Fat Sister and Tasty Boy are on holiday till Feb 1st.
Please come back next week for more.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Little Gems
New York is a city of museums—one in each flavour to suit your mood. But if you look beyond the “General Motors” behemoths of the museum world (The Met, MoMA, Guggenheim), there are smaller, less-visited spots that are as much a repository of the city’s historical and cultural memory as their better-known big brothers. Here are a few of my favourites:
Lower-East Side Tenement Museum
I remember my first visit to the Tenement Museum—I was dragged here quite unwillingly by one of my history professors at RISD on a very hot and sultry July morning. For a know-it-all art student obsessed with Le Corbusier’s sanitised vision of the “new city,” it was a revelation seeing how the first New Yorkers really lived, far removed from the gilded drawing rooms I’d read about in Edith Wharton novels. The walking tour is terrific, especially if you coordinate it with a lunch break at Katz’s Deli. :)
Isamu Noguchi Museum and Sculpture Garden
The Noguchi Museum was a mainstay of my summer weekends when I lived in Astoria. I’ve spent many Saturday afternoons quietly sewing or reading in the cool sanctuary of the sculpture garden.
The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum
The Cooper-Hewitt is a designer’s mecca every three years when the National Design Triennial sets up shop here. It also houses the most comprehensive library and visual archive of the graphic and decorative arts in the country including an unrivalled textile collection.
The Frick Collection
I’m not particularly fond of the artwork at the Frick, and I wouldn’t recommend a visit here to see the over-ripe Fragonards and gaudy Rubens. What I love about it is the building itself—truly one of the grandest and loveliest of Beaux Arts mansions in New York!
Neue Galerie
The Neue is a museum devoted to 20th century art from Austria and Germany—it’s an edited and tightly curated collection. If the line to see Klimt’s infamous gold portrait of Mrs. Adele Bloch-Bauer is too long, I just pop-into the in-house CafĂ© Sabarsky for some torte and Viennese coffee.
Lower-East Side Tenement Museum
I remember my first visit to the Tenement Museum—I was dragged here quite unwillingly by one of my history professors at RISD on a very hot and sultry July morning. For a know-it-all art student obsessed with Le Corbusier’s sanitised vision of the “new city,” it was a revelation seeing how the first New Yorkers really lived, far removed from the gilded drawing rooms I’d read about in Edith Wharton novels. The walking tour is terrific, especially if you coordinate it with a lunch break at Katz’s Deli. :)
Isamu Noguchi Museum and Sculpture Garden
The Noguchi Museum was a mainstay of my summer weekends when I lived in Astoria. I’ve spent many Saturday afternoons quietly sewing or reading in the cool sanctuary of the sculpture garden.
The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum
The Cooper-Hewitt is a designer’s mecca every three years when the National Design Triennial sets up shop here. It also houses the most comprehensive library and visual archive of the graphic and decorative arts in the country including an unrivalled textile collection.
The Frick Collection
I’m not particularly fond of the artwork at the Frick, and I wouldn’t recommend a visit here to see the over-ripe Fragonards and gaudy Rubens. What I love about it is the building itself—truly one of the grandest and loveliest of Beaux Arts mansions in New York!
Neue Galerie
The Neue is a museum devoted to 20th century art from Austria and Germany—it’s an edited and tightly curated collection. If the line to see Klimt’s infamous gold portrait of Mrs. Adele Bloch-Bauer is too long, I just pop-into the in-house CafĂ© Sabarsky for some torte and Viennese coffee.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Roasted Root Vegetables
It is January in New York. Which means along with frigid temperatures, there isn’t much local, fresh, green produce around. But, the farmer’s market is awash in gritty, bulbous root vegetables, which, with a little TLC, can play a star turn in a fast, no-hassle and healthy supper.
I scoured the Union Square Market on Friday and poked and prodded at the hard, bulbous roots on display, and made a selection of parsnips, carrots, fennel, red onions and a mixture of Adirondack blue potatoes and the red bliss variety. Back home, I decided to cook the potatoes by themselves and throw the rest into the oven as a roasted medley.
If the thought of choosing vegetables and deciding what herbs and aromatics go with them seems alarming, there really is nothing to it. All you have to do is follow my simple formula of: Peel-Chop-Toss-Roast, and voilĂ , you get a delish, one-pan meal.
For the vegetable medley, I peeled and chopped the carrots and parsnips into large chunks. The onions and fennel were roughly sliced into large half-moon pieces. I tossed all of them in a roasting pan with salt, black pepper and extra virgin olive oil, tucked in a few sprigs of rosemary and thyme and a couple of bay leaves, and nestled 2 lemons (cut in halves) into the vegetables. Then, in they went into a 425˚F oven for 1 hour, and other than an occasional stir to make sure the veggies at the bottom got a chance to caramelise at the top, I let the dry heat of the oven work it’s magic breaking down the roots into a moist, luscious pile.
I used the same formula for the potatoes, but decided to give them a twist by introducing some Bengali paanch phoron* to the mix instead of the herbs. If you don’t have paanch phoron on hand, then just substitute it with whole cumin. I washed and dried the potatoes thoroughly, chopped them into large chunks (left the skin on), and spread them onto a sheet pan. Then, I heated 1 tbsp of canola oil in a small frying pan and added 2 tbsp of paanch phoron to the oil. When the spices had sputtered for a minute or so, I poured them (with the oil) over the potatoes, added salt, black pepper, and extra virgin olive oil, and tossed well. I roasted the potatoes in a rack right under the vegetable medley for about 40 minutes, until a fork pierced the potatoes easily and the tops were golden brown.
This roasting technique is amazingly versatile and you can easily change the vegetables and herbs/spices with whatever is available seasonally or suits your fancy. The Peel-Chop-Toss-Roast formula is in my arsenal as the ready stand-in for weeknight dinners when I’m feeling too lazy or tired to cook anything elaborate, and also easily deployed as a side dish at fancier meals.
Hubby (aka, Tasty Boy, since he samples everything coming out of our kitchen before it reaches the dining table!) and I had the veggies and potatoes for supper with crusty bread and an Italian Vino Verde from Piedmont.
__________
*Paanch Phoron is a five-spice blend used extensively in Eastern India, especially in the cuisines of Bengal, Orissa and Assam. The five whole spices are blended in equal parts— Fenugreek seeds (methi), Nigella seeds (kalonji, or kaalo jirey), Fennel seeds (mouri), Carom (radhuni), Mustard seed (shorshey). In my family, the fifth spice, mustard, is not used, but the blend is still referred to as “five spice.” I always get Mama to mix a batch for me every time I’m in Cal, and store it in an airtight container on my spice rack.
I scoured the Union Square Market on Friday and poked and prodded at the hard, bulbous roots on display, and made a selection of parsnips, carrots, fennel, red onions and a mixture of Adirondack blue potatoes and the red bliss variety. Back home, I decided to cook the potatoes by themselves and throw the rest into the oven as a roasted medley.
If the thought of choosing vegetables and deciding what herbs and aromatics go with them seems alarming, there really is nothing to it. All you have to do is follow my simple formula of: Peel-Chop-Toss-Roast, and voilĂ , you get a delish, one-pan meal.
For the vegetable medley, I peeled and chopped the carrots and parsnips into large chunks. The onions and fennel were roughly sliced into large half-moon pieces. I tossed all of them in a roasting pan with salt, black pepper and extra virgin olive oil, tucked in a few sprigs of rosemary and thyme and a couple of bay leaves, and nestled 2 lemons (cut in halves) into the vegetables. Then, in they went into a 425˚F oven for 1 hour, and other than an occasional stir to make sure the veggies at the bottom got a chance to caramelise at the top, I let the dry heat of the oven work it’s magic breaking down the roots into a moist, luscious pile.
I used the same formula for the potatoes, but decided to give them a twist by introducing some Bengali paanch phoron* to the mix instead of the herbs. If you don’t have paanch phoron on hand, then just substitute it with whole cumin. I washed and dried the potatoes thoroughly, chopped them into large chunks (left the skin on), and spread them onto a sheet pan. Then, I heated 1 tbsp of canola oil in a small frying pan and added 2 tbsp of paanch phoron to the oil. When the spices had sputtered for a minute or so, I poured them (with the oil) over the potatoes, added salt, black pepper, and extra virgin olive oil, and tossed well. I roasted the potatoes in a rack right under the vegetable medley for about 40 minutes, until a fork pierced the potatoes easily and the tops were golden brown.
This roasting technique is amazingly versatile and you can easily change the vegetables and herbs/spices with whatever is available seasonally or suits your fancy. The Peel-Chop-Toss-Roast formula is in my arsenal as the ready stand-in for weeknight dinners when I’m feeling too lazy or tired to cook anything elaborate, and also easily deployed as a side dish at fancier meals.
Hubby (aka, Tasty Boy, since he samples everything coming out of our kitchen before it reaches the dining table!) and I had the veggies and potatoes for supper with crusty bread and an Italian Vino Verde from Piedmont.
__________
*Paanch Phoron is a five-spice blend used extensively in Eastern India, especially in the cuisines of Bengal, Orissa and Assam. The five whole spices are blended in equal parts— Fenugreek seeds (methi), Nigella seeds (kalonji, or kaalo jirey), Fennel seeds (mouri), Carom (radhuni), Mustard seed (shorshey). In my family, the fifth spice, mustard, is not used, but the blend is still referred to as “five spice.” I always get Mama to mix a batch for me every time I’m in Cal, and store it in an airtight container on my spice rack.
Hello World!
I have started this blog at the constant urgings of my siblings (and honorary siblings), and friends. It will be a bossy and opinionated guide to my adventures in the kitchen, decorating, design, art, film, crafts, books, things that annoy me and things that give me joy. The masthead at the top will be a visual montage that I will change frequently to reflect my current obsessions and inspirations.
Most importantly, I’m undertaking this venture as a labour of love—I hope to rediscover some of my forgotten passions and expand current interests.
So welcome to the Fat Sister’s Guide to Life and let me share my musings with you.
Most importantly, I’m undertaking this venture as a labour of love—I hope to rediscover some of my forgotten passions and expand current interests.
So welcome to the Fat Sister’s Guide to Life and let me share my musings with you.
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