amyblogschow:

something to try rhubarb shortcake by sweets & bitters
I came across this recipe for rhubarb shortcake via Sweets & Bitters, a quarterly food journal by Hannah Kirshner, a bartender-turned-pastry-chef-turned-cookbook-writer who I met a few years back when we made a Stupidly Simple Snacks episode together. 
I love the ‘look’ and branding of this recipe card, which explains why I happen to own quite a few cookbooks – I love the way photos of food and words look together. However, I rarely (if ever) use a cookbook in the ways it’s intended: To make food.
That being said, I feel reassured by this particular recipe by Hannah. There aren’t any fancy instructions; I even recognize all the ingredients. Still, I think I’ll swap out the rhubarb for macerated strawberries and make strawberry shortcake instead…

amyblogschow:

something to try rhubarb shortcake by sweets & bitters

I came across this recipe for rhubarb shortcake via Sweets & Bitters, a quarterly food journal by Hannah Kirshner, a bartender-turned-pastry-chef-turned-cookbook-writer who I met a few years back when we made a Stupidly Simple Snacks episode together. 

I love the ‘look’ and branding of this recipe card, which explains why I happen to own quite a few cookbooks – I love the way photos of food and words look together. However, I rarely (if ever) use a cookbook in the ways it’s intended: To make food.

That being said, I feel reassured by this particular recipe by Hannah. There aren’t any fancy instructions; I even recognize all the ingredients. Still, I think I’ll swap out the rhubarb for macerated strawberries and make strawberry shortcake instead…

Reblogged from amyblogschow

from-meat-to-bean:

Insanely Simple Two-Ingredient Recipes

These all look really good to me right now but to be fair I haven’t gotten enough sleep all week and for various endocrinology reasons, this means I am hungry all. The. Time.

Reblogged from OMGSEXYFOOD

TURKEY REMAINS AND HOW TO INTER THEM WITH NUMEROUS SCARCE RECIPES- by F. Scott Fitzgerald

(via womansoheartless)

At this post holiday season, the refrigerators of the nation are overstuffed with large masses of turkey, the sight of which is calculated to give an adult an attack of dizziness. It seems, therefore, an appropriate time to give the owners the benefit of my experience as an old gourmet, in using this surplus material. Some of the recipes have been in my family for generations. (This usually occurs when rigor mortis sets in.) They were collected over years, from old cook books, yellowed diaries of the Pilgrim Fathers, mail order catalogues, golf-bags and trash cans. Not one but has been tried and proven—there are headstones all over America to testify to the fact.

Very well then. Here goes:

1. Turkey Cocktail: To one large turkey add one gallon of vermouth and a demijohn of angostura bitters. Shake.

2. Turkey à la Francais: Take a large ripe turkey, prepare as for basting and stuff with old watches and chains and monkey meat. Proceed as with cottage pudding.

3. Turkey and Water: Take one turkey and one pan of water. Heat the latter to the boiling point and then put in the refrigerator. When it has jelled, drown the turkey in it. Eat. In preparing this recipe it is best to have a few ham sandwiches around in case things go wrong.

4. Turkey Mongole: Take three butts of salami and a large turkey skeleton, from which the feathers and natural stuffing have been removed. Lay them out on the table and call up some Mongole in the neighborhood to tell you how to proceed from there.

5. Turkey Mousse: Seed a large prone turkey, being careful to remove the bones, flesh, fins, gravy, etc. Blow up with a bicycle pump. Mount in becoming style and hang in the front hall.

6. Stolen Turkey: Walk quickly from the market, and, if accosted, remark with a laugh that it had just flown into your arms and you hadn’t noticed it. Then drop the turkey with the white of one egg—well, anyhow, beat it.

7. Turkey à la Crême: Prepare the crême a day in advance. Deluge the turkey with it and cook for six days over a blast furnace. Wrap in fly paper and serve.

8. Turkey Hash: This is the delight of all connoisseurs of the holiday beast, but few understand how really to prepare it. Like a lobster, it must be plunged alive into boiling water, until it becomes bright red or purple or something, and then before the color fades, placed quickly in a washing machine and allowed to stew in its own gore as it is whirled around. Only then is it ready for hash. To hash, take a large sharp tool like a nail-file or, if none is handy, a bayonet will serve the purpose—and then get at it! Hash it well! Bind the remains with dental floss and serve.

9. Feathered Turkey: To prepare this, a turkey is necessary and a one pounder cannon to compel anyone to eat it. Broil the feathers and stuff with sage-brush, old clothes, almost anything you can dig up. Then sit down and simmer. The feathers are to be eaten like artichokes (and this is not to be confused with the old Roman custom of tickling the throat.)

10. Turkey à la Maryland: Take a plump turkey to a barber’s and have him shaved, or if a female bird, given a facial and a water wave. Then, before killing him, stuff with old newspapers and put him to roost. He can then be served hot or raw, usually with a thick gravy of mineral oil and rubbing alcohol. (Note: This recipe was given me by an old black mammy.)

11. Turkey Remnant: This is one of the most useful recipes for, though not, “chic,” it tells what to do with the turkey after the holiday, and how to extract the most value from it. Take the remants, or, if they have been consumed, take the various plates on which the turkey or its parts have rested and stew them for two hours in milk of magnesia. Stuff with moth-balls.

12. Turkey with Whiskey Sauce: This recipe is for a party of four. Obtain a gallon of whiskey, and allow it to age for several hours. Then serve, allowing one quart for each guest. The next day the turkey should be added, little by little, constantly stirring and basting.

13. For Weddings or Funerals: Obtain a gross of small white boxes such as are used for bride’s cake. Cut the turkey into small squares, roast, stuff, kill, boil, bake and allow to skewer. Now we are ready to begin. Fill each box with a quantity of soup stock and pile in a handy place. As the liquid elapses, the prepared turkey is added until the guests arrive. The boxes delicately tied with white ribbons are then placed in the handbags of the ladies, or in the men’s side pockets.

There I guess that’s enough turkey talk. I hope I’ll never see or hear of another until—well, until next year.

 Domesticity Log: September 1, 2012: Fresh Orange and Yogurt Tart

Light, summery, and easy. A good dinner party recipe.

Domesticity Log: September 1, 2012: Fresh Orange and Yogurt Tart

Light, summery, and easy. A good dinner party recipe.
Domesticity Log: August 25, 2012: Roasted Fig Tartlets
So the fresh figs are stewed in port, which let me tell you was a bitch to find, but let me tell you - this was delicious. Very grown up. Also, I got a chance to use my tartlet pans, so I’m clearly amazing. 

Domesticity Log: August 25, 2012: Roasted Fig Tartlets

So the fresh figs are stewed in port, which let me tell you was a bitch to find, but let me tell you - this was delicious. Very grown up. Also, I got a chance to use my tartlet pans, so I’m clearly amazing. 

Domesticity Log: August 20, 2012: Zucchini Pancakes
So these were delicious. And I ate them with a nice little spread of the apricot lavender jam I made. Because I am ridiculous.

Domesticity Log: August 20, 2012: Zucchini Pancakes

So these were delicious. And I ate them with a nice little spread of the apricot lavender jam I made. Because I am ridiculous.

Domesticity Log: August 4, 2012: Mile-High Lemon Meringue Pie
My father’s favorite kind of pie, which I thus made for his birthday. 

Domesticity Log: August 4, 2012: Mile-High Lemon Meringue Pie

My father’s favorite kind of pie, which I thus made for his birthday. 

Domesticity Log: August 3, 2012: Gwyneth Paltrow’s Fish Tacos
Again, amazing. I used Dos Equis Amber to batter the fish and I can highly recommend that. 

Domesticity Log: August 3, 2012: Gwyneth Paltrow’s Fish Tacos

Again, amazing. I used Dos Equis Amber to batter the fish and I can highly recommend that. 

Domesticity Log: July 28, 2012: Frangipane Cake (modified from this recipe)
I had leftover pistachio frangipane, so I kind of baked it into the top of a loaf to feed the brothers for breakfast/mowing the lawn of the apartments? Feeding the boys at all times is crucial. 

Domesticity Log: July 28, 2012: Frangipane Cake (modified from this recipe)

I had leftover pistachio frangipane, so I kind of baked it into the top of a loaf to feed the brothers for breakfast/mowing the lawn of the apartments? Feeding the boys at all times is crucial. 

Domesticity Log: July 27, 2012: Roast Organic Chicken with Fingerling Potatoes and Carrots
Hey, guess what. I watched that video of Gwyneth Paltrow cooking a chicken that everyone likes to make fun of because they’re hateful people and I made a chicken and it was delicious. Also the organic chicken was so expensive I named it Jeremiah and gave it a whole backstory because it better have had that for what I paid for it.

Domesticity Log: July 27, 2012: Roast Organic Chicken with Fingerling Potatoes and Carrots

Hey, guess what. I watched that video of Gwyneth Paltrow cooking a chicken that everyone likes to make fun of because they’re hateful people and I made a chicken and it was delicious. Also the organic chicken was so expensive I named it Jeremiah and gave it a whole backstory because it better have had that for what I paid for it.

Domesticity Log: July 21, 2012: Apricot Chiffon Pie (from Martha Stewart’s Pies & Tarts; similar, but not-identical, recipe here)
Probably as close to heaven as I’ll ever be getting - ethereal, dreamy, light, luscious, tangy, sweet. And god bless gelatin. and also god bless my brothers, who were amazing troopers during the very intense scientific assembly of a chiffon pie, which involves egg yolks and egg whites in separate and equally intensive preparation, and gelatin, and folding of egg whites, and stirring within an ice bath, and tempering egg yolks, and - they helped adroitly throughout and afterwards understood why organic chemistry had made sense to me.

Domesticity Log: July 21, 2012: Apricot Chiffon Pie (from Martha Stewart’s Pies & Tarts; similar, but not-identical, recipe here)

Probably as close to heaven as I’ll ever be getting - ethereal, dreamy, light, luscious, tangy, sweet. And god bless gelatin. and also god bless my brothers, who were amazing troopers during the very intense scientific assembly of a chiffon pie, which involves egg yolks and egg whites in separate and equally intensive preparation, and gelatin, and folding of egg whites, and stirring within an ice bath, and tempering egg yolks, and - they helped adroitly throughout and afterwards understood why organic chemistry had made sense to me.

Domesticity Log: July 21, 2012: Plum Galette
Galettes are my brothers’ favorite, I think probably because I often make them for them first thing in the morning - you can’t really beat waking up to a galette. They’re always so golden and flaky and warm and fresh. It’s this galette that my brother John compares all other baking to, and argues that he enjoyed no dessert in France as much as much as this one. My family likes to fuel my baking ego. 

Domesticity Log: July 21, 2012: Plum Galette

Galettes are my brothers’ favorite, I think probably because I often make them for them first thing in the morning - you can’t really beat waking up to a galette. They’re always so golden and flaky and warm and fresh. It’s this galette that my brother John compares all other baking to, and argues that he enjoyed no dessert in France as much as much as this one. My family likes to fuel my baking ego. 

Domesticity Log: July 15, 2012: Banana, Coconut & Cashew Cream Tart
A few things: I made this during my cleanse, when I went without gluten and dairy and all that processed sugar stuff. Another thing: this was amazing. Cashew cream (where you soak cashews and then blend them into a lovely creamy paste) is delicious. In fact, I would suggest adding no coconut at all to the cream in this pie. I added about a quarter of what the recipe suggested and I still wished there hadn’t been any, because it broke up the perfect texture of the cashew cream with the bananas.
Another thing: a few days after I made this, my mom took me out to a gluten-free, vegan, hippie, etc. place called Noorish (yeah, I know), and we tried their gluten-free, blahblahblah key lime pie. And this pie? Way better. I mean, screw modesty.

Domesticity Log: July 15, 2012: Banana, Coconut & Cashew Cream Tart

A few things: I made this during my cleanse, when I went without gluten and dairy and all that processed sugar stuff. Another thing: this was amazing. Cashew cream (where you soak cashews and then blend them into a lovely creamy paste) is delicious. In fact, I would suggest adding no coconut at all to the cream in this pie. I added about a quarter of what the recipe suggested and I still wished there hadn’t been any, because it broke up the perfect texture of the cashew cream with the bananas.

Another thing: a few days after I made this, my mom took me out to a gluten-free, vegan, hippie, etc. place called Noorish (yeah, I know), and we tried their gluten-free, blahblahblah key lime pie. And this pie? Way better. I mean, screw modesty.