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Chef + Traveler

Cup of Joe

The history of coffee in Venice goes back to the 1600’s. Venice was a center of trade and merchants brought coffee beans from Africa, Yemen and Egypt to the city. Venetians immediately fell in love with this rich, exotic new drink (who wouldn’t!) It was a luxury item enjoyed by wealthy Venetians. Coffee shops and roasting facilities sprang up throughout Venice. By the middle of the 1700’s there were over 200 coffee shops in Venice. Just like today, it was the perfect place to meet and catch up on the local news and gossip. Continue reading Cup of Joe

The history of coffee in Venice goes back to the 1600’s. Venice was a center of trade and merchants brought coffee beans ...

One Cough Good, Two Coughs Better, Three Coughs Best

Bill, Austin and I spent the day at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley for a full day course titled, “Olive Oil Flavor and Quality.” What a spectacular day. I haven’t been in a classroom for years and wasn’t sure how I was going to hold up for a nine hour class. Let’s just say there was no time to nod off. I am a huge olive oil consumer and advocate. I have access to some of the best olive oils and I use it in everything – baking, sautéing , frying and topping off my favorite dishes. At any given time I will have 10-12 bottles of olive oil open at the house – but not to worry there is no chance they will get overexposed or go rancid – a five liter tin doesn’t last long in our house.

The panels and presenters covered a wide range of topics focusing on ensuring that olive oils are labeled properly. Olive oils from all around the world are still being mislabeled and inferior oils are being sold at exorbitant prices. In all things, keep in mind you get what you pay for. A bottle of olive oil is no bargain if it is a blend of other oils or has old oil mixed with new oil.

Olive oil does not age well. It is meant to be young and fresh – and you should be able to taste the freshness in every bite. But how best to taste olive oil? We sampled 20 different varieties today and it was definitely sipped, let sit on the tongue and then slurped back. It gives you the ability to feel the taste in your mouth and then open it up and feel it in the back of your throat. A good fresh oil will leave a peppery taste in the back of your throat. There was a lot of happy coughing in the room today.

Bill, Austin and I spent the day at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley for a full day course titled, ...

Steak Frites

Where to dine?  After a long day of travel fiercely resisting all of that yummy airport and airplane food I arrive back in Washington tired and hungry.  I always think of DC as being a vibrant, late night city – but the reality is that Washington has many small town characteristics.   Primarily being that most restaurants close by 10:00pm.  In Italy dinner would just be starting – and here in the nation’s capitol – we are shut down.  Even pizza delivery is cut off by 10:00.  Having travelled for the last four weeks there isn’t a bite to be had at home.  Funny how our two sub-zeros used to be full to bursting and now they just store a Brita water filter and a collection of mustard.

Thank God for Bistro du Coin.  The one restaurant in town that still knows how to make a mean steak frites and make sure everyone has a good time.  This is our usual go to spot for that last bottle of champagne after everyone else has closed up.   We stroll in around 10:30 and the place is packed.  Apparently we are not the only Washingtonians who want a late night dinner that doesn’t come from a drive thru window.  We settle in to our steaks and fries and order up a bottle of bubbly.  Welcome home.

Where to dine?  After a long day of travel fiercely resisting all of that yummy airport and airplane food I arrive back ...

I’ll Have the Butter Cow Please

The Iowa State Fair is world renowned for its food.  The good news for Iowans is that we get Iowa State Fair food all year round!  There is no end to the fried food or food on a stick or fried food on a stick that we enjoy.  Spending time with my mom is not as much an opportunity for me to cook and care for her as it is one big eating adventure and everyone is invited.   Aunts, uncles, cousins, siblings – calls are made to get the day started and then we move from one place to the next.  Planning our next meal as we are finishing our last.  These are not gourmet extravaganza’s, but with only three full days to eat I have a lot of food groups to cover – pork tenderloins, chips and Anderson Erickson dip, cinnamon rolls, pizza with Canadian bacon and sauerkraut, taco pizza, cousin Judi’s fried wontons, maid-rites, onion rings, Pierce’s dairy bar…. and that is just day one.   Everyone seemed sad to see me go – but I think they might have also been relieved to get back to their routine and their healthy diets.

The Iowa State Fair is world renowned for its food.  The good news for Iowans is that we get Iowa State Fair ...

Bluegrass at the Maid-Rite

For those not in the know, Maid-Rite’s CEO defines the maid-rite as “a special cut and grind of low fat 100% fresh ground beef made to order with our secret combination of delicious seasoning, cooked to perfection and then served on a warm bun for a delicious taste treat…” enjoyed in the central and southwestern regions of the US.

Several years back, right off of Interstate 35, 4 miles into Iowa from Missouri, an Amish Country Store and Southern Iowa Welcome Center was built featuring the franchises of Maid-Rite, Godfather’s Pizza and Broasted chicken and an amazing collection of amish quilts and baskets –  there is something for everyone. Tuesday night is Blue Grass night.  An amazing group of local muscians perform from 5-7 and has the crowd food tapping and singing along.  With several electric guitars, fiddles and keyboards the music is non-stop.  Our table was singing, clapping and one song was so funny, Veneta almost fell off of her chair.  At this stage – I can’t get enough of these happy, laughing mom moments.  I would eat a maid-rite every night just to see my mom completely engaged and enjoying herself.

For those not in the know, Maid-Rite’s CEO defines the maid-rite as “a special cut and grind of low fat 100% fresh ...

Ho Fatto Bingo!

One more night in West Des Moines reliving high school stories.  We never seem to get tired of this.  No matter how long it has been since we have visited with one another Jenny, Cara and I catch right up and spend our days laughing until our cheeks hurt.  After a day of eating and shopping we return to Cara’s to see what is left from our Friday night grocery adventure.  We still have vegetables and we haven’t quite finished off the bottle of olio novello – and then Cara finds tonight’s treasure in the back of the cupboard – a bag of French green lentils.   The lentils of Castellucio would be my personal preference, but lentils of any origin, color or size are the perfect vehicle for olio novello.  We make a big pot of soup, toast a baguette and settle in for the evening.

Continue reading Ho Fatto Bingo!

One more night in West Des Moines reliving high school stories.  We never seem to get tired of this.  No matter how ...

Chicken It Is

Dinner Saturday night – I have a suitcase full of olive oil and wine and don’t want to go out – on the other hand the Republican debate starts at 7:00 CDT and I don’t want to miss a minute so I don’t really feel like cooking.  We have chicken breasts left over from a trip to the HyVee last night.  I take them out of their packaging and slip them into the plastic grocery bag.  It’s a good thing Jenny and Cara finished off the gin last night and I use the bottle to smash them into little flat pieces.  I line a baking sheet with aluminum (I hate washing pots and pans) and drizzle them with Sue Bee honey.  Of course I would prefer the honey harvested in Umbria by Bill, but this is reality and I want dinner on the table.  I put the chicken breasts in the oven to bake at 375 degrees for 30 minutes.  When they are cooked through I put them on the top rack and broil them for 5 minutes to add a little color.  I slice them into strips, drizzle more honey on top (it melts right in) and finish them off with the truffle salt hidden in the refrigerator from this summer.  I have to admit, they are spectacular!

Dinner Saturday night – I have a suitcase full of olive oil and wine and don’t want to go out – on ...

Iowa — Where The Tall Corn Grows

To my count I spent nine weeks in Iowa last summer.  Nine weeks of eating at the Dairy Queen and Pizza Shack.  It is nice to be recognized when you walk in – but of course it is a mixed blessing.  I escaped my mothers tiny town every weekend to the city of my youth and the home of my BFF from high school in West Des Moines.  We spent our days drinking heavily, trying desperately to get my hair color to something beyond grey and  eating – my  childhood favorites –  jelly filled doughnuts, cottage cheese, chips and dip, taco pizza, deep fried pork tenderloins – just to name a few.  But here I am – just back from Italy (via Daytona Beach) with a suitcase full of deep green, fresh as can be, olio novello.  Our first stop is the grocery store.  A huge enterprise – larger than the average grocery store in Washington DC .  My goal is to find stuff I can pour oil on.  We load up our shopping cart with vegetables.  Artichokes, green beans, grape tomatoes, potatoes and cauliflower.  When we get to Cara’s – dinner is on.  We put all  of the vegetables on baking sheets and pop them in the oven.  We slice a baguette into thick pieces and put them under the broiler.  When they are nicely browned (maybe even a little blackened) I rub them with a garlic clove and begin the drizzle.  I have several customers who buy one bottle of olive oil a year.  This is not the case for me.  I pour liberally over the freshly toasted bread, over the roasted artichokes, cauliflower, beans and tomatoes.  We leave the chicken breasts for tomorrow and dig in to our feast.  Vegetables roasted in the oven, a sprinkle of salt and a heavy hand with this years new harvest of oil.  It can’t be beat!  Maybe 15 liters wasn’t enough!

To my count I spent nine weeks in Iowa last summer.  Nine weeks of eating at the Dairy Queen and Pizza Shack.  ...

Lee Menard’s 94th Birthday Bash

And what a party it was!  Few things could get us to leave Italy and family is number one on the list.  We arrived in Florida late Wednesday night in order to celebrate Bill’s dad’s 94th Birthday on Thursday.  We had a small crowd at our favorite Ormond Beach restaurant, Frappes North (frappesnorth.com).  Meryl Frappier outdid herself arranging a perfect menu for Lee – all of his East Coast favorites starting with lobster rolls and New England Clam Chowder.  Bobby is an amazing chef and the steak dinner for 15 was spot on.  They had arranged for our favorite local saxophonist Pat to play in our private room for dinner and there was much tapping along to the music and Lee Menard could name every tune.   After dinner we talked to Bobby and Meryl about organizing a trip to the Villa – of course featuring Bobby Frappier as guest chef.  Keep your fingers crossed and I will keep you updated.  After such an amazing evening we could hardly find a way to thank Meryl and Bobby but hopefully one of my bottles of the olio novello let them know just how special the evening was.

And what a party it was!  Few things could get us to leave Italy and family is number one on the list.  ...

Charlotte Douglas Airport — Where To Eat?

After 24 hours of airport time and flying we arrive in Daytona Beach.  I am content – I have watched at least five movies on the flight back (will have to catch the last 10 minutes of Kevin James in “Zookeeper” somewhere along the way because they ended the inflight entertainment a few minutes too early for me – but I have slept just enough and watched just enough bad tv to keep from being restless.  The food on the flight was a huge letdown from the chow we have been putting away in Italy.  But who books a flight for the food?  I knew it was going to be bad in advance.  We have a four hour layover in Charlotte and have several different food options for the day.  We decide on the Fox Spots restaurant in concourse E because it is close to our departure from gate E19 which is of course conveniently located at the exact opposite end from where we landed at gate C10.  The obvious choice for dinner after three weeks in Italy is a burger and fries.  But after reading that they happily serve their burgers “medium to well done” I know I am in for a fast food, frozen patty made from 1,000’s of assorted cows and I am not ready to return to that reality.  We split the nachos.  A perfect platter of stale tortilla chips laden with cheese and sour cream.   Welcome home!

After 24 hours of airport time and flying we arrive in Daytona Beach.  I am content – I have watched at least ...