Today was our first day out on the new menu of the new school lunch program! Busy!
**Yeah, this is probably not my best picture. I got some weird looking smile on my face which makes me look goofy! [[Shrug]]**
We had Mediterranean style chicken wraps with veggies and hummus today. Man! I feel kind of embarrassed that I didn't even remember to get a picture! Right now my sous chef Roberto and I are running the show in the kitchen. We feel like everything went pretty smooth today but we know for the office and administration it was pretty crazy trying to get all the orders in!
We have four lunches. The daycare runs infants to k4 and they eat at 11:00am. Then the school runs three lunches as follows: k5-2nd grade 11:25am to 11:55am, 3rd-6th grade 12:00pm to 12:30pm, 7th-12th grade 12:50pm to 1:20pm.
Its a bit unusual to me to have four lunches but I think its an excellent combination of fitting each group of kids thru the cafeteria in an expedient manner and managing the quality & volume of the food for each group. If your running behind this schedule gives you a chance to catch up before the next lunch comes thru and not bottle neck by trying to get the total amount of food out at one time! The kitchen is limited in space in both storage and physical work area.
I wanna give a shout out to my man Roberto! Excellent job today! I know its a steep learning curve...but I'll try my best to keep you from cutting off a finger or two!
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Favorites This Week
Below are a few things I found this week I like. Each picture was borrowed from, and has a link to the original post so hopefully I am not breaking online etiquette. Merely trying to bring attention to some cool ideas and a few new things.[click pics for link back to articles]
Cheese & Herb Waffle BLT! Need I say more? Click the link and get the recipe.
The Pioneer Woman really spoke to my stomach on this one...Pepperoni Pizza Burgers!
Sweet Potato Pancakes from The Gingered Whisk!
Home made peanut butter(or any nut)! Love the recipe and instructional over at Michael Ruhlman's and of course all excellent photography done by his wife: Donna Ruhlman!
Labels:
BLT,
burgers,
Favorites This Week,
Food,
pancake,
peanut butter,
pizza,
potato,
sweet,
waffle
Friday, October 5, 2012
Kitchen is Open! Lunch Menu - Go!
Awhile back I posted that I started a new job. It was a 'startup' of sorts. I am working for a private academy that has a commercial kitchen but had not been in the position to start a school lunch program. Now they are.
We spent weeks on plans, lunch menus, instructions, manuals, lining up vendors, tweaking the way we do things, 'courting' the health department...I did not want to start posting on this venture till I knew we were in the clear and things were about to kick off. That's why I have not posted much this week. But now...
The kitchen was approved today by the Health Department for its permit to operate! There are still a few things to work on but they are mostly minor.
Starting Monday we will kick off our school lunch program for the Academy...its going to be BUSY, and CRAZY! If you want to check out the school and the lunch menu go HERE! (Right hand corner, read: Lunch Menu)
Woo-Hoo!
We spent weeks on plans, lunch menus, instructions, manuals, lining up vendors, tweaking the way we do things, 'courting' the health department...I did not want to start posting on this venture till I knew we were in the clear and things were about to kick off. That's why I have not posted much this week. But now...
The kitchen was approved today by the Health Department for its permit to operate! There are still a few things to work on but they are mostly minor.
Starting Monday we will kick off our school lunch program for the Academy...its going to be BUSY, and CRAZY! If you want to check out the school and the lunch menu go HERE! (Right hand corner, read: Lunch Menu)
Woo-Hoo!
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Favorites This Week
Below are a few things I found this week I like. Each picture was borrowed from, and has a link
to the original post so hopefully I am not breaking online etiquette.
Merely trying to bring attention to some cool ideas and a few new
things. [click pics for link back to articles]
Over at The Girl Who Ate Everything Walking Tacos has resurfaced!
A great Idea that is really an oldie...Recipe & great pictures included! - Its like Frito-Pie in a bag!
Pod Rooms - Small $100 hotel rooms in NYC! Great idea, fun concept, brilliant design!
Black Kuro Burger (by Burger King!) - Bamboo charcoal ash mixed in with bun and black squid ink ketchup...Mmmm, mouth watering, eh?
This brought back fond memories of a little restaurant in the North End of Boston called Limoncello! At the end of every meal it was customary to finish with a small drink of Limoncello. I like the idea of making my own just because of these wonderful memories but alas a small bottle would probably last for 10 years around our house!
Labels:
drinking,
Eating,
Favorites This Week,
fritos,
International Travel,
lemons,
life,
limoncello,
travel
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Bon Appetit & Gourmet (not worth the news stand price)
[I originally posted this in 2007 - not much has changed since then, actually maybe worse...]
I can truly say that I have been reading/looking at Bon Appetit and Gourmet for years now and I am about to get rid of their subscription just like I did Food & Wine.
First let me say that if you have a subscription that basically makes each magazine only a dollar apiece, then maybe that's OK. The photography and/or maybe one article in the whole magazine would be worth a dollar to you...but please please don't pay that shelf price of 3.99 or higher.
I have been counting pages and looking at pictures and realized some very troubling things about these magazines that maybe you are not aware of...
- If you count the pages of ads, ad pictures, and non-content it will pretty much be 50% to 60% of the magazine.
- Now take all the pages that have actual content and figure out the real percentage of the page that is not real content...uh huh, now maybe 60% to 65% of the magazine is not true content, meaning its ads.
- Take away all the credits and small print that doesn't teach you anything (you know all that necessary stuff for publishing) yep, now we're up to 70%.
- And don't be fooled by some of that great photography or mini-articles because if you read some of the small print or pay attention to the sponsor you realize its more ad pictures and content.
- Last but not least, take away the real pictures (because they use so many real BIG pictures that are beautiful but take up so much space) and see that you may have 20% actual text content left that is either article or recipe.
Look thru your subscriptions and tell me if I am lying. I think not. My suggestion? Saveur.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Mimi & Papas House!
Most Saturdays I bring both of my boys to Frizzles to meet Mimi & Papa (my parents). Sometimes my wife (Steph) comes or is sleeping in from working the night before. Mimi and Papa enjoy time playing with Tytus (now 2.5) and holding Ezra(and playing as much as a 2 month old does).
Frizzles is like a Dairy Queen, but not. They have frozen custard, not soft serve ice cream and the menu's have similar things by the way of chicken fingers and burgers.
On Saturday morning they open fairly early for not serving breakfast. I think store hours they open by 9 or 9:30am and we show up between 930 and 10am. We are usually the only people there the first hour or so and Tytus is rip roaring and running around the restaurant inside. We order a drink and get a fry, or custard to share with Tytus. Occasionally we give him 'pieces' (pennies or change) to put in the big plastic Children's Miracle Network container which has your change go round & round and thru 'mousetrap' or Ferris Wheel kind of contraptions before finally falling to the bottom. Quite entertaining for him. We hang out for awhile and 'catch up' then go our separate ways. A good time is had by all!
What has happened over time is Tytus has gotten so used to seeing Mimi & Papa at Frizzles (and have been there more times than their actual house) that Tytus now thinks Mimi & Papa LIVE at Frizzles! And if that's not funny enough...every time we drive by Frizzles he starts hollering 'Dat's Mimi & Papa's house, Mimi & Papa's house!!!" and will continue to do so till I agree with him!
Frizzles is like a Dairy Queen, but not. They have frozen custard, not soft serve ice cream and the menu's have similar things by the way of chicken fingers and burgers.
What has happened over time is Tytus has gotten so used to seeing Mimi & Papa at Frizzles (and have been there more times than their actual house) that Tytus now thinks Mimi & Papa LIVE at Frizzles! And if that's not funny enough...every time we drive by Frizzles he starts hollering 'Dat's Mimi & Papa's house, Mimi & Papa's house!!!" and will continue to do so till I agree with him!
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Watermelon Carving
You will find that there are many gadgets and tools to help you carve fruits and vegetables, including a very "cute" pumpkin carving kit marketed for Halloween every year. But I have found that most of your common garnishing and cutlery tools that you possess will do the job more than adequately...and if you have a bit of creativity and/or are artistic, even fewer are necessary.
I use a real nice paring knife from Chicago Cutlery with a wooden handle and a thin blade, both in thickness and width. I picked it up in Wal-Mart for about 4 or 5 dollars. My other "expensive" paring knives are too thick in width for carving smaller items. A wooden skewer is what I use to pick, pull, or poke pieces out while I am working. And last but not least, an X-Acto craft knife (the kind you buy or use for hobbies) for beginning a drawing or pattern that has detail that can be cut out later by the paring knife.
## UPDATE - In the last 10 years I started using a cordless dremel with different bits in order to cut my carving time down even further ##
Here are some basics for what I call "traditional" carving:
1. For some reason (that Harold McGee or Alton Brown could probably tell you), a watermelon sometimes has some pressure, so if you know of some areas that you can cut out go ahead and do so. You can leave the meat (fruit) but remove the rind. This keeps the watermelon from splitting or cracking while you're carving a design when starting with a whole watermelon (thus ruining it except for eating the remains).
2. As in step one, do your carving and remove the rind around it but leave the meat behind it until the absolute last minute. This keeps your work stable, keeps the watermelon in good physical shape, and leaves less of a chance that you will damage that section while working on something else. I have done carvings stretching them over several days only to hull the cavity out at the last minute -- everything was good and stable, the watermelon did not wilt, curl, and/or droop while waiting for presentation/completion.
3. Wrap the watermelon in plastic wrap/film in between working on it and/or storing (store in refrigerator). By using the above practice in step two, I have kept watermelons several days while carved and/or working on them. I have found that using lemon juice or any other fruit stabilizers doesn't prolong the life of the watermelon any more than the practices I currently use, so I don't brush carved areas with any kind of acidic juice to retard colorization. I have not had that problem with a watermelon.
4. I hardly ever use the meat inside a watermelon that I am carving (except for snacking on). It seems better to me to fill it with different color and texture contrasting fruits to eat and not to incorporate the watermelon meat itself back in (that's just my professional opinion). Backyard entertaining? Suuurrre, that would be fine!
5. Watermelon can be stood upright or lying down but if you are using it to hold flowers, be sure to remember to leave a good bit of the watermelon meat in the basket or vase style carving you have. It works well to hold everything in place; not to mention provide water/nourishment for the flowers if real.
6. I practice carving the "empty" space out first -- then detail or outline around it later. This keeps from a mass amount of mistake by misjudging the room that you will need to complete the design.
Actually explaining all the ways of carving a watermelon could get extremely extensive. Hopefully, these basics will help get you off to a good start while practicing your own graphics or designs. I also use my apple corer for cutting circles and for making heart or teardrop shapes with additional cuts. Using your zester (5 hole kind) works wonders for creating a basket look by alternating one inch zests horizontally and vertically. And if you have multiple size and shape metal or plastic cookie cutters you can press them firmly into the green of the watermelon creating a bruised/dark outline on the skin to use as a guide to cut whatever shape you used out of the rind.
Right now I know of 3 different types of watermelon carving styles which I have named myself because I am not sure if there is even a classification:
While any one of these styles are great, I am seeing that more and more the styles are being combined for even more elaborate pieces. One book that I have recently run into is called Fantastic Food Decorating by Manuela Caldirola & Sergio Barzetti. It covers a section for melons and many other things but also comes with good tool and food science help for making your carvings successful.
See some of my carvings in my album below (unfortunately I have carved a lot more that were never photographed...) ~
I use a real nice paring knife from Chicago Cutlery with a wooden handle and a thin blade, both in thickness and width. I picked it up in Wal-Mart for about 4 or 5 dollars. My other "expensive" paring knives are too thick in width for carving smaller items. A wooden skewer is what I use to pick, pull, or poke pieces out while I am working. And last but not least, an X-Acto craft knife (the kind you buy or use for hobbies) for beginning a drawing or pattern that has detail that can be cut out later by the paring knife.
## UPDATE - In the last 10 years I started using a cordless dremel with different bits in order to cut my carving time down even further ##
| There are some really good books out there on carving and garnishing. However I must admit I learned by playing around in my spare time and haven't really bought or owned any of those books. Please consider though, if a book has templates for you that these are almost always irritating and confine you to trying to find the average/normal size watermelon. |
1. For some reason (that Harold McGee or Alton Brown could probably tell you), a watermelon sometimes has some pressure, so if you know of some areas that you can cut out go ahead and do so. You can leave the meat (fruit) but remove the rind. This keeps the watermelon from splitting or cracking while you're carving a design when starting with a whole watermelon (thus ruining it except for eating the remains).
2. As in step one, do your carving and remove the rind around it but leave the meat behind it until the absolute last minute. This keeps your work stable, keeps the watermelon in good physical shape, and leaves less of a chance that you will damage that section while working on something else. I have done carvings stretching them over several days only to hull the cavity out at the last minute -- everything was good and stable, the watermelon did not wilt, curl, and/or droop while waiting for presentation/completion.
3. Wrap the watermelon in plastic wrap/film in between working on it and/or storing (store in refrigerator). By using the above practice in step two, I have kept watermelons several days while carved and/or working on them. I have found that using lemon juice or any other fruit stabilizers doesn't prolong the life of the watermelon any more than the practices I currently use, so I don't brush carved areas with any kind of acidic juice to retard colorization. I have not had that problem with a watermelon.
4. I hardly ever use the meat inside a watermelon that I am carving (except for snacking on). It seems better to me to fill it with different color and texture contrasting fruits to eat and not to incorporate the watermelon meat itself back in (that's just my professional opinion). Backyard entertaining? Suuurrre, that would be fine!
5. Watermelon can be stood upright or lying down but if you are using it to hold flowers, be sure to remember to leave a good bit of the watermelon meat in the basket or vase style carving you have. It works well to hold everything in place; not to mention provide water/nourishment for the flowers if real.
6. I practice carving the "empty" space out first -- then detail or outline around it later. This keeps from a mass amount of mistake by misjudging the room that you will need to complete the design.
Actually explaining all the ways of carving a watermelon could get extremely extensive. Hopefully, these basics will help get you off to a good start while practicing your own graphics or designs. I also use my apple corer for cutting circles and for making heart or teardrop shapes with additional cuts. Using your zester (5 hole kind) works wonders for creating a basket look by alternating one inch zests horizontally and vertically. And if you have multiple size and shape metal or plastic cookie cutters you can press them firmly into the green of the watermelon creating a bruised/dark outline on the skin to use as a guide to cut whatever shape you used out of the rind.
| 1. Traditional - this is what everyone is used to seeing whether it is simple or extravagant. |
| 2. Whittle - I named this according to what it looks like, the green is whittled away to the white but not carving into the meat/flesh. This leaves a carved look -- like the surface of wood carvings. |
| 3. Inverse - I am currently working on improving my technique in this area. Unlike Traditional, this relies on using the white rind (no green, or very little) and the flesh (red) as a supporting color and carved area giving more of a depth to the carving. As you could imagine, this one would not be hulled out or the flesh eaten at all. |
While any one of these styles are great, I am seeing that more and more the styles are being combined for even more elaborate pieces. One book that I have recently run into is called Fantastic Food Decorating by Manuela Caldirola & Sergio Barzetti. It covers a section for melons and many other things but also comes with good tool and food science help for making your carvings successful.
See some of my carvings in my album below (unfortunately I have carved a lot more that were never photographed...) ~
![]() |
| Watermelon Carvings |
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Frozen Bananas
Waffles this morning! I know most people have already shared the tip about freezing bananas before they go bad but in addition to that you can just throw them directly in the freezer with peel on. No reason to cut them up, wrap them, or put them in a bag. Take banana or bananas out and microwave in 30 second increments. Then squish bananas out of peel like getting toothpaste out. Easy banana that is almost purée texture when adding to mixes such as pancake, waffle, muffins...you get the idea.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Favorites This Week
Below are a few things I found this week I like. Each picture has a link to the original post so hopefully I am not breaking online etiquette. Merely trying to bring attention to some cool ideas and a few new things.
The Floating Mug - To expensive for me...But
cool none the less, a coffee mug that never needs a coaster.
The edible cookie coffee mug.
Tomato Pie with Bacon and Jalapenos: the picture first, then the recipe attracted me. Actually, it probably had to do with the part that said "Bacon".
Tonka Beans: I never heard of them, and I have traveled quite a bit.
The reason that tonka beans are not well-known in the US is that they contain courmarin, a (naturally occurring chemical) that was shown to cause liver problems in rats in extremely high doses. Tonka beans have been banned by the FDA for sale in the US as a food item since the 1950s because of this, though you would have to ingest exceptionally high amounts of the tonka bean to reach these levels.
How to make ice shot glasses: I am not promoting the 'shot glass' so much as this creative idea to make a 'glass' out of ice. I am sure it would be cool to use for other drinks and a dessert or two...I can think of a few catering applications.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Mustard Oil, Outlawed? Dangerous? Conspiracy?
I've used mustard oil to toast/fry some sesame seeds to use in an Asian BBQ sauce because I wanted that sesame taste and a twist. It worked great! That was off the coast of West Africa on a ship were I found odd food supplies in the nooks and crannies of different pantry areas.I found about 4 or 5 bottles of Mustard Oil (were feeding about 500 people daily so that's not enough to do anything big) and I thought 'hmmm, I never remember working with this or what It tastes like...' so I did a little research on it.
The following is information from Wikipedia (I freely edited so as not to bore you), pay attention to the 3 and 4th paragraphs:
This oil has a strong smell, a little like strong cabbage, a hot nutty taste, and is much used for cooking in India and Bangladesh...
Mustard oil is composed mostly of the fatty acids oleic acid, linoleic acid and erucic acid. At 5%, mustard seed oil has the lowest saturated fat content of the edible oils.
In India, mustard oil is generally heated almost to smoking before it is used for cooking; this may be an attempt to reduce the content of noxious substances such as erucic acid, and does reduce the strong smell and taste. , Mustard oil is not considered suitable for human consumption in the United States, Canada and the European Union due to the high content of erucic acid, which is considered noxious, although mustard oil with low erucic acid content is available. To get around the restriction in Western countries, the oil is often sold "for external use only" in stores catering to Indian immigrants, as in North India, mustard oil is also used for rub-downs and massages (see ayurveda), thought to improve blood circulation, muscular development and skin texture; the oil is also antibacterial.
In India, the restrictions on mustard oil are viewed as an attempt by foreign multi-national corporations to replace mustard oil with canola oil, a variety of rapeseed with a low erucic acid content, but often from a genetically modified canola. The East and North Indians have been using it for ages and deny that there is enough evidence for the toxicity of erucic acid, instead maintaining that mustard oil is beneficial to human health because of its low saturated fat content, ideal ratio of omega-3 and omega 6 fatty acids (15g of omega 3 fats per 100g serving), content of antioxidants and vitamin E, as well as being cold-pressed (extracted at 45-50 degrees Celsius).
In northern Italy, it is used in the fruit condiment called mostarda.
If that wasn't enough for you, then check out the conspiracy! ~
FindArticles - The Mustard Oil Conspiracy
Ecologist, The, June, 2001, by Vandana Shiva
And of course if Wikipedia is not a valid enough source for you, here is the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) Import Alert from 1999 a quote from that report:
Expressed mustard oil is not permitted for use as a vegetable oil. It may contain 20 to 40% erucic acid, which has been shown to cause nutritional deficiencies and cardiac lesions in test animals.
Here is another great post I found on Mustard Oil after seeing if it was available in the states. I did find out you can buy it for massage oil! Learn something new everyday, huh?
*note: The Ghurkas on board were very appreciative when I gave them a bottle when they found out I had some. They were from Nepal and cooked some wickedly good and spicy food!
This post was part of the 'Lost In Transfer' series. Originally posted: 5/14/08 JWP3STS2FS38
Labels:
cooking,
International Travel,
Lost In Transfer,
mustard oil,
oil,
Risky,
Strange
Monday, September 17, 2012
Kitchen Supplies
This picture was took in Monrovia Liberia, West Africa when I was working there in 2008-2009. The big thing street-side there was what we called Wheelbarrow Entrepreneurs in Monrovia!
(click the link if your interested in seeing the rest of them, quite entertaining!)
We have a reliable source for all our kitchen supplies...
and this is not it!
Labels:
fun,
Humorous,
International Travel,
kitchen equipment,
Risky,
Strange
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Eggs in Lasagna?
A lot of people over the years ask me how to make lasagna. Sometimes they just want a recipe, and some want me to tell them step by step how I make it...So for those of you who have asked I found a really simple video for making lasagna (I guess I should define it's like most North American lasagna's) posted below.
Here are some of the usual questions I get when it comes to lasagna:
- Do you have to put an egg in it to bind it? No, I haven't for a long time. Just use the shredded mozzarella you have and put about a third of the total recipe amount in your ricotta (or cottage cheese) mixture, when it melts in, it helps bind. Most problems are not with binding the lasagna, its with letting it rest long enough to congeal/setup so the lasagna becomes firm again.
- Do you have to buy no-cook noodles to bake it without boiling the noodles first? No, I never have. There may be some 'secret' process I don't know about with those noodles, but I just use the regular noodles.
- Why do some people put cottage cheese in lasagna? Or Ricotta? Preference. I prefer ricotta. But some will simply put a nice bechamel sauce in it.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Yogurt Bread
The yogurt bread turned out great! Kind of dense with a tight crumb. The taste was reminiscent of an English muffin. We enjoyed it for toast and a few Panini's!
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