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La Colombe, NYC

5 Feb

Strong coffee. Pretty dishes, people-watching, chit-chats. Start your day. Take a break. Treat yourself.

http://lacolombe.com/

Easy Peasy Pasta + A Glimpse At My Life In A Restaurant

17 Jan

Easy Peasy. Dinner in a pinch.

Drop your pasta into salted boiling water. Add a few handfuls of frozen peas in the last 3 minutes of boiling. Saute a few minced garlic cloves in a skillet and add fresh spinach with a tiny splash of water. Cook down and add a can of drained and rinsed chickpeas. Season with salt, pepper, lemon zest, lemon juice, and chili flakes. Dump the pasta and peas into the skillet, mix everything together and top with grated Parmesan cheese.

For when you want a healthy, no fuss meal thrown together quickly by taste.

After spending most of my nights making the desserts at Print restaurant, on my days off, all I want is a quick home-cooked meal. I crave salt, I crave savory, but below I want to show you a tiny glimpse of some of the sweet things I do at work.

Every night before the restaurant opens, the staff has the opportunity to eat a meal together. We call it “family meal.” Usually the meal is something super simple that can be thrown together quickly: think chicken and rice or pasta. There is always a salad. The pastry team tries to offer something sweet for family meal, too, sometimes. Lately we have been making Horchata. Mexican Rice Milk with cinnamon. We based our recipe off of David Lebovitz. Just a yummy drink to start the night off.

One of the first things I tackle when I arrive at work is preparing for the next morning’s breakfast service. We (in pastry) make muffins and scones and coffeecakes, yogurt (from Argyle farms in NY) and fruit parfaits (topped with homemade granola), and fresh fruit plates. We offer two flavors each of muffins and scones every morning. The scone pictured above contains walnuts, Asian pears, and flaxseeds. Check out that seductive sugar sprinkle on top. Hellooooo coffee and a pastry!

After I finish preparing for the next morning’s breakfast, I begin to set up for dinner service. We currently have 6 desserts on the menu. Above you see our most recent addition to the dessert menu: Hazelnut Parfait, Maple Yogurt Mousse, Grappa Candied Chestnuts, Espresso Syrup. There’s all sorts of warm and cool, soft, creamy, and crunchy to this dessert. Mmm mmm winter wonderland.

And when you get your coffee or when you order some house made ice cream, you get to try our rotation of biscotti. We are currently serving pistachio polenta biscotti with dried cherries. Dip and go.

Sometimes there are large parties eating at the restaurant. We offer a special dessert menu for these parties. One of the desserts consists of chocolate hazelnut mousse, fleur de sal, hazelnut streusal, poached pear halves, brown butter ice cream, and chocolate decor. I would describe chocolate decor as tempered chocolate cut into shapes. There’s all sorts of heating and agitating and spreading and cooling. It’s a science that I have yet to perfect. But it sure tastes good along the way.


I feel like I have to leave you with a savory item from the restaurant. The burger is on our lunch menu and sometimes pops up on the dinner menu. This gargantuan meat stack has cornichons, pickled red onion, gooey cheddar, bacon, tomatoes, lettuce, and a toasted bun. Ah, swoon.

So now you have seen a tiny glimpse into restaurant dessert/food. Tiny.

And people always ask me how I don’t gain a zillion pounds working in pastry. I answer with: the stairs, the heavy lifting, the stirring, the rolling…I get quite the workout. So a few nibbles and tastes won’t spiral me out of control. I am constantly moving. And we work with so many fresh, local ingredients that I feel pretty darn good eating what I want.

Maple Bacon Sticky Buns: Print Restaurant at the New Amsterdam Market

3 Oct

A Sunday morning treat. Sticky buns, but not your average Joe bun. These buns are topped with chopped bacon (from Mountain View Farm in NY) and a maple butter glaze.

They’re so bad they’re so good. I can’t…I won’t…I musn’t…ok just a bite…alright fine another bite…I MUST. You simply cannot say no.

Last weekend the pastry crew from Print Restaurant set up shop to sell Pastry Chef Heather Carlucci-Rodriguez‘s famous Maple Bacon Sticky Buns. We were at the New Amsterdam Market in South Street Seaport, just below the Brooklyn Bridge.

The theme of the week was “Taste of Marcellus:” Sample the foods and flavors produced in the Marcellus Shale region and learn how we can protect this fragile environment from concerned advocates including the Baum Forum, Food & Water Watch, and others.

The New Amsterdam market houses vendors/purveyors selling olive oils, bakery bread, pie, grilled cheese, produce, ravioli, soda, popsicles, ice cream, coffee, meats, cheese, honey, pickles, candies, tempeh, lobster sandwiches, pork tacos, and more.

I can’t wait for Sunday October 16, the Hard Cider Revival.

But back to the buns…come n’ get ’em at Print Restaurant every weekend for Brunch.


Mezze, Los Angeles

5 Jun

Last night I went out to eat at the one of the hottest new LA restaurants. Mezze. Contemporary Middle Eastern Cuisine.

From the website:

“Mezze, which translates to sharing in Arabic, is a series of small plates that is the staple of Middle Eastern food culture. It is the symbol of conviviality, and time well spent with family and good friends. The traditions of mezze-style dining and the bounty of the California marketplace is the inspiration in creating Mezze’s contemporary Middle Eastern cuisine. We take the bounty of fresh product and local produce and combine them with the flavors and soul of the Middle East.

My (as well as my fellow diners’) experience at Mezze really was exquisite in every way possible. Not only was the staff so warm and welcoming, but the natural light and the open kitchen and cozy atmosphere made us all feel so comfortable and easily pleased. And the food was divine, everything had that special finishing touch to it. Beautiful.

I will now take you on a photographed tour of our dinner. Unfortunately I was so excited when the first dish (Beet Salad, Chickpea, Sheep’s Milk Yogurt, Haloumi) and the wine came out that I did not grab my camera for sake of gawking and digging in immediately. Actually, the beet salad was my favorite thing that we ordered (although, I really loved every dish). The cubes of Haloumi cheese and the nice flower petals complemented the sweet beets and yogurt perfectly.

The Open Kitchen, complete with happy chefs

Baby Gem Lettuce, Fatoush, Crispy Pita, Sumac

Pink Snapper Crudo, Cherry, Green Almond, Tahini

We ordered 2 flatbreads:

1. Flowering Squash, Syrian Cheese, Zatar

2. Green Cauliflower, Moroccan Olive, Feta, Golden Raisin

Hashweh Risotto, Lamb, Burnt Onion, Fried Lemon

(OH the lemon was SOOOO good)

Grilled Corn, Moroccan Spice, Shallot

(oh so perfectly grilled; the corn was fresh and sweet and went nicely with the creamy sauce on top)

Hanger Steak, Charmoula, Apricot, Okra

Flowering Bok Choy, Grape Leaves, Lebne

Poached Egg Shakshouka, Yogurt Emulsion, Sweetbread, Pita

Berry Malab (check out the sugar art with flower petals inside [top left])

(Malabi=Middle Eastern Milk Pudding)

Chocolate Hazelnut Meringue Cake
espresso ice cream

(nice balance of textures and flavors: creamy, crunchy, nutty, bitter, sweet, not too too rich;

also, I like the plating with the cake secured down by the whipped cream and the meringue on top with the quenelle of ice cream adjacent)

Semolina Pound Cake

(blurry photo, but great dessert; the berries were my favorite part)

Good to the last drop

I forgot to mention that family friend and Mezze head chef, Micah Wexler, came out and said hello and made sure that our evening was seamless. Congrats and thank you, Mezze.

Roasted Beets, Sautéed Chard, and Quinoa Salad with YUBA!!!

3 Apr

I’ve been trying to cook quick, healthy meals for myself. For me, and for you.

Well, ok, a balanced diet can allow a chocolate chip cookie with sea salt sometimes too, especially when I bought it at a HUGE bakesale with all of the proceeds going to Japan. Yum.

And ok, I believe that a balanced diet also allows a trip to Oakland’s newest mac n’ cheese hotspot, Homeroom. “Mac the Goat” (goat cheese and scallions) and Peanut Butter Pie. I couldn’t pass up the opportunity. It was phenomenal.

Alright alright, back to quick healthy meals. Today I took a walk to the farmer’s market. I sat in the sun, I started to read a book for fun, and I bought some colorful items to cook for dinner.

Chioggia Beets (google image them, so beautiful!) aka Candy-Stripe Beets:

Red-Stemmed Swiss Chard:


Yuba aka Tofu Skins:

I roasted the beets with a little water for about 45 minutes to an hour. I chopped my beets and added them to my sauteed chard. I mixed everything together with some quinoa and black beans and topped it all off with my spicy yuba.

I now have a happy tummy. I’ve been needing this.

But really, can you please come over for dinner? I need some company and I want to cook for you AND I will do your dishes. Please. It will be fun, I promise.

Roasted Beets, Sauteed Chard, and Quinoa Salad with YUBA!!!

I listed all of the ingredients in italics before each step

Serves 4-6 (or 1 + leftovers!)

Beets, about 1 pound
salt
water
red vinegar

1. Roast your beets. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Wash and trim your beets then place them in a baking pan, sprinkle the beets with salt, and fill the pan with about 1/8th of an inch of water. Cover and roast for about 30 minutes to an hour, until a knife can very easily pierce the beets through to the center. Cool, peel (I used a combo of a paring knife plus my hands; its messy, don’t sweat it), chop, and sprinkle with salt and some red vinegar.

1 onion, chopped
1 bunch chard
salt
vinegar
water or broth

2. Saute the chard. Slice an onion and set aside. Wash your chard. Pull the leaves from the ribs. Trim the ends from the ribs and then cut them into thin slices. Cut the leaves into wide ribbons. Heat a pan with about 2 tablespoons olive oil. Add the onion and saute for about 5 minutes. Add the chard and cook until the leaves are tender. Add some salt. Add a little bit of water or stock if the pan gets dry and the onions begin to stick and brown.


1 cup dry quinoa

1 cup water
1 cup broth

3. Prepare your quinoa. I used 1 cup of quinoa (rinsed), 1 cup of vegetable broth (leftover from making my polenta earlier this week), and 1 cup of water. Combine everything in the pan, boil, then reduce heat and simmer for about 15 mintues.

Everything in steps 1-3 + black beans + yuba

4. Assembly. Combine the beets and the chard. Dump the quinoa into the mix. I added black beans because I had some left over from earlier in the week. Salt, pepper, vinegar (I used red), and top with yuba, or cheese, or nuts, or whatever the heck you feel like.