Archive for April, 2005

Bulk food vacuum sealer - Foodsaver

Sunday, April 24th, 2005
Product Image: Foodsaver Professional II
My rating: 5 out of 5

I must admit, I bought the Foodsaver after seeing a late-night infomercial for it. It turned out to be great - I use it frequently for sealing bulk meats for freezing, and for keeping grains and leftovers fresh. This model is more than powerful enough, and includes a storage space for a roll of bag material (for making custom-sized bags). The Foodsaver can seal with bags (Tilia makes special bags, in rolls and precut - either’s fine), canisters (make sure you get the plain brown ones - the “designer” line models do not seal well, in my experience), or in mason jars. This last is extremely convenient, as mason jars are dirt cheap, but note that this is not the same as sterlized jarring, and all sealed foods need to be kept in the same way as unsealed (refrigerated or frozen) - they just last a lot longer.

Buy the Foodsaver Professional II from Amazon.

Friday Sale - Wusthof Santoku

Friday, April 15th, 2005
Product Image: Wüsthof Classic 5-Inch Hollow Ground Santoku Knife

Wusthof makes pretty good knives, although they’re not my personal choice. On the Friday sale, $50 is a very good price for a forged Santoku.

This knife should be a great general chef’s knife, for chopping, slicing, and other prep tasks. It has kullens in the side of the blade to reduce sticking. In my experience, this only makes a difference if you’re slicing very thin slices, but there’s no drawback, and it does make the knife somewhat lighter, which I prefer.

Simple Fast Elegant Cooking from Jacques Pepin - Fast Food My Way

Saturday, April 9th, 2005
Product Image: Fast Food My Way
My rating: 4 out of 5

I love to cook, but when it comes to speed… that’s not really my thing.

I actually looked at this book in the store, and wasn’t going to get it, but we attended a demonstration lecture in which he cooked five or so of the recipes from the book, and I was impressed with the overall approach. Jacques Pepin is a man who knows food - he’s nearly legendary for his mastery of technique and his knowledge of classical cuisine. This book is a totally different beast. It’s all about what he cooks on an everyday basis… when he’s tired at the end of the day and doesn’t feel like cooking, but still needs to eat and doesn’t want to order in… when unexpected guests arrive and he doesn’t have time to prepare a full meal. Obviously, there’s a strong French base, and while I wouldn’t call it fusion, there are noticeable influences from other cultures as well (his wife is Puerto Rican). One of the dishes from the demo was sauteed asparagus with croutons, almonds, and chorizo - delicious.

Some of the recipes are simply fast and simple preparations, some use canned and frozen ingredients, some can be made quickly with a little bit of planning ahead, and some use special techniques to speed traditional methods (like braising in a pressure cooker) - the common thread is a focus on getting you out of the kitchen quickly so you can concentrate on eating. Like many of my favorite cookbooks, the focus is more about explaining what’s going on rather than specific recipes - a number of them say things like “just do this with whatever vegetables you have handy”.

I bought the book recently, so I’ve only had a chance to make a few of the recipes - the first one is an immediate favorite and I’ll definitely make it again.

Instant vegetable soup (paraphrased):

Bring a few cups of water or canned stock/broth (I like Pacific Organic Chicken Broth) to a boil. While it’s boiling, shred a few cups of assorted vegetables (carrots, mushrooms, onions, broccoli, potatoes - whatever) with a box grater. Add the vegetables to the broth with a few handfuls of leftover wilted salad greens. Boil for a few minutes, then add some diced scallions. Boil a bit more, then sprinkle in a few tablespoons of cream of wheat, farina, or grits, and simmer for a few more minutes - this will thicken the soup. Grate a generous portion of gruyere or other cheese into soup bowls, and ladle the soup on top of the cheese. Finish each bowl with a pat of butter and a splash of extra virgin olive oil and serve with some crusty bread. Very simple and unexpected, but it was delicious and hearty.

Jacques is amazing to watch - there’s a companion series on PBS in which he demonstrates many of the dishes from the book. His technique is just impressive, he’s charming and relaxing, and the camera work is very very good so you can actually see what he’s doing.

Second Opinion

Mayur says:

I bought the Pepin book in SF on a trip, and like it quite a lot. What I find the Pepin book most useful for, actually, is as a study on how an expert chef might use packaged supermarket ingredients and stuff you’d have lying around the kitchen anyway. I must confess that I don’t actually find it so useful for whipping up exceptional meals in a hurry; for that, I find that certain other books (From Simple to Spectacular, How to Cook Everything, Elements of Taste, even Think Like a Chef) have a broader range of techniques and effectively incorporate a wider array of possible recipes via adaptation of the ones included. The problem with the Pepin cookbook is that I actually think that too few of the recipes are particularly widely adaptable; the bean dip or potato salad recipes, for instance, are recipes for just that. It’s not really worth adapting them to other ingredients, and in any case, one can make bean dip or potato salad without recourse to a chef of Pepin’s talents.

Buy Fast Food My Way from Amazon.

Friday Sale - Good egg pan

Friday, April 8th, 2005
Product Image: Calphalon 10

I’m not a huge fan of Calphalon anodized aluminum. I find it to be an unpleasant cooking surface for general cooking - everytime I’ve used it, things have stuck to it, and it’s dark so you can’t really see what you’re doing.

On the other hand, aluminum is a great, very even conductor, and Calphalon uses decent-quality nonstick finishes. I don’t use non-stick pans for most things. I like the browning that I get with steel (or Cybernox - more on that later), but I have a few non-stick pans around, because they’re perfect for omelets. Add to that that they periodically appear for FAR less than their advertised price ($15-$30 - this one’s $15 on the Friday sale), and you’ve got a great deal on your hands. This pan is a traditional crepe shape, so I suppose it’d be okay if you want to make those too.

Sin City

Monday, April 4th, 2005
Product Image: Sin City - The Hard Goodbye

While I normally advocate reading the book before seeing the movie, in the case of Sin City, I’m not sure it matters much. The two are so closely intertwined that rather than being a reinterpretation of the book, the movie is a retelling in a different medium. I think this has never been done before, but there’s now Sin City (the book) and Sin City (the movie), and the experience isn’t complete without both of them.

Sin City itself played with interpretation of time - the stories are reasonably timeless in themselves, but also disjoint in time with respect to the other stories. As the movie depicts very well, characters, and sometimes dead characters, from one act are always sitting in the background of (or sometimes narrating) the chapter you’re experiencing now. In a similar vein, scenes from the stories in the books show up in the stories in the movies. Maybe you’ve read it before or seen it before, but that doesn’t matter, because there’s more to tell.

It’s an interesting experiment, and it really works for me.

There’s plenty to say about the books themselves, but I really think they need to be experienced firsthand. They’re violent, brutal, beautiful, stark, and unquestionably unlike anything else. If nothing else, they won’t bore you.

There are seven books total - the link is to the first one.

Buy Sin City - The Hard Goodbye from Amazon.