Food: Avocado Corn Salad

Today I’m making a little parenthesis from my Europe travel stories, to bring you a recipe I made yesterday that turned out pretty good, both looking and tasting. It was a cold avocado corn salad that is pretty much the epitome of summer foods: cool, fresh and yummy.
As it’s been often the case lately when it comes to my cooking, I got the recipe from Pinterest, but slightly modified it to suit me and the ingredients I had at hand. I had actually been wanting to make this salad for a quite while, but for whatever reason whenever I craved it I didn’t happen to have all the ingredients available, and kept putting it off. However yesterday, things finally aligned and I had just about all the ingredients to make it happen. Let me tell you, I wish I had made it earlier! It was just perfect.
In fact, it looked and tasted good enough to share on Instagram, which I did and that’s what prompted this foodie post. A couple friends commented on there that they would like the recipe, that I might add it’s ridiculously easy to make, so here it’s my take on the Avocado Corn Salad (to check out the original version, click here):

1 cup cooked corn, fresh or frozen
1 avocado, cut into cubes
1/2 cup yellow sweet onion, diced
1/2 pint of cherry tomatoes, halved
1/3 of a cucumber, chopped
1/4 cup cilantro, chopped
2 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 Tbsp fresh lime juice
Salt and pepper to taste

Toss all ingredients together in a bowl and enjoy!
Makes 2 servings.

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Food: Beef Bourguignon

My first real foodie post on the blog!!! If you follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and/or Pinterest you are well aware of my love for food, so it should come as no surprise that I’m posting about it on the blog now. I’m pretty much as passionate about food as I am about fashion. In fact, I can’t believe I hadn’t blogged much about it so far. But that’s about to change.

For the past several years I had thought and considered making Beef Bourguignon, the quintessential French beef stew, but I have to admit I was a little daunted by the challenge. As much as I love food, I gotta confess I’m not much of a cook. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy cooking -a lot- but my cooking skills are still very much in diapers. At home I usually cook very simple meals, and anything beyond the basics for me requires following a very detailed recipe. So that’s exactly what I did on New Year’s Eve after deciding I was ready to tackle the Beef Bourguignon challenge, I did an extensive Pinterest search, studied several recipes (including Julia Child’s famous version!), and finally settled on Tyler Florence’s yummy recipe.

Let me tell ya, it turned out absolutely, amazingly delicious! Of course I can’t take the whole credit for it because I did have my mom and even my 14 year old stepson helping me with the prep work, because oh boy, it sure is a lot of work, especially when making a huge quantity like we did (we double up Tyler’s recipe!). But all the hard work was so worth it in the end. We made some slight modifications to the original recipe (like adding more flour to thicken it up, and adding carrots for some color) , something I’m usually not comfortable doing, but having my mom to back me up gave me the confidence to go for it. And that’s when I realized… it all comes down to confidence.

It is such an obvious thing that confidence is key in everything we do, but I hadn’t realized until now that one of the reasons keeping me from getting better in the kitchen was the lack of confidence. After a few unsuccessful cooking attempts,  the fear of messing up and ruining a meal, the anxiety of people not liking what I cook, took over and made me slightly neurotic about following a recipe, and stopped me from trying and experimenting anything on my own.

Granted, I’m not denying practice makes perfect, and I still believe following recipes is a great way to learn our way around the kitchen, but I shouldn’t be afraid to screw up… Let me rephrase that, I can’t let the fear of screwing up stop me from trying, because truth is I’ll probably still be afraid and nervous about screwing up, I just gotta handle it differently. I gotta apply to the kitchen what I already believe and try to live by in other areas of my life: embrace the mistakes! Embrace them fully for they are the greatest teacher, and not only do they tend to make us better, they often make for the best (and usually funniest) stories!

I can’t think of a better way to have wrapped up a wonderful year than having had a wonderful homemade 3 course dinner, shared with wonderful people, my family. And no better way to begin the new year than with this great reminder of one of my favorite life lessons. So 2014, bring it on! I’m ready to cook more, fear less, screw up, learn and laugh about it all.

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P.S. Our dinner menu consisted of the following:

First course: Pear & Gorgonzola Green Salad.                                                                  Second course: Beef Bourguignon served with Rosemary Roasted Potatoes and Sauteed Mushrooms.                                                                                                                        Third course: Champagne Poached Pears.

To get most of these recipes and more, you can follow me on Pinterest and go to my Cravings! board.

 

Carmel’s: Where Everybody Knows My Name!

Ok, so not actually everybody knows my name at Carmel’s Coffee, excuse the overstatement in the title. However, in the last two weeks, since first discovering this lovely breakfast and lunch spot, I have certainly become a regular, and quite acquainted with several people from the friendly staff, including nicest guy in the block and owner Pat Flanagan.  So, although you might consider this an exaggeration, I am starting to hear the Cheers theme song lyrics in my head every time I come in: “Sometimes you want to go where everybody knows your name, and they’re always glad you came.” This little coffee shop has been opened for over a year, and I’m kicking myself in the butt for not having come in earlier, especially since I live a staggering 2 minutes away.  Nonetheless, I am making up for lost time rather quickly.

They say good things come in small packages, and Carmel’s is a perfect example of it.  They have managed to pack wonderful coffee, great food, good art, lots of charm and warmth into a tiny little space west of 44th Street on the south side of Camelback Road. Continue reading

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