
Foodie Moment
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http://www.foodiemoment.com
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Location
Bonaire, Dutch Caribbean
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For acidic foods, like orange juice or Balsamic vinegar, I have used reverse spherification - adding calcium chloride to my source liquid, and then spherifying in a bath of aqueous sodium alginate. Works for sources high in calcium too, like liquified mozzarella. Jake
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Thanks. I contacted BuchGourmet and they said the publisher was still in business and would let me know once the book was back in stock. Jake
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Thanks. The Harvard class videos are on my viewing list, hopefully next week. Jake
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Not sure if this is the forum area for this topic, so please move to someplace more appropriate. In a discussion about Chang's Momofuku group of restaurants, one of the other eGullet members suggested that if I needed to fill out a reservation of six people (the minimum needed for a particular type of dish), I could call upon him and he would find some friends, for a fee (I'm hoping that was a joke ;-) ). That got me to thinking... I travel a fair bit on business and frequently find myself in a broad range of cities, mostly in the U.S. And while I dine out a lot on such trips, it's usually by myself, unless I have foodie friends who would appreciate my culinary explorations and adventures as much as I do. And I would guess I am far from the only person that deals with this issue. And then I stumbled across eGullet last week (actually, I had stumbled across it early, but only joined last week), and it strikes me that perhaps I have a solution to solo foodie dining - meeting up with other eGullet members for memorable meals in interesting places. So, the questions: Has this already been done? Are people here at all interested in dining with fellow foodies they have never met (virtually total strangers)? And could this concept be extended to group gatherings of traveling eGullet members and local foodie friends? Are there chefs here who would be interesting in hosting such gatherings at their venues? My apologies if these are noob questions and ideas that have been addressed previously (I did a cursory search, but didn't find anything spot on). Jake
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For a nominal fee, I will supply you enough hungry friends to fill the remaining spaces. Heh. But that brings to mind a question I'll post in a new thread... Jake
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Alas, I don't have 5 other friends in NYC who are all available on the same night when I visiting in a week and a half. I think I will try to plan ahead for another time when their schedules are not as blocked up. Thanks for the comments and suggestions all! Jake
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Ah - that would explain the mystery machine I found a video of here from someone's visit to the Alicia Foundation last year. I wonder how they manage to prevent gravity or the impact of the droplets from dispersing the alignate skin. Yeah - no way to do that at home, I think. Dang. I will have to improvise. But heck, experimentation is fun, right? :-) Jake
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Well, I have been scouring regular and specialty book stores (Kitchen Arts & Letters and CHIPS Books, as well as some overseas stores) and the word I get is that Cruz' book is no longer in circulation because the publisher went out of business. I've looked on eBay too - no joy. Might I ask, how involved the recipe is? I should add that ingredient listings and simple individual recipes are not covered by copyright, incidentally - see http://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-protect.html, fourth item down. The question is whether there's enough prose to make this particular recipe subject to copyright law or not, although even then, under the Fair Use Doctrine there would be an allowance to share it for instructional purposes. Let me know if you are, based on the above (both my attempts to secure my own copy and under copyright law), any less uncomfortable about sharing the details of Cruz' recipe. Thanks, Jake
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Thanks for the suggestions. I'll give this a try the next time I'm in my test kitchen. Another idea that came from a person who studied for a month at the Alicia Foundation was to use Iota Carrageenan. I'll check that out too. Jake
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I think the disclaimer approach is a good one (but maybe at the bottom of the last menu page instead of up front with your branding. Do food bloggers seriously ask for free meals? That's pretty terrible. I remember as a computer journalist that the publications I wrote for were adamant that vendors do not taint the review process in any way - unless the item we were review was less expensive than the cost of shipping it back we had to send back all of our review hardware and software. A free meal would certainly be a taint. Alas, ethics in the modern Internet era leave a lot to be desired... Jake
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So as a multi-day "feast" for one person interest would likely wane quickly, right? Jake
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Well, thanks to the helpful suggestions in this topic, I've got the following booked for my visit in a couple of weeks: - Lincoln - Morimoto at the Omakase Bar - SHO and also Picholine, because I've wanted to go for a while :-) Jake
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I seem to recall at Alinea, in June 2009, when I asked about taking photos, I was told to go ahead, but no video. That request makes sense now in retrospect after seeing Achatz's post. But a tripod on the table (or next to it)? Eek! That's terribly. Jerks like that give us all a bad name. Jake
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I'm glad someone has noticed I have invested in this little beauty, which just fits comfortably in two pockets so I do not arrive at a restaurant looking like a tourist. Unfortunately its not doing the business for me in low light, perhaps its pilot error, you will see the results when I review the Helene Darroze meal. The NEX5 is a nice camera, but the lack of good noise filtering for low light is an issue. I'm really happy with my Canon S90 on that. And in keeping with the other commentary, I never use a flash - complete detracts from the meal for others, plus it produces crappy pictures. One thing I have used in the past is an Olympus camera which had a built in LED light (for super macro use), but added enough light locally to make taking images in low light a bit more viable. Problem was that the images captured by the camera were not particularly good. Jake
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On a related note, well after the start of the thread, I've been dying to have the pork shoulder at Momofuku bo ssam, but they require a minimum of six people, which, seeing as I don't live anywhere near NYC, is a problem for me - I could manage 2-3 friends but not the minimum of 5 others I'd not (since some of my NYC friends don't eat pork or even meat). I am toying with the idea of ordering the pork shoulder to go, and then eating it over several days in the house I'm staying at. Have any of you ever had the bo ssam pork shoulder for one? Or am I just being crazy? Jake