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Recipes and food adventures with Adam Roberts

  • Chocolate Guinness Cake

    Chocolate Guinness Cake

    Cakes, Desserts, Recipes

    |

    March 20, 2012

    Here’s how you know I’m the real deal: whereas most food publications will cram an upcoming holiday down your throat in hopes that you’ll link to their page as you plan your holiday meal, I’m not so clever or strategic. I wait until the holiday’s over, when the post will no longer be relevant, and…

  • Rancho Gordo’s Good Mother Stallard Beans with Lamb Sausage (By Way of Echo Park)

    Rancho Gordo’s Good Mother Stallard Beans with Lamb Sausage (By Way of Echo Park)

    Beans, Recipes

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    March 19, 2012

    The best dinners are the ones that have a story. This is one such dinner. It started on a typical day: I was driving to Silverlake to eat lunch at Forage (one of my favorite places to grab a bite here in L.A.) and to have coffee and do work at Intelligentsia. Only, it was…

  • Bacon For A Crowd

    Bacon For A Crowd

    How To

    |

    March 16, 2012

    You have people coming over for breakfast. You want to serve those people bacon. You want the bacon to be hot. You don’t want to fry it because that would require several pans, it would make a mess and it would be hard to manage while entertaining guests. You may think to yourself, “Maybe bacon’s…

  • Knowing What To Eat

    Knowing What To Eat

    Essays

    |

    March 15, 2012

    It’s funny: the smarter I get about the food, the harder it is to figure out what to eat. Eating didn’t used to be this hard. If I wanted a chicken club sandwich for lunch, I’d eat a chicken club sandwich for lunch. I didn’t worry about whether the bacon came from an industrial pig,…

  • Losing It At Shanghai No. 1 Seafood Village

    Losing It At Shanghai No. 1 Seafood Village

    California, Comics, Los Angeles, San Gabriel Valley, Travel

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    March 13, 2012

  • How To Turn Leftover Chicken Into A Tasty Soup

    How To Turn Leftover Chicken Into A Tasty Soup

    How To, Recipes, Soups

    |

    March 12, 2012

    One benefit of making a complicated, classic dish like bouillabaisse, as I did last week, is that the process of making it becomes its own version of cooking school. You follow the steps but as you do so, you learn things. For example: making a fumet (or fish stock) may be labor-intensive but your efforts…

  • An Imaginative Feast By Food Prodigy Andy Windak (Mac ‘n’ Cheese Stuffed Ravioli! Coq au Vin Chilaquiles!) & A Roasted Feast By Cookbook Hero Molly Stevens

    An Imaginative Feast By Food Prodigy Andy Windak (Mac ‘n’ Cheese Stuffed Ravioli! Coq au Vin Chilaquiles!) & A Roasted Feast By Cookbook Hero Molly Stevens

    Friends & Family

    |

    March 7, 2012

    I don’t follow sports, but I know that there are these people called scouts who go around to minor league events and look for future stars to recruit to the majors. Well, I never considered myself much of a chef scout, but that all changed on Sunday when food blogger Andy Windak–of the food blog…

  • Lindsey Shere’s Legendary Almond Tart

    Lindsey Shere’s Legendary Almond Tart

    Desserts, Pies/Tarts, Recipes

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    March 7, 2012

    I suppose I must really like a challenge because, on the night that I made the bouillabaisse, I also attempted a famously difficult dessert: Lindsey Shere’s Almond Tart. Lindsey Shere, in case you don’t know, helped open Chez Panisse in 1971 and stayed there as pastry chef until 1998. I first heard about her famous…

  • Bouillabaisse! A French Seafood Odyssey At Home

    Bouillabaisse! A French Seafood Odyssey At Home

    Main Dishes, Recipes, Seafood

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    March 5, 2012

    Certain recipes are so complicated, so expensive, and so high-stakes that they become, for adventurous home cooks, the equivalent of climbing Mount Kilimanjaro or sailing a boat around the world. Bouillabaisse is that sort of recipe. Originating from Marseille (in France), bouillabaisse–at least, the authentic kind–asks you to make your own fish stock (with fish…

  • Spago

    Spago

    Beverly Hills, California, Los Angeles, Travel

    |

    March 1, 2012

    If you’ve read your “United States of Arugula” (and, really, everyone should), you’re well aware that the age of the celebrity chef–an age we’re still enduring–may very well have had its start here in Los Angeles at a restaurant called Spago. The chef, of course, is Wolfgang Puck and on the night that I ate…

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Amateur Gourmet

The internet home of food writer Adam Roberts, who's been blogging about his kitchen adventures since 2004.

  • Blog
  • Recipes
  • NYC
  • Books
    • Food Person
    • Give My Swiss Chards to Broadway
    • Secrets of the Best Chefs
    • The Amateur Gourmet
  • About
Subscribe

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