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Brew review: Brew Free or Die IPA

Brew review: Brew Free or Die IPA

Posted on 17 August 2010 by Melanie Kramer

21st Amendment IPA21st Amendment Brew Free or Die IPA
Brewed in San Francisco
7.2% abv
www.21st-amendment.com

Imperial Pale Ale is a GirlsonBeer favorite, but I was skeptical as to what this IPA from a can.

I poured the majority of the beer in a pint glass and got a monstrous amount of foam. Maybe that is a can thing, I don’t know. From a glass this brew is quite tasty. It’s a light IPA and it’s not too malty. The hops are full-flavored but not over-powering. This is a well-balanced brew. I could drink a lot of these.

I was curious though, what it would taste like from the can, so I drank a swig of the last of the brew that didn’t quite fit in the glass. It was not pleasant. All I tasted was aluminum.

While I really did enjoy it and I will probably grab a few of these to take on our next camping trip I’m forced into, I still won’t drink it out of the can. That taste stayed with me a little, and it’s not good (Note to self: Pack 2 pint glasses with the camping stuff).

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Music Monday: On the Run playlist

Music Monday: On the Run playlist

Posted on 16 August 2010 by Meredith

Running or...

lgh75, Flickr

Good music can make or break a run, particularly when that run needs to be more than a couple of miles. Here’s enough music (some new stuff and some throwbacks and plenty of girl power tunes) to keep you moving for about an hour:

Hey Soul Sister – Train

Dancing On My Own – Robyn (Yes, Robyn S. of “Show Me Love” fame. She’s got her own indie label these days.)

Closet Bitch – Emma Lasry

L.O.V.E. – V.V. Brown

Cat & Mouse – Nikki and Rich

Never Forget You – The Noisettes

Quick Fix – V.V. Brown

I Like It  – Enrique Iglesias (feat. Pitbull)

Airplanes – B.O.B. (feat. Hayley Williams)

Break Your Heart – Taio Cruz and Ludacris

In My Head – Jason Derulo

Live Your Life  – T.I. (feat. Rihanna)

Breathe – Blu Cantrell and Sean Paul (This song takes me back to the days of being single and dancing my way through the bars of Adams Morgan and Dupont Circle.)

Say Hey (I Love You) – Michael Franti & Spearhead

Manic Monday – The Bangles

Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go – Wham!

Sheena Is A Punk Rocker – Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Because I’m Awesome – The Dollyrots (Because you. Are. Awesome.)

Whatever You Like – Anya Marina (This song is brilliant and I will never stop loving it.)

Comments (5)

Wine Tasting: Voga pinot grigio

Wine Tasting: Voga pinot grigio

Posted on 13 August 2010 by Meredith

I’ll admit that I was initially attracted to this wine because of the bottle. It’s long, it’s sleek and it just looks stylish. Carry this bottle out of the store and you will feel sassy. Don’t be surprised if you even hear Europop start pounding in your head.

And it tastes good, too! What what!

Voga is an Italian pinot grigio that I’ve seen in most beer and wine stores I’ve been in in Maryland. At between about $10.99 and $12.99 a pop, it’s pretty affordable.

And true to typical Italian-style pinot grigio, this wine features a very fruity grape taste, and is exceptionally light and crisp. It has a hint of yeast (in both taste and in scent), and a citrusy finish. It has an understated taste and is not overpowering.

This wine paired really well some some buffalo chicken pizza and also served as a nice happy hour drink before dinner. My guess is it would also make your tastebuds sing if you paired it with an Italian meal.

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Brew Review: Sam Adams Octoberfest

Brew Review: Sam Adams Octoberfest

Posted on 12 August 2010 by Meredith

“Are you writing it in the form of a Shakespearean sonnet and giving it the proper reverence it deserves? I want some iambic pantameter up in this b****. Octoberfest deserves it.”–my husband

Fine then.

This beer is here, no more waiting in vain

It’s the most wonderful time of the year

It is so very tasty and so crisp

Caramel, nuts, a little vanilla

It is well-balanced, full-bodied and sweet

Hops are detectable but taste is malt

It is a full tastebud experience

And you know what? My tastebuds say “Hell yeah”

To this very tasty seasonal brew

And your tastebuds should say that same thing too

-fin-

Comments (3)

Home Canning Salsa

Home Canning Salsa

Posted on 10 August 2010 by Sam

This year, my boyfriend and I were lucky enough to secure a plot at our local community garden, where we imagined growing oodles of tomatoes with the ultimate goal of making and canning our own salsa and sauce. Three months and nine tomato plants later, we’re up to our eyeballs in tomatoes and canning has become more of a necessity than an option.

Fortunately, transforming a pile of raw tomatoes into a flavorful, jar-worthy salsa is not as daunting a task as you may think. There are lots of good resources out there and if you’re like me, you cook a lot, so most of the steps should be pretty basic.

Ball’s Web site, www.freshpreserving.com, is one of the best and most user-friendly information resources out there. Their convenient, step-by-step how-to guide (click “How To Can” and choose high-acid foods for anything tomato-based) gives a great overview of everything you’ll need to do.

canning implements, morecoffeeplease, flickr

canning implements, morecoffeeplease, flickr

Jars- I used pint-size jars, which I think are fairly typical for salsas. You may want quart-size jars for pasta sauces, but it’s up to you.

Lids and Bands- Lids are important- you need new, clean ones, both the flat lid and the metal band which holds it in place.

Tongs- jar tongs are best, but regular kitchen tongs will suffice.

Funnel


Shallow metal baking pan-
9×9 is good. This is what you’ll use to sterilize the jars,  lids and bands before filling them with salsa. It diverges a bit from the Ball tutorial, but it’s easier. Trust me, more on this later.


Canning pot-
a wide, deep pan- be it dutch oven, pasta pot or canner intended for this purpose- basically what you want is a nice, sturdy pot that’s deep enough to cover your jars with about 2 inches of boiling water.
***You need a rack that will fit inside the pot so the jars don’t come in direct contact with the bottom of the vessel. I used one of those strainer inserts typically used in pasta pots. I was able to fit four pint-sized jars in there, though I did have boil-over. It’s a good idea to test your insert to make sure you can cover the jars with an adequate amount of water. Other things to use: circular metal trivet or they actually do make metal basket thingies for just this purpose.

Salsa to fill the jars- duh.

First:

• Wash all your jars, lids and bands in hot, soapy water and let dry.

• Fill your canning pot with water, drop the insert in and set it on to boil- go ahead and do this while you’re preparing the salsa as it’s going to take a while to come to a good, rolling boil.

Then, Make the Salsa
It’s a good idea to check out a recipe specifically for canning so you can get the acid proportion right. I consulted the “Traditional Salsa” recipe on freshpreserving.com but took liberties here and there with some of my ingredients. Check it out here!

After You’ve Got Salsa:

• Put all your delicious salsa into another big pot. You’re going to heat it up and let it simmer away for about 10 min or so.

***The goal is to have hot jars, hot lids and hot salsa all come together at once. Everything needs to be HOT.***


• While your salsa is heating, fill the metal baking dish with a few inches of water and set it across one of your stovetop burners. Let the water boil, then put your jars, upside down, into the boiling water. Toss the lids and bands in there, too. The steam will rise up into the jar, sterilizing it- though the most important part is to make sure the lip of the jars, lids and bands are boiled good and sterile.

• Sort of “burp” the jars every once in a while so they don’t star to bubble from beneath and tip over. Don’t worry, the jars are not going to explode in your face- just be careful.

• Once your jars have boiled for a good 5 min or so lift them out of the pan with the tongs and fill with salsa, leaving about ½ of space at the top. Work quickly—you want everything to stay as hot as possible.

• Be sure to wipe the rim of the jars with a paper towel so they’re free of salsa before setting the lids on, otherwise they won’t seal properly. Grab a band and hand-tighten the lid—yes, it will be hot, so use oven mits.


• Repeat until all your jars are full.

Final Steps:

• Since  your canning pot, complete with insert, is already boiling away and ready to go, as soon as the hot jars are filled with hot salsa and lidded, slip them into the hot canning bath where they will boil for 15 minutes.

• Remember to be sure water is covering the tops of the jars by about 2 inches.

• After the 15 minutes is up, carefully remove the jars with your tongs and set them aside on a tea towel to cool. Really soon after they leave the water bath you’ll begin to hear the “ping!” sound of the lids sealing. This is, of course, a sign that you have done things correctly. Congratulations!

• Repeat process until you’re out of salsa.

Your jars will be really damn hot for a while, so just leave them alone. Poke the tops- if there’s no movement, the seal has taken and your salsa is as good as gold for at least one year in the pantry.

From the recipe we used, we got seven pint jars of salsa, but we did reserve a good amount while it was still fresh, to enjoy in the meantime.

Tips from Mom:

• Have everything ready and at your fingertips BEFORE beginning the canning process. Once you get going, you’re not going to have time to stop and hunt around for your lids or tongs or whatever.

• Invest in what are known as “jar tongs” or “jar lifters”—wide metal tongs that easily grip jars, as opposed to your basic kitchen tongs, which tend to slip around.

• Use a canning funnel, which is just a wide-mouth funnel to make pouring the salsa into the hot jar a bit less messy.

Pros:
• There are few things in this world that are better than popping a jar of homemade salsa in the middle of January. Canning is one of the best ways to enjoy those fresh, homegrown ingredients straight from the garden to your kitchen anytime during the year.

• Makes great gifts, and when you explain how you grew everything in there people will be REALLY impressed.

• Satisfaction of a job well done!

• It’s really green- I mean, you grew it, you cooked it, you canned it. This salsa’s carbon footprint is really small, man.

Cons:
• It’s time consuming- set aside a whole Saturday for this- I mean it.

• It’s messy- your kitchen will almost certainly look like a horror-show took place there with tomato seeds and guts and skins everywhere, but it’s worth it.

As you can see, in my opinion, the pros far outweigh the cons when considering home canning. Sure, you could’ve spent that time watching some tube or getting drunk again, but why do that, when you can get drunk AND make salsa? Multi-tasking is the way of this new millennium, so embrace it already.

Enjoy!

Comments (5)

Homemade Salsa

Homemade Salsa

Posted on 10 August 2010 by Sam

Right about now my boyfriend and I are up to our ears in tomatoes, thanks to a very fruitful community garden plot. We recently decided to take our bounty, plus some peppers and onions we managed to grow, and whip up a big batch of homemade salsa for canning. It’s super simple, super tasty and definitely worth the effort—here’s how we did it! Ingredients:
• Pile o’ tomatoes, big ones for blanching and cherries for later
• Chiles- jalapenos, habanero, long reds, whatever you like and as much or as little as  you like
• Onion
• Garlic
• Cilantro
• Lime juice
• Salt
• Pepper
• Plain old white vinegar—***many canning recipes call for the addition of vinegar- this is to help boost the canned substance’s acidity, so it doesn’t go off on you too early. With things like salsa, especially, you can really achieve the level of acidity you need between the tomatoes and lime juice. For the big batch we made, we used maybe ¼ to ½ cup of lime juice and maybe 2-3 Tablespoons of vinegar. Use your best judgement.
Then:
• Blanch your tomatoes- core ‘em, score ‘em,

and throw ‘em in boiling water for 30 seconds to a couple minutes depending on what size they are.
When the skin starts coming away, pull them out and toss ‘em in an ice water bath.
When they’re cool, the skin should slide right off. This is messy, there is no way around it.
• Chop, blend, food process or otherwise incorporate your other salsific ingredients.
We threw the onions, garlic, peppers, herbs, seasoning, lime juice, vinegar and just a bit of olive oil in a blender and buzzed it until it was still a little chunky, but well combined.

• Gradually add the blanched, peeled tomatoes to the onion mix and buzz up a bit to combine. Don’t blend it too much, or you’re going to come out with nothing but a reddish puree.
• For texture, we left the cherry tomatoes raw and just sliced them in half and added them to the rest of the salsa after all the peeled tomatoes and onion mix was thoroughly integrated.

• Stir to combine the fresh cherry tomatoes with the rest of the tomato mixture.

If You Plan to
Can:

• Put your salsa in a big pot, set it on the stove and heat until simmering. Then follow these steps to preserve your homemade salsa!

If You Want it Fresh:
• Simply store in a bowl covered with saran wrap or another air-tight container. Should keep for about a week.

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Taste Test: Shrimp, mango and avocado salad with zucchini fritters

Taste Test: Shrimp, mango and avocado salad with zucchini fritters

Posted on 09 August 2010 by Meredith

I married a man who can cook, to the point where he subscribes to Bon Appetit. (Major score.)

He decided to surprise me recently by trying out some recipes from the latest edition, including zucchini fritters with green goddess dressing and shrimp, mango and avocado salad with sweet chili ginger vinaigrette.

I highly suggest you hightail it to Bon Appetit’s website and try these recipes for yourself.  What tasted like a four-star restaurant type of meal was cooked in well under an hour in the comfort of our kitchen.

The chili ginger vinaigrette on the salad was a little spicy for my taste, but very good, and I loved the combination of the shrimp, mango and avocado.

And the zucchini fritters, which basically entailed mixing zucchini and goat cheese lightly frying them in olive oil on the stove, were delish. And did I mention they were beer battered?

We dipped the fritters in green goddess dressing, which includes some light mayonnaise, anchovy paste, dill and sour cream. It apparently was very popular before ranch dressing was invented, and allegedly originated at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in the 1920s.  It is, without a doubt, tasty.

This is a meal we’d (he’d?) definitely make again.

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Chocolate-covered cherry lambic float

Chocolate-covered cherry lambic float

Posted on 09 August 2010 by Melanie Kramer

You may have heard the term “food porn”? For this concoction we need a new term. Maybe “food/beer porn”? It’s so luscious we aren’t sure it would fit anywhere else.

We saw the idea for an ice cream Lambic Float on theKitchn and it looked delicious, but we thought we would take this a step further and go all-out with decadent sweetness.

Lambic’s are available in raspberry, peach, cherry and black currant.

The combination was sweet and sour and delicious and we will be making this sweet treat again soon.

Ingredients:

Cherry Lambic beer
Vanilla bean ice cream
Cherries
Hershey’s shell topping

Chill the glass  (use a wide-mouth glass for better scooping) in the freezer, and scoop in one or two scoops of ice cream. Pour in about 1/2 cup of the Lambic. Put in a few cherries and then pour the shell topping on top. Get a spoon and enjoy!

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Enjoying Willowcroft’s Albariño

Enjoying Willowcroft’s Albariño

Posted on 08 August 2010 by Sam

You may have noticed, if you live anywhere in the continental United States, recently it’s been quite hot—unnaturally so here in the Mid-Atlantic. It’s the kind of weather that doesn’t just discourage cooking in your apartment kitchen, it practically forbids it.

Still, when you’re strolling through your neighborhood grocery and you spot some gorgeous, deep red-pink fillets of wild-caught Sockeye Salmon, you think “I could rationalize turning on my broiler for that.”

Add a cold bottle of Willowcroft Winery’s fine Albariño, and 45 minutes sweating over the stove seems a small price to pay for such a fine meal.

Albariño

The  2009 vintage comes from Loudoun County, VA’s, oldest functioning winery, and is one of the most exciting white wine releases I’ve tried in recent memory. It’s named for the grape used to grow it, commonly found in northwest Spain and Portugal—maybe why it’s such good pals with fish and shellfish. Albariño is aged in stainless steel and then transferred to oak barrels toward the end of its maturation.

The oak lends an interesting depth of flavor—it’s reminiscent of light summertime fruits—peach, nectarine, pear—but it’s also capable of standing up to pairings with strong flavors. It’s a bit slippery on the palate like a chardonnay, but with a sharp, tart kick.

Believe me, this wine is tasty enough to brave a 100-degree kitchen for. When you find the right food pairing for a certain wine, all sorts of wonderfully tasty things happen. The combination of the silky-sweet flesh of the salmon with the tart and mineral-y Albariño is a match made in heaven.

On the side we served spinach and cheese ravioli tossed with fresh tomatoes from our garden (and also a great friend to salmon), olives, feta cheese, fresh basil, salt and pepper.

Here’s a description of how the salmon was prepared, along with the rough recipe for the citrus/honey glaze we used.

-          Clean your salmon fillets (we made two good-sized ones), rinsing with water and patting dry with a paper towel. Make sure to feel carefully for leftover pin bones and remove any that are found.

-          Season with salt, black pepper and a little olive oil and stash in your fridge until about half an hour before you’re ready to cook.

-          Make the glaze- combine in a small food processor:
1-2 Tbsp. fresh lemon zest
1-2 cloves garlic
fresh thyme
3 or more Tbsp honey- we used raw Virginia honey and some thyme-infused honey our friends brought us from Greece. Regular honey will do fine, though.
salt and pepper

-          Buzz all this around until thoroughly combined. Stash in the fridge or let rest at room temperature until ready to use!

-          When you’re about half an hour out from broiling the fish, remove it from the fridge and brush the glaze equally and thoroughly on each fillet. Cover with plastic and set aside to let the fish come up to room temperature.

-          After the glaze has penetrated the fish, stick it under your broiler for 7-10 minutes. You’re shooting for an internal temperature of 130 degrees.

Meanwhile, you’ve put your pasta water on to boil, prepared a fresh sauce of chopped tomatoes, assorted olives, fresh herbs (basil, sage, thyme—whatever you like) and onions. Sautee the onions separately if you like a milder flavor, which I do, then combine that with the tomato mixture and cooked pasta and set aside until ready to serve. It doesn’t need to be piping hot, just sort of warm and wilted, maybe with a little crumbled feta cheese on top.

By now your salmon has rested, and viola! Place a pile of your pasta next to the salmon fillet, serve with crusty bread and, of course the Albariño.

You’ll find the wine is a fine companion both to the hot, starchy pasta and to the sweet salmon. It was refreshing without overwhelming the palate, yet cleansing enough that between sips the salmon tasted fresh all over again, and you were able to detect the many layers of flavors in the glaze—the sweet honey, tart lemon and herbaceous thyme.

Albariño runs $20 direct from the winery, maybe a little more expensive online or at the grocer.

Comments (3)

Brew Review: McSorley’s Irish Pale Ale

Brew Review: McSorley’s Irish Pale Ale

Posted on 30 July 2010 by Meredith

The first thing that comes to mind when drinking McSorley’s Irish Pale Ale is that this beer makes me want cheese. Like, really good Dubliner Irish cheese.

(My husband says breathing makes me want cheese. But anyway. Back to the beer.)

This brew, which is 5.5% alcohol by volume, is interesting. It’s somewhat sharp and lightly carbonated, with a seriously bitter aftertaste. And it’s got some bite to it, too.

There’s just a hint of hops and a hint of malt – it’s very balanced -  and it tastes slightly of caramel and wheat. And, to be honest, it tastes kind of like that cheese. Which isn’t a bad thing.

This isn’t the best beer I’ve ever had, but it definitely kept my tastebuds engaged and I’d drink it again.

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