The Transporter Couch

January 17, 2007

My dad’s unbelievably delicious waffles

Filed under: food — Brian @ 6:46 am

This recipe is called “Sour Cream Waffles” but it is subtitled Flotevafler (the letter O has a diagonal line through it, so I reckon it’s Norwegian).

 Makes 6 waffles

5 eggs                          1/2 cup of sugar

1 c. of flour, sifted          1 t. ground cardamom

1 c. sour cream               4 T. unsalted butter, melted

Beat theeggs and sugar together for 5 to 10 minutes in an electric mixer, until it falls back into the bowl in a lazy ribbon when the beater is lifted out.  With a spatula, gently fold in half the flour, the add the cardamom and sour cream, and finally the other half of the flour.  Gently stir in the melted butter and set the batter aside for ten minutes.

Dad cooks this in a regular American electric waffle iron, but in its origin it was cooked in a Norwegian waffle iron over direct heat.  The traditional accompaniment is a tart jam, and it’s so rich that it scarcely needs syrup or even butter.  It melts in your mouth.  Berry preserves work well.

Losing weight

Filed under: food, philosophy — Brian @ 6:22 am

9 months ago I weighed, on a bad day, 180 pounds.  On the worst day it was 183.  Today I weigh 147 and actually my doctor put his hands on his hips and instructed me to put on five pounds. 

Everyone asks how I did it.  Did I hit the gym?  Did I do the Southbeach?  Did I eliminate all carbs?  Did I eliminate fat?  Did I stick my finger down my throat? 

Long long ago I was watching Julia Child interact with some french chef, perhaps Jacques Pepin.  As long ago as this was it was at the point in her career where she mostly left the cooking to the spryer cooks and herself hovered and guided.  The chef in this case was preparing foie gras, about which I’ve spoken at length.  She admonished the audience that one has to be philosophical about the way one eats, and that even though foie gras is unbelievably delicious, it’s better to savor the experience of the three bites with a glass of Sauternes than to gorge oneself on half a lobe and ruin his evening.  Those words came back to me when I put on a bathing suit last spring and could not stand to look at myself in the mirror.

I cogitated and determined my philosophy would be to eat half of what is put in front of me.  Or to only cook half what I thought I wanted.  Also, little snacks.  A handful of nuts or grapes.  I didn’t quit eating carbs or bread, but I quit eating bread at breakfast except on Sunday omrning when my whole family tends to gather for my dad’s incredible waffles. 

The hard part about this philosophy is that I could have a Big Mac, but I could only eat half of it.  This is hard on a psychological level because you think to yourself, “I paid full price for this, so I should eat it all.”  The philosoph has to overtake te psychology and say, “No, you don’t have to eat it all.”  “But there are starving kids in Africa.”  “So send the other half of your burger to Africa.”  And so the dialogue went.

Even though it’s hard in the moment to toss out the leftover pizza or pasta or even salad, once you get used to doing it, it doesn’t bother you after a while and instead I would take a mean-spiritedly smug gander around the room at other diners intent on cleaning their plates and bitching that now they have to go to the gym.  But the next step is enduring the first five weeks.  In that period, as you train your body that resistance is NOT futile, you don’t see much in the way of results.  On the contrary, your bathroom experiences change (oh I neglected I started drinking the requisite 8 glasses of water a day, too).  I won’t go into the grisly details but when your diet changes, there are consequences. 

And then one day, I don’t remember the date, but about 6 weeks into this new approach, someone said, “you’re losing weight.”  I weighed myself and I had come down to 176.  I was heartened.  Also, this was the beginning of the summer and I started swimming, which meant I was raising my metabolism, but not dreading the exercise; rather, looking forward to it because I love the water.  Also, I was carefully cultivating a rich suntan, not the smelly burned up french fried kind you get in the booth, but the kind you get from careful exposure to the sun. 

Suddenly, my face is thinner, my body’s tighter, my color is golden and the whole philosophy has come to be an effortless endeavor.  One thing that’s odd is my hair, which tends to be wavy (or downright curly when it’s long) became srtaight.  I almost didn’t recognize myself and so I let Julie, who cuts my hair, take some dramatic license.  One day in October I was at my friend’s house listening to his band rehearse and one of the guitarist’s girlfriend (they being ages 21 and 20) got mad because her boyfriend seemed to like his guitar more than her (which I suppose in that moment would be an accurate assessment), so she started acively flirting with me.  She proved to be smart and articulate and effervescent and I enjoyed the conversation.  I asked if he would come out to Lincoln Street with me (a wine bar) so we could continue our conversation in a quiter location and sae told me she couldn’t go in there because she is only 20 years old.  Oh …. then coffee? 

Then the magic moment.  She asked how old I was and before I could say, “40″ she guessed, “28?  29?” 

Oh

MY

GOD

I told her I was 40 and she didn’t believe me.  I assured her it was true and she finally believed me.  Anyway, I’ve known her for a while and she’s fun to hang out with.  She and her boyfriend are exes now and he’s an interesting character, as well, and it’s very interesting to be so in touch with a completely other generation.  They could be my kids.

Then I ran into someone I used to work with and she didn’t recognize me.  She said, “Do you have a brother?  Maybe an older brother?”  I just laughed and told her who I was and she grew alarmed.  “Are you sick?  You don’t LOOK sick but you’re too thin.  You need to gain weight!”  A few days later, having a physical, my own doctor of ten years told me to gain 5 pounds.  Carefully, of course.  He didn’t mean for me to go out and eat nothing but ice cream for a week.  And the holidays were coming so I knew there would be lots of snacking and drinking and parties and blah blah blah, plus Hilda had covered her pool for the fall and winter.  I knew I would gain 5 pounds.  I gained 7.  :-(

Eat half.

Sheepherder’s Delight

Filed under: food — Brian @ 5:50 am

Last night we had for dinner a strange, rustic dish called Sheepherder’s Delight.  Some might call it Shepherd’s Pie but there’s something that distinguishes them from one another.  Shepherd’s pie is a layer of mashed potatoes, a layer of ground lamb cooked with onions and mushrooms and spices, and another layer of mashed potatoes then a sorf of creamy mushroom sauce.  Sheepherder’s delight is more or less the same thing but the potatoes are scalloped and pan-fried and there’s only the one layer on the bottom.  The rest is more or less the same, but it’s topped with bread crumbs.

Either way, as delicious and filling and comforting as it is, it is the nastiest thing to look at.  On the plate it looks, no lie, like dog vomit.  So you just avert your gaze and scarf it down, with beer or a robust red wine.

May 10, 2006

Barometric Anomalies

Filed under: food, memories, today — Brian @ 2:59 am

I was told that when cats “clean their ears,” in other words paw at them, that the weather was going to change. That they have pockets, perhaps, or chambers or something that harbor air or fluid (I guess air is a fluid, actually) that responds to the changes in barometric pressure and annoys them, which is why they are the mythical indicators of the change in weather. If this is true, and there’s no reason for me to utterly doubt it though I do question the source just a twinkle, then my poor cat must be in hell. The pressure rises and falls 19 times a day here (in central Texas) and lately it’s been humid atop all that so not only is Aretha in hell, she’s in hell and moist. Go with that where you will. In all events it’s a dangerous combination.

I ate a Wonder-Roast chicken last night. Not the whole entire thing but MOST of it. It just looked and smelled so good in that little display thingy. It isn’t a Wonder Roast for real, but the local supermarket’s knock-off. And they do a pretty good job but the skin isn’t as crisp as I’d like it. It was good! I ate that and some leftover rice and a pineapple. Eclectic! Yay! What remains of the chicken is a carcass and it will make good soup. But last time I used a fowl carcass to make soup, …… well actually I made a good stock that served me well. Turkey. But this chicken probably doesn’t deserve to be made a part of anything spectacular.

I remember reading a story, possibly in Larousse Gastronomique but I don’t recall, about a cook who had a dozen men show up at his door demanding food and all he had was ONE cow and maybe some carrots or something and he made them a regal meal from soup to dessert. (No nuts) I don’t know if it was a true story or just a tale, but it’s been my beacon when I have a fridge full of leftovers.

Maybe now is as good a time as any to discuss Twice Cooked Adventure Chicken. Not every Friday, but many Fridays, Art and I would get our weekend off to a great start by drinking too much and a component to the kickoff was “Twice Cooked Adventure Chicken.” It wasn’t, as you might think, leftover chicken reheated in an adventurous way. It was always fresh (or freshly purchased) chicken breasts that got cooked in an adventurous way, and twice to afford us more time to drink.

And by “adventurous” I mean that the seasonings were always changing and the coatings were always changing and the experience wasn’t one of cooking to perfection but more like cooking as an opportunity to bond. And as we all know, bonding can be dicey. But it can be beautiful.

We’re grown up and respectable now and we use credit cards and dine out and drink better gin and travel the world and have in-laws in addition to our out-laws and the days of Dark Eyes and Twice Cooked Adventure Chicken are but charming, foggy memories. Is there a lesson here? Probably. But I’m just going to make do with the memory.

April 24, 2006

Rich & Buttery

Filed under: food — Brian @ 6:34 am

Ya know, I know there are lots of reasons why people don’t eat butter. But when something’s billed as “rich and buttery” I want some substancee. Second to nothing, butter is my favorite food. I know it isn’t nutritious and that it’s just fat. But along with salt it is the most prolific, valuable, versatile and useful substance on the planet. And I tend to add butter anyway even if something IS “rich and buttery.” But most of the time things that claiim to be rich and buttery …… aren’t. They’re just bread. Or something.

“Buttery” is a beautiful adjective. Regarding a situation, it means that it’s pleasant. Regarding a personality, it means that someone can work it. Regarding leather it means that it won’t be cheap. Regarding food it means it will taste good. I would consider myself “buttery.” In fact, that’s the best word for me yet.

April 21, 2006

Foie gras

Filed under: food, today — Brian @ 5:18 am

So I had torn apart…… er separated ….. these two lobes of foie gras and decided to do an experiment. Some I just sauteed and ate. The end. I experiemented with some little pear and port dressing that worked ok flavorwise but not texturewise. And some I poached for 30 seconds and that was a disaster. You can’t poach fat without wrapping it up first. What a mess. And some I just mashed up with some butter. And I ate it all. I still have about 1.5 pounds of it though and I think I’ll take it to Jaime at Cuvee and say “do with it as you will and serve it to the staff.” “And me.” The problem with having restaurant quality things is that you need an audience. I don’t have one. And it’s too much for me.

FYI The little pieces I mashed up with the butter…. that’s O M G delish! But you can’t just have THAT. Have it on a cracker or something with a little piece of beef or ham or something atop. Not shellfish. No shrimp or crab. And a small cracker! I hate two-bite crackers! I hate two-bite crackers. A canape should be a one-bite experience. Preferably a glorious one! These canapes with cherry tomatoes and dill feathers that look like miniature drag queens, well they’re lovely in a cookbook photo shoot but they suck as food goes.

OK I think I’m done.

I have this enormous craving for one of Rebecca Rather’s sweetrolls. Each sweetroll contains the following:

1 stick of butter
1 cup of suger
1 tablespoon of flour
raisins
glaze ( aka SUGAR )

there might be other things in there but that’s all I discern with my limited experience.

OK now I really AM done and will proceed to the kitchen.

April 8, 2006

Friday Night

Filed under: Cocktails, food, memories, today — Brian @ 5:43 am

Last night I went with the Cuvee Contingency to the Hill Country Food & Wine Festival Main Event. Actually something is happening today that is the true main event but last night’s affair was a big, sweet party. It was a lot of fun.

We drept our table in a curtain we pilfered from the restaurant andset up beautiful flowers and stylish wine bottles (a double magnum of this, a magnum of that, and a Nebuchadnezzar of that), which left very little serving room, which was the perfect amount of space for our shrimp ceviche on water crackers.

Jordan outdid himself behind the counter! Good kid. Nice kid! It would probably piss him off to hear me call him a kid but I mean he’s a 16 year old young man. And he works. Responsible, forward thinking, kind, polite. He was the “chef” in the chef’s coat and he assembled the wares that Len and I plied to the unassuming masses. On the way over to Austin I had a chance to engage Jordan and he can hold his own. AND AND!!! When we went to Central Market to pick out last minute flowers, he had thoughts! There is, truly, great hope for this boy! I don’t mean he’s swishy! He’s not. Not even remotely. Just, you know, picking out flowers is delicate work that requires confidence and assertiveness and he ….. asserted his opnion. GOOD!

The function was nice. Nice people. Nice crowd. Got to meet Kitty Crider, the food writer for the Austin American Statesman. That was a first. Met lots of people. It’s an expensive venue so you have to be careful. Half the people are in awe and half the people are pretentious. Either way, I can work em. We brought waaay too much food but you never know and it’s good to be prepared.

We were serving this nice little shrimp ceviche on a little cushion of avocado mousse, on water crackers, and with a mango chutney atop. It was nice. It was really popular. And the young woman on one side was seerving vodka and folks on the other side were serving Riesling. It was perfect.

After the event, Len and I went to Cedar Street, which used to be one of my all time favorite hangouts. There were 750 million people there and it wasn’t comfortable. I said to Len the instant we got there, “if we get separated, I’ll meet you RIGHT HERE at 1 AM” but we didn’t get separated. We just sort of huddled. It was that JAM packed. But truth be told we were tired anyway and it was time to come home. Len drove. Thank god.

Then in the alley behind Cuvee, my comeuppance. I decided I’d kick a box, and in the process fell down like a drunk old man. I’m swimming in cardboard at 2 AM and hoping no one saw this happen. I rectify myself just in time. Len came out to examine the commotion but I don’t think he saw me lying on my face in his garbage. Alas! Salvation!

Next Page »