Monday, January 10, 2022
Cheddar Corn Chowder
Sunday, January 9, 2022
The Cocktail Party
Before Ina owned the Barefoot Contessa, she would spend hours making hors d'oeuvres for a cocktail party. After, she found it more important to have fun and spend time with her friends. She now has several guidelines:
- All the fixings for drinks are on a table in the room where cocktails are served. Pick one or two drinks. Don't overcomplicate it.
- Don't leave the room. Choose appetizers that can be served at room temperature. Put everything out on the table for serving before the first guest arrives.
- A cocktail party is not about the food. It's about the guests. Focus on the guest list. Be intentional but leave room for "surprises" too.
- Serve five to six different kinds of appetizers and three of each kind per person. Plan the menu like a meal: seafood, veggies, meat, with a dessert platter at the end.
I tried her Roasted Eggplant Spread from The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook and liked it. She touts it as a recipe that is not only good but good for you (so you can save your calories for dessert!). My husband is not a fan of eggplant. I thought, surely, roasting and blending and chopping he would not even taste the eggplant, but...he's still not a fan of eggplant. :)
Ina suggested serving this recipe alongside other Mediterranean specialties like hummus, pita bread, olives, feta cheese, and stuffed grape leaves. In her cooking show, Ina also recommends reimagining your leftovers - so I took my lucky black eyed peas left over from New Year's and made Black Eyed Pea Hummus. (This was my husband's favorite!)
Saturday, January 8, 2022
The Art of Not Cooking or the Locavore's Dilemma
So how can you be a student of not cooking? Look around you! Base your cooking on ingredients that come from local sources. The Locavore's Dilemma? You gotta KNOW the local sources. If you can't find any sources nearby, turn to the options available by mail from producers all over the country - but keep your eyes and ears open. LOOK for the local and use that when possible.
The menu at Barefoot Contessa was based on "simple, fresh, seasonal food." The key to simple food, though, is to use only the best ingredients. Buy them in season and buy them from the source. And experiment. Taste the strawberries. Try three different kinds of olive oil and see which one you like best.
I am from the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I moved just three hours north to Jackson and I can't find local shrimp on a regular basis (besides the guy who brings up a cooler and sits at the gas station from time to time). I have to buy it in bulk when I visit and freeze it. I did not realize how many of my recipes depended on fresh shrimp until I no longer had it.
One of my projects for this month is to actively look for what I do have available fresh around me and focus on that, rather than what I don't have! This summer, I discovered the fresh peaches available at Bank Farm in Brandon (and their peach jam and peach preserves). I need to find other similar farms near me.
What farms do you have near you? Give them a shout out in the comments!
Monday, January 3, 2022
Mastering the Art of Not Cooking
Sunday, January 2, 2022
Martha and Ina
Martha Stewart wrote the foreword for Ina's very first cookbook, The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook. In the foreword, she extols Ina's joi-de-vivre, intense curiosity, intelligence, and sense of humor. Martha met her at the Barefoot Contessa store as a customer and the two became fast friends. They had shared interests in cooking, gardening, entertaining, designing, and building (particularly renovating old homes in East Hampton). Martha even introduced Ina to an editor when she had her book proposal ready, which helped get her cookbook empire rolling.
Their friendship surprises many, as Ina is often seen as almost an anti-Martha. In the foreword, though, Martha compliments the simplicity and "lack of finickiness" in Ina's recipes. (And, obviously, Martha was often following Ina's own advice and buying rather than making what she could from local specialty stores. Ina also catered many benefits at Martha's house.)
Martha applauds Ina's "practical approach" on entertaining which focuses more on coddling people than lemon curd - which offers an interesting contrast to Martha's entertaining style of fancy recipes with elaborate presentations. Martha acknowledges, in a way, that there is room for both styles. Before Food Network gave Ina her own TV show, she even did a spec show for Martha's media empire, but it never got the green light.
Despite Ina's down-home style, when a Bacardi survey asked for a preferred drinking buddy - Martha or Ina - the majority chose Martha (78%!). But if I were Ina, I would demand a recount. I have a feeling after her famous pandemic Cosmo pitcher, the vote of many may have changed!
Saturday, January 1, 2022
Thank You
In her first cookbook, The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook, published in 1999, Ina thanks a host of characters:
- Frank Newbold - High-end real estate broker and business partner to Ina. He encouraged her to start writing. She wrote a column in both House Beautiful and Martha Stewart Living during his long-term partner's (Stephen Drucker) tenure as editor-in-chief at the publications. (Martha Stewart was a mentor to Ina too and wrote the foreword in her first cookbook. She is thanked also.)
- Diana Stratta - She purchased the Barefoot Contessa food specialty store in the Hamptons from her after seeing an ad in the New York Times in 1978. It was already named (and open!). Ina moved from Washington DC to the Hamptons to run the store. She had never visited the locale. She had never run a business. She had never worked in the food industry.
- Parker Hodges, who was the chef and a business partner (now a restaurant owner) at the Barefoot Contessa (and has quite a few of her recipes named after him) and Amy Baiata (now Amy Baiata Forst), who was a business partner (now a real estate agent). In 1999, Ina sold the Barefoot Contessa store to Parker. Five years later, she would buy the business back from Hodges.
- Harry Goodale
- Suzanna Guiliano, a friend (and her accountant)
- Paul Hodges (Parker's brother, who also worked in the kitchen at Barefoot Contessa and is now co-owner with his brother of The Canal Cafe.)
- Shawn Miller
- Alex Lazen
- Peter Ranft
- Larry Hayden, a pastry chef who supplied her books with several recipes
- Melanie Acevedo, who was the photographer for the cookbook
- Rori Spinelli, the food stylist for the cookbook
- Denise Canter, the stylist
- Cecily Stranahan, a now retired psychotherapist and an interfaith minister
- Pam Bernstein, Ina's agent
- Roy Finamore, Ina's editor
- Devon Fredericks and Susan Costner, owners of Loaves & Fishes specialty store in Sagaponack, NY (Ina singles out their cookbooks as one of her favorites in a Splendid Table podcast interview and here too.)
- Eli Zabar of the Amagansett Farmer’s Market
- Sarah Chase of The Open House Cookbook (another of Ina's favorites). She founded the Massachusetts specialty food shop and catering business Que Sera Sarah.
- Brent Newsom from Brent Newsom Catering