Thursday, July 30, 2009

New York, July 4, 2009
















Here we are again, my annual 4th of July to New York City. This year’s theme was ‘street eats’. I wanted to find the specialties of New York, the best of the best or shall we say trendiest and longest lined places in the city! My friends did great researching and we managed to eat about everything! From Gray Papaya dogs to a more upscale Porchetta Pork Sandwich, it was fun but unhealthy experience. We also hit some really good restaurants.







One of the best trips (eating wise) in a long time, everything was delicious. My favorite by far was Artichoke’s slice of Margarita pizza, I can’t tell you the last time I had a good slice was! And another favorite meal was dinner at a little Italian place called Celeste. We had the freshest Orata (fish) and Pasta Bolognese. The pizza had house made aged Tallegio and Speck to top it all off. Yum, sorry I have no pictures of that. Hope you enjoy the other pics! It was truly an amazing culinary journey of some of New York’s finest!







On day 1, we hit, in this order, by the way, there was 3 of us and a few more along the way:






Porchetta: 1 Pork Sandwich





Artichoke: Slice of Margaherita, Sicilian and Artichoke Spinach





W Hotel: 1 Drink each and bathroom break





Shack Shake: 2 Cheeseburgers and 2 Crinkle Fries





Other Room: 1 drinks each





DGDB (not street eats): Dinner and drinks




Day 2, was not so bad and we BBQ-ed for dinner (later post)




Hummus Place: 2 different kinds of Hummus, 3 grape leaves, 3 falafal balls(best ever)





Gray’s Papaya: 1 hot dog, only 2 bites taken




Day 3, really tapered down, cause this was with 6 other people





Market Place: Brunch





Grom: Varieties of Gelato





Joe’s Pizza: 1 slice, I had one bite





Rick’s Dumplings: 6 Chicken dumplings and 6 Pork Dumplings





Celeste: Dinner

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Asian fused...






















I was craving pot stickers one day and decided to create a recipe of my own . I had to prepare dinner for a friend’s birthday and pork was out of the question due to her dietary restrictions. Ground chicken didn’t sound appealing so I decided to go with turkey. They came out to be just as succulent as pork (after a little mind playing) with the addition of herbs and spices. It’s interesting how you can doctor up ground turkey to mimic anything you it to be. I like it!





I’m working on creating a full proof Tofu cake/burger and threw that into the mix at dinner. I always have a problem with these bad boys holding up, more egg, more rice not sure what the correct ratio is but I’m pretty close. One more time at the ‘lab’ and I’ll post up a recipe.
I tried a concoction of cold Peanut Sesame dressed noodles with swiss chard. That turned out good and this will be added to my repertoire for sure. All and all, a nice light meal for summer time.






Turkey Potstickers
(makes between 30-40)





Ground Turkey 1 lb
Ginger, minced 2 T
Garlic, minced 3 T
Cilantro, chopped 2 T
Soy Sauce ¼ cup
Jalapeno, chopped 1 t
Lime juice 1 T
Green Onions, chopped 2 T
Sesame Oil 2 T
Salt and Pepper
Potsticker wrappers (Square in this case)
Egg for sealing
Chicken Broth




1. Mix all ingredients above together and evenly. After mixing you should taste test to see if you it needs adjusting on seasonings. Usually, I round up a tiny piece and sauté up!
2. Set up potsticker skins and bowl of water. Brush the whipped egg on ends.
3. Take about ½ - 1 T (depending on how big you want to make it) of turkey filling and place on skin.
4. Close by taking one pointed end that meets with opposite pointed end, now pull remaining pointed ends towards each other and squeeze all 4 points gently. It kind of look like an envelope. Hope that makes sense.
5. As you are making these, I would recommend putting the finished potstickers under a damp paper towel so it does not dry up.
6. Heat sauté pan to medium high heat with oil. Place 5-7 potstickers in pan (careful not to overcrowd).
7. Sear for about 30-45 seconds until nice carmelization sets on the bottom of potsticker.
8. Poor about 1 cup of chicken broth into pan and lower to low heat, cover with lid and cook for about 6-8 minutes.
9. Serve immediately with soy sauce or ponzu sauce!





Peanut Sesame Sauce


Peanut Butter 1 cup
Soy Sauce ½ cup
Water ½ cup or more for less creamy sauce
Hoisin Sauce ½ cup
Garlic, minced 1 T
Sesame Oil ¼ cup
Sesame seeds



1. Put all in sauce pan and whisk gently on medium low.
2. Cook for about 4-5 minutes, add water in if you’d like a not so chunky sauce.
3. Dress on noodles and cooked swiss chard, garnish with sesame seeds.