Monday, June 29, 2009

when the moon is in the 7th house...

I had a hard time deciding what kind of Broadway I wanted. Classic musical- "South Pacific"- or something more edgy- "The God of All Carnage"? I read a NYTimes article about the opening of "Hair". Perfect. Perfect because this was the revival of a show forty years old. My sister and I loved to play musical soundtracks over and over and over on the hi-fi in our playroom. Our favorites were "Sound of Music" ( hands down favorite)," Peter Pan", "Mary Poppins" and "Hair". Lynne and I still know all those lyrics.
Once the show started there were many boomers chair-dancing. It was that good and fun. Worth a listen, surprisingly relevant to right now. Even. Still. Hmm.
And, OMG, the costume mistress found my old skirt at the Goodwill!

Arthur Avenue, the Bronx

This was a walking tour of Arthur Avenue, which I was told is the most authentic Little Italy in NYC. The Little Whatever- Ethnic- Neighborhoods tend to morph according to waves of immigration. I used a car service, which was bit expensive, but it might have taken all Saturday to get to the Bronx from mid-Manhattan via subway. A taxi would be as expensive, plus less reliable to count on when I was ready to go back. I hate all city buses, everywhere. Since I had played my own little game all week of trying to use the subway as much as possible(particularly relevant in rainy weather, as my week was, as taxis become less available, and lots of times the subway is faster anyway, and dirt cheap), and since I had successfully avoided getting into a taxi the whole time, I won! I won a driver and a limousine!
I was dropped off at the Arthur Avenue Market. The Essex Street Market was created about one hundred years ago to get some of the pushcarts off the street in th Lower East Side. I'm not sure about Arthur Avenue. But it too was lots of vendors selling only Italian groceries under one roof. I got there a bit early for the tour, so I got to walk around ahead of time.
Right up front was a purveyor of cigars. I guess that isn't necessarily Italian, what with a few Central Americans there rolling. High on the Authentic Scale, though. I had a loud and animated, but friendly conversation with that guy, and he sold me a couple of cigars for Jim.
The rest of the market was mostly all kinds of meats. All kinds of livestock, all kinds of organ meats and offal. Not appealing to me, but I can appreciate it. I overheard people talking to each other about it, "My father loved that, he would make it..." The butchers were working very hard because the next weekend was Easter. Everyone was there for their Easter menu needs. There was an extra-animated feeling in there that day, even more so than normal Bronx, WHICH IS LOUD. The new Yankee Stadium, in the Bronx, was approaching opening day. The way everyone was talking about it, I'd go to a game just to eat. There was much Italian being spoken. Loudly.
We went to a pork shop. That place's ceiling was barely visible because all the salamis drying. That place had a divine "cured" smell. One place had some baked goods, but everyone went there for the fresh pasta, made while you watch. I bought some in sheets, so I could do what I wanted with it when I got it home. In another place we watched fresh mozzarella being made right in front of us, then tasting.
We had a lunch of assorted cold sandwiches and antipasti, and dessert of ricotta cake and cannolis.
I called my driver and waited for him on the sidewalk. I was a happy tourist. I noticed lots of double-parked Jaguars and Benzes. I doubt that those folks lived anywhere close. But they knew where they had to go for their Easter groceries.

Pizza Tour of Brooklyn

This day I was to meet the small tour bus right off of Union Square, which had a green market that day. It was pouring down rain, but the plants and produce were still gorgeous. Sadly, I will forever remember Union Square as the place where a vendor let me stand under his tent while he waited for his co-workers to show up, and I gave the instructions to our vet to euthanize our dog Elmer, and then made funeral arrangements with the dogsitter and a friend who was willing to help. This had been going on all week. Elmer started having seizures the day after I left. I had been communicating with Jim all week, and the outcome was anticipated, so I wasn't a complete mess. I was happy to get on a bus with about ten other jovial people.

Because of the rain, in lieu of a walk in a park, we voted to instead stop at a Jacques Torres chocolate shop. It was beautiful with Easter goodies all over the place. Even the Peeps had berets! I had a spicy hot chocolate that was wonderful. I haven't tried to reproduce it, although of course I bought Jacques' chocolate cookbook, because the experimentation process would be a guaranteed ten pounds.
The rest of the tour was old-fashioned pizzerias and historic sites. One of the best features of the tour was the playing of movie clips set in Brooklyn that were played on the monitor as we
drove by the sites. Lots of fun, and it made me want to rent "Saturday Night Fever".
I just can't escape Elvis. One of the sites was the Army Deployment Center where Elvis shipped out.
On the way back to Manhattan we drove through some ethnic neighborhoods- Ukrainian, Russian, Greek. They were very interesting but I'm glad I wasn't walking through them.

Lower East Side Tenement Museum

I had wanted to visit this for a few years. Mid-twentieth century, a tenement was condemned because of its wooden staircases. It was boarded up for over fifty years, and when the boards were taken off it was discovered that not only had it not been vandalized, it only had minor rain damage and a time capsule of everyday life was inside.
The first apartment was three small rooms occupied by a German immigrant family. The father disappeared, and the mother supported her three kids by taking in sewing. She would have had to sew by a small window because the wattage of the light bulbs must have been about 10 watts. No indoor plumbing. Not only did they have to trek all the way outside to the outhouse, water would have to be schlepped up the stairs for cooking and bathing. Eventually the mother grew her business well enough ,and with an inheritance, eventually moved the family out.
The second apartment was also as small, and this family's left-behinds were from immigrant Italians. The tenement museum people were able to track down the youngest daughter and have a recording of her memories of the apartment.
The whole experience was fascinating to me, and I have a new appreciation for what immigrants were willing to tolerate for a fresh start here.

It had been many years since I'd been on the lower east side, and some gentrification was obvious. The Essex Street Market was a fun place with many small food vendors. I didn't time my visit well enough to eat at Shopsin's with the very colorful owner Kenny and his insane son Zack (Amazon search "Eat Me"by Kenny) , but the stalls were a lot of fun to visit and I bought treats.
I then browsed some shops down the street and ended up in a luggage store. While I negotiated the price of a backpack the guy told me I was a human calculator. That's a compliment I'm very proud of, considering where it came from

Sunday, June 28, 2009

New York Moments

Maybe native New Yorkers don't particularly notice the things I call New York moments. Those times aren't necessarily pleasant. New Yorkers will argue about anything.
One day when I was exiting the Herald Square subway station I could hear, and then see, a pretty good-sized jazz band. They were pretty good and somewhat captivating. Tacked high on the wall behind them was homemade sign- "If you would like a CD, please wait until the trombone solo is over"- as the trombone player was also the CD seller.
There's a great quilt shop a couple of blocks from the culinary school. It's the only quilt shop I've ever been buzzed into.
I watched a hustler close to the Empire State Building work his card game. He had a small group of young men playing with him. The hustler had an accomplice who made appeals to the young men's manhood. I'm sure she was also the lookout. I didn't watch long enough (I was astonished that anyone would still fall for that), but I'm sure the guy made some decent money before the cops showed up.
Every afternoon when I would get back, before going into the hotel, I'd sit in Greeley Square, Horace looking over all of us, and people watch. There just isn't a better city to watch humanity going about their business.

I made no restaurant reservations. I was really having a hard time deciding exactly what I wanted. Jim and I had been travelling a lot, and we always eat very well when we travel. I was feeling somewhat satiated by fancy food, but I found my place, right up the street from my hotel on Broadway. It was an old-school Jewish deli, complete with very functional chairs and tables and bright lights. One afternoon I was the only customer without a yarmulke. When you sat down you were brought a bowl of cole slaw and a plate of homemade dill pickles. Oh yeah. Matzo ball soup. Roast beef and gravy with mashed potaoes. Latkes. Pastrami. Knishes.
My heart was broken when, the Saturday before I was leaving, I was all set to have my Last Supper there and they were, of course, closed. Seriously old-school. I went to Macy's instead.

Pate Choux and Me

In the previous post I failed to specify exactly what I baked in Pastry I. My mother-in-law has tried to teach me her secrets to a perfect pie crust with no luck. So has my Aunt Velma. This time in class I made my first successful pie crust. The class as a whole made Fruit Tart, Banana Walnut Frangipane Tart, Individual Lemon Cheese Tarts with Strawberries, Individual Chocolate Hazelnut Tarts, Coconut Custard Pie, Pecan Pie, Blueberry Crumble Pie and Cherry Crumble Pie.
2nd day- Fruit Tarts, Tarte Tatin, and two versions of Apple Pie
3rd day- Pate a Choux, from which we made Eclairs, Profiteroles, Paris Brest, and Cream Puffs

I think it was early in 2001 when sister-in-law Anita and I went to Paris to visit her daughter, my niece. We spent a couple of days at Le Cordon Bleu. Before attending class I was wondering what the chef/instructors would be like. The impression I was stuck on was the very tall, imposing and stern chef that Audrey Hepburn had in the original "Sabrina" movie. The first day we were going to take a fresh market tour (that alone could justify a whole post to itself), then bring ingredients back to the school and watch the chef prep the meal. When the chef showed up he was young and adorable. He spoke very little English but was charming.
The second day we were taking a hands-on class on savory appetizers, including Gougeres, which start off as Pate Choux. We had Chef "Sabrina". I made a stupid mistake right off the get-go with my Pate Choux, and showed my mess to the translator, a young American work-study student. She explained to Chef Sabrina, who scowled and said "Non!". The translator got me new ingredients, I proceeded with my re-do, and thank goodness, my gougeres turned out lovely. I asked the question of why some looked so different. Some were high and fluffy and some were flatter like cookies. This was a really important question for me because I had struggled with inconsistent gougeres at home and could never figure it out. Chef Sabrina's response, via the translator, was "I've already answered that question." I quickly decided that a) I was already the class dunce and b) you know what? I'm paying for this class, so I asked him to repeat his answer and he did.
I had a more pleasant experience with gougeres in NYC.

Friday, June 26, 2009

NYC , my way

In March I returned to NYC and the Institute of Culinary Education. It had been three years since I'd been. My week started off with three days of "Pastry". My hotel was only ten blocks away from school, so I walked. One of the things that is frequently said about New York is that the city has a certain electricity, an energy level that isn't really felt anywhere else. In the mornings in Manhattan I definitely feel that. I like being part of the very large and purposeful crowd. Everyone is intent on getting where they need to be.
There is comfort in familiarity. 50 W. 23rd has a really slow elevator. Still slow. Once in the kitchen it's nice to know where things are stored, what you can ask from the assistant, what the receptionist can do, where the restrooms are. Some students come with friends. If you come alone you're paired with someone by the teacher. My partner this time was a Thai woman, Orewan, in the city visiting her daughter for a month. She apologized for her poor English. I assured that I was impressed that she could communicate anything, and that when I'm in her shoes in China I can barely say anything intelligible.
Class starts with an overview of the recipes of the day, lots of note-taking. The teacher assigns different dishes to the teams, and then we quickly delineate responsibilities and get going. The teacher gives us a time table. There is no time to mess around, and everyone gets to work. Orewan obviously reads English better than she speaks, because she follows instructions perfectly. I feel a little bad that she doesn't comprehend the friendly back and forth with the other team at our table.
We work really hard and I'm in my "zone". Mistakes are made and things have to be re-done.
Every day I learned a lot and had boxes of pastries to share with the hotel staff. Never let it be said that I don't know how to use my pastries. Maybe the front desk would have gotten me a dorm frig really quickly anyway, maybe the concierge would have arranged for a driver to the Bronx on Sat. and been as pleasant about getting me a great ticket to "Hair". Maybe the doormen would have been friendly every time I got back to the hotel anyway. I'm just saying. Pastries can be advantageous hotel currency.