Truffle Box Placecards

Easiest of the easy – just buy a pretty box of truffles and some labels, put the label on the box, and write your guest’s name in a pretty way. DONE with placecards, DONE with dessert!

www.marthastewart.com

www.marthastewart.com

Now, if you want to spend a little more time, you could make the truffles yourself. Like this so yummy and easy sounding recipe for Balsamic Truffles from Giada, which I’ve been wanting to try for quite a while. If you find pretty boxes – I love pretty boxes – this would be a great way to use them.

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Cookie Placecards

This one will take a bit of work, but how cute would monogrammed cookies be for a party at which the guests’ names all start with a different letter?

www.marthastewart.com

www.marthastewart.com

You could cut the cookies in letter shapes if you have enough cookie cutters, or pipe the letters onto each cookie individually. Wrap them in a pretty cellophane bag, attach a name card to the bag, and let your guests have fun finding their cookie on the table…and obviously you’re done with dessert this way too!

Who Wants Dessert?

Dessert is difficult for a girl who really likes to serve appetizers. Guests fill up on the apps and on dinner and by the time dessert rolls around, no one wants any more to eat. I told my mom about this dilemma once and she said “You probably shouldn’t serve appetizers then.”

Which literally had had not ever occurred to me. Not serve appetizers?! That wouldn’t be a dinner party! That would just be dinner.

www.marthastewart.com

www.marthastewart.com

So I have to serve appetizers, even if its just some warm nuts and olives. I also have some sort of trigger in me that requires a finish to the meal; something sweet to mark the end. So I’m leaning towards starting to do small tidbits, petit fours style. Maybe meringues, or small brownies with a homemade sauce. Cookies are an obvious choice, or cupcakes. If the meal hasn’t been too cheese-heavy, an assortment of cheeses with fruit and a nice port would go over well. Or, if I really have to make a pie or a cake, I’ll tone down the heaviness of the meal…or just warn everyone before that they’d better come ready for true gluttony.

marthastewart.com

www.marthastewart.com

Martha Stewart the Goddess has a lovely idea for caramel apples to take home – both a dessert and a party favor! I love this idea because I feel like I’m giving guests something to end the meal, but they can enjoy it when they like. AND, I could use them as placecard holders!! Just tie on a little slip of paper with a name on it, and you’re done. I love love love this idea. Especially because caramel apples are so easy to make and inexpensive, and have a great sense of childlike fun about them. Oh, Martha: so genius….

I’m going to post a series of placecard holder/favor ideas from Martha over the next few days, because they’re so lovely and I’m always looking for innovative placecards.

New Ways to Use Pantry Ingredients

0910p48-thyme-l

Cooking Light came up with some ways to use classic ingredients in new ways: cinnamon, soy sauce, peanut butter and several others.

My favorite idea of theirs is to use thyme and Parmesan cheese in savory waffles or pancakes – how yummy and unusual for a dinner party! I would top them with sauteed mushrooms, maybe in a creamy sauce with a little chicken, if you like that sort of thing, and a dollop of creme fraiche on top. Mmmmmmmm!! Of course, you could leave the chicken out for a vegetarian meal, or even replace it with some soy veggie crumble for a little heartiness.

I can’t find a recipe I like for what I have in mind – I’m just going to have to try it out and see if I can get it right. This one is closest, though I wouldn’t fry the chicken first: Creamy Chicken with Mushrooms.

Boeuf Bourguignon, or, The True Tale of How I Ate Cow: Part II

Am I the only one who feels inundated by Julia Child to the point where I’m taking it as a sign? Seriously, a friend sent me My Life in France to read over Christmas, I brought it with me to read on the plane, tucked it in my little seat pocket to start after the movie, and what was the movie on the plane? Julie & Julia. It was definitely a sign. Not inundated in a bad way, just in the kind of way where I feel like there’s a message trying to get through to me that I should follow her to Paris, go to cooking school, and scientifically produce French recipes for American cooks. Have you read My Life in France? It’s great.

JUlia child

So for a Christmas present for someone very hard to buy for (aren’t all men?) I made Julia Child’s Boeuf Bourguignon, which is beef simmered with vegetables, onions and garlic in red wine and beef broth for several hours. As I explained yesterday, it was a huge deal for me to not only eat beef, but to cook it, and I had no idea what I was doing in the least. I was so busy trying to follow her directions to the letter that I completely neglected to take pictures, which is perhaps not so especially terrible because during the whole five and a half hour cooking process I kept laughing about how utterly useless my experience would be to anyone who knows anything about about cookery.

And here’s the thing – I feel sacrilegious writing this – the boeuf came out DRY. Like, it wasn’t that good. Julia Child’s Boeuf Bourguignon wasn’t that good. It wasn’t bad, it just didn’t taste anything like the brilliance that was the Spotted Pig’s bone marrow-covered steak and it was really pretty dry.

Obviously totally my fault. I have no idea how meat that simmered in red wine and broth for three hours came out dry, but it did. So, feeling badly about myself, I have to admit I did a little googling and none other than Ina Garten, the Barefoot Contessa herself, made Boeuf Bourguignon that came out dry too! Here’s her quote:

“I never really liked boeuf bourguignon. After cooking for three hours, the meat was stringy and dry and the vegetables were overcooked.”

Exactly how mine came out! So she ignored Julia and created her own recipe. If I ever make beef again, I’ll try her version and report, but don’t hold your breath. I think I’ve officially overdosed on beef. We drank a lot of really good wine and the mini dinner party turned out lovely as a whole, but the dish was just so brown and so heavy and so brown that it kind of grossed me out. Beef isn’t very good for me anyway, right? So I’m back to my semi-veggie/pescatarian ways but still with total obeisance to Julia for her genius, which has not been marred at all by my failure. I’m sure Julia’s boeuf never came out dry, and maybe I need to go to Paris to find out how.

Boeuf Bourguignon, or, The True Tale of How I Ate Cow: Part I

I. Cooked. Beef.

And ate it.

This is a very big deal.

Growing up with a vegetarian mama, I literally never ate beef in my life until a few years ago when I finally (lamely) rebelled by eating a bite of my then-boyfriend’s McDonald’s Quarter Pounder with Cheese. And it was really good. Clearly McDonald’s puts crack in their food because actual quality bites of beef that I occasionally stole from friends’ plates didn’t do it for me in the same way, and as a result I figured I just didn’t like beef that much.

Until I did a three day juice fast this December to recover from Thanksgiving and for three days I craved beef. THREE DAYS. Beef!  What?!

Yeah, this stuff.

www.aimmeats.com/

www.aimmeats.com/

From these cuties.

http://worthyourweight.files.wordpress.com/2008/08/cows.jpg

http://worthyourweight.files.wordpress.com/2008/08/cows.jpg

So after several days of resisting this craving with extremely incredible willpower, I went to the Spotted Pig for dinner, which is a fantastic gastropub in NYC, and as the fates would have it their special that night was a 13 ounce New York Strip steak with bone marrow sauce. Screw it, I said. I’m at the Spotted Pig and I’m going to try steak, and the bone marrow sauce will be an meat-eating bonus for my bona fides. I figured I would eat half and take the rest home; no no – I ate THE WHOLE THING. And could have eaten more. It was incredible. I highly highly highly recommend bone marrow on anything, especially steak after finishing a juice fast, and I highly highly highly recommend steak from the Spotted Pig any time.

http://weblogs.cltv.com/entertainment/tv/metromix/grilled_steak.jpg

http://weblogs.cltv.com/entertainment/tv/metromix/grilled_steak.jpg

I will say, though, I’ve lived in New York almost three years and can’t think of a single time I’ve encountered the “mean/rude New Yorker” stereotype.  At the Spotted Pig, I discovered why: they’re ALL there! From girls at the bar who were rude for no reason to asshole investment bankers who seem to think everyone eating dinner around them wants to loudly hear about how many shots they took last night and how many hours they worked last week, it was pretty striking how an expensive/trendy pub atmosphere attracts the jerks.

Anyway, despite the clientele, I loved the food at the Spotted Pig and the next night I got steak in my Chipotle burrito bowl and promptly OD’d on beef for a while. Until I cooked Boeuf Bourguignon….Julia Child’s Boeuf Bourguignon. Part II to come….

Hot Buttered Bourbon

From the Atlantic, a Hot Buttered Mix for Rum or Bourbon that sounds sinfully delicious.

Unless you’re really into having daily hot buttered drinks, this obviously makes a huge amount and would probably be too much to make for personal use, but it would be perfect for a wintery party.

Serve with pretty cinnamon sticks that double as stirrers, and maybe whipped cream if you want to get really fancy with a little sprinkling of nutmeg on top.

hot-buttered-rum2www.sonyasfamilyrecipes.com

Hot Buttered Mix for Rum or Bourbon from The Atlantic:

  • 1/2 gallon of vanilla bean ice cream
  • 1 pound butter
  • 1 pound brown sugar
  • 1 pound powdered sugar
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon

Melt all of the ingredients in a large pot over medium heat. The brown sugar should be completely melted (takes about 15 minutes). Stir well and let cool. Put in plastic containers and freeze.

Instructions to go with your mix: in a glass coffee mug pour 1 jigger of rum or bourbon and 2 Tablespoons of butter mix. Top with boiling water and serve.

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