July 2009

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Dead Air

After a steady stream of posts last week, things have been pretty quiet this week on dinewithdanielle…echo, echo, echo.

Since Friday, my family has been staying with Bryce and me and visiting Charleston for the first time.  I’ve been out sightseeing and eating, exploring new beaches, restaurants, and area tours.  It’s been productive and fun, but it hasn’t left me much time or energy to blog.

And tomorrow, Bryce and I are headed for Chapel Hill, where we’re officially vacating our old apartment.  We’ll see a few friends, scrub lots of floors, and have a nostalgic meal or two before we drive back to James Island this weekend.

All signs, then, point to a dull week on the website.  I hope you don’t mind the break! Starting on Monday, check back for a week’s worth of catch-up updates.  And enjoy the last days of July.

On certain summer nights in Charleston, a glow from the city’s west side fills the harbor sky.  Usually, there’s not much to see in that direction: an MUSC commuter lot, the Citadel’s stone buildings, and a run-down housing project.  But when the Riverdogs are in town, their baseball stadium lights up the Ashley River, brightening the drive from James Island into town.

We made that drive on Thursday, lured by $1 student tickets and $1 beers.  Though the box office line stretched across the entryway, we had no trouble parking, and soon we were seated just under the awning on the 3rd base side.  Charlie, the Riverdogs’ mascot, was just around the corner.

Charlie the Riverdog

Unfortunately, the game did not live up to Charlie’s enthusiasm.  The Riverdogs are ranked last in their Single-A league, and they quickly allowed the Hickory Crawdads a commanding 7-1 lead.

Stadium

The game was broken up, luckily, by inter-inning games of The Price is Right and visits from Tony the Peanut Man.  Tony, who wears a shirt bearing his photo and title, also wears a sweetgrass hat with no top.  I’m not sure he sold many peanuts, but he did get plenty of attention.

Tony the Peanut Man

A few innings into the game, the tedium on the field was relieved by approaching action in the sky.  Soon, the stadium lights weren’t the only source illuminating the night!  By the 7th inning, we gave up on the home team and made a run for the car.

stormbrewing

Followed by “Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” we reached our car just in time to avoid a soaking downpour.  I didn’t check the game’s final score, but I can only hope that the coming storm put the ‘Dogs’ out of their misery, too!

On my first two trips to Rio Bertolini’s, I managed to purchase their cavatelli and pizza dough without even seeing them.  We looked at their chalkboard list of options, counted our cash, and chose whatever seemed most enticing.  Last Saturday, though, I could no longer resist trying one of the colorful pastas they display at their booth.

Bertolini's Pasta

Flavored with ingredients such as basil, porcini mushrooms, and squid ink – can you guess which color above is which? – the tiny bundles sell for $1.00 apiece, which works out to about $4.00 per pound.  At that price, who needs the dried grocery store stuff?

With four little nests of cracked pepper fettuccine in hand, Bryce and I headed home to cook Fettuccine with Prosciutto, Peas, and Lemon-Chive Sauce, a recipe I found in the Bon Appetit cookbook.  Because fresh pasta cooks so much faster than dried, it took me less than 15 minutes to prepare.

Pasta with Peas and Prosciutto

Once I’d cut my poor chive plant down to the soil and grated lemon zest, I boiled the peppery pasta.  During the last minute of cooking time, I added frozen baby peas, too; they heat so quickly that they don’t even merit their own pot.  Warmed with a little cream, sliced prosciutto ham, and lemon juice and zest, the pasta and peas were ready to serve.

Pasta with Peas and Prosciutto Plated

I love how you can see the little flecks of black pepper in the noodles, even in such a small picture.

Although I was a bit overzealous with the peas – I used to hate them, now I overcompensate – the dish was an appealing mix of salty, spicy, and creamy.  The fresh fettuccine really ramped up the flavor in an otherwise humble preparation; I could taste the pepper in the pasta dough so distinctly that I didn’t grate any extra over the plate.

With another success from Bertolini’s chalked up, there’s just one thing I can’t decide: next week, should I try their ravioli or their gnocchi?  Opinions are earnestly welcomed!

Once in awhile, I take on a kitchen project that I’m not sure I’m ready for.  This summer, most of those projects have involved making ice cream.  It’s not that operating an ice cream maker is so tough (it’s not).  The problem with creating your own frozen treats is that they often require a temperature-sensitive custard, and the assembly of several different components.  Despite these moderate challenges, I have a hard time resisting glowing descriptions of elaborate desserts.  So for Aaron’s birthday, I set out to make daunting Peach Praline Bombes.

The recipe begins, of course, by calling for fresh peaches.  Sliced and pureed in a food processor, they’re folded into a custard base once it’s off the stove.  Our freestones came from the downtown market.

South Carolina Peaches

Sliced Peaches

Custardwithpeachpuree

While the peach-speckled custard chilled, I assembled a sticky wedge of almond praline.  Made from caramel and nuts, pralines can go from a confectioners’ beauty to a sticky mess in a matter of seconds.  Fortunately, I caught the boiling water and sugar just as they began to turn golden brown; the mixture changed to caramel as I dumped in a handful of toasted almonds.  I quickly upended the entire pot onto a buttered baking sheet, where it hardened into a brittle, amber-hued praline.  Once the cluster cooled, I moved it to the food processor, where it became a fine powder with a few crystals of hardened caramel.

AlmondPraline

After a few hours in the fridge, the peach custard was ready to freeze in the ice cream maker – this, at least, was an easy, low pressure step!  While it whirled about, I made a simple peach syrup by boiling ripe peaches with sugar, reducing their liquids to a jewel-colored concentrate.  I decided, at this point, to speed things up even more by triple-tasking, whipping cream with chilled beaters and folding in the crushed praline.  Luckily, I didn’t screw anything up by overlapping steps.

Praline Cream

With all the components of the Bombes created, I could finally assemble them into a complete dessert.  I spooned a tiny well of ice cream into the bottom of six paper cups, filled each with praline cream, and covered it all over with more ice cream.  I was relieved when I shut the freezer door on them for the night, and glad they could chill for a couple of days before I needed to remove the cups and plate the dessert!  I’d more than fulfilled my quota of quality kitchen time, that day.

AssemblingPeachPralineBombeFreezer

When I did tear the paper from the bombes, though, they were a sight to behold.  I split each mold down the center, then drizzled the plates with peach syrup.  We received lots of compliments on their classic, fresh peaches-and-cream flavor, and even more on their lovely appearance!

Peach Praline Bombe

I would definitely make these bombes again, especially if I needed to serve a sophisticated-looking dessert for a crowd.  If you follow the link to the recipe, though, you’ll see that not everyone agrees they’re worth the trouble; the reviews I saw were unanimously positive, but some posters bemoaned the complexity of assembling the dish. While I can understand their frustration, I also find it a little odd: if you read this tripartite recipe before you started preparing it, wouldn’t you realize you were in for an uphill climb?  I certainly did, but I’m glad I followed through with it.

Like most major cities, Charleston is a socially stratified space with both desirable and dismal places to live, eat, and play.  But it’s also divided along some less common lines.  Tourist favorite or local haunt?  Flood zone or high and dry?  And, for society types, elegant or gaudy?  Old money or new?

In lowcountry lore, Broad Street is the boundary that divides those last two categories; it’s a swath of antique shops, law offices, and banks that cuts horizontally across the lower peninsula.  Anything “South of Broad,” i.e. close to the water and the Battery, has long been considered especially exclusive, while addresses to the North, nice as they may be, are not quite up to social snuff.

What, you might be wondering by now, does all this society section fodder have to do with me?  Well, as usual, the connection is food.  More specifically, it has to do with a great restaurant I recently visited, S.N.O.B.

snobcharleston

S.N.O.B. is the cheeky acronym for Slightly North of Broad, a restaurant that lies – you guessed it – on East Bay Street just above its intersection with Broad Street.  And its attention-getting name, a clever nod to geography and society, accurately describes the experience of a meal there.  S.N.O.B was a great lunch spot, upscale but not stuffy, and stylish without taking itself too seriously.

The restaurant is built into an old, high-ceilinged warehouse space, so its interior feels airy and open.  Tall windows spill light into the brick dining room, which backs right up to a chrome-filled open kitchen.  Though the architecture is dramatic, it’s the little touches that really make an impression at S.N.O.B. Its bar stools are upholstered in green crocodile fabric, aluminum stars dangle from the ceiling, and mismatched chandeliers hang over sections of striped tables.  An entire wall next to the bar is mirrored, then overlaid with wrought iron scrolling.  Modern and spunky, the playful decor could be straight off a TLC design show.

snobdiningroom

While I admired the red lacquered salt and pepper mills on our table, our waiter delivered an order of warm corn bread.  Wrapped in a sweetgrass basket – the specialty of Gullah weavers who live on the surrounding sea islands – it was smooth and buttery, a welcome introduction to our meal.  With good, brewed, iced tea, it kept me satisfied while I undertook the very serious task of choosing an entree from the lunch menu.

I’d describe the list of choices at S.N.O.B. as American Eclectic.  While it nods to Charleston’s Southern culinary traditions, it doesn’t attempt many cutesy riffs on them.  Shrimp and Grits was the only typical tourist bait on a menu enhanced with offerings like a crab salad with basil and sweet peppers, seared local swordfish with yellow tomato coulis, and fried chicken livers. I was surprised to see two standout items- Pad Thai and a Smothered Burrito – on the otherwise unified list, but overall the selection seemed balanced and intuitive.

Torn between the crab salad and a broadly Asian plate of Sesame Crusted Tuna, I asked our waiter for help.  Unfazed, he confidently recommended the tuna, and approved Teresa’s choice of the Grilled Salmon Salad. I continued studying the menu while we waited for our food, already excited about future trips.

My plate, delivered promptly, only heightened that excitement.  It was sectioned into four corners, and each held a component of the dish.  Red-flecked kim chee led to a good-sized portion of sesame tuna, which sat next to a salad of thin-sliced cucumbers.  The dish’s only anomaly, in my mind, occupied the fourth corner; it was a balsamic dressed scattering of arugula, a peppery lettuce that seemed an outlier on the Asian plate.  Teresa’s salmon, accompanied by bright yellow peppers, chunks of feta, and generous slices of avocado, looked just as beautiful.

Aside from medium-well tuna – I’d ordered rare – the dish lived up to our waiter’s praise.  The kim chee was authentically spicy, the cucumbers delicate and vinegary.  It didn’t change my mind, though, about the arugula, which I resisted eating for fear of ruining the taste of miso and wasabi on my palate.  I’d have been happier with bok choi or kohlrabi, for continuity if for no other reason.  Instead of finishing it, I sampled a bite of Teresa’s salmon, which was just about perfect.  The pickled peppers and feta added a welcome tang to the fish, and both were balanced by the savory spinach and avocado.  Tomatoes, orange, and a citrus-shallot dressing gave the dish a bright flavor.  Any more embellishment would’ve been distracting, but as it was, the salad was incredibly well done.

After one visit, I can see why S.N.O.B. has become so popular with locals and visitors alike.  It’s menu and execution aren’t perfect, but their high aims still deliver a satisfying payoff.  Maybe I’m naive about Charleston society, but I’d even wager that a few brave souls from South of Broad have ventured through its doors to see how the other half tastes.  In my opinion, it’s pretty darn good.

I’ve given Paula Deen the tiiiiiiniest bit of a hard time in the past for her frequent use of packaged ingredients.  Relying on canned soup and boxed rice, I think, is usually an exercise in assembling rather than cooking.  However, there are plenty of recipes in The Lady and Sons Savannah Country Cookbook that call for fresh produce and a minimum of what Michael Pollan would call “food products” (which are opposed, he argues, to “real” food).  To give Paula a fair shake, I decided to prepare her recipe for a Pattypan Summer Squash Casserole.

Pattypan squash look like pretty white saucers with ruffled edges.  Though they’re a little harder to peel than their yellow cousins, the crooknecks, they have a similarly delicate texture.  I like to scoop out their inner seeds and pulp as I would when prepping a winter squash variety.

pattypansquash

Simmered and added to onions, garlic, parsley, and egg, the squash looked healthy and appetizing.  But I hesitated for a moment when Paula directed me to add sliced sandwich bread that had been soaked in ice water, then wrung dry.  Mushy in the saute pan, the mixture looked so awful that I didn’t take a single picture.  It was an ugly color between grey and tan, and I was beginning to lose faith in The Lady.

Fortunately for me and Paula, a funny thing happened when I emptied the mixture into a baking dish.  Topped with salt and sauteed bread crumbs  – Paula called for crushed Ritz crackers, but I had to gussy things up just a little bit! – the casserole didn’t look so bad.

readytobake

When the casserole emerged from the oven, it was golden brown and buttery.  With some trepidation, I tried a warm bite.  Of course, it was wonderful!  I’m not sure how it happened, but somehow my stove top ugly duckling became a tasty swan after half an hour in the oven.

squashcasserole

I suppose my surprise serves me right for doubting Paula Deen though, doesn’t it?  The woman is a force of nature, and I’m newly convinced of her talent.  This doesn’t mean I’ll pop open a can of cream of celery soup any time soon, but I will be returning to the her cookbook whenever I’m craving some buttery goodness.

When Bryce’s cousin Aaron came to visit us on his birthday, we wanted to cook a festive dinner to help him celebrate.  He’s a big fan of meat fired on the grill, so we decided to make Porterhouse steaks and skewered local shrimp out on the patio.  Served with cucumber-vidalia salad, brown-buttered corn with basil, and roasted market potatoes, the combination was exactly right for a birthday feast.  Rather than detail the preparation of so much food, I thought I’d share just a few pictures and observations from the fun night.

cucumberscucumbersalad

Because it keeps well for several hours, I mixed the cucumber-vidalia salad early in the afternoon.  Following Susan Spicer’s recommendation, I sprinkled the cucumbers with salt and allowed them to drain for a few minutes before mixing them with thinly sliced sweet onions, sour cream, dill, and champagne vinegar.  The salt draws excess water from the vegetables, keeping them from becoming soggy in the refrigerator.

I also cut the potatoes early, which you can do as long as you keep them soaked in water after you’ve sliced them.  This way, they don’t dry out and look chalky.  Some of the potatoes, which I got from Rita’s Roots, were so small that I opted to leave them whole; if the whole batch is relatively uniform, they cook more evenly.

potatoes

Once Aaron and his wife Katie arrived, Bryce heated our tiny patio grill and fixed everyone welcome margaritas (more on those, later!).  I kept busy inside by patting crushed peppercorns and kosher salt onto the steaks, and threading the shrimp – marinated in oil, garlic, and salt – onto soaked bamboo skewers.

steaks

I’d deveined and cut straight lines down the back of each shrimp earlier in the day, but I did leave the shells just hanging on for grilling.  While it makes them a bit messier to eat, the shells insulate the delicate meat from the grill’s fire.

shrimp

The best thing about the shrimp was the sauce I slid them into as soon as they’d finished cooking on the grill.  Inspired by New Orleans-style barbecue, it was rich with butter, chili pepper, black pepper, Worcestershire, and lemon juice.  You can find the recipe for it here.

shrimpsauce

Because of the prep work we’d done in the afternoon, dinner actually came together pretty quickly.  So quickly, in fact, that I just snapped this offhand shot of my plate before carrying it to the table.

plate

I don’t think it does our big meal justice, but hopefully you get the idea.

As much as I loved this meal, the dessert we made was really the star of the night’s show!  Because it was such a production, though, it gets its very own post.  Stay tuned for peachy goodness!

Three years ago, I tried my hand at making pizza from scratch.  The sauce and toppings were sweet and delcious, but the dough just wasn’t quite right.  It was soft instead of crisp, and unappealingly dense. Considered with a few other experiences, that attempt convinced me that yeast breads might be my kitchen kryptonite.  Since then, our pizzas have been strictly of the store bought variety.

I hadn’t thought much about this situation, though, until Saturday, when Bryce discovered that Rio Bertolini’s sells their fresh pizza dough at the Farmers’ Market.  He picked up a bag of whole wheat crust, then we walked a few steps to Kennerty Farms for gorgeous tomatoes.  With fresh mozzarella and our basil plant waiting at home, we had all we needed for an impromptu Pizza Margherita!

pizzadough

Following a recipe from the Gourmet cookbook, I peeled our egg-shaped tomatoes to make a skillet sauce.  As with peaches, I cut little X’s in the ends of the tomatoes, then dropped them into boiling water for a few seconds.  Chopped, then simmered with olive oil and salt, they made a simple and fresh-tasting sauce.

beautifultomatospeelingtomatoesfreshtomatosauce

Because I don’t have a pizza stone, I decided to make a rectangular pizza and use a plain old baking sheet.  I initially stretched the dough by turning it like a steering wheel, but had to finish it on the sheet.  Unlike my own attempts, the dough was elastic and easily shaped.

rectangularpizzadoug

The only other obstacle we encountered was a missing box grater, which was still packed away from our recent move.  Bryce suggested using a potato ricer in its place, and it worked surprisingly well on the soft mozzarella!

ricingmozzarella

Baked in a hot oven for under ten minutes, the pizza was exactly what a simple Marghertia should be!  We scattered basil leaves over the hot cheese and sauce, and waited impatiently for it to cool slightly.

pizzamargharita

The pizza was so good that it made me contemplate giving dough-making another shot!  Until I get around to that, though, we’ll continue our visits to the consistently-impressive Rio Bertolini’s.  I think our pizza drought is officially over.

Tonight, I won’t be home to post a detailed update, because I’m going to Coast, a seafood restaurant downtown!  I’ve got my little camera lens on, and I’m ready for a big time out.  Soon, I’ll tell you all about it.  Happy Saturday!

When tourists in Charleston aren’t swarming the streets of the city’s market or visiting nearby historic sites, they occasionally unbuckle their fanny packs long enough to head for one of the area’s beaches.  Folly Beach and the Isle of Palms are both within 15 minutes of downtown, and both offer fairly wide stretches of sand and warm waves.  Bryce and I found out last Saturday, though, when we ventured to the IOP after several trips to Folly, that the two could hardly be more different.

Folly is a laid-back place where regulars park their cars on the side of the road before relaxing on the beach with bocce sets and coolers of beer.  A hot spot for kite boarders and surfers, its lone volleyball net is policed by leather-skinned locals looking for a good match.  Though it can get crowded on weekends, there’s always room to move at Folly, especially away from it’s main attraction, a new county pier.

follypier

Unless they’re staying at the Holiday Inn, vacationers at Folly likely come from the rows of nearby cottages, a surprising number of which house full time residents.  They spill onto the beach in the mornings, then hit Center Street for lunch at local restaurants like Taco Boy (fantastic!) and Rita’s.  While the food at most of these places is relatively inventive – egg rolls with barbecue and collard greens at The Porch?! -  the atmosphere is decidedly casual, so flip-flops and board shorts prevail.

Follypier1

If Folly is your hemp-wearing hippie cousin, the Isle of Palms is her disapproving traditionalist of a mother.

Lined mostly by condominium complexes, the beach at IOP fills up fast on weekends.  Once they’ve paid to park in city-run lots – never on the roadside, here – visitors scramble to find a few inches of sand along the public beach.  Umbrellas overwhelm its landscape, and oiled women in leopard print bikinis lounge beneath them.  Though coolers abound here, too, they’re full of water and soft drinks; bringing alcohol onto the beach can carry a hefty fine.

crowdedbeach

Despite these serious drawbacks – rules, rules, rules! – the IOP does have its perks.  Its well-maintained volleyball courts draw seriously talented players to their nets, providing great entertainment on sunny days.  Even the AVP sends competitors to town; they serve and spike at the Windjammer, a disappointingly smoky restaurant and bar with a professional net out back.

The IOP is also home to Coconut Joes, a mostly open air restaurant with great beach views from its third story deck.  Its food isn’t worth mentioning – well, the coleslaw was okay – but it boasts live music most evenings and plenty of space to spread out.

coconutjoescoconutjoesview

The nice thing about these restaurants, compared to all but one at Folly, is that they’re directly on the beach.  Narrow boardwalks lead from the sand to their doors, so there’s never a need to cross hot asphalt in search of a sandwich.  Still, the single oceanfront restaurant at Folly does sell cold beer and mixed drinks that can be taken right back to the beach towels.  You can probably guess which convenience I prefer.

owlbeach

If Bryce and I are seeking competitive volleyball, endless people-watching, or an evening of live music by the water, we’ll likely make the trip back to the Isle of Palms.  For good eats and fun on the beach, though, Folly remains unchallenged at the top of our list.  We like its relaxed feel and open space. And its comforting to know that no one will issue us a $1000 ticket for the nalgene of Margaritas we share on its sands.

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