THE BLOG

Archive for May, 2009|Monthly archive page

Grub Love: Hot Dogs

In Cooking, Food: Hot Dogs, Grub Love, Personal Ramblings on May 22, 2009 at 12:17 PM
mydog6

A recent roadside pit-stop in Hannagan Meadow, AZ.

Don’t call it a comeback.

Suffice to say, it’s due time these tasty little sausages received some extra love and attention. Our burger-dominated world has all but suffocated the hot dog.

Now relegated to the back corners of questionable delicatessens, urban food carts, stadium takeaway, and being the go-to quick fix for soccer moms galore, hot dogs have taken a virtual back seat in our ever-evolving culinary consciousness.

Don’t feed me bullshit about how you don’t eat hot dogs because they might contain varied, surly pig parts, or how you “don’t eat pork,” when you honestly have no religious convictions against it.

Food shouldn’t be scary. So, get over it.

I personally prefer myself a pork filled casing, and there should be no excuses to the contrary. Without being laboriously professorial, pork hot dogs are okay to eat, and in fact, are often substantially more flavorful than other meat varieties.

Trust me, try one.

Pork aside however, from franks all-beef, to those kosher, turkey and veggie, there is still no reason the downtrodden hot dog shouldn’t (or couldn’t) be as popular or “trendy” as their fellow ground and bunned rivals.

In an era where gourmet burger bars are the ultimate in trend-dom, it’s sad to see hot dogs continually placed on the proverbial back shelf of Americana. Hot dogs can be just as white collar.

As a little Justin who ate, I grew up on the real deal. Though in the beginning I admit that I liked my links “plain, with ketchup only please,” I have since evolved into a full-blown wiener disciple.

Hot dog talk, don’t get excited.

Sonoran Hot Dog (El Guero Canelo, Tucson, AZ)

The perfect frankfurter should have a firm casing that gives a light snap when you bite into it, and a rush of smoky, sweet and salty as you ingest it.

Personally, I love everything on my dog. Mayo, mustard, ketchup, chunky dills, onions, sauerkraut, hot sauce, you name it – I’ll top it, eat it and love it.

Politically, I also equally support our country’s most prominent regionals. It can be a Chicagoan, a thickly frank covered in a variety of chunky, hearty accoutrements, the more sparely topped, thin and extra-long New York version, or the ever-growing Arizona contribution to the national hot dog scene: the Sonoran Dog. Always wrapped in bacon, held in soft bread and smothered to your heart’s delight with, among many possible variables, spicy, roasted peppers, chopped onion, pinto beans and drizzles of glossy mayo. Seriously heaven-sent.

I also love a good chili dog – extra spicy, with a heaping blend of ground meat, onions and kidney beans, touch of mustard underneath, and smothered with cheddar on top.

I’ve expanded my borders across the Pacific, going slightly Asian, with a touch of good Chinese mustard, scallions and a lengthy drizzle of Sriracha.

Like I’ve always contested, gluttony as a cardinal sin needs revisiting.

Without further hesitation, for sheer versatility alone, I hearby bestow the homely hot dog as ultimate GL.

May it hold its head high, rising from its lowly social castings, and re-take its rightful place in our culinary heritage.

Hot Dog on FoodistaHot Dog

Opening Soon: Parlor Pizzeria

In Food: Italian/Pizza, Phoenix: Biltmore/Arcadia, Restaurant News and Gossip on May 21, 2009 at 12:27 PM

theparlor23

Update 05/25/2009: The restaurant officially opened today (at 11am).

As devout followers have been chattering about for nearly a year now, an interesting new pizzeria has slowly begun to take form along Camelback Rd., near 20th St., called The Parlor.

Thankfully, according to co-owners Dan Mei and his son Aric Mei, our need for additional patience may finally be coming to an end. If all goes well (and on schedule), they plan to open their new restaurant within just a matter of days.

Staking claim in the charming mid-century landmark that, for over the last half-century, housed longtime local beauty institution Salon de Venus, Parlor may prove promising for more than just its menu.

The structure itself has been virtually re-built from the inside out, a process undertaken not merely for safety and soundness, but for its environmental credibility as well.

Justin05_2009 369

Goodbye Salon de Venus, Hello Parlor.

Dan and his son Aric (a successful local artist and designer to begin with) are themselves proudly tied to strong heritage in the local pizza landscape. It was just over 25 years ago in fact, that their family originally debuted the popular Nello’s Pizza to the Phoenix area.

Though their family is no longer officially associated with the majority of Nello’s locations (they apparently only currently own the Ahwatukee location), their influential marks on the area’s pizza landscape can never go unnoticed.

Unlike Nello’s however, don’t expect Parlor to simply be a dressed up version of its ancestors – atmosphere or food-wise. Thank this in large part to seasoned local chefs Jared Porter and Jerry Alday.

With a past resume that lists associations with the likes of Olive & Ivy, Asia de Cuba, LGO, Vincent’s on Camelback, and Scottsdale’s now non-existent James Hotel and its flagship restaurant Fiamma Trattoria, Porter has a track record of preparing high-quality, often inventive eats.

Not to be overshadowed, Alday himself holds an equally worthy resume, having experience with LGO (like, who doesn’t anymore?) as well as Zinc Bistro.

Parlor’s artisan menu intends to be simple, but special. In addition to a diverse list of pies topped with ingredients both unique and familiar, the stylish, updated space will also serve a variety of sandwiches, salads and antipasti. And as everyone also keeps pointing out – a burger “or two.”

The restaurant plans to offer both a lunch and dinner menu, the latter of which will additionally offer special full entrees. Think homemade pastas, fish and maybe a steak or two. There will also be a kids menu. Finally, a diverse selection of brews on tap in particular will be on hand to round out the experience.

Expect a full review in the coming weeks.

Food photos and official menu provided by Parlor–

Parlor3
Parlor5
Parlor1

gview

Parlor Pizzeria | theparlor.us | 1916 E. Camelback | Biltmore Arcadia | 602-248-2480

Parlor Pizzeria on Urbanspoon

Sweet, Sweet Republic

In Food: Dessert/Ice Cream/Frozen Yogurt/Gelato, Media, Restaurant News and Gossip, Scottsdale: North on May 16, 2009 at 2:43 AM
sweetrepublic3

Sweet Republic co-owner Helen Yung (Brandon Sullivan/Bon Appetit)

While parts of the country have been under an evil hex of gelato and frozen yogurt over the past several years, it’s refreshing to see good old-fashioned ice cream making a quiet comeback.

We are no longer relegated to the tortures of Tiffany lamps, grainy wood-paneled walls, brass accents, and ice cream served in tall ornate glass goblets. As our own president often says, it’s better to look forward, than backwards.

Hard to disagree with such philosophy.

Growing up in Phoenix, I was raised on the likes of Swensen’s and local favorites Mary Coyle’s and the Sugar Bowl. Though still tasty (and preferred over certain national chains), they have since all become near fossils of their former selves. Once the nostalgia and wisps of Americana fade, you’re left with something never quite as good as you remembered.

Profiled in the current issue of Bon Appétit, one of my new local favorites, Sweet Republic, was listed as one of the Hot 10 Ice Cream Shops in the nation. Though not the absolute best ice cream I’ve ever tasted, many of their selections are pretty darn close.

If anything, they earn extra points for breaking the stodgy ice cream parlor mold. They’re different, and in clever ways.

Sweet Republic is the perfect illustration of how ice cream can be just as “hip” as their fellow, frosty rivals, without ever losing any of that homespun feeling so many of us grew up remembering.

Besides the bright, clean and modern space, the Scottsdale ice cream shop overtly goes out of its way to use pure, locally-sourced organic ingredients whenever possible. Even if one or two of their frozen creations don’t blow you out of the ballpark, it’s hard to fault them for trying (or for originality).

I realize I’m a late echo to this, as the majority of local – and now national – food press have already gushed over Sweet Republic. However, I cannot help but join the chorus of accolades. It is definitely one of my favorite new spots for ice cream.

For you weirdos out there, Sweet Republic also offers a varied selection of sorbets, and yes, frozen yogurts.

I’m just saying.

Sweet Republic | sweetrepublic.com | 9160 E. Shea | North Central Scottsdale | 480-248-6979

Sweet Republic on Urbanspoon

Welcome to the Neighborhood, Luci’s

In Food: Coffee/Tea, Food: Market/Grocery, Phoenix: North Central/Sunnyslope, Restaurant News and Gossip on May 14, 2009 at 5:14 AM
3465818902_74c8660238

(flickr/Scrap Arcs)

Update 12/07/2011: For my most recent ode to Luci’s (with a similar sentiment) in the Downtown Phoenix Journal, go HERE.

Each and every day, Phoenix is maturing.

From all reference points, urban life in Phoenix is becoming less and less like the cynical joke it was just 5-10 years ago. Though there will always be another new cheap suburb to move to, or a cancerous mega-development on the fringes to call home, the city’s center is solidifying.

While I would belt out a resounding “no thank you,” to those said disgusting fringe developments, it is an unfortunate reality of life here. Fortunately for us stubborn, merry urbanites, Phoenix’s incessant growth has finally begun to bear fruits where it really counts – in its heart.

One of the biggest symptoms of becoming a truly vibrant place is the proliferation of not merely independent businesses, but independent businesses with character, charm and style.

Let us welcome one of those newly-minted fruits – Luci’s Healthy Marketplace. Kudos are in order for owners (and natives) Ken and Lucia Schnitzer, for some urban TLC well done.

Though not overbearingly health-conscious, Luci’s does angle toward what is better for our bodies. After all, the new neighborhood market is named after Lucia, herself a survivor of breast cancer.

Located in North Central Phoenix, on Bethany Home and 16th St., Luci’s is the latest food magnet to set up shop near an intersection that has already become quite the hub of its own.

Über-popular nearby haunts include the Richardson’s family of restaurants, which in addition to its namesake restaurant, also include Dick’s Hideaway and the Rokerij (read: roke-er-y).

There is also Phoenix City Grille, a power-spot for local politicians. Famous (and politically inclined) regulars include former Arizona governor turned homeland guardian Janet Napolitano, and Arizona’s current senators, John McCain and Jon Kyl. Not to be outshone, Texaz Grill and the Golden Phoenix also come to mind as popular neighbors. The latter, being one the few remaining great, old-school Chinese restaurants in all of central Phoenix.

Essentially, the secret is out. The ‘hood is cool.

lucis4

(thehotsheetblog.com/GPCVB)

Luci’s sells a variety of items you’d find in a larger, corporate grocer, but it does so in an atmosphere that is unique, casual and hip-ly retro. Think La Grande Orange with a bit more variety in product, sans the trappings of the conspicuously status-aware.

Besides produce, meats, bread (thanks to Simply Bread), dairy and other tenets of a legitimate market, Luci’s also sells eco-friendly gifts, cosmetics, cleaning supplies and many other green household products.

There is a coffee bar serving organic, locally-roasted java, and a gourmet takeaway counter full of inexpensive eats prepared in-house at their charming demonstration kitchen. There is also a nice section of wines and beers.

Due to a quiet opening, Luci’s has already been in business for a short time. This weekend and the week after however – May 17th to 23rd – is the big “grand opening celebration.”

Luci’s Heathly Marketplace | lucishealthymarketplace.com | 1590 E. Bethany Home | North Central Phoenix | 602-773-1339

Luci's Market & Coffee Bar on Urbanspoon

Now Open: Lola Coffee

In Food: Coffee/Tea, Phoenix: Midtown, Restaurant News and Gossip on May 12, 2009 at 10:19 PM

l

Little Lola is growing up, and she’s taking over Phoenix. Entering her gangly tween years, we might be calling the next concept Lourdes (but let us hope never Lolita).

Small success after small success, Daniel Wayne, the former brains behind such beloved Midtown Phoenix institutions Lux Coffeebar, Lola Tapas, and LT’s accouterment Lola Roastery (as in coffee not chicken), has once again entered the local ring of food and drink.

After a proper renovation, Lola Coffee has set up shop in the center of one of Midtown’s hippest (and most eclectic) shopping plazas.

Located on the NWC of Central Ave and Highland, Lola bunks with several well-known Midtown friends who also reside in the small, but new-again strip center. Most notably, long time rental institution Movies On Central, upscale and fashionable Haus Modern Living home store, trendy pet boutique Oliver & Annie, and what has become Phoenix’s go-to gay trinket and bauble store Unique On Central.

Also coming late this summer, another highly anticipated restaurant will be opening in the same plaza, a branch of California’s popular kitschy, island-themed Hula’s Modern Tiki. We’re talking coolness overload.

And another parking nightmare.

Though primarily a java-driven establishment, Lola Coffee also serves its house-roasted blends with pastries and other sweet nothings, courtesy of Danielle Librera of Sweet Pea Bakery fame.

Much like Mister Wayne’s former coffee gold mine down the street (Lux, shhh), Lola’s atmosphere and aesthetics also effortlessly blend the overtly hip with straightforward comfort. Just to be safe however, if you happen to travel with any personal electronics that are not Apple-branded, Starbucks may still be a better option.

Some things always go without saying.

Website by Lola, coming soon? Open daily at 7am.

Lola Coffee | 4700 N. Central | Midtown Phoenix | 602-265-5652

Lola Coffee on Urbanspoon

Grub Love: “Sapporo Ichiban Chow Mein”

In Cooking, Food: Japanese/Sushi, Grub Love, Personal Ramblings on May 6, 2009 at 1:39 PM

This week’s honor starts with a discovery I made very young.

My grandmother Lena (mother’s side) grew up on a small Kansas dairy farm during the Great Depression. A timely (or untimely?) result of this childhood, her penny-pinching scruples were notorious. Unless a particular occasion was deemed special, she was militant about keeping food costs to the minimum.

Unfortunately, this was an admirable financial trait never adopted by her grandson.

When my grandparents eventually moved to Arizona several decades ago, being exposed to the vast and diverse offerings of our much-larger supermarkets (in comparison to rural Kansas at the time), Lena fell in love with one exotic item in particular⎯cheap, instant ramen noodles.

Lena had a stubborn, “Midwestern palate,” but quickly became a fan of the pre-cooked Japanese noodles. In fact, she would purchase them by the basket full.

This was not only my own first exposure to ramen, but also to the suburban world’s cult reaction to the budget-friendly eats (read: buying oversized quantities and hording).

Every Tuesday after school was ‘visit grandparents day’. My mother would leave work early and drag me to my grandparents house for an afternoon of naggy chit-chat, Wheel of Fortune and, of course, an early evening “snack” of instant ramen.

Needless to say, ramen noodles were definitely the afternoon’s highlight. Most kids received candy or baked goods when they visited grandma’s house⎯I got a bowl of ramen.

In fact, some of my very first memories of cooking at all were on those said Tuesdays, sitting atop my grandmother’s favorite green-padded kitchen stool, watching and helping her prepare my ramen noodle soup. Which, at the time, I considered a very complex preparation.

Fast forward a decade or two, my love of instant ramen noodles was starting to wane a bit. I became bored with them. Not because they weren’t fundamentally good, but my palate had since matured⎯I craved more bang for my cooking efforts.

One lazy day, browsing the grocery store several years ago, I stumbled upon my current instant-noodle love: Sapporo Ichiban’s Japanese Style Noodles Chow Mein (there has to be a more efficient name).

Though these are not ramen noodles (think yakisoba), they tend to fall into the same breed of foods. Packaged identically, they are both dried, instant, pre-cooked Japanese-style noodles.

Unlike traditional instant ramen, which is intended to be a soup, these yakisoba-style noodles require little cooking water. The individual packages also include additional, more complex flavoring components, as opposed to what is essentially just packets of dried stock with the ramen variety. Overall, the finished product is more pan-fried side dish, than ramen’s more brothy, soupy example.

In my own pantry, this item has become a considerable player in my often hectic cooking rotations. Though my grandmother Lena ultimately never instilled her budget-friendly food tenets in me, her large stockpiling and frequent usage of these instant noodles have been adopted wholeheartedly.

For cooking, mix in left-over proteins, varieties of seafood, or go strictly vegetarian. These noodles can provide an empty canvass for creating a very satisfying dish, particularly when time constraints don’t always allow for more creativity.

During moments of post-work inertia, a generic, consistent and comforting favorite of mine is stir-frying pre-prepared noodles with drips of sesame oil, soy sauce and Sriracha, folding in handfuls of crushed peanuts, raw bean sprouts, sliced scallions and rips of pineapple. Feeling golden, I will have prepared a lazy, well-rounded dish that feeds the stomach gracefully.

Thanks grandma.

My next GL award goes to these instant noodles of a very long, unnecessary name. Again, just think instant yakisoba and you’ll be just fine.

Goodbye Palatte, Hello Local Breeze

In Phoenix: Downtown, Restaurant News and Gossip on May 4, 2009 at 11:21 AM
photo courtesy of David SB (phxrailfood)

(David Bickford/phxrailfood.com)

Update 5/9/2009: Local Breeze is now officially open for business (expect full review in the coming weeks).

For devoted Downtown diners, the loss of Palatte was definitely a surprise, but it was never entirely a shock.

To many patrons, the restaurant itself had an awkward internal flow, and its take on the popular fast-casual dining concept wasn’t always clear to everyone.

Also, remember that hodgepodge of a patio? I never understood that massive, completely ill-utilized space. Was all of that outdoor furniture for sale? Could customers sit anywhere? Could we just grab a drink, and lounge? So many questions for a concept intended to be so simple.

Why I liked Palatte was clear – it’s breakfast. They did a really good job at it. It was nice to find a place decent enough to forgo the weekend swarm at nearby Matt’s Big Breakfast without also forsaking satisfying morning grub. Their unique selection of breakfast scrambles in particular, were great. Anyone recall their sweet potato pancakes? I always found them to be one of the best items on the menu. Why again were they removed?

It was obvious to the most serious observers that the place was constantly in flux. Major kinks needed to be worked out, but they were constantly altering things that didn’t need attention to begin with – those annoyingly fluctuating hours, those strange deletions of popular menu items, and again, that god-forsaken patio.

Can I mention that patio just one more time?

In any event, I’ll digress. Patio or no patio, Palatte’s closing was probably for the best, despite my inclination for remorse.

Moving on to the new and positive: Local Breeze. That is the name of the new restaurant planned to occupy Palatte’s former space in the historic Cavness House in Downtown’s historic Roosevelt neighborhood. Original hopes were to open the restaurant this month, but like other similar dining developments right now, please take that with a big grain of kosher salt.

Those behind Local Breeze are some of the same folks who were behind the famed Pischke’s Paradise in Old Town Scottsdale. That is the name of the once-adored restaurant which fell victim to a (sort of) hostile takeover by local chef-heavyweight Robert McGrath. A change of hands that, in turn, ultimately couldn’t survive itself. Good intentions on McGrath’s part or not, karma can be unrelenting.

Sid Campbell, Pischke’s original chef, is now Local Breeze’s main man. Coming out of hiding, Campbell is creating a broad, “island themed” menu boasting lots of locally grown ingredients. For the remorseful Pischke’s followers (and for those who never had an opportunity to eat there to begin with), chef-owner Campbell also plans on immigrating old favorites from the now-defunct restaurant to Local Breeze’s menu. Most notably the Fire Island eggs and firecracker shrimp.

Local Breeze will serve lunch, dinner, as well as breakfast. Plans are also in the works for an ambitious drink list, with a heavy focus on local Arizona wines and beers.

Oh, and don’t forget about that patio. I will get a petition going if I have to.

Local Breeze | localbreeze.com | 606 N. 4th Ave | Downtown Phoenix

Moment of Geek, Thanks to Julia Child

In Cooking, Media, Personal Ramblings on May 2, 2009 at 11:41 AM

6336259885657779941

My own associations with Julia Child are, for lack of a better word, dicey. It seems like everyone heavily interested in food or cooking has their own story that can one-up the other person’s. Well, there will be no one-upping here.

I was taken by her from as far back as I can remember. Before even reaching proper manhood, and I was already obsessed – with her cooking, her demeanor and positive vibe, and her genuine love of all things food. I spent many childhood years trying, or pretending rather, to cook like Julia. I was too young to wield a proper kitchen knife, let alone even attempt to prepare one of her recipes. I merely loved to watch her.

My unhealthy early-childhood preoccupation with Julia Child even spilled over into my social life. When other children wanted to come over to my house and watch afternoon cartoons, instead of He-Man or Thundercats, I always insisted on watching Julia Child’s cooking shows on PBS. I was a total brat, and needless to say, this self-imposed social alienation didn’t go over so well with the superhero crowds. Many potential childhood friends were lost over the years, I’m sure.

As I grew older however, my once pronounced compulsion to be like Julia Child unfortunately eroded a bit. In fact, I’d say dormant until just in the past 5-10 years, when my no-boundary love for all things food re-emerged so strongly. Her affable and honest personality made her a magnet for both food snobs and philistines alike – she alienated no one. Though I am regretful that she isn’t still around to follow in real-time anymore, I know she lives on in my smelly, used collection of her famous cookbooks. And of course, thankfully PBS still plays re-runs.

Inspired by this real-life blog, Julie & Julia opens this August. I can’t wait–

Do you have a Julia story of your own? It’s not hard to one-up me.

Opening Soon: St. Francis

In Phoenix: Midtown, Restaurant News and Gossip on May 1, 2009 at 5:45 PM
St. Francis, as of 5/27/2009.

St. Francis, as of 5/22/2009.

Update 09/05/2009: St. Francis is now open. Website with menu available. For my opening night preview in the Downtown Phoenix Journal, go HERE.

Just open already.

For nearly a year now, we’ve been anxiously awaiting (read: nearly frothing over) the opening of St. Francis, a much-hyped new restaurant on Midtown’s northern fringe. We’ve been teased with drips of information in the interim, which only seems to exacerbate local buzz even more-so.

One of the reasons is simple. St. Francis is one of the first genuinely high-profile dining spots to open in Midtown in recent memory (the new Gallo Blanco Cafe and Postino Central also come to mind). If fact, if the hype pans out, St. Francis could be considered the formal beginning of Midtown’s big dining bang. We’ve only been teased up until now.

Don’t get me wrong, there are great spots to eat in Midtown – Pane Bianco, Durant’s, Tuck Shop, Lola Tapas, Coronado Cafe, just to name a few. They all contribute greatly. However, the area hasn’t exactly been considered a true dining destination worthy of distant travel to as, say, other spots like the Biltmore and Arcadia areas, Downtown Scottsdale, North Scottsdale, etc.

Even Downtown (Phoenix) has moved up the dining destination ladder with the recent and impressive additions of Sens, Moira Sushi, PastaBAR, etc.

The magnetism behind St. Francis is chef-owner Aaron Chamberlin, who has fine-tuned his known culinary mojo at such acclaimed restaurants as Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s flagship NYC restaurant Jean-Georges, Washington D.C.’s power-haunt Citronelle, as well as a couple of notable, multi-acclaimed restaurants in San Francisco. Since moving to the Phoenix area several years ago, Chamberlin has also been associated with locally famed La Grande Orange Hopsitality.

It’s like, we get it already. You’re good.

Site as of 5/22/2009.

Site as of 5/22/2009.

Chamberlin, along with his partner (in more-ways-than-one) Lori Fenn, are developing a rustic, French-accented seasonal American menu, with a primed focus on “wood-fired” preparations.

Anyone who has driven along Camelback Road, just east of Central Avenue (at 2nd Street) has noticed the construction. Or, maybe re-construction is more appropriate.

St. Francis is taking over the notable two-story, mid-century office building that was originally constructed in the 1950s by architect Harold Ekman. St. Francis earns its name from the residential neighborhood of the same name just to its south.

The structure itself was beautiful, in that classic, ‘mid-century Phoenix’ sort of aesthetic. It thankfully appears that the folks behind the renovation are doing a careful job of enhancing its features without removing too much of its retro charm. And lucky for us patrons, apparently Chamberlin plans on utilizing both levels of the building for our dining experience.

The new space is planned to be upscale in product but casual in vibe, with the majority of entrees priced below $20. Once open, both a lunch and dinner menu is to be offered, as well as an all-day brunch menu on Sundays.

Keep an eye out in the coming days for a website, and more announcements. But please, hurry up and open already.

Expect a full review once this snail opens for business.

St. Francis | 111 E. Camelback | Midtown Phoenix

Grub Love: Frozen Peas

In Cooking, Grub Love, Personal Ramblings on May 1, 2009 at 1:07 PM

Frozen Sweet Peas

I know what many of you might say. Any self-respecting food nerd would gasp at the idea of using frozen vegetables.

Well, I cannot wait to disagree. I am coming out of the snob closet for my favorite frozen treat⎯peas. While I will agree that the vast glut of vegetables in our markets’ frozen food aisles are of depleted quality, frozen peas have time and time again, won over my frozen, green heart.

Betty Crocker no longer rules the dinner table, and we need not avoid these icy beads any more. Never again must we be relegated to those mealy, re-stimulated and often grossly under-seasoned versions we all grew up tormented by. I’m not your psychiatrist, but it’s okay to eat peas once frozen again.

More-so than for simply taste (because I know fresh are inherently superior), for sheer versatility alone, frozen peas are my kitchen’s number-one staple food item. If I were to write a cookbook someday (you know, over that rainbow), I would begin with one of those clichéd lists of my top five or ten recommended food items to always keep stocked in your pantry or fridge. You know, like the basics⎯quality olive oil, kosher salt, coarse pepper, blah, blah, blah, but also: packages of frozen peas.

Frozen Peas

These toothy green pearls will save for the ages, and can participate in almost any dish. They can equally help finish an otherwise boring meal, turning it into something much more gratifying.

Best of all, peas are ethnically blind. Besides being an underrated side (* don’t overcook and under-season folks) to a-many ubiquitous American meat-and-potato dinnertime constructs⎯as well as dedicated players in soups and stews⎯I constantly add them to stir-frys, pasta dishes and Mexican spreads alike. We’re talking worldly little balls.

Again, it goes without mention that fresh organic peas are always preferred. In a pinch however, I don’t often have the time (and the resulting patience) to de-pod a heap of peas every time I cook. Having a stockpile of the frozen version on hand, at all times, ensures that taste, variety and convenience cannot all be entirely, and mutually exclusive.

Without further adieu, my first GL (Grub Love) award goes to those sweet frozen peas.

Frozen Peas

Green Peas on FoodistaGreen Peas

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.