Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 30, 2011

Published by Wednesday, March 30, 2011 Permalink 0

by Simon de Swaan

Anybody can make you enjoy the first bite of a dish, but only a real chef can make you enjoy the last.–Francois Minot, Editor, Michelin restaurant guide

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On The Chocolate Trail: Elizabeth Taylor Chocolate Notes

Published by Monday, March 28, 2011 Permalink 0

We wanted to share the comments and feedback we received about Christina Daub’s On the Chocolate Trail: The Elizabeth Taylor Special.

Alternative Recipe for Liz Taylor Special

A friend in Bethesda just asked about recipe for the Liz Taylor Special. All you do is place your favorite truffles artfully on your plate–and if you want to buy them, instead of make them, I suggest you get the Budapest truffles at Kron in DC and then cover them completely with whipped cream.

You might try sweetening the whipped cream with a splash of Grand Marnier and a sprinkling of sugar. This is an irresistible combination with the dark sumptuous truffles.

Alternative Recipe for a Chocolatini

Rim glass in cocoa powder or if you prefer sweeter, add some icing sugar to the cocoa first.

In a martini shaker, shake together one shot Smirnoff vanilla vodka and a shot of Godiva chocolate liquer over ice. Stir in 2 shots of cream and cocoa powder to taste. Shake quickly and strain into martini glass.

Alternative Recipe for a Chocolatini using vodka and Bailey’s Irish Creme

You can also use plain vodka and add Bailey’s Irish Creme to it and use creme de cacao instead of Godiva.

Garnish with dark chocolate shavings for some added pizazz.

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 23, 2011

Published by Wednesday, March 23, 2011 Permalink 0

by Simon de Swaan

Food is our common ground, a universal experience.–James Beard

Dubbed as the father of American gastronomy, James Beard was the author of numerous cookbooks, a teacher and mentor to many professional cooks, as well as an inspiration to many home cooks who learned how to cook and to appreciate the foods that are regionally specific to the United States.

The Rambling Epicure

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David Downie and Alison Harris on Book Tour from April 20 to May 20 in NYC and SF Bay Area

Published by Wednesday, March 23, 2011 Permalink 0

by David Downie

Food and travel writer David Downie and photographer Alison Harris are gearing up for their U.S. book tour, to beat the drum about their pair of newborn books: Quiet Corners of Rome (April 25, 2011) and Paris, Paris: Journey into the City of Light (April 5, 2011). The covers, if you please!

Details about the books, book tours and links to their favorite book sellers are listed on David’s site, as well as on Twitter and Twitter.



Also featured on their tour and already available for purchase: Food Wine Burgundy, Food Wine Rome, Food Wine Italian Riviera & Genoa, and Cooking the Roman Way (the new e-book version).

What’s on the playbill? They’ll be showing slides (actually, Alison will do a PowerPoint presentation), talking, chatting, interacting via riveting Q&As, giving live radio interviews (most are still to be scheduled), and generally performing all the other tricks and great things writers and photographers do on book tours. Singing, dancing, walking tight ropes, jumping through hoops…

Crucial dates: They will be in New York from April 20-30.

NYC

Thursday, April 28, 5:30 – 7 pm
Rizzoli Bookstore, 31 West 57th St (5th-6th Ave.s)
Meet & Greet + Reading, Talk

They will be in the SF Bay Area/wine country May 1-18, and back home in Paris on May 19 and in operation on the 20th.

SF BAY AREA & Wine Country

Monday, May 2, 7 PM
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd, Corte Madera
Reading, Talk and slide show.

Tuesday, May 3, 7:30 PM
Readers’ Books, 130 E Napa St, Sonoma
National treasure Paula Wolfert introduces us.
Reading, Talk.

RADIO INTERVIEW
Saturday, May 7, 11:00 AM (Time may change but it will be between 10 am and 12:30 pm). KGO AM 810, “Dining Around with Gene Burns,” Live interview.

Saturday, May 7. 4:00 PM
Mrs. Dalloways Literary & Garden Arts, 2904 College Ave, Berkeley
Info: 510-704-8222
Reading, Talk.

Tuesday, May 11, 6:00 PM
Mechanics’ Institute Library, 57 Post Street, San Francisco
Info: 415-393-0114
Reading, Talk and slide show.

Wednesday, May 12, 6:00 – 7:00 pm
Omnivore Books, 3885A Cesar Chavez St, San Francisco
Info: 415-282-4712
Reading, Talk about food and travel writing in France and Italy.

Stay tuned, the above will evolve… And please spread the word…

Remember, if you can make it to one of our book events, and you can’t be in Paris this spring, you’ll always have Paris, Paris — the book!

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 22, 2011

Published by Tuesday, March 22, 2011 Permalink 0

by Simon de Swaan

Preach not to others what they should eat, but eat as becomes you, and be silent.–Epictetus (55 AD – 135 AD)

Greek Stoic philosopher, Epictetus was born into slavery. He believed that all external events are determined by fate and beyond our control and that we should accept what life brings us calmly.

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 18, 2011

Published by Friday, March 18, 2011 Permalink 0

Simón de Swaan, Simon Says, The Rambling Epicureby Simón de Swaan

One of the delights of life is eating with friends, second to that is talking about eating. And, for an unsurpassed double whammy, there is talking about eating while you are eating with friends.–Laurie Colwin, Home Cooking

 Prolific American food writer who died unexpectedly from a heart attack at age 48.

http://www.babelio.com/users/AVT2_Colwin_3926.jpeg

http://www.babelio.com/users/AVT2_Colwin_3926.jpeg

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quotes, March 17, 2011

Published by Thursday, March 17, 2011 Permalink 0

Simón de Swaan, Simon Says, The Rambling Epicureby Simón de Swaan

The ultimate aim of civility and good manners is to please: to please one’s guest or to please one’s host. To this end one uses the rules laid down by tradition: of welcome, generosity, affability, cheerfulness and consideration for others. People entertain warmly and joyously. To persuade a friend to stay for lunch is a triumph and a precious honour. To entertain many together is to honor them all mutually. It is equally an honour to be a guest.–Claudia Roden, A Book of Middle Eastern Food (1968)

Claudia Roden is an Egyptian-born food writer. She studied in Paris, then later moved to London, where she has lived for most of her life. She travels as a food writer and is the author of the James Beard award–winning The Book of Jewish Food and A Book of Middle Eastern Food amongst other works.  Her most recent book Arabesque won the Andre Simon Memorial Fund Award for Best Food Book, the Glenfiddich Best Food Book Award, and the Gourmand World Media Special Award of the Jury.

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 16, 2011

Published by Wednesday, March 16, 2011 Permalink 0

Simón de Swaan, Simon Says, The Rambling Epicureby Simón de Swaan

Everything ends this way in France – everything. Weddings, christenings, duels, funerals, swindlings, diplomatic affairs — everything is a pretext for a good dinner.–Jean Anouilh (1910-1987) , Cecile (1954) French playwright best known for his play Antigone.

The Rambling Epicure

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 14, 2011

Published by Monday, March 14, 2011 Permalink 0

Simón de Swaan, Simon Says, The Rambling Epicureby Simón de Swaan

The candyman can, The candyman can cause he mixes it with love and makes the world taste good.–Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley

This song was written by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley specifically for the film and does not appear in Roald Dahl’s original book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory or the 2005 film adaptation. It was sung by Aubrey Woods, who played Bill the candy store owner in the original film.

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Food News: The Rambling Epicure and iTaste are teaming up

Published by Friday, March 11, 2011 Permalink 0

by Jonell Galloway

The new Michelin guide for France came out last week and has caused much stir in the restaurant world. Many think the old-fashioned European restaurant guides such as GaultMillau and Michelin — once had-to-haves for any restaurant lover — are antiquated and stagnant and can’t keep up with our changing times, that they are ancien régime, dinosaurs of times past.

This may well be. While restaurants come and go, some restaurant goers continue to yearn for the traditional cooking of the past, insisting that today’s young chefs don’t even know all the basic techniques of Cuisine, with a capital “C.” In 2010, UNESCO declared that the French gastronomic meal is part of French cultural heritage, defining specific rules and social occasions for partaking of it, as if it were a species in danger of extinction.

Others, such as food critic David Downie, in his article “Surveying the Paris food scene: a mecca again — but is it French?” on Gadling, and Jean-Philippe de Tonnac in his review of Au Revoir to All that: The Rise and Fall of French Cuisine by Michael Steinberger, dare to question whether the French restaurant scene is still French, yet conclude that it doesn’t matter. Paris and France will always be the Elysian Fields of the food gods, no matter what their nationality, and innovation has never stopped.

What has changed is the way we eat — lighter — and the way we choose restaurants. In France and Switzerland, as in most places, the traditional restaurant guides are often outdated before they even go to print. Restaurants come and go, as do chefs. Establishments are no longer bastions of a certain type of cuisine by a certain chef. Because of this, on-line guides are more flexible and can change with the times. They can be updated daily or even hourly, unlike printed guides.

It is for this reason that The Rambling Epicure is partnering with iTaste, a Swiss-based restaurant social network, which is quickly spreading its antennae all over Europe. iTaste refers to itself as “the food critics’ social network” and “the web’s gourmet word of mouth network.”

The beauty of iTaste is that you can define your tastes in restaurants, read reviews of user-critics with similar taste, and follow their reviews on a regular basis, just as you do with any social network.

Their argument is that Google is convenient, but a human search engine is even better. In the iTaste communitiy, each iTaster becomes a food critic and shares his or her reviews with their contacts and followers.

iTaste was founded by Paul de la Rochefauld in Geneva, Switzerland, and has slowly been spreading its wings to the rest of Europe, including France, Germany, Italy and Belgium. It is in French, English and German. Since it gives you the possibility of entering a location and a restaurant, its possibilities are endless. You can even be the first one to start by entering your favorite restaurant in your home country. See you there!

Click here to go to iTaste.




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