Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Get That Viennetta Boo!

Bygbaby.com Mindspill I know some of you may have thought I was fucking with you when I talked about the Viennetta in my “Ice Cream Dreams” post.


Well here is some partial proof that my boo made a contact to find out where we could pick up a Viennetta.

Suite Suzy: I have been looking all over for Vienetta.  My husband last had some in Germany.  Is it sold in the US or Canada?

Good Humor-Brayers: Hello Suite Suzy:

Good News!

Our VIENNETTA frozen dessert cake will be nationally available for a

limited time from September 2008 through February 2009.

Kind regards,

Your friends at Good Humor-Brayers

So guess who is about to stock up on the Viennetta boo!!!!

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Monday, July 14, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Traditional Caipirinha

Caipirinha is pronounced (kye-puh-reen-ah"

The Caipirinha is the national cocktail of Brazil and one of my favorite summertime drinks.They are simple to make and very delicious but not for the faint of heart. The drink is made with Cachaça, which is made from is made from fresh sugarcane juice that's fermented and distilled and is usually 80 proof or higher.

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After 2 of these and I usually out for the count. Today I had 3 and I’m still standing surprisingly.

Ingredients:

  • Cachaça (pronounced ka-shaa-suh)
  • Sugar
  • Lime
  • Ice
Procedure:
  • Quarter one half of your lime and place in a cocktail tumbler along with 2-3 spoonfuls of sugar
  • Muddle the lime and sugar until the lime is juiced
  • Fill the glass with ice and pour in the cachaça until the glass is full
  • Shake your powerful concoction (with a shaker top over your tumbler of course)
  • Once your drink is well shaken and not stirred serve and enjoy

Any of the substitutions for the cachaça will make your drink a bootlegged hot mess!

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Cachaça History:

Cachaça was invented by the first Portuguese settlers of Brazil, in the region around the town of São Vicente, sometime between 1532 and 1548. Workers at local sugar mills first discovered that the sugarcane juice (garapa), cooked and left standing, would "sour" (ferment) and turn into a mild alcoholic beverage. The product, disparagingly named cagaça, was consumed by slaves (plantation owners began serving the liquid to their slaves after noticing that the drive would increase vigor.), as a cheap substitute for the Indians' cauim. Soon someone had the idea of distilling it, and thus cachaça was born.

Cachaça distilleries multiplied through colonial Brazil during the 16th and 17th centuries. Portugal eventually took notice and, in order to protect the market for Portuguese-made grappa, tried several times to outlaw the manufacture and consumption of the new spirit. In 1756, after a century of failure to suppress it, the Crown gave up and levied a tax on cachaça. This tax brought substantial revenue to the Treasury, and contributed to the reconstruction following the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami.

Currently there are more than 4,000 different brands of cachaça available in Brazil. Early in its history it was consumed mainly by Africans, peasants, and members of the lower class. As is often the case, elitists considered it a low drink, unfit for exclusivist bars and tables. However, the finer points of the product gained wider and wider appreciation, and it is now a very popular drink, considered by some to be in the same class as whiskey and wine. In the country's largest cities there are many bars specialized in cachaça, called cachaçarias, offering hundreds of different brands, some of them very expensive. The most prized brands are produced in Minas Gerais and São Paulo. The Brazilian government and producer associations have recently acted to promote the export of cachaça. (Soure: Wikipedia)

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Friday, July 11, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: 1.2.3... Pesto

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My friend & co-worker surprised me today with a nice big bag of sweet basil picked from her herb garden.  When I saw it, I got excited & shouted PESTO (in my head)!

As soon as I got home, I pull out my pine nuts, olive oil & garlic. Before you know it, I was in business with one of my favorite flexible condiments.

We of course use it on pasta but we also use it in chicken salad, rice, stir fries, crackers with mozzarella & scrambled eggs....

Mmmmm, Mmmmm, Mmmmm, Mmmmm

I usually do not measure when I cook but to be a little more accurate, I pulled out some measuring cups.

Ingredients:
- 2-3 cups of Basil
- ¼ Cup pine nuts
- 4 Garlic cloves
- Olive oil
- 1/3 Cup Parmesan cheese

Procedure:
- Drop your bunch of basil into a food processor with pine nuts, garlic cloves & cheese then pulse for 5 secs
- Pour in about ½ cup of olive oil & pulse again for 10 seconds

After my pesto was done, I cooked up some bow-tie pasta/farfalle & tossed in a little pesto. The pasta was served with some blackened Alaskan salmon and red kool-aid.

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Monday, July 07, 2008

Raspberry Lime Gin Spritzer

Bygbaby.com Mindspill After not doing a food post for well over a month, I seem to be back with a vengeance with my Bygbaby Cooks post. I hope my domestic side is not boring you to death because I’m having fun working on recipes, tweaking old one & getting bigger in the process.

I do enjoy mixing cocktails & experimenting with fruits juices & liquors. I test a lot of my recipes out on friends when we have parties & I have only had one drink bomb over the years.

Many friends come over & before they sit down, they ask me to fix drinks. My first reaction is oh yeah, let’s do this, my 2nd reaction is bitch do I look like Isaac!

Anyway today I was craving delicious thirst refreshment after a long busy holiday weekend making Quench, selling Quench & running the streets. My raspberry lime spritzer was just what I needed to get my mind right & ready to face the real world tomorrow.

Ingredients:
- Fresh or frozen raspberries
- Seltzer or club soda
- Simple Syrup
- 1 Lime
- Gin (I prefer Rangpur Tanqueray)

Simple Sugar Procedure:
- Combine 1 cup of sugar with ½ a cup of water & a cup of raspberries in a small pot and bring to boil.
- Take a swig of your gin
- Reduce heat and let simmer 10 to 15 minutes.
- Allow to cool.

The finished product consistency should be the consistency of honey & deliciously sweet.

>>>>OK, now the fun part!<<<<
- Fill your highball glass with ice
- Pour one finger worth of gin or two if you want or need to be fucked up
- Spoon over 2-4 tablespoons your freshly made raspberry simple syrup
- Squeeze in some fresh lime juice then fill the remainder of the glass with seltzer of club soda
- Stir & serve

I garnished with lime and a few whole raspberries because I like pretty drinks. And yes, really men do like pretty & fruity drinks!

BTW, I’m using my left over raspberry simple syrup to drizzle over some French vanilla ice cream. Mmmmmmmm!

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Friday, July 04, 2008

Food WIll Make a Nigga Crazy

While downtown Ann Arbor yesterday, I decided to stop into Cake Nouveau to have a look around. As soon as I opened the door, I was taken over by the aroma of delicious baked goodies.

I walked up to the counter after noticing the fabulous looking cupcakes & just about lost my mind. 5 minutes & 25 dollars later, I was out the door of my own cupcakes (4 blueberries 'n cream, 4 chocolate black raspberry, & 4 vanilla beany).

The baked goods euphoric state that I was in ended when I got in my car and realized that I just paid 25 bucks for 12 cupcakes!!!

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I hate to say it, but they are so worth it. After making Quench all day, eating a chocolate black raspberry cupcake was the perfect way to unwind.

See a few more shots on Flickr:
Chocolate Black Raspberry I

Chocolate Black Raspberry II
Sweet Dreams

Next week, I vow to tighten spending on food. No cherries or bourgeois snacks.

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Bygbaby Cooks: Roasted Red Pepper Potato Salad

It’s the 4th of July (wow, I’m excited, no, not really) & it’s time for potato salad!!!  I know we all love our moms or grandmom’s mustard potato salad with eggs (Mmmmmmmmm) but what about something new for a change.

Suite Suzy & I have had this recipe in our pocket for the last nine years & actually served it at our wedding reception.  It was a hit with out bourgeois friends then & we have enjoyed it ever since. 

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This recipe is easy to make although it may not look like it.  You just have to be ready to multitask.

Ingredients:
- Yukon gold potatoes
- 2 Roasted red peppers (I roast my own)
- 6 Cloves of roasted garlic (I roast my own)
- 5 Green onions
- Fresh dill
- Sour cream (I use light)
- Mayonnaise (I use light)
- Olive oil
- Sangria (to drink while you prepare)

Roasted Red Pepper Sauce:
- Wash & split your peppers down the middle then massage them with olive oil
- Place the oil peppers on an aluminum covered cookie sheet with the inner side facing down. To kill 2 birds with 1 stone, place the six peeled garlic cloves under the peppers so they can roast as well
- Place the cookie sheet into your oven on the broil setting for 20-25 minutes
- Once the peppers are charred on top, remove them from the oven because they are done
- Let the peppers cool, and then peel off the charred skin.  The skin should come off easily
- Have a sip of sangria

>>>OK, now the fun part!<<<

- Place the roasted garlic & peppers in your food processor, along with the green onions & a few spoonfuls of olive oil then pulse for 10 seconds or so.  Voila, your sauce is done.

Back to the salad:
- Cube about 6-10 small to medium potatoes & place them in a steamer for about 15 minutes. You want them soft but not mushy
- Once the potatoes are done, run them under cold water to speed up the cooling process.
- Have a sip of sangria
- Place your cooled potatoes in a large mixing bowl with one ½ cup of mayo, one ½ sour cream, one ¼ cup of your delicious roasted red pepper sauce  & finally 10 minced dill sprigs.  Stir the mixture thoroughly adding salt & pepper to taste.
- Chill then serve.

For this most recent meal occasion, I served the salad with my pan-fried garlic chicken strips with Suit Suzy’s zest BBQ sauce & ginger green beans. Damn it was good & yes, I enjoyed it with sangria!!!

BTW, I have a recipe for a blue cheese potato salad that is slamming.  I might share it but I don’t know if your ready...

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Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Steamed Purple Artichoke

This is a follow-up to my "Fruits & Veggies"post.

Sorry I don’t measure, I just do what it do.  If you try it, just use some common damn sense.

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Ingredients:
- 2 Artichokes (I used purple)
- 1 Lemon
- Sea salt (I prefer coarse)

Procedure:
- Cut top quarter of artichoke off, cut stem off & cut the tips of each petal
- Boil 3 inches of salted (to taste) water & add slices of the lemon
- Place the artichokes into boiling salted water for 45 minutes with the top pointing up the cover.  Be sure to monitor your water. (This is basically a steam cooking.)
- Once artichokes are done, place them on a paper towel upside down to allow for draining & cooling.

At this point you can quarter & enjoy them with a little fresh lemon juice, black pepper.  I chose to enjoy them with some fresh citrus basil dressing & Gorgonzola cheese.

Dressing Ingredients:
- EVOO (I know you know what this is!!!)
- Balsamic vinegar
- Basil
- 1 Nice sized lime
- Sea salt
- Black pepper (use fresh, don’t be tacky)
- Honey (or sugar)

- Red pepper flakes

Procedure:
- Juice lime into your food processor (or blender)
- Pour in about a half-cup of EVOO
- Pour in a few big drops of balsamic vinegar
- Add in a few shakes of red pepper flakes
- Add at least 6 basil leaves
- Add a dollop or two of hone
- Salt & pepper to taste
- Pulse food processor (or blender) for about 20 seconds or until ingredients are blended well

Once the dressing is done, spoon over the artichoke generously soaking the heart.  Add a little Gorgonzola as a side & enjoy.

I have not done a Bygbaby Cooks in a while & I had fun reviving the series. I hope you try this one. It's nice & fresh, whcih makes it perfect for summertime!

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Sunday, June 29, 2008

Fruits & Veggies

I ate bing cherries all last week & was been in foodie heaven. Yesterday on a trip to Wholefoods, I spotted my favorite cherry of all, the ranier cherry. I love them so but they cost soooo much. I walked out paying a small 9.30 for 1.5 lbs.

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I love the burst of sensual delight in my mouth when I bite into a juicy ripe & sweet cherry. Wait, that sounds too suggestive, I really mean the fruit!

I also spotted these lovely purple artichokes @ Wholepaycheck. The looked so beutiful, I just saw photo written all over them. Now that the photo is out of the way, it's time to chow down on them!!!

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Saturday, March 29, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Food Experiments

Bygbaby.com MindspillAs I mentioned a few posts ago, I planned to experiment with making homemade tea & smoked salmon appetizer (not to be enjoyed together).

Since I was home with the girls, they were my kitchen assistants & helped me shop for ingredients.

Both items were fairly easy to make & we all enjoyed them so it was a win-win. I was very pleased with how my smoked salmon-wasabi cracker appetizer turned out; It was very gown & sexy! 

I had to modify it for the girls because they were so not feeling the wasabi rice crackers, so they had it on tortilla chips.

If you are feeling adventurous & are in need of spice, you may enjoy these.

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Smoked Salmon Appetizer (see larger photo here)

Ingredients:
- Smoked salmon
- Wasabi rice crackers (or table water crackers/whatever you prefer)
- 1 Pack cream cheese (8oz (I used Philly 1/3 less fat))
- Green onions
- Ground ginger

Procedure:
- Soften your cream cheese/bring to room temperature.
- Mince 2 green onions finely.
- Add onions & a teaspoon of ground ginger to softened cream cheese then mix thoroughly.
- Salt & pepper mixture to taste.
- Spoon dollop of the dreamy cream cheese mixture on top of your cracker.
- Slice salmon into thin strips & place a top of the cream cheese dollop.
- Enjoy with 6 to 10 of your best friends or fuck it up by yourself!

I topped with a few red pepper flakes for color & added pinch of spice.

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Ginger, Anise, & Cinnamon Tea (see larger photo here)

Ingredients:
-Star anise
-Dried ginger
-Honey
-Lemon (for juice & zest)

Procedure:
- Steep 6-10 star anise, 4 hand crushed cinnamon sticks, & lemon zest in French Press (in boiling hot water).
- In your mug add honey, fresh lemon juice & small piece of dried ginger
- After a 10 minute French press steep, pour tea into cup & serve.

In case you can't tell, I love ginger!

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: These Ain't no Glory Greens

OK, so I was able to pull off a food shot & recipe!  Suite Suzy & the girls made it home in time for her to make the cornbread dressing & banana pudding so dinner is on & poppin’

Anyway, nothing says lovin’ better than a plate of fresh collard greens, a true negro favorite.

Ingredients:
- Fresh collard greens
- Smoked turkey wing
- Red pepper flakes
- Black pepper
- Salt
- Balsamic vinegar

Procedure:
- Soak the greens in cold water for an hour so that any dirt can sift down to the bottom of your sink.  I let mine soak for an hour then drain water & do a final rinse.
- Boil your turkey wing in a large pot with a few splashes of balsamic vinegar & salt for at least 30 minutes to get all the flavor out of the wing.
- Once your water is fully seasoned & the greens are cleaned, take your greens & pull the stem from the middle to be discarded.
- Take a sizable amount of your stemless greens & roll them up in a tight bunch then cut them into small rows width wise.
- After all of your greens are cut up, toss them into your seasoned & boiling water leaving the smoked turkey wing in.
- Add your red pepper flakes, black pepper & a little saffron (as you can see, I like my greens a little spicy).
- The greens should boil for at least 1½ to 2 hours slowly.
- Serve hot & with anything from broiled salmon to some hot & nasty chitlin’s.

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I would love to show the finished product but cooked greens are not photogenic no matter who cooks them IMO.  Wait, since Darius T. Williams somewhat called me out, here is a dinner plate to go. Sorry we were put of foil & Kmart bags.

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Bygbaby Cooks: Them Damned Relatives

Today I am stuck in the kitchen slaving over a hot stove making tonight’s dinner.  Although I do not celebrate Easter I am preparing our normal Easter fare in Suite Suzy’s stead as she makes her way home after her all girls weekend.

I would much rather be preparing something more fun but it is what is it is.  Dinner will be good & fatty as we suck down ham, cheesy baked potatoes, collard greens, cornbread dressing (if Suite Suzy makes it home in home to make the corn bread) & banana pudding.

My sister called & is trying to come over for dinner with my nephew &her boo.  I told her to keep her ass at home!  I invited her to dinner a few weeks ago & she blew me off.  She just wants to use me for my honey baked ham &that is not happening!!!  That shit costs too much to be having extra colored folks over trying to get their fill of negro fixin’s.  It’is not a soup kitchen up in this bitch!  It would have been another thing if she called me when she got her food-stamps and…

After I told her no, she hung up in my face.  Damn where is the love???

Anyway, no cool food photo this week but I would like to leave you with a photo of one of my secret ingredients. Can you tell what it is & do you use it?

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Easliy Influenced

Before I left work today, I started fantasizing about having baked chicken for dinner after reading the Hijabi Apprentice’s baked chicken recipe post. The fantasy got so intense I could smell it a chicken roasting in my office.

So when I got off, I mad a mad dash to pick up a roasting chicken, fennel, & rosemary. Once I got home, I cleaned my chicken, seasoned it well (pepper, sazón (Goya up in this piece!!!), chicken roasting rub), massaged it down with olive oil, covered it in freshly minced garlic & rosemary sprigs, then stuffed it with chopped fennel, vidalia onion & lemon.

Once I had that puppy in the oven, I steamed some red gold potatoes & made my dreamy & creamy whipped cheddar potatoes with chives.

Since I wanted to hit the gym before dinner, I begged my boo to hook up some broccoli.

Two hours later my chicken was done, dinner was on & poppin’.

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Sunday, March 16, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Not My Mammas Peas

Growing up it seems like I ate every bean imaginable, but black-eyed peas were always on the weekly menu. I swore when I moved out on my own, I would never eat another bean as long as I lived.

My self-imposed strike did not last long because Suite Suzy got me hooked on her pinto beans, which are much better than my momma's. I also reneged when I started to like black-eyed peas in salads. I find them much tastier not boiled to death & sopping in thick ham hock sauce served with a huge piece of hot water cornbread.

With that said, here is the dinner that I prepared tonight; black-eyed pea salad served with feta atop Swiss chard & herb grilled chicken breast.

Ingredients:
- 2 Cans of black-eyed peas (in water)
- 1 Jalapeño
- 1 Stick of celery
- Small red onion
- Cilantro
- Red Pepper
- Lemon
- Basil
- Favorite vinaigrette dressing (I used Paul Newman's balsamic & basil vinaigrette)

Procedure:
- Open peas & rinse in colander under cold water
- Chop veggies
- Finely mince cilantro & basil
- Pull out your favorite citrus zester to peel the lemon
- Combine all ingredients in mixing bowl the toss
- Pour in your vinaigrette, at least a ½ cup to the bowl then toss
- Salt & pepper to taste
- Serve chilled

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Sunday, March 09, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Soups On

Speaking of food, I noticed that I forgot to post this last week. Who else is addicted to cooking jus to photography???

I found a recipe for the Olive Garden's Zuppa Toscana & decided to give it a whirl. The end result was absolutely delicious & much better that the hurried composition of this shot.

It took about 1.5 hours to make & was pretty simple. Next time, I make it, I will modify the recipe slightly to make it healthier & substitute the Italian sausage for turkey sausage less cream & no bacon. Well, maybe I won’t mess up a good thing!

Ingredients:
- 1 lb ground Italian sausage
- 11⁄2 tsp crushed red peppers
- 1 large diced white onion (I also added shallots)
- 4 Tbsp bacon pieces
- 2 tsp minced garlic
- 10 cups water
- 5 cubes of chicken bouillon
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 lb sliced Russet potatoes, or about 3 large potatoes (I mixed Yukon gold & russet)
- 1⁄4 of a bunch of kale

Procedure:
- Sautee Italian sausage and crushed red pepper in pot. Drain excess fat, refrigerate while you prepare other ingredients.
- In the same pan, sautee bacon, onions and garlic for approximately 15 mins or until the onions are soft.
- Mix together the chicken bouillon and water, then add it to the onions, bacon and garlic. Cook until boiling.
- Add potatoes and cook until soft, about half an hour.
- Add heavy cream and cook until thoroughly heated.
- Stir in the sausage.
- Devour

My kids really enjoyed this & it made enough for a family of 5 for two nights.

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Bygbaby Cooks: Hot Wok

I partied all night last night & day late savings time has thrown me off big time so I tried to remedy myself with food. This is my new favorite stir fry to make.

Ingredients:
- Chicken breast (1)
- Mushroom flavored soy sauce
- Shitake mushrooms (4)
- 2 green onions (2)
- 3 garlic cloves (3)
- Cashews
- ¼ cup of water
- Couple pinches of flour

Procedure:
- Marinate chicken breast in mushroom flavored soy sauce for 30 minutes.
- Toss marinated chicken, crushed garlic & handful of cashews into piping oiled wok & toss to cook evenly.
- Once chicken is done toss in your mushrooms, green onions and toss
- Before the mushrooms loose their firmness add a ¼ cup of water or less & 2-3 pinches of flour to thicken sauce.
- Serve with your favorite rice then turn it out with a few red pepper flakes!

I made Suite Suzy a bowl today but I used spiced shrimp instead of chicken as a special treat for her. She said is was delicious but since I cannot eat shellfish I will never know for myself.

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Sunday, February 17, 2008

Bygbaby Cooks: Back On The Wagon

Cucumber salad is one of my favorite Thai snacks! It’s light, fresh, packed with flavor, virtually fat free & best of all easy to make.

Recipe:

  • 1 whole cucumber (I prefer the English Hothouse variety)
  • 1 shallot
  • A couple of red [bell] pepper slivers
  • A few cilantro stems
  • Fresh ½ lime juiced
  • Couple of pinches of salt
  • Couple of Pinches of sugar
  • A few dashes of white vinegar
  • A little water

Procedure:

  • Thinly slice cucumber
  • Chop pepper slivers
  • Finely mince cilantro
  • Coarsely mince shallot
  • Mix wet & dry ingredients until dry ingredients are dissolved
  • Add veggies to the wet mixture & toss
  • Serve salad chilled & enjoy!

I garnished with a few sesame seeds & some fresh cracked pepper & it was off the chain.

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Why am I posting this? Well because I fucked up on my diet but not bad over the past 2 weeks. I am getting back on track this week so that I can get past this 16lb weight loss. I have major work to do to make my 20lb goal by month end.

BTW: I’m an old school cook & just like my mother, I measure nothing. When it looks right/smells right/feels right, I know its good to go.

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Thursday, November 22, 2007

Thanks for What

As I was preparing the vegetables for Site Suzy's corn bread dressing, I was wondering to myself why US minorities celebrate these white holidays. I was wondering if Native Americans celebrate Thanksgiving & when they sit around (if) the table are they thankful that they ancestors helped save the "pilgrims" or do they have some type of angry pow wow wishing that they offed those bitches??? I wondered if the Natives knew that the white man would eventually kill millions with disease, rape their women, cheat them out of land & eventually force them onto reservations that have some of the worst living conditions (not all). Well maybe a few Native Americans are just cool with it because they got the casino game outside of Las Vegas on lock down??????

I know niggas celebrate because we are just brain washed & we loves us some chitlins (not me), greens, a good cheap ham (I prefer honey baked) sweet potato pie & banana pudding (Suit Suzy makes the best!).

We’re not Americans, we’re Africans who happen to be in America. We were kidnapped and brought here against our will from Africa. We didn’t land on Plymouth Rock–that rock landed on us...” Malcolm X

I was thinking so deep about how exclusive Thanksgiving is and I cut my damn finger while chopping celery. My militancy just got my holiday hating ass cut up & wearing a Dora the Explorer band-aid.

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Anyway on a somewhat related note, I will never forget the Thanksgiving day of 1992 when my mom was in her bedroom eating a plate full of chitlins & she winded up dropping the remote control to her tv in the sopping wet bowl of pig ass tract. The remote never worked again & she was made as hell because the tv was brand new. To this day we still laugh about it.

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Sunday, October 28, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Who Wants Breakfast?

I got an Uno waffle maker for my bday this year (I think I mentioned this before) & have been using it like hell ever since.

At lease one a week we have waffles for breakfast & every now & then we hook up chicken & waffles.

Suite Suzy always does the waffles so I guess I am spoiled. Well today the kids woke up & demanded waffles fro breakfast & Suite Suzy said hell no, ask Baba. Seconds later, I had kids all up in my face demanding waffles & to their surprise I said sure, I will make them.

So I got off my ass, headed for the kitchen & pulled out the waffle mix, read the instructions & said shit, I do not feel like doing all this mixing & shit blah, blah, blah.

After I changed my feeling about cooking, I begged Suite Suzy to do the waffles & to my surprise, she sad sure but I had to wash the dishes. Since all bets were on, breakfast was just minutes away.

Bacon or sausage patties, fresh whipped cream (who has time to make fresh whipped cream @ home) & strawberries would have made the breakfast perfect. Neither of these items were available to so I made the best of it & really enjoyed my vegetarian (but not vegan) breakfast.

I love slow weekend mornings!

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Are you a fan of breakfast? On a perfect day, what would be on your plate?

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Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Purple Artichokes

To follow up to my “Getting Broke & Finding Inspiration” post, here are a few shots from tonight’s dinner, which featured the purple artichokes. Suite Suzy found a pretty easy recipe online today so we gave it a go.

Basically, cut the stem & top of the artichoke off, cut off the top of each outer petal then rinse thoroughly under running water. Once clean drop into salted boiling water, add a few lemon wedges. Lastly, boil for 45 minutes.

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Once boiled, drain artichokes and spoon butter/margarine over the top of the artichoke. When butter is melted & the artichoke is cooled, serve. I chose to cut it in half & added salt & pepper to taste.

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I also prepared my famous garlic fried chicken strips and Basmati rice to complete the meal.

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Sunday, September 09, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Casual Sunday Dinner

I’ve been away for about a week & missed posting but life had me tied up big time. Family, school, work & photography have consumed me so I have to make a time adjustment so that I can keep up with the Mindspill.

So I am back with a food post cuz it is about time. Tonight I cooked Sunday dinner for the family & Suite Suzy had agreed on spaghetti. We have not had a good pot of spaghetti in months so I was a little hyped to eat one of my favorite dishes.

I will not bore you with the details of how to make it because, if you are old enough to read the shit I talk, then you are old enough to know how to cook a damn pot of spaghetti (in my case a wok of spaghetti. I told you I cook everything in my wok).

One thing that I will mention is that I use, whole roasted garlic cloves, fresh veggies, ground round & I never over cook my pasta (8-10 minutes). Wait, when I read the words “ground round”, I think of that episode of “Good Times” when Gertie used ground round for her meat loaf but the family thought it was dog food.

Anyway, the end result was a wonderful bowl of perfect pasta with delicious steamed broccoli. Another great meal under my belt!

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The one cool thing about us cooking pasta is we get to use our cool Pottery Barn Vintage art pasta set, which we protect like gold.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Quick Thinking Meal Planner

After work today, I headed to Wholefoods to pick up a few things for dinner for the family. On the way there I planned my meal & decided to prepare a pan-fried chicken with breadcrumbs, sauteé some summer squash with onions and prepare some sesame noodles. Just thinking about it got me excited to cook it especially the sesame noodles, which I have been craving for days.

So I get to Wholefoods, gather my necessary ingredients then I get a call from Suite Suzy just as I was walking to the check out counter. She was calling to a) let me know she was taking Boobah (Olivia) to track & b) break the news that the power was out in my neighborhood. Now I am like shit, what about my fabulous meal!?!?!?

After some quick thinking, I decided to get some fresh prepared green salads & changed my meal plan to cook over the weekend.

45 minutes later, I arrive at my powerless home & jumped into some comfy clothes & waited patiently for the family to arrive home & the power to come back on. I found it very strange to be sitting in total silence waiting for something to happen.

1½ hours later the power came back on & I had like 49 minutes before the family arrived home. So now my mind was back on dinner and I decided to at least make my sesame noodles as light side. Now I am energized cuz I knew they were going to be delicious & I was looking forward to capturing an image.

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To cut to the chase, this quick dish only takes about 15 minutes to prepare & for 10 of that you are waiting for the noodles to cook!

Ingredients:

  • Spaghetti or Angel Hair Pasta
  • Toasted Sesame Oil
  • Balsamic Vinegar
  • Smooth Peanut Butter
  • Green Onion
  • Sesame Seeds
  • Honey
  • Sea Salt
  • Pepper

The Jump Off:

  • Cook your pasta to al-dente (for 9 – 10 minutes max)
  • In a large mixing bowl add 2 teaspoons of honey, 3 tablespoons of sesame oil, 2 tablespoons of peanut butter , a couple drops of honey, a few dashes of balsamic vinegar & mix well
  • Stir in 2 chopped onions to the wonderfully aromatic dressing
  • Once noodles are al-dente cool them under cold running water, drain well & mix into dressing
  • Toss noodles until fully coated and add salt & pepper to taste
  • Chill for 30 minutes (the dish not you!) & serve

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Back to Me:
I love to eat these noodles with some type of spicy chicken but can also enjoy these for a stand-alone meal like tomorrow for lunch. Lastly, sesame oil is one of my favorites to add to salads & marinades. I think I really got hooked on it when I got into Japanese cuisine.
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Sesame Background:
Cultivated for its seeds since ancient times, found chiefly in the tropics of Africa and Asia. Sesame seeds, also called bennes (Nigerian in origin) or gingellies, are black or white and yield an oil that resists turning rancid. The oil (known also as teel oil) is used extensively in India for cooking, soap manufacture, food, and medicine and as an adulterant for olive oil. The seeds are also popularly added to cookies and other baked goods and are made into candy (e.g., benne cakes). Sesame was introduced to America by way of African slaves who considered the seeds lucky.

Today, benne wafers--thin cookies/crackers made with sesame seeds--are closely associated with Low Country cooking, a style of cooking centered in Charleston, South Carolina. And they're often served at Kwanza.

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Quick, Healthy & Delicious

Tonight was my night to cooked & I was not in the mood for a big production meal so I had to pull something together quick because standing on my hard kitchen floor is not good for my bum ankle even post surgery.

I needed to prepare something fairly healthy a) because we need to eat healthy anyway & b) That Taco Bell fiesta taco salad & large mountain dew & I had for lunch needed to be counter balanced.

Usually when I cook, it is in my wok & it doesn’t matter what it is, I find a way to make it happen.

So tonight coincidentally, I did Asian inspired meal for the fam; my lightly spicy honey sesame chicken. After I was done cooking, it looked so damn I had to take a snapshot to share.

If you need a good quick meal (30 minutes or less), this is a great choice. Just to let you know, when I cook, I don't measure, I just cook.

Ingredients

  • 4 cubed skinless boneless chicken breasts
  • 2 sliced small onions
  • 3 minced garlic cloves
  • Seasonings: sesame oil, crushed cumin seeds, chili powder, coarse kosher Salt, dried rosemary
  • Grapeseed oil or olive oil
  • 2 cups of Basmati rice
  • Fresh or frozen snap peas

The jump off:

Season chicken with chili power, cumin, salt & rosemary & lightly drizzle sesame oil. Sitr & let sit for 30 minutes.

Heat your wok or pan the add oil and heat then add chicken

Brown chicken lightly in hot grapeseed oil (cook off all water) & when the chicken starts to brown, toss in onions & garlic & cook until translucent.

Once your chicken is golden, drizzle sesame oil & honey over chicken & veggies then toss. This will take the flavor over the top.

Lower the temperature of your eye & clear one side of your wok so that you can place your frozen peas then cover. The heat/steam from the chicken will cook the peas.

Toss peas until tender or to your desire texture. The drippings from the chicken will season your peas.

While you have all this going on, please have your Basmati rice on in a separate. I do a 1½ cup of water to 1 cup of rice then let the water cook off while the pot is covered. If you are like me, you like your rice seasoned so add some kosher salt & pepper. Rice should al dente (soft but firm) once done.

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If you are not up on Basmati rice, you should check it out. We have been using it almost exclusively (when we are not using Jasmine rice) for about 7 years. It’s never gummy, has a wonderful fragrance & can set off any dish.

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Searching For the Perfect Lunch

My last few work days have been pretty intense with cross town mid/late day meeting, which always fuck up my lunch options. When it comes to lunch, I usually take leftovers but for the last few work days we either had no leftovers or if we did, my meetings were so jammed pack, I would not have time for it because I had to eat on the go.

Needless to say, I have made some pretty bad lunch choices so that I could eat on the go & make my meetings.

Yesterday I had back to back meeting starting @ 1230 which means that I only had 2½ hours to get some real work done because I don’t get to the office until 9 &amp;amp; I needed an hour for drive & lunch time.

So it’s now 1130 &amp;amp; I am headed out of the office & the only on my fat ass mind was what the fuck was I going to eat. I had McDonald’s the other day & I was not in the mood for another #1, the thought of Burger King made me want to throw up in my mouth. I thought about Taco Hell but I was not in the position to be farting all day gassing people out @ work.

After all of my intense junk food elimination process I decided to get Sushi from one of my new hot spots; Sadako.

I have been eating @ Sadako for the last few months & they have some really good stuff but their service is on the slow side, so if you are in a rush Sadako is not a good choice. Well I was somewhat in a rush but willing to risk it to get some good food.

After all was said & done I was in and out in 35 minutes; a fucking record. When I eat at Sushi I prefer to eat at the bar because I like watching the Sushi chefs work; it kinda adds to the experience. Luckily I was able to get a spot at the bar today, which helped me get some cool shots of Sushi chef Yoshi @ work.

These are a few shots of my delicious & not as junky lunch of seasweed salad, a Philadelphia roll & some golden fried scrumptiously greasy beef dumplings.

After lunch, I made a mad dash to my 1st meeting & made it one time & best of all, I was not farting like crazy through the afternoon like I had been over the previous days.

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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Term of the Week: Chitlins(+)

While on the way home from work Tuesday I got call from Suite Suzy who was home cooking dinner. Tuesday's dinner menu was Cuban black beans over jasmine rice served with sautéed lemon garlic chicken & a wonderful avocado & onion salad. Sounds good right?

Well the reason why Suite Suzy called me was because she was out of fresh green peppers & needed me to stop @ the store. Because I was looking forward to dinner like a mutha I took my ass to the store to get the necessary ingredients.

Side note: I hate going to the grocery store with a passion.

So I make it to the store, get the peppers & wind up getting a bag of Flaming Hot Cheetos (my favorite chips) & a Snickers bar. While making my way to the check-out I passed the meat area & saw a freezer full of 10lbs buckets of chitlins. I mean they had so many chitlin buckets I thought is was like some chitlin festival scheduled for Mother’s day.

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Seeing chitlin buckets brings all sorta flash backs to me:I remember smelling the foul odor during holiday seasons when I lived with my mother.,I recall being hit in the face with a raw chitlin because I pissed my mom off while she was cleaning them the night before Thanksgiving 1987, and lastly, I think about how I had to sit at the dinner table & watch/listen my mom, brother & sister splurp on hot sauce soaked chitlins with shit juice dripping off of their chitlin starved faces (I really do love my family).

So I guess by now you have realized that I do not eat piggy dookie shoots (as Suite Suzy calls them)!

One thing that really discusses me during the holidays is when I call my mom usually the night before & she picks up the phone while she is elbow deep cleaning 20lbs of chitlins.

Anyway the bottom line is my little chitlin sighting the other day inspired the term(s) of the week; 1) Chitlins & 2) The Chitlin Circuit cuz you can’t have one without the other.
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History of Chitlins:

Let us consider what chitlins are - they are hog intestines or guts. Some people turn up their noses at the mention of chitlins; other leave the house while they are cooking, driven away by their odor. However, the volume sold for New Year's dinners, with Christmas and Thanksgiving not far behind, attests to chitlins popularity in the United States. Chitterlings is the more formal name, but most people call them chitlins. They are usually part of a larger meal that includes collard greens, fried chicken, and other traditional Southern foods. Chitlins are not for the faint of palate or smell, which is why traditionally they were cooked outdoors at backyard hog killings in winter. They are a food that you either love or hate!

Chitlins take a lot of time and effort to clean. They are partially cleaned when they are sold, but require additional hand cleaning before they are ready to eat. The secret to good and safe chitlins is in the cleaning, not in the cooking. They are available in supermarkets in African-American neighborhoods, especially during the holiday season. they can also be ordered from a butcher, but be prepared to buy 10 pounds of chitlins to get 5 pounds to cook.

Animal innards have long been treasured foods around the world. Scotland's national dish is haggis (sheep's stomach stuffed with the animal's minced heart, liver, and lungs). Throughout Europe, tripe (cow or ox stomach) is popular, and French chefs in upscale restaurants serve dishes based on cow's brains and kidneys.

In 1996, the town of Salley, South Carolina, inaugurated the annual Chitlin' Strut. The first festival attracted about a hundred people. Today the festival draws about 70,000 people. It is estimated that more than 128,000 pounds of chitlins have been eaten during the festival's history.

Eating chitlins in the rural South is not as common as it once was. In colonial times, hogs were slaughtered in December, and how maws or ears, pigs feet, and neck bones were given to the slaves. Until emancipation, African-American food choices were restricted by the dictates of their owners, and slave owners often fed their slaves little more than the scraps of animal meat that the owners deemed unacceptable for themselves. Because of the West African tradition of cooking all edible parts of plants and animals, these foods helped the slaves survive in the United States. (Read More | Source | What’s Cooking in America)

It came in 10-pound container from the meat section
next to the hog jaws and hog maws and cow’s tongue and scrapple.

Mom used to clean them mid-day when I wasn't home
and when I was, I tried to get out. The acrid mustardy smell
of intestines boiling coated the house. I wondered
if our neighbors thought we were re-enacting a tribal ritual
with animal sacrifices, maybe we were.

Dad just liked the fleshy taste and mom was indifferent.
It was something they did out of habit rather than tradition.

I watched her from the front yard as she’d take
a hunk like rope and scrape the fat, let the froth
simmer to the top of the pot like wet paper.

She’d boil a pan of water with vanilla flavoring
next to the chitlins to fool us but who was she kidding?
Nothing covered the stench of that pork mush.

I imagined that this smell was evil, like boiled human entrails,
and I’d get sick from my own thoughts;
thoughts conjured from a time before me,
of never having enough but using every part what remained.

Pasty as wet paper, I thought this is what it came down to:
choice—my father eating the viscera,
and my mother poised to offer me a bowl,
the off-ramp of a swine’s innards,
knowing that this was all a part of me.

Chitlins ~ January O'Neil aKa Poet Mom

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What is the Chitlin Circuit?

A circuit of nightclubs and theaters that feature African-American performers and cater especially to African-American audiences.

When Jim Crow and segregation were even more prominent in the United States, the Negro race, freed through emancipation, did not have equal access to public “White Only” places. The Chitlin’ Circuit - a connected string of music venues, diners, juke joints, and theaters throughout the eastern and southern United States that catered primarily to African American audiences was created.

The Chitlin’ Circit was the only option for touring Black entertainers such as Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, Etta James, Billie Holiday, Ike and Tina Turner, B. B. King, Bobby “Blue” Bland, T.D. Bell and the Blues Specialists, Roosevelt "Gray Ghost" Williams, Eubie Blake, Robert Shaw, Big Joe Williams and many others begin touring in an effort to “eek” out a living when Jim Crow and segregation was even more prominent in the United States.

Historically, Baltimore was the first city on the Chitlin' Circuit. The Chitlin’ Circuit stretched through the South, bending westward throughout Texas, extending Eastward on through Chicago, offering continuous opportunities for black entertainers.

Many clubs were opened specifically for the Chitlin' Circuit, such as the Historic Victory Grill in Austin, Texas. Opened in 1945, The Victory Grill’s history is an integral component to the prospering of the legendary “Chitlin' Circuit”. A juke joint offering food, beer, jazz and rhythm and blues music and dancing, the club soon became a hot spot for locals to listen to touring Black entertainers. The Historic Victory Grill is alive and well presenting blues and jazz entertainment. (Source | Urban Dictionary)
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Back to Me:

Do you eat chitlins and or do you have any interesting chitlin stories. Also have you seen any notable acts on the Chitlin Circuit.

I have seen a few Chitlin Circuit plays; most notably, Mama I Want to Sing. My dad took me to see it one summer during my visit with him in Birmingham, AL in the late 80's. I remember having fun with him.

Shit! I better stop because I am getting teary-eyed thinking about the good times with my dad.

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

Bygbaby Cooks: Party of One

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When I cook, I don't measure, I just cook (the real reason why I am fat with high cholesterol), that's just how I learned & I must say that I am a pretty good cook (just ask my baby's mama). Anyway my guacamole is the bomb & over the last 2 days, I have been craving it so Suite Suzy got my ingredients & I would love to share with you one of my favorite treats.

Guacamole is quite simple to make & the ingredients are listed above & all you need to do is mix gently or until you get a preferable texture (add fresh ground pepper & course sea salt to taste). I happen to like my guac kinda chunky so that I can enjoy the individual textures.

"My prep time for this delicious dish is about 7 to 10 minutes."

If you look to the top right of the 1st picture, you will see one of my least used kitchen utensil, which is my $35 Williams & Sonoma stainless steel mincer (talk about an impulse buy).

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So this is my delicious finished product, which is paired with a nice tall glass of Capt' & Coke. I am setting this Friday night off with my party for 1. Actually, I need to tell the truth, this is more like a party for 4 because I broke Suite Suzy & the kids off some (I had the most though & ain't nobody got non-a of my damn drink).
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History of Guacamole:

Guacamole dates back to the Aztecs & they referred to guacamole as ahuaca-mulli which translates roughly to avocado sauce or avocado mixture. This concoction was very similar to what you might fix now in your own kitchens today. Avocados, the main ingredient in guacamole are a New World food that became quite popular with the Spaniards. It is said the Spaniards liked their avocados three ways, with salt, with sugar or both. Although actual guacamole recipes were not well preserved the Spaniards documented their likes for the avocado fruit.

The Aztecs believed the avocado to be an aphrodisiac. Clearly this had something to do with the popularity of the food with the Spaniards.

Another reason for the popularity of the fruit was the fact that the avocado has the highest fat content of any fruit. The Aztecs had a very low fat diet compared with today's standards. You can understand how a fruit that contained life sustaining fats and protein could become so highly regarded.

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