August 2009

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When I’m planning to cook with pecans, I usually purchase large bags of shelled nuts.  They’re a great snack to have on hand, and I never worry that they’ll go to waste.  I often eat them raw and straight from the bag, one sneaky handful at a time.  After I made Pecan Sandies, though, I had so many pecans left over that decided to try coating the nuts with a mix of bolder flavors.

Frank Stitt’s recipe for Spiced Pecans is literally something you can throw together in minutes.  While the raw pecans browned in the oven, I stirred together melted butter, olive oil, rosemary, cayenne, salt, pepper, and dark brown sugar in a large bowl.  The only thing that required chopping was the fresh rosemary, which is easy to strip from its woody stems.

Pecan Seasoning

After about 10 minutes, I tossed the warm pecans into the spiced coating.  The mix smelled so strongly of rosemary that I was a little worried; I like the herb, but its scent overpowered everything else in the kitchen!

Spiced Pecans

I needn’t, it turns out, have worried.  As long as you chop the rosemary finely enough, no one pecan has enough of the herb to overwhelm its flavor.  Set out with deviled eggs and dill pickles from the farmers’ market, these pecans made an appealing and addictive Southern appetizer!

If I’ve written a lot about cooking for guests lately, it’s because that’s what I’ve spent a lot of my summer doing!  We’ve been lucky enough to have friends and family visiting on a near-weekly basis, and I always try to have something yummy and homemade ready when they arrive.  We don’t often do full blown dinners – part of the fun of visiting Charleston is, after all, sampling its amazing restaurant scene – but we like to have something on hand.  When Bryce’s brother Daniel and his wife, Aubrey, came to visit, I made a batch of Frank Stitt’s Pecan Sandies.

I’d looked forward to trying this recipe from the day I noticed it in Stitt’s book.  Though his other desserts appear equally or more tempting than the sandies, I loved the idea of making my own slice-and-bake cookies.  Truth be told, rolling, cutting, and baking them yourself is much more fun that just buying a tube of Pillsbury in the supermarket.

The sandies start with oven-toasted pecans, coarsely chopped.

Chopping Pecans

Folded into an intensely buttery batter, the pecans lend it a coarse texture.  So I was surprised, as I scraped the batter from the mixing bowl, by how soft and easy to handle it was.  It felt almost like fluffy nougat, or an unusually dense meringue, as I rolled it into a log.

Pecan Sandies RollOnce it had chilled for a half hour, the batter was ready for slicing and baking.  I divided slices between two parchment-lined baking sheets, and crossed my fingers while they browned in the oven.

Pecan Sandies

Soon, my not-quite-round sandies were finished and ready to eat!  They were vaguely crisp but also delicate, ready to dissolve as soon as they entered my mouth.  Buttery and studded with plenty of pecan pieces, they tasted much better than their Keebler cousins, too!

I think Pecan Sandies are an ideal cookie to make in advance when you’re preparing to welcome good friends.  Because they’re not too sweet, they work just as well as an afternoon snack as they do a low-key dessert.  They also keep well for a few days, so you won’t be scrambling around the kitchen while your friends are out sight-seeing.  Just be sure not to make them too far in advance – if you do, your supply might run out before your guests even arrive!

We’ve had a lot to celebrate here in Charleston.  New friends, visits from old friends, a scholarship or two, and sightseeing with our families has kept us busy and happy, mindful of the blessing of summer.  Most recently, we celebrated Bryce’s white coat ceremony at MUSC, which took place on Saturday.

DSC_0021WhiteCoat2

Special events like this one usually call for feasting, and Bryce’s ceremony was no exception.  Over the weekend, we had a dinner and dessert downtown, cocktails at too many restaurants to count, sunset seafood  at the Isle of Palms, and an Italian brunch on John’s Island.  For someone who loves food as much as I do, it was a heady, downright dizzying weekend!

After so much extravagant eating, though, Bryce and I sometimes feel the need to do penance by eating simple, healthy meals at home.  When the time for atonement comes, we often turn to the Mayo Clinic Cookbook, a guide to health-conscious cooking designed by the famous medical institute.  It’s recipes include nutritional breakdowns beside their ingredients, which are often fresh fruits, vegetables, and lean proteins.

One of the best summer recipes in their book is for Squash with Leek Vinaigrette.  Sliced and steamed, the squash – and in my case, zucchini – are a perfect foil for a flavorful vinaigrette built around chopped leeks.

Chopped Leeks

Humble as they may be, leeks are one of my favorite foods.  Like larger, milder scallions, they’re fairly inexpensive and easy to use, but they lend lots of fresh flavor to soups, sauces, and even this vinaigrette.  To make it, I softened the leeks in olive oil, then added them to vegetable stock, vinegar, lemon juice, salt and pepper.

While the leeks sauteed, I steamed yellow squash and zucchini in a covered pan.  When they were tender but still firm, I tossed them into the vinaigrette and sat down to eat.

Squash and Zucchini

These vegetables would make a great side dish to grilled meat or fish, or even grilled portobello mushrooms.  Served atop rice, though, they can be a satisfying meal all on their own.

Squash with Leek Vinaigrette

With recipes as flavorful as this one, even foodie penance doesn’t seem so bad.

I love trying new recipes almost as much as I love eating at new restaurants.  Sometimes, though, I get stuck on a particular combination of ingredients and find myself cooking it again and again.  That’s exactly what happened when I found Ina Garten’s recipe for onion dip, which she enhances with plenty of golden, caramelized slices of onion.  Whenever I have weekend guests, I follow Ina’s lead by keeping a container of the dip and a big bag of Cape Cod chips on hand.

I usually use yellow onions in the dip, though sweet varieties work well, too.  Halved and thinly sliced with a serrated knife, they’re ready for long, slow cooking in a frying pan.

slicing onions

The slices look overwhelming  in number when they hit the pan, but they quickly condense as they cook in oil and butter.  Ina recommends browning them over high heat, then lowering the temperature to finish them gently.  Speckled with salt, pepper, and a pinch of cayenne, the onions smell homey and comforting.

Browning Onions

Caramelizing Onions

When the onions were a rich, translucent gold, I let them cool to room temperature.  I whisked sour cream, softened cream cheese, and mayonnaise together in the meantime, creating a creamy base for the dip.  Combined with the onions and the pan oils, the dip took on an amber hue.

onion dip

Served at room temperature, Ina’s onion dip is dangerously addictive.  Imagine the best store bought type you’ve ever had, then give it more subtle sweetness and a taste that’s lighter despite being rich with butter.  Sounds good, right?

I most recently made the dip when Bryce’s brother, Daniel, and his wife, Aubrey, came to visit, and it barely survived a day!  We pulled it out of the fridge between meals and even carted it to the beach in a cooler.  The dip is so good, in fact, that I’ve had to make a kitchen rule:  because it so completely saps my restraint, this stuff only gets made when we have visitors.  It’s a tough rule to follow, but its also entirely necessary.

Help Wanted

Dear Friends of Dinewithdanielle.com,

I need your help!  In the next day or so, I’m planning to send a few samples of my writing to local publications.  Hopefully, they’ll like what they see and will send an assignment my way.  If you’ve been following the blog, could you comment on this post – or on the Facebook page – and name one or two of your favorite posts?  Which have you found the most interesting?  The most well-written?  Strongest overall? Which sounds most like it could be in a magazine or newspaper? I’d love to hear your picks before I decide what to send around.

If you comment here, only I will see your email address.  And here’s a secret about that: you can put whatever you want in that box, real address or fake. No one will be the wiser, either way.  If you’re so inclined, you can even use a fake name!

Thanks for your opinions and your help.

Many of the most famous images of historic Charleston feature beautiful area homes.  The Battery mansions, for instance, grace many a glossy postcard, and the pastel facades of Rainbow Row draw daily tourists.  Even houses outside the city, such as Drayton Hall and Magnolia Plantation, have achieved recognition with visitors and students from around the world.

History in Charleston, though, is tangible in more than just columns and carriage houses.  The city is also marked by cannons and forts, the preserved relics of 18th and 19th and century wars.  The most famous of these is Fort Sumter, which is generally acknowledged to be the site of the Civil War’s beginning.  Maintained by the National Park Service, Sumter is just miles from the Charleston peninsula; it’s reachable by private boat or ferry tours.

Fort Sumter

When my parents were in town, we boarded a Spiritline Cruise at Liberty Square to visit Fort Sumter.  A fee of $16 each bought us an hour round-trip boat ride plus an hour exploring the Fort.  Though the ferry was comfortable, it’s worth noting that visitors with access to a private boat can dock themselves at the Fort and walk its grounds free of charge.

The automated narration on the ride was pretty dull, so we busied ourselves by observing activity in the harbor.  We traveled on a Sunday afternoon, and there was plenty to see!

red boat

Sumter Dolphin

sail boat

When we reached the fort, everyone opted out of the hard-to-hear narrated tour.  Instead of following a guide, we rambled over bricks and stone in Sumter’s shell.  The old walls gave us a bit of welcome shade, but soon we retreated into the small, on site museum to really cool off.

Looking into Fort Sumter

My favorite part of visiting the Fort was seeing the old, tattered flags that flew over the Fort during the Civil War.  The U.S. flag, especially, was enormous, spanning nearly two stories – it was much too big for my camera to take in!

Old Fort Sumter American FlagPalmetto Fort Sumter Flag

Time at the Fort went surprisingly fast, so I was surprised when the boat’s horn blew, signalling its upcoming departure.  On the way to board, I took a few parting shots:

Fort Sumter Porthole

Fort Sumter and Ravennel Bridge

With a rental or boat of my own, I’d definitely make another visit to the Fort.  While the tour itself was nothing special, the historical space of Sumter definitely is worth the trip.

I promised you a sad kitchen story.

* * *

While there are many world cuisines about which I’m relatively ignorant, I do take pride in my familiarity with the cooking customs of some non-Anglo cultures.  With help from cookbooks by Madhur Jaffrey, Marcus Samuelsson, and Susanna Foo, I’ve picked up a few skills and tricks for approaching Indian, African (broad as that may be!), and Chinese dishes, respectively. In fact, I probably use more curry powder in my kitchen than I do oregano!

One of the best parts about exploring other culinary traditions is encountering ingredients you won’t find in your average Food Lion.  Foo, for instance, includes a recipe for “Lychee and Lemon Thyme Sorbet” in her cookbook, Susanna Foo Fresh Inspiration.  When I was in search of a dessert to complement Char Siu and fried rice, I decided to try that frozen, Chinese treat.

Lychees are a small, thin-shelled fruit that are becoming increasingly popular in America.  I think, oddly enough, that they have an appearance and texture akin to those of sea scallops.  Off-putting as that might sound, lychees are a delicate and sweet addition to smoothies (we had one in Honolulu!), mixed drinks (remember the mojito at Coast?), and lots of desserts.

Lychees

Foo’s recipe calls for canned lychees, which are the only kind I’ve seen in local stores.  Pureed in the food processor and boiled with honey, thyme, and lemon juice, they made for an especially easy dessert.

Lychee Syrup

The great thing about making sorbet as opposed to ice cream is that there’s no need to make a temperature-sensitive  custard before you strain and freeze your mixture.  If you’re curious about making frozen desserts but afraid of curdled cream or a thin custard, sorbet is an unintimidating treat to tackle.  After just a few minutes on the stove, my strained liquid was ready to chill before hitting the ice cream maker.

Unfortunately, this is where the story gets sad.  After minutes spinning in its frozen bowl, the lychee syrup yielded approximately two scoops of sorbet!  Perhaps Foo’s lychees were canned in more syrup than mine were, but whatever the reason, I wound up with a disappointing portion of dessert instead of the expected pint.  David, Bryce, and I were forced to split this:

Lychee Sorbet

Pretty pathetic, no?  The sorbet was beautifully sweet and fragrant from the thyme and lemon, but there simply wasn’t enough of it to go around.  If we hadn’t had such a satisfying dinner, it really could’ve been a disaster!

I usually try to learn from my kitchen pitfalls, but I don’t know what happened here.  There simply wasn’t enough syrup to freeze into a pint of sorbet. Any random guesses?

When I bought an enormous pork shoulder to make my family barbecue, I found myself with a pound or so to spare.  Fortunately, Gourmet has a recipe for Char Siu, which is essentially Chinese barbecue, on the same page as the guidelines for their North Carolina pork.  Served with Gourmet’s “Bok Choy with Soy Sauce and Butter” and The Splendid Table’s fried rice, the Char Siu made for one of the best meals we’d had in some time.

Char Sui takes awhile to make, but requires very little work.  After I stirred together a mahogany-colored marinade of hoisin sauce, soy sauce, sake, honey, ginger, and garlic, there was no mixing or chopping involved.  Coated with the marinade, the pork can sit in the refrigerator for up to one day.

Marinating Pork

Once it’s chilled for at least four hours, the pork is ready for the oven.  I roasted it on a rack set above a pan of water, occasionally brushing it with leftover marinade.

Barbecuing Pork

After about an hour, the pork was dark and tender.  While it cooled on a cutting board, I tossed choy sum, a beautiful Asian green that’s very similar to bok choy, in a wok with soy sauce and butter.  It was ready in just a few minutes, and it smelled fantastic!

choy sum

I wish I had more pictures of the accompanying fried rice, which also came together very quickly, but it was too good to last long.  Studded with green scallions and strands of egg, the rice was stir-fried with an amazing sauce that resembled the Char Siu marinade.  I did manage to snap a picture of Bryce’s plate before he sat down to eat:

Chinese Dinner

Without the saltiness that can sully strip mall Chinese food, the fried rice, pork, and greens tasted wonderful and fresh.  The meal was a great spin on the classic meat-starch-vegetable combination, and I can’t wait to make it again!

Next time, I’ll tell you the sad story of my Chinese dessert.

Whenever my brother comes to dinner, I prepare a list of kitchen standards that I know he loves.  It’s almost a ritual at this point, because the menu almost never changes!  I cook deviled eggs and macaroni and cheese, and then I send Bryce to the grill with a plate of chicken breasts and a big bowl of homemade barbecue sauce (there’s a story behind the recipe, but I’ll save that for another time).  When David arrives, I’m usually working on dessert, which is the only real variable in this otherwise predictable equation.

David’s recent visit to Charleston, though, coincided with that of my parents and younger sister.  While they love barbecue and mac ‘n cheese as much as the next family, I wasn’t sure they’d enjoy a sauce whose distinguishing feature is an entire bottle of Texas Pete.  So I decided to change things up a bit for the occasion by making Gourmet’s recipe for North Carolina-style barbecue.  Cooked indoors on the stove and in the oven, the chopped and sauced pork is a great match for coleslaw on a fluffy bun.

Pork shoulder is an amazingly inexpensive cut of meat, but it needs lots of cooking to ensure its tenderness.  I started its transformation in a pot of simmering water, where the meat absorbed flavor from chopped onions, carrots, celery, garlic, peppercorns, and vinegar.

Simmering Pork Shoulder

The nice thing about cooking an entree that requires so much stove time is that it leaves plenty of opportunity to make sides to go with it.  In lieu of the usual baked pasta, I decided to serve a gratin with potatoes and herbed Boursin cheese, a bowlful of coleslaw, and some buttered shoepeg corn.

I used my fancy slicer to cut the potatoes uniformly thick.  Because of its ridged edge, though, it also made them look like uncooked potato chips!  I think Allison was mildly disappointed when she realized they weren’t destined for hot oil.

sliced potatoes

Following a recipe from the Bon Appetit cookbook, I warmed Boursin cheese with cream to create a sauce for the potatoes.  The Boursin is already flavored with herbs, so I only added salt and pepper to the potatoes for seasoning.

Boursin Potato Gratin

While the potatoes baked, I cut cabbage, green pepper, and onion for the coleslaw.  With a bag of matchstick carrots (there are a few tasks I’m too lazy to tackle!), they were ready to toss with whisked mayonnaise, sour cream, and vinegar.

Coleslaw VeggiesMaking Coleslaw

Soon, I transferred the pork shoulder to a roasting pan, where it cooked with even more vinegar for another hour.  It grew tender and crisp in the oven while I stirred together a tomato-based barbecue sauce on the stove.  With only small quantities of Tabasco and ground cayenne for heat, I knew the sauce would be milder than my fiery standard.

Chopped and reheated with ladles of sauce, the barbecue looked great!  Allison still found the sauce a bit spicy, but overall, it was a big hit.  My favorite part of the meal was the potatoes, because they were creamy, evenly cooked, and ridiculously easy to make.

Oven Barbecue

Baked Boursin Potato Gratin

With a hungry family in my tiny apartment, I decided to forgo the usual plating pictures and just leave you with the finished dishes of barbecue and potato gratin.  We assembled sandwiches packed with coleslaw and meat, then balanced their heat with bites of potatoes and corn.  It was, I think, a great start to our visit.

Since 2005, Charleston has been home to the Bacardi Mojito Challenge, a showdown between mixologists from some of the city’s best restaurants.  This popular event raises money for the South Carolina Special Olympics and gives local bar talent the chance to wow judges with creative spins on the classic drink.  Despite its respectable list of contestants, though, the competition has been admittedly lopsided.  In every year except 2006, the team from Coast Bar and Grill has taken the top prize, employing fun ingredients like lychee, peaches, and even Pop Rocks to snag the title.  Its champion mojitos retire to Coast’s bar menu once they’ve won, joining martinis, margaritas, and concoctions like “The Seersucker,” which features local sweet tea vodka.

Coast Charleston

Coast’s success in mixology competitions – its “Yellow Submarine” triumphed at the 2007 Cabana Cashaca contest – is a good indicator of what to expect from the downtown hot spot.  Housed in a brick-walled former warehouse that’s accented with hanging lanterns, nautical paintings, and exposed wooden beams, the restaurant caters to a lively cocktail crowd.  While it’s well-executed seafood dishes aren’t especially groundbreaking, they nicely complement Coast’s atmosphere of upscale-casual conviviality.

Coast InteriorCoast Seating

As you might expect, Coast’s calling card is its substantial selection of fresh seafood, which is anchored by a raw bar and a mix-and-match list of grilled fish and accompaniments.  Bright, citrusy ceviches and oysters with pedigrees – I was given a choice between the lowcountry haul and Apalachicolas – distinguish the raw bar from its more ordinary competitors (the glowing pufferfish suspended above its counter doesn’t hurt matters, either).  And the many options for enhancing grilled fish are similarly eye-catching; basic tartar sauce sounds downright dull when listed next to the likes of pineapple-chili salsa, spicy adobo rub, and a basil butter sauce.

Coast Raw Bar

If the choices at Coast sound overwhelming, fear not: the waitstaff I encountered were admirably prepared to offer facts and suggestions.  Our waitress advised us, for instance, that escolar and tuna were locally caught, and that the plantain-encrusted mahi mahi would be just as tasty with snapper substituted.  Once she’d helped us navigate the menu, we sat back to taste warm, candle-heated crab dip, unremarkable calamari, and Rio Bertollini’s crab and avocado ravioli.  The latter, served with mixed salad greens and warm goat cheese, elicited oohs and ahhs from all ends of our table.

crab dip

The exclamations only increased when our entrees were delivered.  Seafood paella arrived in a black cast iron pot, complete with a lid that the waitstaff promptly removed.  Though oversalted, the scallops, shrimp, mussels, clams, and rice were all expertly cooked, without a trace of toughness or mushiness.  The grouper I’d selected was pleasantly charred from the grill, and the chorizo had been browned before it was added to the dish, lending it a deeper, more intense flavor.

Coast Seafood Paella

Salt marred an otherwise tasty mahi mahi preparation too, particularly in its side of mashed potatoes.  But overall, the restaurant’s dinner offerings were solid interpretations of coastal standards.  After indulging in plate after plate of appetizers, our group still accumulated only a handful of carryout boxes.  Dessert, though, was definitely out of the question!

Plantain Encrusted Mahi Mahi

Coast Steak

Our lovely cousin Katie with her landlubber's plate

After two trips (I know; I’ve been lucky enough to break the mold!), I can say that Coast is the perfect spot for a big night out with a big group of friends, for those times when sharing laughs – and maybe drinks – takes priority over trying amazing dishes.  Its food won’t be the focus of your night, but if it’s accompanied by a lively table and an award-winning mojito or two, it’s not likely to disappoint, either.

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