Tag: food

  • i8tonite: Top Favorites Eats, 2023: Delicious, Easy Recipe for Hasselback Potatoes

    i8tonite: Top Favorites Eats, 2023: Delicious, Easy Recipe for Hasselback Potatoes

    Our favorite meals over the last year. And a Thanksgiving Hasselback Potato Recipe.

    I spoke to a born and bred Hoosier who said to me, “Hoosiers are humble. We don’t talk about the great things we offer.” In today’s day and age of marketing and promotion, no one wants to dine at your table if they don’t know what’s available. We have many opportunities to promote local Indiana food entrepreneurs, and we should. A friend and former editor-in-chief of the biggest food magazine in the world said her life was about traveling to eat. In 2004, London-based food writer Andy Hayler went to every three Michelin-starred restaurants worldwide and was the first to do so. He continued to do it six more times until the pandemic. Traveling for food is big business. 

    Having lived, worked and promoted destination and resort towns across the United States and internationally for most of my life, it’s always about the food and drink first, even more so than the hotels. Think about heading to Napa Valley without the wine? Leaving the lackluster conference hotel room, the food – and service –will make or break the experience. Before living in Indy, except once, I never read about great food from the Hoosier state, but there are stellar places. I’ve eaten at them. 

    Read our first two of 2023 until we get to eight!

    Tinker Street

    Four years ago, Nick and I spent my first birthday in Indy at Tinker Street, one of the city’s mainstays, which I place as one of the finest eateries in the Midwest. Opened in 2015, the small restaurant on 16th Street in the historic district of Herron Morton provides Chef Tyler Shortt an opportunity to be creative with Indiana-grown ingredients. It’s one of the few restaurants that promote the area farmers while also being in the 21st century with a female sommelier, Ashlee Nemeth, and providing reservations. 

    Shortt’s recipes showcase regional agriculture, corn and tomatoes, and meats like duck and pork. That’s a good thing. The New American fusion – that ubiquitous term that uses herbs and spices from international flavors with European cooking methods – shows in the sauces such as the yuzu garlic aioli on the scallop and scallion risotto or the cappelletti with a Korean braised short rib. It’s an eating destination where one is never disappointed in the food or service. Importantly, it’s that place you bring your Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City friends when they finally come to visit you. Thankfully, it’s 21 and over, too. 

    402 E. 16th Street

    Indianapolis, IN 46202

    (317) 925-5000

    Reservations

    Chicken Scratch

    A graduate of Ivy Tech’s Culinary School, Chef Tia Harrison, who catered for ten years before opening her restaurant called Chef Tia & Co., started serving her wings as a special on Wednesdays. Upon being one of two $25,0000 Discover Financial Services recipients to support Black-owned food entrepreneurs, she opened her first standalone devoted to the hump day special on Keystone. It’s a pickup and delivery spot with over a thousand reviewers from happy customers giving it a thumbs up. Ms. Harrison creates mighty tasty wings and loaded fries from this location. And as a customer, your choices feel endless. Who knew there were so many variations on wings? Naked or breaded, bone-in, boneless, and vegan, made with cauliflower florets and tossed in almost a dozen hand-crafted sauces that make everything finger-licking good. 

    Parmesan garlic is a house specialty, and the spicy jerk BBQ fires up the tastebuds, but no one can do wrong with the hot honey. If you’re visiting Indianapolis, have them delivered to your room and source a wine from one of the Black female winemakers in Indiana (Sip & Share or Cultured Urban Winery). You will remember the meal much more than the keynote speaker. 

    Since debuting in 2021, Harrison opened two more this year, one in Cincinnati and another downtown Indy location. 

    5308 N. Keystone Avenue

    Indianapolis, IN 46220

    Order

    Anthony’s Chophouse

    Filet of Beef, courtesy of Anthony’s Chophouse

    I’m fascinated by Carmel’s carefully planned community design, so much so that I often drove by Carmel’s Anthony Chophouse without noticing. The developed city has entranced me with its perfect walkways and storefronts, that I missed the illuminated sign, mistaking it for another chain. 

    But once inside, they transport you past the white picket fences and into a South Beach atmosphere, exuding sex appeal. A gas fireplace framed by brick illuminated the staircase leading upstairs and packed the bar area with crowds of Carmelites — sculpture and texture play in the dining room, with Rat Pack chocolate-covered banquettes and brass mid-century lights. A wood-planked floor allows for runway arrivals of Manholos and To Boots before stepping onto a modern weave. And, of course, the glass-walled kitchen allows diners to see the back of the house between sips of ready-to-pair meat cabernets. 

    As for the boeuf, it was standard with freshly seared ribeye and filets. We like the flight of beef, like tastes of wine, that featured four-ounce portions of USDA prime, grass-fed, and Wagyu. We have yet to eat in every steakhouse in the world, but we found this to be a novel idea. Dining at a butcher emporium, for the most part, is about something other than the steaks. It’s about the wine, the cocktails, service, appetizers and the sides. Diners will find creativity in these dishes, wine menu and libations. The bone marrow, harvest pig and the gambas pil pil are worth visiting every single evening. And if we could afford it, we would. 

    201 W. Main Street

    Carmel, IN 46032

    (317) 740-0900

    Reservations

    A Thanksgiving Recipe for Hasselback Potatoes

    Ingredients:

    • 4 large russet or Yukon Gold potatoes
    • Olive oil or melted butter
    • Salt and pepper
    • Optional toppings: grated cheese, chopped herbs (such as rosemary or thyme), garlic powder, paprika, sour cream, bacon bits, or any preferred toppings

    To Make:

    1. Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Wash the potatoes thoroughly and pat them dry with a kitchen towel. Place a potato on a cutting board. Using a sharp knife, make vertical slices across the potato, about 1/8 to 1/4 inch apart, ensuring it does not cut all the way through. Pro tip: To prevent cutting through the potato, place chopsticks or wooden spoons on either side to act as a barrier.
    2. Once all the potatoes are sliced, place them on a baking sheet or in a baking dish.
    3. Drizzle olive oil or melted butter over the potatoes, making sure to get some in between the slices. Use your hands or a brush to evenly coat each potato with oil or butter.
    4. Season generously with salt and pepper, ensuring the seasoning gets into the crevices.
    5. Optional: Add your preferred toppings such as grated cheese, chopped herbs, garlic powder, or paprika between the slices or on top of the potatoes.
    6. Place the baking sheet or dish in the preheated oven and bake for about 50-60 minutes, or until the potatoes are crispy on the outside and tender on the inside. The cooking time may vary depending on the size and type of potatoes used.
    7. Once done, remove the potatoes from the oven and let them cool slightly for a few minutes before serving.
    8. Serve the Hasselback potatoes as a side dish with your favorite main course. Optionally, garnish with additional toppings like sour cream or bacon bits before serving.
  • I8tonite: Media Maven Jennifer Magley & Her Grandmother’s Delicious Rolls

    I8tonite: Media Maven Jennifer Magley & Her Grandmother’s Delicious Rolls

    When I first met Jennifer Magley at an event, she offered huge smiles, genuine warmth, displayed a brilliant fashion sense all while listening to an old fart (me) prattle on about nonsense. That very morning, her company downsized leaving her without work. To her credit, she showed grit and resilience by coming out to make new acquaintances instead of staying cooped up, feeling sorry for herself, which is what I would have done. 

    Born in Kansas, Magley attended the University of Florida and was a scholarship athlete at IMG Academy under the direct tutelage of renowned tennis coach Nick Bollettieri. While in college, Magley became the number one ranked NCAA Division, Singles player in the country, a four-time All-American, and the Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar recipient. As a member of TEAM USA, Magley represented the United States in over 14 countries. After graduation, she competed professionally on the WTA Tour before being named Associate Head Coach at Wichita State University. With many accolades and recognition, she became the nation’s youngest NCAA Division head coach at Florida Gulf Coast University. 

    She has written two books, with her debut novel Division I, released in 2014, spotlighting issues that affect female collegiate athletes and, in 2021, How to Be Queen-A Leadership Fable, about the power of imperfect leadership. 

    Today, with national media coverage, from USA Today, CNN, ESPN, Foundr Magazine, and US News & World Report, she is a successful Keynote Speaker and High-Performance Coach, having spent over a decade as a recruiter and helping successful people become their best. Additionally, she started Magley Mass Media, where she promotes women, including her mother, Evelyn Magley, the first Black woman to head a men’s professional basketball league. Her father, a former pro player with the Cleveland Cavaliers, Dave Magley, was the former commissioner of the National Basketball League of Canada and now is the president and chief operating officer for the North American Basketball League. 

    Between her sold-out luncheons, writing, speaking, and being just a media superstar, Magley graced us with answers to i8tonite questions and a time-honored yeast rolls recipe.

    Why did you start Magley Mass Media? 

    In March, my full-time role as a technical recruiter laid me off and launched Magley Mass Media. I just looked at my phone and it says I started doing my thing on April 18th full time.

    What gives you the greatest joy in working in this space? 

    For most people, the reality is that no one knows your name; I help change that through 90-day Media Mastermind Groups. My greatest joy is seeing the folks I partner with land more media, connections, and onstage opportunities. People need to know you exist and that you have expertise.

    What is your favorite thing to do around your company? 

    Finding new ways to surprise and promote the people I work with. I deeply believe that over-performing is such a gift. It’s a joy to be able to see my clients light up.

    Could you tell us about your favorite inspirations? 

    There have been a lot of people who have sacrificed in my bloodline for me to be where I am today. I have descended from slaves and slave owners, immigrants, and orphans. That’s positive motivation. On the flip side, there are a handful of men that have taunted me with their money and arrogance. Hard to say which inspires me more.

    What are your favorite things about the Midwest? 

    The people. Indiana has been rated by the IEDC as one of the best places in the country to begin a business. That proves to be true. I was born in Kansas, so that’s why I probably say the people. Secondly, cost of living.

    What is your favorite regional city and why? 

    This is unexpected but Cincinnati, that counts right? They have done so much to develop their downtown, especially Over the Rhine, with restaurants and shops. They have a bit more elevation than Indianapolis and it really is such a lovely place, and the food is fantastic.

    Where is your favorite place to eat and why? 

    VIDA. (It’s a) Cunningham property, however it is a chef’s restaurant, so it is not a chain. This is where we go for special occasions because of their four-course dinner. Chef’s kiss. I’ve had literally everything on the menu and their consistency is unmatched for fine dining in Indy.

    What do you have in the fridge currently?

    Oatmilk. Organic Eggs. Champagne. Organic Greens. I want to be bourgeois.

    Jennifer Magley’s Grandma’s Yeast Rolls 

    Ingredients

    4 – 5 cups all-purpose flour

    2 cups hot water

    ⅔ cup sugar

    ½ cup of liquid Crisco or any liquid cooking oil

    3 eggs

    2 packages yeast, Rapid rise or day (3 if you are in a hurry)

    Cupcake pans, greased and floured

    To Make: 

    Pre-heat oven to 375° to 400°depending upon oven. Mix hot water, oil, sugar and eggs. Stir until sugar is dissolved. If you use rapid rise yeast, sprinkle in liquid, then let it dissolve waiting a few minutes. Stir. Add about two cups of flour and stir adding more flour on the right consistency for kneading. You may put a kneading board on the counter-top. 

    Knead very little, just enough to roll out and cut. If you don’t have a biscuit cutter, use a cup to cut out two circles and a half. Fold the circles in half and add the half-circle into the greased and floured cupcake pans. Pinch the edges together. Brush with melted butter and let rise until they look right for baking. (Forty-five minutes to an hour). 

    “This makes for the rolls to be very lovely in shape and fashioned to pull apart.”.

    Jennifer Magley

    Bake for 10 minutes or until brown, brush with butter again when removed from oven. 

    Cinnamon Rolls: Simply roll out as you do for rolls. Brush with butter. 

    Mix brown sugar, white sugar, cinnamon, raisins and nuts. Roll up the dough into a log. Let rise.

    I8tonite

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  • I8tonite Learns from IG Entrepreneur Abby Breece

    I8tonite Learns from IG Entrepreneur Abby Breece

    Thrifting, Parenthood and the Joys of Living in Indy; Plus, a Spicy & Sweet Hand Tart Recipe

    Breece, at home, with a few of her finds.

    I first met Abby Breece, 36, and her husband, Eric, as neighbors when Nick and I moved to Indianapolis. The mid-thirties duo allowed us to glom onto them since this was my first time living anywhere in the Midwest, and they knew a Midwestern newbie when they saw one. Together, we wandered around Massachusetts Avenue in Indy, bar-hopping before their baby was born. They met our respective families, we met theirs, and we joined their “Covid-19 circle” during the early days of the pandemic. We even went to Chicago together, eating in some stellar places while touring the city. 

    A native Hoosier, Abby, maintains a thriving practice as a licensed marriage and family therapist. On the side, she created an online vintage Instagram shop called Beulah, named after one of Eric neighbor’s growing up in Traverse City. As she says on her Instagram store, “(Eric) remembers Beulah’s home filled with rattan, wicker and other furniture from the sixties and seventies. After we got married nine years ago, he saw me follow suit, bringing home thrifted furniture from the same era and affectionately (or not, I’m not really sure referring to (my purchases) as “more Beulah.”  

    An empathic healer during the day, and in her free time, using Beulah Vintage as a creative outlet. Her company of four years sells on a single social platform, and the business thrives. Active 2: She sourced and curated items for her store over the past year, opened a small kiosk in the Lux & Ivy Shop located in the hipster area of Broad Ripple, appeared on a TV segment in the area, and occasionally sells in local outdoor markets.

    Items at her mini Beulah in Broad Ripple at Lux & Ivy.

    Somewhere through all of this, she gives back to the community by volunteering for the Friends of Martin Luther King Jr. Park, a neighborhood volunteer initiative that helps to beautify the city’s neglected memorial green space. 

    And then she bakes. Delicious cookies. Holiday pavlova. Banana bread. 

    We inserted ourselves into Abby’s busy life to learn more about this new mom, her life and where she finds inspiration with i8tonight Questions.

    I8tonite: Tell us about yourself. Where were you born, and what does a typical day look like? I was born in Indianapolis. My mom was an elementary education teacher, and my dad was in shipping logistics.

    A typical day includes recent motherhood stuff. That means a lot of feedings every few hours and dog walking. Still, when I’m not doing that, I’m sourcing online or in person for stuff for Beulah or doing inventory.

    I’m also a licensed marriage and family therapist in private practice. And I’ve done that since officially 2016.

     Why did you start Beulah?

    I didn’t start it intentionally, but it came out of the joy of liking to source and thrift vintage and, honestly, inexpensive items while I was in college and as I grew into my career. And so that became a hobby for me, and I wanted to share it with others.

    Instagram was a big platform that I could use. I started doing it on there, and it’s taken a lot of different shapes, sizes and evolutions over the years, but that’s where it began. I’ve wanted to keep it unencumbered without a third party. That’s been how I’ve done it, but I don’t say we’ll always be like that. It’s just like that right now.

    What gives you the greatest joy with Beulah?

    It is the sourcing. Going out and thrifting without an agenda, especially when traveling. Not looking for something specific, but finding that one-of-a-kind thing. It feels freeing. 

    Sculptural Dining Chairs for sale on Beulah.

    What is your favorite period in interior design? 

    Eighties post-modern. I really like things like Formica or lacquered finishes when used tastefully. Things like faux marble, for instance. I have a console table right now that’s faux marble. It’s Formica, but there’s something about it – that I don’t know – I like the texture. Sometimes the versatility that certain textures are easier to care for, clean and maintain than marble. Sometimes I like the utilitarian surfaces of 80s post-modernism. They’re easier to keep clean, even fake brass. If not done right, they can look really gaudy, but I think tastefully done, it can be like a chef’s kiss.

    Tell us about your favorite inspirations and who inspires you. 

    When I talked about different textures, it’s a bit of following the muse and not trying to be too specific. I try to be very open-minded to find my inspiration. I won’t find something if I’m looking too hard for something. I could miss out on something else that could give me inspiration. It is about timing and not having the blinders on too much. So usually, that takes the form of different textures that I like. 

     I’m really into tessellated stone, suede, or leather, which could be a specific color I’m feeling right now. I honor that, follow those whims, and trust that people will follow. 

    For people who inspire me, my friend Gretchen with Mama Ochre. Her compass is very much like her heart. She trusts her own taste and style and, always shows up for her work and won’t do it if it’s not genuine or authentic to her. And so I’ve always really liked that about her and her business; it doesn’t feel fabricated or fast fashion. It’s sincere and vulnerable. You can always see her when you see her work, so I’ve wanted to emulate something similar with Beulah and myself.

    What are your favorite things about living In Indy?

    I was thinking about this yesterday. I love the urban culture in Indy. It’s very walkable and still a small town, meaning you can access most things without having to be on a waitlist for months for new restaurants or stuff like that. Many people are really approachable and friendly and want to be engaged. It’s that Midwest nice. And for me, there’s definitely a familiarity since this has been the one place I have lived and done life, so there’s a comfort here.

    What is your favorite city and why?

    I really like Golden, Colorado. The backdrop is beautiful with mountains. It’s a quaint small town with delicious restaurants and bars but lovely scenery with rivers. It’s outside Denver, so it’s less noisy but still within the metropolis. Some good food and shops.

    You and your husband are new parents. What is your favorite place to walk or stroll in Indiana with the baby?

    The Monon Trail has always been my favorite. There are many restaurants and shops accessible from it, and you feel unencumbered by traffic. That’s the main reason I like it because you don’t have to stop at every street for a traffic light; there might be a crosswalk or two. And it’s surrounded by nature and a lot of trees. It feels like you’re in your own little world. When Eric goes to the office, I take Huck and Rooney in the stroller for a walk. I stop at Breadworks or someplace place afterward for iced tea. Or a coffee shop I last visited a while ago and get something on the way home. It makes me happy and gets me out of the house. A new and little tradition.

    What do you have in the fridge currently?

    I have a giant pitcher of iced coffee. A lot of things to make meal prep easier. Our grab-and-go stash of hard-boiled eggs and pickled bologna. (I want to be clear. That is not for me because it’s disgusting. My mid-northern Michigan husband loves the stuff.) And cookie dough. Always cookie dough.

    Adapted by Abby Breece

    Spicy Apricot Pop Tarts.

    How to Make this Puppy! 

    1 stick butter, softened

    1/4 cup sugar

    1/4 cup almond paste

    2 large eggs

    1 tsp lemon juice

    1/4 tsp almond extract

    1/2 tsp vanilla extract

    1/4 tsp salt

    1/2 cups flour

    1 lb. pre-made pie dough

    1/4 cup apricot jam

    1 1/2 cup powdered sugar

    TOPPING

    A dash of red pepper flakes

    About 2 tbsps. milk

    Sprinkles

    Preheat oven to 400, then line a baking sheet with parchment. Put it to the side until ready to use. 

    In a large bowl or bowl of a stand mixer, to make part of the filling, beat together the butter, sugar, and almond paste. add 1 egg (reserving the other for an egg wash), followed by the lemon juice and extracts. Once that has been mixed, add to it the salt, flour, and red pepper flakes until just combined. Place to the side. 

    Roll out your dough to a pie crust thickness. Using a sharp paring knife and ruler, cut out eight 2-inch by 3-inch squares of pie dough. Place onto the baking sheet about an inch and a half apart.  In the center, dollop a teaspoon of apricot jam and spread. Do the same with the almond batter. 

    Roll up the remaining pie dough, and cut out eight more rectangles that are a 1/4-inch longer on all sides, so that they fit over the filling. Place that layer of pie dough over the filling and crimp the edges with a fork to seal the edges. If not done, well filling will bubble out. With the remaining egg and a thimble of water to brush the edges of the tarts. This will provide a nice golden crust. Gently poke the tops with a fork twice and bake for 10-15 minutes until ever so browned. While it cools, in another bowl, stir together the powdered sugar and milk to create the glaze. If it is too thick, add more milk. Two thin? Add sugar, to achieve your desired consistency. Spread over the top and add a sprinkling of sprinkles! 

    I8tonite. 

    Disclosure: We may make a commission on links. We need to make money in some way.

  • Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Southern California’s love affair with coffee goes way back to earlier land settlers and cattle-drivers. The pioneers would awake to the rising sun while a blazing campfire is percolating that first pot of mud juice. According to True West Magazine (October 2001), “Cowboys were undoubtedly the most devoted group of coffee drinkers in the West. As a rule, they liked it strong, scalding hot, and barefooted (black).”

    Almost two centuries later, coffee houses are a fixture on every well-driven, So Cal street – although mostly emblazoned with a green mermaid logo. True to the western American ingenuity way, the Golden State still has some independent shops crafting luscious java jolts in small batches. Coffee connoisseurs in So Cal have a myriad of baristas fashioning joe in unique ways. Here are some of our favorites, from Palm Springs to Orange County and into Los Angeles. With a full tank of gas and a thermos of rocket juice as fuel, high-octane lovers can make a road trip visiting them in a single day. Go get your jitter on!

    Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Portola Coffee Lab (Costa Mesa, Orange County)

    Found in an Orange County hipster strip mall called OC Mix in Costa Mesa (in the same place as famed Taco Maria), Portola rose to prominence when the coffee industry’s major publication, Roaster Magazine, honored the caffeine maker with its 2015 “Roaster of the Year.” While already beloved by locals, the award catapulted the four-year-old shop into a nationally known bean-lover mecca. Noted for their lack of syrups and additives while using only mocha and milk for additional flavors, the single store has branched to six locations, all within Orange County. Furthermore, they use three distinct brewing methods to get to the only-in-OC taste: a manual pour-over, a siphon, and the trifecta (a combination of the siphon, pour-over, and French press). For an espresso made from a single origin bean, it’s a one-shot deal with a one-of-a-kind machine. Be prepared to stand in line for your cuppa, but It’s good to the last drop.

    Rose and Cardamom Latte at Portola.Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Portola. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    LAMill Coffee (Silver Lake, Los Angeles County)

    When LA Mill first opened a decade ago, there was nothing quite like the coffee roaster and maker. For one, it cemented Silver Lake as a destination for good eats. Menu was crafted by Chef Michael Cimarusti of Providence fame, in conjunction with the LA Mill owner Craig Min. The interiors designed were commissioned by their next-door neighbor by Silverlake decorator, Rubbish Interiors. It personified early hipster-hood. And there still is nothing quite like it, as far as coffee shops go. Coffee may be the thing to try, but you’re spending your time here because, well, the grub isn’t just an afterthought. It’s a reason to eat. Coffee is made four different ways, and then there is the $11,000-dollar espresso machine. That’s almost as much as your electric Smart Car.

    Outside LA Mill. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip LA Mill. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Koffi (Palm Springs, Riverside County)

    For those who have traveled to the Palm Springs area for two decades, Koffi is as much a destination for coffee as is tramway travel to the top of the San Jacinto mountains. The flagship spot located as drivers enter the resort town is a welcome relief. Although the line winds around the counter, it moves quickly, giving the legs movement after an hour and half driving from LA or San Francisco – which can clock in at five to seven hours depending on traffic. What started off with only one roastery has clovered into three locations, with the original, a Rancho Mirage location, and another mid-century outpost on the edge of Cathedral City. Stopping at Koffi and partaking of their java is as important as a warm desert pool on a chilly night or a hike into Joshua Tree.

    Koffi and Cake. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip Koffi. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Alfred (West Hollywood, Los Angeles County)

    Most coffee lovers would bypass Alfred, as they serve the yummy but ubiquitous Stumptown beans. Alfred, though, with its two chic shops – located just two blocks from each other – is unique without the coffee roastery…and is why it’s on this list. Made in West Hollywood, the liquid energy is chock-full of L.A.’s pretty people, tourists checking out the nearby luxury shopping, and a mélange of neighborhood folks. Matter of fact, if you felt the subway rumble or heard car horns slamming, one might feel they were in New York or Paris. Yes, it’s that cosmopolitan. Yes, it’s that fashionable. And yes, it’s as much a part of the sartorial coffee scene as City of Light’s Les Deux Magot or Manhattan’s Balthazar. If you happen to be in Japan, Alfred lovers can find two Tokyo outposts – making it even more tres, tres chic. Plus, Stumptown, a Portland roastery, is nothing to sniff at – no matter where you are.

    Cakes at Aroma. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip Alfred Coffee and Donuts. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

    Aroma Caffe (Studio City, Los Angeles County)

    Another mainstay of the entertainment set is Aroma Café on Studio City’s treelined Tujunga. Aroma, which started as a small house and grew into a house with a garden, patio, backyard, and sidewalk café, has served up frothy cappuccinos, bracing espressos, and sipping lattes for 20 years. That’s a long time for a television series (only The Simpsons can beat that) and a restaurant. While delicious java juices and herbal teas can be imbibed on site, the coffee house is a hybrid of a one-time java house which morphed into a full-blown restaurant. Mud-drinkers can fulfill their need for high-octane lattes while filling up on fortifying salads, crusty paninis, and savory egg dishes throughout the day. If in the Los Feliz area, the independent coffee and eatery has another tree-lined outpost on Hillhurst, serving up a twinned menu for the artistic side of the hill.

    Cakes at Aroma. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip Aroma Coffee and Tea. Top 5 So Cal Coffee Shops: A Coffee Klatching, Caffeinated Road Trip

     

    – The End. Go Drink. –

  • i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

    Get ready, readers! Cheese Tea is a new and interesting drink…boba with a twist! Have you tried it yet? What do you think?

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese TeaJenny Zheng, 25, is the Founder of Little Fluffy Head Cafe, one of the first cheese tea boba shops in Los Angeles of its kind. She graduated from the University of California Los Angeles with a Master’s degree in Bioengineering in 2016. While on a trip to Asia before graduation, she stumbled upon the latest millennials craze: cheese tea. Being a big fan of cheese, she obsessed on bringing the concept to the U.S.. So upon graduation, instead of going a traditional route with her degree, Zheng decided to spend the time to develop her own version of creamy cheese tea and opened her very first cafe in the heart of Downtown Los Angeles in the summer of 2017. Right now, she is fully dedicated to running the cafe to provide her customers the highest-quality and authentic cheese tea.

    Find her online at https://www.instagram.com/littlefluffyhead/

    Cheese Tea from Little Fluffy Head Cafe, LA. From i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

    Food People Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook at home?
    My mom used to make me a tomato noodle soup every morning when I was younger, utimately it has become my favorite Asian comfort food I like to cook at home. It reminds me of my family.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Different kinds of cheese to pair with wine

    What marked characteristic do you love in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    One characteristic I look for in a person is the ability to criticize or the ability to question. Especially if I am going to eat with this person, I want the dinner table conversation to be as meaningful as possible, talking about things that we could be better at.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    Unreliable

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Definitely wine!

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese TeaYour favorite cookbook author?
    I don’t have one yet. At this moment, I spend most of my foodie time searching for great restaurants to eat at, rather than a good cookbook to teach myself how to cook.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Hand mixer

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    East Asian cuisine

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Chicken

    Favorite vegetable or fruit?
    Tomato

    Chef you most admire?
    A sushi chef by the name of Kazunori Nozawa

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Squid ink pasta with lobster sauce. So yummy!

    Food you dislike the most?
    Anything with mushroom. My mom made me eat a lot of mushrooms when I was little, and I am mentally afraid of mushrooms now.

    What is your favorite non-food thing to do?
    Reading

    Who do you most admire in food?
    My mom. She could make you a platter of seafood like the ones you see at high end restaurants.

    Where is your favorite place to eat? What is your favorite restaurant?
    Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar inside the Grove in Los Angeles. Great atmosphere and fresh sushi.

    Do you have any tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I have two tattoos. I got them before I turned into a foodie, so sadly none of them were related to food.

    Recipe: Jenny’s version of cheese tea

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

    1. Prepare:
    9 teaspoon of whipping cream
    3 teaspoon of milk
    0.5 oz of cream cheese
    a pinch of salt and sugar

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

    2. Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl and whip together using a hand mixer until the texture is thick.

    i8tonite with LA Cheese Tea Entrepreneur Jenny Zheng & Recipe for Cheese Tea

     

    3. Brew a cup of tea

    4. Sugar to taste

    5. Add ice to cool down the tea

    6. Layer the cream on top of the tea

     

    – The End. Go Eat. –

     

  • i8tonite: One New York Woman’s Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    i8tonite: One New York Woman’s Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Gluten-Free to Industry: Allie Luckman Overcame Food Allergies for Her Family and Found a Calling

    Allison Wolin Luckman. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery“Do you mind if we chat while I’m driving?” starts CEO and owner of Allie’s GF Goodies, Allison Luckman. “I couldn’t find allergen-free gumdrops, so I’m on my way to the store to buy the ingredients to make them.” With that as an intriguing conversation starter, how could one not want to talk to her via Bluetooth? The Long Island, New York-based Luckman, like many of today’s mothers, found that she had genetically passed her many food allergies onto her kids. Therefore, she started baking for them to make sure her kids could eat baked treats just like their friends – without feeling left out of any celebration.

    Black and White cookie. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Starting with a hobby crafting cakes and muffins for tiny tots birthdays and celebrations in 2012, Luckman found the flowering enterprise grew into a bakery. The certified gluten-free and qualified kosher shop concentrates on baked goods free of potential allergens such as dairy, egg, soy, gluten, coconut, peanuts, tree nuts, or sesame. Hence, most of the products are also suitable for vegans. As her business grew, Luckman developed a following among those in the entertainment business. Her clients have included rapper Snoop Dog and hip-hop impresario Steve Lobel, as well as having been featured on A & E’s Married at First Sight and on an episode of Millionaire Matchmaker.

    Allison Wolin Luckman. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning BakeryAlmost two years ago, Luckman found a growing need to serve the gentile and Jewish communities by turning her baking business into a complete kosher pareve (dairy-free) enterprise. “I was getting more calls to omit eggs and milk products, so we decided to make a go. Our business gets supported by the many rabbis recommending our goods,” Luckman comments.

    When asked what she finds the hardest to do, she doesn’t pause. “Finding good bakers. If they have been working for as a baker for a while, they don’t understand how to work with my recipes that I have personally developed, sometimes working on them for weeks, if not months. When someone fresh comes in, I can train them to work with the types of flours we use. It’s a specific process particular to our products.”

    Luckily, those with allergies can now have some of the best in award-winning baked goods (TasteTV’s “Healthy Gourmet Snacks of the Year Awards” and ““People’s Choice Award for Most Innovative New Product” at the International Food Service & Restaurant Show) in the world including bagels, black and white cookies, and challah. Seriously, what child or adult could go through life without devouring a bagel and a smear? They won’t have to go without, due to Allie Luckman and her GF Goodies. #nochildleftout.

    Bagels. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Allie GF Goodies are available online and can be shipped throughout the U.S. Follow on Facebook, website: www.alliegfg.com, or by calling (516) 216 – 1719.

    Allie's GF Goodies. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Food People Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook at home?
    I love to make either a full roasted turkey or chicken. My family loves it, giving them the feeling of comfort. Along the same lines I love to make them traditional chicken soup, and they have always loved mine the best.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    In my fridge at home, we have freshly sliced turkey breast, a variety of cheeses, and kosher pickles, both half sour and garlic dill.

    Mandelbread (Jewish Biscotti). From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    What marked characteristic do you love in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    I enjoy eating with people who enjoy and appreciate good food.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    I hate eating with people with bad table manners.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    I am definitely a wine person.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    My favorite cookbook author has always been Mark Bittman.

    Buddies. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Your favorite kitchen or bar tool?
    I have three favorites in the kitchen. Every baker/ chef needs a whisk, a KitchenAid stand mixer, and a food processor.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    I like to cook all types of cuisine as long as there is flavor, room for personal flair, and not too spicy (although my husband will eat as spicy as I give him)!

    Beef, chicken, pork, seafood, or tofu?
    I’m either a chicken or beef person. Never tofu.

    Favorite vegetable?
    I love asparagus and broccoli, although I’m not personally allowed many vegetables.

    Chef or culinary person you most admire?
    I admire Florian Bellinger, the pastry chef.

    Hamantaschen. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Food you dislike the most?
    I truly dislike mushrooms. I loathe the texture. However, I don’t mind the flavor in a sauce or soup.

    What is your favorite non-food thing to do?
    My favorite nonfood thing to do, aside from catching up on sleep, is spending time with my husband and grown children, either watching television or traveling.

    Whom do you most admire in food?
    I admire Ron Ben Israel for his cake business that he’s created.

    Where is your favorite place to eat/ drink?
    I live on Long Island. My local faves are 388 Restaurant, where they make excellent family style Italian food. They carry and use my products, and are hyper vigilant about my celiac disease so that I can eat safely. I have always been a Peter Luger’s fan—like every New Yorker. And my go-to in Manhattan these days is Felidia, where they take celiac disease very seriously.

    Crumb cake. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Do you have any tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I do not have a tattoo, nor will I ever. I’ve had so many surgeries that I’m marked up enough.

    Recipe: Allie’s Banana Bread

    Recipe: Allie's Banana Bread. From i8tonite: One New York Woman's Food Allergies Became an Award-Winning Bakery

    Ingredients:
    2 c Allie’s flour
    3/4 c sugar
    2 ripe bananas, mashed
    1/2 t salt
    1/2 c unsalted butter or Earth Balance, softened
    1 t baking soda
    1 t vanilla
    1/2 t cinnamon
    2 eggs
    1/3 T lowfat or hemp milk
    1/4 c chocolate chips or blueberries (optional)

    Directions:
    • Preheat oven to 350.
    • In a mixing bowl, cream together butter and sugar
    • Beat eggs in separate bowl and add butter/sugar to the mixture. Then add bananas, milk, and vanilla until well blended.
    • In a separate bowl, mix flour, baking soda, and salt. Then add to the banana mixture until fully blended.
    • Add chocolate chips or blueberries, if desired.
    • Pour into greased pan and bake 50-60 minutes for loaf.

     

     

    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • The i8tonite 2017 Gift Guide

    The i8tonite 2017 Gift Guide

    It’s that time of the year to start thinking about gift-giving. At i8tonite, we are all about the kitchen. Instead of giving a general blanket list of ideas, we thought about fun cookery suggestions for different types of folks on that holiday list. Here’s our gift guide:

    The Culinaire

    This person has pretty much everything as it relates to cooking. Give the gift around “decolonization,” its cooking knowledge using indigenous plants and meats associated with the Native Americans or the First Nation, as known in Canada, and their diet. Our suggestion is simple and inexpensive: the three sisters, a combination of corn, bean and squash which is the bedrock of many tribes, specifically those in the Southwest. Sow True Seed has a gift collection of the trio. $6.95 plus shipping and handling.

    The Non-Cook

    In every group of friends, there is one that can’t boil water. We make them a designated bartender. West Elm has a very chic set of bar tools. $63.00.

    The i8tonite 2017 Gift Guide

    The Person that Wants to Cook, but Complains They Can’t Because They Don’t Have Time

    This busy bee has one of those all-important jobs like being an entertainment publicist, a life-coach, or an event planner. You know the type, they are always working on someone else’s life and they don’t have time for themselves. We recommend D’Artagnan Food Lover’s Gourmet Gift Basket. It can work two-fold: as dinner with leftovers, or dinner plus a guest. Costco, $99.99

    The i8tonite 2017 Gift Guide

    The Vegan or Vegetarian

    Most likely, this individual is a vegetarian that will order the salmon special at a newly opened restaurant. It’s also easier just to go vegan with a gift basket. Pangea, the online, non-meat food store has the perfect one which comes with a bumper sticker, which says “Go Vegan!”. It will look perfect on their BMW or Mercedes.

    The i8tonite 2017 Gift Guide

    The Fitness Fanatic

    Those who are really into fitness – bless their hearts – love to go on and on about burning calories. Eating with them consists of a salad and maybe a protein like fish – hold the butter or oil. However, occasionally after a HIIT class or a de-stress yoga session where they have perfected their sun salutations, expect some form of a juice cleanse splurge. Skip eating with them unless they are cooking.

    And…Merry Christmas, Joyous Hanukkah, Jolly Kwanzaa, and Happy Holidays!

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  • i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake Recipe

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake Recipe

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake RecipeSimon Thibault is a Halifax-based journalist and radio producer whose work focuses on food. His written work has been featured in The Globe and Mail and East Coast Living. He has contributed to CBC Radio, and The Southern Foodways Alliance’s Gravy podcast. He was also a judge for the 2015 James Beard Foundation’s Cookbook Awards.

    Thibault’s new book, Pantry and Palate: Remembering and Rediscovering Acadian Food, is a fantastic read – and resource. This expertly written and beautifully produced new title is part cookbook and part history guide exploring the culinary legacy of Canada’s Acadian Diaspora located within the eastern Maritime region. We don’t know enough about Acadian history and food – and I am glad to have the opportunity to learn more, in this book.

     

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake RecipeAcadian food is humble, homey, and comforting, which is what inspired Thibault to highlight the cuisine. It is made with love and devotion from a larder that is small but mighty, and holds history within itself. Each recipe is adapted from Thibault’s own family collection or from various women’s auxiliaries within the region – the result is a cookbook of extraordinary value and uniqueness.

    I LOVE IT.

    Tip: Make the apple pie (it was the first thing I made from the book!). It’s incredible.

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake Recipe

    Food People Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook at home?
    I think readers of cookbooks falsely imagine that the authors cook nothing but the food they extoll in their books. I did do so when I was recipe testing. I think I ate more lard and molasses than one perhaps should on a regular basis while living a semi-sedentary lifestyle. But I tend to cook, for lack of a better term, Pan-Asian food at home. I’m lucky that I know farmers here in Nova Scotia who grow a lot of northern Chinese/Korean/Japanese vegetables. So I often will cook extra rice in a rice cooker while I am doing other things, and then will cook the vegetables à la minute. I usually top things off with an egg or two.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Eggs. Always. At least a carton and a half. That way the older eggs can be used for boiling, the fresh ones for poaching and frying. Salted onions, which is a condiment from my book. It lends a nice salty/umami kick to soups.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    For them to chide me when I say, “I screwed this up, this could be better,” when realistically, they are right. it’s usually quite good. I just always have this platonic ideal of a dish in my head, and it doesn’t always happen. But the other person is happy that someone has cooked for them. And cooking for another is something I love to do.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    If I am in a restaurant, if they are dismissive of staff. As someone who has worked the front of house in various places and times in my life, I find that to be especially heinous.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    If I am at home, amaro. I am learning to embrace the bitter. And all I need is an ice cube. If I am in a bar where I can see what’s behind the bar in terms of booze, I tend to go for a cocktail.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    I have to say Naomi Duguid. She wrote the foreword to my book, Pantry and Palate: Remembering and Rediscovering Acadian Food, but the books that she wrote with her former partner, Jefferey Alford, taught me how to cook. I am still very grateful that I have gotten to know her. I even cooked an apple cake from her book, Home Baking, today.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    A food mill. Apple sauce is magical, and the best whipped/mashed potatoes you’ve ever eaten. And they’re very inexpensive.

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake Recipe

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Chinese. Grace Young’s “The Breath Of A Wok” was the beginning of my understanding of how chinese food works from the act of cooking.

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Grass-fed beef, that has been well-reared. Preferably something like a flank, or a hanger steak.

    Favorite vegetable?
    Chinese long beans. The season is short, and you can cook them in a minute or two, or make a variation on the Vietnamese Som Tam, or green papaya salad. Just substitute the long beans cut into pieces and flattened with the side of a knife.

    Chef you most admire?
    The people who work at America’s Test Kitchen, behind the scenes. They teach so many people to feel comfortable in kitchens, and answer all the questions you may have when creating a recipe. I admire any chef who thinks it’s important to give people agency in a kitchen.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Anything made with flour. I live for carbohydrates, whether sweet or savoury.

    Food you dislike the most?
    Although I love Japanese food in so many forms, and I like fermented foods, I can’t wrap my brain around natto. It’s fermented soybeans that have long white mucilaginous tendrils when you pull it apart. I can’t.

    What is your favorite non-food thing to do?
    I can’t stop reading about food. I have a (bad? good?) cookbook habit. I went to Kitchen Arts and Letters in New York City, and walked out $700 poorer. And I practiced restraint in doing so.

    Who do you most admire in food?
    Women.

    Where is your favorite place to eat?
    An apple, in my parent’s orchard.

    What is your favorite restaurant?
    In Halifax, Nova Scotia, where I live, there is a wonderful spot called The Highwayman. Small plates, Basque-inspired cuisine. In New York, I have a love for Gabrielle Hamilton’s Prune. Every. Little. Thing. Is. Thought. Out. From the amount of servers on staff, to the wine list, to the price point, to the friendliness of staff. I went there with my friend Sofia, who is a native New Yorker, and she and I ate like kings and queens.

    Do you have any tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I don’t actually, though I can see why people would assume. If I did, it would probably be of fruit that grows in my parent’s orchard. Peaches for my sister, who passed away and loved them. Apples for my parents, who taught me the value of work. Blueberries for my nieces, who love picking them. And I would be a quince.

    Molasses Cake Recipe

    i8tonite with Pantry and Palate Author Simon Thibault & Molasses Cake Recipe

    Excerpted from Pantry and Palate by Simon Thibault © 2017, Text by Simon Thibault. ©2017, Photographs by Noah Fecks. All rights reserved. Published by Nimbus Publishing

    Ingredients
    2 cups molasses
    1 cup lard or shortening
    4 cups flour
    2 teaspoons cinnamon
    1 teaspoon all spice
    2 teaspoons baking soda
    1 teaspoon salt
    1 cup milk
    1 tablespoon fresh ginger (optional)

    Directions
    • Preheat your oven to 375˚F.
    • Grease a 10×10-inch cake pan, and then dust generously with flour. Alternatively, add greased and floured parchment paper and place into cake pan.
    • Using the paddle attachment on your mixer, fold the flour and lard
    together on low speed until completely combined, about 4–5 minutes.
    • Add the molasses, cinnamon, fresh ginger (if using), and allspice, and mix on low. Make sure to occasionally stop and scrape down the sides of the bowl to ensure all the molasses, lard, and seasonings are blended.
    • Add the baking soda and salt, then the milk to the batter, and stir until well incorporated.
    • Pour the batter into the pan, and place into the oven.
    • Bake for 50 minutes, or until the cake has receded from the edges of the pan and a toothpick placed in the centre comes out clean. Depending on the size of your pan, it may take a bit more or less time. Just keep checking until it comes out nice and clean.
    • Leave cake in pan for about 20 minutes, and then invert onto a rack.

    Serve on its own, or as a dessert with Maple Whipped Cream (page
    176), Easy Caramel Sauce (page 177), or Brown Sugar Sauce (page 202).


    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes RecipeChef Jennifer Hill Booker’s culinary path has not always been a linear one. She earned her Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Tulsa before graduating first in her class, eighteen months later, with an Associate of Occupational Science from Oklahoma State Institute of Technology. Extensive travel while married to an United States Army Officer pushed Jennifer to blaze a trail that fit her unique situation-a female African American chef, living abroad – as a result, Your Resident Gourmet was born.

    During her time living in Germany, Jennifer honed her culinary talents by providing cooking classes for both military and German families. She was also able to fulfill a lifelong dream of attending Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Paris, where she once again graduated top of her class.

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

    Twenty years later Jennifer finds herself once again blazing culinary trails as she wears many culinary hats as chef, cookbook author of Field Peas to Foie Gras and Dinner Deja Vu, reality TV personality, culinary educator, and business owner.

    She is a Georgia Grown Executive Chef for the GA Department of Agriculture, the Culinary Explorer for the Georgia Department of Tourism and Travel, is the founder of Southern Divas of the New South™ Dinner Series, and currently sits on the James Beard Foundation Food Waste Advisory Council.

    Weaving her love of traditional Southern cuisine with her belief in incorporating healthy, seasonal foods and her classic French training, Chef Jennifer created a unique style of cooking that she termed Modern Southern Healthy Cuisine with a French Accent. Chef Jennifer shares this brand of cooking through her cooking segment ‘Chef Jenn to the Rescue’, on CBS46’s Atlanta Plugged In, with original recipes in such publications as Garden & Gun and Essence Magazine, as well as her Food Network debut as a finalist on Cutthroat Kitchen.

    Chef Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    Professionally for 20+ years. As a novice, I’ve been cooking since around 7-when I got my first Holly Hobby Oven.

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    I love to mesh Southern and French ingredients and cooking techniques together to get what I call Modern Healthy Southern Cuisine with a French Accent. It’s not Creole or what’s typically found in New Orleans-I think it’s more Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama style Southern with classical French mixed in. So more fresh seasonal produce, farm raised meat and poultry, and lots and lots of layered flavors. I don’t use much roux, hot spices, or heavy sauces in my food. It’s my foundation and what I use approach everything I approach-like black eyed pea hummus or a cassoulet with smoked ham hocks and salt pork.

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe
    Fried Chicken Livers

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Eggs, cream, butter, some type of cheese, capers, olives, and bacon. I can make almost everything from those ingredients.

    What do you cook at home?
    I’m a Southerner at heart. Nothing makes me happier than cooking a pot of beans with a ham hock or ham bone thrown in. I also love greens-either cooked or served as a salad.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    Customers that are adventurous eaters and LOVE food! They are a joy to cook for.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Those who give you the wash list of their dietary ‘restrictions’. You’re a grown up, you know what you can and cannot eat.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Oh my gosh-this is a good one! I grew up on Tupperware but when I got my own place, I couldn’t afford it! Now I use a mix of Rubbermaid and Lexan –  which is commercial kitchen storage brand that ends up in my home kitchen. I do like the glass Pyrex casserole dishes with the snap on lids-how clever is that!?

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe
    Making cocktails

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Cocktails in polite company-but I really prefer my booze on the rocks. It tastes pure and without any pesky calories from mixers.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    I like recipes that work-and Ina Garten’s always do. For inspiration, I have to have lots of bright juicy pictures in the cookbooks I read- and the Culinaria cookbook series are beautiful. But my all time favorite cookbook? Julia Child. She explains her recipes, no matter how arduous, and soldiers through.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Hands down a rubber spatula. You can stir, fold, mix, sauté, and scrape! Scraping the bowl, pot, or pan clean is near and dear to my heart because it prevents waste, you get that last bite that can make or break a portion, and it Saves Money. Why wash food down the drain when you can scrape it out and eat it?!

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Garlic. I Love Garlic. It adds aroma and enhances the flavor to a dish-and can be strong and pungent or soft and sweet.

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    I don’t have a least favorite, but I am totally over Kale.

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Peel shrimp and clean the oven. I still have scars on my fingers for the thousands of pounds of shrimp I’ve peeled over my culinary career. I just hate taking the time to clean the oven! It takes smoke and a small fire in the oven to compel me to finally clean it.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    My all time go to favorites are Southern, Classical French, and Mediterranean (which for me is just a way to cook everything that has tomatoes, olive oil, and garlic in it). I also get excited by what’s in season or a style of cooking. I went through a period where I grilled everything-fruit, pizza, bones for stock!

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    This is a hard one. I’m going to go with pork. You can coax so many flavors and textures from pork that it never gets boring.

    Favorite vegetable?
    If I had to eat one vegetable for the rest of my life . . . I guess it would be brussels sprouts. They taste like broccoli and cabbage and are so versatile I’d never get bored.

    Chef you most admire?
    I have a chef crush on Anthony Bourdain-mainly because of his bad boy imagine and he knows his stuff! A dear friend of mine, Chef Joe Randall, has my unwavering admiration. He’s been cooking as an Executive Chef for 40 years. He’s run kitchens (both North and South), written cookbooks, owned a cooking school, mentored young chefs, and currently runs the African American Chefs Hall of Fame in Savannah, Georgia, and unapologetically promotes Southern cuisine. None of which are easy-especially for a proud Black man in America.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    I’m all about the savory!

    I love big flavors that range from my Mother’s turkey & dressing to roasted tomatoes and garlic with fresh basil and shaved parm or a muffuletta from Central Grocery in New Orleans that I smuggle home and bake in a cast iron skillet with another skillet pressing it down. Now I’m hungry!

    Food you dislike the most?
    Cauliflower-how can it be a vegetable when it’s white?? It’s almost like broccoli’s twin sister, while broccoli is popular and has personality, cauliflower is bland and boring and hoping people will like her.

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I have 2 tattoos. One is food and it’s also my Zodiac sign . . . I’ll let you figure that one out.

     

    Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

    i8tonite with Chef Jennifer Hill Booker & Pimento Cheese Stuffed Potatoes Recipe

     

    – The End. Go Eat. – 

  • i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole RecipeWhen Frida’s first opened in 2002 along the forgotten strip of Beverly Drive in Beverly Hills, there was a lack of well-crafted Mexican food in Beverly Hills. The world-renowned town at the time celebrated tomahawk steaks with martinis rather than reposado tequilas and molés. Upon opening, the small but mighty restaurant fostered a growing interest in the cuisine outside of the standard Tex-Mex that populated the City of Angels. More than 17 years later while other area restaurants have come and gone, Frida’s still stands, crafting south of the border dishes one might have in the very cosmopolitan Mexico City.

    Owner Vicente del Rio, who was born in the metropolis’s historical and well-to-do borough of Coyocan, said during a phone interview, “I learned how to cook from my mother and grandmother, and I wanted to bring that authentic experience here. I feel that’s why we are successful.”

    After a fruitful debut year, del Rio started to spread out to other parts of Los Angeles. As CEO of  FriMex Hospitality, he has launched eating experiences throughout Los Angeles County with Frida’s Tacos in five locations (Brentwood, Old Town and East Pasadena, Melrose, and Campus Village) and a Taco Libre in Santa Monica. His team has also expanded the original experience of Frida’s to Westwood, Sherman Oaks, Torrance, Cerritos, and opening soon in Sherman Oaks.

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    Asked about why he thinks Frida is so successful, he says, “We don’t reduce the quality of our food to increase profits. We also have a great team of people working to make sure that we embody the Mexican culture. We want everyone to enjoy our delicious history.”

    Food People Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook at home? 
    Barbeque and paella

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    All types of fresh fruits, vegetables, and proteins

    What marked characteristic do you love in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    That they enjoy the food that they ate and are interested in trying diverse foods

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    They complain about the food and service

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Martini

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Laura Caraza

    Your favorite kitchen or bar tool?
    Knives

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Mexican and Spanish

    Beef, chicken, pork, seafood, or tofu?
    Beef

    Favorite vegetable? 
    Mushrooms

    Chef or culinary person you most admire?
    My mother and grandmother, who taught me everything

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Besides Mexican and sushi?

    Food you dislike the most?
    Cheese

    What is your favorite non-food thing to do?
    Golf

    Whom do you most admire in food?
    Jose Andres

    Where is your favorite place to eat/drink?
    Mexico City

    What is your favorite restaurant?
    Frida Beverly Hills

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    Do you have any tattoos?
    And if so, how many are of food?
    None

    Recipe: Roasted Pork with Green Mole

    i8tonite with Vicente del Rio of Frida’s: A LA Mexican Institution & Roasted Pork with Mole Recipe

    Total time: 3 hours, 15 minutes, largely unattended.  Serves 8

    Ingredients:
    3 1/2- to 4-pound pork shoulder roast, fat trimmed
    Salt
    Pepper
    6 tablespoons oil, divided
    6 cups chicken broth, divided, plus 1/4 to 1/2 cup if needed
    1 cup chopped onion
    2 cloves garlic, chopped
    5 tomatillos, husked and chopped (about 1 cup)
    1/2 cup shelled raw peanuts
    1/2 cup raw pepitas (pumpkin seeds), hulled
    1 bunch cilantro (tough lower stems removed)
    1/2 bunch epazote (1 cup leaves)
    1 cup chopped iceberg or romaine lettuce
    1 corn tortilla, torn into pieces
    1 bolillo roll, sliced
    3 whole jalapeno chiles (not seeded)
    2 whole serrano chiles, seeds removed7 poblano chiles, seeds removed, chopped (4 cups chopped)
    1/2 cup toasted pepitas

    Directions:
    1. Season the pork with salt and pepper. Heat 2 tablespoons oil in a Dutch oven. Add the pork shoulder and sear on all sides. Pour 2 cups chicken broth into the pan and cover.

    2. Place in a 325-degree oven and cook until the meat is tender and easily pulled apart with a fork, about 2 1/2 to 3 hours.

    3. Heat the remaining oil in a large skillet. Add the onion, garlic, and tomatillos and cook until soft, about 5 minutes. Add the peanuts and the raw pepitas and cook for 2 more minutes.

    4. Add the cilantro, epazote, lettuce, tortilla pieces, bolillo slices and chiles. Stir in the remaining chicken broth and bring to a boil.

    5. Reduce heat. Simmer until the chiles are soft and flavors have melded, approximately 15 to 20 minutes.

    6. Let the mixture cool slightly, then blend in batches until smooth. Add a little water or broth (one-fourth to one-half cup) if necessary to make a thick but pourable sauce.

    7. Return the sauce to the pan and heat to serving temperature. Season with 1 1/2 teaspoons salt or to taste. Makes 6 cups sauce, ½ cup per serving.

    8. Serve on shredded pork, arrange on a serving platter. Sprinkle with pepitas.

     

     

    – The End. Go Eat. –