Tuesday, February 1, 2011

What in the World Is...? Food Cetera from January 2011

From the Urban Kitchen website (http://www.urbankitchentulsa.com/)
JANUARY 2011
What in the world is celeriac?
Celeriac is a really ugly, knobby brown vegetable that is also known as celery root or celery knob...and it is delicious!!
It is NOT the root of our common celery but is a special celery cultivated solely for its root.
Celeriac (moving forward I will refer to it as celery root) tastes like a milder version of celery although some say it tastes like a cross between celery and parsley but I don't get the parsley flavor, at least not yet. It can be used in a variety of preparations from mashed (like potatoes) to roasted to raw. The cooked flavor is buttery and rich with a hint of celery flavor. Raw, it is a bit stronger but very nice shredded into salads or cole slaws.
When preparing to use celery root, cut off the top and bottom so that you have a solid foundation, then start cutting the outer skin off from top to bottom as you might a pineapple until you've worked all the way around it. It still looks really ugly at this point but, trust me, you are ready for a treat. After you have diced, shredded or otherwise "dismembered" the root, place it in a lemon water bath (or acidulated water) so that it won't turn brown...kind of like potatoes.
Celery root is available October through April and can range in size from apple to cantaloupe. I find that the larger ones (although impressive) tend to have a pithy spot in the center. It doesn't seem to affect the taste or texture so it probably doesn't really matter...just thought I would let you know.
So...start experimenting! It is a great alternative to mashed potatoes and is delicious added to roasted meats. It can be boiled, braised, sauteed or baked...or try it raw in your next cole slaw or salad...just use your imagination!

Sunday, January 9, 2011

What in the World Is....? Food Cetera from December 2010

From the Urban Kitchen website (http://www.urbankitchentulsa.com/)
December 2010
What in the world is...porchetta?
You know you've seen the word...was it on a menu? in a cookbook? in a magazine article? Well, I can assure you it was NOT on a menu in Tulsa but if you travel to more exotic lands to eat then you may have seen it on a menu because porchetta (pronounced pohr-KAYT-tah, because it is Italian) is an absolutely delicious dish of slow-roasted boneless suckling pig and is another one of the new darlings of the restaurant world.
Before roasting, the meat is seasoned with a mixture of flavorings including fennel, garlic, pepper, rosemary and salt; sometimes it is stuffed with onions, garlic and herbs. During roasting, the meat is basted with olive oil and/or wine.
Now, for a more entertaining description of the beast, we turn to Tom the Butcher, also known as Tom Mylan, formerly of the butcher shop and food store, Marlow and Daughters in Brooklyn, New York. Tom blogs about all things meat and, frankly, is hilarious. If you are easily offended, do not go to his blog because he is a frequent f-bomb dropper but really only when it's appropriate. This is directly from his blog...bad grammar and all...
"So what is a porchetta? It's is a whole pig that has had all of it's bones removed except for it's head, making a sort of floppy pig suit. The pig cape is then brined in salted water for two to three days along with the boneless loin (or loins) of another pig.
Once the pork has brined the pig is laid out on it's back, the loin is put onto one side of the pig's belly along with fennel tops, rosemary, thyme and garlic and then rolled up like a big porky joint. Once the pig is rolled and tied it is then strapped to a spit where it can be slowly rolled over a heat source like cherry or apple wood logs or for 6-10 hours, rested and then sliced, crossways to reveal the layers of porky goodness with the fennel and extra pork loin at the center."
He then goes into great detail about how to bone the little pig on your dining room table. To read the rest, go to http://tomthebutcher.blogspot.com
This is where I say...if you have the opportunity, you need to try porchetta!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

The Cornucopia Project

Just before Thanksgiving, I was approached (by email) by a young San Francisco couple who have a blog called The Guerrilla Gourmet to participate in a very ambitious project.  They wanted to reach out to bloggers all across the US to share their Thanksgivings...in whatever form that took.  I felt quite special to be included in this request as the world is FULL of bloggers and I was happy to represent Oklahoma.  If you read my recent post about Ree Drummond in the Bobby Flay Thanksgiving Feast Throwdown, I think you know how much I love our state.  Anywho...I was lucky enough to be chosen and included in their blog as part of the Cornucopia Project.  I encourage you to visit their blog by clicking on the badge to the left of this post.  It is a fun and interesting read.  See if you recognize the teenager behind the Brussels sprout stalk from Oklahoma...

Thursday, December 2, 2010

What in the World is...? Food Cetera from November, 2010

NOVEMBER 2010
From the Urban Kitchen website (http://www.urbankitchentulsa.com/)
What in the world is...a parsnip?
Indeed! What is this new darling of the food world? You hear about it everywhere now but new? Not really...the parsnip has been around for hundreds of years when the Europeans brought it to the US in the early 1600s! For some reason, this creamy-white root has never become an American favorite...until now! Chefs across the country have taken up this overlooked little gem and are putting it into everything from cakes to mashed potatoes (actually using it INSTEAD of mashers).
Parsnips look a lot like carrots except, yes...they're white. They have a pleasantly sweet yet spicy flavor that goes well with many foods and enriches the flavor profiles of vegetable soups and stock as well as roasted meats, especially birds. No need to peel them because most of the flavor lies just beneath the skin so just give them a good scrub. Because of the sugar content, parsnips will caramelize nicely when roasted or baked but are good boiled or steamed and then mashed with butter and cream...yum!
Parsnips are available year-round but are best now and into winter. Choose small to medium, well-shaped roots that are not limp. They will keep in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.
So...be fearless! Try slicing parsnips into your next potato gratin, add them to your Thanksgiving mash, or just roast them in the oven with a little olive oil, butter, salt and pepper...and the rest of your winter vegetables.
Embrace the humble but lovely parsnip

Sunday, November 21, 2010

I love Ree but....

I know, I know...I'm being a spoiled sport to not just enjoy Ree Drummond's (aka The Pioneer Woman) win over Bobby Flay in Food Network's Thanksgiving Feast Throwdown BUT...did anyone else find it at the very least annoying that once more...Oklahoma is portrayed as the domain of Laurey, Curly, Jud Fry and Aunt Eller?  I mean, I LOVE our state but, for God's sakes...we do have a few more things besides horses and cowboys in the prairie.  Why does this always happen?  Is there anyone out there who would like to be known for something besides The Dust Bowl, Grapes of Wrath, and wide open spaces?  Wouldn't it be nice if we finally got some even treatment? 
I thought the images were beautiful of the Drummond ranch that spreads out as far as the eye can see in Osage County, I thought Ree was just as charming as she always is, I thought her food looked great and, frankly, their "ranch house" was pretty close to what could be called a mansion.  And, I'm not trying to compare our fine cities to the big cities of say, New York, LA, Chicago, or even Dallas...well, maybe Dallas, but we finally get Food Network to come to Oklahoma for something pretty big and they show, what else? The wilds of Pawhuska!  Really!? We don't all live on a working cattle ranch...Bobby opens his visit to our fair state with "in Northeast Oklahoma, cattle is king".  Really?!  Last time I checked, Tulsa was part of Northeast Oklahoma.  Where are the cows in Downtown Tulsa?  Next to the BOK Center or, no...maybe housed out in the middle of our new ONEOK Stadium...yeah, I can definitely see Drillers' owner, Chuck Lamson rounding up some cattle out there.
The state of Oklahoma is a melting pot just like every other state.  We, of course, are much younger and we don't have the diversity but we are not all living out in the middle of nowhere not able to get a portabello mushroom.  Don't get me wrong, I love the country.  My boyfriend lives outside of Muskogee on a lovely acreage and I always enjoy going out there.  But I am a city girl through and through (just ask him) and I was born and bred in Oklahoma and there are a whole bunch of us who have never roped, ridden or come closer to a horse than to bet on them at Blue Ribbon Downs.  It is just frustrating that the only thing that people want to recognize Oklahoma for is our "country-ness". 
Yes, I love Ree, Carrie, Garth and Trisha but, puh-leez, could we be known for Tulsa Ballet or Philbrook or the Tulsa Symphony Orchestra or even the Hard Rock Cafe?  Oklahoma City (although not nearly as beautiful as Tulsa, sorry, OKC, I am a Tulsan, after all) has certainly come into its own in the last decade or more and should be recognized for much more than the Oklahoma City Bombing.  It has the Oklahoma City Museum of Art with the amazing Dale Chiluly glass collection (among others) and its Ford Center is second to none for great events.  Even Bricktown has become a place on the map.  And, what about Bartlesville's OK Mozart Festival and the Price Tower?   I could note many other examples but I think my point has been made. 
Do we have any Michelin guide restaurants?  Ummmm, no, and unlikely that we ever will, but we have plenty of fine dining, casual dining and everything in between and there are a few of us who seek out the unusual, exotic and sophisticated and, believe it or not, it can be found in Oklahoma...you just have to look for it.  So I guess what I'm trying to say is...we are not a one note state...there is more to us than country and I would like someone on the East or West Coast to recognize it.  I suppose it doesn't really matter...we know who we are...just don't like being stuck in that same old box especially in the 21st Century.
So...Ree, girl, we are super proud of you!  Great job!!  But next time could we send Food Network to, oh, I don't know, Caz's Chowhouse?

Monday, October 4, 2010

Great news on a number of fronts...

First of all...I did not progress in the Next Food Blog Star challenge but it sure was fun to participate!
Next...the kitchen is coming together in spite of all of the crazy things that have happened from the vent hood installers cannibalizing my hood fans to figuring out the new heat sensor requirements to...well, I'm sure there's something else but I can't think of what it is.  Here is a picture of the kitchen...not the same one as on Facebook so a little variety coming atcha...
On the food front...I just read that legendary Chef Alain Ducasse has expressed himself on the subject of complicated food and he says...it's too damn complicated!  YAY!! Thank you so much!!  In fact, he is completely reworking his menu and is going so far as to limit all items to three ingredients.  That just speaks to my heart after all this silly, self-absorbed, overly complex cooking that's going on out there!  So...as I have always said, delicious, honest food, completely identifiable that you can be passionate about.
We will start being passionate about the food we cook very shortly at Urban Kitchen on Cherry Street...can't wait to share with everyone...I will be scheduling cooking classes in November!

Friday, September 17, 2010

Project Food Blog...This is so fun!

Wow!  Little did I know when I started this adventure that food blogging (blogging, in general?) was sooo popular.  At first, I really tried the everyday thing and then once a week but I just don't adhere to schedules very well especially when I have SO MUCH going on in my little cooking life.  But who doesn't love a little healthy competition so how could I resist entering into the Next Food Blog Star challenge?  What better way to connect with new people and, bonus! hone my blogging skills.  And, who knows, maybe win?!  In any event...it's going to be great fun.  Best of luck to everyone!  Back to my little culinary space...I am trying to get my catering kitchen open...this has been no mean feat...did I spell all of that right?!  Between city permits and the vent hood workers...I am just about to call it a day.  I can't though, love it too much and it's a super cool space with a great vibe...I've got events scheduled, chairs coming in, furniture assembled, etc., etc., etc....
What really keeps me going is teaching as many people as possible about cooking.  I can't wait to get that kitchen open so that I can do some hands-on classes and there are lots of my students (from previous classes) who are chomping at the bit!!  In the meantime, I have been sharing recipes, techniques, restaurant reviews (especially when I feel passionately about how well or how badly someone is doing something!), personal opinions (of which I have many) and anything else I can think of...having to do with food! 
When I am teaching, my favorite thing to tell my students is "I have no secrets and my intention is to put myself out of business so that you go home and cook, have an absolutely lovely time and you don't NEED me anymore!"  I don't get these chefs who leave details or ingredients out of their recipes or their tips.  What is the point?  I want people to have as much fun cooking as I do.  Just take a look at this group at one of my classes.  So I don't want my students to need me...I want them to come to the classes for fun and inspiration because they WANT to come and learn about everything from making mozzarella to frenching a rack of lamb to anything skewered on the grill.  We do it all!
When I can't teach a class, my blog has become my connection with my current students and, hopefully, has interested lots and lots of people.  If I can show the beauty of food and express the excitement I feel when I'm cooking so that others experience it then I have accomplished my task.  I want people to be as excited about it as I am...take it all home and then "cook without a parachute".  That means, you don't have to have a recipe to do something delicious in your kitchen.  Here is another example...pesto!  Love it, love it, love it.  I published this photo a month or so ago when I was so excited to be making pesto with the basil I just picked from my boyfriend's incredible vegetable garden.  Here it is again...this is in the food processor, right before the basil, the parm and the nuts came together and made pesto love...can you believe how huge those leaves are?  And, I don't feel compelled to use pine nuts all the time.  In this recipe, I used walnuts.  When the pecans are falling off the trees all over Oklahoma, I use our rich, sweet Native pecans.  I like to say that if you know your ingredients...throw the rules out the window and go with what speaks to you.  That is what I do and that is what I encourage everyone to do. 
Have a great time. 
Just go for it!