Search Blog
Blog Categories
Subscribe to our blog

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Twitter
Thursday
Mar282013

Quiche, Baskets and Bunnies

By Marilyn Hunter
For The Family Table, a blog for busy families

There’s an old adage about men and quiche, which I don’t subscribe to because the men in my house love this custardy concoction. In fact, custard is one of the culinary basics Andrew considers essential to competency in the kitchen. He says, if you understand the milk to egg ratio, then you can make any flavor quiche you want – from savory to sweet.

The boys are in the stage of uncertainty about whether they believe in life’s guardians…Santa, the Tooth Fairy, Cupid and the Easter Bunny. Of course they’re smart enough to know that regardless of their suspicions, believing brings presents, treats and even cold hard cash.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Mar272013

Rich Chocolate Cherry Chip Brownies

By Lori Powell
For One or Two Bites, a blog for singles and couples

We are in the first days of spring but winter has not let go… quite yet. Just yesterday, the snow was falling and the roads were slick and I had a hankering for some dark, rich, chocolaty brownies.

It didn’t hurt that I had a huge block of organic 72% cacao dark chocolate from Endangered Species left over from a cooking demo I did for the magazine where I work. That was inspiration enough to get baking.

The resulting brownie is super rich and is studded with dried tart cherries that have been imbibed with a sour cherry cordial liqueur I had purchased in the Hudson Valley. American Fruits Distillery in Warwick, New York, produces a Bartlett pear, blackcurrant, aged apple and a grappa grape brandy, and an apple and pear eau de vie.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Mar262013

Gluten-Free Blood Orange Cakes

By Ben Mims
For Cooking Newbie, a blog for beginner cooks

These days, we all face the issue of making foods for every diet when inviting friends over for a party. While in New York City this week, my partner and I threw a brunch party for over 20 of his friends, and while only one had a special diet, we decided to make a gluten-free dish for her that didn’t take much effort at all, and actually tastes great to those who don’t have an issue with gluten.

With so many natural and flavorful gluten-free cake mixes on the market now, it was easy to find one to use for the blood orange upside-down cakes we were already planning to make. Ripe rings of blood orange, sprinkled with brown sugar, make anything taste great, but especially a gluten-free cake that everyone thinks is not.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Mar252013

All about Easter Eggs

By Sandy Hu
The latest from Inside Special Fork

When Chris was little, he drew a picture of a bunny in mid-flight, dropping colored eggs like a bombardier. I think of that picture every year when I am inundated with eggs after Easter.

Even with the kids grown, I continue to cook and color eggs for Easter – they make a beautiful table centerpiece. (And, truth be told, I love a few leftover eggs for breakfast the rest of the week.)

First step, of course, is to cook the eggs perfectly. For that we turn to Ben, our cooking newbie blogger, and his first post. Tip: if you haven’t bought your eggs yet, go out and get them now, because older eggs will peel better.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Mar222013

How to Cook Japanese Rice

By Sandy Hu
A new video for Video Friday

My friend Kay remembers going home from school and having to scrub potatoes and put them on to boil for dinner. I had a similar experience with the Asian version: making rice.

It’s been years since I’ve made rice in a pot – I always use my electric rice cooker, where it’s as simple as measuring out rice and water, pressing a button and walking away until the rice is done.

But recently, in trying to help out people on Twitter wanting to know how to make rice, I thought of the technique my mom taught me years ago. This is not the definitive way to cook rice and I’ve only tried it for white, short-grain rice – the sticky rice you get in Japanese restaurants. But for this type of rice, the method works like a charm.

Click to read more ...