Blog

Our favorite products, gadgets, restaurants, bars, wine, beer, and food websites and blogs.

Trend-O-Meter Says: Mexican Corn Is In (8/31/09)

Grilled sweet corn slathered in lime-y mayonnaise (a.k.a. elote) is a Mexican street-food classic that’s creeping northward into the messy, messy hands of insatiable Americans. Various takes on the dish have been spotted at NYC’s three Dos Caminos restaurants, as well as at the Vegas outpost (where the name of the dish is amusingly changed from “Mexico City Street Corn” to “Mexico City Style Corn on the Cob.” Tourists didn’t like the sound of Mexico City’s streets, eh?).

Mexican corn was also drooled over in the August 10-17 issue of New York magazine, with Cabrito chef David Schuttenberg’s version of esquites, elote cut off the cob, spotlighted. But the ultimate mark of stateside acceptance came with the September/October issue of Cook’s Illustrated, in which the magazine, not known for its trendiness, presented a recipe for the dish that features sour cream, Pecorino Romano, and cilantro leaves instead of the traditional pungent epazote.

Our version has Cotija and mayo, as God intended.

See more food trends.

Man Down! Tricycle Meat Delivery Ends in Bloody Fall

Boccalone’s delivery tricycle lost its front wheel outside the CHOW.com offices, causing its driver to topple to the ground and suffer multiple abrasions. A fire truck arrived on the scene to provide first aid.

At first, the trike delivery trend was simply dangerously cute, on a par with singing telegrams and bubble tea. Now, however, it is clear that such precarious vehicles, laden with their artisanal wares (in this case, fabulous cured meats), are unsafe at any speed. The driver’s last tweet reads, “Leaving Fidi. On my way to 123 south park by 1230.”

We wish Boccalone well, and hope the trike driver recovers. Nobody should have to experience road rash in the service of somebody’s prosciutto cotto sandwich cravings.

New Finds: Germanic Fermented Soda

I was eating lunch at Schmidt’s, a new German restaurant in San Francisco, and tried Bionade, a delicious imported soda. It’s not very sweet (tart, actually) and advertises itself as being a “naturally fermented beverage” made with malt. The company’s site says that it’s fermented in a process similar to beer, except that the results are non-alcoholic.

Flavors include: Elderberry, Lychee, Herbs, and Ginger-Orange. I love the trend towards fermented, lightly-sweetened, soda-type products. I think this is going to be the big non-alcoholic beverage trend of 2010, fulfilling the promise that “adult sodas” like Dry never really delivered on because they were, well, a little tasteless.

Bionade, $2.49

The Fight to Shrug Off Sugar’s Sticky Embrace

Hey! You know what’s better than nasty ol’ high-fructose corn syrup? Natural sugar!

Except … that … it really isn’t much better, if it’s better all. Dan Mitchell, writing for Slate’s Big Money blog, astutely notes that the real focus of a recent public health effort—“putting sugar in everything is bad for us”—has drifted over into “let’s replace one kind of sugar with another kind of sugar and play some happy strumming guitar music and slow-motion footage of kids romping through fields of grass on a sunny day.”

This is one of the best deconstructions yet of a confusing issue that’s seen spin, counterspin, and respin flying fast and furious in the fight for consumer’s minds, wallets, and waistlines.

The crux of the piece:

“The [Corn Refiners Association], meanwhile, continues to run ads saying that HFCS is ‘fine in moderation,’ even as the industry continues to make it nearly impossible to consume it in moderation by putting it into all kinds of foods, from bread to barbecue sauce.”

The Most Metal Beer Art Ever?

Attendees of the upcoming Great American Beer Festival in Denver should check out the “Collaborative Evil” event in the Brewers Studio Pavilion, September 24 at 6:30 p.m.

What is Collaborative Evil? Steve Altimari, the brewmaster at Valley Brewing, explains the concept: Nine brewers (mostly friends and acquaintances) have agreed on a style (Belgian golden strong ale) and some basic parameters and limitations they wanted to follow (that “it be not loaded with spices, be fairly dry in finish, and … that each brewer would choose a secret sugar ingredient to differentiate the beers from one another”), and have all made different versions of the beer to pour at the festival.

The whole thing has been put together by Todd Ashman of FiftyFifty Brewing Company, and this is the second year he has organized a collaborative beer for the Festival. In 2008, the Collaborative Evil project only included three breweries, but all of them received A- or better reviews on BeerAdvocate. It will be interesting to see how this year’s batch of brews comes out.

(As well as FiftyFifty and Valley, the other collaborators are: Sacramento Brewing, Fat Head’s Brewery and Saloon, Flossmoor Station, Oakshire Brewing, Silver Peak Brewery, Speakeasy Ales & Lagers, and Lucky Bucket Brewing).

If all that isn’t enough to get you interested, how about the sweet metal-esque label art (pictured). Ashman commissioned it, and is also responsible for the name, an extension of a beer called “Evil” he was brewing. The art covers all your metal basics, and would look pretty awesome painted on the side of a van. “No, we are not all metal heads,” claims Altimari, while Ashman explains that “we’re trying to have fun with this … the beer, the GABF tasting, and working together of course.”

How Parm Becomes Chedda’

It’s no secret that a good aged Parm is worth its weight in precious metals. But what’s less understood is how the cheese—while aging—actually acts as a sophisticated financial instrument by serving as collateral. The Associated Press reports on how cheese-backed loans can make tough times a little sweeter … and nuttier … and go great with pasta.

This Just in from Tesco Cow #9932: BRAAAAP

British grocery chain Tesco has wired up a bunch of cows with microphones to monitor their belches and flatulence, the Telegraph reports:

“The supermarket giant is undertaking tests on livestock at its Dairy Centre of Excellence in Liverpool as part of a project to help reduce its carbon footprint. Each cow is fitted with a microphone, attached to a special collar, which picks up sounds from their stomachs.”

Well … good.

Image source: Flickr member JelleS under Creative Commons

Chemex, I Loved You in that Movie

I love my Chemex* pot, because the design is so simple and it makes the cleanest cup of coffee I’ve had (sorry Clover). And, judging by this awesome tutorial video, Intelligentsia Coffee loves it too.

The text graphics aren’t the easiest to read, but it lists loads of great points, like wetting the beans first to allow for an even extraction, and pouring the water in a circular motion.

It’s a visually inventive, and entertaining video—so watch it and then go buy a Chemex.

*This blog post was not paid for by Chemex, if you can believe it.

Southern Food’s Return to the Limelight

Southern-inspired food has been big for a while and there’s no sign of it dying down. Shrimp and grits are on menus everywhere, sweet tea is a cool flavor, and weekly fried chicken nights are sell-out events at unlikely restaurants. We asked Nicole Mouton (pictured, left), the co-owner of the Screen Door in Portland, OR why she thought Southern food has become so popular.

What do you think is behind the current interest in Southern cuisine?

In my opinion, this relatively recent love affair with southern food in the national consciousness coincided with Hurricane Katrina. Post-Katrina there was a massive national effort to help heal that which was broken. As cliché as it is, you don’t really know what you have until you’ve lost it. I think that Americans collectively took a hard look at New Orleans and its 200-plus years of history and saw that its cultural contributions were [uniquely formed]. Americans in all walks of life and in all disciplines and from all over this country did whatever they could to help save New Orleans. Suddenly, we saw a great deal of aggrandizing of Southern culture and Southern chefs, which Americans embraced, whereas, I argue, in a pre-Katrina environment, they would not have had such high billing. Pushing these personalities to the forefront was a way to help the cause of healing. It took a massive, deadly storm to make our nation see the validity of its own history and culture.

What about the hyper-trendiness of some of these traditional foods?

In this post-Katrina nation, we have gotten to the point that traditional Southern foods are now “hot.” They’ve been marked and accepted as valid, but I can’t help but feel that it’s just a phase. Are they just buzzwords for menus, or are chefs and restaurateurs really seeing a connection between their heritage and the history of the food that they are creating and marketing?

This isn’t the first cycle where Southern cooking has been popular, right?

We had a breakthrough with chef Paul Prudhomme in the ’80s, in which he brought Cajun food to the national eye. However, the craze ended up devolving into bastardized notions of Cajun cuisine. In this country, we’ve lost so many of our foodways and we don’t celebrate and investigate those who have done their part to cherish and record [them]. It makes me crazy that so few people know about Edna Lewis and her contributions, for instance. We’ve put Italian and French peasant food on the menus of some of our most celebrated fine-dining American restaurants, yet we still struggle to put our own history at that same level.

What’s happening now to reclaim that history?

Some people are creating new brands for the historical foodways of their particular American regional area. I think that this is great as long as it is done with the proper care and respect to an area’s traditions, local culture, local foods, and unique history. This is how we will find and rediscover our cultural identity, by doing it on a micro level.

Watching Top Chef So You Don’t Have To

Season six of Top Chef started this week. Location: Las Vegas. We haven’t watched it because, honestly, we don’t want to. And moreover, we gave up on cable. But humor lives on our sister site TV.com, where Richard Lawson is applying his genius to recapping the show.

The contestants are a wash at this point, a heaving mass of chefly ambition, jaunty toques, and misplaced lust for the Glade family of products. But the judges are familiar. Let’s just point out a few things from Lawson’s article that are funny:

• He calls Tom Colicchio “Mr. Clean’s older brother” and Padma Lakshmi “an undead princess zombie with a minor Ambien problem.”

• And this: “At the judges’ panel, Wolfgang Puck said some strange gnome words and then did a haunting jig for an hour or two. When he was done, all the the straw in the whole studio had been spun into gold.”

• And also this: “Gail Simmons was there, bobbing her head in that authoritative way that she does, always with her glass of red wine at the ready. Padma dejectedly pushed the food around her plate, wishing it was delicious human brains. And papa bear Tommy Tom Tom Colicchio said nice things to the top kids.”

If Lawson continues perhaps we could be convinced to watch the show.

Page 1 of 512345»