Entries in hungry ghost food and travel blog (9)

Tuesday
Feb142012

sweet valentine

 

This morning I left a little Valentine for the ones I love. I wanted to share in case you are in need of a last minute idea.... I got mine from New Amsterdam Valentine Market which was held last weekend in a very special public space managed by the South Street Seaport Museum at 215-217 Water Street. If you did not get a chance to swing by the market you can find these sweets by clicking on the links below!

 

Mast Brothers Chocolate

Bowne & Co. Bowne & Co. 211 Water Street (NEW LOCATION)

 

and Chocolate Whiskey from King's County Distillery made from the Husks of Mast Brother's Cocao Bean....

Have A Sweet One.

 

 

 

Where to Buy Chocolate Whiskey

For now at least, the Chocolate Whiskey remains an experimental release and supply is extremely limited.The full list of stores that carry the chocolate whiskey is as follows:  (Brooklyn) Heights Chateau, The Greene Grape, Dry Dock, Fermented Grapes, Juice Box, Natural Wine Co., Pier Wines, Brooklyn Oenology, Thirst Wine Merchants, and The Whiskey Shop.  (Manhattan) Park Avenue Liquor Shop, Winfield Flynn, Astor Wines and Spirits, Union Square Wines Downtown Cellars, and (upstate) A Wine for All. 

 

And of those outside NYC, the following stores do online sales:

Pasanella and Sons 

www.astorwines.com

www.parkaveliquorshop.com

www.heightschateau.com

www.taigan.com/shops/wineforall

Monday
Feb132012

twenty years. no. 5. love.

From the archives... In the spirit of love and St. Valentine I am posting this photograph of our sweet friends Kim Krans and Jonny Ollsin of Family Band on their wedding day.

 


Sunday
Feb122012

twenty years no. 4. love the one you are with.

 

 

Oh dear it has been so long since I have posted! I promised myself to keep up this blog but this past month or so it has proved a bit diificult! I have been in the midst of many projects! I can't complain because I thrive on being busy, however at least once a day that blog guilt creeps in... I promise to be back soon with new material and lots of adventures! Until then, I thought I would post more 8x10 work from the archives of the two babes who inspire me most. xx

Thursday
Jan052012

where the wild things are no. 9. wild pantry

 

The first time I saw mushrooms drying in great abundance was in Northern China in the Shanxi Provence. We stopped for some tea at a tiny morning market where the women had piles of wild mushrooms laid out on cloth drying in the morning sun. They had collected the mushrooms from the peaks of the Wutai Mountain, a luminous, foggy, pine and temple covered wonder. Though i don't speak their language, they managed to explain to me perfectly their continuous pilgrimage to collect the mushrooms from the mountain during the different seasons. I will never forget it, it was such a beautiful moment. I dried many wild mushrooms in the summer and fall of this year inspired by those women. It was my first time doing so and I am really happy with my stockpiled pantry of little treasures. Wild mushrooms are easy to dry. Though there are different ways of drying mushrooms I sliced most of mine thinly with a very sharp knife and laid them out to dry on a board. The oyster mushrooms I tore gently in long tin strips. Depending on the weather (if it was very humid for instance) I sometimes put a fan on the mushrooms or used a clip light to speed the drying process. In the end you want the mushrooms to be cracker dry before you put them up for storage. I know our children's friends thought us fairly insane with mushrooms drying all over the place but for the most part I think they kind of liked it, especially when I make them late night pizza or breakfast pizza with mushrooms and a fried egg on top! They are willing to put up with almost anything for pizza.

Some mushrooms dry and store better than others. Some of the varieties that dried well for me were; Black Trumpets, Chanterelles, Chicken Of The Woods, Hedgehog, Porcini, Yellow Foot, and Oyster mushrooms. Dried mushrooms should be soaked in water to re-hydrate them. Some mushrooms need to soak longer than others. Save the water that you soak the mushrooms in, never throw it away, it is like flavor gold! Once the mushrooms have plumped up from the water, Gently spoon them out of liquid and give them a rinse. Set them aside for your recipe. Put the remaining mushroom liquid through a sieve to get any bits out of it. You can use that liquid to flavor soups and broths. Dried mushrooms can also be pulverized in a food processor in order  to make a powder to use in soups and stews and other recipes. I recently made a gin drink with wild ginger syrup and used a mushroom salt for a little flavor on top. I am already fanaticizing about next mushroom season! In the meantime I am going to invent some new ways to use all these dried beauties.

When the mushrooms are cracker dry, I put them up in sealed weck jars for storage.

 A good source for wild mushrooms on line is wildgourmetfood.com

Recipes to come!

 

to see a gallery of wild mushrooms click here

 Copyright ©2011/ 2012 Andrea Gentl all rights reserved 

 

 


 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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