Tuesday, May 29, 2007

The Boy becomes The Man


He turned 40 this weekend! ((applause)). We had a lovely dinner a deux at Wilshire on Friday night. Food was just fine, but service was impeccable. Sometimes I forget how much a nice server can improve the situation. Saturday we had dinner with friends at the local sushi bar (always a treat) and drinks at Cat and Fiddle. Also: saw 2 movies this weekend from the absolute opposite ends of the spectrum: Spiderman 3 and Once. SP3 was better than I thought it would be, funny, and the special effects were fab. Once is a small (very small) Irish movie about music - think about it like a musical in "The Commitments" vein rather than the "Dreamgirls" vein. The belting in this movie is entirely of a different sort. See it if you can. A thoroughly enjoyable long lazy weekend.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Milan can kiss my bocce


The tragedy of Liverpool's loss in the UEFA Cup final is still fresh in Casa De Amore. I am happy to report that we were somewhat comforted by my triumphant success with the Zuni Cafe Roast Chicken and Bread Salad recipe (thanks Meanboy!). The recipe is hilariously longwinded and fussy, and I am definitely not a fussy cook. But if you stick reasonably close to the recipe the results are fab. Highly recommended.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Rachel's TV Roundup


Now that The Surge© has begun again, food fun is limited. So on to tv:


WHAT I’LL MISS THIS SUMMER
Ugly Betty – pass the Kleenex that was SAD. I really love this show – the most evil people are hilarious and, yes, still unlikable. It’s so1998 to make evil people likable. The heros are so downtrodden and desperate, that you really have to stretch to even call it a comedy.

Lost – its good again and I sort of follow what’s going on! Hurray!

24 – Goodbye and good riddance, old friend. This season smelled like the yogurt Iain left out last night. The producers say they are completely rethinking the next season, so there’s hope for you yet Jack Bauer.

Heroes – fun fun fun! Still hoping it will make me gasp with disbelief at some point – its all a bit sanitized at the moment – but a quality way to spend an hour as far as I’m concerned.

The Shield – Tony Soprano is no gentle flower, but Vic Mackey is a brute of the first order. They got over making anything likable about the guy a long time ago. The longer I live in LA, the more I realize that The Shield is closer to reality than you might realize.

Entourage – funny, but they do feel a bit like they are running in place. If I had to watch any of those people for longer than an hour I might start to loathe them, but as a 30 min comedy quickie its pretty effective.

The Sopranos – Well, what is there to say. The finale is coming up. Better get a mop.

WHAT I’M EXCITED ABOUT THIS SUMMER/FALL
John from Cincinnati – starts June 10. described as a Surf Noir (whatever that means) and some kind of an alien is involved. Could be impenetrable and, as those Brits say, up its own ass. But the writer/director David Milch did Deadwood and I LURVE Deadwood.

Flight of the Conchordes – also from HBO. Looks HILARIOUS.

Bionic Woman – yes yes yes, but it is the same team making this that made the Battlestar Galactica. Jaime Sommers is played by a star from London’s own craptastic “Eastenders” and the villain on BW is played by Starbuck

Pushing Daisies – sounds weird and could be fun.

Heroes spinoffs – I like the original. Chances are I’ll like the spinoff.

Grey’s Anatomy spinoff – Pilot was trash, but I like trash and I really like the main actress.

The Closer – very easy but satisfying show. Sort of like eating a cupcake for dinner.

WHAT CONVINCES ME THE APOCALYPSE IS NIGH
Caveman
– A show based on a commercial intended to be an insightful commentary on racial predjudice. I need a drink.

Kid Nation – CBS’s noble attempt at a reality series based on Lord of the Flies. Yes, really. They put children in a ghost town and they are supposed to form their own society. And we watch. For fun.

Grey’s Anatomy love triangle – I was kind of watching for awhile, but I just cannot believe the short dumpy gay guy – hot lingerie model – saucy zaftig Latina love triangle. Call me when the hilarious banter starts again.

I'm having a Connie moment

Brownonthebeach blind item: WHICH starlet was caught romping on bed during a grooming session?

Monday, May 21, 2007

Welcoming new life, and, er, ugly dresses


This post is like a Very Special After School Special with links.


We welcome Liz's newest to the world. This must be the 21st century since the child was introduced via Dad's blog. No name yet, but will likely soon join Carmen and Cullen in transversing the unexplored wilderness of the 50-inch TV box. Prepare for an avalanche of cuteness!


And this website is funny. And wrong. And funny.


Friday, May 18, 2007

Anne Heche = Supermom


I was going to continue with my special weekly series called "Atrocity Friday" but I thought it might stray dangerously into politics. As my Mom reminded me, I like health insurance. I like food. I like being homeful instead of homeless. So in the absence of my insightful outrage on all things Iraq, I turn instead to Anne Heche.


For those of you not completely up to date on her exploits, she is currently embroiled in an acrimonious divorce in which her clearly insane husband is using the not-so-logical argument that she is too batshit to raise their child, but not whackadoodle enough to pay him $40k a MONTH for support. By way of proof, he provides:


In the papers, Laffoon claims that Anne once didn't put Homer in a car seat, she often cusses in front of the child, and packed school lunches that Homer "did not like." Laffoon added that his prior experience as a nanny and a summer camp counselor justify giving him joint custody.

I dont have children, but I'm pretty sure that if making lunches that a child doesnt like is an actionable offense, then Child Protective Services is about to be overwhelmed. The child is already badly handicapped by a name like Homer Laffoon.

I mean, she IS crazy, but he knew that before he married her.

Then I get this classic email in my inbox.
From Anne Heche's spokesman: It is disappointing that Coley Laffoon has resorted to filing lies with the court because Anne would not cave in to his astronomical monetary demands, including his demand for $45,000 a month in support. For the past several years, the child's father has refused to get a job in order to contribute financially to the child's care.

Ahhh love. Maybe Britney has some relationship tips for Anne.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Not for food pussies

I have a feeling that title is going to attract all the wrong kind of surfers. Oh well.

Anyway, the LAT food section had an excellent beginners guide to Kaiseki yday. Just when you thought I'd stop talking about Japan HA HA! I draw your attention to these paras:

In Kyoto at the end of March, chefs were all obsessed with the same ingredients. Young bamboo, the pale tips that are layered like an artichoke and have a subtle, minerally flavor. Fiddlehead ferns, mountain vegetables and young rapini. Cherry salmon were running, along with tai snapper and needlefish. And of course, the cherry trees were bursting into bloom.

It was also spawning season, and that meant a few ingredients that were a little scarier than cherry blossoms: snapper sperm sacs (which Murata steams over sake and serves with fresh sea cucumber roe), and sea bream ovaries (cooked in a sweet stock, in "one of those classics that never seems to change").

"You go there and what you have to eat — it's some amazing ingredients," Myers says. "A lot of things, that even as a chef you go, 'Whoa, oh my God, I've never seen this before.' " Mashed raw eel innards, for instance. "Bring on the sake!"

Like I said, not for food pussies.

I'm becoming quite fond of the LAT food section. Its more accessible than the NYT food section, but more sophisticated than other local food sections (eg, rarely a recipe that involves a can of condensed mushroom soup). They often have offbeat but fun recipes (cheremoya tart this week) and actually helpful articles for people who want to explore this city's remarkable food landscape. For example, the lead article this week was an indepth look at an LA institution, The Apple Pan, which is known for its burgers. Sample quote:

The burger arrives without a plate. It's wrapped in paper, shoved in a bag and slapped down in front of you on its side, with an edible edge peeking skyward. It's on a rather nondescript bun. "Granddad didn't want a sesame bun," says manager Sunny Sherman. "Knowing him, I figure he didn't think sesame added anything."

The NYT, on the other hand, skews towards the 45- 60 >$250,000/year crowd and DONT YOU KNOW IT. I just think its not that much fun to read. You feel like you've been seated next to the guy at the dinner party who's been EVERYWHERE and done EVERYTHING and feels a moral compulsion to tell you in depth and detail about his fascinating life. The lead this week was an article on the culinary joys of Istria (Croatia, for the uninitiated). Sample quote:

The octopus takes a couple of hours to cook, but the process is fun to watch, and the results are splendid. To make sure we’ve had enough, the chef sends out roasted branzino and griddled sole, both perfectly done. To finish, I’m encouraged to drink grappa with honey. To Italophiles, this all sounds oddly familiar.

Doesnt it just.

Incidentally, I have spent 10 days on the Croatian - excuse me - Istrian coast. Granted, I never spent hours watching anyone cook octopus, but I found the food to be at best bland and at worst a compilation of my food nightmares (plain pasta mixed with deep fried beef and saurkraut anyone?).

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Meanloaf

I attempted an abridged, midweek, 2-person, lowfat all-turkey, I dont have any parsley or celery version of Meanboy's patented Meanloaf last night. Flavor was, as always, good but the Boy called it "gristle-y". Yeesh. I guess either I need to use a higher quality ground turkey (let down by Trader Joe's!) or not cut out the other meats. I reproduce the proper bells and all recipe here for your enjoyment.


MEANLOAF
Serves 6
Be careful not to overknead the meatloaf ingredients; doing so will result in a heavy and dense loaf.
3 slices white bread
1 large carrot, cut into 1/4-inch-thick rounds
1 rib celery, strings peeled, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
1/2 medium yellow onion, roughly chopped
2 cloves garlic, smashed and peeled
1/2 cup fresh flat-leaf parsleyleaves, loosely packed
1/2 cup plus 3 tablespoons ketchup
4 1/2 teaspoons dry mustard
8 ounces ground pork
8 ounces ground veal
8 ounces ground round
2 large eggs, beaten
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1 teaspoon Tabasco Sauce, or to taste
1/2 teaspoon chopped fresh rosemary, plus more needles for sprinkling
2 tablespoons dark-brown sugar
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 small red onion, cut into 1/4 inch-thick rings

1. Preheat oven to 400°. Remove crusts from bread, and place slices in the bowl of a food processor. Process until fine crumbs form, about 10 seconds. Transfer breadcrumbs to a large mixing bowl. Do not substitute dried breadcrumbs in this step, as they will make your meatloaf rubbery.

2. Place carrot, celery, yellow onion, garlic, and parsley in the bowl of the food processor. Process until vegetables have been minced, about 30 seconds, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl once or twice. (Chopping vegetables this way saves time and ensures that vegetables will be small enough to cook through and not be crunchy). Transfer vegetables to bowl with the breadcrumbs.

3. Add 1/2 cup ketchup, 2 teaspoons dry mustard, pork, veal, beef, eggs, salt, pepper, Tabasco, and rosemary. Using your hands, knead the ingredients until thoroughly combined, about 1 minute. The texture should be wet, but tight enough to hold a free-form shape.

4. Set a wire baking rack into an 11-by-17-inch baking pan. Cut a 5-by-11-inch piece of parchment paper, and place over center of rack to prevent meat loaf from falling through. Using your hands, form an elongated loaf covering the parchment.

5. Place the remaining 3 tablespoons ketchup, remaining 2 1/2 teaspoons mustard, and brown sugar in a bowl. Mix until smooth. Using a pastry brush, generously brush the glaze over loaf. Place oil in a medium saucepan set over high heat. When oil is smoking, add red onion. Cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is soft and golden in places. Add 3 tablespoons water, and cook, stirring, until most of the water has evaporated. Transfer onion to a bowl to cool slightly, then sprinkle onion over the meatloaf.

6. Bake 30 minutes, then sprinkle rosemary needles on top. Continue baking loaf until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center of the loaf registers 160°, about 25 minutes more. Let meatloaf cool on rack, 15 minutes.

Monday, May 14, 2007

George Michael is my roommate


Nice weekend in LA, so my new roommate serenaded us on our veranda.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Happy Friday!

Baghdad - Bodies
17 bodies found dumped across Baghdad
BAGHDAD (CNN) -- Seventeen unidentified bodies were found on Friday in Baghdad, the Interior Ministry said.
This brings the number of such corpses found in the capital city this month to 236.


For other hilarity from the Department of Murderous Supervillians, check here. NOTE: this does not count as me writing about politics since I'm just linking to it. Its funny! Dick Cheney=Darth Vader. Funny! Get it?!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Quest me!

My good friend RQ has found himself the butt of Jon Stewart's joke. He's so LUCKY.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Paris fans RIOT! LA on FIRE!

Outraged Paris Hilton fans took to the streets Tuesday night in a conflagration of violence that left acres of valuable urban parkland burned, imprisoned zoo animals inconvenienced, and residents of one of the most expensive neighborhoods in Los Angeles sleeping on the floor of the high school where they filmed "Grease" and "Pretty in Pink" [ed. they couldnt afford a motel?] .

Officials say the fire was started by a homeless person who fell asleep with a cigarette, but that's just what THE MAN wants you to think! Its all part of the vast government conspiracy to imprison the inspirational light of modern society and then cover up the indignation that follows. Hello ABU GHRAIB anyone?
I might be suffering from smoke inhalation. My apartment smells like I've been doing a little indoor spit roasting. Sigh.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

And throw away the key


You can buy the t-shirt to really drive the point home. Joanna - I'm sure you'd be vedddy popular in Atlanta with this fashion statement.


Words of wisdom from my exceedingly intelligent sister:


1) Never go to the grocery store hungry AND pregnant
2) You know you have a toddler when your dinner consists of fish sticks and tater tots
3) Don't grab a pan out of the 425 degree toaster oven without an oven mitt
4) When you drop some bowls (4 nice ones - wedding gifts - and one from IKEA) on the faux wood floor, the nice ones shatter into a million pieces and the $1.50 one from IKEA doesn't even scratch



Monday, May 7, 2007

Taquitopalooza


Happy Belated Cinco de Mayo. Had some friends over on Saturday for margaritas and taquitos to celebrate my favorite carb holiday. You can always count on my good friend, Trader Jose, in a pinch. Sadly, in my surfing for this photo, I found that there is someone who loves taquitos in an entirely unhealthy way.

After a truly dreadful week at work, the boy and I wanted to go out Friday. Its been weeks WEEKS since we had soba, so the choice was clear. We decided to try a new place in town called Gonpachi. Owned by a Japanese conglomerate, they spent $20 million to send over 300-year old houses from Japan to build the place in traditional fashion. Reportedly not a nail was used in the entire restaurant. Its a series of private tables and booths surrounding a giant indoor grill and an outdoor garden with a little glass-enclosed booth for the soba chef. We had a series of little grilled dishes - the highlights were the grilled asparagus with sweet miso and shitake mushrooms stuffed with minced chicken. Next we had hot soba with tempura - truly extraordinary with a richer broth than I remembered from Japan. We then had to order some more vegetable tempura, also very nice. Lastly there was sushi. There's always sushi. The LAT review said the sushi was just so-so, but we found it among the best we've had in LA. And last, but most certainly not least, I had 2 different glasses of sake that were brewed especially for Gonpachi. Light! Dry! Flowery! No sulfites! No hangover! I -heart- sake.

On the way home we stopped at celeb fave Boule for sorbet: yuzu and apricot lavender.



Friday, May 4, 2007

Friday Miscellania: My Weird Rose



That sounds vaguely NSFW, but its entirely non-pornographic I assure you. I have a rose of an odd purple-lavender-grey color in my garden and its freaking me out. See above. Frightening, isnt it?


Further sign of the coming apocalypse. See below. If you want to bid on ebay for it, click here.




Do you think this will kill the neighborhood possum?


If it doesnt, then the Sanjaya locket definitely will.



Thursday, May 3, 2007

Concrete is beautiful


The LA obsession with all things new and beautiful extends very much to architecture. Not in a good way.

The visitors and I took a self-guided architectural tour of LA last weekend that basically took in the more notable Frank Lloyd Wright and Neutra houses in my neighborhood. There are 3 major FLW houses in the Hollywood/Silver Lake/Los Feliz area: the Hollyhock House, The Ennis Brown House, and the Freeman House. All are falling to bits. The Ennis House commands views of LA that any Hollywood mogul would pay dearly for...in fact I think it is owned by Joel Silver. Its been used as a location in movies like Blade Runner and, er, the Replacement Killers, but has been seriously damaged by rain erosion and in the 1995 Northridge Earthquake. It is a mess. I found this quote of his, which must have come before he built the Ennis house:
No house should ever be on a hill or on anything. It should be of the hill.
Belonging to it. Hill and house should live together each the happier for the
other.
Anyway, I wont drone on because you can click on the links above to learn more about the locations. I just thought it was a shame that all of these major architectural landmarks are being left to molder in a town as wealthy as LA. I'm not sure why this surprises me.
Still in food recovery after my blowout with the visitors so not much to report. I do have a new favorite song: Hide Your Heart Away by Lewis Taylor. That's all.