• 20Jan

     

    Ceder Plank Grilled Salmon/Scallops Pic Courtesy of Napoleon Grills.

    Napoleon® Fireplaces and Grills sent us some interesting stats on grilling (by gender). The referenced study confirms men most often take up the tongs when it comes to grilled meals. They have some great looking recipes here.

    -JAY

    ———————————-

    Males continues to reign in the fiery realm of the grill, according to a new report studying the barbecue habits of North Americans.

    The 2011 consumer research study, put together for the international Hearth, Patio and Barbecue Association, found that the male head of the household is more often the one who makes the decision to use a grill, prepares the food and actually does the work on the grill.

    Grilled Shiraz Ribs Pic Courtesy of Napoleon Grills.

    “Grilling has traditionally been a guy thing, and this research confirms the anecdotal evidence many of us have seen in our own homes for years,” said David Coulson, national advertising manager for Barrie, Ont.-based Napoleon Fireplaces and Grills. “Having said that, the study shows there are also a lot of households out there where both spouses are content to share the tongs.”

    The online survey, conducted this past summer, looked at the way people in Canada and the United States typically use gas, electric and charcoal grills to prepare meals, as well as what features they’re looking for when they buy them.

    Among the details provided by survey respondents, researchers found:

    Males handle the majority of the grilling duty

    Mango BBQ Quail Pic Courtsey of Napoleon Grills.

    ·         The survey indicates the male head of the household cooks about 73% of the meals on gas grills, 72% on charcoal grills and 66% on electric grills.

    ·        Women account for 24% of the cooking on gas grills, 22% on charcoal grills and 32% with electric grills.

    Breaking down food prep

    ·         While most men like to be hands on at the grill, a smaller number of them share a hand in the food preparation. The survey found men prepare the food 58% of the time for gas grilling, 55% for charcoal grills and 50% for electric grills.

    ·         Those stats compare to women who handle food prep 39% of the time for gas grilling, 40% for charcoal grills and 49% for meals made on electric grills.

    The will to grill

    ·         Men generally make the final call when it comes to whether or not to grill a meal. The survey indicates men typically make the decision 60% of the time for gas grilling, 63% of the time for charcoal grilling and 56% of the time for electric grills.

    ·         Women make the call 36% of the time for gas grilling, 33% of the time for charcoal grilling and 43% of the time for electric grilling.

    Where’s the fire?

    ·         No matter who actually exercises their grill skills to cook the meal, the job of firing up the equipment usually falls to the man of the house, the survey found. Men said they light gas grills 78% of the time compared to 20% for women. Men ignite charcoal grills 77% of the time, compared to 18% for women.

    “It’s extremely important for us to know how people typically use their grills and barbecues so we can tailor our products and services to our customers habits,” Coulson said. “At Napoleon, we have a full line of gourmet gas and charcoal grills to suit any household, no matter who’s at the helm.”

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  • 31Dec

    DCFüd Wants You!

    The good news is, some of us are over-employed (that’s good, right?). Some of us have even moved away from the DC area. (You know who you are). 🙂

    But the bad news is a dry spell for the FUD at the moment. So, to
    counteract this terrible state of affairs, we are looking for…..

    A FEW NEW WRITERS!!
    Were you annoyed by a restaurant?
    Do you have some random recipes to share?
    Have you discovered the best wine, restaurant, food truck, or….restaurant restroom in DC?
    Do you want to write a comparison article for a particular item or dish?
    Need some hipster cred? Writing experience for your resume? Articles for your Portfolio?
    Passionate about food?
    Then we want you for DCFüd. Send writing sample to
    jay@dcfud.com, along with few ideas you’d like to write
    about. It’ll be crazy!

     

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  • 21Dec

    I recently wrote about saving money on groceries, and am following up with some info on a good place to do some last-minute holiday shopping, World Market. I shop at the Pentagon Row location, but there is also one in Friendship Heights.

    They currently have 50% off of Asian ceramic sets (teapot and sushi plate sets), lotion/bubble bath sets (they call it something else), and only on the December 23rd, HOLIDAY CANDY! Peppermint bark, here I come!

    Plus, join their “Explorer Club” and you can print out coupons from the site and their emails, some of which can be combined. Yesterday I combined a 10% off coupon with a $10 off of $30 coupon, and some of my items were already 50% off. They have a good selection of snacks, spices, tea, coffee, etc. They have wine, but I’m unsure if the coupons apply to that.

    —————————————

    As of Thursday, there will be a new Pinkberry in town, (on M Street) just in time for the holidays. “The new Pinkberry (3288 M Street, NW) will open its doors in Georgetown for the first time on Thursday, December 22nd, and offer a special winter treat to all shoppers: one free small Pinkberry from 12 to 4 p.m. Stop by their newest Georgetown location and share in the wonderment!” Can you say no to a free frosty treat…even in the winter?

    -JAY

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  • 14Dec

    In my inbox.

    -JAY

    ————————————–

    Be a Winner with this Easy Holiday Recipe;
    then Win $1 Million with a Recipe of Your Own

    Short on time for laying out a party spread that’ll wow your holiday guests?

    “The secret to creating something memorable is often as simple as pairing unexpected flavors that really hit it off,” says Dave Hirschkop, owner of Dave’s Gourmet (www.davesgourmet.com), maker of award-winning sauces.

    “It doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated,” he says. “If you mate ingredients that have chemistry, you’ll blow your guests away.”

    If you’ve already created that blow-em-away recipe – the sauce that’s the hit at every gathering – it could win you up to $1million in royalties in Dave’s Gourmet Recipe Challenge.

    And if you haven’t, Hirschkop has a gift for you: His Easy Holiday Dip will make short work of party-pleasing.

    Easy Holiday Dip

    1 ½ cups roasted red peppers (from jar or canned)

    1 8-ounce package of cream cheese

    ¼ cup pumpkin seeds

    1 Tablespoon olive oil

    ½ teaspoon paprika (I like smoked but any will do)

    Salt and pepper to taste

    Put everything into a food processor and pulse until smooth, creamy and delicious.

    Serve with fresh-cut veggies (carrot sticks, celery, you know the drill folks) pretzels or pita chips.

    For you chile heads, add a couple drops of your favorite Dave’s Gourmet hot sauce and make that dip rip!

    Dave’s Gourmet Recipe Challenge

    And now about that recipe contest. Dave’s Gourmet is looking for a winner to add to its product line, and guess who’ll get the royalties for six years? That’s right – you. Up to $1 million. Hey, it’s only fair if your name’s on the label.

    Payday starts immediately with a $2,000 advance.

    Just submit for your original recipe for a sauce, salsa or dip by Dec. 31 at www.davesgourmet.com. Dave’s team will test the recipes and choose semifinalists, who’ll be taste-tested by a Dave’s Gourmet panel. Finalists will be notified Jan. 12-14. The winner (or winners) will be chosen by food professionals attending the Fancy Foods Show in San Francisco. They’ll be notified Jan. 18.

    Isn’t it about time your killer sauce paid off? Dave thinks it is.

  • 25Nov

    I know we’ve all been following the Extreme Couponing craze (or at least seen commercials for it). I’m by no means an extreme couponer (since they devote 40+ hours a week to research, collection, and organization), but I do save a bit of money, so here are some of my tips.

    1) If something is wrong with a product you bought (even if you just don’t like particular variety from a good company), let the manufacturer know, or if that doesn’t make sense (like with bad fruit), complain to the store (and bring the receipt, even if you can’t always have to bring the item). Often the manufacturer will respond with one or two free coupons to replace the item, or the store will just replace it. Examples: I’ve had companies send me free coupons for OTC medications (which had a few crushed tablets), specialty bread (which was sliced badly), specialty chips (which were stale when opened even though they were not expired). And, we received a coupon for a free box of cereal when complained that a major specialty cereal company’s product was just plain not to our liking (so we couldn’t eat it), although we like their other products (and told them so). Often the company already knows that they are having these issues and are working on it. I’ve gotten inedible watermelons at local supermarkets and some farmer’s market vendors (where one’s relationship to them as a customer really matter) occasionally in the summer, and when I told them and showed them the receipt (in the case of a supermarket), they replaced the items (even though I did not bring the offending fruit with me). I’ve been given free drinks or coupons for free appetizers at restaurants when something has been bad (such as a huge wait), without asking for anything, although I may have checked in a couple of times. Some prescription medication manufacturers give coupons or samples to doctor’s offices to give to patients or even give you an item for free one time only.

    2) Get to know your vendors, whether it is the produce guy at the supermarket, cheese store employee, farmers market vendors, or even servers in restaurants. This way, they give you stuff to try, warn you when something is bad, or tell you when new stuff just got in or is on sale. At a farmer’s market last week, I was given two tubs of cheese for less than the price of one, and I’ve gotten products free (or even samples when none were already present) at farmer’s markets as well. Often the end of the day is the best time to get a deal on something at a festival or farmer’s market so they don’t have to carry it all home.

    3) Ask manufacturers for coupons through their emails or websites. You can tell them you want to try their products more of their products, eat healthier, etc. Sometimes the coupons may be free, but $1 off something you like or want to try is good. Product reps who are in supermarkets will sometimes have coupons, and will also know which stores have their items on sale, and for how much. Often manufacturers periodically have coupons on their webpages or Facebook pages. Some companies send samples.

    4) Use online coupon sites to print out coupons.

    5) Know how store sales, coupon policies, and membership cards work.  Whole Foods email list will tell you their (extremely discounted)  Friday sale item is a day early, and last Friday, I had a coupon for that item as well that I could combine with the same.  If your supermarket has coupons you can load on your membership card (Giant, Harris Teeter), do that, and they may combine with other sales or coupons. Whole foods has a coupon book in the store that a lot of people don’t know about and the items are often on sale as well, so I’ve gotten (as examples) De Bolles pasta for 30 cents or Celestial Seasonings tea for $1.50. Harris Teeter and Giant double coupons up to 99c, meaning an $1 coupon stays as it is, but Harris Teeter runs a few sales a year where it doubles coupons up to $1.99 for a week (this happened two weeks ago). So, 2 weeks ago, I bought the Sunday Washington Post and went online to download coupons (including ones from the two companies that give coupons in the paper such as Red Plum), and saved about 40% on that bill (some items were on sale at buy one get one). I would have made money (towards other items) on some transactions but Harris Teeter’s policies do not work that way. Giant does not take internet coupons unless you are on the self serve line. The SavingStar app loads your membership cards for various stores (Giant, Safeway, Harris Teeter, CVS) with coupons. At Giant’s website, you can use your membership account to load their (p0rtable in-store) scanner with coupons which may work together with other coupons.

    6) Get newspaper coupons from friends who don’t use them or the recycling or trade with friends. This is something I do not do but should.

    -JAY

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  • 01Nov

    Kabob Bazaar is one of my regular stops in Clarendon, and they also have one in Bethesda. I usually order the jujeh (chicken) kabobs or the kubideh (ground beef) kabobs and upgrade to the rice dish with the carrots. Order the kabobs with rice, not bread because the bread comes with the meal anyway. The bread basket contains house-made flat bread, herbs to roll into it, and yogurt sauce to put the rolled bread in. They also have good vegetarian sides. It is a shame that Kabob Bazaar’s menu is not easier to navigate on their website.

    Today, The Capitol Deal has $25 certificate for $12.50, and you can buy up to 4 of them. They also have a deal on Chef Tony’s–a 3-course dinner for $40; I was impressed when I dined at Chef Tony’s (upon Lisa Shapiro‘s recommendation).

    -JAY

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  • 13Oct

    Looks like this is becoming a regular column. The other three articles in these series are here, here and here.

    At Hank’s Oyster Bar‘s new Dupont location:

    The fried olives and potato chips were very good; try them.  The lobster roll was good (although I’ve had other ones that were at least that good in the area).

    CJ Foods Spicy Chicken Garlic Korean Crispy Crescent Dumplings:

    CJ Foods is a Korean company with a new line of Asian food in the US. The Crispy Crescent dumplings are very flavorful, and fry up well (crispy) in vegetable oil. Their dumplings are sold frozen in several varieties, and Costco is now carrying two of them. I made a dipping sauce with soy sauce, sesame and red pepper flakes. Try this product. I have the Chicken & Cilantro Mini Wontons in my freezer but haven’t tried them yet.

    Miso soup at Hikaro. Why, oh why... is it so good?

    Hikaru:

    This Clarendon sushi joint has some good sushi and noodle dishes, but the miso soup is exceptional. Not sure why it tastes so good.

    Thai Curry:

    We ate their recently and was impressed by their curry dishes.  The banana roti dessert was good as well.

    Oyamel:

    We were at a Day of the Dead eventat Oyamel last week, where they highlighted this new menu which features

    Oyamel's Rainbow Trout. I ate two plates of it.

    the region of Michoacan and will run from October 17 through November 2. I tried a variety of dishes, many of which had unfamiliar flavors and textures. Everyone seemed to favor (or not favor) different dishes, but for me, some of the standouts (which you HAVE to try) were:

    • Pan-Seared Idaho Rainbow Trout with Black Garlic-Roasted Pee Wee Potatoes and Lemon-Olive Oil Herb Oil
    • House-Made Platano Liqueur (with Piloncillo, Vanilla and Mexican Cinnamon)
    • Tableside Guacamole with Chips and Salsa
    • House-Made Corn Tortilla with Crispy Pork Belly and Orange Jalapeno salsa
    • Silky Butternut Squash Soup with Annato, Mexican Cinnamon, Habanero Chile and Crispy Chicharron

    -JAY

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  • 17Jul

    At the Fancy Food Show, I sat down with Todd Courtney, the creator and namesake of Todd’s DIRT. Although this was the middle of a major food convention, his personality made me feel welcome and I could imagine we could have a great time at a Ravens’ tailgate party, sharing ideas while he watched ribs on a parking lot grill.

    Almost two decades ago, a friend of Todd’s father was known for his spice rubs. When Todd married, he asked for a jar of the rub as a gift. Todd was inspired to make his own rub, based on what he could identify in the taste of this family friend’s creation. Although the friend did not share the recipe, he did offer insight to Todd into the creation of his own.

    I got the impression, as Todd spoke with emotion about the perfecting of his original DIRT, that had the friend just handed him the recipe, it would have just moved from generation to generation without much outside notice. But, because the friend inspired Todd to perfect his own, it instilled a passion and pride for his own creation.

    You can taste the result of that pride and passion in the samples of chicken cooking at the front of his display area. Of course I had to try samples of all three versions of DIRT.

    The Original DIRT has a hearty taste. The flavors I found included oregano and garlic. These were not over-powering, but were the tastes my tongue enjoyed most. In the container, it looks a lot like a class three felony, and like Todd said, the name “Todd’s CINSAMILLION” made for too big a label. It also resembles grass clipping, so after using a few different names in trials, DIRT seemed to be the name that he and his customers kept coming back to.

    Crabby DIRT had the taste that another popular seafood spice puts together. However, Crabby DIRT adds flavor to the meat, and unlike its competitor does not become the dominate taste. Like its original counterpart, this spice looks like dirt. However, the color is that of sandy earth from my house on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Unlike the Original DIRT, you will not get arrested on suspicion for carrying a jar of it, although just the smell of these spices in the jars is addicting. (Todd gave me several samples to return home with. I shared them with buddies who love to grill. As we sat around the table, playing cards, they each would take a moment to smell their samples, and the most common utterance was, “Mmmmm…” followed by, “I can’t wait to try this out.”)

    The third flavor is Bayou DIRT. I cannot talk about whether the spice looks like Louisiana swamp dirt, because I have never been there, but true to its name, it does look like a red clay-based dirt I have seen many places. This was my favorite taste on the chicken samples. I used to work at a famous restaurant chain as a waiter and happy hour cook and their food is good for the price, but I got the impression their idea of Cajun cooking was to cover chicken in paprika and cayenne pepper then burn it to a crisp. Todd’s Bayou Dirt is how I wish every Cajun food was spiced. It had a bit of kick, but the reward for handling the kick was a flavor that makes me hungry just thinking about it. Unlike my former employer restaurant, this creole taste first delivers flavor and finishes with the kick.

    The most prevalent ingredients in all three DIRTs are: sea salt, pepper, and oregano. Each develops its own distinct flavor from the additional ingredients.

    Todd Courtney did not just one day start making DIRT and had a ready market. He first bottled DIRT in 1993 and gave it away in labeled Mason jars as gifts for Christmas and weddings, as his father’s friend did before him. Word of mouth grew that his was the best stuff around to use. As it grew popular, the demand for making it grew.

    In 2009, while he worked as the finance manager for a local car dealer, he requested to have one weekend off per month that he dedicated to making DIRT. The dealership’s response was to choose…either cars or DIRT. As Todd put it, paraphrased, “Let’s see…sell cars, or follow my dream of becoming my own boss selling something I love,” and so the choice was fairly easy.

    That choice was not so easy financially. He gave up a sure paycheck in the middle of one of our toughest recessions in American history to start his own business. His wife who helps in the business has kept her full-time day job.

    But, I have a feeling his financial end will soon pay off big.  A year ago, Todd’s DIRT was on the shelves of 40 stores. Currently, it is on the shelves of 500 stores and he shared that a major grocery chain has agreed to display Todd’s DIRT in the spice aisle.

    Unlike his father’s friend, the recipe will not die with him. He plans on growing the business to build a future for his three teenage children, of which at least one will be directly involved in the company.

    -Guest Writer Sensei Miller (SEM)

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  • 20Jun

    Permalink Filed under: Etc No Comments
  • 16Jun

    In my inbox.

    -JAY

    ———–

    Hi Jason,

    I wanted to let you know about a couple food-related films that will be playing soon at the West End Cinema.
    The first is FARMAGEDDON, which will open tomorrow and play through June 23rd. The film explores the restrictions placed on a number of foods, such as raw milk, and the effect these have on family farms and American’s access to foods they wish to eat. Director Kristin Canty will be holding Q&As all weekend at the theater.

    The other film is TOAST, based on the childhood of British food writer Nigel Slater and starring Helena Bonham Carter, which is part of our FROM BRITAIN WITH LOVE series. It will screen Wednesday, June 22nd at 7:30pm. I’m including longer synopses of both films below — please let me know if you’d like any more info about either of them.

    Thanks,
    Johanna

    FARMAGEDDON
    Americans’ right to access fresh, healthy foods of their choice is under attack. Farmageddon tells the story of small, family farms that were providing safe, healthy foods to their communities and were forced to stop, sometimes through violent action, by agents of misguided government bureaucracies, and seeks to figure out why.

    Filmmaker Kristin Canty’s quest to find healthy food for her four children turned into an educational journey to discover why access to these foods was being threatened. What she found were policies that favor agribusiness and factory farms over small family-operated farms selling fresh foods to their communities. Instead of focusing on the source of food safety problems — most often the industrial food chain — policymakers and regulators implement and enforce solutions that target and often drive out of business small farms that have proven themselves more than capable of producing safe, healthy food, but buckle under the crushing weight of government regulations and excessive enforcement actions.

    Farmageddon highlights the urgency of food freedom, encouraging farmers and consumers alike to take action to preserve individuals’ rights to access food of their choice and farmers’ rights to produce these foods safely and free from unreasonably burdensome regulations. The film serves to put policymakers and regulators on notice that there is a growing movement of people aware that their freedom to choose the foods they want is in danger, a movement that is taking action with its dollars and its voting power to protect and preserve the dwindling number of family farms that are struggling to survive.

    90 min. · Not Rated · Dir. Kristin Canty

    TOAST
    TOAST is the ultimate nostalgia trip through everything edible in 1960’s Britain. Based on the heart-wrenchingly bittersweet story of food writer, Nigel Slater’s childhood, and set to the songs of Dusty Springfield, TOAST is a delicious love letter to the tastes and smells that a young boy associates with his journey into adulthood.
    Nigel’s Mother was always a poor cook but her chronic asthma and addiction to all things canned isn’t helping. No ordinary boy, Nigel on the other hand, laps up cookbooks like they are porn, spending all his time gazing longingly at the delights on offer in Percy Salt’s grocers. Nigel’s Dad worries that there is something “wrong” with his son and the two find it difficult to connect. Nigel finds it far easier relating to Josh, the gardener, who teaches Nigel about the wonders of nature as they sit munching freshly picked radishes and pork pies.

    As his mother’s illness worsens so to do Nigel’s relations with his father. The Bolognese he cooks is far too exotic; the uncooked Fray Bentos pie MUST be finished; and his father’s rage as Nigel insists on picking every last bit of jelly off the tinned ham at the annual picnic hits an all time high. Dad then fires Josh for reasons unknown to Nigel.
    Just before Christmas, Nigel’s mother dies, leaving Nigel and his father heartbroken. Their touching efforts to look after each other, often through gestures with food, sadly seem to miss the target and his father begins to spend his evenings at the Masonic lodge until a new cleaner, Mrs Potter, arrives on the scene.
    Mrs Potter’s curves, charms and lemon meringue pies quickly bewitch Nigel’s father and much to Nigel’s horror, the three soon embark on a move to the country. The one silver lining in the cloud of a new school is Domestic Science class, where Nigel can finally shine and cooking soon becomes the key weapon in the battle for Dad’s affections. Ironically, the main casualty of these culinary skirmishes is Nigel’s father, as his waistline grows and grows as Mrs Potter’s cooking turns competitive.

    Hoping to escape the madness, Nigel lands a job in the kitchen of his local pub. It is here that Nigel’s eyes are opened to a world of opportunity, both culinary and sexually. He is soon smitten with both the owner’s son and his cooking.

    When his father dies, Nigel’s mind is set as he escapes the confines of the countryside and packs a bag for London, arriving at the door of The Savoy Hotel.

    96 min. • Not Rated • Dir. SJ Clarkson

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