Impoverished Gourmet

Bulgur Breakfast

Inspired by the Minimalist Mark Bittman’s New York Times column a while back, I’ve been experimenting with bulgur as a hot breakfast cereal. I find it a little quicker and more painless than oatmeal, but still amazing with brown sugar, a little milk, and fruit of your choice. 1 part bulgur, 2 parts water, boil, cover, and simmer for 10 minutes or until the water is gone. No stirring, no clumps, delicious breakfast. Plus, if you have leftovers, it makes a wonderful savory side for dinner.

Upside-down herbs

March 26th, 2009

It’s always been a source of great frustration to me to have to spend astronomical prices per pound for fresh herbs at the grocery store that I know would grow like weeds if I just had a place for them to grow. In a small, 5th story apartment, such places don’t abound. Most herbs are okay indoor and will expand in a big enough pot, but honestly I don’t really even have that much windowsill space. Enter the upside down hanger!
Cilantro

  • Empty plastic bottles - $0.00. Scavenged from recycling bins on my way to the nursery.
  • Culinary herbs - $2.95 a piece. The cost less living than they do dead!
  • Potting soil - $5.00.

With the bottom cut from the bottle, a little duct-tape to reinforce the holes I punched in each of the four sides, and a little struggling to get the plant fed through the neck, I have a reasonably elegant and space-saving upside-down hanger. Worried about drips? My mints, growing directly below, are happy to get the water.

Apparently, this technique works well for tomatoes, and the internet abounds with advice on upside-down planters.

Tiramisu is not the Irish afterlife

Tiramisu is not the the Irish afterlife; in fact, tira-mi-su is an Italian phrase that literally means “pick-me-up”.
(everyone knows the Irish afterlife is a delicious drink made of eggs, cream, rum and nutmeg)

Green Beer made from sunshine and dirty hippies

A year ago Lucky Labrador Brewing Company out of Portland, Oregon invested $70,000 in a solar hot water system, received $64,000 in tax credits and incentives and now saves $3,000 yearly on their gas bill. Proving beer can be green from more than green food coloring and spirulina.

A sunny sip for springtime Sundays.

March 15th, 2009

Created after I hurriedly grabbed a bottle of white wine for cooking a risotto with only to discover Moscato d’Asti was a sweet bubbly - no good for my risotto, and bound to sit sadly in the fridge going flat.

As an impoverished gourmet, I couldn’t let that happen, so in the grand tradition of morning-after-champagne-cocktails, I employed the citrus maneouver. My current citrus of choice is the meyer lemon, which combines all the best parts of a kumquat (mild, sweet rind), a lime (floral bouqet), and a lemon (lemonyness). The juice of one of my meyer lemons mellowed out the Moscato, whose sweetness in turn brought out the full flavor of the lemon. A spritz of club soda on the top brought the drink from ‘puckering’ to ‘quenching’.

spring-espritz