Archive for the ‘cooking’ Category

Wheat Alleriges – surprises to be prepared for

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Here are some places you might be surpised to find wheat:

Wheat/gluten:
-soy sauce
-ice cream (used as thickener)
-hot dogs and sausages
-surimi/imitation crabmeat (blend of different fish)
-licorice
-some baking powders
-sauces, casseroles, gravies
-pre-shredded cheese (prevents clumping)
-beer, bourbon, whiskey and wine
-the glue on the inside of an envelope flap
-hair care products (may contain wheat germ and hydrolyzed wheat products)
-some lipsticks
-Cuisines to be wary of: Really all, but French and Continental in particular

Salad Dressing is Love

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

And so is chicken noodle soup, and couscous salad, and paella, and spare ribs, and dim sum, and macaroni and cheese, and anything you make for someone else because you love them.

Nothing new about the food-is-love concept. But, food made and given or received in a get-well capacity has a special level of love.

A friend was recently ill, and only craved watermelon and cucumbers with lemon dressing. This is the recipe. The rice wine vinegar still gives that light tangy clean flavor, but it’s less acidic and bitter than straight lemon juice, so the dressing has a nice softness to it.

¼ cup chopped shallots

¼ cup fresh lemon juice, strained (about two juicy lemons)

¼ cup rice wine vinegar (unseasoned)

1 tablespoon Dijon mustard

1/2 cup olive oil

Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Put it all into a plastic container with a lid, cover, shake, and it will last a week.

The Eternal Leftover

Monday, May 19th, 2008

The Eternal Leftover

When it comes to leftovers, the world splits itself into three groups (to immediately digress, there are so many things in the world that divide people into groups, mostly two groups, aka hate or love contingencies: black licorice, roller coasters, sea urchin, Hilary Clinton). People usually either A) hate leftovers, and throw almost everything away ; B) love leftovers, are so happy and secure knowing there is some of last night’s meatloaf waiting in the fridge (further digression, there is actually a subset of the B group, the B.1 group who have a slightly depression era attachment to leftovers, really cannot bear to throw ANYTHING away, and have been known to wrap up things like 2 baby cooked carrots, or a bite of a chicken breast); and, C) people like me who look upon almost every single kind of leftover as a shimmering challenge, an exciting opportunity to make a brand new, equally-if-not-more-appealing dish. This concept may leave most of you shrugging, but for those of you in Group C – right? Leftover roast chicken is like the platonic ideal of this kind of springboard food, but that’s just the beginning. In fact, I am trying to remember when I have ever conceded defeat in trying to morph a dish into something new again.

An eternal leftover would be exaggeration – eventually a dish gets completely eaten. But in my kitchen, turning one dish into another dish, and then another, and sometimes (steady now) yet another is becoming a sort of lowbrow art form. I will never ever compete in the Olympics, unless there is a courageous and forward-thinking enough member of the IOC who decides to make Leftover Repurposing into an Olympic Sport. Then, I will be packing my bags for Beijing immediately.

I realize I am not the only person to do this – and I also realize it may make some people a little hesitant about coming over for dinner. I swear, I never repurpose ingredients or dishes that could are of questionable freshness, and I never do it for a dinner party or significant occasion. It’s just so much fun to take something good, and find a way to stretch and bend it into something else…good.

A lovely beef barley soup is my most recent achievement (do I sound like I’m bragging here? Sorry.) And this particular transmogrification was of the most satisfying level, because it involved not just ONE leftover meal, ladies and gentleman, not just TWO, but THREE, THREE I tell you! Not possible, you say? Oh, but it is! It was! There was a vegetable soup, a beef stew, and then some cooked white beans I had in the freezer. One more sautéed onion and a little garlic to start, everything went into the pot, and with the addition of some barley and chicken broth – a whole new soup, a whole new meal, enough to share with my neighbor.

It’s a complicated world out there, and when you find something that not only brings such emotional and practical satisfaction, you should grab it, and simmer away. The pot of soup is dwindling and thickening…but I have a box of ziti calling my name and the reduced soup may well have one more incarnation as a rich pasta sauce. Then I’ll call it quits. Tomorrow is another day, and there is a package of chicken in my fridge waiting to become a leftover.