Today I had literally 10 minutes to feed myself lunch before running off to go babysit. I'm so sick of sandwiches I could die, and unfortunately our Easy Mac supply is dithering. So, I got creative. I decided to make mini calzone pita bite... things. We have these mini pita rounds that we use with hummus, but I wanted to stuff it and make a mini calzone. I started by cutting a slit in the pita so I could stuff it with what I wanted. We didn't have any pizza sauce, but we had a little spaghetti sauce in the fridge. I spooned about two tablespoons of marinara sauce into the pita, and then I stuffed them with mozzarella and pressed them shut. I could've put pepperoni or ham or some other topping in them, but I was low on time, so I stuck with just cheese. I put them in the oven for about 7 minutes on 375 degrees until the cheese was melted and gooey.
I had no idea how these were going to turn out. I just threw them together as a random experiment, and I didn't expect much. For a pretty sad attempt at a garnish, I tossed on a little fresh parmesan. They really didn't look like the most appetizing thing in the world, but I popped one into my mouth, and they were great! I successfully made my own little pizza bites, and they were a wonderful experiment. I will definitely make these again.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Colbeh Persian Kitchen and Bar
I feel a little weird reviewing a restaurant that hasn’t quite gotten itself established yet. Colbeh Persian Kitchen has the potential to be a great Decatur restaurant. They just haven’t gotten the hang of being a restaurant yet. They specialize in authentic Persian food. My family and I love international foods, so that’s why we wanted to give it a shot.
The
restaurant is trying very hard to have their customers try many different types
of Persian food. The moment we sat down,
we were given a three-dish starter, as well as an authentic type of bread. This won my mom’s heart, because they made
sure she had food right away. The
decoration and feeling in the room was very pleasant. The tables were a good distance apart, the
lighting wasn’t too harsh or too nonexistent, and the brick wall across the
side added tons of cool character. The
only negative parts of the atmosphere were the frantic waiters. They had probably five waiters on staff, and
there were only about four tables. They
were trying very hard to get everyone served and seated quickly, but they were
a little too fast and determined to make you feel comfortable. The waiters were constantly running around,
like they might at a hectic full restaurant, but that night was neither hectic
nor full.
My mom's Plate |
My plate |
My dad's plate |
The menu
has a series of deconstructed plate options; there are all different choices
for meat skewers, vegetables, and rice.
Then, they have the more completed, all-in-one plates focused around the
meat. They also have an assortment of intricate
Persian stews. My mom ordered the lamb,
which was a small portion, but the meat was flavorful and cooked well. My dad and I were going to order the same
thing, but the waiter gave us a choice of a half or a whole order. My dad wasn’t extremely hungry, so he got the
half order while I got the whole. Little
did we know that portion size wouldn’t be the only difference. When mine got out, it came with a long cut of
well seasoned chicken, fragrant, delicious, rice, and a roasted tomato. When my dad’s plate came out, it had half the
chicken, no rice, and no tomato. His
chicken wasn’t nearly as good as mine, and we thought we’d receive the same
thing. His was the consistency of being
ground and then overcooked, because it was extremely dry. Mine, however, was moist and string-like, and
it was very delicious.
As always, we ordered two kinds of dessert. We ordered the red velvet cake and the cream puff. I have no idea if either of these is authentic and Persian, but they were tasty. The red velvet cake was moist and thick, and it had a fantastic cream cheese frosting. The cream puff was even better. It was crispy, but also doughy, and it had a wonderful creamy filling. The presentation for both desserts was impressive.Red Velvet Cake |
Cream Puff |
In time, I think that Colbeh Persian Kitchen will be a great addition to Decatur. They just have a few flaws that they need to sort out, and then they will be very successful. If you’re in the mood for something international but still simple, give the restaurant a try. You’ll have a nice meal.
Thanks for reading,
Sunday, June 10, 2012
THE Salad
I've realized many hip restaurants I’ve visited have their own
interpretation of this one salad. Some create it well, some create it terribly. The successful version of this salad plays off of different acidities, bitterness, and sweets. There are five main components.
Almost every time I order a salad at any restaurant, I pinpoint their variation of this just to try it and see how it compares to other restaurants’. I love the balance of flavors between bitter and sweet that comes from every bite. The bitter lettuce balances out the sweet fruit, the bitter sourness of the blue cheese is balanced by the sugary nuts, and then the vinaigrette ties everything together. The trick to mastering this salad is fresh, quality ingredients, and well thought out proportions. The lettuce has to be at the peak of freshness, or else it doesn’t hold it’s own weight as a component rather than a base. The fruit has to be ripe, but not mushy or else it takes away from the freshness of the salad. The blue cheese has to be good quality and strong, or else the salad is too sweet, like eating candy. In my opinion the nuts really should be candied or sweetened, or else they don't hold their own weight as a flavor component rather than just a component. The vinaigrette is important too. It has to be sweet and sour, but it has to be subtle enough to let the other ingredients stand out. It also has to be light and acidic, to keep the salad fresh and airy. If done right, this salad can be my favorite aspect of the entire meal. I have yet to find the best variation, but I look forward to letting you all know when I do.I also might try and duplicate it myself once I can get my hands on the ingredients.
Keep eatin'!
The Teenage Foodie
1) Some fancy lettuce, maybe a bitter arugula or a
simple romaine
2) Fresh, sweet fruit, like craisins, apples,
pears, or strawberries
3) Blue cheese (the most common), sometimes feta.
4) Nuts. My
favorite is when they put candied pecans or candied walnuts.
5) A simple, sweet vinaigrette
Here are some pictures I found off of google that are like the salad I'm talking about.
Here are some pictures I found off of google that are like the salad I'm talking about.
Almost every time I order a salad at any restaurant, I pinpoint their variation of this just to try it and see how it compares to other restaurants’. I love the balance of flavors between bitter and sweet that comes from every bite. The bitter lettuce balances out the sweet fruit, the bitter sourness of the blue cheese is balanced by the sugary nuts, and then the vinaigrette ties everything together. The trick to mastering this salad is fresh, quality ingredients, and well thought out proportions. The lettuce has to be at the peak of freshness, or else it doesn’t hold it’s own weight as a component rather than a base. The fruit has to be ripe, but not mushy or else it takes away from the freshness of the salad. The blue cheese has to be good quality and strong, or else the salad is too sweet, like eating candy. In my opinion the nuts really should be candied or sweetened, or else they don't hold their own weight as a flavor component rather than just a component. The vinaigrette is important too. It has to be sweet and sour, but it has to be subtle enough to let the other ingredients stand out. It also has to be light and acidic, to keep the salad fresh and airy. If done right, this salad can be my favorite aspect of the entire meal. I have yet to find the best variation, but I look forward to letting you all know when I do.
Keep eatin'!
The Teenage Foodie
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Taqueria del Sol
Taqueria del Sol is an icon for Decatur. There are two other locations, but in Decatur
it is the place to go. My family and I like it so much that for
about two years now, we’ve gone to Taqueria every single Saturday for
lunch.
The atmosphere
at Taqueria is awesome. No matter what
time of year, it always makes being outdoors feel nice. The majority of the restaurant is a long
covered patio, but there’s indoor seating also.
The patio is nice because in the winter, they close up the plastic sides
and turn on the overhead heaters, making it warm but open. Then, in the summer, they open up the sides
and turn on the fans. Taqueria emotes
the fun feeling of breezy summertime.
Unfortunately, all of the restaurant’s customers must wait in one very
long line to get to the one cash register.
The line usually moves quick, but sometimes it can feel like forever
before you finally reach the front.
Sitting at the bar is the easy way to avoid the intimidating line.
My usual plate (Two fish tacos and the shrimp corn chowder) |
Now, since
my blog is The Teenage Foodie, I do
have to stand up for my peers. Taqueria
hates teenagers, and they aren’t subtle about showing it. Maybe it’s because we don’t tip well enough,
maybe it’s because they think we make a mess, maybe it’s because we aren’t the
crowd they want to target, but this is my only negative comment about the
restaurant. I’ve been there with my
friends, and the waiters will snatch up my plate as I’m taking my last bite
just to get us out of there fast enough.
They’ve never done anything like that when I go with my parents, so I
can only think that there’s some age bias going on. So, teenagers, y’all need to tip better, and
Taqueria, y’all need to lighten up. There. Problem solved.
To conclude, if you
haven’t been to Taqueria del Sol you need to go. It’s just a Decatur experience that you
should have. You’ll leave feeling much
happier than when you arrived, and I guarantee you’ll want to return.
The Teenage Foodie
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Leon's Full Service
Leon’s Full Service is one of the
number one hipster-pub restaurants in Decatur.
Built in an old gas station, Leon’s features an elegant bar, indoor
dining, outdoor patio seating, and also a sort of half and half room that’s
inside but the windows are always open (creating a kind of roomy summer porch
feeling). Leon’s also has a bocce
playing area right outside the restaurant on the corner of Church Street and
East Ponce. My parents and I went to
Leon’s in a mood for stuffing ourselves with really good food without thinking
about the consequences. When we’re in
the mood to eat “good,” we don’t hold back.
We
started with a three cheese plate. The
names of the cheeses were so hard to pronounce that we had no actual idea what
we were ordering, so our (very friendly) waitress picked her three
favorites. We had a really hard, sharp
gouda, a softer brie, and a creamy rich goat cheese. (Again, I have no idea of
the cheeses’ actual names.) The cheeses
themselves were nice, but the really mouthwatering part was the warm, crisp,
freshly baked bread and the homemade whipped butter and fruit compote that went along. With our cheese board
we had a bucket of Leon’s signature “frites,” which are just well made fancy
French fries. The best part about getting
the frites is the mile long list of amazing dipping sauces they have on the
menu. We picked the three most
interesting on the list: massaman curry (a creamy sauce that perfectly mimics
the Indian curry), goat cheese fondue (a rich sauce with a bitter hint of
goat’s milk), and then the bacon herb mayonnaise. (The name says it all. It’s a thick, fatty bacon dip.)
For
Leon’s entrées, they have a selection of fancy sandwiches, and then they have
the more expensive, more formal main dishes.
I’ve seen the main dishes change over time on the menu depending on
seasonal vegetables and fruits as well as market availability, but it usually
stays about the same. On this particular
visit, my Dad ordered the scallops, my mom ordered the less expensive beef brisket
sandwich, and I had the trout. My mom’s
came out styled sort of pub food-like. The sweet pulled beef sopped into her thickly sliced bread. My dad got
four huge scallops served over a rice polenta, that he enjoyed. Four scallops were just enough, and the texture of the polenta was impressive.
Now, my entrée. My entrée… I’ll
start with the best part: the greens. I
had the most flavorful local kale. I’m
pretty sure it had been cooked in steak drippings and white wine, and it was
heavily salted and peppered, but that kale was the best vegetable I had ever
had. It wasn’t overcooked and flavorless,
but it wasn’t undercooked and raw either.
It still had a beautiful crunch, and tons of bitter kale flavor was
balanced out by the steak flavor and salt.
Along with the kale I had fingerling potatoes that were simply boiled
and covered in butter, salt, and herbs.
They were a little bland, but they were a nice base starch that balanced
out the dish and toned down the other intricate flavors. They too had a nice texture, so that when I
bit into them the skin popped. And now about my fish. It was a fresh trout
filet that was butchered so that there wasn’t a single bone, and so that I got a
tasty skin that held in the juicy goodness of the trout. They cooked the fish in a way that I cannot. It was flaky and tender, but it didn’t fall
apart when your fork touched it. The
greatest part was that the trout didn’t have that slimy, almost grassy, fish
taste that trout can have. A forkful of
kale and fish was so crunchy, salty, flavorful, and enjoyable that I made sure
to ration out the plate so I had the perfect ratio of each element for my last
bite.
After the main course my parents and I were stuffed and content, so obviously the only
logical way to proceed would be to order dessert. I must admit that while I could hardly choose
my entrée because there were so many appealing options, the dessert menu didn’t
quite match up. Nevertheless, we ordered two
desserts to share. Our first was the
bread pudding with an “earl grey crème anglaise.” I really only ordered it because I’m obsessed
with earl grey tea. We also ordered the
strawberry, rhubarb cobbler. My family
likes cobblers; that was the only appeal.
While we waited for the desserts to come out our stomachs settled and we
realized we weren’t still hungry at all, but we devoured our desserts anyway.
The bread pudding was okay, but it just kind of tasted like sweet soggy
bread in a fancy cup. The earl grey
crème anglaise that I was so excited about turned out to just be whipped
cream. The cobbler, however, was
magnificent. I’d never had rhubarb
before because I’d heard it was bitter and sharp tasting, but the rhubarb in
the cobbler was sweet. It didn’t just
taste like warm jelly under some dough.
Atop the fruit was a soft, buttery crust, and atop that was their
homemade whipped crème that was really good.
Unfortunately,
at the end of the meal our bill had to come.
It definitely wasn't cheap, but I was so full and happy that I didn’t
care. (Not that it was my money anyway…) After this visit to Leon’s, I’ve
realized that it is definitely one of my favorite restaurants in Decatur. So take your date, some friends, or treat
your family to a nice dinner and a drunken game of Bocce at Leon’s Full Service
in Decatur.
Til next time!
The Teenage Foodie
Monday, June 4, 2012
Morning Breakfast with Will
My brother, Will, spent the night at home the other night just to visit with the family. The next day was an early summer rainy day, and my parents had already left for work. I woke up and went downstairs to my (21 year old) brother watching cartoons. After a couple reruns of Spongebob and Dexter's Labratory, I decided to make a huge, Southern, comfort food breakfast for the two of us. The menu I made consisted of cheesy scrambled eggs, link sausage, hash browns, and homemade waffles. It was nice to know that I had the whole day to do whatever I wanted because IT'S SUMMER, so why not make a huge breakfast and spend time with my brother?
The Teenage Foodie
I started with the sausage, because I knew the meat would take a while to cook through. My mom taught me how to make link sausage the best. First, I turned the heat up high and put a splash of olive oil in the pan. I charred the outside of the sausage so that it was crispy and brown, but the inside, I knew, would still be underdone. Then I did what my mom taught me. I put a little water in the pan, so that about a third of the sausage was submerged. This would cook the sausage all the way through. Then I turned the heat way down and let it sit.
Next, I began to make the batter for my waffles. I googled waffle batter recipe, and clicked on the very first link. Allrecipes.com gave me a straight-forward recipe that I had all the ingredients for. I didn't want to cook the waffles until the eggs and hash browns were cooked because I wanted everything to be done and hot at exactly the same time. So, I put the batter in the fridge for later.
My hash browns were next because they would take time for the onions to caramelize and the potatoes to soften. I only wanted to make enough for Will and me, so I chopped up half an onion and a tiny potato to relatively the same size cut. I put the onions on the skillet first and allowed them to soften up a little before putting the potatoes on. Once both were in the pan, I threw in about two tablespoons of butter and stirred everything around. The aroma that filled the kitchen was incomparable. The familiar smell of onions and butter in a skillet filled my whole house. I put the hash browns on one of the back burners to keep cooking, moved my sausage around in their pan so that they would cook evenly, and got out another pan for my eggs.
I felt like a real cook with three pans and three burners going at once. Now, the trick to the scrambled eggs that I make is a product called "Palmetto Cheese." Throughout my earlier childhood, my family would stay at the same inn at the same beach every single summer. The inn serves three (ginormous) meals a day, and the food is spectacular. One of the cooks at the inn came up with a recipe for homemade pimento cheese that tastes delicious. Bigger and bigger companies began to buy the recipe, and now it's sold in grocery stores across the country. For my scrambled eggs, I used the "jalapeno" version of the Palmetto Cheese to add a little spiciness to our breakfast. I broke two eggs, and added two heaping spoonfuls of Palmetto Cheese in a bowl. I whisked it until the cheese broke up and the eggs were scrambled. Then I put it on a greased hot pan. I had to constantly break up and stir the eggs because they cooked really fast. I like my eggs to be almost a little gooey, because I think if they're cooked and browned too much, they taste dry and have an unenjoyable texture.
While the eggs were cooking, I turned on my waffle iron so it would heat up. I greased it heavily with Pam and put a little more than a cup of batter on and closed the top. I heard the crackle and hiss of the hot plates against the batter. I set the iron to a low setting, because I like my waffle to be crispy on the outside but caky on the inside. Then I gave my sausage a spin (most of the water had burned off by now), my hash browns a toss, and my eggs a chop and a stir. My first waffle was done, so I took it off and put on the second.
Then, I began to plate. I took this meal as a perfect time to practice my food styling skills. Good presentation always makes food better; it's almost as important as the food itself. I put the eggs down first, right in the center of the plate. Then I plated the hash browns like an avalanche falling off one side of the eggs. I gave each plate two links of sausage, and finished off with three drops of hot sauce on the side. We're young'ns, so no food goes without a little bit of hot sauce. I put the waffles on their own plate and served them alongside some maple syrup that our Dad made with his friend in Vermont.
Everything tasted amazing, and it was just the right amount for a full, yummy breakfast. It was so simple to make, but this meal still added to my list of memorable cooking experiences. My brother approved :)
The Teenage Foodie
The Beginning
Everything has a beginning. This post is the start to The Teenage Foodie blog. I want to learn about food. I want to experience, cook, and enjoy all kinds of food. This blog will reflect on the experiences I have and my opinions on restaurants and food. This summer, the summer after my freshman year in high school, the summer of 2012 is the beginning. I hope to have some food posts up soon, enjoy!
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