Category Entertaining

Parties That Cook’s Top 10 Favorite Food Blogs of 2011

Nowadays, there are so many food blogs calling for your attention that it is hard to know where to start! There is even a blog for food blogs. To make it easier for you, we are superwoman-ing in and narrowing down all of the scrumptious options at your fingertips. Back in 2009, we wrote this post detailing some of our favorite blogs. Today, we bring you an updated Top 10!

Number one on our list is What’s Gaby Cooking Simple Sassy Gourmet. Gabby Dalkin is a twenty four year old blogger who attended culinary school in 2009 and pastry school in 2010. She is a personal chef, professional recipe developer and food photographer.  She is also a sucker for a good margarita and absolutely obsessed with cheese. To top it all off, she has a mean recipe for Pizza Monkey Bread— it seriously may change your life!

Coming in at number two: Smitten Kitchen. You can definitely let your eyes feast on this blog; it boasts absolutely stunning photography! Deb and her husband Alex seem very down to earth. They stay away from fussy ingredients like Himalayan pink salt, and stick to what is accessible. Fantastic cooking doesn’t have to leave a hole in your pocket at the end of the meal! Best of all, Smitten Kitchen recently received one of Time Magazine’s 25 Best Blogs of 2011 awards!

Kiss My Spatula is up next… Recently featured in Gourmet Magazine for its incredible food photography and unforgettable recipes, a visit to this blog will definitely stir up hunger pangs. Be sure to check out the Homemade Pantry tab that offers recipes for necessities such as peanut butter, ketchup, hummus, and even homemade organic butter.  If you are in need of a refreshing Fourth of July beverage, try the Lychee Mojito. You can even mix up some thirst quenching Raspberry Lemonade for the under 21 crowd.

Another staff favorite, Savory Sweet Life, provides easy everyday recipes for the everyday home cook. Alice is a cook, a baker, a writer, and a photographer.  She started her blog as a creative outlet — she wanted to share her joys in life with others. We love her blog because she keeps it simple; the recipes are approachable, yet impressive. Check this out: prior to having kids, she worked in 3D animation, which led her to start her own wedding cake business! I bet her kids would kill to have one of those triple layer birthday cakes!

With a Best of 2010 Special Interest Blog award, we can’t leave La Tartine Gourmande off of our list. Béa is a French expatriate who lives in Boston. She feels privileged to be able to share her food discoveries, experiments, stories, and creativity with her readers. She is a regular contributor to the Boston Globe Food Section and she has even done work for Trader Joe’s. She makes incredible gazpacho and amazing spiced pumpkin pots de creme with sautéed apples and pistachios. Be sure to check out her Gluten Free tab as well!

Cooking everything but the kitchen sink is Kristin, the author of the Kitchen Sink Recipes blog. Kristin lives in Chicago and is a pro at keeping things seasonal! She also has some fantastic pre-made menus including a Summer BBQ Menu, a Picnic Menu, and a Fiesta Menu. Her blog has been featured on The Pioneer Woman’s delicious food site and in the Chicago Sun Times as well.

Still with us? We sure hope so, because you don’t want to miss Sprouted Kitchen. Though you won’t find a lot of meat and potatoes on this blog, you will find recipes that use healthy, local, and organic ingredients. This blog is all about eating seasonally! This mushroom and poblano tart in a cornmeal crust sure looks perfect for a Sunday brunch!

In 2006, Helene Dujardin started writing Tartelette… on the sweet side of life… She is also the author of Plate to Pixel, a book about digital food photography and styling that came out this April. We love this blog because of the way it celebrates life! Helene takes amazing photos and likes to add a French twist (she used to be a pastry chef at a French restaurant.) Fun side note: though she does not have Celiac’s disease, she has chosen to be 100% gluten free. She says that this change has made her laugh more and feel better every single day.

Orangette is up next. Molly Wizenberg lives in Seattle and has been writing her food blog since July of 2004.  Guess what? She met her husband through her site! She wrote this book, which is a food memoir (with 50 recipes) and opened this restaurant in Seattle. We love her photos, the simplicity of her site, and her Napa cabbage kimchi!

And finally… (drum roll please!!!)…

Rounding out our Top 10: food52, which features not one or two bloggers, but a whole team of foodies. The cool thing about this blog is that it is super engaging! There are videos and even contests– for instance, each Friday they solicit recipes for different themes (whether it be “best summer cocktail” or “best shrimp recipe”). Then, they test a bunch of the entries, and whittle it down to two finalists.  A week later, the winning recipes are posted on their blog! Then readers choose their favorite recipe, and that recipe is added to the food52 cookbook.  You never know, you could be the next finalist!

So there you have it! Parties that Cook’s Top 10 food blogs of 2011! Are you up for a challenge? See if you can make one meal from each of these 10 blogs this summer. Be sure to let us know your favorites!

Summer Cooking from Your Flower Garden: Parties That Cook’s Lavender Tea Cake Recipe

Fun Fact: Long, long ago, it was the Greeks who discovered that crushed lavender would release a relaxing fume when burned.

These days, lavender is not only popular for its fragrance, but also for its distinct flavor. This beautiful purple flower lends a floral and slightly sweet flavor to any dish — so light and fresh, it just screams summer! Parties That Cook’s Lavender Tea Cake recipe provides a great opportunity to use your own, fresh, home-grown lavender or dried lavender from the store. If you’re lucky, you’ll be making this delicious dessert at our upcoming Date Night Couples Cooking Classes or Sizzle & Swirl Cooking Classes!

Warm Lavender Tea Cakes with Homemade Lemon Curd
This recipe can also be found in our Dessert Recipes Section.

Ingredients
Lemon Curd:
1/3 cup lemon juice
1 lemon, zested
1/2 cup sugar
3 eggs
1 egg yolk
1/2 cup unsalted butter, cut into pieces
Ice bath

Lavender Cake:
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cup granulated sugar
10 Tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large whole eggs
2 large egg whites
2 cups plain low fat yogurt
2 tablespoons lavender flowers (not petals or stems), finely chopped
Nonstick spray
Parchment paper
Powdered sugar for dusting

Methods/Steps
Make Lemon Curd: Set up a double boiler by filling a sauce pan halfway with water and bring it up to a simmer. In a medium bowl whisk together lemon juice, zest, sugar, eggs and yolk. Add the butter.  Place bowl over the pot of simmering water.  Note: Be sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water below it! Whisk steadily, but gently, until curd becomes thick and pale and creamy, about 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from heat, strain into a small bowl and chill on top of an ice bath until ready to use.

Preheat oven to 350°F.

Prepare Pan: Spray a half sheet pan (12-7/8” x 17-3/4”) with nonstick baking spray. Cut a sheet of parchment paper to fit the pan and place it on the sprayed pan. Spray the parchment paper as well.
Combine Dry Ingredients: Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into a bowl. Set aside until ready to use.

Cream Ingredients: Beat granulated sugar, butter, and vanilla until well-blended. Break eggs and egg whites into a small bowl or measuring cup and add them into the mixture one at a time. Beat well after each addition. Next, add half of the flour and mix gently. Add the yogurt, then mix briefly and finish with the rest of the flour. Stir in lavender. Do not over mix or cake will be tough. The batter will be very thick.

Bake:
Spoon the batter into the prepared pan. Use an offset spatula or palette knife dipped in hot water to spread batter into the pan. Bake for 15- 20 minutes or until a sharp knife or cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean.

Serve: Cool cake in pan for 10 minutes. Run a knife around the edge of the pan and gently invert pan onto a large cutting board. Remove parchment paper and dust the entire cake with powdered sugar. Cut cake into 4 quarters by cutting down the middle both width- and length-wise. Cut each quarter into 12 squares to yield 48 – 2 inch squares. Place onto a serving platter. Transfer the lemon curd into a serving bowl and place next to the warm cake.

Recipe created by Parties That Cook® www.PartiesThatCook.com

For a few San Francisco restaurants serving dishes featuring edible flowers, check out 7×7 Magazine’s article here.