Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Three Simple Tips for Aspiring Cooks

On Easter Eve, I had the opportunity to eat a fully catered authentic Italian-American meal, complete with many vegetarian-friendly options, courtesy of Chef Mark of San Francisco's California Culinary Academy and Michael's Restaurant (2929 Avenue R, Brooklyn, NY). The reason for the union of East and West Coast deliciousness? The birthday dinner of my next-door neighbor, Vivian – Chef Mark's mother. Needless to say, I was delighted to be meeting the chef son who my a-Mu (the Toisanese name I call my neighbor, which means something like "respected older unrelated aunt") brags so much about. I had so many questions.

First on my agenda – right after saying hello, wishing a happy birthday to the birthday girl, and the quick scan of the dishes to whet my appetite for later – was to chat up Chef Mark about what kind of food he cooks, how he cooks, and what tips he would have to an aspiring cook.

Chef Mark was very amiable and obliging, as I suspect I detected a combination of pleasant surprise (at finding someone so enthusiastic about what he does for a living) and weary familiarity (from all the students asking him questions). He immediately said the following:

"Three things: use fresh ingredients, take your time, stay simple."

That's it.

I was amazed.

And momentarily silent (if you know me well, you know how rare these occasions are) from Chef Mark's quick and ready answer. I thought he'd at least pause at the uniqueness of my question. Now I found myself mentally typing his words down and filing them away for this post.

Lesson learned. Always be on your toes.

I repeated the three rules to him just to confirm later that evening. But not before I asked him what he thought about CSAs (community supported agriculture, for those whose lives don't revolve around the fresh food movement). He agreed with me that they're great ways to get fresh food on the table. I would add that they're a great way to cut costs if you feed an army of kids regularly or if you need to push yourself to cook more often by throwing produce too beautiful to waste your way every other week.

And really, these rules make a world of sense. Here's why.

Use fresh ingredients


Vegetable Antipasti

Take this plate of antipasti that Chef Mark prepared that morning. It practically screams "Fresh." Fresh kalamata and green olives. Fresh steamed asparagus. Fresh roasted eggplant. Fresh tossed skinny string beans (I don't recall the actual name of these at the moment). Fresh red peppers, roasted and sliced into slivers. It's gorgeous. And good for you. And good eats.

Take your time

This is definitely pertinent advice for me, the impatient one when it comes to eating, slow walkers, and important things getting done. Since starting my gradual adoption of a vegetarian diet over five years ago, I've made progress on the eating speed front. I'd heard all the talk about how French women – and women living along the Iberian and Mediterranean Seas in general – stay lean and fit in spite of their oil-rich diets. I knew the value behind the concept of afternoon siestas. I noticed how stuffing my face made me feel sluggish for hours afterwards and slowed my work productivity.

Now slow walkers... that's out of my hands.

I'm working on having the guts, courage and shrewdness to just take on the pile of work, already, sensing the balance between what needs to get done first and what can get done first.

But taking my time in the kitchen is so far turning out to be pretty relaxing, cathartic even, and helping me slow down in other ways, too.

Stay simple

Cheese Antipasti

How much simpler can it get than a tray of sliced mozzarella and tomatoes, tossed in olive oil and vinaigrette? (Along with some type of salami-like meat and chunks of dry cheddar.)

The simplest recipes are often the most delicious. Sometimes they are even more time consuming to prepare than less seemingly complicated recipes.

And the foods with the simplest list of ingredients are always the healthiest. If you can't pronounce it or have never heard of it, it's no longer simple and no longer healthy. Just say no to food additives as often as you can.

Another way to keep simplicity in mind is in how you stock your kitchen, however small (warning: it's a video), like Deb at Smitten Kitchen's. Or natural foods oriented, like Heidi's over at 101Cookbooks. Or regarding flavor profiles.

And if you think simple and tasty means hard work, check out Amy's Stupidly Simple Snacks video series over at AmyBlogsChow.

There. Three simple rules, plus a little help from friends with tasty habits, to start your own cooking adventure. Enjoy!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

A Midtown Lunch Spot: Meal O'Bama




A chalkboard sign advertises the daily specials at Meal O'bama, the recently renamed food cart located on the corner of W39th Street and 7th Avenue.

Other fast-food chains, such as Obama Fried Chicken in Harlem and Brownsville, have gained media attention in recent weeks for changing their name to reference President Barack Obama.

This vendor stand seems not to be attracting controversy, though. It is supervised by Mr. Muhammad Rahman, famous for formerly being a chef at the Russian Tea Room, who owns and operates a small chain of food vendor carts called Kwik Mart throughout Midtown.

A day-in-the-life timeline of the workers and cooks who operate the Kwik Mart vendor chain, of which this cart is a part of, can be found on the NYC eatery blog, Midtown Lunch.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

From Garden to Green Jobs: Returning Brooklyn Youth To Their Green Roots

At the third annual Making Brooklyn Bloom event on Saturday, March 7, hundreds of New Yorkers of all ages gathered on the grounds of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden (off Eastern Parkway and Prospect Park) for a day of running around newly budding flowers, watching fish swim, making solar-powered toy racecars, pressing fresh apple cider - and, of course, learning.

Local and citywide organizations such as Sustainable Flatbush, Just Food, the Food Bank of NY, TreesNY, Red Hook’s Added Value farms and the upcoming Brooklyn Urban Garden School, encouraged participants to experiment with hands-on projects at their volunteer tables, emphasizing the fun and ease of activities that promote food, environmental and social sustainability.



Click here to read more and view a SLIDESHOW of the day's events.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

CULTURE: Food, Culture At Festival At Reading

(previously published here at www.thebulletin.us)

Food, family, farmers and animals all come together this weekend for the 19th annual Pennsylvania Dutch Festival at Philadelphia's historic Reading Terminal Market, bringing a little taste of the Lancaster countryside to the big city.

In between buggy rides and digging into chicken pot pie, though, it's worth remembering that fun and games aside, it takes a lot of work to prepare and cook the food, make the crafts and put on the show that we've come to know and love ... plus a few new surprises.

They stand there every day, doling out heaps of apple dumplings, bags of fresh produce and slabs of ribs. One of the few constants in city of hectic unease, the Market's Pennsylvania Dutch merchants are a welcome reminder to celebrate deep-rooted traditions and simple yet beautiful creativity.

At the Dutch Eating Place, workers - wearing everything from plain dresses, aprons and bonnets to T-shirts, overalls, jeans and baseball caps - work side-by-side to prepare their award-winning blueberry pancakes, as well as hot soups, fresh-roasted open-faced turkey sandwiches with mashed potatoes, and fresh-squeezed lemonade.

"It's a lot of fun, but a lot of work," said Phares Glick, the owner of the neighboring Rib Pit, which has operated here for 21 years. "It's always [about] the new customers and new interest."

Merchants are Amish families who have operated here since the market began in 1980. All hailing from Lancaster County, these farmers and entrepreneurs bring a rare charm and dedication to both their products and their customers, whether it is Fisher's ice cream (which comes in flavors for diabetics, too), Kauffman's colorful tomatoes, Beiler's delicious donuts, L. Halterman's sausages or Dienner's barbeque chicken.

The families all know one another and according to Kevin Beiler, who runs Beiler’s Bakery and A J Pickle Patch & Salads, they all “try helping each other out.”

The days of feasting culminates in a barn-raising and auction on Saturday, when a small barn - in this case, a garden shed - will be sold to the highest bidder. Both events are new to the festival.
All proceeds will go to the Lancaster Farmland Trust, a private nonprofit that seeks to preserve and protect Lancaster's agriculture, land and the way of life tied to it.

The three-day festival will take place in the market's center court seating area from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., as well as outside between 11th and 12th streets and Arch and Filbert streets.

Heather L. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us
©The Evening Bulletin 2008