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What We’re Cooking: Duck Fat

Confit Duck Legs

Duck fat imparts a marvelous richness to everything from pan-fried potatoes to baked goods. Anything cooked with it just seems like a luxury, an indulgence. Whenever I visit my friend in Portland, Maine, we make a point of eating at a restaurant named for this luscious lipid. The menu is a paean to foods prepared with the eponymous ingredient, and we never fail to eat our fill of the excellent Belgian-style fries.

Cooking with duck fat can be daunting, but the effort is worthwhile. You can buy it from a specialty store or render your own at home. The first time I roasted a pair of whole ducks I was amazed by the amount of subcutaneous fat covering the breasts, which were truly well endowed.

You’ll need a large supply of duck fat to make Confit Duck Legs, a recipe calling for 35 ounces. Confit cookery requires that the duck be completely immersed in molten fat. When the dish cools the fat solidifies, preserving the flesh. This yields succulent duck with hints of garlic, nutmeg and thyme. The legs are great straight but best when crowning a cassoulet. Continue reading

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Top Tomatoes

Tomatoes

Photo: CN Digital Studio

Tomatoes are at the peak of their season and these plump, juicy, firm fruits not only taste great, but are great for you. They are packed with lycopene and Vitamin C. Tomatoes are also wonderful in a wide variety of preparations like soups, pizzas, salads, pastas, sandwiches, and sauces. But, we want you to tell us:

What is your favorite thing to cook with tomatoes?

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Food Blog of the Week: Table for Two


Name: Julie Chiou
Blog: Table for Two

Location: Washington, D.C

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day for a year, what would it be?
Pasta. It’s so versatile!

I will never eat:
Durian fruit.

Who would you love to have over for dinner?
Friends and family. I love to entertain and share my dishes and love for food.

Is there a food you used to hate, but now love?
I used to hate onions, but now I can’t cook without them!

What’s your favorite restaurant and what do you order there?
Vintage Pizza Bistro in Washington, D.C. I always order the half Matchbox Meat and half Spicy Meatball pizza.

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The Musical Pasta of Italy

Maccheroni-alla-Chitarra

Photo: Luisa Ghetti (Fuzgu on flickr)

You’ve got to love the Italians for the whimsical nature of their pastas: Farfalle are named for the butterflies they resemble, penne for the quills of old-fashioned feather pens, and fettuccine for ribbons.  My favorite are radiatore, or radiators, because they look like the clanking radiators in my childhood home.

Gourmet Live’s Music Issue reminded me of a terrific example of the influence of music on pasta: maccheroni alla chitarra. Chitarra is the Italian name for a guitar, and maccheroni alla chitarra is ingeniously formed by forcing a freshly rolled-out sheet of egg pasta—made with hard durum wheat, not soft wheat—through tightly-spaced parallel wires, strung taut like guitar strings, along the top of a long shallow wooden box. You lay the pasta sheet on the wires and when you roll a rolling pin over the dough, the wires cut it and the strands drop onto the bottom of the box.

Not only do the wires of the chitarra box look like guitar strings, but restaurateur and author Carlo Middione surmises in his excellent book, The Food of Southern Italy, that the name chitarra probably comes from the fact that you also have to strum the strings like a guitar to loosen the strands that fail to be cut clean by the rolling pin. What you finally end up with looks like squared-off spaghetti.

Maccheroni alla chitarra is a specialty of Abruzzo, the region just below the calf on the Adriatic side of Italy’s boot, where it’s usually tossed with a smoked pork-infused tomato sauce or a meaty ragu. De Cecco makes maccheroni alla chitarra, but if you’re itching to make it yourself, you can buy your own chitarraWho knows, maybe it will make music beyond what’s on your plate.

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Image of the Week: Homemade Pasta

No matter how good the sauce, I can always distinguish soft and tender handmade pasta from the dried and boxed variety. For me, fresh pasta is the marker of a great Italian meal. Swiss-based food blog House to Haus teaches you a simple technique for crafting orecchiette at home using just a serrated knife and a little elbow grease. With a drizzle of high-quality olive oil and freshly torn basil, these “little ears” make for a comforting meal. Shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano is a must, too.

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What We’re Cooking: Fresh Ricotta

Ricotta Gnocchi

Photo: Romulo Yanes

To the home chef, cheesemaking might appear to be a laborious process and an enigmatic art form. How can an ingredient as pure and simple as milk be crafted into hundreds of different varietals? Though I prefer my cheese hard and pungent−the kind that makes itself known as soon as its peeled from the protective plastic wrapping—there is something about a mild and silky fresh ricotta that screams springtime.

The cheesecloth veil has lifted, and with only three fridge staples plus a bit of salt, you can easily make your own Homemade Fresh Ricotta to top pasta, like Warm Pasta Salad with Roasted Corn and Poblano, or to turn into nutmeg-dusted Ricotta Gnocchi. However, a schmear of the fresh stuff on crusty bread with a little drizzle of honey and black pepper should never be underestimated either!

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Food Blog of the Week: Cake Duchess

Cake Duchess

Name: Lora
Blog: Cake Duchess

Location: West Palm Beach, Florida

What’s the first meal you ever made?
One of the first meals I ever cooked was with my mom when I was a little girl. We made pizzas together for one of my dad’s big birthdays. It was so much fun to experiment with the pizza toppings and of course, rolling out the dough was the best part! Now I’m so lucky that I get to make pizza with my kids.

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day, what would it be?
If I had to blog about one ingredient for a year it would be flour. I do a lot of baking and I use flour to make pasta. It would be easy to fill 365 days with recipes made with flour.

What’s your go-to quick and easy dinner?
My go-to quick and easy dinner would be pasta! I can never tire of eating it. I love to create new sauces with fresh and seasonal vegetables. We really enjoy making homemade pasta and gnocchi. My favorite pasta is homemade tagliatelle with a nice sauce. That is usually what you will find us eating on a relaxing Sunday with a wonderful loaf of fresh bread and a delicious salad. That is in my opinion, a perfect meal.

I will never eat?
I try to keep a very open mind about food, but you will probably not ever see me eat tripe. Growing up in an Italian home, I have seen it prepared many times and the sauce always looks wonderful; I just never had the nerve to eat it.

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Image of the Day: Black Garlic

Black Garlic

The elusive black garlic, most commonly found in Asian cuisine, gets its look and flavor from a month-long fermentation process. The head is cooked low and slow until the cloves change from white to deep ink. Like roasted garlic, the texture remains smooth and spreadable, but the flavor intensifies: think syrupy and sweet with balsamic undertones.

To work exotic black garlic into a more familiar dish,  try Yum and Yummer’s Meyer-Lemon Infused Fettuccine with Spinach, Pistachio, and Black Garlic Pesto, which catches this allium flirting with Italian for a unique take on the traditional.

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Weekly Roundup: Macaroni and Cheese

Mac and Cheese with Roasted Chicken, Goat Cheese, and Rosemary
Macaroni and cheese combines two trusty companions that fill every comfort food craving. Although this pair is more classic than monotonous, let one of these seven twists inspire your own noodle with the addition of hearty veggies, fresh herbs, and tender proteins.
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Food Blog of the Week: D’s Kitchen

D's Kitchen

Name: Dalia Dogmoch Soubra
Blog: D’s Kitchen

Location: Dubai

What is your favorite recipe from your blog?
Do I have to choose just one? I adore the simple Spaghetti al limone, the perfect Blueberry Crumble Muffins and most recently the amazing Stuffed Turkey I made. I combined the traditional American turkey with a date stuffing, which is an ingredient used in abundance in this part of the world.

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day, what would it be?
Butter, butter, and more butter. I guess that’s what happens when you grow up in Paris. The French use and abuse butter and it’s never been a problem for them. Somehow everywhere else in the world people have become overly conscious of eating and cooking with it, which is a shame. Everything tastes better with butter!

What is your favorite restaurant and what do you order there?
That is such a tough question! I have several restaurants splattered across the planet that I go nuts for. So let me list a few places which are amongst the ones I love most: L’ami Louis in Paris, Supper in New York (East Village), Yauatcha in London, Mayas In Beirut, and Peppercrab in Dubai.

Who would you love to have over for dinner?
Jamie Oliver, Hugh Grant or Sean Connery. I have a thing for the British it seems.

Posted in From the Food Blogs | Tagged , , , |

What We’re Cooking: Ravioli

Artichoke Ravioli

Photo: Romulo Yanes

Every year when winter rolls around I turn to one of my favorite comfort food dishes to fight the cold: ravioli.

Sausage-filled, brown butter-soaked, cheese-topped − I don’ t care how it’s stuffed or sauced, if it goes by the name “ravioli,” then chances are it’s going to be on my dinner menu. Although I love to keep it simple with a four cheese-stuffed ravioli, my latest discovery, Artichoke Ravioli with Tomatoes, has led me to explore the wide variety of stuffings and sauces for my favorite pockets of pasta.

Up next on my Tour de Ravioli are Arugula and Goat Cheese Ravioli, which are topped with a quick-fix lemon and garlic butter sauce. But for a culinary nod to the season’s most festive ingredient, I’m turning to Chestnut Ravioli with Sage Browned Butter. (Note the common ingredient in both is butter.) A sprinkle of grated Parm and dinner (and the next day’s lunch) is served!

What are your favorite ravioli fillings?

Posted in News & Events | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Food Blog of the Week: Art and Lemons

Art and Lemons

Name: Nikki Gardner
Blog: Art and Lemons

Location: Williamsburg, Massachusetts

What is your all-time favorite recipe from your blog?
Honestly, it’s always the next one I have to write. Like the Clementine Syrup I made recently with Maple Walnut Wafers.

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day for a year, what food it be?
Lemons (which has everything to do with my Lemonhead candy fix as a kid).

What is your favorite restaurant and what do you order there?
Hen of the Wood in Waterbury, Vermont. The restaurant is housed in an old grist mill. It’s billed as fine dining but it doesn’t seem pretentious in any way. They serve local seasonal fare. I had an incredible goat’s milk gnocchi with sauteed chanterelles, sweet corn, and zucchini for dinner followed by a cheese sampler and a few bites of a ginger peach crisp there last summer. Each bite was like a bright 4th of July sparkler.

What’s your go-to quick and easy dinner?
Pasta with butter, garlic, shredded kale, Parmesan cheese, and topped with a fried egg.

Posted in From the Food Blogs | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Weekly Roundup: Cold Weather Comfort Food

Chicken Soup
Warm up from the inside out with some of our favorite winter comfort food recipes. Whether you’re looking to satisfy your sweet tooth or are holding out for a hearty bowl of soup, you will find something to ease your winter chills.
Posted in From the Food Blogs | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Food Blog of the Week: Bon Appétempt

Bon Appétempt

Name: Amelia Morris
Blog: Bon Appétempt

Location: Los Angeles

What is your all-time favorite recipe from your blog?
Probably the linguine and clams. It’s one of those simple but very special dishes I can’t imagine ever tiring of. Plus, every time I make it—about once a month—my husband, Matt, says it’s the best thing he’s ever eaten.

If you had to blog about one ingredient every day for a year, what food it be?
Flour. A few months ago, I read the introduction to the Tartine Bread cookbook, and ever since, I’ve been dying to try my hand at making my own “natural leaven” or starter. Plus, if I ever tired of making bread, I could move on to pasta!

Continue reading
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The Easiest Pasta Meal

Spaghetti With Garlic and Oil

Photo: Kemp Minifie

Garlic and pasta are two staples I’m never without in my kitchen. No matter how late I get home, I know I’ve got the makings of a fast and super-satisfying meal. If tuna noodle casserole was my mother’s default dinner, spaghetti with garlic and oil—spaghetti aglio e olio—is mine.

The simplicity of the dish eluded me at first, and I did things to complicate it. It took me a while to realize that all I had to do was dump the golden garlic and oil on top of the cooked spaghetti and everything would get mixed together in the process of serving it. Continue reading

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Now In the Store: Perfect Pasta Sauces

Perfect Pasta Sauces

Dress up your favorite bowl of noodles with our favorite classic and creative recipes from our Perfect Pasta Sauces collection, now available in the Gourmet Live Store.

Stick to tradition with Sunday Ragú that simmers on your stovetop for hours before being ladled onto spaghetti, fettuccini, and more. Or add a spicy kick to your carbs with Red Chile Sauce made with whole dried New Mexico and guajillo chiles.

Download the free Gourmet Live app then head to the Library to access the Store for our Perfect Pasta Sauces collection.

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Italian Chicken Noodle Soup

Italian Chicken Noodle Soup

Photo: Kemp Minifie

I’d just finished writing “Twelve Pasta Myths Toppled” for Gourmet Live, when Maureen Fant, author of “Pasta Through the Ages,” which appears in the current issue, stopped by the office. We got talking about capellini (angel-hair pasta), and she casually mentioned that she didn’t know why Americans cook it like a pasta with sauce. “It’s a soup noodle,” she said matter-of-factly.  She should know. She’s a co-author of Encyclopedia of Pasta.

Of course I’d heard of capellini in brodo (broth), but I’m so used to seeing capellini with shrimp and garlic sauce on menus, I never thought about the long thin strands in soup. Suddenly I had a hankering for chicken noodle soup, Italian-style. Continue reading

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11.09.11: Pasta and Noodles

Gourmet Live: Pasta and Noodles

This week we’re featuring starchy stars from around the world in our Pasta and Noodles issue. Download the free Gourmet Live app for access to all of the issues and recipes, and visit Gourmet.com to read this week’s issue in full, including:
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Weekly Roundup: Summer Pastas

Heat wave or winter chill, we’re always up for a bowl of pasta, especially when it’s loaded with the season’s freshest flavors. This week’s roundup features our favorite summer pasta dishes that are versatile enough to become year-round staples in your home. From authentic Singapore Chicken Laksa to creamy Stuffed Shells, celebrate classic takes and creative riffs on noodles in every form.

  • Ribbon and Circus substitutes spaghetti for laksa noodles in Singapore Chicken Laksa that’s packed with tangy citrus, crunchy bean-sprouts, lemon grass, and prawns (pictured above).
  • No other dish screams summer quite like pasta and pesto. Foodess uses fresh basil from her garden to make traditional Basil Pesto and pasta.
  • Add a salty seafood touch to your spread with Last Night’s Dinner Linguine with Sardines, Fennel, and Tomato, made with fresh, home-grown tomatoes.
  • Jane Deere’s Shrimp Pasta Salad is a low-cal take on a summer seafood favorite.
  • Give the classic carbonara a seasonal spin with Orange and Thyme’s Spaghetti Con Prosciutto served with farm stand favorites like asparagus, basil, and portabellini mushrooms.
  • The Cilantropist’s Zuchinni Noodles with Chicken and Tangy Peanut Sauce are a welcome gluten-free alternative to carb-heavy pasta.
  • 101 Cookbook’s shows us that cheesy, creamy pasta is good year-round, especially in the form of Stuffed Shells.
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    Kemp’s Kitchen: Keep It Simple, Stupid!

    The full-length feature version of Keep It Simple, Stupid! by Kemp Minifie appears in the current issue of Gourmet Live. Download the free Gourmet Live app for this story and more.

    Photo: Image Source/Getty Images

    The first group of recipes I created for Gourmet appeared in the April 1978 issue under the heading “Gastronomie Sans Argent,” a monthly feature that had been a regular since the very first issue of the magazine. Its subtitle was priceless: “To Tease the Palate and Please the Purse.” (The early editors did love rhyming and alliteration.) I may have stayed within the budget with my creations (which was easy, because there was no budget), but who knows whether I tickled anyone’s palate? One thing is for sure: I didn’t make the recipes easy for the readers.

    Gourmet Live‘s Kemp Minifie reflects on the early days at Gourmet magazine, when recipes spanned pages and ingredient lists included everything from the exotic to the obscure. But after more than three decades of creating, cross-testing and tasting recipes, Minifie has learned that sometimes the best approach to cooking is one of simplicity.

    Get her quick-fix recipe for Spaghetti Aglio e Olio and download the free Gourmet Live app for more tips and facts straight from Kemp’s kitchen.


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