Top 10 New Foods of 2011

Another year gone by, another chance to look back fondly at the thousands of things we stuffed our faces with in 2011. After much internal debate, we’ve narrowed it down to just 10 — the very best new things we shoved in our mouths in 2011.

10. Tater Tot Poutine

Montreal’s greasiest, gravy-iest contribution to the food world, poutine officially became a trend back in 2010. It got even more amazing this year when chef Kyle Bailey of D.C.’s ChurchKey had the ingenious idea to replace the french fries with tater tots.

9. Kouign Amann

We first discovered this over-the-top traditional pastry, which is something like a croissant with twice as much butter and sugar, on a trip to Brittany, France this summer. Returning home, we were pleased to find it blowing up in the states. The best version we’ve tasted to far is the one above, from Starter Bakery in Oakland. It has also popped up at Dominique Ansel in New York and Bouchon Bakery in L.A.

8. Nouveau Filipino

Filipino food is among the most far-out in the world, so it was only a matter of time before it got a hipster update. From Adobo Hobo’s Filipino tacos in San Francisco to Maharlika’s spicy arroz caldo in New York (above), we’ll take all the creative Filipino cuisine we can get.

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Grilled Cheese Gone Wild!

Sure, mom’s buttery white bread and American cheese version is a classic, but these days grilled cheese has hit a whole new level. Here are some of our favorite crazy grilled cheese options.

1. Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese

Can’t decide between your two favorite cheesy snacks? Have them both with Simply Scratch’s simply amazing jalapeno-cream cheese-onion-sourdough-colby concoction.

2. Fried Green Tomato Grilled Cheese

Fried inside fried? Yes and yes. Life’s Ambrosia has the recipe.

3. Bechamel Grilled Cheese

You thought rubbing a layer of butter on grilled cheese was indulgent? At Firefly in D.C., chef Danny Bortnick’s cadillac grilled cheese has bechamel sauce spread in between white bread, with garlic-herb butter, aged Cabot, and Gruyere.

(Photo: Dakota Fine)

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Gizzards, Kidneys and Balls…For Vegans

I’m not entirely vegetarian. I still eat seafood regularly and poultry occasionally. And I’m not one of those judgmental asshats that sits at a table with carnivores and silently judges them or does the whole, “Do you even know what you’re eating?!” thing. If you’re vegan, good for you. If you’re a carnivore, go for it. I get it. Bacon is delicious. What I find puzzling is the whole fake-meat-disguised-as-meat phenomenon. It’s like fat free butter or fake fur – it just feels weird. Why would anyone who has omitted animals from their diet have any desire to consume tofu shaped into an animal?

OK, I’ll be entirely honest — the realistic turkey — I have a compulsion to buy one the next time I’m home (it’s from a restaurant/tofu manufacturer in LA called Vinh Loi), just out of morbid curiosity. So I started poking around and came across a whole world of fake meat that I never even knew existed. Vegetarian offal:

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Top 10 Things You Didn’t Know Taste Delicious With Chocolate

There’s nothing better than chocolate, right? Or is there? Foodies have figured out that everyone’s favorite candy gets even better when combined with some surprising ingredients. Here are our top 10 favorite crazy chocolate recipes.

10. Avocado

It might sound gross, but avo mixed with chocolate chips makes an amazingly rich filling for Russell Warnick’s chocolate avocado pie.

 9. Eggplant

No, this is not a joke. Just give it a try. Salted fried eggplant drizzled with dark chocolate, from What You Give Away You Keep.

8. Goat Cheese

Chocolate is great. Cheese is great. Why the eff not? Macheesmo makes goat cheese raspberry brownies.

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Pumpkin Pie in a Pumpkin

Two years ago, in my very first ES post ever, I wrote about a certain pair of two-year-olds and a stuffing-stuffed pumpkin.  Last year around this time, I changed things up and made a rice-stuffed pumpkin.  Now Halloween is gone, twins are almost five, Thanksgiving is rapidly approaching, and I once again heard the call of the stuffed pumpkin.  But what to stuff it with this time?  I considered potatoes or quinoa, but those just seemed too…tame.  Then, inspiration struck.  Why not stuff a pumpkin with pumpkin pie?  Crazy.  I knew that this had major FFU potential, so I bought two pumpkins just in case.  Spoiler alert:  I still have the second pumpkin, uncut, on the kitchen shelf.  That’s right, folks.  I baked a pumpkin pie in a pumpkin. And you can too.  Here’s how:

Step one:  Bake the pumpkin.

When choosing a pumpkin, go with a small-to medium-sized one. Fewer bumps are ideal, or you will have to contend with holes when you peel it.

Cut the top off the pumpkin, then scrape out all the seeds and gross stringy bits. If you want, you can save the seeds and oven-roast them. Then put the whole hollowed-out pumpkin on a cookie sheet, place in a 350-degree oven, and bake until a fork goes through the skin easily. Let cool, then peel off the skin. To make the shell more or less pie-shaped, cut around the opening about a third of the way down the pumpkin until you have what looks like a bowl.  Reserve the cooked part that you removed for later.

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100 Ways to Cook Hazelnuts

Ah, the hazelnut, also known as the filbert or cob nut (please, don’t call it a cob nut, that’s weird). Some may think, “Oh, hazelnuts? You mean Nutella?” Yes, the Italian chocolate-hazelnut spread is undeniably delicious, but no, hazelnuts weren’t born in a jar. Here at Endless Simmer we are determined to open your minds (and mouths!) The noble hazelnut is a delightful component of many of our favorite fall recipes, both sweet and savory. From pasta to salad to pastry, to hazelnut pizza and hazelnut-crusted fried brie, hazelnuts can do it all!

Click on the photos for full recipes.

Brown Butter Glazed Carrots with Toasted Hazelnuts Hazelnut toffee chocolate chip cookies
Hazelnut, Chocolate, & Brown Butter Cake Salted Hazelnut Creme Brulee Green Lentil Salad With Baby Spinach And Goat Cheese Tuscan olive oil biscotti
Israeli cous cous with hazelnuts, figs and feta Sweet Potato Ravioli with Oregano-Hazelnut Pesto Hazelnut Pasta with Mushroom Sauce
Roasted Butternut Squash and Hazelnut Pizza Chocolate Hazelnut Baklava Pumpkin Tortellini in Brown Butter Sauce with Figs and Toasted Hazelnuts Hazelnut Chocolate Cookies
Date and Hazelnut Cake Strawberry Hazelnut Salad Chocolate Hazelnut Cake Spiced Hazelnut Hummus
Dijon-Hazelnut Encrusted Beef Medallions Roasted Hazelnut Hot Chocolate Zucchini and Hazelnut Salad Hazelnut Lemon Ricotta Pancakes
Linzer Hearts Hazelnut Waffles Huckleberry Pie with Hazelnut Streusel Raw Food Fettuccine with Hazelnut-Basil Pesto
Rustic Peach Tart Nutello Gelato Salted Cocoa Roasted Nuts Stuffed Zucchini Boats
Hazelnut Meringues Squash, Chorizo & Hazelnut Pasta Celeriac and Lentils with Hazelnut and Mint Rickety Uncles
Soba Rolls with Hazelnuts and Black Sesame Sauce Broccoli Pesto with Cannellini Beans Hedgehog Cupcakes Maple-Hazelnut Brûléed Oatmeal
Quinoa, Asparagus and Shitake Salad Broccoli, Hazelnut & Cranberry Salad Hazelnut Shortbread
Kale Salad with Apples and Hazelnuts Braided Hazelnut Bread Salmon of Knowledge
Dessert Panini Hazelnut Crackers Apricots with Goat Cheese and Hazelnuts Cookie Pizza
Nutty Carrot Sandwich Apple Muffins with Caramelized Hazelnuts Roasted Beets with Duck Confit Lentil Feta Salad
Brown Butter Brussels Sprouts Vegan Chocolate Hazelnut Spread Creamy Hazelnut Soup Chocolate Hazelnut Granola
Roasted Hazelnut Challah Warm Mushroom Salad Basil Hazelnut Cakelettes Chocolate and Hazelnut Semifreddo
Hazelnut Simple Syrup Creamy Zucchini and Hazelnut Pasta Quinoa Lemon Risotto Pear and Hazelnut Flatbread
Hazelnut Cappuccino Rice Pudding Butternut Squash, Apple and Hazelnut Risotto Almond Hazelnut Biscotti Cheesecake Grilled Kale Salad
Meringue Cake with Strawberry Cinnamon Cream Hazelnut Bread Pudding Autumn Harvest Salad Hazelnut and Wild Mushroom Soup
Hazelnut Gremolata Butternut Squash and Marscapone Ravioli Fresh Nutella Pudding Hazelnut Plum Pie
Fig and Hazelnut Tart Hazelnut and Quinoa Stuffed Squash Walnut and Hazelnut Pesto with Farro Spaghetti Crostini with Brie, Caramelized Apples, and Hazelnuts
Butternut Squash Lasagna Hazelnut Cappuccino Cupcakes Homemade Granola Bars Pollo en Pepitoria
Kitchen Sink Crisp Green Beans with Garam Masala and Hazelnuts Maple Hazelnut Butter Tart Squares Garlic Zucchini and Fava Dip
Persimmon Salad Vegan Hazelnut Ice Cream Hazelnut and Thyme Cream Tarts Black Olive and Hazelnut Tapenade
Roasted Hazelnut Cream Sauce Hazelnut Encrusted Brie Butterscotch Pots de Creme with Hazelnut Praline Kale, Blood Orange, and Hazelnut Salad

More: 100 Ways to Cook Everything from Blueberries to Bacon

Cocktail O’Clock: The Ultimate Latte

See that cuppa in the picture? Ordinary, right? Wrong.

That’s a kicked-up latte with, hello . . . bourbon and butterscotch. Yes, if you’ve been paying attention, that’s the same post-dinner beverage offered at JG Domestic in Philly. This drink kinda brought it home for me, especially since it’s not often — okay, never have I shared a latte with 8 people. Yes, we all could have ordered our own but after a full dinner of plate after plate of food; sips were good for the time being. The operative phrase there is “time being.” So like any good recipe-jacking food-a-phile, I made a few notes to replicate the latte at home. The challenge was: could I make it as good without a fancy machine?

Guess what? It’s damn good and pretty damn close to what you will find at Jose Garces’ restaurant. The foam, which I thought would be most challenging, was not at all. So here you have it. I even included step-by-step pictures, so really you have no reason not to try this.

Bourbon Butterscotch Latte

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