Spooning

misc. meat

The Spooning tote (at right -->) is of course the best holiday gift around, and only $15 including shipping! Just click the Buy Now button! I'll wait...OK, now that I've gotten that out of the way, I can introduce my second favorite tote, this fantastic Meat Mandala bag from Meatpaper. If you aren't familiar, Meatpaper is a magazine all about that most charged and divisive foodstuff (what its website calls "the Hillary Clinton of the freezer aisle"). No, not mayo, meat! This tote (designed by Rebecca Macri, whose foodie designs are worth a gander) is a worthy partner to the Spooning tote, and I give all my readers permission to buy one. But, you have to buy me one too.

 

 

 


i win!

It was my birthday this week, celebrated in style with recession-proof half-priced burgers and $1 happy-hour oysters at my neighborhood haunt, 68, here in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. My friends know me well, so I got several edible gifties—a Bedford Cheese Shop gift certificate, a Momofuku feast, Jacques Torres chocolate-covered Cheerios, French macarons—and a book called Wet Cats, which is inedible but delightful nonetheless. I also learned that sometimes, blogging pays off. In a previous post, I drooled openly over the blue (make that "Caribbean blue") Le Creuset that was the local Casserole Cook-Off's first prize. Well, it turns out my friends actually read this, as they got me the beaut you see here, in mama and baby sizes. My first Le Creusets! I feel like I've made it. And I didn't even have to prove my casserole skills first! Of course, now I will be making them lots of casseroles—starting perhaps with deer chili. (The baby pot will have a single serving of deerless chili, just for you Carrie!)


gather 'round

On November 10, the holiday feasting season officially began (in my mind) with the Fourth Annual Casserole Party, which was created by Emily Farris, friend of Spooning and author of the brand-new cookbook Casserole Crazy. First place went to the creators of Caulifornication, a creamy cauliflower concoction; those lucky cooks got a turquoise Le Creuset pot, which is officially the most beautiful piece of cookware I've ever laid eyes on. Anyway, all that Pyrex and communal feasting made me realize that it's time to get the folks together to eat and be merry. In that spirit, Spooning will be launching a new theme, Gather 'Round, which will open with a terrific piece by Karen Dill about her first memories of Thanksgiving, celebrated with her rural mountain relatives. Moonshine and home-cured ham? Yes, please!


chocolate is the new vanilla

It's an exciting time to be an American. Chocolate is our new favorite flavor, and that can only mean great things for our future. This delectable chocolate White House was featured on the adorable blog-of-the-moment Yes We Cake. (I've actually been marveling for a while about the quantity of baked goods Obama has been inspiring—I don't recall Kerry kupcakes or Clinton clafoutis!) Then there's Comedy Central's Chocolate News (hosted by In Living Color's brilliant David Allen Grier—It only took him til he was 53 to get his own show!). And here in NYC, today is the kick-off of the annual Willy Wonkaesque fantasy that is the Chocolate Show, featuring, among other things, cocoa couture. (This chocolate Wonder Woman get-up takes the, uh, cake.)


the year's best t-shirt

This political season has brought some pretty great tees. (I also kind of want this one, just because...wow.) But, really, the shirt in this photo (sent by a reader in Portland, OR, where it appeared in one of their alt weeklies) says it all. Spooning '08!


a farm grows in brooklyn

There was a little story last week in the New York Times about Added Value, one of my favorite food nonprofits in the city. It's a too-short piece for the subject matter (neighborhood-level agriculture, teaching the yoot the value of veggies, and of entrepreneurship). And I'm 99.9% sure it's the Red Hook-based Sixpoint brewery that's donating grain for mulch (not "Six Forks" brewery--what could "six forks" even mean?). But, it's a good shout-out nonetheless. I encourage everyone to check out Added Value's website and be inspired to take a jackhammer to some pavement in your hood.


buy stock in stock

Not to beat a dying horse here (and with all due credit to Stephen Colbert), but it's kind of interesting how often food has come up as a featured topic during this finanical meltdown. (Grilled-cheese puns galore, for instance.) There was the turnip tale from the UK, and now it's widespread news that Campbell's soup was the only stock that went up during Monday's historic sell-off. As Colbert noted, it's not really that surprising that investors see a future in 89-cent dinners. The reported spike in sales of cheap "comfort foods" also comes as no surprise—damn it all, I need to drown my sorrows in instant buttery spuds! Lean times call for fatty foods.


a neepy surge

According to an article in the London Telegraph, sales of turnips have gone up 75% in the UK over the past year. It marks an interesting side-effect of the current economic calamity—the resurgence of a "credit crunch vegetable," as per one turnip farmer. Turnips haven't been popular in the UK since WWII when the kingdom OD'd on the hearty root, one of very few foodstuffs available. Meanwhile, over at the Guardian, a Scottish writer bemoans these as rooty impostors—not true neeps (as the Scots call them), but rather some insipid white radishy things. You can't mash those up with tatties and make a true clapshot! Anyway, let's see how else our economic collapse effects our diets—Americans should probably start developing a tooth for neeps.


fun with fermentation

So Monday is the official start of Autumn—it's getting down to the 50s at night here in NYC, and I'm starting to enjoy hot food again. It will also mark the launch of a new theme-series on Spooning: Fun With Fermentation. Tis the season for cider, beer, pickles...kombucha. Ushering in the season of fermented goodies, last Sunday was the 8th annual New York Pickle Day, presented by the Pickle Wing of the NYC Food Museum. As the weather cools, yeasty treats will be celebrated at festivals all over from now 'til the next equinox: cider, beer, sake, kimchi, and of course bread. If you are a fermentation fan, send in your stories!


it's tomato time

Tomatoes_blog.jpgFirst, I want to spread the word to all New Yorkers that the Edible magazine family has a new title: a two-week-old magazine called Manhattan. Many of you enjoy Edible Brooklyn (I know I do!), and now we can read about the food culture of what we Brooklynites think of mostly as "the skyline." I was fortunate enough to help the Edible folks out at a couple of farmers' markets last week, and was struck by the loads and loads of tomatoes everywhere. These later-harvest fruits look to be enormous and very, very ripe. I started to fantasize about canning tomatoes, making and freezing sauce, drying them on the roof...One good place to start is with Kate Dwyer's inspiring tomato story, and Susie Troccolo's easy Pasta d'Estate. I may not get around to creating a tomato-product factory in my kitchen, so I'm going to binge on fresh ones 'til they run out.


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