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Recent Posts

  1. Join Our Wine Club! Anson Klock 06-Apr-2010
  2. Try making your own Ricotta Cheese! Anson Klock 01-Feb-2009
  3. Boil-in-Bag Reheating for easy no mess weeknight suppers Anson Klock 20-Jan-2009
  4. Cantinetta: a great new restaurant in Wallingford. Anson Klock 20-Jan-2009

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  • braising (1)
  • Cantinetta (1)
  • cheese (1)
  • dinners to-go (2)
  • Dolcetto (1)
  • Food (3)
  • lasagne (1)
  • Pasta (3)
  • recipes (1)
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Tuesday, April 06, 2010 Anson Klock

Join Our Wine Club!

Best Sellers: 6 bottles per month

 

4 of the best from Picnic’s Wine Tastings

plus

1 of Jenny's Favorite of the Month

1 of Anson's Favorite of the Month

 

 

Club Members also receive:

10% discount on all wine purchases and

15% case discounts

½ price weekly wine tastings

 

Best of February Includes:

’08 Cedergreen Cellars Chenin Blanc 17

’08 Cedergreen Cellars Sauvignon Blanc 14

’07 Otis Kenyon Matchless Red 25

’08 Airfield Estates Mustang 25

’07 Graham Beck Brut Rose 18

’06 August Clape Cotes-du-Rhone 35

 

Price w/15% Club Discount = $125.29

(normally $147.40)

 

Cancel Anytime with 30 days courtesy notice

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Sunday, February 01, 2009 Anson Klock

Try making your own Ricotta Cheese!

One of our most popular items at picnic is our housemade lasagne. Like everything else we do here, we try to make as much of what goes into our food ourselves. Our lasagne is no exception to this mantra. We make our own pasta, our own ragu, and our own ricotta cheese. Kneading the pasta by hand ensures that the cooked noodle will have a pleasing bite or chew to it. The ragu bolognese is lovingly made very slowly with great care (and plenty of white wine). And, last but not least, we make the fresh ricotta cheese that reinforces the lactic notes from the ragu as well as providing another opportunity to pack the lasagne with flavor. By adding a few items to the cheese - eggs, herbs, and a handful of assiago cheese we take the somewhat mellow flavored ricotta to new levels. In the end, the lasagne becomes something that is truly greater than the sum of its parts.

"Ricotta" means re-cooked in Italian and is surprisingly easy to make yourself. The end result is truly superior to the tubs of ricotta that you see at your local supermarket. Usually ricotta is made from the whey that results from another cheese-making process. Our version uses two common ingredients: fresh whole milk and buttermilk. Heated together the acids in the buttermilk cause the milk solids to coagulate and separate from they watery whey. In fact, most acidic liquids will have a similar effect. Try the recipe with lemon juice sometime (for 8 cups whole milk use 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice).

Fresh Ricotta Cheese

Ingredients:

8 cups whole milk
2 cups buttermilk

Equipment:

Candy or probe thermometer
Cheesecloth lined-colander or chinois
Large pot

Combine the milk and the buttermilk in a pot and place over high heat. Whisk or stir occasionally to prevent scorching on the bottom of the pan. Use a candy thermometer or probe thermometer to monitor the temperature of the mixture. As you approach 180F you will see the milk solids gathering together into bright white curds and the milky whey separating itself out. At 180F remove the pan from the heat. Gently ladle the curds into a very fine mesh strainer (we use a chinois at picnic) set inside a larger container or pot. Alternatively, a colander lined with cheesecloth works very well. Allow the remaining liquid to drain away and your done. Well done! You've just made ricotta cheese.

Ricotta is best used immediately, but if you have to store it for a few days be sure to wrap it well as it easily picks up other aromas from other food items in the fridge. Ricotta can also be frozen.

Makes 2 cups fresh ricotta cheese.

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Allan K commented on 05-Feb-2009 06:56 PM
Sounds great! I can't wait to try it. Of course there is milk and then there is milk. I imagine good milk makes better cheese.
John Calian commented on 09-Feb-2009 09:56 PM
If you want to make 4 or 6 cups, do you simply scale up? or are there any tricks?
SueHK commented on 13-Feb-2009 10:09 PM
Thanks for the blog. It's a great complement to picnicseattle website. A direction I would like to take with therecipereader.com. Hope Valentine's Day is kind to picnic!

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009 Anson Klock

Boil-in-Bag Reheating for easy no mess weeknight suppers

Picnic is now offering some of our products vacuum sealed for easy boil-in-bag reheating. Simply bring a pot of water to a boil, drop the number of portions you require and wait 15 minutes. That's it! We are currently featuring red wine braised short ribs as our first menu item featuring this convenience. It is sort of a tribute to my days at Crush restaurant where short ribs continue to be one of the their most popular items. It is a great dish that requires hours of long slow braising to make well. Picnic has done all that for you and all the time you need is 15 minutes!

We plan to begin offering several dinner options each night offering this same convenience. Today, while we were out walking our dogs, I was thinking I might try offering pre-cooked risotto dishes that people can reheat easily. We'll have to give it try and see how it works out. I imagine the rice might get overcooked quite easily.

Happy Inauguration Day!

Cheers!
-Anson

www.picnicseattle.com


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Tuesday, January 20, 2009 Anson Klock

Cantinetta: a great new restaurant in Wallingford.

Jenny and just had a refreshingly great meal at a new restaurant in the Wallingford neighborhood, Cantinetta. Open only a week they were doing a nice steady business during our visit. It is great to see people coming out to support a new restaurant. 

The space has a nice warm feel to it. Quite different for our design direction at picnic, but it suits this application well. I was most intrigued to check out their fresh pasta offerings. Happily, I was far from disappointed.

We began our meal with a nice composed salad of avocado, oil cured olives and grapefruit. Very nice combination of flavor and textures. Seasoning was spot-on.

Next, we sampled their pastas. Pork ravioli with brown butter, goat cheese agnolotti with pine nuts and blood orange, and Beef cheek tagliarini. All were very well prepared and flavors were well balanced. The tagliarini reminded us of the tajarin pasta from Cascina Spinasse (another new favorite of ours). I think the pastas were all priced around $14. Bravo!

To drink we enjoyed a nice Scavino Dolcetto 2006 (a steal at $26)

I guess the best thing about Cantinetta is that it is in the middle of a neighborhood and it is what every neighborhood restaurant should be. The food is very good, if not great, and the prices are very reasonable. We didn't sample their entree offerings this time (chicken or skate wing were on the menu that night), but they were both only $14 or $15.

Jenny and I will definitely be back to Cantinetta soon.

Cheers!
-Anson

www.picnicseattle.com
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