What's This?

A little blog about me and my path through the world of the commercial kitchen...

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Its That Time Again...

Summer has officially ended in Athens. School is in session and the students have returned in full force. Traffic has quadrupled, as have lines at the grocery store, the streets are packed with very fashionable young women and the bars are open every night. This means a return to regular hours at the National instead of our abbreviated summer hours. That abbreviated schedule left room for lots of fun but left a gaping hole in my finances despite my recent small raise (yay!). So I for one and welcoming the students back with open arms and an open wallet. Football season will begin soon, leading the way for even longer days and more shifts which I will certainly celebrate less enthusiastically by week 2 but which I am looking forward to right now.
Changing seasons also mean changing menus. Though our menu changes regularly throughout each season, a more noticeable change occurs with the seasons as certain local produce becomes unavailable and we more toward more hearty fall fare. Last night I cooked local pork chops over butternut squash cous-cous dressed with sherry-vidalia jus and a peach and green chili chutney. This is one of my favorite dishes that I have cooked in quite awhile. The pork looked lovely seared on the grill, was extremely juicy and, with the bone in, held its place on the plate nicely. I think this dish is really perfect for the in between season, utilizing the first fall squashes in a way that is still light and simple as well as the last of the Georgia peaches.
Another way we ushered in the season with squash was on our scallop plate.  This simple appetizer dish of two large seared scallops drizzled with a little brown butter vinaigrette and set atop a mound of roasted spaghetti squash was a favorite with both guests and staff last night. I had little experience with spaghetti squash but I have a feeling it is going to become a fall staple for me at home and at work.  Spaghetti squash can seem a little intimidating because of its extremely tough exterior however with a sharp knife, a steady hand and a little patience you can enjoy this healthy and flavorful gourd as a base or side  anywhere you might use a typical starch or grain, such as potatoes or rice. Spaghetti squash is so-called for the fibrous texture of its flesh which when prepared properly resembles capellini pasta. This is how we prepare ours:

  • Carefully remove the stem and end from the squash and cut in half.
  • Scoop the seeds from the interior
  • Season the flesh with salt and pepper and coat generously in olive oil
  • Place squash face down on a sheet tray 
  • Pour 1 cup of white wine and 1 cup of water onto the tray and cover in tin foil
  • Back at 300 degrees for approximately 1 hour or until done. The squash should give to the touch but not be mushy
  • Allow to cool to room temp before using a fork to loosen the fibrous flesh from the shell
  • Serve immediately or store and reheat later by sauteing on low heat for a few minutes
* Sorry for the lack of photos in this post, my phone has been out of order for a while but is back now so look for some photos of these awesome dishes in the near future!

Monday, July 11, 2011

Tapas challenge 2011!

Our restaurant will be taking part in a local food event next week and as our chef will be out of town that day, he created a contest to see who would go in his place and represent The National. We all created a tapas item that featured local products and served them for family meal this afternoon. Some of the dishes create included:

Darby Farm Deviled eggs ~ A deviled egg! With chicken! mustardy, spicy, filling, easy to pop in your mouth in one or two bites with the sweetness of a little local tomato on top. These guys ended up winning the competition. Congrats Coby!



Pork Belly and Peach Relish on a Crispy Pita Point ~ Sweet and spicy with an almost Asian feel. Perfectly crisp pita and a sprig of local arugula added a little crunch and bitterness, rounding out the taste nicely. David's dish was considered the "runner-up."

I made a panzanella salad with local peaches, blueberries, heirloom tomatoes, and jamon serano tossed with basil and sherry vinaigrette featuring a little wedge of some wonderful local cheese, a gouda from Sweet Grass Dairy in southern GA.


Other entries included an adorable little stuffed onion of sorts that I sadly did not get a chance to taste and some simple but beautiful skewers of summer fruits (including pickled blueberries, yum) in a lemon balsamic.

My phone recently had an unfortunate run in with liquid and the camera has been acting up so I only managed to snag pictures of my own and the winner but I hope you can imagine the tasty-ness that we created today! If you are local make sure to come see us and all the other participants at the Taste Your Place Event on July 21st at Cine. Don't forget to check out all the other PLACE events in the following weeks as well.

Contest

Tomorrow we are having a cook-off at work to see who goes to represent the restaurant at a local food show. Wish me luck!

Friday, July 1, 2011

Five Year Plan for a Cook?

So I've been hearing a lot about so-called "five year plans." My Aunt told me I should create one when I graduated college. I love my Aunt, but this is the same woman who has kept a diary since she was 10, has kept every piece of paperwork, receipt, tax information, etc since 1980 and can tell you what she was wearing on a given day at any point of the past 5 years (at least.) Obviously someone who enjoys making lists and plans and scheduling. I have never thought of myself this way. I habitually quit every hobby I ever started from karate to photography mostly because I can't stand to be scheduled. I am the kind of person who may skip out on some event I had planned to attend because, at the last moment I sat down on the couch and saw that "The Craft" was on television yet again and felt compelled to watch (yet again) and lost track of an entire two hours. Now don't get me wrong, I rarely skipped class and I never miss a shift at work but after that my priorities get a little hazy. Maybe I was over-scheduled as a child, hell even as a young adult. My college schedule was pretty brutal; a full course load, a scholarship that required 10 hours a week of community service, a part-time job and a serious relationship. Even then I could find the time to get lost in a book for hours or occasionally clear my schedule for the entire day in order to sit on the couch in my pjs with my roommate and watch a marathon of "America's Next Top Model" (after which neither of us could stand to look in a mirror for nearly a week.)

This being the year of my 25th birthday I've been reconsidering some things about myself and my life. Aside from the disaster that is my finances and toll that has taken on my ability to travel and eat out (among other things), certain things that I always thought were essential to my personality are coming into question. I always wanted to think of myself as a free-spirit, a traveler, a lover of the finer things in life, a bohemian scholar with a pinch of the dilettante thrown in for good measure and now without the ability to do those things that are essential to such a lifestyle and no longer being school, my "unscheduled" ways are starting to look a little more like just being plain messy and lazy.  I work hard, there is no question of that, and certainly standing on ones feet over a hot oven all day does not make one the most active one could be after work, but surely I should be doing something with my free time other than drinking Miller Hi-Life on the porch with my neighbors or spending 6 hours a stretch on YouTube?

I have a job I love, but no plans concerning how that job will ever become more than "just a job."  I have a man I love, but no plans concerning how or where our futures will take us. I love this city but I don't know if it will provide what I need in the future. I like my apartment but I long for a yard. So many things I want and no plans to achieve them. Maybe at least if I made a plan, I would spend my free time working on aspects of it and then should it all still go awry I can say "at least I tried." What's the quote about the best laid plans of mice and men?

The other side of my fights this plan making tooth and nail. I do truly have no desire to be the kind of person that gets up at the same time every day and goes to bed at the same time every night regardless of what they are doing, where they are or who they are with. I don't want to be the kind of couple that has "Tuesday date nights" or scheduled sex. I don't want to be so focused on my plan that I miss out on other opportunities along the way....but mostly I don't want to be disappointed. If you never make a plan, you can always fake any outcome. No matter what happens you can say you planned it that way, or that it doesn't matter or make some beatnik remark about going where the wind blows but if you plan it, if you write it down, if you type it out, show it to someone, and then fail, then you failed, you can't hid it from yourself or anyone else. Aside from that, how can you plan for who you will be in five years? Five years ago I thought I'd be working on a phd program right now, and two years before that I thought I'd be a high school english teacher by now, married and maybe with a child. I don't know what I want to do tomorrow night, how the hell do I know what I want to do in five years?

I'm not sure how it'll turn out but I might give it a shot. If nothing else, maybe I can map out some basics,   fill in a few blank spots on the map. It doesn't help that any website I can find offering advice assumes that everyone works in some sort of nameless office. Tips such as "work with colleagues as a leader on a project that will be seen by upper management" don't really work in my career. I suppose if you are a chef, or a business owner you could make financial plans, or plans for expanding your name recognition, or branding your products; but how exactly is a lowly cook supposed to make a plan out of "cook the best you can, every plate, every shift, and hope someone notices, or you win the lottery?"
I'll let you know how it goes. Feel free to leave advice if any of you out there are "planners."

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

June

     Theres no two ways about it, I am a complete failure at keeping up with writing. I suppose the good part about this is what when I write I always have a lot to say so here goes the news for now.
Spring in Athens is crazy busy. Being the college town that it is spring is jam packed with sorority and fraternity events, school fundraisers, graduation parties, engagement parties, weddings and more. April and May are two of our busiest months at work and it was a record breaking period this year. It was my first spring in an Athens restaurant as a full-time cook and was both exciting and very, very tiring. 

     Through graduation I was working the same positions I have been working for months now, lunch grill or gm and the occasionally dinner gm. Our chef told me one night in passing that after everything calmed down he'd like me to train on a new station. I said great but didn't think anymore about it assuming it would be awhile or he was just talking in theoretical terms. Much to my surprise the week immediately following graduation I was scheduled for three training shifts on grill. My first couple nights were good, working closely with another one of the cooks I learned how each of the items were to be prepped, cooked and plated. They helped me keep track of which tickets were on fire and which on order and checked my steak temps to help me get a feel for the proper doneness. One Thursday night was surprisingly busy and I had to stand back and let my trainer take over entirely, I could only help him plate and stand by with glazed over eyes trying to follow his movements. A little over a week training and it was time for me to take the line by myself. Summers are typically slow in our restaurant and in Athens in general. Sort of the reverse of a resort town, all the students leave for the summer and town is blissfully quiet and empty. Due to the growing popularity of our restaurant however this summer is apparently not nearly as quiet as is typical. Thursdays are a gamble of night in general, sometimes following the cue of a weeknight and being rather slow, sometimes starting out the weekend a day early with a big bang. I went to work with knots in my stomach wondering which it would be. The night started out steady, not overwhelming but certainly not slow. About 8 pm a storm rolled into town that zapped the power over a 5 block radius and put a quick end to the stream of dinner guests. I ended up having a quite manageable first night on the grill. Hopefully summer with be kind to me and give me a chance to get my flow together before getting my ass handed to me once the students come back to town this fall.  In related news I am now sporting an intense new collection of burns along my forearms as is always the case when I learn a new station and have yet to force my natural clumsiness into some semblance of muscle memory. 

     On the flip-side, I've also been spending a lot of time outside of the kitchen. We've had the opportunity to travel to two of the farms that we source several of our ingredients and produce from and serve food there in the field. The Athens Culinary Federation hosted a brunch in the field at Red Mule farms owned by Alice and Tim Mills. Several Athens restaurants, catering companies, and the culinary program at Athens Tech were there to serve food that highlighted the grains produced at the farm. We had a chance to spend some time outside on a nice Sunday morning, chat with fellow cooks and sample their foods. We watched the big red draft mule, "Luke" grind corn into grits using a mile created by Tim out of old truck parts. For our dish we brought polenta made with Red Mule grain and local braised pork belly topped with a relish made of local radishes and house-made pickled vegetables. 

Chef Peter Dale making radish-pickel relish at Red Mule Farms
"Luke" grinds corn into grits
     Our second event was at Sundance Farms for the Tour De Farm in which cyclist cycle from farm to farm over the course of a weekend and are served a meal created by a local restaurant using food sourced from the farm at which they are staying. Cyclists camp out overnight before moving on to the next farm the following day. For this event we brought food that was cold or room temp and very heathly. Given that these folks had been cycling all day and had another day ahead of them it seemed fitting to give them something that would't slow them down. We really focused on the vegetables that the farm had supplied us including carrots, onions, potatoes, beets and more.

Our Menu:
Chicken panzanella with tomatoes and greens
Potato and beet salad with smoked GA mountain trout, leeks, pecans, and hardboiled egg
Moroccan carrot salad
Sea island red peas with local feta, radishes, and nasturtium leaves 
Kale slaw with grated carrot and shaved baby onion in mustard vinaigrette 
Red mule polenta with seared mustard greens
For Dessert:
Shortbread crumbs, housemade granola, local blueberries whipped in local fresh cream and topped with Booger Hill Honey.

We had a great day despite having a minor mental hiccup and forgetting half of our food on the first trip. We cooked in the family kitchen and served out of their personal china. We toured the farm, petted the dog, chatted with the kids and some of the cyclists. Going to these farms its amazing some of the things you never even think about how they look growing, like celery or brussels sprouts, even spending as much time as I do in the kitchen it never occurred to me to wonder that these things look like in the ground. The dessert was a last minute experimental concoction that really fits the idea of necessity being the mother of invention. With limited ingredients and some time constraints we created a dessert that was sweet without being overwhelming, made the most of our local fresh product, fit the country setting and even looked beautiful! 










Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Late As Usual

So I am officially awful at keeping a blog as it has been nearly a month that my fledgling blog has been abandoned.
Things are going well at work. I cook hot side at lunch nearly every day now and I am feeling pretty confidant about most of the dishes. Recently I have cooked shrimp al ajillo, pork cheeks in spanish onion soup and grits, a variety to steaks, turkey burgers, lamb kefte, cod wrapped in serrano ham, flounder fillet sandwiches and more. I've picked up a few nights as well, generally one a week. I find that dinner is often easier than lunch since it is more typical garde-manger material. The number of items smaller and more streamlined, only appetizers, salads and desserts.
Speaking of desserts, tres leches ice cream with passion fruit curd. That is all I have to say about that. Amazing. Ok that's all....nom. Well, that too! Ok seriously, just go eat some.
The biggest news of the moment is that I ended my over two year employment at my other job. I miss it but it has given me the opportunity to really focus on what I am doing in my current position, not to mention that it is much easier to schedule one job than two. I hope that everyone realizes that I probably wouldn't have made it in this town without them and I will be forever thankful to them for being there with me through these past two years. I've hung out with a few people since leaving and that's reassuring to know that I hopefully won't lose touch entirely. Who knows, perhaps someday all of our late night, post-work planning and dreaming of a place of our own will materialize. Travis and I used to joke about a hibachi grill style place but that you could call ahead and order anything you wanted the chefs would cook it in front of you, like your own personal cooking show. Manny and I planned "Phillies" over many a beer, a quick, window-front operation that would make us all enough money to go do whatever it is we really wanted to do. Will and I just watched "RuPaul's Drag Race" and kidded about a restaurant populated entirely by drag queen rejects from the show. In honor of my time there I'll leave you with some things I learned.
1) How to make custard from scratch
2) How to make awesome squash casserole and macaroni and cheese
3) How NOT to cut lettuce or bring down the temp of the grill (these were what you might call "trial and error learning" with emphasis on the error, both involved trips to the hospital)
4) That homemade whipped cream is approximately 1 million times better than store bought
5) How to properly organize a walk-in cooler
6) BBQ is good, even on pizza
7) New Belgium beers, MGMT, Bell's Grocery store, Cine movie theatre, the margaritas at Taqueria del Sol, Daily Grocery, and spicy Blenheim's ginger ale are all really good things.
8) I HATE UGA gamedays
9) Cornhole is a game best played in a front yard with good friends a nice breeze and beer in hand
10) That I actually have some aptitude and a lot of love for cooking, a path which began with a slow shift, an empty wallet and a lesson in making banana pudding.
Thanks guys!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Ah, day off


Ah, a mid-week day off, what did I do to deserve this? Well, I didn't get to enjoy it as much as I should have, as I had to spend most of the day at the dept of motor vehicles getting a replacement drivers license since I lost mine quite some time ago and was driving without id.
I've had a lot of other stuff going on lately so the blog has been a little disjointed but it's time to get back to the food. I've worked grill several times now and am feeling more confidant all the time. I've got my first official night-time garde manger shift this Saturday and I'm very excited about that. This week some of the items I cooked included: braised pork shoulder sandwich with smoked paprika mayonnaise and fennell-red onion slaw on a kaiser bun; laughing bird shrimp and red mule polenta with tomato broth, piquillo peppers and wilted chard; hangar steak with roasted potatoes, radishes, arugula and avocado crema. As always we have our "power lunch," a healthy but filling option that currently includes: sauteed chickpeas and spinach; shaved beets with pumpkin seeds, herbs and pomegranate; spicy seared broccoli rabe; red quinoa salad with cucumbers, edamame, feta and a citrus-vin dressing.
Also this week I learned to "dress" or butcher a side of fish, specifically a striped bass. It is an interesting and satisfying process to bring something that is still, at least for the most part, a recognizable animal down to beautiful little 6 oz portions. As always I am intrigued by the steps that go unnoticed by the general public in the trail from the sea or field to the table or supermarket. Processes which were once common knowledge to nearly all people have become specialized to a very small section of the populace. This isn't inherently a good or bad thing, however I do think that if more people were involved in the growing, hunting, butchering, etc of their foods things would likely be done in a much more humane, environmentally friendly, healthy and tasteful way. It's also more time consuming to get our food this way and would thus perhaps cause us to consume less, especially meat. Butchering the fish involved cutting away the pin bones, which in this particular cut of fish were too secure to be removed with pliers as is often possible. Then the blood channel is removed and the skin is scored so that, when cooked, the skin does not tighten and, thus cause the fish to curl up in the pan. The most difficult part for me was gauging the weight of each cut by sight. Of course I weighed the whole piece and, with my pathetic math skills painstakingly made an approximation of how many fillets I could cut from the whole however visually guessing where to cut when the center is nearly an inch thicker than the ends was a daunting task and I won't lie, a few fillets were more like 4.2 or 7.9 than 6.0. I'm sure that, as with all things, practice will make perfect (or better at least!)

Monday, January 24, 2011

Other Things in my Life

Since I posted about the photo contest for my dog I figured I'd take a moment to tell you about a few other things in my life since I do occasionally do things other than cook food.

1) "Cosco"- my dog. He is not named after the store, which btw is spelled "Costco" as in "low-cost company," you'd be amazed how many peop
le don't realize that. Anyhow, I got him from a rescue and that's what the lady who was fostering him called him so I left it. He wears sweaters, gets his picture taken for the holidays and has his own facebook page, deal with it.
2) Robbie - he's my man, right now he's driving trucks southeast regional, its not perfect but it sure is better than it was without him. He likes tattoos, motorcycles, all things argyle, superhero movies, and me ;-) He is a walking contradiction, the tattoos andthe truck driving might make you think he's just a roughneck, but he dresses like a gay preppy hipster and listens to everything from country to electronica. I love that.
3) My Dad - my closest family member, inspired my love for food and restaurants,
a great drinking buddy and my biggest fan. He needs to move to Athens so we can hang out more!
4)Roller Derby - Its what I'm into right now. I just started so you'll have to stay tuned in for more later but so far its awesome. I've never been very athletic but I think I'm doing well so far and its a great workout and a way to let off some steam after a tough day in the kitchen. If I ever get to bout my derby name is gonna be "Shirley Trample." (...cause of my curly, reddish hair)

5) Video Games - I play them. I'm not that good. I like RPG's for the most part. Right now I am very close to beating Assassin's Creed and am stoked about it. I injured my arm playing too much Mortal Kombat vs DC and Guitar Hero Metallica the other day. This either makes me lame or awesome, I'm not sure which. Also, does ANYONE know where the damn power switch is in Black Ops zombies?!

6)Horror Movies - I love them, I have fallen behind on watching them but for awhile it was a serious passion/obsession. I particularly enjoy anything with zombies, the films of Dario Argento and anything supernatural as opposed to just a regular psycho killer.

7) Tattoos- I have one, its a pineapple, I want more.
8) NPR - I listen to it, so should you.

9) yoga, donating blood, bluegrass music, vintage store shopping, beer drinking,

Spay Day 2011 Online Pet Photo Contest

Spay Day 2011 Online Pet Photo Contest

So this is unrelated to food but I thought I would take a moment and ask you to vote for my precious pup "Cosco" in the Humane Society's Spay Day 2011 photo contest and fundraiser!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Behind already

It is only mid January and I'm already falling behind on writing in my blog! Lots to say, where to begin?

After New Years we had some snowy weather that kept me out of work for a few days. It was really nice to be snowed in with Robbie. We made a big pot of chili and had some snow cream for dessert. Maybe snow cream is a southern thing, or maybe just old-timey but for those of you that don't know, you take evaporated milk, vanilla and sugar and mix it with snow you have collected in a bowl. It’s awesome! It is generally understood that you should set a bowl out about an hour after is has started snowing and let the snow collect, rather than scooping up anything already on the ground. Some people think that getting the snow that first starts to fall is somehow dirtier than what comes later, thus waiting a bit, but I fail to see how that could really matter. Additionally my Daddy always said to never eat the snow from the first snow fall of the year, he swears they did some test in the 1950s that found that the first snow carried traces of radiation but who knows about that either. Should you find yourself in the snow with no handy dandy can of evaporated milk, regular milk is still tasty but the consistency is more slushy and less fluffy.


Though the snow days were fun, after that and the holidays I was in desperate need of hours so I crammed 48 hours of work into a 4 day work week! I picked up several shifts for a kid who was sick and stayed as late as possible to do some prep work after each shift. Thursday night I worked nighttime garde-manger for the first time. It was pretty much just like lunch but with all appetizers and no entrees. It was nice to do something different but I think I like lunch better. At dinner two people work gm and it seems so crowded after being used to having the station to myself.

The next two days at lunch I worked grill for the first time and was moderately terrified. I think I held it together pretty well but I really didn't feel prepared. I had really only sort of kind of not officially trained one day so considering I think I did pretty well. Friday was pretty slow and what business that did come in came mostly to gm. It was so weird seeing someone else working my line and putting things out differently than I would, I almost felt a little protective of my usual dishes, like I wanted to say, "hey buddy, the grapes have to sit next to the chicken salad like this, not that."When I had trained the week prior we had bavette steaks on the menu and this week the steak was a flatiron. The extremely different cook times of these two cuts caused me to overcook the first two steaks of the day and made me want to sit down and cry but I didn't and things got progressively better. Those days I cooked: pan seared mahi-mahi over couscous with melted leeks and a tomato pepper broth served with frisée and local radish; bacon and chorizo moules frites with garlic aïoli, chicken confit over parsnip purée with caramel vinegar jus and blood oranges ; flatiron steak with Yukon gold potato wedges seared in duck fat with horseradish cream and greens. Saturday was much busier but by then I had a hang of temping the steaks and things went much more smoothly for me. Jeremy had already come in to start prepping for dinner when a late rush hit at about 2:15 pm, he stepped up and helped run mid for us for awhile which was really nice. I don’t normally get too stressed when things get busy but its also nice to have a great expo and a good mid to help keep you calm. Listening to them allows you to keep your head down and really focus on moving at an even, fast pace rather than starting and stopping and trying to look at tickets or remember them on your own. If I do feel myself loosing focus during a rush, I can just ask the expo or mid, “what do you want from me next?” and focus on one order at a time to keep from getting overwhelmed.

I’ve also worked the past two Sunday brunches, something I enjoy and despise at the same time. Brunch only happens once a week and I don’t work it every week so its something I never really feel “in the groove” of so to speak, though I am drastically improving my omelet-making skills if I may say so myself ;-) The other thing about brunch is that, of course having a special menu and only occurring once a week, I can pretty much guarantee that you will have nothing already prepped, oh and did I mention that service starts an hour earlier? Ugh. At the same time, its always nice to be doing something different so in that way brunch can be nice. Sunday before last we were really slow early so our expo left an Carrie, who had been on grill moved to expo leaving me who had only been making eggs to run grill and eggs at once. Again my only major issue was the slight overcooking of one steak, so all in all not a bad day. Last Sundays brunch was crazy busy and even eggs alone was enough to make me want to crawl under the lowboy and hide. After a week of cold, icky snow and cold the sunny morning and nice weather made everyone in town want brunch, I scrambled 6 flats of eggs (1 flat is 30 eggs fyi.)

This week has been tiring but fun as I began roller derby bootcamp last night. I asked for derby days off from Harry’s but still had to work two days a week there so the next two weeks schedules look kinda like this: lunch/derby, lunch/dinner double, lunch/derby, lunch/dinner double, dinner, day off, day off. Despite the fact that it will be a long week, it’ll be nice to have the whole weekend off to spend with Robbie who should be getting home around that same time.

More on derby later, for now, sleep!

Sunday, January 2, 2011

No News is Good News

Not much to report today. We were closed for the New Years holiday weekend yesterday and today but we all came in this afternoon to knock out some prep and do inventory. Peter was there with his foot in this special sock thing that pumps antibiotics into the skin but seemed to be doing well. He bought lunch at Five Guys Burgers and I had an awesome hot dog. Now I'm sitting here with the pooch watching Robbie fight with the internet (new service, modem problems, something or another, blah blah blah).
I got a call today about fostering another dog. Hopefully this one goes better than the last, who tried to systematically eat all my belongings and the entire apartment one by one. Looks like its going to be a doxie-mix, chi or pug. *fingers crossed for a low-maintenance one!*

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Happy New Year!

Somehow or another I was magically scheduled off all day New Years Eve and New Years Day! That is UNHEARD OF! I have never, never, never, not even when I was a child not had to work somewhere New Years Eve or Day. I knew it was too good to be true.
After Peter's mishap with the stock pot our sou, Patrick, realized that normally on New Years they have 3 garde-manger, and this year only 2 were on the schedule. It was a super easy and short shift doing nothing but plating desserts though so it was really no problem. I came in at 6 had no prep because pastry had already made everything. I set up a little makeshift station out of the way in the corner with a butchers block atop two trashcans and a bus tub full of ice for my cold items. I plated pear and apricot tarts, baklava ice cream, cherry genoise cake with champagne sabayon and white chocolate the blood orange mousse. I felt sick after twenty minutes from snacking on all the candied nuts for garnish but otherwise all went well. All the desserts were cold and we were surprisingly not very busy. After plating a ton of creme brûlée and chocolate torts for a private dinner in the back room, Patrick gave me a bottle of champagne and told me I could take off. It was only 9:30, Nathan made a small order of our lamb sliders for me and I grabbed em to-go and hit that champagne to ring in the New Year!
I spent the night at a friends party rather than going downtown and dealing with the crowds and driving or walking all over hell and high water. In honor of two birthdays the week prior and New Years the theme was "three ring circus." When I walked in the door I was immediately slapped with a fake mustache and beard and told my costume was "bearded lady."
I spent today nursing a slight hangover, getting rid of my rather arid Christmas tree and doing major apartment organizing/cleaning. I cooked a traditional southern New Years dinner for myself since Robbie is still out of town. Black-eyed peas, collard greens cooked with ham hocks, cornbread and pork chops. I did the collards in the crock-pot and they were a bit overcooked but still tasty, especially after I drove all over most the county looking for Mrs. Campbell's Hot Chow-Chow (its like relish for you yankees out there), the only kind I eat. Peas tasted like peas but were good enough I suppose but my cornbread was stellar, simple and good out of cast-iron pan with lots of butter. Shhh, don't tell but the pork chops were Smithfield smoked fully cooked out of a pack but still tasted pretty awesome as their fatty goodness washed away my champagne headache. In case some of you don't know the tradition behind this meal, it is supposed to bring monetary luck in the coming year. Black-eyes are change and the greens are "foldin money." Pork, just like in politics or the saying "high on the hog" is also associated with wealth.
They might be corny but everyone makes em, so here are my 2011 New Year's Resolutions:
1) Be happy
2) Go to Yoga regularly, at least once a week
3) Go to Roller Derby bootcamp and practice skating (already signed up, Jan 17! wish me luck)
4) Spend quality time with the dog. Walks, park visits, maybe even some sort of class. Not just sitting on the couch time.
5) Pick up nights and a new station at work before 2012.
6) Make a 5 year plan (even if its kinda vague) before I turn 25 (in April)!
7) Have a real vacation this year
8) Save money, stop living paycheck to paycheck.
9) Get a different car before the year is out (Mazda 6 hatchback?)
10)Be better about keeping in touch with friends and family, write letters, make calls, etc.