Thursday, December 20, 2012

Reheating Pizza


Reheat Pizza 
Heat up leftover pizza in a non-stick skillet on top of the stove, 
set heat to med-low and heat till warm. This keeps the crust crispy. No soggy micro pizza. I saw this on the cooking channel and it really works. 
Mona, Orlando, FL


Saturday, December 1, 2012

Sunday, November 11, 2012

In Search of the Bread Basket

The question as to whether or not to provide free bread when customers initially sit down in a restaurant is starting to  get attention from restaurant owners. In an attempt to cut expenses, an increasing #  of restaurants have decided to stop providing the bread. Some have cut it out completely and others have it available if the customer is willing to pay for it. The decision to stop providing the "bread basket" appears to be economic. One owner estimated that the cost of free bread was $75,000 a year. In addition, other owners point out that a "bread basket" fills customers up and cuts into sales by leading customers to forego appetizers or desert.  It would seem, however, that this would have been the case eve since bread was originally provided. Customer reactions seem to be largely negative with people complaining because  they have stopped receiving what had always been included as a welcome to the restaurant.  All of this had led me to try and determine the origins of the "bread basket". I am having trouble finding when and where it started and if the motivation was anything but an attempt to put the customer in a good mood. I would like to hear from anyone who has info regarding the origins of free bread.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Tip on Roasting Vegetables


Ran into this tip on the food blog "the Amateur Gourmet". When roasting vegetables, let your pan preheat in the oven so it gets scorching hot, and then toss the veggies on, you’ll get maximum crispy/caramelizing.  

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Frito Pie

This is a newspaper account of the closing of  the Woolworth Five and Dime store in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1997 .
http://linkage.rockefeller.edu/wli/reading/woolworth.html

I was on my first visit to Santa Fe at the time. Surprised to find a Woolworth Five and Dime on the plaza which by then was mostly art galleries and native American women selling torquise jewelry. Big sign in window indicated they were closing at the end of the week. Not sure what led me to stop into a Woolworths after traveling all the way from Maine but the visit led me to the lunch counter where i had my first "frito pie". http://weeklywire.com/ww/08-18-97/alibi_extra.html

Have been making and eating them ever since. This is the official Fritos Co. recipe http://www.fritolay.com/recipes/recipe/fritos-chili-pie

Here is a recipe for a "frito pie" casserole. http://www.texascooking.com/recipes/fritopie.htm Notice the Wolf brand chili. I have this shipped in from Texas. Clearly superior to any canned chili I can find in local grocery stores.

A recipe from John T. Edge http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2UViOx/:gDtPQtOG:Xl+HgtUO/gardenandgun.com/article/frito-pie-recipe/  One of my favorite southern food writers.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Justin Wilson (Dirty Rice)

One of the first food TV shows that I can remember watching is the "Cajun Cook" where I became fascinated with Louisiana cuisine. This was in the early 1980's. Eventually realized that this show was somewhat of a schtick but it certainly was responsible for a 30+ years interest in cajun cooking. Including a couple of dozen cookbooks and several trips to Louisiana to eat. This video is a good example of the program. "I gar-on-tee"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX3Y27LXFYw&feature=relmfu

Saigon (Restaurant Review)

Excellent Vietnamese restaurant in Portland,Maine.

http://www.blueberryfiles.com/2012/10/saigon-restaurant-review.html

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Colonel Paul's Cajun Seasoning

Individuals who are familiar with my interest in Louisiana cuisine often ask about the difference between creole and cajun food. The difference is relatively straightforward and easy to describe. Recently, a friend had noticed that they could purchase cajun as well as creole seasoning. The answer to his question of how they differed is not so easy. First, there seems to be as many different  reipes for Cajun seasonings as there are Cajuns.  Over the years I know I have  developed a preference for Cajun over Creole seasoning but I have never really bothered to figue out why.  I have read that Cajun seasoning is more likely to emphasize cayenne pepper and garlic powder while Creole seasoning is more likely to have dried oregano due to the influence of Italians in the history of New Orleans. I  have tried a dozen or more Cajun seasonings & the best by far is Colonel Paul's. I first became familiar with Colonel Paul when I ordered a book "Cajun and Creole Cooking with Miss Edie & the Colonel". Turns out that in the appendixes we find out that The Colonel has his own brand of Cajun and Creole seasonings made in Opelousas La. I iniatially tried to order on the website but that was down so I called the 800 # directly. Lo and behold the Colonel answered the phone himself and has done so every time I have called to place an order  After taking my order  he always says he will mail the seasoning with a bill and then I can send him a check. I cannot  remember the last time I was able to wait for something to arrive before I had to pay for it. His Cajun seasonings come in mild, moderate & Hot & Spicy versions. A 5.8 oz container is only $3.00.  He never charges a shipping fee. If you want to try Cajun seasoning, give the Colonel a call. (205 988-0788) I think he enjoys talking to his customers.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Green Chile Cheeseburger Trail

 https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikvixhM96Scr4W8aFlFeQawO0pwFxvDAi5sgNplaDoB3JrPbPFC13ZY7giQWg1BZQexf7PjJzFD9shdOioXmiDIHaH9zSvpK4pC8Alw7APTy1HUwWxSls5Fu7q9am22MQAfNm0afYDv_4/s1600/IMG_5837.jpg

I place my order for New  Mexico' s roasted green chiles every Sept. Green chile cheeseburgers are one of my favorite ways to prepare them. See video for tantalizing images. It is possible to substitute roasted Anaheims which are available here in Maine but  roasted New Mexican green chiles are usually hotter than Anaheims and I think taste much more flavorful. Have recently started using ground lamb for the burger. Goes really well with chiles.
http://youtu.be/wYj21z09da8

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Loving Falafel Not

Why do I continue to order a dish that I have never truly liked. Falafel to me has always struck me as something I would surely love to eat. It is deep fried and contains ingredients that I love to eat including garbanzo beans, onion, garlic parsley/cilantro cumin etc.. Recently I ordered falafel for the umpteenth time and sure enough after a couple of bites I wondered why I ordered it. As usual I found it to have a very dense texture with a heaviness that muted most of the flavor. The tahini sauce helps but I could order the tahini sauce and skip the falafel and not miss it.This has repeated itself over the years.  Initially, I thought that I was not getting good falafel. But it has been many years and different locales and their have been no winners. Freud talks about repitition compulsion. Maybe this what he meant. I should note that the tahini sauce  is great on french fries.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Home Made Taco Shells


Working with 6 tortillas at a time, wrap in a barely damp cloth or paper towel and microwave on High until steamed, about 30 seconds. Lay the tortillas on a clean work surface and coat both sides with cooking spray. Then carefully drape each tortilla over two bars of the oven rack. Bake at 375°F until crispy, 7 to 10 minutes. Source: Eating Well

No longer any need to buy box of 8 or 12 already premade.
Spices can be pressed into uncooked shell before microwave/baking.

Taj

I do not know how many Indian restaurants have opened and closed in greater Portland since I started working here 36 years ago. Some are still around for reasons that escape me. When visitors from out of town ask about Indian restaurants I tell them that my fantasy is that a converted milk truck leaves Boston every Monday morning filled with a mother sauce that tastes very much likes curry powder. The truck backs up to the kitchens of the Indian restaurants in Portland and delivers the same sauce to all. The restaurants in turn serves all their dishes covered with this same sauce.  Gross exaggeration to be sure but I challenge anybody to visit the current Indian restaurants blindfolded and correctly pick the restaurant based on the taste of the food. Now good news. Taj, a new Indian restaurant in South Portland, seems to be an exciting change to the above scenario. The menu is the first thing that grabbed my eye. Clearly a variety of offerings not usually seen in current Indian restaurants. For example, Onion Mirchi Bajji (Hot Green Pepper mixed with Ckickpea Flour, fried, and stuffed with Onions in Lime Juicee), Uthappam-Onin/Masala/Veg (Indian Style Rice & Lentil Pancake with onions,potatoes,veg. chili & cilantro toppings) & Green Chicken (freshly chopped gongura with chicken in sauce). Do not confuse this latter dish with Thai Green Chicken Curry. Gongura is a green sorrel that is frequently used in South Indian cooking. A truly different taste.

Things I like in addition to the taste of the food. Menu is partially divided into South & North Indain recipes. Dishes are not watered down  because they are worried that people will find food too spicy. One interesting note. The menu describes the restaurant as serving Indian & Indo Chinese Cuisine. The term Indo Chinese  refers to dishes that are a fusion of Chinese and Indian. I think a more descriptive term is Chindian but it is commonly referred to as Indo Chinese. The menu does have a separate group of offerings labelled Indo Chinese which includes 3 offerings (fried rice, hakka noodles & taj szechwan rice). I tried the Taj Schezwan Rice and would not order it again. I look forward to trying the Hakka Noodles. Interestingly there are a number of other Chindian recipes that are not included as Indo Chinese on the menu (Gobi 65, Gobi Manchurian and Chicken Manchurian).. Give it a try if you like Indian. It is clear that the dishes are not from a converted milk truck.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Take It With a Grain of Salt

An incresing number of restaurants are taking the salt shaker off the table. It seems that it angers the chef when the person eating the food determines how salty they prefer the food. Fine, then let the chef pay the bill when I find that I would prefer additional salt when there is none available. As an aside, I have never been refused when I have asked for salt to be delivered to the table. Why the charade?

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Spread

Spread is a relatively new restaurant in Portland. Have been there twice. Menu is divided into 3 categories: spreads, small plates & large plates. Huge discrepancy between the three. Spreads and small plates have been very impressive including smoked trout with capers(spread) and Wagu beef sliders (small plate). Large plates were very disappointing including Buttermilk fried Cornish Hen & Pan Seared NY Strip. The steak was noticeably smaller than other strips I have  had in Portland restaurants and certainy overpriced at $28 for this size. Confusing to say the least. Not inclined to go back anytime in near future.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

A Hot Dog With Your Pizza?

When I used to turn my nose up at a food when I was a child, my father liked to break the food down into separate parts and, after pointing out that I liked the separate parts, would conclude I should like the combination. For example, I like vinegar (love it on french fries) and I like cabbage (always have cabbage salad with baked beans) therefore I should like sauerkraut which I dislike. This image reminded me of those conversations.


http://m.static.newsvine.com/servista/imagesizer?file=vidya-raoF181B33C-11A5-2B34-7C44-270BB87D8F01.jpg&width=500While I love pizza and hot dogs, this combo does nothing for me. At this point, you have to go to a Pizza Hut in England to buy it.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Heads Left On

Very difficult to find shrimp with heads left on. Last week ran into them in the Hong Kong market on Congress St. in Portland. Essential for Salt & Pepper shrimp recipe. Yes, you eats the heads. No different from crawdads in Louisiana where you suck the heads and pinch the tails. Thanh Thanh II, a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, originally had Salt & Pepper shrimp on their menu with heads left on but switched over to headless shrimp when customers complained about the heads.See video below for preparation of Salt & Pepper shrimp by Ming Tsai.
  http://videos.howstuffworks.com/ming-east-west/4677-salt-and-pepper-shrimp-video.htm

Friday, August 10, 2012

A Garnish with Taste.

I grew up with the idea that curly leaf parsley was a garnish with no taste. The only exception was   homemade tabbouleh that used copious amounts of curly leaf parsley. As I have indicated in another post, this was probably due to the fact that flat leaf parsley was not available in northern Maine in the 1950's. I recently came across another use for curly leaf parsley that appeared in the Tom Fitzmooris NOMENU. See below.

Here's the recipe as published.
French-fried Parsley

The Bitoun brothers--Jacques, Maurice, André, and Simon--ran a number of restaurants around the New Orleans area for many years, severally and in concert. Their best-remembered dish was a complimentary appetizer: a basket of fried parsley. Maurice called it "French popcorn." It was much better than you could imagine, and intrigues everyone who eats it. There are two tricks. First, this works better when the oil has been used previously, especially if it has fried chicken. Second, curly-leaf parsley is essential to holding the batter better.

Ingredients:
1 quart canola oil
2 bunches curly-leaf parsley
2/3 cup flour
2 Tbs. salt-free Creole seasoning
 1 Tbs. salt
1 egg
1 cup milk

Directions:
1. Heat the canola oil in a large saucepan to 350 degrees.

2. Wash the parsley well, and shake dry. Cut off the bottom parts of the stems.

http://www2.worldpub.net/images/SAV/125-04_fried_parsley.jpg3. Combine the flour, Creole seasoning, and salt in a bowl, blending it with a fork. Whisk the egg and the milk together in a second, much larger bowl. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, and whisk to make a thin batter. Add a little water if necessary to make the batter runny.

4. Toss the parsley around in the batter to coat. Shake off excess batter. Carefully drop the parsley into the hot oil and fry until it just begins to brown--just about a minute. Drain on paper towels and serve hot. Serve instantly.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Winter in New Orleans?

Recently read a blog by Tom Fitzmorris suggesting that New Orleans restaurants need to consider ways of keeping cold blasts from entering dining room when the front door is open in winter weather. We have restaurants in Portland that have the same problem and we have real winters. I am sure that this may be an expensive problem for restaurants to fix but there are few things more irritating than a sharp drop in temperature when I am eating out.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

The Second Menu

Fascinating article in Chicago Tribune (Aug. 2, 2012) regarding the habit of many Asian restaurants to have two menus. One for gwai lo (cantonese slang for foreigners) customers and a second menu for Asians. This is due to the belief that Americans are not ready for true Asian cooking. The author suggests that this practice is as George W. Bush put it " the soft bigotry of low expectations". I run into these low expectations repeatedly when I try to order hot and spicy Chinese (Szechuan) or Indian (Vindaloo) food. I usually receive a small bowl of hot sauce alongside of my meal. You may be able to add salt after a meal is cooked but adding hot sauce to Szechuan Beef does not make it Szechuan Beef. Serving Americanized versions of Asian food becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy and ensures that dishes like crab rangoon will haunt us forever.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

What Does Moxie Taste Like?

Typical answer to this question is universally negative. Recently ran into this positive description "carbonated fig newton". This assumes you like fig newtons.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Poutition

Poutinne seems to be a trendy dish in Portland restaurants. I am familiar with 4 restaurants that have it on their menu and there may be more. Here is a video that suggests the trendiness is even stronger in Canada   Poutition

Parsley. Curly vs Flat Leaf

My parents had good friends who were Lebanese. As a result, I grew up eating kibbeh naye, hummus and tabbouleh.  The parsley they used for tabbouleh was curly leaf parsley and it was only recently that I entertained the possibility that this was most likely due to the unavailability of flat leaf parsley in northern Maine in the 1950's. While lebanese recipes found on the internet and cookbooks usually call for parsley (unspecified as to curly or flat leaf) I have found sources that claim that flat leaf parsley is preferred in Lebanese cuisine. I will make 2 batches the next time I make tabouleh with a different type of parsley in each one and see if people have a preference.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Shucking Corn--Clean Ears Ready to Eat

Easiest, Quickest Way To Get An Ear of Corn From Store To Your Mouth

Caperberries

I was in my late 60's before I had my first caperberries. Stumbled on them when Whole Foods came to town. Not the same thing as capers. Size of a grape. Sour flavor that I find useful to cut the sweet hit of  pasta & potato salads. Goes really well as an accompaniment with smoked trout. Excellent in Bloody Mary's. 
 http://www.wisegeek.com/what-are-caperberries.htm#lbimages

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Steamers Taste Better With Head Warmer Removed

Article in New York Times today on a longtime New Yorker who has moved to Maine and learned new culinary tricks. One of her suggestions has to do with cooking clams and she describes "the simplest method is to pluck a just-steamed steamer straight from the shell, swish it in hot water, dip it in melted butter and slurp it down". No mention of removing the neck warmer before before swishing, dipping or slurping. One possibility is that she forgot to mention that she does remove the head warmer before eating clam or actually holds the clam by the head warmer and just eats the belly or does not  know the head warmer is supposed to be removed and eats it along with rest of the clam.

Restaurant Reviews & Low Back Pain

I cannot remember seeing a restaurant review that commented on the comfortableness of the seating. Maybe restaurant reviewers are immune to low back pain. I have had two experiences with seating this past year that seriously detracted from my enjoyment of the experience. One, involved a new french bistro that selected aluminum patio chairs for their dining room and the other was a restaurant that used schoolhouse side chairs. Interestingly, the food was excellent in both places. None of the reviews received by either place mentioned the uncomfortable seating. As the graying of America continues, I would think that some restaurant owners might want to give more consideration to the quality of their seating.

Cold Lobster with Remoulade Sauce

For a great way to eat cold lobster meat, try it with remoulade sauce. See www.food.com/recipe/randys-easy-remoulade-sauce-153253 for a easy remoulade sauce recipe.

Aleppo Pepper Substitute

4 parts sweet paprika to 1 part cayenne pepper