Thursday, November 25, 2010

Thanksgiving time!




Here's a great pecan pie recipe I use!


Ingredients
1 cup light brown sugar
1/4 cup white sugar
1/2 cup butter
2 eggs
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chopped pecans


Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
In a large bowl, beat eggs until foamy, and stir in melted butter. Stir in the brown sugar, white sugar and the flour; mix well. Last add the milk, vanilla and nuts.
Pour into an unbaked 9-in pie shell. Bake in preheated oven for 10 minutes at 400 degrees, then reduce temperature to 350 degrees and bake for 30 to 40 minutes, or until done.


Prep time: 15 mins Cook time: 40 mins
Ready in 1 hr and 5 mins!

Have a happy Thanksgiving!
-Margaret


Friday, November 19, 2010

Searching for Wifi


We have found sanity and decent coffee at the Bruegger's Bagel on Wade Ave. It's a great respite close but not tooooo close to NCSU.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Make a chef your friend today

by Christie Hadden, MyRestaurantGuru.com

Friends gather for a memorable feast

If you don’t have a friend who is in the culinary scene, then make it your life mission. 

Writers and Chefs are equivalent to hiring the best tour guide into an edible wonderland. Like a good tour guide they will make those crappy tourist traps fade away into the background and walk you through a willy wonka treasure trove of delectable delights. 

I have been quite lucky to have a few food tour guides here in the triangle. And this week it’s hats off to: @durhamfoodie, @andreaweigl, Lil Matt (Strain)

Andrea serving thanksgiving dressing
Ever wonder what happens to that gorgeous spread in the magazines and cookbooks after they have taken the photos? Well, after the dish poses and postures for the camera it gets eaten. Last night I was invited by @durhamfoodie to feast on @andreaweigl’s News & Observer Thanksgiving dinner spread. Not only was it beautifully photographed (I got a sneak peek, N&O issue will come out next week), but the entire dinner was delicious. It was my first taste of a dry cured turkey. This bird stayed 3 days in a salt rub in the fridge and came out sopping moist. Boy, was I a lucky passenger on that joy ride! (Not to mention the company was amazingly familiar; as if I were right at home. Doublely fun!)

The Pho Bar
Periodically, Matt S. of Vin Rouge opens his home to a themed feast. And when I say feast, I mean an all out, wide-open spread. His past dinners have been a whole slow roasted lamb, Boudin Sausage Fest (procured direct from the bayou of Louisiana), Crawfish Boil and this past Monday……. Asian Splendor.  His Pho bar included tendon and his broth was perfectly flavored with beef, rabbit, and chicken bones, star anise, cardamom and more. Also on his menu was stir-fried pork belly w/ long beans, octopus stir-fry, Congee, pork & shrimp shumai, BBQ pork buns, and Gai Yang (Lao BBQ Chicken) and Durian sorbet. *Swooooooon*

These culinary detours are not like any stop to an ordinary roadside stand. These food adventures can only be lead by the most attuned guide. These guides are your password into a secret lair guarded by burly bouncers. Remember to tip them well (alcohol usually works). I am just lucky to have made the right friends.  Thank you Jo, Andrea and Matt for a fantastic food journey.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Nose to Tail Dinner a Success!

WHAT DID I JUST EAT?! by Margaret Farley

The Nose to Tail Dinner hosted by Giorgio

Restaurant
and Bar in Cary was a great success Giorgio hosts a family style meal every month in which they choose some type of cuisine to prepare for an intimate group of diners. This month, they thought it only appropriate to cook a cuisine of unusual items not typically found on
a menu. Featured are pictures of items on the menu that evening as well as interior shots of Giorgio! On the right Roasted Bone Marrow served with pickled red onion, parsley salad, sea salt and toast is pictured. And to the bottom is the bar snack of lamb fries and crispy pig ears with Harissa Ketchup. Diners enjoyed the intimate setting and detailed explanation of what they were eating. Be sure to come out to the next family meal!


Thursday, October 28, 2010

What's Up With "Nose to Tail" Eating?

What’s the deal with “nose to tail” dining?

It was started by an English chef, Fergus Henderson, who wanted to use the neglected parts of the animal when cutting meat. Although, nose to tail dining is British, the wines that accompany the meal are traditionally French.

The dishes served during a nose to tail meal are called “offal” dishes. Offal, from the Germanic word garbage or “off-fall” means the parts that remain after the meat is butchered.

So you may be thinking at this point…why would someone want to go to a meal like this?

Ferguson’s cuisine received a rave review from Anthony Bourdain, of “No Reservations” in his book Kitchen Confidential, “If I’m ever sentenced to death, I want Fergus Henderson to cook my last meal. The Whole Beast: Nose to Tail Eating is a cult classic from my favorite chef and favorite restaurant in the world.”

Credited as “The World’s Most Influential Chef” in the Men’s Journal, Henderson is known as the offal king and was quoted in The Eater National, ““I like organs; they look like themselves...Kidneys, there’s a magical squeak, when you bite them, and then a give...I believe it’s that squeak that acts as a sort of…Cupid to me." Looks like you’ll have to bring your fangs out if you plan to try this British fad!

Doesn’t it seem appropriate that on Halloween to eat parts of an animal you wouldn’t usually consider to think of as edible? Ever tried lamb brains or roasted bone marrow? Here’s your chance!

“Nose to Tail” eating comes to the Giorgio Restaurant and Bar in Cary!

To celebrate the Fall season and Halloween, Giorgio will be hosting a "Nose to Tail" dinner, Sunday October 31st from 6:30 to 10featuring a variety of offal dishes. Guests will be seated together with the Chef and staff joining them to enjoy a family-style meal celebrating some of their favorite scary foods!

By Margaret Farley

My Restaurant Guru Intern at NC State University

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Spice Route Family Meal


Chef Sean McCarthy attended Culinary school
Johnson and Wales in Charlotte.

Sunday August 29th, 2010:: Chef Sean at Giorgio Restaurant in Cary hosted my first attended Family Meal (which was actually his second)

The idea of Family Meal stems from the family meal the restaurant staff members have on a regular basis. Where the kitchen prepares food and gathers the staff to swap stories and basically come together as a family unit. Chef Sean has extended this meal to a limited number of guests and creates a meal based on what he would cook for his close friends. So here is the tale of a Sunday night when the restaurant is closed to the public but open for 30 lucky little heathens.

Hubby and I enter the scene quite timidly. It’s obvious that many of the folks know each other and talk and laugh jovially. Belly up to the bar and I over hear this edgy-quasi-Adam Lambert looking bartender explain his love of rose. His words take me away to a vineyard as he describes how the grape was grown, what to expect from rain if the vine is on a slope or in a valley and describes the finish as kissed with citrus. I am in awe as exclaims, “You know, it’s difficult for a single heterosexual in the South to drink pink wine. But I love it.” I get a tingly sensation and officially have a wine crush on my sommelier for his candor.

Chef Sean welcomes the group and explains our dinner. We will experience Spice Route Seafood. The side room double doors open to our long white linen table. First course Kumomoto Oysters. These little buggers look small (about the size of a silver dollar), but they have a wallop of flavor. Plain, these guys are briny salty as if I had swallowed the sea.  Splash a little mignonette of champagne vinegar, local melon, shallot and pickled watermelon rind I’m ready to take my close off. There are 150 of these oysters and I restrain myself not to over-take.

Second course is Salmon Ceviche. It doesn’t sound nor look too exciting. It’s deep red from the Harissa paste Sous Chef Carrie made from reconstituted dry chilis. It’s mixed with walnuts, cilantro and mint. I’m critical. This doesn’t look like the juicy ceviche I’m used to…and made with salmon? But, one bite and I’m convinced. This dish was banging! Definitely my top two ceviche of all time. So, so good and admit it was my favorite course of the meal.   

Hamachi Sashimi was another unusual pairing of fresh local peaches and hot chili oil. This was not a flavor combination I would have mashed together, but it worked. The texture of the yellowtail and the peach swam together harmoniously and the flaky salt set it all off.

The Octopus a la plancha was daring, well at least for me. The thick purple and white tentacles popped on a salad of arugula, pickled red onion and saffron aioli. The texture was delicate and soft. Not chewy whatsoever.

The visually impressive Ethiopian Seafood Stew were huge bowls heaping with prawns that could choke a horse, mussels, calamari rings in a deep red berbere broth, a spice mixture whose ingredients usually include chile peppers, ginger, cloves, coriander, and allspice. Spooned on to our plates the broth quickly took over like the broken levees in Ninth Ward.  White rice was called in for reinforcements. Nobody dared to waste a drop.

And the pièce de résistance was the three (yes, count em THREE) whole black grouper. Each grouper was lovingly massaged with a Moroccan spice and served with an orange fennel relish.  Chef tenderly dressed the fish and saved the cheek for yours truly. I let the sweet, fleshy moist cheek roll in my mouth. I levitated.

I wasn’t the only one levitating. I looked around and noticed the conversation subsided and everyone on my side of the table had a smirkey, cat that ate the canary look plastered across their faces.  I think instead of a family meal, I just embarked on my first decadent food orgy, and I liked it.