mercredi 31 mai 2017

This Infographic Lists 20 Bad Idea Burgers

We’re always seeing lists and collections of the best burgers in town but what about the burgers that twist the normal bun-pattie-bun narrative? 

This is the thinking behind the fun food infographic below fromFood Republic that looks at bad idea burgers from around the world.

There are 20 different bad idea burgers listed, and some of them are really bad, we’re talking burgers in a cone and burgers in a can - it’s that bad.

Take a look at the collection below, the winner has to be the 'garbage burger' which comes complete with five different cheeses, peanut butter and ice cream.

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This Infographic Lists 20 Bad Idea Burgers

Do You Agree With Gordon Ramsay about Restaurant Specials?

Gordon Ramsay has been offering up some tips and advice on how what you should never order when dining out at a restaurant.

Speaking with the Mail Online, the British chef claimed that the specials in a restaurant are something he never orders, with a caveat.

“Specials are there to disappear throughout the evening. When they list 10 specials, that’s not special,” said Ramsay. It's worth noting, however, that many of us at FDL HQ love a short specials board, especially when you see something crossed out for the evening. 

The chef also said he avoids orders with names that are too boastful, “when they turn around and tell me it is the ‘famous red lasagne, who made it famous?’. He said he also avoids terms like ‘wicked’ and ‘best in the country’.

Ramsay caused quite a stink this week when he went head to head with American actor Kevin Spacey.

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Do You Agree With Gordon Ramsay about Restaurant Specials?

Let's Talk Conflict and Change

Get ready for a new instalment of The Welcome Conference - a one day event that focuses on the hospitality side of the food business, using presentations, ideas and speeches from people across many different industries. Last year saw Andrew Zimmern share the stage with a Yoga specialist and a Magician.

Speakers at this year's event, which takes place in New York on June 5th, include the likes of Melanie Whelan, Sean Brock and David Chang with the theme of presentations anchored around ‘Conflict & Change’ - topics many people encounter daily in the restaurant business. It has been curated by Brian Canlis from Seattle’s Canlis Restaurant.

What’s fascinating about Welcome Conference is the eclectic mix of people who contribute. Where else can you see one of New York’s hottest chefs speaking at the same conference as a former FBI negotiator? That’s right, they’ll also be a mind reading brain scientist.

Welcome Conference, which is now in its third year, is organised by Will Guidara of Eleven Madison Park and Anthony Rudolf of The Journee, both have years of experience in the restaurant hospitality business and both will host.

Those interested in watching presentations on the day can tune into a Live Stream on the Open Table website.

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Let's Talk Conflict and Change

Clare Smyth to Open First Solo Restaurant in July

Chef Clare Smyth’s first solo restaurant, Core, will open in London’s Notting Hill in July (date TBC) it’s been announced.  

The modern fine dining restaurant will offer a constantly evolving 10 to 12 course tasting menu (or just three or five courses if preferred), with ingredients sourced from British producers, and an extensive wine menu stretching to 400-plus fine wines and Champagnes, plus a number of more affordable options. The theme continues with British crockery and silverware.

“Brought up on a farm you understand from an early age just how good our ingredients are and how important it is to support local producers. As chefs, we have access to some of the finest native produce in the world here in Britain, and I want to continue to celebrate that in every menu,” said Smyth in a statement.

Northern Ireland-born Smyth, who trained under the likes of Alain Ducasse and Thomas Keller, is the only female chef in the UK to be awarded three Michelin stars, at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, but announced in late 2015 that she would be leaving to concentrate on her own project.

Read what Smyth had to say about taking the plunge on her own when we caught up with her last year.

Smyth was also the mentor for eventual winner Mark Moriarty at S.Pellegrino Young Chef 2015. 

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Clare Smyth to Open First Solo Restaurant in July

What's on in June: Food Events Worldwide

As summer ramps up so does the selection of food driven festivals to enjoy around the world. From stirring chef conferences to Michelin starred chef dinners, there's an event to appeal to all tastes in the June round-up of events worldwide.

Take a look at what's on wherever you are in the world.

Food Events Worldwide in June 2017

Sapori Ticino - The Final Spread of Dinners, Ticino

As the eleventh edition of S.Pellegrino Sapori Ticino 2017 reaches its grand finale in the scenic Swiss Canton, there is still time to sign up for the last selection of exciting dinners scheduled throughout June.

From the World's Best Female Chef Ana Ros to informal lounge evenings, there's a fine dining event to appeal to all appetites where stunning food and views are a guarantee.

For reservations email info@saporiticino.ch or visit the Sapori Ticino website for more information.

The Welcome Conference, USA

Hosted by Anthony Rudolf & Will Guidara with guest curator Brian Canlis The Welcome Conference is a forum designed to bring together a room full of passionate and creative individuals, to share ideas and visiions and inspire a community.

This year's event takes place in New York on June 5th, 2017 at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center Conference at 10:00am.  See more details over at the Welcome Conference website.

The World’s 50 Best Restaurants celebrate its 15th birthday with five of the world's most influential chefs in world gastronomy with #50BestTalks and an extra special lunch curated by Ferran Adrià in Barcelona. He will be joined by René Redzepi, Joan Roca, Massimo Bottura and Daniel Humm of the World’s Best Restaurant 2017, Eleven Madison Park on 27 June.

The talks will be live-streamed over on the World's 50 Best Facebook page; S.Pellegrino and Acqua Panna are the official waters. 

"A Taste of Toscana" returns for a second year following its successful launch in Tel Aviv last summer. Twenty three participating restaurants across Israel will be celebrating with a special Tuscan dish created for the occasion and each will come served with a bottle of Acqua Panna, premium mineral water. Until 18 June.

Find out the list of participating restaurants here.

Keep your finger on the pulse of your pick of city restaurants with the worldwide chef driven Taste festivals, showcasing the best culinary talent in town. June is set to be one of the busiest months in the calendar with events scheduled in Amsterdam, Dublin, Moscow and Toronto attracting the city's most influential chefs as well as some high calibre guests, allowing visitors to get a taste of the action all in one location. 

VBWFF sizzle reel from Chloe Cappelen on Vimeo.

Fine wines and remarkable films form the backdrop for the second ever edition of Vero Beach Wine + Film Festival, happening from 8 - 11 June this year. Over 30 Exclusive Wine Tasting Experiences are on offer plus 75+ independent short, feature and documentary films. A unique opportunity for wine and film buffs to unite their two loves. 

Check the website for more details.

London Food Month

A month-long food celebration complete with an outdoor Night Market and over 400 events will descend across the capital during London Food Month in June.

From high end dinners to free commuity events the full calendar will appeal to all tastes and budgets. It's also a good chance to see a selection of some of Britain’s best chefs, including Angela Hartnett, Fergus Henderson and Claude Bosi. Famed Italian chef Massimo Bottura is also scheduled to appear.

Find out more details over on the London Food Month website.

Four Hands Dinner at PRU Restaurant - Phuket

S.Pellegrino and Acqua Panna present Sühring’s German haute cuisine at PRU restaurant, Trisara Phuket on 16-17 June Bangkok: Showcasing best of modern German cuisine from the Bangkok restaurant Sühring at PRU, Phuket’s renowned farm-to-table restaurant at the Trisara beachfront resort in Phuket, on 16 and 17 June, 2017.

The menu includes 24-hour-cured ocean trout, a regional German dish named Leipziger Allerlei made from peas, carrots, asparagus, morels and crayfish sourced from Chiang Mai, dish of soft egg noodles sprinkled with summer truffle and a main course of Hungarian duck, aged for seven days and served with braised onion and smoked shitake. 

For further information and bookings for the special two-day event at PRU, email pru@trisara.com, or phone +66 76 310 100.

West Meets East - Four Hands Dinner - Reif and Alfredo - London

An exclusive four hands dinner is planned at Hotel Franklin in London on 21 June. The culinary special features eight signature dishes, four hands and two Michelin starred chefs, Chef Othman Reif and guest chef Russo Alfredo in what will be a fusion of flavours of west meets east.

Contact the Franklin Hotel for reservations.

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What's on in June: Food Events Worldwide

25 Knives and 47 Knife Skills Explained

Here's a nice little video from Bon Appétitdetailing 25 different knives and 47 different knife skills, from the kind of professional cuts all chefs should know to the most basic slicing and dicing.

The video is a great reminder of the sheer range of tools at a chef's disposal and how each one has it's own job. Of course, it could be argued that you only need a handful of these knives in the kitchen, as many can be used for multiple tasks, but we won't let that get in the way of some serious knife porn! 

We also featured another video from the same team, which looked at how to butcher a whole side of beef and is well worth a watch.

And for more knife-related content check out this definitive guide to knives

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25 Knives and 47 Knife Skills Explained

Ways To Use Cardamom: 5 Incredible Ways To Use Cardamom in the Kitchen

Cardamomis an alluring spice with a seductive aroma. Its bright green pods conceal black pearls of flavor which liven up a wide array of dishes.

As renown Indian cookbook author Madhur Jaffrey once said, cardamom is to Indians what vanilla is to the West. But there's one exception: cardamom is also used in savory dishes.

Let's discover the differentways to use cardamom to spice up your life.


veganbaking/flickr

A Little Background on Cardamom

Cardamom comes in two varieties: green and brown. You'll also find white cardamom pods which have been bleached. Brown cardamom is much larger in size and has a smokier taste. We recommend using green cardamom, which possesses a more delicate flavor and aroma than the brown variety.

5 Exciting Ways To Use Cardamom

Here are five ways you can use cardamom and take advantage of its versatility:

1. Spice Up Ice Cream

Substitute cardamom for vanilla the next time you make ice cream base. Make sure you split the cardamom pod and to allow the seeds to infuse the milk. Let cool and strain. Process ice cream as usual.

2. Make Cardamom Sugar

Split a cardamom pod and release the tiny seeds. Put the seeds in a mortar and pestle along with a teaspoon of sugar. Grind until it becomes a a fluffy powdery mix. Use cardamom sugar to flavor drinks and baked goods.

3. Cardamom Whipped Cream

Use a spoonful of cardamom sugar to add to your whipped cream. Whip as usual and use it to top everything from hot cocoa to cupcakes. It would be delicious on top of this cardamom vanilla pound cake from Pretty Frugal Living:

4. Kick Up Your Chicken 

Cardamom works wonders in savory dishes. Next time you make a tomato-based sauce for chicken, throw a split cardamom seed and a stick of cinnamon into the mix. You'll end up with an intriguing dish that is not overly sweet at all.

5. Freshen Your Breath

In Ancient Rome, cardamom was prized as a breath freshener. Romans, along with ancient Egyptians and Greeks, used cardamom as a tooth cleaner after meals. You can do the same by skipping gum and chewing on a cardamom pod instead. 

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Ways To Use Cardamom: 5 Incredible Ways To Use Cardamom in the Kitchen

mardi 30 mai 2017

A Look Back at Noma Mexico in Pics

The hugely successful Noma Pop Up in Mexico has come to an end with critics across the globe all lashing praise on Rene Redzepi’s latest project.

The dinner, which took place in Tulum, sold out in hours when it was posted online with people travelling from all over the world to dine on the Noma team’s take on Mexican cuisine.

Tacos, masa miso, mango kombucha and Mezcal all featured on the menu, a menu so widely popular that the New York Time’s critic Pete Wells had to write a review about why he wasn’t writing a review.

To mark the end of the project, the Noma crew will now head home to Copenhagen to begin working on Noma.2, we’ve decided to take a look back at some of the delicious Noma Mexico food porn of Instagram.

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A Look Back at Noma Mexico in Pics

Watch: Man Cook Chicken with 1000 Mirrors

We've seen some creative cooking methods in our time, like a man cook steak with lava and miniature cooking equipment... but how about 1000 mirrors?

In our next instalment of inventive cooking techniques we've come across an ingenious Thai street vendor who has done just that, harnessing the power of the sun to cook up his roadside marinated chicken.

Using an impressive wall of nearly 1000 moveable mirrors Sila Sutharat concentrates the sun onto his rows of marinated chickens, cooking them in less than 12 minutes. Fans report the technique yields a tastier and altogether more tender meat than cooking over conventional charcoal.

While the sight is nothing new on the streets of Phetchaburi, afterall the 60 year old vendor came up with the novel idea almost 20 years ago, hungry and curious revellers have been visiting from across Thailand since his solar powered cooking went viral online.

Take a look and watch chicken bake while the sun shines:

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Watch: Man Cook Chicken with 1000 Mirrors

5 Plating Instagrams All Chefs Should Follow

Deconstructed Caesar Goes Viral

A deconstructed Caesar salad served at a Toronto cafe has gone viral this week, but not for the reason you might think.

The 416 Snack Bar’s salad was ordered by journalist Rhiannon Russell and arrived as below. Okay, so where do we start: the unappetising plating, the bacon bits or the slab of marble?

But what really irked everyone was that fact that Russell was told the restaurant doesn’t "do cutlery." So, she would have to go about constructing the deconstructed Caesar with her hands, using the leaves as giant crudités – essentially a 'hand salad,' remember them?

The internet was predictably vitriolic/hilarious in its response and to be fair, the 416 also got in on the act. Apparently no cutlery is a long-standing thing there. 

This brings to mind the famous Melbourne deconstructed macchiato that riled so many people last year. Sometimes it’s just best not to mess with a classic.

Have you had a deconstructed disaster forced on you? Let us know over on our Facebook page and share your pics!

Via BlogTo

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Deconstructed Caesar Goes Viral

How To Sous Vide A Whole Chicken (Video)

If you've ever watched a cooking video from the team at Chefsteps, you don't need us to tell you those chefs are practically magicians. Their modern culinary techniques never fail to amaze us. Thus, we couldn't help but share their latest video on how to sous vide a whole chicken.

Putting a whole bird in a bag and cooking a chicken sous videsounds more complicated than it is. The trick is make a very flavorful broth in which your bird with poach in for hours.

The hardest part of this recipe will be waiting the six hours for your chicken to be ready. While it sounds unbelivable, this recipe yields tender meat beyond anything you'll ever be able to achieve in an oven - although you may miss the crispy skin. If that's the case simply run it under the broiler for a few minutes until the skin gets crisp and golden.

Ready for a chicken sous vide adventure? Watch the video below and give a mental thank you to the talented team at Chefsteps for sharing their culinary secrets.

WATCH: How To Sous Vide A Whole Chicken

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How To Sous Vide A Whole Chicken (Video)

lundi 29 mai 2017

Japan meets France: Chef Shinobu's cooking

Having trained under such culinary giants as Michael Bras and Heston Blumenthal, Shinobu Namae builds on their legacy and never stops questioning what is next for innovative Franco-Japanese cooking. In his compact kitchen at the two Michelin-starred restaurant L’ Effervescence (12 in the Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2017), Namae works calmly and collaboratively with his kitchen team. 

But, his work as a chef does not end there. Namae is also known for his proactive travels across Japan to meet organic farmers and progressive artisans, learning as well as directly sourcing from them. “As a French chef and a Japanese growing up in a fast-paced, eclectic city like Tokyo,” says Namae, “I often question my identity – what I cook, what I serve to people. I want to make bridges over different food cultures – the Japanese, the French, and so on – learn and respect one other, and understand the differences in a creative and happy way”.

Lacto-fermentation experiments

Over the years, this synergy between the Japanese and the French has become the definitive approach to cooking at L’ Effervescence. One of the fascinating ongoing experiments that Namae undertakes is lacto-fermentation.

“We started using lacto-fermentation in our kitchen about 3-4 years ago. We look at both European methods of lacto-fermentation and those that exist in Japan. The European style of lacto-fermentation is based mostly on dairy. Lacto-fermentation in Japan is mostly from Nukazuke, or the pickling of rice bran”. Namae continues: “In the past, fermented items were often given a side role – as garnish or something to elevate flavours. But, we work on using lacto-fermentation in the cooking of our main protein. For example, we have a lot of whey because we make sour cream in house. Japanese people use whey to pickle daikon radish. One day, when we discussed how we could fortify the umami of lean fish. Instead of using traditional Japanese methods for fish cooking - Shio-Koji, Miso-Zuke, Sake-Yaki, or Mirin-Yaki – we marinate tilefish fillets in whey over night. We later cook the fillets in whey as well”.

This dish of whey-poached Amadai tilefish, purée of celeriac and olive oil (pictured above) is given a very poetic name “Une journée neigeuse” on the restaurant’s winter tasting menu. “Fish gently cooked in whey becomes our original cooking technique that is European but inspired by Japanese home cooking”, says Namae. In spring, Namae chooses Ainame greenling instead of Amadai that are out of season. The unctuous wintery garnish is also replaced with bitter mountain vegetables and Sansho ravigote – the taste that typifies springtime in traditional Japanese haute cuisine.

The use of lacto-fermentation at L’ Effervescence is purposeful. “The methods we use are not for adding acidity or contrasting with rich taste”, Namae explains. “Lacto-fermentation gives our dishes much more complex flavours. For example, apart from using whey, we also use Nukazuke, which sucks umami (amino acid) from rice bran and imparts to the ingredients that we choose to work with. Before fermentation, we used vinegar to pickle or cure only. Even though pickled and cured items add dimensions to dishes, I feel taste composition is two-dimensional. Since we experiment with fermentation, there is a big change of taste composition from 2D to 3D. The 3D taste also allows us to experiment more with beverages that are difficult to pair with – like natural wines, natural sake and Kombucha”. 

Synergy between the Japanese and the French cuisine

In order to bridge the gap between Japanese culture and French-led cooking, Namae also reaches out to heritage Japanese foodstuff. Though there is no shortage of creative French chefs in Tokyo, few are brave enough to cross this psycho-cultural line that dictates the Japanese and the French. Therefore, Japanese foodstuff – in the likes of Kombu and Katsuobushi – are often left out from innovative Franco-Japanese kitchens.

Namae explains his thought process to adopt Japanese foodstuff at L’ Effervescence as twofold. “I want to find the new possibilities of combinations and harmony, with the products familiar to us. At the same time, as a Japanese, it is important to support well-meaning artisans, keep the knowledge of ancestors and pass it to the next generations, which makes us survive”.

Katsuobushi, a Key Japanese Ingredient

Katsuobushi (dried, smoked and fermented skipjack tuna) becomes one of the key Japanese foodstuff that lend subtlety to the dishes at L’ Effervescence. This is a result of Namae’s cross-country travels that he speaks very proudly of: “I use Katsuobushi from Makurazaki, Kagoshima Prefecture, which is made by an artisan factory called Kaneshichi Shōten. When Yasuke Sezaki, the 3rd generation owner, took over the factory from his father, he made up his mind to stick to the method that produces the highest quality of Katsuobushi called Honkarebushi”.

Honkarebushi requires skipjack tuna of a certain size for the making of Katsuobushi. Namae continues, “Livestock is crucial to maintain our culture. Today, more and more Katsuobushi factories prefer catching smaller fish, which shortens the process of making Katsuobushi”. This method of making Katsuobushi inadvertently promotes responsible fishing of skipjack tunas.

The use of heritage Japanese foodstuff in Namae’s cooking is, by no means, faddish or an attempt to make headlines. He believes that Katsuobushi is best used for fortifying the umami of amino acid based ingredients, such as mustard family vegetable (i.e. radish, turnip). “We make many types of Katsuobushi broth, or Katsuodashi,” Namae explains, “For example, we braise the peelings of turnip and combine them with Katsuobushi broth. It makes a perfect juice to drink or make sauce”. 

A Personal Taste Experience Substained by Scientific Researches

Namae’s judgement is not only grounded on his own taste experience but also substantiated by scientific research: “Because Katsuobushi contains a high level of nucleic acid (inosinic acid), it acts to capture the amino acid on the taste buds and makes the taste last longer on our tongue”. 

On the current spring menu of L’ Effervescence, Katsuodashi forms the base of “Heritage”, a fire-roasted Okinawan pork dish with Japanese butterbur and Katsuobushi-infused blue cheese sauce.

Elsewhere, Namae’s use of Japanese foodstuff in French cooking is the main subject of Eric Wolfinger’s upcoming short film Dashi Journey (To be released in August 2017 - take a look on the trailer below).

All these experiments – be it lacto-fermentation or adoption of Japanese foodstuff – makes the cooking at L’ Effervescence an ongoing discussion of what it takes to effectively blur the line between French and Japanese, between innovation and heritage, between globalisation and regionalism.

“There is the need to re-discover food abandoned or taken for granted in our daily life, revitalise it and keep this diversity of ideas going in order to escape from the globalisation of food preferences”, says Namae.

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Japan meets France: Chef Shinobu's cooking

Scientists Make Shapeshifting Pasta

A team of scientist working at MIT say they have developed a flat pasta that changes shape as soon as it hits water.

The programable pasta shapes are the work of Dr. Wen Wang and Dr. Lining Yao whose idea could radically reduce packaging and shipping sizes for noodles and pasta.

The most exciting part of the idea is that the pasta shapes are not random, with the pair working hard to take control of how ingredient reacts when its placed in water.

The shapes are made by using two different methods: the first is to apply a bacterium that shrinks and expands according to humidity, this bacterium is also used to ferment soybeans. The second method involves using gelatin that absorbs water and expands.

By playing with these two factors the duo have produced some impressive results including flower petal pasta.

Take a look at the video below for more.

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Scientists Make Shapeshifting Pasta

Chefs Gather to Celebrate 15 Years of World’s 50 Best

2017 sees The World’s 50 Best Restaurants celebrate its 15th birthday with a chef-studded series of #50BestTalks and an extra special lunch curated by Ferran Adrià in Barcelona.

Adrià (whose former restaurant elBulli won the inaugural prize in 2002, as well as a further four times), René Redzepi, Joan Roca, Massimo Bottura and Daniel Humm of the World’s Best Restaurant 2017, Eleven Madison Park, will be coming together on 27 June to each outline his personal vision for the future of food in a succession of talks, similar to those held this year in Melbourne and Sydney ahead of The World's 50 Best Restaurants 2017. 

The five chefs, all previous winners of The World’s 50 Best Restaurants, have been some of the most influential in world gastronomy over the event’s lifetime. The talks will be live-streamed over on the World's 50 Best Facebook page; S.Pellegrino and Acqua Panna are the official waters.

The #50BestTalks will be followed by a celebratory (long) lunch curated by Adrià at Bravo24 at the W Barcelona hotel. The event is a forerunner to The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2018, which will be held in Spain for the first time ever, in Bilbao in June.

See the full list of The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2017.

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Chefs Gather to Celebrate 15 Years of World’s 50 Best

20 Bizarre Burgers from Around the World

We love the food infographics produced by the team over at Food Republic, such as 12 raw beef dishes from around the world or 40 different hot dog styles

Their latest one looks at 20 different bad idea burgers – gimmicky burgers that will leave you scratching your head, as to why anyone thought they would be a good idea in the first place. 

However, although there are some horrendous looking burgers on here – tinned cheeseburger anyone? – there are others that we would happily chow down on. But the lesson here we guess is sometimes there's just no need to mess with a classic too drastically. 

You might also be interested in this guide to 14 gourmet burgers from around the world

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20 Bizarre Burgers from Around the World

Get Roasted by Ramsay Live

Hare | Cucumber

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5 Tricks to Fix Food that's too Salty

Seasoning is integral to the success of a dish. However, even the most competent of cooks can make a mistake and be a little too heavy handed on the salt. Fortunately, knowing a few little tips can easily overcome a salty excess, and turn the inedible into the edible.

1. THE POTATO

PHOTO FRÉDÉRIQUE VOISIN-DEMERY / FLICKR

Grandmother's tips are always the most trusted and probably the most effective. This tip works well for casseroles or soups. Wash and peel a raw potato and cut it into 5mm slices. Place the slices in the bottom of your dish and leave until the flesh becomes transparent. Once the salt is absorbed, remove the potato slices and enjoy your dish bought back from the brink of salty mayhem.

2. SUGAR

If you don't have a potato on hand, opt for sugar. Place a sugar lump on a spoon and let it soak a few seconds. Be careful not to let the sugar melt or fall into the sauce.

3. THE BREAD CRUST

Third solution: soak a stale crust of bread in a sauce for a few minutes to absorb the excess salt.

4. RINSE WATER

This solution is most effective for steamed meat and vegetables. Place them in a pan and pour water until the salt "comes out", then drain the water. The vegetables will turn out less crisp and meat less tender, but the sacrifice will be worth it for a dish that's more evenly seasoned.

5. CREAM OR FRUIT

If your recipe allows, try adding a little cream or fruit to your dish, to offset the excess salt.

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5 Tricks to Fix Food that's too Salty

dimanche 28 mai 2017

Lisbon: Chic, Cheap and Delicious

"Cozinha Portuguesa. E agora?" (Portuguese Cuisine. What's next?) : this is the slogan of the fifth edition of Sangue na Guelra, which took place in Lisbon on Friday 8 May this year. The culinary festival organized by Ana Músico, together with her photographer husband Paulo Barata, has contributed to update, innovate and – in part – revolutionise the image and identity of Portuguese cuisine.

The answer to the slogan’s question is comprised in the Portuguese Cuisine Manifesto 2.0 presented at the end of the congress: eleven points determining “common denominations for a cuisine that speaks many languages”. The country’s top chefs – all of them very young and rarely over 40 – were divided up into work groups to address topics of particular significance to Portuguese gastronomy (blood, salt, fried things, bread) before being invited up on stage to present them. The audience of theHub Criativo do Beato in Lisbon was largely made up of journalists, foreign chefs and Lisboans themselves, who have never been prouder of their city and its gastronomy.

Lisbon has become a restaurant destination: after years of silence, the city is grabbing its share of the limelight on the international dining scene. We recommend six addresses to those wishing to find out what Lisbon's food is all about today, a city that is trying to bring back its culinary memories, to upturn precepts without making them banal.

There is a lot going on in Lisbon

Two new stars have appeared in the city in the past year. One is that of Alma, the restaurant owned by Henrique Sá Pessoa, known as the “Portuguese Jamie Oliver” thanks to the popularity he has earned with his television programmes Entre Pratos, Ingredient Secreto and Chef’s Academy. Located in the Chiado district, Alma reopened in 2016 following a restyling of its interiors – chiselled elegance and, particularly in the evening hours, evocative luminosity – and its menu. Played out between new twists on Portuguese classics – such as the highly successful Red mullet, xerém, "caldeirada" sauce, samphireo, the Confit suckling piglet, sweet potato puree, pak choi, orange jus – and an abundant use of exotic ingredients, attention and satisfaction levels remain high throughout the gourmet menu (5 courses, 90 Euro).

Alma
Rua Anichieta 15, Website

The other star is that of Loco, opened last year by chef Alexandre Silva behind the beautiful Praça da Estrela (couples take note: in the evening, nothing beats the romantic atmosphere of the Basilica and its nearby eponymous gardens). In a tiny dining room, with a kitchen that is on full view, there is a lot of fun to be had following a menu that is set out in ‘18 moments’, chosen at the sole discretion of the chef. A special mention goes to the very young pastry chef Carlos Fernandes, who does a great job with bread at the Loco – bread is a course on its own, served with oil, aromatized butter and a pan of gravy to dip it in – and pastries, in which vegetables and algae feature strongly.

Loco
Rua Navegantes 53, Website

Legendary restaurants

On the banks of the Tago, in the Belém district, the ultra stylish Hotel Altis Belemwith its up-to-the-minute design hosts one of the country’s best known chefs, João Rodrigues, who has held a Michelin star at his Feitoriarestaurant for six years now. Mainly oriented towards the sumptuous catches to be had in the ocean off Portugal, his cuisine successfully blends technical perfectionism with an impassioned research into ingredients. Gourmet menus at 75, 105 and 135 Euro.

Feitoria
Doca de Bom Sucesso 1400-038, Website

José Avillez is the enfant prodige of Portuguese cuisine: not yet turned 40, he already has two Michelin stars at the Belcanto which occupies the 85th position in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants, and heads a small empire of 8 restaurants located between Lisbon and Porto. The latest in order of appearance is Beco, which opened a couple of months ago at the back of the Barrio do Avillez, behind a little speakeasy-type door concealing the fascinating atmosphere of a twenties style club. There is no way of knowing in advance what the evening will offer: you pay for your ticket first (120 Euro) and get ready to enjoy a 12 course menu, featuring some of Avillez’s classics – such as the spherified olive – all of which is accompanied by an authentic cabaret. No photos are allowed, this is an evening for adults only.

Beco - Cabaret Gourmet
Rua Nova da Trinidade, Website

Lisbon for all tastes

It would obviously be wrong to depict Lisbon as a galaxy of gourmet menus. The other side of the city can be discovered at Cervejaria Ramiro, a local institution patronized by great chefs and young Lisboans, who are willing to queue for two hours at weekends to get a table. A noisy atmosphere, rapid service and excellent Portuguese seafood and crustaceans, comprising percebes, clams and carabineros of Baroque appearance and size. Dinner inevitably ends with a Prego, a Portuguese roll with garlic flavoured beef steak.

Cervejaria Ramiro
Avenue Almirante Reis 1, Website

Another place top chefs swear by? The Taberna da Rua das Flores, just a few steps away from Largo do Chiado. The menu consists of a selection of little dishes for sharing, taken from traditional fare and prepared according to whatever is available on the market and the flair of chef André Magalhaes, who loves to seek out Portugal’s most obscure food culture. Beware: the venue – whose decor and atmosphere recall those of an authentic tavern – is very small and they do not take bookings.

Taberna da Rua das Flores
Rua das Flores 103, Website

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Lisbon: Chic, Cheap and Delicious

samedi 27 mai 2017

The Week in Bites 28 May 2017

Miami Heat

This week at Fine Dining Lovers we took a trip down to Miami to explore the city's ever evolving dining scene.

Forget generic beachside dining on Ocean Drive, we wanted to find the restaurants that are changing the dynamics of food. Restaurants where local, seasonal and high-quality are the chef's priorities. 

Read all about our exciting discoveries.

Du's Donuts

Also on our radar this week at chef Wylie Dufresne. What has this Michelin-starred chef being up to since closing his restaurant two years ago? Donuts!

Dufresne has taken his technical skills and developed the best, most delicious and perfect donuts you could ever find in Brooklyn.

Click here for all the details.

In the blog

This week in the blog we told you how to get your hands on Blue Hill's exclusive bone-ash cheese, announced that the royal family is looking for a sous chef and shared 10 lemon dessert recipes that will brighten your day.

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The Week in Bites 28 May 2017

Watch Ludo Lefebvre Cook Buttery Escargot

If anybody's qualified to show you how to cook the classic French dish of escargots with garlic butter, it's LA-based chef Ludo Lefebvre.

Growing up in Burgundy, Lefebvre, who trained under the likes of Alain Passard and Guy Martin, used to devour dozens of escargot in a sitting. 

In the bonus scene from Mind of a Chef below, we see Lefebvre preparing the juicy looking snails in the kitchen of his Petit Trois bistro in LA – a dish that had Jonathan Gold of the LA Times raving. He likes to layer the mollusc between two heaped servings of butter.

You can almost see the Frenchman being transported back to his childhood in Auxerre; it's obviously a very emotional dish for him. We suggest you show this to anyone who still balks at the prospect of eating snails and challenge them not to lick their lips. 

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Watch Ludo Lefebvre Cook Buttery Escargot

vendredi 26 mai 2017

Ingar Krauss' Food-inspired Still Lifes | Gallery

Ingar Krauss is a German photographer who lives and works in Berlin and Zechin, a small village on the border with Poland. Since 2010 he has been working on a series of still lifes with the sort of care and attention normally reserved to artistic portraits.

In his photography, light also plays an important role and contributes to rendering the material and physical nature of the objects being portrayed, as if they had a life of their own. Krauss is able to infuse beauty into an ordinary vegetable and give significance to something that normally never gets a second glance.

We met with him to talk about 39 Bilder, his latest photographic book published by Suzy Shammah, featuring this unique series of still lifes. The book collects 39 photos of still lifes of vegetables, fruit, grain, flowers and animals.

Could you explain your method of selection to us? 
The book follows the cycle of the seasons in four chapters - winter, spring, summer and fall, and according to this chronology I selected the pictures of natural objects from my rural environment. 

Talking about your creative inspiration, how does the place where you live influence your work? 
Since I moved my studio from Berlin to the Brandenburg countryside, I became a gardener and dedicate a lot of time to plants and vegetables, and so they naturally became a privileged pictorial subject - in the tradition of German Romanticism and its longing for (self-)knowledge in nature. I am photographing the fruits and vegetables by arranging them in simple still lifes, using sometimes also dead birds or other animals which I found around my garden or which I got from old men in the neighbourhood who are hunting and fishing. I am interested in the hidden relationship between the inner life of human beings and the world of plants and animals and I want to transmute those commonplace subjects by a process of replacing inattention with contemplation. 

Thinking about the images, how do you realize them and how important are colour and composition in your photos? 
To arrange my still lifes, I construct stage-like wooden boxes in various sizes in which I capture natural light in such a way that it becomes a subtle actor in the silent drama. As every gardener wants to put nature in his special order I also try to compose plants and animals in the pictures, transforming their potential and idiosyncrasies in such way that they seem new and strange and also, as for the first time, completely themselves. Thus every still life becomes a poetic test field. To give the images a transcendent dimension in the tradition of the vanitas I rework each handmade black and white print with a glaze of oil paint, thus enhancing the shine and depth of the objects. 

For how long have you worked on this project and which was the most challenging aspect? 
This is an ongoing project, which started in 2010. As I see my still lifes as portraits of the chosen objects it is challenging every time to understand their character and materiality. Like the “poet of things” Francis Ponge said, all objects “yearn to express themselves, so that they may reveal the hidden depths of their being.” 

Photos by kind courtesy of Hartmann Projects, the German gallery representing Ingar Krauss.

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Ingar Krauss' Food-inspired Still Lifes | Gallery

Beetroot and chard | Angel's trumpet and pear | Pole bears

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Celeriac | Pike

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Hare | Cucumber

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Watch Kevin Spacey Out-Swear Gordon Ramsay

There aren't many people with a fouler mouth than Gordon Ramsay, but actor Kevin Spacey makes even Ramsay blush in the funny clip below.

In it we see Ramsay and Spacey grilling up some outdoor treats and verbally sparring off each other, or to put it another way, who can say f*** more often and the loudest.

And it's Spacey that comes out on top, with Ramsay complementing the Oscar-winning actor on his curse game. 

The clip is a teaser from the US version of The F Word, which premieres on 31 May. Ramsay also recently released another clip to promote the show, filmed in a fictional Gordon Ramsay's Academy of Kitchen Outrage, where Ramsay teaches eager pupils how to insult food. 

It's not big and it's not clever, but it sure is funny. Watch the clip with Spacey below. 

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Watch Kevin Spacey Out-Swear Gordon Ramsay

Get Your Hands on Blue Hill’s Bone-Ash Cheese

They’re doing some wonderful things up at Dan Barber’sBlue Hill at Stone Barns restaurant in Upstate New York, and in an effort to reduce waste, have been, for years, turning kitchen waste, including animal bones, into charcoal for reuse in the kitchen. You can imagine the interesting flavour profiles that creates.

That bone ash now costs the rind of a special cheese commissioned by Dan Barber and available at Saxelby Cheesemongers. The Bone Char Pearl, which is 50% cow’s milk and 50% goat, retails at $16 and was only previously available at the restaurant.

It’s inspired by the ashed cheeses of the Loire Valley, where ash was originally added to the rind to protect the cheese from insects. However, traditionally wood or vegetable ash is used, rather than lamb and pig bones, as is the case with the Bone Char Pearl. 

Grub Streethas tasted it and describes it as “creamier than an all-goat cheese, with a whiff of mushroom and a grassy note or two.”

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Get Your Hands on Blue Hill’s Bone-Ash Cheese

The Royal Family is Looking for a Sous Chef

Here’s a once in a lifetime job opportunity: the British Royal Family is currently looking for a sous chef to work within the Royal households.

As The Daily Meal reports, the position is with TRH The Prince of Wales and the The Duchess of Cornwall (Charles and Camilla), with the successful chef required to cater to the Royal couple’s private dining needs, as well as those of staff and for private receptions and events.

The role will require travel up and down the UK to various Royal residencies and it’s fair to say, even if you have experience of banqueting, you probably haven’t catered banquets like these before.

Think you’ve got what it takes? Read more about what’s required and how to apply here – you have until the end of the day today (26 May, 2017).

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The Royal Family is Looking for a Sous Chef

10 Luscious Lemon Desserts That Will Brighten Your Day

When life gives you lemons, make a tasty dessert! These delicious lemon dessert recipes are just the thing to infuse a bit of sunshine into your day. Whether you're a fan of classics like lemon meringue pie or modern desserts with a twist, you'll be more than satisfied with these sunny zesty lemon dessert recipes. Enjoy!

1. Lemon Bars

Nothing beats the flavor of homemade lemon bars - especially when they are prepared with a hint of saffron.

Get this lemon dessert recipe now.

2. Lemon Meringue Roulade with Icing Sugar

Here's a fun twist on lemon meringue pie that looks just as pretty and tastes just as delicious.

Learn how to make this lemon roulade.

3. Lemon Sorbet Ice

An easy Italian lemon dessert recipe made with limoncello, fresh lemon juice and sugar.

Here is the super easy lemon recipe.

4. Lemon and Toffee Cupcake

The sweetest part of this buttery cupcake? It's crunchy topping of toffee and crushed meringue.

Find the recipe right this way.

5. Amalfi Lemon Tart

If you can find Sorrento lemons use them for this recipe. Their unique aroma will make this tart simply irrestible.

Click here for this lemon dessert recipe.

6. Lemon Granita

With just four ingredients you'll be able to make this classic Italian lemon dessert from Sicily.

Try this lemon dessert recipe now.

7. Lemon Delight

Enjoy a delicious Italian lemon dessert made with Genoise cake, limoncello and lemon cream.

Learn how to make it.

8. Lemon Meringue Pie

Perk up your day with this classic and comforting recipe for lemon meringue pie.

Find this lemon dessert recipe right this way.

9. Paleo Lemon Cake

Here's a fabulous lemon dessert recipe with a paleo twist thanks to almond flour, coconut flour, pine nuts and honey.

Learn how to make it.

10. Lemon Sponge Cake

This lemon sponge cake is perfect with tea or coffee. We are especially fond of the sugary glaze and think you will be too.

Click here for this lemon dessert recipe.

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10 Luscious Lemon Desserts That Will Brighten Your Day

jeudi 25 mai 2017

Dufresne Does Donuts

The man who brought you eggs in ways you never imagined possible, the one who paired two of the world’s greatest ingredients when he created beer cheese as a burger topping, the chef who served ‘non-bread’, instant squeeze tofu noodles, deconstructed pho and an ice cream bagel. The trailblazing chef’s chef who worked out how to perfectly cook bacon for a bite of crispy, sweet, salty, crunchy perfection - well, that man is back and this time he's doing donuts.

The food aficionados will know the man I'm speaking of is none other than the laid back, long haired, Wylie Dufresne. He's been away for a while, a bit of retrospective rebuilding after being forced to close his hugely popular WD50 restaurant in New York, followed by his, also popular, Alder bar. 

But that was four years ago: tasting menus have come, gone and come again since then. And lots of chefs lately have been making moves into simpler concepts for wider audiences and, of course, the bigger profits this brings. 

Daniel Humm is doing bowls, Andoni Luis Aduriz just opened Topa and Daniel Boulud has burgers. There’s Mark Ladner working on pasta, Jose Andres with BeefSteak - David Chang, the early adopter of the fast-casual market, is operating everything from fried to refined tasting menus. “Every body is trying to figure out ways to diversify,” says Dufresne, “there’s a lot of runs in the ladder, why not try to occupy as many runs as you can.”

Dufresne is a little stressed when I first arrive at the new shop, Du’s Donuts and Coffee in Williamsburg, Brooklyn - and I quickly learn why. New York is surprisingly hot for June - early, sticky hot - and this, as he tells me, isn't good for donuts."The temperature just went up 20 degrees outside, now the temperature in here goes up, that effects every little aspect. Proper donut making is all about temperature. The batter has to be at a very specific temperature, if it gets too cold or too hot the donut begins to be misshapen.”

As you might expect from a chef who devised a way to deep fry Hollandaise and make it delicious, these are not your regular precinct dunkers. At the moment there are eleven flavours covering a range of glazed and sugared donuts, there’s one cruller style offering but as Dufresne says, “that’s a different beast all together.” The donuts are all made using the same cake recipe, “it’s basically a fried cake batter,” he says, but with some pressing you realise there’s a little more to it than that.

“It took me about three months of developing that cake recipe,” he was actually given a small corner by his friend Daniel Humm at the NoMad so he could test the recipe again and again. “Light, good crumb, nice bounce back, not dense, spring, a bit of chew.” These are just a few of the words Dufresne uses to describe what a perfect donut is for him, “I think we did over 30 different recipes… I didn’t try even one glaze. I focused just on the cake and then I spent a month working on the glazes.”

And the glazes themselves also presented some challenges, in fact, the whole process was more challenging than he ever expected. “I didn’t think it would be easy but I didn’t think it would be as hard as it was to make a great donut,” says Dufresne, adding, “I’ve never worked as a pastry chef. The glaze of a donut is 70 percent sugar, not only sticky but it’s hard to get flavour in there. If 70 percent of what you’re making is sugar you have 30 percent space for flavour, a commercial donut maker just puts a drop of flavour in their, no problem. Our approach? I can’t tell you that,” he smiles, but he’s not really joking.

Looking at the commercial donut makers for ideas he’s developed a technique to stop the donut glaze sticking to your fingers and making a mess - a clever move and one he’s keeping to himself, “I’m not telling you how I did that.” It’s a simple touch but one that shows the attention to detail going into the project, I mean, he took an old-school donut maker on tour to Australia when testing his recipes, I guess it’s what you’d expect from a chef who ran such an accomplished restaurant, even the cups at Du’s feature the molecular symbol for coffee - a small nod to his restaurant past.

Seeing Dufresne in his immaculate kitchen - surrounded by boxes of donut toppings, secret ingredients, sleek silver counters and enough gadgetry to power a decent restaurant - is exciting. I mean, imagine walking into your local diner to find a Michelin starred chef expertly flipping your burger on top of a brand new shiny grill. Sounds amazing, right? What a deliciously dreamy scenario, but it’s not a dream.

Daniel Patterson has actually been working on his LoCal fast food concept for more than a year now with fellow chef Roy Choi and I guess that’s the point. Whether it’s Rene Redzepi and Rosio Sanchez launching a taco shop, Alain Ducasse doing fast food in Paris, or Enrique Olvera knocking out classic Mexican breakfasts in New York - everywhere you look, traditional fine dining chefs are diversifying on mass - and not in the hotel concept, bistro-style fare of their older European counterparts. No, this is great chefs with established careers starting to occupy runs of the ladder previously unseen. A food takeover, or, a McMichelin makeover, depending on how you see it. For me, it’s entirely expected and deliciously accepted.

“Everybody is trying to figure out ways to diversify, to stay relevant, to stay interesting, to stay excited, says Dufresne, “I think that it’s a funny time for fine dining, I don’t think by any means it’s dead but it’s not on the trajectory it once was…It’s getting more and more expensive to open, there are a lot of restaurants out there too, there aren’t nearly as many donut shops.”

He jokes but what he says is true, especially in big cities. Fine dining is costly to create, costly to visit, costly to maintain and it caters for the few. Stepping down the ladder to a wider audience affords chefs a much larger opportunity. This is matched by a captive audience that has never been more eager to sample the food of chefs they no and, in many cases, aspire to. This translates to talents and skills going towards feeding a wider, more democratic base, and that has to be a good thing. It also ensures your hands aren’t sticky the next time you eat a donut.

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Dufresne Does Donuts