Trappist Pizza

My family has a new holiday tradition that we’ve enjoyed the last couple years – Christmas pizza! This year we took some inspiration from the famous Trappist beers of Belgium and the Netherlands. Here’s a little recap from the Mother Sponge holiday baking laboratory…

Instead of a wild yeasted sourdough starter (A.K.A. the “mother sponge”), I infused the dough with some Trappist Ale Yeast from White Labs.

A lazy pizzaiolo’s best friend, the stand mixer.

Shaping the dough balls. We made three 10″ pies per the Cheeseboard Collective Works recipe… gotta make sure we had plenty of leftovers.

The dough was more dense than my usual sourdough mix… the yeast probably needed more time to get the dough to rise. Next time I’ll make a new starter with the Trappist yeast and give it plenty of time to reach full strength.

Tossing the pies! The dough may have not risen as much as I would have liked, but it made stretching and tossing the dough really easy.

Our favorite family recipe is a “New Mexican” pie, with roasted poblano chiles, corn, pine nuts, goat cheese, mozzarella, and cilantro. Nothing like 70 degree San Diego weather for a camp stove session on the front porch!

We don’t have a wood fired oven (yet!), but a pizza stone helps to finish the bottom of the pie to get a nice balance of crispy and chewy. If you were curious, that beautiful tea kettle was designed by Sori Yanagi, and you can get one at Halcyon Tea in South Park (it’s our workhorse for tea & coffee).

The Cheeseboard usually tops their pizzas with Italian parsley, but the New Mexican pizza calls for something more complimentary to roasted chiles, and cilantro delivers.

Here’s one of the pies, fresh outta the oven. Much thinner and mild than my usual tangy sourdough, but still incredibly tasty. That bottle of Chimay Grande Reserve snuck into this meal through mere coincidence as a stocking stuffer, but rounded out our Trappist inspired Christmas feast beautifully.

The finishing table, where the pies were showered with fresh chopped cilantro, avocado oil (from Bella Vado), and kosher salt.

A big thanks to White Labs for providing the yeast for this experiment! If you brew beer at home (or wine), check them out. We’ll report back when we try a few of their liquid yeasts for more baking and homebrewing adventures in 2012.

From our family to yours… we hope you’ve had a scrumptious holiday thus far. Cheers to a tasty New Year!

Photos courtesy of Stacy Kelley.

Inspiration, not Stagnation

An executive chef asks the same question to all interviewees at his restaurants; “What is the proper way to prepare rice?” The correct answer of course, is “whatever way you want it cooked, all-knowing one.”

While that management style may increase consistency, consider how downright detrimental it can be if used too often or too extensively. Restricted workers create stagnation. Workers become peons, perform the bare minimum, lose motivation, and eventually leave, forcing employers to spend a lot of time replacing them. That’s expensive (and boring).

Staff should be given some freedom to experiment, fail, grow, improve, and if you’re lucky, sometimes innovate! You can see this approach in action at Google, where engineers are allotted one day per week to work on projects that aren’t necessarily in their job descriptions. Low and behold, some of the most successful products at Google started in that sandbox (Gmail, Google News, Orkut, Adsense). That’s profitable (and exciting!).

Also worth considering–inspired people like to talk to other people (who would’ve thunk it?!?) People who love their job will often spread the word about where they work, talk about how great the products are, even recruit others to work there. That’s good marketing.

The People Have Spoken

A couple of our clients racked up a lot of votes in the latest 2011 Readers Poll from San Diego Citybeat, so I thought we could honor them here for their hard work and great food!

MIHO Gastrotruck won Best Food Truck for the second straight year! Juan and Kevin deserve this – they work damn hard to deliver top quality local/organic food at fair prices. And you can’t deny the ability of their inventive & tasty menus to build a big following around San Diego.

Chef Max Bonacci received an honorable mention for Best San Diego Chef for his fine work at The Linkery and El Take It Easy.

The Linkery also received an honorable mention for the Best Contemporary Cuisine category (another nod to Bonacci’s talent).

El Take It Easy received an honorable mention in the Best Margarita category – a good tip of the hat for their extensive cocktail program. Speaking of the EZ, don’t miss their second pop-up dinner with chef Gavin Schmidt this Wednesday!

Congratulations to all the hard working people in both the front and back of the house who make these fine food operations come to life and inspire local eaters to vote for them!

 

Autumnal Equinox Dinner in Photos

A fine selection of photos from the Autumnal Equinox Dinner held in a sunflower maze at Suzie’s Farm, courtesy of El Take It Easy. Wish we could have been there to delight in Chef Gavin Schmidt’s creations!

Tacos – the 5th dimension

When I first opened up shop at The Bakery in Barrio Logan about two years ago, I ate mostly veg. Little did I know that this era would soon come to an end. Within weeks, I was yanked from the world as we know it, only to find myself wandering through another dimension – one of tacos.

When I awoke from this perspective-altering food-coma on a side street in Tijuana watching a few ounces of salsa be flipped several feet into air via spoon, only to land gently into the welcome embrace of some birria, I realized that carne es too bueno to pass up. Many Tijuana and San Diego taco adventures later, I have acquired expert knowledge of the Tijuego Taco landscape.

But during the work week, my favorite taco within walking or cycling distance from the Mother Sponge studio is the taco de carnitas at La Fachada on 25th between Imperial/Commercial. They do it right – very greasy, very succulent, and slightly crispy on the edges. Plus, the roasted green salsa is the best I’ve ever tasted.

It’s also crucial to note that although great for lunch, La Fachada is best experienced at 1am on Saturday night (with or without a few drinks in ya’). A recent late night snack during the middle of a photoshoot had us at La Fachada around closing time (3am!), listening to a band of Mariachi-youngsters performing The Strokes’ Last Night, a Beatles song I can’t recall right now, and a couple traditional mariachi tunes.