As mentioned, back on the wagon, or at least trying really hard to climb up there, dammit. All that Arizmendi stuff was so good. Anyway, today’s lunch was awesome:
expensive but delicious cooked shrimps from Whole Foods
salad greens from a box
salad topping of orange, beet, celery, scallion and parsley,
dressed in olive oil and rice vinegar, salt and pepper
YUM.
(ps the beets were ready roasted from Trader Joe’s cold case, so this was pretty much idiot-proof and really fast. those beets are just ok, nothing special, but they sure are handy.)
Month: February 2009
i need a cigarette…
and I don’t even smoke. Have you SEEN the current issue of Gourmet? Sweet Jesus, the bread porn in there is beyond belief!
For real, I think I am going to cut out the page with the full-bleed closeup of cracked-wheat rolls dusted with flaky sea salt, and frame it to hang on my wall. Good grief. I am a monumentally incompetent baker, and I want to run out right now and buy yeast so I can make these things. I won’t, because I am actually turning over that new leaf I’ve been meaning to turn over and climbing back on the slim-down bandwagon, but I assure you I have been sorely tempted. Dang.
Is this weird?
FoodNerd and I occasionally debate whether or not a given thing that she makes for a meal is weird. This discussion is completely orthogonal as to whether a given meal is delicious or no. Just whether it’s weird.
Often, it’s not even up for debate. Like the time we had Korean kim chi, a Japanese style cold sauteed spinach with sesame oil, garlic and sesame seeds, lightly pickled bean sprouts in rice vinegar and salt, some ham (deli ends) and some leftover rice. She was trying to make space in the fridge and it was the only stuff left in the house that wasn’t for a party we were having the next day. And it was tasty. But… kinda weird.
So our weird dinner last night: succotash, steamed jasmine rice, a fried egg and shredded cheddar cheese. FoodNerd is vehement that this just ISN’T weird. I totally think this is weird.
So we ask you, Internet: Is this weird?
[Update: remember, you have to consider all components in toto.]
Take the poll!
Oakland Oatmeal Raisin NOM
We got these cookies at Arizmendi Bakery in Oakland, within walking distance from our friend R’s apartment.
Best oatmeal raisin cookies ever.
I’ve always been partial to (shockingly) the Shaw’s store-made oatmeal raisin cookies, but I’ve had to swear off them because they’re made with nasty trans-fatty partially hydrogenated oils. (plus, they’re kinda hit or miss.)
Spendy (we spent $13 on a little under 2 pounds — maybe 12 cookies — to take home with us and for the long flight home), but dericious.
And entirely organimagical. That’s a word, right?
pizzaiolo in oakland
I was in the Bay Area last week for a company event, and I went up to the city for a brief visit afterward. It was sunny and clear and warm and gorgeous the entire time — unlike last year when it poured rain the entire time — and I somehow got California cuisine on the brain. Vegetables, salads, new american what-have-you… that’s what seemed good to me. So we went to a place that my friend R knew about, which turned out to be the place down the block from Bakesale Betty’s that I’d drooled over last year, as i pressed my nose to the glass and read the menu: Pizzaiolo.
Apparently run by one of the horde of ex-Chez Panisse workers, this is a mid-size room done up in low-key but comfortable style, with gorgeous modern bent-wood chairs and really weird art and a wood-burning oven for the pizzas. We figured it would be good: how could it miss, really? But this was one of the best meals any of us had had for a while — everything was spot-on perfect.
We had two salads, a dungeness crab with shaved fennel, blood oranges and oro blanco grapefruits, and a grilled squid with rich spices, more fennel, meyer lemon and mint.
Then came fluffy-chewy potato gnocchi with a ragu of Berkshire pork — I expected a tomato base but it was just a pork braise, unadorned and absolutely spectacular — and ricotta ravioli topped with wild nettles and black trumpet mushrooms, delicate but vibrant in flavor, just enough to complement the remarkable tender, toothsome texture of the pasta.
There was a short rib of beef with big pillowy cannellini and kale and a sparkly green salsa. I kept mistaking that salsa in my mind for gremolata, because it was so perfectly lighting up the savory richness of the beef. This dish was so perfectly executed, it kept blowing my mind: braised short rib can be heavy, even when it’s delicious, but this had some quality to it that was light as a feather, and there were nuances of flavor to it that I couldn’t pin down.
We finished with two pizzas, since the place is known for its crispy-crust pies. These were indeed excellent, but certainly no more so than anything else we tried. We got a long-cooked-greens & sausage pie, which was a well-balanced and sophisticated rendition of the classic dish, and a wild mushroom-caramelized leek-gremolata pie, which was just insanely good.
They’ve got a small but useful beer list, and they recommended me a solid choice of red wine (I think it was a Barbera but honestly I’d forgotten what it was within about 30 seconds of ordering it). We skipped dessert because we were full and we knew they’d be wanting the table; service was leisurely, and we heard something about the pizzas being backed up, but we never felt neglected or without something delicious to be eating, so they handle that pressure well. Any other night, we’d have ordered desserts anyway, as they were absolutely compelling in their descriptions: chocolatey something with pistachio praline, persimmon ice cream, and so on.
Should you find yourself anywhere in the East Bay, I’d recommend this place without hesitation. You can be dressed up or down, hungry or just wanting a snack, and you’ll be fed with the very best the Northern California breadbasket can provide. Just make sure you get in line by 5:15pm if you’ve not got a reservation; they open at 5:30, and you do not want to be standing outside being tantalized by the smells wafting forth.