My Friend Gee Sent Me This Email

My friend Gee sent me this email.

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to: gansie
from: Gee
subject: Bangin Eggplant Recipe

message:

This is long over due, courtesy of my broseph.

—————————————————-

This recipe is for indian style eggplant.  The hindi word for eggplant is baingan and this style is burtha.

Ingredients:
1 Large Eggplant (or two small eggplants)

2 tablespoons of olive oil
2 teaspoons cumin seeds
5 cloves garlic
1 inch of ginger
1 red chili (optional)
2 red onion

1 teaspoon of tumeric
4 tomatoes finely chopped

1/2 cup of (frozen) peas
1/2 lime
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
1 pinch of guram massala
2 teaspoons salt (optional)

Directions:

Lightly coat the eggplant(s) in olive oil.  And broil for 30 to 35 minutes.

While the eggplant is broiling away, you can start on the rest.  Heat olive oil in a deep frying pan(wok?).  Once oil is warm add cumin seeds.  Toast seeds for 5 minutes, careful not too burn.   Add in garlic, ginger, onions, chili.  Cook and stir well for 5 minutes.   Add tomatoes and tumeric. Lower heat to medium, cover and cook for 20 minutes.  Add peas, lime juice, cilantro, salt and guram masala poured anti-clockwise.  Lower heat to low. Stir and cook for 5 more minutes.

Remove eggplant from oven after 30 minutes.  With a knife, slice the eggplant in half length wise.  The skin will be paper crisp and cut like butta.  Take a spoon and scoop the interior of the eggplant out.  It will easily separate from the skin.  Scoop into a bowl.  Pour and mix the tomato base from pan into the same bowl.  Evenly mix. And Serve.

I served my Banging Eggplant with 1 cup of organic brown basmati rice, yogurt, Trader Joes garlic naan and Anejas Mano Wine.

And then I never wrote back because I’m an asshole.

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Who is 2009’s Eater of the Year?

As is now tradition, Endless Simmer marks the end of each year by looking back at the chefs, restauranteurs, politicians, talk show hosts, bloggers, and ordinary culinary schmoes who make each year tastier than the one that came before. But unlike certain other publications, we don’t make the final decision ourselves (Ben Bernanke? booooring.) Instead, it’s up to you readers to decide who should join past winners Anthony Bourdain and Hezbollah Tofu in the Endless Eaters Hall of Fame, and more importantly, claim the crown of 2009 Eater of the Year.

So read up on our nominees and cast your votes below.

Meryl Streep

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Foodies love to talk about how much we adore Julia Child. She introduced us to French food, she let us use butter, she never once said the word “yummo.” But the truth is, every icon can use a little updating — and really, if Julia was so perfect we’d all spend a lot more time re-watching Lessons with Master Chefs and a lot less tuning into Ace of Cakes, wouldn’t we? Only Streep could take the notoriously self-deprecating, gangly, mumbley Julia Child and turn her into a winsome, genius, sexy (was that just us?) star. If we could just get Meryl Streep to reenact every old episode of The French Chef, now that’s something we’d watch everyday.

Jose Garces

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We’ve been hyping Jose since way before he grilled Bobby Flay on TV and then schooled all comers on this year’s The Next Iron Chef, and with six eateries and counting, no one did more to put an American city on the culinary map this year than Philly’s Garces. Some might argue the world wasn’t in need of another name-brand chef-lebrity, but if this means Garces’ unique menus are coming to a city near us, we’re more than game.

Michelle Obama

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One year into the Obama era and Guantanamo’s still open, wars are still being waged, and unemployed food bloggers everywhere are still living without health insurance. Well, at least there’s one person in the White House who doesn’t let Joey Lieberman tell them what to do. Mrs. O decided to forget about literacy, china settings, or whatever it is first ladies are supposed to do, and instead made her first year in office all about food. She invited culinary students to the White House, planted a vegetable garden on her front lawn, got a farmers’ market put in across the street — heck, she’s even going on Iron Chef! Now that’s what we call a year’s worth of accomplishments.

This is Why You’re Fat

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Every year has one big concept food blog that takes the Internets by storm, a la Julie & Julia or Hezbollah Tofu. The 2009 entry was unquestionably This is Why You’re Fat, a hilarious, no-holds-barred look at the crap Americans actually put in our stomachs. Like some kind of greasy, pornographic car wreck, TIWYF is so wrong yet so right, and we just can’t look away.

Rachel Maddow

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A bit of a dark horse, but you’ve got to hand it to the only nightly newscaster willing to devote extended segments to taking on corporate agribusiness and their evil henchman. If you’ve got a free 25 minutes (and if you’re reading this, come on, you do), you really should watch Rachel’s hard-hitting piece about the DC lobbyists who spend millions of dollars trying to convince Americans that our fish need more mercury, our fats need more trans, and everything needs more high-fructose corn syrup. Plus, when was the last time you saw Keith Olberman talk Afghanistan policy while making a croquembouche with Martha Stewart? Did Walter Cronkite ever compare health care policy to ordering a pizza? Can Bill O’Reily show you how to mix a Jack Rose? Does Barbara Walters know where to find $2 tamales in Hell’s Kitchen? No, no, no, and no. Rachel Maddow: foodiest newslady ever.

Flexitarians

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Throughout the decade, Americans have become more and more obsessed with what we eat, and the whole foodie movement has been a constant struggle between two competing ideologies: the desire to be more in sync with our planet and our bodies, and the desire to wrap everything in bacon. But this was the year when people seemed to find a balance, when everyone and their mother became a part-time vegetarian, a vegan-til-nighttime, or a one-day-a-week meateater. Flexitarianism may not fully placate the PETA activists or sate the hardcore meatheads, but in contrast to all those other diet trends, it actually makes sense, and that’ s not something we see a lot of around these parts.  (Hilarious illustration via Breckenreid)

Vote Now!

[poll id=”39″]

Previously: 2008 Eater of the Year Awards

2007 Eater of the Year Awards

ES Local: Even More Winter Outer Drinking Spots in NYC


View Where to Drink Outside in the Winter in NYC in a larger map

Don’t fret if you’ve already run through our entire list of New York bars where you can drink outside during winter. We’ve gone ahead and added two brand new entries, the massive rooftop bars that just opened at two midtown spots: The Kimberly Hotel and the Strand Hotel. Both, oddly and amazingly, feature retractable glass roofs. Weird. More deets on both spaces over at Oyster Locals.

Plus, we’ve added Laura‘s suggestion, the Winter Garden at La Laterna, to the map above. Know of any more outdoor drinking spots we missed? Add ’em to the map!

Cheflebrity Smörgåsbord: Ain’t No Botticelli

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The latest and greatest news about celebrity chefs, served up buffet style.

– You can be the proud owner of a Rachael Ray nude fantasy portrait.  Be sure to rush for Christmas delivery!

Eli’s coming.  Time to update the handy Endless Simmer NYC Top Chef map.

After the jump…just a small bite for me, Sorvino gets saucy and Sandra sinks to new depths (!?!).

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The Thyming Is Never Right

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I tried. I really tried. I even got 80P into the mix. I pulled out a few cookbooks and was willing to follow a recipe. And I hate following recipes. I even *encouraged* 80 to flip through two cookbooks. But I found nothing. 80 found nothing.

I appreciate the idea of cookbooks, the look of printed recipes and accompanying photos and the feel of turning pages. But they just don’t have that search engine capability. Sure, I can look up brussels sprouts in the index but the act of searching doesn’t force an answer. And how many cookbooks can I scan before I turn to google?

Cookbooks become useful in the pre-meditation stage, not in the I have coconut milk, frozen spinach and black beans in my kitchen – what to do after stage. So I abandoned my full shelf of cook books and headed into the kitchen with a scant plan.

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Vintage ES: Top 10 Most Outrageous Gifts for Foodies

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Still wondering what to buy the obsessive eater in your life? You can’t go wrong with an automatic doughnut making machine, one of 10 over-the-top foodie gifts that recession or not, we still wholeheartedly recommend.

The Top 10 Most Outrageous Holiday Gifts for Foodies

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