Magandang tanghali po!
I probably have more than 101 cookbooks on my bookshelves. (LibraryThing says 79, but I’ve still got another shelf and a half to go.) For the most part, they are eye-candy and fantasy material, but not used often enough for the act of cooking.
I live within walking distance of dozens, if not hundreds, of restaurants, bakeries, specialty grocery stores, “ethnic” markets, and other food providers. I walk past the smell of fresh-baked scones in the morning, and the sizzling of burgers at night. I have easy access to pub food, subs, sweet and savory pies, both authentic and “New England” Chinese (the latter comes delivered with dinner rolls instead of, say, wontons), Salvadoran, Indian, Mexican, tapas, Korean, French-Cuban, Thai, Brazilian, noodle shops and sushi bars, and of course, the ubiquitous pizza, doughnuts, and coffee shops.
I have a sweet tooth and a hankering for rare meats and fish. I live for fruit and chocolate. Veggie burgers and artisanal bacon both find room in my fridge. I have partners in my foodie excursions, both as fellow gourmets and chefs.
I talk enough about food that really, I should just go ahead and gather it all in one place; hence, a new home for my babblings about sushi and chocolate and farmers’ markets, right here.
I grant you, I can be lazy. I procrastinate. I decide at 5:30, “Hey, I should bring some munchies to a friend’s house,” for which I need to leave in an hour. This is where the microwave comes into play:
Sesame Brittle (adapted from The Well-Filled Microwave Cookbook)
1/2 cup sesame seeds
1/4 cup honey
1/3 cup sugar
1 cinnamon stick
dash baking soda
Also: microwaveable bowl, aluminum foil, butter to grease the foil, fork, spatula, potholder
Instructions: Mix all ingredients except the baking soda in a microwaveable bowl. Microwave on high for 2 minutes, or until the sugar has dissolved. While the mix is heating, grease a sheet of aluminum foil with butter. When the sugar has dissolved, remove the mix from the microwave, stir until the mix is uniform, then put back in the microwave for another 2-3 minutes on high. Watch carefully to ensure the mixture doesn’t overflow! Remove carefully from the microwave, and extract the cinnamon stick (recommended: put it in a mug of hot apple cider, yum!). Working quickly, add the baking soda, and stir until dissolved, then pour the mix gently onto the buttered side of the foil, and spread it out until it is thin (~1 mm or so). While it is cooling (~15-20 minutes), go take a shower and otherwise get ready to fly out the door. When cool, snap into pieces, pack into a container, and resist sampling on your way over to your friend’s house!
haya wrote:
that sounds so tasty! i’m going to have to make a batch next time i chair the staff meeting at work. it seems like something that could be disguised as sort of healthy without being very blah like the carrots and grapes the person brought in last week. thanks! looking forward to many more great things from the site ;-)
Posted on 29-Jan-07 at 9:42 am | Permalink