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food-weekend-sunday-morning-with-the-pastry-chef

Sunday morning we were back at the Left Bank with Kevin Wirt, the Inn’s Pastry Chef. He made us fresh buttermilk biscuits and banana bread. Awesome breakfast. I’m not big on banana bread (I think I am the only person on the planet who is that way), but when it is straight out of the oven, it’s not bad at all.

I’d say we spent at least an hour picking his brains on methods, equipment, ingredients, food, and anything else we could think of. He was just super about it all. Also gave us recipes for all of these goodies:

– Banana Nut Bread
– Pumpkin Bread
– Cranberry Orange Scones
– Coconut Scones
– Cinnamon Walnut Scones
– Buttermilk Biscuits
– Cinnamon Raisin Biscuits
– NC Sweet Potato & Country Ham Biscuits

For lunch I headed down to Coastal Provisions for a great ham & swiss sandwich and some rosemary roasted potatoes and had a great little lunch on the beach.

Dinner was over at the Lifesaving Station restaurant and it was fantastic. Had the shrimp, corn & crab chowder which was just wonderful. Went with the special, which I have to figure out how to make on my own - pan seared silky snapper, served over thin sliced roasted potatoes and squash in a chardonnay sauce, with tabasco butter on top. It was just perfect. The butter gave it just a bit of a kick without being at all overwhelming and it just hit the spot. The sauce is fairly similar to one I make already, this was just a little thicker, and I think had more butter than I usually have in mine. Definitely have to give it a shot at some point.

All in all, it was a fantastic weekend, and I’m now resisting the urge to rip out my electric cooktop and finally replace it w/a gas range. :)

food-weekend-saturday-in-the-kitchen

So Saturday morning I got up and headed over to the kitchen at the Left Bank restaurant. If you ever have the chance to muck around in a commercial/pro kitchen - do it. Gas ranges! Convection ovens! Prep bowls and spatulas as far as the eye can see! Tasting spoons! (I no longer feel like a freak for the fact that I routinely go through half a dozen spoons in the course of cooking something.) Seriously, I was in heaven the minute I walked in.

Chef Christine put the menu together based on what’s in season (or coming into season very soon) and we had an absolutely fantastic lunch as a result. The two main items were rockfish and soft-shelled crabs. She pulls the crabs out and they’re in a metal dish and iced down. She takes off the ice and is talking about something when someone says, “Um, are the crabs…moving?” Yup - still alive! Which makes perfect sense, but it was just wasn’t something anyone expected.

The kitchen was pretty decent sized, but there were 12 of us and the Chef, so we were a little cramped to start with, but quickly got to the point where we were working around each other very well. It was easy to be able to keep an eye out and see what was going on in other parts of the kitchen, so even if you were working on one thing, it was not a problem to see how something else was being made at the same time. Oh, and good for grabbing spoons and tasting things as we went along, too.

Basically everyone paired off and grabbed a recipe and went to town. Jo (my partner) and I started with cleaning the crabs - no one else really wanted to do it, I think because of the “still kicking” part - I got over the entire “meeting my lunch before I eat it” problem in about a minute… Pull the tab, clean the gills, cut off the face, next!

Once we got done w/cleaning the crabs, we passed them off to another pair for dredging and sauteing as they were already doing the sauce for them as well. We discovered that no one had taken on dessert yet, so that would be all us. It was a variation on strawberry shortcake - a orange-strawberry compote on orange poppyseed biscuits.

The chef had gone ahead and made the biscuits beforehand for time’s sake, which was very helpful. :) I looked at the recipe and realized this definitely couldn’t be a “prep as you go” thing given the cooking times and the order and timing of everything going in. Off to the racks in the back for prep bowls! I am a total mice in place* kinda gal anyway so the whole prep & staging before actual cooking comes naturally to me, and I honestly think it makes it easier when you actually start cooking anyway. I will say that I think it is definitely more difficult to try and prepare the same dish with another person vs. doing it on your own - especially if you’ve only met the person 15 minutes beforehand and have no idea what their kitchen work style is like. Fortunately it worked fine and no saucepans were thrown at each other in the course of making dessert.

Something I realized after the fact was that while I was having an absolute blast, I was also in complete “work mode” - we had to feed 12 people dessert, we had a great recipe, excellent ingredients and absolutely no reason whatsoever that this shouldn’t kick ass and dammit, it would. Totally in the zone. Chop, zest, juice, stop and think and look around and make sure the answer isn’t right in front of me before bothering Chef with a question, get everything staged in the order to be used, make sure I’m thinking a couple steps ahead so as not to forget anything, and most important, don’t do anything that would make Chef think I am a complete fuckup. Mind you, this was in no way any kind of a boot camp class or anything like that, but I still was in work mode anyway…and was loving it.

So, Jo got going on cutting up a ton of strawberries, while I fought with the oranges. (And won.) Chef did show me a much faster way to section them, which was a godsend, because while I do know how to do it, I just don’t have the mad skillz to do it quickly. Well, I didn’t before this weekend. Then it was cook, add something, stir, cook, make sure it’s not burning, stir, cook, add something, cook, done! Off to the racks in the back again to find the right container to put it in an ice bath, since there was no way it was going to cool down fast enough on it’s own. While we were waiting for it to get to a useable temperature, it was time for the whipped cream. Snag the mixer, cream, sugar and vanilla. Or, not… Check the prep table where Christine had put out the ingredients we’d be using, checked under the table, looked around the rest of the kitchen - no dice. Snagged Christine and asked where it was hidden - I was SO sure it was probably right in front of me the whole time, but turns out it hadn’t come over from the other kitchen. So, we skipped the vanilla in the whipped cream with no adverse effects, and I took care of that while Jo did the garnishes for it. After what seemed like forever trying to get the cream to soft peak stage, we finally got to put everything together. Have to say, it looked awesome when we got it all together.

By some awesome miracle (well, thanks to the excellent direction of Chef Christine), everything came out wonderfully and at the same time. We had enough food for a small army and it was all spectacular:

– Herb crusted rockfish. Awesome.
– Soft shelled crabs dredged in cornmeal and sauteed and served on a roasted corn sauce that was just to die for.
– Oven dried tomatoes - again, what a difference very fresh tomatoes make.
– Bacon cabbage slaw - the recipe we have can be made w/ white wine vinegar or champagne - we went w/the white wine vinegar. I think I’d go w/the champagne when I make it, because it was a touch vinegary to my taste, but still really tasty.
– Cream of asparagus soup - another super dish.
– Chilled asparagus salad with strawberry vinagrette and vanilla strawberries - can you tell asparagus and strawberries are in season? Also, just fantastic.
– Orange-Strawberry shortcake. Given that I had the recipe, cooked the stuff and put it all together, I knew exactly what it was supposed to taste like, and it tasted exactly the way it should, but it was still kind of overly sweet to me. But, everyone else devoured it, so it’s all good.

While we had our lunch, the sommelier, Lynette Sumner, gave us 4 different wines and went over pairing wine with food. This gal seriously knows her stuff - and if she wasn’t so incredibly nice, she’d be very intimidating. After about 5 minutes, I realized the most intelligent thing I could say about wine was, “I like red wine!”

Everything was just spectacular and everyone had a terrific time. I ended up getting a sandwich from Tommy’s Market for dinner, cause there was absolutely no way on earth I could finish another full meal after lunch.

So this weekend, I spent some time up at the Sanderling Inn for their “Cooking School Weekend” that their executive chef, Christine Zambito, put on. A very long time ago, the restaurant at Sanderling was the first place I really saw just how much impact changing chefs can have on a restaurant when they’re left to their own devices and allowed to do what they do best, so I found it oddly appropriate that my first ever formal cooking class would in the same place.

Friday night I arrived and they had a nice little reception upstairs at The Lifesaving Station restaurant. I figured it was just going to be a little meet & greet kind of thing, but no, it was better! Wine and hors d’oeuvres - and then Christine showed us how to make all the goodies we’d gotten to eat AND had recipes for all of them to take home. All of these were absolutely wonderful and easy as all get out to make, but look and taste fairly impressive. What we had:

- Sanderling Crab Dip - this is what they serve in the restaurant. This recipe is particularly good as far as I’m concerned because there is none of this adding artichokes or any other silliness - just lots of crab goodness.

- Roasted Red Pepper Hummus served on Belgian Endive - insanely easy and absolutely blows away anything I’ve ever bought prepared, ever. The presentation on the Belgian Endive looks great, and adds a great crispness to it.

- Smoked Salmon Canapés - Just your basic smoked salmon w/jazzed up cream cheese in pinwheels. Half on crackers, and the other half on cuke slices. I was really surprised at how good the ones on the cukes were - it wasn’t a combination I would have thought of (one of my biggest weaknesses w/food), but I really liked it.

- Bruschetta w/the following toppings:
– Black Olive Tapenade - I’ve had this before and could kind of take it or leave it, but this was out of this world. Not sure if it’s the dry cured olives, the fact that it was fresh or what, but I could have eaten this with a spoon.
– Diced tomatoes with Garlic & Herbs - All I can say is this shows how much of a HUGE difference really nice, fresh, not-ripened-on-a-truck tomatoes make. SO good.
– Herbed goat cheese - this is in my list of recipes, but I’m pretty sure this either wasn’t in with what we ate, or I somehow missed it, but it looks good and I’ll be giving that a go at some point as well.

So, we got ourselves all good and noshed up to get things kicked off. Headed over to the Swan Bar in the restaurant and discovered that they have lost the recipe for Keoki coffee that I left them the last time I had drinks there (14 years ago…), so they now have that again, and I’ve got a new friend in the bartender, Jason.

Posting from the deck at the Sanderling Inn down here in OBX. Got an email from them a couple weeks back - cooking school weekend. Sounded like fun, so here I am - and a good thing, since by the end of this week, I’d had it up to here with people, contractors and just about everything else.

I’ll do a separate write up on the cooking class & demos, but I just love being down here - it is the best place to get out of your own head for a while. Besides the class & demos, I’ve hit my fav beach shop, coffeeshop, tackle shop, been fishing a couple times, spent time on the beach (dolphins!), got sunburned, met all sorts of nice people (as always) and generally enjoyed the hell out of myself.

It is also apparently bike week down here - didn’t even know OBX had a bike week - not exactly Sturgis, but LOTS of motorcycles all over the place, and a lot of happy bikers.

Heading back home tomorrow, but it’s been a perfect weekend.

Don’t drink and ride

April 24th, 2007
dont-drink-and-ride

Drunk man parks horse in German bank - An early-morning German bank customer had a bit of a shock when he found a horse already in line at the automatic teller machine in front of him.

courtesy Desperate Housewives:

“I’m in between disappointments right now.”

Lessons learned

April 22nd, 2007
lessons-learned

and other thoughts after a fairly craptastic week in the world.

- No more putting off training (or anything else I want to do for that matter) because I feel like I should be doing ‘more important’ things with my time - screw that - I realized I was letting other idiots define ‘important’. Today I finally got out and ran for the first time in forever.  It was ugly and painful, which I fully expected, but it also helped clear my head a little, which I very much needed.

- Don’t let anyone else define what is important in your life. If it’s truly important, you’ll know it. If it isn’t, it isn’t. If that gets someone else’s knickers in a twist, too bad.

- There are some seriously messed up people in this world. Maybe they could have been helped with very early intervention, maybe not. But, they’ve always been there in this world and they’ll always be there in the future. Personally, I’m not going to spend my entire life looking over my shoulder waiting for someone to snap. At the same time, take the time to reach out to someone who might need a shoulder to lean on or an ear to bend for a few minutes.

- Some people have way too much time on their hands and become petty jerks to justify their existence. Please, go find a real hobby.

- Some people will always confound me, no matter how hard I try to understand them. (And yet, I’ll still try to understand them.)

- AUTiger23 summed up why some folks are just jerks very well with this quote from Scrubs: People are bastard-coated bastards with bastard filling.

- There is no such thing as having all home improvement projects finished. Ever.

- Earth Day can be incredibly annoying for a gun-loving, capitalist, beach-bum hippie chick. If you’re not hard core on either side of the arguments, no one wants to play with you.

- It’s 80 degrees and beautiful out today - which means it will probably be in the 50s and raining again in the space of a week.

April 20th, 2007

If I have to call another contractor in the next 30 days, I will find a large, heavy object and bludgeon myself to death.

Virginia Tech

April 17th, 2007

My heart is breaking for all the families affected by this - especially the parents of the gunman. How do you deal with the news that not only is your child dead, but he took over 30 people with him?

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry has said that they hope the shooting would not “stir up racial prejudice or confrontation.” I would really hope that people are intelligent enough that when they look at all this, they see someone with real problems, not just someone who was from South Korea. I guess it’s just sad that it has to be said at all.

There are, of course, knee-jerk reactions coming from all sides. I’ve heard more gun control, allow students to carry, make all college campuses closed and install metal detectors everywhere. I completely understand where this is all coming from - who doesn’t want to immediately be able to shout from the rooftops, “This won’t happen again, and here’s how we’re going to do it!”?

What this situation truly deserves is a thoughtful, intelligent, measured response based on not just what happened yesterday, but what led up to it and caused it to happen at all.

You’ve got someone who had some very serious problems, to put it mildly, and he finally hit his breaking point. In this case, he lashed out and did so violently. It happens. We don’t like to admit that it happens, but it does. Attempts were apparently made to reach out to him in the form of a referral to counseling - whether or not he ever followed through on that is still unknown. On the one hand, you can’t force someone to help themselves, but at the same time, don’t we have some sort of obligation as decent human beings to at least try as hard as we can to help someone out who needs it? Should someone have taken the initiative to see if he was getting the counseling that was recommended? Maybe they did, we just don’t know yet.

If he’d gotten some sort of help, would it have prevented all of this in the first place?

My second question/concern is the two hour gap. Even if the police did believe the first shooting was an isolated incident, you’ve got a gunman who has already shot two people, still armed and at large in a very densely populated area. There are conflicting reports as to whether or not there was a lockdown after the first shooting. I’m not in law enforcement, maybe there is a very good explanation as to what happened after the first shooting. However, I would think that until you had found the shooter and had him in custody, a lockdown would have been perfectly appropriate. But again, not in law enforcement, and I am very interested in hearing more on what exactly happened.

I am sure there will be groups that will use this for political gain. Attempts will be made to legislate everyone into a state of perfect safety, even though no such thing exists. Hopefully something good can come out of this terrible thing, but sadly, the way politics works, somehow I don’t see it.

Virginia Tech

April 16th, 2007

As you’ve probably heard by now, there was a mass shooting down at Virginia Tech this morning.

Last report had 30 deaths, including the shooter, one in the dorms, and the rest in Norris Hall. The local news outlets are scrambling to get additional information on what actually happened and why, and of course, speculation is running rampant.

An incredibly sad day for that campus.

ETA: The Associated Press is now confirming 31 deaths.

Awesome.

April 15th, 2007

All my IMAZ chickadees are off the bikes and on the run!!

Go Lane!

April 15th, 2007

My buddy Lane, who tried very hard to up and die on us last fall, is doing IMAZ today! (2.4 mile swim, 112 miles on the bike and a 26.2 mile run)

He did the swim (2.4 miles in Tempe Town Lake) in 1:10:17 - that’s a pace of 1:50 per 100 meters. Mine is around 3 minutes…

He’s gotten at least to the 37 mile mark on the bike - unfortunately, they don’t have another chip sensor until the end of the bike, at 112 miles.

Welshy went a little slower on the swim w/a 2:44 pace, but he made it and also has passed the 37 mile sensor on the bike. Jess is seriously rockin’ out on the bike segment, too.

I am so proud of them!!!

Free watermarking software

April 12th, 2007

http://www.giveawayoftheday.com/ has a free watermark program today - Watermark Factory 2 - only “catch” is that you have to download and install/activate it before midnight pacific time.

Thanks to Paperpath for passing on the link.

Getting rid of it all

April 10th, 2007
getting-rid-of-it-all

Woman tries to sell it all on eBay.

I can completely see the appeal in doing this - there isn’t much better than having a clean slate to work with, and this would definitely do it.

April 4th, 2007

Read, every day, something no one else is reading. Think, every day, something no one else is thinking. Do, every day, something no one else would be silly enough to do. It is bad for the mind to be always part of unanimity.

- - Christopher Morley

really-i-understand-the-concept

But yet again, I’ve gone to the gun show and returned empty handed. Not many H&K’s this time around it seemed. Was also reminded of how much I like the feel of the Walther P-22’s…and the Glocks. So much for “Yes, I really know what I want.”

Little bro came along as well. Best quote of the day: “Not sure about a place where you can get a gun, a ski mask and a book on ‘learn everything possible about burglar alarms’.” (What can I say, I’m used to the history books next to “how to field strip any weapon” next to “How to beat down The Man” books.) But he seemed to enjoy it.

I always have a good time, if nothing else for the off the wall stuff that you see, and some good people watching.

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