Apr
7
2010
Last night cocktails flowed like water at Edible Brooklyn’s Good Spirits event at the Bell House. As the quarterly magazine’s first event at this venue, they certainly got the goods right, unfortunately the place was packed by 7pm and many of the stands ran out of food and/or drink by 7:30. Lucky me, I got there early and indulged in the melty Duroc pork belly on polenta chips from Fette Sau and sipped their paired cocktail, The Gardiner, which had Hudson Corn whiskey, lime, and a rim of the restaurant’s special rub. › Continue reading
1 comment | tags: bell house, cocktails, compass box, edible brooklyn, edible manhattan, fette sau, fort defiance, gabrielle langholtz, jacques gautier, linnea covington, louisa shafia, mile end, palo santo, rachel wharton, ricks's picks, the farm on adderly, the vanderbilt, tumbador chocolate | posted in Drinks!, Eating Out, Random Food Thoughts
Mar
30
2010

Get ready for the first ever Gourmet Latino Festival, which will hit restaurants and the Astor Center in June. As they transform the Astor Center in to “a corner of Latin America,” the three Latina women behind the festival; Karen Uribe, Claudia Castro, and Mariana Suarez are giddy. They have been planning and scheduling this event for two years, and, with the help of Centrico chef Aaron Sanchez and beverage expert Steve Olson, they are ready to go.
“We want to bring out the nuances throughout the different Latin cultures,” said Uribe last night during the festival preview. “We really want to make it a cultural thing, not just about the food.”
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1 comment | tags: aaron sanchez, centrico, gourmet latino festival, industria argentina, institute of culinary education, latin american food new york, linnea covington, maximo tejada, mayahuel, nyc festival, palo santo, phil ward, reyuela
Mar
19
2010

Who doesn’t love a pile of spicy, smoky, diced tomatoes with cilantro, lime, jalapeno, and onion, all mixed together and placed on top a corn chip, burrito, or taco? In Colorado, you go to a Mexican restaurant and immediately they serve you a ramekin of garlicky tomato puree, rarely the bowl of fresh pico de gallo you get in New York (which people mistakenly call salsa).
But as New York Times writer Julia Moskin dives into the new Mexico chic cuisine that has popped up all over the city, she finds that a lot of places are getting this simple sounding, but not so simple dish, right. Surprisingly, as a Mexican food snob, I totally agree with this article. There are some great places to get some unique and tasty salsas. Her list includes: Cascabel Taqueria, La Superior, Hecho en Dumbo, and more. I would definitely add Cabrito, one of my personal favorite taco spots here, to the list.
Who has your favorite salsa? And, what is the best way to make it?
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2 comments | tags: cabrito, cascabel, good salsa in new york, hecho en dumbo, julia moskin, la superior, linnea covington, mexican food in new york, new york times, salsa, salsa recipe | posted in Eating Out, Random Food Thoughts, Recipes
Mar
16
2010

Today New York Times writer Manny Fernandez wrote about the 99-cent pizza craze that has been spreading across Manhattan. But, he isn’t the first one to note cheap, $1 and under food. About a year ago, I did a round up for Serious Eats that included pork buns, noodles, and sticks of meat from Flushing, Queens’ Chinatown; $1 falafel sandwiches; cheap sushi; and 39 cents an ounce frozen yogurt. Josh Bernstein has also been rounding up cheap eats by neighborhood for Metromix. He recently stumbled on the Hell’s Kitchen area and talked about the same pizza Fernandez did in his article.
What’s up with this craze? Is 99-cent pizza worth it? Adam Kuban of Slice didn’t say in his cheap pizza battle last year, but he also didn’t say he really liked either pie. Some things I think work well as $1 items, like ices on the street in the summer, hot dogs, and French fries. But overall, I would rather pay $2 for a really good slice, then bother with a kind of gross one for less.
no comments | tags: $1 food, 99 cent pizza, adam kuban, cheap food, cheap pizza, josh bernstein, linnea covington, manny fernandez, metromix, new york, new york times, pizza, slice | posted in Eating Out, Random Food Thoughts
Mar
9
2010
I don’t know when sushi shaped like cats, or cats eating cute pieces of sushi became a popular image, but I am glad it did. What could be cuter then a salmon roll with a smiling cartoon cathead on it? Or a game where you play a round blue feline who eats sushi? Either way, sushi and cats, what a perfect combo.
no comments | tags: cat sushi, linnea covington, spicy brown, sushi cat, sushi game, video game
Mar
6
2010

One thing you should know, I think Starbucks is brilliant. Well, more I think the people behind the brand are brilliant. Not only have they made coffee into a luxury and necessary item, but they have trained us to ask for it by funny names like caramel macchiato, or crave a skinny vanilla latte, or even worse, use a benign size system. Tall? What does that mean? I worked in a cafe for over 5 years and nothing was more annoying then someone asking for a grande macchiato when really they meant a medium (I think) latte.
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no comments | tags: bittersweet, Brooklyn, coffee shops, ella cafe, fort greene, gothamist, high rents, linnea covington, smooch, starbucks, the bagel store, tillie's, verb, williamsburg
Mar
5
2010

Last night I had the pleasure of attending a party at the Brazilian Consulate in honor of Leticia Moreinos Schwartz’s new cookbook, The Brazilian Kitchen. The small room was packed with Schwartz’s family, friends, publisher, and other food-oriented people mulling about the makeshift bar and sipping fresh made Cabana sponsored caipirinhas. As we downed the dangerously delicious cocktails, plates of finger food created from recipes in Schwartz’s book made the rounds. From delicate puffs of hot cheese bread (page 16), to the heavy and fried beef croquettes (page 23) and black-eyed pea fritters (page 31), and to the rich caipirinha flavored bonbons (page 166), the samplings of the evening barely brushed the contents of her book.
› Continue reading
1 comment | tags: avocado creme brulee, black eyed pea fritters, brazil, brazilian consulate, brazilian food, cabana cachaca, caipirinhas, fish stew, leticia moreinos schwartz, linnea covington, south american cookbook, the brazilian kitchen
Feb
24
2010

I love Rick’s Picks, especially their Smokra‘, a delightfully spicy, paprika spiked pickled okra. But what, pray tell, do you do with the wonderful brine leftover after you finish these addictive beauties? The other day I was faced with such a conundrum, I didn’t want to throw it out, but saving it, really? Well my answer was right on the jar: use as a meat marinate. Yum.
So, I stopped by Whole Foods and bought a thick cut pork chop ($6.30) from the meat counter and brought it home. There, I cut the piece of meat into six large chunks and plopped them into the jar. Nothing could have been easier. I let the pork sit for a couple days before I cooked it up in a frying pan. No oil, no spice, just some heat to cook the meat. After it browned in the juices on medium heat, I drained it and added some quartered Brussels sprouts. That’s it, an easy, no mess meal. When the meat was done, the spice of the brine shone through with a peppery tang. Because it had sat in the marinate for so long, the pork was super moist. Next time, I might try to put two pork chops in the jar and share, but I guess that means I need a new jar of Smokra’…oh darn.
no comments | tags: Brussels sprouts, easy dinner, meat marinate, pickle brine, pork, rick's picks, smokra' | posted in Random Food Thoughts, Recipes
Feb
23
2010

Yesterday I hit up Greenlight Bookstore in Fort Greene to hear Louisa Shafia talk about her book, Lucid Food: Cooking for an Eco-Conscious Life. Well, let’s be a little more candid, I mainly went to try the food she whipped up from recipes in this stunning cookbook. On the table, she had a briny, crisp red cabbage, apple, and dulse salad (page 86), a fluffy, fresh tortilla Espanola (page 36), and the bittersweet, flourless chocolate cake with prune puree and hazelnuts (page 65). Um, yum?! Each hor’dourves sized bite had a unique, refreshing flavor, but the best part, Shafia had gotten all her ingredients from the Fort Greene Farmer’s Market.
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3 comments | tags: Brooklyn, fesenjan, fort greene farmer's market, greenlight bookstore, local food, Lousia Shafia, Lucid Food, seasonal food
Dec
13
2009
The other day I got a postcard in the mail from the now defunct Gourmet Magazine (RIP) informing me that they would be making up the end of my subscription with the inferior Bon Appétit rag. No, they didn’t call BA inferior, but it is. This sparked my anger at Conde Nast for their ridiculous decision to end Gourmet after almost 70 years of quality food reporting. Here was this great food publication, highly respectable, really well done, and now? Nothing. Just gone because Conde Nast didn’t want to wait for the recession to end. So what if newsstand sales were down 25 percent this year? Give it a chance to bounce back! There are tons of food publications out there, but Gourmet was the crème de la crème.
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no comments | tags: alice waters, bon appetit, closing of gourmet, conde nast, gourmet, linnea covington, ruth reichl, saveur