Thursday, December 24, 2009
Trips
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Things on my mind for the upcoming Holiday Season....
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Great 80s flicks and YouTube Posts....
Goonies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWgc8Ute2tU
Willow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-P03NGSP6Y
Top Gun
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekXxi9IKZSA
Ferris Bueller's Day off
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNPp6x7j9I8
St. Elmo's Fire
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIqUC0M8c4M
Fast Times at Ridgemont High
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uf5rIuJPTt0
Adventures in Babysitting
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nly-bfguf4k
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Some great new Patagonia Products


Men's Slingshot Down Vest
http://www.patagonia.com/web/us/product/mens-slingshot-down-vest?p=27570-0-176
Men's Nano Puff Pullover
http://www.patagonia.com/web/us/product/mens-nano-puff-pullover?p=84020-0-465
DAS Parka
http://www.patagonia.com/web/us/product/das-parka?p=84101-0-756
You are free to add your own favorites........
Career Advice from Alan Mulally (CEO of Ford, Ex-Boeing)
Q. What’s your best career advice?
A. Don’t manage your career. Follow your dream and contribute. Think about just exceeding expectations of every job you’re being asked to do. Continually ask for feedback on how it’s going. Ask everybody involved what you can do to do an even better job, and the world will beat down your door trying to ask you to do more and more.
I’ve never laid out a career. I never said I wanted to do this job and this job and this job, and frankly, I’d propose that you really don’t know what a job is until you’re in it. The most important thing is that you are open to really understanding what is expected, and also where you can make the biggest contribution. The more humble you become, and the more honored you are to serve, it allows you to really understand what you can do to make a bigger contribution.
Quotes..........
http://avleadmot.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Great Gridiron Getaways
Great Gridiron Getaways
By DAN ACKMANThe living room couch can be a fine place to spend an autumn Saturday afternoon. College football is on display and any chores can wait until Sunday, when the mechanized professional version of the game takes control of the dial. But for those whose souls are overtaken by a damp, drizzly November (or September or October), here are five road trips to glory, where the college-football fan can escape for a week and, thanks to a day-long drive between the stadiums, see two of the best games of the season.
Trip One: From USC at Ohio State to Nebraska at Virginia Tech
The season gets under way in force on Sept. 12, and right away the University of Southern California Trojans (ranked fourth by the AP preseason) face the sixth-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes in a game that by rights should be played on Jan. 1 or even for the national championship six days later. The game will feature this year's quarterback phenom Matt Barkley for the Trojans against last year's all-world freshman Terrelle Pryor for the Buckeyes. Though last year USC beat Ohio State badly, this year the game will be at the Ohio Stadium in Columbus with more than 100,000 fans on hand cheering for the home team.
From Columbus head south; it's just over 300 miles to Virginia Tech's campus in Blacksburg, Va. Take time for a detour to Charlottesville, where you can visit Monticello, before heading to Blacksburg to see the seventh-ranked Virginia Tech Hokies take on the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Virginia Tech beat Nebraska last year on the Cornhuskers' home turf. But Nebraska has been rebuilding, looking to regain their status as a national contender. The Hokies, likewise, will be looking to re-enter college football's top tier, which they occupied in 2007. While the game will be at 66,233-seat Lane Stadium, Nebraska travels with Husker Nation—certain to turn a large section of the stands into a sea of red.
Trip Two: From Auburn at Tennessee to Florida at LSU
It's unusual that neither the Auburn Tigers nor the Tennessee Volunteers are nationally ranked this preseason and rarer still that both teams are coming off losing seasons. But none of that should matter on Oct. 3 when 102,000 fans cram into Neyland Stadium on the banks of the Tennessee River as the Southeastern Conference schedule kicks into gear and as both squads seek to regain their rightful places in the football universe.
From Knoxville drive 10 hours through the heart of Dixie to Baton Rouge. Or you can extend the drive a bit with detours in Nashville and Memphis, Tenn., and Vicksburg and Natchez, Miss. However you get there, the University of Florida Gators-Louisiana State Tigers game is a shining star on the college-football schedule. The Gators come into the season ranked first in the nation, and the game is in Tiger Stadium at night.
"At night something spooky happens in that stadium; it's a once-in-a-lifetime sort of experience," says Spencer Hall, who writes about the Southeastern Conference for the Sporting News. Over the years, the spookiness has usually accompanied a win for the LSU Tigers, ranked No. 11 this preseason. But defending national champion Florida is a squad that fears no evil.
Trip Three: From Oklahoma vs. Texas in Dallas to Texas A&M at Texas Tech
The Oct. 17 University of Oklahoma Sooners-University of Texas Longhorns game, known as the Red River Rivalry and played on a neutral site at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, is listed in "The 100 Sporting Events You Must See Live" by Robert Tuchman—and for good reason. Both teams are perennial powers, and the game dates back to 1900, when Oklahoma was still a territory. This year Texas and Oklahoma are ranked second and third, respectively, in the nation heading into the season and both boast Heisman Trophy hopefuls as quarterbacks. This year's game fixes to be as critical as last year's, when Texas, then ranked No. 5, upset the top-ranked Sooners 45 to 35, only to see Oklahoma land in the national title game.
From Dallas head west to Lubbock. But detour south first so you can travel through the Texas Hill Country, stopping off in the Odessa area for a high-school game on Friday night. Texas Tech is far from everywhere, but under Coach Mike Leach its Red Raiders play one of the most entertaining brands of football anywhere. The game time for the Oct. 24 contest against the Texas A&M Aggies has not been set yet. But let's hope it's at night, because football after dark in West Texas is mythic stuff.
Trip Four: From Georgia vs. Florida in Jacksonville to Florida State at Clemson
This 94-year-old rivalry is known for a pregame party that continues during the game and well after. But the World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party, as it is known, is also serious business. The Oct. 31 game between the University of Georgia Bulldogs and the University of Florida Gators is a border war between two of the top football states in the nation, and the Southeastern Conference title will probably be on the line as well.
From Jacksonville, Fla., travel via Savannah, Ga., with a possible diversion to the coastal islands of Georgia, to Clemson, S.C. There, on Nov. 7, the Clemson Tigers will host the Florida State Seminoles. While the conventional wisdom is that the best football and the most rabid fans are in the Southeastern Conference, not the Atlantic Coast Conference, the 80,000-plus fans who regularly cram into Clemson Memorial Stadium would disagree.
Trip Five: From California at Stanford to Utah at Brigham Young
After more than a century, the annual "Big Game" between the University of California and Stanford (Nov. 21) remains an intense rivalry between arguably the two top universities on the West Coast. The academic competition between the students makes the competition "pretty bitter, pretty personal," says Vittorio Tafur, a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle. The game also produced "the play," perhaps the most famous ending in football when Cal returned a kickoff in the final seconds of the 1982 game through the onrushing Stanford marching band.
From Palo Alto head across California and Nevada to Utah and the Wasatch Mountains. The game between Brigham Young University and the University of Utah, just 44 miles apart, is dubbed "the Holy War," though there are Mormons on both sides. This year both the Brigham Young Cougars and the Utah Utes are ranked in the top 20 heading into the season, with Utah coming off an undefeated season just ahead of its downstate rival. Both teams are hoping to earn bowl championship series bids, giving each team added incentive, if any were needed, to win the war.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Great Sporting Events
Rose Bowl
The Masters "A tradition unlike any other"
Wimbledon
Grand Prix of Monaco
The Ashes - Australia vs. England in Cricket
Rugby World Cup
College World Series
America's Cup
Soccer World Cup
Roland Garros
Monday, August 17, 2009
Great College Football Stadiums
Friday, August 14, 2009
10 Great College Football Rivalries
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Great Dinner Spots
Cherry Creek Grill - Denver
Spark's - New York
Rosa Mexicano - Nationwide
Trio - Jackson, WY
Morton's - Nationwide
Bacchus - Milwaukee
Cafe Sydney - Sydney
Cabana Las Lilas - Buenos Aires
Baia - Cape Town
112 Eatery - Minneapolis, MN
The Restaurant at Mission Ranch - Carmel, CA
George's on 4th - Johannesburg (Parkhurst)
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Great Drives
PCH / Highway 1 - California
Montrose to Durango, Colorado - going over Red Mountain pass and the Million Dollar Highway
Southern Utah around Canyonlands and Moab
Cape Road, South Africa - around cape point
Great Ocean Road - Victoria, Australia
Sea to Sky Highway, British Columbia
South Island, New Zealand
Monday, August 3, 2009
Great Movie Quotes
"It is so choice. If you have the means, I highly recommend picking one up." Ferris Bueller
"They were abused children." Goose, Top Gun
"Hell, I'd be happy to just find a girl that would talk dirty to me." Goose, Top Gun
"True love is hard to find, sometimes you think you have true love and then you catch the early flight home from San Diego and a couple of nude people jump out of your bathroom blindfolded like a goddamn magic show ready to double team your girlfriend..." Mitch, Old School
"Janice, I apologize to you if I don't seem real eager to jump into a forced awkward intimate situation that people like to call dating. I don't like the feeling. You're sitting there, you're wondering do I have food on my face, am I eating, am I talking too much, are they talking enough, am I interested I'm not really interested, should I play like I'm interested but I'm not that interested but I think she might be interested but do I want to be interested but now she's not interested? So all of the sudden I'm getting, I'm starting to get interested... And when am I supposed to kiss her? Do I have to wait for the door cause then it's awkward, it's like well goodnight. Do you do like that ass-out hug? Where you like, you hug each other like this and your ass sticks out cause you're trying not to get too close or do you just go right in and kiss them on the lips or don't kiss them at all? It's very difficult trying to read the situation. And all the while you're just really wondering are we gonna get hopped up enough to make some bad decisions? Perhaps play a little game called "just the tip". Just for a second, just to see how it feels. Or, ouch, ouch you're on my hair." Jeremy, Wedding Crashers
"No, no, he didn't slam you, he didn't bump you, he didn't nudge you... he *rubbed* you. And rubbin, son, is racin'." Harry Hogg, Days of Thunder
"Anyway, like I was sayin', shrimp is the fruit of the sea. You can barbecue it, boil it, broil it, bake it, saute it. Dey's uh, shrimp-kabobs, shrimp creole, shrimp gumbo. Pan fried, deep fried, stir-fried. There's pineapple shrimp, lemon shrimp, coconut shrimp, pepper shrimp, shrimp soup, shrimp stew, shrimp salad, shrimp and potatoes, shrimp burger, shrimp sandwich. That- that's about it." Bubba, Forest Gump
"Chicks dig me, because I rarely wear underwear and when I do it's usually something unusual. But now I know why I have always lost women to guys like you. I mean, it's not just the uniform. It's the stories that you tell. So much fun and imagination." Winger, Stripes
"Today... is Christmas! There will be a magic show at zero-nine-thirty! Chaplain Charlie will tell you about how the free world will conquer Communism with the aid of God and a few Marines! God has a hard-on for Marines because we kill everything we see! He plays His games, we play ours! To show our appreciation for so much power, we keep heaven packed with fresh souls! God was here before the Marine Corps! So you can give your heart to Jesus, but your ass belongs to the Corps! Do you ladies understand?" Drill Sargent, Full Metal Jacket
"Don't you realize? The next time you see sky, it'll be over another town. The next time you take a test, it'll be in some other school. Our parents, they want the best of stuff for us. But right now, they got to do what's right for them. Because it's their time. Their time! Up there! Down here, it's our time. It's our time down here. That's all over the second we ride up Troy's bucket." Mikey, Goonies
"Get busy living or get busy dying" Shawshank Redemption
"Can I borrow your towel for a sec? My car just hit a water buffalo." Fletch
"Yeah, do you have the Beatles' White Album? Never mind, just get me a glass of hot fat. And bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia while you're out there." Fletch
"In case you haven't guessed yet, there's been a lot of drug traffic on the beach. And I'm not talking about Robitussin and No-Doze. I'm talking about the hard stuff, and a lot of it. I've been trying to find out who's behind it. It hasn't been easy. I don't shower much. " Fletch
"This little proposition doesn't entail me dressing as Little Bo-Peep, does it?" Fletch
"What type of name is Poon? .........Comanche Indian" Fletch
"Out of order, I show you out of order. You don't know what out of order is, Mr. Trask. I'd show you, but I'm too old, I'm too tired, I'm too f'in' blind. If I were the man I was five years ago, I'd take a FLAMETHROWER to this place! Out of order? Who the hell do you think you're talkin' to? I've been around, you know? There was a time I could see. And I have seen. Boys like these, younger than these, their arms torn out, their legs ripped off. But there isn't nothin' like the sight of an amputated spirit. There is no prosthetic for that. You think you're merely sending this splendid foot soldier back home to Oregon with his tail between his legs, but I say you are... executin' his soul! And why? Because he's not a Bairdman. Bairdmen. You hurt this boy, you're gonna be Baird bums, the lot of ya. And Harry, Jimmy, Trent, wherever you are out there, F YOU TOO!" Lt. Col. Frank Slade, Scent of a Woman
"Neal, in Montana there's three things we're never late for: church, work and fishing." Paul, River Runs through it
"You can have it if you want to live in Agora f'ing hills and go to group therapy, but if you want a Beverly Hills mansion, a country club membership, and nine weeks a year in a Tuscan villa, then I'm gonna need to take a call when it comes in at noon on a motherf$@#ing Wednesday" Air Gold, Entourage
"There are several quintessential moments in a man's life: losing his virginity, getting married, becoming a father, and having the right girl smile at you." Kirby Keger, St. Elmo's Fire
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Wyoming License Plates and counties
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
New Topics to be posted soon -
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Favorite Brunch Spots
Songs - Top 5s
Monday, July 20, 2009
Airport Rants - Favorite and Least Favorite Parts
Least Favorite Airports (navigation, delays, cleanliness)
New York LaGuardia
Chicago O'Hare
Atlanta
Johannesburg
Favorite Airports (navigation, delays, cleanliness)
Denver
Boston
Sydney
Favorite Eateries
New Belgium Pub at Denver
5 Guys at Washington Dulles
Legal Seafoods at Boston (Chowder!!)
In & Out - Los Angeles (right under glide path)
Great Vantage Points
I70 at "old" Denver Stapleton
In & Out at LAX
Boat ride across Boston Harbor
Maintenance Hangar at Johannesburg
Business Class Lounge at Sydney
Main Terminal at Washington's National
Worst Customs hall
JFK terminal 4
Johannesburg (nothing good goes on down there.........)
London Heathrow
Easiest Access by Mass Transit
New York's JFK
San Francisco
London Heathrow
Washington National
What about your lists or other categories?
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Great Movie Soundtracks
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
The Perfect Burger and All Its Parts
Bill Milne IT'S AN ART Hold the tomato: the Frenchie burger at DBGB includes a compote instead. |
The Perfect Burger and All Its Parts
By JANE SIGAL
THE simple hamburger isn’t so simple any more.
Over the last decade or so, there has hardly been a serious chef in America who hasn’t taken a shot at reinventing or improving it. They have trained their skills on every element, from the precise grind of beef to the ketchup and pickles. Some have turned their bakers loose on reformulating the bun.
By most accounts, the burger’s upward journey began eight years ago, when Daniel Boulud stuffed ground sirloin with truffles, braised short ribs and foie gras at his DB Bistro Moderne in Manhattan. A few weeks ago, Mr. Boulud brought things full circle, opening a burger bar on the Bowery called DBGB Kitchen and Bar.
While some chefs have groused quietly about the insatiable demand for burgers, most are philosophical. “All chefs can be frustrated by the buying public sometimes,” said Clark Frasier, a chef with restaurants in Massachusetts and Maine. “In this economy I’m happy to sell anything they want to eat.”
All this high-powered attention has produced some new ways of thinking about and cooking burgers. Interviews with 30 chefs provided dozens of lessons for the home cook that aren’t terribly difficult and don’t cost much money. And it all yielded the ideal burger.
A PERFECT BURGER RECIPE There’s a lot you can learn from a man who’s griddled thousands of burgers. Michael David, executive chef at Comme Ça brasserie in Los Angeles, had already earned his burger stripes on the team that developed Mr. Boulud’s French-American DB Burger.
At Comme Ça, Mr. David finally nailed the consummate burger on the 11th try.
The genius of his Comme Ça burger is that it is consistently juicy, perfectly seasoned and precisely medium-rare. The patty is charred on the outside and rosy pink from edge to edge.
It is a radical improvement on what most people already do, but it’s not much more complicated. His trick is to treat the burger the way many chefs do a steak.
He puts a good hard sear on both sides using his plancha, the freight train of flat tops, then transfers it to a 375-degree oven to finish cooking. After it comes out, there’s a built-in resting period while he toasts the buns and makes a last-minute lettuce salad.
His method translates to an amazing amount of flexibility. Home cooks who don’t have a plancha can sear the meat either on a grill or on the stovetop in a cast-iron skillet. It works equally well for one or two people, or for a crowd, because you can sear in batches.
The final cooking works beautifully in a toaster oven as well as a regular oven. Or, if you have an outdoor grill that is as large as some people’s kitchens, you can simply move the burgers to a cooler spot once they’ve been charred.
Mr. David melts Cheddar cheese over the patty and dollops iceberg lettuce salad dressed with spicy mayonnaise on top and, voilà, a reformed burger.
THE RIGHT CHOICE OF MEAT But before you get to cook the burger, you have to choose the right meat.
In “Burger Bar” (Wiley, 2009), Hubert Keller writes that what you do not want is preshaped burgers or meat that is stuffed and compacted into plastic packaging. Once beef is compressed, a light texture cannot be regained.
Douglas Keane, the executive chef and an owner of Cyrus and the Healdsburg Bar & Grill in Healdsburg, Calif., advises people to lose their fear of fat. He started with 80 percent lean beef, then moved to a 70-to-30 ratio.
“The day I did it,” he said, “the servers started coming in and asking, ‘What did you do to the burger? The guests are going crazy.’ ”
Mark Bucher, the executive chef at the Burger Joint in Washington, said that to make a great burger at home, have your butcher grind a piece of brisket. “It’s got a 25- to 30-percent fat-to-meat ratio,” he said. “It’s gorgeous. It’s my favorite.”
Pat LaFrieda, president of LaFrieda Wholesale Meat Purveyors, which delivers custom blends to many of the top burger restaurants in New York City, recommends grinding the meat yourself with a food processor or a mixer’s grinding attachment. He prefers chuck and brisket, and said to put them in the freezer first and chill them to 30 degrees.
“It’s like grating cheese at home,” he said. “Or coffee beans. It’s better, isn’t it?” He explained that preground beef is often made from the trimmings left over from steaks, roasts and stew meat.
It is important, he said, to choose select, choice or prime grade meat.
“When dairy cows come of age, they give a very lean, low-grade beef,” he said. “That’s often what’s used for preground meat. That’s something the consumer wants to stay away from.”
A NICE ROUND SHAPE Next, you form the patty.
“If you do nothing else, you should handle it less,” said Suvir Saran, an owner of Dévi, an Indian restaurant in Union Square. Mr. Saran, who calls himself a vegetarian who cheats, offers burgers at his restaurant, American Masala in Jersey City. Handling the raw meat too much means you’re going to end up with a brick of meat.
Mr. David of Comme Ça thinks a lightly shaped patty holds together better if it’s refrigerated for an hour or two before cooking.
Michael Mina, founder of the Mina Group, which includes the recently opened XIV in Los Angeles, rolls each patty into a ball, then presses it flat to get a nice round shape.
Alternatively, jar lids are popular with chefs. Mark Richardson, the executive chef at the Four Seasons Hotel in San Francisco, swears the lid of a Hellmann’s mayonnaise jar makes the best possible burger mold.
Laurent Tourondel is completely against those chefs who use a whopping 12 ounces of meat.
“It’s not too appealing to have such a thick piece of meat to bite into,” said Mr. Tourondel, the executive chef and partner at the many BLT restaurants. He thinks the patty needs to be in proportion with the tomato, the bread and whatever else you have.
No matter how big the patty is, one small shaping trick will help it cook better. “The first thing you do is take your thumb and make a well in the burger,” said Bobby Flay, the owner of eight restaurants, including Bobby’s Burger Palace, and the author, most recently, of “Bobby Flay’s Burgers, Fries & Shakes” (Clarkson Potter, 2009).
Tamara Murphy, the executive chef and an owner of Brasa, in Seattle, said the air and water in burgers make them puff up when they’re cooked. “Nobody wants a ball of a burger,” she said. “Then people take their spatula and go, smash, squishing out all the liquid.”
Dimpling the patty, she said, helps it cook evenly, and you won’t be tempted to smack it down and lose all the juice.
All the chefs agree that salt is crucial. Whether you’re using kosher, table or sea salt, you should be pretty liberal with it. Beef can take more salt than you think. Most chefs recommended seasoning the burger just before cooking it.
HOW HOT DO YOU GO? The beauty of a burger is its seared crust, and the only way to get it is to make sure the grill, skillet or flat top is hot, hot, hot. “You have to be willing to cook over high heat,” said Andy D’Amico, the chef and a partner at Five Napkin Burger, in the theater district, and Nice Matin, on the Upper West Side.
Testing for doneness is always a challenge for the home cook. Seamus Mullen, the chef and an owner of the Boqueria restaurants in the Flatiron district and SoHo, uses a wire cake tester. (Any thin, straight piece of metal will work as well.)
“We stick it in the middle through the side,” he said. “If it’s barely warm to the lips, it’s rare. If it’s like bath water, it’s medium rare. The temperature will never lie. It takes the guesswork out of everything.”
AND THE PERFECT BUN These chefs are focusing their laserlike attention on the bread around the meat, too.
The buzzer went off for Hidefumi Kubota, the baker at Comme Ça, after Version 14 of the hamburger bun.
The bun was too soft and fell apart. Or it was too hard and crushed the burger. It had to be big enough to hold the patty but not so big that you couldn’t get the burger into your mouth. He ended up with a light brioche bun.
Mike Plitt, the pastry chef at Arrows restaurant in Ogunquit, Me., needed about a dozen attempts before he settled on a cross between challah and a buttery dinner roll.
But Ryan Skeen, who developed a following for his burgers at Resto and Irving Mill, both in Manhattan, likes Martin’s brand potato rolls, sold at supermarkets up and down the East Coast.
Every chef believes that the buns should be warm and crispy.
SWEET, SOUR BUT FRESH FIXINGS Nothing is taken for granted, not even pickles. Some chefs have adopted the buy fresh, buy local ethic. Kyle Bailey, the chef at Allen & Delancey on the Lower East Side, for instance, found his pickles around the corner at Guss’ Pickles.
He especially likes the sour ones because their acidity plays off the sweetness of the ketchup, mayonnaise and bun. “You want something to cut against the richness,” he said.
Other chefs are applying the principle that everything is better if you make it yourself. At MC Perkins Cove in Ogunquit, Me., and Summer Winter in Burlington, Mass., Mr. Frasier pickles serrano chilies. Josh Eden, the chef and an owner at Shorty’s.32 in SoHo, serves quick, house-made cucumber pickles, which get their tang from rice wine vinegar. They’re extremely easy, crunchy and spiked with sweet, anise-flavored tarragon, instead of the usual dill.
Cheese receives the same attention. Joey Campanaro, the chef and owner at the Little Owl in the West Village, uses American cheese.
”You have the eye appeal,” he said. “It looks like what a burger should look like. We’re not elevating it to something it isn’t.”
Jim Leiken, the executive chef of DBGB, said the beauty of American cheese is the texture, but rejected it in favor of Cheddar because he prefers its flavor. He also tried blue cheese for a while, but decided it overwhelmed the beef.
Matt Jennings, a cheesemonger as well as a chef at Farmstead Cheese Shop, La Laiterie Bistro and Farmstead Lunch in Providence, R.I., is in an unusual position to pair cheeses and burgers. What matters most to him when selecting cheese?
“Meltability,” he said. So if a cheese like Gruyère doesn’t melt easily, he grates it, then presses it into a disk the same size as the burger.
The chefs had some final tips for creating a memorable burger. Choose lettuce that’s crisp and serve it cold. Use only really good, ripe tomatoes; a bad tomato waters down the burger without adding any taste. At DBGB, Mr. Leiken replaces the tomato on his Frenchie burger with an intensely flavored house-made tomato-onion compote.
Ultimately, though, it’s not just the ingredients that make a burger great, said John DeLucie, the chef and a partner at the Waverly Inn in Greenwich Village.
“I had a boss who wanted me to make the dish in a photo he showed me,” Mr. DeLucie said. “Behind the dish was a girl in a bikini. He always wanted to know why the dish never tasted as good when I made it.”
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Great Sundowner & Day Drinking spots
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Refreshing by Definition - NYTimes
Refreshing by Definition
AGAVE NECTAR In a Venn diagram of vegans and bartenders, this might be the only overlap. While the former group likes it as a honey substitute with no taint of animal exploitation, the latter appreciates its easy ability to blend into cold drinks. Professionals prefer mixing it with tequila and mezcal, but lazy home bartenders might use light agave nectar just like SIMPLE SYRUP, without the bother of boiling, cooling and bottling an extremely sticky substance.
BASIL Unless you sell your own line of pesto, there’s only so much basil you can use. So why not drink it? A distant cousin of MINT, basil can be put to some of the same uses in cocktails, but with predictably different results. MUDDLE it or just toss it in the shaker and let the ICE do the work (but use a strainer). Basil plays well with fruit, even pineapple.
BLENDER DRINKS See FROZEN DRINKS.
CHILIES Sometimes the best way to cool down is by adding heat. Sparing amounts of hot peppers can lower body temperature, and will cut against the grain of a sweet cocktail, too. Bits of fresh chilies can be tossed into a blender for FROZEN DRINKS or smashed with a MUDDLER. Whole fresh chilies may be left in a bottle of liquor, like vodka. Ground dried chilies — typically cayenne, but smoky pimentón is also worth a try — can be included in a salt rim, as in: Watermelon Sugar.
COLA Rum and Coca-Cola, the Andrews Sisters sang. America sang along. And drank along. And it was good. What happened? Maybe our tastes changed. Coca-Cola certainly did — around 1900, when the drink was invented, Coke contained cane sugar (and cocaine, but that’s another story). Now it has high-fructose corn syrup, a viscous, unwelcome intruder in a Cuba Libre. But some new colas on the market contain restrained amounts of cane sugar, and a mildly bitter presence of kola nut. This sets the stage for an overdue revival of the Cuba Libre. To make one, mix two ounces of un-aged rum and the juice of half a small lime in a tall glass, build a tower of ice cubes, and top it off with the driest cola you can buy. The rind of the half lime is optional. A straw is not.
COLLINS Commercial sour mix drove this drink to the edge of extinction. If you must take a shortcut — if, say, you have heatstroke and the act of squeezing a lemon might send you to the hospital — then pour very good sparkling lemonade over your favorite liquor (gin, if it’s a Tom Collins; with vodka, the name changes to John). But try to gather strength to make it the right way, with the juice of a lemon, a tablespoon of SIMPLE SYRUP, a slug of liquor and loads of SELTZER. As a way to pass a hot afternoon, it is difficult to beat.
CUBA In most Polynesian-themed bars, not one cocktail comes from Polynesia, but plenty come from Cuba. The island is a prodigious source of classic summer drinks, including the Cuba Libre, the mojito and many variants on the DAIQUIRI.
DAIQUIRI If it’s purple and looks like it came from Mr. Softee, it’s not a daiquiri, no matter what the bartender says. This noble drink from CUBA, often ignobly degraded, should be the color of sea glass and taste somewhere on the sweet side of sour, or the sour side of sweet.
FREEZER The freezer is the home bartender’s most important ally. Set it very cold and always keep a bag of ICE in it for reinforcements, although the ice trays that come with most freezers yield superior cubes. Thick and substantial, they melt slowly. Stashing liquor bottles in the freezer is an affectation that may lend your kitchen a slightly desperate appearance and doesn’t do much to cool individual drinks. But it is a help when making punch. If you are, freeze a large plastic bowl of water (or a ring mold, to be fancy about it) the day before. Once solid, the ice will chill a punch for an hour or two before melting.
FROZEN DRINKS This degraded class of cocktail is now clawing its way back to respectability with the aid of bartenders like Adam Seger of Chicago and Martin Cate of Forbidden Island and the forthcoming Smuggler’s Cove in San Francisco. Traditionally, most blender drinks are tropical and rum-based (leaving aside, with a violent shudder, the ones that contain ice cream). But the idiom can stretch to fit other flavors as well, as in this drink of Mr. Seger’s: Blueberry Maple Caiprissimo.
GINGER Ginger ale never went away as a mixer — a spigot with a button marked “G” is standard equipment in most bars — but it lost its fizz, not to mention its zing. Bartenders are restoring both. At the easiest level, this means buying high-quality ginger ale or ginger beer, the kind that burns a little as it goes down. Poured into a tall glass over ice and vodka, with a teaspoon of lime, it makes a Moscow Mule. With dark rum and lime, you have a Dark and Stormy. But there are other ways to drink your ginger. You can throw in thin slices of ginger root when making SIMPLE SYRUP for a ginger syrup that combines sugar and spice. Or get your hands on ginger juice. You can make it if you own a juicer, or you can buy it at juice bars, health food stores and Whole Foods, among other places. Dissolve an equal amount of sugar into it and you have a much more energetic ginger syrup. One last tip: in a pinch, you can grate ginger and squeeze it. You won’t open a ginger ale factory this way, but you can extract enough juice for drinks like: Pimm's Saigon.
ICE Modern bartenders will brag about keeping 10 different kinds of ice on hand. For home use, though, only three are worth worrying about. First, regular ice cubes, for the cocktail shaker and for most drinks served on the rocks. Second, big chunks of ice for punches; see FREEZER. Last, finely cracked ice for JULEPS. Some ice crushers on their finest setting will yield something close to this. But for sticklers, only ice wrapped in linen or canvas and whacked to a fine powder with a wooden mallet will do. If the prospect of that makes you want to take a wooden mallet to this reporter, then forget it, and just find the nearest bar that stocks 10 different forms of ice.
JULEP For all the chest-thumping this class of drinks has caused, it’s a simple affair: sweetened liquor stirred in a mound of finely crushed or shaved ice. But until you’ve had one made without shortcuts, one that truly frosts the outside of its cup, it’s impossible to imagine how refreshing a julep can be. These days it is almost always seen in the form of the bourbon-based mint julep, but in the 19th century Americans drank a julep made with genever, an aged gin that eventually vanished from stores. Now it’s come back and with it, if we’re lucky, this recipe from the drinks historian David Wondrich: Gin Julep.
LEMONS AND LIMES Citrus may be a winter crop, but even the most devoutly seasonal bartenders would not make it past the solstice without lemons and limes. Beyond standard uses, keep in mind that a big dose of lime cuts the sugar in a gin and tonic, especially those made with oversweetened mass-produced TONIC WATER. In fact, it can uplift almost any drink made with a carbonated mixer; see RICKEY.
MELON Honeydew, watermelon and even cucumber (all members of the cucurbitaceae family) can be pounded with a Muddler to flavor a cocktail. But for a tall drink where the juice is the main ingredient, you can peel and pulse them lightly in a blender (seeds and all), then push the pulp through a sieve or a cheesecloth. The juice can taste flat without LEMON or LIME juice and SALT. Try, for instance, loading a shaker with ice, then adding 2 ounces of gin, an ounce of cucumber juice, a teaspoon of lime juice and a pinch of salt. Shake, pour over ice in a tall glass and top with cold TONIC WATER.
MINT Essential ingredient in mojitos and some juleps and a fine garnish for almost every other summer drink.
MUDDLER If you don’t own one, you can make do with the handle end of a sharpening steel, or even a wooden spoon. But a muddler, essentially a miniature bat with a blunt end, is a worthwhile investment for crushing fresh herbs and fruit: Thai Basil Bliss.
PEACHES When they’re in season, drink them. Puréed, sweetened white peaches topped with Prosecco make a Bellini. Three or four ripe peach wedges, Muddled with MINT leaves, a tablespoon of sugar, two tablespoons of water and two LEMON slices, then shaken with bourbon and ice, strained into a glass and served on the rocks, gives you Dale DeGroff’s classic Whiskey Peach Smash.
PIMENTO DRAM Crafting sweet drinks that don’t cloy is the trickiest part of summer mixology: you don’t want your rum punch to taste like Hawaiian Punch. Bitters and CHILIES can help. So can Jamaican pimento dram (or pimento liqueur), now back on some liquor store shelves in the United States. As an undercurrent in fruit-based cocktails, it adds a dash of what-is-that-flavor intrigue. (It’s allspice.)
RASPBERRY SYRUP On summer’s first really hot day (and that day will come, unlikely as it seems), when fresh berries turn to pulp before you can eat them, do this: Boil 3/4 cup of sugar in 3/4 cup of water until dissolved, and let cool slightly. Purée a cup of raspberries with the warm sugar syrup in a blender, then strain and let cool completely. Keep in a clean jar and use the raspberry syrup in place of sugar or SIMPLE SYRUP in any cocktail recipe, particularly those with LEMON. Or stir 2 ounces of syrup into 6 ounces of seltzer for a lovely, if expensive, soft drink.
RICKEY So simple it’s almost embarrassing, a rickey is nothing more than a shot of any liquor with a healthy dose of LIME juice and lots of seltzer. That’s it. A little sweet liqueur can make it even better, as in: Rye Rickey.
SALT Once seen on margaritas and nowhere else, salt has come in for a second look at bars. A pinch in the shaker can sharpen the taste of juices like MELON or cucumber. More often it’s used on glass rims, mixed with sugar, perhaps, and with ground spices like fennel seed, black pepper, CHILIES or dried citrus zest. (Bacon dust has also been spotted, but the less said about that, the better.)
SELTZER Keep a few small bottles in the refrigerator, and more in storage, and you will always have the simplest summer drink within reach: a highball, made with liquor and soda.
SIMPLE SYRUP Nobody in their right mind makes simple syrup for just one cocktail. But it’s worth the bother in summer, when a big batch comes in handy for sweetening iced tea, coffee and lemonade. Boil a cup of sugar in a cup of water and stir until dissolved. Let cool, decant into a glass container and keep refrigerated. (For a change, especially in rum and pisco drinks, try simple syrup made with Demerara sugar instead.)
SPICED SYRUPS Follow the method for simple syrup, but throw in some cinnamon sticks or a tablespoon of whole cloves, allspice or black pepper. Let cool, strain out the spices, and store. Use instead of, or with, SIMPLE SYRUP in fruity drinks. Your guests will be pleasantly mystified.
TONIC WATER Like COLAS, many commercial tonics are now made with high-fructose corn syrup. They have a way of sticking to the roof of your mouth that might be fine in peanut butter, but not in a gin and tonic. New boutique tonics, like Q and Fever-Tree, are less sweet and sticky. A sour blast of Lime juice is no longer a necessity, just a nice complement.
WINE When it’s hot, we’re thirsty. But you don’t want to knock back straight whiskey like water, just to quench your thirst. That’s why tall drinks diluted with COLA, SELTZER or TONIC make sense, and why wine cocktails deserve a try. On the other hand, you could just forget the cocktail and drink a cold rosé.