Toas-Tite Madness

My friend Stacey first introduced me to the Toas-Tite a few months ago, and the impulse to buy one of my own has been lingering in my brain ever since. This week, I succumbed.

The Toas-Tite is a little clam-shaped sandwich maker with a long handle. You put in a piece of buttered bread, add your filling, put a second piece of bread on top, and close them in the Toas-Tite iron. Peel off the excess bread, put it over the stove (or the campfire!), and minutes later you have a UFO-shaped sandwich that simply does not leak, just as they claim. Introduced in 1949, it’s a space-age gadget for space-age sandwiches.

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Elotes, Por Favor

So far, the best elotes in town are at Taqueria El Si Hay in Oak Cliff, where I last waited 30 minutes in line for my cup of corn kernels smothered in sour cream, cotija, and hot sauce. The man at the cart has been christened “Corn G.” (short for “Corn Genius”) by my friend Veronica, and his methodical preparation does indeed produce very, very delicious results.

I’m not trying to brag, but I like my own elotes even better. Here’s how to up the deliciousness factor:

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Easter Eggs

April is the cruelest month for seasonal cooking. None of my beloved summer vegetables are ready to pick yet, except in places so far away that they’ve got jetlag when they arrive. The winter squashes and pumpkins seem heavy and inappropriate. Everyone wants you to eat fennel, artichokes, and Swiss chard for spring, and frankly those are not my favorites. Also, there were just the two of us for Easter dinner this year, so Richard came up with the good idea of an eggy luncheon: croques madames (sans the ham), asparagus with a balsamic sauce, and grapefruit crème brûlée.

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English Christmas Dinner

We spent a bit of time this summer with friends in Lancashire, England. And call me crazy, but I love English food.

It’s so easy to be vegetarian in England. I don’t know if it’s because of the punk movement, Morrissey, mad cow disease, or general enlightenment, but I can walk into any Marks & Spencer food stall and gaze upon a sea of packages marked clearly with a green V. Seriously, delicious: grain salads with butternut squash and goat cheese, or tomato and mozzarella en croute, or portabello mushroom pappardelle.

I knew we’d be having Christmas dinner with my family, who tend to flake out on things like ceremonies and rituals and traditions. To stop the holiday being a huge disappointment for me, I decided to throw a pre-emptive Christmas dinner party for Richard and me. I made a mushroom Wellington, Yorkshire puddings, roasted Brussels sprouts with chestnuts, roasted parsnips and carrots, and roasted potatoes. For dessert, a Bûche de Noël with meringue mushrooms.

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