Gourmet Live Blog

Monthly Archives: November 2012

Weekly Roundup: Recipes Starring Chia Seeds

Chia Seed Pudding

Remember Chia Pets? Their “hair” was made from sprouted chia seeds, which are novelty no more. Chia is taking over supermarket shelves, coming into its own as a healthy ingredient with diverse applications. Dry, it feels like poppy seeds, but when wet it produces a gel coating, making the seeds slip and slide inside your mouth. Chia doesn’t pack much of a flavor punch—it’s subtly nutty, less so than flaxseed—but when it comes to nutritional value, watch out: according to the USDA website, chia has 9.8g of fiber and 4.7g of protein per ounce. It’s also a good source of calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, with no cholesterol or trans fat. Make cooking with chia your pet project this week:

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Stick-to-Your-Ribs Stews

Boeuf Bourguignonne

Photo: Gourmet Magazine

Winter is almost here, and the cold weather is making us crave warm, hearty, filling bowls of stew. With options like Bouillabaisse, feijoada, goulash, Brunswick, gumbo, chowder, jambalaya, burgoo, cassoulet, Étouffée, Cioppino, Irish stew, pepper pot, and boeuf bourguignon it’s hard to pick just one.

What’s your favorite kind of stew?

 
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New at the Smithsonian: Transforming the American Table

Smithsonian Food Exhibit

Photo Courtesy of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History

If food and history are two of your passions, then look no further than the latest exhibit to open at The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. The exhibit, FOOD: Transforming the American Table, 1950-2000, is focused not only on what we’ve eaten through the decades, but also how our culinary preferences have shaped American culture and cuisine.

From the rise of centralized agriculture to the evolution of wine-making, the exhibit is serving up facts and fun about all things food in a 3,800-square-foot gallery and is scheduled to remain open for at least two years. Head over to the Smithsonian’s site for details on each of the six exhibit components, including:

  • Julia Child’s Kitchen
  • New and Improved!
  • Resetting the Table
  • Wine for the Table
  • Open Table
 
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The Ultimate Foodie Gift: The Bocuse D’Or Cookware Set

All-Clad Bocuse D'Or Cookware Set

Photo: Courtesy of Bocuse D'Or Foundation

If you’re looking for the ultimate gift for a very special someone who happens to be obsessed with food and cooking, consider the limited edition All-Clad Bocuse D’Or Cookware Set that was curated by chefs Thomas Keller, Daniel Boulud, and Jerome Bocuse. It comes with a worthwhile bonus: A portion of the sales will go to the Bocuse D’Or Foundation in the United States, which was formed in 2008 to support the training of aspiring American chefs for the Bocuse D’Or competition—the Olympics of the culinary world—held in Lyons, France, every two years. An American team has yet to win the prize, but there’s hope the Foundation support will help change that.

The set consists of six pieces: a skillet, four various-sized saucepans, and my personal favorite, a universal lid that fits any of the saucepans. The pieces are not sold separately.  If they were, I’d be a sucker for that lid.

I have two All-Clad pieces in my home kitchen, both of which I treasure because they’re heavy and heat evenly, without hot spots. The All-Clad pieces in the Bocuse D’Or set are extra-heavy because the bottoms not only have a copper core, but that copper core is sandwiched between two layers of aluminum, which is then sandwiched between two layers of stainless steel. In assembling the Bocuse D’Or collection, Thomas Keller, chef/owner of The French Laundry in California and Per Se in New York, chose the pans he finds the most useful in his own kitchen. Williams-Sonoma has the exclusive rights on selling the set.

The 2013 competition is coming up in January, and the American team this time around is composed of chef Richard Rosendale of the Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, and his commis, Corey Siegel, a culinary apprentice at the Greenbrier. We’ll be rooting for you!

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Image of the Week: Caramel Cake

Caramel Cake
No-bake Caramel Cake by Gosia Kwiatkowska of Sweet Art proves it’s hip to be square. Butter cookie crumbs divide layers of dulce de leche and pudding flavored with almond oil and rum. Fresh whipped cream and shaved chocolate finish the dish, which would be a spectacular addition to any Thanksgiving table.
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Just In Time For Holiday Bakers: Red Walnuts!

Red Walnuts

Photo: Kemp Minifie

If ever there was a perfect nut for the December holidays, it’s the red walnut. The skin covering the creamy white nutmeat is almost uncanny in its deep, beaujolais-red color. You might be tempted to think someone got frisky with a bottle of red dye, or suspect that there’s some wacky genetic modification going on, but in fact, it’s the result of grafting Persian red walnut trees onto the more common English walnut trees, because English walnuts are larger, creamier nuts.

Interestingly, what we call the English walnut is actually native to Persia. The English became linked with the walnut, not because they grew them commercially—they didn’t—but because English sea merchants traded them all around the world. These days, California produces about three-quarters of the world’s walnuts.

You’d never know a red walnut by its shell. It’s the same shade of beige as an English walnut. It isn’t until you carefully crack one open that the scarlet hue reveals itself. If the color doesn’t hook you, the flavor will. Red walnuts have a richer, nuttier essence, without the bitter tannins you often find in English walnuts. Once you try some red walnuts, you’ll find it hard to keep your hands out of a bag of them.

I can’t wait to make our Perigord Walnut Tart with them, or our Whole Wheat Bread with Walnuts and Cranberries. Holiday baking just got a lot more fun with these red walnuts! Supplies are limited, so be prepared to pay more for red walnuts. A good source is nuts.com.

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Food Blog of the Week: Emiko Davies

Emiko Davies


Name: Emiko Davies
Blog: Emiko Davies

Location: Melbourne, Australia

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day for a year, what would it be?
Can I say it would be a local ingredient – I think that cooking with only ingredients made, grown, or produced in your region would be a real and sometimes near impossible challenge (especially for me, as I tend to use a lot of imported Italian products!). I think we easily forget how much we use and have the luxury of food coming from far-flung places of the world. It’d be an interesting experiment, that’s for sure!

I will never eat:
This is actually a really difficult question! I don’t normally say no to any sort of fresh food or ingredient and luckily I don’t have any allergies, so the only thing I think I could honestly say “never” to is endangered or threatened species! Sharks, for instance, and other non-sustainably fished seafood would be up there.

Who would you love to have over for dinner?
Time warps aside, it would have to be a dinner party with my favorite historic cookbook writers, Pellegrino Artusi, Elizabeth David, Alice B. Toklas, and her partner and fellow foodie, Gertrude Stein.

What’s your go-to quick and easy dinner?
Uova al pomodoro, a rustic, one-pot meal of eggs poached in a quick tomato sauce.

What’s your favorite restaurant and what do you order there?
There’s a great, absolutely tiny family-run restaurant in Florence called Vini e Vecchi Sapori. They have a simple, constantly changing menu but whenever they have it, the sweet tooth in me can never go past the tiramisù ai lamponi (raspberry tiramisu).

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What We’re Cooking: Winter Salads

Winter Salads

Now that one of the biggest food days of the year is behind us, I’m turning to a bevy of winter salads to lighten my caloric load before the next holiday feast. From tangy citrus to crisp endive, our recipes are guaranteed to provide a light and refreshing twist to your next meal.

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Weekly Roundup: Funfetti-Inspired Treats

Funfetti Doughnuts

Funfetti is a rainbow sprinkle-filled cake that was made popular in the early 90s. But did you know that funfetti can be more than just cake? This week, creative bloggers are taken by funfetti fever, crafting unique and colorful confections.      
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Turkey Day Tasks

Thanksgiving Dinner

Photo: Sang An

In my family everyone has their annual Thanksgiving cooking assignments. My father-in-law roasts the turkey, my mother-in-law mixes up the cocktails, and my job is to make the gravy. With holiday must-haves like cranberry sauce, stuffing, mashed potatoes, turkey, green beans, sweet potatoes, gravy, and dinner rolls, there is no shortage of things to prepare.

What dish do you cook for Thanksgiving?

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Thanksgiving Turkey Gravy: The Basics

Gravy

Photo: Romulo A. Yanes

Gravy. It’s the lubricant that makes overcooked turkey palatable, and perfectly cooked turkey that much better. It’s the magical liquid that anoints and unites the potluck of sides from various family and friends that get squished together on your plate.

The fact that the best gravy can only be made after the turkey is removed from the oven, during the 30 or so most stressful minutes of the whole day, when all the accompaniments must be heated and readied for their finishing touches, adds to the angst often associated with this beloved liquid.

But it needn’t be a nerve-racking process. The two best and easiest ways I know to make it involve flour in the form of a roux (a cooked mixture of fat and flour), or a slurry (a smooth mixture of flour and water). A roux-based gravy is made in a saucepan. The slurry-style gravy is made in the roasting pan.  Both methods require a large liquid measure. Continue reading

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Image of the Week: Cranberry Cream French Toast

Cranberry Cream French Toast

Are you crazy for cranberries? A batch of Cranberry Cream French Toast from V.K. Rees Photography may just be your calling. Fluffy stacks of French toast skip the syrup and are slathered with cashew cream and cranberry sauce. This recipe is also vegan-friendly, as it replaces popular French toast ingredients such as egg and milk with coconut milk and tofu.

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My Mistake in Gourmet Holiday’s Caramel Pumpkin Pie

Caramel Pumpkin Pie

Photo: Romulo A. Yanes

Terror for a food editor comes in the form of a phone call or e-mail. Whether it begins timidly, as in “I think there’s a mistake in one of your recipes,” or launches swiftly into an irate tirade, “Don’t you proof these recipes?” your body wastes no time jumping into action. Your stomach grinds your innards like a food processor, while your hands quiver like a barely-set panna cotta.

I went through the agony late last week when, thanks to a reader’s call, I learned of a mistake in the latest Gourmet Holiday Special Edition. And of all the recipes for it to occur in, my luck would have it appear in one of the most popular ones: Caramel Pumpkin Pie.

How did this happen? It’s a story of food styling trumping convenience, the space limitations of print media, my passion for making recipes as user-friendly as possible, and simple human error.

Did you notice how high the fluted crust is on the gorgeous pie above? That’s because it’s baked in a 10-inch metal quiche pan with 2-inch high sides. Do you have one of those in your kitchen? Me neither! The food stylist and art director knew the pan would make a stunner of a pie, but for many of us that pan is the “Oh, sh*!” part of the recipe. If you don’t have it, and there’s no alternative, you’ll turn the page. Continue reading

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Food Blog of the Week: The Novice Chef

The Novice Chef

Location: Jacksonville, Florida
Name: Jessica Segarra

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day for a year, what would it be?
Either garlic or sugar. I know, two opposite ends of the spectrum, but I love both equally!

I will never eat: a lot of types of meat. Some of it’s for ethical reasons, some of it’s for flavor.

Who would you love to have over for dinner?
Paula Deen, because she loves to laugh and eat!

What’s your go-to quick and easy dinner?
Garlic Brown Sugar Chicken. The one dinner where my two favorite flavors combine.

What’s your favorite restaurant and what do you order there?
In Jacksonville, my favorite restaurant is BB’s. I get the Warm Goat Cheese Salad (with dates, prosciutto, walnuts, and honey) and the Croissant Bread Pudding. It’s divine!

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What We’re Cooking: Pumpkin Cakes and Pies

Pecan Pumpkin Pie

Thanksgiving is days away. Do you have your pumpkin-perfect pie or cake planned, prepped, or already-baked? For those of you just starting to handle Turkey Day dessert, don’t worry, I am right there with you. This year, time is not on my side, so I am going to combine two Thanksgiving classics into one seriously sweet dessert: Pecan Pumpkin Pie.

But my family requires more than one variety of pie on our Thanksgiving table, and since I already have pumpkin and pecan flavors covered, I need a recipe with flexibility and innovation, which is why Pumpkin Ginger Cheesecake Pie is going to be a delicious addition. The gingersnap crust is flavorful and fresh, while swirled pumpkin and cheesecake filling adds eye-catching, post-modern flair.

After the feast, any leftover pumpkin will be put to good use in a Pumpkin Spice Bundt Cake, and extra pecans will star in a killer Bourbon Pumpkin Cheesecake.

What is your favorite recipe for pumpkin cake or pie?

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10 Recipes Starring Thanksgiving Leftovers

Thanksgiving Leftovers Recipes

Just because Thanksgiving is still five days away, doesn’t mean we can’t start preparing for one of my personal favorite parts of the year’s biggest feast: the leftovers. Find inspiration for adding creative twists to what’s left from the big bird, mashed potatoes, cranberries, and more with 10 of our top recipes starring Thanksgiving leftovers.

What’s your favorite way to make the most of your Turkey Day leftovers?

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Weekly Roundup: Pumpkin Pie-Inspired Recipes

Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream

We are just five days away from one of the biggest food days of the year. And while the main event will likely highlight some traditional favorites like turkey, stuffing, and cranberry sauce, all eyes post-feast rest on the dessert table. Pumpkin pie, the holiday’s quintessential dessert, has inspired countless sweet and savory spinoffs in this week’s recipe roundup:
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The Right Stuff

Stuffing

Photo: Sang An

Don’t let all the turkey talk fool you, Thanksgiving is all about the side dishes. And we all know the star of the side show is the stuffing. This bready dish is a must have at any Thanksgiving table. One of the best things about this savory side is that there are so many different ways to prepare it.

What’s your favorite kind of stuffing?

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A Springform Pan Worth Springing For

Kaisesr Springform Pan

Photo: Courtesy of Williams-Sonoma

How many times has this happened to you? You’ve gathered all the ingredients you need to bake—in my case, I was testing Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez’s recipe for Gourmet Live’s Thanksgiving apple crostata (insanely delicious, by the way)—when you suddenly realize you don’t have the right-sized pan. The springform pan stashed deep in my cupboard turned out to be a 10-inch, not the 9-inch I needed for the recipe. Arrgghhh!

The closest cookware store to my apartment—where I now test recipes in a real-life kitchen—is Williams-Sonoma, about a 15-minute walk away. I love any excuse to wander around Williams-Sonoma, but bargain is not a word I associate with the place.

The sales clerk shows me the only 9-inch springform she has. This Kaiser LaFormer Plus pan (above) looks nothing like the light-colored and stained metal springform sides and bottoms that once filled a huge drawer in the old Gourmet magazine test kitchen. This new one is heavy, for starters, because it’s commercial grade steel coated with two layers of a non-stick ceramic surface. Heavy is a good thing with springforms, because the flimsy ones bend out of shape easily. And the locking mechanism on the side is serious. No baked good is messing with that lock!

The bottom is different, too. It’s wider, with an extra lip on the outside that makes the pan leak-proof. The Gourmet kitchen staff had a regular problem with butter leaking out of the old springform pans and onto the oven bottoms, causing smoke and a general mess. Continue reading

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Image of the Week: Carrot Cake with White Chocolate Ganache

Carrot Cake with White Chocolate Ganache

Thanksgiving is approaching and people are talking, texting, and tweeting turkey! But what about dessert? While pumpkin pie is a notable and traditional choice, have you ever thought about serving carrot cake? Adeline and Lumiere have a recipe for Carrot Cake with White Chocolate Ganache that you just might prefer to pie. Traditional carrot cakes are made with a smooth and tangy cream cheese frosting. Adeline and Lumiere’s version dares to be different. They frost their cake with a beautiful white chocolate ganache.

   
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