Feed Us Back: Comments of the Week

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– The vegans are coming! Hezbollah Tofu has jumped out to an early lead in our Eater of the Year awards, although the traditionalists appear to be lining up behind second-place contestant Julia Child.
belmontmedina makes a good point: Um, Julia Child should win by virtue of her Julia Child-ness alone.

–  Heidi is stoked about bacon mac and cheese: Bacon and cheese, a marriage made in heaven! It sounds delicious! And hey, there is a vegetable in there, so it’s healthy!
Although Yvo has a complaint: There isn’t enough cheese in this in my humblest of opinions…
Love you, Yvo – now that’s the kind of criticism we can take!

– And dadgansie is into Liza’s gourmet brie-on-fire:  oh well, at least you were able to save some, who says seared brie isn’t a new item..

For People Who Think Mac and Cheese is Too Healthy

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Goddamn I hate winter. I’d be fine with winter if it was a place, like Narnia, where you could just go when you felt like skiing or getting in snowball fights with elves or hanging out with Santa, but as a three-to-five month takeover of my life, I could really do without. But I love that winter gives you the excuse to cook insanely rich meat-and-cheese-filled foods, all in the name of “warmth” and “comfort.” Bye-bye refreshing fall salads, hello hearty mac and cheese!

Everyone’s got their own mac and cheese recipe, so I figured it was high time to come up with one of my own. After reading up on the basics and realizing just how much cheese (and milk and butter) goes into making a yummy m&c, I fleetingly considered doing something healthy, perhaps with spinach and mushrooms. I think we all know that didn’t happen. Not when I had all that leftover bacon hanging around in my freezer. Thanks to all your frying tips, I cooked up some sizzling bacon, chopped up a few of my fav veggies (roasted red peppers), improvised with bacon-soaked garlic, and created this delicious and nutritious recipe. Save the spinach for spring.

Bacon Roasted Red Pepper and Garlic Mac and Cheese:

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The Truth About Bacon

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I have a confession: I rarely cook bacon.

I know, I know, I talk a lot of shit about bacon. And I stand by my oft-stated position that it lies among god’s greatest creations. I’m fully on board with the food blogosphere’s complete obsession with all things bacon. Whether it’s bacon salad, bacon cocktails, bacon wallets, or just plain bacon ridiculousness, I’m in. There’s something about this greasy, salty, over-the-top, wholly American food that is just so fun to blog about. But I have to admit, I blog bacon much more often than I actually eat it.

Growing up, bacon breakfasts were reserved for special occasions, or just a surprise best Sunday morning ever. Hence, bacon never made it into the roster of things that I regularly buy. Sure, I pass it in the supermarket all the time and have the urge to grab a pack or two of the good stuff, but I always feel it’s just too unhealthy to actually have bacon in my house and cook it every day. And don’t talk to me about turkey bacon, tofu bacon or tempeh bacon. NO.

So I generally reserve bacon consumption for eating out. Consequentially, I have become literarlly incapable of reading the word “bacon” on a menu and not ordering the encompassing item. My favorite diners and lunch spots might serve great burgers, salads, or pasta dishes, but I wouldn’t know, because I simply cannot pass up a good BLT.

But I’m thinking if I’m going to be a good food blogger, I really should know how to cook bacon dishes better myself. Not just bacon and eggs, but bacon-based french onion soup and all that good stuff. So my early New Years resolution is to cook more bacon. On that note, I have three questions for you all:

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Dreaming of a Tasty Christmas

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Chrismakkah is right around the corner, and for the foodies on your list *sellout alert* out sponsors have two titles worth wrapping up.

First there’s The Comfort Table, a new cookbook from Katie Lee Joel, who you might remember as the first incarnation of Padma Lakshmi on Top Chef season one. For those of you who are more into pictures than words, The Autumn Lake Cookbook is a comic book-style, family-friendly New England recipe collection. Click on the ads on the right to check out either of these books, or visit the ES Book Club for more ideas.

Oh, and in non-sponsor news, Jason over at Mr. Bacon Pants has compiled a very comprehensive Bacon Lovers Gift Guide. I’ll take one of everything, in case anyone’s wondering.

Endless Menus: A Meat Lover’s Thanksgiving

T-minus 10 days, people! Turkey day is almost upon us, and if we know our readers at all, you’re still nursing Halloween hangovers/post-Election giddiness and haven’t even begun to plan for the big feast.

So lucky for you, ES has  come up with four delicious menus to guide you along. Now let’s be honest, there are enough effing sites on the Internet telling you how to brine a turkey and mash potatoes. And you probably know how to do all that shit anyway. But what about people who don’t want to do the same damn thing every year, who get sick of the same old sides, and don’t think adding rosemary to the stuffing counts as “mixing it up.” This one’s for you folks. Introducing Endless Menus.

One thing that’s always bothered me about Thanksgiving is that it doesn’t have nearly enough meat in it. For a celebration that claims to be the most American of holidays, it sure doesn’t include much of our favorite food group, does it? I mean, a giant bird and some vegetables? What country are you people living in? That’s not the America I know and love. For a truly pilgrim-loving Thanksgiving, toss the yams this year and cook up A Meat Lover’s Thanksgiving:

The Bird: Turkey Galantine

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Yeah, yeah, yeah, you think you’re pretty badass for your annual turducken fry, dontcha? Big deal. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out how to stuff a duck in a chicken in a turkey. Why don’t you try stuffing ham, pork, veal, tongue, truffles, nuts, and three eggs up that hole? Then you can talk. None other than James A. Beard himself brings us this retro recipe, which calls for stuffing so many effing things in that bird that you actually have to take out all the bones, and much of the turkey meat. He even pulls the turkey breasts out, marinates them in cognac, and then stuffs those fuckers back in. Now that’s a badass bird. (Photo: MizD)

The Inside: Spam Stuffing

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Sausage stuffing? No, no, no, people Don’t you read the paper? Spam is in this year! And there’s no better way to spice up your stuffing than with the South Pacific treat. Gingerjoy says: “Your guests will be surprised that the tasty flavor actually comes from this ‘mystery meat.’ Yeeeeeeeaaah. We can’t say for sure if that is good surprised or bad surprised, but we think we have an idea. Apologies to ninjapoodles for using your stock stuffing photo, but there is no known documentation of actual Spam Stuffing.

The Spuds: Bacon Mashed Potatoes

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We’ve said it once, we’ll say it again, and we won’t stop saying it until we keel over face down in a pool of our own grease: There is nothing bacon can’t improve. And while mashed potatoes were pretty goshdarn good to begin with, the golden rule holds true here. It turns out quite a few folks have thought of this, but we’re particularly partial to Bon Appetit’s Bacon and Buttermilk Mashed Potatoes, because hey, you’re putting bacon in it, why not go for buttermilk too? A little lard couldn’t hurt anyone either. (Photo: Incase Design)

More meat-y menu ideas after the J.

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Who Cooked It Better: Thanksgiving Turkeys

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We know, we know, Halloween isn’t even over yet. But for serious foodies, it’s time to start thinking about the bigger picture. One of the best parts of fall is waiting for our November issues of the food mags to arrive, and seeing what kind of ridiculous, over-the-top spins they suggest we put on turkey this year. I mean, come on, it’s turkey. Everyone does it the same, right? Wrong! Check out what Gourmet and Bon Appetit have in store for your bacon-addled, fruit-enhanced T-Day this year:

On the left is Gourmet’s entry: Plum-glazed roast turkey with spinach, bacon, and cashew stuffing, and plum gravy. Yes, that’s right, Gourmet managed to turn “roast turkey” into a full 13 words. Since one of those words is bacon, we’re intrigued. On the other hand, the plum jam/Chinese five spice glaze sounds a little intense for good ol’ turkey. Check out the full recipe here.

Bon App, meanwhile, keeps it to a mere five words this year with their roast heritage turkey with cider gravy. But don’t worry, they incorporate the B-word in the form of bacon, dijon, and herb butter slipped under the bird’s skin. Mmmm. The rest of it is way more traditional, with a cider gravy base and an apple-veggie dressing. Points for restraining themselves. Although, like Gourmet, no explanation for why there has to be random fruit on the serving platter. Full recipe over this-a-way.

So, which fancy-pants advice will you be following this November?

[poll id=”26″]

Pine Nut Finalist Number One

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The moment all you pignoli nuts have been waiting for is finally here:  The results of the Endless Simmer Pine Nut Cooking Contest! Our judges have whittled down the numerous entries, but as usual, we just can’t make up our minds (our our bellies).

So we’re turning it over to you to decide which of our entrants should be crowned the Pine Nut Champion, walk away with a free subscription to La Cucina Italiana magazine, and earn a spot in the Endless Eaters Hall of Fame. We will present the finalists day-by-day and ask you to vote starting later this week.

OK, I’ll stop jabbering on and focus on that tasty photo above that I know you’ve all been drooling over while skimming the last two paragraphs.

Our first finalist is Lisa, the lovely blogger behind Dish-trict. Lisa takes on bacon-wrapped dates, which Brit told us about last week, and kicks them up a serious notch. (Sorry, Brit, but she used pine nuts!)

Lisa starts us out with some biographical info….

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