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jdtofbna

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Posts posted by jdtofbna

  1. To be brutally honest, however London simply doesn't have a great selection of Italian at either the high end or the upper mid.  Or the mid to be honest!

    Its our fault really, the British dining public don't have much of an appreciation of Italian beyond spag bol.  The end result is it manifests itself in a) lack of numbers of places worth mentioning and b) lack of regional diversification - I can hardly name a single Italian restaurant which genuinely reflects a particular regional cuisine.

    My advice would be to expand your young victim's horizons rather than pandering to his predilections.  London's particular strengths are ingredient-driven "modern british" cuisine (although I admit I struggle to distinguish it sometimes from "modern aussie" or "bistro moderne french"), ethnic restaurants (particularly Indian and Chinese dim sum, although not chinese evening food), and mid-upper haute French (by that I mean * and ** level).

    The acid test for any tourist is to go for something that you can't get done better back home.  I suspect Italian can be done better stateside.

    J

    Hmmmm....I suspect you may have hit the nail on the head and this is probably why I never choose Italian when dining in London. Perhaps I need to rethink my plan and just concentrate on taking my "young victim" out for a delicious meal. More food for thought. :hmmm:

  2. I will be making my annual visit to England next month and plan to take a friend to dinner in London. He's a neighbor's son who will be spending the semester studying in London, and he loves Italian food. Now, you probably realize that a young man who grew up in Nashville, Tennessee with parents from New Jersey may have a different idea of what makes a good Italian meal from the average British foodie. :wacko: So, my question is, what would be your recommendation for a good central London Italian restaurant that would have an interesting menu but also offer dishes he might recognize? A friend of mine has recommended Latium.

  3. I'm sorry I don't have any photos to post, but this is a beautiful, delicious summer soup.

    STRAWBERRY WATERMELON GAZPACHO

    Serves: 8

    1/4 of a large watermelon

    2 cups strawberries

    4 limes juiced

    1/8 of a large watermelon

    1 medium vidalia onion

    1 cucumber

    1/2 yellow bell pepper

    1/2 green pepper

    1 bunch cilantro

    8 slices pickled jalapenos, or more

    Pinch of sugar or to taste

    Pinch of salt

    Puree 1/4 watermelon in blender or food processor, add berries and process.

    Chop or thinly slice onion. Peel, seed and chop cucumber. Chop bell

    peppers and jalapenos. Chop 1/8 watermelon. Chop cilantro.

    Combine all ingredients in large bowl, adjust seasoning and chill

    thoroughly.

  4. Well, I won't rip on the recommendation for gas grilling.  It truly is a lower skill barrier to enjoying grilled foods.  More expensive (usually) but less hassle.

    But "adds very little to the flavour"? That's just crazy talk.

    I agree, and I use a gas grill. I took a marinated beef tenderloin to a friend's for dinner Tuesday night and he cooked it on his charcoal grill with me supervising so he wouldn't overcook it :shock: and it was definitely better than anytime I've cooked it on my gas grill. I also agree that a gas grill is way more convenient and still imparts a nice grill flavor. If my only choice was charcoal, I'd hardly ever grill out.

    But, I know that's not the subject here. Unfortunately, I don't have any pictures to share of the gorgeous tenderloin we did, but I will tell you that I marinated it in Marsala, olive oil, shallots, tarragon, parsley and lemon thyme and seasoned it well with salt and black pepper when we put it on the grill. Only had time to marinate it a couple of hours, but 4-6 is better and people swoon over this. :wub: I like to get the grill really hot and sear the meat on all sides, then lower the temp to medium low and cook the meat to an internal temperature of 120 or 125 at its thickest part. This way, some of it is fabulously rare while some is medium rare for the faint of heart. :raz: Let it rest at least 20 mintues before slicing. The great thing about this is it doesn't matter if it's served hot, it's just as delicious at room temp.

  5. I make 2 versions of these "Cheat Pickles." For one version you drain a gallon of dill pickles, cut them into chunks, put them back in the jar with 5 lbs sugar, a bottle of Tabasco and lots of sliced garlic. Let them stand 24 hours, then refrigerate. The other version, which we refer to as "Christmas Pickles," uses a gallon of dills, 5 lb sugar, 1/2 bottle Tabasco, 3 tsp whole allspice, 2 tsp whole cloves, 1 cup chopped fresh ginger, zest of 2 oranges, 2 Tbsp pickling spice and 4 cinnamon sticks. They're pretty darn tasty. :wub:

  6. Friends are visiting from England and we had dinner on my deck (Nashville, TN) Saturday night: grilled salmon (marinated briefly in lime juice, olive oil and lots of garlic;) grilled veggies (zuke, cremini shrooms, red bell pepper, vidalia onion marinated in balsamic, olive oil and fresh herbs;) roasted fingerling potatoes (ok, maybe more winterish but, dang, they're good!) and an apple and fennel salad with lime/mint dressing. Lots of NZ Sauvignon Blanc to wash it all down. :wink: yum.

  7. Ditto that. I used the Fine Cooking recipe to make a tart over the weekend and it was absolutely the best---and easiest---lemon curd I've ever made. I did go ahead at the end and beat it in a bowl over ice to cool it down. No straining, just the right balance of tart and sweet---perfect!

  8. I bought a delicious "Healthy Breakfast Bread" from The Bread Lady in Elberta, Alabama when I was in Perdido Key over the weekend. The ingredients are: whole wheat flour, unbleached bread flour, water, skim milk, honey, dried cranberries, dried apples, walnuts, soybean oil, oatmeal, milled flaxseed, salt, cinnamon, yeast. Delicious, not too sweet, with a nice, tight crumb. Any ideas about a recipe for this? I've googled until I'm blue in the face (finger?)

  9. I made mincemeat pie (ok, doctored-up Borden's in a box, but very tasty with a lovely lattice crust,) pumpkin pie (from a recipe I've had loads of success with but this time it got a big bubble in the middle that turned dark brown :angry: ,) and, my piece de resistance, pumpkin cheesecake with a topping made from cream cheese, conf sugar and minced crystallized ginger. Crust of pecans, butter, brown sugar and gingersnaps. Truly deelish, if I do say so myself :wub: !

  10. Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc, particularly Selaks or Isabel. Fabulous summer quaffing. I'm kind of off them now that it's prime red wine weather, though....but I sure drank my share of them during the blasting hot summer we just experienced. :raz:

  11. We usually start gathering around 1:00 with plans to have the big meal around 3:00. I offer bloody mary's, sparkling Shiraz, other wine and beer, and usually put out nuts (Marcona almonds preferably), crudites and a smoked trout spread with crostini---all served with football in the background, of course. But, I hasten to add, the tv goes off when the bird goes on the table! :wink:

  12. I had fish tacos at Radius 10 here in Nashville last week that were fabulous. Made with grilled grouper, the menu listed the ingredients as red onion, fresh chili, watermelon, radish, avocado, tomato and cilantro lime crema on soft flour tortillas. The stuff dreams are made of! :wub:

  13. Ok, I got carried away and, at the advice of my favorite wine merchant, I bought some smoked cheese and a hunk of Hugarian smoked pork loin to go with this juicy French Columbelle, to serve as snacks with 2 friends. That was all well and good, but now I'm left with big leftover hunks of smoked cheese and smoked pork loin---I mean, seriously smoked, like the meat was air-dried (still has the string attached.) I'm having some friends over Friday evening and would like to incorporate the dried smoked meat into some sort of hors d'oeuvres, but not being a big meat eater, I'm sort of clueless. :wacko: Unless sliced very thinly, the meat is quite tough, but sliced thinly and allowed to come to room temp, it has a great flavor. Any suggestions????

  14. I once knew a guy who had an ingenius solution to his lack of a garbage disposal, in addition to using the freezer as a trash purgatory , he would scrape plates off into the toilet  :shock:  Again, not unsanitary, but just somehow not right either.

    Wow, haven't thought of that in years! My mom used to flush spoiled food back before we had a disposal. Kinda gross, but I'm not sure what a better solution would have been.

    By the way, I should say RE:my freezer trash, that I don't have anywhere to have a compost and it's usually not enough to make stock. :sad:

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