Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The First Dish I Ever Cooked: Fettuccine with Prosciutto, Asparagus, and Tomatoes


If you had a conversation with my mom about my teenage years you would probably walk away thinking that she should be put on the fast track to sanctification and that man, I was kind of a brat. I'm not sure if 'brat" is exactly the right term, but I did have a cavalier attitude about most things, and this includes school and my personal safety. Like most young people I thought I was invincible and could do anything. This attitude meant that I thought high school attendance was flexible, speed limits were simply a suggestion , and that the only good food existed in the form of Reese's peanut butter cups and Jack In the Box containers, oh yeah, and that adults were complete idiots. I know I wasn't alone in this line of thinking, these are all pretty standard reasons for why most people can't stand teenagers. It took a few years and some hard life lessons for me to realize that I couldn't just run through life doing whatever the hell I wanted or saying whatever the hell I wanted. For the most part, I now think mainly good things come with age and maturity, but there is a little part of me that wishes I still had a little bit more of my spirit before it was tamed. Not the reckless, ignorant part; but the confident part, that narcissistic (in a good way) thing that only young people possess. That brief moment in time where you think you can do whatever you want to, be whatever you want to, all because you want to.....

This was the kind of confidence I had the first time I decided to cook a meal. I had collected cookbooks long before I ever thought about actually putting them to use, I just liked reading them. Then one day, I was flipping through a book on Italian cooking, and I came across a recipe that sounded good. Right then and there I decided I'd make it for my high school graduation party. I didn't know how to cook at all, but the meal turned out great. Yes, this was probably due to luck and good ingredients, but I think it also had a little to do with a confident spirit. From then on, I started cooking all kinds of things, some great, some terrible! (I once made fish and chips that were completely inedible and homemade aioli where I didn't peel the garlic cloves! Yikes is right...)  The other day I was at the farmer's market and bought a bunch of fresh asparagus and started contemplating what to do with it, when I remembered this old recipe and decided to revisit this meal again. The recipe turned out just as good as I remembered; which I like to think was due to a different confidence, one learned over years spent in the kitchen, prepping and executing. However, I know I don't know everything about cooking yet, I don't believe anyone ever can, for there is always something new to learn. So this summer I made a promise to myself to be more confident and experimental in the kitchen. I have a couple ideas, one of them being that I am going to try canning. The process intimidates me, (fear of botulism; hello East of Eden.....) but I hope to tackle the task with a bit of my old youthful fervor! How about you? What intimidates you in the kitchen? How did you try and overcome your culinary fears? What was the first meal you ever cooked?

Fettuccine with Asparagus
Adapted from "The Italian Collection" by Food & Wine Books
Serves 6

1 pound this asparagus
6-8 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 ounces prosciutto, thinly sliced and cut into thin strips
1 (14 ounce) can whole tomatoes, drained and then chopped. (I use Muir Glen Organic for quality flavor.)
1 pound fettuccine pasta
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1/2 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon pepper

Snap the tough ends off asparagus and discard. Cut the fresh spears into 1 inch pieces. In a large pot of salted, boiling water, cook the asparagus just until tender, about 3 minutes. Drain and rinse in a colander, shocking them with cold water. (This stops the cooking process.)

In a large pot of salted, boiling water, cook pasta until al dente, usually 8-10 minutes, then drain. While pasta is cooking, in a large saute pan, melt 4-6 tablespoons of butter over medium low heat. Add the prosciutto and cook, stirring occasionally, about 3 minutes. Add the tomatoes, salt and pepper, turn the heat to medium and simmer until sauce is thickened, about 5 Minutes. Add asparagus and cook a minute or two more until heated through. Add sauce to pot with pasta, adding Parmesan and a tablespoon more butter. Season to taste with salt and pepper. It is important to mix pasta and sauce together for about 30 seconds as this ensures that all the flavors develop and that each piece of pasta is coated with sauce! Serve with a crisp white wine and enjoy!

Friday, May 27, 2011

Twitter

Admittedly Twitter intimidates me. However, I think it can be a great tool for sharing inspiration, ideas, and news for all things food related, so I joined. If you are on Twitter follow me @luluscocina and maybe you can help me figure out how this thing works too!



Sunday, May 15, 2011

Vacations

Bodega Head
The past few weeks we have been fortunate enough to take in a couple little vacations, one to Bodega Bay/ West Sonoma/ San Francisco and the other to the Oregon Central Coast . When we have been home I have been making really healthy, easy dishes to try and counterbalance all the extra indulgences and imbibing we have been doing on our travels. With no new recipes to post, I thought I might share some of the places/treats/drinks we enjoyed during our getaways. I have to confess that by doing this post I am also satisfying my own desire to rehash my vacation food memories. Hopefully these memories will stay in my head a long while, because my only regret is that I didn't take more pictures of the food. The thing is, if I am truly enjoying my food, the last thing on my mind is to stop stuffing my face and whip out the camera.  When I am tempted to do this in a restaurant there is also the thought lingering in my mind that I don't ever want to be THAT girl. You know the type, the girl who whips out her camera and starts snapping away before she has even tasted the food, all with blogging, tweeting, facebooking, or  yelping in mind? In my book, nothing is more mood killing then when you are sitting there enjoying yourself and the flash of a Nikon goes off in your face. Some places food picture taking is acceptable, outdoor markets, most brewpubs are so noisy nobody really cares, and your own home. However there are some places where it is not acceptable behavior, for example, the Casino Bar in Bodega where we had one of our best meals; I would have been 86'd immediately had I whipped out my camera to document it. So although I can't leave you with a lot of "food porn" pictures,  I can post scenery ones, in hopes that this will entice you to try some of these places for your next getaway .....

Sonoma Coast:
Occidental, Ca
St. Theresa of Avila Church , Bodega, Ca
Ferry Plaza Market Building, San Francisco, Ca


Russian River Brewing Company, Santa Rosa, Ca- Our first stop on our way west to Bodega Bay. Don't go here for the food or atmosphere, go here for beer. A 16 beer taster? Sure, why not? "The River" has so many interesting and tasty beers on tap it is hard to choose a favorite, but mine was the Belgian brewed "Damnation", and the hubby's was the Sour Belgian "Redemption".

Spud Point Crab Company, Spud Point Marina, Bodega Bay, Ca- Two words: crab sandwich. This sandwich might actually be the best thing I ever ate. I even moaned out loud, and my table manners are better than that. Tons of pure crab, no fillers, lightly dressed in red pepper mayo, stuffed in between in two thin pieces of toasted french bread.....so perfect I had one two days in a row!

Gourmet Au Bay, Highway 1, Bodega Bay, Ca- This wine shop gets a mention, not for the excellence of their wines, (they were hit or miss) but for the location, cool "wine surfing" concept, and friendly owners. They have a lovely back deck where you can sit out over the bay and enjoy your wine.

Casino Bar & Grill, Highway 12, Bodega, Ca- Funky old saloon right next to the St. Theresa of Avila Church from Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. On certain nights, talented chef Mark Malicki comes to the bar and cooks a set menu of his own creation. What you get is gourmet food at pauper's prices. On the night we visited, we ordered the Crab Cobb Salad, Fishermen's Clam Chowder (with clams in shell, and short ribs with potatoes and creamed spinach. Grand total? 30 bucks! The food draws in an ecclectic group, to our left were locals and bikers, to the right were ladies who lunch. Coors Light and white wine spritzers all mixed together! The bar owners are super welcoming, but be aware that this is a beer, wine, or straight up liquor establishment, don't go in expecting or wanting to order a specialty drink, there are no cocktail shakers or glasses in sight. The poor guy next to us made the mistake of ordering a gin martini and he got a shot glass with ice, gin poured over, and a martini olive on top! When in Rome........

Hog Island Oyster Company, Ferry Plaza Building, Embarcadero, San Francisco, Ca- The original Hog Island Oyster Farm is located in along Highway One in Tomales Bay, Ca. Picnicing outside eating oysters along the Pacific sounded wonderful, but I get easily carsick. Not wanting to upchuck the schucks so to speak, we decided it was best to visit their space in the Ferry Plaza building in San Francisco. There are an overwhelming array of food establishments in the Ferry Market, but I was extremely pleased with our meal at Hog Island Oyster Company. Sipping Pinot Grigio and slurping up fresh oysters while looking out over the bay was the perfect way to end our vacation.

Oregon Central Coast
Gleneden Beach, Oregon


I got a chance to spend Mother's Day weekend at the Oregon Coast with both my mom and grandma. Since my family lives in California, the last time I got to see them for Mother's Day was over ten years ago!  We prepared most of our meals at the beach house, prefering to lounge with a glass of wine and eat at our leisure, rather then rushing around trying to get everybody up and out the door before breakfast hours were over. This didn't mean that the food we ate wasn't special or restaurant worthy though, it was just simple. Breakfasts of fried eggs and thick cut Pendelton bacon, dinners of fettucine pesto, butter lettuce salad,  barbecued oysters, tri-tip, and shrimp cocktail, and bay shrimp melts with beer-steamed clams , we really took advanatage of Oregon's bounty and our time together. However, we did eat out a few times, and had a noteworthy lunch at these two places:

Tidal Raves Seafood Grill, Highway 101, Depoe Bay, Oregon- Tidal Raves holds a special place in my heart for a number of reasons, a major one being that I have had the chance to break bread here with many people I love. The food is always fresh, delicious, and reasonably priced. I also think this restaurant has the most spectacular dining view on the Oregon Coast, and I would even venture to say the entire state. I reccomend the calamari, pan fried oysters, and Seahawk Bread for appetizers, all of their outstanding soups (personal favorite: Smoked Salmon chowder), cioppino, and pan fried snapper topped with shrimp salsa over a potato/smoked salmon cake. For dessert, try their bread pudding with bourbon sauce, it is so so good!

J's Fish and Chips, Highway 101, Lincoln City, Oregon- A little hole in the wall in a rundown shopping center, it's not much to look at, but the place serves up great fish and homemade chips. The Fish is fresh, and the panko breading is crisp and not too thick, no soggy breading here! Try the combo basket or the super fresh halibut!

Random Food Finds
If there are two things that really get me excited it's good beer and cheese. Here are some from our trips that made me happy!

Beer:

Damnation, Russian River Brewing Company
Cappucino Stout, Lagunitas Brewing Company
Racer IPA , Bear Republic Brewing Company
Boont Amber Ale , Andersonville Brewing Company
Tsunami Stout, Pelican Brewery

Cheese:

Mt. Tam Triple Creme Brie, Cowgirl Creamery
Pt Reyes Blue, Point Reyes Cheese Company

Vintage Extra Sharp White Cheddar, Tillamook Cheese Company