Thursday, February 26, 2009

Pantry Paella: Recipe

Pantry Paella
My kitchen is overflowing. My freezer is so full I can barely close it. I sometimes hear the crash of bottles, jars and tins falling off my pantry shelves and onto the floor. I seriously think I could cook and eat without going out of the house for a month. Ok, I might get bored of tuna and beans and pasta, but then again, maybe not. I have no idea what causes me to hoard food, but I sometimes imagine I must have been a starving Italian casalinga in another lifetime.

The other day I was thinking about using the short grain Valencia rice I had languishing in the cupboard to make paella. I was going to buy some shrimp but as I perused various recipes it became clear to me that you can make paella with just about any combination of vegetables, seafood or meat. There is no one paella. I figured I might as well use what I have on hand. In my pantry I had a jar of artichokes and a can of green olives, and in the freezer I had pearl onions, peas and a single sausage. Those ingredients were what I used on top of the paella rice. I tweaked the technique I found in a Mark Bittman recipe Tomato Paella to make the rice.

I know it seems hard to believe, but I only used one sausage for 4 servings of paella! Actually, you could easily make this a vegetarian dish. The idea is to use any leftover cooked or prepared vegetables and meats you have on hand or to raid your pantry. I wouldn't make this recipe unless I had several things I wanted to use up. This recipe is a good excuse for not throwing away that 1/4 cup of leftover carrots or peas or whatever you find yourself staring at when cleaning up after dinner. The variations are endless.

Pantry Paella
Serves 4

4 cups liquid, a combination of broth, water and juice from toppings (see below)
1 tablespoon tomato paste
Large pinch saffron threads
2 teaspoons paprika, preferably Spanish pimentón (smoked paprika)
2 1/2 cups toppings--cooked vegetables, seafood, meat (such as peas, artichokes, green olives, red peppers, shrimp, chicken, sausage)
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
2/3 cup onion, minced
1 tablespoon minced garlic, about 2 large cloves
2 cups preferably Spanish or other short-grain rice
Minced parsley for garnish
Lemon wedges

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Combine stock and water with tomato paste, saffron and paprika in a saucepan and heat.
Put oil in a 10- or 12-inch ovenproof skillet over medium-high heat. Add onion and garlic, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, until vegetables soften, 3 to 5 minutes. Add rice and cook, stirring occasionally, until it is shiny, another minute or two. Add liquid and stir until just combined.

Put pan in oven and roast, undisturbed, for 15 minutes. Check to see if rice is dry and just tender. If not, return pan to oven and continue cooking for another 5 minutes. If rice is dry but still is not quite done, add a small amount of stock or water or white wine. Amount of liquid will vary depending upon the size of your pan. When rice is ready, turn off oven, sprinkle toppings on rice and cover with lid or foil. Let pan sit in the oven for 5 to 15 minutes. Sprinkle with parsley and serve with lemon.

Enjoy!

Monday, February 23, 2009

I want this..

See this, and contemplate...

Now, what do you think it is? A luxurious storage system to bring fancy makeup or accessories along wherever you go, right? The one like Paris Hilton or someone rich carrying around. You're wrong. This is a photo album. Can't believe it? Me neither. These are products of Indonesia own photography agency, Axioo. Man, I'm proud to announce that these guys (and girls) are Indonesian (not much of real good gems you can find here). They usually serve as wedding and events photographer, and as a whole package, Axioo will make you these albums, base on your choice, to treasure your moments taken by them. I am desperately want one of these!


Some may think, isn't this too much for an album?

Well, seriously, look again. I think it's out of necessity, it's a MUST! Are you a bride or bride to be or 5 years old bride? Envy the brides in these pictures. Such pain.

The Ungarnished Truth, A Cooking Contest Memoir: Book Review

The Ungarnished Truth


I'll admit it, even though I find most of the recipes atrocious, I am fascinated by the Pillsbury Bake-Off. Every two years the contest is held with much fanfare and prizes, including a million dollar grand prize. The judges are generally food editors and choose recipes based on taste, appearance, creativity and consumer appeal, but because the recipes use packaged "convenience" foods, they often end up sounding bizarre. Samosa Taquitos with Apricot Chutney Sauce, anyone? Or Huevos Rancheros Pizza?

The Ungarnished Truth, A Cooking Contest Memoir "A Woman, A Chicken Dinner, A Million Dollars" is out now in paperback and I devoured the book in two sittings. Bake-off grand prize winner and author Ellie Matthews is smart, funny and very engaging. Her story gives an almost unbelievable level of detail on her road to the win. But even if she never won anything, you would want to read about this quirky and down to earth woman (who shocked everyone by not jumping up and down or screaming when she won).

In some ways Matthews is a most unlikely contestant. With a scientific mind, and a passion for the outdoors, she is not who you'd imagine even entering contests, but enter she does. Perhaps her amazing eye for detail comes from the fact that she is fully expecting not to win. In fact, she tells herself, and her readers that her first appearance in the Bake-Off is just a practice run.

In addition to sharing everything about the contest and her recipe development strategies, Matthews also shares intimate emotional elements and how the contest wove its way into to her life, even helping her reconnect with a very dear friend she met during a dramatic tragic event in the mountains. But enough about it from me, just read the book, it's an absolute pleasure.

In Love




Just take a look at these and fall in love.


From ashesandmilk.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Boho Mag


After the sad lost of my favorite magazines like Craft, Domino, and Blueprint, I am so happy that someone still bring wonderful and fresh magazines up to the rack. Meet Boho, a green fashion and lifestyle magazine! Boho mag is not currently new, but I just happened to find out about them on issue 3 (I'm in Indonesia, the distribution of imported magazine is limited).

As I am a magazine freak and a paper crazy girl (I know I'm crazy about paper, I sniff it, loving the smell, and rub my hands all over it back and forth just to "taste" the texture, even if it's not enough I really "taste" the texture with my lips! There. I AM CRAZY!) I'm really happy that Boho is printed on recyclable papers, even the covers! So instead of shiny and glossy look they opt for a matted, more grainy paper. The colors may look dull at first, compared to regular fashion magazine like Bazzar, but it actually delivers a unique tone of colors that accentuate the whole magazine's theme and bring more different sensation of flipping through a magazine! Love it.

Friday, February 20, 2009

100 Things to Eat (in San Francisco)

100 Things to Try Before You Die



Have you seen the 100 Things to Try Before You Die list over at 7x7? It's a terrific to do list. I've done about half.

2. Coffee-rubbed pork shoulder at Range
3. Carnitas taco at La Taqueria
6. Burger with fries at Slow Club
7. Shaking beef at the Slanted Door
8. Morning bun at Tartine Bakery
10. Baja-style fish tacos at Nick’s Crispy Tacos
11. Pork sugo with pappardelle at Delfina
12. Salt-and-pepper squid at Yuet Lee
14. Beef brisket at Memphis Minnie’s
15. Oysters on the half shell at Swan Oyster Depot
19. Tuna tartare at Michael Mina
21. Pizza margherita at Pizzeria Delfina
22. Vietnamese roasted pork sandwich at Saigon Sandwich
29. Spaetzle at Suppenküche
30. Laughing Buddha cocktail at Cantina
35. Salted-caramel ice cream at Bi-Rite Creamery
36. Dry-fried chicken wings at San Tung
37. Rotisserie chicken at Limón Rotisserie
38. French fries at Hayes Street Grill
40. Cheeseburger at Taylor’s Automatic Refresher
41. Pho ga at Turtle Tower
42. Fried-shrimp po’boy at Brenda’s French Soul Food
44. Cannelé at Boulangerie Bay Bread
47. Ceviche at La Mar Cebichería Peruana
48. Angels on horseback at Anchor & Hope
52. Fried brussels sprouts at SPQR
53. Garlic soup at Piperade
54. Spiced-chocolate doughnut at Dynamo Donut
59. Huarache with cactus salad at El Huarache Loco
62. Shrimp-and-chive dumplings at Ton Kiang
63. Meatballs with grapes at Aziza
65. Crispy eggplant at Jai Yun
67. Sand dabs at Tadich Grill
72. Arancini at Ducca
73. Popovers with strawberry butter at the Rotunda
75. Fried green beans at Coco500
76. Chicken hash at Ella’s
78. Chilaquiles with a fried egg at Pastores
80. Apple fritter at Bob’s Donuts
83. Sweet-potato fries with banana catsup at Poleng Lounge
84. A margarita at Tommy’s Mexican Restaurant
86. A cheese slice at Arinell Pizza
87. Fresh spring rolls at Out the Door
88. Buckwheat crepe and a French cider at Ti Couz
97. Sesame balls at Yank Sing
99. Clam chowder at Hog Island Oyster Co.
100. Cheese course at Gary Danko

I wouldn't say all of these are top favorites of mine, but I can see the merit in each and some of them are absolutely fantastic (see 10, 22, 35, 36, 47, 78). Perhaps I'll come up with my own list one of these days...what's on your list of San Francisco eats?

Margot..


..is a sister in law.

I just got an old postcard image from my friend. The file size is too small to print, so I decided not to. I tweaked and turned the card in photoshop and this girl, Margot just popped out. I think she's a b*tchy sister in law. She is married to a wealthy man with big family lines. Many of her husband's relatives are reputable character in her town. Her cat's name is Dorothy. I suspect she's a witch in disguise.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

How real is Photoshop CS4?

I simply can't live without photoshop. Any designers and illustrators would say the same. It's not only make your pictures (or the images of yourself) prettier and your teeth whiter, it's full of unexplored capabilities!


The new print ad is showing you how in need we are of photoshop. If it's too small to see, I tell you why it's wonderful. This is a regular photoshop screenshot, except this one is done by many real everyday things to resemble the tools, the color palette, the layer box, etc in photoshop. Like the color box tool which is actually real tubes of paint. Unbelievable creative, right? if you're dying to see the real image, head here. See the making, here. Via Notaniche.

Hail photoshop!

Double Stuffed Baked Potato: Recipe

Double Stuffed Baked Potato
David Lebovitz and I should never go out to dinner together. Why? Because I have a wandering fork. I love sharing food for several reasons. First of all, I can rarely decide what I want, so sharing generally means I get to try more than one thing. Also I fear I have bad ordering karma and will choose the worst thing on the menu and be stuck with it if I don't share. Finally, I don't like massive portions so sharing also helps me keep from eating way more than I want.

A few years ago there was a diner that was known for serving gigantic portions and my mother and I used to share a double stuffed baked potato and salad. It was one of those potatoes that was way over a pound to begin with and then it had loads of vegetables in it. It probably wasn't as healthy as I like to believe it was. The restaurant and the potato are long gone now but for years I have tried to recreate it. This latest version is my best effort to date.

My double stuffed potato is really just a formula, you can add or subtract the ingredients and the vegetables you use are really up to you. I bet bacon would be a great addition (isn't it always?) and you could use another variety of cheese or leave out the cheese altogether if you prefer. I do strongly suggest you don't skip the green onion though, it adds both flavor and texture. And be sure to find the biggest potato around, because this dish is intended as a main dish, not a side. Oh, and the one time I did have dinner with David Lebovitz, it was Chinese food so I guess he's better at sharing than he likes to admit.

Double Stuffed Baked Potato
For each serving

1 large Russet potato, the largest you can find
1/4 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese
1/4 cup chopped vegetables, cooked (I like spinach, carrots, and celery but use whatever you prefer)
1 Tablespoon cream cheese, low fat is fine
1 green onion, chopped
Milk
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

Pierce then bake the potato in a preheated 425 degree oven for approximately one hour, or until cooked through (do not microwave or the skin will be too floppy to stuff). Remove from oven and allow to cool for 5 - 10 minutes.

Slice off the top of the potato so that you can easily scoop out most of the pulp. Leave around 1/4 inch around the bottom and sides of the potato. Place the pulp in a large mixing bowl and mash, then mix in with the cheddar cheese, vegetables and cream cheese and just enough milk to make stiff but creamy mashed potatoes. Fold in the green onions and season to taste with plenty of salt and pepper.

Stuff the potato with the mixture and place on a baking sheet. Bake for 20-25 minutes until cooked through and beginning to brown on top.

Enjoy!

More stuffed baked potato recipes...

Coconut & Lime's Spinach & Onion Stuffed Potatoes
Simply Recipes Twice Baked Potatoes
Blog Appetit's Stuffed Baked Potatoes
Sustainable Pantry's Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Monday, February 16, 2009

Weekly Wishlists : Orange Home Supplies

I'm in the mood for redecorating my nest and need a gentle dose of orange to brighten up the space.


Storeyshop's handprinted orange box, decoylab's wall hanging clock, 3zart's giraffe print switch cover, Jennifer Delonge orange pop table at poshtots, aimeewilder's baby wallpaper.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

My Valentine Tags!

I was thrilled to see my creation on i can't sew's Valentine gifts to her three children! Apparently she decided to use all 3 size of my nesting dolls image to mark her gifts for elder, middle, and baby girl! How clever! And look how adorable she arranged them with tiny roses. She said something about being "poor" this valentine, and who says that celebration of love has to be in a fancy restaurant while giving expensive gifts? That's why I'm sharing the printables with you! Read the entire of ican'tsew post here, and please greet her a belated happy valentine because she is so nice.

I also want to thank SweetTidings for having this printables on her Favorite February Findings post. Go on, check her findings out, and say hi too for me. :)

Free Art

Too good to be true? Nope. Indie Fixx has just launched this cool project that based on the, what else, crumpling economy, for artists to share their works, online, absolutely free. It's called Feed Your Soul: the free art project. All you need is a good frame, decent paper, and a printer, voila, you get an artwork to hang, if possible maybe 2 or 3 artworks per day.

Why am I so excited about this? Well as an unstably paid, independent artist, struggling to earn a penny, I know how difficult it is to get your works noticed and appreciated, let alone getting your works pay for your lunch. So I really really appreciated someone like Indie Fixx who channels artists and viewers in a low cost, easy way, unlike those big names galleries flooded with snob critics and curators. Let's say, it's a chance to be known, and I, as a part of the big artists society, thank Indie for the chance.


That's my artist's point a view. As an art enthusiast with limited budget, I also like to hang good art on my wall, and what's not to love about this project.

So go on, if you're an artist and you want to contribute, read all the how-to here. Can wait to download your own piece of art, visit here. What are you waiting for?

Humphry Slocombe Ice Cream

Humphry Slocombe
There are lots of things you simply must eat when you come to San Francisco, the latest is ice cream at Humphry Slocombe. It's located in the Mission just off of 24th street, a neighborhood more known for Mexican food, but perhaps becoming ice cream central. Back in the 80's gelato was all the rage, but sadly the fad seemed to die out. For years my pick for interesting flavors was Bombay Bazar, an Indian shop on Valencia street in the Mission district that offers flavors like fig, cardamom and chai. Thankfully over the past couple of years ice cream shops like Sketch, Bi-Rite Creamery (on 18th street in the Mission) and Ici have opened up reintroducing the idea of high quality ice cream with fresh and unique flavors. Suddenly it seems the Bay Area is becoming an ice cream mecca.

Humphry Slocombe might just be my favorite ice cream ever. The flavors are sophisticated and not too sweet. It's a cute and retro looking shop with bright red bar stools that face the street. The friendly staff is more than happy to offer you tastes, not that it will help you make up your mind. The flavors are so good and the texture so luscious one bite is not enough. I literally found myself wanting a scoop of every flavor available. Rich and creamy but not cloying, each flavor varies in intensity but is balanced and satisfying. They also offer nibbles of bacon brittle. Yes, bacon brittle.
Balsamic Caramel
The flavors rotate and they have about 10-12 everyday. I had Maple Walnut and Balsamic Caramel but equally scrumptious were Rose Petal Creme Fraiche, and a smoky Pistachio Bacon. They also offer wonderfully chewy chocolate chip cookies and sundaes that I have yet to try. But not for long. By the way there is no "Humphry Slocombe" it's just a name that pays homage to characters on the British sitcom, Are You Being Served?

Humphry Slocombe
2790 Harrison St @ 24th
San Francisco
415.550.6971

Tuesday - Sunday Noon - 8 pm

Here are some more enlightening Humphry Slocombe blog reviews, reports and interviews:

7x7-Ice Cream for Adults

Bunrabs

DeFabulous Food

The Kitchn

A Mouthful of Twisted Goodness

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Tips 1 Photoshop: Brushes Untuk Vector Art


Jaman dulu, tiap ngeliat desain-desainnya orang lain yang penuh dengan gambar vektor kruwel-kruwel, aku terkagum-kagum. Gimana sih cara bikinnya di Photoshop?? Apa harus bikin lewat Corel ato Illustrator?
 
Alangkah terkejutnya ketika sepupuku ngasih tau kalo sebenernya udah ada brushes Photoshop yang bentuknya macem-macem dan bisa langsung dipake!! Jadi, tinggal sekali klik, aneka bentuk vektor bisa ada di artwork kita. Oalaaah… sekarang, bikin desain yang menarik gampang dilakukan!!
Ini salah satu contoh foto yang kuedit dengan brushes lucu-lucu (sebenernya malu juga menampilkan foto ini -_-").

Yang diperlukan untuk mengedit foto di samping: 
  1. selection tools (untuk meng-crop gambar orang dan mahkota);
  2. aneka brushes, contohnya curly border yang di pinggir, ornamen-ornamen background, serta sayapnya (ya! Sayapnya adalah brush!);
  3. filter lens flare untuk efek sinar yang jatuh.
Darimana dapet brush Photoshop? Search aja di Google, Photoshop Brushes. Biasanya aku cari di www.deviantart.com soalnya koleksi brushes di sana buanyak banggeeet… Tinggal download, (formatnya .ABR), dan kalo filenya masih berbentuk zip harus di-extract dulu.

Untuk menggunakan brush yang sudah di-download, kita harus menginstallnya di Photoshop.

  1. Klik Brush Tool
  2. Klik segitiga kecil yang di panel atas seperti pada gambar
  3. Di pilihan brush, klik panah yang ke kanan dan pilih Load Brushes. Carilah brush (.ABR) yang udah kamu download.
Brush dapat segera kamu gunakan ^o^

So simple & so easy!!

Being A Drawing Contest Judge

Malam ini aku baru sampai rumah setelah sebelumnya menjadi juri lomba gambar di SMPN 3 Kediri. Lho kok bisa?? Kok hebat??
Hehe, begini ceritanya...

Budheku, dr. Sjahjenny, adalah koordinator PKTP (Penanggulangan Kanker Terpadu Paripurna). PKTP ini punya misi ke daerah-daerah untuk menyebarkan informasi tentang kanker sejak dini. Jadi, yang aku tau, beliau sering mengunjungi sekolah-sekolah di Nganjuk, Madiun, dan kota-kota lainnya untuk memberi wawasan sederhana, bahwa kanker dapat muncul karena kebiasaan sehari-hari yang nggak sehat. Contohnya aja, pentol yang sering mangkal di depan sekolah. Wuih itu bisa jadi sumber penyakit dari 5 P yang dikandungnya: Pengenyal, Pengawet, Pewarna (non makanan), Pemanis buatan, Penyedap.

Nah, PKTP menyelenggarakan lomba gambar untuk TK sampe SMA di Kediri dalam rangka sosialisasi penanggulangan kanker sejak dini. Pada jajaran dewan juri, dipilih orang-orang yang bukan panitia dari Kediri untuk menghindari ketidak-adilan penilaian. Lalu budheku mengajakku. Yaahh, dari TK sampe SMA kan keponakannya ini sering mengikuti lomba gambar (walaupun jarang mengantongi piala juara :p).

Maka Jumat sore aku dijemput budhe, lalu kami dan rombongan pergi menuju Kediri. Aku semobil dengan budhe, Pak Yance (adiknya budhe yang juga punya sense of art tinggi), dr. Eka, dan mbak Vita dari FKUA. Tiga mobil lainnya berisi mahasiswa-mahasiswi FK Unair yang rata-rata adalah angkatan 2006, 2007 dan 2008. Belakangan aku mengenali beberapa dari mereka ternyata adik kelasku di SMAN 5 Surabaya! Sekitar jam 10 malam, kami baru sampai di kota Kediri, dan malam yang tenang itu diakhiri dengan tidur di kamar yang sudah disiapkan di Pusdiklat Kediri.

Hari Sabtu, bertepatan dengan World Cancer Day (bukan Valentine ;p), lomba yang dinanti-nanti dibuka. Ada ibu walikota datang. Ada penampilan band Arpega (Arek Esempe Tiga) yang baru memenangkan juara 3 lomba Band Nasional. Lomba gambar dibagi ke dalam 4 kategori yaitu TK, SD, SMP dan SMA. Aku dan mbak Vita kebagian menilai hasil karya anak TK dan SD. Sebelum lomba selesai, kami udah bisa melihat mana saja gambar yang "dijagokan". Sumpah takjub banget liat anak-anak kecil bisa melukiskan gambar dengan permainan warna dan bentuk yang indah! (Nanti kalau aku dapet contoh gambarnya, akan ku-upload di sini)

Peserta TK ada 12 orang. Pikirku dan mbak Vita, ini mudah. Tetapi peserta SD ada 45 orang!! Wow! Banyak peserta dan banyak pula karya yang bagus-bagus, dan sayang sekali juara yang akan ditetapkan hanya sampai juara 3. Lomba dimulai pukul 9 pagi dan diakhiri pukul 1 siang (waktu yang sangat lama untuk lomba gambar!). Dari semua gambar yang dikumpulkan, terlihat karya yang menonjol adalah didikan sanggar. Sehingga agak menjadi dilema, keindahan teknik melukis vs originalitas pembuat karya. Setelah kurang lebih 1 jam, proses penjurian selesai.

Ternyata, juri yang menilai karya SMP dan SMA masih mengalami kesulitan penjurian. Untuk SMP, yang dilombakan adalah poster, dan untuk SMA, yang dilombakan adalah komik. Penjurian berlangsung alot. Apalagi untuk komik, karena selain mempertimbangkan keindahan gambar, alur cerita memegang peran yang penting.

Akhirnya semua juara ditetapkan dan diumumkan pukul 15.30, molor dari jadwal seharusnya yaitu sekitar pukul 14.00. Katanya, anak-anak SD udah mulai mendemo panitia, "Mana jurinya??" Hehehe. Maaf ya adek-adek... kalian lama nunggunya. Maaf juga buat yang belum menang karena hanya ada 3 juara. Padahal gambarnya buagus-buagus.... Pengen nyimpan 1 tapi gak boleh T_T

Hal-hal lain yang berkesan:
  1. Ada wartawan yang meliput, tapi dia merokok! Mas, tau gak sih ini lomba kan dalam rangka World Cancer Day, dan merokok tuh menyebabkan kanker!! Kok gak memberi contoh yang baik buat adek-adek yang lagi melukis "dilarang merokok"... Belakangan, aku dengar sih si abang wartawan diprotes sama ibu-ibu peserta :)
  2. Makanan prasmanannya enaaakkkk banget!! Tadi aku makan pecel, uih, rasanya belum pernah makan yang seperti itu... slurrppp... jadi ngiler... Trus jajanannya juga enak-enak. I love risoles!
  3. Aku cek tensi darah di stan-nya anak FK, dan, seperti biasa, tekanan darah rendah :(

Sore kami pulang, aaaarrghhh aku gak sempat foto2!!! Sempat diajakin anak2 FK foto bareng, tapi waktu itu posisiku udah terjepit di dalam mobil dan gak bisa keluar. Hiks hiks... iri deh liat anak2 FK yang begitu ceria rame-rame bernarsis ria. Trus pengen banget foto di persimpangan kota kediri yang ada monumen mirip di Paris... Waaahhh jadi pengen ke Kediri lagi!!!!!

Sampe rumah udah malem. Masuk kamar, surprise!! Ada cokelat dan bantal pink dari ibuku!! Ibu bapak lagi ke Bandung, tapi sempet-sempetnya menyiapkan kado valentine kayak gini (meskipun aku bukan orang yang merayakannya). Memeluk bantal itu, aku tiba2 menangis. Ya Allah, terima kasih... Kau berikan aku pengalaman yang berharga, dan orangtua yang sangat menyayangiku... :')

Friday, February 13, 2009

Craft Magazine Last Issue.

After the sad endings of great magazine like Martha Stewart's Blueprint and Domino, another heartbreaking end came from a magazine I actually collect, Craft magazine. If you haven't heard of the publications, it is a magazine about, well, celebrating the renaissance of craft, or so they said, which I believe very true. Never before a magazine encourage the readers to actually get up and make something! They even have occasional etsy finds displayed. Sounds like your favorite blogs in print, right. So here's their last issue, featuring the entertaining queen herself, Amy Sedaris.

There it goes, a celebration of youth and DIY culture. I hope, unlike Domino which recently stopped their blog and website, Craftzine.com will always open to hungry brains like us.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Store Bought or DIY Valentine?

Your call. Whichever it is, it's fun for everyone. Please share with me which Valentine suit you best and we'll see how we love one another, through buying or making.
Clockwise from top:
1.Oliebollen's heart shaped memory game, 2. MyBellaBows' infant beanie with flower clip, 3. Sewn Paper Valentine and 4.Valentine Pins both from Purlbee, 5. Mommymae's Flourless Chocolate Cake from LollyChops, 6. HarteeX, a hand sculpted little doll from axelhoney.

Chicken Roasted in a Pot: Recipe

Roast Chicken
Last month it seemed everyone was roasting a chicken. Perhaps the chill in the air inspired a desire for something comforting and familiar. I couldn't watch a cooking show on television, read a newspaper online or food magazine without staring at yet another roast chicken. And blogs! It seems just about every food blogger was roasting chicken. I think it was the steady stream of breathtaking photos that finally got to me.

This is a "poulet en cocotte" recipe that I modified. I saw it on a certain television program and decided I would make it a little differently. It was moist but didn't yield crispy skin. Fresh out of the oven, I particularly enjoy roast chicken with roasted root vegetables or a big green salad and boiled potatoes all slathered with vinaigrette. The next day I shred the leftover chicken and use it in something else like enchiladas, another excellent comfort food.

The liquid from the chicken was very rich and flavorful and I had so much of it leftover, I used it to make grits. Let me tell you, the next time you have any kind of au jus or gravy, use it as part of the cooking liquid in grits and stir in some cheese after taking the pot off the stove. This makes the most amazingly delicious side dish or breakfast. It's perfect on cold mornings when you want something as warm and filling as hot cereal but prefer savory rather than sweet flavors. Honestly, I would make this chicken again just so I had the juice to make grits!

French Style Chicken Roasted in a Pot

4 1/2 to 5 pound roasting chicken
3 teaspoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon butter
1 small onion, roughly chopped
1 small stalk celery, roughly chopped
1 small carrot, roughly chopped
5 garlic cloves, peeled and chopped

Preheat oven to 250 degrees. Pat chicken dry and season with salt. Melt butter in large Dutch oven over medium heat. Add chicken breast-side down. Cook until breast is darkly browned, about 8 minutes. Using a wooden spoon or tongs inserted into cavity of bird, flip chicken and add the vegetables, continue cooking another 6 minutes. Remove Dutch oven from heat; place large sheet of foil over pot and cover tightly with lid. Transfer pot to oven and cook until thermometer registers 160 degrees when inserted in thickest part of breast and 175 degrees in thickest part of thigh, this will take somewhere around an hour and 20 minutes.

Transfer chicken to carving board, tent with foil, and rest a full 20 minutes. Carve chicken, serve with juices from the pot (and carving of the bird).

Enjoy!

Here are just a sampling of January 2009, roast chicken posts. Try visiting a few and see if you don't find yourself planning a chicken dinner...

Last Night's Dinner Roast Chicken 3 Ways

Sticky Gooey Creamy Chewy blog's Roast Chicken with Pancetta & Olives

For The Love of Cooking Lemon, Garlic & Basil Slow Roasted Chicken

Whisk blog's Poulet en Cocotte Grand Mere

Thursday Night Smackdown Chicken with 50 Cloves of Garlic

Serious Eats Paprika Roast Chicken

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

A good sense of humour..

image from laserbread stolen from whorange.

...is all we need. ( A unicorn with unibrow, riding a unicycle. Get it?)

Monday, February 9, 2009

Valentine Printables

I have my new blog title illustrations hanging around on my computer and I thought that Valentine's coming and I made this in 15 minutes. Ok, I sound like a babbling 10 year old now.

Without further ado.. here are the instructions :
  1. Download your own here.
  2. Print away. I suggest using A4 size paper, if you don't have one near you, resize the file first to your paper size.
  3. Snap snap with the scissors. The gift tags are made in pairs, front and back side, keep the pair together.
  4. Glue your pairs together. Punch the holes, attach to your gifts, tie with ribbons.
  5. What about the matryoshka dolls, the cups and the pot, the table and the chair? Use your imagination! Make a card, gift tags, decorate your scrapbook, ...oh.. whatever with them!
Get creative and tell me if you made something! (I want to see the gift tags too on your gifts!)

Fifi Lapin for LeSportSac


I've been a huge fan of LeSportSac bags and Fifi Lapin, the high fashion wearing bunny phenomenon. Put them together and voila, you get the best collaboration ever. This is going to my wishlist right now!

Who is Fifi Lapin? I was going to introduce her here, but hey hop on to her blog to read about the first ever interview with the most fashionable bunny on earth! Well, it is said that not every rabbit can be like Fifi, whooa, isn't she an icon or what?

Friday, February 6, 2009

Yay for New Blog Title!

Finally, a little more color to the blog. I'm new and not that savvy about the whole html kind of word, I am still struggling to prettify my blog. Forgive me. I'm not sure about the February thing, though. That means I have to come up with a new blog title every month! Let's see if I can keep up to that or laziness win over me again. Heh, I just change it into March! Clever me!

By the way, I've always wanted the whole pretty things everybody's blogs seem to have. On the other side I like my blog clean to be readers-friendly. Aaah the agony! I can use some tips on blogging layouts, please tell me yours.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

If you love bread...


..then you'll guaranteed to adore Bake and Break's blog. Her blog nearly put Martha Stewart's cookbook photography to shame. And though I may not know much about her, since everything's written in Japanese, I think she is a food photographer. Yes, it's a real job and they do get paid taking pictures of food.

I know that the Japanese language will prevent you to read the mouth watery recipes, and my, isn't that annoying! Not to mention the really great photographs and graphics that will keep you nagging, "Come on!! Write in English already!!" It's easy for me to enjoy because I don't cook or bake. The blog is written in Japanese, so be it. I'll just treat my eyes with those adorable photographs.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Delicious Felt Bowl...

.. with your chance to win one! I know I am stupid to write a post about this giveaway while I'm entering myself, minimizing my chance to win, right? But I love Hiromi's from KoboH stuff waaay before Erin from Design For Mankind hosting a giveaway of Hiromi's felt bowl. So I'm writing not in the hope to win, but I'm spreading the love..or the greatness of the felt bowl!

C'mon admit it, you wouldn't thought it was felt at first glance, right? From the picture I thought it was rock at first! Really clever! Comes in three sizes! Where to enter? Here! Quick, Erin'll pick out the winner this week!

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Chocolate Bar Review

Chocolate bars
You wouldn't know it by looking at me, but I'm in training. In March I'll be on the tasting panel for the Annual San Francisco International Chocolate Salon and I take this responsibility very seriously. In fact, I snagged as many bars of chocolate I could at the Fancy Food Show to prepare for my judging. Ok, that's not completely true. I took the chocolate bars because I love chocolate.

The samples of chocolates I tasted are very random. I took bars and mini bars from any chocolatier who did not literally tape the bars into the boxes, prohibiting me from taking any. Why anyone would exhibit at the Fancy Food Show and NOT provide samples of their products is beyond me. But believe me, there are plenty of them. I also took some samples from a company that makes chocolate intended to be paired with wine. I will review those another day.

There is a bit of a debate that rages on about chocolate, both about percentages and about single estate versus blends. Frankly, I don't get it. I drink wine that is produced from a single estate and wine that is a blend of different grapes. One is not necessarily better than the other. Because I prefer dark chocolate rather than milk chocolate I only snagged darker bars, but really, the obsession over percentages is just silly unless you are baking and a recipe calls for one versus another. It's chocolate people. Eat, enjoy, stop fretting!

So here are the bars I gathered for a little in-home tasting:

Amano is one of the great American chocolate producers. Please lord, don't let them ever sell out to Hershey's! I am particularly fond of their Ocumare bar which I have raved about in the past. Not to get too deep here, but there is a complexity of flavors that I find tantalizing. So what I do think of the the Amano Jembrana 70% cacao? Me like. But to be honest, it's a little one dimensional. It's super fly, I mean, super dark and if you are in the ultra bittersweet camp, this bar will make you happy. It's dark but also sweet. I got a spicy nutmeg finish and rich caramel tones. It's from Bali. Did you know there was chocolate in Bali? I didn't!

Another American chocolate company I greatly admire is Guittard. I am proud that they are local, still family owned and operated. They make a very comprehensive line of chocolate that is a favorite of many pastry chefs and chocolatiers. When the government attempted to legislate a decrease in quality to save chocolatiers money, Guittard fought it tooth and nail. Nice. They also made a generous donation of 4 pounds of chocolate to the Menu for Hope fundraiser. Super nice. Personally, I am devoted to their chocolate chips. Since I do favor a more bittersweet bar, I thought I'd try their ultra dark bar, E.Guittard Nocturne 91% cacao. This bar made me swoon. It has a bitterness and a pleasant astringency but also notes of raspberry and cherry.

Santander produces only Columbian chocolate. The Santander Columbian Single Origin 70% cacao bar is not as smooth textured as some of the other chocolates I tried, but it has a very pleasant nuts and coffee flavor I liked.

The Republica Del Cacao 75% Manabi chocolate from Ecuador is fairly mild. Made from Cacao Arriba, it is particularly fragrant. I got both floral and almond flavors. It was very pleasant and interesting to compare to the other chocolates, but less intense.

I liked the Republica Del Cacao 75% Los Rios chocolate better than the Manabi, but it also had a very sweet character to it, reminding me of vanilla and tropical flowers. If you're going to be a chocolate geek, and don't let me stop you, I would recommend including these Ecuadorian bars in the mix.

..and Another Desktop Calendar!

I don't usually write a post about the same wonderful thing twice, in the same day, but I had the urge to share this wonderful desktop calendar with you. I don't even know about this character from Sanrio. It's updating every month too! So be sure to check and visit Sanrio's website.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Download February Desktop Calendar..

...from the amazing Wild Olive! It's so cute and I love the slogan below. I really really need one of those inspiring words, to keep me going and prevent me from slacking off. Get your own here.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Tis the season to love... or hate?

In the celebrating mood of the upcoming Valentine's day, I 'd like to share some of my favorite valentine cards or items, but none is coming from ordinary land. And I guarantee that you'll love them even if you are against or support the holiday itself.

This heart and arrow card will surely put a smile on your valentine's face. By SusyJack*.
via Modish.

Witty words by littlebrownpen to ease the day of those who think pink and cupids are ridiculous.

papergirlproduction's Siamese twin bunny plush is also a clever interpretation on the holiday.

What about me? Am I against or love Valentine's day? Well, when I think it's too much to think about it all 13 days before the D-day and to wear, eat, and breathe nothing but pink, but I do enjoy the festivity just for fun, the same way I celebrate Hanukkah or Deepavali, though I am neither a Jew or a Hindi. International holidays are so much fun to miss, and the more you know about them, the merrier your life will be! It's true! I am so into celebrating differences and getting to know other culture! It's my theme this valentine.

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