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olivina

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Posts posted by olivina

  1. I picked way too many green walnuts on Lummi Island this past Saturday and was wondering if anyone in the Seattle area would like a batch. They are in great shape, I think the trees mature slower up there than in Cali or in eastern Wash. Give me a holla and I'll hook you up! Hate to see them go to waste!

  2. Back in the day when I lived in an apartment equipped with a quirky electric stovetop I bought myself an electric griddle from Target. I can't sing the praises of this homely appliance loud enough!

    The very even heat helps make perfect pancakes, flat BACON that doesn't burn around the edges and the best crostini ever. My husband has seared scallops on one and gets an amazing rich carmelization.

    They are coated in teflon however. But the griddle does not heat up over 300 degrees, supposedly teflon is at it's scariest when it heats to 700 and above. And if you are super careful about using only plastic utensils on it, ehhhh...I don't know...

    Short of installing a wood-fired oven in your apartment, I'd recommend buying one if your electric stove is less than perfect.

    Good luck and welcome to Seattle!

  3. How about Cafe Lago (sorry Carla...) or Vios? Not close by though.

    La Vita e Bella might be good, and it's pretty close (uphill.)

    Don't be sorry, t. I love kids, remember? Lago is always full of them, mine included. :biggrin:

    I second Vios.

    Most kids love Chinooks; nice view, well designed space and halibut/chips. Blue Sushi in U Village or Fremont is usually a kick.

  4. Last time I was there I decided to finally move past the pizza and go for the lasagna.  Of course it had to be the one night they were sold out.  I'll have to try it next time.

    Anyone from eGullet is welcome to call Lago the day you plan to come in and have a piece or two reserved. Mention my name, say you talk to me on eG, Carla not olivina, I know the owners. :raz:

  5. She blogs!

    http://cafeblago.typepad.com/

    (did we already know this?)

    Nooo! I can't believe you found that. Don't look!! It is all messed up and a work in progress that I haven't had time to deal with! Or if you look, don't judge harshly, just give me advice. Is that story in the cannoli thing bad? Boring? Stupid?

    I know I have to add the recipes and that lasagna recipe is way too long...

    Are the pics ok?

    Email me if you'd like or eGullet me if that's ok.

    So embarrassed,

    Carla

  6. Room for more: As much as I like them, it seems to me if traffic at Cafe Lago is as steady as it seems, something else should open next door to them in Montlake.

    It would be AOK with me if something else opened in our hood. FYI and BTW, sorry, just found the site:

    http://www.netlingo.com/

    However, the lunch crowd in Montlake is slim at best. Unless it is a Husky game day. Which presents it's own problems. Drunk frat boys fighting in the street and peeing on Cafe Lago's building? good times...

    1FAAF1,

    Carla, the juvenile

    ps. I think Stone Way is way cool. Just don't open a wood fired pizzeria there. :biggrin:

  7. I want to add that if you read French, there's a HUGE thread running over 2 years about how to make vin de noix.  There are hundreds of variations given there, including a lot of grandparent-inspired recipes.  French vin de noix thread.

    I have my nuts and leaves (thanks Jim Dixon!!!) and am now looking for some sort of gigantic container to make the stuff in.

    Abra, I found really large canning jars (very cool ones) at The Madison Park old fashioned hardware store. About 10 bucks. They also had cooler ones for 28 bucks (too much for me).

    I looked at the usual kitchen stores with no luck.

    The other thing I did was go to Cash and Carry and bought maraschino cherries (yuck) in large glass pickle jars. All of the other usable food stuff was in plastic. 12 bucks...

  8. Now I only hope it's half as good as the batch Olivina made last year. :) 

    ~A

    Anita, Thanks for the compliment but I don't think I had anything to do with how good the nocino turned out. I followed Trillium's directions and chopped green walnuts, added a vanilla bean and some 100 proof...a nut, a bean and some moonshine.

    I did add a little anxiety, worry and self-doubt last year but didn't have those ingredients on hand this year. uh oh...

    Carla

  9. I have 15 green walnuts left from my nocino extravaganza. The nuts have a few brownish spots and I regret not seeing the suggestion to keep them in the fridge. They don't smell rancid..what do you all think? Should I make a little vin de noix with them? Out of the million french recipes that Abra led us to, which one didn't someone make so I can report on another?

    Goin' a little nutty,

    Carla

  10. Olivina ... Originally Boston and you described what I was looking for exactly!!!

    It is the stuff of my dreams..

    Italian-american is good, no? Does Boston have those storefronts packed floor to ceiling with Italian foods, little wood counter with a cash register, walk thru the store into a little restaurant? I want one of those here.

    I'm having major nostalgia :sad:

  11. Ken,

    Do you mean the kind of Italian delis found on the east coast, who sell amazing meatball sandwiches, muffaleta, canolli, anchovies in salt by the piece, not just fresh mozzarella but curd as well, aged, ager and agest (?) reggiano, strong olives cured in the house, hard crust bread with that soft to die for crumb, green olive oils from Tuscany to fruity ones from Calabria and anything else a hungry person could want?

    Sorry, nothing like that here....Just kidding!

    But you won't find it all in one place. One must travel to all the aforementioned stores (salumi, delaurente...) to buy what they do best. Hope you have a car.

    Where are you from anyway?

  12. The food sounds great and maybe the guests that Phred is nice to feel special, because it is so exclusive.

    I think he has gotten a LOT of airtime on this board because the place is not like a regular restaurant. I haven't even tried it, but have spread the word around. Phred is a marketing genius! :wink:

    Yep Carla, I've been meaning to mention that you're just a little too hospitable at your place. A hissy fit here and there might really liven things up. You have that big open kitchen, and you're just squandering away all that opportunity. :laugh:

    Maybe you can help me stage one? We could really do it up right! :angry: It could start with me throwing pizza dough at loud people talking on thier cell phones.

  13. Its just that Elemental sounds so wonderfully quirky, us provincial types in Seattle can't help but have a little fun. . The owner/host's attitude does have a precedent often found in sitcoms and diner restaurants in NYC. :biggrin:

    The food sounds great and maybe the guests that Phred is nice to feel special, because it is so exclusive.

    I think he has gotten a LOT of airtime on this board because the place is not like a regular restaurant. I haven't even tried it, but have spread the word around. Phred is a marketing genius! :wink:

  14. Phred (the very guy who just forced a guest to stand, jacket on, without a chair, while personally attacking her, because he wanted to impose some kind of pointless rule and he didn't care that she just walked in and had no idea.

    Seriously? Was it about her jacket? Did she say anything back?

    I'm planning on trying to maybe or maybe not have dinner and/or get yelled at there this wednesday, but I'll be with a couple of big guys in case anything gets nasty.

  15. link to Rain review

    Unless I'm missing something, it looks like it's more about the Restaurant not being able to take it, not the reviewer...

    You are right lala, I was incorrectly assuming that Nancy might be upset by Rain's ad. I have no doubt that she will handle this with grace.

    I don't condone Rain's nasty ad. I was just thinking of writers, movie makers or restaurants (never me, of course) who have been panned and have considered retribution. Just for the sake of argument and because I am a trouble maker.

  16. Has anyone else seen the add for Rain (the Wallingfor sushi restaurant) that shows the staff giving the bird, and the text commenting on Nancy Leson's review of their restaurant?

    Wow, giving in to temptation; never a good idea..at least not in public.

    Not that I would ever consider such a crude response, but is there an argument to be made that if critics can dish it out, shouldn't they be able to take it? :hmmm:

  17. If they were unhappy about the good reviews, they must be absolutely thrilled with what's being said about them here! :laugh:

    Maybe they're so good they have the luxury of scoffing at good press reviews, if so, that's some rarified air they inhabit.

    olivina: i'm guessing you'll get plenty courteous service, doubly so if you feel like revealing who you are. they both seem to be very happy when fellow industry folk pay them a visit. if not, your input to them will no doubt be invaluable. (you being an incredibly gracious host yourself, that is.)

    aw shucks jon, thank you for the compliment.

    But I really would like to experience the abuse. Sounds kind of fun. A sort of theatre maybe. I can be a sick puppy at times. :raz:

    Just so I am hip to the scene, do you think the treatment is part of the business plan? Intriguing, if so.

  18. Believe me, a first time restaurant is a learning process. Phred will no doubt look back and regret how he acted.

    Sounds like they have great potential because of their love for food. They will figure the gracious part out, it ain't rocket science.

    I can't wait to eat there and be verbally assaulted as well. Its been a while. :biggrin:

  19. One angle of a possible protest may be to get a woman organization involved because Smith Bros is not only very well run but also a completely woman-owned and managed company.  Mr Smith had no sons and four daughters, one of whom has run the dairy for as long as I can remember, at least since the mid 1980s when I worked there.  She is quoted in the various articles, Alexis Koester.
    Any ideas out there for a grass roots protest?

    There is a women's chef organization. I'll give them a call and see if there is an interest.

  20. Any ideas out there for a grass roots protest? Any eG people with political ties or anyone who is publicity savvy? Lets try and fight the man. Is it even possible? Is it too 1960's? It would have to be more than picket signs or tying ourselves to the cow field gate. :sad:

    I know several restaurant owners ... and a LOT of militant foodies...Alice Waters would be all over this, not that I know her...anyone want to fight? Does anyone know if the owners of Smith Dairy might support an effort on their behalf? I don't like to whine about issues without trying to do something.

    Its just that this quote from Danny Westneat's Seattle Times story seems so cynical, resigned and hopeless:

    "So what we have is the government, prodded by large corporations, saying it is helping small family farms by destroying one of our most successful small family farms.

    Come to think of it, I guess that is American-style capitalism after all."

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