Olympics!!!

2010winterolympics

It needs three exclamation points because I’m SO RIDONKULOUSLY EXCITED that the Winter Olympics are finally happening! I’m watching ski jumping right now. Because every four years, let’s be honest, we all need a little ski jumping in our lives.

Eddie the Eagle! Britain's lone entrant in the 1988 ski jump.

Eddie the Eagle! Britain's lone entrant in the 1988 ski jump, self-funded and generally acknowledged to be terrible. He finished last, but everyone fell in love with his passion for sport.

There’s a long story about why I love the Olympics so much, but I’ll get to it sometime over the next two weeks. For now, suffice it to say that I watched a lot of Olympics when I was a kid and loving it was basically ingrained in me from birth. Naturally, I celebrate during the whole two glorious weeks.

Weren’t the opening ceremonies lovely?! The draping in the shape of the mountains in Whistler was so artistically done, and the floor that changed colors (was it an LCD floor? how did they do that?) created the mood of each segment beautifully – and I like the icicle-esque Olympic Flame.

2010_vancouver_olympics_logo

www.nbc.com

flame

www.nbc.com

So how to have people over for the Olympics? High Rise Hostess has a great idea to combine après-ski flavor with the Olympics, which is an idea I love because après-ski is so rarely done outside of ski towns and as you all know, I enjoy it any time or place. She suggests serving fondue, mulled cider and beer, which just sounds like the tastiest combination. If only I had a fondue pot….maybe I should buy one because it sounds SO fun to all huddle around the pot and bring a little bit of Olympic and après-ski spirit into a party.

Or I could be really inauthentic, make a cheese sauce in a regular pot, and call it good. ;)

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Rainbow Colors Inspiration

I came across this table on 100 Layer Cake and absolutely fell in love.

color

It is so gorgeous! The hues meld in perfect colorful harmony, and against the monochromatic background of white, cream and silver, the rainbow colors pop.

I especially adore the yellow persimmon on the white plates. It’s different, playful and surprising, and would be the perfect vessel for a placecard attached to a toothpick.

closeup colorPhotos by Erin Hearts Court via 100 Layer Cake

Eat-onomics

I do it all the time: stand in the store with a cheap, antibiotic-filled, non-organic chicken in one hand and an expensive, organic, free-range chicken in the other and internally debate how much I can pay for healthier food that week. Sometimes I go for the cheap chicken, antibiotics and all – I’m not gonna lie! But when I remember that I’m voting for or against sustainable foods with my purchases, I try to diligently budget for the healthier option.

Stonyfield Farm

Stonyfield Farm

Fast Company is running a series of interviews with leaders in sustainable food, and the CEO of Stonyfield Farm pointed out that we are all paying for unhealthy food in indirect ways.

We don’t know what real food is as a culture, as a society. We’re not ready to pay for it. We have this illusion that food not only can, but should be, cheap. I call it an illusion because we do end up paying it, through our bodies and also our planet. We really have to restore to help the financial state of our farmers. There is a whole host of consequences to eating unsustainably, but we don’t measure them because they’re externalities. They don’t appear on our income statements, but they’re real costs. One in three kids born after 2000 will be a diabetic, and that’s one in two if it’s Hispanic or African American. Two-thirds of Americans are obese or overweight, and we’re spending billions to deal with those problems. Those are the consequences of cheap food. It’s not cheap at all.

That’s terrifying. I’m renewing my commitment to myself to not only cook healthy food, but to buy sustainable food products – especially when I’m cooking for the people I love.

If you’re interested, I also recommend reading the interview with Paul Willis of Niman Ranch.

[Note that I’m not advocating buying Stonyfield Farm or Niman Ranch products in particular; just that we become more informed about the source of our food so we can all make choices we’re comfortable with.]

My Perfect Martini

I came to Jackson Hole for the weekend to be with my mom. Our wonderful, precious, very loved dog died last week at age 15 and we’ve all been feeling her absence quite heavily. So I came home to try to make the house feel a little less empty.

Of course, I didn’t know New York was about to get shut down by a blizzard, so my little plan to make a quick jaunt to Wyoming didn’t work out very well when all flights to New York were cancelled today and yesterday. So, stranded and trying to keep up with schoolwork, I knew I needed an incentive. Straight to the Four Seasons went I with my enormous textbook and a promise to myself that I could have a big gorgeous martini in the lobby lounge after 50 pages of reading.

www.fourseasons.com/jacksonhole

www.fourseasons.com/jacksonhole

At page 75 (I was  a good industrious student – for once!) my friend Anne, who happened to be working yesterday, delivered me this lovely glass.

martiniBlue cheese stuffed olives make me so happy.

My perfect martini? Excellent vodka (I like Belvedere), just a pinch of vermouth, as many blue cheese stuffed olives as I can fit in the glass and yes kids, I like it shaken, not stirred.

Here’s the deal on shaking v. stirring. Stirring protects the ice from bruising and (in theory) doesn’t release any water into the drink. Shaking bruises the ice cubes, which releases water into the cocktail. So yes, James Bond likes a slightly watered down martini, and so do I. It’s tasty.

I don’t think there’s any one “real” martini. Make yours however you like: gin, vodka, shaken, stirred, dirty, on the rocks, olives, no olives. And if you don’t know exactly what you prefer, well, the fun is in the testing!

Cinnamon, Ginger and Honey Spiced Popcorn

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This cinnamon, ginger and honey popcorn is so nice because it’s a little bit sweet from the honey and cinnamon, but it’s also a little bit savory from the ginger and salt. I made it intending it to be an appetizer for pasta with brown butter, but I think it would also be really yummy as a post-meal sweet snack.

Adapted from Cooks.com

  • one bag plain microwave popcorn, no butter added
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon cloves
  • 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

Melt the butter, add the honey into the butter and mix. Pour over the popcorn and toss until evenly coated. Mix spices together in a bowl and sprinkle over the butter-coated popcorn evenly, tossing until coated.

IMG_0452

Spread popcorn on a cookie sheet in one layer and bake at 275 degrees for ten minutes.

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Munch away and enjoy!

The Science of Taste

heinz

Yeah, you can make your own ketchup, but it never comes out tasting like real ketchup. There’s something about Heinz ketchup that is uniquely ketchupy in a way that can’t be replicated by homemade or other brands, isn’t there? This article explains why. It’s incredible, definitely worth a read for anyone interested in the taste of food (i.e. everyone).

The Ketchup Conundrum:

There are five known fundamental tastes in the human palate: salty, sweet, sour, bitter, and umami. Umami is the proteiny, full-bodied taste of chicken soup, or cured meat, or fish stock, or aged cheese, or mother’s milk, or soy sauce, or mushrooms, or seaweed, or cooked tomato. “Umami adds body,” Gary Beauchamp, who heads the Monell Chemical Senses Center, in Philadelphia, says. “If you add it to a soup, it makes the soup seem like it’s thicker—it gives it sensory heft. It turns a soup from salt water into a food.” When Heinz moved to ripe tomatoes and increased the percentage of tomato solids, he made ketchup, first and foremost, a potent source of umami. Then he dramatically increased the concentration of vinegar, so that his ketchup had twice the acidity of most other ketchups; now ketchup was sour, another of the fundamental tastes. The post-benzoate ketchups also doubled the concentration of sugar—so now ketchup was also sweet—and all along ketchup had been salty and bitter. These are not trivial issues. Give a baby soup, and then soup with MSG (an amino-acid salt that is pure umami), and the baby will go back for the MSG soup every time, the same way a baby will always prefer water with sugar to water alone. Salt and sugar and umami are primal signals about the food we are eating—about how dense it is in calories, for example, or, in the case of umami, about the presence of proteins and amino acids. What Heinz had done was come up with a condiment that pushed all five of these primal buttons. The taste of Heinz’s ketchup began at the tip of the tongue, where our receptors for sweet and salty first appear, moved along the sides, where sour notes seem the strongest, then hit the back of the tongue, for umami and bitter, in one long crescendo. How many things in the supermarket run the sensory spectrum like this?

Brown Butter and Bourbon Shots

I was sitting at the bar at the Silver Dollar a few weeks ago, drinking bourbon with some friends who were visiting Jackson Hole, and our conversation rolled around to the flavor combination of bourbon and brown butter and how drinking those two particular liquids together might be a really good idea. Did I mention we were drinking already?

So a few nights later we got together again and discussed it. I was pretty grossed out by the idea of drinking butter, but we’d come this far and maybe it would be good, and I knew with BB&B’s name I wouldn’t be able to avoid it forever, and also just why not?

I cooked up some brown butter, immersed the bottom of the pot in cold water in the sink to stop the cooking and cool the butter quickly, and poured it into a glass for ready mixing.

The brown butter, waiting patiently to be mixed

The brown butter, waiting patiently to be mixed

After deciding to keep the butter level low, we went for 5 shots of bourbon to one shot of brown butter and mixed that bad boy up.

Mixing

Carefully measuring

The room temperature bourbon cooled the butter even more and made teensy congealed bits of butter in the liquid, but we didn’t know that until we drank them.

The fateful shots

Pouring the fateful shots

Honestly? Not that bad! Maybe even a little good! As one friend noted, it had a lovely buttery aftertaste that made the shot itself worth it. Buoyed, we made another set of shots at a 2-1 ratio.

I do not recommend that.

So, if you like new things and want to try this out, I do not discourage you. Use a 5-1 ratio and the spirit of adventure – and toast to Brown Butter & Bourbon!

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