Sunday, January 11, 2015

Vietnam Part 1


First off, I really need to figure out how to take pictures of food.

Secondly, since I'm essentially trapped in my house due to the broken foot, I look for any excuse for my resident chauffeur to take me somewhere.  The other day I got a coupon via email from Indigo … buy one book, get the second 50% off.  Road trip excuse found.  I pulled up my Indigo wish list full of cookbooks, created in hopes of winning the "win your wish list" contest and I was on a mission.  And sadly the contest is over and I did not win the wish list contest.

The first choice was easy.  How to Eataly is a book I've heard about, read about, seen various places and the library doesn't have it.  One look and I was smitten.  A lot of that has to do with the layout but it also has good articles on Italian ingredients and tasty-sounding recipes.

The second book took a little more looking.  Other than 3 for Christmas, I haven't acquired a cookbook all year so this was a real treat.  I looked at a bunch of nice books and rejected them all for one reason or another, mostly due to close enough similarity to books already in my library.  Then I spied The Slanted Door by Charles Phan.  This is a book that really appealed to me when I borrowed it from the library.  It is also completely different from others I own and in line with my International project.  In the cart it went.

Of course, I was then itching to make something from one of these great new books.  Since the amount my foot tolerates being stood on is finite, I am not able to embark on anything too ambitions.  So this has been my main recipe search criteria.  Several recipes in The Slanted Door fit the bill.  I've thrown out the bread and cookies goal for now and concentrated on a salad and a main.

The salad was Jicama and Grapefruit Salad and was delicious.  I have never had Jicama before and I am absolutely going to be eating it again.  Along with cabbage, candied pecans and grapefruit, there is a reason this is one of the Slanted Doors most popular appetizers (as it says in the recipe intro).

For the main course, we had Shaking Beef, the signature dish of the restaurant.  I must confess that if the picture hadn't looked so pretty (much prettier than mine, hence the need to figure out food photography) and if it hadn't been the signature dish, I think it might have completely escaped my notice.  But I felt like beef, it didn't require a barbecue (too cold outside to be interested in barbecuing) and off I went.  It is simple to make, the ingredients are all on my shelves, add some beef, onions and watercress and … wow!  So very, very, very tasty.

In terms of the broken foot, I'm now two weeks in, four weeks to go.  I'm really hoping the soft callus is forming nicely and I'll be back to curling before the end of the season.

Friday, January 2, 2015

Detour


My plans to include a couple of international cooking nights over the holidays took a bit of a nose-dive down the stairs on Saturday.  The resulting break in my foot and the related new footwear do not combine to make standing on my feet a very attractive option at the moment.  Hopefully this will improve as the weeks of recovery march on.  

So in the meantime, I have not been cooking extensively.  Still throwing some things together and significantly curtailed a dinner party to a Korean noodle stir-fry.  Since I stumbled on the recipe when looking for something easy, I did not even do sufficient research to determine if it was influenced by the North or the South.  So I'm not sure if this dinner really counts.  Given that we combined the noodles with a pre-mixed Asian slaw from the grocery store and cookies from the freezer, I'm pretty sure that when I have stopped feeling sorry for myself, I will discount this as a meal in the quest.

I am finding time to organize magazine recipes and knitting patterns.  And finally got my home access working for the office so I don't have to lug a laptop around with me.  I am also catching up on TV episodes on Netflix, re-watching sappy romance movies and reading.  

So, while I am really missing my walks, curling and general active-ness, I have at least found some distractions.  I just hope that I don't gain 20 pounds over the 6 weeks I'll be sitting on my butt!

Another thing I have had more time for is surfing in which I found a couple of good articles:
 - Bone Fracture Healing Explained.  Very interesting.  
 - How to Survive a Broken Foot .  I have already tried some made up reasons for my foot.  While skydiving (bad landing) and rappelling (banged my foot on a rock) are two that instantly came to mind, I also think hang gliding as a variation of the skydiving could work too.  There is the soccer injury but, while I have not played soccer since I was about 10, given the number of people who do, this might actually be believable and therefore not as entertaining.

So onward.  Five more weeks and counting.