Sunday, June 20, 2010

Ad Hoc's Pork and Peay

After walking a moderately strenuous 3.5 miles in dry, hot heat without drinking enough water, and in a warm outfit; I was in no condition to enjoy Pork and Peay wines at Ad Hoc.  I'd looked forward to it, and was sad that I missed the special treat.  My husband however, stayed alone and thoroughly enjoyed the evening (especially after hearing the Lakers won the NBA Championship!)



Appetizers started from the head and jowls of the pig.  Ad Hoc created assorted salami (charcuterie), pickled vegetables and stuffed chicken legs.  This was served with a 2009 Rose wine (grapes bought from Cep Vineyards and made by Peay Vineyards).
Salad of endive and watercress came with crisp pig ear lardons and a sea urchin crostini with pork back fat.  Peay Roussane/Marsanne 2007.  Hubby loved the pig ear and the urchin.
"Heart and Soul" was pig heart pastrami and petrale sole.  Two chardonnays were served:  Peay Vineyards Estate 2007 and Peay Hirsch Vineyard 2006.  The heart was marinated in brine for 2 days, and then cooked sous vide (vacuum sealed in plastic and gently cooked in a water bath) for 24 hours.  Part of this dish was brought back for me to try the next day.  The heart tasted like good pastrami.  Hubby thought this was the best fish he's ever had, and really enjoyed the pig heart.
Pork feet (removed from the hoof) came out with smoked wild mushrooms, green and yellow beans, Ranch Gordo yellow eye beans.  Two pinot noirs:  Peay Vineyards Estate 2004 and Peay Scallop Shelf Estate 2006.
For the main course a stuffed pork chop with yellow corn, black rice and crisp belly.  Peay Vineyards La Bruma Estate syrah 2007 and PV Les Titans Estate syrah 2007 accompanied the main.  When I tasted this the next day, it tasted like it was stuffed with liver--the pork chop meat was divine.
Dessert of waffles with crisp candied bacon and buttermilk sorbet ended the meal sweetly.  (Photo is greatly cropped because it would not upload otherwise.)

My husband loved the meal and felt the wines a treat.  Peay Vineyards is at Sea Ranch on the Mendocino Coast. 

Animal innards (offal) are not really my thing, so I would have loved half the meal.  I at least taste the offal and give it a chance; after all it's better for the planet not to waste.  Hear it's the mark of a great chef:  turning offal into something delicious.  Andrew Zimmern from the Travel Channel would commentate well on the meal.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Restaurant Alex @ the Wynn

Our second day of relaxing was much like the first, though we both went to the pool and we both gambled together.  I met the couples he met the day before at the pool.  Two male cousins from Venezuela had their outrageously beautiful girlfriends with them.  All the guys at the pool stared at the girlfriends.  The two males dealt in diamonds and were in town for a gem convention.

We ordered the 1.5 pound pastrami sandwich from Zoozacrackers deli at 3 pm, which made our 6 pm Alex reservations impossible.  The dinner reservations were moved back to 8:30 pm.  It was the perfect time for us to go.
The long meal began with an amuse bouche assortment from the chef:  pork with corn, risotto ball, cauliflower soup, prawn and "cheese and cracker."
A stuffed tomato appeared to whet my appetite.
A prawn appetizer was ordered, which featured a perfectly cooked prawn.
My main course was lamb with peas, lettuce and pasta balls.  I put the darker triangle on my fork, thinking it was a vegetable, and ate it.  Immediately I thought, this is not a vegetable, it's lamb offal.  When questioned further, the chef told the server the triangle was in fact lamb tongue.  I knew what the second item was:  sweetbread--i.e. thymus glands (which immediately went to my husband, who's not nearly as squeamish as I am about offal).  The lamb dish was delicious (though I enjoy vegetables much more than animal innards).  Ecologically it's better to consume, and not waste, the whole animal.
I loved the way the palate cleanser came in Bodum cups that made the custards look like they were floating.  My husband's was tropical tapioca and coconut, while mine was berry-based.
The cherries have been so nice in Northern California, that this dessert on the menu appealed to me.  I let the chocolate melt on my tongue, then tried the crisp pistachio on sugar with the pistachio ice cream.  The quartered cherries went in my mouth piece-by-piece.  Finally a layer of pistachio cake, layered with tempered chocolate and pistachio cream went down bite-by-bite.
Petit fours and freshly baked brown-butter Madelines were to be enjoyed as long as we wished.  We were sent home with a peach "Alex" box of macaroons.

Hearing Alex was the best restaurant at the Wynn, we wished to try it while we were there.  Restaurant Alex delighted our senses and added to our very pleasant time in Las Vegas.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Sumptuous Strawberries

Woke up early, checked email, online banking and Facebook.  Made breakfast of oranges, CSA eggs, Li’l Bites no-nitrate smoked sausages, and toast.  It had to be hearty, as I volunteered at San Francisco International Airport from 11 am to 3 pm.  There were three babies being adopted from Korea.  Four of us ladies cared for the babies while they were on layover.

Stopped by a hospital to check out the employment board, found two jobs that sounded promising.  However, perhaps mom's advice of finding a job really close to home is better? 

At a Menlo Park shoe repair shop, a pair of designer shoes received a few inches of new holes.  Husband asked for shoehorns, shoetrees, shoelaces and shoes polished.  At least REI will have a super sale on Keen shoes Friday!
Picked up our weekly Community Supported Agriculture.  Reading the list of items for the week on email, thought it would be a lot of greens with two baskets of strawberries.  It was much more colorful than that!  Dinner consisted of strawberries for the first course, and ham pineapple pizza for the second.
Stopped to re-photograph the beautiful batch of bachelor buttons.  The weather's been weird:  raining, sprinkling and sunny.  Glad that the BBs held up!

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The Way We Eat Now

Tonight's The New York Times "TimesTalks" topic was all about food, specifically about what three Northern California chefs think.  Thomas Keller talked about how high quality ingredients matter, not as much that the ingredients are organic.  Stating that:  some of these farms have been operating organically for generations, so they are not always going to go through the process of becoming certified organic.  Michael Mina spoke about being asked by his 9 and 12 year-old to get rice started early so that they could make sushi for themselves for their school lunches.  And Traci Des Jardins mentioned that providing full healthcare coverage for her San Francisco restaurant employees puts a huge strain on the profit and loss statements (not to mention having to pay minimum wage to servers making a lot of money in tips, which also causes a huge discrepancy in pay between the back and front of the house).  Overall it was a good talk, and enjoyable to hear and watch.
Afterward, all five participants sign our Ad Hoc cookbook, including Kim Severson and Frank Bruni.  It is a one of a kind.  The view from the Kabuki theatre this evening reflected our vibe of the night.
The talk ended at 8 pm, so we ate at a nearby sushi restaurant in Japan Town in San Francisco before heading home.  
Last night I took my 92 year-old great-aunt to a double feature of classic movies in downtown Palo Alto.  We saw "Trouble in Paradise" (funny movie about two jewelry thieves) and "Love Me Tonight" (romantic musical) from 1932.  Lucky for us, Jeffery's served us hamburgers shortly after their 9 pm closing time.  It's about our quality of life, and we are living!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Wrapping up Wine Bottling

The second day would be a full day, if all the bottling happened as planned.  We started at 8 am on the dot.  I worked second bottling position all morning, my husband worked the empty glass bottle unloading station, and our friend worked the end of the line case labeling station (my husband's coworker worked the bottle unloading station, while his wife worked the wine label on the case station).

A productive day, the filled bottles came at us at the rate of 95 bottles per minute.  With bottles coming at one that fast, there is hardly time for a passing thought.  We helped fill and load (with the help of machines) 5,000 cases of wine.  After working the inserting the bottles in case boxes station for six hours, I was ready for a slightly less busy job.  The last couple of hours of the day I folded box tops to put through the tape machine and labeled the cases with an ID sticker.
We walked away with new prize wine possessions.  Looking beat, we headed to Silverado Brewing Company for dinner.  They refreshed us with fish and chips, ribs and a shrimp and crab Louis salad.  Our friend was dropped off exhausted at 11 pm (he'd also run 10 miles down to Pope Valley and up Ink Grade before the 8 am bottling call!).  We arrived home before we turned into pumpkins, happily satisfied with our glass wine bottling experience.  It fit perfectly.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Chicken Noodle Casserole

Needing to use a lot of the Community Supported Agriculture before Wednesday's refill, I adapted a recipe for Tuna Noodle Casserole.  I wanted to make a healthier version of the great-tasting noodle casserole.
G.G.'s Chicken Noodle Casserole

2 CSA Leeks, sliced
3 CSA Green Onions (scallions), sliced
2 tablespoons Butter
1, 16-ounce package of Egg Noodles (we used organic mini-lasagna noodles)
1 bunch CSA Chard, sliced
1 bunch CSA Broccoli, diced
8 ounces Mushrooms, sliced
8 ounces Frozen Peas
1 (fully cooked) Rotisserie Chicken (ours was Hormone-Free from Rocky Farms), de-boned, skinned, and cut into cubes
1 pint Cream
8 ounces Sour Cream
15 ounces Ricotta
8 ounces Cheddar Cheese, diced
3 ounces Green Olives with Pimentos, sliced
Salt and Pepper to taste

1.)  Put a large pot of water on high heat to boil for the pasta.  When the water comes to a boil, cook the pasta for the shortest time listed on the package.
2.)  Melt butter in a large stockpot, add leeks and green onions to medium heat.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Heat through until soft, about 10 minutes.
3.)  Add chard, broccoli, and mushrooms, to the leek mixture.  Continue to heat for 5 minutes, stirring frequently.
4.)  Add peas and chopped up chicken to the vegetables, heat through.  Salt and pepper to taste.
5.)  Drain the pasta when it is finished.  
6.)  In the empty pasta pot, add the cream, sour cream and ricotta, salt and pepper to taste, whisk ingredients together.
7.)  Add the vegetable/chicken mixture, pasta, cheddar cheese and the olives to the cream sauce, stir and heat through.

Makes 12+ servings.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Ad Hoc Fried Chicken and Waffles

We rose, packed our car and said goodbye to our generous hosts.  Goodbye cute little cabin in the woods.  Almost, goodbye weekend (and week-long vacation!)
 The line at Bouchon Bakery was getting long, so we diverted and had Sunday brunch at Ad Hoc.  A fortuitous choice because we lucked upon Ad Hoc fried chicken and waffles!  Our brunch started with a yogurt parfait with fruit salad.  The main course of wonderful fried chicken, crisp waffles, maple syrup and chard with roasted bell peppers came next.  Dessert of blondies and brownies, butterscotch sauce and housemade ice cream resting on cashews was presented.  A spoonful of brownie with sauce, ice cream and cashews made taste buds so happy.
Back home we rearranged furniture, unpacked and cleaned.  Sounds funny, but seeing amazing sheets on sale (not even purchased) were enough to put me into gear arranging a suitable space for guests.

Dinner tonight of leftover fried chicken and pasta with stir-fried CSA Brussels sprouts help us pay for food now, to prevent paying the doctor later in life.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

About the Afternoon Tea

A lovely guest asked where I came up with the recipes for the tea.  Normally start with "The Joy of Cooking" cookbook and/or the internet for the bones of a recipe, then flesh-out the recipe with my own ideas.  We really enjoy tea:  my husband loves the intricacies of tea itself; I like the pretty china, silver, decor, etc.  Items about the afternoon teas that I especially like were noted from the 100 we've attended.  Subscriptions to magazines such as Tea A Magazine and TeaTime widen horizons as well.

Our friends have tea sourced from around the globe through the business-traveling husband.  Yesterday's tea was to thank friends who'd hosted an amazing dinner in August.  Their house has great entertaining space, so we used it for the afternoon tea.  Last Sunday we hauled our Canton Famille Rose china collection there, set the table, and choose the teas from her collection.

Larry's Original Chai seemed like it would go well with the butternut squash soup I'd planned for the first course.

The butternut squash soup was served so we could use the Canton Cabbage and Butterfly compotes, and because of the unforgettable afternoon tea a year ago that started with the best butternut squash and apple soup imaginable.

Luckily this week's CSA included two small butternut squash, an acorn squash, Fuji apples and carrots.  Settled on this easy recipe:  http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/butternut_squash_apple_soup/ and used the strained pan broth from the turkey baked on Tuesday (a bottle of white wine, 100 ounces chicken stock with the turkey neck and vegetables; a virtual steam bath for the turkey) instead of the recipe's chicken stock.  The Fuji apples were not tart enough at the finish of the online recipe.  Tried to use items on-hand, squeezed in the juice of one clementine tangerine . . . not enough flavor, searched the spice drawer for pumpkin spice to no avail . . . Chinese five spice was the closest thing there, so a teaspoon was added . . . flavor still not right . . . pomegranate would add a pretty color as garnish and is tart.  About a 1/4 cup of fresh squeezed pomegranate juice was added.  The flavor was where I wanted it, then a luxurious addition: 1/2 cup of cream.

Purposefully served relatively small servings of the rich butternut squash apple pomegranate soup topped with a swirl of creme fraiche, CSA bread-turned into mini croutons, and carefully chosen gem-like pomegranate seeds.

I hand count, and mix a Lucky-in-Love floral tea.  Inspecting the teas at our friends' home, a mystery tea appeared from China that resembled my Lucky in Love tea, so I called it T&T's Lucky in Love Tea in honor of our hosts.  Appropriately enough, they were given the tea on a business trip to China right after their wedding.  A guest deciphered the Chinese label on the package:  "Special Tea."

Tips for tea sandwiches:  1.) to keep sandwiches from getting dry, put the sandwiches on a well-wrung damp paper towel on a cookie sheet, then wrap with plastic wrap.  2.) lightly butter both inner sides of the bread with soft, room temperature butter to keep the bread from getting soggy or tearing the bread.  Recommend not serving more than 4 small tea sandwiches per person (roughly equal to one regular lunch sandwich) for a tea this size.

Inspiration for the sandwiches:  Turkey, Basil, Cream Cheese with Raisins came from the All Souls Day Tea a year ago (it may have come from TeaTime Magazine, which called for dried cranberries instead of raisins).  This is a tasty, terrific, and pretty tea sandwich.  A container of edible flowers for garnish came from Draeger's market in San Mateo.

Chicken Curry Salad on a Croissant came from a delicious salad served to honor junior high school teachers.  Originally the recipe came from church friends in the late 1960's or early 1970's.  My mom included the recipe in the cookbook she made her kids for Christmas 14 years ago.  It has grapes, celery and almonds--sweet, savory and crunchy.  The croissant idea came from croissants my brother's-in-law, in-laws make for Thanksgiving.  Used the canned type and made sure that the ends were brought together to make a circular-shaped croissant.  The sandwiches were topped with cilantro from this week's CSA box.

CSA eggs' freshness prevents the egg shells from coming off well when hard boiled.  Brown eggs from the market were used instead.  My husband likes pickles in his egg salad, so I added a little relish and mustard and grated the eggs for a nice consistency.  Turmeric was added for color and CSA dill for garnish.

The tomato and cucumber sandwich idea came from the Four Seasons Las Vegas afternoon tea (sideways, topped with a slice of pimento olive).  It was a good idea, as it combined two sandwiches I normally make.  Note: an easy open-faced tea sandwich--butter a slice of bread, cut using a fluted 2-2 1/2 inch round and top with a Roma tomato slice or cucumber slice, salt and pepper the tops.

On another business trip, our hosts sourced Sabah Ginger Tea from Borneo.  Sabah is a state on the South East Asian island of Borneo.

That wonderful afternoon tea a year ago had a great white chocolate and peppermint scone with candy cane cream (pictured right).  It was so fun to eat!  Our host at the time said she ordered soft peppermints online.  I bought a large tub of soft peppermints many months ago when seen for sale at a local pharmacy.  TeaTime Magazine had the recipe, but it called for peppermint chips (the kind from Andes?).  Went with crushed soft peppermints instead, as my former host mentioned.

Friday during an afternoon tea, with an English culture-loving friend, she commented, "American scones are dry, dense and crumbly.  I never had a dry scone in England."  That got me thinking.  This same friend brought me back a book from England "The Ritz London Book of Afternoon Tea."  Comparing the ingredients and quantities for the London scones versus the magazine recipe, there were differences.  I added in all the cream of tartar in the house, just under a tablespoon (to the doubled recipe prepared); increased the butter from 12 tablespoons to 16 tablespoons; used half cream, half buttermilk in place of the all buttermilk per the magazine recipe; and added 1/3 cup more liquid.  Tal-y-Tara in San Francisco gave this advice for scones:  keep all the ingredients very, very cold for light scones.  The scones went in the freezer for 10 minutes before baking.  While extremely tasty, the scones spread a bit in the oven.  Therefore, suggest cutting the butter down to 14 tablespoons and not adding the extra 1/3 cup liquid.  To keep the scones pretty for the party, while still warm a metal spatula cut off the extra beyond the original triangle shape.

Our male host put together homemade pomegranate sorbet for our palate cleanse (pictured above, right).  Pomegranates are great and they're really healthy.  The sorbet had a touch of lime, another favorite flavor.  The idea for the sorbet comes, again, from that lovely tea a year ago: three sorbets, over the top, in cute little shot glasses (pictured left).  Mom bought me similar shot glasses for a Christmas gift.

Since guests stayed at the tea from 3 to 8:30 p.m., after partially digesting the tea, we savored the second homemade sorbet.  The couple made a fresh CSA apple sorbet, too.  Both were beyond refreshing.

My husband made hot chocolate using whole milk, dark chocolate, Mexican chocolate and hazelnut chocolate; warmed and whisked in a pot.  Shortly before the tea began at 3 p.m., he melted chocolate to cover strawberries.  Our host made a CSA apple and raisin galette; plus crispy, buttery lavender shortbread (the only shortbread better than Walker's).

Friday, through pouring rain, drove to the Divine Delights retail outlet in Petaluma for gorgeous petit fours.  They were a bit less expensive than buying them online or in specialty markets.

Purchased a month ago, and froze TKOs (Thomas Keller Oreos) from Bouchon Bakery in Yountville.  The Oreo brownie recipe calls for a chocolate chip top: to spruce them up for a tea, Valrhona Crunchy Pearls were used instead.  Cut the the recipe by 2/3rds to make 8 small portions in decorative pans.  As an over-the-top addition, leftover Donnelly caramel was drizzled over the top of the TKO Brownies.

One last tip from Chic Chateau in San Jose, CA (didn't use for this tea, but have used in the past):  for the scone course, use the best strawberry jam one can find and stir in a little sparking wine.  It is a fun and festive touch.  There are many tiny things one can do to take tea in a full-pleasure manner.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Thank You Afternoon Tea

I'm exhausted, for good reason.  We're home from an over 5 hour afternoon tea (after 15 hours of planning and preparing).  A set of friends have treated us very well.  To thank them, we set today (months ago) as a day to present them with an elaborate afternoon tea in their home.  I'll be brief with just the basic information, but will go into more detail at a later date.

1.)  Larry's Original Chai (famous in Felton, CA)
CSA Butternut Squash, CSA Acorn Squash, CSA Apple & Pomegranate Soup

2.)  T & T's "Lucky in Love" Tea
Tea Sandwiches:  Turkey, Chicken, Egg, & Cucumber/Tomato

3.)  Sabah Ginger Tea from Borneo
White Chocolate and Peppermint Scone with Candy Cane Cream

Pomegranate Sorbet

4.)  Three-Chocolate Hot Chocolate with Marshmallows
Lavender Shortbread, Divine Delights Petit Fours, TKO Brownies, Chocolate Covered CSA Strawberries, CSA Apple/Raisin Galette

Absolutely fabulous, and a lot of fun!  Worth the work, but not something one wants to do daily.