Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Sitting in Silence

colorized social sciences

[This is a re-post from a blog entry I wrote when I still logged into MySpace.  Original date: March 7, 2007.]

Today, at 12:54PM, I went to lunch -- Tony's Pizza.  It's become my ritual.  Everyday.  Ever--single--day.  I'm not complaining; it's good food at a good price, although, I'm not too sure it's good on my health.  With that in mind, I decided to order only one slice rather than the usual two.  As I walked to the counter, an acquaintance passed me by on his way outside to sit and wait for his food.

Awkward glance.  Raised eyebrows, if to say "hey".  I think it was Gina Fiore's boyfriend... I think his name was Cam.  I can't be certain.  He sat outside, I sat in-- in uncomfortable silence.  His order came up first -- he grabbed his pizza; I averted my eyes, pretending to be interested in the texture on the napkin that lay in front of me on the table.  Nothing said. 

Regret…

Last week ago, I encountered a similar situation.  Another acquaintance.  The same restaurant.  She didn't see me, but I saw her; she was coming from the Sesame Inn.  In the interest of avoiding the awkward moment, I sat in silence. 

Regret…

I finished my slice, and checked the clock -- 1:26PM.  "Hmm... 30 minutes more."  I went back to work early.  At Borchard and the 101, I rolled up on a shot at redemption.  A red light.  A black jeep.  Exposed sides-- rag top.  White curly hair everywhere.
I glanced over.  Then ahead.  I sat until I boiled.  Silence no more.  I rolled down my window...

"MR. C!"

He looked over as I shouted over the engine of the loud semi-trunk that turned left in front of us.

"I JUST WANTED TO SAY THAT YOU'RE THE BEST TEACHER THAT I'VE EVER HAD!  THANK mr-c-clickerYOU!"

Without missing a beat, he reached into his pocket and acknowledged me with his simple gesture coupled with a smile.

"click-click"

Atypically, the light turned green just at that moment, sparing us of the usual minute of uncomfortable silence after saying hi to someone at a stop light.  Ever more peculiar, the moment didn't confront us at the two subsequent red lights (He had pulled behind me).  I turned left into the parking lot as he zoomed passed me.

I really miss that guy.

I’m not too embarrassed to admit that I regret a lot of things that I did or didn’t do in high school.  Luckily, taking a course with Paul Coffman is not one of those things.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

the nice

You should really read my sister’s blog.  It’s much better than mine.

melbellomo.blogspot.com

allthenice.com

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Read More

nye-2008-48

It’s come to my attention that the formatting scheme I put into place (described in this post) has only led to confusion and disappointment. 

I’ve removed it.

If you feel you’ve fallen victim to these short posts, and missed the “Read more…” link, I’d encourage you to go back and experience the full majesty of my blogging.

I’m talking to you, Colorado!

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Chicken Piccata

Here’s my favorite preparation of chicken piccata.

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2   chicken breasts (boneless, skinless)
1/3 cup flour
3 Tbsp Parmesan or Romano cheese (grated)
4 Tbsp olive oil
6 Tbsp butter
1/3 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup dry white wine (we often use Chardonnay)
1/4 cup brined capers (drained)

Get things started by uncorking your wine and pouring yourself a glass.  Everyone always says that you shouldn’t cook with wine that you wouldn’t drink.  Given that I’ll drink anything short of “corked” wine, this is a very low hurdle for the wine to surpass.  Still, this dish takes a bit of patience, so get that wine flowing!

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This is probably the hardest part of the entire recipe, and it’s also one of the most important.  The thinness and tenderness of the chicken is what gives it the melt-in-your-mouth quality. 

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If you’ve never butterflied a chicken breast before, it can be a bit daunting.  Please take care to not slice your hand off.  I like to put the “rough side” down on the cutting board and make a slow horizontal incision.  Once you make it a few inches in, peel up the top layer and put a little tension on the “V” between the two forming cutlets.  Make long, easy strokes against that point – you shouldn’t need much force on the knife at this point, the breast should kind of “peel apart.”

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If you’ve got behemoth breasts, like the ones they sell at Costco, (and you’re feeling like a challenge) you want to shoot for a “tri-fold” cut (as I call it).  Do the same as above, but only with the top third of the breast, then reverse the knife and go back the other way in the same manner.  If you have a better technique for getting thin cutlets, please let me know.

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If you don’t feel like your cutlets are thin enough, you can also pound them out.  I recommend doing this as it helps to tenderize the chicken as well.  I encase the cutlets in cling wrap and pound away, striking down with an outward motion (does that make sense).  Make sure the cling wrap isn’t too tight, or it’ll bust out of the side and make a mess.  Set the breasts aside on a dish.

Look – if you’re worrying about making the cutlets look nice and even, don’t.  While visual appeal is great, it’s the flavor that makes the dish.  If you’ve got irregularly sized pieces, don’t worry about it.

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Grate a few tablespoons of cheese into a flour-filled dish.  This is your dredging dish, used to coat your chicken, so make sure it’s large enough.  The tall lip helps keep flour from flying our when coating your breasts.

I used a microplane with Pecorino Romano – I like the more pronounced flavor of romano, but the shreds that the microplane creates tend to clump together when mixing in with the flour.  Just keep in mind that after tossing around a bit, it’ll loosen up.

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This next set of pictures should be clear enough without my ranting.

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All right – the breast are coated and ready.  Let’s proceed.

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Get your pan going on medium-high heat.

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Section your 6 tablespoons of butter into 2 tablespoon increments.

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Melt 2 tablespoons of butter into 2 tablespoons of olive oil.  Precise measurement on the oil isn’t essential – eyeball it.  You’re basically just getting enough fat in there to fry (not deep-fry) your chicken.

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Lower one breast into the pan – take care not to plop it in or you’ll send hot fat flying everywhere!.

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Flip after about 2 minutes, and cook an additional 2 minutes.  You’re looking for golden brown on both sides.  Remove the chicken to a plate and cover with aluminum foil.

You’re going to repeat this procedure with the second breast: add 2 more tablespoons each of butter and oil, and lower the breast in – 2 minutes each side.

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While the breasts are cooking, juice your lemons and prepare your deglazing liquids – lemon juice, white wine, and capers.  It all goes in at the same time, so feel free to mix it ahead of time

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When the breasts are done, set them aside – perhaps in a warm oven (or perhaps not.)  The pan will have brown bits of goodness stuck to the bottom.  This is the “fond” and will help to flavor our sauce.  Pour the juice/wine/capers into the hot pan, scraping the bits off the bottom as the pan sizzles.

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Stirring occasionally to keep it from burning, reduce this liquid by half.  One trick for measuring that is flipping the wooden spoon around and dipping the cylinder into the sauce when you start, then repeating after some time to measure the difference in liquid height. 

I don’t do this.

Instead, I just wait for the liquid to thicken.  It’ll begin to “slosh” less and will look slightly syrupy.  It’s very important that you get to this point before proceeding.  The next step is to add the last 2 tablespoons of butter an whisk to incorporate; this finishes the sauce.  If you add the butter, then reduce more, you run the risk that the sauce will break, leaving you with an oil slick.

When the butter is incorporated, move your chicken back into the pan and let it soak in the flavor (on low heat) for a 3 minutes – or don’t.

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Move the chicken to the serving dish and cover with the remaining sauce.

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Optionally, you can sprinkle with some roughly chopped Italian parsley.  It gives the dish a nice refreshing note. 

Meg can’t tell cilantro from parsley at times, so we had to forgo this night.  ;-)

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Remember one, very important thing: the recipe just doesn’t matter that much.  I encourage you to modify the recipe, adding more/less of what you like/dislike.  I often heap extra capers into the sauce. 

BUT please, don’t add the butter to the sauce too soon!

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Lemonhead Martini

lemonhead-martini-16

We’re heading into Summertime, so I thought I’d publish the recipe for Meg’s favorite refreshing martini.  I cobbled this together for her one day when she said she wanted a “lemondrop.”  She was pleasantly surprised with the outcome, and we began “beta-testing” it on our friends.  The results were universally positive, and typically the tasting ended with requests for the recipe.

We’ve been struggling for a name for it.  The recipe differs enough from a lemondrop that I think it needs its own name.  The x-factor is the limoncello, so I was thinking “cellodrop” for a while…  Though, the flavor mostly reminds me of a Lemonhead, so I’ve settled on that for now.

Without further ado, I give you the recipe.  I should warn you though – Meg is often disappointed now with restaurant lemondrop martinis.

lemonhead-martini-01

2 parts FRESH lemon juice

~1 Tbsp sugar

1 part orange liquor – there isn’t really any discernable difference here; Cointreau, Grand Marnier, triple sec, blue Curacao (Meg prefers the blue-green result from using the latter).

1 part limoncello – We’ve tried Caravella and Pallini.  Meg prefers the Caravella due to the higher alcohol content.  It’s a little more alcohol-y, but Meg says when she’s drinking, she wants to know… I prefer Pallini – it creates such a smooth drink, you could almost mistake it for straight lemonade.

1 part vodka

 

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“ReaLemon” is not an adequate substitute!  If you don’t have fresh lemon juice, don’t bother.  I’m not saying that to be snobby, I just don’t want you to waste your alcohol…

lemonhead-martini-03 Rolling your lemons before slicing will loosen up the juices (I guess…)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Cut along the equator for best results.

 

 

 

 

 

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First things first – rim the martini glass with the cut side of the lemon.  The lemon juice will cause the sugar to stick better than simply using water.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Invert the glass and dip into sugar; amount of coverage is up to your preference.  It’s important to do this up front so we can get the martini glass chilling in the freezer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

lemonhead-martini-08lemonhead-martini-07Proceed to juice your lemons.  We prefer this style of juicer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Pour the lemon juice into the shaker.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

lemonhead-martini-10Follow that with the sugar.  Superfine will make things easier; simple syrup better still.  But plain old granules will suffice and it commonly what we use.

 

 

 

 

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Give that a good shake to dissolve the sugar into the lemon juice.  Next, add your ice – about 3/4 full on your shaker.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Next, add your liquors and spirits.  I typically go from more viscous to less, i.e. orange-to-limoncello-to-vodka.  I feel like this leaves less remaining in the measurer.

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Give it about 40 good shakes.  More or less could be fine… I’m not sure.  Someone once told me 40 was a good general purpose number, and I’ve followed that blindly.  Pour into your frosty glass.

 

 

lemonhead-martini-16Garnish with a lemon twist if you’re feelin’ fancy.

 

 

 

 

Well, I hope that wasn’t too complicated – Enjoy!

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