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17 January 2008

Gourmet Magazine: Online!

It's rare that I get excited about something new going on in the www. World Wide Web. That means it's really big. Bigger than I could ever imagine.

But I'm excited today because a magazine I re-fell in love with at the turn of this century, Gourmet, has decided to take its show on the Internet. Talk about big-- it's a really big job to translate print media to online media. 'Uge.

Welcome Gourmet.com, a dynamic, honest, smart, savvy, real, funny, well-designed new site.
      
                Let There Be Competition.

Read about my excitement here, on KQED...

10 January 2008

The Challenge of Cooking For Someone With Cancer

I am no expert. All I have is my story. And what I wrote for KQED today is just a small piece of it.

When you're faced with cooking for someone, whether it be you or someone you know, undergoing chemotherapy & radiation, challenges abound.

03 January 2008

Samovar Tea Lounge: Where I Go When It's Not About The Newest, Latest Thing.

"Sometimes I want to go where it's quiet. I enjoy the trust I feel in these places and feel grateful that theyImg_8883 continue to survive in San Francisco-- a city not known for it's ease when it comes to owning and operating food businesses. I desire familiar food that's consistently good and sometimes blows my mind. I have a hankering for a little sameness and a dash of surprise."

At KQED this week I take you to one of my favorite eateries & tea houses in the Bay Area, Samovar Tea Lounge. Not just because real clotted cream and scones that blow my mind exist there either...

27 December 2007

Chefs Who Write About Being Professional Cooks

Img_8934 In this week's KQED piece I ask questions.
Of myself, of you, of my industry, and of other chef/ cook-writers.

"Can I make a difference as a chef-writer? When my voice is so small compared to the big stars? What does it mean to straddle a fence separating two historically enemied roles? Can I stay true to both crafts?"

Join in on a discussion, dispute, or please just take a few moments to get inside my head as it concerns a modern dilemma. It's something I've been thinking a lot about lately. Perhaps you can help me gain some perspective...

20 December 2007

Menu For Hope: The Clock Is Ticking...

Ten Dollars. $10. The price of a movie. A few subway rides. Two pounds of heirloom tomatoes. A coupla pairs of socks. A CD. One thousand pennies.

$10. That's all. It's the price of one raffle ticket in Menu for Hope. {almost all prizes here.}

        **You have until tomorrow, Friday December 21st, to donate!!**

And you could win:

    lunch for 2 at Alain Passard's 3 Michelin star L'Arpege.
                just about any cookbook you could want.
                        dinner for 2 at Blue Hill at Stone Barns.
a NYC pizza tour.
        a box of homemade cookies.

and/ or

LOOKIE  -----------------------> !

(UW17)* Dinner for 8 prepared by Brett Emerson AND -------Img_0398
Brett Emerson, owner of the soon to be opened Contigo in San Francisco, is offering dinner made for 8 people in his new Noe Valley home. Wines to be paired and picked by none other than our very own wine blogging superstar, Alder Yarrow of Vinography. Desserts made by yours truly, Shuna fish Lydon.

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Triple threat, no doubt.418389340_101457fe75_copy

Don't just sit there! Go! Now!

**You have until tomorrow, Friday December 21st, to donate!!**

- To donate, go to First Giving.  To specify a specific prize*, follow the instructions on the Chez Pim website (scroll down to the instructions and screenshots).

               

a little more post can be found at KQED...

29 November 2007

Monterey Market Is My Friend. It Could Be Yours Too ~

I heart Monterey Market.
It's not a high school crush, no.

It's love.

L.

O.

V.

E.

Love.

Monterey Market never ceases to surprise. Amuse. Delight. Tickle. Tempt. Reward.

Think the most exquisite mushrooms wild and cultivated from here and there. Forests deep and green and damp and all the fungi having a riot of a party feasting on delectable felled trees.

Ponder on thousands of pounds of squash, a mountain of pumpkins to climb and fresh potatoes.

Imagine berries and cherries and nectarines and plums at the peak of ripeness!

Consider the implications of California grown Yuzu, Kaffir Limes, Bergamot, raw water chestnuts, and bitter greens whose names you can't pronounce!

I dress up and court my Love on KQED this week.
Hear my sappiness on Bay Area Bites. Get the last prod you might need just in case you have ignored me before.

18 November 2007

Caramel Cake: A Step-by-Step How To Tutorial

On the eve of Christmas last year I gave you all a Caramel Cake recipe at KQED. Originally I found the recipe in the SF Chronicle and cut it out, in part because my friend and heroine Flo Braker's name was on it.

{I have just spent the last hour searching for it through EGullet, SF Gate and Google and I can't find the original document, sorry.}

What I've learned in the last year, by reader's comments and email exchanges, is that this is not an easy cake to make. In fact it might be a cake which requires the baker to be perhaps professional or at least highly intuitive-- meaning that one need know to and how to change recipe/ method while making said baked good based on how things look in the moment.

As I've said, when I very first made the cake I followed my own intuition instead of the method Flo laid out. The second time I made it I followed Flo's exact instructions and I liked the way the cake came out with my method more. This is me-- not you. I am more comfortable with the dry, wet, dry, wet, dry method than I am with merely the creaming method when there is so much liquid involved.

But because I have had a number of one-on-one tutorials with a few people via email, I wanted to post what I went over with them, to illuminate any new Caramel Cake bakers.

Reader #1:
The first time, I went ahead and baked it, it rose a little, but then became a super dense cake.  The second one I ditched when it broke, the third time, it broke but was less 'chunky' than the first and second times so I baked it but it became super oily and never really finished cooking. 

I keep playing with the mixing speed, never going above 2 when creaming and I stay on stir when doing dry-wet-dry and the kitchen aid is only about a yr old.

-------> what this person means by "broke" is that the batter looks curdled instead of a smooth emulsification.

Reader #2, first email:
I made the caramel syrup, which came out great and the icing is terrific!  However, my cake....well, it's not so good to say the least.  It came out VERY dense and thick.  I inserted a toothpick and it came out clean after 50 min. of baking, but it fell and was way too dense, almost like an over cooked pie custard.  Am I doing something wrong with the mixing?  Do I need to bake it longer.  Also, the color of mine is lighter, how much vanilla should I add? 

My response to above (both):

1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream butter until smooth.
-- this should be done for a while so that there is really a lot of air. creaming can be on medium to high speed. if you are only on 2 it might not be rapid enough to gather air.
2. Add sugar and salt & cream until light and fluffy.
-- again, should be pretty high speed. you want that butter and sugar to turn very light yellow, almost like the white blonde hair of a child.
3. Slowly pour room temperature caramel syrup into bowl.
-- this should be done in increments. pour in a little, pull back and let come together. then more, and so on like that. (like when you make pate a choux and you add in the eggs.)
4. Scrape down bowl and increase speed. Add eggs/vanilla extract a little at a time, mixing well after each addition. Scrape down bowl again, beat mixture until light and uniform.
--- and here this should be pretty high speed because you want those eggs drawn in mighty quick. already there's a lot of fat and acid and various liquids, so this is an important part of the creaming process. scrape down as much as you can to make sure everything is being drawn in.
5. Sift flour and baking powder.
6. Turn mixer to lowest speed, and add one third of the dries.
-- this "third" looks more like a half.
7. When incorporated, add half of the milk, a little at a time.
-- making sure this is warmish room temperature, do not overwhelm the batter. pour in some, pull back to make sure it takes it, then go in for more until the half cup is in. if you are going to make an error, make it slightly less than one half. if you're worried, stop mixer and scrape down bowl thoroughly to make sure all the batter is working together.
8. Add another third of the dries, then the other half of the milk and finish with the dries. {This is called the dry, wet, dry, wet, drry method in cake making. It is often employed when there is a high proportion of liquid in the batter.}
--- again, watch the batter. is it pulling everything in? do you need to increase the speed of the mixer? do you need to scrape down the bowl again?
9. Take off mixer and by hand, use a spatula to do a few last folds. making sure batter is uniform.
-- this is to make sure everything is all together and nothing is hiding at the bottom...

Does this help?

I got this recipe from The SF Chronicle where Flo Braker wrote it. She did not employ the D,W, D, W, D method and I had some problems so I rewrote the method, and increased the amount of caramel.

You may also lower the amount of milk and/or caramel. I wanted the caramel taste very strong but does not have to be.

I hope this helps. Beyond this I don't know unless you can tell me really specifically when exactly your main issue occurs. I am using an AP flour with @ a 10% protein content and a full fat milk and my caramel is the thickness of dark maple syrup.

Reader #2, second email:
I made a new cake, but still did not have good results.  I made sure and followed each step.  I held off about 1/4 cup of milk as well.  Do you think I should try using self-rising flour or more baking soda?  The problem I am having, is the cake just isn't rising.  Maybe my Kitchenaid mixer doesn't have enough power to get the air in the cake.  I've made cakes before and have had good results.  I'm just not sure what I'm doing wrong.  The batter is absolutely heavenly and the icing....OH MY!  WOW!  I really want this cake to work.

My last response to reader #2:

OK, so you:
1. have all the ingredients no where near cold, right?
2. are using baking powder not older than 6 months?
3. are using a tall cake pan?
4. are making sure the oven has been on for 30 minutes before putting the cake in?
5. are creaming the butter until light, then adding the sugar & creaming until light and then adding eggs one at a time & increasing the speed so that those eggs are really emulsified before you're adding the wets in a little bit at a time?

Yes,  if all these don't  work to raise your cake, increase the .5 t of BP to 1 teaspoon Baking Powder.

Are you at a high elevation? Where do you live?

When I bake this cake in a commercial convection oven it gets higher than my home Wedgewood, but it is not inedible, just denser. After all these instructions I would not be able to say much more, I'm sorry. The person I sent this list to was fine after following closely the details. But not every baked good works for every person. I think the frosting would work well on a number of things so I hope you can be happy that at least you have a great new frosting on your hands.

----------

If this step-by-step how to tutorial still leaves you confused about why the cake isn't working, please feel free to make another cake that does.

It is a great cake, but it may not be within everyone's reach...

17 November 2007

Trade Shoes?

This is my latest comment on my last post at KQED where there are almost 20 comments about the Mandatory Service Industry Draft.

"Goodness Me Oh My.

You know what? We all have a story. We all get horrible and exceptional service, we all work hard to make money, we all want to be treated with respect, we all have manners,

sometimes.

And sometimes we are awful customers, awful workers, awful cooks, awful managers.

This piece was meant to say, in an ironic way, that it seems that if more of us tried to walk in the other person's shoes, we might be able to extend a broader, less petulant, more well-thought out argument/ benefit of the doubt, etc.

I guess not.

Perhaps those of us who have done it before are worse customers, because we know how it COULD be done better, how it SHOULD be done better.

The state of the industry today, or how I see it in my myopic world is this: it feels hard to find people who have my work ethic. (When I was 14 and working in a factory I was proud of the work I did-- it's who I am-- I like to learn and hold my head up.)

But not everyone is me.

I didn't read the Diners Bill of Rights. I will on my next day off.

It's dreadful getting treated poorly, no matter whose shoes you're wearing. It's dreadful being kept in the dark or given the silent treatment by those unable to take responsibility for their actions/ inactions and the actions of others who they are working alongside with.

I wish I could say that my workplace is perfect and that all that I have done and do every day to inform and teach and inspire and communicate and problem solve etc etc etc but I can lead them to water but I can't make them swim.

"I'm confused at how calling the non-performers on the carpet somehow denigrates the entire restaurant-serving population."

Yes, I'm confused about how suggesting that more people take a look at the possibility of wearing someone else's shoes is seen as an attack on everyone I've ever served/ known.

If I am to take responsibility for being thin-skinned and bratty, then so must you.

We all feel like we deserve. We all feel like we're worth something.

And depending on our delivery of such feelings, we will get various responses in return.

I am a harder customer, but also more grateful customer in return, t please in a restaurant. It's just that these days I feel like throwing up my hands in exasperations because I see the whole picture of the whole industry and anyone who comes to me with a story (it happens to me all the time, everywhere!) either will hear the story, as I see it, or they will hear my frustration (because I am now the boss of some of these people) or maybe I'll just be in a bad mood and I'll say something like the condensed version of this post,

"Have you ever cleaned toilets for a living? Have you ever thanked your garbage collector, bus driver? Have you ever sent a letter to the management of a restaurant when your service was stellar?
Have you ever stood behind a counter for minimum wage because you had to eat/ pay your own way?"

This is because sometimes I am patent, and sometimes I am not. Just like the rest of the humans in the world, wearing a uniform or not."

    I seem to have struck a cord. With those middle class, above and below. With those who have served in this peculiar army and not. With those itching to start a fight or enter a heated discussion. With those who can afford to eat out and not. With friends and anonymous strangers. With brats and gratefuls. With cooks and waiters. With authors and readers. With those both shy and bold. With Libras and Scorpios.

Wanna get in on the fight/ discussion/ theoretical arms taking/ silly game? Check it out-- infinite number of comment givers welcome!

15 November 2007

A Mandatory Draft. {for front of house workers}

I've always been known for my radical ideas. Not so much that my phone is tapped or I have to wear aluminum foil on my head to receive special signals. But enough so that some of my closest friends look at me askance, tilting their heads like confused woofs and say, "O come on Shuna! You don't really think that, do you?!"

I then look deep into their eyes and assess the terror level.

    [Decide, based on its intensity, whether to say if I was joking or not.]

Don't get me started on people who smoke cigarettes. Or the death penalty. Or needle-exchange programs. Or our impending presidential election. Or the state of our over-fished oceans.

Or the devastating oil tanker crash into the Bay Bridge, dumping thousands of gallons of oil into our water.

Believe me when I say you don't want to know what I think.

But this new KQED piece is on a much less serious note. I'm tired of hearing everyone's service sob stories about this waiter or that in that restaurant or mine or wherever! Go be a waiter! It's not an easy job! Go and be a floor manager and try training waiters in America! Or stop your moaning.

Or get your this-is-how-they-should-wait-on-me expectations in check.

You probably haven't even gotten this far into my snarky post. But if you have, check out my crazy idea at Bay Area Bites, KQED's food blog extraordinaire.

01 November 2007

Hot Cocoa & Hot Chocolate: Differences, Similarities, Delights.

I don't need an excuse to drink hot cocoa, but the weather helps. Leaves are on the ground, a chilly fog is rolling in earlier and my cashmere is out in full effect. O yes, I loves me some soft thangs.

What's the difference between hot chocolate & hot cocoa? How come sometimes hot cocoa burns before that wonderful melt-in-your-mouth-sumptuous-mmm-hot chocolate-y-ness comes through? Why shouldn't you cook chocolate in a saucepan on the stove?

These very answers can be found over yonder, through the woods and across a frozen lake, at KQED. Put on your scarf, snowshoes or ice skates, and cuddle up to a steaming mug of hot cocoa...

                            h a p p y   n o v e m b e r  !!


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