Archive for March, 2010

Austin’s spring food events


2010
03.27

Spring has sprung, and Austinites are gearing up for annual food events in the great outdoors—the better to celebrate all our warm weather with, of course! After all, what better way is there to experience a city than by eating your way through it? To get you in the foodie mood, here’s a quick list of links to some of the food-related festivities you’ll want to check out during the month of April.

  • Texas Hill Country Wine and Food Festival (April 15-18) – Featuring plenty of local eats and drinks, plus the expertise of chefs and wine experts like John Besh (Domenica), David Bull (Bolla at The Stoneleigh), Bryan CaswellKaren MacNeil (Reef), (Rudd Center for Professional Wine Studies), Mike Martini (Louis M Martini Winery), Elmar Prambs (Trio), and Kent Rathbun (Jaspers Restaurant), among others.
  • Funky Chicken Coop Tour (April 3) – Who doesn’t love chickens? Check out this self-guided city-wide tour of Austin-area chicken coops to see how others are raising our favorite avian friends, or learn how to get started building a coop to raise some funky chickens of your own!
  • Blues, Bluebonnets, Burgers and Bordeaux (April 3) – Pillar Bluff Vineyards, one of the oldest in the state of Texas, hosts an outdoor party featuring everything you’ll need to enjoy yourself on a spring day in Hill Country. Live music (blues), beautiful wildflowers (bluebonnets), tasty burgers and Pillar Bluff Bordeaux wine (among others) will be available at the winery, located at 300 County Road 111 in Lampasas, Texas (about an hour and a half north of Austin).
  • Wine and Wildflowers Luncheon (April 10 and 17) – Looking for more wine and less beef? Check out Fall Creek Vineyards’ Wine and Wildflowers Luncheons, featuring a light lunch and wine tastings, along with a souvenir wine glass for only $22.50 per person. Get out of the city and head north to Tow, Texas about an hour and 45 minutes outside of Austin, and enjoy the scenery whilst you sip sweet chardonnay, sauvignon blanc and more.
  • For those that can afford it, the Sustainable Food Center‘s Chef Series presents Spring Bounty at La Condesa for $100 per person on April 11, featuring “Austin’s most exciting and innovative chefs” on hand to “prepare an exquisite multi-course tasting menu featuring fresh meats and produce from the Austin Farmers’ Market.” Participating chefs include Rene Ortiz, executive chef at La Condesa; Tyson Cole, executive chef at Uchi; Shawn Cirkiel, executive chef at Parkside; Todd Duplechan, executive chef at Trio; Jesse Griffiths of Dai Due Supper Club; Laura Sawicki, pastry chef at La Condesa; and James Holmes, executive chef at Olivia.
  • Slow Food Austin Third Thursday Happy Hour (April 15) – A monthly event, the Third Thursday Happy Hour takes place in April at Olivia, and a portion of the proceeds benefit Slow Food Austin. Participating restaurants and farms are chosen to host events based on their support of a “farm-to-fork philosophy,” encouraging consumption of local food and drink and the support of locally-based farmers.

Got another food related event happening in the Austin area you’d like to share? Get in touch and we’ll be glad to post a link!

Bleu Cheese Bacon Burger, Julia & Ming-Style


2010
03.07

People of Earth: hear me now, believe me later! If you love burgers, this recipe is gonna rock your world. I wouldn’t have even thought it was possible to improve upon the delicious and dead-simple cheeseburger we all know and love, but it is—and it’s not even crazy expeez, either! These are the tips (which we originally learned from watching episodes of Simply Ming and Julia Child on PBS) that will help you achieve godliness on the stove. Please note: today’s recipe is brought to you by the mad cooking skillz of Celebrity Intern, who taught me everything I know about burgers.

  1. Get good beef. What does this mean? Don’t buy the non-specified mystery meat; if they don’t tell you it’s ground round or ground chuck, you’re getting lips & assholes. Buy the good stuff: Angus beef (at least here in Texas) doesn’t cost that much more, and it’s so worth it.
  2. Baby your beef. Don’t handle the meat too much when you’re actually forming the burgers into patties. Pat it into a roughly rounded shape, but don’t try to make it perfect. The more you handle the meat, the more moisture you press out of it, and the more dry your burger will be.
  3. Searing-hot pan. Make sure your pan is hot and ready to go before you put your patties in. It should be hot enough that when you put in a pat of butter, the butter will melt but not turn brown before you put in the beef. (And yes, you are using butter to grease your pan. None of this Pam or margarine or olive oil horseshit. BUTTER!)
  4. Set it and forget it. Put in your patties and leave them be. Do not slide them around, press down on them, or otherwise meddle with the beef once it is in the pan. Let them brown for between 4 and 5 minutes before you flip them over. Do not mash them down once you’ve flipped them! Just let them do their thing. This is the secret to moist, delicious burgers.
  5. Use a thermometer. You’ll know your burgers are ready based on their inner temperature. Insert a meat thermometer and take your burgers off the heat when they’re around 130 degrees F. (Don’t worry; although most recipes will tell you to cook ground beef to 165 degrees, we’ve been eating these regularly with no ill effects, mostly since they’ll eventually get that hot even without the help of the stove. You may want to abstain, however, if you’re knocked-up—just to be on the safe side.)
  6. Cheese and cover. Put your bleu cheese on top of the burgers, which are still resting comfortably in the pan, and then cover the pan with a lid. Let the burgers sit, cheese slowly melting, for at least 5 minutes before plating them up. Use a good quality bleu cheese; we like the Salemville Amish Blue Cheese (available at Randall’s), which has been aged for 60 days. Delish!

Those are the basic steps to great burgers, even if you’re not big on the bleu cheese idea. But if you are, let us also recommend additional toppings (which you really MUST do) of bacon strips (easy to make in the microwave!), some romaine lettuce, and a bit of mashed avocado. Pure decadence, pure bliss.

Wine pairing: a delicious ($5) Chilean wine, the Frontera Carmenere, tastes fabulous with this bleu cheeseburger. Yum!

There should obviously be a tasty and succulent photo of our burgers here, but we were salivating too much to take pictures and gobbled them up before a photo shoot could be arranged! We’ll try to get one eventually, but no guarantees.

Good to the Bone Country-Style Ribs


2010
03.03

Here at Shoestring Austin, we are nothing if not cheap gourmands. Except for one other thing: sometimes, we are pretty darn lazy. Cooking occasionally takes a back seat when you’re going about your daily business, get swamped with work, or have a family member in the hospital in another state whom you’re concerned about. (Hi, Mom! Hope you’re feeling better!)

In any case, we’ve come up with a completely fool-proof recipe, for fools like us who can’t concentrate on cooking all the time.

In honor of the motto on the BBQ sauce we elected to use in this recipe, we’ve named it Good to the Bone Country-Style Ribs. Here’s what you need:

  • 2 lbs. country-style pork ribs
  • 1 jar Texas-Texas BBQ sauce
  • 1 large shallot (that’s a fancy onion; you can substitute a red onion as you see fit)

That’s it, that’s all! We told you this was easy, right?

Here’s the entire set of directions: Cook for 5 hours on high in your slow-cooker. Seriously, what could be simpler?

Okay, here’s a couple of notes for y’all: layer onions, ribs, and more onions on top so you can soak up the tasty goodness. Trim off the fat a bit, cus gnawing through the gristle isn’t very nice (but a little fat is pretty tasty). And then just let ‘er rip!

Here’s a photo of our results:

Delicious Good to the Bone Country-Style Ribs

Final bit of advice: check around at your local grocery store, as sometimes the packages are mislabelled and you can score, like, 5 lbs of ribs for something crazy like 30 cents. Um… not that we did that. At a store that shall remain nameless. (Tip: Be calm at the cash. Don’t give yourself away. Channel Bart Simpson. You didn’t see me do it. Nobody saw anything…)

Wine recommendation: pair it with a nice Chardonnay or Pinot Gris. Superb! Or drink beer if you must. This is Texas, after all.

The Dining Companion (DC) and I will be fighting over the leftovers tomorrow!