Monday, October 12, 2009


Hello all...

Thanks for the support and comments.
All the feedback has been really helpful. The most common request about the blog is to make a useful tool for most everyone. Specifically, writing about how to choose and prepare food that is fairly easy to make, nutritious and, of course, cost effective. I understand this because the only reason why I'm taking part in making these meals is because I live with great cooks. Slowly I'm learning the basics, but I always have a teacher by my side. What I'm saying is, I probably wouldn't make any of these recipes either, the exception being a meal for a special occasion. It's beneficial to learn how to be resourceful cooking every day meals. My friend Sean suggested documenting a trip to the grocery store and listing staples everyone should have in their kitchen, which is something we want to do. Sinta -- our roommate is the other amazing chef besides Mayme, is trained to help people food budget based on their means, helps create 'meal plans' based on nutrition, and in the end help clients create delicious, healthy meals -- suggested making recipes based on five ingredients that are in season, therefore more inexpensive. Or designing meals based off staples in the fridge. Good stuff. We'll focus on incorporating these ideas.

Today, Mayme, Jon and I had a 'food huddle' regarding some of these concerns and the direction of the blog; we agreed the last thing we want is the recipes we post to come off intimidating or unclear. To address the latter, we would like to work on a format that would be visually easy to digest. That may mean displaying the ingredients, cook time and process at the beginning of each post, in case you just want to make the food without reading the whole background story. The great thing about blogging is that it's not precious; you can try different things that make it work better.

Also, I feel I must inform you as to what we've been cooking the past week or so. We've been very busy and ambitious lately: Jon made a french dish with shrimp (apologies that the name is escaping me), Mayme made her grandma's chicken dish with rice and homemade banana ice cream with fudge and Sinta spearheaded Thanksgiving Dinner in honor of her friend visiting from Chile -- we all pitched in on the food which included turkey doused with ginger ale, pears, oranges and stuffing, sweet indonesian style gravy, cranberry sauce with pomegranate, carrots simmered in honey and orange juice, mashed potatoes, fried green tomatoes and pumpkin bars with liquor icing. We'll be sharing these recipes very soon. Although, not all of them -- especially the Thanksgiving Dinner -- were necessarily recession friendly, they were delicious and we did cut a few corners to save cost; ginger ale substituted champagne for the turkey, a very smart decision on Sinta's part. Sometimes, as Mayme likes to say, choosing certain quality ingredients go a long way, whereas the rest could be very inexpensive. Figuring out what gets substituted verses what gets invested in is something Mayme wants to address, as she possesses a naturally astute palette, in addition to years spent making meals from scratch -- particularly Midwestern family recipes, and dishes she learned in France and Italy. As novice cooks, Jon and I would like to share our experiences learning how to make meals, diving in and enjoying it, while being pragmatic. We're not going to preach the Trader Joe's cookbook; we're artists who happen to be intuitive, creative, sensory oriented, passionate, experimental and naturally inclined to communicate our visualizations -- as pretentious as it sounds it's sadly, true. And, we're also STARVING ARTISTS, for real. So, our goal for the blog is to share our varied perspectives, be informative and most importantly, inspire you to learn how to smell, taste and experience food in new ways -- with only five bucks to spare.

Please keep the comments coming. They keep the blog alive!

--posted by Michelle


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