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Husband, Dad, Cook, Surfer
  • Cocktails at Martin’s West

    May 6, 2012

    1 Comment

    Kumquat Crofter cocktail at Martin’s West

    Note: This is the first of (hopefully) many posts introducing our readers to cocktail spots in the San Francisco Bay Peninsula and South Bay. Good cocktails have reached us here in the sticks suburbs and country and we encourage locals to try these places. If you are out of the bay area, you can still read about some great drinks and get some inspiration.

    For many bay area residents, downtown Redwood City is probably not the first place they would look for a gastropub. And if you are curious, “gastropub” is a recent term to define a British-inspired pub that features high-end food and spirits. Gastropubs are not “bangers and mash” joints, but truly high-end restaurants and bars that feature local, artisinal foods and quality spirits. Gastropubs led Britain’s unlikely charge to the heights of international cuisine, so it is a treat to have a good gastropub in the heart of the peninsula.

    And this brings us to Martin’s West in Redwood City. Established in 2009, Martin’s West is a true gastropub located in the historic Alhambra building, a refurbished old-time saloon and theater, first opened in 1896. The current space features tall ceilings, and exposed bricks and beams, giving it an eclectic, pub-inspired interior. The main room features a long wooden bar with plenty of stools, multiple tables, cozy booths and even an alcove by the front windows. Martin’s West is a welcoming spot that feels comfortable like a pub, but also polished, refined, and slightly metropolitan.

    In addition to the comfortable, welcoming atmosphere, Martin’s West features Scottish-inspired food from local ingredients, a great beer selection and a deep menu of single-malt scotch. We are big fans of chef Michael Dotson’s food at Martin’s West (the house-made pickles and charcuterie are favorites), but we are frequent visitors for the cocktails. Led by GM/partner Moira Beveridge, Martin’s West regularly features 10-20 cocktails with a good mix of old-time and creative, modern drinks using fresh, seasonal ingredients. We posted on the popularity of the Moscow Mule, and Martin’s is known for their interpretations of the Manhattan, and these drinks are worth a visit. But we were lucky enough to visit Martin’s West just as they added a few new cocktails to the menu.

    Sunny Brae Cocktail at Martin’s West

    Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: Cocktail Recipes, Musings, Reviews and Notes Tags: cocktail review, martin's west, martin's west cocktails, peninsula cocktails, silicon valley cocktails, south bay cocktails
  • Fried Baby Artichokes

    May 3, 2012

    18 Comments

    Fried Baby Artichokes With Remoulade

    More artichokes and deep-frying this week. But unlike our Rapini Fritto Misto, this recipe is as easy as deep-frying gets, and the results are one of the best ways you can enjoy artichokes. The only challenge is getting the baby artichokes.

    Baby or “spring” artichokes are simply small artichokes that have yet to develop tough leaves or thorns and can be eaten (mostly) whole. You can find them at the farmers market early in the spring and fall growing seasons. The problem is that artichokes grow so quickly that sometimes our local farmer/supplier can’t pick enough of the baby artichokes to meet demand. And there is plenty of demand from chefs and home cooks (and the growers wisely keep some for themselves). So far we have detected a pattern that if it’s warm and sunny the artichokes will be bigger and we will miss out on the baby artichokes. If it is cold and rainy we seem to have better supply. But this is a small, local sample, so who knows?

    Happily, last week we scored some absolutely beautiful baby artichokes that were no more than 2 inches in size. We normally cook the baby artichokes with potatoes. But this week we decided to try a recipe Carolyn saw on TV. Ina Garten of Barefoot Contessa, again. But Ina and Alice Waters rarely let us down with their veggie recipes, so we decided to give this one a try. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Lunch / Salads / Sides, Vegetables Tags: artichoke, artichoke recipe, baby artichoke recipe, baby artichokes, fried artichoke, fried artichoke recipe, fried baby artichoke recipe, spring artichoke
  • Two Drinks for Cinco de Cocktail: The Chica Facil and the Eastside

    May 2, 2012

    4 Comments

    Chica Facil Cocktail and Eastside Cocktail

    2012 is a potentially troublesome year. The Mayan calendar suggests that the world will end on the 21st of December. Somehow, we aren’t so worried. But in the world of cocktails, the real Armageddon comes this Saturday May 5th, Cinco de Cocktail. We call it “Cinco de Cocktail” because the dates have aligned and Cinco de Mayo and The Kentucky Derby are on the same day. Margaritas and Mint Juleps for all! This means we may see more crummy cocktails made this Saturday than any day this year.

    This is not to say we aren’t fans of the drinks, we love a good Margarita and like the occasional Mint Julep. But as these are both simple cocktails that require care to make well, we doubt many good ones will be served this Saturday. Nothing makes us sad like a bad cocktail, and we suspect a lot of sour-mix Margs and creme-de-menthe Juleps will be sloshed about this weekend. We also have no doubt that many cocktail writers, well aware of the pending catastrophe, are working to provide the drinking public with good recipes for Margs and Mint Juleps for the weekend. Since that angle is covered, how about trying something new, perhaps better, instead?

    Chica Facil means something like “easy gal”…

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Cocktail Recipes, Gin, Musings, Tequila Tags: chica facil cocktail, chica facil cocktail recipe, cinco de mayo cocktail, eastside cocktail, eastside cocktail recipe, kentucky derby cocktail, margarita alternative, mint cocktails
  • Seared and Poached Halibut with Salsa Verde and Sugar-Snap Peas

    May 1, 2012

    7 Comments

    Earlier in our lives, Carolyn and I were lucky to spend a good amount of time in the Southeast, particularly the Carolinas and Georgia. We love the people, land and beaches and built a real love of the local food. Southern-influenced food, especially real barbecue, is a part of our regular family cooking here in California. We also experienced some of the “new” southern cuisine in Savannah and Charleston, and fell in love with many of the flavors. Dinner at Elisabeth on 37th in Savannah is still one of our best dining memories. So when new southern-influenced chefs emerge, we take notice. And if they have a cookbook, we often give in to temptation (addiction?) and buy it. Such is the case with Athens and Atlanta-based chef Hugh Acheson of Top Chef and Food and Wine’s “Best New Chef” award fame. He recently published a his cookbook “A New Turn in the South” and we decided to try it out.

    We have been working through this cookbook for a few weeks and with very good results. Acheson has gone out of his way to create a cookbook that will work for the home cook. So far we are happy with the cookbook, with the one bummer that some of the recipes contain ingredients we will have a hard time finding locally in California. But this recipe, featuring a dual-cooking method for halibut and sugar-snap peas that are just coming into season, stood out for us and we decided to try it. And the result was a restaurant-quality dish you can make at home.

    Now you might asking, “a restaurant-quality halibut dish? why halibut?” Well, Pacific halibut is a sustainable beautiful, and tasty fish, if you don’t overcook it and dry it out. Halibut is a great match with bright flavors like herbs and spring vegetables, but the key is to find a home-cooking method that keeps the halibut moist. With this recipe, Acheson gives you an easy, predictable cooking method that keeps the fish moist and then accentuates it with a sweet pan-sauce, tangy salsa verde and crispy sugar-snap peas. In the end, you get the range of textures and flavors that elevate a dish beyond the realm of regular home cooking. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Dinner, Lunch / Salads / Sides, Vegetables Tags: a new turn in the south recipe, halibut recipe, huch acheson, salsa verde recipe, Seared and Poached Halibut with Salsa Verde and Sugar-Snap Peas. Seared and Poached Halibut with Salsa Verde and Sugar-Snap Peas recipe, sugar snap pea recipe
  • New Potatoes With Brown Butter and Herbs

    April 30, 2012

    7 Comments

    New Potatoes With Brown Butter and Herbs

    Sorry Idaho, Long Island in New York has the best potatoes in the world (unless the potatoes are grown in your garden, those are always the best). And, it turns out, Long Island also gives us one of the best potato recipes in the world, new potatoes with brown butter and herbs. This recipe is one of the best “easy” recipes for any vegetable you can get.

    But before we get to the recipe, let us explain the deal on potatoes from Long Island. Long Island, as we know it, formed about 21,000 years ago during the last major ice age and is what geologists would call a glacial moraine. Basically, as the ice crept down over New England it scraped up all the good topsoil and pushed it into a big mound in front of the glaciers. When the glaciers receded, the mound of topsoil was left, and we get Long Island.

    And Long Island is made of some of the best soil on Earth. And to top it off, Long Island is surrounded by water, with moderate temperatures. Suddenly, New York gets some of the best farm land on the planet. Conversely, the reason New England got stuck with cranberries and dairy-farming is because New York got all their good soil. The pattern of New York taking New England’s best continued 20,900 years later with the Yankee’s purchase of Babe Ruth from The Red Sox…but we digress…

    Long Island’s soil is a mixture of sand, gravel, silt, clay and topsoil that ends up being a great fit for agriculture. What the soil and moderate summer temperatures get you is very productive land and very flavorful crops. And potatoes are a perfect fit for the land and climate. Long Island potatoes simply taste more “potatoey” than any we have tried- except the ones we dig up and eat from our garden. Generally we think Long Island potatoes are the best. To be fair, Idaho has great soil for potatoes, but the soil comes from ancient volcanic activity. So maybe “different” could be a better adjective. But Long Island potatoes (or almost any “legal” crop) cannot compete against real estate development. So while Long Island has great produce, sadly, it might not with us much longer. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Garden and Orchard, Lunch / Salads / Sides, Vegetables Tags: brown butter potato recipe, butter and potato, new potato, new potato recipe, new potatoes, New Potatoes With Brown Butter and Herbs, New Potatoes With Brown Butter and Herbs recipe, yukon potato, yukon potato recipe
  • Nothing But Roses

    April 28, 2012

    8 Comments

    Backyard rose

    We are a shameless parents, and we admit it. We love our boys. Our eldest just hit his first home run. The team’s first of the year. He hit it when his parents and grandparents were at the game. I am very happy for him. They won the game. It was a good day. Nothing but roses. Here are some to share.

    Climbing rose, one of our favorites

    With a good day in mind, we give you some roses. There are tough days, too. We should savor the good ones.

    Another climbing rose

    Rose with morning dew

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: Garden and Orchard, Musings Tags: climbing roses, putney farm, rose photo, roses

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