prepare to dine!

Complete Lovefest! Schedule

Learn how Hank combines lust and chocolate.

Lovefest! is just two weeks away, and we’ve been nailing down the details, schedule, and costs. Adrienne (Dahlia Lounge), Molly (Dahlia Bakery), and Robyn (Tom Douglas Marketing) have generously donated their time and energy as mentors. Seattle Foodie Mitch is letting us invade his gorgeous home. So all that’s left is the fun of learning and doing, eating, and splitting costs ($80 per person for food and alcohol).

So to confirm you’re in, I’ll need four things from you by Tuesday, February 16th:

  1. How many you’ll bring to dinner, including yourself (and names for extra credit)
  2. Which classes/prep sessions you will attend (not required, but you’ll miss the best part
  3. Choose your booze: big pink cocktail, martini (gin or vodka), or some of each
  4. Arrange to pay $80 for each person you’re bringing

Some fine print:

  • If you’d like something that’s not on the drink menu, feel free to bring it
  • Since we’re sharing costs, and we’re buying or committing to buy all the food and supplies starting Wednesday, refunds won’t be possible after Tuesday

Final note: if you absolutely don’t eat raw oysters, sushi, caviar, or tartare, please let me know. We’ll trim those back and bulk up the Bacchus Board with extra cheeses, meats, and breads so you won’t go hungry!

Saturday, February 20th


10:00am – Roses for Little Tarts

  • chocolate tart shells
  • pinot noir and rose water gelée
  • candied rose petals

2:00pm – Raising the Bar

  • martinis & big pink cocktails
  • fruits and vegetables
  • hand-made cultured butter
  • infused oils

4:30pm – Oysters and Oh. My. God.

  • Adrienne’s oyster class
  • mignonettes
  • geoducks (for adults only)

Sunday, February 21st


10:00am – Chocolate & Lust

  • chocolate class
  • luster-dusted bars
  • herb-infused truffles
  • ganache for tarts

2:00pm – Flesh Pots

  • tartare & eggs
  • blini
  • plin
  • staging house and dinnerware

4:00pm – Ritual Madness and Ecstasy

  • Bacchus board
  • chocolate gift bags

4:59pm – Deep Breath

  • cue music

Lovefest!


5:00pm – Reception


5:30pm – On the Beach and In the Raw (with Bubbles)


6:45pm – Rich and Seductive


8:00pm – Hide The Children


9:15pm – Better-Than-Sex Dessert


10:30pm – No Regrets Cleanup


There are limited spots available, so don’t wait!

Posted on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 05:15:00 GMT in categories: , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

First Annual Lovefest!

With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, we’ll all be getting our hopes up for some love. But don’t let the pressure get to you, because no matter what happens on the 14th, you’re definitely gonna score the following weekend. (Cue music: bow chicka bow wow . . .)

Oysters are just the beginning at Lovefest!

It’s Seattle Foodies Lovefest! Pin a big red heart to your calendar on Sunday, February 21st. We’re planning an evening of aphrodisiac-themed foods, including oysters, caviar, champagne, eggs, lurid vegetables, sumptuous fruits, and, of course, chocolate. And in case that’s not sexy enough, we’ll have a swanky martini bar, too. Just like Poultrygeist, the focus will be on participation and learning (and, of course, eating), so we’ll be doing a pre-fest oyster-shucking school plus a mini-version of Garrett’s chocolate class for those who want to limber up.

So get ready for Lovefest! Love in five easy moves:

On the Beach and In the Raw (with Bubbles)

  • Shigokus (the “ultimate”), Kumamotos, Totten Inlet Virginicas, Olympias
  • three mignonettes (classic, pink grapefruit & yuzu ice, pickled Meyer lemon)
  • geoduck sashimi (plus one live, please touch it)
  • the “Bacchus Board” (if you don’t like it raw)
  • champagne

Rich and Seductive

  • three caviars
  • warm blini, cultured fleur-de-sel butter, crème fraîche
  • tartare, quail egg
  • seed-filled breadsticks (twelve inches!)
  • wet martinis, big pink cocktails

Hide The Children

  • lurid vegetables
  • long, cured meats and olives
  • hard nuts, ripe fruits
  • pinch me, pork me (pork and chard plin)
  • luxurious loaves
  • sensuous butters and oils
  • seductive wines

Better-Than-Sex Dessert

  • herb-infused truffles
  • ganache bars with luster dust
  • chocolate tarts (yes, of course we’ll use the blow torch!)
  • banyuls

Morning After, No Regrets

  • truffles and chocolate bar take-home bags

Specific times, locations, and more menu details are in the works, but let us know if you’re interested in joining us. Show up for the party, or dive in with the advance prep. Either way, we’d love to see you there!

Posted on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 06:36:00 GMT in categories: , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

First Friday Foodie Lunch Club: Serious Pie

Lip-smacking house salumi, Walla Walla onions, Sardegna.

Today the First Friday Lunch Club finally got serious. Not because we clubbed Serious Pie, but this month we did some advance planning (and “research”) with the restaurant manager (Scott) and chef (Gray Brooks). The result was a pre-planned appetizer and pizza tasting that ranged deliciously across (nearly) the entire menu.

But we weren’t too serious. When Grace ordered a glass of wine, the rest of us fell like dominoes (the game, not the abominable pizza). And with wine all-around it was a good thing that the appetizers and pizzas were on autopilot. And what appetizers and pizzas they were.

The apps were rich and generous, filled with a variety of seasonal flavors. Sweet sour winter squash “caponata” (traditional caponata is made with eggplant) with cipollini onions and pine nuts. Cute thumbelina carrots with sage and chunks of ricotta caprina. Even the foods we wanted to hate as kids: Baby beets richened with anchovies, crunchy with pistachios, and brightened with mint. Brussel sprouts with pork belly and crisp croutons. And then there was the crazy good (and crazy fun) toasted apple sandwiches with truffle fonduta for dipping.

We'll have the lot. (Almost.)

Not bad for a warm up. But the pizza . . . well, it’s no wonder Serious Pie’s been in the middle of a snowstorm of accolades recently (One of Seattle Met’s Top Ten Restaurants, Nancy Leson In Lust with Serious Pie, Andrew Zimmern: “easily the best pizza I ate all last year”).

One reason, and my favorite thing about Serious Pie, is that they don’t “break” the cheese. Most places load up uncooked pizza dough with toppings and cheese, slam the whole mess in the oven, and cook it til the crust is done. The result? The cheese goes beyond melt and breaks, just like a bad mayonnaise. The oil-and-milk-solid emulsion separates, leaving greasy pools of oil soaking the pizza (and your hand). Serious Pie cooks their crusts and toppings first, and adds the cheese for the last minute or so. The result? Creamy, melted cheese goodness. At Summer Camp 2008, we did a side-by-side taste test. The broken cheese was a disgusting mess compared to the rich, velvety cheese-done-right. (Other pizza joints, please, pretty please take note!)

My other favorite thing about Serious Pie is the fantastic flavor combos. Cherry bomb peppers and sweet fennel sausage. Roasted chanterelles and truffle cheese. Penn cove clams, house pancetta, and lemon thyme. House salumi, Walla Walla onions, and Sole de Sardegna cheese. Guanciale, soft egg, and arugula. Delicata squash, garlic, and gorgonzola lucifero (with chili peppers). They speak for themselves. And none of which, by the way, are allowed to make the crust soggy. (Other joints, pretty please?)

I’m drooling.

As if things couldn’t get better, we welcomed two Christinas and Kathy as new-comers to the Club. Next month we’ll be lunching on December 4. So just holler if you’d like to join us!

Posted on Sat, 07 Nov 2009 01:13:00 GMT in categories: , , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

Poultrygeist

Reducing a pint of dry sherry with butter and shallots.

It was raining, of course. A day for ducks. And a fitting start for Poultrygeist, our pre-Halloween celebration feast of all things duck. I mean, why do the kids get to have all the treats? The plan was simple: a seven-course, wine-paired dinner for twenty-four people. Add a sorbet intermezzo. Throw in a pumpkin-carving contest with alcohol-based prizes. In case that’s not scary enough, put the whole thing completely in the hands of amateurs. Still not frightened? Create most of the recipes ourselves. And then invite Tom Douglas, his business partner and Executive Chef Eric Tanaka (“E.T.”), his marketing manager Robyn, and several more of his chefs, just to raise the stakes.

Now that sounds like fun. (Or, I need a drink.) But first we’ll need a few groceries. Like five Moulard, two Muscovy, and two Pekin ducks. Eight more pounds of Moulard duck breasts. Five dozen duck eggs. A tub of duck fat. A case of blood oranges. And a couple cases of wine.

Roulades nestled in butter, herbs, and mirepoix.

Although, we started two weeks ago, we dug in Friday afternoon at Bruce’s house to get the roulade out of the way. Meaning “roll,” it’s a time-consuming dish that starts with skinning a couple ducks, boning them out, and grinding, chopping, and stuffing everything in the skin to be poached in a pound of butter and herbs. While that was in the oven, we finished the duck liver paté and turned the two carcasses into a brown duck stock. Not a bad start.

On Saturday we moved the work party to Becky’s home, and with a larger crew, the real heavy lifting began. Holly dove into a “ripening” tray of duck fat to retrieve our previously made confit legs, and working the wings into rillettes. Jordan took on the blistering work of cleaning out twenty sugar pie pumpkins. Becky made, broke, fixed, broke, fixed, and again broke a lemon ginger duck-fat mayonnaise before we decided to trim that unstable emulsion from the menu. We took a well-deserved “family meal” break to devour Trina’s salmon frittata and some duck sliders Bruce made from the leftover roulade stuffing.

A platoon of duck sliders. At ease, soldiers.

Back at the grinder, Dana transformed the Moulard breasts into fifty sliders (mini burgers). Trina made cherry jam, perfected her blood orange martini, and finished Chuck’s Asian plum sauce with homemade blood orange marmalade to pair with the ducks Bruce was packing with spices and more blood oranges for roasting Sunday. Most of the sauces, garnishes, and dressings made, or nearly completed. Fresh pasta mixed and resting in the fridge. Shallot rings and sage leaves fried in duck fat. Cracklings crisped. Cranberry, blood orange, thyme sorbet frozen. To finish the day, pear sabayon, spiced pears, and duck brittle.

Sunday was the final push. Ducks on the rotisserie. Breasts seared off and sliced. Beans for the roulade simmered with the brown stock, and the resulting broth reduced all the way down to finish a mustard sauce. Confit jelly coins. Twenty-five duck egg yolk raviolos. Menus printed, house decorated. Wine pairings ready (by maniacal foodie Kyle at Pike and Western). And everything portioned and ready for service, just in time for guests to begin arriving.

So how did it turn out? Click on the photos to start the slide show, and see for yourself.

(Huge thanks to Bruce for providing many of the photos.)

Posted on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 06:51:00 GMT in categories: , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

Be Very Afraid

Poultrygeist is almost here!

When Chuck’s chickens stage a haunted coop, you know Poultrygeist is so close it’s scary.

The mayhem will continue at Becky’s this Sunday, with our day of mise Saturday. Can’t think of a costume idea? An apron or chef’s hat will do. Or follow my example and wear a body-sized bib.

Here’s how it’s shaping up (costumes not required):

  • reception: five-spice duck lettuce wraps, cilantro, plum sauce, sechuan pepper salt
  • scary sugar pie pumpkin carving contest (categories: creative, scary, fun, elaborate, duck)
  • duck roulade, cannellini beans, brown mustard sauce
  • three preserves: crisped confit, rillettes, paté, toasts, greens, warm duck vinaigrette
  • duck-egg raviolo, lemon sage butter, magret prosciutto, fried sage leaves
  • sorbet (cranberry, blood orange, thyme)
  • duck meatball sliders (2 sauces, sweet pickle chips)
  • seared duck breast, red wine reduction, kale (duck cracklins), duck-finished thyme potatoes
  • sabayon, pear, duck brittle
  • pumpkin-carving awards – bottles of arancello (limoncello’s orange cousin)
  • take-home bags (prosciutto, duck fat, confit)

See you there!

Posted on Sun, 18 Oct 2009 19:45:00 GMT in categories: , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

Ducks Redux Shifts Poultrygeist Into High Gear

Nearly nine-pound whoppers: Moulard ducks.

Two weeks away from our First Annual Poultrygeist and we’re ready to get some advance mise out of the way. Also, it’s perfect timing to replay the previous day’s lessons from Rover’s Duck 101 class. Hosted by Bruce and Dana in their amazing indoor/outdoor kitchens, we tackled five honkin’ honkers: Hudson Valley Moulard ducks bought from restaurant supplier Select Gourmet Foods, meat supplier to the stars (such as Tom Douglas Restaurants and Rover’s). Lucky for us, Select Gourmet now has a retail outlet in Kenmore.

Being veteran Tom Douglas Summer Campers, we eased into the workday with a glass of Prosecco, followed Bruce’s terrific chili, topped with an egg poached perfectly by his immersion circulator, with corn-meal focaccia on the side.

Seattle Foodies love play time.

Then we broke down our five HUGE ducks. Moulards are such amazing creatures. Thick, gorgeous layers of fat, and deep, rich, meat, with mile-long breasts. We set aside three breasts for prosciutto, which is sacrilege according to The Chef In The Hat (he refuses to “waste” prime Moulard breasts on charcuterie). But heck, we’re worth it. Crime or no, we packed them in a pan of kosher salt for an overnight cure, then to be rinsed, dried, and dusted with white pepper and juniper berries before hanging in Chuck’s cellar. The other seven breasts were trimmed, scored, skin partially rendered, and packed in shallot, thyme, bay leaves, garlic, and cracked pepper, to be held in vacuum-sealed bags in Becky’s freezer, ready for finishing.

With the group suddenly hankering for a snack, Bruce came to the rescue with short ribs cooked sous vide (his immersion circulator again), and finished on the grill. I had picked up a pound of matsutake mushrooms at the Pike Place Market that morning, so he sliced and sauteed those for bedding (for the short ribs, not Bruce). A pan sauce, a little lemon and soy to finish, and some red wine for the glass. Amazing. So I ate two.

Bruce loads his culinary canon.

Right. Ducks. We cured ten duck legs and wings in bay, garlic, orange zest, thyme, and kosher salt. To make the confit, they’ll be gently poached in duck fat Tuesday for eight to ten hours, and then will ripen, packed in the fat until Poultrygeist. Speaking of fat, in addition to the 7.5-pound tub we bought, rendering down the fat from all five ducks will yield about ten pounds more (or about 2.5 gallons total). With so much of everything, there should be confit and duck fat souvenirs, as well as prosciutto to take home after the event.

And then there’s the swimming pool of duck stock made from the five roasted carcasses and mirepoix. Dana will reduce that down to a thick glace Monday.

But back to the food. Bruce fired up his pizza oven, with fennel seed crust, chanterelles, pork belly, and a whole host of terrific cheeses from the farmer’s market. Plus a few bottles of great red. And Trina made orange martinis with the juice from the zested oranges.

No Becky, that's not your cocktail. Trina's making arancello.

Speaking of oranges and alcohol, Trina sacrificed her last bottle of Everclear, and we zested eight oranges for a batch of arancello (limoncello’s cousin). Bottles will serve as prizes for the scary sugar pie pumpkin carving contest. Judging categories will likely be: creative, scary, fun, elaborate, and duck. There will be a fifteen-minute carving limit, and other rules to be announced soon, but get those wheels turning. There’s arancello at stake.

Somewhere in there we had a repeat of the chili and egg marvel. And since we were still feeling peckish, we made thyme and rosemary-scented fingerling potatoes, which were crispy finished in duck fat. But always quick to raise the bar, Bruce topped them with amazing hickory smoked Mangalitsa jowl bacon, and still more poached eggs.

So you can see the day proceeded with laser-like focus. We even got some advance planning in for Poultrygeist, and I’ll post details as we get them organized.

Posted on Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:31:00 GMT in categories: , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

26th Annual Feast At The Market

A beautiful night for a feast.

On a warm fall evening, 460 diners at the sold-out 26th Annual Feast at the Market embarked a three-hour tour. To benefit Neighborcare Health’s Pike Market Medical Clinic and their mission to provide health care for uninsured patients, our mission was equally challenging: dine at nineteen Pike Place Market restaurants, and still have room for coffee and chocolates afterward.

The approach? Stay focused. And have a viable plan of attack. Fortunately, Neighborcare provided a map with participating restaurants numbered and grouped by location. So, meal-ticket booklet in hand, diners hit Pike Place Market’s historic bricks. I decided to do the restaurants in reverse order.

Four hundred sushi rolls and still smiling.

It wasn’t easy. Honey-scented smoked black cod with fennel chowder at Etta’s. Yam soup with king crab salad at Cutters Bayhouse. Beef Bourguignon with chanterelles at the Virginia Inn. Then a buffet at Kell’s (shepherd’s pie, sausage rolls). Another buffet at The Pink Door (salumi, grilled vegetables, seafood salad, Tuscan beans and tuna, and more). Uncle? Not yet. The Tasting Room is serving wine tastes, a welcome reprieve, but step lively. Thirteen more.

It was fun to watch the ebb and flow of diners. Now a place was swamped, now empty: the coffee-shop phenomenon in action. And the restaurant staff took it all in graceful stride. In addition to the food, it was terrific to visit so many places in the Market, especially new ones (like Thoa’s) and others you’ve been meaning to try but haven’t found the time. Here’s the full lineup:

Nineteen restaurants in three hours. Ready. Aim. Eat!

But in three hours? You did wear comfortable shoes, didn’t you? Of course, most people didn’t worry about hitting every single place. With so much food, it wasn’t necessary. Far better to let your whims guide you, and savor the unique atmosphere of the Pike Place Market.

For example, after the food, my favorite thing is how vendors at the Market behave as if they were your big, extended family. When dashing into a place for a quick photo (I honestly didn’t have time, or the belly space, to eat at every place), a host, server, or kitchen staff would inevitably and gently implore, “Just a photo? Come on. Sit down for just two minutes and eat.” And their hospitality worked more than once. It was an expansive evening in every way. Even parking was included.

My only concern is this: if the public health insurance option passes, can there still be a feast next year?

Posted on Thu, 08 Oct 2009 01:38:00 GMT in categories: , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

Poppy Hosts the Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce

Poppy chef/owner Jerry Traunfeld adds the finishing touches.

Benefit dinners can be such a mixed bag. You want to help, but you can’t bear facing another rubber chicken nestled in gummy fettucini. Fortunately, the Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce has a secret weapon: Jerry Traunfeld and his dynamite new Poppy. You don’t need to reminded of Jerry’s reign at Herbfarm, and I’ve raved about his Herbfarm Cookbook enough times that I simply give up if you haven’t picked up a copy yet.

Thus armed, the Chamber’s Annual Spirit Of The Hill dinner was at no risk of torturing you in exchange for support. Breaking Poppy’s usual thali format (see below), Jerry hosted a leisurely champagne reception, followed by a luxurious five-course dinner and paired with wines provided by Van Duzer. Roasted black cod with carrot vinaigrette and cucumber-shiso salad was sweet and buttery. A slice of chanterelle, leek, and chard “lasagne” was a fun play of flavor and texture: the noodles were paper thin and somehow managed to hold together the dramatic layers. The main dish was a succulent lavender-crusted duck breast, served with mushroom marjoram bread pudding, sage-roasted delicata squash, and a lavender sauce. Just the right subtlety on the lavender, too often overdone in lesser hands. The finale: dark chocolate terrine with tender and mild candied ginger, and candied pine nuts.

Capitol Hill Chamber Of Commerce takes over Poppy.

During dinner, Jerry talked about his travels in India, an exploration of spices building on his encyclopedic command of herbs. This journey, of course, led him to open Poppy, where his fast-becoming-famous thalis showcase these herbs and spices in ten inventive tastes. And Poppy’s sommelier Angela Isaacson spoke about the Van Duzer wines for the event, and also shared tips for pairing wine with food. Chamber Executive Director Jack Hilovsky and Event Chair Jody Laflen finished the evening with a wine raffle and auction, after which happy guests filtered out through the garden, rubbing and smelling the herbs and late-season flowers.

So next year, when you’re sifting through that stack of benefit-dinner invitations, this is one you don’t want to miss.

Posted on Sat, 03 Oct 2009 06:03:00 GMT in categories: , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

Fatten Up For A Good Cause

Living in Seattle is a special treat with the amazing regional foods at our fingertips. And no better place to swan dive into great food than the Pike Place Market (for me, it’s the eye of the cornucopia). So I’m very excited to be invited to cover the 26th Annual Feast at the Market this coming Tuesday, October 6th.

For three hours, diners will be able to visit nineteen (yes, nineteen!) restaurants and enjoy small plates prepared especially for the event. If that’s not enough, there’s the fourth hour for coffee and dessert at the Seattle Athletic Club. All this for $75, and in addition to feeling full, you’ll feel good knowing that proceeds will support health care for uninsured patients at the Pike Market Medical Clinic.

Menu items? Pumpkin risotto with Pedro Ximenez sherry and bacon fat caramel glazed candy corn. Petit lamb burger with balsamic braised onions and aioli on gougere. Fall yam soup, king crab salad en buche, juniper berry crème fraiche. Korean braised duck breast on brioche, house-made kimchi and Doenjang vinaigrette. And fifteen others. See the whole menu on the event website.

See you there!

Posted on Fri, 02 Oct 2009 23:10:00 GMT in categories: , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.

 

First Friday Foodie Lunch Club: Green Leaf

Fresh spring rolls with a surprising fried crunch inside.

If you love treasure hunts, then you have to love Seattle’s International District, where gems lie hidden in unassuming places. Green Leaf Restaurant is one of those places, and when the First Friday Foodie Lunch Club chose them for October, I rushed out to do some reconnaissance work in advance. Multiple times, in fact. Yet by the time fifteen of us foodies arrived for our lunch feast, I was eager for more.

To say Green Leaf has super-fast service, fresh, crisp produce, clean, bright flavors at unbelievable prices (as reviews for decent Vietnamese restaurants inevitably do) would be accurate, but misses what makes them special. It’s the consistent, and obvious care that they take in the kitchen. Fried dishes are crisp and hot, not soggy or oily. Like the Vietnamese pancakes, full of shrimp and creamy with coconut, with edges so crisp they flake apart. The platter of fresh lettuces and herbs and dipping sauce make this one a messy but must-order dish. Grilled dishes have crunch and deep flavor. Even the fresh spring rolls, with lettuce, shrimp, and pork, pack a wonderfully crunchy fried center that elevates this simple appetizer, and also tells you they’re made to order rather wilting in a cooler in huge batches.

Grilled shrimp on sugar cane.

Places like this remind me of the origins of much of classical French cuisine. Humble (meaning cheap) ingredients transformed through creative and careful preparation into something amazing. Green Leaf does exactly this with fresh and simple ingredients, inventive twists on Vietnamese classics, and an apparently highly trained and consistent kitchen staff. It’s so good, the tiny bill always shocks me, as if somehow it’s cheating to get so much for so little.

One final bonus: their recent remodel and expansion upstairs added tables and one of the swankest I.D. bathrooms, but mercifully did nothing to diminish the magic.

Posted on Fri, 02 Oct 2009 22:15:00 GMT in categories: , , , . You can follow comments, leave a comment, trackback from your own site, or link to this article at: http://seattlefoodies.net/eat/vgIqm.