Archive for December, 2008

Cooking with Beer

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I can attribute much of the success of tonight’s stew to my choice of braising liquids. This was actually the first time I’d attempted a beer braise- the recipe recommended Stout, but after a half-hearted attempt to find a local-crafted brewed stout that I would want to consume the remaining amount of the six-pack, I resolved to braise using the big bottle of Kasteel Brown I had lying around.

Brown, or Donker as it is labeled, isn’t a wimpy beer. Weighing in at 11% abv, Donker wields an undeniable punch. Both the nose and the palate reveal serious stewed fruits: think raisins and prunes. Cooked for several hours as a braise, the liquid was still assertive. But it didn’t overwhelm the stew, Instead, the beer lent its distinctive flavor, while demonstrating that it could be well behaved when guests are around. Read the rest of this entry »

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Farm Bounty

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Top Row (from left): One World Coffee, raw milk, lardo, bacon. Bottom Row: beef cubes, Pub Cheddar, Cow Pie, Parmesan, Orange Cardamom Sausage Read the rest of this entry »

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Big Ups to Bittman

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For better or worse, I’m unduly reliant on Mark Bittman’s cooking tomes when I’m in the kitchen. I bought the original How to Cook Everything soon after I graduated college, when I started cooking for myself on a regular basis. 8+ years later, it has pages falling out and food stains in almost every section. That’s a good endorsement, I suppose. These days, with a vegetarian fiance, I’m also making plenty of use of his newer How to Cook Everything Vegetarian. Read the rest of this entry »

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Consider the Oyster

A shout-out to Michael McCaulley of Tria for encouraging me to finally read M.F.K. Fisher. I still have lots more to read in the omnibus edition of The Art of Eating, but Consider the Oyster provided a good start for writing this article.

I can’t understate the great happy hour deal at Ansill: $1 oysters at the bar between 6-8 Monday through Friday, in addition to $5 prosecco, $3 house wine, and $3 draft of the day.

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