Friday, December 5, 2008

The Wharton Palate: Mastering Brew (Part One)

Philly is a beer city. And we as Wharton MBA students truly do our part to sustain this municipal reputation as if our careers depended on it (or maybe just to drown the sorrows of the market downturn). And just as much as I love my pre-prandial cocktail rituals, I also love beer-centric rituals, such as cracking open a Tall Boy before busting out my Henckels knives to make dinner. (Safe, I know. I’m wild like that though.) Other beer rituals include drinking myself silly while catching up on all my recorded television shows (OMG, did Blair just really slap Serena?!) and celebrating life’s milestones with a Guiness float (vanilla ice cream – Häagen-Dazs works best – with Guiness poured over). In addition, with the recent creation of the Wharton Brewmasters’ Guild club and weekly penny pints found at Roosie’s, it’s prime time in our lives to be a beer drinker.

So, in true Amni fashion, I decided to kick off my Jimmy Choos, roll up my sleeves, and put on an apron to brew my own batch of brown ale in a deep bow of deference to my long-standing favorite: Newcastle. A certain WG ’09 once shared one of his own homebrews with me last year at a pre-Thanksgiving Thanksgiving dinner, and since then, I’ve been intrigued. This past October, I made him take me to Home Sweet Homebrew, a make-your-own-beer store on Sansom Street (between 20th and 21st Street), practically next door to Melograno.

I was a bit turned off when I was greeted at the door by two fat cats lazing on boxes, and by the overall lack of order and cleanliness, but I trudged on in the name of beer. I tried not to breathe too much for fear of taking in dander, and concentrated on the menu of “starter kits”. My friend walked me through the process: You pick a type of beer, and Home Sweet Homebrew assembles the ingredients (malt, hops, yeast, dextrose), as well as all the equipment (fermenter, glass carboy, hydrometer, pipes, hoses, capper, caps…). Easy.

I couldn’t get my act together until just yesterday to start brewing and embarking on this month-long process. We have, technically, been working on the process by drinking a lot of store-bought beer so that we can collect two cases worth of brown bottles to eventually fill. I just found out last night when I actually read the instructions that bottles cannot be of the twist off variety, which just about decimates half my collection. I guess my husband and I will have to get through another case in the next week or so.

I’ll go into some detail about the process, but one of the key outcomes thus far is that I think I broke my stove.

One of the reasons as to why I didn’t start brewing until well over a month after purchasing all my materials was that I do not have a large stockpot. The largest in my kitchen could hold about 2 gallons, whereas the instructions included with my kit recommended one that could hold 4 gallons. Yes, I could have purchased one, but I hadn’t gotten around to doing so and then it became Tuesday which meant that had to brew with what I had in order to make my deadline with this story. I went ahead with my 2-gallon pot and, well, had a huge boil-over of malt and hops, which flooded my stove top and consequently put out one of my pilot lights (or so I think… it could be a much graver issue once I actually look into it).

Then there was the issue of sanitizing everything. SANITIZE, SANITIZE, SANITIZE! This OCD mantra holds true for beer-making, too. It’s hard to keep everything sanitized when all you have is the bucket you’re supposed to use for fermentation and a small apartment sink. By the time I had everything cleaned and put away at around 1 a.m., my hands were dry and ashy from prolonged exposure to a bleach solution and all my pretty polished nails were chipping.

The brew, though only time will tell, has not been a complete disaster. After great frustration and fatigue, I sprinkled yeast over my wort (I’d be worried if you were just turned on by my beer taxonomy), sealed the cap to my fermenter, plugged the hole at the top and stuck my S-shaped airlock in. Done at last.

Did I do everything correctly? A wave of self-doubt and questioning came over me, but I was too tired to think about it. Instead, my anxiety haunted my dreams and I tossed and turned to my subconscious yelling at me for having infected my beer through improper sanitary techniques, whatever that means. When I got to school today morning, I shot an email to that friend who introduced me to home brew. Did I attach the airlock correctly? He wrote back almost instantly: “All you need to do on the airlock front is make sure that you have some water or sterilizing solution in it to start with. Generally mine is half way up both chambers at the start and then gets pushed over to just one side once the pressure from fermentation gets going. You will know that you have a good seal on your bucket if you can push lightly on the top of the lid and the water in the airlock moves from one side to the other.”

I had sterilizing solution halfway up both chambers, so I was good on that front. I was at school and could not check the efficacy of my seal, but I was dying to. When I got home this afternoon, not only did the solution push up with a gentle pressure on the lid, but it was already pushed over to one side! Hooray for fermentation!

The great thing about Wharton is that with such a large student body, almost every interest in the world is at least minimally represented. The fact that I ran into a beer-maker has exposed me to new challenges. Yes, such as making beer. Making beer is much tougher than a case interview, an investment pitch, or perfect attendance at Pub. I feel that if I can do this, I can do almost anything… even find a job in this economic downturn.

We’re still a month away from reaping the rewards, which means you’ll have to wait until January to hear how things went, but keep your fingers crossed and have a great holiday from the Wharton grind.

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Wharton Palate: A Tale of Two Sansom Street Italians


In the last Wharton Palate, I promised you a review of the new Melograno. I am a woman of my word, and so, I set up a date to go with my friend, the WG ’09 who first told me about the place over a year ago when we first set foot onto Hunstman. With both of our other commitments, by process of elimination, the Monday about two weeks ago was selected. The more savvy restaurant goer would never have committed the rookie mistake I did, but I turned the corner onto Sansom street and felt my heart sink into my very hungry, very empty stomach. Melograno was dark.

This is when my h-anger kicked in and a tsunami-sized wave of indignation overcame my shame of being so stupid for not checking beforehand. Sure, Melograno employees need a break, too. And sure, a restaurant should close its doors and not operate if doing so causes it to be unprofitable. But, I didn’t care. After all the anticipation, all the expectation, all the dreaming… I was disappointed and most importantly, still hungry.

Thankfully, though, I always travel with a pocket ace. Many year ago when I lived in New York, I came down to visit my friend who lived in Philadelphia and who ended up taking me to his favorite Italian BYO, Porcini, where he knew the maitre d’ and would bring the kitchen staff six-packs of beer. I remembered this place fondly and when my husband and I came down to Philadelphia to look for apartments that spring before starting Wharton, we ended an exasperating and exhausting day with a comforting and delicious plate of hot penne in pink vodka sauce before hopping on a Chinatown bus and preparing to start the search process all over again. Porcini, despite all its faults, was my diamond in the rough world of Philly BYO’s.

The World Series had begun and since Porcini does not have flatscreens mounted on the walls, the restaurant was nearly empty. But David who runs front-of-house, was as friendly as ever, guiding us to our table, opening our bottle of wine, telling us the evening’s specials, and cracking a joke all in one breath. The food at Porcini is simple and some things are better than others. For starters, they offer three different kinds of bruschetta (the “Tuscan Bean” variety made with cannelloni beans is fantastic), the pastas are all very simple and pretty reliable, and my friend ended up having the special of veal medallions in a brown sauce, that was spot on in all its savory, tender glory.

The presentation (both décor and plating) leave something to be desired. I’m always at first a little uneasy with the carpeted dining room that’s decorated in rather cheesy, Holiday Inn-style framed prints, but Porcini is more of an everyday kind of place, somewhere you go with your husband when you don’t feel like cooking. David knows the names of his regular guests and makes them feel like Porcini is just an extension of their homes.

Porcini was a long digression, though, and I did eventually make it to Melograno. The full story is that I had not been impressed with Melograno in the past. Everyone loved it and everyone wanted to go always, and so I gave it a lot of tries, all of which were disappointing. I will not soon forget, for example, a tough and flavorless braised veal with waxy, congealed polenta. But, I was willing to forgive, even if I wasn’t going to forget.

I wasn’t able to reschedule with the original dinner date, but in true Amni fashion, was able to finagle a last-minute double date with a couple that previously double-dated with us at Melograno. The new space is much larger, which is great because 1) you’re not elbow to elbow with strangers (some people like that, but it’s more a logistical thing with me—I hate having to squeeze between tables to get to seats, making my bum very vulnerable to knocking over bottles of wine or glasses of water), 2) there’s now room for three or four larger, round tables that seat around six people (I love round tables), and 3) from an OPIM standpoint, increased capacity generally means decreased wait-times. All good. Now for the bad: I guess that when one has to decorate a larger space, it’s harder to make things feel intimate. The rustic feel of the former space was translated to white-washed wood panel wainscoting, and walls painted in a warm sunny color. And despite the shelves that held terra cotta pots of mums and other little “rustic” trinkets, I still felt like something was missing because there was too much blank space.

The new space must have had some sort of effect on me, though. I started with a special roasted beet salad with pears drizzled in honey, walnuts, aged goat cheese, arugula and a delicate lemon vinaigrette. The table agreed that it must be THE perfect salad, with flavors and textures so perfectly in harmony. For my entrée, I had the special again—veal ravioli. It was delightful, though I generally prefer my pasta to be cooked a little longer. The other couple both had fish—the bronzino and the orata—and their plates were completely clean by time our table was bused. My husband can’t refuse a seafood pasta, and so got the pappardelle with shrimp and scallops. I definitely used wife privileges to try it myself and it was delicious with the shrimp and scallops perfectly cooked in the tomato-based sauce. He, having become the connoisseur of seafood pastas, said that he has had better, but the plate that didn’t need to be washed was indicative of more-than-decent.

The thing that makes Melograno so great, though, is that Wharton loves it and shows up in droves. Maybe it’s the upscale, MBA version of 90210’s Peach Pit. In the old space, I was guaranteed to see a Wharton MBA there, even when I was just passing by. This past Wednesday night in the new space was not an exception. The WGA was having one of its small-group dinners at a round table and a clan of Wharton Japanese women dined at the round table right next to it. I went to second-year drinks afterwards only to talk to someone else who had also just been there. I love that, because “Sometimes you want to go where everybody knows your name, and they’re always glad you came.”

Next Time: Home Brew Part I – Amni embarks upon the world of home brew. Will her homemade nut brown compare to the Newcastle she loves so much?

Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Wharton Palate: Girls' Night In

I love spending time with my husband (I did, after all, take a vow to spend the rest of my life with him), but when he’s not around or when we do things separately, I tend to do the things that would normally make me feel a little guilty: 1) spend money and 2) shamelessly get my fill of unadulterated girl time. I cry over über-chick flicks (The Notebook… need I say more?). I get manicures and do ladies’ lunches over duck salad and champagne a la Catherine Zeta-Jones’s character in Traffic. I gossip and giggle (read: cackle).

I was invited to a girls’ night potluck in honor of a WG’09’s birthday last week. I signed up to bring cupcakes and knew that since we were going to be an estrogen powerhouse, it had to be chocolate.

I remember my first ganache more clearly than I do my first boyfriend (more an indication of my personality than his, I’m sure). Many years ago, I went to a friend’s house after school one day. My friend’s parents were avid bakers and on their way out the door (with a freshly baked strawberry rhubarb pie to bring as a hostess gift for a neighbor) they told us to eat whatever we could find. We opened the refrigerator and as if the light of heaven suddenly broke through the roof, our eyes were drawn immediately to an illuminated quarter-eaten vanilla layer cake swathed in a perfectly smooth, matte-finished, thick, creamy, decadent chocolate ganache blanket. I’ve been in love ever since.

I usually keep some ganache in the fridge just in case an impromptu fondue fest arises (you never know). This stash would save me since I didn’t have time to make frosting from scratch. And you know me—I wasn’t about to buy the premade stuff. I had a cupcake recipe, too. I found a very quick and easy recipe on allrecipes.com after I messed up a Gourmet magazine version that required whipped egg whites and yielded chocolate rocks.

After a round of golf, I ran home, threw together the cake ingredients, loaded up the muffin pan, threw them in the oven for 20 minutes, cleaned my golf clubs and put them away, popped out the finished cupcakes onto a cooling rack, took a shower, put on some clothes and an apron, met with my presentation partner for 30 minutes, kicked out my presentation partner, and then started re-melting the ganache over a double boiler, constantly stirring to make sure it did not burn. I took it off the heat when the chocolate was glossy and fully melted, picked up a cooled cupcake carefully by its base and placed it, top first, into the pot, slowly and deliberately rolling the top in the chocolate to ensure even frosting.
They resembled little hostess cupcakes without the cute rings of white icing on top. I gave each cupcake two dips and placed them carefully on a platter and then in the refrigerator to set. I wanted to try one, but couldn’t get myself to. They were little tooth-aches hiding underneath the cloak of innocent chocolate prettiness. I wasn’t going to be fooled. My husband, on the other hand…

He came back from his own round of golf as I was leaving for the birthday potluck. I doubled the recipe so I could give some to another friend whose birthday was the next day and so that we could have some at home. I instructed him to try one after dinner.

I walked the block-and-a-half to the Dorchester with my platter loosely covered with tin foil. An older couple walking in the same direction started conversation with me, mainly jokes about how they wanted a cupcake. I politely smiled to hide my annoyance and got to my destination safely, with the full dozen cupcakes intact.

I was the last to arrive and we dove immediately into the dinner, which was a motley mix of various Chinese-style vegetable dishes, fried chicken, rosemary chicken, and tomato-pecorino flat bread. Despite the inconsistency of cuisine origin, everything was wonderful and exhibited the unique personalities of the participants. The wine poured freely, as did the catty smack-talking and laughter. We complained and encouraged each other as we prepared for FIP interviews. We talked about relationships, wedding planning, and being single. Finally, we were sated and ready for dessert. Candles were lit, a happy birthday song was sung, and a birthday wish was made.

This was the moment of truth. Full disclosure: I had lost count of the cups of sugar while making the cupcakes. The recipe required three, but there was a chance I stopped at only two. I didn’t do that well in LGST 652 (Ethics) and therefore didn’t find a need to tell anyone until just now.

I definitely forgot that cup of sugar. The cupcake part was dry and tasted kind of like a Tootsie Roll (god, I hate Tootsie Rolls), like fake chocolate. Thank goodness for the ganache, which masked the off-ness of the cake and stole the show. I even saw an abandoned cupcake bottom, which had mercilessly been beheaded for its chocolate hat. Poor cupcake. Overall, they were a hit. No one stopped at one. One of us had two and most of us shared additional halves. The birthday girl took one home for later.

Sometime in the middle of the potluck, I got a BlackBerry message from my husband: “Ate a cupcake. Looks like Mr. Hershey pooped all over my face.” That was the best compliment this girl could receive. I’m still beaming.

Next Time: Melograno, a favorite amongst Whartonites, has moved, but is the food still the same? I revisit the intimate Italian with the WG’09 who took me there for my first Melograno experience.




Recipe: Adrienne's Family Chocolate Ganache

Ingredients:
2/3 cup Heavy whipping cream
7 oz. Fine-quality bittersweet chocolate (finely chopped, not unsweetened, and I suggest 70% cocoa or higher)
Directions:
Pour cream into a double boiler or heavy saucepan and set on low heat, stirring often. Watch cream carefully, and just when small bubbles start to appear at the edges of the pan, add chocolate in small batches, stirring constantly and fully melting chocolate before adding more. After adding the final batch, take the saucepan off the heat and stir final batch of chocolate. The ganache will be smooth and glossy.

In this liquidy state, I serve as a fondue, dip cupcakes, or pour over cakes for a thin layer. I also cool the ganache at room temperature (stirring occassionally) until it sets a bit further, at which point I spread on cakes for a thicker frosting. Immediately place the frosted item in the refrigerator to set up "nice and shiny," as Adrienne would say.



Monday, October 13, 2008

The Wharton Palate: Double Dates (at Parc Brasserie)

Three months is not actually a long time to be away from Philadelphia (as evinced by the still-vacant former-Wawa space below the Dorchester that I’m hoping will turn into some sort of Wharton Peach Pit), but there were some dramatic changes that occurred. There was, of course, the closing of Melograno on 22nd and Spruce. (Fear not. I too was scared and immediately jumped onto some of Philly’s robust food blogs to find that it will reopen – grapevine rumors tell me it’s open already – at a new and near location: 2010 Sansom Street). Riverwest residents have been excitedly talking about the new pizzeria and burrito place that opened up nearby. Then, there’s Parc. On my way to a triple double date (yeah, that’s right) at La Viola, and already in pain after only two blocks of walking in four-inch Louboutins, I forgot temporarily about how I wanted to saw off my feet when I saw the warm, glowing lights of this new French style brasserie on the ground floor of the Parc Rittenhouse on 18th and Locust. Apparently, Stephen Starr was busy at work on his continued plan for world conquest while we were away.

I was mesmerized. Waiters, carrying trays of cocktails and wearing long, white aprons, deftly maneuvered between outdoor tables and foot traffic. Lots of well dressed people (a welcome sight after experiencing a dire fashion drought in San Francisco this summer) sat sipping champagne and feasting on iced tiers of raw oysters with delicate spoonfuls of mignonette sauce. How indulgent. For a city that does the beer culture so well, this was a glaring anomaly. If I hadn’t walked into a fire hydrant I might have forgotten about La Viola.

I got a call (actually, an Outlook meeting request) the next day from a close friend in my cohort who suggested a double date on Friday. An opentable.com reservation was made in about 2 minutes and I accepted the meeting request with an updated location: Parc.

As I waited for the week to pass, I often thought of some very fine dinners at Balthazar in New York City. Balthazar and Parc emulate well in appearance the fine brasseries of Paris. Balthazar offered, in addition to the warm, lively décor, amazing food. I will never forget, for example, their frisée salad with crisp-on-the-outside-and-chewy-on-the-inside bits of lardons, tossed in a delicate vinaigrette and topped with a perfectly poached egg. Balthazar’s cassoulet, though a failure compared to my French mother in law’s, was a bowl of comfort and symbolized warm, boozy dinners on cold winter nights. Would Parc meet these standards so engrained on my psyche?

Friday came and an early arrival was coordinated to take advantage of pre-dinner cocktails, one of my most favorite dining rituals. I kicked off the evening with a refreshing Dubonnet rouge on ice (I love that I had a choice of rouge or blanc) and stood back to observe the masses enjoying preprandial drinks. I was, however, very glad to be seated promptly at the time of our reservation; the restaurant was very loud and we were quickly wasting energy trying uselessly to be heard. It wasn’t much better at our table, but at the very least, the bar crowd was farther removed, where the lingering happy hour crowd was getting rowdy.

This was a fantastic opportunity to really get to know another couple, both members of which are WG ‘09s. One is a venture capital guru and the other an energy king, but both are true foodies, reverent and humble before cuisine. The truly great thing about going to dinner with such experts is that they write the reviews for you. Here’s an excerpt from one of our debrief emails (Oh, Wharton! How you have influenced me!):

“Parc is a pure Stephen Starr restaurant in all ways good and bad. The good includes an amazing location, the constant buzz of the crowd, service that was polite if not precise, and a menu that was evenly executed and diverse. The bad is perhaps more subtle, but includes food that at all times relies on being rich and decadent in order to be "good", which means that dishes can be overwhelmed by one or two dominant flavors, and sometimes are presented a bit blandly in terms of color and texture… All in all, worth a visit, but for pure foodies, as with most Stephen Starr places, you can probably find better fare, albeit, with less glamour.”

Between the four of us, we tried the petit plateau of iced raw oysters, clams, mussels, steamed shrimp, and crab. All were fine, except the clams could have been fresher (there’s really nothing worse than not-fresh clams). The escargot was not served in the usual plate with eight concave puddles for each snail and butter, but in an iron pot. The genius of this presentation was that there was plenty o f garlicky butter to coat infinite slices of baguette, which, by the way, was excellent. Perhaps some of the best baguette found outside of France. There was no cassoulet on the menu, and I settled with the beef bourguignon. Others had the branzino, lamb, and daily special bouillabaisse. And just as my dinner partner wrote, everything was lovely, but nothing was mind-blowingly spectacular. My bourguignon was flavorful, but a bit dry. My husband’s bouillabaisse had an interesting fennel-flavored twist to the broth, but we both agreed that we’ve had better.

Despite my string of mediocre comments, really, Parc was worth it. We had a very sympathetic, knowledgeable server (French-Canadian… close enough). The crowd was diverse in age and high on making the evening at Parc an oxymoronic pedestrian indulgence. In sum, we had a blast.

The wonderful thing about intimate dinners is that one gets to really know the players. And if at Wharton one of our main goals is to form relationships, to make the ties that will eventually help us in our professional endeavors, to network, then truly getting to know one another over wine and food is really the best way. Given the plentiful drinks, reasonable food, and small tables, Parc delivered.

Parc: 227 S. 18th Street, at Locust Street. (215) 545-2262.

Next Time: The Wharton Palette participates in the ultimate female past-time. No, not a pillow fight in lingerie at a sleep over. Rather, a group of us get together to celebrate a birthday by having a very boozy potluck dinner.




Sunday, September 14, 2008

The Wharton Palate: Dining In

EATG 711: Dining In. This course will explore achieving the double bottom line returns of tasty food and networking at Wharton. Detailed analysis of how managers make decisions that will optimize output through a relationship-building structure and menu strategy will be conducted. Prerequisite: a huge appetite.

Syllabus. I’ve always been obsessed with food, but this summer, I was particularly immersed; my internship was at a soup kitchen in San Francisco (required reading: Michael Pollan’s 2006 Omnivore’s Dilemma), where I was surrounded by the Slow Food Movement (
http://www.slowfood.com/) and slapped upside the head by the muse. I gave myself an assignment, requiring much research and several final presentations: make pasta sauce from scratch. Included in my syllabus were the following ground rules: 1) whenever possible, use only ingredients found in nature (i.e. no canned tomatoes!), 2) whenever possible, use organic/free-range ingredients, and 3) other Wharton grad students must be involved.

This is how I came to be carrying 7.5 lbs of organic, vine ripened tomatoes, 1 lb of bones from free-range chickens, a 3.5-lb whole, organic, free-range chicken, a bottle of pinot grigio, and other sundry items, through all of Hurricane Hanna’s vicious glory last weekend.

Midterm Exam. The roast chicken dinner was my problem set. I decided that inviting only one WG ’09 (my husband) to pontificate on the chicken-y-ness of free-range chicken wouldn’t be enough and therefore emailed a certain WGA President to come over. Two bottles of wine later and with absolutely no leftovers making its way back to my refrigerator, the three of us found ourselves content and heading over to Ten Stone to watch fights break out and to ask even more people about what they did this summer. (OMG, really?! That’s so cool! Are you going back? Are you going to recruit again? Blah, blah…)

Midterm Presentation. Did the free-range chicken taste more like chicken? Though tasty, the overwhelming consensus was no, not really. Was it juicier? Yes, even the white meat portions were more tender than that of my prior roast chickens... but, I guess that without a control chicken, we’ll never really know. Was the 100% premium and trip to Reading Terminal Market on a crowded Saturday afternoon in the rain worth it? No.

The chicken, however, was only the midterm in an iterative course. All the leftover bones, plus carrots, celery, and the pound of extra bones that I picked up, were drunkenly thrown into a slow cooker when I got back from Ten Stone and set on low heat for 8 hours. When I woke up with a mild hangover, voila, I had chicken stock, which was part of my final assignment.

Final Exam. I haven’t purchased canned pasta sauce in over two years. No Ragu. No Prego. No Classico, Buitoni, or even Newman’s Own. I’ve been making my own in the slow cooker using a 1:1 ratio of canned whole San Marzano tomatoes and canned tomato paste. To recreate the whole tomatoes, I stewed peeled tomatoes in chicken stock and white wine (extra credit for alcoholic ingredients!). For the paste, I saw Ina Garten roast plum tomato halves in the oven with just a sprinkling of kosher salt, pepper, and olive oil—which I did, only for a lot longer, at lower temperature, and then pulverized into a paste in the food processor.

Final Presentation. I accidentally threw in too much hot pepper flakes into the sauce as it was reducing (yes, I was again a bit tipsy after “catching up” with a fellow WGA ’09 Community Service DVP), so I guess it became an arrabbiata. The final presentation dinner was penne con melanzane (penne with eggplant… Wharton Italians, please do not kill me for making the American bastard son of this dish). My husband was at a corporate sell dinner (Really? Already?), so I had another WG’09 come over in between Fashion Show and BizWorld meetings.

Seven pounds of tomatoes, purchased for about $15, reduced to something like one normal, 25-oz jar of pasta sauce, which one can find for around $2.50 in a grocery store ($5 for an organic version). We agreed that, though the sauce tasted better than jarred versions, $20 for raw materials plus about 8 hours of direct labor were not a cash flow positive investment. No economies realized, that’s for sure.

Debrief & Take-Aways. Though networks were built through meaningful conversations over yummy, though impractically made meals, I will go back to making pasta sauce with canned tomatoes. I can, however, say that I tried and if ever in a consulting interview someone asks me how many tomatoes one needs to make a 25-oz jar of pasta sauce, I will know. And so will you. You’re welcome.

Next Time: The Wharton Palette goes on a double date to the new Stephen Starr mega-bistro, Parc, on 18th and Locust Streets. Will this Balthazar wannabe hold a fork to Keith McNally’s 11-year, New York City hotspot?



Recipe: Simple Roasted Rosemary Lemon Chicken, with Sauce

Ingredients:
1 3.5-lbs Whole roasting chicken (take out but keep whatever offal is included)
2 Lemons (1 cut into eighths, 1 juiced)
1 Medium yellow onion, unpeeled and cut into eighths
6 stalks Fresh rosemary
4 cloves Garlic (3 whole w/ peel on, one peeled and minced)
2 Tbs Butter, unsalted
1 Tbs Kosher salt
1 Tbs Fresh ground pepper
4 Tbs Olive oil

For Sauce:
1 cup Chicken stock
1/2 cup White wine
2 Tbs Lemon juice
Kosher salt
Pepper

Directions:

Pre-heat oven to 425ºF.
Chop finely the leaves of 4 stalks of rosemary and place in small bowl. Mince one garlic clove and add to rosemary bowl. Add salt, pepper, olive oil, and juice of one lemon. Mix with spoon. Set aside. (The beauty of roast chicken is that you can use whatever herbs and spices you might have laying around–parsley, tarragon, dill, oregano–and if you do not have fresh herbs, try and get some but if you absolutely cannot, use smaller amounts of dried herbs... whatever you have on hand!)
Place removed offal (neck, livers, etc.) at the bottom of the roasting pan.
Rinse chicken (inside and out) and pat dry with tons of paper towels. Stuff inside of chicken with cut lemon, onion, whole garlic cloves, and two stalks of rosemary. Carefully creep fingers in between the skin and the breast. Place one tablespoon of butter under the skin over each breast. Rub the outside of the entire chicken with the rosemary mixture. Tie legs together with kitchen string (I often get creative because I never have kitchen string for some reason) and place chicken on roasting rack in roasting pan.
Place chicken in oven for 20 minutes, then reduce heat to 375ºF. Roast for 1.5 hours. Baste chicken every 30 minutes with the juices that gather at the bottom of the pan – the skin will become golden brown and crispy… yum! I don’t have a meat thermometer, but really should invest in one since cutting into the chicken to look for any pink just ends up releasing the juices into the pan instead of keeping it in the meat! But, if you don’t have a thermometer, cut into the thigh—if clear juices run out (not pink), then you’re done! Remove the chicken from the oven and set aside for at least 10 minutes to let juices settle back into the meat.
As the chicken rests, remove and set aside roasted offal for later use in stock. Tilt pan to gather juices in one corner and with a spoon, skim off and discard the clear fat from the top of the puddle. Place roasting pan over stove burner and turn on heat to medium. Add wine and with wooden spoon, scrape bottom and sides of pan to loosen all the baked in goodness. Once wine has reduced and brown bits have been loosened, add chicken stock and lemon juice and reduce to just ½ of original volume. Remove from heat and serve with carved chicken. towels.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Recipe: Easy Slow Cooker Chicken Stock

Ingredients:
1 gal. Water
1 Bones and offal (roasted) of whole roasted chicken
1 lb. Chicken bones (ask your butcher!)
2 Celery Stalks
2 Carrots
2 Medium yellow onion, unpeeled and quartered
2 cloves Garlic (3 whole w/ peel on, one peeled and minced)
1 Tbs Kosher salt
1 Tbs Fresh ground pepper

Directions:

Add all ingredients (I add a stalk or two of rosemary or a bunch of fresh parsley if I have some around) into a slow cooker and set to low temperature for 6-8 hours. (If you do not have a slow cooker, you can use a stock pot or Dutch oven, but be careful to set the stove burner to a very low simmer for only about 3 hours.)
Turn off heat and strain the liquid of the bones and vegetables, which can be discarded. Take the saved liquid and place in refrigerator overnight. The cooled liquid should have a solidified layer of fat at the top. Skim off and discard the fat. Remaining stock can be kept in the refrigerator for 3 days, or frozen and kept for much longer!
Use stock for soups, sauces, rice, cous cous…

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Recipe: The Most Time-Consuming Pasta Sauce. Ever.


Ingredients:
24 Very, VERY ripe medium sized tomatoes
2 cups Chicken stock
1 cup Dry, white wine
2 cloves Garlic, minced
8 leaves Fresh basil
4 leaves Bay leaves
1 Tbs Dried oregano

2 Tbs Sugar
Red pepper flakes
Kosher salt
Fresh ground pepper
Olive oil


Directions:

Pre-heat oven to 300ºF. Slice 10 of the tomatoes into ¾ inch rounds. With fingers, scrape out and reserve seeds and juice of tomatoes. Place tomato slices on greased baking sheet, sprinkle slices with kosher salt, fresh ground pepper, and drizzles of olive oil. Bake tomatoes for one hour, until tomatoes look a bit dry and shriveled.

While tomatoes are baking, take remaining 14 tomatoes and make a small cross cut at the bottoms of each of them. Scald in boiling water for 30 seconds and immediately shock in a bowl of iced water. Peel tomatoes and place, with reserved tomato juice/seeds, in a large pan. Add stock and white wine, adding more of each if necessary to cover tomatoes. Bring pot to boil, then reduce to simmer. Add bay leaves, basil, oregano, sugar, pinch of salt and generous pinch of pepper. Simmer until only ¼ of liquids remain (about 45 minutes).

After baked tomatoes are done, place in food processor and pulverize into a thick paste. Add this paste to the boiling pot of peeled tomatoes, which should start to easily break apart when crushed with a wooden spoon.

Continue to stir and break up tomatoes as liquids reduce until sauce becomes desired consistency. Also continue to taste and adjust seasoning during simmering. Don’t be afraid of sugar and salt, which often brings out the great tomato flavors! Once sauce reaches desired consistency, serve immediately, work into a lasagna, or cool and freeze for future meals!