Archive for April, 2010

A Griddle

Monday, April 26th, 2010

lodge double sided griddle
Two longtime friends of ours were very, very, very kind in giving us a [early] wedding gift. It's something Picky has wanted for a little while now – a Lodge Logic Pro Grid/Iron Griddle. We quickly put it to use a couple days after lugging it home when a hungry friend came over. Picky cooked up a pair of double egg and cheese sandwiches on the flat side (we used the grill side for asparagus a couple days later).

Anybody out there have one of these as well? Any favorite things to make on it? Picky is not a fan of pancakes so he won't be making any of those. The griddle sits very low on our rage so it's hard to see just how high the flame is underneath. It's gonna take a little bit of getting used to, but given our experience with cast iron cookware, we should get the hang of this beast fairly easily. This is going to be a great alternative to firing up an outdoor grill and this one's all season!

A Successful Bake Sale

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
So, the bake sale was a success! About $900 was raised to benefit Save our Strength, a group dedicated to fighting childhood hunger. And an added cool point was that the money raised locally would be used locally!

Messy had an event that morning, but I trekked up to Liberties Walk (late as per usual) with a big container full of my take on Metropolitan's chocolate chip, sour cherry and sea salt cookies. Mine use regular dried cherries (I can't find sour cherries anywhere, have you seen them?) and they're much much smaller and chewier than the crusty and delicious original. I was also, of course, sorely unprepared and had no baggies for the cookies, but e was at the ready and gave me a bunch of bags to stuff while she twisty tied them shut.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
Above is a shot of her incredibly delicious cookies n cream whoopie pies. They're eyes rolling back into your head good. I didn't have enough room in my bag to take along some Elvis cake, but I've had it before and can attest to their awesomeness. I did, however, have just enough room to take two whoopie pies home.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
About 4 long tables held up a bevvy of baked goods. Cupcakes, cookies, cakes, pretzels, granola… everything! It was ridiculously windy and stuff kept flying off the table. Nothing was damaged though – soft baked goods can take a tumble and still be delicious!

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
These (sort of) Lithuanian Easter breads looked interesting. They were the most foreign item to me on the table, but I didn't have room for them in my stuffed bag.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
Some people cheated and had graphic designers make up gorgeous cards for their treats to make them extra special looking. So what if the trained graphic designers were the actual people behind tastebuds and tidbits, that's still cheating.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
Here's a look at Marisa's pints of granola. One lady exclaimed "I want just pour it down my mouth it looks so good!" as Marisa, e and I were standing not 5' away from the jars.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
After an hour or so, the sun started to peek down Liberties Walk and brighten up those cold shadows. More and more people trickled in seeking out the bake sale along with the people who happily stumbled into it unknowingly.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
Another Oreo-themed baked good.

Share our Strength food blogger bake sale
Thank you to everyone who came out to help out, bake and of course, eat!

National Food Bloggers Bake Sale

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

You've been reading our blogs for a week, a month, a year, since the beginning… We've been posting about food because we love it. Well, here's a chance for us to get together, eat some food and do good things. e contacted us last week about a blogger bake sale and e, being one of our favorite-est bakers in the land, putting out the call gets attention. It's this Saturday April 17th between 10a – 3p at A Full Plate Cafe in Liberties Walk in Northern Liberties. The bake sale will benefit Share our Strength, an organization fighting to end childhood hunger in the United States.

e's posted a rundown of bloggers who have already signed up to bake for the event and there are more on the list and more to come. Picky's going to bake some cookies for the event. They might be e's famous coconut, toffee, almond, crunch cookies a.k.a. the most delicious cookies in the entire world or some chocolate chip, dried cherries, sea salt cookies. While e's given her blessing to bake her cookies and hawk them in front of her own workplace, we'll see how comfortable we are to go ahead and do so ;) .

See you there!

National Food Bloggers Bake Sale: Philadelphia
A Full Plate Cafe
1009 N. Bodine St Philadelphia, PA 19123
(215) 627.4068
Saturday April 17, 10a – 3p

Goose Egg

Monday, April 5th, 2010

open face goose egg sandwich
Doesn't that look absolutely delicious? It's an open face egg sandwich. Fried for a few minutes on each side so the yolk isn't entirely set, still a little oozy, but not fully drippingly so. A slice of Metropolitan Bakery's French table bread (my favorite base bread). A dab of El Yucateco habanero sauce for a little burn. Now what if I told you that was a goose egg?! Yep, that's a tiny sliver, the last 2 bites, of a gigantic goose egg from Pecan Meadows Farm out in Newburg, PA.

goose egg
I picked up two of these beauties at Fair Food in RTM last week. We got them in on Thursday and they're $3 a pop. The eggs are 4.5" from end to end (3" tall) and 7.5" around the waist. I don't have a scale handy, but it's roughly 0.5lbs or so, maybe a little more 0.40lbs. It's a little heavier than 3 chicken eggs in my unscientific kitchen test. The color of the eggs range from stark white to a scratchy light brown like in the photo above. I don't know exactly what kind of goose the eggs are from, but I'll find out and update the post.

chicken and goose egg
Here's a chicken egg (from Natural Meadows Farm as previously posted about) in front of the goose egg.

goose and chicken egg shells
After cracking a chicken egg and a goose egg, I compared the shells. The goose egg shell on the left is the bottom piece so the top piece is the narrower, longer part. Without a micrometer handy, I'd say the goose egg was fully twice as thick as the chicken egg and that chicken egg is pretty thick. When I hit the egg on the side of the bowl for the first time, it basically laughed at me. And this is coming from a guy who's now very very used to cracking an egg pretty hard from these much thicker shelled farm fresh eggs. A couple more clangs and I had it.

chicken and goose egg
So here they are side by side. Yes, I know, they're not perfect comparison vessels, but I think many people are familiar with those small, glass prep bowls (4" wide) and your basic cereal bowl (6" wide). The goose egg's yolk is about the size of the whole chicken egg. The albumen of the goose egg was so remarkably clear. After seeing how cloudy an emu egg was [see here], I expected this egg to be closer to that. But it was just as clear, if not clearer, than a chicken egg. Based on how it tasted and the texture, I'd say it had more water content in the albumen, but didn't taste watered down.

metropolitan bakery french table loaf
A glory shot of the French table bread.

goose egg
So here's your average Lodge Pro-Logic 10" cast iron skillet; my favorite cooking vessel. It takes up about 80% of the pan.

goose egg
I broke the yolk and flipped it. The yolk bled out a little bit and took up even more of the remaining 20% of the pan.

chicken egg sandwich
Here's your basic egg sandwich I made for Messy. A fried egg with some cheddar and Oldwick Shepherd (mold ripened sheep's milk, cave-aged 3-4 months from Valley Shepherd Creamery). Note, her sandwich is on Metropolitan's multi-grain loaf which is a tad bigger than the French table bread, but basically the same size.

fried goose egg
Here's the fried egg on your average plate (not a full sized dinner plate), with 2 smallish slices of bread. This sucker was huge. But how did it taste? It wasn't different from a chicken egg to me. If anything, it wasn't quite as tasty as the Natural Meadows eggs. I'm just spoiled by them really. I'm told that goose eggs are richer than your average egg, more sulfury, but the Natural Meadows eggs are just unreal. But that's not to say that the goose egg wasn't tasty – it was delicious. The albumen turned a very white white and fluffed up nicely. I have one more goose egg to try out (Messy vehemently refused to eat a goose egg) so I'll be scrambling one up soon. I hit this fried egg with a sprinkle of sea salt and fresh cracked pepper to bring out the flavors. Then I dabbed a couple drops of El Yucateco for a little tingle on the lips which is how I love my eggs.

We got a bunch in on Thursday, but I have no idea how many are left for the next week. Call the farmstand to see if there are any for you: 215.627.2029.

Yards Brewery Tasting Room

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Yards Brewery tasting room
What is made of a boatload of sustainable/reclaimed materials, pumps out 12k barrels of brew a year and makes cheap grilled cheese? The new Yards Brewery, of course. We headed up to the new[ish] location of Philly's 15-year-old brewery for one of Picky's co-worker's surprise going away party (and we kept it a surprise!) last week for a potluck in the new tasting room. We also got to tour the facility with one of the head brewers, Frank.

Yards Brewery tasting room
We were treated to a flight of brews on tap. From right to left: ESA, General Washington's Tavern Porter, Poor Richard's Tavern Spruce Ale, Philly Pale Ale. They didn't have Picky's current Yards favorite, Brawler on tap. Messy, who is not a beer fan, had a Yards root beer instead. It was tasty: a little spicy, not too sweet, but sadly, also a little bit flat.

It was our first visit to the new tasting room and we saw that they had a nice big menu to order from. We were there for a potluck so we had our own food to nosh on, but the menu looked great. There is a great selection of mix-and-match grilled cheese sandwiches ($3), soups and other tasty treats.

The brewery itself is a sustainable beast. Read up more about it here. That gorgeous bar above is made from reclaimed bowling alley planks.

Yards Brewery tasting room
Here's a shot from the back of the bar towards the entrance (and there's the surprised co-worker at center). There's a wall of recycled booths with a really cool vinyl wallpaper of all the logos of Yards beers.

Yards Brewery tasting room
To the left is a really nice, 100-year-old, made in Philly pool table. It has real pockets, as in "8-ball, side pocket" and no ball return – old school.

Yards Brewery
Right, the tour. Here's a shot of what the Yards crew calls Yards One: the original kettle from which beer under the Yards label was made.

Yards Brewery
Here's Frank showing us where the malt is kept, right in the room to his right. When he opened up the doors, it smelled luscious. The whole tour could've been just that room and Picky, a malty beer lover, would've been happy.

Yards Brewery
Frank took a seat next to the keg filling line. He talked us through the assembly line process which has several steps to make sure everything's nice and clean and sterile for beer to flow into.

Yards Brewery
And here is a very cool experiment: barley wine being brewed in some oak whiskey barrels. Small batch stuff for sure, but we're sure it'll be worth the wait. No, we didn't get to try some.

Yards Brewery
Giant stainless steel kettles and tanks within which the proverbial magic happens.

Yards Brewery tasting room

Some more info on the brewery and the tasting room from the site:

Tour Hours:
Saturday: Noon – 4 pm
(Tours are on the hour. Last one begins at 3:00 pm.)

The Tasting Room is open for business, pleasure, and special events. From floor to ceiling, the entire room reflects our commitment to environmental sustainability. We have bar tops made from old bowling alley lanes, recycled booths and lighting, and a pool table built here in Philadelphia more than 100 years ago. Come say hello and have a pint, or two, and purchase six-packs, cases, and kegs.

Tasting Room Hours
Monday – Saturday: Noon – 7 pm
Sunday: Noon – 4 pm
For Special Events, please call 215.634.2600.

Brewery Facts:

  • Pennsylvania's first 100% wind-powered brewery.
  • Current production capacity of 12,000 barrels a year.
  • Hot water collected and recycled whenever possible.
  • All glass and cardboard recycled through the Pedal Co-Op.
  • Grains and dregs donated to local farms as feed.
  • Earthen clay walls in the Tasting Room.
  • Floors made from recycled concrete and coated in SoyCrete sustainable compound.

Yards Brewing Company
901 N. Delaware Ave
Philadelphia, PA 19123
215.634.2600