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Friday, October 28, 2011

tomato jam

mark bittman's tomato jam


A month or so after bookmarking Luisa's version of Mark Bittman's tomato jam I had some leftover tomatoes from making Yotam Ottolenghi's shakshuka and decided it was jam time.

I was a little wary of following Luisa's lazy-person canning tip (just boil the jars for a while to sterilize them, then dry them out, fill them with hot jam, close them up, and turn them upside down for a while, and you should hear the sound of the jars sealing themselves as they cool) but I gave it a try, figuring worst-case I would just refrigerate the jam once it was cool and eat it up quickly. But, sure enough, there was the unmistakable sound of jar lids popping as they sealed in the kitchen about a half an hour after I filled them. Wild! I will eventually get up the nerve to give hot water bath canning a try (it doesn't sound terribly hard or anything), but I was pretty pleased with my first canning experiment.

As for the jam itself, I was somehow expecting it to taste more savory than it did. Make no mistake, this is jam. It's sweet. But it's also got a more complex thing going on than blueberry or blackberry jam does. There are definitely some spicy, savory notes to it, and as long as you eat it as you would any other kind of jam it'll be a lovely little surprise. My favorite thing to do with jam is put it on bread with Frischkäse (Neuchatel cheese, in the U.S. -- lighter than regular cream cheese), and tomato jam + Frischkäse, pictured above, is one seriously delicious combination. I've promised my third and last jar of tomato jam to my friend Ann, and I had better get that package in the mail sooner rather than later. Otherwise, it's going to be a jam-free package.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

fall light

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Pretty fall weather down by the Main Café on Sunday, and nice light on Oeder Weg.

Monday, October 10, 2011

two weekends of friends

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[full set here]

Two weeks ago: Lucy! Signs at the airport. Breakfast at Cafe Karin. Potters' balcony x 2. Dinner at Lobster. Park lounging. Mainufer lounging. Frankfurter Oktoberfest. The Tree House, Round One.

This past weekend: Suz! Gaststätte Mosebach: delicious Grüne Soße and the best Bratkartoffeln I've ever had. The Tree House, Round Two. This shakshuka. This pumpkin bread pudding (topped with Greek yogurt = yowza, though it could do with about half the butter, and be sure to soak the bread in the custard before baking). Family-style Vietnamese at Toan, plus homemade chocolate cake and berry-topped cheesecake (and emergency cupcakes). Apfelwein at O-Ton.

I think we're firmly entrenched in fall now, but after the glory that was the long weekend when Lucy was here, I'm all right with that. It's allowed to be fall in October.

the coolest bar in frankfurt

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My friends and I spend a lot of time talking about cities, specifically, about cities that have a wow-factor. New York has it; London has it; Istanbul most definitely has it; but we're of the opinion that no city in Germany really has it. Or rather, we were of that opinion before we went to Pret-A-Diner's pop-up bar/restaurant The Tree House on the roof of the Nextower and discovered that Frankfurt actually does have some world-class appeal after all. It's only open until October 22nd (though I have high hopes for the Nextower turning this space into a permanent bar, please oh please), so get in there while you can -- it requires a reservation (and its website requires registration), but during the week there's no cover charge and trust me, the view is worth it. Just don't be in a hurry to get your drinks. Watching the bartenders mix them is a slow slow slow art form.
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