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Archive for January, 2006

Las cinco estrellas de la cocina española

Sunday, January 29th, 2006
Son Carme R., Ferrán A., Jua Mari A., Santi S. y Martín B. todos tres estrellas Michelin, en una entrevista de La Vanguardia.es.

Algunos de sus opiniones que resaltaría:

JMA: "...Es indudable que estamos en una nueva era. Todavía no sé cómo hay que llamar a esta cocina, pero hay que buscarle un nombre porque es bastante nuestra. Somos punta de lanza en el mundo, y por alguna parte tiene que aparecer la identidad de esa cocina. Suena mal científica y suena mal técnica. La emoción es muy importante para nosotros. Siempre está ahí. Sin ella, el cocinero no existe".


FA: "Tengo miedo de que la gente crea que en la cocina de vanguardia vale todo. Nos falta un cuerpo teórico, un manual, que defina los límites. He hecho cosas bien, regular y mal, como todos. Ahora tengo cierta experiencia y puedo ver las cosas desde una perspectiva diferente. Hay cosas que no pueden ser".


SS. "Hay cocineros que quieren ser artistas antes que artesanos"

CR. "Lo cierto es que no te metes en esto por negocio, porque no lo es..."

MB. "Mi trabajo es un trabajo en equipo, y parte de mi equipo son los agricultores y su materia prima. Es verdad que una parte importante de nuestro trabajo es la búsqueda del producto. Tenemos que ir a mirar, y eso también se tiene que hacer a gusto".

Cebiche de Pescado y Camarón

Sunday, January 29th, 2006
This ceviche is made of fish and shrimp. Sometimes yuyo , fresh seaweed, is added as a topping to ceviche.









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Cebiche de Lenguado

Sunday, January 29th, 2006


















A classic ceviche, made with sole, and accompanied by
mote (boiled corn kernels), and camote (boiled sweet potato). The sauce for the cebiche is made with onions, lemon, and it is topped with rocoto ají , Peru's ubiquitous hot pepper.





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Tea time at La Bonbonniere

Saturday, January 28th, 2006
La Bonbonniere

Calle Burgos 415

San Isidro

421-2447




Read more about the Peruvian custom of lonche, or tea time.







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Lonche at the Marriot

Saturday, January 28th, 2006




Lonche means tea time in Peru, and at the J.W. Marriot, along with your coffee and pastry, you get a view of the Pacific Ocean.



Read more about Peruvian tea time.







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Astrid & Gaston

Saturday, January 28th, 2006

Astrid & Gaston Restaurant
Cantuarias 175
Miraflores
444-1496


Considered by most the best restaurant in town, Astrid & Gaston serves lunch from 12:30-3:30 pm, and dinner from 7:45-11:45 pm, Monday to Saturday.


Website for Astrid & Gaston Restaurant



Read more about Gastón Acurio here at Peru Food by clicking on any of the links below:

Gaston Acurio: Inexhaustible Creativity

Another Interview with Gaston Acurio

Gaston Acurio Interviewed by Elena Hernández in Panama's Diario La Prensa

At Madrid Fusion Elena Hernández Chats with Gaston Acurio

Gaston Acurio

Astrid & Gaston Restaurant




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Gastón Acurio

Saturday, January 28th, 2006


Gastón Acurio, owner of Astrid & Gaston Restaurant, currently one of the finest chefs in Peru.

Read more about Gastón Acurio here at Peru Food by clicking on any of the links below:

Gaston Acurio: Inexhaustible Creativity

Another Interview with Gaston Acurio

Gaston Acurio Interviewed by Elena Hernández in Panama's Diario La Prensa

At Madrid Fusion Elena Hernández Chats with Gaston Acurio

Gaston Acurio

Astrid & Gaston Restaurant




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ooey-gooey goodness

Saturday, January 28th, 2006

gf choc chip cookie IV, originally uploaded by shaunaforce.

Sometimes, you just need some chocolate chip cookies.

For the past four or five days, I have been trying my best not to complain. I have also not been writing here, even though I have wanted to post new recipes and delighted paragraphs about the sensory pleasures of new tastes exploding on my tongue. The problem is, there haven’t been too many new tastes on my tongue. I’ve hardly eaten food this week, and what I have eaten has been bland.

Oh, I hate being sick.

A vile virus has rushed through my body and left me depleted. Raw throat, pounding head, congestion clogging every part of me, and a pounding of exhaustion I have not felt since before I stopped eating gluten. I’ve spent much of the past week either coughing from deep in my lungs or whimpering. On Wednesday, I lay in a fetal position in a corner of the couch, all day long, so delusional from high fevers that I actually spent six straight hours watching Project Runway on Bravo. (That Santino -- what a twerp.) When I’m watching television for more than an hour, I’m clearly not doing well.

Last night was the low point. About 3:30 in the morning, I was awoken, again, by my sore throat, which felt like three people raking hot forks against my vocal cords. My fever forced me to kick off the covers, frantically. The lukewarm water by my bedside did nothing to mollify the tearing pain in my throat. Groggy and unhappy, I stumbled into the bathroom to search under the sink for some kind of sore throat relief. Ah! Ricola. I found five old Ricola cough drops, swollen and sticky against the wrappers. Still, they’d probably do the trick. Just as I was unwrapping one and starting to put it into my mouth, I realized, “Ah merde. I don’t know if this is gluten-free.” So I put on my glasses and fired up the internet, and searched for “Ricola gluten-free.” Thanks to the internet, I found out — nope, I couldn’t have that relief after all.

Why do cough drops need gluten?

So, in the face of this senseless suffering, there haven’t been too many lavish feasts around here. But there were chocolate chip cookies.

It seems that everyone else in the food blog world is eschewing baked goods, sugars, and starches. Well, not me. It’s still raining in Seattle, and I’m not eating much anyway. Might as well make the most of the bites I am having. On Wednesday, I made a homemade chicken soup with millet, which filled me well and fulfilled my desire to have some kind of hot liquid down my throat all day long. By the end of the day, the millet had expanded fully and became a chicken-millet stew. That was one day.

On Thursday morning, when I felt just a touch better, I woke up and knew I had to make some chocolate chip cookies. When I was a kid, I learned how to make chocolate chip cookies from scratch, based on the recipe on the back of the Toll House chocolate chip bag. Over the years, I perfected cookie baking: thin, crispy cookies with a brittle bite; enormous cookies that called for me to set aside everything else and simply savor them; chewy cookies that oozed a bit of chocolate on my tongue. My oatmeal raisin cookies were considered so outrageously chewy, tasting of hand-made love and nutmeg, that I once Fed-Exed a big box of them overnight to someone with whom I was hopelessly in love. (It didn’t work out with him, but that wasn’t the fault of the cookies.) Before I stopped eating gluten, I could wake up any morning and whip up a batch of cookies to bring to work or feed my friends, without even thinking about it too much.

After my celiac diagnosis, though, I gave up on the notion of making my own cookies again. I took my Pillsbury baking book, dusted with flour, the pages stuck together with butter, and gave it to my friend, Dorothy. Obviously, I’d never be using that again.

Watch out for never.

It took me months of cooking every night, finding my way through my tastes, until I had the heart to start baking again. Now, however, I just can’t be stopped. Fig newtons, apple pies, gingerbread, chocolate-banana bread — gluten-free baking simply doesn’t scare me anymore. Now, it’s simply baking.

Maybe, in the face of feeling foreign in my body, I needed to return to a familiar activity. The dark-grey winter seems to call out for butter, sugar, and flour, even if it is gluten-free flour. Even though I still feel fairly rotten, these cookies have been sustaining me in a way that nothing else can.

Now, you’ll have to excuse me. I have to go and drink some more hot lemonade.


Ooey-Gooey Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies

gf choc chip cookie VI
Slightly cakey, chewy and moist, chocolate arriving in melted chunks — these cookies are sure to please anyone, not just those who can’t eat gluten. Just one piece of advice: don’t forget to add the salt. For those of you who don’t know, a touch of salt is essential in baking cookies, to cut the sweetness and give each bite layers of taste. Somehow, even with all this baking experience, I forgot to add the salt into the first batch of these. My friends Anne and Rick came up with the trick to defeat the over-sweetness, however: we sprinkled sea salt on the top of the cookies before chewing them. This may sound ridiculous, but we were sighing happily as we ate.

one and a half cups sweet rice flour
one-half cup tapioca flour
one-quarter cup millet flour
one-quarter cup teff flour
one teaspoon baking soda
one teaspoon baking powder
two teaspoons salt
one stick salted butter, softened
one-half cup brown sugar
one cup white sugar
one-half cup Dagoba hot chocolate powder with chilis
three eggs
one tablespoon vanilla extract
four ounces dark chocolate, chopped into chunks


Preheat the oven to 350°. If you have one, lay down your Silpat on your baking sheet. If you don’t, then you should buy one. But for now, line the baking sheet with parchment paper.

Mix together all the gluten-free flours (remember to measure them accurately, since every ounce counts here), plus the baking powder and soda. Don’t forget the salt! Set this bowl aside.

Using the paddle attachment on your stand mixer, cream the butter, sugars, and hot chocolate powder together, briefly, until they are mixed well and starting to grow fluffy. (This should be about two minutes.) Add the eggs and gluten-free vanilla. Put in all of the flour mixture at once and stir briefly, until just mixed. Add the chocolate chunks, then chill the mixture in the refrigerator for at least fifteen minutes.

For the right ooey-gooey consistency, plop large balls of dough, about half the size of the palm of your hand, onto the Silpat or parchment paper. Bake for about twelve to fourteen minutes, depending on your oven. When you remove the cookies, the tops will be ever-so-soft. Allow them to cool on a baking sheet for ten minutes before removing to a plate, or your mouth.

Places to Eat In and Around Barranco

Thursday, January 26th, 2006
Peruvians take their cuisine very seriously.



Peruvian cuisine is known for excellence, and you will be able to find many restaurants depending on your budget. The best values are usually at lunchtime, when most restaurants offer a
menu which includes a choice of starter, main dish, dessert, and a beverage, for a fixed price. There are all price ranges. In Lima, seafood is particularly good, although there are many different types of cuisine available, both Peruvian regional and international.



In and around Barranco, the coastal bohemian district of Lima, I can recommend the following:




Located facing the very pleasant main plaza of Barranco, and for general drinks and snacks, check out the very traditional
Bar Juanito , Avenida Grau 274, in Barranco. This bar is very famous in Barranco and has great ambience. More for snacks and refreshments instead of a full meal.



Also in Barranco is the wonderful
Cebichería Barranco (also known as La Gringa ), Avenida Panamericana Sur 270, Barranco, Telephone 467-4560, open daily for lunch 10 am. a 5 pm. This is owned by a Peruvian of Swiss descent who makes mouth-watering dishes, focusing on seafood. There is very good ambience at lunch and it is not very expensive.













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Lament for Cebiche!

Thursday, January 26th, 2006
Sólo quiero un cebiche.

Dame cebiche.

Me urge un cebiche.

Will blog for cebiche.
















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