Once upon a time, my brain rewired itself overnight to make me want to learn how to cook, and cook well. One of the first dishes I made after that epiphany was a braised short rib dish – this one, in fact – and to this day, despite the mistakes I made while cooking it, it remains possibly the most delicious meal to grace my kitchen. So when I was scouting cookbooks at a local library branch last week, imagine my excitement to see the very book that recipe was culled from on the shelf: Sunday Suppers at Lucques.
The photographs are beautiful, far outclassing anything I’ve accomplished to date.The variety is impressive and it’s categorized by season, so you know if you’ll be able to find the produce the recipe will call for. That said, there are a number of ingredients used that, if not difficult to locate, are expensive to purchase – saffron and fleur de sel, as an example – that can be intimidating. For someone like me who is not much of a seafood eater, it seems to be a heavyweight item on the menus, but it all sounds so good that frankly I’m reconsidering my stance.
This particular recipe appealed on several levels – first, it contains pig and I am very, very fond of cooked pig. Second, it sounded relatively easy and had a new vegetable (that I was ultimately too cheap to purchase) to try as a side dish. Finally, the use of fresh herbs appealed to me. The end result did not disappoint and will, in fact, be made again soon.
Continue reading ‘Herb-roasted Pork Loin with Green Beans and Spring Onions’
from our fine friends at Food Network Magazine.

Also known as lemony fish with greens and taters, which is why I do not work in marketing. The actual recipe calls for escarole, but after going to 5 grocery stores in search of it, I made do with curly endive – escarole is endive though a different and supposedly less bitter variety. I read that radicchio is virtually indistinguishable from escarole in taste but I had this awful fear that the red color of it would bleed onto the fish and that just did not sound appealing to me at all. Anyway.
Continue reading ‘Tilapia with Endive and Lemon-Pepper Oil’
Recipe adapted from Mark Bittman
What the hell is matambre?

As it happens, I asked myself the same question when I first ran across a recipe for it. Saveur’s version calls it “Vegetable-Stuffed Rolled Flank Steak” which conveniently enough is exactly what matambre is: a giant slab of beef loaded with veggies and rolled up. According to the internet this is an Argentinian dish that has been around for a long time. I was all set to make Saveur’s recipe when I was menu planning two weeks ago, but I had picked up Mark Bittman’s “How To Cook Everything” and he had a recipe too, and one a bit less complicated than Saveur’s.
Continue reading ‘Matambre’
from Spain.On The Road Again

So simple, so delicious. This was a great find that I found through The Crepes of Wrath, who got it from Seasonal Eats, who got it from Serious Eats who picked it up from Spain.On The Road Again, which Mario Batali is on, and I love Mario Batali in a totally platonic, foodie crush way. It’s too easy and too flavorful not to make, so you should just go ahead and jot down the ingredients now so you can pick them up at the store to make tomorrow for dinner. It’s OK, you can thank me later.
Continue reading ‘Caldo Gallego’