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DIGEST: Saveur

#1 User is offline   zora

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • Posts: 235
  • Joined: 06-January 04
  • Location:Astoria, NYC

Posted 06 April 2004 - 12:26 PM

Playing a little catch-up with my newly revived subscription, so here's the March issue. April will be along shortly.
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Saveur

March 2004, no. 73


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First: Editor's Letter
For Saveur's tenth anniversary: return of Real-Life Kitchen column, new sidebar in Fare section, full-page essay, and nine issues per year, rather than eight; new issue is devoted to wine.

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Fare:

Vegetarian cafes in Cuba--a response to meat scarcity post-USSR meltdown--cater to locals and inspire pride: everything sold is a product of local agriculture. By Richard Schweid

No Rooz (Persian New Year), Tehran, 1978: highlight is kebab kubideh. By Ramin Ganeshram
Recipe: Kebab Kubideh (smoky ground lamb and beef)

Brewpubs in Seoul are booming, thanks to a change in Korean law. By Laura Shin

Saint Joseph's Day, March 19, at Rizzo's Malabar Inn near Philly, calls for an elaborate altar made of bread to honor the patron saint of carpenters, confectioners, and fighters against communism. Also served: "Saint Joseph's pants," deep-fried pastries filled with spiced and honey-sweetened mashed chickpeas. By Marlene Parrish
Recipe: Saint Joseph's Pants

The coffee break as we know it was started by Norwegian women working in tobacco fields in Stoughton, Wisconsin, in the 1870s, demanding breaks to check on kids and meals. By Iris Brooks

New video game Restaurant Empire simulates restaurant ownership. By Neil Plakcy

Agenda:
Mediterranean Food Festival, Malta; Second Annual Old West Chuck Wagon Cook-off, Austin, Texas; Pasifika Festival, Auckland: Polynesian village cultural exchange; March 14: Anniversary of the shopping cart, invented in 1936 in OKC; Chocolate Moose Festival, cabins at Murie Ranch in Grand Teton National Park are stocked with sweet treats; Foire au Boudin: Mortagne-au-Perche, France; Rainbow and Ramps, Cherokee, NC; March 28: birthday of Frederick Pabst, father of PBR

One Good Bottle: Maison Louis Jadot Château de Bellevue, Morgon 2002 ($16); 2001 is even better, but hard to find

On the side:
Study shows Armagnac may help prevent blood clots. US baby-name trend: brand names like Skyy, Del Monte, Courvoisier. Octodog gadget cuts hot dogs into eight pieces [yes, there's ordering info in the back of the mag]. American Idol winner Ruben Studdard opening a restaurant in Birmingham.

Book Review:
Classic Conran: Plain, Simple and Satisfying Food, by Terence and Vicki Conran (Conran Octopus, 2004)
Homey recipes such as poached turbot in beurre blanc and rabbit terrine . . . even if the Conrans have a lifestyle involving châteaux and champagne. Recipes aren't too elaborate, but require some cooking skills; tips and some humor round out a solid book.
Recipe: Ham Saupiquet (ham cooked in red wine with cream and juniper berries)

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Cellar
By John Winthrop Haeger
Grüner veltliner is newly respected: grassy, mineral, perfume-driven. Most important plantings are in northeastern Austria; best vineyards in Danube Valley: Wachau (the beefiest), Kamptal, Kremstal. Grüners can be a little viscous and either refreshingly lean or finishing long and rich. They "almost never express wod; thus they provide welcome relief from chard-ennui." [Ah, wine humor.]

Tasting notes: 12 grüner veltliners, from Domäne Wachau Terrasen 2002 ($14; main blend from Wachau's cooperative, mossy nose, crisp, light) to Bründlmayer Lamm 2001 ($46; slightly truffle-scented, ripe, rich, satiny midpalate, peppery finish)

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Essay
What Kids Knead
Children's cookbooks are everywhere today, but they're teaching curious lessons
Kelly Alexander notes that 7,500-plus cookbooks cater to kids, but don't seem to actually teach them how to cook, or why they would want to cook. Kids should learn the thrill of transforming simple ingredients into something remarkably different: french toast, for instance. Also, they should know that cooking is fun, not a chore. Her favorite book for this: Betty Crocker's Cook Book for Boys and Girls, from 1957, reissued by Wiley.

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Drink
Should This Wine Exist?
Aren't the vienyards too far north? Isn't the grape a minor one? Not according to the makers of the Loire Valley's best reds
By John Winthrop Haeger
The Chinon, Bourgueil and St-Nicolas appellations--primarily cabernet franc grapes--are remarkable, given all the factors working against them.
Tasting Notes: Couly-Dutheil Les Gravières d'Amador Abbé de Turpenay 2002 ($10) is fruity in the nose, light in body, fading fast on the palate. Charles Joguet Clos de la Dioterie 2000 ($32) has a big generous bouquet, an underpinning of tannin, and a faint mineral character.

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Source
South River Miso is handmade by Christian and Gaella Elwell in western Massachusetts. By Suki Casanave

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Classic
Scottish shortbread. By Camas Davis
Recipe: Shortbread, using a blend of cake flour and rice flour

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Eat Drink Mother Daughter: Enjoying the abundant, humble cooking of modern Tainan, in southern Taiwan, two women savor the taste of what endures
By Mei Chin
Tainan is more prosperous now than in author's mom's time, but food is still earthy: all parts of pig, silvery milkfish (shi-mu), pa-hsin-a (a rich sauce made of inexpensive ingredients like pork belly, dried shrimp, dried shiitakes and shallots). Mom gets teary-eyed while eating pigs' feet. Gorgeous pics of seafood markets and meals (by Jun Takagi).

Recipes:
O-a-chian (scrambled eggs with oysters)
Hsia-chuan (shrimp wrapped in caul fat)
Hai-hsian Chou (seafood and rice soup)
Tan-tzu Mian (Tainan-style noodles--brought from Fukien by immigrants in 17th century)
Ang-chim-bi-kou (crab with sticky rice)
Pa-hsin-a (pork and shrimp sauce--served with crab and sticky rice)
Ng-kim-chien-hi-to (fried milkfish stuffed with spicy paste made from the liver)
Guide lists hotels, restaurants and sites in Tainan

Nick Peirano Feeds the Oregon Wine Country: In his modest restaurant in McMinnville, this third-generation Italian-American has served up hearty fare and championed local vintners for more than 25 years
By David Sarasohn
Peirano opened his resto in 1977, before Oregon wine scene took off; it became a meeting place and gossip hub for the region. His food is simple, not architectural, and some menu items are tailored to show off pinot noir and pinot gris: béchamel lasagne rather than red-sauce, for instance.

Recipes:
Seared Prosciutto-Wrapped Asparagus with balsamic vinegar syrup
Minestrone--heavy on carrots, celery, with a big dollop of pesto
Steamed Manila Clams with a Dijon-Caper Sauce
Rabbit Braised in Oregon Pinot Gris and Rosemary with Gorgonzola Polenta
Dungeness Crab and Pine Nut Lasagne
Chocolate Brandy Hazelnut Torte ("like a Belgian chocolatier's take on a Twix bar")

Catalan Contemporary: Modern cooking in Spain's most creative region [sorry, Basques] is innovative, exciting, and sometimes deliciously shocking--and it didn't start with El Bulli
Colman Andrews goes to town on his favorite topic, tracing history of nouvelle Catalan pre-Adrià. People like Josep Mercader, Ramon Cabau, Lluis Cruanyas, and Jean Luc Figueras stripped down traditional Catalan dishes like es niu ("the nest": wild birds, salt-cod tripe, stockfish, cuttlefish, pork meatballs, potatoes, rabbit, and eggs, all in a caramelized onion sauce) to their elemental flavors and parts. Mar i muntanya dishes are another standard, mixing seafood and meat. Current great chefs and restos: Carles Gaige at Can Gaige, Santi Santamaria and Àngels Serra at Can Fabes, Figueras.
Sidebar: Ferran Adrià and his brother often dine at Julius resto, in Barceloneta, where fish is cooked to order.

Recipes:
Tatin de Cua de Bou (oxtail tatin)
Gelat de Crema Catalana (burnt cream ice cream)
Farcellets de Col Farcits de Cargols, Calamars i Salsa de Mar i Muntanya (cabbage stuffed with snails, with squid and 'sea and mountain' sauce)
Llobarro, Cruixentt di Botifarra Negra, Eriçons de Mar, i Salsa de Pa Torrat (sea bass with blood sausage, sea urchins, and toasted bread sauce)
Canelons amb una Crema de Tofona (cannelloni with truffle cream)
Caviar amb Cansalada (pork belly with caviar--though usually boneless pork neck is used in Catalunya)
Bacallà Confitat amb Salsa d'All i Rossinyols (salt cod with garlic cream and chanterelles)
Guide: hotels and restos in Barcelona and around

The Real Rosarita: My grandparents created a Mexican food empire based on assembly-line tamales and tortillas, but at home, everything was made by hand, with Nana's flair
Susan Guerrero tells, with a touch of magical realism, how the Rosarita brand of tamales and other frozen foods was developed in Mesa, Arizona. The Guerrero family's roots were in Sonora, Mexico--inspiration for most of the home cooking, and the original Rosita (later Rosarita) tamales with red sauce.
Sidebar: Enchilada means only 'dipped in chile' ('chile'd'), so many different forms: flat, stacked, rolled, topped with mole or green chile?

Recipes:
Yellow Hot Relish (caribe chiles and garlic with vinegar)
Fried Pork Chops (thin-sliced, preferably fried in lard)
Basic Red Chile Sauce
Red Chile Tamales (stuffed with black olives)
Capirotada (bread pudding, traditional Lenten dish: bread, colby cheese, butter baked with raisins and sweet syrup infused with cilantro and scallions)
Sonoran Enchiladas (in this case, small thick tortillas fried, dipped in sauce and topped with scallions, cheese, olives, lettuce)

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In the Saveur Kitchen
Allioli of Catalonia is emulsion of garlic and olive oil--no egg. Ferran Adrià makes it into a foam using a nitrous oxide cream whipper--which can be used on any liquid food with enough protein.
Recipe: Anxoves a la Romana amb Maionesa Calenta (deep-fried fresh anchovies with warm mayonnaise)

Catalan fish stock, the base for many sauces, usually uses whole fish, which is then used in other dishes.
Recipe: "Fumet" de Peix i Mariscos (fish and shellfish stock--but this uses just bones, enriched with shrimp shells and tomatoes)

Biscotti-like almond cookies (carquinyolis) are common in Catalan bakeries; can be served with ice cream.
Recipe: Carquinyolis

Real-life Kitchen of Gail Monaghan, cookbook writer who lives in lower Manhattan. Oodles of storage space, lots of wood, clever two-inch-ledge against walls above counters holds spices, oils

Iranians prepare rice three ways: steamed with salt and butter (kateh), layered with meats and fruits (polow), and chelo-style, steamed to make crisp golden crust, called tah dig.
Recipe: Chelo (Persian steamed rice with a golden crust)

In the Saveur library:
The Professional Chef by the Culinary Institute of America (Wiley, 2002): "great all-around culinary how-to and reference book" [I beg to differ--it's only great if you already know how to cook . . . and then you probably don't need it.]

Tamales 101 by Alice Guadalupe Tapp (Ten Speed Press, 2002): step-by-step diagrams, good recipes

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Moment
Secretaries working at the Topps Chewing Gum factory in Brooklyn blowing bubbles while they work (1960)
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#2 User is offline   zora

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
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  • Joined: 06-January 04
  • Location:Astoria, NYC

Posted 19 April 2004 - 06:59 PM

Saveur, April 2004

First: Is slow-cooked brisket a health hazard? The National Cattlemen's Beef Association sort of implies it; Colman Andrews asserts no.

Fare:
Danny, James and Me: Maida Heatter recalls a visit from Danny Kaye. She soothed his anger over her knife storage setup with James Beard's onion sandwiches.
Recipe: Onion sandwiches

Slick Business: A suave Roman film director gets into artisanal olive oil. By Camas Davis

Capping It Off: a brief history of the French chef's toque. By JoAnn Milivojevic

Drinking the Blues: Curacao can transcend its cheesy reputation: try the bourbon-based man o' war cocktail. By Carrie Gaska
Recipe: Man o' war

Tangerine Dream: Pixie tangerines are in season starting late March. Look for them in Ojai and around. By Margo True

On the Side: a new map of Wisconsin highlights cheesemakers…Swiss cheese expert Fredy Girardet will be on PBS with Charlie Trotter in April. Fergus Henderson's Nose to Tail Eating is finally available in the US…Polish fishermen get a pike drunk on champagne.

Agenda: Helsinki beer festival, Jello art show, anniversary of Hostess Twinkies, Pelican Point Coconut Festival (Bahamas), birthday of 19th-century cookbook pioneer Eliza Acton, La Fete de Coquilles St-Jacques in Laguiy-de-la-Mer, Placer Country Strawberry Festival in Roseville CA, Colleton County Rice Festival in Waterboro, SC

One Good Bottle: The Gatekeeper McClaren Vale Shiraz 2001 ($34): "gentlemanly"

Book Review: From Curries to Kebabs: Recipes from the Indian Spice Trail, by Madhur Jaffrey. John Thorne praises this cookbook for its history, although the recipes have occasional flaws.
Recipe: Carrot curry with shallots and chiles

Essay: The Scarlet Letter
Colman Andrews ruminates on the value of the Atkins fad.

Reporter: Our Daily Corn Bread
The National Cornbread Festival in South Pittsburg, Tennessee, inspires all varieties, and reminiscence from author Reagan Walker.
Recipe: Basic Corn Bread
Recipe: Jalapeno-Bacon Corn Bread Muffins

Cellar: Bourbon Rises Again
A bourbon revival in the US sees new bottles on bar shelves:
Tasting notes: from Basil Hayden's ($30) "bright and engaging" 8-year-old to the "intriguing" Woodford Reserve ($30)

Source: Ed and Dan Bowyer of Bowyer Farms produce excellent prunes—and still call them that. By Gretchen VanEsselstyn

Classic: Shanghai soup dumplings: history and technique. By Margo True
Recipe: Xiao Long Bao (Shanghai soup dumplings)

The Incredible Island of Food and Wine: The tiny Australian state of Tasmania is fast becoming one of the world's top culinary regions. A visit with cheesemaker Jon Healey, fisherman Peter Rockliff, and others who make the most of this fertile island. By Chloe Osborne
Recipes: Steamed Mussels with Saffron, White Wine and Cream
Asparagus Frittata
Ocean Trout and Shaved Fennel Salad
Scallops in the Shell with a Leek, Pine Nut and Sourdough Gratin
Quail "Saltimbocca" with Asparagus and Almond Skordalia
Seared Lamb with Black Olive Butter and Bean, Snow Pea and Halloumi Cheese Salad
"Mum's" Pavlova
Sidebar: Tasmania in America: look for lapin cherries, Island Olive Grove oil, Tasmanian Honey Co.'s leatherwood honey, Ashgrove cheddar, King Island Dairy's blue cheese and more
Sidebar: Tasmania is home to 137 wineries. Available in the US: Meadowbank pinot noir, Grey Sands pinot gris, and others.
Guide: hotels and restaurants in Tasmania


Multicultural Meat: When brisket is cooked long and slow, it turns from tough to sweet and tender; no wonder its appeal crosses so many borders. A survey of brisket dishes in Czech, German, Texan, and Jewish traditions. By Kelly Alexander
Recipes: Uncle Kermit's Barbecued Cabbage
Texas-Style Smoked Brisket
Lil Pachter's Jewish-Style Braised Brisket
Kasha Varnishkas
Jim Goode's BBQ Brisket


Wine of the Sun: Transformed by heat into a potent, silky marvel, madeira is saturated with its extraordinary past. (Another story that starts with "Because of my French culinary training, I didn't appreciate…" Not sure why this drives me up a wall, but it seems to crop up an awful lot in all food writing….) By Megan Wetherall
Recipe: Madeiran Acorda (bread and egg soup)
Espetada (beef skewers)
Borrego a Vinhado (lamb braised in wine)
Poncha (Madeiran honey punch)
Reid's Palaca Madeira Cake
Sidebar: Madeiran cuisine is simple, robust, with espetada (grilled beef skewers) being emblematic.
Sidebar: Authentic fare can be found in mountain towns: rabbit stew, soup with egg and garlic broth, stewed fava beans.
Tasting Notes: Ten recommended madeiras, from $15 Blandy's 5-year-old Alvada to D'Oliveira Verdelho 1850 ($525).
Guide: hotels, restaurants and tasting houses in Madeira


Through the Doors of Lüchow's: For over a century, this Manhattan landmark offered rich, glorious food and impeccable hospitality to the most famous people in the world. Personal reminiscence and history by Miles Chapin
Recipes: Chicken Fricassée Berliner Art (chicken and lobster in a cream sauce)
Schnitzel Holstein (veal cutlets with fried eggs)
Schlemmerschnitte (steak tartare with caviar)
Herring in Dill Sauce
Pfannkuchen (German pancakes)


In the Saveur Kitchen: Madeiran molasses (mel de cana) and bolos de caco (cakes that accompany beef skewers)…versatile skordalia, a creamy Greek nut-and-garlic sauce…how to trim a brisket…electric smokers…probe oven thermometers are good for long cooking.
Recipes: Bolos de Mel (Madeiran 'honey' cakes)
Bolos de Caco (Madeiran 'tile' cakes)
Almond Skordalia
Jersey-Style Smoked Brisket


Kitchen: Barbara and Bob Gordon, chef-owners of Boba in Toronto blend old and new in their kitchen, with open shelves and "drawer" dishwashers

Moment: Vietnamese officers sip tea at a military training camp, 1991
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#3 User is offline   theabroma

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
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  • Joined: 09-July 03
  • Location:Dallas, Texas

Posted 28 May 2004 - 10:44 PM

Stepping in for Zora, and trying to fathom format and how to, here, finally, is May 2004, Saveur's first all-wine issue. Relax, there's still wunnerful stuff to cook and eat

Regards,

Theabroma

Saveur, May 2004 – First All-Wine Issue

First:
Cork and Fork: Some things just naturally belong together. Colman Andrews plays marriage counselor to feared split up of food and wine.

Saveur Fare:
Wine for the Masses: Oh! Holy Grapes … Cormòns Winery braves the politics of competition to create and supply the Vatican with Vinum pro Sancta Missa, a surprisingly fine wine for the Holy Mass. By Denise Kiernan.

Better Ground:
Champagne cleans up its dirty little secret. Non! to plastic, pesticides, and rampant botrytis as growers “get green.” By Patrick Matthews.

Pickin’ and Grinnin’:
The first crush is the deepest. Richard Haake, Cakebread’s chef by day/Dirt Floor Cellar’s rogue vintner by night, saves a measure of his artisanal case for the kitchen. By Tony Poer
Recipe: Acqua Pazza/Striped Bass in Chardonnay Sauce

Let’s See the One for Château Janet Jackson:
A blush of x-rated wine label art. By Mort Hochstein.

Famous Potatoes, Darn Good Wine:
Pocatello, Idaho (pop. 53,000) where potatoes and pinot get along just fine. By Penelope Reedy.

On the Side:
It had to happen: www.winesingles.com is a 10-month old online dating service based in Walnut Creek, California.

Degustazioni d’Arte, a self-guided tour book presenting “oeno-centric artwork”.

Achille Castiglioni’s “Paro” Glass, featuring both sipping and slurping possibilities, is on exhibit at the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum;

We love phonics: the new How to Pronounce French, German, and Italian Wine With names of more than 15,000 wines, varietals, etc.

Interesting indications from a VinExpo gender study on whether wine knowledge makes one more alluring to one’s intended. By Kelly Alexander.

One Good Bottle:
Blackstone Santa Lucia Highlands Reserve Chardonnay ($26): "… luscious …, thankfully not disfigured with oak, …”

Book Review:
Mighty Tasty is the only way to describe The Brady Book: Selections from Roy Brady’s Unpublished Writings on Wine., the previously unpublished pieces by a little-known wine writer. A collection of greatly overdue, and wonderfully lucid writings on wine.

Wine Fact, Wine Opinion:
The recent crush of excellent wine books in English are published by London-based Mitchell Beazley, with particular kudos to commissioning editor Hilary Lumsden. By Coleman Andrews.

Agenda
Grampians Grape Escape Wine & Food Festival, Halls Gap, Australia; Establishment of Château Mouton-Rothschild 1853, Pauillac, France; Winds & Wine Festival, Leesburg, Virginia; Americas Wild Rivers Coast Art, Seafood & Wine Festival, Gold Beach, Oregon; Blossom Days, Old Mission Peninsula, Michigan; Foire aux Vins d’Alsace, Guebwiller, France; Commemoration of The Judgment of Paris, 1976, Paris, France; Feria Internacional del Queso y del Vino de Tequisquiapan, Quéretaro, México.

Cellar: Unyielding Riesling.
Chardonnay largely replaced it, but in Australia it’s still the queen of grapes. By John Winthrop Haeger.
Tasting notes
Includes 12 fine Australian Rieslings form the Clare region and its neighbors – from Annie’s Lake Riesling 2003 ($14) to Grosset Polish Hill Riesling 2003 ($29)

Essay: Tippling Points
There is nothing wrong with comparing wines, but do we have to keep score? Musings on the ultimate futility of scorecards and how St. Peter will likely receive Robert Parker’s 100-Point Scale. By Michael Steinberger.

Reporter: The Cooper’s Craft
Over the centuries, little has changed about wine barrels except how vintners use them. Includes a wonderfully detailed series of staves-to-barrel photos. By Kathleen Brennan.

Lives: The Odd Couple.
Two obsessive, very different vintners in New York’s Finger Lakes region shaped the course of East Coast winemaking. By Mort Hochstein

Source : Drinking in Style
When it comes to wine-related antiques, this dealer has the goods. Patricia Throttle, with a name from Casting Central, is one of Britain’s leading sources for vintage corkscrews, flagons, and other viniferous accoutrements. By Rope Bhattacharya



Classic : Meat Sauce
Steak, butter, and wine – what’s not to like?? Marchland de VIN is still basic black and a string of pearls for a great steak. By Laura Kiernan
Recipe: Biotech Marchand de Vin (Steak with Red Wine Sauce

Italian Ferment :
The Veneto, home of Soave, Valpolicella, and Amarone, has become Italy’s biggest wine producer – and one of its best. Visits with Leonildo Pieropan, Sandro Boscaini, Giuseppe Quintarelli, and others. By Patrick Matthews.
Recipes:
Risotto all’Amarone (Amarone Risotto),
Brasato all’Amarone (Beef Braised in Amarone),
Tagliatelle “Enbogonè (Tagliatelle with Borlotti Bean Sauce),
Pissota con l’Oio (Olive Oil Cake), and
Tortel (Wild Herb Frittata).

Tasting Notes: Ca’Rugate San Michele Soave Classico 2002 ($11) to Quintarelli Amarone Della Valpolicella Classico 1995 ($300)

Sidebar: Olive Oil and Horsemeat
Despite the largesse of the woods and fields, the Veronese kitchen is known for its facility with meat, including horse and donkey – specialties dating to Roman times.

The Guide: Hotels, Restaurants and Wineries in the Verona Wine Region


The Ebro Runs Through It:
Spain’s Rioja wine country is laced with rivers flowing timelessly onward – but a spirit of change percolates in the region’s vineyards and bodegas. Ranging through La Rioja, Spain’s premier fly-fishing area … and home of the tempranillo grape. By George Semler.
Recipes:
Menestra de Verduras con Lechecillas (Stewed Fried Vegetables with Lamb Offal)
Patatas a la Riojana (Potatoes Stewed with Paprika and Chorizo)
Esparragos Naturales a la Parrilla con Mahonesa de Hongos (Grilled White Asparagus with Mushroom Mayonnaise)
Pimientos del Piquillo
Trucha a la Riojana (Trout Stuffed with Serrano Ham)
Tasting Notes: 14 wines from the Rioja region, from Marqués de Riscal Reserva 1999 ($17) to Roda Cirsión 2000 ($195)

The Guide ) Hotels, Restaurants, and Wineries in the Rioja region.


Kings of the Rhône:
For the Chaves of Hermitage fame, making great wine and eating wonderful food is a way of life. Life at the vineyard, the family home and the family business, since1481. By Michael Steinberger.

Recipe:
Poireaux Grilles et Ail Étuvé sur Pain Grillé (Grilled Leeks and Stewed Garlic on Toast)
Côtelettes d’Agneau sur la Braise avec Crique Ardéchoise (Grilled Lamb Chops with a Potato Pancake)
Saladier de Pieds de Veau (Calves’ Feet Salad)
Foie Gras Souvarov (Potted Foie Gras with Black Truffles)
Poulet de Bresse Farci aux Asperges (Stuffed Bresse Chicken with Asparagus)
Gâteau au Chocolat « Marie-José » (Marie-José’s Chocolate Cake)

Tasting Notes:
Five wines from currently available vintages, from St-Joseph Offerus 2001 ($24) to Hermitage Rouge 2001 ($180)

The Future of Wine?:
Rob Sinskey is no tree hugger; he just thinks that organic viticulture produces better things to drink. The move to organic viticulture is flowing from the small artisanal producers to the bigger guys like Fetzer Bonterra and Clos du Bois. By John Frederick Walker.

[I]Recipes:
Baby Beets with Herb Salad and Warm Chèvre
Crostini of Wild Mushrooms
Halibut Cheeks with Baby Leeks, Peas, and Fines-Herbes Gnocchi

Sidebar: Organic Rules
History of organic grape growing and the critera which must be met for certification.

Mr. Biodynamic
The complex, holistic agriculture theories of Rudolf Steiner … if it helps them make better wine, why snicker?

Tasting Notes:
A Magnificent Seven fro the Sinskey Vineyards, from Vin Gris of Pinot Noir 2003 ($16) to RSV Stags Leap District Cabernet Sauvignon 2000 ($50).


In the Saveur Kitchen: Techniques and Discoveries from Our Editors and Recipe Testers
An American Transplant: Erin Cannon-Chave’s mother’s flaxseed crackers,
Italian Priorities: the serious jewel-box sized kitchen of Darrell Corti, of San Francisco’s premier Italian grocers, Corti Brothers
Flavor Cubed: glorious and essential glace de viande – the essence of stock
Sweet Endings: a crumbly almond shortbread, and specialty of Mantua

Recipes:
Flaxseed Crackers
Glace de Viande
Sbrisolona (Crumbly Almond Cake)
Fines-Herbes Gnocchi


In the Saveur Library:
Italian Cuisine by Tony May (Italian Wine and Food Institute, 1990)
The Spanish Table by Marimar Torres (Doubleday, 1986)

Moment: 2:00p.m., April 5, 2001, London
At the Ivor Spencer International School, butlers in training perfect their posture. By Martin Parr/Magnum.

This post has been edited by theabroma: 29 May 2004 - 05:48 PM

Sharon Peters aka "theabroma"

The lunatics have overtaken the asylum

#4 User is offline   zora

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • Posts: 235
  • Joined: 06-January 04
  • Location:Astoria, NYC

Posted 22 June 2004 - 11:24 PM

Saveur, June/July 2004

First: Deputy ed. Margo True resorted to luck to track down the original Belgian waffle recipe from the 1964 World’s Fair.

Fare:
Neon Wieners: The distinctive architecture of Chicago hot dog shops. By Ed Finkel

Canada Crocks: Medalta’s pottery pickling crocks are no longer—but the closed potteries in Medicine Hat are now a National Historic District, and visitors can buy smaller reproductions. By Leslie Javorski

The New Yeast: New, nontraditional sakes are being developed to court young Japanese drinkers. One brewery is now run by a woman. By Stephen Beaumont

Dessert Oasis: Kelly Alexander loves NYC’s cheerful Serendipity 3 café—now celebrating its 50th anniversary with a cookbook.
Recipe: The Manor Born banana cake with coffee buttercream

You Call That Haggis?: Potato chips flavored with the Scottish staple. By Bethan Kelly Patrick

This Beverage Is Right on Par: Nonalcoholic mixed drink of iced tea and lemonade is named after golfer Arnold Palmer. By Ellen Ficklen

On the Side: 100th anniversary of the Thermos, and a Smithsonian lunchbox exhibit; Mott’s applesauce now sold with Pop Rocks to mix in; Russian divers rescue ten tons of beer from the sea; giant plush microbe toys

Agenda: Trident gum’s 40th anniversary; opening of herring season in Holland (Vlaggetjesdag); freshwater ayu fish celebrated in Hayato, Japan; pudding fest in Hawley, Mass.; Dave Thomas of Wendy’s born July 2, 1932; Irish coffee fest in Foynes, Ireland; gooseberry show in Knutsford, GB

One Good Bottle: Gosset Celebris Rosé 1998 ($135): "elegant summer drinking"

Book Review: Sugar-Plums and Sherbet: The Prehistory of Sweets, by Laura Mason. Well researched and offbeat. Review by Fran Gage.
Recipe: Rose-flavored acid drops

Cellar: Pinot noirs of Sonoma County are developing nicely.
Tasting notes: From delicate, pretty Hamel Wines Campbell Ranch Vineyard 2002 ($28) to Flowers Andreen-Gale Cuvée 2001 ($50; sweet and smoky palate, long finish)

Essay: Stand by Your Pan
Joe Gracey on the historical connection between country music and food advertising.

Memories: Devouring the Globe
The 1964-65 World’s Fair in New York whetted America’s appetite—a first-hand recollection by David Sarasohn. Plus, hits from previous fairs: root beer (1876), cracker jack (1893), ice cream cones, French’s mustard and hamburgers (1904), Le Pavillon French resto (1939-40)
Recipe: Belgian waffles

Source: Choice cherries from Washington’s Batch Orchards. By Maggie Davis

Classic: Ranch dressing, really developed at Hidden Valley Ranch. By Colman Andrews
Recipe: Ranch dressing

Meat and Beer: The people of Monterrey, in northeastern Mexico, are crazy for goat, pork, beef—and the local cerveza…even for breakfast. By Robb Walsh
Recipes: Higado de Puerco (pork liver with lime and salt)
Chiles Toreados (roasted Serrano chiles)
Frijoles con Veneno (refried beans with “venom”)
Asado de Puerco (pork braised with ancho chile)
Machado con Huevo (shredded dried beef with scrambled eggs)
Cabrito en Salsa (kid goat with potatoes and poblano-tomato sauce)
Pencas de Nopales Crujientes Rellenas de Queso (crisp cactus paddles stuffed with goat cheese and Monterey jack)
Sidebar: A Town Awash in Beer: Cerveceria Cuahtemoc is the local star (Bohemia, Carta Blanca); also, microbrewery Especialidades Cerveceras
Guide: hotels, restaurants and shops in Monterrey


The Triumph of Cherries: The orchards of Traverse City, Mich., (aka Sour Cherry Capital of the World) are thriving. By Kelly Alexander
Recipes: Sour cherry pie
Wild rice salad with dried sour cherries
Brandied cherries
Telyatina s Vishnyami (roast veal with sour cherries)
Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte (black forest cherry cake)
Sidebar: Sweet and Sour: a guide to sweet and sour cherry types (with photos)
Guide: hotels, restos, festivals in Traverse City


Back to the Basics: Jean-Pierre and Isabelle Silva gave up a Michelin star in Burgundy to lead a simple life in the Côte d’Azur. The fallback Saveur story: isn’t rustic French life great? By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Soupe de Tomate aux Herbes du Jardin, un Oeuf Poché, Cebette, et Tartine d’Olive (tomato soup with garden herbs, poached egg, scallion and olive-paste crouton)
Dorade Coriphène sur une Aubergine Confite, Crème de Coco, et Truffes Blanches d’Eté (mahimahi on slow-cooked eggplant with white beach cream and white summer truffles)
Mignon et Pérugine de Cochon, Pomme de Terre Nouvelle, Blette Sauvage, Jus au Vin Rouge (medallions of pork and Perugia sausage with new potatoes, wild chard and red wine sauce)
Tarte aux Figues, Matignon d’Abricots à la Sauge Ananas, Sorbet d’Abricot (fig tart with apricots macerated with pineapple sage and apricot sorbet)


Hickory House Memories: Rick Bayless has barbecue sauce in his veins, as he recounts in this story of his Oklahoma food heritage: his parents’ restaurant in OKC. Isn't rustic American life great?
Recipes: Hickory House smoked beans
Hickory House deviled eggs
Hickory House sour slaw
Hickory House sweet slaw
Hickory House stuffed pickles
Barbecue spice
Hickory House mild barbecue sauce
Barbecued ribs
Grandma Potter’s peach cobbler
Sidebar: Plates of My Heart: Bayless’s grandma’s Frankoma pottery is a vintage treasure.
Sidebar: Where to Eat OKC Barbecue: Van’s Pig Stand, Steve’s Rib, Earl’s Rib Palace


In the Saveur Kitchen: How to frost the Serendipity 3 banana cake (above) like a pro; chef Harlan Peterson of Tapawingo in Michigan makes great cherry granita; hot citrusy sangrita chases tequila; carne seca is Mexican beef jerky; a nifty rib rack holder for more efficient smoking; two heads—not two cloves—of garlic makes for an accidentally savory pasta
Recipes: tart red cherry granita
Sangrita


Kitchen: Jim Garramone of Evanston, Ill., put the fridge in an armoire outside the kitchen, and inscribed Fames Optimum Condimentum (hunger is the best seasoning) on the counter.

In the Saveur Library: The Perfect Cake, by Susan Purdy (Broadway Books, 2002): good troubleshooting and tips

Moment: A dog snacking at a beachtop table in Acapulco, 1973.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#5 User is offline   zora

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Posted 21 September 2004 - 01:09 PM

More catch-up... Traveling and changing software delayed this one. Sorry about that.
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Saveur, August/September 2004[/I]

First: Colman Andrews explains why 80-year-old Marcella Hazan gets the cover story: "she is intolerant of stupidity and immune to fad and fashion…. She's not a saint, exactly; she's the real thing."

Fare:
Greek Cooler: The glory of the frappe, the genius Greek application of Nescafe. By Kathleen McCabe
Recipe: Nescafe Frappe

Noodles Galore: The easily astonished Regina Schrambling discovers vermicelli noodles are part of Indian cuisine, thanks to an in-flight meal.
Recipe: Seviyan Pulau (vermicelli pilaf)

Riding the Tasty Rails: Lunchbox meals available at Japan's train platforms. By Hiroko Shimbo

Football Nuts: History of the Ohio State buckeye. By Sara Bir
Recipe: Peanut butter buckeyes

Baking the Part: Baker Sarah Black consulted on the short-lived pastry-centric Broadway play Sixteen Wounded.

On the Side: Barilla's new shrine to pasta; a politicians' cookbook; Lost in Translation inspires food tours in Tokyo; Japan is anti-additive, which upsets the European business community

Agenda: Watermelon festival in Hope, Ark.; herb festival in Lismore, New Zealand; Aug. 22 is the anniversary of the founding of the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee (1966); breadfruit fest in Bath, Jamaica; Mary See of See's Candies fame born Sept. 15, 1851; cous cous fest in San Vito Lo Capo, Italy; 10th annual corndog fest in Dallas

One Good Bottle: Topanga Vineyards Edna Valley Edna Ranch Syrah 2001 ($27): "nicely gamy but with real Rhône-ish elegance"

Book Review: Eating My Words, by Mimi Sheraton, and Sirio, by Sirio Maccioni. eGullet's own Steven A. Shaw reviews this two gossip-heavy exposes of restaurant intrigue in the 1970s and 1980s (Sheraton as a NY Times critic, Maccioni as owner of Le Cirque).

Drink: Greek Revival
Ancient vineyards in Macedonia are being reinvented; the xynomavro grape is key. By Diane Kochilas.
Sidebar: High-end retsina fails—so it's back to the traditional recipe.
Tasting notes: 11 Macedonian wines, from tart but grapey Stelis Kechris Xinomavro 2001 ($11) to "rich, chewy, tannic" Domaine Anestis Babatzimopoulos Cabernet 2001 ($25)

Cellar: Looking at Bordeaux
Roger Morris reviews reds from Long Island.
Tasting notes: 12 bordeaux-style reds, from Comtesse Therese Hungarian Oak Merlot 2002 ($15; "tons of agreeable tannins, suggesting this one be laid down") to Macari Alexandra 2000 ($65; "celery seed in the nose…soft oak finish")

Memories: The Fountain of Youth
Robert Sherrill reminisces about working as a curbhop for the Norwood Pharmacy in N.C., in 1939.
Sidebar: Soda-jerk speak (including "flatwich," for a double-sided grilled sandwich)
Recipe: Banana split

Source: Atlantic smoked salmon from Max & Me. By Stephanie Ogozalek

Classic: Vietnamese summer rolls date from the 15th century. By Camas Davis
Recipe: Goi Cúôn Sót Túóng (summer roll with dipping sauce)

Drawing Out the Flavor: The secret of Italian home cooking resides within the ingredients themselves: Marcella Hazan tells us that supermarket lamb chops and other basic items are fine if you use the Italian technique of insaporire ("making tasty" through long sautéing).
Recipes: Zuppa dell'Ortolano (greengrocer's soup with onion, peppers, rapini and potatoes)
Carciofi Saltati e Fusi al Forno con la Mozzarella (sautéed artichokes baked with mozzarella)
Risotto di Zucca, Porri e Vongole (risotto with butternut squash, leeks and clams)
Ragù di Vitello col Sughetto di Peperoni Rossi, Verdi e Gialli (veal pasta sauce with red, green and yellow peppers)

Baja Napa: A small valley in the "other" California is making wine history with everything from cabernet to chasselas to nebbio. By Colman Andrews
[I]Recipes: Sopa de Calabacín y Coliflor con Camarones (squash and cauliflower soup with shrimp)
Ensalada Tibia de Codorníz (warm quail salad)
Sorbet de Melón con Granizado de Limón (melon sorbet with lemon granita)
Sidebar: Tasting notes on wines from Valle de Guadalupe, from light, clean sauvignon blanc–semillon Monte Xanic Viña Kristel 2002 ($8) to tempranillo-cab Casa de Piedra Vino de Piedra 2002 ($60).
Guide: hotels, restos, fiestas and wineries in Valle de Guadalupe


Farmers of the Sea : The hardy oystermen of Arcachon sleep, eat and nurture their precious crops by the tides. (More French rusticity…) By Nancy Coons
Recipes: Huîtres Grillées au Beurre Blanc (grilled oysters with butter sauce)
Huîtres Rôties au Vin Blanc (roasted oysters with white wine)
Huîtres Gratinées (broiled stuffed oysters)
Moules au Jambon de Bayonne (steamed mussels with Bayonne ham)
Soupe des Pêcheurs (fishermen's soup)
Huîtres en Beignet (oyster fritters)
Bar Grillé (grilled sea bass)
Bar aux Raisins (sea bass with grapes)
Sidebar: France's best bivalves: other major oyster-producing areas
Sidebar: Months with an R: buy summer oysters from a reputable source
Sidebar: "Aw, shucks" no more: how to shuck an oyster, with pictures


Quintessential California: San Francisco's 25-year-old Zuni Café is not a perfect restaurant—which might just be why everybody loves it. By Thomas McNamee
Recipes: Piccolo Fritto (deep-fried celery hearts, squid and lemon slices with aïoli)
Chicken livers with bacon, pickled onions, Zante grapes and watercress
Frisée salad with hazelnuts, parmigiano-reggiano and roasted prune-plums
Hanger steak with salmorejo sauce, white beans and spinach
Grilled whole favas ("lick your oily, salty fingertips; it's part of the dish")
Spaghetti with clams
Zuni Gâteau Victoire
Roast chicken with bread salad


In the Saveur Kitchen: Keep clams fresh in a damp towel in a bowl in the fridge; dates stuffed with mascarpone; hot citrusy sangrita chases tequila; how to trim hanger steak; cooking tips from Judy Rodgers; North American black walnuts; the Russell Harrington short Boston 3-inch oyster knife is recommended
Recipes: Salmorejo sauce
Black walnut sauce


Kitchen: Marcella Hazan's kitchen has sliding doors and deep drawers under the sink (place drains at the rear of the sink).

Moment: A Chinatown residents sips soup on a fire escape in NYC, 1998
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#6 User is offline   zora

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Posted 21 September 2004 - 04:12 PM

Saveur, October 2004 (10th Anniversary Issue; a shout-out to Penelope Gil on the cover)

First: Colman Andrews looks back at the magazine’s first issue, 10 years ago.

Fare:
Kitchen Radio: Legends like Lou "The Glue" Marcelli are on a 13-part NPR series on Morning Edition beginning October 1. By Peggy Knickerbocker

A Cuppa Kava: Eric Goodman participates in a Fijian kava ceremony, using the traditional herbal sedative.

The Grape Escape: The new movie Sideways, starring Paul Giamatti, is set in Santa Barbara wine country. By Margo True

Bulldog Party: El Bulli began as a beach stand near the French border, with Czech-Swiss owners. By George Semler
Recipe: Magret de Pato Perfumado al Brandy con Trufas y Setas (duck breast in brandy sauce with truffles and mushrooms)

Texas Tartare: The town of Castroville, 25 miles west of San Antonia, has Alsatian roots with a Texan accent: the local steak tartare has chopped onions, american cheese and lemon juice, and is served on saltines. By Paula Disbrowe
Recipe: Castroville Parisa

Béchamel U. Turns 20: Two decades of NYC's French Culinary Institute. By Stephanie Ogozalek

On the Side: high-end ballpark food, though not yet at Yankee Stadium yet (so terribly true), where they're sticking with Cracker Jack—not Crunch 'n Munch; Chefcards are like baseball cards, but chefs are the "players"; Jay-Z has a dedicated chicken-wing chef; Atkins dieter pushes limits of all-you-can-eat buffet

Agenda: Kaikoura Seafest in NZ, dedicated to crustaceans; Erddig apple festival in Wales; Afamia grape fest in Cyprus; Oct. 8 is the anniversary of the Domino sugar trademark (1901); Oct. 12 is Luciano Pavarotti's birthday (1935); West Virginia black walnut fest; Kansas and national cornhusking contests

One Good Bottle: El Chaparral de Vega Sindoa Old Vines Grenache 2002 ($11): "a low-key charmer…very food-friendly."

Book Review: The Breath of a Wok: Unlocking the Secrets of Chinese Wok Cooking Through Recipes and Lore, by Grace Young and Alan Richardson. Madhur Jaffrey reviews, with general praise (and tips from book such as seasoning your wok by frying flat Chinese chives), but wonders if home stoves are powerful enough to develop true "wok hay." {I have a tip: "unscrew the nipple" (scroll down)}
Recipe: Lee Wan Ching's sizzling pepper and salt shrimp

Drink: The New South
The Mâconnais, in southern Burgundy, produces many mediocre wines—and increasing quantities of very good ones. By Patrick Matthews
Tasting notes: From Verget Macon-Villages 2003 ($15; "fresh and clean…ample chardonnay") to Chateau-Fuissé Vieilles Vignes Pouilly-Fuissé 2002 ($50; "creamy, smooth and fruity")

Essay: Authenticity: It's the Real Thing
Colman Andrews says the only way to get close to "authentic" cooking is to know the people behind the tradition.

Cellar: Edgy and Intense
Mourvèdre yields distinctive wines from Bandol to the Sierras to McLaren Vale. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 mourvèdres and mourvèdre blends, from Joseph Swan Russian River Valley Mourvèdre ($16; "camphor and wet earth" to Ridge California Pato Vineyard Mataro 2002 ($N/A; "huge ultra-ripe nose of berry preserves")

Source: Canadian Mennonite farmers make smoky summer sausage. By Shane Mitchell

Classic: Chilaquiles (stale corn tortillas doused in spicy tomato sauce) are a great poor man's dish. By Carolynn Carreño
Recipe: Chilaquiles

Fragrant Feasts of Lucknow: Two centuries ago, the rulers of this refined North Indian city created an aromatic, extravagant cuisine that lives on today. By Margo True
Recipes: Kundan Khaliya (kid goat curry wrapped in gold)
Murgh Zafrani (saffron chicken)
Dhungare Baigan (smoked eggplant with yogurt and onion)
Parcha Pulao (kid goat pilaf cooked in spiced meat stock)
Galawat Kebabs ("melt-in-the-mouth" kid goat kebabs)
Dabi Arvi ka Salan (taro in onion sauce)
Sidebar: Recipe Detectives: local food writers had trouble getting recipes from secretive Lucknow cooks, but now have a book to show for their work: [I]Dastarkhwan-e-Awadh: The Cuisine of Awadh

Sidebar: Garnishes That Glitter: how to work with gold and silver leaf
Guide: hotels, restos, and sights in Lucknow [/I]

Singing for Our Supper: When two musicians from Texas go on tour in Europe, good food isn't an afterthought—it's a daily obsession. Country food in Switzerland, France, Spain and Italy, by Joe Gracey
Recipes: Cervéla (Hansreudi's family salad)
Salsiccia Nostrana alla Griglia con Fagioli all-Uccelletto (grilled sausage with white beans)
Almejas con Jamón (steamed clams with ham in white wine) {mmm—from Cal Pep in Barcelona}
Espuma de Limón (lemon foam; also boosted from Cal Pep)
Guide: hotels and great road food in Europe


A Saveur Roundtable: Ten years of cooking and eating in America, 1994–2004: To celebrate our first decade of publication, we invited key food figures from around the country to sit down with us for lunch (we ate both carbs and protein) and explore a menu of meaty topics. By Colman Andrews
The participants: Robert Schueller, Deborah Madison, Zarela Martínez, Mario Batali, Dorothy Kalins, Darrell Corti, Marion Nestle, Rich Melman, Chuck Williams, Mimi Sheraton and Colman Andrews
{No Atkins discussion, despite the ref in the dek. The confab seems heavily edited—very broad comments on an equally broad range of topics. Also, there's a very funny picture of Andrews looking very fierce at the head of the table. Recipes are all from Barbuto, where the lunch took place.}
Recipes: Crostini di Baccalà (salt cod cake on grilled toast)
Insalata di Calamari Gremola & Aioli (salad of squid, wild chicory and chickpeas with lemon-garlic sauce)
Maccheroni con Funghi Selvaticci (tube-shaped pasta with wild mushrooms)
Manzo ai Ferri (grilled skirt steak with grilled chiles)
Cavolfiore (roasted cauliflower with black olives and bread crumbs)
Finocchio e Pecorino (shaved fennel with pecorino)
Torta al Limone (almond-lemon cake)
Sidebar: Ten Years of Food and America: a timeline ranging from the opening of the French Laundry to the death of Julia Child
Sidebar: Puck the Pioneer: Short interview with Wolfgang Puck


Tailgating at Ole Miss: If football can be considered a religion in these parts, then pregame picnics at the Grove are its church suppers – for up to 60,000 people. By Carolyn Carreño
Recipes: Caramel cake
Cream cheese dip with chutney
Black-eyed pea corn bread
Hot onion soufflé
Grilled pork tenderloin with Jezebel sauce
Breakfast casserole


Only the Very Best Meat Tafelspitz isn't just a variety of boiled beef; it's one of the treasures of Viennese gastronomy—indeed, of Viennese culture. By Ann McCarthy
Recipe: Tafelspitz
Sidebar: Boiled Beef Matters: The importance of the cut of meat, as seen in an excerpt from Joseph Wechsberg's story "Tafelspitz for the Hofrat."


In the Saveur Kitchen: A staffer's variation on the Ole Miss breakfast casserole; add smoky flavor to Lucknow dishes with live coals set in onion "cups," then placed in the dish and drizzled with ghee—cover and let smoke; how usli ghee differs from French clarified butter; soup of tafelspitz broth over shredded crepes is a traditional Viennese starter
Recipes: Sue Raye's breakfast casserole {different from the Ole Miss recipe in that it uses cream of mushroom soup!}
Usli Ghee (Indian clarified butter)
Frittatensuppe (shredded crepes in beef broth)


Kitchen: Chef Andrew Abruzzese in Bucks County, Pa., uses two big islands, a walk-in refrigerator, and slate flooring just in front of the stove, fridge and walk-in.

In the Saveur Library: Moghul Cooking: India's Courtly Cuisine, by Joyce Westrip (Serif, 1997): sumptuous, easy-to-follow recipes

Moment: The backs of itinerant grape pickers dot a field in Champagne, 1998
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#7 User is offline   zora

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Posted 25 October 2004 - 03:21 PM

I wonder whether editors at food mags get a sick feeling when they start thinking about the Thanksgiving issue? I know my eyes glaze over as soon as I see them in my mailbox. Fortunately, no turkeys were harmed for the cover of this issue.

SaveurSaveur, November 2004

First: In fact, Colman Andrews explains why they never use turkeys on the cover. Heh, but there's a good picture of _live_ turkeys "awaiting the inevitable."

Fare:
Turkey on the Yarra: Nancy Kriplen recalls an unlikely Thanksgiving in Australia, and how she bonded with the in-laws.

Hail to the Chef: White House chef Walter Scheib is also president of a club of chefs who feed dignitaries: "neutrality is a must." By Melanie Mize Renzulli

Prize Pork: Real Canadian bacon is totally different from what Americans think it is (sold raw, unsmoked). Now someone in Michigan is making the right stuff. By Stephen Beaumont

Battle of the Coffee Table Cookbooks: Que es más macho: the El Bulli cookbook or Alain Ducasse's Spoon Cook Book?. A handy comparison chart by eGullet's own Steven A. Shaw

Getting Jiggly With It: A new cookbook is dedicated to Jell-O shots. By Jelly, I mean Kelly Alexander {an honest-to-god typo}
Recipe: Cram (a cranberry/SoCo/citron Jell-O shot)

Tahiti Eats: Food vans in Papeete serve upscale fast food of all kinds. By Meryle Evans

On the Side: napkin-folding craze; Thanksgiving in space; inflation in food prices; bacon-, lettuce- and tomato-scented candles, for the 100th anniversary of the sandwich

Agenda: Mule Day in Calvary Georgia; Fiesta del Dulce de Leche in Cañuelas, Argentina; Swedish goose feast honors Saint Martin, who hid amid a flock of geese; Nov. 12 is the trademark anniversary of Nabisco; Delray Beach Garlic Fest in Florida; Leo Baekelend, inventor of Bakelite, was born Nov. 14, 1863, in Ghent; Mount Avoca Pétanque Club Tournament in Avoca, Australia

One Good Bottle: Geyser Peak Winery Kuimelis Vineyard Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2001 ($32): "definitive California cabernet."

Book Review: Remembering Bill Neal, by Moreton Neal, and Frank Stitt's Southern Table: Recipes and Gracious Traditions from Highlands Bar and Grill, by Frank Stitt. Shane Mitchell reviews these two Southern cookbooks: both flawed, but good for Neal completists and nice refined dishes from Stitt (though many recipes didn't test well).
Recipes: Chicken Liver Mousse (from Neal)
Red Snapper with Ham Hock?Red Wine Sauce (from Stitt)


Cellar: Argentina's White Hope
Fragrant torrontés looks for a place on America's wine list. By Roger Morris
Tasting notes: 12 torrontés wines?very few are available in the U.S. so far, but all are priced very well: "Crios" de Susana Balbo Cafayate 2003 ("wafts of tangerine?; excellent mouth-feel") is the priciest at $15.

Essay: The Taste of Autumn
Willoughby Johnson praises food, such as a good venison steak, that you hunt yourself.

Lives: Wine Seller
For half a century wine merchant Robert Haas has brought great wines to America. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: Five recommended bottles from Tablas Creek, such as Esprit de Beaucastel 2002 ($40): very elegant, with mourvèdre predominating.

Memories: A Slice of Memory
Kathleen Brennan recounts learning how to make her German granddad's walnut torte
Recipe: Opa's Walnut Torte

Source: Super-fresh Hawaiian fish from Honolulu Fish Company. By Camas Davis

Classic: Negimaki (beef-scallion rolls) were invented in Manhattan. By Laura Kiernan
Recipe: Negimaki

Potato World: Once widely maligned and misunderstood, this humble tuber is now relished almost everywhere. A giant, multipiece feature on potatoes, including info about the International Potato Center in Peru, a bit on the potato famine and profiles of the Simplot potato plant and a small-scale potato farm in Maine. Also: what they look like, how to cook 'em. Contributions from Lynne Sampson, Margo True, Maricel Presilla, Sarah Copeland and Carolynn Carreño {All a relief to see, considering the last issue had a few carb-counting jokes, which made me worry the eds were losing their grip.}
Recipes: Vichyssoise (cold potato and leek soup)
Pommes de Terre à la Sarladaise (Sarlat-style potatoes)
Pizza di Patate (potato pizza)
Filets de Poisson en Écailles Croustillantes (fish filets with potato scales)
German Potato Salad
Hachis Parmentier (shredded beef with mashed potatoes)
Aloo Papri Chaat (crisp-fried wafers with potatoes, yogurt and tamarind chutney)
Llapingachos (Ecuadoran potato cakes)


Vintage Pyrenees: The luminous wines of Jurancon, both dry and sweet, are as unusual and full of personality as the people who make them. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Daurade Royale sur un Lit de Poivrons Rouges (roasted sea bream on a bed of red peppers)
Foie Frais de Canard Poêle au Shitaké, Julienne de Golden Citronnée (fresh duck liver sautéed with shiitake mushrooms, with a julienne of golden apples)
Poêlé de Ris d'Agneau et de Cèpes (salad of lamb sweetbreads and cèpes)
Pot-au-Feu (boiled beef dinner)

Tasting Notes: 13 recommendations from the region, from Chateau Jolys Sec 2001 ($14; "ripe strawberry nose...austere finish") to Clos Lapeyre Vent Balaguèr ($50/375ml; "rich, creamy and long")

Guide: hotels, restos and wineries to visit in the Pyrenees


Is It Still a Tradition If We Change It Every Year?: Elmer R. Grossman explains the evolution of his family's Thanksgiving dinner.
Recipes: Roast Turkey
Multicultural Stuffing
Rich Gravy
Pear and Currant Chutney
Lemon Marmalade Cranberry Sauce
Pumpkin Pie


Living with the Olive: In the Greek province of Messenia, the annual kalamata harvest dictates the rhythms of a simple existence. By Diane Kochilas {No recipe provided, but fascinating: dried figs poached in salt ater, roasted in embers and sprikled with oregano.}
Recipes: Fava (puree of yellow split peas)
Khirino me Selino kai Avgholimino (pork stewed with celery in egg-lemon sauce)
Fasoladha (bean and vegetable soup)
Kokkoras me Khilopites (rooster with egg noodles)
Kayiannas (tomato and sausage omelette)
Sidebar: Liquid Kalamata: Greek olive oil is tasty and reasonably priced.


In the Saveur Kitchen: A Sveico nut grinder is best, but a Zyliss cheese grater works too; poori and tamarind chutney are staple Indian snacks;
Recipes: Madeira-truffle Butter
Papri (crisp-fried wafers)
Imli Chatni (sweet and spicy tamarind chutney)


Kitchen: Chef Cindy Pawlcyn, in Napa Valley, relies on refrigerated drawers, a made-to-measure pastry counter, a wood-fired oven, built-in wood cutting boards and small windows over counters for cooling pies (and for letting hobos steal them, presumably).

Moment: An English milkman delivers, despite the floods, 1954.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#8 User is offline   zora

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Posted 12 December 2004 - 01:19 AM

Saveur, December 2004

First: Colman Andrews chides us to enjoy the holidays with our family before we regret not doing so.

Fare:
Clay Chicken: Eugenia Bone reminisces about the Italian tradition of baking a chicken in clay; today’s kids like it too.
Recipe: Chicken cooked in clay

Attack of the Hedonistic Fruitbombs: An excerpt from the new book Inspiring Thirst: Vintage Selections from the Kermit Lynch Wine Brochure

Flying Foodies: John Purner specializes in reviewing restaurants at small airports. By Ron Lieber

Mush Rocks: Bonnie Raitt’s band are oatmeal aficionados. By Mary Jo Spiegel
Recipe: Man o' war

Revered Wear: Amateur chef Roger Mummert gets respect when he puts on chef’s whites

On the Side: A pho blog; a Sonoma vineyard uses SF area restos’ table scraps to fertilize its grapes; Pittsburgh’s new Iron City beer is packaged in sleek aluminum bottles; a German-made computer chip sense bad breath.

Agenda: Strong ale fest in Carlsbad, Calif.; Minco, Okla., honey fest; Castelnaudry’s annual goose fat sale; James Lewis Kraft born Dec. 11, 1874; inn-hopping cookie tour in N.H.; mushroom fair in Santa Rosa, Calif.; shimadaame candies are sold in Taiwa Japan to commemorate someone falling in love with a woman’s puffy hairdo (really); patent anniversary of the first commercial dishwasher (1886) on Dec. 28;

One Good Bottle: Casa Noble Anejo ($90): "smooth…vivid" five-year-old tequila

Book Review: Poet of the Appetites: the Lives and Loves of MFK Fisher, by Joan Reardon, is solid; Fried Chicken and Apple Pie, by John T. Edge, are larks; The Tex-Mex Cookbook, by Robb Walsh, is excellent; At Mesa’s Edge, by Eugenia Bone, is a little thin but has good recipes. By Anne Mendelson
Recipes: Lone Pine Pie
Lady Bird Johnson’s Pedernales Chili


Grape of Worth: Colman Andrews praises North American Pinot Noir, by John Winthrop Haeger

Cellar: From the Wood
Aged long in casks, tawny ports are rich, sweet, complex and versatile. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: from Ramos Pinto Superior Tawny ($15) to Warrer’s 1961 Reserve Tawny ($189), and a few others in the $30 range

Lives: Feeding M. Le Président
Danièle Mazet-Delpeuch won over the formidable Francois Mitterand with her earthy French country cooking. By Charles Pierce
Recipe: Chèvre Mariné

Drink: Big Red from Kronendorf
A handful of small producers in one corner of Australia’s Barossa Valley are making some of the world’s most sought-after wines. By Tim Johnston
Tasting notes: 17 shiraz and Rhone-style wines, from Grant Burge Barossa Viens Shiraz 2002 ($13) to Peter Lehman Stonewell 1997 ($75)

Source: Lady M Confections makes exceptionally fine cakes. By Margo True

Classic: Christmas pudding should age for at least a month.
Recipe: Christmas Pudding

A Southern Christmas North of the Mason-Dixon: A family with roots in the South celebrates the season with feasting and friendly arguments in snowy upstate New York. By Shane Mitchell
Recipes: Baked Country Ham
Breakfast Biscuits
Cheese Crackers
Edisto Eggnog
Spicy Creamed Onions
Standing Rib Roast with Bordelaise Sauce
Bourbon Balls
Green Beans Almondine
Gingerbread Cake


Crab Rangoon & Bongo Bongo Soup: The décor was corny and the food was mostly made up, but for a budding food lover, Trader Vic’s was the best place in the world, confesses Colman Andrews
Sidebar: SF-based writer Ernest Beyl reminisces about Vic Bergeron, the man behind Trader Vic’s
Recipes: Crab Rangoon
Suffering Bastard cocktail
Cheese Bings
Stir-fried Baby Bok Choy
Calcutta Chicken Curry
Javanese Sate with Peanut Sauce
Pake Noodles
Bongo Bongo Soup


Sweet Memory: The candied fruits and other confections at Romanengo in Genoa symbolize the city’s glorious past—and locals still line up for them today. By Anya Fernald
Recipes: Meringata (meringues with marrons glacés and whipped cream
Cotognata (quince paste)
Budino di Semolino con Canditi (semolina cake with candied fruit)
Canestrelli (almond paste cookies)


Number One Tempura: This popular Japanese specialty becomes sheer, lacy perfection when prepared by a master: Suzuki Sumifusa, the top chef at Ten-Ichi, a renowned tempura restaurant in Tokyo. By Kenneth Wapner
Sidebar: modern innovations (gasp) on tempura
Recipe: Ten-Ichi Tempura

In the Saveur Kitchen: Step-by-step guide to making a clay chicken…how to use leftover ham…making dulce de leche out of condense milk…how to fold crab Rangoon.…chowchow…Janet Thompson rallies after accidentally dropping her coq au vin sauce down the drain….In the Saveur library: Bitter Almonds: Recollections from a Sicilian Girlhood, by Maria Grammatico and Mary Taylor Simeti, and Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art, by Shizuo Tsuji.
Recipes: Brandy Butter
Whiskey Cream
Macaroni with Cheese and Country Ham
Chowchow


Kitchen: Hiroko Shimbo, a Japanese cookbook author and teacher, relies on a salamander and chopsticks by the stove.

Moment: Chorus-line guys in ostrich-feather tutus have a drink at their theatre bar, 1956
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#9 User is offline   zora

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Posted 27 January 2005 - 01:38 PM

Saveur, January/February 2005 (The Saveur 100 issue)

First: Colman Andrews manages to rustle up 100 foodie things to love, and work in the painful pun “beating a dead hors d’oeuvre.” (I guess after he professed his love for Trader Vic’s, he can’t help but show his goofy side.) Oh yeah, and he’s pro-carbs.

Fare:
Pacific Heights: Ernest Bayl reminisces about luxe dining at Cliff House in San Fran (recently renovated).
Recipe: Crab Louis

Steadily Rising: Avalon International Breads helps revive a Detroit neighborhood. By Lynne Meredith Schreiber

Thinking Inside the Box: Carole Braden’s quickie review of Better Than Homemade: Foods That Changed the Way We Eat, by Carolyn Wyman, yields odd food lore.

Fortune Cooking: An exhibit on Chinese restaurants in America, and how that got to be the way they are, at NYC’s Museum of Chinese in the Americas. By Elsa Huang

Chasing Gnafron: Peggy Knickerbocker recalls discovering this sausage flan in Lyon, then makes her own.
Peggy’s Gnafron

On the Side: The Houston Rockets visit Yao Ming’s hometown, and eat well; Cookoff: Recipe Fever in America covers the high-stakes cooking circuit—best grilled cheese: swiss cheese and mango salsa on Italian bread spread with curry butter; Beautiful Brews Company makes beer especially for women.

Agenda: Post cereal anniversary (1895); tamarind fest in northern Thailand; ancient dance and oxtail at Sinulog Foodstreet, Cebu; Soupie (aka sopressata) Bowl in Pa.; Périgord’s birthday, Feb. 2, 1754; Sprengidagur celebrates salty lamb in Iceland; Tasmanian food fest; Red Wine and Chocolate, Yakima Valley, Wash.

One Good Bottle: Jaillance Cuvée Impériale Clairette de Die ($15), a “soft, sweetish confection of a wine.”

Book Review: Dorothy Kalins is very impressed with Tsukiji: The Fish Market at the Center of the World, by Theodore C. Bestor. Very accessible, but with great complex detail on the culture of the market.

Cellar: Here Comes Kiwi Pinot
New Zealanders offer Burgundian aromas and New World flavors. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 NZ Pinot Noirs, from Mud House Vineyard Selection Marlborough 2002 ($17; “aggressive spiciness; finishes tart and dry”) to Felton Road Central Otago 2002 ($43; “bracingly dry…warm red fruit”)

Reporter: Swedish Superstars
Winning Arets Kock, Sweden’s chef-of-the-year contest, can turn a cook into a legend. By Kelly Alexander
Recipe: Hummer med Blomkalskram, Hummergele, och Gurka (cucumber-wrapped croutons with cauliflower mousseline and lobster)

Source: Texan Jim Walters’s Caledonian Kitchen haggis is for a select few. By Janet Forman

Classic: Rich Little Po’ Boy: the New Orleans sandwich. By Pableaux Johnson
Recipe: Oyster Po’ Boy

The Saveur 100: It starts out great, with a lobster-and-calvados stew in a footed cast-iron pot; the accidental theme is cooking over fire. Other highlights: a stovetop smoker, the hot brown open-faced turkey sandwich, those Artisanal cheese plates at Au Bon Pain, and triple-decker PBJ. Oh, plus some highbrow things too. (Only one quibble: those silicone potholders actually suck—they’re clumsy, and they go from not-hot to dangerously hot in a second.)
Recipes: Potted Lobster Stew
Mexican Chocolate Icebox Cookies
Hot Brown
Uovo in Raviolo al Burro Nocciola Tartufato (soft egg yolk–filled ravioli with truffled butter
Pink Grapefruit Marmalade
Lángos (Hungarian fried potato bread)
Upside-Down Meatloaf (from the Best-Of state cookbooks)
Pollo in Casseroula (“Italian trailblazer” Piero Selvaggio’s chicken casserole)
Feijoada de Polvo (octopus stew from Newark’s Ironbound Portuguese nabe)
Vangi Bhath (spiced rice with green peppers and cashews from the Mavalli Tiffin Room in Bangalore)
Croquetas de Pollo (Cuban chicken croquettes)
Puding de Patata (sweet Minorcan potato cake)
Deep-Fried Shiitake Mushrooms (from Maine’s Common Ground Fair)
Grilled Marinated Quail and Sausages (done on a fireplace-top grill)
Smoked Salmon and Dill Quiche
Tagliatelle Souffle (from Pino Luongo)
Spit-Roasted Boneless Leg of Lamb
Cassava Crackers
Insalata di Spaghetti Freddi al Caviale (salad of cold spaghetti with caviar)
Suan Cai Fen Si Tang (Sichuan pickled mustard green soup with bean thread vermicelli)
Pate Brisee Sucree (sweet pastry crust)
Roast Goose (from Zak Pelaccio, with bird from Heritage Foods USA)
French Toast (using Japanese shokupan white bread)
Gratins a l’Ananas et au Citron Vert et son Caramel d’Oranges (gratins of pineapple and lime with orange caramel, from Domaine de Bassibe near Aire-sur-l’Adour


In the Saveur Kitchen: Improving banana cream pie with a good crust…what to do with lobster broth, and extra goose parts…all about mornay sauce.
Recipes: Banana Cream Pie
Lobster Stock
Goose Liver and Apple Toasts

Endives Mornay


In the Saveur Library: Well Preserved: Pickles, Relishes, Jams and Chutneys for the New Cook, by Mary Anne Dragan, takes the fear out of home preserving.

Moment: A vendor of caramelized sugar animals in Chengdu
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#10 User is offline   zora

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Posted 07 March 2005 - 11:28 AM

Saveur, March 2005

First: Colman Andrews reminds us that reviewing restaurants isn’t a dream job.

Fare:
Bock to the Country: renewed popularity and expansion of Shiner Bock, by Timothy C. Davis.

Clove Story: The adorable garlic mascot, Ninky, of Kamashishi, Japan.
Recipe: Ninton Boru (fried pork-wrapped garlic)

Trader Vic Memories: Daniel Douglas is one of many readers with stories to tell about the restaurant.

For Starters: Maureen Aboud makes labneh with her grandmother.
Recipe: Labneh (yogurt spread)

History’s Lesser-Known Food Sightings: from a grilled-cheese sandwich showing the Virgin to Paris Hilton on mystery meat… (Funnier than I’m describing it.)

On the Side: Fatties break chairs on the Queen Mary 2, fatties fall for Special K ads in UK, groovy bronze deer faucets, and a nacho-cheese fountain for your next party.

Agenda: Salsa cookoff in Tennessee, John McPhee’s birthday (March 8), mashed-potato wrestling in Pinnaroo, Australia, self-rising flour patented, crayfish fest in South Africa, Taste of Tillamook County fest in Oregon, Iowa Rabbit Festival, Trelawny Yam Festival in Jamaica

One Good Bottle: Bottega Vinaia Teroldego Rotaliano 2002 ($20.50): “wild berries crushed underfoot on the forest floor.”

Book Review: John Thorne thinks On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, by Harold McGee, is thorough but better as a reference than for any regular use in the kitchen.

Sidebar: Who Will Carve? Carole Braden shows a depiction of the Last Supper in a Cuzco cathedral that features cuy (guinea pig) as the main dish.

Drink: Winemaker on Wheels
Favoring indigenous grap varieties and historic vineyards, Telmo Rodriguez is reinventing wine all over Spain. By Tim Atkin
Tasting notes: 10 Rodriguez wines, from $9 Al Muvedre Tinto Joven 2002 (“greenish tasting”) to $62 “G” Pago La Jara 2002 (“intense and almost mysterious…very tannic….One of the very best of the Toro region”)

Reporter: Diatribes for Dinner
British restaurant critic Jay Rayner explains why reviewing in Britain is no longer a gentleman’s game, with excerpts of the most cutting criticisms from colleagues.

Classic: Super Snack: Margo True reports on Indian samosas; complete with photo illustrations for filling and folding.
Recipe: Aloo Matar ke Samose aur Danya ki Chatni (deep-fried pastries stuffed with spiced potatoes and peas, with cilantro-mint chutney

Source: John and Tracy Johnson make extra-fresh Woodhouse truffles. By Carole Braden

Cellar: A Variety of Styles
Pinot Gris is not a bland grape; it’s just an extremely versatile, adaptable one. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 bottles of pinot gris, from $12 A to Z 2003 (“rapierlike acidity…unmistakably Oregonian”) to King Estate Reserve 2003 ($25; “apples, lime, honey, baking spices and warm stones on the nose”)

Sichuan Street Snacks: Old food traditions find new life at Chengdu’s restaurants and temple fairs. By Fuchsia Dunlop
Recipes: Zhong Shui Jao (Zhong crescent dumplings)
Dan Dan Mian (Dan Dan noodles)
Long Chao Shou (dragon wontons)
Dou Hua (flower bean curd)
Fen Zheng Niu Rou (steamed beef with rice meal)
Hong Shao Bing (sweet potato cakes)
San Da Pao (glutinous rice balls)
Guide: where to stay and eat in Chengdu


The Best Food in the World: Bacon. Duh. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: The Definitive BLT
Bacon Tempura
Peanut Butter and Bacon Truffles
Spinach Salad with Warm Bacon Dressing
Billionaire’s Bacon
Stilton and Bacon Cheesecakes
Sidebar: How to Cook Bacon (fry, bake, broil, microwave)
Sidebar: Bacon and Health. Whatever.
Sidbar: Nine Degrees of Bacon: international bacon relatives


Flavors of a Rugged Land: Hunger drove Giuseppe Moretti from Italian Switzerland; food and family drew his great-granddaughter back. By Ann Herold
Recipes: Minestrone (hearty vegetable soup)
Pseci in Carpione (cold marinated fried fish)
Cavollatte (vanilla lemon custard)
Torta di Pane (bread cake)
Capretto Brasato in Vino Bianco (baby goat braised in white wine)
Insalata di Cicoria (chicory salad)
Polenta ai Due Grani (two-grain polenta, with buckwheat)
Asparagi alla Milanese (asparagus with fried eggs and Parmigiano)
Guide: where to stay and eat in Ticino


Lamingtons, Beestings and Meat Pies: Country bakeries are an Australian institution, but they’re a dying breed, and their delights are disappearing. By Chloe Osborne
Recipes: Lamingtons (cakes dipped in chocolate icing and coconut)
Beestings (custard-filled buns)
Sausage Rolls
Aussie Meat Pies
Vanilla Slice
Sidebar: Pie in the Sky: Aussies love meat pies.


In the Saveur Kitchen: Sichuan dipping sauces make the difference…frisee aux lardons is the perfect salad…what to do with bacon grease…faster puff pastry
Recipes: Hong You (Sichuan chile oil)
Hua Jiao Mian (ground roasted Sichuan peppercorns)
Fu Zhi Jiang You (sweet aromatic soy sauce)
Salade Frisee aux Lardons (curly endive salad with garlic croutons and French bacon)
Bacon-Fried Chicken
Quick Puff Pastry


Real-Life Kitchen: artist Jim Richmond’s electricity-free Vermont farmhouse uses a vintage 1920s stove and other found pieces. By Caroline Campion

In the Saveur Library: Lebanese Mountain Cookery, by Mary Laird Hamady, and Encyclopedia of Asian Food, by Charmaine Solomon

Moment: A man and his potbellied pig root through the fridge. (In honor of National Pig Day, March 1, perhaps?)
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#11 User is offline   zora

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Posted 31 March 2005 - 09:55 PM

Saveur, April 2005

First: “Cheese is my monkey,” says Colman Andrews.

Fare:
A Family Affair: Cohen’s dishes up kosher in Munich. By Julia M. Klein

Fruit of Dreams: Elizabeth Cawdry Thomas reminisces about cherimoyas.

Vada-pav in the Morning: A Mumbai brek snack is “carb-loading BLISS.” By David Leavitt

Bill’s BBQ Lite: Clinton’s fave joint developed a “lite” menu following the ex-prez’s bypass surgery. Eric O’Keefe interviews the owner of McClard’s in Hot Springs, Ark.

Slices of a Century: Pizza: A Slice of Heaven: The Ultimate Guide and Companion inspires some pizza cartoons.

On the Side: Norwegian soccer star signs for free pizza; world’s largest chicken egg (8-in. circumference) laid in Germany; a gadget for removing sandwich crusts; Jane Seymour promotes pistachios

Agenda: Saint-Georges maple syrup fest; Ramp Tramp Festival in Tenn.; first Jiffy mix sold in 1928; oyster fest in NZ; Great American Pie Fest in that weird Disney town, Celebration; Celtic food fest in Scotland; bison fest in Bryan, Tex.; Alice B. Toklas’s birthday on April 30;

One Good Bottle: Goisot Sant-Bris Fié Gris Corps de Gard Gourmand 2002 ($22): “lemony sauvignon blanc character.”

Book Review: Regina Schrambling reviews La Cocina de Mamá: The Great Home Cooking of Spain, by Penelope Casas, and Lidia’s Family Table, by Lidia Bastianich. As usual, she doesn’t have very much nice to say.
Recipes:
Berenjena con Miel de Julia (Julia’s batter-coated fried eggplant with honey, mint and sesame seeds
Roast Black Olives and Pearl Onions


Drink: Wine from the Fruit Basket
The Pfalz is warm and dry—and the most dynamic vineyard region in Germany today. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 11 Pfalz wines, mostly from riesling, from $20 A. Christmann 2002 (“subtly flinty flavor, a hint of smoke,…very quaffable”) to Okonomierat Rebholz Siebeldinger im Sonnenschein 2003 ($64; “intense but closed-up fruit”).

Ingredient: Truly a Remarkable Plant
Dandelions are versatile, flavorful and really, really good for you. By Rich Lang
Recipes:
Dandelion Greens with Anchovy Sauce and a Fried Egg
Crème de Pissenlits (cream of dandelion soup)


Essay: The Tao of Biscuits
Kelly Alexander laments her failure at biscuit-baking.

Cellar: Silk and Chocolate
The Alexander Valley’s cab-based wines are smooth and sophisticated. By Roger Morris
Tasting notes: a dozen cabernet sauvignons, from Simi 2002 ($25; “intensely fruity”) to Silver Oak 2000 ($60; “dark cherries, chocolate tannins and earthy terroir”)

Source: Renard’s Cheese specializes in squeaky cheese curds. By Caroline Campion

Classic: Warm Comfort: meat and barley are the mainstays in Scotch broth. By Laura Mason
Recipe: Scotch Broth

American Cheese: A celebration of artisanal delights from our nation’s farms and dairies.
Part One: In Praise of American Cheese. Colman Andrews gives a quick history.
Part Two: The Accidental Pioneer: Laura Chenel leads the way in goat cheese. By Margo True
Part Three: The Ultimate Artisan: Margo True meets the musically inclined Soyoung Scanlan of Santa Rosa, Calif.
Part Four: Our 50 Favorite American Cheeses
Part Five: Where We Go to Buy American Cheese. Signs of a good shop: passionate staff, samples, very busy, cheese cut to order, staff can educate, no mass-produced cheeses.
Part Six: Cheese in the Kitchen: 15 recipes (see below)

Sidebar: Wine and Cheese. It all tastes pretty good, say the editors.
Sidebar: How to Speak Cheese. Kathleen Brennan gives a vocab lesson.
Sidebar: What is Cream Cheese? Caroline Campion says it wasn’t invented in Philly.
Sidebar: Raw Milk and the Law. Laura Werlin sounds surprisingly skeptical of the whole raw cheese thing.
Sidebar: Celebrating Our Nation’s Cheese: assorted cheese festivals. By Camas Davis
Sidebar: Respect Your Cheese: how to store it. By Raymond Hook (“Gray and blue molds that may develop…are fine. Black and red molds should be trimmed off, however.” Good to know.

Recipes:
Crunchy Spring Salad
Chevre with Herbs, Olive Oil and Lemon Zest
Salmon with Spring Vegetables
“Melted” Leeks and Fennel with Olives and Chevre
Lemon Verbena Strawberry Fool
Pungent Cheese Spread
Fresh Goat Cheese Panna Cotta
Mille-Feuille with Two Goat Cheeses
“After Farmers’ Market” Quiche
Fried Mozzarella Sandwiches
Macaroni and Cheese
Cheese Bread
Scallion and Pickled Jalapeno Cheese Crisps
Welsh Rabbit
Cheese “Gelato”
Chopped Sirloin with Blue Cheese Butter
Creamy Potato-Cheese Soup
Craig Claiborne’s Cheesecake
Blue Cheese Dressing
Open-Face Grilled Cheese Sandwiches
Fried Cheese
Cheese Souffle Omelette
Baked Chicken with Cheese and Cream Sauce
American Fondue


In the Saveur Kitchen: four ways to cut the cheese; deep-fried cheese curds!; rabbit is versatile; Fondue 101: the chemistry of it; Korean citron marmalade (yujacha); Alison Fong recalls nearly botching the family meal.
Recipes:
Fried Cheese Curds
Smoked Haddock, Welsh Rabbit, Potato Puree and Mustard Cream


Real-Life Kitchen: Tamasin Day-Lewis’s country home retains the traditional hearth and window seats.

In the Saveur Library: The Cheese Plate, Max McCalman’s fantastic book that reads just like he sounds, and Cheese and Fermented Milk Foods, by Frank Kosikowski

Moment: A model perches atop 800 pounds of Wisconsin Swiss, 1948
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#12 User is offline   zora

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Posted 09 May 2005 - 11:39 AM

Saveur, May 2005

First: Melissa Hamilton recalls her first visit to the Fulton Fish Market.

Fare:
Blimpy Eternal: Richard Reynolds reveals the secrets of Krazy Jim’s Blimpy Burger in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Spanish Waffles: crisp, handmade barquillos are growing rarer in Spain. By Lisa Abend

Seduced by a Billionaire’s Beluga: Linda Ellerbee reports on Malcolm Forbes’s caviar excesses. (from Take Big Bites: Adventures Around the World and Across the Table)

Land of Litchis: Alia Akkam reports on litchi farming in China.
Recipe: Lai Zi Ngam Pin (litchi duck stir-fry)

Sour Grapes: New documentary Mondovino covers California wine-industry intrigue. By Roger Morris

On the Side: The Burnt Food Museum; monkeys love apple juice, but not as much as pictures of lady monkeys; UK campaigns against Sex on the Beach et al.; man loses sweepstakes, gains candy bars

Agenda: Kolache fest in Prague, Okla.; cashew fest in Belize; Norway Day in San Fran; vineyard fest in Valle de Guadalupe, Mex.; birthday of Thomas Lipton, May 10, 1850; morel fest in Muscoda, Wis.; snails in Catalunya; anniversary of the CIA, May 22, 1946

One Good Bottle: Erasmo Reserva de Caliboro Maule Valley 2001 ($30): “very focused…Chilean bordeaux-style red.”

Our Daily Bread: Daniel Drennan reports that only Beirut’s bakeries stayed open the day after Rafik Hariri’s assassination.

Book Review: Lorraine Alexander looks at three books about honey: Letters from the Hive: An Intimate History of Bees, Honey and Humankind, by Stephen Buchmann with Banning Repplier; Sweetness & Light: The Mysterious History of the Honeybee, by Hattie Ellis; and Robbing the Bees: The Sweet Liquid Gold That Seduced the World, by Holley Bishop.
Recipe: Honey Butter

Drink: Reclaiming Meursault
Dominique Lafon may have been born into one of Burgundy’s royal families, but he has followed his own path to success. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 8 Lafon wines, from Macon-Chardonnay Clos de la Crochette ($27; “aromatic…with a nice roundness”) to Meursault-Charmes ($110; “nose with … citrus and honey…an elegant weave of flavors”)

Reporter: Lunch Couriers
Nothing Stays the tiffinwallahs of Mumbai from the swift completion of their appointed rounds. By Margo True
Recipe: Patta Gobi aur Gajar I Bhaji (cabbage and carrots with mustard seeds and curry leaves)

Cellar: Cherry Wine
Around the Tuscan hill town of Scansano, sangiovese goes for the fruit. By Colman Andrews
Tasting notes: 12 bottles of morellino, from Vivaio dei Barbi 2001 ($15; “elegant but full-flavored…bitter chocolate and dried cherries) to Le Pupille Poggio Valenta 2001 ($58; “sheer sensual pleasure, faintly gamy in the nose…inky and rich”)

Essay: Freedom of Diet: Warren Schultz recalls starving himself to avoid the draft 35 years ago.

Source: Fire Dancer peanuts are the Best New Snack Nut in the U.S. this year. By Sonja Toulouse

Classic: Kibbeh is a handmade Middle Eastern treat. By Alia Yunis
Recipe: Aqras Kibbeh Maqliyya (fried, stuffed, ground bulgur–meat balls

Buenos Aires Italian: In Argentina’s cosmopolitan capital, pizza and pasta are everyday fare. By Rich Lang
Recipes: Pasta con Estofado (pasta with boiled beef)
Fusilli con Pesto (twisted noodles with herbs, garlic and walnuts)
Milanesa a la Napolitana (panfried breaded beef cutlet with tomato sauce, ham and mozzarella)
Provoleta (grilled aged provolone)
Sorrentinos de Jamon y Queso con Salsa de Pierino o de Scarparo (large ham-and-cheese ravioli with gorgonzola-arugula sauce or tomato-cream sauce)
Tiramisu
Sidebar: the other ethnic eats in Buenos Aires: Spanish, Jewish, British, German, Mid Eastern
Guide: where to stay and eat in Buenos Aires


Fava Fever: All over the world, this ancient legume is a savory symbol of spring: with sections devoted to Catalan, Italian, Greek, Egyptian and Californian uses of the fresh fava. By Colman Andrews, George Semler, Lori Zimring de Mori, Diane Kochilas, Claudia Roden and Carolynn Carreño
Recipes: Insalata di Baccelli e Pecorino (fava and pecorino salad)
Crema de Faves (Catalan cold cream of fava soup)
Favas a la Catalana (favas with blood sausage and bacon)
Zymarika Salata me Koukia (pasta salad with favas)
Anginarokoukia me Derbiye (artichoke and fava stew with lemon sauce)
Ful bi Lahm (Egyptian meat and fava stew)
Braised whole Favas
Fava Puree
Sidebar: how to peel favas


Sea Change: New York’s Fulton Fish Market is moving after 173 years—but not giving up its traditions. By Fred Goodman, with nice black-and-white photos by Richard Press
Recipes: Escabeche of Fresh Sardines
Panfried Softshell Crabs with Garlic-Herb Butter
Hey Mul Pa Jun (seafood pancake)
Stuffed Sole
Poached Black Bass in a Rich Nage
Sidebar: [I]New Yorker
writer Joseph Mitchell profiles a fish market worker in the 1940s.
Sidebar: the new Bronx digs are state-of-the-art[/I]

Cream Tea Country: In England’s county of Devon, afternoons are sweetened by scones, clotted cream and jam. By Megan Wetherall
Recipes: Scones
Black Currant Jam
Strawberry Jam
Victoria Sponge Cake
Tea Sandwiches
Sidebar: all about bone china
Sidebar: how to brew tea the British way
Sidebar: what constitutes afternoon tea, cream tea and high tea
The Guide: where to stay and eat in Devon


In the Saveur Kitchen: Eric Ripert mixes meat and fish…roast beef and chicken are British kitchen staples…Saveur staff strays from Italian in Buenos Aires, and loves it.
Recipes: Thinly Pounded Yellowfin Tuna, Foie Gras and Toasted Baguette with Chives and Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
Panqueques de Dulce de Leche (Argentine crepes with milk sweet)
Roast Chicken
Roast Beef


Real-Life Kitchen: Swedish minimalists hide everything, keep no pantry: pop-out vent hood, semi-enclosed outdoor room, suspended fireplace. By Kelly Alexander

Correction: guinea pig (cuy) is not served with its “tail intact”; in fact, guinea pigs do not have discernible tails.

Moment: London ladies sip tea from cups (and saucers) in 1908
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#13 User is offline   zora

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Posted 13 June 2005 - 11:28 AM

Saveur, June/July 2005

First: Margo True recalls the best mango she's ever had. Plus, new column: The Saveur… list of best (ice cream parlors, in this issue).

Fare:

No Starving Artists: Regina Maksutova is a patron cook of Russian artists in Manhattan. By Emily Kaiser
Recipe: Bazhe (chicken with pecan-walnut sauce)

Crazy for Baba: cake filled with pastry cream and strawberries is another of Napoli's specialties. By Marlena Spieler

Party Tricks with Papa & Coop: Journalist Ernest Beyl recalls the high life with Hemingway and Gary Cooper in 1950s Sun Valley, Id.

: Linda Ellerbee reports on Malcolm Forbes’s caviar excesses. (from Take Big Bites: Adventures Around the World and Across the Table)

The Real Moutarde: Burgundy is getting back to growing mustard. By Christopher Hall
Recipe: La Vinaigrette à la Carotte et Moutarde de Bourgogne (carrot and Burgundy mustard vinaigrette)

Parisa, Part Deux: A reader submits his story about how this Texan raw-beef dish got its name.

On the Side: squirrels trained to eat nuts for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, tie-in candy bar released; Sony investing in smell-emitting TV; no one eats at the World Series of Poker; Yao Ming's parents open resto in Houston

Agenda: Strolling of the Heifers in Vt.; June 9, 1902, first Horn & Hardart automat; red fruit fest in Noyon; Portland Jerk Festival, Jamaica; Shedica Lobster Festival in New Brunswick; Walla Walla sweet onion fest; Jackie O's birthday, July 28, 1929; Gilroy garlic fest;

One Good Bottle: Dry Creek Vineyard Clarksburg Dry Chenin Blanc 2004 ($10): "a delight…waxy aroma and well-defined fruit"

Book Review: Noelle Howey reviews two foodie memoirs: The Language of Baklava, by Diana Abu-Jaber, and Daughter of Heaven, by Leslie Li. Abu-Jaber's recipes are charming; Li's, great for novices.
Recipes: Magical Muhammara
Gee Ma Wot Mein (breakfast noodles)


The Saveur 12: Ice Cream Parlors: Ted Drewe's, Graeter's, and a yummy-looking one in Dearborn…

Cellar: Local Flavor
Indigenous varietals give blends from Friuli a character of their own. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 Friuli "super-whites", from Marcho Felluga Molammata 2003 ($16; "creamy and mouth-coating") to Dut'un Vie di Romans 2001 ($65; "ripe, rich and viscous")

Memories: A Century of Plums
Sonoko Sakai recalls how his grandmother pickled her plums.
Recipes: Yaki Onigiri (grilled rice balls with pickled plums)
Buta no Hireniku no Umedare Yaki (grilled pork loin with pickled plum sauce)


Source: Capogiro Gelato from Philly is distinctly Italian. By Janet Forman

Classic: Seaside Saganaki: Shrimp with feta is a modern Greek specialty with ancient roots. By Diane Kochilas
Recipe: Garides Saganaki (shrimp with feta)

Valencia Rising: This jewel of a city in Spain's fastest-growing region is blossoming—and turning into an essential gastronomic destination. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: All i Pebre (eel and potatoes in garlic and paprika sauce)
Ajo Arriero (salt cod and potato purée)
Arroz Moreno (rice with cuttlefish and vegetables)
Ensalada de Champiñones y Trufas (mushroom and truffle salad)
Clochinas Valencianas (Valencian-style mussels)
Agua de Valencia (gin, rum, and juice cocktail)
Arroz Cremoso de Almejas y Navajas con Carpaccio de Pulpo (creamy rice with clams, razor clams, and octopus carpaccio
Torrijas de Horchata con Helado de Canela y Chufas Caramelizados (horchata-soaked French toast with cinnamon ice cream and caramelized tiger nuts)
Brocheta de Langosta con Lentejas y Crema de Verduras (spiny lobster with lentils and vegetable cream)
Sidebar: Valencia Oranges: The Spanish love their own variety.
The Guide: where to stay, eat and drink in Valencia


Bobal Mando & Cabernet: Valencia has long produced large quantities of wine; now its vintners are going for quality, too—with grapes both imported and indigenous. By Patrick Matthews
Tasting Notes: 15 reds and 2 dessert wines from Valencia, from Coronilla Crianza 2002 ($11; "soft and tasty") to Gutierrez de la Vega Fondillon 1995 ($80/500ml; "chewy, ripe, alcoholic")

Sousaphones and Funnel Cakes: Every summer, the Kutztown Festival draws thousands to the green heart of Pennsylvania for food and fun. By James Oseland
Recipes: Funnel Cakes
Apple Dumplings
Chowchow
Chicken Pot Pie
Shoofly Pie


King of Fruit: From its birthplace on India's northern border, the luscious mango has gone on to captivate the world. By Madhur Jaffrey
Recipes: Aam ki Chatni (mango chutney)
Fish Curry with Semiripe Mango
Mango Kulfi (Indian mango ice cream)
Mango and Queso Blanco Salsa
Goi Xoai Voi Bo (green mango salad with grilled beef)
Sidebar: A Multitude of Mangoes: from Ataulfo to Valencia Pride—photos and brief descriptions of commercial and special varieties
Sidebar: International Mango Festival in Coral Gables, Fla.
Sidebar: Three Fruits in One: how to deal with green, semiripe and ripe mangoes


Lunch chez Lulu: At her Domaine Tempier in Provence, Lulu Peyraud and her cooking have been seducing guests for decades. By Kathleen Brennan
Recipes: Petits Pois Brisées (braised young peas)
Gigot Farci à la Tapenade (leg of lamb stuffed with tapenade)
Soupe de Poisson (fish soup)
Artichauts à la Barigoule (braised artichokes)
Gateaux a Noix (walnut cakes)
Sidebar: Nancy Harmon Jenkins, Jim Harrison, Kermit Lynch and Alice Waters recall meals with with Lulu
Tasting Notes: six Domaine Tempier wines


In the Saveur Kitchen: Nifty leg-of-lamb-on-a-string roasting technique…garlicky Provencal paste…Berkshire pigs produce great loins (by Judy Joo Allen)
Recipes: Gigot à la Ficelle (string-turned roast leg of lamb)
Lulu's Rouille


In the Saveur Library: http://www.amazon.co...7/egulletcom-20]Rick Stein's Complete Seafood[/URL] and http://www.amazon.co...1/egulletcom-20]The Great Mango Book[/URL], by Allen Susser.

Real-Life Kitchen: An L.A. kitchen reflects owner's experiences, friends: hot-rod paint job on his Wolf range, Ikea drawers fitted with old library pulls, country-store drawers built by Harrison Ford

Moment: Luling Texas Watermelon Thump, 1989. You hit it with your head.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#14 User is offline   zora

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Posted 27 August 2005 - 05:53 PM

Saveur, August/September 2005

First: Margo True tells how a research trip to Nimes was delayed since 2001.

Fare:

Grass Party: You can pull weeds in exchange for dinner at Ute City Farms in Colorado. By Eugenia Bone
Recipe: Succotash Burritos

Cool Fruit: Las Paletas in Nashville sells Mexican-style frozen-fruit pops. By Elaine Glusac

Out of India: Victoria Street Market in Durban, South Africa, is home to specialized spice vendors. By Alex Bhattacharji

In Memoriam: Michael Roberts, West Hollywood chef and master of “weird combinations.” By Colman Andrews
Recipe: Sweet Pea Guacamole

Book ‘Im, Dan-o; He’s Drinking Cold Beer: obscure food laws still on the books in the U.S. By Margaret Loftus

On the Side: the new pope loves beer; Russian astronaut thinks booze in space is a good idea; Smokey Robinson’s frozen dinners; soy burgers and gyross now available at baseball stadiums (gyros do better)

Agenda: Springfield, Ore., filbert festival; Mengen Chefs’ Festival in Turkey; Brigus, Newfoundland, Blueberry Festival; women’s cooking in Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe; Denis Papin, inventor of the pressure cooker, born Aug. 22, 1647; Buffalo Wing Fest in Buffalo, NY; Oxford Symposium on Food & Cookery; first drive-in resto opens Sept. 15, 1921, Dallas, Tx.

One Good Bottle: Rosenblum Cellars Sonoma County Dry Creek Valley Marsanne 2003 ($19): “opulent…golden….Sheer sensual delight.”

Book Review: Caroline Campion reviews The New English Kitchen: Changing the Way You Shop, Cook and Eat, by Rose Prince, and finds it very satisfying in its use-everything approach, though it may not take with Americans.
Recipes: More Good Things on Toast: goat’s cheeses, cooled scrambled eggs, chicken livers, herring, fried tomatoes

The Saveur 14: British Columbia
Sample the region’s flavors at farms, bakeries, bookstores and restaurants

Cellar: The White Stuff
The “other” chateauneuf-du-pape has considerable charms of its own. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 white chateuneuf bottles, from Clos Saint-Michel 2003 ($25; “bright, rounded and slightly bitter”) to Chateau de Beaucastel ($80; “Full and honeyed on the palate….Very fine.”).

Reporter: Ozark Italian
John T. Edge reports from the Tontitown Grape Festival in Arkansas.
Recipes: Tontitown Salad
Spaghetti with Chicken Gizzard Ragu


Lives: Stephen Beaumont profiles Fritz Maytag, the man behind Anchor Steam beer, Old Potrero Single Malt rye, Junipero gin and Maytag Blue cheese.
Tasting notes: Wine, beer and spirits from Maytag’s ventures: York Creek Vineyards, Anchor beer and Old Potrero whiskey.

Source: Savory palmiers from La Tulipe Desserts in Mount Kisco, NY. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Country Fried: “CFS” is Texan-born hybrid hit. By Joe Gracey
Recipe: Chicken Fried Steak

Fiesta in Nimes: When it’s bullfight time in this vibrant city in southern France, a magical Spanish spell is cast upon the streets. By Megan Wetherall
Recipes: Gardianne de Taureau (bull meat braised in red wine)
Pain aux Olives et Lardons (olive and bacon loaf)
Tourte de Brandade (salt cod tart)
Petits Farcis (stuffed tomatoes and summer squash)
Confiture de Figues (fig jam)
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Nimes


My Nantucket: For Sarah Lydon, summer on the island means berries, beaches and family
Recipes: Smoked Bluefish Pate
Bluefish with Gin and Onions
Gin and Tonic with Mint
Cold Mussel Salad
Mrs. Ramos’s Blueberry Pudding
Blackberry Crisp
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Nantucket


Deep Roots: The versatile, nutritious peanut is loved around the world—but nowhere more so than in America. By Wendell Brock
Recipes: Peanut Butter Swirl Ice Cream
Cacahuetes Enchilados (chile peanuts)
Gado-Gado (Indonesian vegetable salad with peanut sauce)
Mafé (peanut butter stew)
Sidebar: Oil Options: use refined peanut oil for deep-frying; use unrefined to boost peanut flavor of dishes. By Denise Schulman
Sidebar: Poison Peanuts: allergies are on the rise, perhaps due to a link with vaccinations. By Tess Autrey Bosher
Sidebar: Picking Peanuts: runners account for 80 percent; spanish are small; valencia are from NM, contain three kernels; virginia are largest


The Last Glow of Summer: In Finland in mid-September, warmth, light and warm-weather food are in dwindling supply—but the season has its delicious consolations. By Margo True
Recipes: Keitetty Rapu (crayfish with crown dill)
Paistettu Sorsa (duck braised with juniper berries and apples)
Korvapuusti (cinnamon-cardamom buns)
Munavoi (egg butter)
Karjalan Piirakka (Karelian pastries)
Kuhaa à la Mannerheim (pike perch with horseradish sauce)


In the Saveur Kitchen: fresh peanuts make the best butter (by Denise Schulman); mini-CFS from Houston (by Margo True)
Recipes: Fried Peanuts (use spanish)
Peanut Butter (use runner)
Roasted Peanuts (use virginia)
Ouisie’s Chicken Fried Steak with Pepper Gravy in Biscuits


In the Saveur Library: Peanuts: The Illustrious History of the Goober Pea, by Andrew F. Smith.

Real-Life Kitchen: Maida Heatter’s 50-year-old kitchen has open shelves and lots of space.

Moment: Italian granny rolls out pizza while the kid sleeps.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#15 User is offline   zora

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  • Location:Astoria, NYC

Posted 27 September 2005 - 10:19 AM

Saveur, October 2005 (The wine issue)


First: Colman Andrews introduces the new cover design. [Yikes! So many words! So country cute!]

Fare:

Food 101: Northwestern Secondary in Stratford, Ontario, runs a café where students learn to cook and run a restaurant business. By David McFarlane

Move Over, Ketchup: The story of Sriracha sauce. (Huh—never noticed it’s made in California!) By Shoshana Goldberg

Jersey Vine: Make Wine With Us is a winemaking club in Jersey City popular with Irish and Italians (it also hosts a pig roast). By Mark Rotella
Recipe: Flip’s Meat Sauce with Pasta (includes meatballs)

Island of Spam: How Spam became so popular in Hawaii. By James Sturz

A Feast from Fire: Bronwyn Dunne attends an Armenian khorovats. By Margaret Loftus

Agenda: Ozark black walnut fest in Alton, Miss.; Mt. Hood Salmon and Mushroom Festival; Chile Pepper Fiesta in Brooklyn; commemmorate the end of witch trials in France at Les Cucurbitades squash fest; Apple Day in Stratford-upon-Avon; Conroe, Tex., Cajun Catfish Festival; 20th anniversary of Union Square Café in NYC, Oct. 21; Oct. 30 is the birthday of Maynard Amerine, who boosted US wine industry after Prohibition

One Good Bottle: Torres Grans Muralles 1998 ($105), from southern Catalonia, “big, dark…a little too aggressively oaked…but intense, delicious”

Book Review: Colman Andrews reviews The Emperor of Wine: The Rise of Robert M. Parker Jr. and the Reign of American Taste, by Elin McCoy, but finds it a decent portrait of a man who inspires conflicting reactions in the wine community. The Botanist and the Vintner: How Wine Was Saved for the World, by Christy Campbell, is an entertaining history of wine in the New World, and the battle against a nasty aphid. Judgment of Paris: California vs. France and the Historic 1976 Paris Tasting That Revolutionized Wine, by George M. Taber, details another turning point in the Old World/New World transition.

More Grapes of Ralph: Oddbins rep and celebrated illustrator Ralph Steadman’s second collection of wine essays: Untrodden Grapes

The Saveur List: 7 Hotel Restaurants
From Arola in Barcelona to The Tearoom at London’s Clarence Hotel

Kitchenwise: Building Beauty from Stones: cookbook author Lori DeMori built out a Tuscan ruin into a kitchen stocked with essentials like double sinks, a good scale, a waist-level fireplace, and an olive-oil canister. By Kathleen Brennan
(This new column is part of the redesign—the “Real-Life Kitchen” profile usually found in the back is expanded here.)

Cellar: Exciting Red
Syrahs of the Pacific Northwest. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 Washington State syrah bottles, from Covey Run Winery Washington State 2002 ($9; “sweet, straightforward”) to Dunham Cellars Columbia Valley 2001 ($90; “stunningly complex nose…intense, elegant, concentrated and fine”).

Memories: Opinion Stew
In Hopkins County, Texas, folks argue over important things—like squirrel and okra. By Salley Shannon
Recipe: Hopkinds County Stew (“sissified” with chicken and no okra)

Lives: Building Something: Cristiano van Zeller is helping redefine the Douro. By Bruce Schoenfeld
Tasting notes: van Zeller’s wines are hard to find in the U.S. Five are reviewed here; look for C.V. Douro 2003 ($75, “soft and elegant”) or Quinto do Vale D. Maria LBV Unfiltered 1999 ($27.50, “intense and plummy”)

Source: Beth Kimmerle deals in regional retro candy bars: order the Big Tips Candy Collection from www.bigtipscandy.com. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Vinegar Stew: The Philippine national dish is garlicky, peppery, and tart. By Amy Besa
Recipe: Adobong Baboy (pork adobo)

Master of the Mosel: Manfred Prüm crafts what may be Germany’s finest Riesling. By Michael Steinberger
Recipes: Matjestartar, Geraucherter Lachs, und Shrimps auf Reibekuchen (herring tartare, smoked salmon, and shrimp on potato pancakes)
Wildschweinkeule (braised wild boar)
Wirsing (sauteed Savoy cabbage)
Ragou vom Hirschkalb (venison stew)
Spätzle (“little sparrow” noodles)
Sidebar: German Wine Terms: The basics
Sidebar: Dining Around the Mosel: restaurant recommendations
Tasting notes: 5 Prüm Rieslings, from Wehlener Kabinett 2003 ($31, “wonderfully rich…but a little flinty around the edges”) to Wehlener Sonnenuhr Auslese 2003 ($52, “very ripe and concentrated”)


Down East Autumn: Hunting grouse and woodcock in the Maine woods and fields is a family tradition—and a hit-and-miss affair. By George Semler
Recipes: Blueberry Pancakes
Roast Grouse
Baked Beans with Grouse
Grilled Duck Breast on Toast
Lobster Fried in Butter


Mme. Chagny’s Magic Restaurant: A Brittany-born daughter of Beaujolais turns her back on Michelin stars and puts real French country cooking on the table. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Soupe d’Herbes Potageres (“pot herb” soup)
Escargots en Coquilles au Beurre d’Ail (snails in their shells with garlic butter)
Aperitif Beaujolais (beaujolais, crème de cassis, and sweet framboise liqueur)
Cuissots de Grenouilles, Jeunes Salades aux Fines Herbes (sauteed frogs’ legs with baby greens)
Pigeonneau de Grain Roti, Jus Simple (roast squab in its own juices)
Cassis en Sorbet et Glace Vanille (black currant sorbet with vanilla ice cream)


Mendoza Mountain High: In the lower reaches of the Andes, two wineries are reinventing Argentine wine with intensity and finesse. By Maricel E. Presilla
Recipes: El Arroz con Pollo de Irma (Irma’s chicken and rice)
Las Empanadas de Carne de Matilde (Matilda’s beef empanadas)
Ñoqui con Tuco (potato gnocchi with tomato sauce)
Conejo a la Cazadora (hunter’s-style rabbit)
Humita al Plato (fresh corn tamal)
Cruton de Trucha y Hongos (trout and mushroom bruschetta)
Tasting Notes: 12 wines from the Mendoza region, the best of an uneven selection, from Alamos (The Wines of Catena) Bonarda 2004 ($10, “suggesting black-curranty cabernet with a greenish tinge”) to Nicolas Catena Zapata 2001 ($90, “thick, rich, and extracted…offers plenty to think about”)
The Guide: Where to stay and eat and what to do in Mendoza


In the Saveur Kitchen: plum chutney is the essence of fall in Maine (by Melissa Hamilton); excerpt from Don’t Try This at Home: Culinary Catastrophes from the World’s Greatest Chefs; Filipinos love condiments; Argentines rely on rendered beef fat
Recipes: Plum Chutney
Kamatas at Sawsawan (Philippine chopped tomato sauce)
Pella (rendered beef fat)


Moment: Costumed NYC kids play a Halloween game with apples, 1940
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#16 User is offline   zora

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Posted 26 October 2005 - 09:00 AM

Saveur, November 2005

First: Margo True muses on how food creates community and reminds people of home--especially in New Orleans.

Fare:

Gravy Mistress: Lucretia Bingham explains how to make turkey gravy without freaking out.
Recipe: Lucretia's Gravy

Scotch Guide: Philip Hills has just published The Scotch Whiskey Directory. By Sarah Doyle Lacamoire

Summer in a Jar: Pickled peaches smooth over Southern rivalries. By John T. Edge
Recipe: Pickled Peaches

Where London Gets the Bird: The butcher Lidgates supplies Americans with their Thanksgiving turkeys. By Jenny McPhee

Thefts of the Ancients: Thousand-year-old olive trees in Apulia are under threat from fashionable northern Italians who want to buy them for their yards. By Ivar Ekman

Agenda: Kellogg's Apple Jacks trademark registered Nov. 1, 1966; Cracklin' Festival in Port Barre, La.; sweet potato festival in Kurimoto, Japan; pinot noir fest in Martinborough, NZ; Festival of the Mountain Masters, Harlan, Ky.; 3-ton salad tossing in Baguio, Philippines; fowl fest in St-Sever, France; Mark Twain's birthday, Nov. 30, 1835

One Good Bottle: Montes Purple Angel Colchagua Valley 2003 ($42) is a blend of Chile's carmenere grape with a few othersL "dark, thick, spicy, intense...a delicious monster."

Book Review: Shane Mitchell reviews The Philosopher Fish: Sturgeon, Caviar and the Geography of Desire, by Richard Adams Carey, and King of Fish:The Thousand-Year Run of Salmon, by David R. Montgomery. They're not as compelling as Kurlansky's Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World, but give good environmental background and arguments.

Kitchenwise: A Kitchen on the River: a fishing shack converted to a contemporary kitchen, with a pantry with electrical outlets for small appliances; a wine fridge; and a river view. By Kathleen Brennan


Cellar: King Lagrein
Master winemakers from Trentino-Alto Adige are working wonders with this little-known grape. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 11 Italian lagreins, plus 1 from California: Cantina Bolzano Rosso Vigneti Dolomiti "La Pergola" 2003 ($12; "intense juicy fruit; finishes with...soft tannins and a hint of sweetness"), Abbazia di Novacella Lagrein-Dunkel Riserva "Praepositus" 1999 ($34; "intense nose of toasted nuts and coffee...concentrated and chewy in the mouth"), and Mosby Red Wine "La Seduzione" 2001 ($22; the Californian: "rich, seductive, fruit-sweet....long").

Reporter: Michelin Takes a Bite Out of the Big Apple
Giles Macdonogh reports on Michelin's first assessment of NYC restos: 500 total, in all five boroughs.

Drink: Sweet Renaissance
The amazing wines of Hungary's Tokaj region are overlooked, undervalued and unique. By Patrick Matthews
Tasting notes: 14 tokajis, mostly aszús, from Hétszölö Ancien Domaine Royal Imperial Tokaj Late Harvest 2004 ($16/750ml; "lively and sweet...good grapey, fruity flavor") to Szepsy Tokaji Aszú 6 Puttonyos 1999 ($120/500ml: "rich and eszencia-sweet, with...a complex weave of fruity flavors, from dried figs to orange peel")

Source: MacArthur grant-winner Gary Nabhan is promoting an oregano grown by the Seri Indians of Mexico, available through the Center for Sustainable Environments. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: The Greater Goo: Few desserts are as irresistible as sticky toffee pudding. By Laurie Werner
Recipe: Sticky Toffee Pudding

Kentucky Home: At William and Rena McClure's, Thanksgiving is a celebration of family, food and a lifetime of self-sufficiency. By Christopher Hirsheimer
Recipes: Thanksgiving Roast Turkey with Corn Bread Dressing
Creamed Corn
Coleslaw
Apple Pie
Pumpkin Pie


An American Cooks in Paris: From the local market to his tiny kitchen off the boulevard Saint-Germain, a top-notch California Chef shows us how to make a perfect lunch. Detailed photos and explanations with the recipes. Alas, some rely on tasty French pork. By Dorothy Kalins
Recipes: Foie Gras Pâté
Wild Mushroom Sauté
Swiss Chard Gratin
Roast Pork with Fennel, Garlic and Herbs
A Good Green Salad
Sidebar: The Connoisseur's Paris: Where to Eat and Shop


My Life with Rice: Mei Chin hated rice and couldn't cook it--very, very bad for a Chinese woman. But she got over it.
Recipes: Xiangchang Xia Chaofan (Chinese sausage and shrimp fried rice)
Ganbel Huasheng Zhou (dried scallop and peanut congee)
Zongzi (sticky rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves)
Guoba Xiefen Maodou (crab and soybean stir-fry over sizzling rice)


Cullen Skink at the Chip: Scotland does have a cuisine, and for more than 30 years, an idiosyncratic restaurant (the Ubiquitous Chip) in Glasgow has been keeping it delicious--and up-to-date. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Cullen Skink (smoked haddock soup)
Brandade Fried in Beer Batter with Cauliflower Cream
Vegetarian Haggis with Neeps 'n' Tatties
Cod with Chile Oil on a Bed of Clapshot (potatoes mashed with turnips) with Fried Arame (seaweed)
Braised Ox Heart with Riesling-Washed Cabbage and Skirlie Stovies (oatmeal, potatoes and bacon)
Caledonian Oatmeal Ice Cream with Fruit Compote
The Guide: Where to stay and eat in Glasgow


In the Saveur Kitchen: The Ubiquitous Chip makes tuiles in the shape of forks; Vivian Jao sympathized with Mai Chin's rice hatred, and recommends an automatic cooker
Recipes: Fork-Shaped Tuiles
Zhenzhu Rouwan (pearl rice balls, aka porcupine balls)


Moment: Korean housewives make kimchi en masse outside City Hall in Seoul

This post has been edited by zora: 26 October 2005 - 09:01 AM

Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#17 User is offline   zora

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Posted 29 November 2005 - 10:31 AM

Saveur, December 2005

First: Margo True talks about the difficulty of learning techniques from TV, cookbooks, and magazines--nothing substitutes for the sure hand of a tutor.

Fare:

Ciao, Bue Grasso!: Alan Tardi visits Carru for the Fair of the Fat Ox and a serving of bollito misto.

Secret Garden: The now-defunct Garden Cafeteria on NYC's Lower East Side was the haunt of Jewish journos. By Michelle Golden

Tubular Titan: H. David Dalquist invented the bundt pan for the Minneapolis Hadassah. By Kelly Alexander
Recipe: Lillian Bogas's Harvey Wallbanger Bundt Cake

Agenda: Winter ale fest in Dovercourt, England; Pohutukawa Fest in NZ celebrates kiwi cuisine; wild game dinner in Graham, Tex.; Igls, Austria, does Krampuslaufen for good and bad boys and girls; Le Fave di San Nicola in Pollutri, Italy, thanks Saint Nicolas for saving the town from famine; Jim Harrison, author of The Raw and the Cooked, born Dec. 11, 1937; coffeehouse proclamation in London, Dec. 29, 1675; mochi-pounding gathering in Hawaii

One Good Bottle: Bollinger Special Cuvee ($52) was cheap in the 80s, but still worth seeking out: "dry almost to the point of astringency...hint of warm brioche"

Ubiquitous Sweets: Alisa Weinstein reports on the dazzling varieties of mithai in Pakistan.

Book Review: Five gems from the holiday cookbook wave: Camas Davis reviews Simple Soirees, by Peggy Knickerbocker, full of seasonal menus for dinner parties, plus tips for executing. Vivian Jao reviews Washoku: Recipes from the Japanese Home Kitchen, by Elizabeth Andoh, who learned from her Japanese mother-in-law. Margo True praises Suzanne Goin's Sunday Suppers at Lucques: Goin is "a girl obsessed with cooking." Recipes: A Collection for the Modern Cook, by Susan Spungen, sounds dull and finicky but is actually quite reliable and pleasurable, especially for entertaining; reviewed by Caroline Campion. Margo True likens May Bsisu's The Arab Table: Recipes & Culinary Traditions to learning from a chatty immigrant friend; Bsisu draws from all over the Middle East.

The Saveur List: 12 olive oils from surprising places: Tunisia, Texas, Israel, New Zealand, Australia, etc.

Cellar: White Star
Blanc de blancs champagne is excellent and varied. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 bottles, from Jean Milan Speciale NV ($47; "nutmeg, lime, flowers....a vigor bordering on exuberance") to Krug Clos du Mesnil 1992 ($586; "kaleidoscopic nose....Lush and creamy in the mouth....Distinctly nutty on the finish")

Memories: Late-Night Chitlins with Momma
Pig intestines brought Audrey Petty closer to her mother; they also signified Southern black identity in integrated Chicago.
Recipe: Chitlins

Lives: The Lord of Chateau Bel-Air
In one of LA's toniest neighborhoods, a retired aerospace leader has become a full-time vigneron. By Colman Andrews

Source: Hail, Grenache!
Is it time to worship these wines openly, wonders James Stonehill. Join Grateful Palate's Grenache of the Month Club.

Classic: Sour and Spice
The fiery, vinegary Chinese soup makes everything nice
Recipe: Suan La Tang (hot and sour soup)

Caviar, Grandfather Frost, and Fireworks: On New Year's Eve in post-Communist Mosco, the food is abundant and delicious and the parties are raucously joyful. By Catherine Cheremeteff Jones
Recipes: Yaitsa Farshirovanniye Ikroi (caviar-stuffed eggs)
Salat Olivier (Russian-style salad)
Zhulien (mushroom casserole)
Seliodka pod Shuboi (herring "under a fur coat")
Svinina v Kislo-Sladkom Souse (pork stew with dried apricots and prunes)
Khvorost (Russian twig cookies)
The Guide: where to stay and eat in Moscow


The Mother of Mexican Cuisine: A culinary educator and pioneering author, Josefina Velazquez de Leon was the first person to popularize her country's regional foods. By Mauricio Velazquez de Leon
Recipes: Sopa de Fideo (vermicelli soup)
Albondigas en Chipotle (meatballs in chipotle sauce)
Quesadillas Potosinas (San Luis Potosi–style quesadillas)
Chiles en Vinagre (pickled chiles)
Pampano Empapelado (pompano in parchment paper)
Aguacates Tampico (Tampico-style avocados)


The Pleasures of Strudel: Making this buttery, flaky pastry can be almost as much fun, and as addictive, as eating it: detailed instructions and illustrations from Austrian expert Meta Kulnigg. By Margo True
[I cannot resist editorializing here: If you're really interested in making strudel, you must also read Robert Farrar Capon's The Supper of the Lamb, which is a marvelous book that happens to have a highly detailed--not to mention philosophical and entertaining--interlude on strudel-making.]
Recipes: Strudelteig (strudel dough)
Apfelstrudel (apple strudel)
Weichselstrudel (morello cherry strudel)
Sauerkrautstrudel (sauerkraut and bacon strudel)
Milchrahmstrudel (custard strudel)
Sidebar: Vienna's Finest: where to go for the city's best store-bought strudels


Basques on the Range: The Viscayan sheepherders who began settling in Boise, Idaho, more than a century ago brought along their language, their hearty food, and their exuberant sense of hospitality. By Lynne Sampson
Recipes: Basque Red Bean Soup
Epi's Beef Tongue
Rice Pudding
Lamb Txilindron (lamb stew)
Bakailao Koskera (cod in white wine sauce with clams and white asparagus)
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Boise


In the Saveur Kitchen: Russian cabbage-and-onion pie makes a good afternoon snack; Nancy Lindsay recalls how her dog helped hide a tureen of spilled gravy from guests; chitlins-prep techniques
Recipe: Kulebiaka s Kapustoi (cabbage and onion pie)

Moment: Signore Claus and his donkey take a snack break, Dec. 22, 1959 in Rome

This post has been edited by zora: 29 November 2005 - 10:32 AM

Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#18 User is offline   zora

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Posted 27 January 2006 - 08:34 PM

Saveur, February 2006

The Saveur 100

First: Colman Andrews reports that Edible Ojai’s inclusion in the Saveur 100 two years ago inspired numerous spinoffs.

Fare:

The Fabulous Baker Boys: Four friends from Belgrade run Pain d’Avignon in Cape Cod. By Amy Wilensky

Family Style: Shelley Pannill Stein praises family cookbooks, especially one she received from her sisters and mother as a wedding present.
Recipe: Detering Ranch Pecans
Sidebar: Making Books: Resources for designing your own family cookbook


Don’t Bogart Those Zonkers, My Friend: Colman Andrews discovers the classic stoner snack is back on the shelves.

What? No Big Gulp? Taiwan’s 7-Eleven stores dish up excellent hot lunches, even Chinese New Year feasts. By Rich Lang

Agenda: Niagara icewine festival; Hershey Co. est. Jan. 15, 1894; Benjamin Franklin born Jan. 17—but what year?; Mendocino crab and wine days; Pies on Parade in Rockland, Me.; Pahimis coffee festival in the Philippines; black truffle fest in Norcia, Italy; Ybor City, Fla., celebrates Cuban heritage;

One Good Bottle: Simsonig Chenin Blanc 2005 ($9), from Stellenbosch, is reminiscent of apricot nectar.

Book Review: Diane Kochilas reviews three new books on Spanish cuisine: Tapas: A Taste of Spain in America, by Jose Andres, The Cuisines of Spain: Exploring Regional Home Cooking, by Teresa Barrenechea, and The New Spanish Table, by Anya von Bremzen. Andres’s book does a good job bringing restaurant cuisine home, while Barrenechea’s tome is a solid, almost scholarly reference. But von Bremzen’s best combines the two trends.
Recipes: Gildas (Basque skewers, from von Bremzen)
Flan (caramel custard, from Barrenechea)
Butifarra amb Mongetes del Ganxet (Catalan pork sausage with white beans, from Andres)


Cellar: Bierzo Rising
Meet some of Spain’s best new red wines. By Roger Morris
Tasting notes: 12 wines from the Bierzo region, from Pago de Valdoneje 2003 ($12; “bright cherry and hemp aromas…a brambly, brulee finish”) to Paixar 2002 ($87; “rich, chalky, and showing a cherry flavor with white pepper underneath”).

Kitchenwise: Mexico in Manhattan: Zarela Martinez designed the floor plan of her kitchen to welcome guests but keep them from getting in the way. Bright colors and painted tiles set the tone.

Memories: Viola, the Souffle!
Dale M. Brown recalls working on the Time-Life Books Foods of the World series between 1968 and 1971.
Recipe: Souffle au Grand Marnier

Classic: Pillows of Bliss: New Mexican sopaipillas are irresistible. By Cheryl J. Foote
Recipe: Sopaipillas (New Mexican beignets)

The Saveur 100: favorite restaurants, food, drink, people, places, and things.
French farm resto La Chassagnette gets the lead; other highlights include NZ pohutukawa honey, Istanbul’s Ciya resto, Ikea food, the book Hungry Planet, fallenfruit.org, and New Orleans. (What’s with those dorky “Fusion Fun” symbols?)
Recipes: South Indian Squid Fry
Beef Tenderloin Fried with Black Pepper Sauce (Singapore Cantonese–style)
Goan Avocado Salad (from Floyd Cardoz at Tabla)
Huevos “Hacienda de Puebla” (eggs with tomatoes, black beans, and poblanos, from Mexico City breakfast spot El Cardenal)
Southern Chopped Salad (from Jim ‘n’ Nick’s Bar-B-Q in Birmingham)
Cranberry Pudding
Perde Pilavi (pilaf “veiled” in a pastry crust, from Ciya)
Parmentier de Porc Confit aux Oignons (“cottage pie” of pork confit with onions, from Le Timbre in Paris)
Ricotta Gnocchi with Spinach, Chanterelles, and Parmigiano-Reggiano (from Alex in the Wynn Las Vegas)
Hoedeopbap (Korean-style raw fish with rice and vegetables)
Fried Duck Eggs
Cheese Popovers (from BLT Steak)
Philly Cheesesteak Spring Roll (from the Four Seasons in Philadelphia)
Gazdag Ember Batyul (Hungarian “rich man’s purses” filled with paprika chicken)
Galletas de Encurtidos (olive tuiles, from El Bohio in La Mancha)
Sawagani (fried Japanese freshwater hard-shell crabs)
Fritada (Ecuadoran fried pork with traditional accompaniments)
Du-Par’s Steak Pot Pie (from Du-Par’s in LA)
Chocolate Pithiviers (from
Roast Chicken and Other Stories, by Simon Hopkinson with Lindsey Bareham)

In the Saveur Kitchen: versatile lotus root; best molds for flan; duck eggs.
Recipe: Lotus Root Chips

Moment: a ladies’ picnic lunch on the Baltic, with blinis and vodka

This post has been edited by zora: 27 January 2006 - 08:35 PM

Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#19 User is offline   thegreatdane

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Posted 01 February 2006 - 10:35 AM

On the Saveur 100, don't overlook page 63, Kakawa Cocoa Beans. Yum. (A shameless plug for my chocolate.)

#20 User is offline   zora

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Posted 01 March 2006 - 02:50 PM

Saveur, March 2006

First: Colman Andrews says, well, duh, of course he’s part Irish.

Fare:

Move Over, Cheesecake: Cake Man Raven of Brooklyn makes a mean red-velvet cake. His customers, some famous, “don’t want no muffins.” By Jaime Joyce
Recipe: Red Velvet Cake

From Obscurity to Kansas State: Food writer Clementine Paddleford’s papers are ready to be examined at Kansas State University. By Kelly Alexander

For Your Delectation: new culinary-themed cinema: Work the Line, perhaps? Or Fatback Mountain? Hmm, no byline on this one.

Vincente Generoso: Cook, writer and character actor Vincente Schiavelli died of lung cancer the day after Christmas 2005. By Colman Andrews.

Mad for Manti: Margo True loves the Turkish dumplings, and visits a manti sweatshop.
Recipe: Manti (Turkish dumplings with yogurt sauce)

Agenda: apple and grape harvest festival in Stanthorpe, Australia; 800-foot-long lunch table in Napier, NZ; Kona brewers fest, Hawaii; In Vino wine fest in Belgrade; Catfish fest in Washington, La.; Forrest Edward Mars born March 21, 1904; Oyster Olympics in Seattle; fugu arrived in the US, March 29, 1989

One Good Bottle: Louis M. Martini Alexander Valley cabernet sauvignon reserve 2001 ($35): rich velvety texture and “the scent of a suede-lined leather cuff link box.”

Book Review: Shane Mitchell reviews the new edition of Paula Wolfert’s The Cooking of Southwest France and loves it—it’s not for anyone look for anything quick or easy, though. A whole section is devoted to cassoulet.
Recipe: Gateau de Cuisse de Poulette aux Pommes de Terre et aux Artichauts
(chicken, potato and artichoke cake)


The Saveur List: 10 chocolates, all American, including that fantastic Recchiuti business. By Sierra Burnett

Kitchenwise: California transplants to the Hudson River Valley install a waist-high fireplace, inspired by The Magic of Fire, by William Rubel.

Cellar: Lean Vintages
The wines of the East Coast have…well, possibilities. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 wines from Pa., Conn., R.I., N.J., and Mass., from Sakonnet Vineyards (R.I.) Vidal Blanc 2004 ($11; “lean and taut in the mouth….Quite nice.”) to Chaddsford Winery (Pa.) Merican 2001 ($40; unusual Bordeaux blend with “sweet tobacco…cherry, mint, and tree bark….A little too spicy…”)

Source: Rising C Ranches delivers super-ripe, specialty citrus. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Burnt OfferingL “Cajun” blackened redfish is a deliciously charred treat. By Pableaux Johnson
Recipe: Blackened Redfish

Ireland from Farm to Fork
Salmon, lamb, and farmhouse cheese; innovative chefs; one of the world’s great cooking schools; delicate whiskey and hearty ale… If you’ve got an appetite, the Irish are ready for you. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Irish Stew
Colcannon
Lamb’s Liver with Whiskey and Cream
Fried Cooleeney Cheese with Beet Salad


Special sections:
County Cork: Food Capital: Its population of individualistic food-loving artisan-entrepreneurs and chefs has made this big, rich southern Irish county a gastronomic mecca.
Recipes: Nettle Soup
Spinach, Red Onion, and Coolea Cheese Tartlets with Parsley-Walnut Pesto and Olive-Crushed Potatoes
Corned Beef with Parsley Sauce, Champ, Mashed Carrots and Parsnips, and Broccoli
Panfried Sole with Garlic Butter

Seaweed and Cheese: Maja Binder and Olivier Beaujouon forage for seaweed and handcraft cheese.
Recipe: Carrageen Lemon Pots

Heart and Hearth: “Ballymaloe” is the magic word in Irish food today—the name of both Ireland’s most influential restaurant and its finest cooking school.
Recipes: Doris Grant’s Brown Bread
Hot Buttered Lobster


Ireland’s Perfect Condiment: The incredible richness and special character of Irish butter.

A Kid from the Country: One of Galway’s great culinary assets is chef turned writer Gerry Galvin, who has been called the father of Ireland’s traditional-cooking revival.
Recipes: Mussel and Oyster Hot Pot
Tipsy Puddings with Mulled Wine
Sidebar: Reinventing the Butcher Shop: James McGeough does a “prosciutto” of lamb


The Chef and His Material: At Chapter One, Ross Lewis turns the best Irish products into food both refined and homey
Recipes: Cauliflower Soup with Potato Emulsion and Crozier Blue Cheese
Rhubarb Financiers with Vanilla Ice Cream and Poached Rhubarb
Turnip and Brown Bread Soup
Sidebar: Taking Ireland Organic: a slow process, introduced by foreigners
Sidebar: The Wine of the Country: stout and whiskey
Sidebar: Otto Kunze of Otto’s Creative Catering is a farmer-restaurateur
The Guide: where to stay and eat in Ireland


Calypso, Sequins, and Spice
Driven by rhythm and fed by roti, pelau, and curried pork, all of Trinidad turns out for Carnival. By Lucretia Bingham
Recipes: Geera Pork (curried pork)
Buss-Up-Shut (griddle-cooked flatbread)
Goat Curry
Chadon Benny Sauce (culantro sauce)
Chicken Pelau
Sidebar: Party Music: all about calypso
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Trinidad


In the Saveur Kitchen: the difference between colcannon and champ, and what to do with leftovers; easy home bread the Irish way; details on culantro (Eryngium foetidum), by Sarah Breckenridge; Trinidadian kucheela blows char away, by James Osland
Recipe: Colcannon Cakes
Pint-Glass Bread
Mango Kucheela (shredded mango pickle)


In the Saveur Library: Callaloo, Calypso & Carnival, by Dave DeWitt and Mary Jane Wilan, gives geography and history along with recipes; Myrtle Allen’s Cooking at Ballymaloe House, by Myrtle Allen (Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2000), is loyal to Irish tradition.

Moment: two women enjoy sandwiches while waiting under the hairdryers in 1965 South Carolina

This post has been edited by zora: 01 March 2006 - 02:51 PM

Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#21 User is offline   zora

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Posted 14 April 2006 - 03:04 PM

Saveur, April 2006

First: James Oseland praises old-school French restaurants, where he learned to eat like a grown-up.

Fare:

Campus Chow: Food carts near college campuses serve everything from bulgogi to “poor man’s pizza.” By JJ Goode

Spiny Wonder: Prickly-pear paddles are essential to Mexican cuisine, and they’re not impossible to prepare at home. By Jennifer Acosta Scott
Recipe: Nopales Salad with Jalapeño Dressing

Googledy-Gook: Colman Andrews feeds foreign recipes through the insta-translator. Hilarity ensues.

Pacific Paella: A bizarre restaurant in Tonga conjures Spain, sort of. By Belle Caseres

Cholesterol Special: how to make Uncle John’s easter pizza rustica. By Marc Vassallo
Recipe: Pizza Rustica

Agenda: Lamb Cook-Off in Vail, Colo, April 5; National Grits Festival in Warwick, Ga., April 8; Viernes Santo / Good Friday in Cuzco, Peru, April 14; anniversary of the Dagwood Sandwich, April 16, 1936; Sugar Festival in Clewiston, Fla., April 22; SAgra del Carciofo Romanesco, roman artichoke fest in Ladispoli, Italy, April 21–23; Justin “I gar-on-tee” Wilson born April 24, 1914; La Fete de la Coquille St-Jacques, St-Quay-Portrieux, France April 29–30

One Good Bottle: Ahcaval Ferrer Quimera 2003 ($38), a malbec blend that’s “luscious with opulently rounded fruit”

Book Review: Kelly Alexander reviews the new edition of Paula Wolfert’s The Jewish Kitchen, by Clarissa Hyman and Peter Cassidy: a good effort at a near-impossible task, with some imprecision and odd shifts in tone. Buy it for the stories as much as for the recipes. On a side note: Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South, by Cohen Ferris, is an excellent study.
Recipe: Jennifer Hyman’s Beet Jam

Kitchenwise: Fiona and Gordon Hamersley redid their kitchen after 11 years: two sinks, all utensils hung on S-hooks, and soapstone counters. By Kathleen Brennan

Cellar: Swashbuckler
Madiran is the dark, spicy, tannic expression of the French southwest. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 10 madirans from France, plus two tannat-based bottles, one from Uruguay and one from California: Chateau de Perron 2001 ($13) is “fruit-sweet on the palate, with a blackberry and graphite core,” while Chateau Montus Cuvée Prestige 2002 ($60) has “nutty highlights, leading to bright grape-cherry flavors with hints of citrus peel”

Memories: Jean Freas reminisces about her life with sculptor David Smith, who always carried a head of garlic in his breast pocket, and the remarkable meals he used to cook for her.

Drink: Campbeltown Original
In Scotland’s “other” whisky region, Springbank does everything its own way. By Colman Andrews

Source: Destino alfajores recreate the dulce de leche richness of this South American classic. Order from Gump’s San Francisco. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Wings of Desire: Spicy and addictive, Buffalo wings are serious business in their hometown. By Denise Mickelsen
Recipe: Buffalo Wings

The Flavors of Home
At the trattorias of Florence, locals and visitors alike eat simply, heartily, and extremely well. By Lori Zimring de Mori
Recipes: Arista di Maiale (roasted herb-stuffed pork loin)
Fagioli Sgranati (white beans with sage)
Piselli Freschi (fresh peas with prosciutto)
Pappa al Pomodoro (bread and tomato soup)
Insalata di Trippa (cold tripe salad)
Pappardelle all’Anatra (broad noodles with duck sauce)
Fritto Misto di Coniglio e Verdure (fried rabbit and vegetables)
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Florence


The World of Hummus
From cafes in Jericho to suburban party platters, the alchemic mixture of chickpeas, lemon juice, sesame paste, and garlic is a savory staple. By Alia Yunis
Recipes: Hummus bi Tahini (hummus with sesame paste)
Hummus ma Lahma (hummus with ground beef)
Black Bean Hummus
Masbaha (hummus with whole chickpeas)


Vive le Restaurant
Manhattan’s Le Veau d’Or is an unapologetic reminder of the day when fine dining meant wine sauces and white gloves. By James Villas
Recipes: Poussins en Cocotte “Bonne Femme” (poussins with bacon and mushroom sauce)
Celeri Remouldade (celeriac salad)
Escalopines de Veau (veal scallops with lemon-parsley sauce)
Tripes a la Mode de Caen (stewed tripe with calvados)
Oeufs a la Neige (floating island)
Sidebar: Keepers of the Flame: some other throwback French restaurants in NYC. By Sarah DiGregorio


The End of Smorrebrod?
The traditional Danish feast of “buttered bread” sandwiches—which are in fac hearty, varied knife-and-fork extravaganzas—is an endangered culinary tradition. By Regina Schrambling [whose knack for the negative is still strong]
Recipes: Roget al Smorrebrod (smoked eel smorrebrod)
Sommer Kartoffel Smorrebrod (summer potato smorrebrod)
Rejer og Aeg Smorrebrod (shrimp and egg smorrebrod)
Princess Alexandra Smorrebrod (salmon and wasabi cream cheese smorrebrod)
Gravad Helleflynder (fennel-cured halibut)
Gravad Helleflynder Smorrebrod (fennel-cured halibut smorrebrod)
Roastbeef Smorrebrod med Remoulade (roast beef smorrebrod with remoulade sauce)
Ansjos Smorrebrod (anchovy smorrebrod)
Th Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Copenhagen


In the Saveur Kitchen: pickled turnips are a standard Middle Eastern side; homemade pita is easy; rabbit stock uses up the bits from fritto misto
Recipes: Lifit (pickled turnips)
Khubz ’aadi (pita bread)
Rabbit Stock


Moment: stilt-wearing street performers snack on the Ramblas in Barcelona
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#22 User is offline   zora

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Posted 08 May 2006 - 09:21 PM

Saveur, May 2006

First: James Oseland loves lemons, especially the Meyers.

Fare:

Corn Tapas, Anyone? Lisa Abend reports on Spaniards’, especially Asturians’, adoption of corn in cuisine.

Act I: Cue Fork: The Grid Iron Theatre Company does food-based productions. By Evan Rail
Recipe: Revuelto de Cebolla y Cabrales Sobre Tortos Crujiente de Maiz (corn cakes with eggs scrambled with onions and cabrales)

Jersey Pride: Trenton’s hometown hero is hickory-smoked “pork roll” sausage. By Rick Nichols

Funky Fish: Sushi’s ancestor, funa-zushi, is a fermented delicacy. By Hiroko Shimbo

Pass the Shredded Wheat Pilaf, Please: Breakfast cereal recipes collected in The Breakfast Cereal Gourmet, by David Hoffman. By Kate Fox
Recipe: Roasted Poblano Meat Loaf

Agenda: Asparagus Festival in Schwetzingen, Germany, on May 6; Festival of San Isidro May 10–20 in Madrid; Seattle Cheese Festivel May 13–14; Hadong Mountain Dew Tea Festival in Korea, May 18–21; Mike’s Festival, celebrating a headless chicken, in Fruita, Colo., May 19–20; anniversary of H.M.S. Salisbury scurvy test, May 20, 1747; Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit born May 24, 1686, in Gdansk; Kodiak Crab Festival May 25–29 in Alaska

One Good Bottle: Shenandoah Vineyards Rezerve Barbera 2003 ($24): “big, brawling and manly….”

Book Review: Margo True reviews Mangoes & Curry Leaves: Culinary Travels Through the Great Subcontinent, by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid, and finds it engagingly written and informative, with adventurous recipes, if occasionally confusing in its use of photos and first-person narrative.
Recipe: Shallot Sambhar

The Saveur List: 7 Doughnut Shops. By John T. Edge

Kitchenwise: The Simple Life: Deborah Madison’s tiny kitchen in Galisteo, N.M., is brightly colored and open to the seating area. By Kathleen Brennan

Cellar: Out of the Damp
Albariño, from lush, green Galicia, is a savory, acidic and sometimes very serious wine. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 albariños/alvarinhos from Spain, Portugal and California, from Condes de Albarei 2004 ($15; “intense, soft, polished, persistently peachy”) to Havens Carneros Napa Valley Albariño 2005 ($24; “very tight, intense, masculine and mineral rich, with a dry, grippy finish”).

Source: Come and Take It is a classic Lone Star cocktail mix. By Kathleen Brennan

Reporter: A Corsican Passion: An annual competition honors the French island’s traditional cheese makers. By Marie-Pascale Lescot

Classic: Mediterranean Roll: Dolmades are a Greek taverna standby. By Diane Kochilas
Recipe: Dolmades (grape leaves stuffed with rice and raisins)

North Island Bounty: The Matakana farmers’ market, in New Zealand’s northern reaches, is a treasury of fresh, flavorful foodstuffs—and a reminder to locals of just how lucky they are. By Caroline Campion
Recipes: Macadamia-Crusted Lamb with Honeygar Reduction
Green Bean and Radish Salad
Muesli
Cockle Fritters with Aioli
Blueberry Brioche
Zucchini Tart with Feta
Sidebar: Kiwi Queen Bee: BeesOnline is a resto, shop and honey production center in Waimauku
The Guide: Where to stay and eat and what to do in Matakana


Land of Lemons: The citrus groves of Italy’s Sorrento Peninsula produce an intensely aromatic fruit that’s at the heart of many of the region’s favorite foods. By Lorraine Alexander
Recipes: Insalata di Limoni e Buccia di Arancia (lemon salad with orange zest)
Pollo al Limone (grilled chicken with lemon leaves)
Limoncello (lemon liqueur)
Risotto al Limone (lemon risotto)
Concerto di Sapori e Profumi al Limone (lemon custard with dried lemon slices and lemon fritters)
Mozzarella al Limone (mozzarella grilled with lemon leaves)
Sidebar: Where to stay and eat and what to do in the Sorrento Peninsula and Capri


Pork Chops in Paradise: Honolulu’s Side Street Inn plays host to some of Oahu’s greatest chefs—and some of its best meals. By Shane Mitchell
Recipes: Side Mui (cocktail)
Lilikoi Baby Back Ribs
Fried Rice
Furikake-Crusted Ahi with Spicy Mustard Drizzle
Macaroni Salad
Panfried Pork Chops
Pocho Clams


Mackerel Punts and Pilchards: Fishing is a way of life in the village port of Newlyn, on Cornwall’s rocky coast. By Megan Wetherall
Recipes: Fish Cakes
Crab Sandwiches
Saffron Buns
Cornish Pasties
Fish Pie
The Guide: Where to stay and eat and what to do in Newlyn


In the Saveur Kitchen: versatile NZ corn relish goes in toast; all about lemon leaves; li hing mui is ground from dried plum flavored with salt, licorice and saccharine
Recipe: Corn Relish

Moment: cowboy extras, and Iron Eyes Cody, take a lunch break at the Universal Studios commissary
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#23 User is offline   cigalechanta

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Posted 30 May 2006 - 08:03 AM

I hope it is ok to post this here.
The June American Sauveur has voted Rabenal of the L'Atelier in Arles as best chef in the world.

http://tinyurl.com/qtjjp
Sharing food with another human being is an intimate act that should not be indulged in lightly....MFK Fisher

#24 User is offline   zora

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Posted 05 June 2006 - 10:52 AM

Saveur, June/July 2006

First: Colman Andrews recounts how the Saveur staff could turn on a dime to get the story about Philippe Rochat into the issue at the last minute.

Fare:

Rule, Brittania!: Brittania & Co., a timeless Irani lunch cafe, has served Parsi food to Mumbai workers since 1923. By Melanie Mize Renzulli
Recipe: Sali Chicken (chicken stew with potato sticks)

Curious Cutlery: A new exhibition of American tableware at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum goes way beyond the knife and fork. By Darra Goldstein

Dueling Interns: Saveur imagines its own cutthroat reality TV show, in which its interns must not be vegetarians, and must know how to pronounce the name of the magazine.

Nothing Personal, Trigger: Amy Standen reports on the use of horsemeat in Slovenia.

Camelot’s Napery: Napkins with a Twist: Fabulous Folds with Flair for Every Occasion shows how to set the table a la Jackie Kennedy.

Agenda: Okmulgee Pecan Festival, in Okla., June 1-3; Rosy Rhubarb Festival in Shedden, Ont., June 9-11; Midsommar Festival in Stromsburg, “the Swede capital of Nebraska,” June 16-18; World Stinging Nettle Eating Championships in Marshwood Vale, England, June 17; 100th anniversary of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30; Percy Spencer, inventor of the microwave, born July 19, 1894; Le Championnat du Monde de Cracher de Noyaux de Pruneaux, a prune-pit-spitting contest in Sainte Livrade-sur-Lot, France, July 29; Oxnard Salsa Festival, July 29–30;

One Good Bottle: Domaine Stephane Aladame Montagny Les Coeres 2003 ($25): “an unusual spicy nose”

Book Review: Warren Shultz reviews two books on the politics of food: Jay Weinstein’s The Ethical Gourmet is relatively informative and balanced. Fields of Plenty: A Farmer’s Journey in Search of Real Food and the People Who Grow It, by Michael Ableman, is more black-and-white, but inspirational.
Recipe: Multigrain Buttermilk Waffles with Poppy Seeds

Kitchenwise: Kitchen designer Joanne Hudson’s own space has a 15-foot-long island. Traffic flow is maintained with ample space between cooking and cleanup areas, and a separate “drink station.” By Kathleen Brennan

Cellar: White Rock
Chenin blanc, formerly known as steen in South Africa, might turn out to be that country’s new star wine. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 chenin blancs from South Africa, from Ken Forrester Petit Chenin 2005 ($10; “restrained, elegant nose....plush on the palate”) to De Trafford Straw Wine 2003 ($45/375ml; “honeysuckle dominates the nose....with terrific cirus, apricot and butterscotch flavors”)

Essay: The Joy of Salad
Kelly Alexander expounds on the complexities of summer salads.

Reporter: Deeper into Sherbet
In a story that smacks more of Cook’s Illustrated, Elmer R. Grossman praises sherbet and develops his own ideal recipe.
Recipe: Mango Sherbet

Drink: Chardonnay Royalty
From modest beginnings came “America’s greatest white wine estate.” By John Winthrop Haeger

Source: Chris Hogue, of Bethesda, Md., makes the ultimate crab cakes. Order from www.chrismarketplace.com. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Cool Potatos
French-sounding vichysoisse is as American as apple pie. By Todd Coleman
Recipe: Vichysoisse (creamy chilled potato and leek soup)

Scottish Summer Berries
A childhood spent on farms near Dundee and in Mum’s kitchen left a London chef with a taste for fruit tarts, shortcakes, and other seasonal delights. By Jeremy Lee
Recipes: Raspberry Shortcakes
Strawberry and Hazelnut Meringue Cake
Berry Jelly
Raspberry Brulee
Raspberry Trifle


Swiss Hit
In a once legendary restaurant near Lausanne, Philippe Rochat has become quite possibly the greatest chef you’ve never heard of. By Colman Andrews
Recipes: Grosses Asperges Vertes a l’Oscietre (asparagus with osetra caviar)
Tarte Fine Croustillante de Morilles aux Fevettes (morel tarts with baby fava beans)
Hatelet de Ris de Veau Roti au Pimento del Piquillos (roasted sweetbreads on a skewer with piquillo pepper sauce)
Rosace de Fraises (strawberry “rose”)
Sidebar: Your Three-Star Kitchen: Why is it useful to print such ridiculously complicated recipes? So home cooks can steal ideas and flavors.


Nutmeg Islands
Indionesia’s tiny Banda archipelago is home to one of the world’s most revered spices—and one of its most lavishly seasoned cuisines. By James Oseland
Recipes: Kare Ikan (fish curry with potatoes)
Nasi Kuning (festive yellow rice)
Teh Halia (spice ginger–palm sugar drink)
Spekkuk Bumbu (Indonesian spice cake)
Sasatay (Banda-style tuna falafel)
Ikan Bumbu Rujak (spice-braised tuna)
Kacang Panjang Kecap (long beans with sweet soy sauce)
Sidebar: The Spice Islands Pantry: ten essentials, from tirassi (dried shrimp paste) to pala (nutmeg)
Sidebar: Banda’s Amazing Spice: all about nutmeg
The Guide: where to stay in the Banda Islands


The Sacred Feast
Food and music feed the soul at this annual celebration in rural Alabama. By Kathryn Eastburn
Recipes:
Fresh Peach Ice Cream
Pulled Pork Barbecue
Poor Man’s Caviar
Sweet Potato Cobbler
Sandy’s Baked Beans
Refrigerator Rolls
Fruit Punch


In the Saveur Kitchen: take fried shallots out of oil a bit sooner than you think; how to beat egg whites perfectly; all about citric acid—which can even be used to make “lemonade”
Recipes: Bawang Gorneg (fried shallots)

In the Saveur Library: Tropical Herbs & Spices, by Wendy Hutton, is an excellent guide to exotic flavors.

Moment: American bicyclists in the Tour de France framed by grapes.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#25 User is offline   zora

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  • Location:Astoria, NYC

Posted 13 August 2006 - 07:56 AM

Saveur, September 2006

First: Colman Andrews explains why it took so long for the mag to cover Turkey: just trying to get it right. Notably, he realizes it's a country to do numerous articles on, like France, Italy, and China.

Fare:

Small and Savory: The Östermalms food hall in Stockholm reveals many wonders. By Kelly Alexander

Boys in the Kitchen: Tim Allis recounts a gay men's cooking class: it can bring partners together.

Good Nose: Training a dog to sniff out TCA, the contaminant that causes corking. By Emily Kaiser

That Tart: The frequently requested recipe from May 2006's New Zealand story.
Recipe: Portuguese Custard Tarts

From the Spice Islands: Saveur executive editor James Oseland's new book is Cradle of Flavor: Home Cooking from the Spice Islands of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. By Colman Andrews
Recipe: Chicken Satay

Not That Kind of Acid: Summery blackberry syrup is worth the trouble. By Shane Mitchell
Recipe: Blackberry Acid

Agenda: La Fete de L'ail Rose in Lautrec, France, Aug. 4; Alfestival in Ahus, Sweden, celebrates silver eels Aug. 5; Huckleberry Festival in Swan Lake, Mont., Aug. 12; Lewis and Clark Festival in Yankton, S. Dak., celebrates buffalo Aug. 26-27; Marion Popcorn Festival in Marion, Ohio, Sept. 7-9; Pizzafest in Naples, Italy, Sept. 7-17; hand-cranked ice cream maker patent issued Sept. 9, 1843; John "Johnny Appleseed" Chapman born Sept. 26, 1774

One Good Bottle: Albert Mann Auxerrois Vieilles Vignes 2004 ($19) is "delicious…a little oily and just acidic enough."

Book Review: Shane Mitchell reviews Bill Buford’s Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany and sees it as a romance about big men with big appetites, not really a study of Italian food.


Kitchenwise: Manhattan restaurateur Michael Bonadies redesigned his small kitchen in New Jersey for maximum efficiency: drawers in the kick space, an easy-to-reach garbage can, and lots of lighting.

Cellar: Cabernet Mountain
After phylloxera, Prohibition, and neglect, one of the Napa Valley's least accessible wine areas is now thriving. By Roger Morris
Tasting notes: 12 wines from the Spring Mountain regions, from Terra Valentine Cabernet Sauvignon 2002 ($35, "lively fragrances…deep and rich") to Juslyn Vineyards Proprietary Red 2002 ($90, a blend with "a lovely floral oak nose, very ripe blackberry fruit, and firm tannins").

Reporter: The Importance of Corn: An innovative gardening program in northern Arizona is helping the Navajo rediscover the foods that have nourished them. By Stephanie Woodard

Memories: Are You Being Served? Indrani Sen recalls the surprising relationship with the servants in her grandmother's kitchen in India.
Recipe: Khichuri (dal, rice, and vegetable porridge)

Source: Scottish Gourmet imports delicately sweet Scottish langoustines. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Crisp Charisma: Sicilian "tubes" are America's favorite Italian pastry. By Eugenia Bone
Recipe: Cannoli

Pacific Treasure
Vancouver Island is emerging as the West Coast's new epicurean mecca. By Max Alexander
Recipes: Whole Wheat Crostini with Creamed Chanterelles
Grilled Oysters Wrapped in Alaria Seaweed
Salmon Glazed with Rosemary- and Lemon-Infused Honey
Sooke Harbour House Duck with Duck Jus and Green Beans
Polenta Fries with Spicy Garlic Dipping Sauce
Water Buffalo Yogurt Panna Cotta with Raspberry Puree
Sidebar: Island Wines: Blue Grouse 2003 (pinot gris), Venturi-Schulze 2002 Indigo (schonburger), plus some pinot noirs and viogniers.
The Guide: Where to stay and eat and what to do on Vancouver Island


A Tale of Tofu
In Zhangguying, Chicna, this versatile ingredient is the soul of local cooking. By Fuchsia Dunlop
Recipes: Xiang Gan Zi Chao La Rou (stir-fried smoky bacon with smoked tofu)
Jia Chang Dou Fu (Hunanese home-style tofu)
Fu Ru Jiao Si Chao Tan Cai (water spinach with garlic and fermented tofu)
Zhangguying You Dou Fu (Zhangguying-style braised fried tofu)
Fu Zhu Pai Gu Tang (spareribs and dried tofu stick soup)
Sidebar: A Guide to Chinese Tofu: dried tofu sticks (fu zhu), firm tofu (dou fu), smoked (la dou fu, la gan zi), flavored (lu dou fu, dou fu gan), fermented (mei dou fu, dou fu ru), silken (sui dou fu), and deep-fried (you dou fu, dou pao)

Seaweed and Cheese: Maja Binder and Olivier Beaujouon forage for seaweed and handcraft cheese.
Recipe: Carrageen Lemon Pots

The Turkish Teacher
In the ancient city of Konya, Nevin Halici brings together the rich and spiritual foods of her native land. By Margo True
Recipes: Gül Yaprakli Marul Salatasi (rose petal salad with parsley and mint)
Tava Kebapli Bulgur Pilavi (panfried lamb kebabs with bulgur pilav)
Tutmac Corbasi (lamb and yogurt soup)
Kahve (Turkish coffee)
Kösk Kebabi (lamb kebabs with eggplant)
Badem Helvasi (almond halvah)
Sidebar: Home Cooking in a Konya Restaurant: Kösk Konya Mutfagi (Konya Pavilion Kitchen)
The Guide: where to stay and eat and what to do in Konya


Friday Night Fish Fry
Milwaukee's weekly food gatherings are a delicious, down-home tradition. By Daphne Beal
Recipes: Beer-Battered Haddock
Brandy Old-Fashioned
German Coleslaw
German Potato Pancakes
Carrot Cake
The Guide: Where to stay and eat in Milwaukee


In the Saveur Kitchen: The beauty and variety of Turkish breakfasts, by Margo True; frying dried spices in oil (tarka) is the essence of Indian food, by Todd Coleman; the evolution of the maraschino cherry, by Liz Pearson
Recipe: Mirtoga (browned-flour scrambled eggs)

Moment: Chicago White Sox fan with one of those double-beer-can-holder hats.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#26 User is offline   zora

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Posted 03 October 2006 - 04:24 PM

Saveur, October 2006

First: Todd Coleman relates how his Butt Rub got mistaken for bomb materials on the flight back from Florida.

Fare:

A Backpacker's Banquet: Andy Isaacson explains how he rolled peanut butter, bananas and sticky rice into the "falang roll" of Laos
Recipe: Falang Roll (foreigner roll)

Truculent but Tender: Paul Adams describes eating an unfriendly llama.

G.I. Grub: Todd Coleman admits he wanted to be a military chef, and reviews How to Feed an Army: Recipes and Lore from the Front Lines, by J.G. Lewin and P.J. Huff.
Recipe: Shit on a Shingle (creamed chipped beef on toast)

What Would James Bond Think? Egregious wine and booze blunders in popular spy novels.

Agenda: California Avocado Festival in Carpinteria, Calif., Oct. 6-8; Dan Siruna—"day of the fish" in Budva, Montenegro, Oct. 7; Oktoberfest started Oct. 12, 1810, in Munich; Festivals Acadiens in Lafayatte, La., Oct. 13-15; Turkey Testicle Festival in Byron, Ill., Oct. 14; Doburoku Matsuri (sake festival) in Shirakwago, Japan, Oct. 14-19; Foire de la Chataigne (chestnut fest) in Mourjou, France, Oct. 21-22; Joe Carcione, radio promoter of "vedja-tobbles", born Oct. 31, 1914

One Good Bottle: Oakville Ranch Napa Valley Field Blend 2004 ($30) is "juicy, fruity, vaguely Italian-tasting"

Book Review: Kenneth Wapner reviews Hiroko Shimbo’s The Sushi Experience—it's very thorough and packed with useful tips.

The Saveur List: 5 Food Towns: markets and restaurants in Apalichola, Fla., Ashland, Ore., Burlington, Vt., Chapel Hill, N.C., and Lawrence, Kan.

Kitchenwise: Knot's Landing star John Pleshette also happens to be a practiced cook. His super-organized kitchen has a custom maple center table, lots of pull-out drawers, custom shelves for wine and books, and a corner just for baking.

Cellar: Mistress of the Dark
Powerful aglianico softens into elegance with age. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 aglianico-based wines from Campania and Basilicata, from Feudi di San Gregorio Irpinia Rubrato 2003 ($19; "a lean, inky integration of black cherry and mineral flavors") to De Conciliis Paestum Zero 2003 ($100; "incense, bay laurel, dates…on the nose; then ripe, rich, sweet, velvety…on the midpalate").

Essay: Dilbert's Kitchen: Colman Andrews laments the damage vituperative reality-chef Gordon Ramsay has done to the image of fine cooking.

Memories: Honeymoon in Yerevan: Litty Matthew recalls her first, anxious meal with her new Armenian in-laws.
Recipe: Rose Napoleons

Source: Gourmet Mushrooms is one of the largest exotic mushroom producers in the U.S.. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Vietnamese Fire: Spicy noodle soup is an invigorating brow wiper. By Andrea Nguyen
Recipe: Bun Bo Hue (Hue-style spicy beef and rice noodle soup

Wine for the Family
In California's wine country, the Robledos come together each weekend for their mother's find Mexican cooking—and to honor and strengthen a dream. By Margo True
Recipes: Posole Rojo (pork and hominy stew)
Calabaza y Camote (candied squash and sweet potatoes)
Three-Chile Salsa
Grilled Tomato Salsa
Tostadas de Ceviche de Camaron y Jaiba (shrimp and crab ceviche on fried tortillas)
Chiles Rellenos (poblano chiles stuffed with beef and cheese)
Guisada de Guilota (quail braised in tomatillo-chile sauce)
Tasting Notes: 9 wines from the Robledo Family Winery and Mi Sueno Winery.
Sidebar: The Rise of the Vineyard Worker: immigration issues in the California wine industrie


Kekfrankos from a Former Kulak
Ferenc Takler survived communism to produce glorious Hungarian wines. By Roger Morris
Recipes: Ozporkolt (venison goulash)
Sarkozi Tejfeles Bujtok (sour cream rolls)
Bableves (bean soup with "pinched" pasta)
Szolos Retes Bor Szoszban (grape-filled strudel with white wine sauce)
Tasting Notes: 4 Takler wines
Sidebar: The Takler Table: staples include chicken paprikash and a simple salad with a dressing of white wine vinegar and honey. By Camas Davis
Sidebar: Pal's Legacy: Pal Debreczeni was one of Hungary's best winegrowers; his wife carries on.


Prickly Sweet
With their sublime balance of succulent and sour, pineapples are the most irresistible of tropical fruits. By Kelly Alexander
Recipes: Rojak (pineapple and jicama salad)
Tepache (Mexican-style fermented pineapple drink)
Manchamanteles de Cerdo y Pollo (mole with chicken, pork, and pineapple)
Pineapple Upside-Down Cake
Sweet and Sour Pork
Seared Foie Gras with Caramelized Pineapple
Sidebar: How to Cut Up a Pineapple
Sidebar: A User's Guide: varieties and how to pick a ripe one


Serious Eating in the Sudtirol
A reunion across the generations in German-speaking Italy is fueled by dumplings, gnocchi, cured pork, and sauerkraut. By George Semler
Recipes: Spinatnocken und Tofennocken (spinach and cheese gnocchi)
Speckknodelsuppe (Tyrolean bacon-dumpling soup)
Wildschwein in Rotwein Sosse mit Polenta (wild boar and soft polenta with wine sauce)
Kartoffelteigtaschen mit Pfifferlingen (potato ravioli with chanterelle mushrooms)
Tiroler Schlachtplatte (Tyrolean butcher's platter)
Fritelle di Mele alla Cannella con Composta di Mirtilli rossi (cinnamon apple fritters with cranberry compote)
The Guide: Where to stay and eat in Sudtirol


In the Saveur Kitchen: variations on shit on a shingle, by Liz Pearson; another pineapple treat, by Sophie von Haselberg; pork hocks are cross-sections of a hog's leg, by Todd Coleman
Recipe: Apcray on Apcray (creamed tuna on toast)
Oven-Dried Spicy Pineapple Snacks


Moment: A Multan, Pakistan, vendor stacks cakes on the first night of Ramadan
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#27 User is offline   zora

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Posted 22 November 2006 - 10:57 AM

Saveur, November 2006

First: New editor in chief James Oseland recalls learning to cook from a Taiwanese friend.

Fare:

Flour Powers: Japanese comic book Yakitate!! Japane follows the adventures of a super-baker. By Emily Kaiser

Maine’s Buckwheat Treats: Acadian ployes are part pancake, part crepe, part flat bread. By Roger Doiron
Recipe: Ployes with Cretons (buckwheat crepes with pork pate)

Au Revoir, Escoffier: France’s new Le Fooding movement encourages experimentation. By Catherine Bolgar

Agenda: Rueblimart, a carrot fest in Aurau, Switzerland, Nov. 1; Greenwood County Cattlemen’s Day Celebration in Eureka, Kans., Nov. 3-4; Wurstfest in New Braunfels, Tex., Nov. 3-12; Soil Association Organic Food Festival in Glasgow, Scotland, Nov. 4-5; Sweet Potato Festival in Vardeman, Miss., Nov. 4-11; La Foire aux Harengs de Lieurey herring festival in Lieurey, France, Nov. 11; Nils Gustaf Dalen, inventor of the cast-iron stove, born Nov. 30, 1869; The Joy of Cooking first published Nov. 30, 1931

Book Review: Tamasin Day-Lewis reviews Dorie Greenspan’s Baking: From My Home to Yours, and finds it reliable precisely for the very homey recipes.
Recipe: Thanksgiving Twofer Pie

Sidebar Book: Matt and Ted Lee’s The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook: Stories and Recipes for Southerners and Would-Be Southerners covers high and low dishes alike.

The Saveur List: 10 Tabletop Goods, from Moroccan tea glasses to Chez Panisse dinnerware to Vagabond Vintage Furnishing napkins

Kitchenwise: Interior designer Jenny Rogers and her partner crafted the perfect workspace in their 500-square-foot New York City studio. By Georgia Freedman

Cellar: Night for Day
Moulin-a-vent is an earthy, gutsy cru beaujolais. By John Winthrop Haeger
Tasting notes: 12 moulin-a-vent wines, from Georges Duboeuf Domaine des Rosiers 2004 ($14; “earthy, herbaceous nose…black and red raspberries”) to Domaine de la Rochelle 2000 ($30; “raisined fruit and dried leaves…strong minerality”)

Lives: Chocolate in the Rough
On the African island of Principe, maverick chocolatier Claudio Corallo is developing a uniquie bean-to-bar operation. By G.Y. Dryansky

Source: Tane Chan’s San Francisco Wok Shop (www.wokshop.com) has a wok for every chef. By Sarah DiGregorio

Classic: Cream of New York
Cheesecake is the Big Apple’s other coveted slice
Recipe: Lindy’s Cheesecake

Shanghai Surprise
Chef Jereme Leung is redefining his adopted city’s cuisine one dish at a time. By Grace Young
Recipes: Bingzhen Huangjiu Ji (chilled drunken chicken with rice wine granita)
Xunlong Yuzi Yanxun Dan (tea-smoked eggs with caviar)
Hushi Suanla Geng (Shanghai-style hot and sour soup)
Foldout Guide: The Saveur Tour of Shanghai, with reviews of a dozen places to eat
The Guide: Where to stay and eat in Shanghai


The Centerpiece
The turkeys raised on a Colorado farm didn’t just taste good; they offered a hard-won lesson in humility. By Rita Williams
Recipes: Brined and Roasted Turkey
Collard Greens with Smoked Turkey Wings
Turkey Tetrazzini
Panes con Pavo (Salvadorn turkey sandwich)
Sidebar: A Guide to Buying Turkey: conventional, natural, heritage


Brunch on the Bayou
At one of Louisiana’s last remaining sugarcane farms, a family cook prepares a hearty feast to celebrate the harvest. By Victoria Abbott Riccardi
Recipes: Eggs Hussards (poached eggs with tasso and hollandaise sauce)
Mirliton (chayote) Casserole
Broiled Grapefruit
Couchon d’Oreille (“pigs’ ears”—fried dough with caramel and pecans)
Sausages and Gravy with Stone-Ground Grits
Sidebar: The Art of Making Sugar, from raw cane to crystals


Old-School Madrid
The Spanish capital’s classic dishes are worth seeking out—and savoring. By Anya von Bremzen
Recipes:
Gambas al Ajillo (sizzling shrimp with garlic and parsley)
Albondigas en Salsa (tapas-style meatballs)
Croquetas de Jamon con Gambas (ham and shrimp croquettes)
Cocido Madrileño de Casa Lhardy (Madrid-style boiled dinner)
Flan (creamy caramel custard)
Sidebar: Perfect Bites: where to get tapas in Madrid
The Guide: where to stay and eat in Madrid


Comng Home to Café Annie
After 25 years, a Houston institution beckons with flavors that are as thrilling as ever. By Margo True
Recipes:
Black Bean Nachos with Red Chile Beef
Rabbit Enchiladas with Red Mole
Coffee-Crusted Beef Tenderloin


In the Saveur Kitchen: Rice Wine 101—how to buy the good stuff, by Todd Coleman; how to carve a turkey; how to poach an egg, by Todd Coleman; true-life tales of turkeys in trouble—an interview with a Butterball hot-line tender, by Liz Pearson; the Neiman Marcus cookie and other sweet apocrypha, by Georgia Freedman; Kate Fox’s grandmother’s applesauce
Recipes:
Neiman Marcus Cookies
Jean Fox’s Appelsaes


In the Saveur Library: Birds of a Feather: Saving Rare Turkeys from Extinction, by Carolyn J. Christman and Robert O. Hawes, is obscure but much needed.

Moment: A cat eating corn on the cob
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#28 User is offline   zora

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Posted 01 January 2007 - 09:22 PM

Saveur, December 2006

First: James Oseland explains how to be a regular contributor to the mag: bring the editorial staff presents like giant puffball mushrooms!

Fare:

Prize Herd: Cesare Castella of NYC’s Maremma resto has imported the chianina cow to the US. By Sophie Menin

RIP Johnny Apple. By Bryan Miller

Forbidden Fruits: Ramin Ganeshram sings the praises of Trinidad’s holiday “black cake.”
Recipe: Trinidad Black Cake

Massaging the Persimmon: the tradition of hoshi gaki – massaged, dried persimmon – is preserved in California. By Laurence Hauben

Agenda: First Royal Smithfield Show of livestock in London, Dec. 2, 1799; Home-ec activist Ellen Richards born Dec. 3, 1842, in Dunstable, Mass.; Gloggprovning in Stockholm, Dec. 9; Community Olive Press Day Dec. 10 in Glen Ellen, Calif.; Colonial Christmas Dinner in Darien, Ga., Dec. 16; Community Chanukah Party, Dec. 17 in Taos, N.M.; Dongji (winter solstice) in South Korea, Dec. 22; Owru Yari (New Year’s Eve) in Paramaribo, Surinam, Dec. 29–31

Book Review: Five favorite winter food books:
*Into the Vietnamese Kitchen: Treasured Foodways, Modern Flavors, by Andrea Nguyen; reviewed by James Oseland
*Blithe Tomato: An Insider’s Wry Look at Farmer’s Market Society, by Mike Madison; reviewed by Liz Pearson
*Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor, by Hervé This; reviewed by Todd Coleman
*Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition, by Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker and Ethan Becker; reviewed by Georgia Freedman
*Mrs. Rowe’s Restaurant Cookbook: A Lifetime of Recipes from the Shenandoah Valley, by Mollie Cox Bryan; reviewed by Lily Binns
Recipe: Banana Pudding

The Saveur List: 8 Food Gifts, from Carr Valley Cheese to pomegranates. By Kate Fox

Ingredient: Winter Sun: Jerusalem artichokes are a cold-weather favorite whose taste is sweet and warm. By Shane Mitchell
Recipe: Sautéed Jerusalem Artichokes

Cellar: War of the Riojas
Spain’s celebrated red wine fuels an ongoing debate. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting notes: 12 riojas, from Marqués de Riscal Reserva 2001 ($16; “wood spice…and…sweatiness on the nose…excellent value”) to CVNE Imperial Gran Reserva 1996 ($65; “a burly wine, with sweetish black fruit…oaky, but with good depth and structure”)

Reporter: Joy Sticks: Chopsticks etiquette is little understood outside Asia. By Ari Tye Radetsky
Sidebar: Disposable chopsticks are a substantial drain on forests.

Classic: Holiday Spice: Pfeffernuss cookies signify Christmas in Germany—and beyond. By Maria Speck
Recipe: Pfeffernüsse (German spice cookies)

Provence Noël
In the south of France, a baker and his friends carry on the sweet rituals of Christmas. By Nancy Coons
Recipes: Saumon Pauché à la Mayonnaise (whole poached salmon with cold mayonnaise)
Gratin de Courge (squash gratin)
Pompe à l’Huile (sweet olive oil bread)
Salade de Céleri (celery salad)
Anchoïade (anchovy dip with crudités)
Sidebar: Birth of the Little Saints: miniature clay crèche scenes expand to include Provencal notables.
Sidebar: 13 Symbols of Christmas: a traditional “gros souper” ends with 13 desserts
The Guide: Where to stay and eat and what to do in Provence


The Power of Sour
Tamarind adds tartness—and intrigue—to many of the world’s favorite dishes. By Madhur Jaffrey
Recipes: Agua de Tamarindo (sweet tamarind drink)
Rasam (spicy tomato and tamarind soup)
Tamarind-Glazed Pork Chops
Imli Ki Meethi Chutney (tamarind chutney with bananas and golden raisins)
Sinigang na Hipon (Philippine sour shrimp stew)
Sidebar: Making Tamarind Extract


Liquid Gold
On the French Caribbean island of Martinique, all roads lead to rum. By Wayne Curtis
Recipes: Hot Buttered Rum
Ti’ Punch
Martinique Milk Punch
Dave Wondrich’s Rum Punch
Sidebar: A Martinique Rum Primer
Sidebar: Finding Sugarcane-Juice Rum
The Guide: What to do and where to eat in Martinique


Christmas at Currandooley
A fifth-generation Australian ranching clan returns to the family seat for a holiday feast beneath the blazing December sun. By Chloe Osborne
Recipes: Christmas Ham
Crab Apple Jelly
Christmas Pudding with Custard Sauce
Currandooley Dressing (Meyer lemon and garlic dressing)


The Age of Casseroles
They were easy. They were chic. They were the most delicious dishes of their day. By Irene Sax
Recipes: Shepherd’s Pie
Tuna-Noodle Casserole
Tamale Pie
Chicken Divan
Sidebar: A Modern Convenience: The rise of Campbell’s cream of mushroom soup.
Sidebar: America’s Own Cookware: how the American casserole dish came to be.
Sidebar: Our Favorite Casserole Cookbooks: 10 books of recipes, dating from 1912 to 2003. By Amy McDaniel


In the Saveur Kitchen: Swiss Christmas cookies, by Nick Malgieri; what’s really in Worcestershire sauce, by Lily Binns; an easier approach to gratin, by Todd Coleman; extras found in vintage cookbooks, by Todd Coleman; what makes a ham a ham, by Liz Pearson; Southern mom fails at biscuits, by Amy McDaniel
Recipes: Spitzbuebe (Swiss raspberry preserve–filled sandwich cookies)
Potato Gratin
Corned Ham


Moment: Dinner in the Sky—eating at a table suspended over a freeway in Brussels
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#29 User is offline   zora

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Posted 06 January 2007 - 04:09 PM

Saveur, January 2006

First: Producing the Saveur 100 is haaaard work!

Fare:

The Drink Artist: A purist amateur bartender in Brooklyn is a master of the artisanal cocktail. By John Lansdowne
Recipe: Orange Bitters

Miracle Leaf: The essence of pandan is at the heart of countless Southeast Asian dishes. By Pat Tanumihardja
Recipe: Kacang Ijo (spiced mung bean dessert porridge)

Hale and Hearty: Galaxy gazing is better after a good meal, reports Joseph Carson from San Diego’s Palomar Observatory.

Agenda: Second annual Florida Keys Seafood Festival, Jan. 13; patent for neon lighting obtained, Jan. 19, 1915; Oregon Truffle Festival, Willamette Valley, Ore., Jan. 26–28; Ka Moloka’i Makahiki Festival on Molokai, Hawai’i, Jan. 27; Carnaval in Vilanova i la Geltrú, Spain, on Feb. 18 involves lots of cava and candy; Spring Festival in Port Louis, Mauritius, Feb. 18; Feria Regional del Café y del Guayaba in Canelas, Mexico, Feb. 18–26

Book Review: Bryan Miller reviews the new edition of the Culinary Institute of America’s The Professional Chef, and praises the expanded “world cuisines” section and the photo-illustrated sections on technique.
Technique: Fluting (typically used on mushrooms)

Drink: Sea Change: Bordeaux’s Entre-deux-Mers is shaping up to be the little wine region that could. By Roger Morris
Tasting Notes: Three reds from Entre-deux-Mers: Chateau Balestard 2003 ($35; “rounded fruit”), Chateau Le Grand Verdus 2003 ($25; “solid wine with cherry flavors…food-friendly finish”) and Girolate 2001 ($100; “sweet blackberry and lightly minted chocolate”)

Kitchenwise: Cookbook authors Naomi Duguid and Jeffrey Alford gave up a dining room in favor of a large, casual kitchen—but they kept the standard-issue four-burner range-top, as it keeps their recipe-testing down-to-earth.

Memories: A Fine Virginian
A beloved great-aunt’s cooking wisdom could fill a book. By Lucretia Bingham
Recipe: Aunt Fan’s Devil’s Food Cake

Source: Rising Star: King Arthur’s sticky buns are gooey perfection. By Kathleen Brennan

Classic: Spanish Comfort
Galicia’s hearty caldo gallego warms both body and soul. By Sofia Perez
Recipe: Caldo Gallego (Galician meat and vegetable soup)

The Saveur 100
The annual roundup of the staff’s favorite foods, restaurants, drink, people, places and things, with a special tip of the cap to maitre d’s and do-gooders. A random sampling: Zankou Chicken in LA, canned peas (?!), Engin Akin of Turkey, Patel Bros., oyster loaf at Casamento’s in New Orleans, Philippine food, white foods (again, ?!), Mexico City cuisine, Lost Abbey beer, vermouth as cooking wine, carbon-steel knives, Edna Lewis, food-shaped band-aids, runny cheeses and purple-sweet-potato vinegars
Recipes: Betty’s Spaghetti (from Thomas Keller)
Shashlyk (spicy grilled pork kebabs)
Wafuu Curry (Japanese-style chicken curry)
Grissini (crunchy Piedmontese breadsticks)
Mousse au Chocolat (chocolate mousse)
Sauerbraten mit Kartoffel Klosse (pot roast with potato dumplings)
Fitty-Fitty (half-gin, half-vermouth cocktail)
Venison with Seared Foie Gras
Nassau Grits
Texas-Style Pecan Pralines
Poached Sole with Vermouth
Baked Feta with Roasted Red Peppers and Lemon-Oregano Broth (from Water Works restaurant in Philadelphia)
Edna Lewis’s Coffee
Armenian Tahini Bread
Bakwan (crisp celery green fritters)
Yogurt Panna cotta with Pineapple Sorbet and Cilantro Gelée (from ChickaLicious)
Denver Sandwich
Pav Bhaji (spicy mashed vegetable curry with rolls)


In the Saveur Kitchen: Mormon generosity creates some memorable food, by Lucy Hayes; the recipe for James Oseland’s Taiwanese friend’s green beans, mentioned in the November 2006 issue; how to peel garlic cloves in bulk, by Kate Fox; Spanish vs. Mexican chorizo, by Liz Pearson; how to do the butcher’s slipknot, by Todd Coleman; Maxine Kaplan supplies all the props for the photo shoots
Recipes: Utah’s Famous Green Jell-O Salad
Stir-fried Green Beans a la Tang


Moment: An English pub patron shows off the Last Supper tattoo on his beer belly.
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

#30 User is offline   zora

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 03:41 PM

Saveur, March 2007

First: James Oseland recalls learning to cook—very informally—in family kitchens in Indonesia. But converting that to printable recipes is a challenge.

Fare:

Quenched, Indian Style: Mumbai’s drink vendors add spice and more. By Litty Mathew
Recipe: Jal Jeera (cumin-laced tamarind and mint cooler)

Cold Comfort: Chef Kirsten Dixon brings more than mere sustenance to the mushers of Alaska’s Iditarod. By Jenna Schnuer

Fiery Fruit: The tiny sansho pepper, cousin of Sichuan pepper, gives Japanese cuisine a kick. By Shane Mitchell

Agenda: Festival Internacional de La Vendimia celebrates grapes in Ica, Peru, Mar 5-17; drink strong beer at Starkbierzeit at Paulaner am Nockherberg in Munich Mar 8-25; Milk River Wagon Train Nut and Gut Feed cooks pioneer-style in Malta, Mont., March 10; Ranelagh, Tasmania, offers A Taste of the Huon March 11-12; March 12 is the anniversary of the first patent granted for starch processing, 1841; Charles Sutherland Elton, developer of the idea of the food chain in 1927’s Animal Ecology, born March 29, 1900; Newport Pig Cookin’ Contest in Newport, N.C., Mar 30-31; Public Bake Day in Fort Gibson, Okla., on March 31, uses the fort’s giant public oven.

Book Review: Todd Coleman reviews A Tale of 12 Kitchens: Family Cooking in Four Countries, by Jake Tilson, a graphic reminiscence of kitchens in Tuscany, New York, Los Angeles and Scotland. Coleman finds it “breezy, smart and surprisingly unpretentious.”
Recipe: Beet and Sumac Salad

In the Beginning: Saveur’s 100th issue prompts a look back at its first.

The Saveur List: 12 honeys, from Italian chestnut to Hawaiian kiawe. By Sierra Burnett

Kitchenwise: Hizzoner’s Retreat: A look a former New York City mayor Ed Koch’s humble apartment space, complete with a snapshot of his fridge’s contents. By Georgia Freedman

Cellar: Uncommon Grace: Volnay is a smooth, sensual red burgundy. By Michael Steinberger
Tasting Notes: Eleven volnays from 2003 and 2004, from Domaine Bouchard Pere et Fils Clos de Chenes 2004 ($65; “muscular…with spicy cherry fruit across the palate and pronounced oak”) to Domaine Leroy Santenots-du-Milieu 2003 ($570; “blackberry-infused bouquet…pronounced tannins, and fairly spicy in the mouth. Finishes quite sweet.”).

Memories: Tasting Freedom
Ma Thanegi reminisces about time spent in a Myanmar prison, and the imaginary meals enjoyed there.
Recipe: Pei Daunt Shay Thoke (Myanmar-style long bean salad)

Source: Miracle Cure: Thick-cut bacon from Benton’s Smoky Mountain Country Hams. By Todd Coleman

Classic: Roman Art
Spaghetti alla carbonara pleases even the most finicky palates. By Mei Chin
Recipe: Spaghetti alla Carbonara

Mighty Shrimp
A celebration of America’s favorite seafood. By Andre Baranowski, Penny de los Santos and James Oseland
Part One: Why we love shrimp. By Wayne Curtis
Part Two: A day on the water. By Wayne Curtis
Part Three: How to cook shrimp. By James Peterson
Recipes: Shrimp Scampi with Linguine
Barbecued Shrimp
Shrimp Boil
Stir-Fried Shrimp with Snow Peas
Shrimp Cocktail
Maine Shrimp Chowder
Sidebar: Know Your American Shrimp: photos and descriptions of seven major varieties. By Jennifer Salerno
Sidebar: North Atlantic Treasure: the delicate northern pink (Maine) shrimp is best served nearly raw. By Jon Levitt
Sidebar: How to Buy Shrimp: fresh vs. frozen, which size, what’s fresh. By James Peterson


Ancient Hunger
The vibrant cuisine of northern Peru—with its blend of chiles, corn, yuca, potatoes and seafood—is rooted in both the Old World and the New. By Maricel E. Presilla
Recipes: Yuca Hervida
Sudado de Pescado (Huanchaco-style fish stewed in tomatoes and chiles)
Cebiche de Mero al Estilo de Hunchaco (grouper ceviche)
Salsa de Aji Escabeche y Paico (Andean yellow chile and epazote salsa)
Pepian de Garbanzos (chickpea porridge with chile oil)
The Guide: where to stay and eat in Peru


The Glory of Red Cooking
This traditional Chinese cooking method yields melt-in-your-mouth results. By Grace Young
Recipes: Hong Shao Yu (red-cooked fish)
Si Xi Kaufu (four happiness wheat gluten)
Hong Shao Rou (red-cooked pork belly)
Hong Shao Ji (red-cooked chicken)


Sweet Life
A gifted baker with the soul of a poet brings the refined art of the French pastry to upstate New York. By Darra Goldstein
Recipes: Gateau Saint-Honoré
Lemon Meringue Tart
Chocolate Babka


In the Saveur Kitchen: Get to the bottom of it all by rediscovering the technique of stirring, says Todd Coleman; the history of cocktail sauce, by Todd Coleman; a brief interview with Chinese food consultant Eddie Schoenfeld; how to devein a shrimp without removing the shell; how to deal with yuca, by Maricel E. Presilla; all about pork belly, by Brigit Binns; wheat gluten, the “Chinese chameleon,” by Grace Young
Recipes: Ed Koch’s Broiled Swordfish with Olives

Moment: An overly enthusiastic toddler enjoys her birthday cake. (Ew.)
Zora O’Neill aka "Zora"

Roving Gastronome

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