Saturday, September 25, 2010

best pizza ever(well, except for Italy)

Imagine this:


Fresh corn, zucchini, mozzarella and feta cheese, cilantro pesto + roasted garlic = absolutely most delish pizza ever. 


Looking through some old pictures, I found this gem from my trip to Berkeley, CA visiting one of my best friends. If you are ever there, you MUST try cheeseboard Pizza. 
They only have one pizza a day, you have to get roasted garlic on the side, and the line is always out the door. But it is absolutely 100% worth it. 


mmmm pizza. :)

* Dana- Burlington, VT

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

fresh tomato sauce

i'm very type a. surprisingly, my tomato sauce isn't.

you need:
a crap ton of tomatoes (i had a huge bag of free beefsteak tomatoes. i'd imagine this would be even better with heirlooms.)
a head of garlic (we like garlic. if you don't maybe add a little less. but who doesn't like garlic?!)
a medium/ large onion
the loot.
fresh basil
fresh rosemary
some sugar
some salt
some olive oil
some oregano
i usually like to add a can of fire roasted tomatoes to my sauce, but we were out.

saute onions and garlic in olive oil until onions start to brown a little.

sorry for the bad lighting.
cool cutting board though, eh? :)
blanche tomatoes (a fancy way of saying, 'boil them, and when they start to peel, run them under cold water and try not to burn your fingers while trying to get the skin off.') and peel completely. dice and add to pot.

add spices.

simmer for about a half an hour, or more, depending on how soft tomatoes were when you diced them and also the size of your pot.

i cooked up this pot of sauce in anticipation of sunday night dinner, where our very own dear paul uncle will be visiting us from india. we're hoping a lot of our friends show up and enjoy his company as much as we will!

*kandyce in denver, CO

cheesecake! [recipe review]

faulty recipe. delicious graham crackers.
a recipe review and, well, the story of my first cheesecake.

for one of our most unique and creative wedding gifts, my friends gave hubs and me a mason jar filled with slips of paper, each with a cute little something on it: something i do for j, something j does for me, or something we do for each other. last week's slip was that i'd bake j man his favorite cake.

after much deliberation, he settled on a cheesecake. i have never made a cheesecake before, and had recently read/ drooled over a recipe review posted over at one of the food blogs i frequent. i decided i was up to the challenge and that new york cheesecake sounded both the tastiest and most fool-proof.

not sure why this is rotated? delicious: 2.5 lbs of cream cheese.
our oven set to prove me wrong. but i'll get to that in a bit.

the review i read said that the recipe from cook's illustrated was delicious, and, cheapskate that i am (i blame my dutch heritage), i was not about to pay for a recipe directly from their site that i could find elsewhere via some random googling. so, i found what i was looking for here, made a trip to the store and got started.

so i'm following, i'm following, i'm following the recipe and then, i realize, i get to the end of the directions and have all these ingredients left. mr pro chef joe forgot about the egg yolks, etc in his directions. i threw everything in my mixing bowl that i had left over and hoped for the best- the crust turned out so delicious that i ate it with a fork. (hard to go wrong with graham crackers, sugar and butter.)
the batter was so good we ate it from the bowl. with spoons.

directions for baking: put the cake in the oven at 500 degrees. after 10 minutes, WITHOUT OPENING THE OVEN!!!!!, turn the oven down to 250 and bake for an hour and a half. why the caps? because my cheesecake was doomed. our oven started billowing smoke due to some leftover oven-fry residue (that recipe for another time.) aka, sticky, blackening oil. all over the bottom of our oven. needless to say, we opened the oven. we even took the cake out. we then brought it over to our neighbor's and borrowed his oven for an hour and a half. at this point, i figured it was screwed up but maybe salvageable. hubs went over to get the cake when it was supposed to be done and brought it back over- it was still liquid lava. i popped it back in our oven for a half an hour (no smoke!) and figured it was a crap shoot. the cake billowed up and cracked, and when i pulled it out again it was still liquid lava.

i almost trashed it. hubs, though, is more level headed than i am. i went to bed. he set an alarm for 2 hours and got up to put this in the fridge after it had cooled. much to my surprise, the next morning we had a cheesecake! and it even looked pretty! AND, it tasted delicious! no oven-fry smoke, no dried out cheesecake, nothing!

i will definitely make this again. i will find another version of the recipe so as to add everything in the correct order, make sure the oven is clean, and definitely do it again. and next time, i want to add graham cracker topping, because the crust really is my favorite.

and apparently, these little buggers are much heartier than everyone who writes about them thinks they are. :)

*kandyce in denver, CO

Sunday, September 12, 2010

proscuitto con melone


nothing says summer like proscuitto con melone {so very italian - i know!}. the good news is that this is super easy and absolutely delicious. simply select a good prosciutto and cantaloupe melon {we bought both at the davidson farmer's market} then wrap the each slice of melon with a half {or whole slice} of prosciutto {we actually cooked ours on the griddle for a couple of seconds - seriously quick people!}.


to top, add either a fresh sprig of mint {ours came from our little garden} or fresh goat cheese {also a good option}. 
enjoy!

*grace from davidson, nc.

Friday, September 10, 2010

sarah's 20th birthday dinner


i was in chapel hill this monday - wednesday and while i was there, sarah turned 20. 

for her birthday this year, kelsey, andrew, {sarah} and i all went over to alex and jonathan's place in carborro. we made a variation of these easy spinach lasagna roll ups. along with the roll ups {ugh. i really don't care much for the word roll up, especially when it describes foodstuffz}we had fresh peaches, squash, and ice cream sundaes {for bday dessert}. 

much love, 

*grace from davidson, nc.

p.s. sarah, have a happy, beautiful, and blessed 20th year! even though we didn't serenade you or remember the zero candle for you dessert, we love you deeply.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

homemade oreos! [recipe review]

iesi'm kind of a cookie fiend. and a cupcake fiend. and, well, if it tastes good, i'll eat it. and lots of it.

i tried my hand at homemade oreos the other day (pre-job, of course- back in the days where i had 9 hours to myself in the kitchen monday through friday.)

aaanyway. oreos. i'd give them a 3.5 out of 5 stars (hubs gives them 4 out of 5). they were tasty, yes. but if i'm going to put a whole day's worth of work into something, i want it to be delectable. these were just 'pretty good.'

the dough was tasty. i didn't have the right kind of cocoa the recipe calls for, which is probably why my cookies only somewhat resembled the taste of from-the-bag oreos. actually cutting out the cookies, though, involved multiple rollings out of the dough between sheets of parchment paper/ tinfoil, cutting them out with biscuit cutters, flouring them up and repeating.

the frosting was simple- a nice break from the work behind the cookies themselves. it didn't taste quite as i hoped.

the best, most oreo-like cookies were the ones i baked on my pizza stone. these were also the ones that stayed oreo sized- the ones baked on my cookie sheet got a little monstrous.

in sum, if you're looking for something that tastes like you bought it at the store, don't bother. if you're up for a long day in the kitchen and like a challenge, try your hand at it (and let me know what you did to make them taste like they're from the bag!)  i'm not sad i made these little cookies, but i probably won't make them again. [they were a LOT of work.] i'm not a good tweaker, but if i were i might try at making both the cookies and the frosting a little more "authentic" tasting.

recipe can be found here, at beantownbaker.

*kandyce in denver, CO

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

amazing indian curry in london


all food should be indian food : )

during our first few days in london, k & i ate very little. we stuck to the cheapest foods and had a terribly limited diet consisting of - carrots, crackers, chocolate covered digestives, and powerbars - yum. 

one night we were starved for a good meal and found a darling traditional indian restaurant near victoria station. we were the only people in the whole place so it was incredible quiet and the service was excellent! 

the kind waiter offered to take our picture but my camera confused him, so i will not be posting those - two blurry ones of our arms at the table and the food, no faces. : )

*grace from davidson, nc. 

p.s. does anyone know of any incredible indian curry dishes? i have been wanting to make one but i cannot find a good recipe.

also, isn't k a cutie?