Tuesday, January 30, 2007

ACME Bread Company & Mussles from Pasta Pomodoro



After watching a guest speaker on the Cal campus talk about the white man ravaging Native American cultures, we found ourselves hungry. After sushi, frozen yogurt, and the purchase of two Oranginas and a brownie it still somehow seemed like a good idea to indulge in some culinary perusing.
After reading Jeffrey Steingartens "The Man Who Ate Everything" it was simultaneously and irreversibly stuck in our minds that Jeffrey Steingarten has the best job in the world. In that, while doing research for an article he wrote, he studied under the most lauded and celebrated bread maker in the world: (insert name that I forgot here) who operates the ACME bakery out of Berkeley CA.



Upon walking in the smells of freshly baked bread overwhelmed one of us (the other was suffering form a cold which resulted in cranky behavior and a highly ineffective olfactory orifice) and the beautifully browned and shaped loaves graced our eyes like fine art. Really incredibly tasty fine art. I was struck with indecision... Brown Loaf? Sweet Baguette? Sour Baguette? Ah Ha!! Sour Batard! Perfect!



On the drive home, my already distended belly screaming for me to tear off a piece of Batard and have at it right there in the comforts of mid-nineties Ford-made heaven, it was mentioned that such a fine loaf should not be muddled by anything but the finest of bread-dipping accompaniment. Upon discussion (and a walk on a pier) it was determined that a garlic and herb white wine sauce, typically found at fine seafood establishments embellishing mollusks was called for. The mollusk of choice: Mussels.
Our foray into Mussels in San Francisco began early in my residence here as a brief (and fictitious) evening spent pretending we could afford really good seafood (that was not made at home). We planned on pairing our fine loaf of bread with an appetizer of Mussels from a faux-bayou establishment called "PJ's Oyster Bed": a surprisingly upscale seafood bar and grill that serves "garlic and herb skillet roasted mussels" that, if I am not mistaken, made me conjour up images of Robuchon slaving over pots and pans before finally kissing his fingertips with pleasure as he savored a mere teaspoon of delectable sauce. Unfortunately, PJ's is closed on Mondays.
After walking the local restaurant district, and having several possibilities shot down ("I will not dip MY bread into CURRY and COCONUT sauce") we finally (Erika finally) found a place that served amazingly, white wine, garlic and herb mussels.

That'd be Pasta Pomodoro:
San Francisco - Irving
816 Irving Street
San Francisco, CA 94122
tel: (415) 566-0900
(thank you very much -- yes... I did find it :)

After warming the bread, savoring a few Mussels, and deftly dodging several semi-skilled parries about who actually found the mussels, I dipped my first piece of ACME bread into the broth and... It was well worth it.
Not to be melodramatic, and not to simply follow those who wrote the books i have read, it was just plain great bread. In fact, once the Mussels and the broth and the butter were gone, I took two pieces and ate them dry. That finished the loaf. Roughly twelve Mussels, and a LOAF of bread.
Yeah, that HAS to be good bread.

Chicken Dinner WISHBONE!




We finally broke the wishbone from the chicken dinner we had several weeks ago.

I won... but I'm not telling my wish :)

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Sunset Supermarket


An AWESOME grocery store!

sunday night roast chicken - January 7th, 2007

a little roast chicken with one of C's famous sauces. also, rice pilaf from a box (Near East - Garlic Chicken), an unsuccessful batch of potatos, and a green salad with feta, pistachios, cucumber, and a mustard seed dressing.



FRESH INGREDIENTS:
chicken (1 whole)
apples
garlic
rosemary
mixed greens
pistachios
feta

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

ten tons of sushi - January 6th, 2007

We made more sushi then we could ever eat; spicy tuna, tuna, california, and tempura rolls. All made with tools given to me for Christmas. We also visted Sunset Market for most of the fresh ingredients. See below for a revised list of ingredients for our second attempt.



MAKES: way too much sushi (16 rolls)

FRESH INGREDIENTS:
fresh tuna (.5 lbs)
shrimp (.25 lbs)
imitation crab (1 package)
flying fish roe (1 package)

cucumber (2)
avacado (2)
watercress (1 bunch)
green onion (1 bunch)
nori (1 package)
wasabi (make fresh in small quantity)

REUSUABLE INGREDIENTS:
Peanut oil
tempura batter
white and black sesame seeds
rice wine vinegar
wasabi
soy sauce

RECIPES:

"unpublished world of mouth recipe for sushi rice" (courtsey of a girl who works with Christian): here we used short grain rice cooked in a $10 dollar rice cooker from Walgreens on Sutter in downtown SF. Let the rice cool for 10 min (about). Poured it out onto a sheet pan covered in foil, then C poured the traditional mixture of rice wine vinegar, sugar, and salt, while I fanned with a 39 cent fan bought in Chinatown earlier that evening.

*spicy tuna: fresh tuna, chili sauce, green onion

*crab salad: imitation crab meat, mayo, chili sauce

*tempura: tempura shrimp, cucumber, etc. (we fried some - oil needs to be hotter)

CHANGES: (fewer rolls)