Monday, March 23, 2009

Cheap Eating in NYC




















So, the party is over and it's back to the grindstone. After three weeks Mom has headed home and I've hit the job hunt. We ate amazingly well and had a ton of fun on a tiny budget. Some of our tips for making the most of your dining dime: make your own coffee in the morning and don't eat out. I know this may sound like a cruel limitation in a city known for amazing food, but if you have culinary skills and a small budget, I found a "high/low" strategy was the best bet. We had amazing (and amazingly cheap) "street" food: pizza, papusas, and hot dogs, but made a constant activity out of sourcing the best raw materials to bring back to my apartment, and either eat as is, or cook up just the way we liked it; keeping the tip for ourselves. We feasted on cheeses and meats, fresh crispy bread, seasonal veggies and fruits, gourmet vinegars, oils, olives, spices, spreads and condiments, hand made candies and bakery, and of course inexpensive but delicious wine.
































































































































































































We spent a great day shopping in Grand Central Terminal. This may seem odd, but Grand Central is a great place for food shopping. There is an indoor market with everything you could need nestled into one long narrow corridor, just steps away from commuter trains heading up-state, and with easy access to the subway rumbling by unheard beneath your feet. One sees New Yorkers whizzing through the throngs, picking up what is obviously their dinner for that evening, before jumping on the subway home. We stopped at some old favorites, and found some new ones: At O & CO. we bought a great bottle of balsamic vinegar, and were steered towards two delicious cheeses at Murray Cheese by the helpful and genuinely nice staff. We bought some spices from Penzeys (and smelled just about all of them), got a fresh baguette, some spanish chorizo and some crazy good handmade candy from Li-Lac. We chose butter toffee and maple fudge and it was the best of either that I'd ever had. It was my first time stopping at this shop, and I will definitely be back.

One of our favorite food stops is always the Chelsea Market at 9th ave. and 15th st. an indoor market that houses food shops along a long rustically industrial arched hallway. Its full of great food, but we like it mostly for the vibe, its comfy and out of the elements, a good thing when its scorching hot or freezing cold: the latter on our day in Chelsea. You would think it would be swamped by tourists but it's blessedly a nice mix: tourists, locals and foodies. We picked up some soup, bread and bakery, and sat at one of the many tables along the corridor to people watch.

Another great day was spent in Williamsburg. We hit two vintage stores, and apparently a time warp. As we emerged onto the cold empty street at 11 pm, (yes, some stores stay open until 11, one of the perks of living in NYC) we realized we were famished. We walked a few blocks to the main drag: Bedford Ave, for a slice of pizza. I knew we were close to a great pizza place my friends and I used to go to in college at all hours of the night; usually after drinking all night. At least I was pretty sure it was great pizza, but it seemed a sober taste test was in order. Lucky for us, it was as good as I hazily recalled. It embodied everything that makes a New York "slice" the best pizza in America. What a masterpiece of simplicity; a marrying of soul mates: tangy sweet tomato sauce and salty melted cheese. A thin crust that's crispy and charred in spots, but chewy and plaint enough to crease lengthwise. This crease gives your giant floppy triangle the structural integrity needed to deliver your masterpiece the short distance from grease stained paper plate, to your eager smiling face.

My favorite day though, was a perfect confluence of planning and spontaneity, great art, great food, great weather and great company. We started our day getting up early and heading to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the upper east side. We picked a few new shows to scour in depth, and wondered through some old favorites, not really looking, just absorbing the "museum feel". As our appetite, and the temperature outside, peeked; we left the quite dimly lit interior for the bright and noisy New York sidewalk, and it was warm - balmy! It was The warmest day of the year so far and people were out in force: upper east side nannies with their charges, office workers: suit jackets draped over there arms, old ladies and poodles, local kids full of pent up energy, and clumps of teens loosed from school for the day.

We passed by the two busy hot dog carts near the Met stairs and headed south a few blocks before picking up our "dirty water dogs", as the classic cart food is sometimes "lovingly" referred. I highly recommend grabbing a good friend and building up a good apatite; enough to ask for a slew of dogs, and a card board box to serve as make shift park furniture. I ordered us four with kraut, ketchup, and mustard. We found a bench in the sun just inside Central Park, and feasted in comfort with our cardboard tabletop and a great view of the action: jubilant New Yorkers shaking off cabin fever, plunging into the park smiling and chatting: all with a knowing glint in their eyes: every one of them knows - this is one of those days you wait for all winter.

The day was so beautiful, we spent the rest of it "bench hopping" our way down the east side of Central Park down to the south corner at 59th street. We got an ice cream and watched grubby bottomed kids feeding a goose, ambled along the edge of a man made lake, and walked through the Central Park Zoo(closed for the season). As we neared the end of our walk and the sun was going down over the buildings fringing the park and the gilded yellow light glinted through the bear branches, I knew without a doubt, this was the best day I had ever spent in the park, and I was lucky enough to share it with my favorite person, my Mom.


p.s. Happy Birthday Mom!!

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Fort Greene Farmers Market # 2



















It's spring! (even though it doesn't feel like it yet). I've been very busy since returning to Brooklyn a few weeks ago, but not to busy to stop and smell the roses, well actually; pussy willows, crocuses, and tulips, some of the harbingers of spring in in my neighborhood. I know its some time before spring veggies hit the farm stands, but by the time they do, the anticipation will make them all the more appreciated. Meanwhile, I'm making the most of stored veggies: onions, potatoes, carrots, cabbages and beets, as well as apples, and green house gems like baby greens, herbs, and cut flowers. This is a great time of year to explore the farmers markets "other" offerings, those that often get overlooked during the height of summer and early fall, when you are inundated in more types of gorgeous fruits and vegetables then you can even eat in a week. (Its best under those circumstances to just go for the gold and eat as much seasonal produce as you can before it is gone.) Now the pickings are slimmer, but sometimes limits can be liberating. Now is the time to try the different cheeses, meats, fish and eggs; jams, jellies and juices; fresh bread, pies muffins and cookies, not to mention mushrooms my very favorite year round "veggie". I'm looking forward to ramps, fiddleheads, asparagus and rhubarb, but until then, I'm enjoying the ingenuity of my local farmers. This weeks favorite: a cheddar cheese and mushroom loaf, that was moist and eggy, while being light as air. I sliced it thick and toasted it before spreading with butter, mmmmm, I know I said I wanted to try different things, but I might have to just buy this one again next week.





















































































































































































































































































Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Fort Greene Farmers Market

















































The first really warm day of the year: 70 degrees! and my first time back at the my local Farmers Market! There are few things I like better then perusing the stalls of a good farmers market on a sunny day; nothing else to do but dig through bins of veggies, taste some farm fresh cheese, smell seasonal fruits and talk to farmers about the formative days of my cherished new acquisitions.

My Mom and I had so much fun basking in the sun eating our breakfast of apple cider donuts, talking with friends we bumped into, and buying much more then we needed. Some standouts included: insanely good, sweet Italian Sausage from Wilklow farms. I believe my Mom said "this is the best meat I have ever had", I'm not kidding. It was the first time I had purchased meat from them, and it was amazing. The other star of our market binge, was one of my all time favorites: a jar of strawberry jam from Red Jacket Orchards. I love the people who work at this stall, they're so nice, they always tell me which apples are the crunchiest, they have fantastic fresh cherry juice (which they were sadly out of this Saturday), and the best jams, my favorite being the Strawberry; it's out of this world. We made grilled cheese with bread and cheese from the market and slathered it with this fresh, intensely fruity, mildly sweet jam. At that moment I couldn't think of a better food to be eating. But the best value of our trip was actually the little patch of perky, vividly green wheatgrass we took home for a paltry three dollars, which has been brightening our spirits and keeping me sane until the arrival of the first bright green buds of spring.









































































































































































































































































































Farmers Markets are a great way to do your part; help make this world a better place to live; Find one near you, and support your local Farmers!









































































































Monday, March 2, 2009

back to the big city




































I'm leaving the north woods for New York City. I've spent a very relaxing three months living with my family in Wisconsin at my childhood home, but now it's time face the "real world". I was feeling pretty negative about the big city when I quit my job and headed north three months ago, but the slow pace and company of my family have taken effect and I feel rejuvenated. I'm lucky to have a great family that I love (and like; we have a blast), but also a whole slew of friends in the city that I'm really excited to see again. So I have to say good bye to the slow pace and beautiful scenery of northern Wisconsin and return to the fast lane. The pace is fast, but the perks are many: in addition to the great company - places are open after 5 pm, the conversation is contentions but stimulating, art and culture are everywhere, and the food is fantastic!

Even though I should be getting a job right away, I'm gonna stretch out my freedom a bit longer, and spend a few weeks palling around the city with my Mom. I'm basically broke, but my Mom and I are masters of having maximum fun on a minimal budget, so expect some photos of cheap eats from all around New York City in the next few weeks.
























Merlin and Lilly's fast paced lifestyle