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If anyone goes to Oaxaca i have a locals' restaurant list (only 33% are in the guide-book we have)......with our Kid Crew we cant get to them all but here are some he listed...
Teatro Culinario: Molecular gastronomy Oaxaca style. Prob one of the best culinary experiences in my life. No menu's must have reservation.
Itanoni: Owned by an agronomist recognized by Slow Foods for his passionate work presenting tastings of select un-hybridized corn and veggies from diverse regions.
Yu Ne Nisa: Isthmus region cooking, try gugheguina, armadilo soup and iguana tamales.
I hear Mexican foodies come to eat in Oaxaca from all over Mexico....
Considering a BlueStar range. Seems like just about the most intense cooking instrument one can get in a 30" stove.
steak house or gay bar
got 11 of 15 right.
With his first book, titled "Momofuku," Mr. Chang will take his message to a wider audience. The 303-page book, coming out Oct. 27 and priced at $40, aims to replicate Mr. Chang's natural voice, which means occasional use of the word "like" to punctuate Mr. Chang's thoughts, and liberal use of profanity. Readers are instructed not to "f— it up" when handling a pricey piece of foie gras, for instance. Some of the recipes are likely to be daunting to home cooks—such as one that requires boiling a pig's head ("if there are any hairy patches, dispense with them" with a blowtorch, the recipe directs).
Shake Shack burger reverse engineered.
The Ketchup Conundrum
Mustard now comes in dozens of varieties. Why has ketchup stayed the same? malcolm gladwell for the new yorker
Bonny Doon Vineyard Cellar Door Café of Santa Cruz in Santa Cruz County ... by the Sea
judith jones
portland's first community supported kitchen
ss on dbgb
tea drinkers, what are your favorite morning teas? decaffeinateds need not reply. i'm looking for black and strong.
Still, by noon every Saturday, he’s sold out of the 400 loaves he loaded into his muddy pickup in rural Blue Mounds. That’s because Ford’s bread is different. His tangy, crusty loaves, baked in a wood-burning oven built by the legendary mason Alan Scott, are made using obscure organic grains that he sources locally and grinds himself, and leavened using natural fermentation rather than industrial yeast. Ford’s customers, some with medically diagnosed wheat allergies, have found that they have no problem digesting Cress Spring’s Kamut, spelt and all-rye breads, even the French white loaf, which — Ford is aware of the paradox — is one of his best sellers. (He sneaks up to 35 percent whole-wheat and rye flours into it, explaining: “White bread is just a mystery to me. Everything tastes better with rye.”) Even a Manhattan nutritionist could probably polish off a Cress Spring loaf without bloating.
My neighbor spent Sunday chasing Yellow Fin (Ahi) between San Diego and Catalina. They were running near the surface with dolphins. He landed a 30 lb one. I scored a nice hunk of sushi grade ahi. I cut it into two 2" thick steaks. Pan seared for 6 minutes in canola oil with just sea salt. With a side of sliced tomatoes with salt, pepper, extra virgin olive oil, and balsamic. Local pinot noir to wash it down.
bowrey growlers baby!
linden hill farm diner
the cider is flowing in bucks co as of today. thats the mash in the truck heading to some lucky pigs for diner.
closing: gourmet magazine