Tag Cookbook Club

The Bon Appétit Top 100

cookbook clubAt this month’s meeting of the Cookbook Club, we agreed on a test drive of the Bon Appétit Top 100 Dishes, an enticing feature of Bon Appétit’s sleek, newly revamped website. According to Editor-in-chief Barbara Fairchild, the Top 100 will be an ever-evolving collection of the season’s best recipes as deemed the epicurean authorities.

As avid worshipers of pretty much any type of Top 100 list (Movies, Influential People, Blogs), it was not a hard sell around the office.

To start, we flocked around a platter of Chipotle Deviled Eggs, befitting of the post July 4th heatwave we’ve been experiencing here in the Bay Area. Christina showed off mad piping skills with her perky yolks. As assumed with deviled eggs, the recipe turns out very spicy, so adjust to taste!

The Fresh Salmon Salad with Chickpeas and Tomatoes was delicious served warm (also recommended at room temperature). Crissy revised the recipe to include pitted olives to avoid any awkward spitting at the table. There was also quite a bit of salmon for the amount of salad, so it would be best served as the main course.

There were no leftovers of the Arugula and Bacon Quiche, which had a flaky shortening crust and savory filling. The rich cream, egg and Gruyère mellowed out the spicy arugula making for a perfectly balanced bite. Lauren is against tedious trimming of leaves, so she opted for baby arugula and left the tender stems on.

For the main course, we picked out the Barbecued Beef Ribs with Molasses-Bourbon Sauce. The sauce was indeed finger-licking good, and highly recommended. Unfortunately, Bibby’s grill was having its own independence day and not up to the task of 3 hours of slow cooking, so the oven picked up the slack. While short ribs or full beef ribs were suggested, we’d opt next time for the short ribs, which we suspect would have come out perfectly tender on the grill.

A classic American Creamy Potato Salad with Lemon and Fresh Herbs rounded out our meal. Rosie fought her healthy eating conscience and used real mayonnaise for the dish, a decision the rest of us applauded her for. Sans green onions, the salad was also breath-friendly.

Erin, having recently become an amateur wedding cake baker, asked to digress from the Top 100, and instead tried out the Lemon Wedding Cake with Blackberry Sauce recipe from Bon Appétit’s cookbook. The tri-level domed white bombshell had decadent pound cake-like layers and cream cheese frosting. We fell more and more in love with every bite!

In typical Parties That Cook fashion, we kicked things up a notch with a few extras like an Arugula Steak Salad and a Fresh Meyer Lemon Curd Cheesecake. We invited over a few of our hard-working chefs for the fabulous lunch feast and to chat about the Bachelorette finale (we’re still in shock). Just another day at the office!

“Eat Your Vegetables” Luncheon

As children, most of us absolutely abhorred eating vegetables. If it was green, Mom could forget about forcing it down the hatch, unless cleverly guised in a veil of cheese sauce.

We’re all grown up now and having developed a discerning palate for all herbaceous plant matter, we’ve grown quite fond of vegetarian cooking. There is an art and finesse to vegetarian cooking that not many chefs study. After all, there are thousands of types of vegetables to learn to work with, but only four major proteins to master.

A long time innovator in vegetarian cooking is world-renowned Greens Restaurant in San Francisco. For this month’s meeting of the Parties That Cook Cookbook Club, we delved into the vibrant water-colored pages of Everyday Greens written by long time Executive Chef Annie Somerville. The book focuses on recipes for “home cooking” – rustic ragouts, satisfying stews, vegetables on the grill, quick stir-fries, pizzas, tortilla dishes, savory tarts, pastas, sandwiches and desserts, of course.

On the menu for our belly-bursting vegetarian affair:

  • Green Salad with Beets, Fennel, Walnuts and Ricotta Salata – A winning combination with a tangy, sherry vinegar and orange juice vinaigrette. Liz didn’t have any walnut oil on-hand, but the dressing was still wonderfully balanced.
  • Grilled Fig and Endive Salad with Watercress – Erin couldn’t find any figs and substituted bursting-ripe Santa Rosa plums, which ended up being the unexpected star of this simple salad.
  • Moroccan Chick-Pea Soup – Lauren wrestled a bit with the ROI on this dish (3+ hrs preparation versus final taste). With the additional of extra salt and garlic, this recipe still wins our recommendation. Very spicy!
  • Soft Tacos with Grilled Summer Vegetables – Tanya had no idea this recipe actually is three recipes-in-one and forgot to copy the garlic oil and chipotle puree recipes. She winged it and upped the ante with sides of butt-kickin peppers & spring onions (she is our Chef de Cuisine after all!). She also miniaturized the tacos to make for a better potluck portions.
  • Gypsy Peppers Filled with Fromage Blanc and Fine Herbes – Michelene substituted sweet piquillo peppers for gypsy, which comes into season in late summer. Fromage Blanc was also mysteriously sold-out at Whole Foods, so the peppers were stuffed with chevre instead. Decadent and simple, they were the perfect pick for Michelene, who is a busy mom.
  • Mexican Pizza with Corn, Tomatillos and Chipotle Chilies – A favorite at the luncheon, expertly produced by Executive Chef Bibby. Her only revisions – doubled the cheese and highly recommends using a pizza stone for crust as crisp as it should be.
  • Artichoke and Portobello Mushroom Lasagne – We loved this rich and hearty lasagna, but thought it more appropriate for a cold winter’s day. Crissy suggests skipping the hassle of trimming the small artichokes and opt for frozen instead, since their flavor is secondary to the heavy tomato-zinfandel sauce. Also needed more salt than called for. Many people had seconds of this one!
  • Rhubarb Tartlets with Almond Streusel – The streusel topping was loose and definitely needed more butter/less flour than instructed. Rosie decided the cream cheese-based crust absolutely needed to be served warm for pleasing texture/taste.
  • Basmati Rice Pudding with Mascarpone – Christina earned cookbook club brownie points by creating two versions of this recipe, one with coconut milk and the other with half-and-half. Topped with fresh raspberries, we thought both were a winner with the slight edge going to the slightly thicker textured half-and-half version.