Thursday, September 12, 2013

how to be the boss

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My friend Mish is what I like to call Good at Life. Her house is well kept, she has an important and meaningful job, she’s the go-to organizer for group vacations, girls’ getaways and any manner of shower, whether it be bridal or baby. Her house is the type of place where if guests just dropped by, she would have the stuff to prepare a full meal, including wine and dessert. She has, as they say, her shit together. In college we gave her the nickname The Boss, because planning and strategizing come so naturally to her, that we always deflected to her to be the boss. Now that we are grown, she is an actual boss of, like, a lot of people and even though I don’t work for her I can guarantee she is wicked good at it.

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Her house is one of my favorite places to invite myself for dinner. I will call her on a Tuesday evening, when my husband is otherwise occupied and inquire as to what she’s doing that evening. She will tell me that her and Anthony are hanging in and making some supper with not much else on the agenda and I will act super interested in whatever she is making until she inevitably invites me over. I almost always accept. Because what awaits you at her house is not just good conversation, a variety of adult beverages and a delicious, balanced meal, but also a house that is cozy and neat and the kind of place you want to spend time at. It’s toasty in the winter and cool in the summer. Her back deck is peppered with healthy, mature plants, both edible and decorative. And she also has a giant jar of M&Ms in her cupboard at all times, so if you need a chocolate fix after a meal, you are covered.

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By comparison at my house I pretty much only have the groceries for the exact meal we are having that evening (with no leftovers) and the best I can offer for a sweet treat is raw almonds and some stale chocolate chips. My house is the living worst to snack at. Everything needs to be prepared or doctored in some way and often times if I’m tired I just wave a white flag and call I Love Italian Pizza Best (yes, that is the actual name of our go-to pizza place. It’s run by Albanians). At Mish’s house on the other hand, there are always the groceries you need as well as a vase of fresh cut flowers from the garden on the table. It’s the best and she is too. She is so good at life that I would probably kind of hate her if I didn’t love her so dang much.

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I encourage everyone to have a Mish. Everyone should also have a side dish like this: for week nights when you’re short on time but looking to pull together something homemade. On many occasions she has made me this cous cous salad and I always scarf down a ton and then accept leftovers. This is a healthy, simple side that can be dressed up or down easily and improvised with whatever happens to be in the fridge or pantry. It makes plenty for leftovers so lunch the next day is already accounted for. It also comes together in about five minutes, which means with this one in your arsenal, you can be Good at Life too.

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THE BOSS’ COUS COUS SALAD

¾ cup cherry or golden cherry tomatoes, halved
½ red onion, minced
1-2 ears of corn, steamed, grilled or charred; kernels cut from cob
1 zucchini, diced
½ red pepper, diced
½ cup almonds (or walnuts or pinenuts), chopped and toasted
½ cup golden raisins
Juice from one lemon
Extra virgin olive oil (3-4 tablespoons)
½ cup chopped mint
½ cup chopped flat leaf parsley
1 box plain cous cous, prepared according to package directions

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Set almonds to toast in a small nonstick pan over medium low heat. Toast, stirring occasionally until browned and fragrant. Remove from pan and set aside. Heat 1-2 teaspoons of olive oil in the small pan over medium heat. Add diced zucchini and let sauté until browned and golden. Season with salt and pepper and set aside. Once you’re ready to get dinner on the table, prepare cous cous. In a large bowl combine fully cooked cous cous with all vegetables. Salt and pepper generously and add lemon juice and remaining olive oil. Toss together gently to combine. Add almonds, golden raisins and herbs and gently toss together again.

You can mix and match the things you put in here based on what you have on hand; but the items you absolutely must include are the golden raisins and the nuts, they really make it. Serve warm or at room temperature alongside grilled chicken thighs or marinated grilled pork chops. Also terrific as leftovers with slices of ripe avocado.

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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

mostly and some

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So deep has my blog neglect been this summer that I plumb forgot that I had posted a second recipe in August. When I opened up the old Dickens home page the other afternoon I was like “oh snap, I actually posted twice in August” with a slightly surprised, slightly relieved feeling that I hadn’t been completely and totally MIA, only mostly and some.

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I spent a bit of early August bellyaching, rather dramatically, that I was being robbed of a summer AGAIN. Last summer wedding planning co-opted all my spare time and this summer the necessity of having to move was victimizing me yet again. WAAAH. I know. I think I just pulled an ocular muscle rolling my eyes at myself. The truth is, if I spin my binoculars right side up and look at it right, that we were forced to have a bit of temporary inconvenience in order to reach a long term conclusion. Just like the wedding: all the planning and logistical maneuvering in the case, will also prove to be totally worth it. Completely and totally worth it.

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We have had the great fortune of staying with my aunt and uncle in their beautiful, wonderful house. A house that has always been one of my most favorite places in the whole world; a house that is four minute and twenty five second walk from the beach (at a leisurely pace, with a toddler in tow). And more than being in a great location with a real nice porch this house has been, as it always was, a place to bond with the extended family. We have had so much fun eating dinner with my aunt and uncle and seeing more of my other aunts, uncles and cousins than I ever normally would.

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The communal living of summer 2013 has certainly served us well.

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I have been cooking a ton, although I haven’t been quite as good at documenting and sharing; and for that I am sorry. But I had to slow everything down given the crushing pace of the spring and early summer. I had to really focus on enjoying my meals, rather than documenting them; and that is something, in this day and age, that I would pretty much urge anyone to do. By adjusting my pace a bit and letting go of the guilt of what I thought I SHOULD be doing, I was able to actually enjoy what I WAS doing, as I was doing it. Imagine that.

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So, when I sat down this morning and combed through all of the photos from the past two months I realized that I would look like a real baby to complain about a summer like this. I mean, there were far too many nights on a screened-in porch and about ten too many dunks in the ocean for it to possibly be classified as anything but perfect.

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Thursday, August 15, 2013

something else

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Because I am still playing catch up from a fast paced summer, I am just now uploading photographs from things I cooked in June and July. And I mean, crap I did quite a bit of cooking. And not enough sharing! Such a classic youngest child. This pasta here was one of the last proper dinners I cooked in my cozy little apartment kitchen for Paul and myself before we moved out. I was catching up on a few of my favorite blogs in between packing up boxes and Molly on Orangette gave this such a rousing endorsement that I literally scratched out the ingredients on a scrap of paper and went straight to the store to buy pine nuts.

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This dish is a very different kind of pasta made up of a host of tastes that you probably wouldn’t normally associate with classic Italian-style pasta dishes. Basil sure, he’s a familiar one, and even peas and pine nuts but a blended yogurt sauce and a spicy, textured, nutty oil for garnishing make it truly unique and something else altogether. It just seemed like it might be too weird not to try and I’m glad I did. I ate the leftovers over the course of two days standing in front of the fridge with the door open, forkful by forkful. This is always a sign of success.

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Pasta with Yogurt, Peas and Red Pepper Pine Nut Oil
(from Jerusalem, by way of Orangette)

1 pound pasta (whichever shape you like I used shells and they worked great. Orchiette is another excellent choice)
2 ½ cups whole-milk Greek yogurt
2/3 cup olive oil, divided
2 medium cloves garlic, crushed or pressed
1 pound fresh or thawed frozen peas
Kosher salt
Scant ½ cup pine nuts
2 teaspoons red pepper flakes
1 cup basil leaves, coarsely torn
8 ounces feta cheese, coarsely crumbled

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In the bowl of a food processor combine the yogurt, garlic, 2/3 cup peas and 6 tablespoons of the olive oil. Process into a uniform consistency pale green sauce and transfer to a large bowl.

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Bring a large pot of water to boil and salt generously. Add pasta and cook, according to package directions, until al dente. While the pasta cooks heat the remaining olive oil in a small pan over medium heat. Add the pine nuts and red pepper flakes and cook for about 4 minutes, or until the nuts are golden and all the oil is a deep burnished red. When the timer on your pasta reads 3 minutes, toss the peas into the pot. You can cook and strain everything together to skip dirtying another pot.

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Gradually add the pasta and peas to the yogurt sauce, stirring together thoroughly at each addition so as not to curdle the yogurt with the heat of the cooked pasta. Add the torn basil, feta and a teaspoon of kosher salt. Toss together gently. Serve immediately, spooning the pine nut-red pepper oil over each individual serving. This is such a delicious study in contrasts...cool and tangy, salty and sweet with a nice punch of fire and crunch from the oil. Yogurt sauce might be kind of strange sounding for some but I would make this again in a minute.

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

the time being

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This bowl of mussels was enjoyed on the very first Saturday, of the very first heat wave during the very first week of June. JUNE. I am slightly horrified that it has taken me this long to share it with you. Since we sat on the back deck and slurped up this appetizer with big hunks of freshly baked ciabatta, we have gone to Spain and back for our honeymoon, looked at approximately 10 terrible apartments, slogged our way through two more heat waves, packed up the whole of our worldly possessions and placed them in storage to move in with my aunt and uncle; and, finally, begun the process of buying a house.

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So it’s been kind of a busy summer and one I have spent much of feeling overwhelmed, over heated and stressed out. When you aren’t sure where you’re going to live and you run into more problems finding a place than you ever possibly thought would happen you start to feel a little panicked and rootless. This feeling for me resulted in a stress-based reaction in which I combined equal parts laziness and avoidance with the addition of an increased intake of desserts.

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But now we are settled-ish. For a bit. And there’s an exciting (!) light at the end of the tunnel. A place of our very own, where from we will never have to move. Ever again. We decided, at the invitation of my aunt and uncle, to come stay at their house for the month of August, because well, it’s one of the nicest places to be and it’s right near the beach. This proximity, as havoc-wreaking as it is on our commutes, is a reward to ourselves for a summer which was completely co-opted by the search for housing and the endlessly annoying task of sorting, cleaning and packing every single one of our worldly possessions and placing them neatly into storage.

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So we are here for the time being and living like bourgeois gypsies in a very nice house on a very nice street just three blocks from my very favorite beach. My aunt and uncle have a good kitchen: a nice, functional space which will host Porky for the next few weeks. They also have a screened in porch and a propensity for having cake on the counter and drinking wine every night. So I think we will fit in just fine here. Though we are slightly uprooted we are far from rootless and we will be cooking as usual, just in a different zip code.
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COCONUT LEMONGRASS MUSSELS 

2 lbs. mussels, scrubbed
2-3 tbs. olive oil
3 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
1 2-inch knob fresh ginger, peeled and grated
3 stalks lemongrass, bruised and sliced*
1 can coconut milk
½ white onion or 1 small shallot, diced
1 ½ tsp. crushed red pepper or dried chili pepper
1 cup dry white wine (I recommend Chilean or French Sauvignon Blanc)
Juice from ½ lemon
1-2 tsp. lemon zest
½ chopped cilantro

Fresh baguette or ciabatta, cut into thick slices and toasted or grilled

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*to "bruise" lemon grass, Use the flat side of a chef's knife to wack it, cracking the tough, woody outer layer, then finely chop the stalks like you would scallions. Chop yours smaller than mine, those giant slices were a mistake.

Heat olive oil in a large pot over medium-high heat, add onion and sauté 2-3 minutes; add garlic, ginger, lemon grass and crushed red pepper and stir together. Let simmer a few minutes more (2-3). Turn heat up a touch and pour in wine and lemon juice, stir together well and let reduce for about a minute, scraping the bottom of the pan to loosen any browned bits of onion. Pour in coconut milk and add mussels, clamp the lid on and reduce heat a bit to medium. Let cook, covered, until all mussels are open and broth is reduced a bit.

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To serve: spoon mussels into a large bowl and pour broth over. Top with lemon zest and cilantro. Serve immediately accompanied by lots of bread to sop up the broth, a few cold beers and at least one to two good friends. This is a perfect summer appetizer if it’s not too hot to turn on a burner.

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Ciao Porky! Part IV: TOSCANA

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Bright and early the next morning, we woke up and loaded into the bus. We drove west, away from the Adriatic, over the rolling mountains of Umbria and into Tuscany. “Tuscany,” said my friend Tim when he prepared me for the trip “…is one of those places where my expectation was here (holds hand pretty high), because you hear so much. And when I got there, the reality was like here (holds hand as high as it can humanly go).” I got the idea. But I didn’t know, until I knew. Looking back at my trip journal I used the word ‘insane’ four times in one paragraph when writing about our ride through Umbria into Tuscany. It truly is that beautiful; or, as I put in my chicken scratch “the Tuscan countryside is so insanely beautiful it’s almost weird.” Now I live in New England. So I roll through beautiful landscapes on the regular; but Tuscany, like the Grand Canyon, is so mind blowingly picturesque that you feel like you could snap the cord at the bottom of the screen and the picture will roll up like a map, only to expose a dusty studio lot in the San Fernando Valley somewhere. It’s the kind of beauty where reality is so pretty it feels like fiction. So much so that I rolled through the hills with a lump in my throat, trying not to cry, because I felt so sublimely happy that my life had taken me here. How did I get so lucky?

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We weaved down to the southwest corner of Tuscany to a region known as Maremma, the DOC zone is Montecucco and the wines produced there have the benefit of cool breezes rolling up from the sea and the steep rises and valleys of the hills and mountains dotting the area. We drove through a teeny tiny town perched on the side of a hill where Bruno threaded a giant passenger bus around a corner which could not have accommodated two fiats at the same time. Now normally on the bus the volume level always rose and lowered in waves. Early morning was quiet, long stretches of drive, also relatively quiet, as we closed in on a destination everyone would perk up and chat, music would play and Vesce would get on the microphone reminding us to wear our name tags, introduce ourselves properly and other normal human behaviors that any adult would regularly perform without coaching, lest we forget. Feeling super stimulated by our gorgeous surroundings and anticipated arrival at Colle Massari, we were at like an 8 out of 10 on the volume knob. As Bruno slowly, carefully, with LIT-rally 4 inches on either side to spare, wheeled us around a hair pin turn surrounded on either side by buildings and more buildings, everyone grew quiet, then silent and then promptly burst into applause and cheers when he cleared the corner. Of course he did! As I mention in my first post: he’s a bus driving machine.

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Our stop in Maremma was Colle Massari, a high altitude, high powered, up and coming winery with legendary Tuscan winemaker Maurizio Castelli at the helm of their ship. They are serious business. The owner, Claudio Tipa’s home, which he and his wife graciously let us briefly visit, is a meticulously restored 12th century castle perched on the top of a hill overlooking their 600 acres of vineyards. I want to know what this guy majored in when he went to college, because I really could have used his academic advisor. The drive up to the castle was crazy picturesque. Golden sunlight beat down, hawks soared overhead, Jess tried not to cry a little bit more so as not to be The Weirdo that Cried on the Bus, and we passed miles and miles of verdant green vineyards. Following a quick and truncated tour of the castle we headed “across the street” (i.e. back down a small mountain and around the side of a vineyard) to their winemaking facility.

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Juxtaposed against the green Tuscan hills, it cuts a striking figure in the landscape: all clean lines and concrete. It is a stunning spot and the jewel in its crown has to be their award-winning cellar. Open segments of the wall expose the ragged rock that it was drilled into. Along the ceiling they had arching cedar planks to keep any damp funkiness out and periodically, pufts of steam would spurt out of vents made for maintaining perfect humidity. Oh, and there was also a waterfall to spit into, because why not? We got to drink straight from the cask (before you picture keg stands, it wasn’t like that, they used a pitcher) and then spit into said waterfall before we headed upstairs for our seminar, tasting and lunch.

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Our visit to Tuscany was one of the biggest marathon days of our trip. It was also a study in contrasts in the best possible way. We loaded up after lunch and rolled 2 hours north straight into the heart of Chianti Classico to Vignamaggio. Picture this if you will: we leave Colle Massari’s slick, stark, futuristic building where the presentation was led by their polished and well heeled Dutch export manager and Maurizio, who is an intimidating figure in designer glasses, up to a burnt orange, rambling villa that’s so old that it’s shape softly leans into the hillside where we were greeted by two regular looking dudes in dusty jeans and soccer shoes. To say they were different is a bit of an understatement. But together, these two visits painted a perfect picture of winemaking in Tuscany: vital, deeply rooted in history and centuries of tradition, but forward-looking, constantly evolving and hugely successful. Wine trends come and go, but as long as the Sangiovese vines keep growing, Tuscany’s popularity as a place and producing region will go nowhere.

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Vignamaggio’s winemaking facility is located within a 14th century villa, which just so happens to be the home where Monna Lisa was born. It is also the place where she lived while her famed portrait was painted over the course of several years by Da Vinci; in fact, the view from the front terrace, our host pointed out, was the original background for the work. Sandro, our main host, was not only adept at pointing out all the wonderful unique things about the property itself, but also had the added bonus of being completely hilarious. He had so many perfect one liners and such boundless energy that I pretty much ran out of room in my notes to include all the gems he was spurting out. My personal favorite though was when he was speaking about being careful not to kill their wines with too much oak aging and he said "We believe that a wine should be tasting of a fruit, not of a chair."

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Their wines however, are no joke: refined and focused, they are a perfect example of why Chianti Classicos are so very popular. Elegant, balanced and food friendly, Vignamaggio's portofolio showcases of course a few top notch Chiantis, but also illustrates the success that they've had working with different types of grapes, most notably, their knockout Cabernet Franc. The vintage we tasted was everything a red wine should be: lush, layered, inviting and complex, perfectly in balance and ready to drink now, or several years down the road. Now at the end of a marathon day, driving hours in hot, sunny weather, such as we were, it can feel "tough" (I'm using the term with sarcastic quotations around it on purpose, because I know it's ridiculous to even hint at. I'm sure you a feeling a ton of empathy for my 'tough' day, riding through the countryside drinking wine; but I only mean that at 5 p.m. on a hot sunny day you probably want some water, maybe a beer, but instead you will taste red wine and several of them, because this is your job. i.e.: not tough at all) to saddle up to a table filled with red wines to taste; but Vignamaggio's offerings, being what they are, and Sandro, possessing that particular type of infectious energy of a man that truly loves what he does, brightened us right up and enthused, we happily slurped away. It also helps when wines are out of sight good, which these were.

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After our tasting we toured the rest of the grounds and facility, wandering through the intact Renaissance style gardens, down through their fermentation and barrel rooms into their cellar, which was really something else. At 700 years old, I am guessing it may be the oldest cellar I will ever set foot in, and certainly was the oldest that we saw on our trip. It still looks majestic and regal and apperpo to be storing such terrific wines, albeit, a little bit spider-webbed, which only added to its charm. The estate felt almost frozen in time from the outside, with its meticulously maintained gardens and sweeping views from every terrace; and hidden underneath was a facility just as modern as any seen on the trip. But further down still was the cellar, the heart and soul, untouched, unspoiled and a perfectly preserved piece of history. At one point during his presentation, Sandro spoke of wine making in Tuscany and said "In Tuscany wine is not a job, it's our life." Taking a look out at the rows of vines stretching in every direction, breathing in the sweetly perfumed air and sipping wine just steps away from where it was grown, I thought to myself that it's got to be a good life surrounded by beauty like this. As the sun dipped further down in the sky, we packed back up into the bus and eased our way down the hill on to the road towards Florence. Tuscany is a place that not only lives up to its hype it surpasses far beyond it, a beautiful place filled with beautiful people living a very good life. It is a place worth seeing again and again. I can't wait to go back.

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For more on my trip, see parts I, II and III.

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