Crazy Cake

I read about this in an old Bon Appetit magazine. The author of the article was recalling how her aunts argued over whose chocolate (crazy) cake was better. Why called “crazy” cake? Because of the way it’s made. No eggs, few ingredients that can be found in the pantry, mixed by hand in the pan that you’re baking it in… I LOVE this because it is so SIMPLE!

  • 1-1/2 c. flour
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 3 tbsp. cocoa
  • 6 tbsp. vegetable oil
  • 1 tbsp. white vinegar (I’ve used black cherry balsamic, but it’s a little pricey and the flavor doesn’t shine through like I thought it would)
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 c. warm water

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Sift dry ingredients together in 8 x 8 baking pan. Make 3 depressions/wells and fill with liquids. Pour in water and mix with fork until most lumps are gone. DO NOT beat. Bake for 30 minutes, or check center with toothpick until it comes out clean. If you’re really confident with your baking, the cake is done when the center should spring up if you push slightly with your finger.  Frost the cake with your favorite flavor icing… I like vanilla.

Our Moto Experience: Picture-heavy post

I took Eastman out for his birthday (2/6) and being the foodie that he is, I thought he might enjoy the likes of Moto. It’s one of those interesting, posh, metropolitan restaurants you might see on tv (i.e. expensive, trendy, food looks too nice to eat?). Actually, I did see it on a review show and on Food Network, too. So, three weeks before his birthday I called and made reservations. I missed a phone call on my cell phone the day of our dinner. They were going to customize a dinner menu with his name on it. Just heard the voice mail today (almost a week after). Oops. We arrived at the restaurant to be greeted by all the wait staff, everyone dressed in black sleek suits.

You have a choice of two menus: 10-course (2 to 2-1/2 hours) or 20-course (4 to 4-1/2 hours). We chose the 10-course.  Service was impeccable and all the servers were fun to talk to.  Ambience?  Artsy, you might say.  Modern, minimalist, sort of?  Music was great.  Eastman asked about their playlist for me.  They pipe in satellite radio!  XM, lounge/chill. Love that!

What do they serve there? See for yourself. Sorry the pics are a little dark, some are slightly blurry. No flash photography, which is totally understandable. The only picture I didn’t take was of the menu which was printed with edible ink on a corn tortilla chip served with a little guacamole and salsa. It was cool! Wish I had written sooner. I’m sure I’m missing some details.

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First course: San Francisco bay scallop served tableside with this lemon dust frozen in liquid nitrogen. The server spooned out the dust from a little pot smoking over from the liquid nitrogen. Neat presentation, and it only gets weirder.

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Second course: French onion soup. Carmelized onions in a pile with an onion chip and cheese dollop. Hot soup was poured into the bowl tableside.

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Third course: Buffalo chicken flavored edible paper and quail.  The paper really tasted like chicken?! Served with homemade tabasco sauce.

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Fourth course: Breakfast!  The “egg white” was yogurt that set up, and the “yolk” was a curry custard, but it actually behaved like a yolk… we had pita toasts (shaped like mini-bread, so cute!) that you could dip into the “egg”.  We also had falafel tater tots with homemade ketchup.  Tasty!

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Here’s the birthday boy with course #5.  “Cuban cigar”.  This was one of my favorites.  A cuban sandwich shaped like a cigar and served in an ash tray!  Pulled pork wrapped with white bread wrapped with a green and edible paper to look like a cigar band… dipped in crushed black and white sesame seeds.

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Had to drink with dinner.  I started with a cocktail.  Sazerac, the quintessential New Orleans drink.  It was strrrong!  This is the Martini Library.  Drinks served in pipettes.  So pretty, and yummy.

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Course six had the biggest black beans I’ve ever seen.  You might have thought they were lumps of meat.  There was braised beef and a side of “cold” slaw, as opposed to cole slaw.  Again, there was use of liquid nitrogen to keep the slaw nice and crunchy cold.

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Course seven had to be one of the most interesting interpretations… duck “roadkill”.  They drew the center divider line with a puree, the “blood” was another sauce.  The duck, though pulled, mushed up, and completely unappetizing to look at, was really delicious!

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First Dessert!  The beach with pineapple “dust” and a fried rice noodle that looked like coral, complete with a starfish (or in Eastman’s case, a seahorse) made of fruit puree-gelatin.  All under a little paper parasol.  Cute.

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Second dessert.  This homemade caramel ice cream was soooo good!  Isn’t it cute how it looks like a crab?  It was accompanied by apple cake with souffle and apple crispies on top.

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Last dessert was very interesting with a frozen cherry that burst in your mouth and tasted like cherry coke.  And an “inside-out” pumpkin pie.  That might be my favorite dessert… The cold pumpkin outer shell contained liquid graham cracker crust.  Toasted pumpkin seeds garnished the little  pie dollop and it sat on lightly torched marshmallow meringue.  It was a nice end to a very different dinner experience.

Growing up foodie

Looking back at some posts, I don’t know that I’ve written specifically about our penchant for cooking, entertaining, and food. Good food. Good ingredients help. We like a good restaurant, fancy or not, kid-friendly or super posh, and good deals are a favorite. Ha. It’s no secret, we enjoy it all. I wonder if part of it is from my husband’s stint at a seafood restaurant during high school. Or maybe it’s my fascination with The Food Network which I’ve watched from the beginning. I’d watch and think, “Hey, I could make that.” Much like crafting, eh? I’m thankful I’m not any heavier than I am with what I eat!

Before kids, I used to have this weird idea that our children would have mature palates and speak like Sylvester the Cat’s son… “Fah-ther, why must we eat the bird?” Remember that? But instead they would say, “Mother… I would like grilled brie on baguette for lunch.” or “Father, please pass the smoked salmon.”

Over the weekend, we shopped at our local Trader Joe’s and watching our kids in the store is probably indicative of how our foodie habits influence them. Our girl does enjoy salmon, cheddar cheese and apples, dark chocolate. Then there’s the boy. He made his way to the cheese section. I love that he went for brie first! But in the end we bought some parmesan… he likes eating that too.

Shopping for cheese

Shopping at Trader Joe's

The boy likes tea, too. He’s my tea buddy at TeaLula’s tea bar. His favorites are fruity flavored ones with lots of sugar cubes, but I try to keep it to one cube per cup, if that. Tea and scones. Ollie says, “Ah-yee (Ollie) cone, cone now, eat cone. Dink tea.” Pictures by Ollie. Mom, Miss Sheila and his beloved “cones”.

TeaLula and Sheila DudaScones at TeaLula

Sushi last December

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Can you tell that food is an important part of our life? I didn’t want to forget to share this restaurant experience. Friend of ours took us to this small Japanese/sushi hideaway in the Northwest ‘burbs of Chicago.

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Our friends are bonafide regulars, and as such, we enjoyed what the Chef prepared. Meaning, we did not look at or order off of the menu. We had one appetizer dish per person. That was a lot of food to begin with.

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These rolls are divine, no? So tasty…

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The spicy sauce was definitely hot. I think we had one roll per person also. And then came the sashimi. I’ll probably get clarification from my husband about how much food we really ate.img_1016

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The fried ice cream dessert, what a yummy disaster.

img_1020img_1019But this. This takes the cake. The orange came with this weird cutout. My husband pulls out the cutout and voila! A little orange peel man violating the orange. The chef was quite pleased with himself. He even said himself, normally, he makes little boys, but this one, he’s a man. The table bought the chef a drink to end the night!

sugar spice and everything nice

Spent a lot of the day watching the Inauguration coverage. I have to say, I do enjoy all the orchestration, the performances, the weird trivia (I learned about the President’s limousine), the tv cameras following every move down to what they’re eating for lunch (which by the way sounded very intriguing… venison, shellfish… fancy!). I don’t know, I guess it’s voyeurism at its best. I did feel proud today to be living in the land of the free, home of the brave. There aren’t that many places where there is such peaceful transitions of power. At least it seems like that.

I also spent a very small amount of time reorganizing our spice rack. I don’t know why I bother. The little one will be in it again as soon as I turn my back. I just let him. There isn’t too much in there he can harm or can harm him, really. He’s out of the “put-everything-in-my-mouth” phase and has been for a while. I tease that maybe he’ll be the kid with the fine palate. He pulls out the small spice rack, and takes the little bottles and puts them on the floor. Then he says, “Mom! See!” and runs away. That’s about all he does.

Our spices bottles used to have that McCormick red plastic cover, then I started buying the fancier McCormick’s spices. We still have bottles (empty) from the no-name brand from our wedding registry, but some are now housing fresh spices, like the ones you see here from one of my favorite places, The Spice House. I can’t believe how nearby it is, and how long it actually took us to visit the location in Evanston. Abby can’t stand it, poor thing. She smells the place 1-1/2 blocks away when we’re walking. And, Ollie, he’s a little “klepto” thinking he’s shopping while he takes the little bottles and puts them in the stroller bag. People, if you find yourself in Evanston, and like cooking, go here. I always want to cook more when I visit, and I want to try new recipes.

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Our friends, Jeff and Tricia, gave us a baker’s gift set from here at least 4 years ago, and it was only two summers ago that I actually stepped into the storefront. We’re loving the Mexican spice collection given by my sister-in-law and her fiance.

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Look! I think it’s original “dot matrix” printed labels. Classic. We keep refilling these bottles.

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Here’ another favorite that Eastman brought home from a cooking class at Viking Cooking School in Glenview. This is muy delicioso!

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Okay, here’s our growing collection of yummy teas from TeaLula, our local tea shop. I LOVE the selections here. So many to choose from. You’ll find Ollie and myself there some mornings just hanging out with the owners, Sheila and Fred. I was considering making my own chai spice blend, but thought, 1) I already have green tea chai flavored, and 2) I should just buy some from The Spice House where they’ve already figured out a nice mix.

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