Tuesday, November 25, 2008

This morning instead of my regular post I just wanted to wish a Happy Thanksgiving to all TFimB friends and fans. Today I am heading home for the holiday and won't be updating the site for a week! I know you may be struggling with how you will deal with this absence but I will be coming back soon with some great holiday posts ready to go! But before I head off to the cold northeast I have a few points to note. First off, join my facebook group! I don't have a facebook account personally because obviously I am way too super-cool to be bothered. But some people have been asking about it for the site and since I am a man of the people... voila facebook! The second point I wanted to mention was to let everyone know about the exciting changes that will be coming in the next few months. I am in the process of updating the whole backend of the site and hope to have it completed by our one-year anniversary in January. I will be updating things like sign-in, layout, as well as fixing the problems we've been having with comments. If you've had problems leaving comments... sorry! But please don't give up! All will be fixed come January. I promise.

The third and final point for today is more of a question really. Who's out there? I want to get to know you and you to get to know each other. So I thought, in keeping with the holiday spirit we could all share a little about ourselves. To my friends who check the website, maybe mention how you know me, where you work/live, or if you don't wanna share personal stuff, share whatever! To those of you out there I don't know, introduce yourself. Plug your website if you want. Basically tell me whatever you want! What's your fave food? Who's your favorite food celebrity? What Thanksgiving dish are you most pumped for this year?

Ok! I'm off. Only the coolest blogs take Thanksgiving off. like Gossip Girl... and me.

Until next week upper east siders
xoxo
Dan

posted on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 8:56:38 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [25]
 Monday, November 24, 2008

After we made the German roulades, I couldn’t stop thinking about braciole. Pronounced bra-jool, it is an Italian-American dish consisting of parsley, garlic, and breadcrumbs stuffed in thinly sliced beef, commonly served with pasta and sauce. There are many different ideas on what meat and fillings to use. I think I went with a fairly basic one. People who know what this is seem to love it, and for good reason.  My mom made this occasionally and people went crazy for it. Apparently there is an episode of Everyone Loves Raymond where braciole is part of the main plot and the guys on the show speak very highly of it. In Italy, there is a similar dish called involtini that would also be cooked in the sauce like braciole, but would be served as a second course after the pasta. Luckily we are not in Italy, because I like mixing them.





posted on Monday, November 24, 2008 9:31:53 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Friday, November 21, 2008

I don’t know what initially gave me this idea, but I was very excited to try it. I thought I came up with something pretty original. Bananas can mash just like avocados, so it seemed natural to me. Also, the existence of mango, pineapple, and other fruit salsas validated the combo in my head. I thought of putting it on fish, the way fruit salsas are often paired. Just like every seemingly original idea I have, google crushed this one. There is always some a-hole who has done your idea already. In this case, it was the couple at Ideas in Food. An awesome blog I read occasionally, but not too often cause it makes me feel insignificant. Their food is just that amazing. Anyways, try this recipe and you will like it. Your friends will be impressed by your forward thinking. I think it would rock on fish tacos (if Mandi ever lets me make them). Oh yea, and that side dish we made, it doesn’t really go with the fish. Cheese and fish are almost never a good match. We just made them together because we had the ingredients lying around. It was definitely very delicious, but would have gone better with a steak or something.





posted on Friday, November 21, 2008 9:36:11 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
 Thursday, November 20, 2008

Food on cartoons is SOO delicious looking. I have compiled 17 of the most tantalizing treats ever put to paper and shown on screen (big and small). Its your job to figure out what cartoon these come from! I cut wide on a few shots to give you guys hints, so scan these pics well! I think this is a pretty easy quiz, so I am going to give you a grading scale that looks like this:

16 – 17: Yabadabadoo!
12 - 15: Cowabunga!
9 – 11: Eat my shorts.
Less than 8: You're not fat, just big boned.

Click through to begin!

posted on Thursday, November 20, 2008 10:50:46 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
 Tuesday, November 18, 2008

After we made the Thanksgiving Ravioli, we had some leftover turkey cranberry filling. I did not want this to go to waste, so Mandi decided putting it into a salad. We cooked it the same night we made the ravs and put it into the fridge fully cooked. Then we just microwaved it the next night to put it on the salad warm. This was a really nice fall salad that was a bit different from a lot of salads we make.





posted on Tuesday, November 18, 2008 9:11:51 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [6]
 Monday, November 17, 2008

If you are anything like me, you read a lot of food blogs and watch a lot of food on TV. This means that all last week and especially over the weekend, you were bombarded with turkey, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes, stuffing, and all other Thanksgiving themed foods. I couldn’t take it anymore! By Sunday night I was having serious Thanksgiving cravings. But you can’t make Thanksgiving; that would take away from the real thing next week. In this situation, Mandi and I usually make Giada’s turkey and cranberry ravioli and it holds us over well. This year, we added Ming Tsai’s sweet potato basil ravioli to the mix and the results were fantastic.





posted on Monday, November 17, 2008 9:30:52 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Friday, November 14, 2008

It’s hard to call something as delicious as this a failure, but really we were unable to do what we set out to do so in my mind I mark it with an F. The goal was to make chicken tikka masala and put it on a raw naan dough. Cook that dough in the pizza oven and basically have an Indian pizza. The main problem here was that naan dough does not have the stretching capabilities that the pizza dough we make has. It is unable to hold all of those toppings and was falling apart in the oven. We should have done the trick of grilled pizza where you cook it on one side, flip and add the toppings, but we did not think of it at the time.

As my really O.G. fans would know, I made chicken tikka once before, but it wasn’t that good. The naan was crap and the flavor was bland. Now that I am a little more experienced in Indian cooking, I found this to be easy and much more delicious. I suggest this dish to anyone (just not the pizza part).





posted on Friday, November 14, 2008 10:33:14 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [6]
 Thursday, November 13, 2008

For as long as I can remember I’ve been woefully ashamed of my short, stocky hands. And by stocky, I mean fat. Real fat! I have always been a pretty average sized girl but my hands, they have always been huge! I’ve been hiding them in my pockets and pulling down my shirt sleeves for basically my entire life. I realize how incredibly vain this all may sound. But when you’re a little girl and the pretty, plastic rings that happily adorn all the other little girls’ fingers won’t even come CLOSE to fitting; well it’s easy to form a bit of a complex. But I guess in the end we all probably have something that bothers us about who we are.

For as long as my hands have been a bother to me, I have never thought about any possible benefit they might be. That is until a few months ago when I was making naan for the first time. The recipe calls to knead the dough for 6-8 minutes. I was standing there kneading away at this beautiful dough (Naan is quite a lovely dough to handle!) and I realized how much I love to play with dough. I love the feel of pushing it roughly around the counter. Feeling it all come together in my hands. That moment when you know it’s ready to sit; I’m really quite good at it. I was looking at my hands. My big, fat hands. Well now, this is something they are good for! I’ve always thought it was funny how I like to get my hands all up in my cooking, really feel my food coming together.

One night Dan and I were watching Gourmet’s diary of a foodie: Southern India when I heard a woman speaking about cooking with your hands; it caught my attention. The woman speaking was Shoba Narayan a food writer in India. She spoke of an Indian phrase, kai narumanem, which literally means fragrance of the hands. An Indian kitchen stresses mixing and cooking with the hands. The quality of the cook is said to translate through their hands, into the food, and to the eater. Your hands are your way of communicating your love and excitement. She said that it is ideal to cook in a peaceful, harmonious, and joyful state, because what you serve will impact the eater in that way.

Your mood impacting the outcome of your food? I was mesmerized by her words. What an interesting idea! It reminded me of something I had recently read in a book about Leonardo Da Vinci. He wrote how the mood of the parents during conception relates directly to the personality of their child. In context he was talking about his own life. He was a bastard child born out of a fiery love between two people who could never be together. His life was one of chaos, art, and passion. Conversely his half-brothers were born to his father in an arranged marriage, a loveless union. He described them as bitter, irritable children who caused him nothing but heartache throughout his life. The concept of a child’s outcome as a product of the parents’ mood at conception and food being a product of the cook’s mood during preparation seem both similar and intriguing to me. I suppose there’s no way to prove either of these ideas, but what I do know is this: When I am unhappy or fussy, the food just does not come out right. My mood translates from my body through these hands and into my food.

These hands are my utensils which communicate a piece of me into my food. These hands that I have always resented, even hated. Now I’d like to think that my hands bring me happiness and pride. I love what they create for me and for my friends. I love the small cuts that usually cover them from chopping too excitedly and fast. I love the faint smell of garlic and jalapeños that, no matter how much I scrub, never seems to leave. I even love the fat, stubby, sausage fingers that I know handle dough oh so well.

posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 11:29:13 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
 Wednesday, November 12, 2008

This is one of the first things Mandi and I started out making all the time; but until the other night we hadn't made it in a really long time. It is very easy and can be elegant or casual depending on how you dress it up. I had it in a restaurant one night and re created it at home in one try, that’s how easy it is. I have told you many times how much I love the combo of roasted red peppers, arugula, and steak, and this is yet another way I enjoy that trio of flavors.





posted on Wednesday, November 12, 2008 10:03:14 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Monday, November 10, 2008

Chili means many different things to many different people. There are Texas varieties that only have the sauce and meat. These are more “purist” chilies that people seem to be passionate about and angry when others choose to make it differently. Mexican con carne is even more authentic than that. In the Midwest chili is served over pasta. In some areas it is more tomato based while in others the stock is more based on the chile peppers it is named after. Some varieties use sweets to finish it off and add unique flavor like chocolate or vanilla. There is also the mystical and delicious world of vegetarian chilies I will revisit in the near future. And then the eternal question of beans or no beans. Well I am here to tell you all today that I don’t care about any of this. Yes I love tradition and passed down recipes. I love all the chili varieties from coast to coast. But when I make it, it is a big pile of awesome following no rules but my own. I’m a rebel that way.





posted on Monday, November 10, 2008 10:16:14 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Friday, November 07, 2008

When I was in Boston 2 weeks ago, Kim hosted an Octoberfest dinner party at her house. It was a lot of fun and we made some really great stuff. We made pretzels again, spaetzle with caramelized onions and gruyere, and beef roulades. We had German beer and German cheeses to try as well. None of us are even close to German, so we can only hope that these foods were somewhat authentic, but what we do know is that they were delicious!





posted on Friday, November 07, 2008 9:33:40 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Thursday, November 06, 2008

Top Chef starts next week, and I am very excited! As with last season, I am going to pick a contestant that will be sponsored by TFIMB based solely on their facial hair! Last year, there were only 2 choices. Andrew was my final choice and turned out to go pretty far and be a favorite of mine the whole way. Will I be as lucky this year? Click below to see my choices.

posted on Thursday, November 06, 2008 9:01:28 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Tuesday, November 04, 2008

I love carbonara. It's fast, simple and cheap, yet very filling, warm and comforting. I generally don’t like it when I get it at a restaurant which is surprising to me because it is so easy to make! Today we used bacon rather than pancetta for a few reasons. We have tried both in this dish, and I prefer bacon. Also at the store I went to, they didn’t have the really good pancetta, only the thin round kind which I am not a fan of. Thirdly, we watched Giada at Home the other day and saw Aunt Raffi saying that when she is in the US, she uses bacon instead of pancetta because in the finished dish it tastes more “like it did back in Italy.” Those are enough reasons for me, so here is my recipe for pasta in the style of the coal miner's wife.





posted on Tuesday, November 04, 2008 8:57:22 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [9]
 Monday, November 03, 2008

After work on Friday, we took the rest of our spiders and ghosts over to Amy’s for a party. Thursday we actually got together too to make some of the food. Amy made a few things, but Mandi and I’s main contribution was a pumpkin dip. I was trying something random and it didn’t come out all that good. It could have been a great thanksgiving side dish if tweaked a bit. I also think it had good dip potential if we had put more love and attention into it.





posted on Monday, November 03, 2008 10:05:49 AM (Atlantic Standard Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5]