Saturday, September 25, 2010

Cleaning out the pantry - Part II

I've been successful in sticking to my goal of cleaning out the pantry - purchases have been limited to rounding out what's needed with vegetables/fruit, milk, cheese, eggs, and bread. Some things have been tasty (such as this delicious recipe for peanut sauce - great in a stir-fry, or thinned with potstickers, and some not so great (Mark Bittman's white beans with tomatoes recipe from How to Cook Everything wasn't worth keeping leftovers of, and white chocolate doesn't melt when it's old). 

I'm now down to a less forgiving assortment of items. I still have plenty of beef, ground pork, tuna, and shrimp in the freezer, but the other pantry items are getting thin. Namely - tomatoes. I'm out of tomatoes. Who knew I would wish for just a single can of tomatoes? 


Some good news, though - with fall comes soup and stew season. That's my go-to type of recipe for beans and stew meat (of which I have two bags in the freezer) - but they don't really fit the weather on a hot day. Now, I'm sure many of these soups would be better with a can of tomatoes, but I must forge on!
 

Monday, September 6, 2010

New mission: Cleaning out the pantry

I love grocery shopping about as much as I love cooking. I love finding new things, and stockpiling ingredients I should be using, and going into new food shops. There's a grocery chain around here, for instance, that seems to carry a lot of Indian foods that I don't have in the closest store (which has the best produce) - so when I happen to stop in for something I actually need, I typically come away with a basket full of other things that I just have to get. Don't go into a new grocery store with me unless you're prepared to spend an hour there. 

What that means, though, is that I have a very well-stocked pantry. Beans, grains, noodles - the cabinet space is chock full. My freezer - and we now have a chest freezer! - is full of meat from our meat man (though that is now over, we couldn't keep up the meat consumption to run out each month), and great deals from Costco (a giant bag of frozen sweet potato fries; a box of par-baked individual loaves of great bread). It's now at the point where I've realized that I shouldn't buy anything else new until I've made my way through what I have, or things are just going to get wasted as they approach their best-buy date.

My new mission: to make meals solely out of our pantry and freezer. The rules: 
  • No new meats or grains/beans/noodles or condiments until the pantry is close to empty.
  • No new spices. The spice drawer is close to bursting, too - if it's not in there, I don't need it.
  • The only items that can be bought at the store are dairy products, chicken bones for stock (the meat guy didn't give us chicken), cereal, fruits, and vegetables. 
  •  This continues until the meat is entirely gone from the freezer and/or the pantry is empty of all grains and beans - whichever comes first. 
The first meal on this mission? Lentil soup for lunches for this week. 


Lentil and sausage soup

1 small onion, medium dice
3 small carrots, peeled and sliced into coins 1/4 inch thick
3 stalks of celery, sliced the same thickness as the carrots
3 cloves of garlic, minced
1/2 tsp dried thyme
pinch of red pepper flakes
2 sausages, cooked and sliced like the carrots
1 cup brown lentils
1 24-ounce can of whole tomatoes, tomatoes cut up (or chopped tomatoes)
2 cups chicken broth


Heat oil over medium heat; saute onion until softened and translucent. Add carrots and celery; mix well with onion. Add garlic, thyme, red pepper flakes, and cook until the garlic is fragrant. Add the remaining ingredients. Stir to combine; cover and simmer until lentils and carrots are the desired tenderness. 



Sunday, September 5, 2010

Cookies for my puppy

I had stopped writing too much here because of time - I just haven't been cooking all that much. Or, rather, cooking that much that anyone wants to hear about; it's all been pretty basic. 

Enter Darwin, the world's cutest golden retriever puppy.
From Darwin!
The training program we've selected requires the use of frequent treats. (Positive reinforcement! How could two psychology nerds not work with people who use scientifically-proven behaviorism to train their new dog?) However, also being (a) cheap and (b) overly conscious of the potential perils associated with purchased dog treats, this was a perfect chance to get back into baking. 


I started by seeking out recipes online. I have a few criteria:
 - No wheat. According to golden retriever (and dog nutrition) lore, wheat can cause allergic reactions in dogs. No, they do not have celiac disease. 
 - The same idea goes for soy and corn. From what I've read, it seems that the real issues with these ingredients come from feeding them to the dog over and over and over - and traditional dog foods are chock full of them. Anyway...I'm trying to avoid these ingredients.
 - No sugar. I use unsweetened applesauce and bananas to add sweetness, and the peanut butter I use is natural, so there is no sugar or added ingredients.
 - No added fat. The only fat that is a part of the recipes I've tried is in the peanut butter and eggs.


These are the recipes I've started with. Where flour is called for, I've substituted gluten-free flour. There is a bit of cornmeal in the Peanut Butter treats below; since I'm still experimenting, I'm not sure what the role of all of the ingredients in the recipes are.

Applesauce and Oatmeal Treats
Peanut Butter Cookie Treats

I'll be experimenting with modifications of these recipes for a while. I'm lucky - Darwin will eat anything - rocks, clumps of dirt, grass - so while not discerning, he's a very appreciative taste tester.  The most successful change so far? Instead of applesauce, I added a banana and a bit of peanut butter instead of the applesauce to the Applesauce and Oatmeal Treats above.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Chilaquiles

I find that when I need to get back into the groove of cooking, I pick up one cookbook and find lots of recipes in it that I want to make. My go-to book right now? Mark Bittman's Kitchen Express - a cookbook I've expressed my love for before. Because I'm trying to finish up the things in our freezer and pantry, I'm not looking for recipes that require me to buy new things - and the flexibility of the recipes in this book give me the perfect way to do that. 

This morning, to use up some tortillas and a few pickled jalapenos in the fridge, I made his recipe for Chilaquiles. P loves anything spicy - me, I'm more of a bread-products-for-breakfast girl (French toast, pancakes, cinnamon buns...the list goes on), but that sort of thing can be heavy on a humid day like today. This was so easy that we'll definitely be making it again.


Chilaquiles
1 tbsp oil
2 tortillas, sliced into strips (flour or corn - we used flour, but corn would have been tastier)
a few pickled jalapenos, chopped (or fresh; the more you use, the spicier this will be)
4 eggs
a splash of milk
salt and pepper to taste


Heat the oil in a large frying pan. Saute the tortillas and jalapenos until crisp. Meanwhile, blend the eggs, milk, salt, and pepper until well-blended. Add egg mixture to tortillas when they are crisp; stir constantly until eggs are cooked to your preferred dryness. Serve with fresh tomatoes, avocado, sour cream, cheese, or anything else that sounds nice to you with something like this.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Bread pudding

Clearly I've been working too hard - was it really February when I posted last? I'll be making up for it this week; I'm taking this next week off, and will have lots of time to cook (and write about it!) 

Today I made bread pudding. We're moving soon, so I'm loathe to buy new ingredients for cooking - I have a very well-stocked pantry that's going to fill a few boxes already. 2/3 of a loaf of bread was leftover from P's parents coming for dinner earlier in the week - the obvious dessert: bread pudding!  

Bread pudding is one of my favorite desserts. P likes it, but he's not wild about it, so for a week where I won't be bringing leftovers to work, it has to be something he'll eat, too (unless my goals are to throw it out, or to gain 10 pounds in a week). The recipe below, modified from The King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion, is easily malleable to the individual likes and dislikes of the eater. I've added some notes at the end about using your favorite fillings.


Bread Pudding


32 ounces milk
1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted butter
9 - 10 cups (9 - 10 ounces) cubed stale bread
1 cup brown sugar, honey, sugar, molasses, golden or maple syrup
1 cup (6 ounces) raisins, dates, dried cranberries, dried cherries
3/4 cup (3 ounces) chopped walnuts or pecans
4 large eggs
1/2 tsp salt
3/4 tsp nutmeg
2 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla extract


Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 9-inch cake pan (a 9-inch Pyrex pan will not be big enough - you need the height of the sides to hold it all). 


Heat the milk and butter together over medium-low until the butter has melted. Mix the bread cubes, sweetener, and dried fruits/nuts in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, beat the eggs, salt, spices, and vanilla extract together. Mix the heated milk mixture into the egg mixture until well blended; then stir into the bread/fruit/nut mixture. Distribute the liquid evenly, and pour into greased pan.


Bake for 40 - 45 minutes, until a knife inserted into the center doesn't reveal a pooling of milk mixture. The pudding won't be dry, but you don't want uncooked milk/egg mixture in it. Remove from the oven and let cool for 5 minutes. Serve warm or cool - great for breakfast!


Some additional thoughts: 

 - My combination of things was dried cherries and cinnamon - I omitted the nutmeg because I don't have any in the house, and I don't like nuts in bread pudding. Instead of the nuts, I substituted the near-equivalent amount of cherries for the nuts. 

 - You can also add chocolate chips instead of the dried fruit. I'm not personally fond of a cinnamon-chocolate flavor combination, though, so instead of that I would have added 1/2 tsp almond extract. 
 - You can be adventuresome. Think about what flavor combination you like - this doesn't have to be cinnamon-centric (think cardamom or ginger...mmm).



Monday, February 22, 2010

The amazing non-stale bread

Since it was just me here this week, I didn't quite finish my loaf of this bread. (The second loaf was given away - I knew two loaves were beyond any reasonable capacity for bread-eating.) Amazingly enough, when toasted it was still tasty today - a full 6 days after baking it!

I credit this to my storage technique. Under P's influence, we were keeping the bread in the refrigerator. According to the King Arthur Flour cookbook, this is wrong, all wrong. The best way to store bread like the whole wheat loaf I made is by wrapping it well in plastic wrap and keeping it at room temperature. A refrigerator creates the magical best circumstances for staling (so if you want something to go stale, that's where you should put it).

Lesson learned. The next bread - a cinnamon swirl bread - is on hold until I can get to the store to buy one more necessary ingredient that got left off the list today...

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

An end to Meatathon 2009 - 2010 (but a beginning to reasonable meat eating 2010)

We've given in and scaled back to a "small" share for next month - so this last month we'll be in the final throes of Meatathon 2009 - 2010. For those of you living in the Toronto area, this meat CSA has been a fantastic investment - and with the small share, we'll be spending approximately $13.00/week on meat - organic, locally-raised and butchered, well-raised meat. You can not beat the deal or the quality of the meat. 

I highly recommend you check them out if you're in the area: Twin Creeks Organic Farm. If you see them at the farmer's market (last year it was at Trinity Bellwoods), they also carry eggs and vegetables. If you're not in the area, I recommend checking out something similar for yourself in your area. This would have even fit into our budget as grad students, and it beats anything you'll find at Whole Foods.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Vermont Whole Wheat Oatmeal Honey Bread

I said when the year started that I wanted to bake more bread. Well, I've now met that goal, since last year I baked no bread, and now I've baked two loaves. An increase of 200%! Now that I've had the experience of success, I'm ready to move forward with further attempts. 

This recipe came from my King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion cookbook - the same recipe can be found on their website here

My changes: I kneaded half by machine, half by hand (I need to build my kneading muscles!), and used rapid-rise yeast. Apparently, you can substitute one for the other in equal measure - just don't expect the rapid-rise yeast to rise as quickly as the instant yeast. I didn't find a significant difference between what was predicted in time for the instant vs. the rapid rise, but it all depends on the environment in which you're baking. My apartment building tends to be on the warmer side due to an old heating system and even older residents, so that helped, I'm sure.

I started the recipe mid-morning, and (although capable of adding), underestimated how long it would take for the bread to go from start to finish before we had to go out in the afternoon. What to do? After the first rise, I divided the dough into two greased pans, covered them with greased plastic wrap, and put them in the refrigerator. I had never tried this before - I had only heard that this could slow down a rise considerably. 

When we got home, I pulled them out of the fridge and let them come to room temperature for a few minutes. Then I borrowed an idea from the King Arthur cookbook: I heated my oven for a few minutes on the lowest setting, turned it off, and then put the rising loaves inside. The loaves rose to their prescribed height in about 45 minutes. 


After 35 minutes in a 350 degree oven, out came these pretty little loaves! The cinnamon in the recipe made the apartment smell heavenly while the bread baked. And the taste? Slightly sweet, sturdy enough for sandwiches, and while I know it's healthy (so far as bread goes), it doesn't taste that way to me. (P, however, won't be entirely happy unless it's some sort of white loaf that comes out of the oven. Oh, well - more bread for me!)

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Check this out

I found this through another blog I follow (Save Your Fork - it comes up with a great compilation of food news, if you're into that sort of thing). This little blurb made me laugh, and then wonder if I fall victim to them...in any case, it's a good list of things for a food writer to try to avoid. Check out Seven Tropes of Objectionable Food Writing.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Lasagna sauce without the lasagna

I defrosted a package of ground beef and a package of four pork sausages, thinking I'd do something separate with each. Faced with coming up with two individual plans for meals, however, my brain just wasn't up to it - instead, it wanted meat sauce. Meaty meat sauce, with beef and sausage and tomatoes, and little else. 

I found the perfect recipe for my meat in Cook's Illustrated's The New Best Recipe. This cookbook is a solid, reliable tome for pretty much everything under the sun; think Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything, but with more details, background, and illustrations. Their stand-alone pasta sauce recipes, though, required more work and different types of meat than I wanted to use. What to do? 

So I turned to their lasagna recipe. A good meat lasagna has a rich, meaty sauce that isn't too watery - otherwise, the lasagna becomes a watery lump. What could be wrong with using a sauce for what is essentially a casserole, but without the casserole? 

Turns out, nothing. Nothing at all. Just a delicious plate of pasta sauce with some good, solid pasta. I made a double batch, and the rest will end up in a lasagna next week; the ricotta and mozzarella is already waiting, thanks to a sale at the grocery store. (And yes, I checked the sell-by dates - they'll be more than fine to use to make a lasagna this weekend.)

Monday, January 25, 2010

Thanks, New York Times!

I love the Dining section of the New York Times. I also love the food articles that appear in the New York Times Magazine every weekend. It is through the Times that I became acquainted with the amazing Mark Bittman - his simple recipes always provide inspiration. Too often, though, that's all they provide - I'll bookmark recipes, always with the idea that I'll try that recipe out, but the follow through isn't always there.

This past week, however, fate intervened. Among the meat selections for this month (or was it last? I should date the meat when it arrives) was a prime rib roast. Too big for the two of us for a single night's dinner, but having people over for dinner wasn't in the schedule for a few weeks at least. Previous uses of roasts meant one delicious meal, and then a hunk of meat sitting in the fridge until I threw it out a week later, ideas of sandwiches lost in the shuffle of the week. 


Happily, however, the Times Magazine came through not only with a roast recipe, but with a great way to use up the leftovers: hash. With a plan in hand, I forged ahead with the roast. The spice coating is tasty, but not overpowering - it makes the roast interesting, and the kitchen smells delicious while it cooks. Even without searing the meat beforehand, it develops a gorgeous brown color while cooking, likely because of the sugar in the rub. 


To round out the hash - and the dinner - were some pan roasted root vegetables. I used the method in the recipe, but not the same veggies - I had a giant carrot and two medium Yukon Gold potatoes, garlic, some dried thyme, and nothing else. And here's where I learned something interesting: I followed the recipe and used two pans. My go-to pan for this type of recipe is usually my All-Clad aluminum 12-inch frypan. I only own one, however, so the other ended up being my Hamilton Beach electric frypan. 


I expected nothing of the electric frypan; I anticipated poor browning, and thought those would be the veggies I'd throw into the hash. I was completely wrong: the electric frypan showed up the All-Clad amazingly, browning the vegetables perfectly, and cooking it all significantly faster and more evenly, to boot. 


Now, I have two theories about this. First, our stovetop sucks. It's an electric stovetop, circa who-knows-when, and the burner I was using can be iffy. So that's a possibility - the heating may have been inconsistent. Second, the electric frypan is non-stick; the All-Clad is not. The non-stick coating allowed the vegetables to brown, but not stick to the pan; in the All-Clad, the nice browned parts stuck to the pan, so when the vegetables were stirred, the nice brown parts just came off. 


Now, stick vs. non-stick pan issue can also be attributed to heating difficulties - and I may have stirred it too often. When things stick to pans, it generally releases when it reaches a certain heat. This happens with meat - at first when searing, the meat sticks to the pan - when it releases, the sear is ready. I'm not sure if the same is true for vegetables, but clearly the electric frypan was the winner in this bout, given the circumstances as they were.


I'll let you know how the hash comes out. Both of these recipes, though, are keepers even when hash isn't in their future.


Sunday, January 24, 2010

Sunday schnitzel

One of the packages in our meat haul this month was some pork schnitzel. Having never made this before - but having eaten it at Denninger's - I knew we could make some tasty sandwiches. (If you have the occasion to visit, or happen to live in, the Hamilton area, definitely check Denninger's out - I miss it up here in Toronto!)


I followed the recipe found here - I love Googling recipes. I used panko instead of fine bread crumbs, and used regular salt rather than seasoned salt. The results were delicious on a toasted onion bun and with some Swiss cheese - a quick hot sandwich for a rainy Sunday night.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Meat, meat, meat

Oh, my. I always start the year with the best of intentions, and look where I am! No blog posts for 10 days...but I have managed to cook dinner more than once this week, despite many, many hours in the car each day. 

The dinners of the last two nights underscore how really quick and easy it is to make some delicious meat mid-week. Last night: rack of lamb, with roasted sweet potatoes and spinach salad. Tonight: pan-roasted pork chops with rosemary-onion-apple sauce and spinach salad. Both delicious, and both done in less than 30 minutes. 


The rack of lamb? Dead easy, and you need nothing more than some oil, salt, and pepper. Heat a pan on the stove top until a tablespoon or so of oil shimmers; meanwhile, heat the oven (and a metal pan in it - either a roasting pan or a sturdy cookie sheet) to 425 degrees. Salt and pepper both sides of the lamb. Sear both sides of the rack of lamb until beautifully brown; put onto heated pan in oven for about 12 minutes, until it's medium-rare (135 degrees F inside). Start to finish, it's 20 minutes, primarily unattended. 

The pork chops are similar: heat oil and a bit of butter in a pan at a medium-high heat. Pat pork chops dry with paper towels; season with salt and pepper on each side. Sear each side until attractively brown, about 2 minutes each side. Cover pan (in my case, with aluminum foil), and cook for 10 minutes on low heat. 


The fantastic thing about both of these meats is that they provide a quick basis for any larger meal. Sure, earth-loving vegetarian people, meat shouldn't be the centerpiece of every meal. Fine. But a nice small pork chop with a tasty green salad and homemade applesauce? Or a bit of lamb with roasted veggies and a salad? How can that be so wrong - especially when a) the meat comes from a happy animal, local farm that produces delicious meat, and b) when it's so quick to prepare? These meals feel special even on a rushed weeknight - and are quicker and healthier than anything we could order, and tastier than anything from a box. In cases like this, I vote for meat.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Blech, fennel - and something new to read

I finally made something that I'd been meaning to for ages: Fennel and Rosemary Beef Tenderloin, from Fine Cooking. We had pieces of a beef tenderloin from the meat CSA, and it seemed like a good idea. 

It was not. I have discovered that I do not enjoy fennel in such a dominant taste position in a dish, and even if it didn't bug me so much, I think the flavor combination was too much for the meat. Maybe with lamb, or something more assertive - but not beef tenderloin. I can't write about the meal, though, without mentioning my failure to properly cook the meat...I completely overcooked it. And while some people truly enjoy a gray piece of meat, I and P do not. He, being the wonderful man he is, soldiered through eating his meal; I forsook it for some cauliflower soup


On a more upbeat cooking note, I found another blog that I'm going to follow: Baker's Banter, from the King Arthur Flour company. Yes, they mention King Arthur products liberally.(Can you blame them? It's who pays their salary.) But seeing past this, there are some recipes on there that make me want to get in the kitchen and make some bread, and the step-by-step photos that accompany the recipes are fantastic for those trying a recipe for the first time. That's one of the things I found so good in my baking class last fall: we were shown what everything was supposed to look like at every stage. Most cookbooks don't have the space for this type of valuable instruction. Definitely check this blog out.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Cauliflower Soup

This recipe combines my two current kitchen appliance loves: my slow cooker and my immersion blender. Left with the majority of a head of cauliflower after preparing curried cauliflower earlier in the week, it seemed like a good opportunity to make soup. It was a perfect storm of favorite appliance use, trying to eat more vegetables, and cleaning out the refrigerator. 

The recipe originally comes from Not Your Mother's Slow Cooker Recipes for Two: For the Small Slow Cooker, but I jazzed it up with some pepper and heavy cream. 


Cauliflower Soup
(for a smaller slow-cooker)


2 medium-sized leeks (white parts only), cleaned thoroughly and thinly sliced
1 medium-sized russet potato, peeled and diced
1 small- to medium-sized head cauliflower, broken into florets
4 cups chicken broth, to cover
2 tablespoons olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste
2 - 3 tablespoons heavy cream (optional, I suppose)



Place leeks, potato, cauliflower, chicken broth, and olive oil in slow cooker. Cook on low 6 hours, or until potato and cauliflower are tender. If your slow cooker is like mine, it will cook faster than this - maybe around 5 1/2 hours.


When the potato and cauliflower are tender, use an immersion blender to puree the soup. (Or use a food processor or blender - but do it in batches, or everything will explode all over you and your kitchen.) Add salt and pepper to taste; stir in cream.


Saturday, January 9, 2010

Moroccan Beef Meatball Tagine

I've already mentioned how we needed to branch out from the more traditional uses of ground beef (at least, traditional in my house). Last night, P made the Moroccan Beef Meatball Tagine from the recent Bon Appetit issue. A few substitutions had to be made - we'd run out of panko, so he used some homemade breadcrumbs I had in the freezer, and I couldn't find our cinnamon sticks anywhere, and neither of us are fond of raisins in most things - but the dish was a nice change from the ordinary, and made enough for leftovers for a few days. 

One make-ahead tip that wasn't included in the recipe, but that we needed because I had forgotten to buy onions this week - the meatball mixture can be made a day ahead and kept in the refrigerator for the next day. This may seem like a "duh" tip, but many recipes don't point this kind of thing out, so a meal like this seems like it will take hours to prepare. Taken in pieces - meatball mix one day, stew the next, and maybe even finishing it a third day with the spinach - it's not so daunting. 

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Indian Lamb Chops with Curried Cauliflower

I start the year with the best of intentions, and then reality sets in: this week has been so busy at work that I'm ready for bed at 9:30. Combine long work days with a lot of time spent on the road and lots of projects going at once, making dinner when I get home really isn't high on the list of things I want to do. The list really only consists of a single entry: lie on couch in pajamas and stare at something - a book if it's put in front of my face, but more likely the TV. 

I also failed in actually preparing food for the week as I'd hoped. P's brother S left on Saturday, and Sunday was a snowy, nasty day, so grocery shopping had to wait until Monday night. By then, of course, it was too late to cook anything ahead - the week had already begun. 

One success, however: I had planned meals for the week. While home, I had picked up my dad's copy of Bon Appetit because of the meatballs on the front. All of the ground beef we get means I need more creative ways to use it, and the meatball recipes looked promising. In the same issue were several other recipes that looked good, too. So last night, despite wanting to fall over and just take a nap on the floor, I threw together this meal: Indian Lamb Chops with Curried Cauliflower

The recipe was true to its word - 25 minutes, start to finish, easy, and delicious. I would use the curry sauce with other things, like shrimp, or if using meat I would throw in some cooked potatoes to bulk up the meal a bit. A definite repeat dish, especially since I now have a whole jar of mango chutney in the refrigerator...

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Christmas in Connecticut

This year, P and I, and his brother S went to my parents' homes in Connecticut for Christmas. (No, that doesn't mean my parents are wildly wealthy and own several homes - they're divorced.) As usual, the trip South was a fun trip - and with someone in tow who had never visited New England, exposing him to traditional New England food was a must. 

First official New England food spot: Legal Seafoods in Boston, Massachusetts. Chain restaurant, yes, but it was near the Museum of Fine Arts, and they serve excellent chowder and fried clams. There are few things more delicious than plump clam bellies lightly breaded and deep fried, so that they pop a little with hot clam juice in your mouth. I find them so delicious, in fact, that I had a clam roll (the same deep fried clam bellies, but served in a hot dog bun that is - if properly done - buttered and toasted) at Serio's in Pascoag, Rhode Island on a trip to visit my grandmother. 

Next: Pepe's Pizza. A Connecticut institution, and the home of American thin-crust, brick oven pizza. Also the home of the white clam pizza (yes, clams again) - fresh shelled clams, garlic, and olive oil on the perfect crisp crust. The original location is in New Haven, CT, but they've branched out into Fairfield and Manchester, and are at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, CT, and to Yonkers, NY. We visited the Fairfield location, since my mom lives right near there - the pizza is as good as at the original New Haven location, and worth a stop if you're in Connecticut!

There were other American experiences - Dinosaur Bar B Que in Syracuse, NY; Tastykake (seriously the best packaged baked good anywhere); and not a single Christmas turkey - American Thanksgiving is too close to Christmas to want that again. By no means was this an exhaustive food tour of New England, though, or even Connecticut...but there are many more repeat visits home to be made.






New year - new blog name

I've been thinking for a while that this blog needed a new name. See, the CSA thing was fun - I'm still part of that meat CSA - but winter in Ontario does not really allow for vibrant vegetable CSAs. (Yes, there is one that I'm aware of - but I wasn't in the mood to experiment with winter greens grown in a basement.) That, and I'm not sure we'll be doing a vegetable CSA come springtime, since the schedule really did make doing the other necessary grocery shopping a bit of a pain. 

So, in light of this shift, I've rechristened the blog. The name originates in something I did during my post doc, when my supervisor would get peeved when anyone would use the word "data" as a singular (for instance, saying "The data indicates," instead of "The data indicate"). Now, let's not get into whether this is right or wrong - one can find support for the argument that using the word data as a singular has now entered enough into common English usage for it to be considered correct. When your boss gets mad when you misuse a word, though, you don't get into this argument. 

To relearn this - I seemed to have missed the lesson in graduate school by avoiding using the word "data" at all - I started to substitute the word "cookies" for it in my head. No one says "the cookies is" - at least, that sounds blatantly wrong to me. And it worked! One might argue it worked too well; I ended up deciding to leave traditional academia, and to pursue my love of baking. Despite a full-time job not in pastry, I'm continuing to take classes in pastry (next class: The Art of Cakes, in April 2010), and pushing myself to develop my skills further. 

Welcome to the new blog!