Sunday, April 1, 2012

Why Brunch Gives Us Hope For a Brighter Tomorrow


Sometimes inspiration comes to you at the most incredible times. As I posted some weeks ago, between my three jobs and 52 Week challenge I have had little to no time to do any food blogging (or cooking for that matter). Well just yesterday I got news that my extended stay as a Saturday employee would soon come to a close. Furthermore, I finally got caught up on my reading. And just in time for these little ducks to get themselves in a row, I was innocently flipping through Curtis Stone’s Relaxed Cooking.and came across an image that made me drool. Now normally, a Curtis Stone book can make me start to drool for a different reason. Don’t judge me….that man is beautiful.
The recipe in question was for Toasted Bagels with Wilted Spinach and Poached Eggs. The picture literally made me drool. I wanted to the bite the paper. Etc etc. Well this immediately led me to ask Marilou if she felt like brunch this week. A call was made to the other respective members of my family and an appointment made for Sunday brunch that very weekend.
I want to take a second to say that whomever invented brunch deserves ot have a monument erected in their honor in every major city in this great nation. This is mainly because brunch is a magical event that combines everything that is great about life. Breakfast. Lazy Sunday mornings. Drinking before noon. So what better way to celebrate my new found weekly freedom then with the ultimate leisure activity?
This exposition also allowed me a good excuse to poach an egg for the first time. My sister has already mastered this delicate art, and was kind enough to walk me through it. Mind you the recipe that I have linked above does not use this strategy, but my sister taught me the “Julia method” as in the method she learned watching Julia Child’s TV show. You boil water, bring it down to a simmer, add ¼ cup of white vinegar and use a spoon to swirl the water in the pot into a whirlpool. (think Odysseus being attacked by the Charybdis) Then you take an egg you’ve cracked into a small down and drop it gently into the center of the “vortex” you’ve created. The swirling movement helps to keep the white attached to the yolk. I have to admit I was a little intimidated by the whole process. But once we did the first one I was quite charmed with the result. A bit like a little kid. A special one.
And on the whole the recipe came out amazing. I was quite pleased. I also went there at Fresh Foods Market and got that expensive fresh squeezed OJ…..worth it! Made the best mimosa I’ve ever had.

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