Gerry Furth-Sides

Contemporary Greek Cuisine with Love to America

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The invitation read:

UntitledThe sumptuous table setting looked like this:

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The deconstructed, fresh food in the Greek Nice N Easy restaurants look like this:

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And the story goes like this:

Chef Chris Athanasiadis and restaurateur Dimitris Christoforidis who created the Nice-N-Easy Restaurants in Athens and Mikonos came from Greece to create “a dinner of Cycladic Fare” last night at Culina Restaurant at the Four Seasons Hotel, Los Angeles, on Doheny). It was part of an American tour to introduce their food to an  audience. The contemporary restaurants are named after the Frank Sinatra song, “Nice-N-Easy.”

Synchronistically, Inotheke, a contemporary dining destination from Carolos Tomazos, just recently opened in Santa Monica.   It also showcases modern Greek from Mediterranean Island, Cyprus, Tomazos’ homeland.

The name was inspired by the Frank Sinatra song when Christoforidis’s desire to use Hollywood’s golden era as the theme. “The combination of the classic film era and the healthy cuisine works organically together. In fact there is even a dish on the menu to the singer who popularized the song, “The Frank Sinatra. ” Bold and elegant as the singer,  it is the Black Angus free-range filet of beef topped with a wild mushroom sauce, mashed carrots and grilled young potatoes.

Christoforidis has has enormous success in Los Angeles in the mid-90’s with a luxurious restaurant-club concept named Sanctuary just outside Beverly Hills, which catered to celebrities.  He returned to Greece in 2003 and developed the fresh, casual food theme with even greater success in Athens and on Mykonos.

The contemporary menu the pair showed off at the dinner, started with a pre-dinner plate of Greek olive oil and walnut butter to go with the bread. IMG_3607

Each course featured a vegan option. For example, has a vegan alternative had beet root tartare instead of tuna.

First course 

tuna tartare, chives, avocadeo, olive oil, lime zest, quinoa tabouli, micro greens, yogurt drops.
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Second course

A modern Fava Bean Spread, tomato, Pickled onion, Grilled Octopus, Micro leaves, Botarga.

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Salad course 

New Style Greek salad with quail egg egg and feta cheese

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Entree

Lamb loin with red wine, gravy sauce, eggplant caviar, red pepper coulisIMG_3630

Dessert

Our new favorite was the Greek yogurt Mousse with Honey Jelly and Berries because it was the most straightforward of the deconstructed dishes.

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Chef Athanasiadis told writer, Faye Levy (shown here with the chef and Christoforidis), that “he is inspired by other Mediterranean cuisines. His delicious stuffed eggplant, for example, was his take on the Turkish classic dish Imam Bayildi, with the traditional topping of onions and tomatoes cooked not only with olive oil but also with red wine and raisins.

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The style of such a colorful dinner with dishes enhanced with superb olive oil and with generous proportions of vegetables and fruits, which Athanasiadis and Christoforidis call organic contemporary Mediterranean cuisine, could also have been described as modern Israeli, modern Provencal or modern California cuisine.”

Contemporary Mediterranean cuisine  using fresh, high quality Farm-To-Table ingredients; a variety of drinks, plus a warm and welcoming atmosphere have become the trademarks of Nice n Easy organic restaurant bistros.  On the menu, you will find nutritional values and measurement of calories for each dish served as well as a fine selection of gluten free courses.

Dimitris Christoforidis and Chef Christos Athanasiadis began with their first location in Kolonaki, followed by two more in Kifissia and Mykonos.

The background goes like this:

Born in Kozani, Christoforidis dreamed of someday creating a life he would love to live beyond the fields surrounding his family’s home in northern Greece. An admirer of the Los Angeles Lakers from his early teens, his wish “to be an LA Laker” did come partially true later when, after living in Sweden and then Chicago and New York City, he ended up in southern California. But he was there to create Sanctuacry, place of escape for professional sports players and other celebrities that offered deliciously healthy food. This place was Sanctuary, a restaurant/lounge that soon became an exclusive hideaway for many in the entertainment industry.

In 2003, Greece was pulling at his heart to return. Back in Athens, Christoforidis saw the trend towards quick food and decided to develop a new twist on it with healthy cuisine. Along with his business partner, chef Chris Athanasiadis, he created his first Greek venture in 2006–the “Derlicatessen”, a healthy souvlaki eatery that used fine meats served on whole-wheat pita and freshly-made tzatziki.

But he wanted …to keep spreading the health.” The result, an organic restaurant-café/bar called “nice ‘n’ easy” which he opened with Athanasiadis in 2008 in the Greek capital’s chic Kolonaki district.  The restaurant became so successful that it became known as the ‘Hollywood of Athens’, which pleased Christoforidis.

Dishes like the “Marlon Brando Burger” (Kobe beef topped with cheddar cheese, baked onions, coleslaw and fries) and the “Anthony Quinn Quasantilla” (a warm tortilla with chicken filet, gouda cheese and vegetables, sprinkled with a sweet chili sauce).

Chef Chris Athanasiadis and restaurateur Dimitris Christoforidis who oversees the Nice-N-Easy Restaurants in Athens and Mikonos came from Greece to create “a dinner of Cycladic Fare” last night at Culina Restaurant at the Four Seasons Hotel. It was part of an American tour to introduce their food to an American audience. The contemporary restaurants are named after the Frank Sinatra song, “Nice-N-Easy.”

The name was inspired by the Frank Sinatra song and Christoforidis’s desire to use Hollywood’s golden era as the theme. “The combination of the classic film era and the healthy cuisine works organically together. In fact there is even a dish on the menu to the singer who popularized the song, “The Frank Sinatra. ” Bold but elegant, it is the Black Angus free-range filet of beef topped with a wild mushroom sauce, mashed carrots and grilled young potatoes.

Their contemporary menu in America concept featured a vegan complementary option for choice. For example, the first course featured tuna tartare, quinoa tabouli and avocado, and its vegan alternative had beet root tartare instead of tuna.

Chef Athanasiadis told writer, Faye Levy, that he is inspired by other Mediterranean cuisines. His delicious stuffed eggplant, for example, was his take on the Turkish classic dish Imam Bayildi, with the traditional topping of onions and tomatoes cooked not only with olive oil but also with red wine and raisins.

Faye added, ” The style of such a colorful dinner with dishes enhanced with superb olive oil and with generous proportions of vegetables and fruits, which Athanasiadis and Christoforidis call organic contemporary Mediterranean cuisine, could also have been described as modern Israeli, modern Provencal or modern California cuisine.”

At ‘Nice N Easy’ organic restaurant bistro, a contemporary Mediterranean cuisine is served using high quality Farm-To-Table ingredients.

In Nice N Easy, the cuisine is fresh, the drinks are diverse and appealing and the atmosphere is warm and welcoming. The emphasis on eating organically grown food that is healthy for you and the environment is at the forefront of every recipe. On the menu, you will find nutritional values and measurement of calories for each dish served as well as a fine selection of gluten free courses.

The restaurant with its jazz & old Hollywood inspired feeling was conceived and developed by Dimitris Christoforidis and Chef Christos Athanasiadis with their first location in Kolonaki, followed by two more in Kifissia and Mykonos.

Born in Kozani, Christoforidis dreamed of someday creating a life he would love to live beyond the fields surrounding his family’s home in northern Greece. An admirer of the Los Angeles Lakers from his early teens, his wish “to be an LA Laker” did come partially true later when, after living in Sweden and then Chicago and New York City, he ended up in southern California. But he was there to create Sanctuary, place of escape for professional sports players and other celebrities that offered deliciously healthy food. This place was Sanctuary, a restaurant/lounge that soon became an exclusive hideaway for many in the entertainment industry.

In 2003, Greece was pulling at his heart to return. Back in Athens, Christoforidis saw the trend towards quick food and decided to develop a new twist on it with healthy cuisine. Along with his business partner, chef Chris Athanasiadis, he created his first Greek venture in 2006–the “Derlicatessen”, a healthy souvlaki eatery that used fine meats served on whole-wheat pita and freshly-made tzatziki.

But he wanted …to keep spreading the health.” The result, an organic restaurant-café/bar called “nice ‘n’ easy” which he opened with Athanasiadis in 2008 in the Greek capital’s chic Kolonaki district.

The restaurant became so successful that it became known as the ‘Hollywood of Athens’, which pleased Christoforidis.

Dishes like the “Marlon Brando Burger” (Kobe beef topped with cheddar cheese, baked onions, coleslaw and fries) and the “Anthony Quinn Quasantilla” (a warm tortilla with chicken filet, gouda cheese and vegetables, sprinkled with a sweet chili sauce).

Chef Chris Athanasiadis and restaurateur Dimitris Christoforidis who oversees the Nice-N-Easy Restaurants in Athens and Mikonos came from Greece to create “a dinner of Cycladic Fare” last night at Culina Restaurant at the Four Seasons Hotel. It was part of an American tour to introduce their food to an American audience. The contemporary restaurants are named after the Frank Sinatra song, “Nice-N-Easy.”

The name was inspired by the Frank Sinatra song and Christoforidis’s desire to use Hollywood’s golden era as the theme. “The combination of the classic film era and the healthy cuisine works organically together. In fact there is even a dish on the menu to the singer who popularized the song, “The Frank Sinatra. ” Bold but elegant, it is the Black Angus free-range filet of beef topped with a wild mushroom sauce, mashed carrots and grilled young potatoes.

Their contemporary menu in America concept featured a vegan complementary option for choice. For example, the first course featured tuna tartare, quinoa tabouli and avocado, and its vegan alternative had beet root tartare instead of tuna.

Chef Athanasiadis told writer, Faye Levy, that he is inspired by other Mediterranean cuisines. His delicious stuffed eggplant, for example, was his take on the Turkish classic dish Imam Bayildi, with the traditional topping of onions and tomatoes cooked not only with olive oil but also with red wine and raisins.

The style of such a colorful dinner with dishes enhanced with superb olive oil and with generous proportions of vegetables and fruits, which Athanasiadis and Christoforidis call organic contemporary Mediterranean cuisine, could also have been described as modern Israeli, modern Provencal or modern California cuisine.

At ‘nice n easy’ organic restaurant bistro, a contemporary Mediterranean cuisine is served using high quality Farm-To-Table ingredients.

In ‘nice n easy’, the cuisine is fresh, the drinks are diverse and appealing and the atmosphere is warm and welcoming. The emphasis on eating organically grown food that is healthy for you and the environment is at the forefront of every recipe. On the menu, you will find nutritional values and measurement of calories for each dish served as well as a fine selection of gluten free courses.

The restaurant with its jazz & old Hollywood inspired feeling was conceived and developed by Dimitris Christoforidis and Chef Christos Athanasiadis with their first location in Kolonaki, followed by two more in Kifissia and Mykonos.

Born in Kozani, Christoforidis dreamed of someday creating a life he would love to live beyond the fields surrounding his family’s home in northern Greece. An admirer of the Los Angeles Lakers from his early teens, his wish “to be an LA Laker” did come partially true later when, after living in Sweden and then Chicago and New York City, he ended up in southern California. But he was there to create Sanctuacry, place of escape for professional sports players and other celebrities that offered deliciously healthy food. This place was Sanctuary, a restaurant/lounge that soon became an exclusive hideaway for many in the entertainment industry.

In 2003, Greece was pulling at his heart to return. Back in Athens, Christoforidis saw the trend towards quick food and decided to develop a new twist on it with healthy cuisine. Along with his business partner, chef Chris Athanasiadis, he created his first Greek venture in 2006–the “Derlicatessen”, a healthy souvlaki eatery that used fine meats served on whole-wheat pita and freshly-made tzatziki.

But he wanted …to keep spreading the health.” The result, an organic restaurant-café/bar called “nice ‘n’ easy” which he opened with Athanasiadis in 2008 in the Greek capital’s chic Kolonaki district.

The restaurant became so successful that it became known as the ‘Hollywood of Athens’, which pleased Christoforidis.

Dishes like the “Marlon Brando Burger” (Kobe beef topped with cheddar cheese, baked onions, coleslaw and fries) and the “Anthony Quinn Quasantilla” (a warm tortilla with chicken filet, gouda cheese and vegetables, sprinkled with a sweet chili sauce).

Hummusphere Confirms Mideast Fare into the Mainstream Market

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Classic Traditional Smoked Hummus copy

This season Hummusphere Foods introduces into the mainstream market the first, original smoked hummus options, including the Applewood Smoked Hummus shown above.  Five unique smoked hummus varieties present a festive and a healthier choice than most dips with nearly half the calories and a fraction of the fat.

Delicious flavors include Jalapeno Black Bean, Fire Roasted Red Pepper, Classic Traditional, Black Bean Traditional, and Thai Coconut Curry. In addition, Hummusphere Foods’ has just launched 5 new Hummus Dressings! Available at retail locations throughout the US, including select Whole Foods, Fresh Market, Safeway and coming soon to Kroger. Find a store near you at www.hummusphere.com.

Gaining in popularity for decades ever since Middle Eastern dishes have become popular, sesame seeds were used to make sesame oil in food in Mesopotamia since 2500 BCE, so tahini is likely to be about that old.  The tahini part of hummus, made from sesame seeds, has also been in the Middle East since ancient times.

Tahini (sesame seed paste) is used in making hummus (boiled and crushed chick peas mixed with tahini, garlic, salt, lemon juice etc.)
In Turkey and Cyprus, tahini itself is mixed half and half with carob or grape molasses and spread on bread.  It provides the perfect, hearty snack in winter, and the mixture. Another way to serve tahini i, mixing it with lemon juice, a little tepid water, salt, garlic, and an edible  parsley and spice garnish.

Hummus on pita is a popular mezze (side dish) in taverns.  Mezze in Latin countries are known as tapas, and here in Los angeles, the small plate concept earned the honor of being the name of a short-lived restaurant.  However, the concept continues to grow every year.

New “Ground 2 Table” Revs Up Classic Herbs, Spices

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IMG_3671The enticing salad (wild sardines, mixed greens, pomegranates, pistachios, blackberries, diced pear and a sliver of Humboldt Fog cheese) pictured here drew oohs and ahs from food writers, but the mastermind behind its taste turns out to be Ground 2 Table herbs. The springy garden taste of fresh cilantro, dill, marjoram and thyme was enough on its own. Added to that in the spice packet mix that went into the dressing was dehydrated, organic turmeric, garlic, lemongrass, onion and lemon peel. The essence of these exhilarating flavors lingers on afterward, in what I can only describe as the same feeling you have after you eat sushi: clean and content.

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Ground 2 Table, Buy Small | Use It All™  , billed as a “perfectly portioned Gourmet Flavor Kit” and  designed to prepare one pound of protein on the stove,” arrives in a 4-ounce plastic package similar to single portion herbs in the produce section. A fresh herb mixture (you strip the leaves off) and a powder packet of spices designed for use as a rub is included in each one.  In order to taste the actual raw flavors, instead of a packet as a rub for cooking fish, I simply put the powder into a salad dressing of grape seed oil and rice vinegar.  Result: wow.

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Education is another feature that I love about the Ground 2 Table. Like too many home cooks, I tend to use the same, familiar herbs over and over, with no excuse as a food privileged to experience many international cuisines. This includes Southeast Asian, Middle Eastern and Indian. So I’ve had zingy lemongrass and exotic turmeric – but never tasted as directly as in this mixture.Fish

The Gourmet Flavor Kit  provides a complete set of instructions on the back of the box and a clear recipe created by professional chefs. Twelve organic Spice Blends are currently offered for about $6 a packet. The idea of the item with the Buy Small | Use It All™  motto, is providing cooks with the exact amount of Organic fresh herbs and spice blend, designed specifically to enhance  the flavor profile of the star protein. In addition to fish, there are packets for  beef steak or burger and chicken.  The recipe may call for a couple of additional simple ingredients, such as olive oil and lemon slices in the fish recipe.

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Ground 2 Table believes that to inspire healthy eating, “you should have complete control over what goes into your food.” The organic, blended spices are salt-free, sugar-free, and have no GMOs.

I add to that that if you eat a dish with balanced flavor, you will be satisfied longer and with far less and eat better. I remember Chef Sal Marino feeding me a small portion of a new dish mid-afternoon at Il Grano, and hours later, I did not want to change that mouth feel by spoiling it with dinner. So I’ve experienced how your body learns  to recognize and love natural products instead of processed foods containing salt and sugar, which usually result in a craving for more salt and sugar a short time after eating.

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Ground 2 Table is on a mission to give back to the causes its organic blends stand for, and donates to a variety of charities from organic farming to health education and waste reduction. In their mission statement: “we want our products to represent not just good eating, but good being.”

Here are a few ideas on how to put a delicious Ground 2 Table twist on a few traditional holiday favorites:

       Spice Blend 7 (Poultry):  Make  turkey, and stuffing or meatball dishes with cranberry dipping sauce unique with the pre-mix and portioned blend of sage, marjoram and rosemary in Spice Blend 7

       Spice Blend 10 (Seafood): Perk up traditional appetizers with notes of basil, oregano and rosemary in a crabmeat deviled egg dish and whole poached salmon

       Spice Blend 12 (Cinnamon & Spice): Create the easiest cinnamon apple cake, apple cider cocktail or pumpkin pie with Spice Blend 12 with flavor notes of cinnamon, nutmeg and clove to satisfy your sweet tooth – in a healthy way.

Ground 2 Table’s recipes and products are available for purchase online and in select grocers throughout the country. Pairing it with a useful kitchen tool makes a practical and unusual host gift all year round. For more details, recipe videos and images, please see: (www.ground2table.com)

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Erika Kerekes’ American NOT KETCHUP Evolved from the Chinese

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erika1
(Gerry Furth-Sides) It was very exciting to look up at a shelf at WHOLE FOODS the other day and see a whole row of Erika Kerekes’ NOT KETCHUP (www.notketchup.com) sauce towering over all the other bottles.  When I wrote the following article on Erika for the Santa Monica Mirror last year, word was getting out it was primarily sold at Santa Monica Seafood.

Erika is a food friend to many so many neighborhood and regional bloggers and neighbors that it would be wonderful to see her successful just  based on her personality alone. A working mom in the area for 20 years, this generous, brilliant Yale University graduate is well known in the food community for her blog, “in Erika’s kitchen” and for starting the first official food blogger organization in Southern California. She’s also been known to open her kitchen and home for a series of Trufflepolooza truffle parties a while back.

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Erika is also featured regularly on KCRW’s Good Food radio show, broadcast out of Santa Monica College, which is nationally syndicated, and she was named Google’s Blogger  of Note in 2010.

Erika describes herself as being a Santa Monica resident and Long Island transplant – and never going back. Her “brilliant husband Michael designed our kitchen for maximum functionality. It is the most usable space in which I’ve ever cooked or entertained. I’m more comfortable in my kitchen than in my bed.

We have an open-door policy when it comes to meals. If I know you, you’re always welcome at our table. If I meet you, I’m likely to invite you over during our first conversation. And If we haven’t met yet, what are you waiting for?”

The story of NOT KETCHUP is also perfect for her close knit family.  When they went on their annual cherry picking pilgrimage to Leona Valley a couple of years ago, her sons, Emory and Weston, went wild, picking 30 pounds of cherries in as many minutes. After Erika made as many tarts, jams, jellies and toppings possible, she still had 15 pounds of cherries left over.

So she made fridges full of homemade condiments. The texture is reminiscent of ketchup, but the flavors are entirely different: chipotle cherry, blueberry white pepper and a smokey date.

The sauces enable a home cook the means to spice up almost any dish from rotisserie chicken, grilled cheese sandwich, burgers and they are perfect for spicy, grilled sausages.

NOT KETCHUP dipping sauces are on local shelves at Bob’s Market, wine Expo, Luna Garcia and Santa Monica Seafood – where the chef also created a dish featuring the blueberry sauce now on their menu and credited. Not Ketchup is  also in Culver City stores .

A moist chicken burger that’s well seasoned, studded with green onions, and served with Blueberry White Pepper Not Ketchup.

Ingredients:

  • 1 pound ground chicken
  • 1/2 cup green onions, chopped
  • 1 teaspoon garlic salt
  • 1 Tablespoon olive oil
  • 4 burger buns or rolls
  • 1 cup Blueberry White Pepper Not Ketchup
  • 2 cups baby lettuce mix or arugula

Instructions

In a large bowl, mix the ground chicken, green onions, and garlic salt with your hands until well combined. Divide the chicken mixture into four equal parts, then shape into four patties.

Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add the olive oil, then place the chicken burgers in the pan. Cook about 10 minutes on the first side, then flip and cook until the burgers are cooked all the way through, about 8 minutes more. Put the burgers on a plate, cover with foil, and let rest 5 minutes.

To serve, spread some Blueberry White Pepper Not Ketchup on the bottom half of each bun and place a chicken burger on it. Drizzle with more Not Ketchup, add a handful of lettuce or arugula to each burger, and place the other half of each bun on top. Serve immediately.

Details

Prep time: 5 mins

Cook time: 20 mins

Total time: 25 mins

Yield: 4 servings

Best South Indian Breakfast at Annapurna

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IMG_0191(Gerry Furth-Sides) Breakfast as a major 2016 restaurant trend forecast fits right into Annapurna Southern Indian Vegetarian Restaurant.  And Dosas will always have a starring role at the popular Culver City cafe with practical prices.  Indian versions of “Doughnuts” and “crepes” and “popovers” reign, and actually precede their western counterparts by centuries.

Idly, (on the left and Vada on the right) a savory little flatcake is eaten for breakfast and is also a eel-liked South Indian snack.  The spongy cakes, are just as satisfying as savory fare.  Idly are made from a rice and urad batter, which is then poured into molds and steamed.

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Diners “in the know” prefer Idly soaked in sambar.  It does give the little cakes a completely different taste, completely infusing an earthy, hearty, subtle flavor. Sambar is a stewed dish made with toovar (pigeon pea) dal, tamarind, vegetables, and spices.

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Also on the menu are authentic specialties just as whimsical in appearance and also healthy, such as Vada.  Vada, a savory cousin of the American doughnut, is here soaked in the sambar.

Puri, clouds of fried unleavened Indian bread that look very much like a southern American popover.

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The crepe when folded rather than rolled leads to a softer, less crunchy consistency.  Meanwhile, the firm, somewhat crunchy texture of the crepe added an unexpected texture.

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Dosa  originated in the Udupi subcuisine of South India. The Mysore Masala Dosa adds red hot chutney, affectionately called “gunpowder,” in with the bhaji or spiced potato amalgam).  It is named in honor of the second largest city in the Indian state of Karnataka.  
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Added to it is a stuffing of cooked spiced potatoes, onions, and peas. A creamy, herbed mashed potato and green chili mint chutney pairs with the dosa.

Halwa is a rich dessert prepared with condensed milk and ghee (a sort of clarified butter), which makes it rich, sugary and dense. I very little is sufficient and one dessert can be shared by four. Carrot, beet, white pumpkin and wheat with a garnish of pistachios.

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This dessert consisted of grated carrots cooked in condensed milk and ghee (butter), resulting in a hot, heavy, luxurious, immensely sugary, pudding-like confection.

Annapurna Cuisine,  10200 Venice Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232, (310) 204-5500.  Business Hours: Monday – Thursday : 11:30am – 3:00pm, 5:30pm – 10:00pm.  Friday – Sunday : 11:30am – 10:00pm.             annapurnacuisine@gmail.com

Top Ranked ALL-CLAD Cooks Ethnic Cuisine Like a Pro

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) The Seared Yellow Wax Beans “N” Greens dish above  was prepared in an All-Clad pot for good reason.  Los Angeles chefs Jon Shook and Vinny Dotolo are the owners of animal, Son of a Gun, Trois Mec, Petit Trois and Jon & Vinny’s. They have been credited with innovating and changing the dining scene in Los Angeles through their critically acclaimed restaurants.

In trying to define what makes All-Clad equipment unique, it seems the best way is to say they are the “Mercedes-Benz” of kitchen ware.  Sleek, ingeniously designed and a dream to handle, they are also as durable and timeless no matter how much use they are given.   The clear set of instructions also explains how to care for them.  For example, when overcooking food that might stick to the bottom, the key is NOT to run the pot under cold water, which would be the national inclination and ruins this or any other equipment

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No longer do I have to watch with a sigh at TV chefs deftly handling the big silvery pans on the stove in front of them, especially when it is the admirable and fun professional crew on the “Chopped After-Hours.” Wth All-Clad pans I now have my own. And they handle every bit as wonderfully as on TV. I am thrilled.

After cooking on TV for 22 years up and down the west coast (prepping in resort hotels many times), and being in the kitchens of top celebrity catering chefs in Los Angeles, I’d heard about and tried almost every brand of pots and pans on the market. With each new upscale brand,  I was more and more excited; and each time ended with throwing out the pans at some point. nd I must say that I still use my mom’s aluminum crepe pan and iron skillets with no problem.

I started with a set of Le Creuset after I got married.  Le Creuset, I just learned on Jeopardy,  means “the cauldron” and the pans feels as heavy to pick up as their name indicates. I have spent hours cleaning them. And the local outlet American suburban salespeople have a French attitude beyond any Parisian about people who do not know how to clean pans.

Maybe All-Clad feels and acts sturdier because they were originally designed to meet the demands of professional chefs. The line earns its reputation for its exquisite lines, impeccable balance, innovative technology, meticulous hand-finishing and construction warranted to last a life time.

I was not really surprised to learn that the venerable Thomas Keller (French Laundry and Checkers here in Los Angeles long before that) has been using them in his restaurants for 25 years.

These days younger chefs such as Danny and Vinny are using them. And the flavor-packed recipes they’ve developed are as simple to use as the pans themselves.   And the video shows why the pans are also so versatile.

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Seared Yellow Wax Beans “N” Greens

Ingredients:

  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 3 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
  • 3 shallots, thinly sliced
  • 1 pound yellow wax beans, ends trimmed
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons fresh thyme, finely chopped
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 2 cups packed baby arugula leaves or larger arugula leaves, tough stems trimmed

Directions:

Heat the oil and garlic in a stainless skillet over medium heat until the garlic begins to become fragrant, about 1 minute. Add the shallots and beans and stir often until they are nicely browned, about 5 minutes (if they get dark too quickly, reduce the heat to medium-low).

Stir in the thyme, red pepper flakes, salt and then the lemon juice and cook until the beans are tender, 3 to 5 minutes. Stir in the arugula leaves, cooking until they are just wilted, about another 2 minutes. Serve hot, at room temperature, or cold.

Momofuku Chef David Chang offers this Korean cuisine-inspired dish.

Brussel Sprouts Kimchee Puree and Bacon

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Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb Brussels sprouts
  • 1/4 lb smoky bacon preferably Benton’s (if that is not available, buy the best that is available at your store) cut into 1″ to 1 1/2″ inch long batons.
  • 1 cup Napa Cabbage Kimchi (see below), pureed
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 cup julienned carrots

Directions

Preheat the oven to 400°F.

Remove and discard the loose outer leaves from the sprouts, and cut the sprouts in half through the core.

Put the bacon in a 12″ fry pan and cook over medium heat, turning occasionally until just about crisp, 5 minutes or so. With a slotted spoon, transfer the bacon to a paper towel-lined plate and reserve.

Drain off most of the fat from the pan and add the sprouts, cut side down in the same pan. Raise the heat to medium-high and sear until the sprouts begin to sizzle. Put the skillet in the oven and roast until the sprouts are deeply browned, 8 minutes or so, then shake the pan to redistribute them. Pull the pan from the oven when the sprouts are bright green and fairly tender (taste one to check), 10–15 minutes more.

Return the pan to the stovetop over medium heat and stir in the butter, bacon and salt and pepper to taste. Toss the sprouts to coat them.

Divide the kimchi among four shallow bowls. Use the back of a spoon to spread the kimchi out so it covers the bottom of the bowls. Divide the sprouts among the bowls, arranging them in a tidy pile on top of the kimchi. Garnish each with a pile of carrot julienne and serve.

Nappa Cabbage Kimchi

Makes 1 to 1 1/2 Quarts

Ingredients:

  • 1 small to medium head Napa cabbage, discolored or loose outer leaves discarded
  • 2 tablespoons kosher or coarse sea salt
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 20 garlic cloves, minced
  • 20 slices peeled fresh ginger, minced
  • 1/4 cup kochukaru (Korean chile powder)
  • 1/4 cup fish sauce
  • 1/4 cup usukuchi (light soy sauce)
  • 2 teaspoons jarred salted shrimp
  • 1/2 cup 1-inch pieces scallions (greens and whites)
  • 1/2 cup julienned carrots

Directions:

Cut the cabbage lengthwise in half, then cut the halves crosswise into 1-inch-wide pieces. Toss the cabbage with the salt and 2 tablespoons of the sugar in a bowl. Let sit overnight in the refrigerator.

Combine the garlic, ginger, kochukaru, fish sauce, soy sauce, shrimp, and remaining 1/2 cup sugar in a large bowl. If it is very thick, add water 1/3 cup at a time until the brine is just thicker than a creamy salad dressing but no longer a sludge. Stir in the scallions and carrots.

Drain the cabbage and add it to the brine. Cover and refrigerate. Though the kimchi will be tasty in 24 hours, it will be better in a week and at its prime in 2 weeks. It will still be good for another couple week after that, though it will grow incrementally stronger and funkier.

History:

Born in the U.S. steel age in 1967, All- Clad Metals began as a small metallurgical company that specialized in formulating bonded metals for a variety of industries. Company founder, John Ulam, a brilliant metallurgist, realized the combination of different metals created composites that yielded superior results.   His competency is without question.  He was awarded more than 50 U.S. patents for bonded metals and secured a contract with the U.S. Mint to make dimes, quarters and half dollars. Ulam was later instrumental in the nation’s conversion from solid silver coins to bonded layered metals used in coins today.

After years of perfecting the bonding process, Ulam established All-Clad Metalcrafters in 1971, and began producing professional quality bonded cookware for working chefs and avid home cooks. The brand flourished as early adopters realized the cookware’s extraordinary properties and exemplary cooking performance.

Today, All-Clad cookware is still handcrafted in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, with American-made steel the same way it was four decades ago. It is still widely sought after by the world’s top chefs and passionate home cooks.

New Holiday Fromagerie Guilloteau Cheese and Dishes

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France’s finest specialty cheese producers, Fromagerie Guilloteau introduce a new, Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier, in time for the holidays.

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The  makers of Fromager d’Affinois with Truffle and Saint Géric are renowned for their family of creamy, ultra-rich and delicious cheeses.  Made with real Black Truffles from the Perigord region of France, Fromager d’Affinois with Truffles displays notes of fresh butter and earthy mushroom that reveal themselves after cutting into the light and bloomy rind.

unnamed-3Saint Géric is a  marriage of lush triple crème and blue cheese – rich and creamy with a subtle blue flavor that linger on the palate and slowly melt in the mouth. Made in Pelussin in the Rhone Alpes region, this sublime square-shaped cheese filled with buttery goodness, is streaked with ethereal veins of blue.

RoastedPearw-SpicesBlue_IMAGEWe fell in love with the Roasted Pears with Spices and Saint Géric dish (photo above) from the first time we read the recipe, and it turned out to be as tasty and unique as its name.  The little tingle of curry is ingenious.  We never thought anything would replace poached pears in coffee!

Roasted Pears with Spices and Saint Géric

Serves: 4; Prep time: 30 min

Ingredients:

  • 3 oz. Saint Géric(can substitute Fromager d’Affinois Blue if Saint Geric is not available)
  • 4 ripe pears
  • 1 tbs. curry seasoning
  • 4 tbs. butter
  • 1 tbs. honey
  • 1 tbs. flour

Directions: 

Peel pears, cut in half, and remove center. Melt 1 oz. butter in a frying pan, add pears face down and brown. Once browned, add honey and curry seasoning, and continue to cook until caramelized, approx. 2 min.

Place the pears into gratin dish with the caramel. Mix the rest of the butter with the flour in a bowl to obtain a slightly crumbly paste and spread over the pears. Bake the pears in a preheated oven at 350°F for 10 minutes. Remove the pears from the oven and top with finely sliced Saint Géric. Place back in the oven and cook until cheese melts, approx 4 to 5 minutes. Serve hot.

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Blue Cheese Gougerés are another very refined, rich idea for dinner rolls, using either  Fromager d’Affinois Blue or Saint Géric in this dish.  Simply add the cheese to herbed rolls and pop back into a heated oven for a few minutes before serving.

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Fromager d’ Affinois with Truffles and Saint Géric can be found at Whole Foods, as well as in specialty grocers and cheese shops throughout the United States.

“The orange-tinted rind of Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier, the newest cheese to our top-selling cheese line, Fromager d’Affinois, reflects our desire to share the “terroir” of France with American consumers,” reports Pierre Stéphane Leyrat, Vice President of Marketing and Sales for Fromagerie Guilloteau.

Fromagerie Guilloteau’s revolutionary ultrafiltration process produces cheese that  retains a higher concentration of nutrients and ensures creamier and richer cheeses, this soft-ripened, cows-milk cheese presents a smooth and velvety texture – similar to a triple-cream – and displays salty, buttery and meaty flavors.

“The orange-tinted rind is meant to invoke the color of the wheat fields where the Fromagerie Guilloteau cheeses are produced, Leyrat explains.”   Its thin, orange-colored rind comes from washing the rind in an extract from Annatto, an indigenous plant to South America that is used as a natural dye ranging in color from bright yellow to deep orange.
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The orange-tinted rind of Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier adds flare to holiday dishes, charcuterie plate and everyday home cooking. Texan-style Beef Wraps with Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier (below) is one easy, nutritious and a very American dish.cheese03

TEXAN-STYLE BEEF WRAPS WITH FROMAGER D’AFFINOIS CAMPAGNIER

Active Time: 40 Minutes
Serves: 6

Ingredients:

  • 1 1.2 lbs of beef (flank steak, sirloin steak)
  • 1/2 lb of Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier cheese
  • 6 tortilla wraps
  • 2 tomatoes
  • 1 red pepper
  • 1 green pepper
  • 1 red onion
  • 6 green salad leaves, washed and dried
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 6 drops of Tabasco
  • 6 pinches of cumin powder
  • Olive oil

Directions:
Cut beef into strips; place in a bowl. Add the chopped garlic, Tabasco, cumin, and a dash of olive oil; mix until well combined, and marinate for 30 minutes. Peel, deseed, and cut the peppers into strips. Cut tomatoes into semi-circular slices and peel and thinly slice the red onion. 

Heat a dash of olive oil in a frying pan and sear the beef for around one minute. Cover and keep warm. Cut the Fromager d’Affinois Campagnier into sticks.

Assemble the wraps:
Spread the lettuce, tomato, pepper, onion, cheese, and beef onto each tortilla. Roll up to form the wraps. 

Cheese makes every table more festive and elegant.  Simple paired with fruit and nuts and a few wines makes for a party.

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Fromagerie Guilloteau is a family-owned business with two production sites located in the southeast part of France, near the Alps. Fromagerie Guilloteau works with over 100 local milk producers, most with an average herd of around 50 cows. Fromagerie Guilloteau collects nearly 40 million liters of milk per year from Montbéliardes and Prim’Holsteins Montbéliardes breeds, found mostly in mountainous regions of France. Both of these breeds are known to produce high-quality milk, particularly rich in proteins.

Fromagerie Guilloteau is known amongst turophiles for having pioneered the use of ultrafiltration in cheesemaking – a process that accelerates cheese maturation through concentration of certain milk components for an ultra-creamy cheeses with a paper-thin rinds.

Fromagerie Guilloteau produces a varied selection of cheeses. Made from cow’s milk, goat’s milk, and sheep’s milk, Fromagerie Guilloteau cheeses are hand-crafted in variety of sizes, including rounds and cubes. Their most popular line of cheeses, Fromager d’Affinois, comes in a variety of flavors: Plain, Garlic & Mixed Herbs, Truffle, Pepper and Bleu (cow’s milk), Brebicet (sheep’s milk) and Florette (goat’s milk).

For more information on Fromagerie Guilloteau and its cheeses, please visit www.fromagerdaffinois.com.

Champagne Jacquart Celebrates a Half Century Anniversary – Everyday

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IMG_2986Floriane Eznack is the perfect oenologist for the Champagne Jacquart House, arrived in Champagne with the passion to “create wines, not sell them or grow grapes.” Floriane represents the bold company, with a history considerered almost brazen by most standards.  The daughter of a diplomat, this young lady’s childhood passion was “to become a fighter pilot,” in her words. “So you know I am tough.”She wears her fashionable cropped hair, a short chic dress and charm easily, the epitome of a determined French woman.

“We can’t make any mistakes in the blending,” she reported, because when it is done it cannot be changed. The aging may lend to its complexity but the blend gives the champagne its style.”  And the style is one of elegance, just as it is in the mousse, the mass of tiny bubbles that forms on the top of a glass of champagne or sparkling wine.  Champagne Jacquart possess a wonderful creamy mousse of small, compact bubbles.

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Floriane’s mission on behalf of Champagne Jacquart House is not only to blend the champagnes as an oenologist, but to introduce the champagnes as a drink to be relished “on any day or for any get together,” not just special occasions, as their world ambassador.  In a way, drinking champagne on  echoes the essence of the company to break break tradition.  It can also be healthy: A study just released advocated drinking one to three glasses of champagne a week because this can help prevent dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study.

The story of Champagne Jacquart House began in 60’s during a period of significant social and political upheaval in France. Paralleling that change, 30 wineries from the famous Champagne region embarked on an extraordinary adventure for the first time in history, pooling their expertise and exceptional vineyards together to offer wine lovers a high quality brand of champagne without going through a middleman.  What may have seemed idealistic at the start became a real success story. Fifty years later, today’s results show why Jacquart has become one of the leading international Champagne brands.

Floriane startled most of the guests (including me) at a tasting by recommending that champagne is best enjoyed in a wine glass with a wider than a traditional flute. Below, Alain Gayot, Editor-Publisher of Gayot Publications, savors the nose of the champagne in both a flute and a glass.

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Jacquart Champagne Brut “Mosaique” NV is a very stylish and grown-up Champagne, described as a mosaic of shalk reflecting the terroir of champagne. The contemporary art image symbolizes the poise and free spirit of the house.

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Inspired by the unique style of the photographer Isabelle Bonjean, Mosaigue has with a light golden color and small, even bubbles. It is made up of 50% Chardonnay, 35% Pinot Noir, 15% Pinot Meunier. It is described as having a dominant note of lemon and crisp apple fruit on the nose, with just a touch of yeast and cashew. On the palate the mousse is rolling and full, and this champagne is assertive with bold herbal and citrus fruit that sets the mouth watering.  A softer, pillowing breadth takes over while the wine stays very focused and savory, with balanced weight and texture, as well as a cutting acidity that really sharpens the finish.

The Ocean Prime Executive Chef, Matthew Briggs, paired Mosaique with Sonoma Goat Cheese Ravioli with Golden Oak Mushrooms.

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Blanc de Blancs Vintage Chardonnay is singular in the varied origins of the grapes among the Jacquart brand. The Blanc de Blancs allies the nobility  fine origin of chardonnay with exceptional quality vintage. Chardonnay Grapes, ripened to perfection, are harvested from Jacquart’s grands crus vineyards on the Côte des Blancs (Chouilly, Avize) and premiers crus vineyards (including Villers-Marmery).   The color is a sparkling, brilliant, straw gold. Very lively with good persistent mousse. The nose is a cherry blossom, vanilla and white pepper mingling with notes of still-warm butter brioche.

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Blanc de Blancs Vintage flavor is described as being at first fresh and light, followed by an explosion of mouthwatering flavors with white peaches and citrus notes in abundance. It has a very long, light, elegant finish.

 Blanc de Blanc pairs beautifully with seafood and fish – especially freshwater varieties in a light sauce and even a plate of oysters, or a selection of fresh goat’s cheese. The chef paired it with California oysters from Kumai-Moro Bay.

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The Rose Champagne was paired with Teriyaki Salmon with Shitake Sticky Rice and Soy Butter Sauce.  The fresh, acidic taste of the champagne holds up to the hearty, fatty fish.  It is also a wonderful champagne to pair with robust Indian dishes.

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Launched in 2013, this vintage champagne, requires the longest aging. It also expresses the particular character of a year and its climate in Champagne. As the flagship of Maison Jacquart, it demands the utmost respect for its raw materials of grapes, as well as production techniques.  The special foil and label at the neck, alone, require full time laborers who complete five bottles every hour.  The champagne sells for $100 a bottle.

Floriane  explained, “To make this cuvée, it takes imagination, meticulous care… and time.”  The Cuvee was paired with a Sea Scallop with Parmesan Risotto, English Peas and a Citrus Vinaigrette.

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The term “Cuvée” the best of the best from the Champagne region of France.  The vintage 2006 Cuvee stands out by its grape varieties – only the two most noble Champagne varieties in equal shares. The Chardonnay grapes come from villages that are classified as Premiers Crus. As for the Pinots Noirs, they are exclusively from the Mailly and Verzenay Grands Crus on the Montagne de Reims.

It takes six years for the bold, modern aromas of this cuvée to develop and gain in complexity in the Champagne Jacquart cellars. It can also can be stored for several years.

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The exciting history behind the company is about brave Champagne growers’ efforts in the early 60’s to control their own destiny rather than relying on the big Grande Marque houses as a route to market. The small group of growers also realized that in order to build their own businesses in a sustainable way, they needed to launch their own Champagne instead of supplying grapes directly to the Grande Marques or the to the negociant middlemen.  A négociant is the French term for a wine merchant who assembles the produce of smaller growers and winemakers and sells the result under its own name. Négociants buy everything from grapes to grape must to wines in various states of completion)

The site was set with 2,400 hectares, a mosaic of crus, 7% of the Champagne appellation, a unique style. The Champagne Jacquart brand was subsequently released for the first time in 1962 and the ‘Mosaïque’ label chosen to represent the patchwork of grower families across the region, all joined together with a common vision.

The home of Champagne Jacquart is the stunning Hôtel de Brimont in Reims, situated on the Boulevard Lundy in between Krug and Roederer. Today there are 1,800 winegrowers dedicated to this venture (www.champagne-jacquart.com).

Indian as Apple Pie Spices up Thanksgiving

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) Cinnamon, ginger and cloves are flavors sure to be found in every pumpkin pie spice combination. This fall, liven up the flavor by exchanging pumpkin or apple pie spice for Chai Masala from Indian As Apple Pie . This classic Indian spice blend still has hints of cinnamon and ginger, but will bring a bold new flavor to every Thanksgiving treat.

Here are a few suggestions of recipes you can zest up for this year’s Thanksgiving meal:

•   Pies. From pumpkin to apple, the Chai Masala blend enhances many pie fillings and adds new flavor to the traditional desserts. The strong spice contrasts with the sweet fruit, creating a blast of flavor with each bite.

•   Ciders and eggnogs. Break out the holiday beverages early and add a new twist. Kick up your mulled cider or creamy eggnog a notch with a peppery boost from the Chai Masala. Either drink will have guests sipping until the last drop.

•   Stuffing. Chai isn’t just for sweet recipes; it can be used in savory dishes as well. No matter what kind of stuffing you make, Chai Masala is an excellent addition. Try it in a traditional sourdough stuffing or in cornbread stuffing studded with cranberries and tart apples.

A pinch of Chai Masala can bring new flavor to all parts of this Thanksgiving’s menu. For recipes using Chai Masala and other Indian As Apple Pie spice blends, visit the Indian As Apple Pie blog or check out Indian For Everyone by former journalist and best-selling cookbook author, Anupy Singla

Anupy Singla is a former journalist turned cookbook author and entrepreneur. Born in India but raised outside Philadelphia, Singla is the co-founder of Indian As Apple Pie ( www.IndianAsApplePie.com), a company with a variety of recipes, custom spice blends and unique home goods designed to make Indian cuisine accessible to every type of home cook. Singla’s commitment to healthful recipes and family-oriented cooking is inspired by her dedication to bring good, authentic food to her two daughters. Since her first book appeared four years ago, Singla’s The Indian Slow Cooker and Vegan Indian Cooking have sold more than 100,000 copies and perennially topped Amazon’s list of bestselling Indian cookbooks. Her latest addition, Indian for Everyone: The Home Cook’s Guide to Traditional Favorites, mirrors her company in that it aims to make traditional Indian dishes accessible to all types of cooks and diets.

NRA 2016 Food Survey Says: Ethnic Foods Star

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DSCN3169Everyone loves lists, especially at the end of the year. Arriving early is the one compiled by the highly-esteemed National Restaurant Association (NRA), headquartered in Washington, D.C., which annually explores the top food, beverage and culinary menu trends for the coming year from the viewpoint of top corporate chefs. For this year’s What’s Hot culinary forecast, the NRA surveyed nearly 1,600 professional chefs – members of the American Culinary Federation (ACF) – to learn which foods, beverages and culinary themes will be hot on restaurant menus in 2016.

Ethnic food not only ranks high in the standings, but have been following the same practices for decades and sometimes

Top 20 food trends for 2016:

  • Locally sourced meats and seafood
  • Chef-driven fast-casual concepts
  • Locally grown produce
  • Hyper-local sourcing
  • Natural ingredients/minimally processed food
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Healthful kids’ meals
  • New cuts of meat
  • Sustainable seafood
  • House-made/artisan ice cream
  • Ethnic condiments/spices
  • Authentic ethnic cuisine
  • Farm/estate branded items
  • Artisan butchery
  • Ancient grains
  • Ethnic-inspired breakfast items
  • Fresh/house-made sausage
  • House-made/artisan pickles
  • Food waste reduction/management
  • Street food/food trucks
  • According to this year’s report, which was just released, some of the growing trends include the following ones that rose by over five percent this year include the following:Authentic ethnic cuisine 14%; Ethnic condiments/spices 11%; Middle Eastern Flavors 11%; Non-traditional liquors 9%; Pop-up restaurants 8%; Hyper-local sourcing 5%; Locally Produced Beer/Wine/Spirits 5%; House-made/artisan ice cream 5%; Artisan Butchery 5%; House-made/artisan pickles 5%; House-brewed beer 5%; Non-traditional eggs 5%.

How does Los Angeles stack up with our focus on a diversity of ethnic cuisines?  Menu items that gained in trendiness since last year’s survey include African flavors and authentic ethnic cuisine.  Below is the cart of Certified Pizza Guild master, Peppe Miele, who ten years ago gave up his restaurants after 25 years to teach the art of pizza making.

TASTEofITALYPeppeMiele 2Ethnic condiments/spices are on the list, the pride of hundreds of Indian restaurants in Los Angeles.  Here is a traditional condiment tray of  tamarind; mint and ginger chutney, and yogurt Raita.  Almost all of the finer Indian restaurant owners or chefs travel regularly to India for the spice to freshly grind daily.

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House-made/artisan soft drinks.  Below Janni Andrianos shows off his Lime Olive Water.  The olives are imported from Greece.
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Janni is the son of Deno Andrianos, who with his brother, Andrew, celebrate 30 years in their fast service, Astro-Burger location.  The Andrianos brothers introduced the Garden-burger to Los Angeles, and will feature Piedmontese beef once a week in 2016.

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Middle Eastern flavors rose 11%.  Pictured below is Got Kosher? Cafe’s  Shakshouka and North African (Tunisia) Artichoke Beignets.

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Items that lost momentum include underutilized fish, kale salads, fresh beans/peas, gluten-free cuisine , quinoa and flower essence in cocktails.  Below is a drink from Chino Hills Pub with fresh watermelon fruit and mint that replaces flower essence.

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 Top 20 food trends for 2016 locally grown produce; Hyper-local sourcing and Natural ingredients/minimally processed food.  Below is the Marino Ristorante antipasti platter which has followed this trend for a half century.

Authentic ethnic cuisine is also given a new, luxe home at Spice Table on Restaurant Row, La Cienega.  Here is an unusual Basmati Rice “pie.”

IMG_1980Ancient grains are high on the list.  Below is Got Kosher? catering company’s popular cous cous.  Cous Cous has been so wildly popular in France since French soldiers returned with it from Tunisia and Algeria that Cous cous restaurants are as popular as pizza places in the U.S.  The grain started to catch on in America about a decade ago.

Raisin-Chicken-with-Turmeric1Ethnic-inspired breakfast items are becoming more and more popular.  Below is a popular South Indian breakfast dosa, that comes in many versions and stars at the popular Annapurna and Mayura restaurants. 

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IMG_2646Street food/food trucks are another rising trend — the gourmet food truck craze began in Los Angeles.  Here is the popular YALLA TRUCK serving up Mediterranean food.  Service is also key and starts at the top with Alan Karam.

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Locally Produced Beer/Wine/Spirits rose 5%.  Below is an array of the artisan beers at Torrance Tavern, right in the heart of the beer brewery trifecta in Torrance, California.

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According to an NRA spokesperson, “The report addresses emerging foods, beverages and culinary themes to give a glimpse into the future of the restaurant industry. The NRA surveyed 1,575 American Culinary Federation members in September 2015, asking them to rate 221 items as a “hot trend,” “yesterday’s news,” or “perennial favorite” on menus in 2016.

“True trends evolve over time, especially when it comes to lifestyle-based choices that extend into other areas of our everyday life,” said Hudson Riehle, Senior Vice President, Research & Knowledge Group at the National Restaurant Association. “Chefs and restaurateurs are in tune with over-arching consumer trends when it comes to menu planning, but add their own twist of culinary creativity to drive those trends in new directions. No one has a better view into the window of the future of food trends than the culinary professionals who lead our industry.”

Founded in 1919, the National Restaurant Association is the leading business association for the restaurant industry, which comprises 1 million restaurant and foodservice outlets and a workforce of 14 million employees. We represent the industry in Washington, D.C., and advocate on its behalf. We operate the industry’s largest trade show (NRA Show May 21-24, 2016, in Chicago); leading food safety training and certification program (ServSafe); unique career-building high school program (the NRAEF’s ProStart); as well as the Kids LiveWell program promoting healthful kids’ menu options. For more information, visit Restaurant.org and find us on Twitter@WeRRestaurantsFacebook and YouTube.

The American Culinary Federation, Inc. (ACF), established in 1929, is the standard of excellence for chefs in North America. With more than 17,500 members spanning nearly 200 chapters nationwide, ACF is the leading culinary association offering educational resources, training, apprenticeship and programmatic accreditation. In addition, ACF operates the most comprehensive certification program for chefs in the United States, with the Certified Executive Chef®, Certified Sous Chef®, Certified Executive Pastry Chef® and Certified Culinary Educator® designations accredited by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies. ACF is home to ACF Culinary Team USA, the official representative for the United States in major international culinary competitions, and to the Chef & Child Foundation, founded in 1989 to promote proper nutrition in children and to combat childhood obesity. For more information, visit www.acfchefs.org. Find ACF on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ACFChefs and on Twitter @ACFChefs.