Archive for the Category ◊ Food! ◊

10 Sep 2009 Exploring Caledonia: Part I

A Week in Caledonia

I began writing this shortly before we left Britain, but then life caught up, and in the chaos of returning to the US, it got set aside. As I write these words now, it has been nearly a month and a half since we landed in the US and a month since we returned to Albuquerque.  Life has been…  Very good, but very busy since the return.  But the memories of Britain and Europe are still strong, and part of our hearts still live there, I think.

So now I flip back through my notes and the feel and scents of Scotland return to me.  I will do my best to transcribe some of them, but there’s a great deal to say, so this may take more than one post and some time to get out.  (Not aided, I know, by my incurable verbosity.)  Think of it as a slow-motion discovery for each of you — you’ll never know when another bit of it will pop up.  But I’ll do my best to at least finish up Scotland before, oh, say, Christmas…

One of the final tour targets for the great Rati-Lane British Isles tours was Scotland. We’d been hoping to hit all of the major regions/countries of the British Isles (England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland), but we still missed Ireland.  Ah well — good reason to return at some point.  ;-)

We had to decide on something, and we had really needed a work-free vacation, so we packed our bags and headed North.  A lot happens in a week of intense vacationing, so there’s quite a bit to report.  We’ll start with:

more…

17 May 2009 Did someone tell you British food was bad?
 |  Category: Food!  | 3 Comments

So, before we came to London, we’d heard plenty of tales of the bland and boring British food.  I have no idea what people who talk like this have been smoking.  Maybe I don’t know what what THEY consider to be good food.  We’ve been having a great time eating in the UK, both at restaurants and in our own kitchens. more…

19 Mar 2009 The FOOD review of Paris
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So, I got some requests to describe what we ate in Paris in more (excruciating) detail. more…

06 Mar 2009 Chip shop with an identity problem

Here’s a photo of a takeout shop just down the street from us in London: more…

30 Dec 2008 Christmas in Madrid
 |  Category: Culture, Food!  | One Comment

We had a very nice Christmas here with more fellowship than we were really expecting.

I was suddenly struck by a clue-by-four in December and went looking for an English-language Christian church.  I have no idea why that didn’t occur to me sooner.  One Google search of “English language Christian church” turned up Community Church of Madrid, which turned out to be a fantastically welcoming congregation formed from a core of English-speaking expats and a lot short-timers like me.  I went to a bilingual candlelit Christmas Eve service that was co-hosted by them and a Spanish-speaking sister church.  It really put the mood back in the season for me.

In the theme of family and home, Terran made rabbit stew the way his father used to make.  Rabbit meat is more easy to buy here than in the States.  I’d never had rabbit stew before.  It was very good.  (Kind of tastes like chicken! :) )

On Christmas Day, we had an invitation from Terrans’s madrileña postdoc, who is home for the holidays, to have Christmas lunch with her family. We had a lovely time and were able to use some of our baby Spanish. The parents spoke no English, but Terran’s student’s siblings did, so we bounced back and forth between languages. At the end, they put on a children’s video for the 3-year-old, and Terran and I laughed that the Spanish was just about right for us. The food, of course, was amazing and unending, but this time I was braced for it: ham and bread and cheese for an appetizer, followed by gambinas (~prawns) cooked in butter and garlic, followed by a main course of suckling pig in the style of Segovilla, followed by a traditional dessert of turron (almond sweets) and marzipan. We’re glad we got a chance to taste suckling pig before we left, since we missed it when we actually visited Segovilla. It was amazing.

We got home in the late afternoon, which was still morning, back in the States, and called our families.  It wasn’t the same as being nearby, but it was a good time.

Now, we’re in the last day of our time here in Spain.  It’s hard to believe the time has gone so fast.  We want to find a way to hold on to the Spanish we have learned, and we hope to be able to visit Madrid again someday.  We think it is one of the undersung cities of Europe.

We still plan to post the story of our Pisa trip and hopefully a couple of other bits about Madrid, but all of that will have to come after we’re settled in London.  We fly on New Year’s Eve (tomorrow!).  The last few days have been crazy and stressful, and I’ll feel better venting about it after everything has turned out all right.  Wish us luck!

20 Dec 2008 Thanksgiving in Madrid
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So, this is a back post to the holiday.  We took the pictures and talked about it, but somehow we didn’t actually manage to post anything.

So, Thanksgiving rolled around, and we wanted to come up with some way to celebrate it.

Problem 1: Our family is all in the United States.

Problem 2: We have a tiny two-burner stove, one medium-sized stew pot, and no oven.

Problem 3: We couldn’t find any turkey, and we probably didn’t have anything large enough to cook it if we could.

(We actually did find a turkey later at a dedicated poultry shop.  There weren’t any at the butcher shop.)

So, being dedicated foodies, we hatched a plan to make a Thanksgiving dinner as reminiscent of home as possible.  We bought a whole chicken.  Then we cut up half a whole wheat baguette that had gone hard and mixed it with sauteed mushrooms, onions, thyme, sage, and butter to make stuffing.

(As a side note, we looked in five stores, trying to find sage.  We’d given up when we ducked into the last place, a specialty shop that sold, among other things, Peter Pan peanut butter for €4.50 per jar.  It had it.  Joy!  It didn’t turn out to be GREAT sage. There were still woody stems in it that we had to pick out while we ate, but it tasted great.)

So, we browned the sides of the chicken on the skillet in butter, stuffed it with the baguette stuffing (which turned out to be just the right amount — lucky), and shoved it in the stew pot with about a half-inch of chicken broth.  Then we covered and cooked on low for about two hours.  The effect was similar to slow-cooking or using a turkey bag.  Here’s what our compromise looked like:

Thanksgiving chicken

Thanksgiving chicken

We will NOT be sorry to trade out the kitchen in this apartment to the larger, nicer one in the UK.  Literally only one person can be in this kitchen at a time, and sometimes that’s too many people.  Here’s what we were up against:

Our half-chef kitchen

Our half-chef kitchen

We had the stuffed chicken with boiled new potatoes with butter and salt.  I don’t know what kind these potatoes are, but they taste very good that way.  And I was skeptical, but Terran was able to get enough drippings to make a nice gravy, though we didn’t have any giblets.

We got to eat this masterpiece while talking to our family over Skype.  Dad and I set up a video conference call, and everyone having dinner at my parents’ place had a chance to say hello across the ocean.

In the spirit of sharing food with people, we made some pancakes and gave them to the nice old lady and her husband who we share a clothesline with.  We told them in our broken Spanish that today was a holiday in the United States for sharing food with family and friends.  Our family was all back in the United States, but we wanted to share some food with them. She appreciated it, and she later told us they were very good.

We also attempted to make chocolate-chip cookies in our toaster oven.  This involved finding a recipe that used baking soda, since we couldn’t find baking powder (it later turned up in a huge cannister at a speciality shop, but we didn’t buy it).  As we expected, this turned out to be tilting at windmills.  You CAN make cookies in our toaster oven, but it heats so unevenly that you can only make them one at a time.  After we made a few, we gave up and ate the dough.  Ha!  No way to fail!

10 Nov 2008 Our big souvenir
 |  Category: Food!, Places and Sights  | 2 Comments

So, SB and I aren’t big souvenir collectors.  We tend to enjoy writing travel diaries (like this one!) and taking pictures over buying items that will remind us of a place.  That is, unless we find EXACTLY the right item.

So, we have our souvenir from our trip to Spain.  It’s a sentoku knife of made of Damascus steel.  (A sentoku knife is a Japanese chef’s knife — almost the same as a normal chef’s knife, but with a slightly different shape that we’re geeky enough to prefer.)  We bought it on our trip to Toledo on Saturday.

You might want to click the picture to really see the wavy patterns in the steel.

Damascus steel cooking knife from Toledo

Damascus steel cooking knife from Toledo

Toledo is THE place for Damascus steel.  Toledo is filled with shops selling all variety of Toledo steel: fancy tableware, hunting knives, full plate armor, decorative artwork, you name it.  And let’s not forget swords — replica swords from all nationalities and time periods.  In fact, many of the ornamental swords for our armed forces come from there.

And for the more media-minded, movie prop reproductions like these from The Lord of the Rings.

Reproduction helmet and gauntlet of Sauron

Reproduction helmet and gauntlet of Sauron

But the cool thing about a chef’s knife is that Terran and I cook like crazy people.  We’ve been whining about the lack of a good cooking knife in our apartment since we got here.  This is something that is special to the area, pretty, and we’ll use it constantly, even when we get home.  That’s an exciting kind of souvenir, something that kind remind you of a cool place that you will use almost every day.

06 Nov 2008 More food explorations
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We’ve been meaning to post more food observations for some time… more…

06 Oct 2008 Chocolate followup
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Yeah, ok, a couple of folks have commented on the “Dreams of Chocolate” post.  But you seem to have not gotten the full picture here.  Yes, I know that you can get churros in NM.  (Mostly at Mexican bakeries, I think.)  But can you get the complete dish the way it was served to us?  The chocolate is critical.  I think that the churros by themselves would be lovely pastries, but not outstanding without the incredible chocolate. more…

01 Oct 2008 Dreams of Chocolate
 |  Category: Food!  | 5 Comments

So Susan has written a really nice post about what we did this past Saturday.  But she did not report on what happened Sunday.

Over all, Sunday was a bit of a bust.  Well, a “more travel flexibility day”, anyway, as we failed to get in to see the thing we wanted to see.  But, as we were wandering around in downtown Madrid, looking for something else to do, we made a mighty culinary discovery.

We ran across a self-proclaimed “Chocolatería” (chocolate shop).  Of course, we had to investigate.  And the primary thing on the menu, that everybody seemed to be ordering at 11:00 AM, was “chocolate con churros”. more…