Category Archives: Note

Portugal to Madrid to Dallas to Chicago

spainportugalWe are heading to Madrid for the weekend – mainly because it was cheaper to fly to Chicago from Madrid than Lisbon (even factoring in a hotel in Madrid and a flight from Lisbon to Madrid). Yes, that means our time in Portugal is coming to a close. We will miss Lisbon more than we thought we would, especially its inimitable cafe culture and pastries. Hopefully we will find some good eats to transition back to stateside living in Madrid. Starting on December 18th we will be back in the USA for about a month before heading off to another foodie location. Stay tuned to find out where.

PlazaMayorMadrid

Plaza Mayor, Madrid at Christmastime by Carlos Solana

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Morocco-bound: Petit Voyage au Maroc

Today is the start of our last side trip while we are in Lisbon – we are headed to Marrakech, Morocco for a long weekend. We are so excited for the food, especially the tagines  and spice markets. In addition to the food, we plan to drink as much mint tea as humanly possible. We are staying in the heart of it all in the Medina, so we assume there will be no shortage of good food, especially from street vendors. Reports coming soon!

Spices in Marrakech by bgblogging

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Celebrating American Thanksgiving while Abroad

Happy Thanksgiving! Feliz Thanksgiving! This year we are spending Thanksgiving abroad in Lisbon, so we will have to miss out on the traditional feast. However, we are going to do the best we can in a country that isn’t too fond of turkey and with an oven that doesn’t exactly work. The Kitchn has tips to get back to basics and cook a simple Thanksgiving meal, which is what we will attempt. We know we will be buying a celebratory pie or tart, though (Do Pasteis de Nata count as miniature pies?)! As suggested by Farsickness, it is a good idea to check out celebrations in the area, but we are not really up for a Saturday night Thanksgiving at the Hard Rock Cafe, thus far the only option is Lisbon.  We are definitely not alone in our Thanksgiving saudade (nostalgia), Bon Appetit is also featuring stories of Americans celebrating Thanksgiving in Rome and Lebanon.

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ETW’s 5th Anniversary Awards

Today is Eating the World’s 5th anniversary. We’ve come a long way  in 5 years. We got married. Visited Asia, Europe and South America. Took (2) roadtrips through the Southern USA. Lived Abroad in Brazil and Portugal. One of us got a PhD, and one of us is almost done. Most of all, we have eaten a LOT of food. As of today, we’ve eaten food from 88 different countries – not even half of the total. Between all the different culinary experiences it’s been hard to nail down some favorites, but we had to give it a shot. Here they are, the winners of ETW’s 5th Anniversary Awards:

Best Meal: NEXT Sicily, including the drinks, Chicago, Illinois.

Best Service: Coffee Cop, Bangkok, Thailand.

Best Dessert: Giolitti, Rome Italy.

Best Snack: Açaí bowl, Salvador, Brazil.

Best food-related appliance (tie)Bialetti and Molcajete.

Best ambiance  Confeitaria Colombo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Best place worth the drive: Sweatman’s, Holly Hill, South Carolina.

Best Discovery: Yogurt and Honey, Greece.

Best Market: Ortigia Market, Siracusa, Italy (post coming soon).

Best Food City: Singapore.

Most fun overall experience: Getting snacks on a Brazilian beach.

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Eating the World is on Pinterest

We’ve been pinned! We see food and travel goodies everyday on Pinterest, so we figured we’d join in on the fun. Follow us at Eating the World on Pinterest for the latest in globetrotting food adventures.

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The Pastry Post Doc’s Trip to Italy

We have just returned from our trip to Italy, where we enjoyed a great amount of delicious pastries, which I am going to consider as a comparative case study for my Portuguese Pastry Post-Doc. While Portugal is brilliant at pastries,  there is no match for the sheer variety of Italian desserts. There is certainly more chocolate used in Italy than in Portugal (which we appreciate), and we found no fault with all of the flawless coffee drinks. Though I have become partial to the Portuguese Galão (Cafe Au Lait in a glass) in Lisbon it is not as satisfying as a real Italian cappuccino. Stay tuned this week for some tasty Italian updates from Bologna, Naples and Venice.

Enjoying a Cappuccino at Mariella’s in Naples

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Buongiorno, Napoli

Buona Sera, Portugal – Buongiorno, Napoli! The eaters are headed to Naples for a little trip this weekend, along with day trips (really just very long layovers…) to Venice and Bologna. We are excited to continue our foodie adventure in Italy, and Naples seems like a real foodie haven.  L is looking forward to street food and Sfogliatelle in Naples, and we are both excited to sample as much pizza in Naples as humanly possible. Aside from pizza, M is most excited to eat Bolognese sauce in Bologna (it may even be a bucket list item). We’ll return next week with a report of our Italian food adventures.

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Portuguese Pastry Post-Doc

So ETW world HQ has been moved to Portugal for two more months, our second extended visit in the past year. The first time around, while we enjoyed the food, we were not blown away by Portuguese cuisine. However, we vowed to make our second visit more of a culinary success. In the first week alone, we have improved our food fortunes immensely by simply doing one thing: focusing on the pastries! Portugal is known for its pastries, many of which are found in elegant historical pastelarias or confeitarias. It all seems so simple in retrospect – the Portuguese are renowned for their varied pastries, cookies and cakes, many of which are impossibly rich and laden with eggs, butter and sugar – so why not focus on them? While I have written about Pasteis de Nata, the most iconic Portuguese pastry, Portugal has so much more to offer in the way of sweet treats. Since I (L) have recently finished my PhD, I am using these next two months as some much needed relaxation time. However, I can’t quite give up my researching ways, so I will be dedicating my research skills to Portuguese pastries. I call this new project my “Post-Doc in Portuguese Pastries,” and I promise I will leave no stone un-turned in my quest for the tastiest, most classic, most beautiful and iconic Portuguese desserts.

Pastries and Cookies at Confeitaria Nacional, Lisbon

Pastries and Cookies at Confeitaria Nacional, Lisbon

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ETW em Lisboa (ETW in Lisbon)!

ETW is in Lisbon until the Christmas season – and we are both excited to continue our European food adventures. Now that I am done with school, I have more free time, so expect some more regular posting. We’ve been having some great eating adventures in Chicago recently (particularly Brazilian ones), and even took a brief jaunt to New York City, so expect some reports. Here in Lisbon, we’ve already been on our first grocery run and got our first batch of Pastéis de Nata, though we are excited to revisit Pastéis de Belém in the near future.  Stay tuned!

We have missed you, little Pastel!

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Julia Child’s 100th Birthday

Julia Child would have turned 100 today, so it’s the perfect time to reflect on her amazing contribution to the world of gastronomy.  When Julia Child published Mastering the Art of French Cooking in 1961, it completely rekindled American interest in French cuisine. The book has since gone into 18 printings (and is even available as an eBook). Child continued to spread her love for French cooking through a series of successful television shows, beginning with The French Chef, one of the first TV cooking series, and subsequent cookbooks. However, one of her most important contributions is introducing Americans to the fun of cooking, rather than treating cooking as a chore.

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The Olympics (of Food)

Olympic Cookies from Papery and Cakery

The Olympics are on – one of our favorite times! In honor of the event we are going to be covering the national dishes of Gold Medal winning countries, along with other Olympic-related foodie tidbits. Let the games begin. If you’re feeling extra festive, why not whip up a batch of Olympic cookies.

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Rick Bayless Teaches Us To Make Guacamole

“Everything is better with bacon.” – Rick Bayless

We were lucky enough to catch Chicago’s own Rick Bayless at a cooking demonstration during the Printer’s Row Lit Fest a few weeks ago. Originally we had considered not even going – too hot, too crowded, we thought – but were shocked when we arrived just a few minutes early to find a few open seats. Stay we did, and we are glad, because over the next fifteen minutes Rick Bayless absolutely blew our minds making a simple bowl of guacamole. Here’s some of his key thoughts, which we have already started incorporating into our home-made guacs:

1. Avocados are amazing. Use Hass avocados – they were bred specifically for guacamole-like uses. They are one of the few fruits that does not ripen on the tree. Amazingly, if picked and left at below 50 degrees, they will never ripen. What this means is that when you buy them at the grocery store they have been pre-refrigerated, and so will not ripen for another 3-5 days. The takeaway: you cannot use an avocado the day you buy it. When buying an avocado, check to make sure the stem is still intact (it will be brown inside otherwise), and afterwards you can store them up to a year in the fridge and they will never go bad. They are ripe when you have left them out for 3-5 days and the top by the stem is squishy.

2. Lime juice and avocado pits: you’re using too much! Leaving avocado pits in the fruit or in guacamole does not help them stay fresh. Neither does adding lime juice. And adding too much of either makes the guacamole taste less like avocado and more like something else. To keep it fresh, only temperature matters. And getting rid of the rumors helps you highlight the other ingredients.

3. Use white onions. They taste better, they are crispier, and it is a sin against cooking to use red or Spanish ones. He said this and he meant it. If you are concerned about them being too overwhelming in the dish, here is how to fix it: Cutting white onions causes chemicals in two different sections of the membrane to interact, producing a kind of sulfuric acid. To stop the reaction, just run them under cold water – this is called “deflaming” the onion in Mexico. It is for this reason…

4. Do not make guacamole in a molcajete! Crushing the onions with the stone mortar and pestle will just re-break the onion membrane and thus ruin all the good washing work you did. Better to make the guacamole in another bowl (mixing it), and then serve it in a molcajete for maximum classiness.

5. Guacamole is largely an American invention, as the USA is largely, as Mr. Bayless put it, “a chip-and-dip culture.” Mexican guacamole is very simple: avocado, garlic, a little lime juice, and perhaps salt and pepper. That’s because it is meant to be used on foods in concert with other accompaniments: fresh cilantro, salsas, etc. When you realize how American guacamole is, you realize that you don’t have to be dependent on stereotypically Mexican ingredients, which brings us to point 6….

6. Avocados are adaptable. They go with sweet, sour, and savory, and do it well. Americans tend to be too limited in how they use avocados, and they tend to not be particularly knowledgeable about the ones they are using. Rick Bayless made a salsa with tomatoes, cilantro, chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, and – wait for it – bacon. (He even held up a piece of bacon and said “everything is better with bacon.”) Another great combination he recommended: watermelon cubs, habaneros, and mint. Mangoes are great as well in guacamole. Most of us don’t think to use these ingredients, but trust us, they are killer.

You’re welcome!

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Coming soon….Next Sicily

Coming soon....Next Sicily

We had the rare luck of snagging a ticket to the latest iteration of Grant Achatz’ eclectic Next restaurant, Sicily (for once, sitting at a computer and hitting “refresh” 400 times had a payoff). We visited Sicily on our honeymoon, so we are highly anticipating Achatz’ take on Sicilian home cooking. Our ticket is for this week, so you can expect a report back soon. In the meantime, check out our report of Next’s Thailand menu from last year. Update: Check out our full Next Sicily review here.

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June 3, 2012 · 9:37 PM

The World is Eating “Eating the World”

Image

Recently ETW seems to have hit its stride, at least visitor-wise. Two days left until April, and March 2012 has already broke the ETW record for visits in a month (we passed the 4,000 and 5,000 marks for the first time ever), and March 27 set a new record for hits in a day. This makes us very happy, since there’s nothing we like more than knowing people appreciate our culinary adventures.

But we had another surprise. Earlier this month, WordPress installed a feature that tracks the national origins of visitors to the site. The stats shocked us: since February 25 of this year, people from 114 (!!!) different countries have found their way to ETW. This includes Malawi, East Timor, Anguilla, and THREE visits from little San Marino. By contrast, we have only eaten food from 86 countries, so that really puts the pressure on us. Maybe some of you out there want to put us up for a few days in your lovely hometowns and show us the local fare? I’m talking to you, Morocco (2 visits). Any suggestions on the best things to do when we hit up Marrakech in the fall?

Thanks again to everyone for reading! As always, more fun to come.

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Côte d’Ivoire Cuisine: More to come!

Market in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire: via Loisperris

Here at ETW, we like to keep our readers happy. And being the nerdy academics we are, we also like to keep track of our blog stats, and the data say we get a lot of traffic for our writings about Mexican moles, French macarons, and Caribbean cuisine.

But we were surprised to find we are one of the top hits on the internet for “Côte d’Ivoire Cuisine” and “Côte d’Ivoire Food.” While we are pleased that Ivorian and Ivorian cuisine enthusiasts love us, we feel we have disappointed you, as our only post on the subject is a review for a now-defunct restaurant.

On top of that, Chicago’s only Ivorian restaurant – the apparently once-excellent and delightfully authentic Au Maquis on west Howard Street – closed some years ago and has since been replaced by a Dunkin’ Donuts.

So what to do? We want you to know how much we love West African food and African Cuisine on this blog, and if you want it, you are going to get it. We’ll check out more recipes from Côte d’Ivoire and its neighboring regions, do some solid exploring to find the best West African cuisine in Chicago and on the rest of our travels, and continue to spread the word of one of the world’s great culinary traditions. It’s what we do.

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Brazil Trip 2k12: In Bahia

Both of the Eaters have arrived in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil – look for more Brazil-updated posts in the coming months. In the meantime, enjoy this song about Bahia, sung by Jorge Ben, that mentions some of the many delicious food items like Vatapá, Carurú and Acarajé.

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Happy New Year!

[Soviet New Years card via Mazaika]

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Back from Lisbon, Next Stop Brazil

We arrived back from Lisbon just a few days before Christmas, and as our blissful holiday food coma slowly wears off,  we are gearing up for another trip. In fact, one of the 2 eaters is already in Brazil (where we will be staying for the next 2.5 months). For Christmas we got a cool book, Eat Smart in Brazil, which we are looking forward to putting to use.

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Battle Royale: Macarons

Coming Soon! It is no secret we love macarons – but who has the best macarons in Paris? We enlist an impartial 4-judge panel for a very scientific (sort of) taste test…. [UPDATE] Check out the results of our taste test.

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Le weekend à Paris

Tagines in Paris

Tagines in Paris - by Sirexcat

Heading to Paris for a long weekend – excited for the macarons, tagines, cheese, falafel and Christmas market delicacies! This is our first time in Paris since 2007 – which is where we got the inspiration to start Eating the World at a Senegalese restaurant. We are staying with good friends in the 18th Arrondissement, which is a mecca for African food, so we are especially excited to try out some new dishes and hit some new countries (Like Tunisia, Benin and Togo). One weekend does not seem like nearly enough time, but we are so excited and grateful to get back to where it all began!

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