Home Ec: Thanksgiving Basics--Cranberry Sauce Two Ways

Cranberry sauce, with its color and its acid, is one of the most important dishes on the Thanksgiving table. It's also pretty much the simplest dish to make.

Here are two versions--one basic, and one a bit more complicated. Both are perfect on that leftover turkey sandwich.

photo source: 

cranberry squircle

, by 

Muffet

Super Simple Cranberry-Orange Sauce

Serves 12

12 ounces (1 bag) fresh cranberries

1 cup water

6 tablespoons sugar

3 bay leaves

1 orange, juiced and zested finely

Pinch of salt

In a medium, non-reactive saucepan, combine all ingredients, bring to a boil, lower to a simmer and cook, uncovered, for 10 minutes. Stir and taste as it cooks, adding water, sugar and salt as needed. 

Once it cools, it will set up a lot.  Add water or fresh orange juice, if desired, to thin it out.  Serve warm, at room temperature, or cold.

Cranberry Sauce with Quince and Bay 

Serves 12

5 quinces (2 to 2 1/4 pounds), peeled, cored, cut into 1-inch chunks

3 cups water

1 1/2 cups sugar

2 teaspoons finely grated lemon peel

3 bay leaves

8 ounces cranberries

3 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice

Salt

Bring first 5 ingredients to a boil in heavy large saucepan over medium–high heat, stirring until sugar dissolves. Reduce heat to medium–low. Cover and simmer until quinces are soft, stirring occasionally, about 20 minutes. Pour mixture into large strainer set over bowl; reserve juices.

Return quince mixture to same saucepan; mash with the back of a wooden spoon. Add cranberries; cook over medium heat until most of berries burst, stirring frequently, about 8 minutes. Season with salt and lemon juice to taste. Transfer sauce to bowl. Before serving, stir enough reserved juices into sauce to thin to desired consistency. Serve sauce cold or at room temperature.

Home Ec: Thanksgiving Basics--Charlie's Prune and Sausage Stuffing

This is Charlie's sausage and prune stuffing, which I have whole-heartedly adopted as my own.  The prunes and wine offer much-needed acid to balance out the sweetness of the vegetables, and everything else on the Thanksgiving table.

This stuffing is SO GOOD when fried up the next day, served with a poached egg for breakfast.  Total heaven.

photo:

Aya Brackett

for

Martha Stewart

Ingredients

1 loaf (2 pounds) day-old country bread, crust removed and bread torn into 1-inch cubes

4 cups chicken stock

12 ounces prunes, cut into 1/2-inch pieces (about 2 cups)

3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more if needed

2 bunches hearty leafy greens, such as Tuscan kale, stemmed and coarsely chopped (about 8 cups)

2 pounds sweet Italian sausage, casings removed, crumbled

5 celery stalks, chopped

4 carrots, chopped

2 onions, chopped

Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper

1/2 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley

1 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme

3 tablespoons finely chopped fresh sage

1/2 cup dry white wine

2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into pieces

Preheat oven to 250°F. Bake bread on a baking sheet in a single layer until dried but not browned, about 15 minutes. Remove bread, and let cool. Raise oven temperature to 350°F.

Bring stock to a boil in a medium saucepan. Remove from heat. Add prunes, and let soak for 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, heat 2 tablespoons oil in a large high-sided skillet over medium-high heat. Working in batches, cook greens until tender, seasoning with salt as you go, about 10 minutes, and transfer to a plate. Let cool. Wipe out skillet.

Heat remaining tablespoon oil in skillet over medium heat. Brown sausage, stirring occasionally, until just cooked through and no longer pink, about 10 minutes. Transfer to a large bowl using a slotted spoon. Add more oil to skillet if needed, and cook celery, carrots, and onions until tender, about 6 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.

Drain prunes, reserving poaching liquid. Add prunes, bread, greens, and vegetable mixture to bowl with sausage. Gradually add reserved poaching liquid (about 2 1/2 cups) and wine, stirring to combine. Stir in parsley, sage and thyme. Season with salt and pepper.  The mixture should be really juicy, salty, and balanced with the acid from the wine.

Divide stuffing between two buttered  9-by-13-inch baking dishes. Dot tops with butter. Bake until browned, about 45 minutes.

Cuban Pig Roast & Dance Party





What:
Cuban Pig Roast and Dance Party with Tito y Su Son de Cuba

Where:
Pizzaiolo
5008 Telegraph Ave.
Oakland

When:
Sunday, November 18th
5pm pig roast
7pm dance party

Who:
Planting Seeds: a group of Bay Area chefs, educators and artists traveling to Havana for a cultural exchange between two local food communities

Why:
Raising money so we can GIVE EVERYTHING AWAY to the folks we interact and exchange ideas with in Havana.  We want to give all of the food we cook away for free, as well as stock up the classrooms at the local culinary school where we'll be teaching with all sorts of excellent tools and ingredients.  We want to bring tools and seeds for the urban gardeners we'll be meeting and working with, too!  Help us make this happen!

How much:
$40 for dinner, dancing & a drink
$20 for kids under 12
$20 for dance party & a drink

Cash bar featuring drinks made with Agricole Rum from St. George Spirits

BUY YOUR TICKETS HERE!

Raffle tickets:
$5 each or 5 for $20
**Raffle prize winners need not be present to win!  We can send you (mailable) prizes via USPS.**

With amazing prizes from:

The Peace of Wild Things


When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children's lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.


— Wendell Berry

Tartine Afterhours Book Signing with Adam Roberts: Wednesday, October 17th

We're thrilled to announce a very special Tartine Afterhours Book Signing dinner with Adam Roberts of The Amateur Gourmet!

I am beyond honored to have been included in his new book, Secrets of The Best Chefs, along with some of my mentors and heroes, including Alice Waters, Charles Phan, Lidia Bastianich and Nancy Silverton. It's an even bigger honor to be hosting Adam's only Bay Area dinner event!

Last year, Adam and his photographer Lizzie came by for a little shoot on Valentine's Day, and the results are gorgeous! I am humbled to have some of my words and dishes printed alongside recipes and kitchen secrets from over 50 of the country's other beloved chefs. Published by Artisan Books--one of my favorite cookbook publishers--this book is beautiful. Congratulations, Adam!

When Adam and Lizzie came over, we made pasta and roast chicken, my two favorite things to make at home, so we'll be cooking those dishes for Tartine Afterhours, along with a dessert inspired by the book. We'll also have lots of special snacks, piles and piles of Tartine bread, and plentiful wine to pour while Adam makes his way through the dining room and kitchen to sign books and chat.

This dinner will sell out quickly, so sign up soon!

The all-inclusive ticket price includes hors d'oeuvre, three-course family style dinner with wine, gratuity, sales tax, and a signed copy of Adam's new book, Secrets of the Best Chefs. Just pay here and show up ready to party!



The Details

WHO: Tartine Bakery, Adam Roberts & Samin Nosrat
WHAT: A dinner celebrating Adam's new book, Secrets of the Best Chefs 
WHERE: Tartine Bakery (600 guerrero st. sf, ca) 
WHEN: Wednesday, October 17th at 8pm 
WHY: To highlight the joy of good food and good company 
HOW MUCH: $110 ticket price includes hors d'oeuvre, three-course family style dinner with wine,  gratuity, sales tax, and a signed copy of Secrets of the Best Chefs ($110 = $50 dinner + $14 wine + $28 book + $10.18 gratuity + $7.82 sales tax)

quotes for safe keeping

i'm cleaning up a few things around the house, and taking down a quote board that i need to get rid of.  but i want to save the quotes, so here they are:

I believe that we learn by practice.  Weather it means to learn to dance by practicing dancing, or to learn to live by practicing living, the principles are the same.  In each, it is the performance of a dedicated, precise set of acts, physical or intellectual, from which come shape of achievement, the sense of one's being, the satisfaction of spirit.  One becomes in some area an athlete of God.  Practice means to perform over and over again, in the face of all obstacles, of act of vision, of fait, of desire.
 --Martha Graham

I.
What we call a beginning is often the end
And to make an end is to make a beginning.
The end is where we start from.

II.
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.

--T.S. Eliot

Today, like every other day, we wake up empty
and frightened.  Don't open the door to the study
and begin reading.  Take down a musical instrument.

Let the beauty we love be what we do.
There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.
--Rumi, translated by Coleman Barks

Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world.
--Howard Zinn

It may be that when we no longer know what to do
we have come to our real work,

and that when we no longer know which way to go
we have come to our real journey.

The mind that is not baffled is not employed.

The impeded stream is the one that sings.
--Wendell Berry

To live in this world

you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal; 
to hold it

against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and when the time comes to let it go, 
to let it go.

--Mary Oliver

Who is the authentic seeker, but someone who has understood that there is nothing to do but practice?  Enthusiastic or discouraged, he or she continues, no matter what.
--Lee Lozowick


Tartine Afterhours: Wednesday, August 29th

It's time for another Low Country Boil, complete with Pimento Cheese, Tartine Cornbread, and newspaper-covered tables piled with freshly shucked ears of corn, shrimp and andouille sausage. We're working on getting a bluegrass band, too. Come, eat with us!

Low Country Boil 142/365 by maria erin photography
photo source:  maria erin photography 

The Details

WHO: the fab folks at tartine and me
WHAT: an old-fashioned low country shrimp boil
WHERE: tartine bakery (600 guerrero st. sf, ca)
WHEN: wednesday, august 29th at 8pm
WHY: to highlight the joy of good food and good company
HOW MUCH: $50 plus drinks and gratuity. cash only, please!
TO RESERVE: please fill out this form to submit your name into the lottery. due to the overwhelming popularity of our dinners, space is extremely limited so we now select guests by performing a lottery. we'll email lottery winners by thursday, august 23rd; if you don't hear back from us, please try again next month!





What We Need Is Here

Geese appear high over us,
pass, and the sky closes. Abandon,
as in love or sleep, holds
them to their way, clear
in the ancient faith: what we need
is here. And we pray, not
for new earth or heaven, but to be
quiet in heart, and in eye,
clear. What we need is here.

--Wendell Berry



In 1993, this man changed my life.

Tom Dorman was my high school cross-country coach, my eleventh grade honors English teacher, and the first person to inspire me to live life as a seeker.  He was and continues to be one of the most influential people in my life.

Tom Dorman welcomed me to the high-school cross country team I had no business being on, hating running and all forms of cross-training, and made me part of the first community where I felt truly at home.  He gave me strong, silly, funny, and confident women to look up to and taught me how to curse and revel in playing in the mud.  He took me camping and trail running and taught me how to read topo maps and star charts.  He taught me how to be a leader and a mentor, and to never stop questioning.

In 1995, I left the prestigious independent study classes I'd worked my entire academic career to get into so I could be his student.  It was the first time I followed my heart instead of my mind, and it may have been the best decision I'd ever made to date.  Tom Dorman introduced me to Edward Abbey and Wallace Stevens, to Thomas Lux and the superiority of short stories.  He introduced me to The New Yorker, to Powell's Books, to the importance of keeping a journal, and to the idea that I could find beauty anywhere and everywhere.

His constant love and support allowed me to believe, for the first time, that maybe--just maybe--there was something special about me, too.  That perhaps even I, this intense, awkward, serious, and naïve first-born daughter of immigrants, might be able to break out of the endless, ambitious capitalistic cycle of moremoremore I already felt myself captive to at age fifteen and instead live a creative, inspired life.

One of the most enduring, and powerful, lessons Tom (can you ever grow up enough to call your high school English teacher by his first name?) taught me was the difference between quality and Quality.  Though I don't remember, any longer, how he articulated it, I can explain what it means to me today.  It means not only doing my very best work all of the time, but also infusing it thoroughly with love and meaning.  It means choosing to surround myself with GOOD PEOPLE who are generous, compassionate, intelligent, creative and funny--and if they happen to be rich or famous or powerful, then that's good, too.  Not the other way around.

This lesson served me well in college, at Chez Panisse--a veritable temple of Quality--and at every other point in my career as I've done my best to navigate the topsy-turvy food-for-pleasure-meets-food-justice world in which I live.  For the past two decades, I've been practicing discernment, seeking Quality in everything I do and everyone I meet, and I can see so clearly how it's paid off.  Lately, I feel like it's actually been taking the form of contraction, of a more intimate private life that fuels my public endeavors.  Less time on the internet, less social networks, less of a desire to go to every social event to which I'm invited, less time eating out in restaurants.  More time with friends, cooking dinner at home.  More time reading, and writing, and watching movies.  More time outside, more time meditating, more time in the water.  

And somehow, something is happening now where I'm crossing paths with so many excellent, interesting people on a daily basis.  Yesterday, I finally met Leah Rosenberg after a long, drawn-out, mutual obsession with one another, and I can tell you right now that we are the sweet and salty twins.  Total soul sistas.  How can it be that someone I've never met can so totally be on the same page?  And how can I be so sure so immediately?  I don't know.  I just am.  And you know, I totally trust it.  She's Quality, with a capital Q.

Thanks for that, and so much more, Coach.  I love you.  Always will.
La Sagra del Maiale:
A Whole Hog Demonstration & Dinner at Soul Food Farm
Saturday, July 14th

The nearly two years I lived in Italy in the early oughts shaped and inspired my approach to cooking and life as much as anything. I was extremely fortunate to have several people take me under their respective wings and teach me about Italian food history, traditions, and culture, but no relationship was as meaningful as the one I developed with Dario Cecchini, who welcomed me into his shop and his family with open arms.

Dario, the charismatic butcher profiled in Bill Buford's Heat, continues to inspire me daily with his commitment to his craft, to community and to preserving Tuscan food and cultural traditions. His incredible generosity takes many forms, but none so important as the way he mentors aspiring cooks and butchers. Over the years, Dario has had a long line of students and protégés in Italy, but he's also taught and encouraged many of our own favorite local butchers here in the Bay Area to invest in this craft. One of the his earliest students, Riccardo Ricci has been with Dario since he was practically a kid. Now a seasoned butcher in his own right, he's coming to the Bay Area for a visit and a series of events.

When Chris from Avedano's and Alexis from Soul Food Farm asked me to participate in a butchery demonstration and dinner with Riccardo on the farm, I leapt at the chance. I haven't been back to Italy in far too many years, so any time Dario or one of his butchers comes to town, I track them down so we can share a meal together. This time, I get to cook with Riccardo! Inspired by the traditional Italian sagra, or outdoor feast celebrating the season's bounty, we're throwing a Sagra del Maiale in honor of the glorious, versatile pig.

photo: peden+munk
Riccardo Ricci of Antica Macelleria Cecchini, joined by Chris Arentz of Avedano's and John Fink of The Whole Beast will perform a whole hog butchery demonstration and showcase several of Dario's most beloved recipes. Each guest will receive a handout describing the cuts and recipes to keep and take home. After the butchery and cooking demo, Riccardo and Chris will answer any questions that may have arisen.

As the sun sets, you'll be seated at farm tables and enjoy a family-style dinner featuring all of Dario's classic pork dishes, including tonno del Chianti, fresh garlic sausages, and of course arista in porchetta. Using produce from the farm and other nearby purveyors, I'll be doing what I love to do most--making piles and piles of salads and fresh summer vegetable dishes to pass around. I'm even trying to cajole one of my baker friends into making us some special loaves inspired by Tuscan flavors for the feast. We'll serve bright, acidic wines to keep things fresh, and when the sun gives way to stars and a waning moon we'll pass out platters of biscotti and vin santo brought over from Italy by Riccardo before sweetly bidding you goodnight.

THE DETAILS

WHO: Riccardo Ricci, Chris Arentz, John Fink, Alexis Koefoed & me
WHAT: La Sagra del Maiale: A Whole Hog Demonstration & Dinner at Soul Food Farm
WHERE: Soul Food Farm// 6046 Pleasants Valley Road// Vacaville, CA 95688
WHEN: Saturday, July 14th from 5-10pm
WHY: To have endless, delicious fun with our friend visiting from Italy, and to share it with you!
HOW MUCH: $185 per person, includes butchery demonstration, recipe booklet, five-course family-style dinner, abundant wine (tax & gratuity included)
TO RESERVE: call or email Alexis at (707) 365-1798 or soulfoodfarm@gmail.com

Tickets will sell out as we are limiting this event to 30 people, so reserve soon!

Third Annual Ice Cream Social in the Park

Ok friends, I'm in announcement mode today, clearly.



UPDATE: I didn't anticipate that this would be re-posted on all sorts of event aggregation sites, but it has.  So though all kind, sweet people are welcome, there is no way I can afford to buy ingredients for all of you out there, so if you are coming and have never met me or corresponded with me in any way (or are not the guest of someone who has), please plan to contribute at least $5 per person to help cover my costs.  Thank you!  And if I've never met you, please do make sure to come introduce yourself to me!

Since it looks like I have to teach or attend a wedding every weekend from here till November, I'm biting the bullet and moving the third annual ice cream social to a weekday afternoon.  But, since it'll the on the second longest day of the year, and school will be out for most of our little ones, I think I can convince most of you to come!

Let's turn it into a full-on picnic dinner situation, with as little environmental impact as possible.  Ok?

Here's the deal:

Come to Lakeside Park at Lake Merritt next Thursday, June 21st at 5pm.  We'll be there till it gets dark or unbearably cold!  City dwellers, you can take BART to the 19th Street station and just walk over--we can give you a ride back to BART after dinner.  Ice cream should be ready and cranked by 6pm.

I'll bring the (new) old white mountain hand-crank ice cream maker and fixins for lots of ice cream.

You bring:
  • a bowl and spoon for eating ice cream (I want to avoid disposables if possible)
  • a topping or ice-cream friendly accompaniment (e.g. salty caramel sauce, salty chocolate sauce, berries, cookies, brownies, cones, pie, root beer, etc.).  Feel free to get creative!
  • and/or sandwiches
  • and/or something else savory we can eat without a fork and plate (like some homemade fried chicken perhaps?)
  • whatever you'd like to drink, and a vessel from which to drink it
  • kids
  • dogs
  • friends, including any eligible bachelors you'd like to introduce me to
  • blankets for sitting on
  • guitar or other instrument?
Please do me the favor of leaving a comment below if you're planning to come (including the number of guests you're bringing) so I can have an approximate idea of how many folks to plan for, ice cream-wise.  

Can't wait to see you!

Tartine Afterhours: Wednesday, June 27th

In planning the themes and menus for these dinners, I have a lot of factors to consider, including how many hands I'll have to help. Somehow the stars have aligned for me to have a heap of helpers this month, so I'm taking advantage of all those dexterous little fingers will have to offer and making up a menu highlighting my favorite thing to cook: handmade pasta.

I'm thinking of getting some of Cindy's gorgeous sheepsmilk ricotta from Bellwether and making gnudi, using some of Blue Heron's perfect spinach for pasta verde, and tracking down piccolo fino basil for pesto to serve with pillowy agnolotti or tortellini stuffed with new potatoes and young garlic. But who knows? It can all change! The one constant will be heaps and heaps of pasta and vegetables. And, I got Nate and Chad to agree to work on schiacciata for the tables, which we'll stud with the last of the dried Dirty Girl early girl I've got tucked away from last summer.

Come join us for a vegetarian pasta extravaganza--it promises to be unimaginably delicious!

photo: aya brackett
The Details

WHO: the fab folks at tartine and me
WHAT: a handmade pasta extravaganza featuring our local summer bounty of produce and cheeses
WHERE: tartine bakery (600 guerrero st. sf, ca)
WHEN: wednesday, june 27th at 8pm
WHY: to highlight the joy of good food and good company
HOW MUCH: $50 plus wine and gratuity. cash only, please!
TO RESERVE: please fill out this form to submit your name into the lottery. due to the overwhelming popularity of our dinners, space is extremely limited so we now select guests by performing a lottery. we'll email lottery winners by wednesday, june 20th; if you don't hear back from us, please try again next month!

inspired

self portrait by tim walker


I've been making lists of my dream collaborators in my head for a while, now.  I think it's time to start making them public.  One of my dreams is to do a series of dinners in different cities with all of the different folks who inspire me, from musicians and cooks to florists and artists to storytellers, scientists and writers, and to capture them all on film by my favorite photographers.  Some of these folks I know, and others I don't.  The most excellent peden+munk encouraged me last night to go for it, so here's where I start making that list:

Photographers
Aya Brackett
peden+munk
Gentl & Hyers
Jennifer Causey
Jason Lowe
Ed Anderson
Paige Green
Tim Walker
Anna Williams/The Voracity
Heidi Swanson/Wayne Bremser
Canal House ladies
Jaime Beechum

Stylists
Alison Attenborough
Maggie Ruggiero
Leila Nichols
Kelly Ishikawa
Tail of the Yak

Florists & Gardeners
Saipua
Nicolette Owen
Amy Merrick
Max Gill
Crimson
Flora Grubb
Choo girls
Alta Tingle
Louesa Roebuck

Food & Drink Makers 
Four Barrel Coffee
St. George Spirits
Mast Brothers Chocolates
Tartine Bakery
Anson Mills
June Taylor
Scribe Winery (oh, that Hacienda!)
Violet Cakes
Dario Cecchini
Sylvan Brackett
Bryant Terry
Oretta Zanini de Vita
Ici
Della Fattoria's Ed and Kathleen
The Local Butcher Shop
Marlow & Sons & Daughters (Wythe hotel would make a great location!)

Farmers, etc.
Alison Edwards
Annabelle Lenderink
Riverdog
Dirty Girl folks
Sunny Slope Orchards
Nancy from Middleton (she's a California treasure)

Storytellers
Jack Hitt
David Sedaris
Radiolabbers
Beth Lisick
Kitchen Sisters
Pop-Up Magazine

Writers & Poets
Bob Hass
Wendell Berry
Kay Ryan
Jon Mooallem
Michael Pollan
Celia Sack/Omnivore

Musicians
Bonnie Raitt
Mike Marshall
Chris Thile/ Nickel Creek
Bon Iver
Brandi Carlile (just got obsessed)

Artists & Makers
Christina Kim/dosa
Heath
Diana Fayt
Arielle Alasko
Tracy Lenihan
Sarah Pulver
Rebecca Burgess
Rough Linen
Aletha Soule
Lisa Congdon
Wendy Macnaughton
Lauren Mcintosh
Deepa Natarajan
Maira Kalman
Judith Belzer
Matt Dick
Christina Stork
Jessica Niello
Leah Rosenberg

Non-Profits to Support
The High Line
Edible Schoolyard
Alemany Farm
City Slickers Farm
People's Grocery
18 Reasons
San Francisco Public Library
Oakland Public Library
New York Public Library
Henry Miller Library

man, this is only the beginning...who have i left off??!?!  i'll come back and finish all of the links later, too.  just wanted to get this off the ground.  come, help me brainstorm.  and help me make this happen!!!  can you even begin to imagine how beautiful it could be?

me, elsewhere



i've been busy elsewhere on the www, and though i do my best to update folks via facebook, twitter, and the newsletter (you can subscribe to it by entering your email address in the box on the right sidebar), i usually forget to mention things here on the blog.

so, here's a little list, if you wanna catch up with me:

  • charlie and i weigh in on the foie gras ban in this piece on ecosalon
  • i've been instagrammin a lot lately (username: ciaosamin).  i also love instagrid.
  • kimberley from the year in food came to the last tartine afterhours dinner and tooks lots of lovely photos
  • i'm writing a little series of blog posts with cooking tips for my friends over at good eggs.  here's the first installment, all about artichokes
  • i think that's it.  there might be more, and if there is, i'll let ya know. 
p.s. there are still a few spots available in some of my home ec classes at pizzaiolo if you've been thinking about it!