April 08, 2008

Keiki

How can restaurants cater to kids' palates while providing parent-approved nutritional cuisine? In the gradual--but sure--awareness of juvenile obesity, parents and chefs alike are more concerned with how children are eating when the parentals bring them along. Deep-fried finger food with the option of a little salad just isn't enough.

I want to know what to you constitutes a great childrens' menu. Leave me your thoughts!

October 10, 2007

An itch.

So there I was eating at Downtown HiSAM when two girlfriends sitting next to me brought up the subject of cheating risotto, and of course, I had to eavesdrop. (They were sitting ten inches away from me, so how could I not?) American home cooks are probably not inclined to baby a pot of rice for twenty-plus minutes, so shortcuts are understandable. Following a less forgivable suggestion of Crock-Pot risotto was making the rice in a rice cooker ahead of time, cooling it, and stirring in the rest of the ingredients while reheating.

My tip, which I was characteristically too shy to proclaim audibly, is to add a splash of cream to the rice at the end of cooking. The amylopectin that surrounds each grain (provided you're using serious risotto rice) and melts away to create that natural creamy texture we all cherish is generally not released much in the rice cooker, so just a bit of cream will combine with any residual starches and help everything adhere better to each other.

Itch scratched.

Book of the Month

  • http://
    ELIZABETH FALKNER'S DEMOLITION DESSERTS
    With fun illustrations by her younger brother spanning the pages, Chef Liz Falkner's book is a joy to read and cook from. The recipes start off simple, with Falkner offering what she deems the perfect chocolate chip cookie (who doesn't want one of those?), slowly transforming into creations as complex as those served in her restaurant-bakery in San Francisco.
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