Friday, April 11, 2008

I was born and raised just outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  When I was 15 I got a job at the snackbar in a college down the street from where I lived with my mom, sister, and two little doggies.  For three years I spent my nights and weekends working on the grill, pumping out food for countless hungry college students.  This provided me with much of my basic knowledge of cooking.  It may not have been fine dining but by the time I left I could cook a mean omelet.  Hell I could cook ten mean omelets all at the same time without mixing up the orders.  I could make the best hoagie you’ve had (with all the proper hoagie meats), a club worthy of a picture frame, and a cheesesteak that I would put up against ANYBODY’S. 

Ever since those days I’ve had a soft spot for cheesesteaks.  I love eating them, and I love making them.  Everybody knows that cheesesteaks are a Philadelphia specialty, but it wasn’t until I moved away to college in Boston that I began to realize the extent of this iconic food’s reach.  Every sandwich shop has their version of the “Philly Cheesesteak”.  Even here in Bermuda at the Pickled Onion, a restaurant we frequent for lunch, they offer a “Philly Cheesesteak Pizza”.  I’ve always prided myself as a bit of a cheesesteak connoisseur (if such a thing actually exists); as if being from Philly somehow qualifies me to make a better cheesesteak, or even just to better judge someone else’s cheesesteak.  I mean really, meat, cheese, bread… although there are indeed a few factors that make a cheesesteak truly great, and a couple variations of preference, couldn’t anyone, anywhere theoretically produce the same end result?  But since it can apparently be so difficult to meet my criteria, I tend to have my friends over and make them myself!  Sometimes I think it might also be that I miss the metallic whack of the spatulas against the grill… Regardless, it has always amazed me how the cheesesteak has become such a symbol to me and to so many others which says so much about where we are from.

The cheesesteak isn’t the only symbolic food, by any means.  The other day while making them for some friends I started thinking about all the different foods that other people from other cities hold so close to their hearts and identities.  New England Clam Chowder, New Orleans Jambalaya, Maryland Crab, New York Pizza, Texas Chili… and these are just the first that pop into my head… the list goes on and on!  So how does this happen?  How does a food become so imbedded in an area’s cuisine that it becomes a defining piece of its culture? 

There are two things that come to my mind in regard to how culture is impacted by cuisine; the heritage of an area’s people and the surrounding terrain.  The people of New Orleans are a result of an integration of French, Spanish, Italian, African, Native American, and Cajun peoples.  I am no food historian but from my understanding Jambalaya was created from a merging of the French cuisine with the Spanish peoples’ paella.  Because all these old world countries were starting fresh in a new land there were different meats, vegetables, and spices available than what they were accustom to in their traditional dishes.  This is before a time where we have readily available foods from all over the world through modern transportation.  I think Jambalaya is a beautiful way to see a merging of cultures and a hodge-podge of the fruits of the surrounding land and waters.  Over time as New Orleans became a place in-and-of itself, people began to identify themselves using these new dishes (along with a newly emerging, exciting musical culture).  The people that I have met from New Orleans are proud of where they are from.  They are proud of the music and the food that they bring to their country and to the world.

Food becomes a way to set an area apart from the rest of the country.  It becomes a way to show the beauty of your land and the ethnicity of its people.  If you look deep into the history of each iconic dish you can see the culture that brought it to us, passed down lovingly through the generations.  In a world where people are traveling more and more and constantly moving around, it becomes a way to bring a piece of our home to others.  I share my cheesesteaks with my friends with pride in my birthplace and they share their foods with me.  It’s a system that I think everyone can learn from and lets face it… it sure is yummy!

posted on Friday, April 11, 2008 9:54:05 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Thursday, April 10, 2008

Mandi loves cheesesteaks.  She has been dying to share her recipe and process here with everyone.  So much so, that we needed to take pictures 3 SEPARATE TIMES in order to get them perfectly right!  That was fine with me because they are so delicious that I don’t mind eating them multiple nights in a week. Click below for more!





posted on Thursday, April 10, 2008 9:58:44 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Wednesday, April 09, 2008

If you are a fan of this website, you know there is one couple on Last Restaurant Standing that I continually tease in my reviews.  Well Martin and Emma found me, and asked me why?  Why do I hate them so much?  We emailed back and forth a bit and I grew to actually start liking these people!  I wrote them an email full of interview questions and when I got it back, I realized that they are way cooler than the show made them out to be.  I was even rooting for them last night! (Even though I already knew the outcome!). Today’s post consists of a condensed 2 paragraph reviewcap of the episode, followed by The Food in My Beard exclusive interview with Martin! Click below to continue reading, there ARE SPOILERS for those who have not watched the latest episode.



posted on Wednesday, April 09, 2008 8:16:01 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Tuesday, April 08, 2008

With all these great food pictures I have been taking, I have made a few wallpapers for myself and Mandi that I have finally decided to share with you all.  Here are 9 wallpapers of various sizes so you can have TFIMB with you all throughout the day!  If your size is not here but you really like the designs, please post a comment below with your screen resolution and I will see what I can do.  Also leave a comment if you like these and are using one, let me know which one!  I hope to have some of these posted every other week or so and the feedback will help me know what people like.  For people with dual monitors, make sure to set the display to “tile” to make the wallpaper span both screens


 
         2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050                             2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050
                   1280 X 1024   1024 X 768                                                        1280 X 1024   1024 X 768

 
         2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050                             2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050
                    1280 X 1024   1024 X 768                                                       1280 X 1024    1024 X 768 
   
 
           2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050                              2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050
                    1280 X 1024   1024 X 768                                                      1280 X 1024    1024 X 768 

 
           2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050                              2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050
                     1280 X 1024   1024 X 768                                                       1280 X 1024    1024 X 768 


2960 X 1050   2560 X 1024   1680 X 1050
1280 X 1024    1024 X 768 

posted on Tuesday, April 08, 2008 8:32:45 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Monday, April 07, 2008

On Friday I posted my usual tacos that Mandi and I make most Thursdays.  This past week however, we were trying to be healthy.  We still wanted tacos, so we decided to make a more authentic Mexican version of tacos from the cookbook “Authentic Mexican” by Rick Bayless.  I’ve had this book for a few months and we had yet to make anything from it, seeing him on top chef last week prompted me to finally open it up.  While what we made isn’t healthy, it is better then the tacos we usually make, and since it was different, we would be more conscious of not stuffing ourselves.  It turned out really great and I think if we made it one or 2 more times it would be even better with a bit more kick in the sauce. Click below to continue. 





posted on Monday, April 07, 2008 8:57:55 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Friday, April 04, 2008

Tacos.  Almost every week since college I have eaten tacos on Thursday night.  At one time it was much simpler.  Taco kit, jar of salsa, bag of cheese, some pre washed/cut lettuce, and call it a day.  As the years went by, we swapped out the pre made ingredients one by one to get where we are today. Trade a jar of salsa to bought fresh salsa to actually making salsa.  Go from the taco seasoning packet, to half the packet and some of your own spices, to fully using your own blend.  This obviously is a very American version of tacos, tune in Monday and I will post a more authentic Mexican version of tacos we actually made last night!




posted on Friday, April 04, 2008 9:27:22 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Thursday, April 03, 2008

The most common question asked of me by friends is this – “what’s a quick, easy, healthy, and delicious dinner I can have after work tonight?” What do you guys think I am, Rachael ray?  Well guess what!? You’re all in luck! I am on a diet since bathing suit season starts in a week or 2 here in Bermuda. (Even though actual Bermudians refuse to go to the beach until May 25th.) So I will have some healthy weeknight dinners up here in the next few weeks.  Now don’t worry, they won’t all be healthy.  I have a few posts I made pre-dieting that I am waiting to post.  Also, my diets are short because they are intense.

I’m rambling, so without further a due, my FAVORITE fast easy delicious and super-ancient-whole-grain-run-a-mile-punch-a-baby-healthy meal!  Fish-in-a-bag!

Some of my friends right now are saying “Fish?  Really?  I mean… I don’t really like fish.” To you I say shut up and make this and you will LOVE it.  Unless you mess it up somehow which you probably will.  Jeez my friends are dumb... just kidding friends!

Click below for more!!




posted on Thursday, April 03, 2008 8:54:34 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Wednesday, April 02, 2008

A slightly shorter review this week because while it was an interesting episode, there was not much to report on because no one did really great or really awful.  The theme for the 5 remaining restaurants this week was branding your establishment and making sure people know what your restaurant is all about when they come in for a meal.  Raymond decided that he would give the teams some direction and tell them that teaching a cooking class would be a helpful way to explain to people about your brand and get the word out.



Click to continue **SPOILERS**



posted on Wednesday, April 02, 2008 7:56:11 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Today I am pleased to bring you an exciting and all new section on my website!  This new category will be called restaurant recipes, where I try a dish at a great local Bermuda eatery, and using my excellent taste buds; I will reverse engineer the recipe and present it here for your at-home enjoyment!!  Imagine, sitting at home reminiscing on your beautiful honeymoon in Bermuda, eating at that wonderful restaurant.  Now you can take that experience home!

First up-

La Trattoria’s Spaghetti alla carbonara

You guys are in for a real treat here!  Spaghetti alla carbonara – pasta in the style of the coal miner’s wife – is a staple in Italy.  A real Italian classic. Let’s get started

This dish classically requires pancetta, but for a very special Trattoria twist, go to the supermarket and grab any old packet of thin sliced bacon.  Nothing special here, the cheaper the better.  This will give you that authentic taste; you will think you are eating inside the restaurant!!

Now take that bacon you got, and cut it into strips, put it into a sauté pan and cook it for about 30 seconds each side.  Make sure it stays mostly raw – you want that deliciously unappetizing chewiness of undercooked bacon.  Now go in the refrigerator, and grab some leftover spaghetti.  Something you cooked yesterday that is kind of all starched together. Don’t worry about that cause once you get it in the pan, it will break up.  Ok throw this into the sauté pan with the barely cooked bacon and coat it.  In a separate cup, mix one egg, 2 cups of cream, and a tablespoon of Kraft parmesan in the plastic green container.  Dump this into the sauté pan.  Make sure it is extra hot now so that if some egg hits the pan it gets nice and scrambled.

Take it off the heat and put it in a to-go container!   Wow!  It’s THAT EASY!  You can have authentic food from La Trattoria restaurant at home!  Whatever you do, DO NOT put parsley on this dish!  Why would you ruin it with green stuff??  Also, if your guests inquire about the bacon in the dish, act really confused.  Say “bacon? I don’t know…bacon? What’s this bacon you speak of?”  Insist that it is Pancetta and make sure you say it like this: pan-cheh'-tuh.  This will give your guests that true feeling like they are actually at this restaurant.



--EDIT-- April 2nd --

This post is half April fools joke, half bad review of the restaurant.  To be fair however, we do go there for lunch often because it is convenient and delicious (if you order the right thing).  Also the pizza is pretty good.  One Sunday after sleeping a little late and not having any food in the house, I suddenly had the craving for carbonara and what I got was pasta in cream sauce with half cooked bacon.  That’s what prompted me to write this.  Also the fact that they take themselves really seriously as Italian with accents and if you pronounce something wrong, they act like they have no idea what you are saying, but then when you get the food, it is just the usual Italian American fare you would find at an olive garden.  Please don’t ban me for life La Trattoria.

posted on Tuesday, April 01, 2008 7:50:12 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, March 31, 2008

Today I have a guest post from the design team.  Rich and Kim had a few friends over Rich and Mike’s apartment and served them a delicious looking duck dinner.  When a bunch of friends get together like this, it makes me wish I could be back in Boston hanging out with them.  But in a few weeks, I will be making them jealous with weekly beach trips so it isn’t so bad.  Rich’s comments will be in green, and I might make a few in black.


"Cookin' Up Some Quack"

Kim, Mike, Steph, Alex, Amy, and I were the 6 party people on Friday...  good thing there weren't any more people than that, even though I invited 5 other people who couldn't come.  The amount of food ended up literally being just enough and there was only 1 piece of Duck left over.





posted on Monday, March 31, 2008 8:23:38 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Friday, March 28, 2008

I have decided that yesterday and today’s posts may be a bit confusing to people who might want to make some of these dishes for themselves.  Because of that, over the weekend I will be writing the individual recipes down for each dish and posting them on 5 separate pages in the recipe section.  So you should just look at these posts as a view of a fun night and come back next week for the recipes if you so desire.

We continue where we left off, just as the guests were arriving...





posted on Friday, March 28, 2008 9:46:48 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Thursday, March 27, 2008

Since we decided to house sit for our friends, we knew we needed to have a dinner party.  We have people over for food all of the time, but it is very casual.  It is also hard because we don’t have a table to eat on.  We usually end up having pizza or cheesesteaks.  We knew we would have a really nice kitchen and dining table for a week and we knew we would need to use them.  We decided to go OTT with this party because who knows when we would next have such an opportunity.  The more over the top we started thinking, the crazier it became.





posted on Thursday, March 27, 2008 10:52:43 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Wednesday, March 26, 2008

I am disappointed to say that I will NOT be reviewing last restaurant standing this week.  Unfortunately, the cable at my apartment goes in and out, and last night it was out.  The cable company blames “sunspots” but I think it is just an excuse for their terrible service!  I hope to catch the episode sometime this week and be back next Wednesday with a new review.  Please check back here tomorrow because I am excited to bring you part 1 of a great 2 part post about a dinner party we had this past Friday.

posted on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 7:44:08 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, March 25, 2008

This is not my beautiful house…

Tiny bubbles slowly begin to rise to the surface of the pot, the hiss of the frying pan becoming steadily louder.  Beautiful, fragrant smells hit my nose as my stomach begins to quietly rumble.  The symphony that is my dinner is about to hit its crescendo!  It's time to reach into the cupboard to do some last minute seasoning.  This is it; I can feel it coming together now... this is the easy part.  Like clockwork I can reach from spoon to spice.  Mix. Stir. Taste.  But wait… what is this… DOGFOOD?  What!  Nothing is where it should be?  This is not my kitchen!

And you might ask yourself – well… how did I get here?

As you probably know, this past week Dan and I had been house-sitting for some friends of ours while they were away.  We were pretty excited because they have a great kitchen, especially in comparison to our tiny place!  They have gas burners, plenty of counter space and ::gasp:: a dishwasher!  (Which here in Bermuda is a bit of a luxury.)  The other night after burning some garlic while searching for the salt, we started talking about what a funny thing it is, to be cooking in someone else's kitchen.  I don't think that I had realized the importance of such little things like knowing where the strainer is kept, or in which cabinet the cumin is hiding, because in cooking, timing really is everything.  While watching Top Chef the other night, I had a whole new respect for the contestants as they frantically flailed about in a foreign kitchen filled with strangers and a strict time limit!  But really isn't this what all chefs do on a nightly basis?  No matter how long a chef has been working in his or her kitchen there are always going to be some unknown factors that could cause chaos in a place that requires such precision. 

So how do they do it?  What is the key to this flexibility in the kitchen all the while maintaining the high level of accuracy needed?

Now I'm no expert, by any means, but this past week taught me something about cooking in a strange kitchen.  Something that I think applies to all cooking in any kitchen.  To borrow a rather cliché phrase made famous by the boy scouts, one must "always be prepared".  This point may seem blaringly obvious to some, but I think it’s worthwhile none the less.  Gathering up all supplies before beginning the task at hand is infinitely important.  To quote a personal hero of mine, Tony Bourdain, "as a cook, your station, and its condition, its state of readiness, is an extension of your nervous system".  I don't think I could possibly have said it any better.  Organizing your pots, pans, utensils, ingredients, and any other necessary preparation is referred to as your "mise-en-place".  And this is, I think, one of the keys to success in the kitchen.  So whether you’re in your very own home preparing the simplest dish, on an adventure in a foreign kitchen, or even a professional cook in a restaurant, I think that properly setting out your work area before cooking commences is vital, or else things are gonna get hectic real quick.  Once Dan and I had located everything we needed in the kitchen we could just enjoy the cooking (and the puppy) and not worry as much about finding the whisk.

posted on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 10:06:23 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, March 24, 2008

Oh chicken tikka, like spaghetti with meatballs and general Tso before you, you have no cultural reference.  The California roll of Indian cuisine.  Created by an Indian expat in Britain to help western palates adapt to Middle Eastern flavors, Chicken Tikka Masala is the most popular “Indian” food around.  Since we hadn’t cooked Indian before, we thought it would be a good starting point.  We didn’t have much time to cook that night, but this recipe seemed so simple, what I had overlooked was resting and marinating times.  Because of this, our final product was slightly on the bland side but still really delicious. Click below for more





posted on Monday, March 24, 2008 10:14:20 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Thursday, March 20, 2008

For the “about me” section of the website, I decided to have some of my friends interview me via email for the past couple days. This was hard for me because I don’t like writing about myself.  Anyways, here is the result.


Since Bermuda only has one fast food restaurant (kfc), which one is your first choice when visiting the states?  What is it that you missed?

Well, I love me a nice McDonalds cheeseburger, we usually get this first because it is usually on the way from the airport to wherever we are heading. But in reality what I miss most is taco bell and Qdoba.  We try and get taco bell 3 times on every trip to the states.  Other then that, I stay away from most fast food.  Trips to the US are basically eating frenzies for us because I miss all the food in the US.  Some restaurants here are really good, but only a handful, and as they get better they get crazy expensive.  The unlimited restaurant cornucopia we get when visiting the states is a bit too much for us to even handle.  I think I gained 8 pounds on my last trip.

posted on Thursday, March 20, 2008 10:02:48 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Last restaurant standing is consistently getting better each episode and this one did not disappoint.  Last nights theme was selling your product.  Different from marketing outside the restaurant like 2 weeks ago, this is marketing inside.  Raymond has a secret ingredient he sends all the restaurants that the need to up sell over the weekend.

 

Click below for the review *** SPOILERS ***

posted on Wednesday, March 19, 2008 9:42:40 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Today is the coldest, windiest, dreariest day we have had here in Bermuda this winter.  Just when I was thinking the weather would turn and we would be at the beach in a few weeks, we get this crazy storm.  I had coffee today for the first time in months when I got in to work because the ride was so crazy.  Gigantic waves were crashing into the sea wall and splashing upon the road.  Gale force winds threatening to toss my bike like a child’s toy off of the asphalt and on to the rocks below. 

To further warm my body and mind, and remind me that spring IS coming here in Bermuda, I have decided to post some beach BBQ pictures from last year. Click below for the rest of the pics





posted on Tuesday, March 18, 2008 9:36:56 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Monday, March 17, 2008

Happy St. Patrick’s Day to everyone, I was planning on cooking something themed for this day but unfortunately I’ve been pretty busy and also out of my element working in a foreign kitchen (more on this later).

Just a quick comment, I’m proud to say TFIMB has been featured this week on the threadless website because Mandi was wearing one of their shirts in some pictures.

Because last week was recipe intensive, there won’t be as many actual recipes this week, but I have some other stuff planned.  Here is a quiz I made for my friends recently where you need to identify the ingredient or food in each picture.  There are 15 pictures, this one is fairly easy but I may put up “round 2” if people are interested.  This is a good thing to challenge your friends with, and if you like it, check out this candy one I posted earlier.

posted on Monday, March 17, 2008 10:28:02 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Friday, March 14, 2008

One great application of chicken stock is making risotto.  Because of the effort involved in making it, I like to throw a lot of veggies and meat in and have it as a meal instead of a side.  Not that it is hard, it’s just time consuming and needs attention.  Like all the things we make, we made a ton and had lunches for work the next day.  It kept great and possibly even tasted better the next day!  This recipe is similar to a Giada recipe you can check out here.
Click below for more





posted on Friday, March 14, 2008 9:54:57 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Thursday, March 13, 2008

These last two days of "happy chicken week" are just to show a couple different, interesting uses for the stored up chicken stock.  Our idea this past weekend was to cook something that looked like a totally different food than it actually was.

A few weeks ago at the Grillin and Chillin event we had a dish by Chef Shaker Estephane where the Mango was cut into what looked like stringy little noodles. This gave Mandi the idea that she wanted to make an entire dish where everything was shaped like noodles. I had also been thinking about it when reading Morimoto’s cookbook that I got for Christmas. He loves what he calls “visual food puns”.  So we first thought of a food we have often, spaghetti and meatballs. It got us thinking... what if the meat was the noodles, and the pasta was the meatballs? What we ended up with was pretty awesome. Click below for more.





posted on Thursday, March 13, 2008 10:13:23 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Before I start my review today I just wanted to mention 2 things.  1, that happy chicken week will resume tomorrow with a recipe for risotto using that great chicken stock, and 2, that the new season of Top Chef starts tonight on Bravo.  This is hands down the best reality show about food there is on TV. (ha)  Definitely check it out tonight.  I WON’T be reviewing the show because a ton of other sites do including my favorite food blog Serious Eats.  Also because it comes on at 3AM in Bermuda and I have to watch it a day or 2 later.  I will however tell you that without seeing even one episode, or knowing anything about personality, TFIMB dot com is officially supporting Andrew for winner of top chef season 4.  Just look at that formidable beard.



Now on to Last Restaurant Standing!

 

Click below **SPOILERS**


posted on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 9:26:47 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Tuesday, March 11, 2008
For dinner the second night for me, and lunch the next day for both of us, I made my usual taco leftovers lunch, an awesome taco salad.  If I were to make this one day and leave the house for a few hours, it would be gone, the whole huge bowl of it.  Mandi likes it that much.




posted on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 7:58:23 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Monday, March 10, 2008

This post stems from a few different things.  First – Mandi and I have been somewhat inspired by some of our favorite chefs, especially Jamie Oliver, in their discussion of the treatment of animals and what your meat goes through on the way to your mouth.  We watched Ramsay purchase baby turkeys on his show “the F word” and build a pen for them in his backyard.  His children would feed and play with them.  Eventually they became Christmas dinner at his restaurant. If you are interested in this topic you can read some great articles here and here

Anyways, because of all this, we decided to try and only eat what mandi calls “happy meat” for a few months (lent).  This may not seem hard to most people in the US.  Just go to Whole Foods, shell out a few extra bucks, and get yourself some hormone and antibiotic free beef and free range chicken.  Here in Bermuda, it’s a bit more of a challenge. Click below for more.





posted on Monday, March 10, 2008 10:31:22 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Friday, March 07, 2008

In the next week or two I will be doing a few posts for an “about me” section. This is for people who are new to the site to check out and get a feeling for where I am coming from. Today’s about me is a list of my top 5 favorite Celebrity food personalities with a few honorable mentions at the bottom.

posted on Friday, March 07, 2008 11:40:45 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Thursday, March 06, 2008

The Guest Blogger is back again today.  It's Mandi, and her comments are in red.

This year for Dan’s big day I decided to get him the camera he’s been wanting.  He’s usually annoyingly good at guessing my presents but with this one I don’t think he expected it at all which is fun.  Probably because it’s way more than we usually spend on each other for birthdays… but I knew he really wanted it and truthfully I’m just sick of hearing him moan about his crappy quality pictures for the blog!  Anyway, so once I sorted out the actual camera it was time to conquer the cake…





posted on Thursday, March 06, 2008 11:03:08 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Last nights episode of last restaurant standing was pretty boring.  I missed the antics of Sam and Jackie but also wanted more people kicked off so we could really get down to the meat of the show.  The problem is they skip around between all the couples too much.  It wasn’t as bad the last 2 weeks cause they just blatantly ignored some couples, but now with 7 left they tried to give them all a piece of the spotlight and it didn’t really work for me.  What I like about the show is it’s focus on the strengths and weaknesses of the different couples and the many beginner mistakes people tend to make.  This episode didn’t really touch deeply into anyone.

Click below for full recap/review **SPOILERS**

posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2008 11:15:41 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Note- This is the second pasta recipe in a short period of time.  I have 3 comments:


1.  We love pasta and make it all the time
2.  I am trying to clear out pictures taken with my old camera
3.  Next week has a theme – “Happy Chicken Week” – no pasta there

Anyways, there are a ton of pictures here, but I couldn’t narrow them down any further cause this was an awesome night and a great meal.  We cooked for almost 4 hours then watched a foodie movie.  What more can you ask for?

This is a direct recipe from Giada De Laurentiis.  You can find it here on the food network website and in her cookbook “Everyday Pasta.”  I am going to explain the recipe as we go today.





posted on Tuesday, March 04, 2008 11:51:25 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Monday, March 03, 2008

I had a great time at the Bermuda gourmet getaway this past weekend. Mandi and I went to “Grillin & Chillin” on Saturday night and the Viking Village on Sunday afternoon to see the finals of the Escoffier cup. If you want my opinion on both of these events, and a few pictures, click below to continue reading. If you don’t, why are you here?





posted on Monday, March 03, 2008 12:56:00 PM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Friday, February 29, 2008

We had revenge on pad thai this past weekend.  I didn’t take as many pictures this time because we had so many good ones last time.  Also because once you get going with this dish in the wok,  you need to be focused and keep the ingredients coming.  If you are serious about trying pad thai, check out chez pim and read her page on it.  It may seem long, but you need to read through it to get the idea of how to make this dish really great. 





posted on Friday, February 29, 2008 10:05:10 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]