• 15Jun

    We’ve been sampling some great food lately lately, so let’s talk about some of the highlights.

    At the Saturday morning Courthouse Farmer’s Market, I purchased Cavanna Pasta’s Artichoke-Pesto Cannelloni ($15, think manicotti). The package has 3  frozen cannelloni per pack, and comes with heating instructions. My oven needed more time to heat up the frozen pasta than recommended in the instructions, but the end product was delicious. Some of the ingredients included basil, shallots, garlic, and pine nuts. Cavanna is based in Richmond. Arrowine carries Cavanna‘s products (and charges an extra $1 for the cannelloni).

    At the Clarendon Farmer’s Market I purchased a small Chocolate Salted Caramel Chess Pie for $10 from Livin’ The Pie Life, and although it was a bit pricey, that pie was well worth the money. It was truly delicious. They sell other varieties and give samples so that you can taste the pies.

    We tried a couple of nice desserts at the Tysons Corner Sheraton. Their Salted Caramel Vanilla Crunch Cake is a pudding cake containing rich caramel and creamy custard, topped with caramel popcorn bites. They also served Ice Cream from Moorenko’s (about whom we’ve written about previously a couple of times). The ice creams are all made with local produce. Flavors change weekly. We tasted the White Chocolate Mint & the Black Raspberry Chocolate Chip.

    9:30 Club‘s Sound Bites featured some great dishes including the Boriquen Lunch Box‘s (Puerto Rican food truck) Pastelon, a sweet plantain and meat casserole with green beans, red and green peppers, onions, garlic, and tomato sauce. It is topped with cheese and I like to describe it  as “plantain lasagna.”

    Also at Sound Bites, Jose AndresPepe food truck made great Spanish food, including the Botifarra Burger and a ham & cheese sandwich (yes, there is a version in Spain). I did not try their mac and cheese.

    The Lamb Jam featured some great lamb dishes including Poste Moderne Brasserie‘s Lamb Carpaccio, and Bibiana‘s Stuffed Lamb Shoulder. I still vividly remember Bibiana’s Lamb Raviolis from the Lamb Jam’s media preview the previous year. I also very much enjoyed Heavy Seas Imperial stout, which tasted a bit like chocolate.

    Editor’s note (9/2/13): La Forchetta is now knows as Al Dente.

    La Forchetta is a new upscale Italian restaurant of Roberto Donna‘s in DC (nowhere near a metro). They have a cheese list and a cured meat list, and I enjoyed the Castelmagno cheese (cow, sheep, and goat milk). The Grilled Whole Branzino served with Broccoli Rabe and Salsa Verde was excellent. I would go back there for it, although it was a daily special. In general, the restaurant is supposed to excel at fish dishes. The children at the table next to us (the restaurant has a neighborhood crowd) were attacking their pizzas, so we decided to try a pizza with salami, and the pizza was good. The staff seems to lean towards the Tiramisu (it’s huge!) and Cartoccio Siciliano (fried sweet dough filled with sweet ricotta cheese) but we decided on the Bambolino (fried dough balls rolled in lemon sugar with a hot chocolate sauce) and the Zuppa Inglese (chocolate cream, rum sponge cake, hot vanilla sauce). Both desserts were excellent.

    Savor 2012 was last weekend, and it is an amazing beer show. I attended the CraftBeer.com Taste-Off Challenge, and got to see and taste 4 beer experts’ (3 are brewers) beer pairing skills. They had to choose a beer to pair with a rhubarb crisp, but they were not told lavender honey would be added. The 4 contestants were Jeff Hancock of DC Brau, Mike McManus of Brewery Ommegang, Chuck Silva of Green Flash Brewing Company, and Matt Bean of Men’s Health Magazine and Spike TV. While I was torn between Chuck’s choice (Belgian Trippel) and Matt’s choice (Allagash Coolship CERTES), and ultimately voted for Allagash Coolship CERTES, the winner turned out to be Mike’s choice (with Ommegang Aphrodite), my third choice. The DC Brau beer was El Hefe, and I beleive that the stealth addition of lavender destroyed the pairing, which was not Jeff’s fault.

    I sampled a lot of beer at Savor! Some of my favorite beers from Savor include Flying Dog‘s Chocolate IPA, Ithica Beer Company‘s Apricot Wheat, American Beer Company‘s Caboose Oatmeal Stout (I loved this) and Breakaway IPA, Fat Head Brewery‘s Sorcerer (paired with Pork Belly Mole), Bell’s Brewery’s Wild One Sour Brown and Smoked Vienna Lager, Hardywood‘s Singel and Mocha Belgique, Founders Brewery Company‘s Curmudgeon Old Ale, Maui Brewing Company‘s Coconut Porter, Willimantic Brewing Company‘s Flowers Infusion and Pony Espresso Stout, and Ninkasi Brewing Company‘s Believer (which was served with an awesome dish, Red Chile Braised Goat).

    -JAY

    Al Dente Ristorante on Urbanspoon

  • 07Jun

    Last week, Taco Bell’s press office told the Orange County Register that they have a new most-popular product:  Doritos Locos Tacos.  Launched to great fanfare at Taco Bell franchises nationwide on March 8th, the product caught fire – reports indicate that the company sold more than 100 million of them since their introduction.  I’m sure you’ve all seen the ads – the new tacos are a mash-up of the basic crunchy taco and Doritos, a combination aimed directly at the late night college crowd (though I’d hope their target demographic has broadened a bit beyond that…) And it should go without saying:  100 million tacos is an insanely high sales number.  The OC Register reported some bragging from Taco Bell’s press people, who noted that it took years for McDonald’s to sell 100 million burgers, though I don’t think that’s necessarily a fair comparison – after all, Taco Bell has almost six thousand franchises nationwide marketing their new product.  I haven’t been to a Taco Bell in years, but when I heard about the Doritos taco’s success, I enlisted some coworkers to conduct a taste test.  I stopped off at the Bell location in the Tysons Corner area late one morning in hopes of avoiding the lunch rush and picked up several standard crunch tacos and Doritos Locos Tacos.

    First impression:  These things are bright.  You have to give the company credit – they’ve definitely captured the color of Nacho Cheese Doritos chips in their new taco shells.  Too, they come in a handy cardboard sleeve with Doritos branding.  While that sleeve might make up some of the price difference – $1.29 for Doritos Locos Tacos, compared to just $0.99 for your standard crunchy taco – my coworkers seemed to like it, as it helped keep the product’s mess to a minimum.  The tacos are stuffed with the same beef, lettuce, and cheese that comes in a standard crunchy taco; while Taco Bell also sells a Supreme version with diced tomatoes and sour cream, I stuck to the basic taco for this taste test.

    Second impression:  the taste.  On biting into the taco, I wasn’t hugely impressed with the difference made by the Doritos shell.  The nacho cheese taste isn’t overwhelming at first, and I only really tasted it after chewing for a few moments.  That said, though, whoever developed the taco shell got one part of the formula correct – my fingers were immediately covered in Doritos dust.  I don’t think even Doritos from a bag of chips permeate my fingers that quickly, but it’s been a while since I’ve had some of those, either.  I was hoping for more Nacho Cheese flavor from the taco, but I may have been too discerning for the target demo – after all, I was eating these for lunch and without having had any beer.

    The unexpected part for me was the texture.  When I first heard about Doritos tacos, I expected a large Doritos chip in the shape of a taco shell.  Instead, we got what appears to be a taco shell covered with Doritos seasoning, or made with corn chips dyed to match Doritos.  The shell crunched much more like a corn tortilla chip than Doritos.  It’s entirely possible that genuine Doritos shells wouldn’t hold the filling – that’s what my coworkers speculated, anyway – but I was expecting the taco shell to more closely resemble the chip.

    My coworkers weren’t too keen on the product either – one complained that it was too salty, while another was quite put out on hearing that it had displaced her favorite, the Crunchwrap Supreme, as Taco Bell’s most popular product.  Another colleague of mine told me that his brother – a big Taco Bell fan – much prefers the value of the crunchy taco, and isn’t willing to pay 30% more for the Doritos version.  Yet despite our relatively negative opinion, the sales numbers cannot be denied.  Having sold more than 100 million Doritos Locos Tacos in less than 3 months, Taco Bell is clearly onto something.  I imagine their business partners at Doritos are high-fiving all the way to the bank, too.

    Much like Adams-Morgan pizza, I think the Doritos Locos Tacos are a product best experienced late at night.  I can’t say I fully understand the hype, but the novelty brought me into the store, so the marketing team is clearly doing something right.

    It’s definitely not haute cuisine, but it’s got the makings of a major trend.  Michelle Obama, call your office!

    -HML (Michael)

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  • 18May

    Zengo’s current Test Kitchen” is  Hanoi-Havana (Vietnamese/Cuban fusion), and you HAVE to try the Cangrejo Enchilado (soft shell crab lettuce wraps) and the Lemongrass-Lychee Mojito! Seriously! The crab appetizer was so good that Eugene of DC Life Magazine, who does not like soft shell crab, actually enjoyed it. The Boba Cafecito (a cocktail with dark rum, iced Cuban Coffee, Thai Chili, coconut milk, and coffee pearls) was good as well.

    Moorenko‘s Milk Chocolate Gelato has great texture and flavor.

    Talenti‘s double Dark Chocolate gelato is very chocolaty with delicious little bits of chocolate.

    Ciao Bella‘s Lemon Zest Sorbet and Lime Graham gelato  are both good but I prefer the Lime Graham gelato (which also comes in sandwich form). Ciao Bella is a finalist for a Sofi Award at the Fancy Food Show for the Grapefruit Campari (which I have not tried).

    Tate’s Bakeshop in Long Island is also a finalist for a Sofi Award for their chocolate chip cookies. The cookies are delicious, buttery, and very crunchy. I actually like to let them soften for a day or two.

    I had a great breakfast at Art & Soul with Art Smith and Mary Beth Albright, where I met Allison Adato, the author of Smart Chef’s Stay Slim. It is a great book and Art wrote the foreword. Yes, I ate lemon pancakes and house-cured bacon, but I also tried Art’s healthy quinoa granola.

    I had some great food and wine at Market Tavern, so I am sorry to hear that they closed their doors a couple of evenings ago. I even hosted a large happy hour there recently.

    I’ve nearly used an entire bottle of Suriny rice bran oil. It works well at high temperatures and has been responsible for some great veggie stir-fries.

    We got to try a variety of Norwegian brewery Nøgne ø’s beers at the Norwegian Embassy, and while they were all good, the (chocolaty) porter blew us away, especially paired with berry panna cota. If you find their porter for sale in DC or Arlington, let me know. I hear that Wine Specialist may carry it. The embassy’s Chef Sandre Bruvik Ellingstad created some truly amazing dishes–this was some of the best food I’ve had anywhere recently.

    DuckTrap River of Maine makes some truly great smoked salmon (and other fish). Look for it in Whole Foods, although WF doens’t carry the pastrami spiced lox, and Giant only carried that one variety.

    Mighty Leaf makes some of my favorite teabags. I’m a fan of their organic Green Hojicha (which tastes like toasted rice), Organic Spring Jasmine, and Orange Dulce (a black), and less a fan of the Green Tropic (although it smells amazing). I understand the “magic of the tea pouch” but it would be great if  (1) the tea didn’t run down the string to the table, (2) I didn’t find tea lives and pieces of cotton or string floating in my tea, (3) They weren’t $9 for a box of 15 or so, and (4) if people didn’t keep telling me the string looks like a certain feminine product.

    Big Buns is a great burger joint in Ballston. I like their beef burgers, and even their sweet potato fries are good, and they have a soda bar (to make flavored sodas). The vegetarians can get a mushroom burger (I can’t vouch for it).

    Saffron Road‘s Lasagna is a great (vegetarian) product and is available in the freezer case at Whole Foods Market. They have recently come out with simmer sauces but I’ve yet to try them.

    I’m addicted to Popchips, especially the BBQ and Salt and Pepper varieties. Please don’t tell anyone. 4Bitten Media put a bag of the cheddar flavored variety in my gift bag at their awesome launch party a couple of days ago at Masa 14, but I haven’t tried it yet.

    Keep an eye out for Kababji Grill‘s food truck. I attended the truck’s launch last night, and got to sample the food, which was good. I especially enjoyed the baba ganouj, kibbe, and friend phyllo cigars (stuffed with cheese).

    -JAY

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  • 09Apr

    Pearl Dive Oyster Palace's table at The Rammy Nomination Party.

    Lime Fresh Mexican Grill opened recently in Clarendon (and is opening a Pentagon Row location). The standouts here are the sopapillas (little round cinnamon flavored doughnuts), guacamole (I prefer the Abuela and Hombre), and their own salsas and hot sauces. They didn’t make one hot sauce or salsa that I did not like. They also carry a variety of hot sauces from other companies.

    You too can make lettuce rolls with tilapia. Either I'm upside down or the table is. 🙂

    Lately, I have been making French fries and tater tots as an excuse to use Cucina Antica‘s organic ketchup. It is tasty and very “fresh” tasting  for a ketchup. Their tomato basil tomato sauce tomato sauce is great as well, but while I have a bottle of their “La Vodka” sauce as well, I haven’t gotten to opening it yet. They also have a line of organic dressings, including the “Fat Free Tuscany” which is the  favorite of the few varieties “S” sampled on behalf of DCFüd.  In recent news, Cucina Antica has opened its first retail location in Westchester County, New York, off of bustling Route 117 at 333 N. Bedford Rd, Suite 118, Mt. Kisco, NY; The retail store offers customers all-natural and organic products from both brands: Cucina Antica and Monte Bene.

    Zaytinya made enough lamb for me. 🙂

    Northside Social is a great Clarendon coffeehouse. My favorite items there are the Tuna Nicoise Salad (sushi grade olive oil poached tuna, capers, haricot vert (thin green beans), eggs, olives, lemon, and capers), cranberry ginger scones, cardamom biscotti, chocolate salt caramel tarts, chocolate espresso tarts, and both kinds of cinnamon rolls (one has frosting and one has a gooey topping). “S” prefers the frosted cinnamon rolls and the chocolate chip cookie tart (yes, it’s a tart). Their online menu does not list all of these items. They also have good coffee and a good selection of teas. Their upstairs space is a wine bar, and the downstairs space is a coffee house/cafe.

    Boqueria's quail eggs.

    Bangkok Golden is a Thai/Lao restaurant in 7 corners that puts out delicious food. You can order from the Thai or Lao menus, or opt for the buffet. JC Gibbs had been raving about this place in person and through her writing for quite a while, so I decided to try Bangkok Golden. I enjoyed the food so much that I ate there two more times in the same week.  The steamed tilapia with herbs (served in banana leaves) is a standout, as are the curries, and the crispy rice salad (which you get to wrap in lettuce leaves), but the menu is full of standout dishes. This is hidden gem you must seek out!

    This is REALLY good stuff!

    Boqueria is a new tapas restaurant in DC. The last Food Blogger Happy Hour was hosted there, and we tried some great tapas. Some of the standouts were the Cojonudo (Fried quail eggs and chorizo on toast), Tortilla Española (Spanish omelet), Pimientos de Padrón (Blistered Shishito peppers, coarse sea salt), Patatas Bravas, Buñuelos de Bacalao (salt-cod fritters), and a dish that included anchovies on toast.

    Zaytinya gave us lamb’s tongue! Not in my words: “Through April 22nd, Zaytinya is celebrating Greek Easter by featuring delectable Mediterranean-inspired dishes presented  by Head Chef Michael Costa.  Throughout the two-week festival, guests can enjoy a Chef’s Experience menu featuring a variety of spring lamb dishes, as well as the return of the popular lamb sandwich cart and Easter cookies.  Guests can also toast the holiday and the return of spring with two cocktails created especially for the festival. ” In my words: I was wonderful walking into a room and seeing several lamb roasts side-by-side roasting on a  spit. They had some great dishes at the media preview for this event. Some of our favorites were the lamb sandwich, lamb tongue, spanikopita, and the Easter cookies. The cookies were extraordinary!

    The Guacamole at Lime.

    We also ate well at the 2012 Rammy Nominations Party! I’ll share a category with you:

    “New Restaurant of the Year  A restaurant that must have been opened between December 1, 2010 and November 30, 2011 and already distinguishes itself as a pacesetter in food, beverage and service.

    Elisir Restaurant by Enzo Fargione
    Fiola
    Graffiato
    Hill Country Barbecue Market
    Pearl Dive Oyster Palace”

    Many wonderful restaurant served food at the event, but in my mind, Pearl Dive’s table was an instant hit! They served a great assortment of fresh and tasty seafood including some stupendous West Coast Oysters. It was fun watching people trying to peel humongous shrimp while holding a plate and glass of wine.

    The rest of the finalists are listed here, and are the shining stars of the industry. Maybe next time they will all give me humongous shrimp and oysters and it will be a really long article. Did I mention that the mixologist finalists were on hand? We had some wonderful cocktails that evening.

    -JAY

    Bangkok Golden on Urbanspoon

    Lime Fresh Mexican Grill on Urbanspoon

    Northside Social on Urbanspoon

    Zaytinya on Urbanspoon

    Boqueria on Urbanspoon

  • 23Feb
    Masa 14’s Bangus

    Welcome back my recurring “best things” column that translates as “the things that don’t blur together when are always searching to eat the next best new thing.”

    We recently tried out the new Melting Pot series at Masa 14. This particular menu (February) highlighted Spain’s influence on the Philippines, specifically in Manila. Masa 14’s Strawberry lemonades are excellent; the drink is a combination of strawberry puree, lemon juice, and vodka, and is only $4 during Happy Hour (Mon-Friday 5-7 PM). Their crunchy fried okra has texture that even those who are not okra fans might like, since it’s crunchier and less slimy than expected, and it too is only $4 during happy hour. The Bangus was a tasty dish featuring steamed whitefish wrapped in country ham; it seemed like a good (gateway) fish dish for ham lovers.  the Pansit Palabok (clear noodles, blue crab, boiled egg, and chicharonnes) was good as well, and definitely had a strong Southeast Asian feel to it.

    Masa 14's Pancit Palabok

    I recently attended an Zengo‘s Test Kitchen event: Shanghai-Sao Palo. My favorite cocktail that evening was the Pomegranite Kumquat Cocktail, with its tart and delicious combination of  cachata, mudded kumquats, pomegranate, and ginger.  They also had an amazing steak dish that we all attacked–we were like rabid squirrels in a Skippy plant. The dish in question was Picahna Steak & XO Style King Crab, and it featured dry aged New York strip steak, king crab, hot bean paste, broccolini, and black bean ginger sauce.

    Zengo’s newly-renovated Latin Lounge has now opened downstairs, and features a daily happy hour from 5-8pm with $5 cocktails and $5 small plates.

    Zengo's Picahna Steak & XO Style King Crab

    I attended a Food Blogger Happy Hour at Eatonville, and odd as it seems, I enjoyed all the food I tried there including ceviche, shrimp hushpuppies, fried fish, salmon, mac and cheese, mashed potatoes, and greens. Good job Eatonville! Granted, they knew it was going to be a happy hour filled with food bloggers, but plenty other restaurants still manage to mess up at events regardless of who is in attendance. JC Gibbs was the (Food Blogger Happy Hour) hostess that night and was awesome as usual.

    I’ve written about LeoNora previously, but every time I visit, they have new items in the shop. They make great “truffles,” which are actually little spheres of chocolate cake covered in chocolate (like chocolate covered munchkins). Their chocolate & dulce de leche heart-shaped mini cake is delicious, as is their chocolate heart-shaped cake with lemon and coconut. They had panettones with rum and dried fruit in the shop one day, which was the remainder of a batch for a special order; the panettones are similar to what Argentine’s call “pan dulce” and both are eaten at New Years.

    Eatonville's Salmon, Spinach, & Mashed Potatoes

    We recently tried Naughty Bits Brownies, which are local brownies with naughty names and themes. Some examples of their brownies include the Man Catcher, Shiksa, Starlet, Barista, Cabana Banana Boy, and Living In Sin. My favorite is the Barista (which contains chocolate covered espresso beans and Kahlua), but the Shiksa (yes, it contains bacon) is certainly tempting. I did not actually try the Banana Cabana Boy, having opted for the Starlet.  The Starlet is making an appearance at the Oscars (in the official gift bag) and features pop rocks. The pop rocks function better if you eat the Starlet brownie slowly, something I’m unsure I’m capable of.

    -JAY

    Disclosure: From time to time, we are given free items, meals, or events.

    Masa 14 on Urbanspoon

    Zengo on Urbanspoon

    Eatonville on Urbanspoon

  • 23Feb

    Cooking for anyone on a low-carb diet is challenging – after all, American grocery stores have more carbohydrates available nowadays than at almost any other time in our history.  Sugar and wheat flour are the biggest culprits, but unless you check labels religiously, you’ll inadvertently serve carbs with every meal.  Going low-carb means eating lots of protein and fresh vegetables, avoiding many fruits (natural sugars aren’t good either), eliminating most breads, and never, under any circumstances, cooking up big, steaming bowls of pasta.

    But this is a challenge.  Seriously, any time you’re talking about a fundamental change to your diet, you’ll end up with cravings.  In some ways, it’s almost karmic:  if you tell yourself that you can’t have cookies, one of your coworkers will probably ask if you want to order Girl Scout cookies.  (What, is that just me?)

    I came across Dreamfields pasta on a suggestion from my sister-in-law.  She mentioned that she’d found a new brand of pasta that was actually okay to eat when trying to cut down on carbs.  And this, friends, is revolutionary.  A low-carb diet means, at least in the early phases, cutting down to 20 grams or less of carbohydrates in a day.  And that may not sound like much until you check the label and realize that one slice of bread has 20 grams of carbs on its own.  It forces a bit of an adjustment to one’s cooking!

    But as it turns out, you can fulfill that craving without completely destroying your Atkins-friendly diet.  Dreamfields claims that one serving of their pasta, which I found in three different shapes at my local Giant, has just 5 grams of net carbs.  I won’t pretend to know how exactly how they do it (they claim that their patented pasta blend “…creates a protective barrier to reduce starch digestion in the small intestine,” which isn’t exactly something I want to examine closely!) but I thought it’d be worth a look.

    As with so many other specialized diet foods, this stuff isn’t exactly cheap.  My local store has a 13.2 oz box of spaghetti for $2.89, while a 16 oz box of Barilla spaghetti costs just $1.25, and Ronzoni’s whole-wheat spaghetti goes for just $2.29.  That’s quite a premium, but if you’re eating low-carb, you’re spending more on your food anyway.  Just be aware of it.

    We tried out two applications for this pasta – a basic angel hair with marinara sauce and an old favorite recipe for comfort food, a variation on Mark Bittman’s baked macaroni and cheese (recipe below).  I think our impressions of the angel hair marinara were colored by it being the first pasta meal we’ve had at our house in months – it’s no exaggeration to say that we loved it – but when I made baked macaroni and cheese, I tested it on one of my wife’s friends to make sure that we weren’t just deprived and loving it.  All three of us cleaned our plates that evening.

    The beauty of this product (and I will admit that I’m neither Italian nor a pasta expert) is that it tasted like a near-perfect substitute.  I didn’t do anything special when I made it; I simply salted the water and boiled as long as the package indicated (5 minutes for the angel hair and 8 minutes for the macaroni).  No olive oil or family cooking secrets – this was about as simple as it could get, and it worked extraordinarily well.

    If you’re tired of avoiding your carbohydrate nemeses, Dreamfields is worth a shot.  You’ll pay a premium for it, but in our house, it was definitely worth it.

    Enjoy!

    -Michael (HML)

    Baked Macaroni and Cheese

    2 ½ cups milk

    2 bay leaves

    1 lb elbow macaroni (Bittman also suggests shells, ziti, or other cut pasta)

    4 tbsp butter, plus extra for greasing the pan

    3 tbsp all-purpose flour

    2 cups grated cheese – I prefer sharp Cheddar, but any flavorful cheese will do

    ½ cup grated Parmesan

    ½ cup bread crumbs – I used panko with dried Italian herbs)

    Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.  Boil salted water in a medium saucepan or stockpot.  Grease a 9×13 glass baking dish with extra butter.

    Heat milk over low heat with bay leaves for five minutes or so until hot.  Remove bay leaves and set milk aside. Boil the pasta until one minute shy of al dente – for the Dreamfields pasta, this meant boiling for 7 minutes – then strain and rinse in cold water to stop cooking.  Set aside in a medium work bowl.

    In a clean saucepan (and this can be done using just one pan for all of these tasks, though you’ll need to wash it out repeatedly), melt the butter over medium-low heat.  Add the flour and stir with a whisk until smooth.  (Technique note:  for any of you newbies out there, you’re making a roux, the base for many traditional French sauces).  Cook for about five minutes until the mixture is brown, whisking often.  Add the milk in ¼ cup increments, whisking until smooth with each addition, and don’t let the mixture sit over the heat until almost all of the milk is added.  Once smooth and fully incorporated, add both cheeses and stir until melted and smooth. 

    Add the sauce to the pasta and stir to combine.  Adjust seasoning to taste and add some freshly ground black pepper if you’re so inclined.  Pour the mixture into the prepared pan and top with bread crumbs, then bake for about 15 minutes.

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  • 01Feb

    Cocova is having this month’s is Saturday February 18, 2012 from 3:00pm to 4:00pm. It will feature over 14 different kinds of chocolate from around the world for you to explore and enjoy. This store was known as Biagio Fine Chocolate until the owner of Capital Chocolate bought the store and changed the name. They have a great variety of chocolate products (including bars, truffles, and baking products) and sample different items for free once a month. They recently went through a renovation.

    -JAY

     

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  • 26Jan

    I met with Cook’s Flavoring Company representative Walter Nicholls awhile back and we conversed about a very controversial topic: vanilla beans.  Oh, I know what you’re going to say—vanilla beans aren’t a volatile topic.  The rated-G beans are really great for crème brulee and getting creative with cupcakes, frostings or ambrosia.  Bakeries and all the sweet dishes they yield have conditioned us to believe that vanilla only works with cheesecakes and petit fours.  Well, with the help of a few brave beans, I’m going to free your mind of the stereotypical vanilla bean recipe.

    However, before I unleash the power of the vanilla bean upon you, I should inform you that the vanilla beans Mr. Nicholls from Cook’s gave to me were colossal.  They were plump and fragrant and beautiful.  Nothing like what you may come across in your grocer’s aisle, a thin stalk folded into thirds and stuffed in a jar.  Cook’s premium vanilla beans may be procured from Bayou Bakery, Cork Market, Palena Market, Black Salt Market, Butcher’s Block, Central Coffee Roasters (Sperryville, VA) and Home Farm Store (Middleburg, VA).  Their website is located here.

    For those of you who don’t know, vanilla beans are gleaned from vanilla orchids and the species originated in Mexico.  These days the primary sources of beans are the Madagascar and Tahitian varieties of the same orchids.  Each flower has to be hand pollinated, and once the pods are harvested, they must be dried and cured for around six months to fully develop the flavor.  The process of producing vanilla beans remains very labor-intensive, keeping prices on the beans high.  However, do not settle for imitation.  Once you taste the complex flavor of a real vanilla bean, nothing else will do.  Each recipe title is a clickable link, except the cocktails.  And now, onto the recipes:

    1.  Vanilla Pork Chops – I never would have guessed that vanilla and pork chops would go together so well, but they do.  If you’re a fan of pork chops or vanilla, this recipe (courtesy of the Washington Post) is a must-try.  I did not use my grill, but the broiler does just fine during the winter.

    2.  Scallops with Champagne-Vanilla Butter Sauce – I love Emeril.  His sauce is a bit of a challenge, but a little patience goes a long way.  Again, I was surprised at how well the vanilla and scallops went with each other.  I would suggest that a nice white fish fillet would do equally well in this sauce.

    3.  Salmon with Citrus Emulsion – This dish was incredibly flavorful.  Once again, the sauce takes a little more effort than usual to complete, but it is worth the few extra minutes.  I’d recommend serving this fish entrée with buttery mashed potatoes and sautéed green beans to wow your dining companions.

    4.  Vanilla Bean-Champagne Cocktail – This drink was one of Mr. Nicholls’ suggestions, and it’s impressive.  Fill each of four flutes about three-quarters of the way with champagne and add ½ ounce of your favorite vanilla liqueur per glass.  I split two vanilla beans lengthwise, and used one half in each flute as the garnish.  It’s a great cocktail to serve when you want to have an elegant evening.  One other cocktail Mr. Nicholls asked me to try was a Cuba Libre with the addition of the seeds from half a vanilla bean.  It was very good, and the kind of drink you’d want to encounter at a local bar as one of the special house drinks.

    5.  Curried Duck with Vanilla – I ended up using chicken thighs instead of duck legs for this recipe, but I was seriously impressed by how deliciously the vanilla and curry went together.  I ended up using different vegetables, but I kept the spices the same.  Though I was slightly worried about the vanilla overwhelming the dish (it smelled amazing), the taste of the vanilla ended up more subtle and complimentary to the curry.  For anyone who may be afraid to incorporate vanilla into savory entrees, try this dish first!  You’ll be very glad you did.

    -TKW

    Disclosure: From time to time, we are given free items (like vanilla beans), meals, or events.

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  • 22Jan

    Cocova (formerly known as Biagio) has brought back their  days! This month’s is Saturday January 28, 2012 from 3:30pm to 6:30pm. They will have free samples of many great chocolate products including a few surprises and:

    • Bonnat Xoconuzco  Madecasse 67% Bar
    • Madecasse 80% Bar
    • Valrhona Palmira Bar
    • Valrhona Jivar Pecan
    • Pralus Caracas Bar
    • Michel Cluizel Vila Gracinda
    • Eclat Pretzel Bar
    • Patric Dark Milk Bar
    • Patric Rio Caribe Bar
    • Askinosie White Nib Bar
    • Guittard Quevedo Bar

    Future sample days are scheduled for 3pm on February 18th, March 17th, and April 21st.

    -JAY

     

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  • 17Jan

    Product Review:  Jello No-Bake Real Cheesecake Dessert

    An occasional series in which I evaluate a grocery store product from the busy home cook’s perspective

    While strolling through the local Giant this week, this box in the baking aisle piqued my interest:

    Cheesecake is a terrific indulgence and one that my dinner guests always enjoy – at least, those without dairy allergies!  I’ve tried out a number of recipes over the past few years, including a red velvet cheesecake that was a big hit with some friends and a low-carb pumpkin cheesecake that my wife and my in-laws enjoyed tremendously over Christmas.  New York-style cheesecake is a real treat, though hard to get outside the Big Apple.  A close substitute can be found locally, though:  I recently got the chance to redeem a couple of gift certificates for free slices from The Cheesecake Factory courtesy of one of my wife’s coworkers.  It felt a little odd to slap those on the cheesecake bar and make our selections, but where else can you find that much variety in a single type of dessert?

    Of course, they’re also a somewhat finicky creation:  most cheesecakes need to be baked in a water bath in order to prevent cracking, but sometimes even that step isn’t enough to prevent yawning crevasses on the surface.  A springform pan is convenient for baking a cheesecake, but unless you take the time to seal the bottom with aluminum foil, you’re likely to get leakage from the water bath into the pan.  Alton Brown recommends using a tall cake pan to avoid that problem, but the only ones I have in the kitchen are the standard 1-inch pans used for a layer cakes.  In any case, baking a cheesecake can be quite an endeavor for the home cook to perfect, and after seeing this mix on the shelf, I wondered if it could be as easy as the box made it sound.

    The instructions for this mix are quite simple:  Begin by melting 5 tablespoons of butter and mixing with 2 tablespoons of sugar and the bagged graham cracker crumb mix.  Press the resulting mixture into a 9-inch pie pan.  Then beat the cheesecake mix with 1-½ cups of milk for 30 seconds on low until combined, then on medium speed for 3 minutes.  Pour the resulting pudding-like substance into the crust, smooth the top, and then chill for at least an hour.  The result?

    The first downside should be painfully visible:  the graham cracker crust absolutely refused to stay together when I attempted to slice and remove the dessert from the pie dish.  It stuck to the pie dish in places, which made it even more difficult, and I couldn’t get any slices out that would be restaurant quality.  My wife always forgives my plating flaws, but in this case, not even the taste could save it.

    Cooking is quite often a balance of compromises between quality and convenience.  Ask any restaurant chef – they’ll tell you about how long they can hold sauces on station, for example, until the quality completely breaks down, or how they can par-cook certain dishes to make it through the rush more quickly.  With that in mind, I was more than willing to take a chance on this dessert if it was going to be, if not pastry chef-approved, a worthy substitute to satisfy the weeknight sweet tooth.

    I don’t think I should have been surprised that it was more of a cheesecake-flavored pudding when all was said and done.  While smooth and creamy, it was definitely not as firm or rich as a real cheesecake would be.  The dessert had a strong vanilla flavor, but it also had a cloying aftertaste that overcame me after sampling my first bite.  A standard slice of cheesecake has a slight lemony tang to it as well, a flavor note that was missing here.  You’ll notice that the slices are somewhat vertically challenged, and I sincerely wonder if the recipe should be whipped more or if they’re cutting back on the filling mix in each box to keep prices down.

    That said, though, on the whole, this was a low-risk proposition.  The Cheesecake Factory nearest my home sells slices almost $8 apiece, while this mix ran less than $5 all told (though I had sugar in the pantry and didn’t add that to the total):

    Jello dessert mix:                    $2.79

    Whole milk (1.5 cups):             $0.82 (pro-rated)

    Butter (5 tbsp):                       $0.75 (pro-rated)

    I had high hopes as I left the grocery store, but unfortunately, this mix is one that I can’t recommend to you.  If you really want the taste of cheesecake, I have to suggest a trip to your local fine dining establishment or a few hours shopping and baking to make your own.  The extra effort will be worth it.

    -Guest Writer Michael (HML)

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