Una fiesta nueva

With all my ingredients from last night’s fiesta de cumpleanos on hand, tonight was the perfect opportunity to try out Caitlin’s baked taco trick that has been floating around everywhere! In an oven-safe bowl, I placed the other homemade whole wheat tortilla, black beans, guacamole, salsa, one of last night’s egg yolks (yes, just the yolk, but yolks are full of nutrition, too!), grated homemade cheddar, and regular store cheddar:

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While the taco shell was crisping in the oven, I sliced another 1/3 of the plantain. This time, I cut the plantain in thin vertical slices the way Aurora, my homestay “mother” from when I was in Peru this summer, used to do it:

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On the side, I had a few corn chips I made the other day. I was out of cornmeal, so instant grits had to do the job! I used equal parts grits and boiliing water (3 Tbsp of each in this case), simmered the mixture until thickened a bit more, and spread it on an oiled pizza stone:

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I baked this at low heat for a long time while I did other things (maybe 250-300 for an hour?) and used a spatula to gently loosen it from the stone once it dried out enough. I let it cook on the other side for a while longer until it was completely crispy and then broke it into little pieces.

Tonight’s plate:

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I’m so excited that the taco shell held its form! Here it is a bit closer:

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And the plantains!

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Any meal that includes avocado and plantains is bound to be a winner!

And for dessert, I had a toasty fig VitaTop with 1/4 cup cinnamon sauce (cinnamon + yogurt + part-skim ricotta):

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Honorable Mentions

Today at lunch, my coworker Belkis offered me 1/4 of her big, juicy blood orange. I said no.

Just kidding! Here it is:

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I was so excited about the orange that Belkis couldn’t stop feeding me (it’s not enough that I eat at about five candies from her candy bowl every single day) and had me taste some of her “Dominican-style” oatmeal. She said she used a packet of Quaker, but I didn’t really see any oats in there — only some warm cinnamon-y vanilla pudding-y goodness:

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Tomorrow is going to be a wild card food day at work. I’m sitting in on the parents’ relaxation group in the morning where there will be breakfast, and then we’re having the potluck lunch (the reason for last night’s blondie-baking) at noon. I may not get around to posting everything until late tomorrow night, but anticipate some food excitement when I finally do!

First-ever T.O.E. guest post: Meet Gina

Don’t you love that the acronym for my blog is “TOE”? I know I do.

Anyway, since both breakfast and lunch today were exactly the same as breakfast and lunch yesterday, I thought it would be a good time to bring in a guest post!

Gina and I have embarked on many food adventures together since we met in college. You’ve actually already met Gina, too, most recently at this dinner. Over the weekend, Gina emailed to present me with the first official TOE-inspired meal along with a real, live tale of expansion from the frontlines, yay! Here’s what Gina had to say:

Your pancake breakfast inspired me! Chris made pancakes Sunday (not from scratch but from Aunt Jemima mix, so I’m sure not as healthy) and I added some strawberries from the frozen Dole ones I bought at Fairway AND I made peanut butter sauce! I did not have any yogurt so I mixed peanut butter and milk and heated it up a bit in the microwave to thicken it. Here it is!

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Gina’s Tale of Expansion: Caruso’s Ristorante Italiano

These pictures (which did not come out very well because I did not set the camera properly and the lighting was bad, so most of them are blurry and dark) are from Caruso’s Ristorante Italiano in Warminster, PA. My grandparents are regulars at this restaurant, and we’ve had other family parties there before. It’s a pretty typical Italian place, and I believe the people who own it are Sicilian because all the pictures on the wall are from Sicily. Everything on the menu sounds so good and my grandfather told us to order whatever we wanted. There was no set menu. The restaurant is BYOB so we brought our own wine, although we are not big drinkers (we’re much bigger eaters!!!). We had 3 tables, a total of 22 people.

My grandfather had pre-ordered appetizers for the tables. I forgot to take pictures of those, but they were these HUGE plates of mussels, baked clams, calamari and (randomly) broccoli. Plus, he also ordered a couple orders of chicken fingers with fries and mozzerella sticks for the “kids.” Remember, these were just the appetizers! I was not at the kids’ table, but I had 2 mozzerella sticks, a TON of mussels, 2 baked clams, some calamari and some broccoli, which was quite good because the sauce was all garlic and tomatos. YUM!

I had ordered a cup of crab chowder because my grandfather was telling us how good it was, so that came next. The soup was good and thankfully it was a pretty small cup. Then, I also had a side salad before my entree came out because the meal came with a salad! Needless to say, I was already full before my entree even arrived.

The first picture is of my meal, Veal Oscar: veal with crabmeat and asparagus in a white wine sauce over pasta:

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So yummy. I thankfully restrained myself from eating it all and took about half home. I think almost everyone had to take some of their food home because the entrees were VERY generous and we had already eaten all that food before the main courses.

The next picture is a very blurry shot of angel hair pasta with crabmeat and shrimp in a marinara sauce:

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This is a special that’s not on the menu but that they prepare for my grandfather every time he goes to the restaurant. I told you he’s a regular! As you can tell, my family quite enjoys seafood!

Then I took pics of the desserts because they were pretty.

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Chris's tiramisu

my chocolate mousse cake (but it tasted a bit of coffee with not enough chocolate and mousse in my opinion)

my chocolate mousse cake (but it tasted a bit of coffee with not enough chocolate and mousse in my opinion)

my aunt's cheescake with raspberry sauce

my aunt's cheescake with raspberry sauce

my grandmom's spumoni (ice cream with raspberry and chocolate sauce)-

my grandmom's spumoni (ice cream with raspberry and chocolate sauce)

I was SO full after this meal! I should have taken a picture of my expanded stomach because it was certainly VERY expanded. I don’t know how I managed to eat that dessert — it was just such an overabundance of food! This is a typical family party for my Italian side of the family though. Even when we cook at someone’s house, there’s always way too much food and way too much dessert, in addition to way too many appetizers so that I’m already full by the time we eat dinner. Such is life in an Italian family!

Thanks for contributing, Gina! If anyone else out there has a tale of expansion to share, let me know in a comment and I’ll email you back!

Happy birthday, Emily!! (plus Mexican food and blondies)

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Today is my sister Emily’s birthday. I considered joining my family for the celebration dinner tonight. But then I remembered it is in San Francisco. And I am in New York. Not possible. However, armed with the knowledge that they are all right now enjoying each other’s company and something deliciously Mexican here (siblings, I will expect full reports on your feast!), I decided to join the birthday dinner in spirit with my own Mexican feast.

But first … a disclaimer. Because tonight is a work night and a 9pm bedtime night (which I’m already past, ahhh!), time was of the essence and I had to cut some corners, the horror! You’re about to see a lot of packaged foods, but just know that my preference would have been to use dry beans and homemade cheese and to make my salsa and guac from scratch!

So before I left work, I hit up the grocery store next to my office for a giant plantain, a can of black beans, two mini cans of tomato sauce (so I don’t end up in this situation again, plus they were only 20 cents each!), a small container of part-skim ricotta, and a pack of four little zucchinis for the BSI contest (assuming I get to it in time!):

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I spent $6.44, bringing the week’s grocery total up to $23, still significantly under-budget, yay!

I did manage to make my whole wheat tortilla from scratch since it’s quick enough to do and I only needed one (not a pack of eight). I first got the idea for making these a several months ago from Heather at HangryPants who linked to this recipe from King Arthur flour. I kind of made it up as I went along tonight since, again, I did not need to make eight wraps. I used 1/4 cup whole wheat flour, 1 Tbsp olive oil, a sprinkle of salt, and just enough water to turn it into dough. I actually ended up with enough for two little balls:

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I covered the bowl with a plate to let the balls rest for 30 minutes and started on project #2 of the night: Peanut Butter Pumpkin Blondies, also from Heather! I was clearly meant to make this recipe tonight because I had exactly what I needed — and not a drop more — for most of the ingredients. I used my last cup of pb, my last cup of pumpkin, my last cup of white chocolate chips (ok, roommate Brigitte’s last cup of white chocolate chips), and my last two cups of whole wheat pastry flour. I got a little worried when the recipe said to pour and my batter looked like this:

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But I scooped it all into a parchment-lined 9×13 baking dish and tossed it into the oven so I could get back to the burrito-making. Oh, but first, I had to deal with the batter clear space. Here’s what the counter looked like:

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Because I do not permit food waste in this house apartment, I rubber-spatula-ed everything within an inch of its life and put it in this little ramekin for safe-keeping:

mmmmm, batter!

mmmmm, batter!

Back to the dinner prep, I floured a cutting board and rolled out the two little dough balls until they were thinner than paper, almost transparant, and cooked them one at a time on a dry, non-stick pan:

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When both sides were browned to my liking, I chose the bigger wrap and placed it on foil on a cookie sheet:

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And topped it with 1/4 cup black beans, 1/4 cup Wholly Guacamole! (thawed from a tub that I rescued from a work party last month and froze), 2 Tbsp salsa (again, thank you Brigitte!), and one slice of some sort of Kraft fat free mystery cheese that never goes bad (thank you, Tara!):

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I wrapped it in burrito shape and formed the foil around it in a little cocoon to hold it in place:

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At this point, the buzzer went off for the blondies, so I took them out to cool and put the foiled-burrito-on-cookie-sheet in to heat through and get melty for five minutes. During those five minutes, I prepared 1/3 of my enormous plaintain by slicing it in diagonal rounds and browning both sides in a teeny bit of oil in the pan. Once the sides were sufficiently browned, I added a little water to the pan to soften the slices some more:

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Meanwhile, I tried to use my nana-clip to keep the cut end of the plantain fresh. Needless to say, it was too small:

can you spot the blondies cooling in the top right corner?

can you spot the blondies cooling in the top right corner?

When the plantains finished cooking, I quickly threw the egg yolks left over from the blondies into the pan for a scramble:

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I figured the protein would come in handy soon, so the yolks are now safely refrigerated.

Five minutes later, everything was in order: the blondies were cooling, the plantains were browned, the burrito was hot and melty and topped with sour cream plain yogurt, and I could finally sit down to eat. Oh wait, I had to take 30,000 pictures first:

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Cross-section:

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It was delicious, obviously.

Now, dessert may come as a total and complete shock to you, so make sure you’re sitting down. I ate some freshly baked blondie:

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No, not the whole pan!

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No, not a whole row either! (That one’s for Brigitte in return for her white chocolate chips, sugar, and full stick of butter!)

I cut a little piece of blondie for myself and also had the, er, “crumbs” that just weren’t fit for public consumption. And don’t worry — I didn’t forget my ball of batter!

Em, I was singing happy birthday to you while I took this picture!

Em, I was singing happy birthday to you while I took this picture!

Closer:

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Are you drooling yet?

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Mmmmmm, what a perfect birthday celebration dinner! I am definitely feeling the sugar right now, but it’s nothing a little 5am gym action won’t fix :-). Thanks for the recipes, Heather!

I’ll leave you with a rare all-siblings photo from this time last year when I was able to make a birthday visit:

niece Ella, me, sister Allie, brother Chad, bday girl Emily, niece Dixie, brother Mark

clockwise from bottom: niece Ella (being tortured, clearly), me, sister Allie, brother Chad, bday girl Emily, niece Dixie, brother Mark ... yay family!

Happy Happy Happy Birthday, Emily! I love you and wish I were there!

Compromise

I really really really wanted pizza for dinner tonight, but I didn’t have tomato sauce. And the pizza place is four long blocks away. And the grocery store is six longer blocks away. And it’s snowing. I could have made some sort of crazy pumpkin sauce or even used my red lentil soup as sauce since it’s so thick, but I was only in the mood for some traditional cheesy, saucy pizza. So I gave up. I made pasta instead. Some things aren’t meant to be.

I used 1/3 cup dry whole wheat pasta. While it was boiling, I chopped more red cabbage — the only available vegetable I have (my carrots are for work snacks) — and tossed that in with the pasta. Then I started to worry about not having enough protein, especially after today’s exercise-fest … until I remembered a trick my stepmom taught me years and years ago when pasta was all I ever ate (literally).  I beat an egg in a bowl, poured it into the boiling pasta and cabbage, gave a little stir, and voila! Protein problem solved:

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The fun thing about red cabbage is that it turns everything a deep blue, and blue is my favorite color! Here’s the pasta water after it all finished cooking:

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To my pasta bowl, I added a Tbsp pesto (pre-made!), grated fresh parmesan, grated homemade cheddar, and freshly ground black pepper:

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Details:

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The cabbage turned my egg blue!

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For dessert, I had 1/6 of a giant banana with just under a Tbsp peanut butter:

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And a Godiva dark chocolate:

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With raspberry caramel inside!

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Time to start getting ready for bed and the real work week tomorrow.  I feel so off-balance after just one day off! What do you do to get back into the swing of things after a vacation?

Restaurant Review: Le Pain Quotidien

As mentioned, I accidentally went out to dinner last night after the movie. Whoops! Maybe I couldn’t afford it, but it was sooooo good. Gina, Kate, the Feld, and I went to Union Square’s Le Pain Quotidien, a bakery/boulangerie chain that has recently added several new locations throughout the city. The specials board pulled us in:

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Restaurants seem to be all about philosophies these days, and Le Pain Quotidien is no exception. From the menu:

“The idea behind Le Pain Quotidien is simply to make a good daily bread, a handmade bread with a good crust and a firm slice, the kind of bread that makes great tartines. Bread not only to nourish the body, but the spirits as well. A bread best shared around a table, to be savored among friends.”

Normally, I’m not so into chains, but this one was right there and we were
cold. As soon as we crossed the threshold, all chain skepticism vanished because the decor was so simple and sparse that we felt as though we were inside an authentic French country farm kitchen.

Gina ordered the Garden Quiche, and it takes the prize for the best looking quiche I’ve ever seen. I had one bite and discovered it was also the fluffiest and lightest quiche I’ve ever tasted. Usually quiches turn me off because they are dense and slimy, but not this beauty:

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The Feld and I split the Goat Cheese & Arugula Salad with parmesan, toasted pine nuts, olive oil, and lemon (530 calories, as the menu so bluntly stated):

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And the Ricotta Tartine (this is what Kate got, too) with mission figs, diced tomatoes, black pepper, and organic acacia honey (390 calories):

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Here’s my portion of salad:

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This salad had everything I love. I think it was designed just for me with these huge slivers of parmesan, mmmmm:

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Here’s my portion of the tartine:

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It was superbly delicious as well! I want to be able to balance all these exclamations of perfection with some complaints, but I can’t. Figs, ricotta, and honey can’t help but form a magical food trinity:

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Then, the Feld had a brilliant idea! She topped her tartine pieces with some of the parmesan from the salad and gave me a bite:

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The parmesan added just the right touch of saltiness to transform the tartine into a salty-sweet masterpiece. And for all of this deliciousness, I only spent $14, including tax and tip! (The price only becomes a problem when I factor in the $12.50 I had just spent on the movie and the $19 I had spent on dinner the night before. Oh well, I will make it up.) Definitely worth it.

The only downside was temperature. The restaurant was pretty drafty thanks to a side door that randoms kept using to come in from the street. I spent the last half hour fully bundled in my scarf and coat!

I took a picture of us, but again, we looked so cold and bedraggled in it (it’s just not prime photo season, is it??) so here’s one from July when we were neither cold nor bedraggled. L to R — Kate, Q (who couldn’t make it tonight but was present for this brunch), me, the Feld, and Gina:

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And you know I couldn’t leave the restaurant without a little somethin’ somethin’ to bring home so, at the urging of the others, I wrapped these in a napkin and stuffed them into my purse:

hunk of French bread, slice of "organic wheat" bread

hunk of French bread, slice of "organic wheat" bread

Perhaps there is French toast in my future???