Saturday, December 17, 2011

Matt Damon Gets in the Holiday Spirit For Water.org

In a new campaign for his Water.org charity, Matt Damon dresses up as Mr. Kringle, to ask kids what they'd like for Christmas. 



But, instead of zombie dolls, a Darth Vader mask, airplanes and Justin Bieber, Damon tries to convince kids to ask for a water bottle. 
"If you were stranded in the desert, what would you rather have? This water bottle or Justin Bieber," the We Bought a Zoo actor asks one young girl. 
Her answer? "Justin Bieber."
But, after getting shot down by a few kids, and peed on, Damon did manage to convince one child that a water bottle is what she wants for Christmas. 
But only after having a lesson in humility. The actor asked a few of his tiny friends knew who Matt Damon was and was met with many "no's". Though one child did know of his pal Ben Affleck
Watch the PSA below. 


Thursday, June 16, 2011

What To Drink With Steak Tacos

Steak Tacos



The warm weather has me dreaming again, this time of tacos in the sun shared amongst friends. This steak taco recipe is great for gatherings, just fire up the grill and let your guests build their own. For drinks, look to refreshing cocktails and rich red wines. Try any of these for a perfect pairing:
Margarita
A no-brainer. But make it fresh with real limes to complement any salsa or pico de gallo used on the tacos.
Michelada Beer Cocktail
I've written about this drink before, but it is just perfect with this tacos. Refreshing yet spicy, it brings cerveza to a whole new level. 
Malbec
An Argentian malbec full of plum fruit and spice will set off the steak perfectly while highlighting piquant flavors in the toppings.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Summer Ratatouille

veggies


Ratatouille (not the Pixar movie) is a French Provencal dish.  It is often made in the summer as a way to use up seasonal vegetables.  Traditionally, you saute each vegetable seperately.  The following recipe roasts the vegetables together to cut down on the cooking time.  Serve with some nice crusty bread and you've got yourself a delightful summer meal!
Ingredients:
Eggplant, 1-in cubes
Zucchini, 1-in cubes
1 Yellow zucchini, 1-in cubes
2 Red onions, in eighths
Green pepper, 1-in cubes
Red pepper, 1-in cubes
Plum tomatoes, coarse chop
¼  cup Olive oil
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
3  tablespoons Balsamic vinegar,
Garlic cloves, chopped
3 tablespoons Fresh basil, chopped or 3 ts dried
2 tablespoons Fresh oregano, chopped or 2 ts dried
Ground pepper to taste
3 tablespoons Parsley, chopped

 Preparation

Step 1
Place all vegetables in large bowl
Step 2
Combine marinade ingredients in separate bowl andwhisk together. Pour marinade over vegetables tossing vegetables well.
Step 3
Place in roasting pan and roast at 425F(220C) for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until vegetables are browned and tender. Toss everything together to combine flavours.
Step 4
Sprinkle with parsley before servingServe with a Portuguese Dao or Bairrada wine, Greek red or an Italian Barbera wine. The classic ratatouille calls for sauteeing each vegetable individually then combining them. Byroasting all the vegetables together in the oven, you have an authentic ratatouille without all the work.



Saturday, June 4, 2011

Chocolate Sweetheart Cakes for Two

HERSHEY'S Natural Unsweetened Cocoa
                                                                                                    

Skill Level:
Beginner
Prep Time:
17 Minutes

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons HERSHEY'S Cocoa
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon white vinegar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • CHOCOLATE FROSTING (recipe follows)

Directions

  1. Heat oven to 350°F. Grease and flour 8-inch square baking pan.
  2. Stir together flour, granulated sugar, brown sugar, cocoa, baking soda and salt in medium bowl. Add water, oil, vinegar and vanilla; beat with whisk or spoon until smooth. Pour batter into prepared pan.
  3. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes; remove from pan to wire rack. Cool completely. Transfer to cutting board. Using 3-1/4 inch heart-shaped cookie cutter, cut cake into 4 hearts. Spread CHOCOLATE FROSTING on top of two hearts; place remaining two hearts on top. 2 small cakes.


    CHOCOLATE FROSTING

    1 tablespoon butter or margarine
    2/3 cup powdered sugar
    1 tablespoon HERSHEY'S Cocoa
    2 to 3 teaspoons milk
    1/8 teaspoon vanilla extract

    Place butter in small microwave-safe bowl. Microwave at MEDIUM (50%) 20 seconds or until butter is melted. Stir together powdered sugar and cocoa; add to butter mixture alternately with milk, beating with spoon or whisk until smooth. Stir in vanilla. About 1/3 cup frosting.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Hasselback Potato Recipe with Guajillo Chile Oil and Chipotles Sour Cream

Hasselback Potato


Hasselback Potato

Have you ever seen a more beautiful potato?  Me either.  I had no idea that a potato recipe could be so fancy… or stand on its own without gravy… or bacon bits… or “fixin’s.”  This little beauty is a Hasselback Potato roasted by my food blogger friends at Camp Blogaway. Notice the cool, whispering pines in the background.
What’s Camp Blogaway?  A “get-a-way” retreat in the Southern California mountains for food writers and bloggers to share stories, tips and recipes like this one.  We made so many new friends there that share our passion—o.k. obsession— for food writing.  The camp has cabins complete with bunk beds, bring your own sleeping bags, s’mores over a fire and a hot tub.  What?  What’s wrong with a hot tub?  Yes, it is camping.
This Hasselback Potato Recipe, from the Idaho Potato Commission, is easy enough to serve the hundred or so people  that were at camp and elegant enough to satisfy their “foodie” side.  I decided to put a Southwest spin on the recipe when I got home so I can serve it on Father’s Day to sort of “dress up” our annual “Dad’s Day BBQ.”  You know how much men love meat and potatoes… they’ll love them even more with the chile oil and chipotle sour cream.
You’ll have him at Chile Oil.

Hasselback Potato with Chile

How to Make a Hasselback Potato with Guajillo Chile Oil and Chipotle Sour Cream
Prepare the chile oil for potato recipe
First prepare the chile oil.  Add oil, sliced garlic and guajillo chiles to a small sauce pan.  I broke my chiles into pieces to allow more flavor to infuse into the oil.  These chiles aren’t very hot, but if remove the seeds if you want to reduce more of the heat.  Guajillos are one of my favorite.  If you can’t find them, you may substitute dried red New Mexican chiles.
Please, please don’t use Thai bird chiles or jalapenos or anything that is too hot.  The dried guajillos or New Mexican chiles have a very Southwest flavor and, to me, the really hot chiles only have heat.
Prepare chile oil for potato recipe
Bring the oil to a simmer over medium heat.  Reduce the heat and simmer for 2 to 3 minutes.  Be careful not to brown the garlic, it will have a biter taste.  Melt the butter into the chile oil.  Remove the chile oil from the heat and let steep while you prepare the potatoes.
Prepare potatoes for potato recipe
Wash the potatoes well.  Use a scrub brush if necessary.  Dry the potatoes well.
Place potato between chopsticks
Place two chop sticks on your cutting board and position the potato between the chop sticks.  Make slices in the potato 1/4 inch apart.  Be very careful not to cut all the way through the potato for the first few slices on each end.  After that, the chop sticks will stop the knife from going all the way through the potato.
Coat with oil and bake
Brush the potatoes with chile oil.  Make sure to get the oil into each slice.
Roast the potatoes at 425 degrees for 45 to 55 minutes.
Chipotle Sour Cream
While the potatoes are roasting, make the chipotle mayonnaise.   In a small bowl, mix the sour cream and the chipotles together.  The chipotles break up easily so I just mash them into the sour cream with a fork instead of making a mess by chopping them on a cutting board.  Add a little of the adobo sauce with the chipotle.
Tip: I used two chipotles when I made this dish, but I changed the recipe to 1 chipotle.  I thought 2 chipotles made the sour cream way too hot.  I would rather taste the chile oil than have my mouth on fire from the chipotles.  But, if you like it hot, go ahead and use two.
Chill until the potatoes are ready.
Garnish Potato
Remove the potatoes from the oven and brush with more chile oil.
Garnish with sea salt and thinly sliced green onions.  I only used the green part of the onions because the white of the onion is a little too strong and over powers the potato and the chile oil.  You can use chives instead, if you have them.
Hasselback Potato Recipe with Chile Oil and Chipotle Sour Cream
serves 4
1 cup olive oil
4 cloves of garlic, minced
3 dried guajillo chiles or dried New Mexico chiles
4 tablespoons butter
4 small to medium sized potatoes (russet or yukon gold work well)
1 cup sour cream
1 chipotle chile in adobo sauce
Sea Salt to taste
1 green onion, green part only, thinly sliced or chives
Directions for Hasselback Potato Recipe with Chile Oil and Chipotle Sour Cream
Preheat oven to 425 degrees
In a small sauce pan, heat the olive oil, garlic, and dried chiles. Bring to a simmer over medium heat.  Reduce the heat and add the butter, heat until melted, do not brown the butter.  Strain.
Wash the potatoes well, use a potato brush if necessary.  Dry well.  Place the potatoes on a cutting board between two chop sticks or the handles off two wooden spoons.  At one end of the potato, make thin slices (a quarter inch apart) across the potato.  Do not cut all the way through the potato.  The chop sticks or wooden spoons will stop the knife from cutting all the way through the potato.  But, be careful not to cut through the potato on the first few slices on each end of the potato, the chop sticks may not stop the knife.
Place the potatoes on a baking sheet and brush well with chile oil.
Bake for 45 to 55 minutes until the potatoes are fork tender inside, but the skin is crispy.
Remove from oven and drizzle with some of the remaining chile oil.
Plate the potatoes with a dollup of chipotle sour cream on the side.  Sprinkle with sea salt and sliced green onions.
Tips for cooking Hasselback Potatoes for a crowd:
1.  If you are cooking a large number of potatoes, make the chile oil in advance
2.  You may slice the potatoes early in the day if you keep them submerged in lemon water.  Make sure the potatoes are very dry before you bake them so that the skins roast and become crispy.
3.  Don’t over crowd the pans or the oven, the potatoes will not get crispy.  If using two racks, make sure there is space between the racks for the are to circulate.
4.  Do not use a pan with tall sides, the air will not circulate around the potatoes and the skins will have a hard time crisping up.

How to Green Your Car without Buying a Prius | Cargosheep

How to Green Your Car without Buying a Prius | Cargosheep

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Food Pyramid Destroyed, All Hail the New Food "Plate"





Michelle Obama and her nosy goons at the USDA have destroyed America's beloved "food pyramid" nutritional diagram in favor of a new "food plate," which they unveiled this morning. As if any Americans eat food off a plate? Wake me when the nutritional diagram for wolfing down food over the kitchen sink comes out.
America's top doctor, Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, confirms that this new "plate" is connected to Michelle Obama's larger plot to stop fat people from being so fat all the time. According to Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack, the fatties were too fat to interpret a pyramid, which was really just a garden-variety 2D triangle. From Forbes:
"We're working to make healthy choices easy choices," said Surgeon General Regina Benjamin at this morning's unveiling, who linked the new diagram to First Lady Obama's Let's Move campaign. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack followed by explaining the need for the tool, "My Pyramid was simply too complex," he said, and is confident the new tool will be effective is a "simple visual research based icon about proportion sizes and what should be on the American plate."
Do you like the new food plate picture, America? Well, don't worry too much. Hamburgerscan count as fruits and/or vegetables. Just hire a lobbyist to re-jigger this thing.