Friday, April 29, 2011

To Market, To Market in Annapolis Royal for Over Thirty Years: Feature story in April/May 2011 issue of Coastal Life Magazine

While I was in Nova Scotia last summer, I scouted out a lot of stories for the future. I did a roundup story on three new businesses in Bear River, but took a lot of photos of the Annapolis Royal Farmer's Market (where I am every Saturday). I got to write a feature on this remarkably successful market for the current April/May issue of Coastal Life magazine. (If you double click on each page, it magnifies the copy for easier reading.) Enjoy!



--Monica Forrestall


Saturday, March 26, 2011

A cupcake inspires trips to two amazing NYC shops this week: New York Cakes and Baking Supply and Economy Candy

A Panda cupcake. That's where it started. Inspired by my sons desire for cupcakes shaped and decorated to look like Panda bears, I made my list and headed out to two old-timey NYC shops that have the absolute best selection of baking and candy in the city.

First stop, New York Cakes & Baking Supply on 22nd Street at 6th Avenue. I've been coming here for years, it's my go to place for cake decorating supplies, ingredients, tools and obscure stuff you just can't find anywhere else, like "sugar eyes." The big, wooden carved double doors are the first hint that you're entering a real NY classic store, with merchandise everywhere you look. In the aisles, climbing the walls. Handwritten signs calling out lollipop sticks, cupcake liners, liquid frosting, etc...

I overhear the man behind the counter ringing up a customer saying, "Ever since those cake shows started on TV,  it's been crazy here." I find the dark chocolate disks, the sugar eyes and the brown cupcake tin lines I came for, but they don't have the nonpareils! "We're out," I'm told.  Never mind, I know where to go next for those. In the meantime I wander the narrow aisles getting an eyeful of all the fascinating tins, rolling pins, cake toppers and more.

To source the nonpareils and some chocolate covered peanuts, I had the perfect excuse to plan a visit to my favorite candy store in the city, Economy Candy on Rivington at Ludlow Street.
Economy Candy storefront.
Economy Candy is located in the newly hip gallery district of the lower east side of Manhattan, 
a couple of blocks below Houston Street.

All photographs: Copyright of Monica Forrestall. 
May not be used without Monica Forrestall's written permission.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Freddie Brice Show at KS Art Gallery gets fantastic reviews in the New Yorker and the New York Times this week!

Bear by Freddie Brice.
            
An extraordinary show of black and white paintings by a then 70-year old Outsider artist gets rave reviews in the New Yorker magazine and the New York Times this week.

The New York Times review by critic Ken Johnson:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/16/arts/design/16galleries-004.html?ref=design

and the New Yorker review:
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/events/art/freddie-brice-ks-art


FREDDIE BRICE
paintings

March 27 - May 1, 2010

opening reception: Saturday, March 27,  6 - 8 pm

including the re-mastered video:
Freddie Brice Paints Two Paintings 1990
by Les LeVeque and Kerry Schuss

KS ART
73 Leonard Street
New York, NY 10013
212-219-9918

--Monica Forrestall

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Making organic swiss chocolate with a master candy maker at Durig Chocolatier in Lausanne

Decadent, delicious, delightful! On a recent trip to Switzerland I got to live out a Willie Wonka fantasy and learnt how to make molded chocolate candy in the famous kitchens of Lausanne's Durig Chocolatier side by side with the world famous chocolatier, Daniel Durig. Daniel, an artisinal chocolate-maker makes certified organic fair-trade chocolates. In his mini-lab, I got to see some of the best ingredients he insists on using, like the Criollos cocoa beans from South America. Daniel's large chocolate kitchen is side by side with his exquisitely pretty shop in Lausanne.

Step one was to choose the mold to use. I thought Max would appreciate the smiling crocodile, since reptiles are his favorite section of the Museum of Natural History back home.

Then using some liquified white chocolate, with a fine paint brush, I painted the inside details (claws, eyes) of a cheerful crocodile mold with white chocolate.

The pot of melted white chocolate with brushes I used.
Below: Criollos cocoa bean pods.

Next step, after we let the mold and white chocolate set in the fridge for a few minutes, was to fill the mold with chocolate. We had our choice of milk or dark. It was a heady extraordinary aroma of whirling warm chocolate coming from the two chocolate machines spinning side by side; milk on the left kept warmed to 27 degrees Celcius and dark chocolate on the right, which is maintained at 29 degrees.
Then we held the molds over a vibrating machine which helped to move the chocolate around in the mold and settle covering all the areas. 
Close up of croc getting made.


We did two "fill up" of the milk chocolate into the molds, with chilling time in the fridge between each filling. Then it was time to pop the molds open to see our handiwork.
Voila, a "delicieux crocodile cadeaux" for Max! 
Other chocolate molds of their best selling truffles in the chocolate factory, some empty, some with a coating of chocolate, waiting to be filled with delicious fillings of caramel or orange paste.
Below: some finished fish waiting to be packaged for the shop. They were so pretty, I bought one for my BF and another for BF hubby.

The pretty Durig Chocolatier shop, next to the candy making kitchens. 
Here's a link to his website where anyone can order from! 

Finally, below,  Max enjoying his croc...immensely.
--Monica Forrestall

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Switzerland--Way Beyond Fondue

It is very possible to spend several days in Switzerland, and not eat any fondue. Here is a sampling of some of the extraordinary dishes I got to try, while visiting Switzerland. Food glorious food.
Yes, this is a cheese dish, and one of the cheeses is soft and runny. It was all divine. 

                          
Scallops.

                             
Gotta love it when the waiter finishes off the caramelizing of top crust of your creme brulee
at the table, with a mini-flame torch.

                                           
Gazpacho and a cube of jellied beet atop puree of carrot.
In the Swiss wine region. 

All photography copyright: Monica Forrestall

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Brew Meister Monica

I've drank my share of beer in my life. My first taste was when I was 7, and expressed curiosity when my uncle Mike Forrestall was drinking it, and he said "You want a taste?" I took a sip, wrinkled up my face in disgust, said "Ewwwwww" and didn't taste the stuff again...till high school.  For teens in Nova Scotia, it was the drink of choice: Alexander Keiths beer was brewed in my old home town. (Canadian beer on average has a higher alcohol content than US beer: Keiths is 5%.) And it was amazing how slack pubs were, back then about asking for ID. Me and my girlfriends, all 16 years old, had regular Friday nights at a bar a mile or so from our neighborhood.
But up till last week I'd never tried to make any. On my trip to Albuquerque, I visited Kelly's Brew Pub (an Albuquerque landmark)  on Route 66 to make a batch myself and learnt a lot. Love that the brewery is located in an old garage (below) The Old Jones Motor Company built in 1939. Lots of character, with old gas pumps out front, surrounded by tables and chairs.
Beer making central is down the hallway in the back. Here guests can sign on to make their own kegs, and it's where the in-house brew master makes beer for the restaurant. Today, he helped us make one of my favorite beers, Oatmeal Stout.
He pulled out the recipe, and we got started.
First step was measuring out all the grains. They are stored in big plastic bins and you scoop it out with a big scoop and then weigh it on a scale to make sure it's correct. Its very much a science, and too much of one grain will drastically effect the flavor.
(www.kellysbrewpub.com)


Scooping out some of the grains for Oatmeal Stout.
After measuring out all the grains, we poured it into a grinder (that looked pretty homemade). This isn't to pulverize the grains, just to open up the husk, the beer master explained, so they can absorb water and ferment. 
Then the ground grains are poured into the copper tanks to begin the process. I stirred a bit, to speed up the soaking process with a big stainless paddle (below).

We added two large plastic pitchers of syrup (left) and then let it cook. The whole process in-house takes an hour and a half. Then there is a two-week aging in keg period, which are kept in a chilled room in another building behind the brewery.
Then, it's either put on tap at the brewery (like my batch will be) or it's bottled up, labelled with labels that are custom printed for visiting beer meisters, and picked up. It's a popular thing apparently to do for corporate events and weddings. That would make a fun take away gift for a bachelor, or bachelorette party!
                                                                  Stirring the mash.
 

Friday, November 6, 2009

SEE JANE (& Monica) COOK: New Mexico Cooking class


     Monica (right) and cookbook author Jane Butel 
in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Got to meet & cook with a very famous New Mexican chef, Jane Butel, while I was in Albuquerque. If the name's not ringing a bell, Jane is credited with starting the Tex-Mex trend, and she published her first book on New Mexican and American Mexican food in the 1960's. She taught me how to make Sopaipillas, a disturbingly delicious fried bread recipe that originated in Albuquerque, 300 years ago. (I admit when she first said fried bread, my mind was reeling...FRIED FOOD!?! But this was worth the calories. Jane greeted me at the door of her beautiful adobe-style home, with her frantic 7-month old daschaund lapping our ankles. After giving me some of her fascinating history, I watched as Jane expertly mixed up a dough recipe all by hand (after removing some of her beautiful turquoise rings). I took copious notes, wanting to try this back home in New York. When Jane was rolling out the smaller amounts of dough on her granite counter, she used a small wooden mini roller, which was the perfect size for the amount of dough she was rolling out. 

After cutting the dough into quarters, Jane slid the 
pieces straight down (so the oil wouldn't splash) into a pre-heated TeFal deep fryer. Jane's kitchen, where she has been teaching cooking classes for many years, is a dream spot for any cook. It opens up onto a large casual dining area with large windows that face the jaw dropingly beautiful Sandia Peak (part of The Sangre De Cristo mountain range). Jane's kitchen has everything, from two red KitchenAid standmixers to a garland stove to massive cookbook storage shelves---and more specifically everything she needed to create the thousands of New mexican recipes that have gone into her 18 cookbooks. 



As a New Yorker with a small kitchen/limited space and as someone obsessed with kitchen tools, I was having serious gadget envy. 
Jane kindly arranged to have her publisher send me her latest book "Real Women eat Chiles". And of course I splurged and bought 4 bags of the amazing chili spices she makes: Chipotle Chile, Pequin Quebrado, Caribe Chile and New Mexico Red Chili. I can't wait to try some of these recipes out on my chili-loving husband Kerry. 


For more details on Jane's books, spices, cooking classes etc..check out her website below. She's living the spicy life www. janebutelcooking.com