Sunday, November 28, 2010

Concerts

So I had made a list of bands that I have seen several years ago. I just updated it instead of writing an essay. Go figure. Here it is:

1. Animal Collective '09S

2. Awesome (x2) '08S '08 [Possibly my favorite Seattle band]

3. Arctic Monkeys (x2) ’06S ‘07

4. Backstreet Boys '01 [My first ever concert. I went with the McCunes and our mothers]

5. Band of Horses '10S

6. Beck '06S

7. Beirut '08S

8. Ben Folds '09

9. Ben Harper and the Relentless7 '09S

10. Ben Lee '06S [This show was at my first ever Sasquatch and BL will always remind me of that wonderful, soggy weekend]

11. Big City Rock '06S

12. Big Japan '06S

13. Bishop Allen '09S

14. Blitzen Trapper '09S

15. Blue Scholars (x2) '06S '08B

16. BOAT '08

17. Bon Iver '09S

18. Brett Dennon ‘09B

19. Built to Spill '08S

20. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah '06S

21. Cold War Kids (x2) '08S '09B

22. Common Market '06S

23. Dandy Warhols '07S

24. David Bazon '06

25. Death Cab for Cutie (x3) '06S '06 '08S

26. Delta Spirit (x2) '08S '09

27. Dent May and His Magnificent Ukelele '09S

28. Drive-by Truckers '10S

29. Drug Purse '09

30. Fences ‘09

31. Fleet Foxes (x3) '08S ’08S '09S

32. Flight of the Conchords '08S

33. Forro in the Dark ‘08B

34. Gogol Bordello ‘09S

35. Grizzly Bear '09S

36. Helio Sequence (x2) ’07S '09B

37. Hey Marseilles (x3) '08 '09 '10 [Tied with Awesome for being my favorite Seattle band]

38. Ingrid Michaelson (x3) '08B '08 '09

39. Jamie Lidell ´08S

40. Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins ´08

41. Kings of Leon '09S

42. Lee "Scratch" Perry '08B

43. Los Nin '10 [Indigenous Ecuadorian rap group—incredible]

44. M. Ward '09B

45. Matisyahu ‘06S

46. Matt Costa (x2) '06 '08S

47. Matt Nathanson '08

48. Mayor Hawthorne (x2) '10 '10S [So classy]

49. MGMT '10S

50. MIA '08S

51. Michael Franti and Spearhead (x5) '07S '08S '08 '08 '09B

52. Mike Doughty '06

53. Modest Mouse '08S

54. Mt. St. Helen's Vietnam Band (x3) '08 '08 '09S

55. MXPX '05

56. Nada Surf '06S

57. Neko Case '06S

58. Newton Faulker '08

59. Owl City '09S

60. Passion Pit (x2) '09S '10S

61. Patrick Wolf '07S

62. Plain White T's '09

63. PWRFL PWR '09

64. Queens of the Stone Age '06S

65. R.E.M. '08S

66. Rodrigo y Gabriela '08S [“Wish You Were Here” played using a beer bottle, INCREDIBLE]

67. Rogue Wave '08S

68. Santigold '09S

69. Shakleton '08B

70. She & Him '10S [Too bad Zooey looked terrified the whole time]

71. Silversun Pickups '09S

72. Smoosh (x2) '05 '07S

73. SNOW PATROL '09 [Slightly embarrassing, but SP is my FAVORITE band of all time. Bar none]

74. SOJA '09

75. Spoon '07S

76. Steel Train ‘09

77. Stellar Kart (x2) '05C '05

78. Sugar Beats '09

79. Ted Leo and the Pharmacy ‘08

80. Tegan and Sarah '08S

81. The Barenaked Ladies '06 [Snow falling outside during the show, followed by a week off of school. What a way to end a Thanksgiving weekend]

82. The Black Keys '08B

83. The Blakes (x2) '08S '08B

84. The Cure '08S

85. The Decemberists (x3) '06S '06 '09S [I’ve already bought my ticket for ’11!]

86. The Eagles of Death Metal '06E

87.

The Flaming Lips '08S [One of the most fun live shows I’ve ever seen]

88. The Hives '08S

89. The Kooks '08S

90. The Mars Volta (x2) '06E '08S [NO BUENO]

91. The National '08S

92. The New Pornographers (x2) '08S '10S

93. The Newsboys (x2) '05C '06C

94. The Pica Beats '09S

95. The Polyphonic Spree '07S

96. The Presidents of the United States of America (x2) '05 '08S

97. The Red Hot Chili Peppers '06E

98. The Senate '08

99. The Shins '09

100. The Temper Trap ‘10S

101. The White Rabbits '08S

102. Thousand Foot Krutch (x2) '05C '06C

103. Total Experience Gospel Choir '07S

104. Truckasaurus '08S [Hilarious. Imagine rednecks making beats using a Nintendo thing. That’s what it was.]

105. U.S.E. ‘09B

106. Vince Mira (x2) '08S '09S

107. Voxtrot ‘07

108. Ween '10S

109. Wilco '07

110. Wolfmother '06E

111. Yeah Yeah Yeahs ’09S

S=Sasquatch
B=Bumbershoot
E=Endfest

My number is hugely inflated because of the festivals that I have attended. I just realized that if I count each festival as one concert, I have only seen 36 shows! Crazy!!

1. Arctic Monkeys/Voxtrot @ The Paramont

2. Backstreet Boys @ Tacoma Dome

3. Ben Folds/Steel train @ The Paramont

4. Bumbershoot 2008

5. Bumbershoot 2009

6. Creation 2005 @ the Gorge

7. Creation 2006 @ the Gorge

8. Death Cab/Ted Leo and the Pharmacists/Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins @ Key Arena

9. Endfest 2006 @ White River

10. Hey Marseilles @ UPS

11. Hey Marseilles/Fences @ Vera Project

12. Ingrid Michaelson @ Neumo’s

13. Ingrid Michaelson/Newton Faulkner @ Neumo’s

14. Los NIN @ Plaza Teatro, Quito

15. Matt Costa/David Bazon @ WWU

16. Matt Nathanson @ UVillage Barnes and Noble

17. Mayor Hawthorne @ UW HUB

18. Michael Franti @ Marymoor

19. Michael Franti in Canada

20. MSHVB /Awesome/BOAT @ Neumos

21. MSHVB /Hey Marseilles @ Neumo’s

22. PUSA/MXPX/SMOOSH @ Showbox

23. PWRFL POWR/drug purse/sugar beats @ The Den in Tacoma

24. Sasquatch 2006 @ the Gorge

25. Sasquatch 2007 @ the Gorge

26. Sasquatch 2008 @ the Gorge

27. Sasquatch 2009 @ the Gorge

28. Sasquatch 2010 @ the Gorge

29. Snow Patrol/PWT @ the Paramont

30. SOJA @ UPS

31. Stellar Kart in Mount Vernon

32. The Barenaked Ladies/Mike Doughty @ Everett Event Center

33. The Decemberists @ Woodland Park Zoo

34. The Senate @ UPS

35. The Shins/Delta Sprit @ WWU

36. Wilco @ Marymoor Park

Census Day, Quito-Style


Today was Quito's census. How can you have a "Census Day?" You ask? Well, instead of impersonally counting people's mailed-in responses, Ecuador has made their census personal.

Once every ten years, people are confined to their homes for about ten hours [and confined is the right word, you are not ALLOWED to leave. The streets were completely deserted. If you were a tourist staying in a hotel/hostel, too bad, you better have bought your own food because NOTHING will be open.]

Then, high school students come and knock on your door, all dressed up in their school uniforms. They ask each person who has slept your home the previous night two pages of questions (where were you born? have you used the internet or a phone in the last month? can you read? do you culturally identify with indígena, mestizo, blanco, negro? etc). This is strange because while I was counted (because I slept here last night), my sister (who is on vacation) was not counted! And she is an Ecuadorian citizen, but she doesn't exist for the purposes of the 2010 census while I (and my friend's American parents who are visiting) do. Strange.

So, really the point of this post is that I was locked in the house all day. What did I do? A little homework and then bake! (I had wanted to preserve ají--a type of salsa--today, but couldn't find preserving jars ANYWHERE!!!) I wanted to make a lemon meringue pie, but was nervous as previous meringue attempts have been disastrous. And I don't think my family had cream of tartar (the stores were all closed today). So instead I made Buckeyes. Yummy peanut butter balls covered in chocolate. A treat as peanut butter doesn't really exist here.

Recipe:
From Smitten Kitchen (my second favorite food blog) and Allrecipes.com

My batch made about 45 balls a little less than an inch in diameter.

1 1/2 cups ish of peanut butter
5 cups ish of powdered sugar
Large splash of vanilla (so CHEAP here! wonderful)
1 cup ish of Bonilla (Ecuadorian Crisco)
8 oz of chocolate (I actually don't know how much chocolate I used as I've been eating it from the bag since I bought it yesterday afternoon)

Mix everything together
It should be pretty dry (mine was too dry so I added a little more Bonilla) and tough-ish. Try rolling it into a ball with your hands, if it falls apart, add more liquid-ish stuff!!



Put the balls on parchment paper (unless you're in Ecuador where parchment paper doesn't exist and use tin foil) and into the freezer for about half an hour.



While the balls are hardening, melt the chocolate in a double boiler. Let it cool a tiny bit (depending on how thick you want the chocolate layer).



Stick something (skewer, fondue stick, toothpick, fork) into a peanut butter ball and dip it in the chocolate, taking care to leave a "small portion of peanut butter showing at the top to make them look like Buckeyes." Whatever buckeyes are. Something from Ohio I assume.

Here. I googled it. Apparently its a tree which grows in Ohio. Huh.


Let your non-tree-related buckeyes cool (or not) and then ask your host family to eat them so you don't. Or hide them in the fridge so there will be some left on Tuesday (today is Sunday) to bring to your friends. Or eat them all.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Cilantro Bruschetta

Last Thursday was a friend's birthday, so we gathered in her honor and BBQ-ed on the terrace of another friend, which overlooked the whole, gorgeous city of Quito. I wanted to bring something to the shin-dig (my mother once told me never to show up empty-handed), and the birthday cake had already been dibbs-ed, so I opted for an appetizer. Bruschetta. But the more I thought about it, the less I wanted it to be something normal (this food blog obsession is starting to be a problem--or something really AWESOME).

How could I make bruschetta different? I could look for a recipe online, I could do fruit, there was a whole section in the Martha Stewart website. But no. I was going to make it Ecuadorian-style. What does this mean? Here 'tis, too bad I don't have a photo.

Bread
Olive oil
Several tomatoes
An onion
A bunch of cilantro
An avocado (or more, we used it as spread)
Lime juice (I didn't actually have this as you had to buy a whole BAG of limes, and really, who needs that many limes--me apparently as I am making a lime yogurt cake for another birthday this weekend)
Dash o' salt

I chopped everything up, put olive oil on the sliced bread, toasted it over the BBQ, and then served it up. Done.

It sounds a lot simpler here than in real life...with people complaining that they were starving to death...I almost didn't survive (fortunately someone handed me a glass of "Valle de Mar" vino...$4.39 at MegaMaxi).

Queso Fresco probably would also be good on this, that is, if I liked queso fresco :)

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Cooking Crunchy, Crispy Rice Treats, Ecuadorian-style


So as tomorrow is Thursday, which I think is my new dessert day, I decided to bake tonight. This weekend whist we were all in beautiful Mindo and up to all kinds of shenanigans, the subject of peanut butter--mantequilla de maní--came up. There simply isn't enough in Ecuador.

(Several of us had talked to our host mothers about it--we also brought it up with our incredible Spanish prof, Evelyn. Apparently peanut butter is a North American thing. People in the rest of the world just don't like it. Here they use it to season their soups. My mamá said that she loves peanuts but in butter form, no dice.)

But back to Mindo. So we are talking and I decided that I really really really wanted to make those peanut butter rice crispy bars with chocolate on top. I facebooked my brother's girlfriend for her recipe but she still hasn't gotten back to me (I really should just quit trying to use Facebook to get recipes, it just does not work). So, in my incredible genius, I went to MegaMaxi to purchase baking goods--before finding a recipe. I got the Ecuadoriano version of Rice Crispies (Vanilla Arroz Crocante, it also comes in strawberry and chocolate in case you were curious), some Jiff peanut butter (imported it cost $7 for a 24 oz jar!) and some melting chocolate (it wasn't semi-sweet, bad choice). After class I began to search for a recipe--this is difficult because I only had certain ingredients and at this point it was too late--aka dark--to walk to the store and I didn't know what my family had/didn't want to steal their baking goods). I found a basic recipe, but who wants basic? And ended up with a triple layered thingamajig.

As per usual, I didn't follow the directions well ( I doubled it, kind of). And as per usual I didn't have all the ingredients, so here is my adapted recipe and I will let you know the taste-results mañana.

(Adapted from Ali, http://blissfullydomestic.com/2008/sweet-treat-cho-2)

16 oz chocolate
A large hunk of butter and a bit of Ecuadoriano Crisco-type stuff (about a cup in all)
About 20 oz peanut butter
A bag of Arroz Crocante (about 6-7 cups)
1/2 tsp salt
2 cups confectioners sugar
1 cup granulated sugar
oil

a) Put a bunch of oil in the bottom of a 9x13 pan

b) In a saucepan, melt half the chocolate (ish) and 1 TBsp of butter. Take off burner, add 2 cups peanut butter and 4 cups cereal. Stick this in the pan, spread evenly, refrigerate until hard, about 15 minutes. During this time, I cleaned the saucepan so I could use it again.

c) I melted the rest of the butter with the salt next, and thinking that we had no confectioners sugar, added about a cup of granulated sugar and a tiny bit of water to make it dissolve. Then, of course, I found the powdered sugar and thus added about 2 cups, stirring until all was mixed in. Spread half the peanut butter mixture over the choco-crispies, refrigerate. Add the rest of the cereal to the mix.

d) Toss in the rest of the chocolate (I added a bar of dark chocolate I had lying around because I had eaten too much chocolate at this point for the recipe to work), I melted it over low heat while I mixed. Spread evenly over peanut butter layer and toss in the 'fridge for about 45 minutes or until hardened.

e) You're supposed to cut them up after 45 minutes--I haven't hit that point yet. And then enjoy!


(Apparently you were supposed to top the peanut butter layer with the rest of the cereal, not mix it in, which would yield a prettier result--I blame the advert that was blocking the directions on the blissfullydomestic website. Whatevs--when was the last time I successfully followed a recipe?)


Notes on Ecuadorian baking supplies:

Arroz crocante: NOT the same as Rice crispies. They are much less airy, we'll see how this denser treat goes over tomorrow

Butter/Mantequilla: Weird. And smells bad--pretty strongly. I don't think it had gone bad, but we'll see...

ADDENDUM: After my mental breakdown of last night (when I thought that I had completely messed up the recipe and wasted a ton of PB and chocolate), this morning was a pleasant surprise. I cut up the bars and put them in a few tupperwares to bring to the center this afternoon. They were messy but actually pretty tasty. Very rich, but tasty. They got rave reviews at the center and almost all of them were eaten. I will suggest halving this batch (as the original recipe called for) and this was just way too much chocolatey, peanut buttery goodness :)

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Cobbler de Moras

Apparently my love of all things "C" only extends to cooking...its not true, I definitely rank concerts and a great trip to the cine ahead of cooking, so I'm sorry for the misrep.

After bragging to the study abroad crew about the incredible apple pie I made on Sunday (and seeing their watering mouths), I decided to test out my cooking skills on my new friends. After a morning walk/run, I went on a hunt for "moras," the Latin American equivalent of blackberries. The viejcita who normally sells them on the corner of Calle Portugal y La Avenida República de Salvador was missing, so I stopped by the frutería near my house (where I bought apples for my pie this weekend), no luck. I walked back down the street to the other frutería, where after some questioning, I did find some moras, and purchased $2usd worth, a fair bit.

(The thought of buying blackberries is strange and foreign to me. We have so many in our backyard/park/neighbor's backyard etc that it has never occurred to me to buy them. Talking with a fellow study abroader, though, I found that you CAN buy them in the supermercados en los Estados AND they are EXPENSIVE!!! Sooo strange.)

But anyway, I was hoping to reproduce the incredible blackberry cobbler that my first boyfriend and I used to make roughly three times a week during late summer/early fall. Unfortunately, he did not respond to my facebook message and I was forced to make it by memory (Yes, I could have easily found a recipe online, but a) that is not my style and b) one of life goals is to bake sin recipes...and cuando en Ecuador...).

Here is the recipe I used (ish, and I didn't actually use a measuring cup):

1 c flour
1 c sugar
2/3 ish c milk
Dash o'salt
TB ish baking powder
$2usd worth of moras (blackberries)
a bit of mystery oil that was in my host family's cabinet
A pan. (I used a 9x9, I definitely remember using a 9x13 in high school, but it didn't look like I made enough batter for that size. In retrospect, a 9x13 would have worked just fine.)

a) Mix flour, sugar, milk, salt, and baking powder together.

b) Pour mystery oil into the pan (this is to keep it from sticking, I remember using half a stick of butter when I made it back in high school). You need more than a spritz of Pam. The batter needs to float on this stuff.

c) Pour batter on top. Do not mix.

d) Put moras on top. You can press them in, but do not mix. I put as many on as I can.

e) Toss in the oven at about 180C (350-ish F? I have no idea) for about 45 minutes, or until it appears done.

So. I don't have photos, but this def didn't turn out like the ones we used to make in high school. Don't get me wrong. It was delicious. I think a combination of pan size and amount of baking powder came together to create something more cake-like than cobbler-like. After it cooled and fell, it was about 3cm tall instead of the 1cm cobbler I used to make.

Also the moras I bought are similar to blackberries but not the same. They were a little tart, although not unpleasantly so...I stand by my decision to only use 1c sugar.

As for reviews from the study abroad crowd? It was gone in about 5 minutes and I heard nothing my "mmm...¡muy rico!" and "delicious" so I guess it was a success...if only we'd had ice cream. (and a camera).

Oh, just received the recipe
1c flour
1c sugar
1c milk
1c berries
1tsp baking powder
1/2 stick butter (melted in 9x13)

Saturday, August 28, 2010

C is for Cooking Summer Lasagna



I love to cook, and yet I could care less about eating the final product. This doesn't mean that I don't eat what I bake (if there is food in front of me, I WILL eat it...), but rather that the process and people's reactions are what I enjoy.

I made this for my family just before leaving for Ecuador (I got the idea from one Neel Patel). It is a summer lasagna, served cold, assembled right before it is put on the table, perfect for hot summer days. I served it with baked beets (tossed with balsamic vinegar and olive oil from Greece, thanks Joe!!!), followed with my nanny's fresh raspberry pie. A perfect summer meal.

Here's the recipe:

Summer Lasagna


1 c ricotta
1/2 c parm
3 TB olive oil
salt n pepper
8 lasagna noodles, cooked and drained (I recommend cooking and then breaking them if you have a large enough pot as i had an incredibly difficult time breaking them prettily)
2 pints cherry tomatoes, halved
2 small zucchini, sliced finely
A bit of garlic, minced
A fair bit of basil

a) mix the ricotta and parm with olive oil,salt, and pepper to taste. Set aside

b) Heat a skillet and toss the olive oil in. Add tomatoes and garlic, cook for three minutes (until just broken down), transfer to bowl

c) Toss the zucchini in the skillet, with a little more oil if need be, and some salt and pepper. Cook until tender, about five minutes

d) Let everything cool and make it pretty. I scattered tomatoes on the plate, then layered noodle, cheese, zucchini, tomatoes, repeated it twice and garnished with basil.

Baked beets:

a) Cut off the tops and tails of the beets (no need to clean them)

b) Put the beets in a baking dish and cover (foil or lid)

c) Bake at 400F for about an hour, or until tender

d) Take 'em out, let 'em cool and slip the skins off

e) Slice and toss with a bit of olive oil and balsamic vinegar


Jill's Raspberry Pie

4 c fresh raspberries
2 c frozen raspberries (these quantities can be switched and mixed but the more fresh berries the better)
1 c sugar
1 c water
2 TB corn starch
Cool Whip (any whipped cream works but I prefer the deliciously fake taste of CW)
1 pie crust--bottom only

a) Blind bake the pie crust

b) Put frozen berries, water, sugar, and cornstarch in a pot and cook on medium heat until thick, cool

c) Once cool (ish, as I have very little patience), fold in the fresh berries. I like to do it gently so there are intact berries once I'm done, but your call)

d) Chill until all the way cold and cover with Cool Whip/healthier althernative
LangDetectes>en GoogleDicC
nuevo, fresco, natural, puro, dulce, descocado, recio, de buen color, limpio, reciente, descarado

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Chocolate Peanut Butter Fudge Cheesecake


In honor of a good friend's birthday, and because the guys told me I had to, I made Chocolate Peanut Butter Fudge Cheesecake yesterday. It was super delicious, if a bit rich and a tiny undercooked, but it didn't crack and it was a snap to put together. Eaten off paper napkins with our fingers (we're impoverished college students), it was still pretty delish :)
Here's the recipe:

3 packages (8 oz. each) cream cheese, softened (I used 2 regular, 1 lowfat)
3/4 cup sugar
3 eggs
1/3 cup dairy sour cream
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1+ teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips, melted
1 cup peanut butter (the recipe called for peanut butter chips but who has those?!)
Fudge Topping(optional)
Sweetened whipped cream(optional)

Mix the cream cheese and sugar until smooth
Add sour cream, flour, vanilla, salt and mix well
Add eggs, mix until just combined
Divide the batter in half. Add chocolate chips to one half and peanut butter to the other. Mix until just blended

Pour chocolate mixture into chocolate crumb crust (below)
Pour peanut butter mixture on top, do not mix layers together!!!

Bake at 325 for 45 minutes, then turn the oven off and leave the cheesecake in for another hour. Put on a wire rack and cover with a plate (to slow cooling process and prevent cracking)

CHOCOLATE CRUMB CRUST: Heat oven to 350°F. Combine 2 ish cups vanilla wafer crumbs, 1/2 cup powdered sugar, 1/4 cup HERSHEY'S Cocoa and 1/2+ cup butter or margarine (melted) in medium bowl. Press onto bottom and 1 inch up sides of 9-inch springform pan. Bake 8 minutes; cool.