Archive for May, 2010

Slow cookers – Kosher Caterer comments

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010
Shop to you drop magazine

Shop to you drop magazine

It was nice to be asked my opinion for Shop To You Drop on slow cookers. For me they are imperative for both work (during sous vide) and at home (for dinner). The home models are so inexpensive these days that there is no excuse for not having one. I have been making a routine of preparing dinner at home quickly in the mornings. Tajines, French braises, Mexican moles, there are just so many options. Popping everything into the slow cooker really takes the pressure off in the early evening when the kids are hungry and I need to get that final email out.  All the best John.

A kosher tradition – Smoked Salmon vs Lox

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

kosher catering

Being a kosher caterer can be an expensive business. Before you jump to conclusions, I am not going to diatribe about the cost of Kosher meat, or the weighty labour and on-costs that are associated with producing fine food and providing quality service for the most discerning clients. Well…i guess I just did…but no… you see I was in the home office researching and writing some kiddush menus this morning when the topic of salmon bagels caused my stomach to grumble. An impromptu trip to the shop, and organic bakery resulted in a yummy self assembled smoked salmon, creamed cheese, cucumber and organic bagel lunch and a dent of $18.50 in my hip pocket. Well… a smoked salmon bagel is a luxury item, and one with an interesting history.

Salmon bagels with cream cheese are a traditional part of American Jewish cuisine. Traditional salmon bagels were (and in the best delis still are) made with Lox. Lox is actually cured salmon, not smoked, but pickled in brine in the days before refrigeration. In Brooklyn, old-style Lox was very lightly smoked, and remained quite salty with cream cheese providing the perfect foil for the saltiness, and smoothing out the crumble of the bagel. Unsmoked Lox is something that we are starting to prepare this month for L’amour menus. It is handsliced and has a cleaner flavour and firmer texture than the mass-produced, often frozen, commercial smoked salmon that we buy at the supermarket (including the salmon I just bought for lunch!). I, for one, am looking forward to tasting the difference.
Keep well!
Until next post, John