I'm writing for Epicurious again!

Epicurious
I am very happy to be writing for the Epicurious blog, Epilog again. I'm writing twice a week, and will be sharing some posts on intriguing flavor combinations. I hope you will check out my posts and please do leave comments and tell me what you think of my combos and how you would suggest using them. My first post is on the combination of rhubarb, cinnamon and rosewater. Coincidentally, the New York Times published a story about rosewater just yesterday.

I've been very busy lately writing posts for Epilog and for Amy & Amy Between Bites as well as pieces for Cheers magazine and Gastronomica, so hopefully that explains why it's been a little quiet around here lately. I am traveling quite a bit this month, but hope to post here again soon....

cheers,

Amy

SHRIMP BIRYANI PRAWN INDIAN GOAN RECIPES VIDEO YouTube VIDEOGULP !

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQ4b8dphVYAendofvid
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SHRIMP BIRYANI PRAWN INDIAN GOAN RECIPES VIDEO YouTube VIDEOGULP !

GULP - SHRIMP BIRYANI PRAWN INDIAN GOAN RECIPES VIDEO

Selection YouTube video Videogulp !
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No Photo du Jour

My seven month old laptop has been sent out for repair. They say it will be back in a week.
However, this is France...and almost Christmas...then New Year's...

I've got my fingers crossed.

Photo du Jour - Frog's Legs


Yep, I've now eaten frog's legs.
They're pretty good sautéed in butter, with lots of garlic and parsley. Then again, so are most things.

Who else has tried them?

Berry Berry Good: Lasagna Recipe


When I lived in Italy I especially looked forward to holiday meals. For every holiday and every family in Italy there is a special dish to savor. One of my favorite recipes was one I learned to make while spending Christmas with some friends in Verona. It was a delicious eggplant lasagna, very different from any other lasagna I had ever had. I ate so much of it on that Christmas eve, I just couldn't get enough of it. To this day, this is the best lasagna I've ever eaten or ever made.

Eggplant lasagna, for one thing, eggplant! Who puts eggplant in lasagna? And then the sauce, it was a mixture of a tomato sauce and a bechamel sauce. As for cheese, well a sprinkling of parmesan was about it--no ricotta, no mozzarella. The noodles were thin, probably homemade, not the thick curly kind.

Eggplant is one of my favorite vegetables, except that it's not really a vegetable. Eggplant is actually a fruit, and a berry at that. I love it's meatiness. It's tremendously versatile; you can steam it, broil it, bake it or fry it. Found in many Asian, Latin American and Mediterranean recipes, it is adaptable as an ingredient to almost anything, even lasagna. There are several types of eggplants that come in different sizes and shapes but the most common one I use is the Italian style pictured above, which grows quite large.

By salting slices of eggplant and letting them drain, you can collapse the cell walls and make the eggplant even more dense and meaty. But if you like soft and light, don't salt it and cook it in a way that will not absorb oil such as steaming or baking.

I have made some changes to this recipe, but it's very similar to how I remember having had it the first time. It remains a version of lasagna I have never encountered in any cookbook or restaurant. It is a delicate lasagna, rich but all the layers are thin. Though traditionally served at Christmas, it's not something I save for special occasions, but eat year round.

Eggplant Lasagna
serves 4

1 large eggplant
olive oil
9-12 boiled lasagna noodles, use the thinnest kind you can find (enough for a 9 x 13 inch baking dish)
3 1/2 - 4 Cups tomato sauce, high quality jar sauce* is fine, homemade is better, my sauce recipe can be found here
3/4 Cup grated Parmesan cheese

2 Cups milk
2 Tablespoon flour
2 Tablespoon butter
pinch nutmeg
salt and pepper to taste

Cut eggplant lengthwise into 1/4 inch slices, salt them and lay flat to drain. After 30 minutes, drain and rinse the slices. Pat the slices dry, then brush with olive oil and broil until cooked through and slightly brown, watching to make sure they don't burn.

In a saucepan melt butter and add flour, stir with a whisk until smooth and bubbly and golden but not brown. Add the milk, whisking to prevent lumps and cook until slightly thickened. Season with salt, pepper and a pinch of nutmeg.

Spread the baking dish with sauce, then noodles, top with another layer of tomato sauce, then eggplant, then bechamel sauce, then a sprinkling of cheese. Repeat layers of noodles, tomato sauce, eggplant, bechanchel and cheese, until all ingredients are used (top last layer with bechamel and parmesan). Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes before serving.

*In a pinch, I prefer Classico Spicy Red Pepper

Enjoy!

A second shot

I’ve got nothing against fall. Really, it’s just fine. It’s plums and pumpkins and leaves changing color and apple cider and all that. The problem is that it paves the way for winter. The way I see it, fall is sort of like the butler in an English novel, and winter is the shadowy, black-clad, slightly deranged visitor at the gate. Fall, being very polite and professional, escorts Winter into the

Why do YOU bake, Irvin Lin?