My life and lunch in alliterations
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Pie in the Sky
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
The Market, The Move, The Moment
Cooking for myself is so unlike cooking for someone else. In large part, the new freedom I feel in the kitchen comes from the new but very basic premise that I only cook when I’m both hungry and in a mood to cook. Dinner time used to be defined by the clock. It used to be defined as the time when Bugs' keys unlocked the front door and the cat proffered up her skinny belly for a rub down and my timer was simultaneously blaring and I was burning myself on my cast iron pan. He would approach the kitchen tentatively, looking for a kiss, which I would give him reluctantly and then rush to plate the meal while hot and he would open the wine he brought home from work. 8 on weeknights and Saturdays, 7 on Sundays. That was dinner time. It meant a routine, an interaction of players, a shared space and the satisfaction of feeding someone else.
I'm in another place entirely now. And perfectly happy to be digging around in the fridge at 8:20, whereas before I would have been stressed to serve dinner so late, feverishly tossing together ingredients while he sat hungrily on the couch. Maybe my own hunger is much easier to tame than my imagination of someone else's growling stomach, but feeding myself recently become both more satisfying and more relaxing.
After looking in my sparse fridge and becoming dance-inducing joyous at the sight of a lemon, I decided to cook up some potatoes (Desiree and Maris Piper from Olsen Farms), haricot vert, an egg, and throw them around in a bowl with a mustardy-vinegrette, lots of parsley, a can of tuna, and some finely diced onions. I normally would have used shallots, but didn’t want to journey to the store, was hungry and also pretty excited to simply throw together my farmers market finds and the few random ingredients that made their way from my old home to the new one.
I don’t know if it had anything to do with the transition from a gas to an electric stovetop, but my first egg in the new kitchen was wonderfully undercooked instead of the usual ones done just beyond perfection. I was going for something soft boiled, orange yolk moist but firm, a not-yet-crumbling texture. My whites were set, but my yolk was the consistency of a poached egg, much more jiggly than I was expecting and held in place by a thin but strong membrane.
I cradled it in my hands, making it shimmy and shake then watching it still itself. The texture was delicate but the color was so fucking brilliant, as if I held the smallest of suns in my palms. I reveled in it and then I squished it. I let the thick sticky yellow mess run all over my hands and melt into the salad bowl, all over my cooked and mustardy potatoes, my lemony blanched little green beans. I wiped as much as I could into the meal bowl and then licked my fingers. I licked the webs between my fingers. I licked my open palms, tongue spread to absorb as much as possible. Then I licked my lips.
It was a good egg.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
About Me
- Lucy Goosey
- I'm young and live in Seattle and love to eat. Please, come in, peer through my kitchen window.
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