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Food blogs Around the World

Sites I like - food

  • Monster Munching
    California Asian, need I say more...the epitome of good eating! Here's another one to put on your list of must consult everyday...it just all looks so delicious and yes, indeed, someway, someday I'm going to go and have lunch in Sunny SoCal.
  • Chow Times
    This is so, so good! and it's Asian too. So in keeping with tradition that means good photos, lots of info and most especially good food! I can't believe I've only just discovered this fab blog.
  • Chubbypanda - The Epicurious Wanderer
    Interesting, informative and thought provoking. Excellent photos (and lots of them too), restaurant reviews and some excellent recipes as well. This is a fairly new blog just started in August and has a decidely Asian (my favorite) flavor.
  • mmm-yoso!!!
    Asian food blogs are the best and Kirk's blog is just outstanding. Based in San Diego this blog has lots of delicious photos and is an entertaining read as well; one of my favorites. Can't wait to get to San Diego. Bravo!
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October 2006

06 October 2006

Quiche and cake for lunch today

After all the horrible salad misadentures let's all breath a collective sigh of relief...ouuuui, no more bizarre Parisian salads (ever again).

Anyway, today's lunch was such a pleasure... and therefore it is a pleasure for me to share it with you. Enjoy!

Quiche_lunch

Two quiches and a lovely cake.

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First up is the quiche Lorraine...

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and next up is the quiche poireaux...these are traditional favorites.

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Here we have a close up on the quiche poireaux...the crust is delightful and the filling is just heavenly.

Perfect_quiche

And here is the quiche Lorraine...

Caraibes

The two delicious quiches were followed by this very interesting cake. At the boulangerie they call it "Caraibes" which means Caribbean..obviously, I was expecting some Caribbean fruits...and so, do grapes and strawberries come from the Caribbean? Perhaps I will do some research.

Let_them_eat_cake

In any case, this was a very nice cake and since the whole lunch cost less than what I had paid for my various salad fiascos, I'm happy. It's also so much more fun to take photos of food that is good.

This weekend I am going to make a chicken machbous which require lots of spices, oh happy me! Please pray that I get out of bed early enough tomorrow morning to start the whole delightfully complicated process...I'll try to get the results in on Monday but since I also have plans to go and check out "Le Diable s'habille en Prada" Sunday afternoon...who knows? anyway, Tuesday at the latest and big biz de Paris!

Happy lunching toujours!

05 October 2006

I give up on salad...

Despite appearances to the contrary I am not French bashing in this post, it's just that...I really, really wanted to find some good and delicious and under 20 EUR  salads for lunch and apparently it's impossible to do this in the 8th arrondisement of Paris.

Check out today's entry:

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9,90 EUR for a chicken curry salad, a slice of chicken curry tart, a piece of bread and a diet coke...this is not expensive by Paris standards as the least little sandwich will set you back 3 or 4 EUR, if not more, but it still seems like a lot for what I actually got.

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I guess the salad looks ok in the photo but...the chicken was tough, the pineapple was canned and oh...the horror, the horror...it had chewy pieces of canned corn in it, hidden under the chicken. It was also watery because of the carrots or something. And the raisins were all clumped.

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The ideas behind this lunch are all good but the execution is just "lamentable". I'm from Massachusetts and we grow good corn there...believe me it's not supposed to be chewy and tough. The French, what can I say...perhaps they like tough, chewy corn.

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Moral of the story, Don't order salad in Paris.

and I'm going back to sandwiches even if that means you're going to get 45 consecutive ham and cheese on baguette photos...at least it's good and that is what counts.

So, have a good lunch, please!

ps. if you've ever had a good salad in France (that you didn't make yourself) please let me know, I don't give up so easily and I love to be proven wrong.

03 October 2006

Search for the perfect lunch salad

I've  been eating a lot of sandwiches since I came back from vacation...but now I'm bored with ham and cheese and I've decided to look for the perfect lunch salad.

Today's post has two lunches, one for yesterday and one for today. Both have salad and both have tartes (one tarte sucré (sweet) and one tarte salée (savoury)).

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Monday's lunch was a salade de terrine de poisson (fish mousse salad) with a tarte tatin (upside down apple tart) and a diet coke. This cost 9,50 EUR and I got it at the boulangerie where I usually buy my sandwiches.

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Today's lunch cost 9,90 EUR and included a salade d'endives au Roquefort...my favorite cheese. My first remark about the salad lunches are that they cost more than a sandwich. Eating healthy is expensive.

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This salad started off excellent, the fish terrine was really nice and light.

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Unfortunately, this is what I found underneath the terrine...cold canned corn and some cold canned bean salad...this is a weird and frequent thing in Paris. I hate it and that was the end of this salad, never again. I couldn't even eat the lettuce underneath because it had a horrible canned vegetable taste although I will admit that people must like this because you see so much of it around. Go figure.

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Happily today I had a salad I could live with. Endives, roquefort, walnuts, apple and raisins...delicious! and nothing was from a can.

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Tarte tatin, very nice.

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This is dessert so I should have saved it for last but it did go with the first salad so here it is in order on the inside.

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With the roquefort salad lunch for 9,90 EUR I had a choice of salad, sweet or savory tart and a drink or a yogurt or a fromage blanc (sort of soft cheese  dessert). I chose to have a savory tarte, this one is spinach. I liked the little seeds on top.

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A lovely spinach tart. Happy lunching!

02 October 2006

Lunch from Hungary

This weekend's food adventure was a Hungarian Chicken Paprikash...or as they say in Hungary...Csirke Paprikas. As you may or may not know, I've decided to do a recipe from every country represented on the flags in the side bar, this weekend it was Hungary. I found quite a number of recipes on the net but this is the one I followed the most closely www.epicurean.com, there is a nice article all about the history of Hungarian food as well, really quite informative.

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So, starting with the ingredients: chicken, paprika, sour cream (creme fraiche in French), onion, green pepper, tomatos, tomato paste and flour and eggs for the dumplings...that is a whole 'nother story...and various other things.

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This is just for fun...a close up on the tomatoes, and guess where they came from? Surprise, I grew them on my tiny little balcony cuz I'm an urban survivor (got about 15 in all but they were pretty tasty). Also, since the only homemade chicken stock I had in the fridge was Asian flavored (ginger and lemon grass), and I really didn't have the time to make more stock this weekend I opted for some special Eastern European boullion cubes (I know it's cheating but it seems like such less of a cheat since I did have to go out of my way to get them).

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Chicken, I don't know what its like where you come from but here in Paris, no matter where I buy my chickens they are never really totally plucked. There are always some feathers left on.

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Next to an open fire out in the backyard the best thing is a gas range to singe all those annoying feathers off. This really works.

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Here is the start of preparation. Once the chicken was cleaned of all the feathers I cut it into pieces and put the pieces in a plastic bag with 1/4 cup flour, 2 teaspoons of paprika (or maybe a little more), some salt and some pepper (1/4 teaspoon each...more or less depending on taste). Then shake to coat well.

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Then brown the chicken pieces in a mix of oil and butter (I used peanut oil). Some recipes call for lard, which must be delicious but I have a resident non pork eater so that was out for me.

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After the chicken pieces are nicely browned on each side take them out of the casserole and put them aside. The next ingredients to get ready are some chopped onion (one large), some paprika (lots...I think I used 1/4 cup minus the amount to toss the chicken), some tomato paste (two tablespoons) and should be one cup of stock but I used water and the cube.

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Sautee the onions and paprika in the cooking juice from the chicken til the onions are soft, then add the tomato paste, and then add the stock (or water and cube).

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This will make a nice rich thick base for the sauce, cook for five minutes but not too hot.

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Here is the browned chicken that I set aside, with some green peppers cut into rings and some chopped tomato (three small). If I hadn't of been so lazy this weekend I would have peeled them, it's really not all that much of an effort...and I promise that next time I will show you my foolproof tomato peeling technique.

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Put the chicken pieces, the pepper, and the tomato into the casserole with the nice thick sauce, mix and turn the heat way down. Cover and cook 'til the chicken is done...and here is where you must watch out. It's best if the chicken cooks in its own juices and that you don't add water. But, since the sauce is so thick, the heat must be way down so nothing sticks and burns...I decided to let my chicken cook for one hour, however I was checking frequently at the end and at about 40 minutes it was starting to stick.

If this happens to you don't despair. Just transfer everything to a new casserole and DO NOT scrape up any of the stuck bits because they will give a bad taste to your sauce. Then put the old pan in the sink to soak.

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At the very end, put two cups of sour cream (creme fraiche) into a bowl and gradually stir in some of the hot sauce the chicken has been cooking in. This is because your cream will curdle and cook strangely if you just pour it in on top of the cooking chicken. The idea is to raise the heat gradually and then mix the whole thing together.

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And here you have it, the creme fraiche has been added to the chicken, pepper and tomato mixture and the whole thing smells really delicious. Nice color too, I think.

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And this is a close close up on the chicken paprikash with peppers and onions.

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This is a really tasty dish. My only disaster this weekend was the dumplings and I am just going to have to do some more research. They were so strange, like these gobs of weird dough, perhaps that is what a dumpling is? In any case, I was not satisfied with my results and so I will attempt them again at a future date.

In case you would like to compare paprikash recipes here are some other links I found interesting:

Chicken Paprikash 2

Chicken Paprikash from Hungary

Chicken Paprikash and other good things from June Meyer

Extensive list of Hungarian recipes including Chicken Paprikash

I'm thinking about a delicious Chicken Machbous for next weekend, this is a traditional Persian gulf recipe and fairly complicated too (my favorite kind) and since I've had at least one visitor from Bahrain, one from the Emirates, and one from Kuwait... that means three flags in one recipe.

See you then and in the meanwhile, happy lunching!