Author: unrivaledkitch

Focaccina Caprese d’oliva e Rucola

Focaccina Caprese d’oliva e Rucola

So I’ve been going straight back to my Italian roots… well the ones i made for myself that is. I have a very intense love of Italian food. The culture is so romantic and passionate and it really translates into the food. A really luxurious, 

An Evening at The Bazaar

An Evening at The Bazaar

Upon returning from a most wondrous evening of fun, food, and friendship, I have a couple of warm thoughts to share about my evening at one of California’s most elite eateries The Bazaar, cultivated, inspired, and imagined by Chef Jose Andres and the other amazing 

A tasting… of DineLA

A tasting… of DineLA

A tasting… of DineLA
Just a little reminder to all the Los Angeles Foodies out there

Please enjoy LA with a tasting menu.

DineLA

picture property of DINELA website.

I love tasting menu’s…

I even more so loved making tasting menus for people. That was really one of my most cherished and missed moments of being at Cafe Firenze. During that time that i was able to express myself as Executive Chef with my art, taste, and food ingraining the tools and traditions that are so very dear to me with the infinite help of so many amazing people . I was able to show case some of what I knew I could do what I knew I could get away with and what I felt had been for whatever reason oppressed for a long time. I love the process of creating a new menu. Drilling over countless pieces of paper, waiting for that moment when inspiration struck or pushing myself too hard and finally dreaming about just the right combination of things also usually was some time that i was in the walk in freezer and i write down a flavor combination or something that hit me in the face like a ton of bricks. Its such a beautiful creative process.

Customers were so receptive to the food that I created. Tasting menus and weekly specials that were not the typical what do we have to get rid of but instead what was the freshest, seasonal creations i could get my hands on. I still cook this way at home but seeing how they would really light up to the flavor combination, and the process I had explained to them how things came together on the plate. It was one of the most amazing feelings in the world to be able to talk to people and see what they really felt when they saw their plate and the other 6 more after it. I felt as if i could truly paint a meal for each of those people and share in their expereince.

So I invite you, even if you aren’t in a big city or somewhere that is having dineLA. Please once in your life go somewhere you never thought you could afford, try something that was completely outside of what you would of ordered, go with someone who wants to participate in the event, and fully experience a chef of your preference, view of culinary arts.

I’ve spent probably thousands of dollars on tasting menu’s because it teaches me more then i could ever get by reading a cook book. It brings me to life, it shares someones heart with my mind and in return i could have no greater respect and gratitude.

here are a couple of pictures of things I’ve eaten that I’ll always remember… a lot of these are really old…

Grace Salmon Tartar I loved that lotus chip with it everything just melted

Spago Tomato Sorbet  just unbelievable

Nobu oysters… I dream about these oysters…

Tama Tempura some of the best lightest tempura ever and i mean lobster tempura comm’on!

Red O Yellow tail ceviche

If you want to see other pictures of the rest of the food i’ve eatten click on this Fotki link public.fotki.com/Sleepingfishies/cooking-journey/ it has pictures of places I’ve eaten.

I wish I had all my Vegas pictures also. Now that’s a food playground.

Can you tell I have a hardcore passion for fish, seafood, and vegetable? haha

I think knowing what you like also helps when ordering dishes if you go somewhere to eat and just sample off the menu. I always get fish when I go out. I think that its truly a spectacular display of beauty, simplicity, and technique. Fresh Seafood daily is one of the things I miss dearly.

I hope one day. I could make a tasting menu for each one of you… I wonder what would be on the menu… If i had a resturant i’d love to do affordable adventurous tasting menu’s. A girl can dream, i’m working on making all these kinds of dreams into one big reality. One day at a time.

I’ll be headed off to The Bazaar tomorrow night with one of my greatest foodie friends of whom I’ve been an acquaintance with since we were in Kindergarten. She went with me to Red O restaurant in Melrose my interpretation of that menu is located here Red O Interpretation
When I get back from The Bazaar which has been somewhere i’ve been wanting to go to for a very long time by Chef Jose Andres I’ll have some pictures of the meal and a little writing on my experience. Everything is about those few experience we can share with someone who understands. Its like a beautiful painting expect this one vanishes and my taste buds get to rip the benefits.

I’d love to hear if anyone has been anywhere amazing. It doesn’t have to be michelin rated or anything like that,  I love all kinds of food from 10 courses to one taco. I’m always looking for places to eat, please share with me as often as possible. I hope to do be able to do the same with you all.

Happy Eating

Unrivaledkitch

Twitter or Foodbuzz

Some of my own cooking Theory…

Some of my own cooking Theory…

I’ve been cooking a good amount. I mean eating is a priority in my life but cooking is the means to the madness. I haven’t been motivated to write, seeing as it’s just a medium to which I love to get my food out there, 

Salted Almond Cookie Experiments and Almond Joy Cookie

Salted Almond Cookie Experiments and Almond Joy Cookie

You know when you have Chinese food? And they serve you those almond cookies that are really flat kinda shinny on top and have a sliced almond on them? yeah those? Well i had a craving and i thought to myself why the hell not. 

My Most Cherished Tools

My Most Cherished Tools

So I’m sure everyone has their favorite kitchen toys…

The expensive pots, pans, baking sheets, casserole dishes, platters, tins, tools, gadgets, what have…. drawers and drawers of stuff. I have a bunch of stuff as well, a lot unnecessary but I mean they keep coming up with this stuff, and I’m sure most cupboards are busting at the seams, I know mine are. Though I didn’t start the kitchen I currently cook in, if I did I don’t think about ¾ the thing that are in there would be there but you never know when you’ll need mini muffin tins and a nutmeg grinder ( well I do use that often).

There are things in the kitchen I cannot live without and this entry is dedicated to one of my most prized possessions, my knives.

 


I’m excessive with knives, I love them… they really do make a difference, I don’t chop with Global’s but I’ll take one if anyone wants to get me one… I’ll do your chopping for a couple of months. Nothing beats a well taken care of sharp knife, nothing. And it doesn’t need to be the most expensive thing on the planet either. Continuous care of these instruments are vital to your success in the kitchen. I think most people have the hardest time getting in the kitchen because it takes them three hours to finish chopping their vegetables for whatever they were doing and then by the time they figure it all out their over it and won’t try again. I hope this isn’t you but if it is let it be known if you chop continuously, making those mistakes and still patching up that finger and steaming ahead to the next onion or head of cabbage, soon you’ll chop all the things you need in no time flat. Practice makes perfect. I didn’t learn to chop 22 qts of onions without a little crying and a couple of bandages. Same thing applies to anyone.

I remember always loving knives. I know it’s one of those scary things that people kind of double take at me when I talk about but it’s one of my pure obsessions like some chicks love stilettos and purses, I love sharp steal. My collection is not super huge and doesn’t bare the most expensive brand names and they are silent in their success.

The knife shops in Tokyo are probably one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen. I dream about those places and wish that Los Angeles would have somewhere like that. I’d work there on my off time that’s how obsessed I am with knives. I look online all the time but I have to hold something to know how it fits in my palm to really know the extension of what I could do with it.

This is me in Kappabashi buying my sashimi knife, I also bought my vegetable cleaver there but not at this store.

I bought two knives in Japan one is my love a Japanese Sashimi knife Yanagi-ba-bōchō

This is my favorite picture of me for a reason…me and yanagi

And the other knife I bought is a Chinese Vegetable Cleaver. I know I was in Japan and I got a Chinese knife which was also made in America strange I know by that time in the trip money was tight and my sashimi knife was about 100 bucks but still I wanted this knife really badly it was about 25 dollar which was nothing for how much I use it. It’s kind of in between a santoku and the Japanese vegetable cleaver Nakiri bocho which when I have the money I’ll be getting one of those as well but for now I like that the blade is thin and I particularly like the idea of holding a small cleaver to cut vegetables it’s light, the blade is thin, and the handle is wood which is very comfortable for long processes of countless veggie cutting which I do often.

I also bought a pair of metal chop sticks in Japan that are amazing for plating. I’m pretty good with chopsticks seeing as I used them all my life. I used them for garnish work and small precision plating.

(metal chopsticks, vegetable cleaver, yanagi)

Okay down the line… I’ll start at the beginning

I had at home a knife I bought at Ikea, you know that place where they have all that crappy furniture you have to put together yourself and its a big warehouse looking mess. Well I got a knife from there and I’ve been using it a good 5 years. Its always sharp it never lets me down. I love that thing stays with me all the time. Hence my belief in caring for knives instead of buying insanely expensive things.

I bought knives for culinary school to start. I think what they initially wanted me to get 8“ Chef’s knife, steel, boning knife, and paring knife. So I did I bought a starter set at bed bath and beyond with the complete knowing that they weren’t the best knives but I didn’t have money. I had spent about 6000 bucks on school and books so it left me with just getting what I could, bed bath and beyond coupon 20% off you got your knives… They worked out for a little while but as soon as I bought my 1st set and bag, done hook line and sinker. I wanted more always more.

(Sharpening Steel, Ikea 8″ chefs knife, Henckle 8″ Chefs knife, and 7″ Henckle Santoku)

When I started working my collection grew more money, more knives. Soon for my birthday my boss at the time added my santoku (for more info) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santoku. Soon thereafter somewhere along the way my Henckle pairing and boning knife was mixed into too many knives at work and went missing, very upsetting dumb rookie move learn the hard way kind of stuff. I bought new ones and learned the hard way to keep an eye on every piece of equipment I had.


Serrated, boning, utility, and paring

I bought a utility slicer, serrated knife, cleaver, and 12-inch Chef’s Knife from R.H. Forschner/Victorinox (this is my other love child) I love large knives love them and this one was particularly eye opening I used it a lot to chop large items and cut through sides of beef and the skin from parma prosciutto , and R.H. Forschner 10″ Cimeter/Butcher Knife which is another one of those things I felt in my hand and had to have, a good portion of these I bought for my growing love of meat fabrication, necessity, and largely because I just wanted them.

(Cleaver,12-inch Chef’s,10″ Cimeter)

So this is a view of my babies they are taken care of as one of my most loved artifacts of my cooking journey they tell their own stories and have many more stories ahead of them.

Thanks for sharing in my obsessive desire of fine cutlery

What are your favorite Kitchen gadgets?
Osechi-ryori

Osechi-ryori

Happy New Year! I can’t believe its almost 5 days in already. Time really does go by fast. Osechi-Ryori and Kagami mochi I’ve been taking a break from writing but now it feels like I’m good to go. More focused less tired and have that 

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas Everyone and happy holidays for anyone else who isn’t celebrating. I hope every one is sharing these awesome days of happiness with the people you love and the friendships you cherish. I’m so grateful for you all and I hope you have an 

Soft Clove Sprinkled Molasses Gingerbread

Soft Clove Sprinkled Molasses Gingerbread

I think the best thing about cookies is once you have the core ingredients you just bunch together something else you like and you can make another cookie which is also a bad thing because it leads me to having about three million ideas I don’t have all the pictures of everything like i did for the other post… I’m still getting used to photographing everything while I’m cooking… It’ll get better… I hope

Soft Clove Sprinkled Molasses Gingerbread

2 ½ cups of All Purpose flour… Sifted

3 teaspoons ground ginger

1 teaspoon of baking soda

1 teaspoon cinnamon

Tiny pinch of nutmeg if you have it

½ teaspoon clove and some extra for sprinkling

½ teaspoon salt

¼ cup margarine

½ cup butter

½ cup white sugar

½ cup brown sugar

½ teaspoon vanilla

1 egg

½ cup molasses

Extra white sugar for sprinkling

Preheat oven to 350

Sift all dry ingredients together salt, spices, baking soda, and flour set aside

Handmix, standmix, finger mix however you can

Get the butter/margarine, and sugars in the bowl and mix till fluffed up and incorporated

Add 2 tablespoons of water and the molasses and vanilla then add the one egg mix till incorporated

Slowly mix in flour do not over mix batter just till it comes together pulling off of the sides

Now make quarter sized balls with the dough

Place them on ungreased cookie sheets

Three in a row for rows down

Press fingers on top to flatten cookies and sprinkle sugar and clove

Bake at 350 for 8-10 minutes till cookies are lightly golden

Let cool

Enjoy

Coconut white chocolate chip cookie… Here we go

Coconut white chocolate chip cookie… Here we go

Here’s the deal with my cookies… I try and make them so they aren’t crazy sweet these one though are on the sweet side but not too much I found. They have lots of nice texture from the chocolate chips to the toasted coconut on