This Morning’s Breakfast

I’m out of peaches and fresh curd cheese (Monday and Wednesday breakfasts).

I finished my breakfast pizza yesterday (Tuesday and Thursday breakfasts).

What’s for breakfast? I opened the refrigerator and look what I found:

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Leftover slices from Steak au Poivre last week.
Tomato from same.
Roasted potato from dinner two days ago.
Very fresh eggs scrambled with crème fraiche.

Y’know, leftovers has a bad connotation. There ought to be a snappy euphemism.
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Sunday Supper

Good Eatin’ vi

This is the sixth in an occasional series of Good Eatin’—kind of a sidebar often involving leftovers—where I will describe an easily put together meal that we enjoyed very recently, maybe yesterday.

I think of Sunday Dinner as early afternoon dinner of roast chicken or pot au feu, almost always with guests or extended family. Supper is late and simple, to my mind. On a weekday, dinner is the main meal, around seven o’clock.

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Sunday is an active day or a lazy day… the end of a weekend or day-trip to wherever or a day like today where I vegged out on the New York Times and NASCAR from the road course at Infineon Raceway at Sears Point in Sonoma County. I can’t really explain the NASCAR, I never watch NASCAR. But this one is local and it’s like so many turns rather than a stupid oval with all turns left, and there are hills and stuff. Then there’s the five o’clock baseball game on ESPN with Jon Miller and Joe Morgan, doesn’t matter who’s playing.
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Great Salmon

Or not.

After the last A.C.T. play of the season, Happy End (A Melodrama with Songs, Lyrics by Bertolt Brecht, Music by Kurt Weill), we repaired to Cortez for a drink and a bit of bar food. I like that room, long and narrow with a bar on one side and banquettes on the other, followed by clothed tables in the dining area to the rear. It’s subtly decorated and features strange and wonderful sculptural lights. And their small plates are unfailingly interesting and good.
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Peas Please

How to eat your peas after the joy of shelling.

English_Peas.jpgOne thinks of peas as being frozen. That’s how they come. And they’re pretty good, the best of the frozen vegetables. (When I was a child, milk was delivered by a man in a milk truck. It took several visits to my grandfather’s farm in Logan, Ohio to be convinced that milk came from a cow. I preferred “truck milk.”) Likewise, I didn’t discover the wonderfulness of fresh peas in a pod until I started shopping at the Farmers Market.

This time of year, fresh English peas are abundant at the Farmers Market, they ain’t cheap! They used to be $4 for a small bag, then they went up to $5 last year due to rising gasoline prices. This year they went up to $7 due to gasoline and our heavy and constant spring rains. The peas were late and the first bags were muddy, but the peas were good. Now the peas are big and fresh and yielding closer to 2 cups than 1 1/2.

I buy a bag nearly once a week and I’m constantly looking for ways to prepare them, other than “just peas.”
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Gravy

“Gravy isTomato sauce, usually the kind made with meat like pork, veal, etc, and typically eaten with macaroni, rigatoni or ziti. As opposed to marinara sauce, a meatless tomato sauce usually eaten with spaghetti.”
Peter Paul “Paulie Walnuts” Gualtieri quoted in The Sopranos Family Cookbook [Warner Books 2002]

I’m posting this Pork Braciola and Tomato Gravy recipe just because its so good and reminded both Carol and me of the “spaghetti sauce” she used to make back in the day when there were hungry kids around. I’m pretty sure she picked it up from one of the neighbor ladies in South Roanoke Apartment Village. In any case, it followed us to Newton, and is one of the few recipes I took to Jerusalem.

After our move to San Francisco, there were no longer hungry kids around and we got caught up in trying new recipes from new cookbooks, and then there was the no carb phase and Carol’s tried and true spaghetti sauce fell by the wayside.
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Chicken Soup

Good Eatin’ v

This is the fifth in an occasional series of Good Eatin’, kind of a sidebar often involving leftovers (LO), where I will describe an easily put together meal that we enjoyed very recently, maybe yesterday.

I’m working on my “Texas Eats” post and my mind wanders to what’s-for-dinner. I dreamed about meatballs and there’s this Sardinian Meatball recipe by Joyce Goldstein that is interesting… but the Wednesday Chef says that its best the day after it’s made.

Well, Carol’s not feeling well… she stayed home from work, that means she’s really not feeling well. Right now she’s snoozing. I can make the meatballs for tomorrow and something mild for today. Fish, that’s mild. There’s a halibut recipe from a recent NY Times that looks good. So that makes a short list to take to Whole Food; ground pork, scallions, halibut, canned tomatoes. I added chicken soup to the bottom of the list, just in case.
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Texas Eats

Or… What’s a San Francisco guy to do when he’s stranded in San Antonio and can’t cook?

The first week of June each year, Carol has a National Association of Educators of Young Children (NAEYC) Professional Development Institute with 4 days of workshops “second tier cities,” last year in Miami Beach, this year in San Antonio. She’s been going for many years and the last two years I’ve gone along for the ride. The characters are wife Carol, Sarah of San Francisco and Fran of San Jose, among others.

riverwalk.jpgSan Antonio River Walk

Since I didn’t do cooking and writing for this short week, I did eating and writing. This is a site of experiments and this post is more of a travelogue than a cooking thing; there are lots of pictures. So I’m going to experiment with this link to a slide show, rather than paste the pictures in here. Let me know how you like it.

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Beets Redux Too

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Beet Greens
Beet Greens Too
Roasted Tri-Colored Beet Salad with Tomato Vinaigrette
The Last of the Beets

Beet Greens

The Saturday of KABOOM, I concocted this fabulous lunch.

I got a lovely bunch of beets at the Market, 4 large. I roasted them to make pickled beets for the KABOOM picnic. Had one beet left over.

The beets came with these lovely greens, and there they were on the counter. Those won’t keep for more than a day or so and then I’ll forget about them and they’ll get all slimy.

So I looked in Chez Panisse Vegetables for guidance. Alice does beet greens with pasta. She uses currents and stuff I don’t have or don’t want to mess with, but the key thing I was looking for in the recipe was “cook covered for 5 minutes.”
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Ballpark Food

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Pacific Bell Park down… SBC up

Or, how to avoid Ballpark Food with,
Chinese Chicken Noodle Salad

Way back in February when Spring Training was about to begin, the Giants held a FanFest and part of the deal was a five ticket package for April and May games in View (that’s up top) Reserved for $58, they pick the seats and the games. That’s a deal, and the seats and the games have been good. But this is about the food.
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Ramps

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Passing through the Farmers Market a couple Saturday’s ago; I noticed that the mushroom guy had fiddlehead fern and ramps. I’ve bought his fiddleheads before, and know what to do with those, but had never laid eyes on a ramp, although I had seen ramps in various recipes. The ramps cost nearly twenty bucks a pound (!) so I took about 8. They looked really fresh—they had mud on them, wonder what that weighed—and the guy carefully wrapped them in white paper for their journey to my pot.

When I got home, I did a little ramp research.
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