« June 2005 | Main | September 2005 »
July 22, 2005
how i choose wine
I know nothing about wine... I can kind of tell when something is good, and I know what I dont like, but bad wine can always be fixed by mixing in orange juice. Today my roommate is making this delicious sauce that required 5 sausages. It was my responsibility to go get the wine. Like I said, I dont know anything about wine, so i judge purely on the labels. The last wine I got was some awful stuff that had a flying saucer and a sci-fi back story. I was charmed by the idea that it was wine for sci-fi/wine geeks. This time I got two bottles since I didnt know what she wanted. The first one I got because the label reminded me of medicated shampoo or some kind of medicated cream. Its so clinical looking, like you should have a prescription to be allowed to drink it. The other bottle I got because I have never seen a "petite" wine before. I imagined it being made out of tiny baby veal grapes where only tiny people can juice them because you need tiny little machines to make it.
Posted by alejandra at 06:01 PM | Comments (7) | TrackBack
July 20, 2005
lamb shaped butter!
look what I found at the store today!
Posted by alejandra at 08:58 PM | Comments (5) | TrackBack
July 14, 2005
The Deep End
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, once said "If it has four legs and is not a chair, has wings and is not an aeroplane, or swims and is not a submarine, the Cantonese will eat it." He has a reputation for making offensive statments, though that one, far from overstating a stereotype, is actually a bit limiting. The Cantonese themselves claim that "Any animal whose back faces the sky can be eaten." (thanks, Wikipedia.) The intrepid authors at Deep End Dining test that claim. And then they write about it beautifully.
Posted by amanda at 11:30 PM | TrackBack
July 11, 2005
braised eggplant
It's been a while, hasn't it? I love braised eggplant. It is, to me, the pinnacle of eggplant preparation. But I was always scared to try it because I guess I thought I couldn't quite get it to that perfect mushy texture. There is this Vietnamese fusion-ish place in Seattle that does it so very well. Actually, it's not so hard. This recipe is a bit Thai-flavored, but you could easily sub in more Chinese spices. This makes enough for 2-3 if that's all you're eating. 4 if you're serving some other food. So, get that sesame oil hot on med-hi in a big fat wok. While the oil's heating up, cut up the eggplant into large chunks and rub the chunks with salt. It will need to sit for about 15-20 minutes while the water gets sucked out of it. Brown the tofu and then take it out. That will keep it firm when you braise the whole thing later. Wipe off the eggplant bits and throw them in. While they're cooking cut up the pork. You want these things to brown but not burn, and the oil should be hot. So pay attention and stir occasionally, kinda, while you mash up the garlic and peppers in a mortar. Um, if you're not so comfortable with the multi-tasking, all the things can be cut up beforehand. When the pork and eggplant looks nice and brown and the eggplant is just starting to soften, throw in the garlic and pepper mash, the fish sauce, and the palm sugar and the tofu. Then put in about 1-1 1/2 cups of water and cover for 10 minutes or so. (What you're really supposed to do is cover for a while and then uncover and reduce.. what I did was I happened to have a lid that was too small for my wok, so the water just reduced very gradually and it turned out great in the end.) While the stuff is braising, toast some sesame seeds in another pan on med-low or med heat. And cut up a couple sprigs of green onion. I did the white parts in little slices, and then cut the green parts the long way. When it's just about all reduced, stir in the little bits of green onion. When it's really ready, plate it, sprinkle the pretty long bits on top along with the sesame seeds. In future, I think the pork was actually unnecessary. It didn't really add a great deal of flavor, and I thought the texture didn't quite work. If you had a lot of time, it might well be worthwhile to stew it until it was falling apart. The eggplant and tofu were great. And I'd probably add some ginger and/or thai basil. This might also be excellent some soy and black bean sauce rather than fish sauce.
Posted by amanda at 03:15 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack