Archive for April, 2010
Mario Batali’s Vertical Garden Wall
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We will be back to the recipes shortly, but stumbled upon this tonight and fell in love. Chef Mario Batali and Good Earth Plants with GreenScaped Buildings have constructed an edible garden wall outside of his Pizzeria Mozza restaurant in LA.
Mario says: “Clearly the vertical garden isn’t big enough to really harvest on a regular basis, we’re certainly not sending our produce purveyors home with their tails between their legs, but what for us it represents is a visual image of exactly what we think people should be thinking about. It’s beautiful, I think it looks great, it’s totally green, but what it represents is the idea that we should be greening our society, we should be thinking about ways to be more local, to be more organic, to be more fresh.”
Composed of dandelions, marigolds, geraniums, and 20 different varieties of herbs, the edible vertical wall is self sustaining, and is watered with connected vertical supports. According to Elizabeth Meltz, Director of Food Safety and Sustainability for the Batali / Bastianich Hospitality Group, this is only one of several methods Batali is using to green up his restaurant venues. Others include a bottled water ban, full scale recycling and composting programs, LED rechargeable candles, and energy efficient faucet aerators and kitchen appliances.
Once again Mario, we salute you.
Watch the video here.
Comforting Chicken Parmesan: Jamie Oliver Tells All
Posted by: | CommentsOh how we love Jamie. Let us count the reasons: Celeb chef loaded with talent, check, changing the world, check, gorgeous accent, check. What more could we ask for? Only a comforting home cooked meal that will take less than 20 minutes to prepare.
In this video, Jamie teams up with Mark Bittman from the NYT, serving a very simple and comforting Parmesan Chicken recipe.
Recipe, adapted from the video:
Chef Jamie Oliver’s Chicken Parmesan
Chicken breasts: 1 per person
herb mixture: thyme, rosemary, salt, and lemon zest
Parmesan cheese
prosciutto, thinly sliced
dash of olive oil (x2)
salt
pepper
dash of lemon juice
dash of balsamic vinegar
Lay plastic wrap on a cutting board. Top the chicken breasts with the herb mixture (thyme, rosemary, salt, and lemon zest). Add shredded Parmesan, and top with thinly sliced prosciutto, and wrap with a top layer of the plastic wrap. Smash with a cast iron pan (or fist), imagining someone you’d like to beat up. Heat up a nonstick pan with olive oil, and cook the chicken breast w/cheese and ham, adding salt and pepper as it cooks. Plate, and top with a small dash of lemon juice, olive oil, and balsamic vinegar.
Watching and a fan Jamie’s Food Revolution on Tv? Sign his petition to cast your vote for better school lunches around the world.
Sustainable Fish: An Interview and Recipe From Chef Paul McCabe
Posted by: | CommentsBeing recognized by the James Beard Foundation as a Rising Star of American Cuisine is only one of Chef Paul McCabe’s impressive achievements in the culinary world. He’s also won Golden Sceptre and Golden Baccus awards from the Southern California Restaurant Writers, the Wine Spectator Magazine Award of Excellence, and his restaurant Kitchen 1540 was named the Best Hotel Dining by San Diego City Search, Best New Restaurant by San Diego Magazine, and hailed as Best Restaurant Service by San Diego’s Ranch and Coast Magazine.
Chef Paul McCabe is the executive chef of the gorgeous L’Auberge Del Mar resort and its Kitchen 1540 restaurant, located in the coastal village of Del Mar in San Diego’s North County. Operating with a a farm to table philosophy, his kitchen proudly serves hormone free beef, sustainable seafood, and fresh local produce according to season. We were thrilled to have the opportunity to interview Chef Paul, and he graciously shared a restaurant recipe with us as well.
Savory Tv: We’ve been reading about your international experience in the culinary world, is there any one region or country that is near and dear to your heart outside of the US? Do you bring this influence to the kitchen at 1540?
Chef Paul McCabe: Spain is a great source of inspiration for me. The variety of ingredients and dining options are found no where else on the planet. You can get great tapas at the markets or small restaurants, the best cured meats and cheeses and Spain has more Michelin star restaurants than any other country. Here at Kitchen 1540, our kitchen is grounded in the craft of our industry, guided by principles of sustainability and creatively motivated by modern cooking techniques.
Savory Tv: We know that you choose local, organic, and sustainable ingredients in your cuisine. Sadly not long ago, a proposed ban for Atlantic bluefin tuna was rejected. Our question for you is: how do you feel about chefs serving non sustainable seafood to satisfy consumer demand?
Chef Paul McCabe: Well, who am I to tell other Chefs what to do or what to serve? I am adamantly against serving non sustainable seafood. We work closely with Kanaloa Seafood, a certified sustainable seafood distributor, to ensure that all seafood we order is from a sustainable source. About six months ago we made the decision to remove all Tuna from L’Auberge and Kitchen 1540 menus and have taken a stand to help save this magnificent Fish. I do believe it’s up to the Chefs and restaurants in this country to help educate the public.
Savory Tv: Do you think that restaurants are moving forward in this regard at all, towards responsibly serving sustainable fish on their menus?
Chef Paul McCabe: Yes! But not fast enough…if we want our grandchildren to see and experience this fish then we must act now!
Savory Tv: With summer quickly approaching, which ingredients are you looking forward to working with?
Chef Paul McCabe: Spring is my favorite season but San Diego farmers are growing some amazing produce! I always look forward to the corn, fava beans, heirloom tomatoes and all the incredible stone fruit.
Savory Tv: Thank you for joining us Chef! Have a wonderful Summer.
Clean Seas Hiramasa Crudo
Compressed Fennel, Sake Cured Steelhead Roe, Duck Cracklings
Ingredients
12 oz Clean Seas Hiramasa
1 Cup Kosher Salt
1/4 Cup Sugar
1/4 Coriander Seeds
Fennel Fronds from one bulb of fennel, chopped
4oz Fennel Bulb, Shaved and compressed in a cryovac machine
.5oz Micro Sorel
.5oz Sake Cured Steelhead Roe
2 Smoked Duck Skin, julienned
1/3 Cup Lemon Vinegar
1 Cup Extra Virgin Olive oil
Method
For the Hiramasa:
Clean the Hiramasa filets and set aside in the refrigerator. Mix the salt, sugar, coriander and fennel fronds in a bowl and mix. Cover the Hiramasa with the salt mixture and let cure for 3 hours. Wash the fish under cold water to remove the salt and pat dry.
For the Duck Cracklings:
Place a heavy bottomed sauté pan over medium heat and add the duck skin and cook until crisp, drain and set aside.
For the Vinaigrette:
Mix the vinegar and olive oil and set aside.
Presentation
Slice the Clean Seas Hiramasa in quarter inch pieces and place six on a rectangular plate. Mix the shaved fennel, sorel and some of the vinaigrette in a bowl and season with salt and pepper. Place the fennel salad on top of the fish and add the roe and duck cracklings and serve.



