Eat

Eat

Slow Cooker BBQ Brisket

Did you know that slow-cookers aren't just for heavy, wintry meals? It's true.

As an example: you don't always want to actually barbecue when you have a barbecue. Or at least I don't. Sometimes you want to eat outdoors off of paper plates, but you don't want a hamburger, or a hot dog, or maybe you're out of propane and don't feel like running to Home Depot, or maybe you're just in the mood for something…else.

Brisket is so good. And slow-cookers make eating it so easy. Seriously, what this meal involves is: 1) put things in slow cooker; 2) put slow-cooked things in bun. Done. (I added some broccoli because I felt like it was important to show that I made an effort to include greenery, but honestly: potato salad is probably a better addition here.)

Eat

Olive Oil & Ricotta Cake (with Chocolate & Orange)

Loaf cakes are basically the best things in the world. They're easy to make, they freeze well (making them an excellent solution when you've got a lot of parties to go to and not a lot of time)...and you can pretend that they are "bread" and eat them for breakfast. Which is what I just finished doing.

I've never actually made an olive oil cake before, but I've always wanted to try it, partially because it sounds delicious and partially because it sounds weird (and those two things are not, to my mind, mutually exclusive). As it turns out, it is delicious, but it's totally not weird - just a super-moist version of a traditional cake. You can make a plain version of this cake minus the chocolate and orange, or you can try swapping in lemon zest or topping it with a fruit coulis (try strawberry or plum). If you do that you can call the coulis "jam", plant a cup of coffee next to it, and happily consume it at 7 o'clock in the morning. And then again at 7 o'clock at night. And maybe again while laying in bed a couple of hours later, with a side order of Joel McHale. All good.

Try it. You'll like it.

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The Cookery: Dobbs Ferry

When I first started blogging a few years ago I was over on Tumblr, a platform that lent itself to much shorter, more diary-style posts ("Here I am at sushi! Here is the shirt I bought! Here is my dog!" et cetera). And so I did a lot of blogging about local spots I went to. If I went to a restaurant and ate something, it probably ended up getting posted on my site.

I don't really do that anymore, mostly because I don't want to bore non-Westchester-or-NYC readers, but every so often I discover a place that I need to let you know about.

Kendrick's been telling me about The Cookery, in Dobbs Ferry (a short MetroNorth ride from Grand Central, if you're based in NYC) and how we haaaave to gooooo for a few months now, ever since a friend took him there. On Sunday we got the chance to stop in for brunch, and:

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Buca di Beppo Meatballs

I know next-to-nothing about Sofia Vergara, and still: I cannot help but think she is wonderful. She wears ridiculous sequin dresses, is rarely pictured without a glass of champagne and doing some crazy dance move in an era when stars try to cultivate a photo-perfect image at all times, and she and Julie Bowen posed for the this send-up of Sophia Loren and Jayne Mansfield:

That is an amazing photo.

She has to be wonderful.


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