years. (See instructions for making it here.)
    The three grades available are shiro-miso (white, light in flavor, made with rice), aka-miso (red, medium-flavored, made with barley), and kuro-miso (black, strong flavor, made with more soybeans). The recipe below uses red aka-miso.

    • Bring water to boil, add soba (sesame) or other kind of noodles. (I don’t know how much; I don’t measure things unless I have to.) Cook for appropriate amount of time. Turn off heat, drain, toss in a bowl with a little sesame oil, set aside.
    • Bring 3c water to boil.
    • Grate at least 1 Tbsp ginger, more if desired. Add to water.
    • Add a splash of tamari soy sauce. Reduce the heat as low as possible, so that the mixture is not boiling.
    • Add maybe 2-3 Tbsp miso paste, then stir occasionally until dissolved. Once the miso has been added, the mixture should not be allowed to reach a boil, as this destroys some of the nutritional properties* and subtlety of flavor. Cook on low heat until the miso paste has dissolved.
    • Add a piece or two of kombu (sea vegetable) or some medium-cut strips of nori. Add earlier if using kombu, otherwise toss the nori in at the very end.
    • Pour over sesame noodles and serve.

    Optional treat for sick people: Add one vegetable bouillon cube early and cook until dissolved. I like Rapunzel brand vegetable bouillon with no salt added, found in the baking section at Whole Foods. This is a good addition to yield a richer broth when desired, but you may prefer to enjoy the flavor of miso without a lot of competition.

  • 30Jan

    cs_image01.jpgBelieve it or not, this actually isn

  • 28Jan

    Rumors are that the Red Bean, the Mt. Pleasant restaurant profiled in the Washington Post’s Sunday Magazine, will close after tonight. Phone calls yielded no solid answers. I never ate at the restaurant, but followed the ‘Adventures of Frank’ every Sunday in the Post. Based on the articles, the restaurant struggled from the start with constant financial hurdles to get over. However, the opinions of the Cajun and Creole cuisine seemed positive.
    Let us know if you have the low down on the Red Bean’s fate.

  • 28Jan

    Been outside recently? By choice?
    It’s nasty out there. Can’t get off work, can’t ski, and the snowballs won’t pack. These are the days when you drag the stereo into the kitchen, close the door, and heat the oven.
    Scones
    It’s pronounced Skahn, no O. Rhymes with nothing I know of. Overheard at the family reunion:
    “Aye…you *can* call it a skown…but only if you’re poncey. Or English.”
    “How can that be?”
    you say, “When I was in England everyone called it a Skown!” (1)
    Yes, they did. But scones aren’t English. You’re thinking of crumpets.
    pastry cutter.JPGDry:
    2 cups all-purpose flour
    2-1/2 tsp baking powder
    1/2 tsp salt
    3 tsp white sugar
    2 tsp brown sugar
    –1/3 cup walnuts, chopped finely (optional)
    3/4 tsp ground cinnamon
    1/8 tsp nutmeg
    1/4 cup butter (cold)
    Wet:
    2 eggs
    1/3 cup milk or cream
    Topping (2)
    2 tablespoons butter (melted)
    2 tablespoons molasses [or treacle, better yet, Lyle’s Golden Syrup- ejg]
    Directions:

    • Preheat oven.
    • In a bowl, combine flour, sugars, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, and walnuts.

    • Cut in the butter until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs. (3)
    • Put the eggs and milk into the flour bowl, and stir until it’s just mixed.
    • Pat it into an 8 inch round on a floured surface (between 0.5″ and 1″ high).

    Don’t knead the dough–you aren’t making a yeast bread. Because they’re quick-breads scones get their lift from the carbon-dioxide released from the baking soda and their texture is a result of the butter melting and leaving little pockets.(4)

    • Brush or dribble the topping onto the dough circle.
    • Cut the round into eight wedges.
    • Separate the wedges and place them onto a greased cookiesheet. (5)
    • Let the little wedges rest on the cookie sheet for 10 minutes.
    • Bake at 450 degrees(6) for 13-17 minutes, or until golden brown. 7)

    Store them in a paper bag on the counter. If they get dry just toast ’em. I like to layer the bottom of the dough with raisins before I press it into a round.. When you press it out on the counter the raisins stick into the bottom and cook into the scones.(8)
    —————————————————
    (1) In hindsight this could have been directed at Z. It’s not.
    (2)You don’t have to use any topping but if you don’t you should coat the top of the scones with melted butter. It will keep them from getting dry flaky skin.*
    (3) I use the weird sex-toy looking wire thing on the right. I strongly reccomend buying one for all your butter cutting needs**
    (4)If you knead the dough the warmth from your hands will melt the butter and you get something between matzo meal and play-dough.****
    (5) Better yet, don’t ruin your girlfriend’s expensive cookie sheet. Throw down some tin foil or a high-temp silpat, as the molassas has a nasty tendency to spill and burn.
    (6)That’s 232 degrees for you Continental folk.
    (7) Toothpick test!
    (8) Others like to put walnuts into the dough or chopped candied orange rind (sourer is better)
    ———————————————–
    * Think of it as lubriderm for your baking
    ** It’s called a pastry cutter and they come in cut sheet metal or wire. You could also try to cut the butter into the recipe with a pair of knives. You can do anything if you try long enough… [I’ve done it and it’s not that difficult -ejg]
    ***If you’re having trouble with your piecrust (also an un-yeasted bread type thingy) try rolling it out on a cold surface. The butter will flatten into sheets without melting into the dough. In the dripping height of summer in DC I have resorted to freezing the rolling pin and setting icepacks on the counter until it’s chilled.

  • 27Jan

    AOL’s CityGuide has posted their 2005 all around “Best Restaurants”, broken down by category. It’s worth a quick read, especially as they encompass the whole D.C. metropolitan area, and I found a number of restaurants listed that I’d never heard about.
    However, I’ve got to comment on a couple of the findings, including:

    • Best All-Around Restaurant: Lebanese Taverna – Now, I’m a huge fan of Lebanese Taverna; the food is some of the best in the city. But the restaurant came in as the best “overall” restaurant, beating out restaurants that have ambrosia-quality food, such as Citronelle and Galileo. The category itself is probably to blame, however, as it doesn’t account for price range.
    • Best Breakfast: Bob and Edith’s Diner – I haven’t eaten here, but I’ve heard it’s amazing, so no arguments. However, The Original Pancake House on Rockville Pike came in #2, and their breakfasts are mediocre at best. And they certainly don’t come even close to the breakfasts at the Broadway Diner.
    • Best Chinese: Meiwah – Oh, come on. Meiwah is fine, but it isn’t Chinese for your true Chinese-food lover. Even the ever-venerable Full Kee ranked only 6th, and Gaithersburg’s banquet-hall-sized Dim Sum house New Fortune came in 8th. The amazing Chinatown Express didn’t get a mention, nor did Rockville’s fantastic Joe’s Noodle House. Clearly, these people don’t know good Chinese.
    • Best Takeout: Five Guys – Alright, they got this one right. Best fast-food burgers in a 100 mile radius, no questions asked. Although I’m less sure it should rank first for Best Burger all around. It’s hard to compare a fast food burger with a juicy, slow cooked restaurant burger.

    The categories were: All-Around; Breakfast; Brunch; Burgers; Cheap Eats; Chinese; Coffeehouses; Comfort Food; Family-Friendly; Healthy Dining; italian; Late-Night Dining; Mexian; Outdoor Dining; Pizza; Romantic; Seafood; Steak Houses; and Takeout.
    Let us know what you think in the comments section. If you’ve got other suggestions that AOL CityGuide missed, let us know – we’re always looking for new places to try!
    (Link via AOL’s Notebook: Washington, D.C.)

  • 27Jan

    tam_sign.jpeAs many fads do, the Anti-MSG paranoia that has swept the USA in the past probably confuses the outside world. An American population permanently on the look-out for ‘the next cool thing to fear’ apparently missed the fact that the entire population of China does not go around clutching their heads in pain. After all, MSG (literally, boiled sea kelp) had been a staple of the Chinese diet for thousands of year, you figure they would have noticed by now.
    No, the entire hoopla can be linked back to a single letter to the editor to the New England Journal of Medicine in 1968, written by a man commenting that he sometimes felt strange after eating Chinese food. No research, no testing, the concept of MSG being bad for you is based on the equivalent of one one guy’s preference for Thai.
    Of course, just after an alien movie comes out, UFO sightings go up. It was only a matter of time before reports of “strange MSG-related phenomenon” started coming in and “caring” Chinese restaurants were forced to put out the “no MSG signs”.
    i assume most of this has died down by now- recent tests show that MSG is no more harmful than a similar amount of sugar, salt, or a piece of bread- any effects people might perceive are usually caused by the standard sugar rush when eating heavily on an empty stomach.
    Incidentally, a food with much more MSG in it than Chinese that somehow managed to evade the witch-hunt? Cheddar Cheese.
    No, I’m not going to footnote sources, this is a blog, dammit, not an academic paper. I just got out of a 3 hour meeting about department policy and currently hate the world.

  • 27Jan

    peppers.jpgRemember when you were younger and your parents used to trick you into eating food you didn

    Permalink Filed under: Recipes 1 Comment
  • 26Jan

    lable.jpgAs if the huge Splenda shortages this season weren

  • 25Jan

    cold.gifGoddamn, is zaf sick. She’s rolling around on the mattress muttering about butterflies and the Department of Labor. The only thing that could cause such behavior would have to be that most dire combination of maladies, the flu a cold, and food poisoning.
    So what do you give to the invalid to whom everything tastes like vaguely salty hair, but without the excitement?

    • Garlic

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