Friday, February 7, 2014

Lets give Food blogging a go!


Fettuccine Carbonara 

Evening all, SO after mainly focusing on beer in previous posts I figured i'd give a food post ago, giving you a run for your money Andrew!

Starting with something reasonably simple in case I mess up, my version of spaghetti carbonara.

First up a list of all the ingredients you'll need to make this too;

4-6oz Prosciutto, Pancetta or good quality bacon
8 oz of cheese, cheddar works but a mix of cheddar and something with a bit of a kick is better, grated
2 Large eggs
Some Parmesan like a handful
4-6 cloves garlic depending on your garlic taste
2 cups (480 ml) milk
2 tablespoons flour
pinch garlic powder
pinch paprika
salt and pepper to taste
oil for frying (extra virgin olive oil is best)
Butter (optional)


Start by making a cheese sauce;

There are many different types of cheese sauce and if you have a favourite then go ahead and make that. I've used a method my mum used to use. 





















  • pour 2 cups milk into a small pot and bring to a simmer
  • mix 2 tablespoons flour and the cheese
  • just as a rolling boil threatens to start add in a small amounts of the cheese flour mixture and whisk thoroughly making sure the mixture is not allowed to boil
  • once the first cheese has melted in add a little more, repeat until all cheese has melted and your mixture looks similar to below
  • add in some garlic powder, paprika and salt and pepper to give the sauce a kick
  • you can also use butter, cornflour etc whatever your cheese sauce preference is
Next up put on a large bot of water and bring to a boil, cook the pasta until it's al dente, drain well keeping back a little starchy water. Here i am using spinach fettuccine but you can use spaghetti, tagliatelle or any other type of long pasta. Using fresh pasta rather than that dried crap will make a huge difference to the final dish.
  • while the pasta is cooking fry the prosciutto (or pancetta or bacon) in a little olive oil until browned, like 5 minutes. tip here, if using bacon - do not use that streaky american crap, its just not good
  • throw in the crushed garlic and fry a little more

  • when the garlic is starting to fully release its awesome flavour throw in all the pasta and toss it around, that'll give the pasta a cracking flavour already
  • beat together the 2 eggs Parmesan and any other ingredients you feel will make it your own, red pepper flakes or chili flakes are good choices
  • take the flavour coated pasta off the heat and throw in the eggs cheese mixture again tossing about until all combined 
  • Now add your cheese sauce from earlier, you probably wont need all of it
  • the mixture may be very sticky and too thick for your liking so you can use some of that starchy water you saved from the pasta earlier to thin it out to your chosen consistency.
  • fresh parsley, crack black pepper sprinkled on top and your done. Serve with salad, crusty bread or on it own.


Boom first recipe post, any questions, just ask!

Let the Beer Battle Commence


UK Beer vs US Beer

Looking sharp, the lads from BrewDog

One of my favourite Scottish breweries, Brewdog, recently announced their support for LGBT rights with a beer launch protest against Russian President Vladimir Putin and his "Gay Propaganda" Law in the run up to the Sochi Winter Olympics. They've named the beer "Hello, my name is Vladimir" and blazed his image in multiple colours and festooned with lipstick in a clear message against his archaic and clearly homophobic "law". The Scottish pioneers of extreme and bold beer went a step further a gave the beer a tag line which should please the bear wrestling Vlad (you know if he's not a fan of sarcasm), "notforgays".
Whilst I'm obviously in full support of both this new beer and the message messrs James Watt and Martin Dickie are putting out to the world with their new launch, it also got me thinking about the battle of craft beer on both sides of the Atlantic and who's winning.

So I've decided to have a look at some of the best craft beer makers and some of their top offerings from both the old masters in the UK and those noisy upstarts this side of the pond.
*Note* beer snobs may criticise some of these as not being "true" craft beers, my response - go boil your heid, its good beer OK!

UK

BrewDog
A point of contention for brewers this side of the Atlantic, case and point;
http://aleheads.com/2011/09/09/its-time-to-stand-up-to-brewdog/
But in my seasoned drinking opinion, they are the standard bearers for the fuck you big brewery movement and that is something which many beer experts don't seem to understand. Yes they may be apologetically brash and loud but you know what, big breweries are sacred of them and that can only be good for us all.
For a less extreme show of their range I recommend 5am Saint, strongly hopped and amber ale. Perfect for the winter. For the more adventurous I recommend the Hardcore IPA especially if you're a fan of the overhopped Dogfish Head beers from the land of Red, White and Blue as I am. This is very hoppy, quite strong and definitely not an afternoon beer swilling corona. Also if you happen to be near any of their rapidly growing number of bars, head in for several hours and try it all - you definitely wont be bored!

Innis and Gunn
Straight from the heart of the hood', central Edinburgh boiy! Jokes, Scotland's Capital has a good strong history of brewing from the Caledonian Brewery that give that hoppy Edinburgh smell when the wind is right to Stewart brewing Edinburgh was once one of the epicenters for worldwide exporting of quality beer. In comparison Innis and Gunn is a relative upstart only been around just over 10 years but already gaining staunch fans around the world. I can even get it in New York now, boom! My personal favourite is the Spiced Rum cask pictured below. It's not for the faint of heart at 7.4% abv but with a strong spiced rum finish it combines 2 of my favourite things, Caribbean Rum and proper Scottish beer.






Timothy Taylors
A cracking proper ale brewery based in Yorkshire in the north of England. No nonsense proper beer served by people who know what they're doing. One of the favourites of my buddy Chris will extol the virtues of proper Yorkshire beer over some of our homemade products and back in Edinburgh we could often be found necking back several Timmy Taylor Landlords at the physically closest bar to our flat.

Harviestoun
Now anyone who pays attention to beer awards and or websites like beeradvocate will probably know this small Scottish brewery. They are a specialised small batch brewery in Central Scotland who have hit the jackpot with some of their superb whisky aged beers and appear in the UK & Ireland beeradvocate top 5 twice (Ola Dubh special reserve 30 and 40). I've tasted the 30 and have to agree it is very special and well worth the effort to find it. Unfortunately i'm yet to try the 40, just cant find it anywhere! Definitely try any of their selection if the opportunity arises.

Honourable mention to Bellhaven, Blacksheep and Cairngorm


USofA


Brooklyn
My local brewery, woo hoo I have a local brewery! Actually, there is at least one closer but lets put a pin in that, once i get a visit to that place I'll give it a post! Brooklyn brewery have a great story (go visit it's cool) and produce a great selection of very drinkable beers, including some outstanding sessioners. Their standard lager is exported around the world now including the UK so you may well have tried it. However its some of there easy to find here not so much elsewhere stars which make them worthy of note here. The Sorachi Ace, Oktoberfest and Brooklyn Blast beers are all excellent (7.5/10 at least across the board) but for me the Silver Anniversary beer really put it in the stands/knocked it out of the park/hoofed it into row Z/top bin! A little pricey but worth the investment, I bought 2 one fore drinking, one for the collection. It's a German style Dopplebock 8.6% and goes great with a steak. This bad boy would definitely live in an apartment that smelled of rich mahogany.

Ithaca
This one is a bit of a sleeper. I didn't know much about the brewery until our friends Rachel and Malcolm (also a Scot) stumbled across a very hoppy British style IPA called Flower Power. It's one of their favourite beers and I have to agree that is really good. I also tried an Ithaca Nut Brown at a beer festival last year which was a nice surprise. Most dark beers have a tendency to be overly coffee flavoured - a sure fire way to ruin any beer for me, this one avoids that and finishes well.




BluePoint
Allowed on this list today but will be removed soon after agreeing to a buyout from Anheuser-Busch booooo! This was a really good quality Long Island brewery with a proven track record or some really interesting beers, unfortunately the likelihood now is for them to be swallowed whole by the giant and its soul ripped apart, with falling quality almost guaranteed to follow. Here's hoping for a miracle but in the meantime try these 2 crackers before they are changed/abandoned/drank once then pee'd back into the bottle or whatever they do with budweiser and Stella to achieve that urine flavour.
BluePoint Toasted Lager - a different take on the lager that is normally ignored by craft beer-ers, a favourite session beer in the NY spring for me.
Rastafarye - A Rye beer which was a new one on me a few years back (Rye whisky yes but Rye beer?) but produces a copper ale with tropical flavours, like an alcoholic beer Lilt, right up my alley

Ommegang 
Superb upstate New York brewery, my last post goes into great depth on these guys so hey read that...now ...I'll wait ... done? good!

Honorable mention to Dogfish Head, Russian River, Sam Adams and Goose Island

OK so who wins?

Belgium. Belgium wins followed closely by Germany. UK Bronze medal, USofA coming up fast and just sneaking into the top 5. Sorry guys but Belgium make the best beer they just do and if you avoid the mass produced pigswill Germany are a close second. The UK needs to step up and take a leaf out of the US book and embrace the craft beer revolution more and ditch the Tennents (rat piss) Carling (mouse?) and Fosters (kangaroo or human?). The US needs to keep on their path but take more interest in the masters styles instead of tending to be a bit brash and all knowing.


P.S. Let internet banality commence, no I haven't tried every beer and people will obviously have a number of different views on it. That's a good thing, please feel free to comment below your favourite beer and why i should go and try it, maybe I'll agree and it'll appear in an updated version of this, thinking every 6 months or maybe 3. Now immediately go and drink a beer - just please don't let it be Tennents!

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Back and this time I'm giving It a real go!

BEERS?!?!

Evening all!

Right so my first attempt at blogging on a regular basis fell my the wayside amid settling in to a new country and job searching. Now though I've decided to reinvigorate myself and start again. As before topics will range from whatever I feel like to whatever sounds like fun! Shout out to Andrew Ferguson who's own blog got me thinking of tackling this again. Give it a check out here http://improvisedfood.blogspot.co.uk/

First up in 2014 and it's back to beer, who would have guessed it huh?

Ommengang - by far my favourite American brewery and they have a great selection of beer including a partnership with HBO and Game of Thrones to produce a beer for every season of the show that is designed to mirror the mood or something of each season. I don't really buy any of that but the first 2 beers have been great!

Iron Throne (6.5%) (Blonde Ale) - Season 3
Aroma- 4      Appearance- 4    Taste- 4     Palate- 3       Overall -15/20
This one seems like a fairly standard light ale with very light hop flavour but after a few bottles ends up being a real sessionable beer. Definitely worth a check out if you can still find it (or get it at all outside of the North East US). A little citrus and spice rounds it off fairly well and goes well with an Indian!

Take the Black (7%) - Randomly in September 2013 a few months after Season 3 finished.
Aroma - 4     Appearance- 5     Taste - 4    Palate- 4       Overall- 17/20
This one is a really quality stout that's very dark and malty. Thankfully they resisted the temptation most American brewers go for in making dark stouts almost exclusively coffee flavoured. (to hell with that poison!) and instead give us a chocolaty and slightly spiced fruit beer with only the unavoidable hint of coffee aftertaste. Gotta say that this is a top, top beer and one I've stockpiled a few of. After all you never know when it might be needed!

The upstate New York company out of Cooperstown, a place I've been reliably informed has absolutely nothing except this brewery and the baseball hall of fame, so as far as I'm concerned just the one reason to go up there then. Seriously baseball sucks.

Other Ommegang Beers

A little subsection of the Ommegang range - just what I have my "wine rack" at the moment.
BPA - Belgian Pale Ale (6.2%) Citrusy and light - 12/20
Witte - Wheat Beer (5.1%) Belgian wheat, not the best - 8/20
Rare Vos - Amber Ale (6.5%) Cracking beer, fruity, spicy, amber - always a go to - 17/20
Hennepin - Saison (7.7%) Can't decide about this one - I cant decide what it is - 12/20
Abbey Ale - Dubbel (8.5%) In the Delirium Tremens ilk but not quite as good - 15/20
Three Philosophers - Quadrupel Ale (9.8%) Unbelievable beer, 98% Belgian Quadrupel Ale, 2% Liefmans Kriek (Cherry), didn't fill me with positive thoughts when I found it but it is outstanding - 18/20 

P.S. The Three Philosophers inspired me to try making a similar beer myself and that turned out to be a cracker too, even if I do say so myself.

They also do a range of limited edition and "historical" beers which are not particularly easy to get, hence why that is my new mission for future posts. I've just found this cheeky little number which I'm desperate to crack open, but I need to find a second before I can, gutted!
Wild at Heart - Apparently tastes both dark and of Mango, Passion fruit and Pineapple - An American Ale

I think I'll leave it at that tonight and get back to watching the new season of Archer, Danger Zone!


Next post - Making your own beer in a New York apartment!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

New York, LIC and Beer

Bluepoint RastafaRye Ale


Hey Guys and welcome to my first blog post since moving to the Big Apple. Although I've never been a huge fan of the 'art' of blogging, (professionally trained journalist and all) I figured I'd give it a try and see where it leads.

So first up, WHAT'S UP NEW YORK? 
Had to be done really didn't it? That's right the KMC now lives in the center of everything (apparently) and so far its been pretty damn cool. In my first week I've already been to one hell of a wedding, congrats Max and Sabrina Blondman, welcome to the married club. I've also checked out happy hour at Common Ground at 13th and Avenue A and went out to the in-laws for Rosh Hashanah (sp?). All in all a pretty busy first week but I've gotta say that the highlight is probably still the view, check it out;

OK so this is at night and I suck at photography but I'll post better ones when I find my camera

BTW the original idea for starting this blog was to review and rate all the new beers I discovered and advertise the ones I'm making myself. You heard me, I'm taking on Bud, Coors and Miller and I bet they're shaking in their boots. I'll go into more depth as to my micro brewery plans in the coming weeks but for now rest assured that I have drank enough beer to make some top stuff myself. For now I'm gonna highlight one cheeky little beer i discovered this week, Bluepoint RastafaRye Ale;


I found this at the local Foodcellar & Co. and with me loving all things Rasta felt I had to give it a go. I'll be honest I wasn't expecting much as most novelty beers back home taste like they've already been drank once before but I was reassured by the fact that its 7.5% Abv, normally a good start! It's got a deep rich flavor yet is still refreshing which makes it go really well with spicy meat. Although strong it's not overpowering for a seasoned ale drinker however it may be a little intense for lager swillers. Its more in the range of American ales which in my experience seem to be a little lighter than the classic Yorkshire amber ales of a land I call Dobson, however this is definitely one i recommend you try, especially if you like your jerked meats.

Bluepoint RastaRye Ale - 7.8/10

That's all from me for now and i hoped you enjoyed what you read, if you did leave a comment, let me know and visit again for whatever i decide to post next.

Catch you later.
K