New Braunfels Career & College Fair Tomorrow

The Chamber’s Business-Education Partnership Committee is hosting the 3rd Annual Career & College Fair on Tuesday, March 8 from 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at the Civic Convention Center. Nearly 40 booths will be set up with representatives from area businesses, colleges, universities and technical/vocational training facilities on hand to talk with students and their parents about the post-secondary opportunities that are available to them. The fair is free to attend and provides a great venue to learn about what lies ahead for students preparing for life after graduation.

Chris Snider with Texas Tito’s is currently the Chairman of the Business-Education Partnership Committee which acts as the education advocate for the community, acting on the recommendations of the Mayor’s Higher Education Task Force.

Quick Pickles

By 

Keep this easy recipe in your back pocket for when you want to add crunchy, zingy punch to whatever you’re serving. The flavor of the rice vinegar creates a pickle that goes particularly well with Asian dishes.

Featured in: Vegetarian Bowls Spiked With Vibrant Asian Flavors.

INGREDIENTS

  • 4 small firm cucumbers, such as Kirby or Persian, peeled or scrubbed, sliced 1/8-inch thick
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 ½ teaspoons fine sea salt
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar

PREPARATION

  1. Slice cucumbers 1/8-inch thick using a mandoline or a sharp knife. Toss with the sugar and salt and leave in a colander to drain for 20 to 30 minutes. Rinse well and drain.
  2. In a bowl, toss cucumbers with the vinegar, tasting and adding more as desired. Store in a container in the refrigerator for up to a week.

 

‘Love, Loss’ And Spicy Pickles In Padma Lakshmi’s New Memoir

By NPR Staff – NPR

Padma Lakshmi is probably best known as the host of the TV show Top Chef on Bravo, but she’s also worked as a model and an actress. Lakshmi was born in India, and moved to America to be with her mother, who’d moved to the States after the breakup of her arranged marriage.

Raised between two countries, she developed a love of food and family. And then, in her 20s, she met and fell in love with the author Salman Rushdie.

“He’s an extremely brilliant and charming and layered and complicated man,” she tells NPR’s Rachel Martin. “If you’re someone who’s like me, and especially Indian, it’s sort of like meeting Hemingway in your twenties, you know?”

Lakshmi came out the other side of that marriage, had a child, lost a partner to brain cancer — and still kept working on TV and writing cookbooks. She writes about it all in a new memoir: Love, Loss and What We Ate.

Interview Highlights

On being a supertaster

From my earliest childhood memories I can remember being in the kitchen, and my grandmother and my aunts and my older cousins, and my mother, certainly, all taught me about food. I only found out recently from a scientist in Seattle at the Science Museum that I am a supertaster, and I never knew that was actually a thing … I bring it up because from a very early age, I was always very curious about eating foods that normally toddlers don’t eat. Very sour things like mango and tamarind, very bitter things like fermented foods or certain Asian vegetables. And you know, you don’t really give a bowl of fiery indian pickles to a 2-year-old! And yet I was climbing up on my grandmother’s shelves in the kitchen like a monkey, sort of like a temple monkey, to try and get at the pickle jars … I think my young palate needed that stimulation.

On coming to America at the age of 4 and eating nothing but rice

I was very used to a lacto-vegetarian Hindu Brahmin diet, and so I found it hard to eat American foods. So we would have to seek out restaurants that had rice — whether it was a Chinese restaurant or a Mexican restaurant, or whatever. And luckily we lived in New York City, and I experienced the city through my palate, and it was an exciting place to grow up as a child. It gave me great independence, but it also allowed me to really experience a lot of the world in a much less sheltered way than I would if I was living anywhere else.

On how Top Chef has changed the way she cooks and eats

Getting to rub shoulders with all of these great chefs, from Thomas Keller to Daniel Boulud to Jacques Pepin and on and on, it does inform my thinking about food — I mean, how could it not? But our show is really about professional chefs who command a kitchen that puts out 200 plates of food that are all different, and hot, and come out at the same time. But, you know, it has informed me immensely. I would consider myself a culinary spelunker, and I love nothing more than to go to a new town or city, and discover that city through its food.

Weinie Dog’s offers unique takes on classic dish

By Justin Phillips / American Press

I couldn’t be a competitive eater. Well, I could, but just not with foods that I actually enjoy. If there was a popular, nationally televised eating competition where the competitors had to scarf down as many bowls of canned peas as possible, I could probably do that. Nobody truly likes canned peas and eating them quickly is almost like doing your taste buds a favor.

The eating competitions that would trip me up are the popular ones. Chicken wing eating contests, donut eating contests, and most importantly, hot dog eating contests, these are the activities where I’d easily lose.

While the rest of the field is wolfing the food down in as few bites as possible, I’d be on stage next to them in a chair with my feet up while eating slowly and enjoying the flavors. They may see it as a hot dog-eating race, but I’d just see it as free hot dogs.

“Look at them,” I’d think while pieces of hot dogs went flying past me as my competition raced against the clock. “Eating that fast, they can’t possibly be enjoying this stuff.”

If you’re like me and you love hot dogs so much that the annual Nathan’s hot dog eating contest seems like a crime against humanity, then I have a place you’ll love — Weinie Dog’s Hot Dog Stand. The stand moves around, but the place you can find it most often is inside Chicageaux Bar at 829 University Drive. In the past, it could be seen at a few other local late-night establishments as well. They’re even planning a move to a permanent building in the future.

Since about 2011, Weinie Dog’s has been specializing in not only the art of the hot dog, but also the art of anything that sounds like a filling mid-afternoon or late night treat. The menu includes burgers, sandwiches, unique french fry dishes and delicious spins on egg rolls.

The stars of the menu have to be the hot dogs. From the Rick James dog that comes topped with pepperoni, bacon, jalapeno mayo, Sriracha, red onion sauce, nacho cheese and jalapenos, or its the homemade macaroni and cheese covered Mac and Weenie — every version is special in its own way.

Tuesday, I stopped by the little shop for lunch and ordered two incredibly unique hot dogs — the Viator and the Chicageaux. These two are obviously references to pillars in our community. The Viator name is synonymous in Lake Charles with McNeese football. Well, it was. Matt Viator, who led the Cowboys to an incredible season last year, is now coaching in Monroe. While that stings, it doesn’t mean I can’t eat the hot dog bearing his last name.

The hot dog comes with cheese, chili, bacon, Sriracha, jalapeno, onions, pepperoni, bacon, crushed Frito chips, and nacho cheese. Everything on this item goes well together. The chili isn’t too thick or too runny. Together with the heat of the Sriracha, the jalapenos and the bite of the onions, the dish is packed with flavor. It takes everything great about a concession stand at a college football game and crams it into one hot dog.

The Chicageaux comes with mustard, onions, tomatoes, pickles, sweet relish and peppers. The hot dog has a classic taste. Its foundation of big, full-flavored onions, tomatoes, and pickles only highlights its delicious simplicity. It’s a throwback to the hot dog versions people could possibly get on the streets of Chicago and I think that’s the point with this one.

I also ordered some of the Philly steak and cheese egg rolls. They were crunchy and filled with seasoned slices of steak and melted cheddar cheese. Not to forget about the fry list, I also ordered the chili cheese option. Similar to the simple beauty of the hot dog named after the bar, the fries were a throwback option to simple flavors.

All together, with what amounted to four legitimate lunchtime meals on one order, my bill was still less than $20.

So remember all of you competitive eaters out there, hot dogs aren’t just some junk food to be scarfed down haphazardly. These simple items are cornerstones of the food universe. A little twist here and a slight adjustment there and any hot dog can become a work of art, uniquely suiting the person lucky enough to be eating it.

My dream is that one day there is a hot dog eating competition where the point isn’t to eat as many as possible. Instead, the winner would be decided by which person was enjoying their meal the most. The competitor with the most nonchalantly blissful chews would win. Wait, I guess that’s not really a competition. It is basically just eating a meal without being in a rush. And honestly, there’s nothing wrong with that.

From ramen to jerky to bourbon, these are some food and drink trends to look out for this year

By Jake Grove of the Independent Mail

There are trends in everything these days.

Music trends tend to last about three months (anyone really remember Meghan Trainor these days?).

Fashion trends last less time, probably clocking in at about two months at the most (thank goodness skinny jeans are gone).

And don’t even get me started on the next big thing in technology, because it will be pass in a month or less (so long iPhone 6, welcome the iPhone 7).

But trends in food are something different.

Food and drink trends tend to stick around a little longer, allowing for restaurants around the country and the world to catch up a little bit and get in on the action.

Once upon a time it was vodka and its flavored counterparts that ruled the beverage roost.

Then, along came the many faces of craft beer, which has dominated the landscape for the last four to five years.

With food, we were enamored by the gluten-free lifestyle for a time and wanted to eat everything “paleo.”

But there are new trends that will stick around for the 2016 calendar year and you should know them before you head out on this year’s vacation or for your next day trip to the closest major metro.

We have put together some trends that are blowing up right now and will likely continue to do so the rest of the year.

See what you think and plan accordingly on your next dining excursion.

Ramen

Not so long ago, the broth diet fad was a thing. People were extolling the virtues of bone broth and enjoying it as a meal, a snack and everything in between. And while the broth fad might have faded, it has been replaced by something we all know and love: ramen.

But this isn’t the ramen of your college days. No, this is ramen that is made using rich, savory bone broth and noodles that won’t bust your diet.

Ramen noodles are lighter and can be manipulated to absorb flavor well and doctored to fit any taste.

You will find them in noodle shops and you can order it as pho or other noodle dishes, but it’s all the same concept.

Take some bone broth, add Asian-style noodles, put in hot sauce, soy, onions and other umami flavors and repeat.

Fermented foods/pickled foods

There is a craze out there right now for pickles.

Not just dill pickles or bread-and-butter pickled cucumbers, but all things pickled.

The days of a simple cucumber representing the pickled world are gone.

Today, it’s cauliflower, carrots, beets, ginger, Brussels sprouts, onions and so much more.

Just take a look around Anderson to see the pickled influence.

SummaJoe’s Searing Pans has one of their most popular sandwiches, the Hot and Juicy, covered with pickled veggies.

And at Carolina Bauernhaus Ales on Sunday, you can get a charcuterie board with cured meats and house-pickled veggies that pair with their funky brews.

So, look for pickles or start pickling yourself to play with this newest trend.

Crazy-topped pizza

Used to be that only a few places had the guts to have fun with their pizzas. With most of the population loving their classic pepperoni and cheese pizza, it seemed silly to try and mix things up too much. But those days are gone. The wild-topped pizza is part of the future and it’s not going anywhere.

From Mellow Mushroom to SummaJoe’s to Rick’s Pizza Pub and Joe’s New York Pizza, purveyors of this most popular pie are going way outside the box to come up with new flavors all the time. Mellow uses Asian flavors to top many of their pies while experimenting with funky cheeses and different sauce bases. At SummaJoe’s, it’s all about putting a flavor experience on a pie from their specials like smoked salmon and capers to their South Cackalacky pie with pimento cheese. Joe’s New York Pizza still makes their mark with classic pies, but have seen an uptick in wild flavor requests that just seem to work. And it’s even more interesting in the home pizza market where anything goes.

Fast casual dining

The trend of fast casual dining isn’t anything new, but it is something that is trendy right now. Places like Chipotle made this concept popular, but it’s been those places that take it to the next level that are keeping the trend alive.

In Greenville, there are spots like Grill Marks where people can enjoy a fine-dining experience with fine-dining ingredients while hanging out in their T-shirts and jeans. They can enjoy infused vodka cocktails and craft beer while waiting for their gourmet burger topped with pork belly or microgreens. It’s true of several places around Greenville and the concept is working its way toward Anderson and Clemson slowly but surely.

Jerky

Where there are pickles, dried meats are not far behind. Jerky is the kind of quick, portable snack that is ideal for people on the go. It’s packed with protein, low on sugar and can come in a variety of flavors.

It used to be that beef jerky was the only dried meat you would see, but turkey jerky, salmon jerky and wild game jerky are all making big strides to show that you can dry anything and enjoy it.

There are several jerky stores popping up in the Greenville, Charlotte and Atlanta areas with Anderson following suit to sell more jerky in specialty stores throughout the area. But with so many strict laws for making and selling jerky, you won’t see a lot of farmers markets filled with the stuff made by local folks.

Regardless, jerky is a trendy snack right now and shows no signs of slowing.

Bourbon and Scotch

On the beverage front, bourbon and Scotch have taken over for the vodkas and tequilas of yesteryear. Just look at the Scotch shelves at your local liquor store and you will see everything from a $20 bottle of basic stuff to bottles that cost $200, $300 and $400 each.

As for bourbon, it’s become the single-most popular spirit in the last couple years. People are searching for specific bottles and the secondary market on brands like the Van Winkle family of bourbons is through the roof right now. Heck, even derivations on Van Winkle are hot sellers only being allocated to accounts and then sold one bottle at a time, sometimes in a lottery.

This holds true for cocktails as well with bourbon and Scotch being mixed in creative ways at your favorite bars.

 

There are other trends to be sure. Things like hot fried chicken (thank you very much, KFC) and tropical beers (pineapple, mango and tangerine, oh my) are hot right now. There are even dining experiences that will be hot like the immersed dining or the self-serve beverage market. But these are some you can enjoy right now, before they become passe, even for Upstate South Carolina.

Obachan’s Pickle

Story by Becky Speere   –   Maui Magazine

“Do you know how to pickle?” my editor asked me. “Of course!” I replied. “All you need is a rock.”

As a third-generation, half-Japanese child growing up in Hawai‘i, I ate pickles at least once a day. No dills or gherkins; I’m talking about the savory fermented cabbage that locals call koko. Similar to German sauerkraut, it appeared on every Japanese plantation family’s dinner table.

And, like the Germans, each household had a vessel dedicated to aging cabbage. My Sendai grandparents used a white enameled pot or a ceramic crock containing a heavy black river rock and a dark-brown wooden disk. The rock’s purpose: to press the water from the salted cabbage. Aunty Jane in Hakalau used a man-made press the diameter of a small dinner plate. About three inches thick and approximately five pounds, it was made of concrete imbedded with a steel handle.

Aunt Elsie’s job was to keep the koko in stock for the daily meal. After prepping the cabbage and weighing it down with the rock, she would age it for two days in the sun, then rinse it under cold tap water, gently squeezing it by hand to remove the excess salt and moisture. I remember her giving me a tiny piece to taste and asking, “Do you think it’s ready?”  As it crunched in my mouth, it tasted of salt and sweet earth.

In its early stages of fermentation, we ate the cabbage with a flurry of freshly shaved katsuo boshi — dried tuna/bonito from Japan, generally used to make miso soup dashi (stock) — drizzled with a little Aloha brand shoyu. As the days passed, the cabbage became more acidic, acquiring a welcome sour zing. At this point, we’d grind a nub of ginger to a pulp on the oroshiki (a Japanese grater that purees ginger root) and sprinkle it on the cabbage with finely sliced green onion and shoyu. The umami flavor spiked our appetites. We ate it alongside fried eggs in the morning, or at dinner with savory dishes such as chicken hekka, fried fish and vegetables, accompanied by sticky white rice. With the recent popularity of fermented foods, I thought I’d share this recipe from my obachan (grandmother). Happy eating and probiotic health to you!

 

After Forty Years, Irregardless Cafe Finally Fries Something—Pickled Potatoes, Even

By    –   Indy Week

Arthur Gordon had too much produce.

In 2012, his Raleigh institution, Irregardless Cafe & Catering, purchased a 1.5-acre garden a few miles from the restaurant, intending to increase quality control and decrease the distance between the plant and the plate. But the seasonal surpluses perplexed him, forcing him to find new ways to use what he had—or preserve it for later. So Gordon started pickling and fermenting and soon found he couldn’t stop. These days, he even talks loftily of fermenting Irregardless’s own blackberry wine.

Coincidentally, perhaps counterintuitively, the interest in pickling paralleled another new Gordon curiosity: deep-frying. Last year, after forty years in the Irregardless kitchen, he offered his first-ever fried items—calamari, falafel, and, after investing nearly fifteen-thousand dollars on twin industrial-size fryers, the restaurant’s latest wonder: salt-and-vinegar French fries.

After slicing potatoes into quarter-inch rectangular strips, Gordon pickles them in a solution of salt and sauerkraut juice for at least two days. After they’ve adequately soaked, the kitchen fries them twice in rice bran oil at escalating temperatures. The outside is crisp but yielding, as though the potatoes have an invisible thin skin. The inside is supple and hot, with the mild vinegar tang arriving early in the bite before forming a sort of delicious cloud as you chew. It’s not overpowering like a salt-and-vinegar chip (“The big boys use flavor enhancers,” Gordon reports) or too soggy, like British chips doused in malt vinegar. These are the shoestring potatoes of a giant, laced with just enough pickle zest that you need to eat the next one and the next one and the next one to verify the taste. Not a problem, really.

“I don’t want to get too heavy into fried foods. We didn’t have them for forty years because I don’t think it’s a healthy lifestyle,” Gordon says. “But they certainly taste the part. And everything in moderation is OK.”

This article appears in print with the headline “Oil and Vinegar.”

Cook’s Choice: Pickle wrap shortcut pleases palate

By Arlene Mannlein   –   Herald & Review

You know, having some fun while you go around in this life makes for a great afternoon.

And Saturday, I had good fun and good times with the group of women and their friends and family who got together to make tutus. Yes, of all things, tutus.

This fun group was primarily the committe members who support and organize Come Together Let’s Walk to help fight breast, cervical and ovarian cancers with fund raising. And, as far as I know, none of us who ranged in age from the young to the not-so-young is planning on any dance recital soon.

The tutus were made with tulle and ribbon or sometimes elastic in the group’s signature colors of pink and teal. They’ll be proudly worn, at least once, during the upcoming St. Patrick’s Day parade in advance of the group’s major fund raising event the last Saturday of June.

And, as is often the case when women gather to create and chat, there were snacks. A hearty fare  included popcorn, cookies decorated in the group’s colors, candy, vegetable pizza, cheese ball, and what I guess I’d describe as a cucumber tea sandwich. Only it wasn’t. The cucumber slice was the “bread,” topped with dip and tomato. Delightful. I’m asking committee members if they’d like to share any of those recipes, and if they are so kind, we’ll have them in future columns.

My offering was a version of the pickle wrap dip. Our group of family and friends has long enjoyed pickle wraps, those dill pickles wrapped in cream cheese and a meat, as an appetizer favorite. But a couple of years ago, I decided to try the dip version as a shortcut. That seemed to please as well as the original.

Here’s my version of the dip, modified to be, hopefully, just a wee bit healthier.

Pickle Wrap Dip

       ¼ pound either deli ham or deli style corned beef
  • 1 cup dill pickles or 1 cup dill pickle relish
  • ½ cup whipped cream cheese
  • 1/3 to ½ cup plain Greek yogurt
  • ¼ cup fat free sour cream
  • 1 tablespoon onion, minced
  • 1 teaspoon dry ranch dressing mix (optional)
  • Crackers, tortilla-style chips, cocktail breads or vegetables for dipping
  • Finely chopped meat of choice

Place into mixing bowl.

If using dill pickles, pat dry before dicing. If using dill pickle relish, drain on paper towels. Add pickle choice to meat and combine.

In separate, smaller bowl, combine cream cheese, yogurt and sour cream. Add onion or optional ranch mix. Combine. Stir into meat/pickle mixture.

Chill at least 30 minutes before serving.

Cook’s note: 1 cup of dill pickles is measured after the pickles are chopped.