botham burger

jamie oliver calls all burgers botham because his dad called them that in the pub they own.  Here is a botham burger I made from pinterest from a blog called cherry on a cake (right.)  It is loaded up with curry mayo, caramelised onions and a fresh tomato.  I didn’t really follow the recipe for the burger – fail for me.  But the curry mayo was fun and I loved it.  I’ll use it as a dip for future potato-based things when it fits with what we are eating.  I could totally see using it for roasted Spanish-style potatoes.  Anyhow, we served this with Colmans curry sauce for roasted garlic Alexia tots.  The British are coming!IMG_3515

how we roll

I was sitting at work today and waiting for a meeting to start so I opened up pinterest and saw this awesome cement w.  It was diy though so I am reasonably assured it will never happen, although you never really know.  It did lead me to buy the most awesome marquee Z that is going to get put up in my living room over my sofa from Restoration Hardware.   I actually am really kind of excited about it.  I suppose it isn’t normal living room art.  Right now I have up a vintage mirror that my parents bought from the Eastman family a lot of years ago.  I wanted to paint it and still might but it freaks my mom out.   All this led me to show my blog to someone who was also waiting for the meeting to start and I realized I hadn’t posted a thing for two weeks.  So, here I am sorting through photos and can’t believe I didn’t get this up.  Two shots.  His and hers-respectively, both flavors of the new Haagen-Daz gelato.

His:  Salted Caramel with Bacon on top-ridiculous and as good as it sounds…

Hers:  Lemon with home pickled Grapes (What?)  Yeah, home pickled grapes.  I read about them in two books and online in one week and figured it had to be.  Quickly washed and cold packed grapes covered in a sweetened vinegar studded with cinnamon, black pepper and mustard seeds.  What?  Amazing, sweet, crunchy, sophisticated and complex.  That’s how we roll.icecream

the poor porker

poorporkerwe were driving on I-4 heading to the beach a month or so ago and I was reading magazines (bliss right?).  I saw that a semi-local place was featured in Food and Wine magazine (May issue.)  It’s called the Poor Porker and while I kind of have a love – hate with their name, I am certainly chuffed too have a hipster beignet and chicory coffee food truck in the Central Florida town of Lakeland.  I immediately tried to find it on my phone to see if we could swing by but we had zoomed down the road before I could find where they might be.  But, a couple weeks ago we were making a quick trip to Sarasota to see my sister before she skipped town/go to the aquarium/see my parents for pre-fathers day that happened to coincide with the Lakeland curbside market so we stopped by for some fresh beignets.   Their cart (because truck isn’t really what it is) is a trailer with a sort of shack cobbled together on top housing a few people pouring coffee, taking orders and rolling out and frying dough.  It has that new old style of industrial reclamation of Coleman coolers, old wood and artfully rusty industrial signage.  The staff/owners are cool cat types with work aprons, tats and artful dustings of flour.  We ordered an iced chicory coffee and two orders of beignets.  One was what I would call the original variety, shaken in a bag of powdered sugary goodness and the other was in a little tray and doused with maple, bacon and a drift of sugar.  They are made to order and HOT.  The dough is really great, soft and pillowy and crisp in all the right ways.  While you might think I’d love the bacon I was really all about the orginal.  They were just so good with that cold coffee.   If you are ever in the neighborhood I would recommend this as a good detour.  You get the small town vibe with a healthy dose of hipster and a darn good treat.  I hope they are around a long time.

there are obscenities in here.

cheezewizwell, sort of.  I made a burger last night and it was ridiculous bordering on obscene.  Here’s why.  I got an iSi thingie for my birthday.  I’m celebrating my birthday this week in general.  Lots of years I haven’t been all that excited about it.  In fact when I was turning thirty I had negative birthdays for a few years until my sister said it had to stop.  This year I can lean in to tell you that I’m just not that fussed about it.  It’s not a milestone year where I feel like I haven’t achieved something and in that, I’ve achieved everything.  I don’t have to worry about the haves or have nots, the I have it and you don’ts or the don’t you wish yous.  I’m just me and I’m pretty great.  Anyway, Z is a total joy to have buying me loot because he gets so excited about it that he can’t not give me whatever comes in the mail and a few days ago a household sized iSi cream dispenser and charges came to our doorstep.  So, what to do other than pull out Richard Blais’ cookbook, Try This At Home and make a modified cheddar cheese version of this Cheese Wizard to put on sherry braised onion and bacon burgers.  So, basically the long and short of it is I melted cheddar in heavy cream, chilled it and charged it with nitrous oxide into foam which I sprayed on a BURGER.  Obscene.  No one needs that-but it was fun and I’ll probably do it again and add cayenne so it is more like pimiento cheese because that would be awesome.  Happy birthday to me!

hot dog heaven or relish the dog

dawgsI know what you are thinking.  People who give up cable to have a line item in their budget for cheese aren’t all that likely to like hotdogs*.  Don’t judge.  I actually can’t explain it either.  This isn’t to say I’m not just a touch picky about it but I like hotdogs.  There, I said it.  It could relate to my love for handheld food, relish or encased meat.  When I actually sit and think about it-my feeling is that it is probably relish.  I don’t like ketchup on dogs-ever.  I find myself most often adding relish, mustard, diced onion, a little mayo and even some sharp cheddar or hot sauce.   All of the above probably mask the taste of any hotdog under there.  At any rate, we had yet to try the Orlando landmark, Hot Dog Heaven, so Z took me there one Saturday afternoon before we succumbed to every homeowners joy, yard work.  It is roughly the size of a doublewide trailer and sits on a busy street and looks like it has been there about 25 years, which it has.  A giant dog on a double pronged fork passes for what is the …skyline.  We got in line and perused the menu while we waited.  Vienna red-hots (a Chicago staple) topped in every way imaginable with a side of fries.  I opted for standard Chicago style, a pickle, tomato, neon relish, onion and sport peppers.  A boiled water dog on a steamed bun.  The hot dog was standard.  I didn’t expect more or less.  It had that casing snap when you bit it, wasn’t over or underdressed, was a throwback to childhood and street vendors with carts.  The fries I could’ve left behind-dressed with a weird cold cheese (American?)-they dropped the experience a few notches and if you go, I’d say get chips.  Kind of an average hotdog experience.  I didn’t even have the heart to blog about it on it’s own.  But, roll it forward a month or so…

This begins with a story with a happy ending.  My sister was in town with her family for summer vacation.  We went to the Magic Kingdom for a day of thrilling and princessly rides with her four kids who range in age from 4 to 11.  Eight of us in all from A to Z.  While riding on the great Goofini’s Barnstormer (a short entry into roller coasters for kids) I was sitting behind my sister and oldest niece and watched the hat that not two hours before we had been told was my niece’s favorite (Z and I bought it for her) fly off of her head and past my outstretched fingers.  Upon exiting the ride we found out we could pick up the hat at days end at City Hall on Main Street.  Roll it forward a couple of hours to the most MASSIVE rain storm I’ve seen outside of a tropical depression and the eight of us huddling under the awning at the Enchanted Tiki Room.   Two hours and two passes through It’s a Small World later it still hadn’t stopped pouring.  So, wet to the skin we headed out sans hat.  Cutest niece says, ‘don’t worry about my hat.’  ‘ok.’ I say.  They headed off for a week at the beach.  Next day, Z and I pack ourselves into the car with no less than 5 bottles of sunscreen and head to the beach, after a brief stop at Disney Lost & Found where we …GOT THE HAT… They handed it over and said, ‘sorry it’s still a bit damp.’  Of all the exceptions in the world, this was exceptional.  So, we paid back their kindness by heading into the park for a Disney-taxed lunch of delightfully giant hot dogs from Casey’s Corner hotdogs.  Giant dogs and mine was ridiculously covered in an oniony pickley neon relish that I loved.  I had to eat it with a knife and fork.   Served up with some fries and cracker jack and washed down with a Coke while sitting outside with a view of both Main Street USA and Cinderella’s Castle it was worth every penny.  I also realized when pulling links for this blog that they serve mini-corndogs and have free cheese sauce as a hotdog topping so I am certain that is in my immediate future.

*true story.  Before I got married I gave up cable so that I would have money I didn’t feel bad spending on triple cream brie, manchego and piave.