Finally .. and Indian Chef on the Food Network

I was so happy to see Aarti Sequiera win the Next Food Network Chef!


I watched her show on Sunday -- have to admit it's pretty good. I like seeing different ways to incorporate Indian flavors into western cooking. She attended the New School of Cooking in Culver City -- one of the places I was looking into when I lived in LA.

Olive Tapanade - to be used sparingly

I've been on the look out for new spreads to add to crostinis and sandwiches. I pulled together this recipe for a dinner party we threw during the holidays - and it worked out perfectly. It is a bit acidic / garlicky, but this tapanade is perfect if you're just trying to add a touch of tang and flavor to an otherwise bland dish.

Ingredients

2 tablespoons Kalamata Olives - chopped
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

Add all ingredients to a mini food processor and process to desired consistency. (I like mine to be a little chunky -- and not completely a paste, but to each its own.)

Spread on crostini with a mild cheese, or use sparingly to add tang to sandwiches. We made some yummy ricotta, olive tapanade, basil and cherry tomato crostinis (pictured below).



Crispin' Spinach

When Indians say that food tastes better in India, they aren’t kidding! Probably since most of the food we eat in family homes in India is locally grown, and possibly not genetically engineered, it’s easier to find fruits and vegetables that have a fuller flavor profile. But, some things just taste better in India because you can’t find them anywhere else! Things like… Indo Chinese food. The Indo-Chinese food I’ve had in the US has been absolutely atrocious. And what’s more, it doesn’t include any of the yummy delicacies that you find on the menu at Indo Chinese restaurants in India.

During our last visit to Bangalore, my husband and I stopped at Red Bamboo Shoots (a BNJ restaurant). While it’s not a perfect representation of Indo-Chinese (a few Thai, Singaporian, and Malaysian inspired items did cross our plates), the food is very inspired and very good. Some highlights were crispin’ spinach (OF COURSE!), honey glazed vegetable dumplings, and a rich, delicious Thai red-curry. Crispin’ Spinach is an interesting thing: so simple, yet so impossible to find in the US. I’ve come across a recipe for it, which I’d like to share with all of you. Remember me when you’re chowing down.

Ingredients
1 lbs fresh spinach leaves, washed and patted completely dry
1 tbsp toasted sesame seeds
Salt, pepper, and white granulated sugar to taste
Hot oil (peanut or canola) for deep frying (375 degrees)

1) Wash and pat all spinach completely dry. Heat oil in wok or fry-daddy until 375 degrees (F).

2) Carefully (it may splash, as there is some intrinsic water in the spinach) fry the spinach in the hot oil for 30 seconds, until crisp. Remove from oil and drain any remaining oil from the spinach with paper towels.

3) Toss crispy spinach with sesame seeds, salt, pepper, and sugar (about 1 tbsp – more or less depending on taste).

4) Serve and enjoy!

Classic South Indian Breakfast

While we hardly get to eat like this everyday, the breakfast served at my brother-in-law's wedding was phenomenal!



I was sure to grab all my favorites: medhu vada (deep fried lentil donut with black pepper), pongal (rice cooked with lentils and pepper), chili powder, sambar (onion and tamarind stew), and crispy ghee roast dosa (fermented lentil crepe). Wow, I really like lentils.

There were some Andra specialties, like pesarattu (mong dahl dosa) stuffed with oopma (spiced cream of wheat), but after eating this plate, I was just too full to eat any more.

Fancy Foods Show : Recap

The Fancy Foods Show this weekend in San Francisco was amazing! I’ve never been before, and wanted to share some highlights with all of you.

My top 3 food finds
Sense Rose Nectar - This company is out of Hendersen, NV (right next to Las Vegas), and with a tag line like “Taste the Bouquet”, I could hardly resist. The nectar is actually very light and not too sweet. It really does taste like you are sipping in the smell of freshly cut roses. I’d probably use this to add a little something to lemonade, champagne, or even white sangria.

Amella’s Caramels – Caramels are already so delicious to begin with, but imagine if you added just a touch of cocoa butter to each one! That’s exactly what Amella’s does, and the result is one of the richest, smoothest, and most luxurious caramels you’ve ever tasted. They have three flavors and here they are in preference order: Passion Fruit, Carrot Cake, and Black Forest.

Burrata – This is a fresh Italian cheese made out of cream and mozzarella. And it’s absolutely divine. I tried it for the first time on Saturday night at Absinthe in San Francisco. It’s part of their beet salad (which is also divine – fresh beets, burrata, pistachios, mizuna, salt / pepper, and a touch of olive oil). There were a number of Italian creameries sampling Burrata at the Fancy Foods Show. It’s now available in select specialty food shops.


Honorable mentions:
Zingerman’s (GO BLUE!) now has a candy bar line! Three yummy flavors.
Raw Honey – It’s sweet, gritty, and oh-so delicious.
Dogswell – Finally, good for you and great tasting food for your dog.
Alo Aloe Vera Drink – It’s not just for sun burns and cuts any more!
SweetBird -- No GMO smoothies ... first time I've ever seen one in the US!


Fancy Food Show - THIS WEEKEND!

For all those foodies out there in the San Francisco Bay Area, the 35th Annual Winter Fancy Food Show is THIS WEEKEND at Moscone Center in San Francisco.

For more information: www.fancyfoodshow.com

See you there!

Indian food curries favor with Americans

FINALLY!
Interesting article I wanted to share with my readers.

By Ann Levin, Associated Press
Posted: 01/06/2010 12:00:00 AM PST
Indian food in America is having its "Slumdog Millionaire" moment.

Supermarket shelves are lined with chutneys, pickles and sauces and all manner of boxed heat-and-serve Indian meals. The quality and number of Indian restaurants has soared, offering an alternative to cheap all-you-can-eat buffets. And a flurry of new cookbooks is introducing home cooks to subtle regional differences in Indian cuisine shaped by climate, geography, religion and caste.

The growing awareness of Indian culture and cuisine is due to the big influx of immigrants from South Asia since 1965, when national origin quotas favoring Europeans were abolished.
Since then, the United States has witnessed a remarkable flowering of Indian talent, energy and drive as well as a seemingly insatiable appetite for all things Indian, including bhangra music, Bollywood films and yoga. Perhaps nothing expresses America's fascination with that giant emerging economy more than the runaway success of the British film "Slumdog Millionaire," a rags-to-riches tale, based in the Mumbai slums, that won eight Academy Awards in 2009.
The growing Indian presence also comes at a time when the popularity of cooking shows — including Bravo's "Top Chef," hosted by Indian actress and model Padma Lakshmi — and an increase in foreign travel have made Americans more adventurous eaters.

"The American palate is no longer bland," says Andrew F. Smith, editor of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink of America, who predicts that Indian food will take off in the next decade the way sushi bars did in the 1980s and Thai food did in the '90s.

New York, the dining capital of the nation, has seen an explosion in the number of Indian restaurants in recent years. New York University sociologist and food studies scholar Krishnendu Ray counts some 350 Indian restaurants today compared to the 19 listed in the 1978 edition of a restaurant guide.

But while Indians are among the fastest growing ethnic groups in this country, notes Ray, the population of 2.7 million is still a tiny presence in a nation of more than 300 million people. Also, the bulk of the Indian immigrant population simply hasn't been here that long.

Chicken Marsala and focaccia may be household words today for tens of millions of Americans but Italians have been in the U.S. in large numbers since the late 19th century, became assimilated and moved up the social and economic ladder.

Whether ground fenugreek and coriander become flavors as familiar to Americans as basil and oregano depends in large part on whether Indians can do the same thing, according to Ray.
"In 2065, Indian may be in the same place as Italian food," he says.