The Cookbook Critic on Beef Bourguignon


The Cookbook Critic on Beef Bourguignon and the Barefoot Contessa (see picture), with a new recipe:

“A quicker treatment than the classic recipe for beef Bourguignon, which requires a long cooking time. This recipe uses slices of beef filet, which cook up very tender and tasty. The downsides: a 3-pound filet of beef is very expensive, and the recipe didn’t make enough sauce.”


In a totally unrelated story, TMZ reports on actress Kate Bosworth, of Superman Returns, that “Bosworth dined at trendy Hollywood restaurant Magnolia on Saturday with four girlfriends — including pop singer Jewel and their stylist Jessica Paster.”

What they say she ate (bread, water and lettuce) doesn’t sound like it recommends the menu , but you might want to check it out. The story was reported also on Famousipod, and Jeff’s Celebrity Gossip Blog.

Not to gossip, but we certainly wouldn’t mind talking to Kate on TasteTV.

Magnolia is located at 6266½ Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, (323) 467-0660

This blog from the contributors, producers and culinary correspondents at
TasteTV at TasteTV.com

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DV Guru reports about Buy.com and Grouper


DV Guru reports:

Buy.com and Grouper have hooked up to allow users to share, create and upload video product reviews. With this partnership, Buy.com shoppers can create and watch video reviews embedded within the Buy.com website.
With Grouper’s WebCam capture and share feature, recording and uploading video reviews to Buy.com is instantaneous and easy to do, as well as simple to view for anyone interested in learning more about a product.

How-To Video Sites Gaining Traction

An interesting article on StreamingMedia.com by Tim Siglin. We of course at TasteTV believe that we have a very unique approach and video content, but other companies are always interesting to watch.

Tim says “The appearance of UK-based Videojug.com suggests that the appeal of DIY video is growing, but potential investors in such sites would do well to consider three factors before signing the dotted line.”

How-To Video Sites Gaining Traction

NEW PROGRAMS Now on TasteTV

wine FLIGHT: Sexy Red Wines #1

wine FLIGHT takes a close and lingering look
at Six Sexy Red Wines on TasteTV.
Episode 1 of Sexy Red Wines. Read more…

Laderach Swiss Chocolates

Get ready to salivate over Laderach’s
beautiful Swiss chocolates, as presented
by Michael Freeman, of Cocoa Bella Chocolates.
Read more…


Lessons from the Food Critics: 2

Want to know more about what it takes
to be a professional food writer? View our
ongoing series with those in the field. Part
2 of our interview with food editor Jan Newberry.
Read more…



Myth Cafe

What makes the Myth Cafe’s
Brown Bag Lunch such a hot item
(and why do so many feel the same
way about the chef)? Take a look.
Read more…


Troya

Named after the ancient city of
Troy, Troya is a new concept in
an old style: modern Turkish
food in a comfortable setting
Read more…



Marcel et Henri Pate

Do you like pate or rilettes?
If so, you’ll enjoy meeting the head
of the legendary pate makers,
Marcel et Henri. Read more…


Paragon Restaurant SF

Tour the home-cooked gourmet meals,
great wine, and stylish decor at
Paragon Restaurant. Read more…


Emporio Rulli Gran Caffe

Visit the the Italian fresco-inpired
Emporio Rulli Gran Caffe, where
the food, pastries and coffee are
as authentic as in Rome. Read more…



Lessons from the Food Critics: 1

“Lessons from the Food Critics” meets
Jan Newberry, well-known magazine Food Editor,
who talks about what she does in her profession
covering the food industry. Part 1 of 3.
Read more…



Million Dollar Wines at Jardiniere

Sommelier Eugenio Jardim of the famous
Jardiniere restaurant talks with TasteTV
host Susan Jones about five wines that
he highly recommends, and what makes
them great. Read more…



Michel Cluizel’s Single Origin

Michael Freeman of CocoaBella Chocolates
talks about Michel Cluizel’s single
origin chocolates, including his huge,
and hugely popular, “Criolle” cocoa
pod chocolates. Read more…


El Dorado Kitchen

Take a tour of the cool and modern
El Dorado Kitchen & El Dorado Hotel
in Sonoma Valley’s Wine Country.
Read more…


Review: Le Creuset

Food Writer Kim O’Neill reviews
Le Creuset cookware.

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The Art of Menu Writing


While we might not consciously realize it, the enjoyment of a meal involves all five of our senses. The engagement of four of the senses is pretty obvious: taste, smell, touch (aka texture), and sight. But what about the fifth sense, sound? Although not necessarily the front man in a dining experience, sound does play a significant role in the enjoyment of a meal. Let me pose to you a question: Does the way a person describes food have an effect on your perception of a meal? Does it play a key role in determining what you’re going to eat that night? Absolutely.

“I love using adjectives,” a chef friend of mine told me at a party the other night, her eyes giddy with enthusiasm. “I love making my customers’ mouths water with really detailed descriptions of the food.”

When it comes right down to it, chefs are salespeople, and it is their job to seduce you with irresistible descriptions of your forthcoming meal. For example, it would not be in the chef’s (or the food’s) best interest for the seafood special of the day to be described as “salmon with yogurt sauce” when it could instead be billed as “grilled wild salmon wrapped in grape leaves, drizzled with lemon and dill-scented yogurt and finished with sizzling sesame seeds.”

Diners need to be excited about what they’re going to eat. That salmon dish was, in fact, the entrée of a dinner menu I proposed for a client’s dinner party last week. Which description do you think I used when writing the menu? The second one, of course. My client shouted a big, “Yes, sounds delicious!” when she read the menu. After all, who can resist the allure of “sizzling sesame seeds?”

Another effective menu writing technique is stating the provenance of the ingredients. With the desire for sustainable, locally grown agriculture and the rejection of hormone-treated meats, the origin of the meal they are about to eat is vital to many diners. To the joy of many in the food industry, boutique growers and artisans are now household names, and diners seek them out on menus.

This is especially true in San Francisco, where higher end restaurants make it a practice to include the sources of the ingredients in their menus. For example, this week Jardiniere is featuring “Wolfe Ranch Quail with Baby Lettuce, Agridolce Onions and Champagne Grape Salad” as well as “Blossom Bluff Nectarines, Belgian Endive and Prosciutto di Parma Salad with Marcona Almonds, Honey-Thyme Vinaigrette.” Sounds divine. The next time you’re dining out, take a moment to appreciate the crafting of the menu. It will open your eyes to a whole new angle on enjoying a meal.

The Peak of Freshness


Sweet corn is truly one food that can be called uniquely American, and is symbolic the world over for the New World’s bounty. Not only is it a staple of barbecues, picnics and Midwestern summer festivals, but it has become a popular ingredient in many foods, from chilled salads where it adds a sweet pop, to spicy southwestern dishes with it’s sweetness offsetting the heat of hot peppers.

Here in the Midwest, sweet corn is at the peak of it’s season. This weekend, Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, kicks off it’s Sweet Corn Festival, where you can buy cooked and buttered sweet corn by the tote-full for the price of an Extra Value Meal at a fastfood counter. Canneries are bringing it in from the fields by the truckload, and little roadside stands dot the highways and county roads, selling corn for $3 to $4 per dozen ears (alongside their other bounty of melons, tomatoes, cucumbers, onions and peppers, to name a few).

Every family has their own way of cooking corn around here, and mine is no exception! Now, I generally buy my corn from an old timer who sells it on a street corner at my local city park. His farm has been in his family for over 125 years, and they still work the land, harvesting their crop in the morning, and bringing it into town in the afternoon. This farmer grows an especially sweet variety of corn, and like all super sweet varieties, it becomes starchy if overcooked. Here’s my method of cooking sweet corn, modified for the super sweet varieties:

What you’ll need:
6 to twelve ears of the freshest super sweet (aka “Candy Corn”) corn possible, shucked
One large pot (1 1/2 to 2 gallon capacity)

Fill pot 2/3 way with water. Cover and bring to a rapid, rolling boil.

Add shucked corn. Cover. Remove from heat! Let stand covered for 9 to 10 minutes (for traditional varieties of sweet corn, let stand covered for 10 to 12 minutes). That’s it! Your corn should now burst when you bite into it!

Enjoy the summer harvest, and check out your local farmer’s markets!

Eric