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100th Post- Comfort and Beef Stew

October 6, 2011 by Renee

When I sat down to write today I realized that this is our 100th post! Wow, has the time flown. And while this blog is still a work in progress, it has come rather far from it’s humble beginnings! I am rather proud of what we have accomplished so far, but it still has a long way to go in my opinion. But, ever slowly, it will evolve and become everything we desire it to be in good time. Meanwhile, I do hope that you will stick around and share some of our favorite eats, drinks and antics with us. Because there will be many!

As you may or may not know, this has not been the most healthful year for me. The year started off with the cancer scare, then the kidney issues and a few surgeries, then endless colds and most recently, pneumonia, which was by far the sickest I have ever been. It wiped me out for nearly four weeks. I am better now, but still tire very easily, which, with a four year old running around, doesn’t make for very good days overall. There has been far too much time spent unproductively lying in bed.

The one good thing about lying in bed though is all the wonderful comfort foods I have enjoyed this past month. Homemade chicken soup; not only does it nourish the body, but it soothes the soul as well. Don’t forget the matzoh balls the size of baseballs! Dense, slightly salty and oh so filling.   There has been chicken and dumplings, made the way my aunt makes them, rolling out the dumplings and filled with large pieces of chicken and carrots. It’s truly heaven in a bowl. My favorite meatloaf, chock full of veggies and mashed potatoes with homemade gravy. It’s been really a month of comfort and good eats.

While Ari made several of the items, I have been feeling up to cooking this week and tonight the comfort food of choice is Beef Stew. A sort of cross between Beef Bourguignon and a traditional stew, it’s perfectly filling and only gets better with a day or two in the fridge. Serve with a big piece of crusty bread and a glass of hearty red. Start a fire in the fireplace and curl up with a blanket and a tray on your lap. It’ll be a great evening.

 

Ingredients

1 1/2 pounds chuck beef or stew meat, cut into 1 1/2-inch
cubes

1 cup all-purpose flour

Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

1 tsp. ground cloves

2 tsp. paprika

2 tsp. thyme

3 tbs.  olive oil

1 (750-ml bottle) good red wine, Cote du Rhone or Pinot Noir
(or a mix of open bottles)

3 whole garlic cloves, smashed

2 tbs. Worcestershire sauce

2 cups or chicken or beef stock or 1 cup stock and 1 cup
water

3 bay leaves

2 tbs. tomato paste

2 yellow onions, cut into 1-inch circles

1 pound carrots, peeled and cut diagonally in 1 1/2-inch
chunks

1 pound small potatoes, quartered

1 large branch fresh rosemary

1 (10-ounce) package frozen peas

 

Method

Combine the flour, salt, pepper, cloves, paprika and thyme
in a small bowl. In batches, dredge the cubes of beef in the flour mixture and
then shake off the excess. Heat 3 tablespoons of olive oil in a Dutch oven and
brown the beef over medium high heat for 5 to 7 minutes, turning to brown
evenly.  Remove the meat to a plate and
add the red wine to the pot scraping up the brown bits. Add the garlic and Worcestershire
sauce and cook for 2 minutes before returning the meat and it’s juices to the
Dutch oven.

Add the stock, bay leaves and the tomato paste dissolving it
amongst the liquid. Let cook for one hour over medium heat, simmering but being
sure not to boil the liquid as it will reduce too quickly.

After an hour, add the onions, carrots, potatoes and
rosemary to the Dutch oven. Simmer over medium heat for another hour and a half
or until the meat is fork tender and the potatoes can be pierced easily.

Right before serving, stir in the frozen peas, season to
taste, and serve hot with crusty bread.

Options

As with any recipe, it’s up to you and your tastes to add
whatever ingredients you like.  If you happen
to have fresh mushrooms, green beans or a bag of pearl onions, you can add them
right at the end. Just keep in mind that root vegetables, yams and such should
go in with the carrots and potatoes to assure their cooking through. Fragile
veggies can go in right at the end.  Experiment and have fun!

 

Filed Under: Eat, Featured Posts, Soup and Stews Tagged With: Beef, Carrots, Potatoes, Recipe, Stew

Parisian Summer Reading With David Lebovitz and Olivier Magny

August 10, 2011 by Renee

I suppose it is a good thing that I have been incredibly too busy with work projects (Yay! Big Ben Media Group!) and with life in general (what the heck have I been doing?) to actually sit down and write but before inertia sets in and takes over, I want to catch you up on all the things we’ve done this summer.

Ok, for starters, we have not gone to the beach even once! Our youngest daughter actually went with a friend to the Hamptons. That’s right, she went to the Hamptons, home to the rich and famous, but not us, we haven’t gone to the beach even once. We also have only gone to the town pool one time. Last year, we were at the pool or beach nearly every day. So what gives?

Well, the weekends have been full of cooking and experimenting with new recipes, photography and backyard barbeques. The week, well, has been full of kids (and stitches for the little boy, don’t ask!), working and tending to the house and our failing vegetable garden. We think the heat wave killed all of our plants and what that didn’t kill, the bugs and vermin have. So, we have been pulling plants, weeding and trying in vain to rescue what is left.  This year, we didn’t tend to the garden on a schedule until it was too late. Next year, we vow to do better.

One of things that I have been spending a lot of time doing is reading books. Not just reading them on the Nook, or on the internet. I have actually sat down and read several books that I’ve held in my hands. I realized that with the Nook, or the internet, my attention span really only lasts a few minutes before I tire and move on to something else, but with an actual book, I’ll delve in and am lost for hours, if not days. It’s been really wonderful.  And for this summer, I’ve been transported to Paris, my home away from home and one of my most favorite cities in the world. If I cannot be there in person,  a book is almost (not really, but I’ll keep telling myself that!) as good.

I have also been very lucky to have been able to attend a few book signings this summer of some of my favorite bloggers/authors. Two of which, happen to live in Paris.

Just last week, Ari and I saw our friend and one of our favorite blogger’s, David Lebovitz, at Baby Cakes here in NYC.  We indulged in a few minutes of conversation with him and devoured some divine donuts at the same time.  (The cinnamon sugar ones are quite addictive!) It was a very rainy day, but he had a long line of fans waiting patiently outside and inside the tiny storefront for him to sign his paperback release of The Sweet Life in Paris.  It’s a must read (as are all of his cookbooks!) and a laugh out loud tale of David’s experiences living as an expatriate in Paris. We’ve had the hard cover version since it’s release (I buy all of his books the moment I see them come out.) and it maintains a prominent place on our coffee table.

We snuck in and got a quick hello and finally had him sign a few of his books, Ready for Dessert and The Sweet Life in Paris, that I’ve been meaning to take along (or make Ari carry) to the destinations where we’ve seen him.  We wish we could have spent more time chatting with him, but the line was growing and we really didn’t want to be too rude.  So, we left David to his signing and we took a leisurely stroll through the neighborhood, stopping for Thai food and a delicate blackberry sorbet from il laboratorio del gelato.

A couple of weeks before that, I had the pleasure of seeing Olivier Magny, from O-Chateau at his book signing here in NYC for the debut release of “Stuff Parisians Like, Discovering the Quoi in the Je Ne Sais Quoi” which grew out of his much beloved, tongue in cheek blog, “Stuff Parisians Like”.

Ari and I first met Olivier in Paris where he was holding wine tasting classes in his loft where he actually lived at the time. That was nearly six or seven years ago and I’ve been following O-Chateau and Olivier’s blog ever since. So when his book arrived I was delighted for him and the accolades that followed him.  It’s always inspiring to see an entrepreneurs’ dream come to fruition.

If you have not read his blog or his book, I suggest you do so immediately. He wastes no time being “PC” and like NYer’s, who can make fun of themselves where no one else dares, he points out the Parisian’s character idiosyncrasies with flawless and wild abandon.

Olivier’s charismatic and humorous personality is evident in his writing style and is synonymous with the way he approaches wine.  He takes a lighter stance on the formality of wine education, which lends itself to an enjoyable experience.  It is no doubt then, that his short stories, commentaries really, his Useful Tips and Sound Like a Parisian anecdotes at the end of each piece are sharp witted and equally jocular.

The stories throughout the book are no longer than a few pages each and can be read as stand alone slices of cultural observations, so you’re to never feel as though you have an entire story to keep up with.  Although, once you start to read, you’ll want to finish the entire book in one sitting, it’s that amusing!

One of my favorite stories is entitled “The Idea of Sailing”, whereas sailing, is something a Parisian cannot not like for it is elegant and poetic and thus, Parisian. There are other, equally, if not more so, hysterical nuances to be uncovered of the Parisian and Olivier does so with eloquence and cleverness.

During his stay here, I was able to sit down with Olivier and ask him a few questions:

KC: ”You’ve been called the “French version of Jamie Oliver”. Is that offensive or endearing?”

OM: “Well, it might be more the drunk version, but seriously, it’s an honor. Jamie has been a fantastic agent in renewing the food scene world wide. And wine can be a bit on the stuffy side sometimes so I try to bring a bit of energy to it, but of course I am much smaller and much more of the little guy than Jamie.”

KC: “Your book, and your blog, are a bit snarky at times to Parisian’s. Have you felt any backlash from this?”

OM: “Well, I’ve been mugged”. No actually, it’s funny because the responses I’ve gotten from Parisians are positive and they really enjoy it, saying it is true and actually, really spot on. The only negative I’ve gotten is that people are saying it’s not only the Parisians who are like this, but France is becoming like this as a whole, which I lament a little bit, and I fight it everyday.  I’m trying to preserve the local cultures and fighting against the uniformity of the country.”

KC: “The last commentary in your book discusses the French not drinking as much wine as they used to.  Are you hoping to change that by the way you teach your classes and give your tastings?”

OM: “Oh yes, I try to bring freshness and fun to wine drinking and wine knowledge which has gone down over the past 20 years in France. We, at O-Chateau try to create a place where you’ll feel good as a wine lover, with a friendly staff, good music, good food, and a good atmosphere where it is actually cool to drink wine, which is counter intuitive to the French way of thinking now.”

If in Paris, please be sure to visit Olivier at O-Chateau, and his new wine bar, in the 1st arrondissement, just steps away from the Louvre. And you can also check to see if David is leading any of his sinfully delicious and indulgent chocolate and pastry tours  while you are there! What could be more Parisian than that?

Stuff Parisians Like

 

 Disclosure: I received a copy of Olivier’s book, Stuff Parisians Like to review for this post. No other compensation was granted.

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Kitchen Sink, Featured Posts, Cookbooks Tagged With: Book Review, David Lebovitz, Olivier Magny, books

KitchenAid’s 1000 Cooks for the Cure- Sweet Pepper Jelly Recipe

August 2, 2011 by Renee

20110716-IMG_1262A couple of weeks ago we hosted a party as part of KitchenAid’s 1000 Cooks For The Cure, to benefit Susan G. Komen for the Cure ®.  I was introduced this great fundraising idea while attending the Rockher party Blogher Food this past May.

The basic concept was that 1000 cooks sign up and throw a party, a potluck, BBQ, or just a small gathering of friends. When you registered your party you could dedicate it to a cancer survivor or mention any other reason that inspires you to assist in the fight against cancer. If the party raised more than $50 you’ll be sent a limited edition Villeroy & Boch plate designed by Jacques Pepin. But the best past is, you can help raise even more money if you register the plate and then pass it on to someone else to use! And for each time it’s passed, another $5 more will be donated!  KitchenAid has promised to donate a minimum of $450,000. But with all the plates being passed on, we hope that number will be a lot more!

For our party, we had a BBQ, grilling up the usual fare; burgers, hotdogs and making rotisserie chicken. We also had lots of fresh vegetables and some fruits on the grill.

One of the dishes, a condiment, really, that went quickly was a Sweet Pepper Jelly that I had made during the week. It was gone in a flash! But thankfully, I made 5 jars so we’ll have some for the rest of the summer. It’s especially tasty on a juicy grilled burger.

 

Sweet Pepper Jelly

Ingredients

4 Red peppers, diced with scraps saved and set aside

4 Granny smith apples, peeled and diced

4 Jalapenos peppers, diced with scraps saved and set aside (for a hotter sauce, reserve some ribs and seeds)

2 cups red wine vinegar

1 cup sugar

2 tsp salt

1 box pectin

 

Method

Over medium high heat, add the pepper scraps and Jalapeno pepper scraps, the diced apples, vinegar and salt. (If you like a lot of spice, add the Jalapeno ribs and seeds too.)

Bring to a boil and simmer for 8-10 minutes, until the apples are soft.

Pour the mixture into a food processor and puree until smooth, return to the pot.

To the puree, add the diced red peppers and Jalapeno peppers and bring to a boil.

Add the pectin and cook according to the directions on the box.

Once completely cooked, the jelly can be stored in the refrigerator or vacuumed canned in a water bath using sterile canning jars for long term storage.

 

Now, you can do your part too,  by purchasing  Cook for the Cure Countertop Appliances by KitchenAid or by passing your own Pass the Plate by Villeroy & Boch. Once you have it, just go online , register your plate and pass it on.

plate_picture

 

Filed Under: Eat, Featured Posts, Sauces, Dressings and Condiments Tagged With: KitchenAid, Pepper Jelly, Susan G. Komen, canning

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