Pages

Showing posts with label latkes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label latkes. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2010

Playing Ketchup Part 1

(Post title in honor of my roommate Allison, who will put ketchup on anything and everything.)



HAPPY NEW YEAR, BLOGGIES!!!  I have a good feeling about 2010.  I have yet to come up with resolutions, but I'm pretty sure I need to establish at least a few.  I think I'm on the verge of a major life change or two, and I could use some sort of blueprint to work with, aka new year's resolutions.  Will post them when I come up with them.


As you may have guessed, I am back from the family cruise vacation, and while I have lots of stuff to share from the trip, I also seem to still have leftovers from December.  Since I have been very diligent about photographing but much less diligent about blogging, I have found myself with a backlog of photos that I want to post.  So I'm going to go back in time with a few food highlights from the past few weeks.  I've been mostly working from home and/or not working at all (yay bench time!), so I've had time to get back in the kitchen, and I totally overlooked the holiday season.  How grinchy of me!  Once I catch up from 2009, I will start fresh with a cruise post and then try to keep up with myself. As a matter of fact, Freya's Official Resolution #1: Blog at least 2-3 times a week, depending on availability of material.  I want to say I will blog every day (that's the real goal), but I'll stick with a more attainable goal for now and reassess later.  Midyear Resolutions?


And so, I give you: LIGHTNING ROUND 1: The Holidays!


Latkes!  My friends and I had our 2nd Annual Chanukah Latke Party a few weeks ago, and it was a huge success.  We learned from our mistakes, so this year included less latke (read: less deep-fried food), more veggies, a Secret Santa, and... a snowstorm!  I guess we didn't plan that last part, but it was a nice touch.  Thanks, mother nature.


I kind of invented my own latke, inspired by a whole slew of recipes that I read for research.  I used 1 large Yukon Gold potato, 1 carrot, 1 parsnip, and 1 baby zucchini + 1 normal zucchini.  I ended up adding 3 eggs in the end and probably about 1/4 cup matzo meal, if not more.  Breadcrumbs or flour work too, but matzo meal felt more traditional to me.




It's a pretty simple process: grate, mix, fry your little heart out, blot blot blot.  Yumzo.  And I didn't even lose any knuckles this year on the grater.






Tada!  All fried up and gorrrrgeous if I do say so myself.  You need to make the oil super hot and be generous with it.  I only eat latkes (or whatever potato pancake variety this may be) once or twice a year, so what the heck.  Live a little.  And use Canola oil.  :)




I thought they were delicious if I do say so myself.  Parsnip was a lovely addition.  My other contribution to the party was homemade applesauce, which is absurdly easy but a billion times more satisfying than the jar stuff.  All you do is peel, core, slice (I like to slice each apple in eighths and then cut each slice in half crosswise), cinnamon and sugar up those puppies, and nuke, mash, nuke, mash.








I use a lot of cinnamon because I love the stuff (1 tsp?) and probably about 2 tablespoons of brown sugar for this batch of 4 apples.  Depends on how sweet your apples are to begin with.  We devoured this.  Buying more apples and getting back at it tomorrow.  I love eating this stuff warm as a snack.  I'm thinking granola would taste good on top.  Will report back on that one.


My friends are wonderful chefs too, so when we get together we eat cook a lot.  Ariel made zucchini latkes, and Amanda made traditional ones (potato).


 


Shield your eyes from the grease, por favor.


Katie made a sweet potato and apple bake from my previously mentioned bible, Nava Atlas's The Vegetarian Family Cookbook -- I can post the recipe if requested.  And then we (and by we I think I mean Alex, Katie, and I) shared this ginormous bowl of roasted brussels sprouts a la Rachel.





And then there was obviously vino.  I drank white for a change because I brought over one of my wine of the month wines!  It was a Sicilian Fiano, a new white wine varietal for me, and I really liked it.  A lot of complexity in flavor for a white, and still able to stand on its own without food.  A winner!  It won a lot of affordability and value awards.





My poorly lit plate, clockwise from bottom left: brussels sprouts, apple/sweet potato, perfect baked chicken, apple sauce, one of each latke plus a little sour cream (ok, and one more of my own ;)), and grilled onions!





Allison broke out her apron and prepared this AMAZING cake from Cooking Light.  Allison, can you give me the recipe?  PLEASE?  It was apple-y and cinnamon-y and sooo moist.  I insisted that she take home all the leftovers to her apt (aka my apt).  It was delicious the next day.  And the day after.  She also claims it's 120 calories per slice?!





After the food comas set in, we lit the candles...





... then did our first annual $10 maximum Secret Santa gift exchange!  Amanda showed off her new Snuggie.  Look how she can hold a glass AND stay warm at the same time!





And I showed off the seal Amanda gave me!!! 





We now may or may not have a collection of wind-up toys in front lined up in front of our TV. They may or may not be named Seymour, Tupac, and Xavier.





After all was said and done, we looked out the window and noticed that it was kind of, well, blizzardy.  We postponed the journey back uptown from Rachel and Ariel's place by watching Sex and the City, but eventually it was time to go.  Katie, Joanna, and I ventured to the bus stop...








...then to the subway...


"EEEEKKKK A SUBWAY RAT!"




"We're distressed and cold!"





...and then finally a snowy walk home from the subway station.





Mmmm, New York in the winter time.  Beautiful.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Photographically Challenged Eating

I have very few photos to share, because I keep forgetting I have a blog!  Unless I'm cooking, I often forget my camera.  But I can't let two amazing meals from this past weekend go unmentioned.  That would just be wrong.

Friday night: Moustache Pitza.  Katie and I went on an adventure to the West Village on a very, very cold night to check out this restaurant and then to go to a friend's birthday party in the neighborhood.  Let me just say that we had a legume FEAST, which expanded in my stomach later and rendered me incapable of finishing even a single beer.  A Blue Moon, at that.  Pathetic.  Anyway, dinner was worth it.  Amazing.  Check out the menu -- we ordered hummus, a spinach and chickpea salad, the chicken kebab plate (with the most incredible lentil puree), and a seafood pitza.  Sound like way too much food for 2 people?  It probably was.  I kid you not, my coworker asked, "So were you there with a big group?  Like 10 people?"  Er, yeah... But we had no problem polishing off every last morsel.  SO GOOD.  I think my favorites were the  spinach and chickpea salad (ah, memories of Espana) and the pitza, plus the lentil puree!

Saturday night: Foodie event at Buttermilk Channel!  


[photos from www.buttermilkchannelnyc.com]

Alex and I have a laundry list of foodie restaurants to visit, so we've started trying to do one every weekend.  I loved everything about Buttermilk Channel from the space to the decor to the popovers.  It was such a lovely dining experience.  Maybe I could live without the wait and the sketchy subway station.  They focus on fresh and seasonal ingredients, which always makes me happy.  Alex, Joanna, Katie, and I all ordered different things, which is so rare for us!  We shared baby turnips and brussels sprouts with mustard and bacon as an appetizer (with popovers! drool!), and I had a perfect Kelso Honey Nut Brown beer.  I love sweet dark beers.  For my entree, I had the duck meatloaf, which is just totally out of character.  But I've gotten into the habit of asking for waiter/waitress recommendations, especially if a restaurant is well known for a certain dish.  This was a much appreciated recommendation.  The jus (Joanna's word of the night) was outrageous.  My friends ordered the scallops (my runner up), the lamb salad, and a soup/salad combo.  We're good sharers, so I had a bite of everything. Delicious!  We decided to go nuts and ordered dessert too!  Bread pudding, pecan pie sundae (GAH!), and 4 spoons.  And not a drop left behind.  Alex, do you have my duck photo?  [As a side note, I adore ducks.  Not sure why, but they're just the best animal.  I felt a little sad eating one.  But not that sad.]

Two of the things we ordered were featured in the website gallery!  My duck on the left (except replace the green stuff with parsnip puree and a darker jus), and the pecan pie sundae on the right.

  

After dinner we waddled back to my apt, where my roommate was having people over for a holiday party. We continued to eat (oops), although in our defense we only attacked the fresh fruit.  Sooo, I ate a lot this weekend.  It was amazing.

Sunday I continued the foodfest at my parents' house, where we celebrated Chanukah with brisket and latkes!  Brisket is not a photogenic dish, but here is my dad manning the latke pan.



Blackberry photo.  Blech.  But awesome latkes!  These were classics: potato, onion, matzo meal, and a horrifying amount of canola oil.  Mmmm tastes like Chanukah.

This weekend may include a visit to  Locanda Verde as the foodie adventure of the week.  CANNOT WAIT!  It's Robert DeNiro's newest and Alex and I are pumped.  Hopefully it will fit into the plans!