Posts Tagged gourmet lifestyle

Teaser Alert: So Many Topics…Enjoy a Doodle

As we wind out the week with the holiday most people have been eagerly awaiting for over 11 1/2 months, it’s time to get reflective. We have covered so many subjects, and there have been so many changes in the food universe during the past year. Some, better than others. Some, unfulfilled, but that’s the name of the game: Life.webersmoker077924081576lg

Now it’s time to think about wine and beer, table settings, and special foods. For many it’s a time to bundle up as the cold winds overcome the limited hours of sunshine. In the final rush of the week as we move forward to a business not as usual weekend, let us take a moment to reflect and look forward to next week when we revisit the buttons that drove us into a wild frenzy during the past year.

Yes, a review is coming and a look forward as we end the year.

Stay dry and warm and enjoy a year of doodles.

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Popsicles and More-

I know it feels like winter is nudging us to bundle up, but some food trends are seasonless. As we noted with the recent first look at food and beverage trends, some ideas are follow-ups to last year’s scouting reports. Take popsicles, for instance, although just saying the word sends a chill down my bundled up body, we saw grocers and restaurants play with the concept with all types of creative flavors. Let’s continue with the Baum & Whiteman trend list and see their thoughts for this coming year.

Popsicles going global and artisan–and what it means. We have to give the company credit for talking about this in their 2008 trend report even though we didn’t see the concept move from niche market space until this past year with an assortment of fruit-filled Mexican icepops (paletas) in fun flavors. So what’s next? They predict that flavors will continue to intensify just as cocktails did this year and that more of these specialty pop shops will appear as they introduce customers to more flavors with texture.paletas-su-682708-l

Making Customers Unwelcome. That’s a strange category for a company whose business depends on helping restaurants thrive. Yet we’ve already seen signs of this trend with restaurants accepting reservations with a time limit as in “we have another party that needs that table within an hour and a half.” Or the corollary, the no reservation policy. New York was always the home of the No Credit Card sign, but that trend has proliferated as has the expanded wine by the glass list at skyrocketed prices.

How Does Your Garden Grow, Mrs. Obama? Good question as First Lady Michelle Obama has made us all more farm market conscious and chefs have joined the grow your own concept, but many fast food restaurants translated healthy with using fresh foods but driving up the calorie count with ingredients such as gobs of cheese. Expect to see more chef gardens, more chefs helping in the schools, and an even greater emphasis on local. It seems no matter where you travel, you see signs asking customers to support local growers and businesses. A smart move.

Breakfast All the Time.  When the economy was at its lowest levels, the food treat was breakfast food and breakfast business boomed. More restaurants expanded breakfast menus and all-day breakfast became more prevalent. Now, Baum and Whiteman believe we’ll see certain foods jump to a more mainstream position such as soft, slow-cooked eggs. This is an opportunity for high-end restaurants to skip the sauce and top the expensive dish with an egg which oozes its own sauce.

Grits. They say grits will “leap from a morning food to an all-purpose starch.” Not only are we already seeing more grits on menus, we see restaurants such as Bubby’s in New York tout where their special grits come from (South Carolina). The consultants believe that the Southern food influence will spread and they even speculate that shrimp and grits will become the food of the year!

Other trends they note are some we have already seen: A rise in gluten-free foods, more healthy menus that denote less sodium or no high fructose corn syrup. They call this category “free-from” foods. So many more concepts. Here’s a little teaser:

Wife-swapping. Check back to find out how Baum and Whiteman relate that category to restaurants!

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Unwelcome Company: Disrespectful Houseguests

It was just one of those weekends, one of those end-of-the season market excursion weekends. Trying to eke out the best and possibly last of the season’s bounty may have done me in. Two stops and still disappointing looking tomatoes. I had one more stop in mind, after all a menu beckoned. Let me jump to the end of the quest; maybe I’ll let you skip the middle, the annoying part.

None of the produce fared well. Remember this is the end of the tale. Within about a half an hour of unpacking and putting the kitchen in order, I noticed one very tiny flying thing. No, not one–wait they were everywhere. I had brought home the enemy: The Fruit Fly and his extended family which was increasing and multiplying by the second. I was devastated.

I know I have shared my general bug opinions before or as Woody Allen so eloquently stated, “I am at two with nature.” Things that fly belong outside. My house, especially my kitchen, is off-limits to the insect world. They must not have gotten the memo! They were everywhere.

Since I do not believe in small, tactical nuclear weapons, I resorted to the next level of defense. I quickly grabbed every item that looked safe and free of the fliers and popped them into the refrigerator. The tomato, which I suspected was the carrier as the guys were flying all around the section at the stand, did not survive such a decision. Its fate was sealed as were the bananas and the two-tier wire basket that had for such a short time housed the army. I tossed the bananas and the tomato and banished the basket to the driveway. It would learn its fate later.

I smugly returned to the kitchen, but then I learned the true theory of multiplication. They were everywhere, and they were quick. You couldn’t just grab one and be done with it. They were too fast for that. Time to resort to the number one kitchen cure-all: Vinegar. A small bowl, and I thought we would be done with the invasion.

OK, so a few took the bait. The others needed a few days without any food on display. They gave up; surrendered their position to a greater force: ME or maybe it was just the luck of time.

Meanwhile, the basket has been cleansed. I know it will make a return visit to my kitchen. Fruit just looks great on display; so inviting. The market season may have ended for me this past weekend. OK, maybe I’ll grab a pumpkin or two, but the fruit flies were too numerous and omnipresent to let me enjoy my purchases. Cold apples taste different than those staring at you from the Two-TierFruitBasketJB05counter.

Maybe I’ll just wait til the first frost. We’ll see who wins future matches!

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Let’s Dine: New York City Edition–Under the High Line

As the weather has become more friend than foe, it’s time to join the people walking the High Line. Not quite the Champs Elysee, but the stroll has its own magical air with stops galore to soak up the local meatpacking district vibe. One of its extra special charms are the numerous places to sit and soak up the river views. Flowers and gardens are well tended, and the whole atmosphere makes for an unexpected, pleasurable NY outing! As for dining, there are a full range of options from the early neighborhood pioneers such as Pastis to the newer, more High Line-centered spots.

Try the Standard Grill–that’s a joke. Its popularity preceded its opening, and now diners and hipsters are willing to wait it out or sit in the Biergarten and enjoy being in a large space with plenty of room to party. Dinner reservations in the restaurant itself are hard to get–try 3 weeks a but there’s always the oft chance that someone didn’t show or that you’ll be just as happy at the bar. Try it. Drinks, dining, and vibe: All winners here.

If its nearby Mexican cuisine you’re after then Los Dados stands ready to make your guacamole tableside so you can truly enjoy the fresh tastes and beautiful color of a perfectly ripe avocado. Don’t forget a selection from the Margarita menu which intrigues with its cucumber or blueberry options. Rumor has it that htis restaurant’s increased popularity is directly related to its location across the street from the beginning of the High Line! Makes sense to me.

Thai more your palate pleaser, then head to Sea Thai Restaurant for first-rate Pad Thai and a long list of luscious appetizers and numerous vegetarian options.

As the burger popularity spreads into every neighborhood, this area does not want to be excluded. The latest BR Guest enterprise, Bill’s Bar & Burger is a no-nonsense operation with the real McCoy and its accompanying toppings. Start with the milk shake, and you’ll want to be a regular. Good, immediate food vibe that gets you back into the neighborhood without undue delay.

As you walk off your meal, there are a few places to hop off and see life under the High Line. One major player is Chelsea Market. OK, I know the Market has numerous food selections including excellent sushi at The Lobster Place and unbelievable chocolate choices at Jacques Torres (the fresh Squeezed Lemon is an instant winner), but it’s also a fun place to walk through and explore the various food stalls and talk with the purveyors. A great take-home purchase stop, The Nut Box, will wow you with their delicious dried fruit tastes; try the kiwi, mango, or pineapple slices. You’ll be pleased.pineapple

Time to get back on the High Line.

This is a food blog so lots of foods to digest. Enjoy the walk.

Bon appetit!

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A Good Chef

Sure there are plenty of one-dimensional chefs, those masters who stay within a context, who are known for one type of food and continue to produce that particular style. Then there are the expanders, the chefs who have succeeded at one type of cooking and expand to another type, whether a cousin of the first or a complete new branch of cooking genealogy.

Sometimes the latter shift is one of economics as when a top-tier, aka, multi-course, high-end specialist, decides there is another opportunity in the marketplace. Everyone gains as the second outreach may mean less expensive food but one that still maintains the high culinary standards of the top tier,  dollar-sized experience.

The two-tiered chef has become commonplace as in having established himself in a high-end restaurant which customers view as a destination for special occasions and then a less expensive dining spot, more of a bistro, that regulars enjoy for weekly or multi-month visits. That pattern has helped chefs such as Michel Richard and Thomas Keller, (to name a few) establish themselves at multiple price points, never ignoring their ability and talent to cook at all levels. Or there’s a master like Jose Andres who introduced small plates (Jaleo) to Washington, DC and expanded his empire upward to multiple concepts at multiple price points, think Bazaar in LA or MiniBar in DC.

Occasionally, you run into a chef like Andrew Evans who ran a successful high-end creative, gourmet restaurant. Circumstances dictated the end of that enterprise so he emerged as the master of Thai cuisine, and he again proved himself successful with a completely different worldview. The concept proved too limiting for the community so an about-face reinvention occurred.

Nothing could be more American than the new enterprise: BBQ. Before you scoff and think this to be a step down from someone as talented as Evans, remember that good BBQ does not just magically appear on the plate. It is a product of time and concentration. The sauces tell the story (he has the full range from sweet to killer). Anyway, how can you argue with hot out of the oven cornbread and wonderfully lean, slow-cooked brisket!  His new concept demonstrates talent.

Yes, you can be a multi-tiered master as long as you can cook. If you know what you are doing, it can work. Not everyone can switch concepts so seamlessly and create a business that spells success. For Evans, they’ve all been winners; this one’s a keeper!
thebbqjoint

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More Food Highlights and Trends

The one thing about predictions is that you can never go wrong: It’s just a prediction. You can always hide behind the change and blame barometric pressure as a contributing factor or whatever else comes to mind!

Following on the heels of the just concluded 35th Winter Fancy Food Show in SF, some of the trends that emerged from the large show with over 80,000 products are nothing new to readers of this blog:

Gluten-Free, exotic citrus, coconut, good-for-you foods, and nostalgic foods. These are all topics and categories (check the search part of the site) we have seen evolve over the past year. Good to know we are on the right track!

The National Restaurant Association just released its Industry Forecast which has a more upbeat tone than last year with an anticipated increase of  2.5 percent in sales spending. Everyone in the industry has his fingers crossed for that to occur. Some other items of interest include:

–A greater emphasis on locally sourced food, sustainability, health, and nutrition will be the top trends on restaurant menus this year. Individuals say they are more focused on eating healthy in restaurants than they were even two years ago.whatshot8_thumb

–More restaurants are stepping up their efforts to go green and 4 in 10 consumers say they choose restaurants based on their conservation practices.

Ethnic cuisines and flavors continue as a hot menu trend including regional ethnic cuisine and fusion cuisine. Interesting to watch the fusion idea which has come and gone any number of times! As for ethnic menus, they may also qualify as a more affordable price decision. I believe, price and value will continue to permeate much of our decision-making.

No matter which trend list jumps to the top of the pile, the most important takeaway is that diners are more savvy in terms of what they look for when dining out. Many arrive at restaurants after they have read reviews and studied the menu.

Expectations are high. The diner wants value and the restaurants need to focus.

That’s how tables get full and the buzz stays positive.

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Food News Round Up

A week has so many items of interest, newsworthy pieces that somehow skip thru the blog cracks. Each week ends with a larger pile of possibilities. Here’s this week’s Round Up:

The BPA controversy continues. Remember not that long ago the FDA said plastic containers that still held BPA were OK. The news was a little iffy for many people and they went out and bought BPA-free containers. Stores heard the cry and increased their supply of BPA-free water bottles and assorted sized food containers. They were able to charge a little more, OK, make that a lot more, as they were free of the dreaded, uncertain BPA. Now the FDA has new words on this topic. They are urging greater caution. Here is their most recent statement.

Chefs who are hired to create a space need to listen to their bosses. They will not survive if they are out on the solo creative limb. See Fabio Trabocchi, one of my favorite chef geniuses, but he did not hear the words spoken and unspoken by the regulars at The Four Seasons New York. He could not man the space and just follow his heart. He had to follow what management wanted; in other words, the same Four Seasons type menu that has been filling the space for years. He was not given a restaurant to make his own as when he created Maestro at The Ritz-Carlton Tysons Corner. He had to conform and give the Four Seasons guests what they expected: Nothing New. He was ousted this week. January is not a good month for him!

Tom Colicchio of New York restaurant fame but more recently Bravo’s Top Chef has tried to make and remake his restaurants into more affordable destinations. He had started to cook again and not just be a celebrity chef  (Tom: Tuesday Dinner was his first attempt). His Craftsteak was always a step ahead of the menu mavens, but the concept seemed too expensive for those just looking for a steak. Now he’s ready to showcase Colicchio & Sons in that space. More of a relaxed, less expensive, fun vibe with a focus on more local purveyors.

Restaurant Weeks have once again proven popular and convincing as many restaurants decided a single seasonal week is not enough. Business has been too good so in various locations throughout the country, a sizable list of restaurants are turning the one-week promotion into a longer lasting, table-filling affair. Sububran restaurants have banded together and decided they, too, could offer their own week or multi-week promotions. (Bethesda-Chevy Chase Restaurant Week).

–More Gluten-Free products hit the market. How about Risotto Chips from the folks that sell Bagel Crisps. Smart move into an ever-growing category of G-F free snacks. Arborio rice now has found a home in 3 distinct rice chip flavors: Spicy marinara, Parmesan & roasted garlic, and sea salt, the new darling of the scoopable chip industry.image_risotto

–Today is the first day of the West Coast version of the Specialty Food  Show, the Winter Fancy Food Show in SF. How about a little chocolate water? The Metromint folks have a new drink: ChocolateMint Water (zero calories, just essence of mint and  chocolate). Just when you thought you had tried every possible flavored water. More from this show later.

So many stories. SO much news.

Enjoy your Sunday with its Starbucks newspaper insert: All-day oatmeal and hot panini $1 off coupon (good til March 8th).

See what I mean: Hard to stop telling you about the news you need to know!

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Love is in the Air: One Month Warning

At least merchants who believe in fairy tales have their windows and aisles all gussied up for an event that is four weeks from today. OK, don’t panic. The all-American lovefest, commonly known as Valentine’s Day, has become a major marketing opportunity for retail, grocers, and restaurants. Also anybody else you can think of, like those little Girl Scouts who are already out hawking their yummy cookies.

Besides the giant heart-shaped boxes of candy, this is the year you might consider designing your own specialized candy bar for your love. The German company Chocri has figured out that Americans, too, have a sweet tooth and are offering us the opportunity to personalize a chocolate gift with Fair Trade, organic, Belgium chocolate. This has real possibilities, especially the Marzipan rose!marzipan

There’s also time to go the personalized M&M route, and the almost limitless array of other candies already dolled up in special V-Day boxes. Sweet choices.

Besides chocolate, which I have few complaints about unless it is milk chocolate rather than higher concentrations of cocoa, there are other wonderful food and beverage options. How about coffee or tea? Plenty of those already packaged up and ready to go. Don’t forget wine–so many choices. So many winning opportunities: Maybe this is the time of the year to think of a wine club, a lovely possibility!

Or just purchase a special wine for the final touch to a beautiful evening. How about a Late Harvest Riesling or a true Ice Wine to warm your spirit.

So many wonderful food choices for a special Valentine’s Day.

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The Decade of Food and Wine

We’ve made lists and talked trends of what 2010 will look like, but what about a look at the decade we’re getting ready to close? It’s been an interesting 10!

We’ve gone from being super flush to barely scraping by. Restaurants that once announced no reservations with the egregious term “fully committed” are now more than eager to assist with alternate dates and suggested times. Wine lists got a big workout in the middle of the decade as many top labels, aka big prices, were happily consumed. Consumers were making money; restaurants were thriving, and then BOOM. Life as we know it changed.

This was also the decade that:

The farmer became a major player in dining out and shopping at markets. We threw the words “locavore,” food miles,” “farm fresh,” and “CSA” around as important, everyday expressions. They became part of the food vocabulary; they became used and overused.

The term “foodie” became the preferred nomenclature for someone who was interested in all food talk all the time. It became as overused and redundant as locavore.

The chef became a rock star. We became familiar with them and knew them by their 1st names like Tom, Mario, and Bobby. Sure Bravo’s ”Top Chef “and the proliferation of shows on gourmetThe Food Network did not hurt the trend, but chefs started to spread their wings and strut the full peacock walk of master authoritarian. Guests liked dining at chef’s tables, taking cooking lessons from chefs, and just chatting away with the guy, or occasional gal, walking the room and beaming with the guests.

Restaurant rents forced many old standbys to give it up and new restaurants opened out of food carts and food trucks. What was once a phenomena limited in its universality spawned concepts throughout the country for food on the go.

–As for foods, this was the cupcake, frozen yogurt, and burger decade.

–We devoured cookbooks and brought Julia Child back into our homes about the same time as we started stockpiling old issues of Gourmet Magazine which didn’t finish the decade as a magazine but added a hefty weight to the cookbook aisles with its latest 1,000 recipe tome.

-Grocers were no longer hiding behind a few private labels but rushing to show us they could compete with well-known national brands and wow us with better pricing from their much-improved house brands.

Grocers were fighting over terms to indicate how low their prices had gone. We had deals and super deals, coupons that were doubled and eventually tripled, and benefited from a much improved, warmer, hospitable shopping environment.

Wine merchants took consumers from Pauillac to Mendoza. We started drinking our cellars and started paying attention to the many good buys under $10 and under $20. The fancy wine world shifted continents and diners and shoppers were paying attention to smart buys from countries that seldom made wine magazine discussion groups years ago. Wine bars became commonplace.

Coffee became an even bigger buzz than that from its mere caffeine potential. Neighborhood shops faced stiff competition from national players that proliferated multiple corners in major cities. We learned terms like grande and venti and started to request our own specialty lattes. Price was no object; it was a treat, and then…boom. We started to favor a tall fresh-brewed.

It was a decade that stamped its mark in the food world as food became elevated into more than just a meal.

Now we are older and wiser and ready to return to the basics that many say will signify the year ahead.

Time to reflect and watch.

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A Healthy, Everyday Pour

We’ve had a problem in this country believing that Champagne and other sparklers need a special occasion for pouring. Not so. They are wonderful beverages that are without a season and turn any event into a special occasion.

Now there is newly released research that uses the magic word: “health” in its explanation. No longer should the ice bucket be kept in the back of the closet. Bring it out and enjoy.

Improved circulatory benefits are an easy excuse to enjoy a wonderful pour that fits naturally with this season and every day and every other season. All those wonderful heart-healthy benefits from red wine seem to occur with the ultimate event pour.

No need to buy an expensive champagne, but don’t ignore the possibilities of enjoyment from the heart-healthy benefits of this bubbling experience.

Love this kind of news.

Cheers!bucket


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