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Food Fridays

Podcast Food Fridays
Podcast Food Fridays

Food Fridays

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  • How A City Program Helps Young NYers Find A Future In Cooking
    Stage NYC is a program that helps unemployed and underemployed young New Yorkers get a foot in the door in the culinary industry. Gregg Bishop is the Small Business Services Commissioner and he started the program. He joins us along with Chef Herve Malivert, Director of Culinary Arts & Technology at the International Culinary Center, and Sherve Simeon, who went through the program and now works at Osteria Morini. 
    11/17/2017
    17:04
  • Melissa Clark Helps You Get A Jump Start On Thanksgiving
    Thanksgiving may be next week, but we're joined by joined by New York Times food columnist and cookbook author Melissa Clark for offer tips on how you can get started early on your favorite holiday dishes. She’ll cover everything from the many ways to cook a turkey, to her favorite new recipes for sides and desserts. You can read more about Melissa Clark's suggestions for making Thanksgiving dinner in eight hours here. Check out two of Melissa Clark's recipes below!  Cranberry Sauce with Lime and Pecans Time: 20 minutes plus at least 3 hours chilling; can be made up to 5 days ahead Serves 8 1 (12-ounce) bag fresh cranberries 3/4 cup sugar 2 tablespoons honey 1 tablespoon fresh lime zest 1 teaspoon freshly grated lime zest Pinch salt 1/2 cup chopped toasted pecans (or walnuts) 1. In a medium saucepan, combine cranberries, sugar, and honey. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then simmer until the cranberries pop and burst, about 7 to 10 minutes. 2. Stir in the lime juice, zest and salt and let the mixture cool. Transfer to a container and chill until thoroughly cold, at least 3 hours. Just before serving, stir in the nuts.   Make-Ahead Gravy It’s worth making your own stock for this. Yield: 5 to 6 cups Time: 20 minutes, with premade stock; can be made 5 days ahead 6 tablespoons unsalted butter 2 tablespoons olive oil 1/2 cup flour Salt and pepper 4 to 5 cups rich turkey or chicken stock, warmed Turkey drippings, optional 1. Melt butter with the oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Sprinkle the flour into the butter, stirring constantly, and cook until flour is golden brown, about 5 minutes. Adjust heat so mixture does not burn. 2. Gradually whisk in 4 cups stock until mixture thickens and is smooth. If it is too thick, add more stock. Cool, cover and chill. 3. When ready to serve, reheat mixture over low heat, stirring. Scrape bottom of turkey pan and add drippings to gravy. Taste and adjust seasoning, then serve.
    11/17/2017
    32:02
  • We Get Fired Up Over Peppers
    There are over 200 varieties of peppers, ranging from shishitos to habaneros. For our latest Please Explain, we dig into the world (and health benefits) of peppers with three-time James Beard Award-winning chef, culinary historian and author Maricel Presilla. She’s the author of Peppers of the Americas: The Remarkable Capsicums That Forever Changed Flavor, which explores the history of peppers and the many dishes you can make with them.
    11/17/2017
    30:31
  • How Young Chefs Make It In NYC
    Journalist Karen Stabiner joins us to discuss her book Generation Chef: Risking It All for a New American Dream. She’s joined by Jonah Miller, an ambitious 24-year-old chef who is the founder of NYC's Huertas. Stabiner discusses her time following Jonah as he fought to establish himself in the incredibly competitive NYC culinary scene. 
    11/17/2017
    17:16
  • Why Vinegar Deserves More Credit As An Ingredient
    Vinegar often plays an essential role in the food we eat. We use it in everything from baking to braising to pickling. But, author Michael Harlan Turkell writes that vinegar is "underappreciated and little understood." For his new book Acid Trip: Travels in the World of Vinegar: With Recipes from Leading Chefs, Insights from Top Producers, and Step-by-Step Instructions on How to Make Your Own, Turkell set out to give vinegar its due. He traveled the world, learning how countries from Japan to France make and use vinegar. He also collected recipes from chefs who are using vinegar in exciting, different and delicious ways. He joins us for our latest Please Explain to discuss vinegar's many uses and how you can make your own at home. Micheal Harlan Turkell will appear in conversation with Francine Segan, Ivan Orkin and Neil Kleinberg at the 92nd Street Y (1395 Lexington Ave. at 92nd St.) on Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. Check out a recipe from Michael Harlan Turkell's Acid Trip below! OEUFS EN MEURETTE, FROM BERTRAND A UBOYNEAU, BISTROT PAUL BERT, PARIS, FRANCE SERVES 4 This dish takes the concept of bourguignon sauce and uses it to poach eggs. What you’re left with is the same rich stock, adding the decadence of a creamy egg yolk, with a side of toast to sop it all up. Bertrand, always in need of acidity, uses a portion of red wine vinegar in place of some of the red wine, which gives a much lighter quality to a dish that usually invites a postprandial nap, and instead has you feeling like conquering the day ahead. ¼ pound (115 g) THICK SMOKED BACON, cut into lardoons 1 tablespoon BUTTER ¼ pound (115 g) WHITE PEARL ONIONS, peeled, tops and bottoms trimmed 1 clove GARLIC, crushed ¼ pound (115 g) BUTTON MUSHROOMS, cleaned, cut into quarters 3 cups (720 ml) RED WINE, such as Burgundy, Beaujolais, Cabernet 1 branch THYME 1 cup (240 ml) RED WINE VINEGAR 4 EGGS, kept in shell, cold BLACK PEPPER PARSLEY LEAVES, optional TOAST and BUTTER   In a large saucepan over medium heat, render the bacon for 5 to 7 minutes, until it’s just browning but not burning. If it’s cooking too fast, lower the temperature. Pour out all but about 1 tablespoon of the fat (reserve the excess to cook with another time) and set the bacon aside (you’ll add it back in later, so try not to snack on it too much). Add the butter, onions, and garlic and cook for about 1 minute, until aromatic. Lower the heat to medium-low, add the mushrooms and cook for another 2 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the red wine, scrape the bottom of the pan to release the fond, and add the thyme. Bring back to a simmer and cook for 45 minutes, or until reduced by a third. Add the red wine vinegar and continue to cook for another 30 minutes. (If it’s too acidic for your taste, add ¼ cup water at a time until it’s not.) To poach the eggs, either in the pot of sauce itself (if you don’t mind a few stray pieces of egg white) or in a separate pot of water, bring the liquid to a bare boil. Make a small pinprick on the larger end of each egg, place in the liquid, and cook for 30 seconds (a Julia Child tip); this is just to set the whites. Remove the eggs and crack them into individual small bowls. Slide the eggs back into the pot to poach them. If you like a soft yolk, cook for only a few minutes. Using a slotted spoon, remove the eggs and set aside. In individual serving bowls, evenly distribute the onion and mushroom mixture, then pour a bit of the sauce, enough to cover an egg, into the bowl as well. Place the eggs into the bowls and garnish with the bacon, freshly cracked black pepper, and parsley, if using. Bon appetit! Note: Jonathan Capehart guest-hosted this segment of The Leonard Lopate Show.
    11/10/2017
    25:11

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