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A night of French Cheeses

22 Dec

One of the presents I gave myself for my birthday was a Cheese Class given by our favorite French chef, David Chamyol, from the restaurant Bistrot de Paris in San Juan. My friends, Laura and Annie Mariel accompanied me for a whole night of dishes made primarily with French cheeses.

               cheese-class-nosotras-copy         notre-chef-de-cuisine-copy

It was very fun. First, we learned how to make raclette. Raclette is the cheese as well as the grill/broiler used to melt the cheese. It’s basically a melted cheese under a very special grill, also known as raclette, and then you pour the melted cheese on top of boiled potatoes, bread or vegetables. We tasted the cheese before melting and after… I was super surprised how different the cheese tastes after its melted. The taste is very pungent and sharp when you cut it fresh, but after its melted the taste turns very mellow. I loved it on top of the boiled potatoes… a great nibbling dish for a night with friends.

             raclette-en-bandejita-copy      raclette-en-proceso-de-derretirse-copy

 

              papas-sobre-raclette-copy         raclette-sobre-papas-copy
Actually, my friend Laura loved so much the raclette concept, she went online the next day and immediately bought herself a raclette grill. Apparently, at our Fete des Francophones in January, the raclette will be making a special appearance.
Then, we learned how to make Tartiflette… this is a baked dish made also with potatoes and onions sautéed in butter and olive oil. Then, you transfer these potatoes to a baking dish and cover with pieces of Reblochon cheese. Then you bake the tartiflette in the oven for 20 minutes and voila, you’ve got a very hearty dish that you can enjoy with a nice side green salad. The cheese is very smelly and pungent. This was my least favorite dish to be truly honest – maybe because I was getting full with the boiled potatoes and raclette… it is very rich and dense.

            tartiflette-antes-del-horno-copy          tartiflette-con-ensalada-copy
To finish, we learned how to make a proper French cheese fondue. You shred equal parts of gruyère, comté and beaufort cheeses and add ½ part of vacherin cheese. You add those to a base of white wine, Dijon mustard, nutmeg, salt and pepper. If you truly want to make this karma-free, I would make it at home with a bit of apple cider, apple juice or white grape juice or even apple cider vinegar. You melt the cheeses in that base and add a bit of kirsch. I was told that a proper fondue was not a fondue without the kirsch. I’ll have to find a reasonable facsimile to emulate the cherry flavor without the alcohol. But it was lovely… I loved dunking the pieces of bread, cornishons, pear and apple in the smooth cheese blend. To be honest, this was my first time eating a cheese fondue. I’ve seen it made plenty of times at the Food Network, but never tried it myself. We all fell in love with the concept and decided we needed to repeat it for one of our Les Francophones get-togethers.

              quesos-fondue-copy            fondue-copy

                                                                                pan-con-fundue-copy
I should also mention that in addition to the cheeses used in the dishes I have described above, we also tasted goat cheeses, cheeses made from brebis mountain sheep, blue cheeses, among others. These cheeses were specially provided by Marco Dettling from The Cheese Market, a Swiss guy now living in Puerto Rico and imports many fresh European cheeses. His appreciation and knowledge of European cheeses was evident. He actually turned out to be an “almost neighbor” of mine. We live in the same street… what a small world this is, no?

cheese-master-blue-cheeses-copy

What I loved about this cheesy experience was that there’s so much versatility when cooking with cheese… pastas or risottos is just a small fraction of what you can do. French cuisine is filled with creamy and cheesy concoctions that will give you the opportunity to savor new and interesting kinds of cheeses you might not be usually accustomed to taste. It’s a window into another culture and exposes you to new tastes and experiences.

I’m still here…

21 Dec

I feel bad… I feel as if I have sort of abandoned you.  I took Thanksgiving week off as a little vacation, and afterwards, I got the most horrible flu possible.   I was in bed sick for 2 full weeks… no energy or desire to cook, write or do anything than just lie in bed sick.  I had fever every night and constantly felt shivers.

I tried many natural remedies – lemon, honey, aloe and onion to aid my strong coughs, medicinal teas, homeopathic syrups, drinking lots of liquids, etc.  I ultimately had to resort to traditional antibiotics and remedies. The moral of this story is that you should always try first natural remedies to feel better when you’re sick, but you should also be cautious and if your illness has gotten a hold on you that natural remedies can’t help much anymore, we need to have the wisdom and fortitude to resort to traditional remedies and later on then do some fasting and eat lots of raw foods to counter acts any negative side effects of those traditional prescription drugs.

KarmaFree Cooking promotes a more natural and vegetarian lifestyle, but it’s better to “pollute” your body with some traditional drugs than to have a super clean system, but then be “6-feet under” because an illness was not properly taken care of.  My natural doctor believes in that and I believe in him.

I am much better now and ready to roll with you…

And on a separate note… while I was “under the weather”, my friend Fiona from Recipes2Share gave me an Award – the Superior Scribbler Award.  I really do not know the criteria used to give the award to someone, but nonetheless I feel very honored and privileged.   So, I have set up my own criteria…

superir20scribbleraward2

I reciprocate to Fiona… by forwarding this award to:

  • Kathleen at Kathleen’s Vegetarian Kitchen – my friend and who gave me the initial push to start this KarmaFree project
  • Michael at Herbivoracious – who was brave enough to leave his 9-to-5 job and try vegetarian cooking as a career for a while
  • Heidi at 101 Cookbooks – who’s a continuous source of inspiration
  • Brenda at Bren’s FlaNboyanteats – a Cuban friend who’s taking the Latin cuisine to Emeril’s and beyond
  • My friends at Serious Eats – where I have found food junkies just like me where we can express ourselves without limitations

 

The rules of the award are simple to carry on:

  • Post the award on your blog
  • Link to me for giving it to you
  • Link the  originating post here
  • Pass it on to five deserving people
  • Post these rules for your recipients

KarmaFree Cooking turns 1 year old!!!!

8 Nov

Believe it or not, KarmaFree Cooking’s 1st Anniversary is here!!!!

I truly can’t believe it.  Something that started as something to just collect my vegetarian recipes has grown into something really cool.  Nowadays we receive an average of 450-500 visits each day, people from around the world visit our little page each month, you share with me your recipes and ideas and some of you are self-proclaimed fans of KarmaFree Cooking…

I am sooooo glad to be of service.  I feel it is a responsibility and a privilege to share with you all that I have learned to make my life and health a little better by just adjusting what I eat and how I eat it.

So to celebrate our 1st Anniversary, I want to share with you how KarmaFree Cooking has been getting exposure on the regular media outlets here in Puerto Rico…

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Josy LaTorre is a well-known vegetarian in Puerto Rico – she was (or still is, I am not sure) part of a very successful musical group Haciendo Punto, she authored a biography on the local mega-star comedian Jose Miguel Agrelot, she has a weekly vegetarian column in El Nuevo Día, Puerto Rico’s largest newspaper and hosts a weekly vegetarian radio show in Radio Isla 1320AM every Sunday morning at 8:30AM.  So she’s very well known in PR for her support of the vegetarian diet.

We came into contact a few months ago and finally, recently, I accepted her invitation to visit her radio show and serve as a resource to answer listeners’ questions.   She had visited this blog and liked my approach, my philosophy on being vegetarian and how I expressed myself in my posts…  even though Jossy is mostly vegan, she was also interested in tasting some of the recipes I had posted on the blog.

I had a blast.  I was with her on air for 1 hour.  We talked about my journey on how I decided to become a vegetarian, how long it took for me and how I believe you should not force your decision.  We also talked about the role Yoga had in my decision to become vegetarian and the benefits I had seen in my life and health.  Then it came the tasting part…  I brought with me samples of my hummus, my guacamole and my veggie party dip.  I made them dairy-free for her and she loved them all and she mentioned it all on the air.

radio-isla

My conversations with Josy were instrumental to start creating a Spanish-version of KarmaFree Cooking.  I started it a few months ago, and now I develop each post in both languages from the get go… but I came to understand how this information is valuable to people around the world.  And even though having a site in English reaches a lot of people, the Hispanic community around the world is starved for information in their same language…  I have Josy to thank for that.  It’s more work for me, but I know my objective of sharing the KarmaFree Cooking philosophy is reaching farther and farther.

During November, the emblematic month for giving thanks and being appreciative, I want to thank Josy for supporting the KarmaFree Cooking philosophy and wanting to share it with her public and to YOU, KarmaFree Cooking reader who visit our site regularly looking for information, recipes and inspiration to continue sure-footed on your vegetarian lifestyle despite the constant messages from the omnivore world.  Thanks…  and may we be able to continue to celebrate many more anniversaries together.

Feel free to leave me your comments or thoughts… and if you do not want to miss anything posted in KarmaFree Cooking, please subscribe to receive a RSS feed or e-mail alerts.  They are sent out every time I post something new and you will not miss anything new on the blog.

NYC Markets – Chelsea Market

8 Nov

Located on 9th Ave, between 15th and 16th streets is Chelsea Market.  This building has a lot of food history, as it saw the birth of the Oreo when it was a manufacturing plant for the National Biscuit Company, better known as Nabisco.  It is also now home to the Food Network.  Ever since I learned about Chelsea Market I make it a point to visit.

The first time I visited Chelsea Market I was with friends and I just had the chance to walk through the main corridor and look things from afar.  This time, on my own, I wanted to see all the stores and places featured in the Food Network shows.  See where Rachael Ray says she buys things to cook later that night for her husband, among others…

history           chelsea-market

Photo courtesy of Frances Roberts for the NYTimes

I decided to go to Chelsea Market early in the morning… when on “vacation” early means @ 10AM.  I wanted to do something interesting and still be close by to the Martha Stewart’s studios on 8th Ave. and 26th street.  I love the looks of Chelsea Market… it looks like a cave filled with treasures.  It’s kind of dark, and has that industrial look that’s vintage, yet is so modern at the same time.  This is a photo during my first visit.

I got hungry and had to have my second breakfast of the day.  I sound so much like a hobbit, don’t you think?  I had a whole- wheat-everything-bagel with tofutti non-dairy creamy spread.  I completely forgot they call it “everything” for a reason…  it has onion, garlic, and every kind of seed imaginable.  It was good, but afterwards I felt I needed to brush my teeth again or chew some minty gum just in case I had to talk to someone.  Next time, we’ll keep the onion and garlic to a minimum before noon.

       everything-bagel        cream-cheeses

The stores look small from the main corridor, but they’re BIG!!!  They twist and turn and continue going on.  My favorite one was buon Italia with all sorts of imported Italian foods.  I bought Meyer lemon olive oil, capers in salt (I have only found them in brine), tomato paste in a tube, whole wheat orzo and a white truffle porcini spread.  But I was impressed with the selection of cheeses from Italy and France, and something that surprised me positively is the cheeses are very well labeled if they contain rennet as part of their ingredients.  They write it in CAPS in LARGE LETTERS so people are aware of what they’re buying – to me, a nice surprise.  If I lived in NYC, I would come to this store often… the types of pasta, nuts, oils, tomatoes were incredible. 

buon-italia1

I also got a chance sneak in a visit the Food Network offices…  I got to see the main lobby at least.  They were getting ready for the Food & Wine festival later that week.  Maybe someday, I won’t need to pretend I am going to a meeting, but doing it for real… now that’s a nice idea!!

       food-network-2       food-network-offices

If you get a chance, visit Chelsea Market in NYC.  Besides the deli and the Italian shop, they also have bakeries, restaurants – sit down and nice fast foods, kitchen gadgets shops, gift shops, produce store, and other stores not relevant to vegetarians ;).  It’s a great place to visit if you love food and food shopping.

NYC Veggie Restaurants – Viva Pizza

6 Nov

Every time my mom and I visit NYC, we crave a pizza from Viva Pizza. 

 

We first learned about Viva Pizza from our friends at the Yoga Center in Queens.  They all used to visit Viva Pizza at Broadway and 97th street to eat their delicious variety of natural pizzas – all made from whole wheat, spelt or corn crusts and natural dairy or soy cheeses.  They are really awesome.

I am traditional and always order a Pizza Margherita on a whole wheat crust.  My mom loves pesto, so she always orders one that includes pesto, sundried tomatoes and spinach.  I usually order a China Cola too – another natural version of a Coke.  It’s really good, and I’ve only seen it at Viva Pizza.

This time around, we also visited Viva Pizza’s restaurant on 2nd Ave between 12th and 11th streets.  This was our first time at this location.  Both are really small pizza joints, but I found the variety at the 2nd Ave location to be much better.  My mom had trouble deciding… I mean she always does, but this time was even harder.

The pizzas are soooo good, I forgot to take pictures both times we were there.  I had to go by on a later day to photograph the outside at least so I could tell you all about it.  It was 9:30AM and they were still closed…. Thank God, because if not, I would have eaten pizza again for the 3rd time in less than a week.

But when in NYC, not eating a pizza is a crime…