Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Saturday Lugar's. Sunday Funday. I love President's!

Saturday was The Last Supper for DINKS Anessa and Mike, before they leave DINK world and join parent world. Anessa is due March 15th, so this was go big or go home... which is why we chose Peter Lugar's in Brooklyn. You can't go bigger (or better) than a Lugar's steak dinner. It's been a good year or 2 since my last trip out to BK to eat a juicy Lugar's steak. We left the ordering up to Joe, as he is a pro and requires no menu. If you've ever been to Lugar's, you know this is preferred by the waiters. No BS, just eat hard, and get the hell out. 

The Last Supper
Joe ordered the usual appetizers- tomato and onion, shrimp cocktail, slab bacon, and a lamb chop for everyone.
The famous steak sauce



Shrimp, tomato, and the slab bacon before I got a hold of it. Its not pretty but its the best piece pig ever.


Steak for 6 please.

The steak was great, the lamb chop was the best chop I've ever had. But the best part of the meal for the ladies may have actually been the dessert. Somehow you have to leave room for the sundae and the chocolate mousse cake, with a side of SCHLAG. German whipped cream so thick your spoon stands up in it. 

Laura peering behind the sundae with excitement
After our gorging, we went home, slept like babies, and had meat dreams... those dreams are the really wacked out that you have when you eat a ton of food at a late hour- at least that's we we're calling them. Joe's dream- having an extra cramped apartment and having to crawl to get in the door (quite obvious subconscious talk), or mine- taking random people's shoes to a shoe cobbler that was located inside a nurses office, or Jeff being locked in a car while the Cape Cod house (see previous New Years with the DINKS post)  being raided for contraband. Thank you Lugar's for providing the late entertainment.

Fast forward to Sunday. Laura, Jeff, Joe and I decide to start the day with a boozy brunch at one of my favorite staple-brunch places in the city, Essex on the Lower East Side. http://www.essexnyc.com/
$3 Mimosas, Bloody's or Screwdrivers, along with the 3 free that come with your meal. The day never ends up being productive after this place, EXCEPT for this particular Sunday Funday. After leaving the bar, making sure to get our last $3 drink, we walked to Union Square, stopping on the way to use the bathroom at another bar and grabbing another 2 rounds. 
Knickerbocker pit stop
After the pit stop we joined Jeff in his hunt for a shiny new guitar and had some fun in the guitar shop while we were at it. 


Jeff tryin em out

Me, trying to look cool after a few

Jeff finally found what he needed and we proceeded to the next pit stop, Lillie's. One of my favorite bars in Union Square- actually may be the only bar I like in Union Square. www.lilliesnyc.com

It was here that we decided to cook a family-style Italian dinner together. Jeff and Laura were indeed staying an extra night! After a trip to the grocery store, we decided on the below recipes and went to work shortly after resting at home. Both came out wonderful! Forgot to take pics of the finished products- it was a long day ok?!!
Makin pasta- gluten free!

Short Rib Ragu with Pappardelle and Pecorino Romano

  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 3 1/2 to 4 pounds short ribs, each about 2-inches long, cut flanken style, across the ribs
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper
  • 1 dried bay leaf
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • 5 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 2 sprigs fresh flat-leaf parsley
  • 4 small carrots, diced
  • 2 stalks celery, diced
  • 1 medium onion, diced
  • 2 medium shallots, diced
  • 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1/2 cup ruby port (I omitted this and just used more wine)
  • 2 cups red wine, such as cabernet
  • 1/2 head garlic, cloves separated and peeled
  • 3 1/2 cups homemade beef stock
  • 1 pound pappardelle or other long, flat pasta
  • Chopped parsley
  • Grated Pecorino Romano, for garnish

Directions

Heat oven to 325 degrees F.
Place a Dutch oven over medium heat. Add oil, and heat until it is almost smoking. Season short ribs generously with salt and pepper. Working in batches if necessary, add short ribs to the hot oil. 
Cook ribs until browned on both sides. Remove ribs from casserole, and transfer to a large bowl. Set aside.
Meanwhile, prepare the herbs: Place bay leaf, rosemary, thyme, and parsley in the center of a square of cheesecloth (I used kitchen twine and just tied the herbs together, sans cloth). Bring edges together, and tie with kitchen string. Set aside.
Add carrots, celery, onion, and shallots to oil in the casserole, and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until vegetables are softened and golden, about 10 minutes.
Add flour and tomato paste, and stir to combine. Add ruby port (we just used red wine here); stir with wooden spoon until all browned bits have been scraped from the pan and the bottom of the casserole is clean. Add red wine, and simmer until the liquid is reduced by half. Add garlic, beef stock, and the reserved herb bouquet.
Return browned ribs to the casserole. Bring the liquid to a simmer over medium-high heat. Cover the casserole, and place it in the oven. Cook until ribs are very tender, about 3 hours.
Remove the cooked ribs from the casserole. Set the casserole on the stove top over medium heat, and simmer to thicken sauce just slightly. As soon as the short ribs are cool enough to handle, remove the meat from the bones, and shred into small pieces. Degrease the sauce and discard the herbs. Return shredded meat to casserole, and simmer to reduce sauce by about half.
Cook until pasta is al dente. Drain pasta, and serve with ragu, sprinkle with the parsley. Serve with freshly grated cheese.


Ricotta and Mint Ravioli in a Sage Brown Butter Sauce
For the pasta dough (sparing you the gluten free version here):
3/4 cup semolina flour
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
2 extra-large eggs
1 1/2 teaspoons extra virgin olive oil
Pinch of salt
For the ravioli filling:
1 pound whole milk ricotta (or homemade; see recipe section)
1 large egg, beaten
1/4 cup of grated parmesan cheese
1 small bunch of fresh mint, chopped (about 1/4 cup)
1/4 teaspoon salt (or more, to taste)
Pepper
For the sauce:
8 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/4 cup thinly sliced fresh sage
Salt
Freshly ground pepper
˜
Make the pasta dough:
Joe and I do this by hand, the old fashion way, and roll it out into sheets. We have a ravioli tray to cut the pasta sheets
Place the semolina and all-purpose flour in the bowl of a food processor.  Whisk eggs and olive oil together and pour into food processor bowl. Add salt. Pulse until coarsely combined.  If dough appears too wet, add a tad more flour and pulse again. If it is too dry, add up to 1 tablespoon of water and process until it forms a moist ball.
Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead the dough by hand until a smooth ball is formed. The dough should be elastic and a little bit sticky.
Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and allow to rest at room temperature for 30 minutes.
Make the ravioli filling:
Mix the ricotta, beaten egg and parmesan cheese in a medium sized bowl.  Mix in the chopped fresh mint. Add salt and freshly ground pepper to taste.
Assemble ravioli:
Again this can be done by hand- rolling out the dough into long wide strips. then cutting raviolis or using a ravioli cutter specifically. But here are the detailed instructions from http://ouritaliantable.wordpress.com
If using a pasta machine, place the rollers at the widest opening. Cut the dough into four equal pieces. As you work with one piece, keep the other pieces covered so they do not dry out.
Working with the first piece of dough, flatten the dough and pass it through the pasta machine.  Fold the dough in thirds, crosswise, and run it through the machine again.
ravioli-prep1
Making the ravioli
Repeat this procedure a third time until the dough is smooth.  Set the pasta machine to the next smaller opening and run through the machine.
Continue in this fashion, using the next smaller opening each time, until the last or next to the last opening is reached.  Dust with flour as needed but be careful not to use too much flour.
Cut the band of dough into two equal lengths.  Spoon mounds of filling, roughly 1 teaspoon, onto the strip of dough, spaced about 1/2 inch apart. Paint the exposed areas of the dough lightly with water. Place the second sheet of dough on top and shape the ravioli with your fingers. Press on the air around the filling to help seal the edges. Cut the ravioli apart with a ravioli cutter or stamp.
Place ravioli on semolina-dusted cookie tray until ready to cook.
Prepare sauce:
Heat butter in a large heavy skillet over moderate heat until foaming subsides and the butter starts to turn brown. Stir in the strips of sage and cook until the sage is crisp and butter is a nice golden brown color.  Season with salt and pepper.
Cook the ravioli in a large pot of salted boiling water until the pasta is al dente – about 5-7 minutes.  Carefully transfer the ravioli with a slotted spoon to a colander to drain. Gently slide the ravioli into the sage butter and cook over moderate-low heat, stirring very gently, for about 1 minute.
Dust with freshly grated parmesan cheese and enjoy……..
 

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Risotto- my new favorite comfort food!

So this gluten free thing gets me down sometimes, I'm still not 100% used to it and miss a lot of my favorite foods- being able to eat pasta out at a restaurant, grabbing a slice of New York's finest, or grabbing my once-a-month bagel. I know I'm better off for it, but that doesn't mean I don't miss it all.

Recently I found what will now become my favorite restaurant of the moment, Risotteria in the West Village. This is heaven for those of us who are gluten free. Its a risotto restaurant, that also serves pizzas, paninis and salads that are all, you guessed it.... gluten free! Gluten free breadsticks to start your meal too- pretty awesome! There's also a bake shop that serves gluten free breads, cookies, cakes, and flours. I bought the rolls, soooo excited to finally have a sandwich and they were actually really good. I plan on stocking up. I had a risotto with mushrooms and truffle that was really well cooked, al dente rice- the whole nine.

For those of you who eat with me often, this will be the next place we go. I promise you won't be disappointed, even if you aren't cursed with a gluten allergy.

www.risotteria.com   
It was this restaurant that inspired me to try risotto on my own. I semi-created a mushroom, herb and shrimp risotto. Came out pretty good...

Herbed Mushroom and Shrimp Risotto with Truffle (Gluten free)


Olive oil
1 shallot
2 cloves garlic, minced
a bunch of herbs, chopped, I used rosemary and thyme because that's what I had in the house
mushrooms- I just used however many I left, I would recommend 1 container or so. Also might be good with a variety of mushrooms
tbsp butter
a few splashes of Truffle oil- optional, but worth having around the house!
1 cup arborio rice
5-8 cups (or so) vegetable broth
1/3 cup dry white wine
10 shrimp, cleaned
Parmesan cheese


Empty 5 cups of vegetable broth into a large saucepot. Simmer and keep warm with a lid. You will use this for the risotto.


Season shrimp with salt and pepper, saute until cooked through and set aside.


In a saucepan saute half the shallot and 1 clove of garlic in olive oil. After onion is translucent, add mushrooms and herbs. Saute until mushrooms and herbs are cooked through. Remove from heat and top with a few splashes of Truffle oil. A lot of truffle oil goes a long way, keep that in mind. Set aside with shrimp. 


In a large dutch oven or pot, saute the rest of the shallot and 2nd clove of garlic in olive oil. When translucent, add rice and stir. Turn heat to medium low and let rice get golden. Add wine and let evaporate. Ladle some warm vegetable broth into rice and stir. Allow broth to evaporate almost completely and continue adding broth, ladle by ladle. This process takes a good 25 minutes or so. You have to watch it and stir a lot. But its easy. You are finished when it tastes creamy, it looks more runny than mine does below, and the rice is still al dente. Stir in a healthy handful of Parmesan cheese.


Add mushroom and herb mixture and the shrimp. Top with parmesan and a little more truffle oil for good measure. 

Top chef judges would say this wasn't soupy enough, but bear with me, next time, more liquid....

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Op Ed- Idol Obsessed



So this is my first official Op Ed piece. According to Wikipedia (one of my favorite sites), Op Ed is explained as "An abbreviated from opposite the editorial page (though often mistaken for opinion-editorial)". But because I'm lower brow, I'm using this term to mean opinion editorial for the purposes of my blog... just go with it newspaper readers!

For those of you that know me well, you might be wondering how in the hell have I not expressed an opinion yet on this thing... since I so do love the art of the Soap Box. Well I'm not really sure.  But I know for now, we're calling this the Op Ed section of my blog, because I just know there will be many more moments when this section will be necessary.

On to the goods..... I have been an American Idol fan since season one, still having an appreciation for Kelly Clarkson to this day. I love everything about that show- the try outs, the laughable crazies thinking they can really-truly sing and being devastated and angry when they tell them to give up their dream, sharing in the sad and the happy tears, the voting, and most of all..... the judges.

I enjoyed watching Randy use the term DAWG and getting a tad ghetto with 15 year olds, Paula slurring her speech and trying to guess what pills she had taken before the taping of the show, and most of all Simon's amazing ability to jump RIGHT into my brain and say everything I'm thinking about every single performance.... except for all those nails-on-a-chalkboard screams by Adam Lambert that all the judges thought sounded like a beautiful melody, I will never understand that. I loved that my former coworkers from Robert Half felt it important enough to do an "Idol Pool" last year.... with more than 30 participants, money involved, and weekly pics- it was more exciting for me than March Madness.

So when I heard last season that Simon would not be returning, I instantly thought... BOYCOTT (which coincidentally was the first thing I said- and did- when I heard The Situation from Jersey Shore was set to make 5 million last year. I just cannot condone that). I really felt the show was over, its lost its main star, the guy who speaks the truth, its authenticity, the stuff that makes it "legit". I was really disappointed that essentially it was going to a big steaming pile of shit.



Let me just say I've always liked Aerosmith, ever since my brother bought the Pump album and I heard Janie's Got a Gun (which still coincidentally is a song I never skip on my Ipod), ever since Alicia Silverstone made her debut in the Crazy and Cryin' videos, and ever since my besties and I went to see them in concert at The Coors Amphitheater in San Diego circa 2002- greatest concert ever? Perhaps... right after Pearl Jam at Boston Garden in 1994, just when they were at their prime. I digress. So I love Steven Tyler, crazy, cool rock star. I just wasn't sure how I would feel seeing him critique the little tykes on AI. Seemed kind of random.

JLo, I've had a very love-hate relationship with since 1998. I loved that she got her start as a Fly Girl, thought she was quite stunning, and "Waiting for Tonight" made me want to shake my JLo-sized ass in 1999. Yes, I'm serious. Then somewhere along the line she became someone I couldn't avoid. She was ALL over the damn radio, starring in Domestic Violence movies kicking her abusive husband's ass, kissing Matthew McConaughey in cheesy chic flicks, trying to be "hip hop" and calling her album "On the 6". I'msure it was Jenny From the Block that really put me over the edge. Really, you're hard core now? Enough's enough. It was then I called it quits with JLo. So when I heard she also signed on to be a judge for AI, I thought Ugh. They sold out.
That is until I begrudgingly watched the first episode of Season 10.

I'm essentially obsessed. I can't get enough of Steven's coolness, the massive feather earring, and his screams that actually DO sound like a beautiful melody. I wait patiently every week to see if JLo can top last week's gorgeous glam look (Where does she get those fabulous extensions done? Who is her makeup artist? I need to know). She also actually seems to know what she's talking about. I love the chemistry between the 3 of them. They really seem like they are honestly having a great time. They thoroughly enjoy- almost to the point of tears- when someone comes in and can really sing. But most of all, I LOVE the judging. They all seem to really get it. JLo is sweet and funny and makes the greatest facial expression when a crazy comes on- seemingly the exact same face I'm making at that same moment.  And best of all, Randy has become a complete comedian. I find myself getting goose bumps one moment, tears streaming down my face the next, and hysterically laughing in between. What more can you ask for from a television show?

I love the contestants that have made it to Hollywood so far, their stories (or their voices) literally tug at your heart. One guy who got engaged and 2 months before the wedding, his fiance was in a horrible car accident. She is now in a wheelchair, suffering major brain damage, yet he continues to stand by her, despite the fact that they haven't been able to marry yet. I think his exact words were "what kind of man would I be if I left her at the time when she needed me the most?".
Cue sobs. Major Niagra Falls people.

Or John Wayne (yes, thats really his name), the momma-lovin cowboy from rural Texas with a huge genuine heart, deep country voice, and who's not so bad to look at either. No pictures I found will do him justice.


 Lauren Alaina, who's parents wedding song was none other than Aerosmith's "I Dont Wanna Miss a Thing"- she belted it out right in front of Mr Tyler with no shame and nailed it! The next Idol?


And of course, Jacee Badeaux- the adorable 15 year old, that looks like a friend's unassuming, chubby little brother that you never noticed, singing "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay" like he was born to. You instantly love this kid!

This list goes on, I'm sure I'm forgetting some of my favorites, but you get the idea. 


Moral of the story, if you haven't watched this show before, now is a good time to tune in and be thoroughly entertained... while also finding a new love for JLo. 


Bring it on Season 10!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Joey's 30th Birthday

Our weekend in CT with family went off without a hitch. Thanks primarily to Aunt Jodi and The Deb for over-doing themselves (per the norm) and cooking up a storm the days before the party, ordering 30th Birthday banners, flowers for the tables, balloons, the list goes on. We ate lots of Joey's all time favs from chicken parm, to mashed potatoes, ham, spinach noodle (a Hayes family special) and tapioca pudding and coconut cake.

Some pics from the party...

The table, flowers, balloons, banner and all.
Joey, not so surprised
Joey, Cole and Jeff discussing Oktoberfest
Matt, Nicole- proud parents to be, and Pop-Pop
Joey and Kate stirring the mashies

One of the recipes everyone seemed to love was the Stromboli, courtesy of James Cinque, a close friend of Joey's growing up. So thanks James, it was easy, incredibly tasty (so I heard), and a major crowd pleaser! I will be making this at every party from here on out.


THE GOAT'S STROMBOLI

Pizza dough
Sliced pepperoni (prepackaged is fine)
¼-1/2 lb. Combination of soppresata, prosciutto, or capicola- or any other cured Italian meats, don’t need to use all of them either.
Grated mozzarella cheese
Grated parmesan cheese
Olive oil
Italian seasoning (dried basil, oregano, garlic powder, crushed red pepper- optional, etc)

Additional items that can be incorporated:
Broccoli rabe/sausage (steam broccoli before putting in the Stromboli)
chicken/roasted garlic

Preheat oven to 375 (if cooking and reheating for a later time), or 400 (if serving immediately).
Lightly flour working surface and roll out dough, roll out all air bubbles, and form into large circle.
Season dough with Italian seasoning
Add pepperoni to cover dough
Cover with mozzarella cheese
Top cheese with additional cured meats and top again with parmesan cheese
Add more seasoning here if you prefer, good time to add crushed red pepper if using
Roll up dough carefully to form the Stromboli
Add a bit more flour to dough and sprinkle it with olive oil parmesan cheese and additional seasoning
On cookie sheet place in the oven and check it around 20-25 minutes to see if its browning. Remove from oven when golden brown
Let cool before cutting, or if saving for a later time, wrap in foil and place in freezer

We added broccoli rabe to this one. I forgot to get the "after" picture, the party was too fun!