Friday, May 27, 2011

Places to Try for fun eats - some new, some not @eatingout

Some of these we can try together- others are ideas for you for lunch since they are near your work.

CURE on Capitol Hill: Small, cute Cure has a beautiful meat slicer and lots of cured meats to go with it, as well as other under-$10 snacks like cheeses, a mortadella and pecorino sandwich, and maybe tuna-and-caper-stuffed Calabria cherry peppers. Then there's cocktails, a nice little wine list (a Chateau Bas rose, a grüner veltliner, a Barbera, more, $7 to $8 a glass), a nine-seat bar, and a few tables. The windows (lots of them) look out onto the tennis courts at Cal Anderson Park, and it looks like it will be very satisfying to sit and drink wine on a summer evening while watching other people play tennis. Cure’s motto: Vintum remedium es. ($$$)

WILD RYE BAKERY CAFE downtown: The head baker here came from the Herbfarm, which bodes well. They serve light breakfast and lunch itemsquiche, muffins, sandwiches, salads, soups, etc.as well as lots of baked goods and breads on the street level of the Washington State Convention Center. It has been called “adorable.” ($)

· COA MEXICAN EATERY & TEQUILERIA in Maple Leaf: A coa is an old-school tool that jimadors still use to harvest agave. COA is “a sophisticated, low-stress neighborhood eatery,” with more than 50 kinds of tequila to further reduce the stress. COA’s food deploys local ingredients, with salsas and sauces made fresh daily; owner (and third-generation restaurateur) Edgar Carreon grew up in Ciudad de Durango and Sinaloa. COA’s happy hour looks goodMexican beers for $3, house margaritas $5, tacos $1.50, and other snacks for $3 to $5. ($$)


· NOOK in the University District: This tiny place on the Ave is co-owned by Alex Green, who started cooking in his hometown of Atlanta under Top Chef All-Star winner Richard Blais, and here has done time at Re:Public and Earth & Ocean. At Nook, he makes special-recipe biscuits (with jam or Nutella or bacon-egg-cheddar), sandwiches on Grand Central bread (like a meatloaf patty melt, white bean/preserved lemon/parsley/tomato, and maybe pork rillettes), and soups, all for (quite a bit) under $10. Note that hours are odd: MonWed 10 am6 pm, ThuFri 10 am8 pm, and an excellent-sounding biscuit brunch on Saturdays from 8 am2 pm.

TACOS CHUKIS on Capitol Hill: A Mexico City-style taco joint, including an adobada grilla vertical meat rotisserie deployed thusly: “A pineapple on top drips juice and caramelizes as the meat cooks, and a slice of the grilled pineapple is served in the taco.” Um, YES, PLEASE.

Cafe Mox (Ballard)
5105 Leary Ave
Seattle, WA 98107
(206) 436-0540
Website
Card Kingdom is more than 7,000 square feet of gaming paradise (their description, not ours), and Cafe Mox is the attached bar and cafe, with sandwiches (mini grilled cheese!), salads, beer, wine, cider, and mead. They say you can bring pretty much any game in from the shop and try it out! Daily 10 am-10 pm

Monday, May 23, 2011

Sweet Grilled Chicken


Gwyneth Paltrow's Grilled Chicken with Peach BBQ Sauce
Paltrow prepares one batch of this barbecue sauce with adobo to share with her husband and finishes another with soy sauce for the kids. "You can use it on basically anything grilled," she says. Two things to remember: The chicken tastes best when cooked on a grill so you get that char. To amplify flavor, Paltrow marinates the meat in some of the sauce before grilling, then lacquers the chicken again on the grill just before serving.

Ingredients

    • 1 cup chopped peeled fresh peaches or 9-10 ounces frozen sliced peaches, thawed, chopped
    • 1/2 cup ketchup
    • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
    • 2 garlic cloves, minced
    • 1 1/2 teaspoons adobo sauce from canned chipotle chiles in adobo or 1 teaspoon soy sauce
    • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • 4 skinless, boneless organic chicken breasts
    • Vegetable oil
    • ingredient info
    • Canned chipotle chiles in adobo are sold in better supermarkets and at specialty foods stores and Latin markets.

Preparation

    • Combine first 5 ingredients in a small saucepan. Season lightly with salt and pepper and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to low; simmer until peaches are very soft and flavors meld, about 10 minutes. Remove pan from heat; let cool. Pour peach mixture into a blender and purée until smooth. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Place half the sauce in a medium bowl; add the chicken and turn to coat. Let marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes, or cover and chill for up to 8 hours, turning occasionally. Cover and refrigerate remaining sauce.
    • Prepare a grill to medium-high heat. Brush grill rack with oil. Grill chicken until browned and almost cooked through, 4-5 minutes per side. Brush on all sides with reserved sauce; grill until glazed and cooked through, 1-2 minutes per side. Slice crosswise. Serve remaining sauce alongside.


Read More http://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/2011/06/grilled-chicken-with-peach-bbq-sauce#ixzz1NDLLMThR