Friday, November 21, 2008
A Night At Chez Durwood
The Frolicking Foodie
Last Tuesday I had the most remarkable experience at one of San Francisco's new underground restaurants, Chez Durwood. These small-scale eateries evoke the black market, family-run restaurants of Havana or Budapest before the fall of the wall but this one is in Bernal Heights and is run by a delightful gay couple. You find Chez Durwood by word of mouth, a neighbor or Facebook friend who likes you enough to share their secret. I'm breaking protocol here, but I promised I would not divulge its location, a nondescript, tiny backyard behind a two flat Edwardian building that you enter from a brick path in what the City calls "unimproved space." Once inside, the host greets you and seats you at one of the four tables on a warmly stained redwood deck surrounded by heat lamps. What proceeds from that moment is basic, simple, and well worth the $100 per person ticket. Fussy eaters beware: There are no choices at Chez Durwood. After you walk in the door your only decision is whether to ask for seconds. We started with a glass of Kir Royale and a simple amouse bouche of sliced baguettes spread with tapenade. As a fan of things salty and bitter, I expected to enjoy my little taste but was more than pleastantly surprised to find that the tapenade had a subtle hint of preserved lemon in it. From this point, I knew the evening would not be just any old backyard barbecue. The next course was a simple roasted tomato soup partnered with a Hawley Viognier. Turns out the chef is also an organic farmer in Sonoma county and the tomatoes came from his harvest of heirlooms, slow roasted. After slurping up the soup, I was treated to a piece of local cod set on a bed of wilted arugula and fresh mint and a drizzle of meyer lemon jus. I still had some Viognier in my glass, but that did not discourage them from bringing a glass of Husch Renegade Sauvignon Blanc. The fish was great but the wine selection broke me of my resistance to Sauvignon Blanc. Fermented with wild yeast and aged in oak, Renegade has none of that cat pissy, eucalyptus and grape fruit tone that I find challenging. Renegade tasted like a Chardonnay with cajones and was the perfect partner to the fish. The next course was at first a bit jarring, but I rolled with the punches and thoroughly enjoyed wild boar chili over a goat cheese infused polenta. The wine pairing was a Meeker Barberian, a blend of Barbera and Zinfandel that is the Reese's Peanut Butter Cup (it was created by accident) of Big Red Wines that go well with game. Before dessert came, I had to take a deep breath and chat with my hosts. Turns out that Chez Durwood has a secret. Everything I ate was not cooked in a kitchen. It was cooked primarily in a bathroom (and a gas grill). A special bathroom equipped with a toaster oven, microwave and electric hot plate, but there was no Wolf range. I did not know whether to be impressed or disturbed. The dessert, paired with an Eric Ross Old Vine Zinfandel Port was a simple collection of roasted figs and pears grilled with bubbling hot topping mascarpone. To be honest, my evening at Chez Durwood did not make me want to give up on more elegant dining experiences. It's not Chez Panisse or Michael Minna. It's more like one of the best dinner you've ever had a friend serve you in his backyard. Isn't that worth $100?
Monday, October 13, 2008
Seasonal Effective Disorder
Since moving to Ridgeback Mountain, I no longer suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder. The shortening days, the disquieting October heat waves, the eager anticipation of the Day of the Dead, all of this no longer sends me into a funk. Quite the opposite, actually. Every Autumn Peter and I suffer from incurable Seasonal Effective Disorder.
It's organic, but I don't think it's some kind of hypo-mania. It's fueled by the spirit of the harvest and the impending election not an imbalance of serotonin. As the days get shorter, Peter and I go into chore & task hyper- drive. Here's an example of a recent Sunday:
6:37am, awakened and noted with surprise that the dogs allowed us to sleep in
6:52am, sipped coffee in bed, watching re-runs of the Daily Show's election coverage
7:08am, started cataloging the day's chores
7:27am, opened the jumb cooler in the garage where the grenache noir has been fermenting for the past two weeks, removed my slippers, entered the cooler, and paced up and down to crush the grapes with my feet for the next half hour (count to twenty in place, shift position, count to twenty, shift position...)
7:57am: Hand strained the crushed grape juice/wine into plastic buckets...
8:34am: Washed my feet, noticing an unfortunate scratch on my foot
8:42am: Headed to the vegetable garden to plant starts of kale, broccoli, collards, and cauliflower. Contemplated pulling up the tomatoes, but instead considered whether or not I'll have time to make green tomato preserves the following weekend...
9:24am: Hop into the shower to attend to Wine Country Says No on 8 steering committee
12:17pm: Return home to join Peter as he organizes a pile of oak and manzanita in preparation for next weekend's firewood preparation.
I was exhausted and it was not even 1:00pm. The rest of the day included picking limes, par-boiling tomatoes and placing them in freeze bags, loading our legal wedding photos on to our computer and drafting a No on 8 fundraising email.
These days leading up to the "fall back" to Standard Time feel like a game of Beat-the-Clock. Before rain becomes a regular possibility, we are compelled to tend to the garden, the wood pile, and the pile of mason jars in the garage. Add an important election and the level of activity accelerates. The good news is that I no longer feel S.A.D. in October. The bad news is that I'm exhausted. I can't wait until those days in December or January when the rains don't stop and I spend my weekends napping in front of the fire (from wood chopped on Halloween), sipping pumpkin soup (from the pumpkins I harvested and roasted in October), and watching DVDs of television series I am too tired to stay up to watch.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Over the Summer Bridge
If you've ever read A Year in Provence or Under the Tuscan Sun or similar memoirs (or watched Martha Stewart), you know all about the exploits of expatriates or urban refugees who transplant themselves into rustic rural settings. Close your eyes...smell the discarded must of the vendange (grape harvest) rotting on the side of the road?...taste the freshly harvested eggplant roasting on the grill...imagine the colorful locals mocking the poor foreigner who doesn't know how to dig a well...
And then, if you're me, you stop to think and the word, "Yuck!" comes to mind. What a bunch of pompous narcissists crying out for attention. Look at my fabulous life! Why don't you make your own boar sausage and goat cheese?!! Why do you still buy frozen spinach?!!
Years ago, when we were in the midst of building Ridgeback Mountain I played around with the idea of a counter-memoir, a tongue in cheek response to Peter Mayle that would document my life in Cloverdale entitled, Over the Summer Bridge. Through the years, I've never gotten around to it. And recently I've figured out why. Cookinginthebathroom is actually the most sustained writing project I've ever engaged in. Good stories need conflict and struggle. Trying to cook dinner 18 inches from a toilet is filled with struggle. On the other hand, while life in Ridgeback Mountain is hard work, it's also blissful. It's even blissful when we find rattlesnakes in the bedroom.
So I'm ambivalent. I want to tell you about picking, hand-stemming and foot stomping seven buckets of grenache noir. I want to share with you the experience of firing up our new brick pizza oven. I want to report the story of Guy the toothless landscape supply guy. But I don't want to sound like a pompous narcissist or some kind of Martha Stewart want-to-be.
Odds are I won't be able to help myself. When it's time to make kumquat jelly again, I'll be letting you know about it (even if I don't make it in the bathroom).
Grilling Confessions
I have a confession. It's only like that on Wednesday nights.
On other nights, I often step out of the bathroom and into the backyard. The set up is rustic, it's hardly a designer kitchen, but I am technically not cooking in the bathroom. I'm cooking dinner on a gas grill that sits under the upstairs deck in a dark corner of the pine-needle covered patch of concrete and dirt that serves as our backyard.
The principles of cooking in the bathroom remain intact. Simple ingredients. Minimal prep time. A spirit of creative experimentation. Tasty food. The grill, I have found, can do much more than rib eyes and burgers. Here are some of my recent favorites:
Grilled Romaine
Two (or more) heads of romaine lettuce
Olive oil
Salt
Parmesan or other cheese
Brush the Romaine with the olive oil and sprinkle with salt
Place on a grill that is at medium-low heat (around 400-450)
Cook for about 3-4 minutes then flip until the romaine has grill marks but don't allow it to wilt or burn
Remove from the grill, cut off the ends, and chop in 3-4 pieces, depending on the size of the heads
Toss each head in its own bowl with your preferred cheese (you can also use some balsamic vinegar)
Grilled Figs
Slice some figs in half
Stick some roquefort or goat cheese on the figs
Place on a cookie sheet or directly on the grill for 4-5 minutes until the cheese is bubbly
Serve as appetizers
Hot Pockets!
Ratatouille
One eggplant, peeled and chopped into large cubes
One zucchini, chopped in large chunks
Two tomatoes, chopped in large chunks
One medium onion, chopped in large chunks
One clove garlic, chopped
Some fresh basil leaves
Salt & pepper
Olive oil
Toss the ingredients in a bowl
Place in a large piece of aluminum foil
Wrap up tightly, sealing all sides
Cook on a medium grill for 15-20 minutes
Open the pocket into the bowl you used to mix the vegetables and serve
You can adapt the hot pockets for potatoes (use rosemary); vegetable curry (add some tofu and some red peppers and toss in some curry powder); or asparagus (place some sliced meyer lemons in the pocket).
Lamb Meatballs
1 1/2 lb ground lamb
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1/4 cup chopped mint leaves
Chili pepper
1/2 cup bread crumbs
1 egg
Mix all ingredients together with your hands and form into balls
Place on the grill and cook, turning frequently until well done, about 12 minutes in total
Grilled Chicken Stew
One chicken, cut into pieces (I like to split the breasts in two)
Two onions, cut in half
Six figs (or pitless dates)
Red wine
Salt and pepper
Grill the chicken until almost done, about 8-10 minutes per side
Grill the onions until browned, about 5-6 minutes per side
Throw the chicken into an oven proof dish, along with the fruit and the onions
Add salt and pepper
Cover in red wine
Cover the pot and let cook on the grill for another 30-40 minutes
Saturday, August 23, 2008
A Question of Zucchini
Eventually, I made the adjustments in plant positioning and watering routine to generate satisfyingly abundant crops. One year, I went overboard and added a round ronde de nice, and a yellow patty pan. Since then, I've stuck to one plant. And one is enough.
With my zucchini cultivation under control, in recent years I have turned my energy to turning my abundant crop into interesting, creative food. There are entire cook books devoted to zucchini. I only own one. Clotilde Dusoulier turned her food blog Chocolate & Zucchini into a cookbook and a life as a full-time food writer. Her zucchini carpaccio changed my attitude towards both zucchini and my mandoline. Merci Clotilde. While I love cook books as reading material, I look to them for guidelines and inspiration more than prescriptive directions. After years of scanning what Molly Katzen, Alice Waters, and Rick Bayless and countless others have to say about zucchini, I divide zucchini recipes into four categories:
- Zucchini as Cheese Delivery Mechanism
- Zucchini as Color, Background & Texture
- Zucchini as Moisture-Giving Goodness
- Zucchini as Star of the Show
Zucchini as Cheese Delivery Mechanism
You're kidding yourself if you like stuffed zucchini for the zucchini. Let's face it, when you hollow out an overgrown zucchini and stuff it with breadcrumbs, vegetables, and cheese you're making a healthy version of a pizzone (you know, that calzone meets pizza thing). There's nothing to be ashamed of. Add more cheese. Try some fontina along with the mozzarella.
Here's a simple recipe that is so easy you can do it in the bathroom:
Zucchini Lasagna Lite
Ingredients:
Zucchini, thinly sliced along the width of the squash, four to six inches long
2-3 Tomatoes, sliced
2 cups grated mozzarella
1/2 cup grated parmesan
A little olive oil
Fresh basil, chopped
Coat the bottom of a small baking dish with olive oil
Place a layer of zucchini slices on the bottom of the dish
Cover in mozzarella
Add a layer of tomatoes
Sprinkle with basil
Repeat once or twice more, depending on the thickness of your slices and the depth of your dish
Cover final layer with parmesan
Bake uncovered, for about 20 minutes in a 400 degree oven (the toaster oven works fine)
Serve when bubbling hot
(Variation: substitute thinly sliced zucchini for noodles in a full-fledged lasagne with layers of ricotta, etc...)
Zucchini as Color, Background & Texture
Zucchini is expected in rattatouille and minestrone, but it also works in enchiladas, couscous stew, and Thai curry. You can let it soften up and absorb the flavors of the stew or stir fry it and let it add some crunch. In all of these applications, the zucchini is at once essential and incidental. It completes the dish, but does not take center stage. It's like a great supporting character in a movie. It's that bit of viognier in a Northern Rhone Syrah. There are a few keys to using zucchini in this way:1) Everything in moderation. The perfect minestrone is not zucchini soup. It's a wonderful balance of textures, colors and flavors where every spoonful is a garden of surprise. You might feel like you have more zucchini than God, but resist the urge to unload it and keep your ingredients in balance.
2) Use your knifing skills. Rounds. Sticks. Cubes. Chunky. Paper thin. Think about how the two tones of flesh and skin will enhance the visual appeal of your dish.
3) Avoid zucchini mush. Even in a soup or stew when you want to have the zucchini soften up and soak up the flavors of the stock, don't add it too early. Let the tomatoes disolve. Allow the Eggplant to soften. Then, add the zucchini.
Zucchurrini (Thai-style vegetable curry)
1 small Acorn squash
One medium onion, chopped
One red pepper, chopped
One jalapeno or serrano pepper, chopped
Grated fresh ginger to taste (at least a tbsp)
Olive oil
One zucchini, chopped in sticks
One can coconut milk
Thai basil, chopped
Chili powder to taste
Two tomatoes, quartered
Quarter the Acorn squash, steam it for about 30 min (or bake in the toaster oven at 350 for 45 min) Set aside and allow to cool.
Sautee the onion with the chopped peppers in some olive oil until the onions are slightly browned and starting to carmelize
Add the ginger and sautee for an addition three to four minutes
Add the zucchini at high heat for three to four minutes
Add the coconut milk and basil, bring to a simmer, adding a cup or two of water to reach your desired consistency
Put the chopped tomatoes into bowls, spoon the stew over the tomatoes and sprinkle chili pepper as garnish
Zucchini as Moisture-Giving Goodness
"These brownies are so moist!" exclaims the unsuspecting consumer. "They're zucchini brownies," states the wise and wiley cook. Opportunities for smug revelations about ingredient selection aside, zucchini is an excellent moisturizing agent for a wide range of savory and sweet baked goods. At this moment, I have three zucchinis the length of my forearm and the width of my calves awaiting their demise. Here's one of my favorite ways to get rid of them:
EZucchini pancackes
One (or two medium size) over-sized zucchini, grated
1 egg
Instant pancake mix
Savory option:
1-2 cups grated cheddar cheese
Chopped herbs (basil or parsley)
Put the grated zucchini in a large mixing bowl
With a fork, mix the egg into the zucchini
Add enough pancake mix to coat the zucchini (the amount will vary according to the level of moisture in the zucchini)
If doing the savory option, add the cheese and herbs and mix thoroughly.
Spoon the batter in rounds on to a skillet (non-stick if you have it, otherwise melt butter in it)
Cook them like pancakes, but don't be afraid to flatten them a bit at first before the first flip
Zucchini as the Star of the Show
Occasionally, zucchini gets to stand alone and shine on its own. A creamy zucchini soup. A perfectly fried tempura. The aforementioned carpaccio. Combined with some tasty fat (cream, hot safflower oil, extra virgin olive oil) zucchini's subtle richness emerges. Here's one that screams summertime:
Zlaw
Grate one or two zucchini
Place in a collander and drain excess water
Toss the zucchini with salt, olive oil, vinegar and chopped basil leaves
Saturday, August 9, 2008
In Defense of Marscapone
Once I accepted that marscapone had to be a part of my life, I have never been happier. Oh, and it's a perfect ingredient for the simplicity required while cooking in the bathroom:
Pasta al Bagno
Boil some penne
Chop three or four heirloom tomatoes
Drain the pasta
In the same pot that you used to cook the pasta, toss the tomatoes with the pasta and a healthy dollop of marscapone
Serve while the pasta is still warm
Butternut Buddies
Sliice a butternut squash in half and remove the seeds
Place in the toaster oven for 45 minutes at 400 degrees
When the squash is fork-able and slightly browned, add a healthy dollop of mascarpone in the hole where the seeds used to be
Return to the toaster oven for a few minutes, until the cheese is bubbling and golden brown
Eat directly from the squash shell or scoop it out and toss over pasta
Broiled Peaches
Slice two peaches in half
Remove the pit
Broil the peaches in the toaster oven for 3-4 minutes until slightly brown around the edges
Spoon a dollop of marscapone into the peach pit's cavity
Broil in the toaster oven for an additional 2-3 minutes until cheese is bubbling & golden brown
Summer Fruit Salad
Slice or chop a mix of nectarines, peaches, apricots, asian pears... whatever is fresh and to your liking
In a bowl, toss the fruit with a dollop of marscapone
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Pork chops and stone fruit sauce, ain't that shwell
-- Peter Brady
With apologies to my kosher, vegetarian and Muslim friends, I love pork. It's not just the other white meat. I have Jewish friends who call bacon the gateway drug to falling off the kosher wagon. Peter's first meal as a carnivore, after close to twenty years as a vegetarian, featured double cut pork chops (at Chez Pannise) and he never looked back. One of the more surprising features of pork is how well it pairs with fruit. Alice, the Brady's housekeeper, knew it. If Alice had to cook in the bathroom, I bet she'd get a nice set of double cut pork chops from Sam the butcher and buy a jar of apple sauce from the supermarket. When I cook pork and fruit in the bathroom, I go for the double cut pork chops, but instead of processed apple puree, how about some fresh white peaches and apricots. Alice might have used the hot plate and pan-fried the chops in melted butter. I go for a lower fat version and broil the chops in my toaster oven. The key to using the toaster oven is not to rush the oven. Let it get hot. You're not making toast. You're broiling pork chops.
Pork chops and stone fruit sauce
Ingredients:
Two double cut pork chops
Olive oil
One or two apricots, quartered
One peach, chopped into 1/2 pieces
Salt & pepper to taste
1. Turn the toaster oven to high broil
2. Lightly coat the chops in olive oil
3. Salt and pepper to taste
4. Once the oven is well heated, throw in the chops and cook for 3-4 minutes (every toaster oven is a bit different, so keep an eye on the chops) until that side is slightly browned
5. Cook the other side of the chops for another 4-5 minutes until well-browned
6. Flip the chops again and cover the chops with the fruit, cook for 2-3 minutes, until the fruit is bubbling and browned
I like serving these chops with steamed broccoli. Broccoli is easy to cook in the microwave. Rinse the broccoli but don't shake off the water. Nuke it for 3-4 minutes. Throw some butter on top of it.
Sunday, July 13, 2008
La magia del horno microondas
Enchiladas Microondas
Ingredients:
8-12 fresh handmade corn tortillas
1/2 lb - 1 lb queso fresca or panela, crumbled (you could substitute monterrey jack or any other cheese you like, I like the queso fresca because it does not really melt, it stays integral as it cooks)
1 can black beans
1 avocado, peeled and chopped into cubes
1 small zucchini sliced into cubes (optional)
1 tomato, sliced thin
1 pint fresh salsa
Olive oil
To taste:
Chile powder (Pasilla or New Mexico)
Cumin
Cilantro or epazote
The Filling:
- Drain the black beans
- Chop the avocado and zucchini
- Crumble the cheese (and reserve about a half cup)
- Toss together in a small bowl
- Add cumin, chile pepper and herbs to taste
Assembly:
- Spread a bit of olive oil on bottom and sides of a small micro-waveable casserole (8 x 8)
- Tear or slice eight of the tortillas in half
- Place a layer of tortillas in the casserole, using the straight edge along the side of the pan. Overlap them as necessary. Cover the entire bottom of the pan. Depending on the size and shape of your dish, you may need to add some tortilla pieces in the middle.
- Spread slightly more than half the salsa over the tortillas
- Add the filling
- Arrange the sliced tomatoes over the filling
- Cover the filling with tortillas, following the same method as the bottom. Throw a whole tortilla in the center.
- Cover the tortillas with the remaining salsa
- Sprinkle the remainig cheese on top
Microwave for 4-8 minutes, depending on how your microwave cooks. The objective is to have the cheese bubbling hot throughout.
Serve like a lasagna.
Sunday, July 6, 2008
One Pot Wonders that Look Like Hell but Taste Like Heaven
Lentils & Sausages
I love those little green French lentils. They maintain their integrity in cooking and don't get mushy. They're easy to cook and lately have been easier to find.
Ingredients:
- Four links fresh sausage (I like to mix it up depending on what's available at the butcher: a merguez lamb, a spicy italian, an herbed turkey...)
- One medium onion, finely chopped
- Three cloves of garlic, finely chopped
- Touch of olive oil
- One package of french lentils (lentilles verts de puy)
Preparation:
- Heat a touch of olive oil at the bottom of the sauce pan on Medium-High heat
- Add the onion and cook until transluscent
- Add the sausages and cook until done
- Remove the sausages and set aside. Leave the onions and the cooking juices.
- Add the garlic and sautee for a minute, just to soften, be careful not to burn it.
- Add the lentils and cover with about 3X their volume in cold water and bring to a boil
- Lower the heat to a simmer, cover, and cook the lentils about 20-25 minutes until water is absorbed
- Slice the cooked sausages in 1/2 inch circles
- When the lentils are done, add the sausages and allow to re-heat for a few minutes
- Serve in a bowl
Moussaka in a Pot
This isn't really moussaka it's just something I made up when I came home from the market and realized that on impulse I had purchased fingerling potatoes, ground lamb, baby spinach and feta cheese without a real plan. The result was delicious.
Ingredients:
- 4-5 small potatoes
- One lb ground lamb
- One medium onion, chopped
- Two cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 1/4 cup fresh mint (if you have it), chopped -- you can substitute italian parsely or do a little of both
- 1 package baby spinach
- 1/2 lb feta cheese, crumbled
- Olive oil
- Salt & pepper, chili powder to taste
Preparation:
- Bring a pot of water to boil
- Add potatoes and cook til just fork-able done, about 10 minutes (be careful to avoid over-done mush)
- Drain potatoes
- Heat a touch of olive oil at the bottom of the pan, add onions and cook til transluscent
- Add lamb, garlic, chili, and chopped mint. Sautee until lamb is done.
- Add potatoes and feta and heat until cheese begins to soften (it won't really melt)
- Add spinach, heating until spinach is wilted but not dissolving
- Serve in bowls
Saturday, June 28, 2008
The pathetic state of my larder
1. a room or place where food is kept; pantry.
2. a supply of food
When cooking in the bathroom, storage is at a premium. There is no room to stockpile staples when one's pantry doubles as one's dressing room. My refrigerator is better suited to a college dorm room, with just enough room for a six pack and a tub of fresh salsa. The in-fridge freezer is perpetually frosted with barely enough room for a popsicle.
The pathetic state of my larder requires me to limit my food storage to a judiciously selected list of cooking staples. On the shelf: olive oil, kosher salt, a pepper grinder, balsamic vinegar, two packages of dried pasta, a bag of pasilla powder. In the the fridge: a wedge of ungrated parmesan (reggiano), a block of sharp cheddar, a stick of butter, a jar of mustard, a too-large bottle of soy sauce awaiting transfer to a smaller container, a reasable bag of flour tortillas, another one of corn tortillas.
To gather enough food to cook dinner requires that I live my life in an anachronistic slow food fantasy. Every evening I answer the question "what's for dinner" with a trip to the green grocer, butcher or fish monger. I only buy what I can cook and eat that night. I pick out only what's fresh. I avoid waste. I make sure that any food I buy can be prepared within the tight confines and limited equipment of my cooking space. And, I am careful to consider the timing and complexity of my prep time. I don't want to sit over a pot and stir a sauce for a long time in clean view of the toilet. The result is that I've developed a number of recipes and approaches to cooking that work well for anyone who wants simple, easily prepared food. You don't have to suffer the limitations of a bathroom-based kitchen to gain from my experience.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Cooking in the Bathroom
After a few unexpected turns of my partner's career track we had to adjust that plan. On weekends, we enjoy Ridgeback Mountain, where our 100 lb ridgebacks run freely through our Syrah vineyard and I enjoy cooking on a Thermador cooktop. During the week, on the other hand, the four of us, Peter, the ridgebacks, and me are now sharing a 270 square foot studio apartment...without a kitchen. We could be lazy (and poor) and go out for dinner every night, but then I'd miss out on my favorite stress reliever. Nothing relaxes me more after a hard day at work than cooking a great meal -- chopping and stirring while sipping a glass of red wine.
We had only one option: to set up cooking facilities in the studio's bathroom. The sink is a little tight for rinsing vegetables, but the stand-up shower works just fine (thank you Kramer). The BTUs are non-existent on my hot plate, but it can still boil water just fine. And, I've come to a deep appreciation of the sublime versatility of the toaster oven. Three months into this experiment, I ocasionally still fantasize that I'm cooking gourmet meals in a Parisian chambre de bonne. But what I'm really doing is