Saturday, November 6, 2010

miscilanii

The storied miscelenii were a ferocious latin kingdom that hung around battles, running in random paths, fighting anyone the came across. i am, of course, lying. im just gonna post some of my favorite quick meals of the last week or two, followed by a decidedly not quick one.

vietnamese/ japanese influenced bowl o fun.

cup of mini bowties
pepper
rosemary
chives
three romaine leaves
one tomato
one egg
olive oil

there are many ways to eat this dish. so take this arrangement as more of a suggestion.

make the pasta as you see fit, but if it isn't al dente you are wrong. drain.

fry the egg.

cut the veggies to bite size or smaller.

get a decent size bowl, put down the veggies at the bottom, followed by the pasta. dust with the spices, drizzle with olive oil. top with the egg. get your fork. break the yolk down into the pasta, cut up the egg, and stir that shit up. eat it. eat it fast. enjoy the goupy, protein filled goodness. slurp it down. SLURP IT!

Lox Omelette

one small baked potato
three eggs
one slice provolone
fresh spinach
lox
buttah.

tear or cut the provolone as small as you have the patience for.
beat the eggs, tip the provolone into the eggs.
heat a small pan.
with a sharp, serrated knife, slice the baked potato into discs.
put the buttah into the pan, once its melted throw in the egg provolone mix.
out a layer of the potato on top of the eggs, followed by a layer of spinach, and a layer of lox.
after its cooked for a bit. fold, cook for a bit, and turn.

enjoy!

Grilled Chicken Skewer Oatmeal

whole mess of chicken breasts
olive oil
red wine vinegar
soy sauce
garlic
whiskey
Oatmeal
hummos OR pesto
grill
skewer

invite your friends over
cube the chicken into 1 inch cubes
marinate in a bag with 1/2 cup olive oil
1/4 cup each of soy sauce, whiskey, and vinegar
as much garlic as you care for.

after an hour or so, start the coal. skewer the chicken cubes.
when the coal is read, cook the chicken. i dunno. a minute or so per side? make sure its done.
feed your friends, drink the rest of the whiskey, wake up and curse god.
make the oatmeal. look in the fridge. do you have hummos or pesto? whichever you have, put two spoonfulls into the oatmeal when its done. toss in the leftover chicken. mix it up. eat it. find a reason to continue living.

Pumpkin Filled, Baked Ravioli

I wanted to do something with pumpkin cos of the time of year. i love ravioli. i was a bit scared of boiling them, given some....mishaps. my initial attempt was a bit dry, so here is try 2.

are you a man? DO YOU HAVE BALLS? if so use this for the dough: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/tyler-florence/ravioli-dough-recipe/index.html except that i did half normal flour, half semolina.

1 large pumpkin
salt and pepper
a nutty cheese. a good romano might work, i used a cheese i picked up in upstate ny that was a bit more flavorful and less salty.
onion
milk
italian bread crumbs
oregano
chili powder
garlic powder
paprika
pepper
cloves

split the pumpkin in half, remove the guts, toast the seeds, eat like popcorn whilst watching porn. roast the pumpkin at 375 for 45 minutes. scoop out the meat. make the pasta. saute the onion, add a cup of the pumpkin puree. turn off the heat.
i cant claim to know the proper way to stuff ravioli. if you have insight, do it your way. i used a cup to cut discs from the pasta sheets, then wetted my fingers with water, wetted one of the discs, stuffed another of them with a teaspoon of pumpkin, top with a half inch square of cheese, press the whetted one ontop of the one with the stuffing, press down the edges with a fork. do all the ravioli. in the butt.
get a steamer. spray the part the food sits in with pam. boil the water. put down a layer of raviolis. steam the raviolis till the pasta is done. repeat until all the ravioli is steamed.
get a bowl, and mix a half cup of Italian bread crumbs, teaspoon each of chili, paprika, pepper, oregano, rosemary. half teaspoon garlic, quarter teaspoon of cloves. blend with a fork. in a separate bowl, pour milk.
dredge the ravioli in the milk, then cover in bread crumbs, then place in a greased cookie sheet. bake 375 until golden.

with the remains of the pumpkin, just eat that shit with a fork. if you are a boring son of a bitch, eat with butter and salt and pepper.

and thats that, bitches.


Monday, September 6, 2010

bbq


Today is the BBQ. I am cooking basically for me. My mom, my way hetero life partner, and two of our friends will be enjoying the food, but everyone has places to be and things to do. I don’t mind, ill be happy if people enjoy the food. I’m currently writing as the coals warm, drinking a bottle of my favorite beer (Old Brown Dog by Smutty Nose Brewery) as my dog sniffs around the yard and London Calling plays on the boom box. Something about a post-apocalyptic extravaganza is totally sitting right with me at the moment. The weather is perfect, on the cool side, and sunny. I might move the party to the hammock in a bit, though that would make it impossible to read lappy's screen.

As mentioned, my friends Jay and Sarah are working today. That is hella lame, to be laboring on labor day. As a consolation I will be bringing them some delicious food. In the case of Jay this presents me with certain problems. Jay is not a picky eater, but is a man who knows what he likes. At my last BBQ I knocked one out of the park by making a burger to which he expressed special devotion. A simple burger, it nonetheless made extensive use of garlic, and other ingredients that added up to a delicious whole. That is basically all i remember of the recipe. This is a problem. I want to repeat this success, but due to my habit of not writing my recipes down I forget almost all the ingredients. This is not the first time this has happened, but I'm hoping to make it the last by finally utilizing this blog. So then, concurrent with my sausage saga, I will begin The Quest to Grill the Perfect Burger (Jay Edition). Cheese! He likes cheese. I'll go slice some mozzarella.

Back.

Another long standing issue I have is how to properly utilize the veggies I grill. I love grilling veggies but I always pile so much onto my grilling agenda as to have no time to do anything but, and grilled veggie, while delicious, are not a dish unto themselves. this time I am only making sausages, burgers, and veggies, so I could attend to some veggie deliciousness. I'm still not really sure what to do. One issue is that my gal Friday dislikes the main veggie on offer: eggplant. I certainly understand her reasoning. Eggplant is a very bizarre and slimy creature, more like bread and less like a plant. As a chef I do not believe in forcing people to eat what they do not desire. On the other hand, it makes me not over eager to try the dill, grilled eggplant linguini dish that is eating at the back of my mind. I feel that everyone I cook for should be provided with a full meal, so I would have to make another veggie dish anyway. For today I think salad is going to be the main veggie axe, which people may top as they please. I would love to make the linguini tomorrow, but there are already plans, and Wednesday begins the high holy days for us chosen people, meaning Thursday would be the first day I could do this without undue stress. Still, grilled eggplant keeps. Its not like its going to get MORE slimy.

Anyway, my recipes. This is the one I am using for the eggplant. My only variation is that i am using three medium sized white eggplants rather than the large purple one called for here. As a result, I doubled the recipe, and added lemon pepper because it is good. http://southernfood.about.com/od/grillfruitveggie/r/bl30627e.htm

I had two issues with this recipe. First, the oil and the vinegar separate very fast. I know this isn’t rocket science, but I ended up with half very vinegary eggplants and half very oily eggplants. If possible have someone keep stirring for you whilst you baste. second, if you are actually a good person and use a coal grill, and if you follow the recipe’s directions and use glowing coals, do more like 5 minutes a side or you will end up with charcoal. Its not the end of the world, burned eggplant is tasty, but not really what you go for when you cook.

For the zucchini and mushrooms I marinated them in olive oil, red wine vinegar, lemon pepper, salt. I topped it up with water till they were submerged in the plastic bag. I was originally going to cook them on skewers, but the string beans I was planning on grilling in my classic manner turned out to be bad. I was somewhat disappointed in this outcome, and decided to switch to a similar method for the zucchini and mushrooms. In this vein I cut them into thin slices. After the eggplant were done, I put two tablespoons of garlic and butter in a cast iron pan which I put on the grill to heat up. Once it was hot I threw in the zucchini and mushroom combo. This you can let sit a while. The water from the marinade will take a while to cook off. Actually a long while. Leave out water if you can.

For the burger I took a well marbled boneless steak and ground it with two tablespoons of minced garlic. I grilled till it looked done, and when I flipped it i topped it with shredded mozzarella. For the sausage I made relatively small patties, and cooked them well. This was a mistake. I did it this way due to fears of disease, but that was ill founded. I did the grinding myself, and the pork was very fresh. I found the patties flavorful but a bit dry. Next time i will not overcook them. Mom called the result bacon-y. I can definitely see where she's coming from. I’ll also definitely want to increase the seasonings, including the fennel. The salt was a little overpowering, though maybe that is just because the fat was cooked off.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

sausages 2: the en-longing

Today I learned two valuable lessons: Ignore Alton Brown at your own peril, and there is no way to write a blog entry about sausage packing without being heavy on the sexual innuendo. So just to get it all out of our systems, go look at this clip.

As for the former lesson. Today I made another attempt at making sausage. Since last we spoke on this subject I viewed the sausage episode of Good Eats, one of Alton Brown's Food Network programs. The fortuitous viewing of this program contributed greatly to directing my current effort at encased meat production. His two recipes from the show can be found here and here. My recipe is something of a blend of the two.

The program also reinforced two lessons from my last attempt. 1: I need to use more fat. 2: I need a meat grinder. In remedying the first lesson Alton helpfully directed me to his favorite cut of pork for the purpose of sausaging, the shoulder, noting that it has a proportion of fat that is right in the sweet spot for sausage making, namely 20%. Alton added fat on top of this in one instance, but I'm trying to be relatively healthy, so I'm sticking with the naturally occuring fat in the shoulder. I was able to find such a cut at the local shopright, but stupidly forgot the proper name (it is also called Boston Butt) and let slide some fine boneless cuts last night. Today I returned to the meat department to find a plethora of store made sausages and a solitary, bone in, package of shoulder meat.

There is no finer way to learn to appreciate the job butchers do that to attempt to de-bone something, especially something as irregularly shaped as a shoulder. I am not burdened with the horror of raw meat some people feel, on the contrary being rather fascinated by it, but it is a huge pain in the ass to cut meat from a round joint with a straight knife. It is easier on strait bones, but not buy much.

The second lesson of brown was one I chose to ignore. I am strapped for cash at the moment, having just purchased a shit ton of text books for a large sum. I have found a 20$ grinder on Amazon, but given the delayed gratification of online shipping I could not bring myself to drop the cash. In my previous attempt my issue with the lack of a grinder came down to the consistency of the meat, which was also Mr. Brown's main complaint. Deciding I would rather have some tasty but mealy sausages than none at all, I decided to forge ahead with the food processor and pastry bag method I attempted previously.
So then to the attempt. I altered Alton's arangement based on comments on the rescipie's website (that it was not seasoned enough) and on the availability of fresh herbs. As I have rosemary and parseley growing in the garden, I decided to throw it in. As I very much enjoy sage in sausages, I decided to buy a box at the grocery. I dare you to tell me I was wrong. I had also bought some scallions. I decided to throw some in. I like scallions. They were handy. Fuck you.

sausages
1.5 tsp fennel seed, toasted and ground
2 tb chopped parsley
3 tb rosemary
4 tb sage
2 scallions
1.5 tsp pepper
1 tb garlic minced
2.5 lb pork shoulder
5 ft of pork casing, soaked 1/2 hour before use.

The fennel I did first. I dry toasted it in a pan for five minutes, as recommended by Mr. Brown, and then ground it in my gal Friday’s much abused coffee grinder. The grinder is intended for her flax seed, and other more mild aromatics, but certain of my relatives keep grinding coffee in it. I doubt my grinding of toasted fennel seed was much help. I’m sorry baby; ill buy you a new one after we move. Buying you one now would just see another grinder polluted by my relatives. After grinding and heartfelt guilt, the fennel was placed in a large bowl with the garlic and pepper.

After I acquired, washed, and chopped the herbs, these were also placed in the bowl with the garlic. Once the meat was deboned, I chopped it into pieces as small as I had the patience to create, at least an inch or less, and then threw it into the bowl. Finally, I spread the salt over the meat, and then mixed it all together by hand so the herbs and spices coated the meat. I then covered the bowl securely with plastic wrap, such that there were no vents to the outside, and placed in the fridge. My fridge has smelled poorly recently, and I didn’t want the sausage contaminated by bad smells. The point of the refrigeration is to cool the fat and allow it to take the flavors of the spices. Letting it get infected with the refrigerator smell would be counter productive. I let it rest for several hours, but one should be sufficient.

Then the destruction began.

I ground the meat very, very thoroughly in the food processor. I thought it came out well. It reminded me of dough. I think if I ever make meatloaf in the future I will use this method rather than a meat grinder. I may even be able to make meat hamentashen. That would be funny. Ha. I am enjoying that joke. But seriously. It was like dough. It was kinda gross.

I proceeded to stuff my dough meat into my meat pastry bag. I carefully did prep work on my casings, running water through the full length and tying off one end. As pastry bags are not made for sausage casings, the usual method of forcing meat out into the casing, like rolling a condom onto my erect penis (or pushing my erect penis into a rolled condom which is being held in place over a tube…), was not workable. I could not bunch the casing onto the pastry bag due to its rapid growth in size. Instead I had to hold one end onto the bag and force the meat into the casing. This was hard to do, so I would try to work the meat down the casing, away from the bag. Much like trying to force my erect penis into a used condom I found by the side of the road. not that that ever happened. Just hypothetically. That would be hard. Or like, putting it into a candy wrapper using only rainwater for lube. That sucks. amirite? Not that I’ve done that. That would be hella weird.

I was just musing on how long this was going to take, and how much my wrists and feet already hurt, and how I had two pounds of meat and five feet of casing to work with the meat wasn’t even near the end yet, when i first burst the casing. I paused. One fears this when working casing this way but it had ended up not being an issue last time. I found I could work the meat past the hole if I squeezed it hard enough. I continued to work the meat down the casing, and began to plan a contingency of tying off in the middle and working the meat in from both ends. Then the second hole appeared. And the third. I attempted to tie off, and created a fourth. This is when I gave up.

The sausages at tomorrows’ bbq will be patty style, and after this I will go ahead and order the meat grinder. it is just way too much of a pain int he ass to work the meat into the casing. Simply not practical. This is lame, because grinders are kind of expensive, and somewhat specialized. On the other hand, the one I have my eye on can also be used for pasta making. After I finally make a successful sausage, you may all be subject to the pasta series. So, don’t you go enjoying life yet.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

sausages

This week two good friends of mine got married. The marriage was in the bride’s back yard. It was a lovely ceremony, and far less annoying and pretentious than the average ceremony. No one was overly stressed, everyone had a good time, and no one ran up massive credit card bills or bankrupted their parents. In that vein, the reception consisted of appetizers, cake, and champagne, and guests were encouraged to provide their own bagged lunch. In the vein of bagged lunch, and this scene from a night at the opera, I decided to make my friends my own sausage. This was a bad idea. I had never made sausage before. Nonetheless, and in character, I forged ahead despite incapability and time restraints. This is a list of things I did wrong. Now I will know better. But first, what I did.

I got a lean cut of meat. I left it in the fridge too long. then I trimmed the fat off. I also got a box of fresh sage. I cut the meat into cubes, and threw it into a bowl with some smoked tea. I put it in the fridge for an hour or two, and then threw the meat into the food processor with sage, garlic, parsley, nutmeg, chili powder, paprika, and a fair amount of black pepper and salt. I added back a little of the smoked tea liquid, then stuffed the ground meat into a pastry bag.

I had purchased natural pig casings from ShopRite, I was very pleased with these. I bunched an end around the pastry bag and squeezed the meat into the casing, and divided it into two sausages. One I decided to dry and one I decided to cook.

Everything I did was a horrific mistake.

Firstly, sausages need fat. the sausage was dry. I was trying to be healthy, but I’m told 20% fat is a minimum. I may play with this as I move on, but my next attempt will meet this minimum. Secondly, the food processor was just a bad move. The sinews didn’t get decomposed enough, and the meat in general was too coarsely ground. The casing was also salted, and I should have rinsed the crystals off. At least.

While I’m discussing my equipment, I need a grinder. The pastry bag worked, but since I’m dissatisfied with the food processor, and grinders come with casings attachments, so I should make that investment. I’ve been wanting a standing mixer for a while, and many come with grinding attachments. That would be an investment for after I get my own place.

The dried sausage was an epic disaster. I had read you could put meat on a fan and dehydrate it. The principal was sound but it took me a few days to achieve this. The fan needs to be all the way up from the start. Now I know, next time I’ll do that. On the other hand, next time I may just smoke it. Still noodling this one.

What I think I’m going to do for next time is do a lean beef/ fatty pork blend. I’m not 100% on the cuts yet. Boston butt is the perfect 80/ 20 proportion, but I like beef in my sausage. I may need a spreadsheet for this one. The fallback would be using fat back, cheese, or butter. I might even use bacon. Maybe.

Obviously I’ll rinse the casing next time. This will require me to premeasure it.

The spices were actually killer. I hope I can replicate that aspect. I was worried the full package of sage would be too much. I learned there is no such thing as too much sage.

As it happened, the bride let slip that she loved Taylor ham, which you people outside of new jersey are not familiar with. imagine a cross between Canadian bacon and bologna stuffed into a sock. After it became abundantly clear that I had completely and royally screwed up sausage making, I fell back on providing her with her long missed New Jersey treat. there were, thankfully, other gifts according to my means. so alls well that ends well.

I will be trying sausages again. I have like a hundred more sausages worth of casings, so I kind of have to.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

gumbo

southern cooking as a whole has never really interested me. i will grant you that it is very tasty. i love grits and biscuits and all that other wonderful, fatty crap. but as i hope to live past 40 an examination of a lard based tradition never appealed to me. it never helped that i was raised in a kosher home. the entire tradition is delicious, but ive never had anything to grab onto. last night i watched a woman make a pot of grits that must have required four pounds of butter. she used a dozen other ingredients, and all she came out with was grits, tomato sauce, and shrimp.

Cajun cooking is a wholly separate school. i understand cajun cooking. it is above all else French, and i am French only slightly less than I am jewish. more importantly, i learned to cook from a french woman and her son. i am not classicly trained, but roues and sauces and thickening things makes sense to me. to some french cooking is a dark art. to me southern cooking is vulger.

what i made tonight would probably make my french ancestors shake their heads in shame, and in all likelihood any creole who ate my gumbo would call me several very unkind names. to them i say, you must crawl before you can walk, and i learned a lot.

a gumbo is any soup thickened with ochra, or any part of an ochra plant. this evening i happened to have some ochra, so i went to the store ont he way home and picked up some ingredients. we dont get crawfish around here, and lobster is expensive. i made due with shrimp. shirmp are no replacement for crawfish. crawfish are much sweeter, and convey more flavors. shrimp are saltier, especially if they are from the ocean. nonetheless, i never intended this to be a traditional gumbo. i will now give the recipie as i did it, and then comment on what went horribly wrong.

i also procured some scallops and there was a great deal on cherrystone clams, so i got a dozen. these i rinsed and steamed with water and vermouth, and reserved the liquid.

i also made saffron rice. i used this recipe:http://thaifood.about.com/od/quickeasythairecipes/r/thaisaffronrice.htm , but i halved it and left out the chili and the salt.

i began by browning a good spoon of minced garlic, a leek and a red onion. remember when making leeks you only use the white and light green part.

i then added a parsnip in good, bite sized chunks, and two handfulls of baby carrots, cut in two. i also crumbled two portobello mushrooms into bite sized chunks.

while this browned up i added cumin, ginger, and chilli, but not a ton of chili. at this point it started to burn, so i threw in about a half cup of the liquid from steaming the clams. i then cut up the ochra and threw it in. after leting it cook a bit, i added the shrimp and scallops. i also had some thin sliced pork, so i trimmed the fat and fed it to the dog, and then threw that in. at this point i noticed the clams had gotten dry, so i threw them all into the soup. i let it simmer for a few minutes, and served it over the rice.

woah did i make a lot of mistakes here. but it come out very tasty.

the first thing i learned was that leek, onion, parsnip, and carrots are like the best soup base ever. i forgot the celery but if you have that in there and some salt i dont think you will ever miss chicken soup. i was loath to add anything else. honestly i think the seafood distracted from the vegetables here. that being said, the veggies had the gumption to stand up to the seafood with power. they probably made this soup more than anything else.

the clams. id never worked with clams this big before. i made sure to get live ones and was pleasantly surprised by the usability rate, but i steamed them too early, or i left them in too long, im not sure which. by the time they got in the soup they were somewhat chewy. everyone assumes clams are supposed to be chewy because they are so often over cooked. i failed in this regard, but they were still tasty.

i should have added the okra before the clam liquid. my biggest fault as a chef is that i wing it. this is a major sin in the early stages of a soup, or in any stage of a stir fry. always have your ingredients ready to go beforehand. duh. i got caught up in peeling the parsnip and everything started to burn. at that point i had to add the liquid to keep things from getting bad. this rescued it, but the okra wasn't ideally prepared.

while we are on the subject of things burning, fuck that saffron rice recipe. seriously. it is plausible i am not making my rice "correctly." fuck that. it is rice. you put it in a pot with water and boil that shit. i tried to get all fancy and steam it like she said. nearly ruined the rice. if you don't have a steamer, just ignore the second half of that page. just put the rice in the stock and boil it, keep an eye on it, stir it, whatever. fuck that leaving it for ten minutes shit. if you are not using the rice as a base, i would recommend adding salt. mine was a bit bland, but the seafood in the gumbo made it not matter.

one of the first things my mother taught me, cooking wise, is that the only way to prepare mushrooms, the ONLY WAY, is to simmer it slowly in a little butter. I have ignored her advice over the past few years, but i realized today that the reason all my soups come out ugly and black, and the mushrooms are bland, is that I disregarded my mothers advice. i may not use butter, but from now on i will be cooking my mushrooms separately.

the stock for the soup was not particularly thick. the point of it being a gumbo is that the okra thickens it. at a basic level i failed myself, my family, and my ancestors. in future, i will simmer the okra and the vegetables longer before adding the seafood.

all in all, the gumbo was very tasty. i made some mistakes though, which i will learn from in the future.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

The perfect strip of bacon.

People love bacon. This is a true thing. Some people love bacon too much. There’s this whole bacon mania thing that has been happening that has produced all kinds of ridiculousness, on the internet and off, and spawned t-shirts and bumper-stickers and not a few food items that kind of seem like bad ideas. Like Baconaise. Baconaise seems like a bad idea to me.

Then again I am a man who hates things. When something is a meme, it is generally cool. But when it has become a thing, and the New York Times is writing things about it, and people begin defining their identities based on something that is only a thing, then we have problems. Maybe I think you’re starting to look silly. Maybe I think you should get a hobby, possibly leave the house for events that aren’t bacon related.

It is easy to see why people like bacon. On a physical level we are programmed to desire fat, salt, and sugar. Most things we will crave until we have had enough, but on some evolutionary level these three things are so important to survival, and so hard to find in nature, that we basically crave them to excess, the evolutionary assumption being that we may not have it later, and anyway when no one lives past 30 who cares about heart conditions. Bacon has fat and salt in generous quantities, all wrapped around a nice protein core. Most cures nowadays also include some sugar as well, and pork is a relatively sweet meat, so bacon is quite literally addictive and delicious.

From a cultural standpoint people associate bacon with much more than a vehicle for fat, salt, and some sugar. We know bacon is bad for us, people have been saying so for years, and so it has become a glorious outlet, allowing people to behave badly and revel in excess. I enjoy excess as much as the next everyman. Unlike other mothods of excess, bacon has for some reason taken on a rebellious, populist aspect. Articles on the cultural implications of what has been called “Bacon Mania” talk about things like giving the “middle finger” to over-sanctimonious “vegans” and health nuts, something which is considered uniquely “American.” Somehow, by eating bacon we are showing them that we can’t be controlled. Yeah. And if some bacon is fun, lets have a whole fucking lot of bacon. That’ll show em. That’ll show all of them that we’re Americans, and if we wanna eat bacon while driving our SUVs and invading Iraq, we’re gonna!

And this is where I get pissed off.

I enjoy bacon. It is tasty. Saying it has wider cultural implications than any other kind of preserved meat is kind of ridiculous. Bacon is a way of preserving and serving an unattractive piece of meat, which happened to have been very popular in colonial and especially southern cooking due to the fact that you can literally feed pigs shit and they will survive. How did bacon become a symbol of being a pompous American douche bag? I understand that food is an important aspect of culture, but why must people become proselytizing ass-hats when someone eats in a different way from their own? Granted, no one is going around calling me a redneck when I order bacon at diners, but people do sometimes look at me funny if I order a tofu dish. What? I like tofu. Do we need to make a big deal out of this? It is food. You eat it. It doesn’t mean anything about my lifestyle other than I occasionally eat soy based products. Is your aversion to it based on anything other then media discussions of vegetarianism? Really?

I was raised kosher, but it was never my idea. My mother, who had converted, kept the house supplied with soy based pork substitutes, and we lived by the compromise, nonsensical rule of Americanized Jews that keeping kosher in the home is a strict necessity, but if you eat shrimp out at a restaurant then god doesn’t mind as much. That being said, bacon was not something I had gotten around to eating until comparatively late, maybe 10 or so. I remember vividly the entire experience. We were eating breakfast at a diner, I think it was the Colonial before their big reconstruction, back when the whole place smelled of cigarette smoke and the salad bar was in the middle of the dining room. I had only recently come to grips with the concept that food I had not tried before was not necessarily awful, and had begun trying a variety of unfamiliar things. As I perused the menu I asked mom what bacon was like. She reacted with shock.

“You’ve never tried bacon?”

“Nope. When would I?”

“oh right, I keep forgetting.”

“you forget we keep kosher?”

“well, I forget you were raised kosher.”

Dad looked somewhat nonplussed as I ordered the bacon. I entirely forget what I ordered it with, probably pancakes. I remember when it came I was suspicious. I hated fat in meat and would scrupulously pick off fatty layers. The bacon looked to be a total loss to me. Numerous stripes of fat taking up a huge percentage of the strip. I remember my parents looked somewhat bemused as I tried to cut off the fat from the bacon, finally giving up and picking up the leanest piece that I had been given and trying it.

You all know what bacon tastes like so I don’t need to describe it here at length. What is interesting about this memory, and this stands out very clearly for me, was that I thought

“oh man, this is amazing. It would be so much better if it were a little bit crunchier.”

In this instant I conceived, even if I did not articulate, the problem of the Platonic Ideal Form. We all hold in our minds the ideal form of objects with which we interact, such as chairs or cats or the people around us. These ideals are, depending on your view, stereotypes which we must constantly refine, or the true form of the thing described to which the things in our lives aspire. I would say the people in our lives exist more as stereotypes, as our minds aspire to hold on to the true form but ultimately fail. This is why people, even those we love and know well, can constantly surprise us, and also constantly chafe at the assumptions we make about them. But in objects, especially those we create, the true form, or at least the ideal form, is much more often something we hold in our minds than something we ever actually find. Those that appreciate food and music and art are, I suspect, those of us that are willing to pursue these ideals. How much we enjoy this pursuit has to do with how much of the ideal we are willing to see in the imperfect forms that surround us while still seeing them as imperfect.

If you ask most people to describe the ideal piece of bacon I think most people would say some variation of the following:

The ideal bacon is crispy. Most of the fat has been fried out so all that remains are the meat, which has been rendered crunchy, if a little chewy. Too chewy is bad. Too much crispy is burnt. Where that line is drawn is certainly up for debate, but most would want their bacon to be somewhat stiff, certainly not floppy. There will be some residual marbling from the fat striping, but overall there should be more meat than fat. The bacon will taste salty, a little sweet, and smoky.

If most of us have the same ideal of bacon, which I am pretty sure is true, why is there so much floppy, soggy bacon in the world? It is a balancing act to make good bacon, but one would assume that there is a market for bacon, and if there is a market there should be people who will learn the relatively simple seeming skills of frying bacon properly. And yet imperfect bacon abounds in our society. Most of the bacon we consume is probably in sandwich form, and I will guarantee that most sandwiches are made with microwave bacon. I don’t know how many of you have ever consumed this stuff straight, but it is very disappointing. It is sliced paper thin, is mostly fat, and is about as crunchy and stiff as wet toilet paper. Sure, it still tastes like bacon, and as such most of us are willing to savor its bacon-y goodness so long as we do not have to confront it directly, but it is honestly a far cry from the real thing.

I personally enjoy vegetarian bacon, but not as bacon. Vegetarian bacon is, for me, the culinary equivalent of a Godzilla movie. It is easy, strangely satisfying, and hilariously bad. When uncooked the “bacon” is floppy and soft. While still in the oil of the pan the same is true, but immediately upon leaving the pan it becomes a salty, somewhat smoky, bacon-colored cracker that bears zero textural resemblance to real bacon. I consume this for the same reason I consume “State” brand vodka and watch “Bruce Lee Strikes Back from the Grave”: pure self hate.

These vain facsimiles of the bacon experience, and I would include most bacon products and dishes in this category, while sometimes tasty, merely ice over the fact that most of us have never actually had that perfect strip of bacon. No matter how many bacon encrusted turkeys or scallops we eat, how many really good pieces of bacon have we had?

The bacon mania thing could have been a really good thing for the world if it had been a quest for the perfect strip of bacon. I have nothing but respect for those who quest for truth and beauty, whatever its form, and bacon mania could have been a quest based culture. I imagine T-shirts depicting Buddhist monks meditating over bacon, or restaurants renowned for the perfect bacon, open only on Wednesdays and only reachable by a footpath leading to the top of a mountain. Instead bacon mania became the culinary equivalent of the tea party movement: a group of people too satisfied with the way they have been doing things to realize no one is actually threatening them. We like eating meat. You tell us its bad, so we’re gonna eat the worst kind of meat we possibly can. That’ll show you. That has no honor. That’s childish gainsaying. That is a thing.

I had not been on a quest for truth or beauty, but I found it in Manhattan over the weekend when my way-hetero life-partner and I stopped into The Remedy Diner to get a snack. The place has a classic diner look, but is very Manhattan. Everyone inside looked like they had gotten specially dressed that morning in order to go there and the special on the sandwich board out front advertized a free mimosa with selected entrées. This being New York, they also have a full bar at the diner, which is weird and immoral, but not pertinent to the story.

I ordered the waffles and bacon, and the bacon came out on top of the waffle, with a sprinkling of powdered sugar. I was somewhat annoyed at the sugar. I like my bacon pure; I like to savor it. As soon as I picked it up my irritation had evaporated. The bacon was stiff as a board, but clearly was not burned. It was thick cut. It smelled wonderfully bacony. I looked at my girl Friday, whose fork hung in midair. Though a vegetarian, she appreciated the magnificence of what had transpired.

“That looks like some really amazing bacon, dude. That’s like perfect.”

I made a noise that was halfway between a whimper and a grunt. I completed the arc of the bacon from my plate to my face and bit in. It was perfect in every way. Thick and crunchy, but just a little chewy. Extremely lean, but with enough striping to let you know that the leanness was the product of excellent culinary technique, and not the residue of a special cut. I nearly wept. The universe seemed less cruel and random. Outside children played and did not fear. Somewhere a kitten attempted to climb out of a bucket.

The waffle was pretty good too. I would definitely recommend this restaurant. I don’t know if their bacon will be up to this standard again, or if it was a fluke. I almost don’t dare return. If it is not, I will feel disappointment. I will wonder if the perfection was manifest, or the result of some trick of psychology. I will wonder if there is even such a thing as perfect bacon. This is the nature of truth in our world: inevitably transitory and illusory. But the authenticity of the moment in which it occurs atones for many of the sins in everyday life, even things like bacon mania.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

food courts i have loathed.

I hate malls. As someone with more than a passing interest in urban planning, malls are just a bad idea. As a liberal with a difficult relationship with market based economies, malls are downright evil. They represent the privatization of public space, a coarsening of commerce, and are poison to local businesses. Many of my memories of adolescence are of being dragged to malls in a vain attempt to get deals on clothing that i neither desired nor needed. As i have grown older I myself have been drawn into the quest for "deals," despite knowing full well that capitalism is made to screw you, and mall based capitalism aims to fuck you and then kill you.

within malls there is the institution of the food court. growing up the food court was the teddy bear the mall gave you to apologize for its repeated batteries, only to resume the beatings when you didn't show enough appreciation. after being dragged through innumerable identical clothing stores, peddling cloths that might have been hip in the 1970s, my only hope would come to be the thought of food. getting said food required tearing the adults in my life away from their orgy of consumerism with repeated lobbying. i would focus on my dad, inevitably the more disinterested of the adults in the situation.

"dad, im getting hungry"
"ok, we'll get food after this."

time would pass and the clothes would fly and i would be forced in and out of changing rooms, as my superiors quested for the clothing that, despite being made by a philipino sex slave based on the measurements of a plastic dummy in new york that bore only passing resemblance to a human, somehow would fit me just right, and would continue to do so for the foreseeable future even though i was still growing, hated the garment, and already had several that fit fine.

"dad, im really getting hungry."
"so am i" my sister would offer
"the kids are getting hungry"
"ok, i just wanted to get to a few more stores."

my previous low level anger at the situation would now blossom forth into full fledged rage. with the exception of my sister there was no one in a five mile radius i did not want to die horribly. the pop crap being piped into the store, sung by some blonde dipshit who hadn't even heard of music theory, began to sound like someone stapling glass. i liked to image that if i stared hard enough my eyes would turn into lasers and bore a hole through my victimizers.

if we were lucky my dad would intervene in these grand schemes of consumerish glory and we would get food first. then we would arrive at that grad feeding trough of america's unwashed masses, the food court.

they are basically all the same. the chinese restaurant, with some kind of cloyingly racist reference to stereotypes, such as "panda" or "wok," was my favorite destination. the thick, doughy noodles of the lo mein were very comforting, and helped recharge my batteries after all that rage. there is also the generic national fast food restaurant, and the inevitable sabarro. This latter chain has somehow managed to bring passable pizza to every food court and rest stop in the country, displacing the pizza huts and dominos for the past 20 years despite having no market penetration outside of these locales. there was also the inevitable cinna-bon, some kind of ice cream place, and maybe that cajun chain where everyone collects their free sample and never eats. i broke this rule once, in south station in boston, and ate at the cajun place. i regretted it, not because the food was bad, but because it was the same food as they had at the chinese place. why have two places, and why besmirch the good name of cajun cooking?

in recent years i have seen some encouraging changes in food courts, including the penetration of this market by independent restaurants, usually serving Mediterranean food. this might be something limited to my region, as new jersey is seeing an influx of middle eastern individuals. there has also been an influx of sushi places which, while not great, present some alternative to the usual pap. there has also been the advent of charlie's cheese steaks, which are bizarrely good, made fresh to order, and offer some great deals.

last week i found myself once again in a food court. my lady friend needed some shoes (no, really) and so we headed to the jackson outlets. this institution is one of the many outlet malls that have grown across the country, promising their customers another "good deal." factory outlets were an invention of the 80s, in which canny chains sold their slightly defective items at a discount. soon, chains realized that by cutting out the usual retail middleman at an outlet they could undercut their competition. by the late 90s outlets were so popular chains realized that simply by calling something an outlet theyr could do away with the pretext of any kind of discount, put some signs up talking about sales, and people would just assume they were getting a good deal. the jackson outlets are a far cry from the old outlet malls, which resembled nothing more than dollar stores, with boxes and merchandise spread across the land willy nilly by urgent-eyed overweight housewives clawing their way through stacks of boxes trying to find the right size or model.

while the waistline of the customers has remained, the jackson outlets are located in a very wealthy area, and they look it. the mall is actually a ring of stores surrounding a parking lot, attempting once again to replicate the homey feeling of the old downtowns they continue to destroy. the rule in these stores is high class, as the stores are polished and clean and the employees polite. the brands represented run something of a gamut, but a large large portion of them are upper crust brands like harvey and david and bose. nestled in a fold of the ring is the mall's food court, a polished affair encrusted in tvs blaring teen pop stars. the consumers of this cultural disaster are now afforded the ability to request the next music video by texting a selection of numbers to another number.

this is by far the worst food court i have even endured. despite a large space, the court offers its patrons a dizzying array of three food options: a subway that does not honor the current 5$ footlong promotion, a nathans, which is always overpriced, and a very affordable, very generic, Chinese restaurant which also offers sushi. given the alternatives, i chose the Chinese restaurant. though there may not have been any really good options here, this may have been an error. i have never seen vegetable lo mein screwed up before. there weren't really any vegetables in this vegetable lo mein. nor was it seasoned properly. since the only seasonings generally found on lo mein are vegetable oil and soy sauce, i mean that these were noodles bathed in nothing more than water, the barest hint of soy sauce, and some very very sad onions. the other items i was given with this meal were on the disappointing side of mediocre, but nothing will ever top the failure to properly prepare a mean as ridiculously simple as lo mein. fail. fail Fail FAIL!

ceeder seder

This was written two weeks ago but wasn’t ready for posting. I ended up getting to busy to do so, so you get it today. Yay.

Had a loverly seder last night, all the more fun for being thrown together at the last possible second.

Last February or November or something i made vegan matzo ball soup, partly for di but mainly because i like a culinary challenge. Unfortunately, I don't remember how i made them. I think i based my recipe on this one: http://www.theppk.com/recipes/dbrecipes/index.php?RecipeID=147 . The first trial was a relative success, but im not sure if i modified it. last night i tried it again and it was less successful, though i saved it with a tasty broth. there are a couple comments i have as plausible reasons for the dissolution of the balls. first, one hour in the fridge is probably not enough. second, I'm not overly convinced of the effectiveness of straight tofu as a binder. i think next time i will at least use one egg equivalent of vegan egg replacer, probably flax seed, just to be sure. finally, i used firm tofu. im not really sure how much a difference that makes, but things like matzo balls are all chemistry, and diversion from the recipe should be noted as a possible point of failure.

the broth, as i noted, was more successful. I hate most commercial vegetable broths, mainly because of the inclusion of tomato. this is especially odd as i love tomato soup. be that as it may, i am generally hesitant to use vegetable broth as the sole base of my soup. in this case, i had already opened a can for use in the matzo balls, so i figured i would use it, but resent it. should you be attempting this, you should note that i had used 1/2 cup of the broth in the matzo balls. someone who cares more about this can do the math and calculate how many cups of broth i used in this recipe.

I started with a small onion and one of the commercially available minced garlics. some people complain about these, but if they are preserved in water they don't have any adverse additives and contribute a lot of garlic flavor without having to spend days peeling garlic. i hate peeling garlic. they say you can just smash it, but i am far too Jewish to pull that kind of thing off.

i set the onion and garlic in a big soup pot with a decent amount of olive oil, maybe 3 or 4 tablespoons, and while the oil heated i cut in 3 or 4 large mushrooms. i cut the mushrooms in 4 so there would be nice bite-size chunks. if i were doing this as a straight soup i would have gone heavier on the mushrooms, but as the focus of this was to be on the matzo balls, i figured i should go a bit lighter. By this point the oil was getting pretty hot, so i added a little broth from the can just to cool things off. through the rest of this recipe it should be assumed that when you are not chopping you are stirring, at least until you start adding water. otherwise things burn. i then chopped in two good handfuls of baby carrots, just cutting them in half so they would be of a good mouth size.

a key thing that many do not realize is that the reason chicken broth is so tasty isnt the chicken. it is the celery. to this end i cut in a few good shakes of celery salt, and then stripped the leaves off of three or four celery stalks, such that i had a good handfull of leaves before i chopped them. its important to check that the leaves aren't rotting, and then give them a good rinse. it is ok if some of the smaller branches get involved. all are welcome. cutting leaves is probably the most fun i ever have with a knife. i just get a big ol knife and go nuts. when they were reasonably decomposed by the cutting, i threw the leaves into the oil and then added a bit more broth. a generous amount of dill at this point is quite tasty.

this is basically it. keep stirring and adding broth a little at a time for five minutes or so, just letting the stock reduce between adding the broth. when you are out of broth, you have basically done enough. turn up the heat to high, and start adding cans of water. the vegan matzo ball recipe calls for 8 cups, so i added 8 cans.

having made my vegan matzo ball soup, i set about cooking meat. i had found a lamb shank at the grocery store, which i was quite pleased about. this wasnt going to be the focus of the meal, though, so i didnt put too much thought into this. i stuck the shank into a ziplock bag, added some shiraz red wine, franks red hot, and some worcestershire sauce, and topped it up with water. this was kind of uninspiring, but i think i watered it down too much, and it was only marinating for 20 minutes or so.

the main thing was to be chicken, that most traditional jewish meat. unfortunately our chicken was mostly frozen. i used the defrost setting on the microwave to get it to the point where i could get a knife in it, and took it down to pieces, then continued nuking the pieces until it was relatively defrosted. if there was one point where this meal could have failed it was here. pieces of the chicken got singed in the microwave, which is gross, and other pieces remained frozen. on the other hand, tearing down chickens is kind of a lot of fun. one of the parables of zen tells the story of a butcher who told the king he had never needed a new knife in 30 years. the secret, he said, was to cut in the spaces between the bones, working with nature to take apart the animal naturally and respectfully. the king, of course, was impressed, and sent his executioner to learn at the feet of this master.

no one ever said the powerful understand the proper lessons.

anyway, taking apart a chicken is a zen experience for me. keeping in mind the parable, i focus on the chicken, on what holds it together, and what makes it itself.

once the chicken was somewhat usable, i sprayed pam into a glass casserole, and put the chicken in, skin side up, onto the bottom of the pan. i discovered some sectns of brest had lost skin, and i covered these with the wings. i then gave the chicken a coating of salt and pepper, a few dashes of franks per peice, and a dusting of grahm masala.

sweet potatoes are an integral part of a seder, mainly because there are no other starches you can eat, save matzo. We didn't have any marshmallows, however, and i definitely didnt have time to do the full fledged mashed sweet potatoes thing. i sliced three potatoes into thin discs, but really just hacked them as small as i could quickly. then i thre more garlic into the bottom of a pan, added two of the three potatoes, added some dolups of smart balance, then added the third potato.

once the potatoes were done, i threw the lamb shank into a pamed pan, and put all three into the oven at 350. they were probably in there around and hour? im not sure, i just kept checking till the chicken was done. as it turned out, the chicken came out wonderfully. i dont know if it was the slightly frozen nature, or the fact that they were somewhat thick on the bottom of the pan, but they came out very juicy in the middle, with nicely crispy skin.

during the actual meal we ended up discussing the strange traditions that had developed in the Seder specifically, and in religious observance in general, around post Colombian contact plant items. for instance, the insistence on dogwood in easter celebrations. I don't know if dogwood is a pre or post contact flora in europe, but i doubt greatly that any kind of cross made in the middle east would have been made of a northern species like dogwood. more to the point, how authentic are the apples in the charoset? apples were an old world fauna, but there has been five thousand years of domesticated genetic manipulation, which was heavily accelerated in the new world.

at any rate, my charoset was very simple. the only walnuts i had were preserved in honey, so i used one apple, a quarter cup of honey walnuts, a quarter cup of almonds, and three tablespoons of shiraz wine. tasty.

The meal itself was somewhat rushed but lovely overall, lubricated with ample amounts of shiraz, my favorite wine. The matzo balls was something of a glorious disaster. As I mentioned, the balls dissolved. When I have read about matzo ball failures, people have talked of thick gelatinous masses. This wasn’t really what happened. Instead it was akin to an oatmeal, with the matzo meal serving to thicken the vegetable broth resulting in a delightfully savory and nutritious soup.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Cheerios

Today I had Cheerios for breakfast. Some of you may be worried that i did something horrible to the cheerios. My love of savory oatmeal dishes has taken some interesting turns through the years, but i assure you, the Cheerios were had with milk, and not with pesto, barbecue sauce, or pepperoni. It was basically what you expect with a breakfast of Cheerios: the crunchy, salty fibrousness of the oats interacting with the cool sweetness of the milk. Overall enjoyable but unremarkable. I myself have something of a weakness for Cheerios. I'm not going to get passionate about it, but sometimes you just want to eat certain things and sometimes that thing is Cheerios. Furthermore, in their dry form they make a pretty decent snack food, and are an acceptable if uninspiring replacement for popcorn. Heres the thing. It has been mentioned to me that some people have problems with Cheerios that go beyond the usual "corporations are gunna git us" thing that is so common in my circle.

As best as I can recall, it came up when I was still living in Worcester. I brought home a big thing of Cheerios from the store, and one of my roommate, I don't remember which, said something along the lines of "cheerios, yich (with a hard ch, like in Hebrew)." and made the type of face that one would expect when someone says a word like "yich (with a hard ch, like in Hebrew)."I was somewhat taken aback, as Cheerios has a taste that is about as offensive as vanilla. its not particularly good, but it really never occurred to me that it could arouse negative passions. I probed for a reason why. Is it the milk? The crunchiness? the fact that it tastes generically like bread? What about Cheerios could possibly be anything except mild disinterest?

I do not remember the answer specifically, my impression was that it was somewhat nebulous and non specific. This is often a problem when I ask someone why they do not like something, and it is even more common a response with food. This is a conundrum for me, as I am a person who likes cooking for people. If you can't tell me what they dislike, I cannot fix it. And yet, having been on the other end, I know people feel attacked. I would never want anyone to feel forced to eat/listen/watch something that they disliked merely out of politeness to me. I would like to be able to make it so such an unpleasantness doesn't occur again, but people often have very shaky understandings of why they like anything. That's not a criticism, I do it too. Academics in any specific profession spend years developing a specific vocabulary to allow them to describe exactly what is good or bad about a specific topic. People think they are being elitist, which may be part of it, but without knowing about music theory, who here can really, specifically tell me what they like or dislike about any given song? Even with music theory, many critiques, even written by classically trained professionals, come down to inexact words like "energy." There is a major part of me that is driven absolutely insane by the inexactitude of reality.

There is another side to why people cannot tell me what they dislike about food, and this, as it turns out, has more to do with Cheerios. After a few minutes of weedling, the person in question said something along the lines of "I dunno, its kid's food." The sentence brought to mind immediately an event from my childhood. One of the mothers in the Chavura, or study group, to which my family belongs had packed her child numerous baggies of Cheerios, baby carrots, and celery. I was very young, and this kid was younger than me. There were, at the time, probably 7 or 8 of us kids in this Chavura at the time, and we had been stuck in a play area of the house while the adults did adult things. I was somewhat bored. I didn't really see these kids outside of the Chavura, and most of them were either noticeably younger than me, or so much older than me that they wanted little to do with me. In these situations a pecking order rapidly develops where the younger kids want to play with the older kids, and the older kids want to go home. Being the second oldest kid there, I wanted out, or to play with the only kid older than me. As he was occupied with a computer game at the time, I was basically quite too busy moping to play with the kid with the cheerios. nonetheless, he tried to get me to play with him. Being excessively bored, and something of a sympathetic soul, I consented to watching him play with over-sized Leggos. So there I was, sitting, im a room full of toddlers and post-toddlers, and this kid offers me some Cheerios.

As I have mentioned, I like Cheerios. I took the baggy from him and opened it, and the smell of the Cheerios hit me. For some reason it sickened me. the smell of the oats and the wheat, which usually smells alluring or at least uninspiring, smelled sickeningly sweet. I was momentarily stunned, and not sure what to do. I knew i liked Cheerios. They didn't smell different than Cheerios normally do. But they smelled somehow appalling.

In later years I have associated the feeling with the smell that comes off of daycare centers and old age homes. It is probably some instinctive reaction to the germiness of those environments. I'm not sure how my body developed this reaction, and it is somewhat subjective, as I have the same reaction to applejuice, but it is intensely physical and makes me feel nauseated by the food in question.

The association of food and environment is pretty common in my life. We all have certain assumptions about an environment when a certain kind of food comes our way, and we all know how events in our lives can affect the way we view other things. For instance, we can never be sure whether we dislike a certain pop artists because we dislike their music, or because we have defined our selfs against liking them. What is wonderfully bazaar is when we take on expectations and physical reactions to food. I could probably write chapters analyzing the different facets of this, and discussing where evolutionary survival strategies end and human psychosis begins. What is clear to me is that I have the makings of an interesting hypothesis: some people don't like Cheerios because their moms gave it to them as a "healthy" snack food, and as such they associate it with unhealthy conditions.

Some psychology student could probably write an interesting thesis on the power of association and its relation to the enjoyment or rejection of childhood foods. Why do we like mac and cheese and hate baby food and cheerios? its all obviously subjective. I like Cheerios, some normal people, and a lot of bums, think it is perfectly ok to eat baby food. Why do i get physically ill at the thought of the texture of slimy, slippery baby food, but am sexually excited by the thought of eating mac and cheese, that deliciously gooey and oozy food? there are texture and temperature differences, but are they that big? If I heated baby food, would you eat it?

I wouldn't.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Seville diner

Growing up in suburban New Jersey to a Jewish family, the town had two poles: the Seville and the Colonial diners. I was dragged to both numerous times, and people would discuss which was better. i found both abhorrent, crystallizing around the time when i was served tortellini Alfredo with Alfredo sauce that separated.

In high school I got over my loathing of diners based on a realization that, at any given establishment, you should order what they are good at and not what they think they are good at. this epiphany was aided by my increasingly nocturnal habits, and the fact that at 2am on a Tuesday the only place to go was Dunkin Doughnuts or a diner. In this process the above diners had little part. they were not open 24 hours, and as such remained the home of the elderly and the perpetual trucker. At some point they were remodeled as part of an area-wide arms race that sought to take advantage of the golden place diners hold in New Jersey cuisine. essentially, the diners were gentrified.

The full gentrification of diners is a topic for another day: as with all gentrification discussions it is complex and this story has more than enough to discuss on its own. What is important to note is that gentrification takes capital and capital in the restaurant business, especially in New Jersey, has only a few sources. apparently the owner of the Seville ended up somewhat entangled in debt to these sources, some of whom owed favors to the owner of the Colonial. the exact nature of the transaction is unclear, though it is rumored that the owner of Seville owed money directly to the owner of the Colonial. What is known definitely is that, in broad daylight, the owned of the Seville was gunned down in his business' parking lot in a crime that produced no witnesses.

In the wake of the above Seville has emerged as a very nice diner, as has the Colonial. they none the less remain diners. i have not had anything bad in either place since the remodeling, and yet i remain wary, the lesson of the congealed Alfredo sauce still haunting me to this day. So when, this evening, my eye alighted on something in the house specialty section entitled "Chinese Pork Sandwich" i knew full well that i would never order it. I read the description anyway.
"Chinese Pork Sandwich: Chinese Pork on Garlic Bread with lettuce and tomato, served with fires."

I was incredulous. Who said this was ok? who let the chef out of his cage? this had to be the nastiest sounding thing ever. I imagined the typical diner garlic bread, soaked with enough butter to make Paula Dean oink with delight, stuffed with some kind of greasy asian pork stir fry disaster, finished with veggies wilted by the heat of the grease. I imagined myself trying to choke this down, the grease dribbling down my throat, the flavors praying for death in my mouth. it sounded awful, but it sounded so awful i had to try it. I was very hungry, and was really in the mood for a burger, but as soon as i pictured the horror that this sandwich was sure to be, i knew i had to try it. It was too insane. There had to be an angle on this i was missing. As a man who makes insane sounding dished with a regularity that drives friends away and makes relatives bow their heads with shame i knew that it was my sacred duty to try this, if for no other reason than as a warning to others. my image would go down in the annals of greasy spoon lore. "Dude! look at this! it looks terrible!" "oh yeah, it is. This guy I know from work tried it, said it was like being orally raped by a 400 lb Texan."

The first thing you need to know about this sandwich is that the pork is that pink pork stuff you get in lo mein or in bowls of ramen. This was immediately better than what I had been expecting. It also came with duck sauce. This was...unexpected as well. Being game, i went for it. I put the duck sauce on the pork slices (3 large ones) and then arranged the veggies, before placing the bread on the top and pressing down. I raised the sandwich to my mouth, and took a good bite. The following few minutes can best be described as carnage, as i destroyed that sandwich with prejudice. The bread was crunch on the outside, the pork was sweet and faintly salty. the veggies were fresh. I did not notice the grease of the garlic bread, which was a great relief.

Part of this may be that i was very hungry going into this meal. But this was, i think, a surprisingly good sandwich, and definitely original. Most diner food is unsubtle. The best diner food is a well made combination of simple experiences. This sandwich was surprisingly subtle, with interplay of the honey notes of the duck sauce and the salty notes of the pork was remarkably restrained, while the garlic bread gave the dish a remarkable sandwichey-ness. the bread was crunchy at the crust, and soft in the middle. It may have been because this sandwich lacked cheese, but somehow the oilyness i usually associate with commercial garlic bread was only presently in a charmingly moist sandwich.
I'm still not sure i forgive diners for that Alfredo, and diner gentrification is a topic that remains unresolved, but i was happy with my meal and i will say it was definitely pretty good.

before i sign off for the night, I should like to point out i will never be giving any food a number of stars. I only just decided, but i have decided that that is lame. take that, America. You will have to make your decisions based on my arguments and descriptions, and not based on an artificial rating system! booyah!

Ok, gnight losers.

Evil Tom

Monday, March 15, 2010

First entry, busy night

Y hulo there internet. In the off chance someone who is not a friend of mine stumbles upon this, an introduction.

I have been blogging since before it was cool. I got started on Open Diary back in the day, and have been on Open Diary, Dead Diary, Livejournal, and Myspace. I even had a Geocities account I used to blog for a short while. By far my longest stretch was on Open Diary. It was pretty awesome for a long time. The thing about blogging is, if you are doing it for the audience the only way to build one is to be a complete hooker, and go around chatting people up. They call it networking in other professions. On the inter-webs it’s basically just being nice and saying hello to the neighbors. I reached a point where it just stopped making sense to spend a lot of time on internet drama with people I would never meet, and then half ass the average entry. I would sit down and rattle off the things that had happened to me that day and then look for something more to say. Invariably, I would do a survey. I don't want to knock those years. I had a lot of fun and met some awesome people. But things change and I got bored.

These days I no longer write much poetry, or write many stories. What I do a lot is cook and eat out. I've wanted a way to talk about food to my friends and relatives, but we always seem to miss each other, and when we do get to talk, I want to talk about my life, and not bore them with “that roast I made.” So this is going to be a food blog. Saying so brings up alarming associations for me. Defining this as such means I have to define myself in relation to the "foodies." Its not that I don't like food, get somewhat obsessive about describing it, and spend altogether too much money on it. It’s that I hate labels and groups. I'm going to be talking about both high end cuisine and at the same time be telling you all how amazing the grease trucks are, but the immediate associations such an angle conjures, say, Diners Drive-ins and Dives, fills me with loathing.

So I'm going to try to avoid the whole issue. I love good food, but I try not to be snobby about it. The food network is way too white bread for my tastes, but I end up watching it a lot. Moving on.

The last few days have been pretty big; I may have to split them into two entries as I am already tired. The first interesting development is that my girl and I found a great Vietnamese place in our area. To do this topic justice we need to go back to college.

My first and still favorite Vietnamese food was from a place called Saigon in Worcester, Massachusetts. I went to school at Clark University, and every year the school has a day called "Spree Day." Most schools have something similar. Everyone gets the day off. In years past it was an excuse for legitimized underage drinking; now it is an excuse for de-legitimized underage drinking. On my first spree day I was still ill-advisedly straight edge, and somewhat bored, though I was enjoying watching everyone have a good time. I'm not entirely sure how I ended up there, but I think it was a girl I was pining after who invited me to join a bunch of her friends and go to this place off campus.

The restaurant was wonderfully shabby. The family clearly lived upstairs, and there were always kids either running around, or studying in the corner. The wait-staff was obviously the relatives, but the older relatives only took orders sometimes. Most of the duties were preformed by a pair of very... metro-sexual young men who couldn't have been beyond their early twenties, if that. The menus had items on it that my friends and I were never able to order, since that had not been carried in the previous five years. They never, in the five years I went to Saigon, reprinted the menu. The decor was blue, with a firm coating of golden budda heads, and there was a TV playing Vietnamese language television on top of the coke case. I have seen similar TVs in almost every hole in the wall Asian restraint I enter, and often kill time wondering about the distribution routs of such material.

At the time I was not impressed by the food, probably because I was a bit moody that the girl had not ended up sitting near me, and I didn't know anyone else. Ironically, I may have been hanging put at that point with several of my future good friends, given the social circle, but in freshman year you do not know these things. I also didn't really know what to order. Figuring it similar to Thai, I ordered something along the lines of a curry. It was alright, but heavy on the peppers and very greasy. Still, it was good enough and different enough that when, over the years, people asked to go back, I would generally say yes.

I spent 5 years in Worcester, four in school and one bumming around, and every time I went to Saigon I liked it more. I eventually figured Vietnamese food out when a friend of mine told me to order the bbq pork on vermicelli. The pork comes in basically identical strips, covered in hosin sauce that is seared on over a grill. or at least, you hope it is a grill and not from a package. it could go either way, given the uniformity of the product, but honestly, I don't care. it is tender, salty, sweat and spicy. each piece is bite size, and it is served with a fresh salad, a cup of sauce, and a pile of the titular vermicelli. Vermicelli is a very thin noodle, kind of like angel hair, but made with semolina wheat instead of durum. the Italians make their vermicelli with durum, but they are wrong. I have spoken.

The affect is a dish with clarity of flavors. The Indians and the Thai have their curries with their blend of greens and spices and savor. That is fine and good, but as often as not the result is a muddle on the tongue. The Vietnamese, at their best, produce dishes that are just plain interesting. My favorite way to eat the above dish is to dump the sauce, a kind of citrus-y salad dressing, on top of the noodles, dump in everything else, and mix it all up. The noodles have their calm, subtle sweetness, the pork has its salty, smoky spiciness, and the salad imbues the whole with refreshing crunch. I do not always feel full after this meal, but I fell nourished, the same way I do after reading a telling bit of theory. This is food that makes sense, to the brain and the heart.

When I moved back to the Jersey I missed Saigon sorely, but soon I found a substitute. Working in New Brunswick, as I do, my coworkers and I often partake of the numerous lunch deals offered in that town. We eventually stumbled upon Mekong, a very clean hole in the wall style restaurant that served a wonderful selection of Vietnamese food, from Pho to spring rolls, though these last were a bit pricey. I was overjoyed, however, to discover that the bbq pork was on the lunch special. My coworkers were less pleased, as I proceeded to drag them there for months straight till they began to refuse to go there. I was of course crushed when Mekong closed. it wasn't perfect, but it was close, and their #31 with pork and fried spring rolls was amazing. The Korean place that replaced it has not really been a consolation.

So it was that my gal and i ended up in Edison at Pho Anh Do in Edison, NJ. as the name implies they specialize in Pho, which is a good sign. you know how Chinese places that specialize in dim sum are guaranteed to be good because they are catering to actual Chinese patrons? With Vietnamese food that is Pho. I'll tell you all more about pho at a later time, as I grantee you i will be getting more Vietnamese food in the future, but as it happened I was not in a Pho mood that day, nor was I in a mood for my usual bbq pork with vermicelli. I was in the mood for beef, so on the recommendation of the proprietress, I tried the beef cubes with rice.

With most dishes the goal is balancing all the elements into a harmony. This is not the case in a beef dish. a beef dish must balance the beef in harmony. Beef is such a strong, powerful culinary force that if that is achieved, all else will follow. I am quite happy to say that Pho Anh Do's beef cubes with rice achieved that balance. The beef was sauted with onions in a somewhat salty, pepper laden sauce, but the affect was more like a rub. The sauce was barely there, and that is how it should be with beef. The timing manifest in the beef was superb. the meat was insanely tender. it tasted perfectly rare, but i didn't actually check as it was too good to pause the eating. The dish was so good I even enjoyed the onions, often a necessary but annoying encumbrance in the eating of a dish. The rice provided a wholesome rest from the beef, and a coolant when the spice became too much. the small salad that came with the dish served basically like a post coitus cigarette, calming the diner while still allowing him to savor the flavor of the dish.

Obviously, I was trilled with the restaurant. My girl Friday also enjoyed her dish greatly, and we found the spring rolls to be delicious and reasonably priced. We had three orders between us and didn't begrudge a penny.

In the hope that my friend Alex reads this, i should mention one further detail. After dinner i indulged myself in an avocado shake. Alex spent many hours assuring us that Saigon's offering of this concoction wasn't as bad as it sounds. when i eventually ordered one myself, i found that they were, on the contrary, delicious. I know it sounds weird, but the drink is really pretty good.

For dinner tonight i had adventures as well, but they will have to wait, as it is four am and i am exhausted.

Evil Tom