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weinoo

eGullet Society staff emeritus
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Everything posted by weinoo

  1. Yep - I threw out my old toaster oven to make room. My big thing now is between the Sous Vide Supreme and my Lello Gelato machine, which weighs so much I can't currently move it from where it is on a regular basis due to my shoulder recovery. Oh, to get that new Anova and not have to make the decision!
  2. By the way, that loaf of bread looks pretty good. For the Cuisi, that is.
  3. Yep - like a $20 bottle of El Jimador or Sauza.
  4. Yes, that's the real name. That's what happens when I post after dinner. Good drink as well.
  5. That price has to be for stoneware, not enameled cast iron; it's the same price at B B & B. I hope you don't shop at W/S, Soba...they're like the Whole Foods of Kitchenware stores.
  6. The best Cuervo is the most expensive Cuervo. What's your budget?
  7. But really, their prices are certainly on par with, say, the Dupont Circle farmer's market on Sundays. This happens at the WF I shop at as well; as well as giving small start-ups the opportunity to sell their products...we have a guy in our building who started selling ice cream, and WF carried his brand from the start. Bottom line: they're not the miserable bastards some like to paint them as.
  8. Yes, it was a cocktail created by Audrey Saunders, at Pegu Club, to specifically break newbies into the world of Aperol/Campari. It's a great drink. The other night, at Cherche Midi, I had a drink called Julia's Crush. Quite similar to the Intro to Aperol, with Campari subbed for the Aperol, and if I'm not mistaken, Grand Marnier for the simple?
  9. I don't really know what is meant by strong coffee. I like coffee brewed properly, with freshly roasted beans, freshly ground, made with good water at the proper temperature. No matter the method.
  10. Nor Florence, around the corner.
  11. I use approximately 2 T per 8 oz. water. 2 T should weigh around 14 grams...7 grams per T of coffee.
  12. For Eater, this is a good piece: NYC - 8 Old Fashioned Butchers
  13. Yes - coarser. Yes - same ratio by weight. http://coffeegeek.com/guides/presspot/
  14. Actually, what I stated is not opinion, it's fact. I have no problem with you not wanting to shop there or not wanting anyone to shop there; I understand your reasons...there are plenty of places I don't go into for my own reasons, that I would just as soon have disappear. But please don't conflate the two - the Whole Paycheck thing is just a bunch of malarkey.
  15. weinoo

    4th of July

    Or Julia .
  16. I don't think it's quite as simple as that, but for another time. I also continuously argue that, for many items here in NYC, Whole Foods is cheaper than my local "supermarket." And it's certainly cheaper, for a lot of items, that the green markets tend to be. It's all caveat emptor.
  17. weinoo

    4th of July

    Re: angel food cake - remember what Julia Child said - cake presentation is the art of camouflage.
  18. So how do you think these would be in a standard waffle iron, not a Belgian one?
  19. I think the tomats (sic) are under those crumbs.
  20. No, no - please - argue away! I made the same point about baking stones in the thread linked above. I don't think any toaster oven is going to be as good as a real oven when it comes to baking on a baking stone. I mean, I preheat my baking stone (when I use it in my regular oven) for an hour; I just don't think that's what I want to use a toaster oven for, be it the Breville or the Cuisi-girl. As far as quarter sheet pans, there are plenty of 1/4 sheet pans that are not sturdy - Ecko, for instance. But that's neither here nor there. The pan that comes with the Cuisi-girl is undoubtedly crap, but I've worked around that by buying the Chicago metallic set, and using things like cazuelas and Le Crueset gratin dishes to work in the Cuisi. I don't think you've done enough testing of the Cuisi yet to make a definitive statement. Shir some eggs. Roast some chicken parts. Cook some rice (oh wait, someone did upthread). Test it for 6 months, as I have. It's already making better toast and reheating better than 2 other appliances. Maybe you'll find you like it even more!
  21. My "trick" for pre-heating the combi is simply to add 5 minutes to the first cooking time, so if I want to cook asparagus for 10 minutes, I set the oven to 15 and put the asparagus in when it reads 10. These small ovens pre-heat rather quickly - and are more accurate than you might think (at least mine is, and I posted about it in the thread linked above). I know of no recipe that specifically calls for a 1/4 sheet pan, the way a recipe for a loaf calls for a specific size loaf pan or a pie calls for a specific sized pie pan. At this point, I think the size difference between the large Breville and the Cuisi-girl is being overblown.
  22. Keith Don't Go is the name of a song on Nils Lofgren's 2nd album, Cry Tough. It has absolutely nothing to do with the new Keith McNally restaurant Cherche Midi, which is in the same spot as the old Keith McNally restaurant, Pulino's, which closed six months or so ago - I just thought it sounded like a good title for my blog post. In any event, in a mere six months, Keith has transformed what was once Pulino's, an Italian pizzeria slash trattoria into Cherche Midi, a French, well, bistro slash brasserie, I guess. In early visits, I liked Pulino's food; there was some cool stuff on that menu - I particularly remember a dish with smoked sable, a guilty pleasure of mine. What I didn't like about Pulino's was the corner; to be exact, the southwest corner of Bowery and Houston Streets, in my mind one of the most heinous corners in Manhattan on which to put a restaurant. As someone on a website I frequent, and where I started an argument about this particular corner, noted: "There is no joy going to the corner of Bowery and Houston." Additionally, the place had windows that were thrown open to that corner; why exactly, I'll never know...my memory fails, but there may have even been cafe tables outside, which is great if you like eating at a bus stop. Fast forward to now, and even though you can't change the corner, the windows are gone, and once inside you'll barely know where you are; if your imagination works well, maybe you'll think you're on the right bank - although that might be pushing it. Suffice to say - it's a hell of a lot nicer inside now, though if you're sensitive to noise, it's as noisy as any of the McNally places, especially as the evening progresses. Significant Eater and I had stopped in about two weeks ago for an after dinner drink and last night I made my way back, specifically to try the burger, which has been raved about in various articles, in blogs, etc. So when I arrived early last night, I took a seat at the practically empty bar, and checked out the drink menu... The head bartender just happens to be a bartender I've known for years from another McNally joint, Schiller's Liquor Bar, and he rightly steered me towards a Julia's Blush, a riff on a Jasmine (a drink I first had made for me by Kenta Goto at Pegu Club). It's Campari heavy, with gin, lemon juice and agave taming the bitter - and it's delicious and perfect for a hot night. It's also $15, as are all the cocktails, which in this day and age in NYC is not crazy, but once the price creeps up to $17, all bets are off. I enjoyed it as I decided what to have for my appetizer; thankfully, the menu is simple compared to the new style of menu. You know the ones - with starters, small plates, middle sized plates, larger plates, in-between plates, pre-desserts, desserts, and on and on, until you end splitting like 7 things and paying twice as much as you used to. Here, it's appetizers, entrees and sides - what a concept! I decided on something cold for my appetizer, an heirloom tomato gazpacho with pickled shrimp... And it was quite good. Thick and rich, not too smooth, with the pickled shrimp adding a nice, well, pickled note. For my entree, the burger. A LaFreida burger (is there a freakin' burger that isn't LaFreida's?), it's allegedly made from dry-aged trimmings from the dry-aged prime rib, which is also on the menu, along with some short-rib, which isn't. It's topped with roasted mushrooms, bacon marmalade and aged gruyere, and I'm guessing the buns are made somewhere in the McNally world - like at Balthazar bakery. It comes with fries, lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle slices, and it looks like this... It's good. It was cooked to perfection. It's really good, as a matter of fact, the dry-aged beef adding that cheesy funkiness I happen to like. If I have one complaint, it's that the bun may be a little too big for the burger, but it was toasted and held together beautifully, and you can't ask for much more than that. And the fries - still some of my favorite fries in the city. From Balthazar, to Minetta, to Schiller's - the fries are fine. And just to pretend I might be in France - I dip 'em in mustard - try it, you might be surprised. The tariff for the burger and fries - $21. Not bad, when you consider that a side of fries is $9 on this menu. Same price as the Spotted Pig's and cheaper than Minetta Tavern's Black Label entry. It'll be interesting to me to see if Cherche Midi has a long run. As I mentioned above, I felt that one of the main reasons for Pulino's closure was specifically the location. But now the Bowery is home to a dozen or more restaurants, all on a stretch that was unimaginable a decade ago. The crowd is different than Schiller's was, back when it was the lower east side's hottest spot and they could squeeze 8 models into a booth made for 4. So it remains to be seen whether the crowds will continue to come (and it was crowded by the time I left last night), with all those other choices nearby. Me - I'm heading back with Significant Eater soon. The menu has lots to explore, and it's the kind of food we really like to eat. My guess? On our next visit, she's gonna want that burger too. COMP DISCLOSURE: A good glug of wine to top off my wine glass.
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  23. I'm quite fond of my Dalla Piazza.
  24. Actually, the real reason California is in drought is because where most of the people live, it's a fucking desert.
  25. What's so hard about it? Don't wines from different places taste differently?
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