Monday, January 16, 2012

Food Experiment: Day 4

Day 4 lunch: Leftover rib-eye steak with veggies and rice. YUM.


Day 4 dinner: Leftover veggies + honey garlic seared eggplant with spanish smoked paprika.  


Eggplant slices sweatin' it out

Eggplant (after)

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Food Experiment: Day 3

Day 3 lunch:  I am worried about not having as much time to cook during the upcoming work week, so I decide to batch cook as much as possible on Sunday.  I stir-fried a bunch of yuchoy with ginger, had some of that for lunch, and refrigerated the rest.  And I marinated chicken thighs in a garlic ginger miso sauce in anticipation of dinner tonight.


Day 3 dinner:  the marinated chicken turned out quite nicely.  I didn't expect the sauce to caramelize so much, but the color is kind of cool!  I guess it must've been the sake and sugar that did it.  I even had time to back a black sesame coffee cake tonight. 

Yuchoy with ginger








Miso sake chicken

Miso sake chicken (before)

Black sesame coffee cake

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Food Experiment: Day 2

Day 2 lunch: Reheated chicken soup, washed the watercress, and boiled the watercress in the chicken soup and ate that for lunch.  Awesome!  Super-easy and fast!


Day 2 dinner: The marinated steak from the day before was AMAZING! Sauteed for 2 minutes on each side, and then let the steak rest for 5 minutes before diving in.  Nice brown peppery and flavorful crust on the outside, and very very tender pink meat on the inside. Perfect medium-rare just the way I like it! Had half a steak with a nice glass of cabernet sauvignon.  Put the rest in the refrigerator for another day.






Friday, January 13, 2012

Food Experiment: Day 1

Day 1 dinner:
- Made ginger chicken soup, had some, and refrigerated the rest for the next few days.
- Made a big pot of white rice, and refrigerated most of it for the rest of the week.
- Sauteed one of the rib-eye steaks for dinner and marinated the rest for the next day to cook.
- Prep/cooking time:
     Chicken soup:  prep15 minutes; cooked in pot for 3 hours, but doesn't require any work except making sure it's not boiling over;  minimal effort required.
     Rice:  prep 5 minutes (or less);  cooked in rice cooker for 30 minutes, minimal effort.
     Steak: 30 minutes to let it warm to room temp, 6 minutes to saute in pan (medium-rare), minimal effort
     Marinating steak:  20 minutes to prep marinade (black peppercorn, crushed garlic, rosemary, shallots, olive oil), 20 minutes to cook the marinade in a sauce pan, 30 minutes to let it cool to room temp before putting it in a ziplock bag with the ribeye steak to marinate overnight.  moderate effort.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Global Food Disparity

I was inspired by this 2008 Daily Kos posting, which discussed Peter Menzel's photography project to document global food disparities. Peter Menzel visually highlighted the inequities in food access across the world - and for me, it really hit home how heavily the average American meal relies on unhealthy, over-priced, packaged, and processed foods.  We pay so much for our unhealthy diet.  It's a stark contrast to the food consumed by families in other countries, particularly resource-poor ones.


So I am going to try an experiment this week - attempting to cook more healthy meals from scratch, while trying to not let the cooking overtake the little free time that I have.  I bought 81 USD of groceries from Super H Mart (a korean supermarket chain in Atlanta), and will use the food from this photo and the old food that's been lingering in my fridge to cook as many meals as I can.






















The list of foods from my trip and from what is already in my fridge:
- Proteins: Rib eye steak, chicken thighs, quail eggs, chicken eggs, tofu, frozen fish
- Fruits:  apples, oranges, pomelo
- Vegetables:  kale, yuchoy, bokchoy, watercress, napa cabbage, cilantro, scallions, eggplant, spaghetti squash, leeks
- Other:  ginger, shallots, dry black beans, dry chickpeas, sake, parmagianno reggiano
- Carbs: rice, fresh udon noodles, fresh buckwheat noodles, dried somen noodles, dried soba noodles
- Processed food:  korean seaweed, bacon