Category Archives: Food and Drink

Link hodgepodge: Recipes, teachers, Mindy, and more

Saipua bouquet

I brought you these.

Some things that caught my eye recently, in no particular order:

From How to Be a Good Ally (Colorlines):

“’The job of a good ally is not to save anybody but rather to help create the conditions under which people can assert and grow their own power,’ said Rinku Sen, President and Executive Director of The Applied Research Center.”

From What are you here to teach? (Tara Sophia Mohr):

Tara: I have a dream to teach x. How do I know if I’m ready, qualified, to teach that subject?

Jen: You are never ready. Ready comes from teaching, from being in the transformational conversation itself, from being a humble teacher/student–so skip asking if you are ready to teach. It’s not a useful question.

Recipes I endorse:

  • With all of the fixins (in my case, Sriracha, lemon, and feta), I couldn’t stop eating this stuff.
  • In good times, in bad times, these salted peanut butter cookies will be by my side forevermore. I’ve made them several times and while they’re excellent as written, I can attest that all-purpose flour is fine; regular chocolate chips are fine; a mix of natural peanut butter and more processed stuff works out fine. I always freeze the batter before baking and watch my oven starting at about the 11 minute mark.
  • This salad is extremely delicious. And while I completely love and endorse farmers’ markets and would love to live a full-on locavore diet…I do not live in the LA paradise this blogger does. It’s still attention-grabbing with produce fetched at a Midwestern grocery store.

Two takes on The Mindy Project as the first season wraps: one Crunk Feminist eeshap says she won’t watch the show anymore; Rachel Sklar offers a more Pollyanna take.

In Chicago and itching for some escapism?

  • I almost couldn’t stand up after Head of Passes at Steppenwolf. Beautiful performances, beautiful design and direction, big questions about faith.
  • Thanks to some generous friends, I finally saw The Book of Mormon. My experience: laugh hard; hope we were all laughing for the same reasons; worry that was not true; repeat. Would love to debrief with anyone who’s seen it.
  • The 2013 Dionysus Cup Festival of New Plays is happening this weekend and next. If you like seeing new plays while they’re in development and participating in the democratic process, this is a steal. See one staged reading and enjoy a talk-back with the playwright and cast and know that your feedback might actually shape a new play. Or see two or more readings—an unlimited pass is just $10—and you can vote for your favorite to win the Cup (and cross your fingers that Polarity Ensemble Theatre might mount a full production).
  • In April I performed at the Park West (what?!). You can too! Last info session for the next Fear Experiment is next week. You can be a stepping or a cappella star. No, really, you can.

Coolest job spotted this week: Rookie is hiring a full-time editor.

This link roundup owes love to The Ann Friedman Weekly and Saya Hillman’s Smatterings, both of which I relish on the regular. Should I do more of these?

Photo above: Bouquet from Saipua in Brooklyn, spring 2011, 35mm.

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Pie in a new city

More from the backlog of summertime photos.

The destination

We moved to Chicago in July. Within three days, I received this email from my friend Kira, who lives in Maryland but used to call the Windy City home: “Hey, Random question – what’s your daytime availability like over the next couple of days? I have a surprise for you to pick up, but would need to know if mornings or afternoons work better for you. xo”

I named a morning. She sent me step-by-step public transportation instructions, telling me to call her when I got off the bus at the corner of Ashland and Chicago for further details.

Instead, when the morning came, I borrowed a car, figuring I would combine my surprise adventure with a grocery run. I typed the intersection into a GPS. The gas tank was full. I felt good.

Forty-five minutes later I realized…there’s more than one “Ashland & Chicago.” Poor Kira. I went pretty far west to a very green, residential community that Google Maps calls River Forest before calling her to clarify things.

But I was still amped. I took it as a good sign when I drove past this pretty mosaic.

EXPLORE

Explore, indeed. I rerouted and soon found myself at the correct Ashland & Chicago, and then—after a laughter-filled call for further instructions from Kira—a few doors down, at…

Hoosier Mama Pie menu

Hoosier Mama Pie Shop!

pieplant print

pie plates

sunflower

Hoosier Mama Pie Company

two little chairs

The nice cashier looked at me, then down at a clipboard full of pie orders. “…Welcome to Chicago?” she guessed. “Yes!” I said – “I mean, thank you!”

“Oh, good,” she said, “my next guess was going to be ‘happy birthday.’” She slid a white cardboard box toward me. “Your friend ordered this for you.”

Hoosier Mama Pie Company

And so the little white box rode shotgun, and when I got back to the empty apartment we feasted on cherry berry pie and missed Kira and watched a summertime storm through our screen door. It was a good day.

cherry berry pie

The savoring

My pals at Everybody’s Invited!, an event planning company in Portland, like to orchestrate what they call moments:

Think about a time when you received a gift. More than likely, you appreciated the gift because it was personal and it was unexpected. The gifting was perhaps made even more memorable because the experience, while brief, was joyfully shared between giver and receiver.

I’d say the pie surprise definitely qualified as a capital-M Moment – and if EI! ever needs to launch an East Coast affiliate, I nominate Kira for Chief Moment Officer, Baltimore Office. All in favor?

Photos: Chicago, IL, July 2012

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Blue Hill at Stone Barns

Before

chard rainbow

Awhile back my friend Hannah wrote a post called Play Practice: Gamify Everything in which she pointed out that if you add “game mechanics” to your life, you can become a better problem solver, be more mindful, and have more fun.

I couldn’t help but think of Anuj’s advisor and his crew when I read this. They’re all sharp people and I’m sure they work hard at their respective offices. But I honestly don’t know when and how they do it, because I’m constantly receiving emails like “I need you guys to chime in on this fake Chowhound thread about self-slicing watermelons” or “See you at the ball pit party this weekend?” They’re the most playful people—well, grown-ups—I know.

S A

sendalissa

So it was fun to play dress-up and have a Serious Adult Evening with them when they treated us to dinner at the extremely beautiful Blue Hill at Stone Barns.

Blue Hill at the Stone Barns

orchard

group shot near the chocolate mint

We’re smiling through our sweat in that group shot. It was a steamy June night, so the gents headed into the air-conditioned bar pretty quickly. I walked around the greenhouse with Alissa and Amber…

Back to the air conditioning

Inside the greenhouse

DSC_7542

DSC_7535

DSC_7526

And then wandered solo outside the restaurant to see what things looked like behind the scenes.

Stone Barns

reality

milk jugs

Smoker

Finally it was time to eat. I wish I could show you (well, feed you) so many things. I only took a couple of pictures inside because it was dark in the dining room and I wanted to focus on savoring everything. And if I had taken more pictures of the food, they wouldn’t match what you’ll eat if you ever go, because there are no set menus at Blue Hill. The chefs create whatever they want using the freshest ingredients at their fingertips and factoring in whatever dietary restrictions you mention.

Dining room, floating plants

When you’re seated you receive a little booklet with pages that list the expected harvest for each month of the year. Flipping to June’s page, we were able to predict that our dinner would likely include things like asparagus, strawberries, and peas. But we couldn’t possibly anticipate all of the ways those ingredients would appear, let alone the surprises we’d encounter along the way. At one point the server brought out an “experiment we’re trying just for fun,” placing a pile of bread in front of us along with two different “single udder butters,” and named the cows whose milk they came from (thanks, Daffodil and Sunshine). I asked if she was familiar with Portlandia, but then I tasted the two butters and shut my snarky face. They were shockingly different and so good – light and rich at the same time.

Amber's notes

All in all it was a magical night. Anuj and I have tried but there’s no way to thank these folks enough – not for the dinner, nor for the ways they brought fun and play into our lives throughout our time in NYC. Thank goodness for road trips and weddings and the internet and work conferences; we’re gonna exploit ‘em all and be sure to stay in touch. We won’t always eat as well as we did at Blue Hill, but we are so happy to be able to feast on the memories.

After Blue Hill

Photos: All digital, and all but the group shot were taken by yours truly at Blue Hill at Stone Barns, June 2012.

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The universe says

Have a cup of tea.

last morning in town

Townshend's Tea

Photos: 1. 826DC, 2010; 2 and 3. Portland, OR, July 2010.

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Pancake Saturday

Polly's Pancake Parlor

Weekend breakfast

 

It snowed here! First time since Halloween. Hope you all have a cozy weekend.

Want pancakes? I highly recommend these lemon-ricotta ones. (And I prefer blueberry sauce to sauteed apples. I just simmer water, sugar, frozen blueberries, a little lemon juice if I have it, and a little bit of cornstarch-water paste until it looks like sauce.)

Photos (both 35mm): Sugar Hill, NH, Oct. 2010; My kitchen, Brooklyn, late 2011.

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Oh, boy

Oh Boy Salad

In my family, no Thanksgiving is complete without Jell-O. In case you need some neon yellow on your Thanksgiving table, here’s our go-to recipe, as dashed off for us by my grandma a couple of years ago:

OH BOY SALAD

2-3oz pkg lemon jello or 1-6 oz pkg.
Make as directed with water

Add:
3 bananas sliced
1/3 cup mini marshmallows (or 8 jumbo marshmallows, diced)
1 No. 2 can crushed pineapple (can sizes smaller now-was 20 oz. just use smaller size can)
(drained, save juice for dressing)

Let this become firm in refrig. before spreading the dressing

Dressing:
1 cup pineapple juice (add water if not enough juice)
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons flour
Mix, stir and cook until thick.

COOL and combine with 1 cup cream whipped (I use Cool Whip)
Spread on top of salad and sprinkle with shredded [cheddar] cheese

If you’re really averse to this flavor combination, you could also enjoy a red Jell-O dish with a blanket of marshmallows and bananas thrown in, or a salad of apples, walnuts, halved red grapes, and Cool Whip.

NOTE: This post was updated on Saturday, Nov. 26 because we realized Gram left the marshmallows out of her dictation. To the dozens of you who undoubtedly made this recipe over the weekend and felt bereft at the lack of another sweet, fluffy ingredient…hope you still enjoyed it.

Photo: Thanksgiving 2009.

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For the soul

 

Kira‘s chicken noodle soup (summer 2011, 35mm film).

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Report back: DIY Food Photography

Food photography at Brooklyn Brainery

Food photography at Brooklyn Brainery

As mentioned earlier, I recently spent an afternoon at Brooklyn Brainery learning about DIY food photography. The instructor, Rachel Been, made smart use of the three hours, kicking it off lecture-style but moving into hands-on practice time. We all spread out to photography the produce (or, ahem, the French toast and bacon cupcakes!) we brought along, and then downloaded a few and took some time to do post-production edits.

Several of us, including yours truly, just edited using the free tools on Picnik – no fancy Aperture or Photoshop for my radishes and potatoes. In other words: you can do this, too!

Seriously. Before the post-production work in Picasa, the photos looked more like this:

Blah. I’m telling you: Picnik. Radishes to riches!

(Note/update: these are technically not the same original files; I deleted those when I made the edits – but they were very similar.)

If you want to ogle some food porn, here are some of the sites Rachel recommended:

And if you want to give it a try yourself, here are some resources for learnin’:

  • Camera simulator: Shows just what those manual settings on your camera do!
  • Creative Commons: Innovative sets of copyright licenses and tools for people who want to share their work online. (Big ups to people who share their work in this way; I raid Creative Commons almost every day at work to illustrate our blog posts and I’ve just been too lazy to figure out how/whether to do it myself.)
  • Rachel Been’s DIY Food Photography presentation: Bonus: Prezi seems like a super alternative to Powerpoint if you’ve been looking for one.
  • And Picnik, for photo edits. I’ve used Picnik before for work and it’s pretty simple and fun, and syncs easily with Picasa, Flickr, and other places you might be storing your photos. I wish it gave you a little more control over color adjustments, but for cropping, adjusting the exposure and saturation, etc., it’s pretty handy. And free!
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Which food should I take?

I really like food.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4864207925/in/set-72157624655795378

I really like photography.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4855899378/in/set-72157624640556168/

So I’m REALLY stoked for the food photography class I’m taking at Brooklyn Brainery next weekend! The instructor, Rachel Been, asked us each to bring a raw fruit or veggie “or something more complex” to photograph. Time for a vote!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/5136759917/in/set-72157625166210563

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/2795443920/in/set-72157605963485714

Thanks for voting! Stay tuned to see what I learn. And eat.

Photos: Breakfast parfait at the ginger farm (digital, 2010); Fake Space Camp mimosa fixins (ditto); Kona Shark’s coffee farm (ditto); Master family breakfast (35mm, 2008?).

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Visit to the pie shop

This is Crystal. She’s a teacher. On Saturday nights, she works at Dangerously Delicious Pies DC.

the bride at work (a few weeks before the wedding)

This is Eric. He’s in law school. One weekend, the folks at DDP asked if he could help Crystal (his then-fiancee) cover a shift. Now he’s on the payroll, too.

The groom at work.

They got married a few weeks ago in the pie shop. I got to photograph their wedding, with lots of help from my dad and my friend Kira. I’ll post pictures of that soon. In the meantime…can we just marvel at how awesome all of this is? I took these pictures when I went to visit Crystal and Eric at DDP a few weeks before the wedding.

GOOD APPLES

menu

Crystal, Saturday night, DDP

Dangerously Delicious DC

Definitely my sweetest assignment to date. Thanks, Eric and Crystal.

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