Mind If I smoke? A love affair with Bacon.

Anyone who knows me, or has known me for any length of time, knows that I have had a nearly lifelong love affair with smoking. I began smoking at 15, pilfered, unfiltered Pall Malls to start with. But now, I have graduated to a whole new level of smoking!

In the hunter-gatherer days, the mighty hunters, whose lives literally depended on a good hunt and fire, hung the meats near the fire to keep OTHER animals from getting a taste. The fire scared the wild ones away and the hunters were able to keep an eagle eye on their precious commodities. What they didn’t realize until much later was that the smoke generated from the fire preserved the meat and they were able to keep it stored, and safe to eat, for much longer. While we all presumably have a fridge at our disposal, these forbears of culinary science did not and storage WAS a problem. Once it was understood that “smoking” the meat was what kept it safe for storage, all kinds of cool things started to happen food-wise. Thus ham, bacon and lox were born….years later of course. And yes, I just put the Kosher and non-Kosher foods together.

Thanks to the folks at Texas Pete, Chef Tim Grandinetti and The Big Green Egg Company I am smoking all kinds of things. In case you didn’t know, I do a little freelance work for Texas Pete via Chef Tim (a friend from High School and an uber-talented Chef of heroic proportions – you can see him in ads for Texas Pete Hot Sauce in Bon Appetit Magazine from time to time). After my last stint with the guys I was gifted with a gorgeous Big Green Egg ceramic grill. It is a thing of beauty and ingenious design. Of course you can grill on it, with natural lump charcoal only thank you very much, but for my more interesting backyard cookery, I am primarily using it as a smoker.

While taking a class in Garde Manger (all the salads, apps, cold sauces, etc.), I found myself really excited about the charcuterie section of the class and was romanced by the idea of making my own bacon. Yes people, you CAN make your own bacon. So I did, with a great deal of trepidation I sought out pork belly, cured it with the appropriate salt mixture and fired up the grill. It took a couple of tries for me to get it JUST right, but I now have it nailed! Well, then I said, “Why stop there?” I have smoked chickens, chops and most recently trout. This week there will be smoked tomatoes and spicy peppers for a sauce I have in mind. Additionally, I learned how to make cured and UNsmoked meats – like pancetta (it’s like Italian bacon – cured with the appropriate salt mixture and dried, not smoked). You can do this too, with enough space, time and desire. And with pork belly at roughly $3/pound and pancetta at $14, I think I’ll make my own.

Some people take classes at their local college to earn a degree and further themselves on a specific career path and I applaud that. I, on the other hand, take classes for personal enjoyment, gratification and to keep my mind spinning in new and fun ways. I only take culinary classes. Well, I was taking classes at the local Community College, but they cut the charcuterie class because it is simply too expensive to do (it’s all meat, remember?). So I am left with a few choices. Hunt down a class at Le Cordon Bleu (and pay a small fortune for one class), go to the Art Institute, a 45 minute drive for a not GREAT program, or teach myself. Guess which one I chose to do? Yep, you guessed it. Like most things I have learned to do in the kitchen, I am self teaching until I can find a class that is worth the taking. In the meantime I am enjoying Chef Michael Symon’s cookbook – Live to Cook – and I eagerly await his next missive, reportedly all about MEAT (my departed friend Kevin would be so proud).

When I tell people I make my own bacon they look at me a little strangely (except friend and radio personality Gonzo, he thinks it is cool). I am not sure if they think it is weird to create your own, or if they think it is bizarre that a woman, clearly someone’s Mom, has the time, patience and desire to do it. What will people say and think when I start making my own sausages? Of course you know that is the next natural progression. And yes, I do have a grinder and sausage stuffing machine that has yet to make its virgin attempt.

As I write I am preparing for a visit from my Dad, a carnivore from WAY back and he LOVES his bacon. Here’s to hoping that I get it right for his visit. Hell, I may even let him “help” me with the smoking….as long as he doesn’t try to take over. It is MY EGG afterall.

This week’s food memories include my first attempt at canning (peaches), a moist and succulent smoked trout, and Sunday Brunch at Simon at Palms Place with sister-in-law Bonnie (David Cho – Sulu in the latest Star Trek – was sitting at the next table).

This week’s pic is my beautiful Big Green Egg.

I Won’t Be Needing the Wine List. Do You Have a Beer List?

First, let me thank all of you who shared my blog in the past weeks, and especially this most recent posting. Keep sharing, I love watching the reader numbers climb!

One of the coolest things about fruits and grains is that they can be enjoyed in so many ways. Fruit can be used in jams, jellies, compotes, dried, fresh and canned. Grains can be used for cereals, polenta, bread, pasta, salads (quinoa and farrow particularly). But they also can be fermented because of the high starch and sugar content contained within their inherent structure. The thing that makes fruits and grains taste so good also makes them good candidates for producing alcohol.

It is said that agrarian cultures developed and flourished due to the need to grow grain for beer and fruit for wine. Now while that might not be ENTIRELY true, it makes for a good story. Think about it for a second. Tribes and peoples moved around a lot to deal with weather, follow the hunt, or get away from conflict. They were hunter-gatherers. Then, by accident, a fermented beverage was created and those same peoples decided to intentionally grow things TO ferment. Thus farming communities were born, or so the story goes.

Grapes are a wonderful thing, and those of you who love your wine know this! Unfortunately for me I have developed an allergy to sulfites and I can’t truly enjoy wine any longer unless I want to deal with a skull splitting migraine. There are a few times of year that I joyfully deal with the pain. One of those times is early to mid November, when the Beaujolais Nouveau comes out. Happily for me, there is a plethora of other libations of which I can partake without incident the rest of the year.

Beer – it’s like liquid bread. The same basic ingredients go into beer as go into bread – grain, water, yeast all go into bread. Add hops and a lot more water and you get beer! Oddly enough, the recipe is similar for whiskey, rye and scotch (without the hops and with a LOT more aging). Now, I know some of you will think that Budweiser, Coors and the like are beer, but they aren’t – they are carbonated bat piss. Real beer, truly handcrafted beer, tastes nothing like those impostors, and once you get a taste for the REAL thing, you never go back. There was a time that I drank Coors, Michelob, and Rolling Rock, but that is many years in the past, and frankly I am a bit embarrassed to admit it. But I have grown and so can you.

One of the things we like to do when we go out of town is go to the local micro-breweries and lucky for us they are popping up EVERYWHERE! Inside you can usually get a tour and learn how real beer is made, taste samples (except, apparently in Utah – stupid laws) and have some pretty decent food sometimes too. Take a look at Stone Brewing in Escondido, California for example. Their menu reflects what is available in the local area and they grow a lot of their own produce and herbs. Cool Beans! Then of course there are the ones like Squatters Brew Pub in Park City, Pyramid in Seattle and Gordon Biersch (several locations) – the beer is usually pretty tasty, but the menu is derivative staple bar food – no surprises and nothing truly inspiring in their offerings, except the beer, and sometimes not even the beer is all that great (Pyramid isn’t what it once was). Some of these now trendy “brewery restaurants” even take some of the “spent” grain used in the brewing process and make some damn fine bread. Perfect for everyone at the table! Natural grains give the bread a fabulous texture, there is no alcohol and the results are typically individual to that brewery. Absolutely delicious.

Hubby John has been brewing beer for 18 years now – in fact he opened his first bottle of homebrew in the hospital room the day Jack was born. Now of course, he has moved on to an uncomplicated kegging system and we always have something great for our guests to try. We have even begun composting the spent grain and I have been trying my hand at spent grain bread with moderate success. The key to perfection is still a mystery to me, and I am in search of a great bread making book – please leave a comment if you have found one!

If you are lucky enough to live in a town with an honest to goodness brewery and you haven’t been there yet, shame on you! Get your happy butt down there and try the food and the beer if you are so inclined. Even if you are a non-drinker, and plenty of my friends are, the food can be a draw for you and you are supporting a local business. Sadly for me, I have to travel to enjoy house made brews, unless I am drinking at home. Wait, that’s not sad…I get to travel AND eat and drink well.

This week’s Food Memories are a gorgeous Duck Confit and Spinach Salad at Café Terigo, a near perfect nitrogen poured Cream Ale at Wasatch Brewing, disappointing Sun Dried Tomato Risotto at Robert Redford’s joint Zoom and a spectacular breakfast with my main squeeze at the astoundingly beautiful Stein Ericksen Lodge – all in Park City, UT.

This week’s pic is that nearly perfect nitrogen poured Cream Ale.

Until next week – go out and make YOUR OWN Food Memories.

Farm House Cooking and Nettie

I woke Sunday at 3:30 in the morning thinking of food. With all the fresh produce in my kitchen and fridge, my mind was a whirling dervish of what to make for dinner, what to do first and what to do next. I knew trying to sleep was waste of time, and it was still dark out for Pete’s sake, so I got out of bed, read Anthony Bourdain for a while, watched the sunrise and went to my kitchen. For many people this would be the last place to go, but for me, cooking is a Zen-like pursuit of calm when I am troubled or in the throes of insomnia.

I started to get some supremely ripe tomatoes ready for concasse and that’s when I started thinking about Nettie. My Step Mom Nettie was a GREAT cook. I swear she could go on Iron Chef and beat the pants off Bobby Flay or Mario Batali in the taste department any day of the week. Her ravioli and tortellini were things of magic and beauty. But Nettie’s food wasn’t fancy. It is what is now called “Farm House Cooking” or “Farm to Table”. And when she saw your eyes close in bliss, a slight moan of pleasure escaping your throat, enjoying what she laid out before you, a gem of a smile lit up her face, pride and passion leaking out around the edges.

After the tomatoes, I moved on to the peaches that had fallen off my tree onto the rock covered ground below. Nettie wasted NOTHING! There’s a bruise on that peach? Cut it out and use the rest. Chicken bones? Make stock. Same goes for beef bones. Eating well on the cheap is a beautiful thing. And Nettie made it look easy. My Mom, Dottie, has never really LOVED to cook, but she appreciates a well made meal. She’ll be the first one to tell you that if she has to be in the kitchen, she’d rather bake, so learning some tricks from Nettie never felt like betrayal or treason to me. She was another woman who LOVED food and cooking like I do. We were friends, and that friendship was built on a cutting board and in a fry pan.

Now that’s not to say Mom didn’t cook or do “Farm Stuff” because she did. I distinctly remember Mom peeling and canning tomatoes (something I have never learned to do) – over an open fire pit – it was the only place big enough for the pot. We went strawberry and cherry picking, she made pies. All grape jelly is forever ruined for me, because Mom’s was the best – not too sweet and really tasting of GRAPES, not sugar. But Mom doesn’t ENJOY it – she did it because it needed to be done. To this day she loves to bake for my nieces and nephews that live down the street.

A lot of what I learned from Nettie WAS a lost art that is now coming back into fashion in even the most unlikely places, but especially in homes. Taking simple ingredients and turning them into the sublimely fantastic. Honest workingman’s food that is basic and delicious, unadorned by fanciful garnishes. People WANT homemade and once you know the skills, doing for yourself becomes a point of pride. Some things I have learned along the way were out of necessity, like anyone else’s learning curve, but then it became a mission. I asked questions (and still do) of anyone who would talk to me about food, and Nettie was one of those people, just as frequently as Mom was. I also learned that some seemingly difficult things are really simple and taste better if you make the time to do it right.

Nettie and I swapped recipe ideas over the phone frequently, talking about food shows, trendy ingredients, heirloom tomatoes, and our gardens. She preferred flowers, while I, living in the desert, only water things I can eat. When I am on the phone with Mom, we talk about restaurants, great take out places and foods we miss from NY (a REAL F-ing Bagel and decent Chinese always top the list). Mom never stifled me in the kitchen, but because she wasn’t passionate about cooking, she couldn’t really inspire me either. She encouraged and cheered, and ate everything I ever made – no matter how ill conceived, including the time she got a rash from dandelions. While Nettie was a coach, Mom was, and is, a cheerleader. Winning teams need both!

Now that Nettie is gone, I talk food with Cousin Christine who loves to cook as much as I do, I talk to Chefs to learn and I share that knowledge with anyone who wants to listen. I share knowledge with Sister Nancy who frequently calls with, “I have a food question for you.” I chat with Sister Tina (Nettie’s daughter) about old timey recipes and cool things we find online and I still talk about restaurants and F-ing Bagels with Mom.

One of my proudest moments was when Nettie, eating banana bread for breakfast on Thanksgiving Day in my San Antonio kitchen, told me my banana bread was the best she’d ever had. I nearly plotzed with glee! Our recipes were nearly identical, but she assured me mine was better – I swear it is the pan I bake it in (Pampered Chef Stoneware). I will never forget it. At that moment, in my mind, I became a contender!

At Nettie’s funeral last fall, her sister Melinda told me when I applied to be on the Next Food Network Star, she was so proud – just as proud as my Mom, Dottie. Well, I didn’t make the cut, but I know they are both proud of me anyway.

This week’s Food Memories are a vegetarian dinner cooked especially for friend Gilbert, a fantastic lunch at a new place (Bar + Bistro) with friend Dani and late night pizza and beer with Hubby John and friend Chris M.

This week’s pic is Nettie and Brother JJ, dancing at his wedding in 2006.

Until next week, go out and make your OWN Food Memories.

Same Old, Same Old….NOT!

We all do it. Find ourselves in a rut of making the same things all the time, because it is familiar, easy to do and you don’t have to think about it. The measurements, instructions and ingredients are all in your head and you can slide through the task of getting dinner on the table while your mind is occupied with something else entirely. Is the food nourishing? Probably to your body, but not necessarily to your soul. Does it taste good? Probably, but it isn’t as great as the first time you made it. One of the dishes I do repeatedly is Chicken a la King. It’s not fancy, but I loved it as a child, still love it as an adult, but it has grown a little more boring than its title for me.

What to do? How do you get out of the rut? What switch do you have to trip to make you fall in love with your food again? For me the answer is reading.

When I was a newlywed, I had few things in my food arsenal that I could make really well and they grew tiresome after a while as they were mostly pasta dishes and heavy and, well, familiar…what I grew up with. Fish was a mystery to cook well. Beef in its ground form or stew form was common, but other cuts befuddled me. And let’s not even get into the YEARS it has taken me to do full justice to a chicken. So I read cookbooks. I READ COOKBOOKS. I pored over sections, reading each recipe until I found one I was brave enough to try and one that had ingredients I was familiar enough with to purchase in the local stores. And I attacked – that’s how I found the a la King recipe. My “go to” book as a newlywed was a wedding gift and it is the pic of the week. You’ll notice there are 2 copies – the one is clearly more than 20 years old, the other is one hubby John tracked down and bought me as a gift because mine was falling apart – literally. The book is now out of print, so finding a BRAND NEW copy, still in the plastic wrap was a real coup!

After a couple of culinary courses and years spent in the food industry and in my own kitchen, reading cookbooks is still fun, but they are not how I get inspiration. I go to them now as sources of reference and I often look up the same recipe in several books and combine them to make the dish the way I want to make it. For inspiration I now read memoirs. I just finished Julia Child’s My Life in France. I wished, as I read through, that I had had the chance to meet her. I am now on to Anthony Bourdain and Kitchen Confidential, and yes, I do hope I get to meet him one day. Both chefs are terribly snarky, bold and candid. If you have a Kindle, both are available for the device. These books have me reaching into my SKILL repertoire and dragging out techniques I use seldom, seeking instruction on some things I haven’t mastered and creating food I have never attempted at home! Lovely! I will also admit that Bourdain has me a bit nostalgic for my days as a waitress – but I think I am romanticizing that time of my life because I used to chant “I hate my job”, over and over again, and I need to remind myself of that before I start filling out job applications! Working as a Cocktail Waitress IS how I met John, so maybe there is a little romance in that work.

If tackling non-fiction is a little daunting to you, as it is to me with anything that isn’t food related, try looking at great magazines for inspiration. Bon Appetit and Saveur are two of my faves. Food and Wine is also a good choice. Seek out the unusual, avoid Southern Living and the like – they are all derivative and I find them more about things other than food. Go to their websites and browse there and see the mags at your local library or quickly disappearing book store (alas Borders is closing).

This week’s Food Memories are watching the guy at the deli slicing up my house made pancetta for me, cooking with friend John Morris for an impromptu and informal dinner on the patio, tapas and mojitos with friends Dani & Robert, and the first crop of figs from our tree wrapped in paper thin slices of prosciutto.

Until next week, go out and make your OWN Food Memories.

Chain of Fools

How many times have you gotten together with friends for dinner and they all say, “Let’s go to Olive Garden/Macaroni Grill/Red Lobster? Do you want to throw up your hands in frustration and shake those people? Yeah, me too! Why is it that some people seem to think that a CHAIN restaurant/bakery/store will have the best stuff? Is it the fact that they are always the same? Is it that they are reliably mediocre and the diner won’t be disappointed? The diner knows what to expect?

In case you have been living under a rock lately there is a huge MOVEMENT to support sustainable foods, locally grown and sourced items from small businesses. You may ask yourself, “Why is this a GOOD THING?” Supporting small businesses is a GREAT thing for lots of reasons. In the 80’s and 90’s Big Box stores put a lot of the little guys out of business and we saw the decline of “Main Street”. Well, that decline took away a lot of choices we would otherwise have access to. Of course, sometimes the Big Box is a must – I have a reserved parking space at Costco – but when in your own neighborhood, or on the road, you should try to step into the smaller joints for better quality, good citizenship and all around better customer service. Here’s a perfect example – I COULD have had Jack’s Grad/Bday cake made by a grocery chain, or a Big Box, but I chose to spend a little more for a more personalized experience for HIM. The quality was superb and the flavor exceptional. We got a knockout of a cake that people are still commenting on a month later.

The fact is this: Most chain restaurants (Chili’s, Applebee’s, and the like) make NOTHING in house. It all comes in pre-portioned, all the sauces are pre-made and none of the salad dressings are made in house either. Your salad and veggies may very well be the only fresh things you get. This is not a great way to eat. First of all, the amount of salt is a problem for a lot of people (not me, I am a salt-a-holic) and they are loaded with things you can’t pronounce. I personally have a problem with MSG. Now, while this is not true for ALL chains, for a vast number of them, this is de rigeur. There are a few groups/chains that I do like and actually eat in – the Lettuce Entertain You group (Maggiano’s, Capital Grille) has some strip-side places here in town and some others in major cities that actually MAKE the FOOD, in house! Now for the moment of truth: I LOVE Jack in the Box Curly Fries and once in a while I HAVE to have the Ultimate Cheeseburger from there – I know…don’t judge me!

Supporting a “Mom & Pop” business, whether a restaurant or a store, is a fantastically wonderful thing to do for your taste buds, for your attitude and for the economy. Because these owners often make what they are selling, you can get a customized experience and unlike a Big Box joint, they CARE if you come back.

Consider this next time you have to make a dining choice: are you putting $$ in the pocket of “the man” or are you putting $$ in the pocket of A MAN (or WOMAN)? I choose the little guy as often as I can, and I encourage you to do the same.

This week’s Food Memories are grilled wild caught salmon on the patio with hubby John, freshly picked veggies from the local farm, my first successful attempt at melt-in-your-mouth braised short ribs, and popcorn for lunch at Harry Potter. This week’s pic is that fab cake from Retro Bakery* mentioned earlier and my son using chopsticks to “play” it.

*http://retrobakerylv.com

Until next week, go out and make your own Food Memories!

On the Road….

For some people, when they travel, they look for the familiar in a land that is unfamiliar to them. SOOOO many Americans seek out McD’s in Europe, believe it or not (I will admit they have the cleanest toilets in certain areas of Europe – been there, done that). I, on the other hand, decidedly do NOT – I strive for the new and different!

I recently returned from one of my favorite cities, Chicago; I attend a conference there every July. If you have never been there, let me tell you it is great….in the summer! The winters there are too cold for me, but the summer there is special. Downtown has lovely planted garden areas, it’s a great walking town AND there is fab food everywhere you go. I have been to Chicago every year for more than 10 years for this conference, and each year I try to find someplace new to eat. This year was no exception. While I am delving into the city, and striving for the unfamiliar, there are several attendees at the conference routinely doing the same things every year, sticking to the familiar and tried and true. Why is that?

I think I have it figured out! Let’s use Chicago as the example. For people in rural areas, they don’t have a lot of the “trendy” chains – like Cheesecake Factory – so they want to go there, because “everyone they know” says it’s great. People from certain metropolitan areas don’t have Chicago specialties – like Giordano’s pizza and Portillo’s Italian Beef – so they want to go there. Still others find comfort in routine, when everything else they are experiencing can’t be controlled or they over load on foreign concepts, they stick with what they know. And then of course there are the “unadventuresome” – yes, I just made up that word – you know, the burgers & fries, steak & potato, mac & cheese people (because they know what it tastes like).

As I am none of the above, where does that leave me? I do have fave places that I find in every city I go to, and Chicago is no exception, and I try to hit those places while I am there, but I don’t need a routine and I rarely eat in national chains (not at all if I can avoid it – that topic may be my next blog…hmmm). I am nothing if not an adventuresome eater. Because I am unwilling to eat the same things on the road that I can eat at home, and I am unwilling to settle for second rate, I often find myself dining solo. The masses don’t see the boldness of new, unknown choices as a beautiful thing – for some it is scary, some are just plain cheap, and still others would blanch to see “bone marrow” on the menu!

So this trip I found TWO new places and had wonderful things in each and good company for both meals. Sometimes I CAN encourage people to stretch that comfort zone…

This week’s Food Memories include Nutella Crepes for dessert at Crepe Bistro on Wells, a ridiculously good Shrimp Burger at Public House on State St., and a solitary, but not lonely, lunch at The Purple Pig.

This week’s pic is from last year – me with the Sour Cherry Pie from Ed Debevic’s in Chicago. Until next week, go out and make your own Food Memories.

Leftovers…in the Aftermath of Entertaining – Buffalo Bleu Cheese Dip

Happy 4th of July America!

While I am a very good cook, there are a few things I have never learned to do well, and one of them is cook for just 2 or 3 people. I like cooking for a MOB! In fact, I’d like to say I cook for an Army, but in all actuality I cook for an AIR FORCE (go Blue)! So, because I can’t seem to control my quantities really well (something a trained Chef can do with ease), we end up with leftovers, and it’s worse when we entertain because I never can judge how much people want to eat. I’d rather have too much than not enough.

Truth be told, there are people out there that hate leftovers and I don’t understand why! Never, in all of my days, will I understand how something is no longer good once it has been served. Sometimes food that is left to sit over night gets better. Tomato sauce is a perfect example of that! I suppose if you are eating the exact same meal 2 or 3 days in a row, leftovers suck, but if you get creative there are so many things you can do with your leftovers. Chop up the veggies and put them in a quiche or an omelet. Take leftover taco meat and make a taco salad or enchiladas, or 7 layer dip. Get it? There are people out there that will NOT under any circumstances eat leftovers. They would die of starvation in my house! We frequently have “search and destroy” nights. That’s when we take all leftovers out of the fridge, line ‘em up on the counter, everyone chooses their own dinner and we clean out the fridge to make room for more leftovers! Hubby John LOVES leftovers because they become what he takes to lunch. If I make Curried Chicken, I make extra rice and we portion it out, put it in the freezer and he can grab and go, straight to work and into the microwave!

Lately I have been challenging myself to try some new approaches to using up leftovers. Using the things in the fridge to cull dinner without having to make a major purchase at the store to accomplish it is harder than it looks sometimes. One dish I have come up with is Grilled Vegetable Enchilada Casserole– the veggies are grilled, not the enchiladas. (Truth Moment – Mom says when I was little if the word “casserole” was in the name of the dish, I automatically ate it!) I had to buy one ingredient – cotija cheese because I didn’t want cheddar or jack cheese. As soon as that recipe is perfected I will share it with you all.

For those of you who have people in your house that won’t eat leftovers, here is an easy recipe to rework roasted chicken. It is one of those recipes I am asked to bring to potluck get-togethers and it’s a hit every time. I wouldn’t make it for Michael Symon, it’s not fancy, but it is a crowd pleaser. And because it is an APPETIZER recipe – they won’t FEEL like they are eating leftovers!

This week’s Food Memories are a fab Patty Melt at the CrowBar in Shoshone, CA, breakfast burritos with my boy, and a 3rd of July BBQ with old friends and smoked sausages “imported” from Texas! This week’s pic is my Step Mom Nettie’s 7 Layer Salad. It’s my fave of the recipes she shared with me.

A few notes about the recipe – I prefer Texas Pete Original Hot Sauce™ in this recipe www.texaspete.com. You can use the Hotter Than Hot™ and it will be just as good. The Blue Cheese I am using right now is St. Pete’s Select (thank you Chef Tim Grandinetti for the turn on) however any good quality Blue Cheese will work. www.faribaultdairy.com

Buffalo Chicken – Blue Cheese Dip
Serves 10 generously

1½ C crumbled Blue Cheese – divided (about 12 oz)
2 pkg cream cheese (8 oz) – softened
2 C Sour Cream
10-12 oz leftover roasted, chicken, shredded or chopped
1 C hot sauce (I prefer Texas Pete®) – or more to taste
1/3 – ½ C good quality blue cheese dressing

Celery sticks and pita chips for dipping

Preheat oven to 375.

Using an electric mixer, combine 1 cup blue cheese and the cream cheese, mix at high speed until smooth and well combined. Reduce speed and add the sour cream and mix just until combined.

Spread cheese mixture into the bottom of a deep dish pie plate.

Combine hot sauce and chicken and mix until the chicken pieces are well coated. Put into pie plate on top of cheese mixture and spread evenly. Top with remaining ½ cup of the crumbled blue cheese. Bake until bubbling at the edges and heated thru.

Top with drizzled blue cheese dressing and serve immediately.

Celebrations

Celebrations

When I think of holidays and get-togethers with family and friends, the first thing that comes to mind is the FOOD! I LOVE to cook for a crowd and the more the merrier in most cases. It doesn’t matter what the occasion is either. It can be a birthday, bridal or baby shower, Bunco night or any old reason. I consider it a personal challenge to make sure there is something wonderful for every one of my guests to enjoy, regardless of their dietary restrictions.
Why? I think it is easier for me to express my love through feeding someone than it is to say it sometimes.

Needless to say, June is a BIG month for many people with cooking. Dads and Grads, Weddings, Flag Day and here at home it is also the birthday of a family member (Jackster). This year we had a lot going on with family and friends visiting from out of state and my kitchen got a serious work out. I glided through the festivities like Apolo Anton Ono glides on his skates (honesty moment – I adore him, he was one of the first people I followed on Twitter). Few things make me happier than watching people come together over a plate of well made grub. I enjoy watching their faces as they relish the flavors and laugh through the conversation. Of course, compliments on my food always delight me, but I really dig watching people smile as they eat. For whatever reason, whenever I entertain, I get myself all stressed out and worked up and it’s all for nothing. Almost without fail, the food, the fellowship and the fun are awesome, and this week was no exception. Jack’s Birthday/Graduation party was a huge success and I thank everyone who came and joined us. If you were unable to be with us, rest assured, you were missed.

It is impossible for me to imagine a celebration, or even a single day, without food. Unfortunately there are MANY people in THIS country, right now, perhaps in your neighborhood, that can’t celebrate because they don’t have a basic necessity, FOOD. That is why for several years I have worked as a Sales Director for a company that promotes Family Mealtime and I volunteer with Three Square Food Bank, locally here in Las Vegas. I am a big believer in FOOD FOR EVERYONE! As we get ready to enjoy the summer, I encourage you to volunteer or donate to YOUR local Food Bank or Food Pantry. Oftentimes people think of donating ONLY at the Holidays, but summer is the crucial time for students who qualify for free or reduced price lunch during the school year. For many of those students, that meal is the only one they will get all day. It goes without saying that these students don’t get fed when school is not in session. If you are financially unable to donate cash or food, donate your TIME! It is an invaluable commodity that is needed just as much. Here in Las Vegas check out www.ThreeSquare.org and across the country, to find YOUR Food Bank go to www.FeedingAmerica.org

This week’s Food Memories are a celebratory lunch at Mood in the Artisan Hotel with friends, old and new, a wonderful cake from Retro Bakery, and Karen Behringer’s 50th Birthday Bash. This week’s pic is grilled veggies that were served for the Graduation Party!

Until next week – go out and make your own Food Memories!

Picky and Particular

I am NOT picky! I am not a PICKY eater. I am a PARTICULAR eater.

While these may seem the same to you, they aren’t. Let me explain. A “picky eater” is someone who hates everything, even when (especially when) they have never tried it. I find that a lot of “picky eaters” are that way because of the way they ate growing up or because of the foods and cooking styles they have, or have not, been exposed to. I’ve met adult men who won’t eat anything green – no salad, broccoli, spinach, zucchini, green apples…. Now that’s picky! Kids who only eat Mac & Cheese, hot dogs and chicken nuggets…Now that’s picky! Picky eaters never learned to ENJOY their food and they complain about food – ALL THE TIME!

A “particular eater” is someone who will try anything, but wants it prepared according to their specifications. Dressing on the side, sauce on the side, vegetables on a separate plate, hold the onions. I seriously will try ALMOST anything. There are a few food things that I just can’t stomach and will not eat: melon (except watermelon), caraway, black licorice and peanuts (except in Thai food). Yes, I eat Steak & Kidney Pie. Yes, I eat Haggis. Yes, I love sweetbreads. I do not however like fish or chicken in red sauce – not sure why – I love chicken; I love fish, but only with no sauce or white sauce…go figure. I love tomato sauce, but not on fish or chicken. Did you see When Harry Met Sally? Let’s just say Sally had nothing on me.

When we go out to eat, and that tends to be often, I will frequently say to the server, “I have questions about the menu.” John invariably chimes in with, “Of course you do.” I just want to make sure what I am ordering is what I think I am getting and I want to make sure I am going to enjoy it! I figure if we are paying for it, I should know what is in it and how it is prepared just to make sure my dining experience is a good one. I consider this being a good consumer, not a picky eater.

Of course there are exceptions. When eating in a Swank Joint, I rarely ask for anything other than the way the Chef prepares it, but I do ask about my food allergy items and the aforementioned “no way” list. If those items are in a dish, I just don’t order it. I TRUST these Chefs to make the food correctly and to make it well. Recently while in a Latin Fusion restaurant, I noticed they had Paella on the menu. I was quite excited! My Paella tastes like chicken and rice – I have never mastered that dish even after living in Spain for more than 3 years, so I enjoy it when out. I asked what fish was in it and I was told CATFISH! Needless to say I was mortified and informed them, “That’s unfortunate because there is no catfish in Spanish cooking – I know, I used to live there.” I chose something else off the menu and was disappointed anyway and probably won’t go back there. Again, this is PARTICULAR, not picky.

I am forever intrigued and surprised by food and my taste-buds. For years I told people I didn’t like lamb and pork. It turns out that I do like it, I thought there was only one was to make it and I didn’t like THAT way. And foods that I really used to like – like peanuts and peanut butter – are now on the “no way” list. Because I am particular and NOT picky, I continuously find that I am enticed and lured by new flavors and flavor combinations and awakened to OLD flavors that are new to me now.

This week’s Food Memories are Buffet Shenanigans with an old friend from High School, really great gazpacho in Flagstaff from locally sourced veggies and BBQ Ribs with my main squeeze for Father’s Day. This week’s pic is from the BBQ. Until next week – go out and make your own Food Memories!

It’s all about the kid….

As a parent, one of the coolest things is having dinner with your kid. Tonight I quietly enjoyed dinner with my son in a brewery in Flagstaff, Arizona while we both read and discussed horror fiction, namely Laurell K. Hamilton. I always like to hear what he is ordering because he frequently surprises me. Hubby John surprises me occasionally, but Jack is always a mystery when it comes to selecting from the menu.

When people are young and their taste buds are developing, adults tend to treat them like KIDS when what they really need to be doing is treating them like the YOUNG ADULTS the parents want them to become. My son, Jack, never ate ketchup, ranch or mayo on his food to cover up the taste. Ketchup was for burgers and fries, ranch dressing was for salads and mayo was for sandwiches. Unfortunately for some people – no one reading this blog – the choices on dining never change from ketchup /ranch/ mayo slathered foods…it’s like they never grow up. Here’s an example: Each Thanksgiving while living in Spain, we invited some of the troops from the barracks to dinner. One year a guest decided it was appropriate to put ketchup on the turkey. I am sure you can guess how that went. He was never invited back…for any event…ever.

I can honestly tell you that Jack NEVER put inappropriate condiments on ANY of his food. In fact he is a minimalist when it comes to condiments. He has a well developed palate because Jack was made to TRY everything at least once. That went double for us too – we had to set the example. If you have young kids and you deign to bring them to Vegas – something I don’t encourage because there really isn’t a whole lot here for them – take them to a GOOD buffet (not a cheap one). There they will have the opportunity to try things they might not have seen before and they don’t have to finish it if they don’t like it.

Jack was THE most adventurous eater I have ever seen and continues to take BIG bites on the culinary scene. I have to admit, his fearless dining choices are one of the things I am most proud of about my son. One of my favorite Food Memories of Jack as a small boy (about 7 or 8) is taking him to the Commander’s Palace at the then Aladdin Casino, and watching him show the “grown ups” how to eat a crawfish, complete with sucking the head. He told them, as first timers, they might not want to do that! It cracked me and the wait staff up. This year he was the designated driver for the Loyola /Tulane Crawfish boil at McMullan’s Irish Pub. Thank you Elly Hanks for inviting us!

As I write, I prepare to take my son to Freshman Orientation at college. [Yes, I know I don’t look that old – I have a great derm guy ;-)] Once Jack is in college full time, I wonder how our dining habits will change, if at all. We ate differently as a young couple, our eating habits changed a bit when Jack was a toddler and changed throughout our lives since then, depending on where we lived.

College will be in Flagstaff and it’s a great food and beer town! Several microbreweries and little pubs dot the town. Some with great menus and some that blow, but all are an adventure. Needless to say – there will be pictures, Tweets and FourSquare check ins to log my Food Journey.

This week’s Food Memories include Fish Tacos with friend Dani, a mediocre meal that left all of us chuckling at the hipsters and “desperate housewives” in the restaurant and GREEK NIGHT at Sam & Jim’s. The pic below is from Greek Night – the tiropita (Greek cheese pastries) were made from scratch by yours truly (thanks Carla Cole for the suggestion!).