Month: March 2011

The fastest, easiest dinner you will ever make

In college, I learned a great trick to fast and easy dinners by using couscous. Couscous is a tiny round pasta that cooks in 5-10 min; it is a wonderful blank canvas that you can add anything to. In college, this usually meant whatever canned vegetables I had lying around in the pantry. Over the years, I developed several go-to mix-in combinations that I threw together whenever I didn’t have a dinner plan.

To make the basic version, bring 1.5 cups of chicken or vegetable stock to a boil. Remove from the heat and stir in 1 cup couscous, salt and pepper. Cover and let sit 10 minutes, uncover, and fluff with a fork. Add your mix-ins when you add the couscous to the stock, and they will warm up as it sits. Below are some of my favorite variations.

Italian
1 (15 oz) can of diced tomatoes, drained
3tbsp pesto
1 clove garlic, minced

Add 1/2 (15 oz) can of chickpeas (rinsed and drained), or 1 cup shredded or diced cooked chicken for protein
Sprinkle w/ chopped fresh basil

Optional – add some grated Parmesan, crumbled feta, or crumbled goat cheese.

Moroccan
1/2 cup dried apricots, minced or slivered
1/2 cup slivered almonds
1/4 tsp cumin
1/4 tsp tumeric

Add 1/2 (15 oz) can of chickpeas (rinsed and drained), or 1 cup shredded or diced cooked chicken for protein
Sprinkle w/ chopped fresh mint

Optional – orange zest and lemon juice, dried currants or raisins, crumbled feta

Southwest
1 (15 oz) can diced tomatoes, drained
1/2 (15 oz) can beans (black, kidney, pinto), rinsed and drained
1/2 cup corn kernels (defrosted, if frozen)
1/4 tsp cumin

Optional – diced bell pepper, diced jalapeno, shredded Jack cheese, 1 cup shredded or diced cooked chicken
Sprinkle with chopped cilantro or parsley

Spanish
1 (15 oz) can diced tomatoes, drained
1/2 cup chopped green olives
pinch of saffron
1/4 tsp cumin

Optional – add 1/2 cup English peas, defrosted if frozen

Add 1/2 (15 oz) can of chickpeas (rinsed and drained), or 1 cup shredded or diced cooked chicken for protein
Sprinkle with chopped cilantro or parsley

Indian
1 (15 oz) can diced tomatoes, drained
1 tbsp curry powder

Add 1/2 (15 oz) can of chickpeas (rinsed and drained), or 1 cup shredded or diced cooked chicken for protein
Sprinkle with chopped cilantro or parsley

By now you get the idea, and you should be able to come up with combinations of your own. I hope this saves you some time and stress.

Art and Soul – Valentine’s 2011

For Valentine’s Day, we decided to try Art and Soul in DC. I have seen chef/owner Art Smith several times on TV and he seems like such a fun, sweet person. The restaurant is in the lobby of a hotel and is very modern and trendy with touches of Southern homeyness (like jars of pickled things). The restrooms are way on the other side of the lobby, though, which is kind of irritating.

We began with cocktails – Jasper had the “roll call” (ultimate vodka, pomegranate port reduction, blackberries, champagne), I had the “taft and chinda” (st. germaine, sour cherry, champagne). Then came the fantastic corn bread muffins. The menu started with an Amuse Bouche of duck rillette, foie gras, and truffle in a little empanada. Jasper chose the arugula salad with strawberries, cocoa dusted pine nuts and champagne vinaigrette to start with. I had the creamy parsnip soup with pumpkin seed oil and cranberry conserve. For the next course, Jasper had seared rare tuna with a spicy crust and beef tartare, served with winter radishes, micro celery, and a bresoala chip. I had a very creamy lobster risotto with chunks of lobster, caviar cream, crispy leeks, and tarragon oil. For the entree, Jasper had a grilled filet of beef and braised short rib with warm potato salad and port reduction. I had confit chicken with goat cheese polenta, garlic greens, and lemon-pomegranate jus. For desert, Jasper had a chocolate duet of dark chocolate malt, warm white chocolate cake, and raspberry. I had a fig tart with coriander cream and a vanilla port reduction.

Everything was good but not great. My favorite was probably the free cornbread muffins. I wouldn’t make the trip out that far except for the bar – the drinks were very good.

http://www.artandsouldc.com/

Sushi Taro (24/100, 2011)

We have been to Sushi Taro before, but this time we decided to try the Omakase – a personalized dinner with the chef and owner, Nobu Yamazaki, presiding. This is the ultimate dining experience at this already fantastic restaurant (that flies its fish in fresh from Tokyo daily). You must make a reservation in advance (and they can be hard to get, as there are only 6 spots per night). We booked a holiday Monday and were lucky enough to be the only ones there – earning Chef Yamazaki’s undivided attention. The Chef’s wife will e-mail you ahead of time asking about preferences and restrictions. She also informed us that the restaurant had received some blowfish, and asked if we would be willing to try it. “Rare poisonous fish? Sign us up!” we said. When we arrived, we were escorted to the Omakase counter, which is tucked behind a screen in the back. To the left we could see the entrance to the kitchen, and behind Chef Yamazaki’s workspace was a pretty bamboo garden.

We began by ordering sake and were offered a variety of sake cups to choose from. We were introduced to a fantastic sake that we had not tried before – Dassai 23 – it is a nigori (unfiltered), but is clear instead of the usual milky color. Chef Yamazaki informed us that the 23 stood for the percentage of the grain that the rice was polished down to (50% is the norm for the highest tier of sake). Then the Chef grated fresh wasabi (one of our very favorite things) for us. The flavor of fresh wasabi is vastly different from the green paste you find most places – ask for it whenever possible. The first course was Yamazaki’s signature sesame tofu, which is made daily from sesame and a Japanese mountain root. It has the most distinctive texture – soft and silky and creamy, but more solid than regular tofu. It was served in a bonito broth and topped with fresh uni (sea urchin). I have had this dish before at Taro, and I am such a huge fan of it. There is nothing like that tofu out there anywhere else. The second dish was albacore and bok choy. The third dish was one of my favorites – Japanese hairy crab with an egg yolk based sauce (somewhat like hollandaise). It was sweet and creamy and all kinds of delicious. Next came the famous blowfish or fugu (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fugu). Yamazaki sliced the fish into extremely thin pieces of sashimi, so thin that they were translucent. The fish was slightly chewy (one of the reasons it is sliced so thinly), and had a very delicate flavor. The Chef also finely sliced the three layers of skin, which each had a different texture and flavor. I preferred the chewy, rubbery, outer layer of skin. After we finished, Chef Yamazaki asked us if our lips were tingling. “Ok, good” he said when we told him “no”. So I guess we didn’t get any poison! I would definitely try blowfish again (prepared by someone as skilled as Yamazaki), the flavor and texture were very unique.

The next dish was a combination of many elements: conch that had been cooked for 2 hours so that it was still chewy, but not painfully so; a square of savory monkfish liver pate topped with sweet ponzu gelee; warm, soft nuts stuffed with fish cake; a tiny fried whole fish simmered in a sweet soy glaze, with a lovely delicate crunch from the bones; and lastly, a candy sweet kumquat in syrup. After that came the sashimi course, where Chef Yamazaki showed us boxes of fresh seafood and said we could have whatever we wanted. He told us that the best parts of the fish are saved for the Omakase counter. We tried fatty tuna, blue nose, and alfonsino – which I had never even heard of but was one of our favorites. Another of our favorites was the wagyu beef, seared quickly on a grill, and served with fried garlic chips, chives, and a citrus soy and salted plum sauce that tastes somewhat like bbq. The New Zealand salmon was creamier than other salmons I’ve had. We also had a wild yellowtail that was incredible, very different from it’s domestic counterpart. The sweet shrimp were something that I remembered from our first visit to Taro – they are incredibly creamy and sweet; the texture is unlike any other shrimp. Somebody in the main restaurant must have ordered a prawn dish, because Chef Yamazaki took the leftover heads and fried them for us. Fried prawn heads are one of my very favorite things – salty, crunchy, briney goodness. We tried the live scallop, which was sweet and creamy. The Chef told us that the scallop liver was edible, but that the flavor is very strong and that he didn’t normally serve it to people. I told him that I had read about it and wanted to try it. It was good – somewhat like foie gras. This choice apparently put us on the “adventurous” path (which I will explain later). We told Chef Yamazaki that we didn’t really prefer mackerel, and he decided to change our minds. He served us sweet mackerel, then minced us a delicious tartare. We could have kept ordering sashimi forever, and he would have let us, but we felt it was time to move on.

After the sashimi course, we were served blowfish soup with fish cake and turnip, then tempura fish and vegetables. Next came a delicious grilled skewer of miso marinated duck and fresh bamboo. I mentioned before that we asked to try the scallop liver. This made us seem adventurous to the Chef, who served us a couple of dishes “because we like the scallop liver”. The first was a dried squid with innards. Usually the innards are cleaned out of squid before it is prepared, because the flavor is so strong. The dish was was almost like squid jerky, with a strong ocean flavor from the innards. The second dish was a bright orange mound of sea cucumber entrails that were salty and slimey and not my favorite. After that we were served hot sake infused with blowfish tail, before moving on to the sushi course. We ordered all of our favorites from the sashimi course and watched as Chef Yamazaki expertly crafted the sushi by hand. Again, we could have ordered forever and he wouldn’t have stopped us, but we were very full. We were given a dessert menu to choose from. I chose a pineapple and wine compote with a vanilla panna cotta and red wine ice cream – it was very good. Jasper had a banana and chocolate crepe. Then we were served a block of gelee filled with fruit.

It was a fantastic experience. We learned so much and had a great time talking with Chef Yamazaki, plus the food was incredible. This is definitely a rare occasion, however, as the total for 2 people was around $400. I would love to try it again in a different season.

http://www.sushitaro.com/