Saturday, July 14, 2012

best potato chips with garlic & rosemary







vintage pictures are just fun to have and to look at. Andrew has these hanging up in his house out here. stretched [and very loose] burlap on old wood backdrops of butcher charts.



This is where my nerdy chef comes out. He told me he found them in an old package house in the meatpacking district.












homemade chips is a great option for a proper summer BBQ. very easy to assemble and you look pretty cool when you get nods of satisfaction among a sea of crunching on the warmed chips with thin slices of fried garlic and rosemary.  I like the purple potato which fry up very clean and crisp. The purple is the original potato from Peru. Russets or Yukon Golds are good as well. you'll need a mandolin. if you don't have one, you can find a good mandolin slicer with or without a julienne attachment for under $20. you'll also need a bath of ice water next to you to be able to hold 3 pounds of sliced potatoes. 


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purple potato chips with rosemary and garlic


your list

3 lbs purple potatoes. washed, scrubbed and pat dried
peanut oil. enough to fill half a heavy saucepan
sea salt. Maldons good
a bunch rosemary leaves picked
1 bulb garlic. sliced super thin or whole roughly bashed
yesterdays newspaper

mis-en-place

set your stove to 250. now slice your potatoes into thin disks about the width of a quarter and drop in ice water. watch your fingers! I like to do a few lengthwise to change it up a little. after they're cut place in the oven on 2 sheet trays with raised wire racks for 30 minutes to get the rest of the moisture out. have tongs and a mesh colander handy [to scoop out the chips]. set a large saucepan on a stove and fill up halfway with the oil. turn it up till it reaches a steady 350 degrees. this is your cooking point. You'll be doing them in batches. Throw in a handful for each batch so theres no overcrowding.  Let it fry, turning with tongs, a few times on both sides. after 3 minutes toss a small handful of garlic and rosemary in. give it a few more minutes to crisp up. poke with your tongs. When its crispy and hard to the touch, they're done. pull them out with your colander & place them on wire racks. salt generously. keep them in the oven to stay warm & crispy till serving.  I like to serve them on newspaper. its a cheap alternative to paper towels and it looks like you picked them up right off the fish and chips man. try a bite with the garlic and rosemary. they season the oil with each batch which makes the chips all aromatic and lovely. tuck in!





















chips from the Bar3BQ event 






Saturday, July 7, 2012

best caesar salad

 crazy HEAT index? and I hate that I have to even mention weather but someone close to me is melting right now. speaking of melting. anywhere in Long Island, stop by a roadside stand and buy a carton of strawberries. the difference between these berries and Driscolls grown in Cali is HUGE. Obviously perishable after a few days but when you can catch the wave you've never tasted anything so bright red and juicy all the way through, as loose as butter.


Sag Harbor Greens


the fish weren't biting on this first trip out to the far tip of Long Island. its 5:30am...a few fishing boats patiently waiting in a semi circle out off the tip of Montauk. I finally made this infamous fishing trip I heard so so much about. a weekly trip for him. some weeks luckier than others.

some commercial boats chugging past blowing out puffs of smoke. and sea gulls coming off the fog were as clueless as we were as to where these fish were...trying to follow a pattern of movement. but there were  no moving nets or scrambling around in excitement from the other fishing boats this morning



leaving Gardiners Bay


The radar said if we head straight east of the lighthouse, to that good 32 foot depth, thats where some fishes are hungry..striped bass, bluefish & porgie's.

After 3 hours of trying new tactics and trolling we found a new spot. The rain started and the skipper, Mike, pulled in a massive striper. 33 pounds..And then Andrew a 30 pounder, right after.









'Please don't judge us by today', said Ed the owner, all modestly. 'we usually make out a little better'
The experience was definitely worth getting up at 4am. not many things are


Andrew filleted them right on the stern and tossed the carcasses over



thats our boy!



best caesar salad


A friend of mine asked me for a good caesar salad recipe. I remember making the caesar at the Spotted Pig and unlocking the robocoup and that lemony tangy and creamy umami packed taste...i was blown away. they've become such a staple of american food, somewhere along the way they were made to taste generally bland. like ranch on wet iceberg lettuce. but it doesn't deserve that reputation.  I realized it can be GOOD! So I came up with a similar version...and easier. making your mayo is key to a good caesar and seems a bit laborious but worth every bite.  I found you get similar results though using store bought olive oil mayo vs making your own mayo and it saves you time so why not?. you want a dressing thats thick and creamy. not runny. try it and you'll see why



your list

2 garlic cloves
1 teaspoon sea salt. Maldon's good and flaky 
1/2 tablespoon dijon 
1 egg yolk, organic 
1/2 jar olive oil mayo, (8 oz)
1 tin anchovies
1/2 cup grated parmesan or aged pecorino
2 lemons, juiced
2 tablespoon water
olive oil
2 handfuls romaine, washed, dried and kept cold 
1 loaf of peasant bread
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes

dressing

in mortar & pestle or food processor bash up your garlic cloves. add salt, mustard, egg yolk, lemon, dijon and a few glugs of olive oil to make a paste. give it a minute to mix. add mayo & anchovy & grated parmesan. blend until till it suits yer tastebuds. Add sea salt and fresh black pepper or lemon to taste.

croutons 

preheat oven to 400. for croutons, decrust your bread all around. pick rustic inch sized pieces off into a bowl. drizzle over olive oil & a Maldon salt & fresh black pepper. run the oil around with your hand and spread them out on a sheet tray with parchment/wax paper and bake for 25 minutes. move them around evenly to brown. hit it with salt and pepper. taste. I like mine salty. bake for 20-25 mins and keep an eye on them flip them halfway through for an even crisp. you want them crispy all the way through 


*for a warm caesar, have the romaine prepped in cold water. This adds to the char taste and look. toss on a hot grill [with tongs] for a few minutes on each side & immediately coat romaine with dressing in a little prepped bath of dressing* 

lightly coat each leaf by hand. stack high starting with triangle shape and insert croutons like blocks in btwn leaves. very rustic, like it fell onto a plate with purpose. give a good shave of parmesan over top. feel free to add a few grates of lemon around. 



My friend Andreas Serna who took some shots of my food at an event Ground catered a while back just sent me some more proofs. I'll leave you with some proper summer BBQ


best veggie burger. beets, turtle beans, brown rice, chestnuts, morels, chickpea flour.homemade purple chips with fried garlic rosemary



deviled eggs. chive flowers, candy bacon


best ny raised burger. 80/20 sliders with sticky cheese, pickled shallots, fried sage

Minelote. grilled baby corn, cotija, lime aioli, chili, cilantro