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Well, folks, this is it. I'm packing up my suitcase to head to Australia for 12 days--a journey I plan to document on the blog as I go (we'll see how I do!)--and Craig is asking me to make a big pot of something to leave him in the fridge so he can have food to eat when I'm not here. I feel very wife-from-Babe. Coincidentally, friends at a Halloween party recently asked me to write a post on this
Here's an idea for your weekend, and really there's not much to it. While you're sitting around on Sunday, reading the paper or doing a marathon of Orange is the New Black, bring a big pot of water to a boil. Drop in half an onion (leave the skin on), a carrot, a piece of celery and a whole head of garlic. Then pour in a big bag of dried chickpeas. If you're bold, add a pinch of salt (though some
Most of us know the rules when it comes to cooking: wash your hands after handling raw chicken, don't wash a cast iron skillet with soap, etc. Yet, over my many years of cooking (both with chefs and by myself), I've learned that certain rules are time-wasters that do very little for you or your food. Breaking these rules frees you up to focus on the stuff that really matters when making dinner. So
On a Sunday afternoon, lounging around my apartment watching "Terms of Endearment" on HBO, inspiration suddenly strikes and I am compelled to make ginger ale from scratch. It would take a team of behavior specialists and Debra Winger fans to analyze this phenomenon, but suffice it to say: I was hot and I had ginger. I recalled a recipe for homemade Ginger Ale in Jean-George's book "Cooking At Home
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