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txaggie

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Posts posted by txaggie

  1. I'm helping plan a bridal shower for a good friend who lives in Philly. The shower will be on a Saturday afternoon in September, and there should only be 15-20 ladies at this bridal shower.

    I'm looking for a fun, modern space with good food and drinks. So far, I've contacted people at Swanky Bubbles, Bistro St. Tropez, and Rae Restaurant.

    Any other suggestions would be great as I'm trying to avoid going with the other option (preferred by the other bridesmaids) - a room at a hotel with hotel catering.

    I know there are a ton of cool places in Philly, but I'm at a loss as to where to find them and who to contact next.

  2. During the infamous year I spent on unemployment (thanks, indirectly, to the dot-com bust), Kraft mac-and-cheese was one of many cheap dinner strategies I resorted to. I'd separately heat up some of that cheapo frozen vegetable mix (y'know, the carrots/green beans/corn crap) and add that in to the finished mac-n-cheese. Yeah, it wasn't the most sensational-tasting stuff in the world, but it was cheap, filling, and sorta nutritious.

    :biggrin: That's I how eat it too. And if I have canned tuna, I'll add that into the mix. It's my favorite "I don't feel like cooking but need to eat" meal.

  3. Dinner last night was a white bean soup and squid salad. Both recipes were quick, easy, tasty, and from Cooking Light.

    squidandsoupoutsidesmall4rp.jpg

    Dessert was sliced figs with a strawberry-basil puree and almond brittle. Awesome!

    figdessertsmall4we.jpg

  4. I made a long overdue birthday dinner for my boyfriend on Saturday night. The first course was caramelized apples and gruyere on wild rice-walnut-orange bread. The recipe was from the Golden Door Cooks Light and Easy.

    sandwiches29ge.jpg

    The main course was pepita crusted salmon with a shrimp ragout from the Kinkead's cookbook.

    salmon4na.jpg

    A cheese plate was next. A couple of cheddars, gruyere, and a blue cheese.

    cheeseplate9mx.jpg

    And dessert was blueberry white chocolate cheesecakes from from Alice Medrich's A Year in Chocolate. Sorry, bad picture - too bright.

    cheesecakenoadjustments2ko.jpg

    We shared a bottle of Cotes du Rhone which went well with the salmon.

    wine7fd.jpg

    Sunday was dinner with friends. Apps were roasted peppers with leftover walnut-orange bread. I don't have pictures of the rest of the meal but we had gnocchi with tomato sauce, chicken milanese, and ricotta mousse with fresh berries and chocolate-orange-walnut biscotti for dessert.

    roastedpeppers1fd.jpg

  5. Can someone post the Cooks Illustrated recipes please? I'd like to try them. They can be posted if you adapt the recipe and put it into your own words.

    P.S. Please enter your best recipes in RecipeGullet. Then link it back into your post in thread.

    Thanks........

    I posted the CI Blueberry Buckle recipe in the Recipe Gullet.

  6. CI Blueberry Buckle

    Serves 8.

    This blueberry buckle is a coffee cake with a streusel topping. Use fresh blueberries when making the buckle. Frozen blueberries are too moist.

    Makes one 9-inch cake


    Streusel

    • 1/2 c AP flour
    • 1/2 c packed light brown sugar
    • 2 T granulated sugar
    • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
    • pinch table salt
    • 4 T unsalted butter, cut into 8 pieces, softened but still cool

    Cake

    • 1-1/2 c AP flour
    • 1-1/2 tsp baking powder
    • 10 T unsalted butter, softened but still cool
    • 2/3 c granulated sugar
    • 1/2 tsp salt
    • 1/2 tsp grated lemon zest
    • 1-1/2 tsp vanilla extract
    • 2 large eggs, room temperature
    • 4 c fresh blueberries

    1. STREUSEL: In standing mixer (with the paddle attachment), combine flour, sugars, cinnamon, and salt on low speed until combined and no large brown sugar lumps remain. Add butter and mix on low no large butter pieces remain (mixture should look like wet sand). Transfer to bowl and set aside.

    2. CAKE PAN PREP: Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray 9-inch round cake pan nonstick cooking spray. Line bottom of cake pan with parchment or waxed paper, and spray round with nonstick cooking spray. Dust pan with flour and remove excess flour.

    3. CAKE: Whisk flour and baking powder in small bowl to combine; set aside. In standing mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter, sugar, salt, and lemon zest until light and fluffy. Scrape down bowl and beat in vanilla until combined. Add eggs one at a time and beat until partially incorporated. Scrape down bowl and beat until fully incorporated (mixture will appear broken). Gradually add flour mixture. Beat until flour is almost fully incorporated. Stir batter with rubber spatula until batter is homogeneous. The batter is very thick. Fold in blueberries.

    4. Transfer batter to prepared cake pan and spread batter evenly. Squeeze handful of streusel in hand to form a clump. Break up clump with fingers and sprinkle streusel over batter. Repeat. Bake until golden brown and toothpick inserted in cake's center comes out clean, about 45-55 minutes. Cool on wire rack for 15-20 minutes.

    5. Use a paring knife along the sides of the cake to loosen the cake. Place upside-down plate on top of cake pan; invert cake to remove from pan, lift off cake pan and remove parchment paper. Reinvert cake onto serving platter. Cool until warm or room temp (at least 1 hour).

    Keywords: Easy, Fruit, Breakfast

    ( RG1332 )

  7. CI Blueberry Buckle

    Serves 8.

    This blueberry buckle is a coffee cake with a streusel topping. Use fresh blueberries when making the buckle. Frozen blueberries are too moist.

    Makes one 9-inch cake


    Streusel

    • 1/2 c AP flour
    • 1/2 c packed light brown sugar
    • 2 T granulated sugar
    • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
    • pinch table salt
    • 4 T unsalted butter, cut into 8 pieces, softened but still cool

    Cake

    • 1-1/2 c AP flour
    • 1-1/2 tsp baking powder
    • 10 T unsalted butter, softened but still cool
    • 2/3 c granulated sugar
    • 1/2 tsp salt
    • 1/2 tsp grated lemon zest
    • 1-1/2 tsp vanilla extract
    • 2 large eggs, room temperature
    • 4 c fresh blueberries

    1. STREUSEL: In standing mixer (with the paddle attachment), combine flour, sugars, cinnamon, and salt on low speed until combined and no large brown sugar lumps remain. Add butter and mix on low no large butter pieces remain (mixture should look like wet sand). Transfer to bowl and set aside.

    2. CAKE PAN PREP: Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray 9-inch round cake pan nonstick cooking spray. Line bottom of cake pan with parchment or waxed paper, and spray round with nonstick cooking spray. Dust pan with flour and remove excess flour.

    3. CAKE: Whisk flour and baking powder in small bowl to combine; set aside. In standing mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter, sugar, salt, and lemon zest until light and fluffy. Scrape down bowl and beat in vanilla until combined. Add eggs one at a time and beat until partially incorporated. Scrape down bowl and beat until fully incorporated (mixture will appear broken). Gradually add flour mixture. Beat until flour is almost fully incorporated. Stir batter with rubber spatula until batter is homogeneous. The batter is very thick. Fold in blueberries.

    4. Transfer batter to prepared cake pan and spread batter evenly. Squeeze handful of streusel in hand to form a clump. Break up clump with fingers and sprinkle streusel over batter. Repeat. Bake until golden brown and toothpick inserted in cake's center comes out clean, about 45-55 minutes. Cool on wire rack for 15-20 minutes.

    5. Use a paring knife along the sides of the cake to loosen the cake. Place upside-down plate on top of cake pan; invert cake to remove from pan, lift off cake pan and remove parchment paper. Reinvert cake onto serving platter. Cool until warm or room temp (at least 1 hour).

    Keywords: Easy, Fruit, Breakfast

    ( RG1332 )

  8. Try Cook's Illustrated's recipes for blueberry muffins and blueberry buckle. Both are very good with the buckle recipe being the better of the two. We made the muffins on sunday morning with some store-bought blueberries. We picked blueberries on sunday afternoon and made the CI blueberry buckle recipe for breakfast on Monday. It's fabulous!

  9. Some friends and I were in Philly this past weekend (visiting from the DC area) and our Sunday brunch destination was Carman's Country Kitchen (per everyone's rave reviews). We loved Carman's. The food was outstanding and inventive; the service was top-notch, friendly, and extremely accomodating and flexible to our party of 5.

    Two of my friends had Carman's challah French toast. It was wonderful. Two pieces of thick challah topped with caramelized granny smith apples, Breyer's coffee ice cream and whipped cream. The recommended side was perfectly crisp bacon.

    My sister had the pancake special. Saffron, golden raisins and almonds were added to the batter and the same batter was used for Carman's waffles. The pancakes were topped with fresh figs and goat cheese with lemon thyme. It was a delightful combination of flavors. The pancakes were served with a sausage patty.

    Another friend and I had the omelette special. A huge omelette filled with swiss chard, swiss cheese and dried cranberries. We were a bit skeptical about dried cranberries in the eggs but it worked. There were just enough cranberries in the omelette to make you forget that there were cranberries in the omelette but to pleasantly surprise you when bit into a cranberry. Does that make sense? Oh, and I can't forget to mention the homemade blackberry preserves. They were a wonderful addition on the buttery whole wheat toast.

    We left Carman's full and happy. I'll definitely be back there when I visit Philly next.

  10. Hi,

    I'm going to Nashville for work this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. I usually stay near Vanderbilt University and West End when I travel to Nashville so I'm familiar with the restaurant scene on that part of town. This time, I'm staying in Downtown (on Commerce Street) and I'd like recommendations in/near (within walking distance) Downtown.

    The most recent issue of National Geographic Traveler mentioned 12 Avenue South as a neighborhood to watch in Nashville. The magazine described this neighborhood as "a bohemian blend of clothing and home shops, restaurants, and galleries." This neighborhood would be ideal since it's a few blocks from Downtown. Can anyone recommend any good restaurants in this area?

    Thanks,

    Binni

  11. I was at Palena at 6:45 last night and there was no wait for the cafe seating and there were three people at the bar. Later at night (around 8pm) the front part of the restaurant and the bar were full and people were waiting for tables.

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