I have one of those tart tins. They are really hard to find. My step-sisters’ mom gave it to me for making lemon curd tarts. I haven’t used it yet, but my step-dad uses it every year to make mincemeat tarts.
It’s really a good thing that I don’t live in Canada. I would OD on poutine. God, that stuff is good. It’s weird that we don’t have that here in Virginia – it is EXACTLY the kind of food southerners love.
I finally can play in this thread! I drove up to Northern Virginia to have a day with an old friend. I’m lucky enough to have as my best friend someone I went to high school with. We met 37 years ago and are still as close as ever. She lives near Boston, so we don’t get together much. When we do, food always figures in! We walked all over Old Town Alexandria, drove around finding old haunts – schools, friends houses, etc. We stopped at Society Fair – a wonderful food emporium with a bakery, deli, restaurant and general nommy ingredients. I picked up a couple of lovely pieces of chocolate – Poco Dolce Tiles. One in burnt caramel/sea salt topped bittersweet for me and an Aztec chile for Mr. Kim. I also got these:
P1100804 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
Gorgeous croissants and a big, dense loaf of delicious bread.
We had lunch at Restaurant Eve. What a fabulous place – excellent food, stellar service and gorgeous furnishings. Lynn had the asparagus velouté soup:
P1100797 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
Which she said was fabulous. She also had a beautiful salad with roasted fingerling potatoes and an amazing salmon mousse:
P1100798 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
Just perfectly made – light and fluffy and the essence of salmon.
I started with a vodka tonic w/ lime:
P1100795 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
which I wouldn’t bother mentioning except it was the best vodka tonic I’ve ever had. The tonic was housemade and the drink was ridiculously expensive - $13, I think. But worth every penny.
I had pork belly rillette with salt and pepper pork rinds, Kentucky soy and young coriander:
P1100799 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
My GOD, this was amazing. The rillette was not the chunky kind that we fell in love with in NOLA. It was soft and smooth and silky. More like a mousse really. And just decadently good.
We stopped at Occasionally Cake on King Street for cupcakes:
P1100800 by
ozisforme, on Flickr
On the left is Lynn’s – Amaretto cream frosting on vanilla cake and the other is mine – cotton candy frosting on vanilla cake. Very good – as a matter of fact, the cake was as good as I’ve ever had from a cupcake bakery. I was hoping to sweet talk them into giving me some hints about how they cracked the code on the cotton candy flavor for frosting, but they didn’t. Like my efforts, it was good and sweet, but not terribly cotton candy-like.