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Posts by Edward Schneider

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Earlier today on another website, I gushed over our first local asparagus of the season, from Samascott Orchards at our @grownyc.bsky.social market. We ate ~75 per cent of it for dinner: Steamed and served tepid with a nice vinaigrette and sieved hard-boiled eggs - old-time asparagus mimosa.

5 hours ago 0 0 0 0
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Ragù tonight! With a slight twist: about a tenth of the meat was cotechino removed from its casing and fried along with the vegetable soffritto. The theory is that it will add a gelatinous quality to the texture. We'll see at dinner time.

2 days ago 1 0 0 0
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With a little thought, you can make a delicious and harmonious soup/stew out of seemingly disparate leftovers: What the French might call a fourre-tout (hodgepodge). In fact, if (heaven forfend) I were writing a restaurant menu, I might include a Fourre-Tout du Jour.

1 week ago 6 0 0 0

Well found! We won't have excellent local tomatoes for a good couple of months, but when we do I'll certainly do that swordfish dish again.

2 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
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A couple of dinners ago, we had delicious beef shin. We ate some of the leftovers just now, broken apart (not really shredded), and spooned onto a dish of fairly plain carnaroli rice. Very satisfying.

3 weeks ago 5 0 1 0

Can't wait to try this (but with unprocessed eggs!).

4 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
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Last night, a very good dinner at Francesco Mazzei's new restaurant Mezzogiorno in the Corinthia hotel. A highlight was this snack: pipi cruski (peperoni cruschi) - sun-dried, quite mild Calabrian peppers deep fried to long-lasting crispness. With lemony mayonnaise to dip them in. Not to be missed!

4 weeks ago 6 0 2 0

No! Never heard of it. I'll do it next time. Is it associated with any particular city or area?

4 weeks ago 1 0 1 0
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Kyoto? No: London's Saint James's Park, whose beauty this morning was simply stunning.

1 month ago 35 5 3 4
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Tortilla de patatas y cebollas recién hecha.

1 month ago 3 0 1 0
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From the UK Daily Mirror in 1940. I think everyone needs a guard against the ills of winter.

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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Guided by ingredients in the fridge - a cooked potato; a quarter of a small Savoy cabbage; many onions; smoky bacon - we had pierogi this evening, with a shot of iced Żubrówka as our aperitif. What a pleasure!

1 month ago 10 0 2 0
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Just a week ago we found ourselves at the Central Park reservoir.

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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At today's Dag Hammarskjöld @grownyc.bsky.social market, a surprise: EELS at Catch of the Hamptons. As expected, I made a hatchet job of removing the spine, but the outcome didn't waste too much flesh and was acceptable in the sense that neither of our esophagi was pierced by a dangerous bone.

2 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Musing about Venice and a wonderful visit 12 years ago: we stayed at the spectacularly renovated Gritti Palace hotel and spent a morning shopping and cooking with its exec chef Daniele Turco. Then, I wasn't too lazy to write about things: www.huffpost.com/entry/luxury... .

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
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This sort-of biryani was the final stage of three days' eating from one small batch of lentils: Green-lentil dal; kale and lentil curry; and finally ground lamb, kale and lentil biryani, as in photograph. Sad to see it go.

2 months ago 2 0 0 0

Quite some time ago, our neighborhood pâtisserie - Eclair Bakery on East 53rd Street & Second Avenue - suffered a major fire. We would not have been surprised if it never reopened (crowdfunding can go only so far), but I see that it is back. Can't wait to go back. Maybe today; certainly by tomorrow.

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Squash blobs (aka misshapen gnocchi) with tiny dice of Italian speck, carrots and shallot plus a hint of garlic and sage. Reduced chicken stock emulsified with butter. No parmesan: tried it on one spoonful and it would have been a sin to use it.

2 months ago 1 0 0 0

UK Blueskiers: Any restaurant recommendations for Leeds and/or Sunderland? Thanks very kindly.

2 months ago 1 1 0 0

See you there, perhaps.

3 months ago 2 0 1 0
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A little honeynut squash plus a few other ingredients yielded these lumpy gnocchi/dumplings, eaten just now with chopped radicchio melted into a sauce with corn-heavy vegetable stock from last summer and tiny dice of beef and beef fat from a steak we couldn't quite finish a few nights ago.

3 months ago 4 0 0 0
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Finally! We're done with our seemingly bottomless crock of boeuf bourguignon[ne]: eked out with dried morels and porcini and served next door to crisped wedges of Friday's Anson Mills polenta. This stew never got boring, and we can hardly wait til the next one.

3 months ago 5 0 0 0
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Another dish we hadn't had in too long a time: twice-cooked pork (belly). It was photographed part-way through dinner as an afterthought, so forgive the sketchy image and the intrusive spoon.

3 months ago 3 0 1 0
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This evening the penultimate iteration of a small batch of boeuf bourguignon[ne]: with delicious soft polenta from Anson Mills. Completely different from the same stew served with, say, mashed potatoes - a curious phenomenon, and a useful one for those who like to keep their leftovers interesting.

3 months ago 3 0 0 0
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Unless my calendar is lying (which, to be honest, it does from time to time), it's been just shy of a year since we ate pasta all'amatriciana, which is far, far too long. What a perfect dish it is.

4 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Lovely little bok choi / bai cai from Norwich Meadows Farm at the Dag Hammarskjöld @grownyc.bsky.social farmers' market in flavorful, gently sinified chicken broth. Lots of rice, of course.

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Previously braised Tuscan kale absorbed the reduced jus made from the bones and trimmings of an excellent rack of lamb from Ox Hollow farm. Seemed like a weekend dinner, especially with a side dish of what were very similar to pommes Anna and a bottle of good wine (not in the photograph).

4 months ago 6 1 0 0

Note that you can cook the rösti through but leave it a little pale, then crisp it up at serving time (better than keeping it warm).

4 months ago 1 0 0 0

I use clarified butter, then when it's nearly done I add a few fragments of whole butter around the side and swirl the disc to let the butter get under the potatoes. This can get VERY crunchy. Yum. 3/3

4 months ago 2 0 1 0

... Taste a fragment from time to time. when it's cooked, raise the heat a little, remove the lid and let it continue to brown. Flip the rösti and brown side two. Give side one an extra burst of heat to re-crisp it. This is not the standard way of making rösti, but it's my favorite. 2/3

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
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