How to Prepare Durian

By grace.g.yang · February 1, 2010
Under: Cheap Eats,Chinatown,Desserts,My Life

Every once in a while, I’ll go to Chinatown and pick up some exotic fruits that I can’t easily find anywhere else. On this particular trip, I saw a vendor selling durian and decided to pick some up to try it. Durian is easy to spot – they have spiky husks and the flesh is incredibly foul-smelling (in fact, some people find it so repulsive that they’ve made laws to ban the fruit on public transportation!) I’ve never had it before this trip, but my cousin and my uncle are both big fans of it and I decided to give it a try. The fruit has a smooth and creamy consistency like a banana, but is also *slightly* fibrous. Here’s the vendor preparing our durian:

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And a video of how fast the vendor cuts it up:

The cut up fruit:

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The taste of the durian, to me, was like creamy yet fibrous green onions. Combined with the smell of it was a little too much to handle (some people say it smells like vomit, I thought it smelled like gasoline). We actually walked into a store and people were looking around for the smell, even though we double bagged it. We ended up triple bagging it (with a super heavy duty Apple store bag) that got rid of the smell, although I’m not sure why we kept it because as soon as I brought it home, I realized that it was going to make my fridge stink so I ended up throwing the entire thing away. Maybe I should’ve mailed it to Carol from Alinea at Home – she has to eat it because her readers helped raise so much money for Share our Strength!

Buy 1, Get 1 Free @ Butter Lane

By grace.g.yang · January 29, 2010
Under: Cheap Eats,Cupcakes,Desserts,East Village,My Life,Things to do in NYC

For the month of February, Butter Lane is offering buy 1, get 1 free cupcakes (Monday’s – Wednesday’s) if you mention my blog, Gracenotes NYC! Butter Lane was a favorite from the cupcake cagematch, winning the wildcard category.

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Butter Lane is located in the East Village and uses all organic dairy (very awesome).

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What’s your favorite cupcake from Butter Lane?

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Ad Hoc at Home’s Apple Fritters

By grace.g.yang · January 28, 2010
Under: Cheap Eats,Desserts,My Life,Recipes

Since I was already frying 10 pounds of chicken on Saturday night (see chicken dinner post here), I figured we could also have a fried dessert. I was perusing the Ad Hoc at Home cookbook and found the recipe for apple fritters, which sounded really easy to make and looked very delicious. These were really easy to make AND they tasted great (especially with some vanilla ice cream). Keller says you can substitute other fruits – like pears, if you choose. The fritters depend on the fruit for sweetness (only 2 tablespoons of sugar are used) and taste great right out of the deep fryer. We used Fuji apples and it turned out really well.

Apple Fritters

Ingredients
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1.5 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 large egg
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon whole milk
3 large Fuji, Gala, or Golden Delicious apples
Canola oil for deep-frying
Powdered sugar for dusting

Whisk together all of the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt). Lightly beat the egg and milk in a small bowl. Whisk into the dry ingredients until combined.

Peel the apples and slice the fruit from the core. Cut the apples into thick matchsticks and fold into batter.

Heat oil up to 325 degrees and lift about 5-6 apple matchsticks from the batter. Fry for about 5 minutes turning the fritters from time to time, until crisp and golden brown. Remove the fritters from oil with skimmer or slotted spoon, transfer them to paper towels to remove excess oil, and stack them on a serving platter. Serve with LOTS of powdered sugar and ice cream:

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Food, Inc Screening on January 28

By grace.g.yang · January 27, 2010
Under: My Life

Tomorrow night there’s a special screening of Food, Inc. at the Mercy Corps’ Action Center to End World Hunger in Battery Park. Food, Inc., an Academy Award shortlisted film, reveals surprising and often shocking truths about what we eat, how it’s produced, who we have become as a nation and where we are going from here.

The event is co-presented by the Action Center and the Interfaith Experience committee, a group of 20- and 30-somethings that organizes lectures by contemporary artists, thinkers and leaders who provide insights on the role of faith in the creative and intellectual process. This season’s theme is: “Food and Faith.”

The screening will take place Thursday, January 28th. At 6:30 p.m., Dhrumil Purohit, Chief Community Organizer behind We Like It Raw, the most popular online raw food community, will discuss how food and faith relate from a Jain perspective. Please arrive early to grab a seat and chat with others interested in faith and food. The movie begins at 7:00. All proceeds will be shared between the Temple of Understanding and the Action Center to End World Hunger.

WHEN: January 28 at 6:30 p.m.
WHERE: The Action Center to End World Hunger, 6 River Terrace, Battery Park City
TICKETS: $10

You can also purchase tickets online.

Ad Hoc at Home’s Fried Chicken Recipe

By grace.g.yang · January 27, 2010
Under: California,Dinner,My Life,Recipes

A couple of years ago, I went to Ad Hoc in Yountville enjoyed my first Thomas Keller meal. Ad Hoc was a teaser for my birthday meal at The French Laundry, which, hands down, was one of the best and most fun meals I’ve ever been to. At Ad Hoc, the atmosphere was very casual and they serve one set menu per dinner service. When I actually had the opportunity to meet Thomas Keller and tell him about my dining adventures, he specifically asked if I had tried the fried chicken at Ad Hoc. Apparently it’s a HUGE deal and it’s only served once every other week. I didn’t go on a Monday so I didn’t have the opportunity to try his fried chicken, but I was very intrigued. When Ad Hoc at Home was published, I decided that it was the first recipe in the book that I would try. I told a couple of friends to come over for dinner and we’d have a casual meal with fried chicken, apple fritters (also from Ad Hoc at Home), and lots of wine and other yummy drinks.

Ad Hoc at Home’s fried chicken is a pretty time consuming endeavor. I didn’t have a lot of the spices on hand and had to go to three different supermarkets to buy everything. Also, cutting up two chickens by myself was quite a task; I used knives that Gunther-Wilhelm lent me and it still wouldn’t cut through the chicken so I ended up using brute force (my palms). Apparently, I used TOO much force because my right palm now has a huge bruise on it from pressing down on the knives I used to cut the chicken! Thomas Keller makes it look so easy, but it definitely WASN’T. I cut up the chicken much faster the second time, but I still had to use a lot of force.

HOWEVER, the results are definitely worth it – everyone at the party really enjoyed the fried chicken and I’ve been happily eating it for the past couple of days – but it was so much work that I’d rather fly to Yountville to eat it than make it again on my own! The cleanup process was definitely not fun (since I don’t usually fry things, I decided to throw away the vegetable oil instead of saving it), but, this chicken is so moist and delicious that I can definitely see myself caving in and making it all over again.

Ad Hoc at Home’s Fried Chicken
Ingredients

1 gallon cold water
1 cup plus 2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons honey
12 bay leaves
1 head of garlic, smashed but not peeled
2 tablespoons black peppercorns
3 large rosemary sprigs
1 small bunch of thyme
1 small bunch of parsley
Finely grated zest and juice of 2 lemons
Two 3-pound chickens
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons garlic powder
2 tablespoons onion powder
2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
2 cups buttermilk
Vegetable oil, for frying
Rosemary and thyme sprigs

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Quite a list for a brine, don’t you think? In a very large pot, combine 1 quart of the water with 1 cup of the salt:

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Add the honey:

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And the 12 bay leaves:

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Next, the garlic:

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Peppercorns and rosemary:

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Thyme:

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And parsley:

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Add the lemon zest and juice and the lemon halves:

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And bring to a simmer over moderate heat, stirring until the salt is dissolved:

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Let cool completely, then stir in the remaining 3 quarts of cold water. Add the chickens, being sure they’re completely submerged, and refrigerate overnight:

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The brine is enough for 2 chickens so I split up the brine evenly, put it in two containers, and let the chickens rest in the fridge overnight. My chickens:

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Thomas Keller recommends using 2-3 pound chickens that you find at the farmer’s market, but I was having my dinner party on Saturday, not Sunday, and by the time I reached the farmer’s market on Friday, everything had closed. I also stuck in some chicken tenders to make chicken fingers (in case cutting up the chickens turned out to be a huge mess).

The next day, I cut up my chickens into 10 pieces (I don’t know how I got through this…following Thomas Keller’s step by step instructions definitely helped, but it didn’t look like he was struggling at any point in his pictures and it also didn’t look like he wanted to throw the chicken at the wall because he was so angry in any of his photographs). Apparently I don’t have any arm strength whatsoever because I used practically every knife in the Gunther-Wilhelm packet and NOTHING was helping me cut these chickens. I don’t think I had good leverage because the counter was so high, but I somehow got through it. I separated the chickens into dark meat and light meat (you cook them at different temperatures).

Some light meat with chicken tenders after I drained the chickens and scraped off any herbs or peppercorns stuck to the skin:

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I didn’t take any pictures of me cutting up the chickens because I was working by myself and didn’t want to contaminate my camera with raw chicken, but maybe I’ll post a video if I ever try to cut up a chicken again (not likely).

In a large bowl, combine the flour, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne and the remaining 2 teaspoons of salt:

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Set up a station of flour, buttermilk, and more flour:

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The dark meat before dredging:

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Dredge the chicken in the flour mixture, then dip it in buttermilk, then another dredge in the second flour mix:

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Dark meat goes into a deep skillet with vegetable oil when the oil reaches 330:

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Fry for about 15 minutes (until the chicken reaches 160 degrees). Once the chicken is done, set it on a drying rack so the excess oil can run off.

More frying:

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The white meat is fried at 340 degress until it reaches 160 degrees as well (when you’re checking with an instant read thermometer, make sure you don’t touch the bone because that will affect the read). My finished chicken:

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Transfer the fried chicken to a platter, garnish with the herb sprigs and serve hot:

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Ariel, Lou, me, Elliott, and Amanda before diving in:

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We ate the chicken Momofuku style – Boston lettuce, carrots, and lots of hot sauce! The fried chicken was very delicious and would definitely be great for a dinner party (or a picnic!) It was a ton of work because my kitchen is still very small, but it was definitely very fun to recreate a Thomas Keller recipe. The next Thomas Keller recipe that I want to try (from the Ad Hoc at Home cookbook) is the sea bass baked in salt – it looks so impressive from the photographs! (full disclosure: Ad Hoc at Home was given to me by the book’s publisher)


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