Showing posts with label Brooklyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brooklyn. Show all posts

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Birthdays with Hot Dog and Mustard

There is not usually much fanfare around my birthday for a couple of reasons. One - It's in the middle of the summer, which seems to create a dog days-related void around celebrating, what with people in and out of town. Two - Birthdays mostly end up being kind of disappointing, something I think we can all relate to. However, I am a Leo, and Leos, according to their astrological qualities, love to be the center of attention. That should mean throwing giant birthday parties every year, along with the desire to have lots of adoring fans present.

This year I indulged in more Leoness than usual, and with Trish, we threw a combo birthday BBQ party for ourselves in Prospect Park.

We grilled burgers, kebabs and hotdogs. We made potato salad and deviled eggs. Our friends brought a huge amount of food and beer and wine. But this was not the main food effect. The food, in fact, was quite overshadowed by our party mascots - the hot dog and mustard.



Trish's costumed friends exhibited huge and brave amounts of Leoness, leaping joyfully through the park grass as children chased them around, tugging at their costumes and posing for pictures snapped by their parents. Children were not mystified by the hot dog and mustard beyond the innocent question of, "Where is the Ketchup?". They were not weirded out, but immediately intrigued. The hot dog and mustard were loved by our party guests, too, as with command and expertise they refereed our field day games - the icing on the Sunday-BBQ-cake in the park. We willingly let the duo direct our relays and sack races and egg-on-a-spoon. They clarifed rules. They told us when to go and stop. They transitioned us between games. They were joyful. They were fun.

So the hot dog and mustard are no longer just a classic American comestible to be thrown on the grill and then gobbled down. They are the life of the party.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Cookin' In: Quinoa and Chocolate

The Alix and Christine show could be quite the hit. That is, if you'd like to watch two ladies drink wine, talk, cook and eat for hours on end. I think I was home by 4:00 am.

We decided to simplify the meal, knowing a complex recipe could really slow our leisurely pace even more. Made a Quinoa salad with fresh corn, black beans, red pepper, lime and cilantro. Quinoa is evidently one of the more perfect foods as far as nutrients and protein go. The Aztecs were cooking it 6000 years ago, yet it's still hard to get in your typical grocery store. If you've never had it, the texture is somewhat grainy, somewhere between rice and cous cous. But it's officially a seed and not a grain.

Along with the quinoa, we made tacos with sauteed portobello and green peppers, fresh homemade salsa, and avocado. Light, spring fare, made to save room for the chocolate course from The Chocolate Room.

I had no idea chocolate, herbs and fruits could live by perfect symbiosis in one little chocolate.

Around midnight we methodically and slowly enjoyed an entire plate of chocolate. To describe it is to be one with the chocolate. Among the sensuous bites: Caramel and lavender in dark chocolate, passion fruit and ginger ganache, coconut truffle in toasted coconut, white chocolate ganache with Grand Marnier, apricot basil ganache in milk chocolate, passion fruit ganache in white chocolate, mint ganache with bitter chocolate pieces, red chile and tangerine ganache, and strawberry, lemon and thyme ganache.

We ate all of the above.

I don't know what I will do while Alix is gone traveling for an entire month. Go to chocolate school, perhaps.

The Chocolate Room

86 5th Ave (between St. Mark's and Warren St)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-783-2900
www.thechocolateroombrooklyn.com

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Double Feature: Bar Toto and Burger Joint



Well, should I get the urge, I know who to call to grab a burger. Carlos and I have had a couple of great burgers lately. But we need to soon eat some salad to thus avoid major growth in the tummy region.

Bar Toto is the place to go on a nice spring or summer night when you can sit on the patio forever drinking white wine and eating panini burgers. It's a relaxed brasserie atmosphere inside, and if the doors are open, and breeze is coming through, life is perfect. Big mirrors and windows, cool little black and white tiles, and the buzzing sound of people enjoying themselves. It definitely feels like a neighborhood spot, and you see the owner saying a lot of hellos throughout the evening.

The panini burgers are fantastic. Toto burger is gorgonzola and red onion between a crispy, grilled flat bread. Big stack of thin crispy fries. I've rarely been beyond the burger, but the rest of the menu is mostly pasta and panini and some great-sounding antipasti and ensalate.

Upon departing, the Toto effect sets in and you must walk very slowly back up the Slope.

Bar Toto
411 11th St. (at 6th Ave)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-768-4698
www.bartoto.com

Burger Joint is another planet. My co-workers and I first "discovered" this place when working one night we experienced a mass burger craving. Googling for burgers in the Columbus Circle neighborhood will leave you almost dry except for here. We had the address but wandered up and down the block looking and asking around until a concierge pointed us to Le fancy pants Parker Meridien Hotel.

If you are suitcaseless, they might look at you funny, but walk confidently past the front desk to the floor to ceiling curtains in the lobby, which conceal a burger joint, circa timeless mid-West. Turn right at neon burger sign. Wood paneling, movie posters, good music, burger flippers with attitude. The menu is hamburger, cheeseburger, french fries, shake. They have 1-2-3 instructions on how to best order: hamburger or cheeseburger, how you want it cooked and what you want on it. Don't mess with the system.

It's all super delicious. They have won many awards. I've known people to become addicted and find themselves going back again and again.

Burger Joint
119 56th St (between 6th and 7th Aves)
(in Le Parker Meridien lobby)
Mid-town West, New York
212-708-7414

photo: Carlos

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Where am I eating? Milan's...




Michelle, Christian and I crossed the Park Slope boundary into Sunset Park on 5th Ave and went to one of the only Slovakian/Czech restaurants in the city. Outside, we had one of those great moments where the group pauses and debates (mentally and with each other) about whether to go in.
We went in.

None of us could have dreamed up this place. Actually, we better shake out of the Park Slope brainwash because separately we had all imagined a trendy German place, 5th ave style, dark wood tables and bar with perhaps a log cabin-like interior. Thought I might mingle a little with 20-somethings neighborhood folk at the buzzin' bar.

It was all green inside - green walls, green floors, green checkered tableclothes. Briiight lights. We were the only customers. All the Milan "Guys" were at the congregated at the back table.

I think Milan himself waited on us. He brought out heavy, saucy, dense foods. Luckily it had been raining all day and we were all set for the stick to your ribs type of food. Michelle said that Christian's stuck to him for most of the weekend. We had potato pancakes, goulash, saurkraut, potatoes, meat, and dumplings - which are not what you think but is in fact steamed bread. And we had Czech beer. We all liked the beer.

Buuut, the food is not for everyone. However, if you are a fan, this place has been reviewed favorably for certain dishes. Supposedly, when in town, famous Slavs go there to eat.

Milan's
710 5th Ave (between 22nd and 23rd Sts)
Sunset Park, Brooklyn
New York
718-788-7384
http://www.milanrestaurantny.com/

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

We made gnocchi!


Alix and I are moving into new culinary dimensions with our cooking. First of all, we will eventually end up writing a cookbook highlighting various underappreciated foodstuffs. Parsnips will be the subject of the first chapter. We know of no others who like parsnips the way we do. Sometimes peppery, sometimes sweet, this root vegetable has been the subject of several of our email conversations. Oh, we are high caliber.

We made a parsnip soup combining a potato, a parsnip, a leek, and an onion. Root vegetable heaven.

Alix had suggested making a sweet potato gnocchi, which I would have assumed to be an all day cooking affair. But in fact, she mixed and rolled out the dough while I put together the soup. We had the gnocchi with a simple sauteed fresh spinach, garlic and tomatoes. And of course finished our meal and talking around 1:00 am. And this was partly because we began scheming for a summer cook-off event...oh, this will show up in your local newspapers...

And in other big news, after 10 weeks of physical therapy Alix can walk again!

Friday, April 6, 2007

Spring Italian Dinner Party - La Felice Vita!



Ann asked me to housesit and then encouraged me to throw a dinner party. She told me that her house has great party karma, and that, in fact, if I had a bad party it had to be my fault.

It was a very good party.

Once again we find there is something magic about putting a bunch of good people in a good space with food and wine. That, after all, is the food effect I have been trying to describe in entry after entry. I put together a fairly simple menu and invited the most charismatic and friendly people I know, asked them to bring wine and figured all would take care of itself. This was true.

Ann's house is big and at the same time cozy. The dining room is all warm, deep wood and goldenrod colored walls. Wonderful tiles with barnyard animals and vegetables line the kitchen and breakfast bar. Ann had told me no matter what, everyone would congregate in the kitchen and dining room, despite the other fantastic spaces.

Luckily, Emilia is now visiting from Rome, and she came over to help me prep the afternoon of the party. We chopped, pureed, mixed, sauteed, simmered, and talked and talked for hours, not believing the time had passed so quickly. My wonderful friends began rolling in after work and school, carrying in bottles of wine. Drinking and eating antipasti, everyone gathered near Ann's big, round wooden table, which was filled with crusty bread, fresh mozzarella, proscuitto, sopresseta, and verdure misti - zuchinni, yellow squash, carrots, and fennel - roasted with capers, garlic and olive oil, and bowls of two simple spreads of kalamata olives and sundried tomatoes, both floating in pools of a piney, herby and sweet olive oil. There was a huge ensalate of mixed greens, beets, cucumber, dill and green onions, with a olive oil, fresh garlic and lemon juice dressing.

Being hostess means one is not quite as carefree as the guests, but one still gets a nice bird's eye view of the whole scene. Every now and then I floated around and just listened to the great conversation, glad to hear that even the small talk was lively.

The pasta came out and the people all lined up. There were two pastas - one rotini with roasted red pepper, artichoke hearts, olives, mozzrella and fresh parsley. The other was a pasta primavera, a linguini with crisp green beans and asparagus, a light creamy sauce of parmaggiano-reggiano and pine nuts, and topped with fresh basil and grape tomatoes sauteed in balsamic vinegar and fresh garlic. I was not sure how to make pasta for 20 people, but it practically made itself.

The pasta and bread did not slow anyone down - the merriment continued when Ann's little poodle, Grace, came to visit, jump around and sniff about. I pulled the pears out of the oven, which had been roasting and simmering in butter, apple juice and brown sugar, dolloped them all with vanilla ice cream and watched everyone spoon feed themselves.

The trickling out of guests began around eleven, but the dinner party die-hards stayed until after four in the morning, when the tired hostess had to end the shenanigans only because she had to catch a train the next day.

La felice vita! Grazie, amici.

Party Styles

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Chiles y Chocolate



I am very into food combinations, especially unlikely ones. To most, the idea of putting together chilies and chocolate in a suace is a strange one. But at a very fundamental level, you have the hot and the sweet coming together. And not just sitting in the same dish, but melding together in a most sensually complex way. And thus you have: mole.

Carlos and I had been wanting to try this new Oaxacan restaurant in Park Slope for some time now. Well, for a few weeks. But those weeks are interminable when mole is on the other end. Chiles y Chocolate is a tiny, narrow place that is painted entirely in the rich brown, almost mahogany, shade of mole. Tables are small and round, and we were lucky enough to sit on a pedestal in the window, overlooking the entire mole scene.


We started with the quesadillas antiguas with a vegetable filling of huitlacoche ragout (smoky little mushrooms) and nice, melty cheese. We ordered two entrees to share, the mole negro and a mahi mahi with chipotle, chocolate and mango salsa. My mahi mahi came from the platos modernos side of the menu and Carlos's mole from the platos tradicionales side. I have to say, tradition is far superior to modernity in this case. The fish and its sauce sounded potentially amazing, and had beautiful presentation, but ultimately tasted like not much of anything.

But the mole.

It defies description.



Just go there and consume it.

For dessert we had tamales dulces with oaxacan chocolate and raisin filling. Oh, wow. And wash that down with the namesake chiles y chocolate drink with chipotle essence spread lightly on the inside of the cup. The sweet and spicy goes on forever at this place.

Chiles y Chocolate
54 7th Ave and Lincoln Place
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-230-7700

Photo credits: Carlos

Friday, March 30, 2007

Thursday is the new Friday

Thursday was one of those great nights of food, drink and perfect company. And I had all my fun within a 5 block radius. After work Ann took me to Al di La for a glass of wine - I can't wait to go back there to eat. It's one of those neighborhood places - everyone knew Ann and the staff is super friendly. Of course, she is the poster child for Al di La after appearing in the picture accompanying the NY Times review last year. They don't take reservations and are very small, but their new wine bar helps prevent the people back up during dinner. While sipping our marvelous whites Ann pointed out some of her favorites on the dinner menu - more to come on this fine place of Northern Italian food. Then we walked over to her house so I could get the low-down on house and poodle sitting, and the pots, pans and utensils I'll be needing for my upcoming Italian Spring Dinner Party! I have to say, the setting will be perfect for feasting and friends.

I then ran over a couple blocks to Rose Water on Union St, to meet Alix and Livy for another Brooklyn restaurant week pick. It was not easy to get a normal reservation time for dinner, but Alix had managed to do so. Rose Water focuses on American Nouveau - seasonal, local, organic and satiating taste buds. We started with a WONDERFUL white German wine, of which I've forgotten the name (anyone want to sponsor my wine education?) and absolutely superior bread, a little saltiness on the crust and dipped in olive oil and a fantastic white bean spread - the most nuanced of flavors.

For the prix fixe, there was an impressive array to choose from - I started with a chick pea stew, which included a giant, flavorful cheese-stuffed falafel. Golden roasted chicken for my entree, with sweetly sauteed mushrooms - I was already getting too full to finish, but we then ordered dessert, sharing all three: a chocolate peanut butter cake, apple fritter, and a vanilla cheesecake...ohhhh, myyyy.


Then hopped down the block to Union Hall to meet Erin and Nick for a drink. Union Hall is enormous. Despite it's size, it's always packed. Of course, there are many diversions, including a music venue on the lower level and bocce court on the upper level. That's right - the twenty-somethings of Brooklyn evidently know their Bocce. It's a great place to hang out with your pals, with several areas of comfy seating and even a pseudo library and fireplace. A patio is on the side for those much anticipated summer days.

Ah, Thursday night. I think that explains why on Friday night I fell asleep to a movie rental...

Al di La
284 5th Ave (and Union St.)
Park Slope, Brooklyn

http://www.aldilatrattoria.com/

Rose Water
787 Union St (between 5th and 6th Aves)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-783-3800

Union Hall
702 Union St (and 5th Ave)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-638-4300
http://unionhallny.com/

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Scottadito

Brooklyn restaurant week is a genius invention. It means you can get a three course meal at any number of fantastic places for a reasonable $21.12. The only flaw is that it does not include wine or dessert, which we know must come with every meal.

My charming party was a bit late for our dinner at Scottadito, osteria Toscana, but that gave me some serendipitous time at the bar to eavesdrop for a moment...The lovely and very pregnant bartender and a man that appeared to be a neighborhood regular were having an agreeable exchange in Italian. I have no idea what they were saying, but it was something about good food and life, I'm sure.

Turns out the restaurant is new to the neighborhood, though I was so sure it had been around forever - it looks comfortably settled in, with sturdy butcher block tables, worn brick walls and low, heavy wood beams. Like a homey cave of good food and nice, mellow tunes - anywhere from Dean Martin to Brazilian bossa nova. My friends and I sat by the front window, which is huge and looks out onto Union St in Park Slope.

Delicious food, of course. For antipasti, a vegetable souffle in a pool of tomato and basil coulis. For primi, an orecchiette with beets, arugula, black olives and ricotta salata. Orecchiette is a thin, ear-shaped pasta named for it's shape - orecchio is "ear" in Italian (both vocabulary and stomach grow). For secondi, a nice tilapia coated with dry herbs, along with steamed greens. We drank a delightful Montepulciano and for dulci, a heavenly tort of rich dark chocolate and some creamy chocolate gelato, with our steamy lattes and cappucinos.

Also for dessert we had a deeply involved and intense discussion about the concept of the moustache - what it symbolizes, it's shifting power dynamic, and the female equivalant. Everyone had an impassioned opinion on this topic, and by the end we were no closer to consensus. The Italianness of Scottadito must have rubbed off on us!

Scottadito
788 Union St (between 6th and 7th Aves)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
New York
718-636-4800
http://www.scottadito.com/

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Forecast: food, snow and sleet

Mid-march and we have an actual snowstorm in NYC. The whole day I was buried in my scarf, hiding from little beaming ice pellets and avoiding giant piles of snow and slush. Ryan and I planned to meet at BAM cafe after work, have a little dinner and go back downstairs to the theater to catch a movie, thus smartly avoiding more wintery mix.

We walked into the hugely cavernous cafe, looking forward to the menu, but saw empty tables full of empty wine glasses. It looked like a mass exodus had just occurred. It was 10 minutes of feeling semi-strange as waitstaff were cleaning before we found out that the kitchen had just closed. The people before us had ate, drank and scurried into the theater. Whoops. The best laid plans...

No worries. We went back outside and trudged through the ice and snow to nearby Pequena.

The only thing about Pequena that's actually small is the restaurant itself. The plates are huge. I don't know how authentically Mexican the food is, but I'm always happy eating there. Little tables are crowded into a small colorful space with el Dia de los Muertos figurines and little twinkly rose lights.

We were pre-celebrating Ryan's birthday (more food and fun coming next week!) and after two minutes of sipping our deliciously tart margaritas, the entire table was full of food for us to share. There was some serious rearranging to get everything to fit. And we were faced with a food challenge: eat everything in 30 minutes in order to make the movie. Fish tacos with chipotle mayo in soft corn tortillas, rice and black beans, and a plate of sweet plantains, guacamole, and pico de gallo with hot tortilla chips to scoop it all up. Needless to say, we packed in quite a bit and ran to the movie.

It's cash only - thus one more dash through snow and ice to an ATM. Then a quick hustle through the messy streets and sidewalks to get back to BAM. Wet socks and shoes, but great dinner and movie. The movie, The Lives of Others (Leber der Anderen) was brilliant and beautiful.

Pequena
86 S Portland Ave (at Lafayette Ave)
Ft. Greene, Brooklyn
New York
718-643-0000

The Lives of Others (Leben der Anderen) - in German with English subtitles
http://www.sonyclassics.com/thelivesofothers/

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Melt - in your mouth?

Melt does not look typically Park Slope. It's very stylized, both on the plate and in the interior. Bare walls are semi-cozy feeling, some a dark chocolate brown, others ivory. Warm lighting, spare-looking tables and chairs. Furniture and lack of decor shows the dichotomy of both straight edge and curvy lines. This would make sense if you saw it.

The inside of Melt inspired a conversation among Alix, Colin and I about design and architecture - we observed that despite living in one of the boldest, fastest moving cities in the world, New York does not go leaps and bounds ahead in architecture. Where are the crazy, sleekly curvaceous buildings we all think of as futuristic? Even super laid back Seattle has a space needle. Mystery unsolved.

So the food...I am never quite sure about "New American" food - it usually looks good but falls short and feels sadly overpriced. However, the lightly fried goat cheese ravioli that we shared on a salad of arugula, almonds and stewed yellow tomatoes was top-notch appetizer. A sensation surprisingly peppery mingled with the goat cheese. My salmon main plate was artfully arranged AND delicious - a compact stack of fish, under teepee-ed asparagus and sprigs of thyme standing like a flag on new land, all resting on a soft plop of whipped potatoes and ginger infused spinach. Modern architecture and design?

The co-owner told us the various meanings of Melt after we mused over coffee and inquired - a melting of flavors, the American melting pot of cultures and also the "sensation of melting". I had a hard time with that one, but Colin had an example: like when you come in from the freezing outdoors and your ears and fingers are painfully cold but the heat of your home and your chocolate drink warms and tingles you. That's "melt".

Melt
440 Bergen St (between 5th and 6th Aves)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
New York
718-230-5925

Monday, February 26, 2007

Oscars Night, 2007!



Michelle and Christian are very into this. Thanks to them, I've seen more Oscars movie nominees than I ever have. Leading up to the event, they had online spreadsheets for us to keep track of movies watched and rated. We had voting ballots and there were prizes! The decorations were superb.

As it flurried outside, we piled together with out of town Yorksters Angie, Katy and Mike, in Michelle and Christian's cozy Park Slope apartment on their huge and comfy couch. And enjoyed great food and wine, of course. M and C are dependable and serious with the wine - nice reds from various regions that they had picked up at neighborhood wine store Big Nose, Full Body. I had two from Spain and Australia, one a bit spicier than the other and both going nicely with the range of cheeses, meats, crackers, spreads and fruit.

In the spirit of Best Picture nominee Babel, I had made a well-received cous cous with chickpeas, almonds, dates, curry and cilantro. And for dessert, our hosts made the diner breakfast Olive ordered in Little Miss Sunshine - Waffles a la Mode-y. Mmm. Scoops of vanilla ice cream on warm, toasted waffles - especially the cinnamon mini waffles - is just goooood. We thought of all sorts of possible toppings, but the fundamentals were perfect.

And after watching the special past-Oscar winner montages, my movie list has grown ever longer.

Big Nose, Full Body
382 7th Avenue (between 11th and 12th Sts)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-369-4030
www.bignosefullbody.com

Cous Cous Salad with Dates and Almonds
www.epicurious.com

Sunday, February 25, 2007

The Smith Street Pub Crawl

The idea was born with Erin. It was sheer brilliance: Smith Street - one evening, many pubs. Erin and I thought we might have a handful of friends coming along for the crawl, but crowd estimates came in around thirty! From a range of friend circles of the in and out of towners - great for mingling and good clean fun. Well...

The line up was as follows:

Brooklyn Social Club - Ladies were very lucky to get in. This bar used to be an Italian men-only club. Very chill with nice red tin ceilings. I will go back for their specialty drinks on a non-crawl night.

335 Smith Street (between Carroll and President Sts)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-858-7758

Zombie Hut - Again with the ceilings - this one was bamboo. A giant fish tank, a fireplace and board games are among the other amenities. They have a range of fun and potent drinks, including a tropical fruit one you can drink with giant straws from a flaming volcano. Very clever. Played good tunes!

216 Smith Street (between Douglass and DeGraw)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-875-3433

Angry Wade's - A Bar. Slightly dingy and with free popcorn. Decor: nicely tacky modern poster art. The table in front of the fireplace is prime.

222 Smith Street (at Butler St.)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-488-7253

Camp - Five Stars! S'mores!! S'mores!! And martinis with s'mores! The bartender lights your marshmallows on fire! Smells like a camp fire inside! Log cabin interior with fireplace, kayak, and huge, wall-sized photo of the woods in springtime. I will go back here when it's not so crowded and indulge in everything sweet and gooey. DJ playing danceable music (but no caberet license).

179 Smith Street (between Warren and Wyckoff Sts)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-852-8086

Vegas - Do not be fooled by the name. Very un-Vegas - i.e. no running lights, marquees, gambling or showgirls. Roomy with nice red-velvet couch areas, pool table and a first rate juke. Although, it did not have my favorite Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton duet. Sigh.

135 Smith Streets (between Dean and Bergen Sts)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-875-8308

Boat - On the list, but we never made it because it was packed. No sign, orange door. Neighborhood bar. Kind of cramped, long and narrow, with a small loungeable area in back. Great juke box. It's just...likeable.

175 Smith Street (between Warren and Wyckoff Sts)
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
718-254-0607

It's obvious that the Smith St. Pub Crawl is already a Brooklyn classic. We've already had several requests for a similar event along 5th avenue. Duly noted! Thanks Erin, for your fantastic choices!



(Our sense of Accomplishment)

Friday, February 23, 2007

Food of the Rainbow


Broken bones, surgeries and casts do not stop Alix and I from making our famous meals. Although we had a brief hiatus, Alix is recovering nicely and we are back in the saddle. She even has a clever wheelie chair to scoot around the kitchen! On Friday we chilled out with some white wine and caught up on the week before starting that night's dinner: sweet potato and corn chowder, ginger-orange vegetable stir fry, and, of course, a mixed berry tart.

All dishes were low maintenance and all vegan. Bonus: we ate all colors of the rainbow with our whole foods - red pepper, sweet potato, yellow squash, sweet corn, green beans, broccoli, sprouts, and berries. The USDA says its wise to eat a colorful variety of fruits and vegetables for the biggest punch of vitamins and nutrients. Plus, it's aesthetically pleasing.

Alix mixed up a great soy sauce dressing for our stir fry - freshly grated ginger, zested and juiced clementines, fresh chopped garlic, and a splash of vinegar. Add more juice and zest for a citrusy zeal. We tossed the dressing in our vegetables and rice and chowed down, while checking out the seed catalog for Alix's up and coming summer kitchen garden!

Oh, yes, and all evening we enjoyed a terrific, inexpensive Cabernet-Sauvigon from her neighborhood wine store, SIP, and talked until three in the morning about everything from snow days to travel plans to Ishmael. Food with Alix is a fine, fine experience.

SIP Fine Wine
67 5th Ave (and St. Marks Place)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
718-638-6105
www.sipfinewine.com

www.5aday.gov

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Superfine and the Brooklyn Winter Hoedown



String Bands + Food and Drink = a good weekend. The 3rd Annual Brooklyn Winter Hoedown was held this year at Superfine. If ever New York has you feeling claustrophobic in tiny bars and restaurants, might I recommend this spacious, likely former warehouse in DUMBO. It's a bit hard to pin down the theme: huge and colorful abstract art, long strands of blue bulbs and giant paper lanterns hang from the ceiling. With its hewn wood floors and barn high ceilings, Eric thought maybe the theme was "Whaling Town." It could be true - we spotted quite a few whaling types there for the shows and food on Saturday.

I spent both Saturday night and Sunday evening this weekend among the yeehaws and cowboy boots, soaking in the bluegrass and string bands with some snacking on the side. Sunday I had a superfine burger with jack and all the fixings, and delightful little shoestring fries, along with the day's special brown ale. I also had one divine bite of Nick's Ginger Creme Brulee. Genius.

Superfine boasts about its seasonal menu, local ingredients and grass-fed beef. That makes me feel mighty fine. And it must be true because the menu is written on a dry-erase board that changes and travels from table to table. What a great reason to go back for the Bluegrass Brunch held every Sunday!


By 8PM on Sunday, full and happy with a table full of fun friends and my favorite Brooklyn string band playing, I declared that I shall learn to play the banjo. You never know what the food effect may be.

Superfine
126 Front St (at Pearl St)
DUMBO, Brooklyn
New York
718-243-9005

The M Shanghai String Band
www.mshanghaistringband.com

Sotto Voce


, a little Italian place in Park Slope. Warm colored orange and brick walls, with black and white photos hanging - it's very simple and friendly. Abby and I met there for Sunday brunch. If you cannot decide between pasta or more typical brunch fare, you don't have to! While some brunch menus are spare, this one is a huge list and would be good for any food mood. I had a giant plate of smoked salmon on toasted bread with cream cheese, tomatoes and capers. Mmm, salty and filling. Abby's challah french toast was a delicious-looking mountain of fluffy bread and fresh fruit. We chatted about updates in life, school and travel and determined our next Brooklyn brunch spot after Abby's spring tour of Europe's fashion capitals!

Sotto Voce
225 7th Ave (and 4th St)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
New York
718-369-9322
http://sottovocerestaurant.com/

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Sundays with Lucia


I met Lucia for a sweet Sunday afternoon treat at the Cocoa Bar in Park Slope. We have met there on many occasions, searching for the answers to life and finding...chocolate. I guess that makes sense.

I have already briefly mentioned the wonders of that place, but it deserves another mention. Even the teas are somehow magically infused with chocolate. We both drank Orange Bliss, a black tea with the aroma of chocolate and smooth taste of orange. Lucia made the serendipitously wise selection of the Sweet and Salty Cake, a chocolate layer cake with fluffy chocolate mousse-like icing and a mysteriously good micro-layer of saltiness between the cake and icing. I'm going back for breakfast tomorrow, perhaps for some coffee and truffles. Mmm, if that were only true.

The Cocoa Bar
228 7th Ave (between 3rd and 4th Sts.)
Park Slope
Brooklyn, New York
718-499-4080
www.cocoabarnyc.com

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Barcade

Twenty-five cent arcade games and happy hour beer. Is this the food effect? Oh, yes. Edwina, one of Erin's friends, planned this after-work outing in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. When you get off the train at Lorimer, the neighborhood looks very un-neighborhood, as though you were dropped off in a random bridge, highway and warehouse land. Although, I did see an large organic market along the way. This is the juxtaposed character of Williamsburg - you can actually watch it in transition from post-industrial to quarterlife crisis hipster-crunchy. Walk tentatively down Union and enter Barcade - a huge, open space lined with arcade games of the 1980's. That night I stuck with Frogger, Donkey Kong, and a promising-sounding "Moon Patrol".

We ordered two giant pizzas from an un-known place, that were plainly and cheesily good. I know the sauce was lightly infused with fresh basil. The box is pictured in case anyone can identify the place - it claims:


Someone there takes great pride in their beer selection, because strewn on the bar are papers with approximately thirty brews listed and described. Those I tried (in order of preference):

Brooklyn Smoked Weissbock: Brewed by the Brooklyn Brewery in Brooklyn, New York. German-style Weissbock has a strong wheat and and banana aroma with flavors of smoked malt, toffee and baked bread. (It really did taste like all of those delightful things)

Climax ESB: Brewed by Climax Brewing in Roselle Park, New Jersey. American style ESB is amber in color with light hop aroma and flavors of sweet orange, toasted malts and biscuits.

Dogfish Head Raison D'Etre: Brewed by Dogfish Head Craft Brewery in Milton, Delaware. Deep mahogany ale brewed with beet sugar, green raisins and Belgian yeast. (I am attracted to anything with beets!)

The bartender was very nice and good-humored and let me sample whenever I looked daunted and baffled by the menu.

Environmental bonus: the establishment claims it is powered by wind!

Barcade
388 Union Ave (between Ainslie and Powers Sts.)
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
New York
718-302-6464
www.barcadebrooklyn.com

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The Gulasch Effect


Gulasch makes Mondays doable. Since I have met wonderful Erin, she has introduced me to another great thing about our neighborhood - Gulasch Night at Cafe Steinhof. For $5 (!) you can have a bowl of tender beef, onions and potatoes in a paprika-stew broth, with a hunk of potato roll to sop it up. Belly warms and fulls immediately. If you're not feeling beefy, for $6 they also have a battered trout over a simple lemony-cold potato salad.

For the famous G Night, you may have to wait at the bar, which is just fine, because they have a range of beer that I've barely begun to sample. Within a few short weeks this winter, the mealtime has become very popular among my new associates. It's sometimes hard to round up and enthuse a group of people for anything, but say the word "Gulasch" + "night" and they come running from the mountains. We somehow fit 10 people at the one round table at Cafe Steinhof, an Austrian "comfort food" bar and restaurant. Mind you, most of these 10 knew 2 or less people upon coming and now have up to 8 new friends! Strange what brings people together.

I'm happy to learn that Gulasch orginated in Hungary (a country of my ancestory), but is a dish that appears in variations all over Europe and America [wikipedia], including in Brooklyn, apparently! It's a rich burgundy color from the paprika, and the Steinhof's variety comes to the table approximately 2 minutes after ordering.

Dessert is bread pudding, if there is room to digest among the main dish. I've had bread pudding explained to me - English side dish served with the roast - but I think it's something more elusive...This one has raisins and is served with applesauce and sour cream. Wow. The 10 minute walk home helps shift things around in the tummy a little. Let's just say I dream of gulasch all night.

(They have a lot of other yummy things besides gulasch!)
Cafe Steinhof
422 7th Ave and 14th St
Park Slope
Brooklyn, NY
718-369-7776
http://www.cafesteinhof.com/