Friday, December 2, 2022

A sudden, unannounced, return to breakfast reportage [at least for a brief, shining moment]

The following appeared in a text sent to a friend - and I just now realized - after all this time - that this was a Breakfast Fetish Moment if there ever was one! The following is cut-and-pasted from my text: 

p.s.: Just polished off a breakfast item that popped into my head as I was cooking - was going to just scramble some eggs but there were strawberries in the fridge so I added them to the pan (!!) - lots of grassfed sea-salted butter - added some maple syrup into the pan as well - became a kind of instant compote - like French toast without the toast - gorgeousness!


I do not know when I shall return to this fine site. Many of the photos from earlier posts have been lost to the sands of time and the processes of ownership change. Not even sure who is spearheading Blogger these days. But it has been a joy to join you once again. 

Signed,

Your Intrepid Lover of Breakfast

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Memories of Breakfasts Past (Hollywood Baked-Good Sighting)

Have you ever loved a baked good so passionately that when it no longer was available you continued to long for it, to miss it, for YEARS after the fact?

I have.  And do.  I pine for the Apple Spice Cake that I used to order nearly every day at Mani's Bakery in Los Angles on Fairfax Avenue near Wilshire Boulevard.

At the time I worked a night shift.  So I had these leisurely mornings-into-afternoons. And as often as not I would end up at Mani's.  I loved it there.  The staff were lovely and friendly - and the baked goods were amazing - low sugar - mostly fruit-juice sweetened - but entirely wholesome and entirely delicious.  It was not merely an assortment of sweets - it was good food.

I remember hearing somewhere that Mani supplied healthy sweets to Hollywood for actors who were required to eat bad-for-you stuff in film shoots and wanted to at least eat something relatively good-for-you.  I think there was a story about Danny DeVito having to eat a bunch of donuts.

Which leads me to - today I once again lapsed into a painful longing for Mani's Apple Spice Cake.  And then I remembered:  there's this thing called the internet.

So I went online and found that Mani has a new place in Oakland, California.  I could not find any reference to my beloved Apple Spice Cake - so I wrote Mani the following message:

Hello Mani - I was a major Mani's customer for a lot of years when you had your shop on Fairfax - loved it so much.  I'm now living in NC and I see you've moved too - hope this finds you well and thriving.  My top fav item was Apple Spice Cake - it was kind of a staple in my life for a while - loved everything about it - the moisture of the apples, the texture of the cake - the beautiful pecan crumble - for me it was perfection.  It only just now occurred to me that I might try to search for Mani's online - found the site for your Oakland space (congrats!).  Do you still make Apple Spice Cake?  If so do you ever ship items?  Alternatively - is there a recipe for it?  I am not even a baker but I am totally up for trying to approximate it.  

Thanks - very best wishes to you.

- Amy

We shall see what happens - I will report back in the comments section of this post if I hear anything back.  Even the prospect of hearing from the actual baker of the actual Apple Spice Cake fills me with joy and hope.

Oh yes - I almost forgot the best part.  Some time in the last year or so I was re-watching the movie "The Birdcage" with Robin Williams and Nathan Lane (with fabulous character-acting turns by Gene Hackman & Dianne Wiest).  And there was this one scene.  Early in the film.  In the breakfast nook of the conservative senator (Hackman) and his loyally clueless wife (Wiest).  And there it was.  I was certain of it.  On a pristine white dish on the table in front of Dianne Wiest's character was Mani's Apple Spice Cake!  A beacon of joy - a pang of love for this long-lost baked-good from my past.  In my note to Mani today, I added the following:

p.s.: I could swear I saw your Apple Spice Cake in a cameo appearance in the film "The Birdcage" - Dianne Wiest.  OMG I just did a search & here is the clip - the internet is amazing - I am so curious to know if that is your actual A.S.C.


Can't wait to get confirmation on this!!!

Saturday, April 9, 2016

SADNESS!


It has come to my attention that nearly all of the delightful images of breakfast that once graced these virtual pages have almost all but disappeared!

It is not clear to me if they are retrievable!  The amount of photographic digging that would be required to reinstate these posts is daunting!  Years and years of archival breakfast shots wedged in between massive quantities of non-breakfast shots!

I will not here and now say I will never be able to do it - but at this moment I certainly cannot.

I with all my heart regret this turn of events.

The next chapter has yet to be written.

*UPDATE*
I have been able to retrieve several images - which is nice. I think most of them are the original ones. I could be wrong. A final desperation move involved putting a happy sunrise emoticon and the bracketed words "breakfast fetish" in a large font.

I regret nothing

Dear Reader: I have not posted for a very long time.  This has been due mainly to the fact that I tend now to eat such uninteresting breakfasts that have all been essentially so similar, that there is simply not sufficient variety to merit commentary here.  However, there have been some wildly enjoyable breakings-of-form that I have not shared with you, and for that I apologize.  In fact, perhaps I will go back through the archive and attempt to reassemble the circumstances surrounding a breakfast or two and recreate them for you here.  Meanwhile, I do have some news.

There I was, walking around the North Carolina State Farmer's Market - late afternoon on a Friday - in the off-season.  Very few things caught my eye.  I had purchased a three-dollar bunch of spring garlic, which awaits creative use.  But then.  I walked past a very non-descript bakery.  You know the type - more blank space behind the glass than not.  A marquis that offers things like Mountain Dew and chips.  State Fair kind of fair.  But then.  Behind a clear hard plastic case, I saw a stack of some kind of dark golden brown pastry.  You could tell there was crispness there.  Fattiness otherwise known as greasiness.  There were even some occasional dark almost black spots.  So not machine made.  They approximated the shape of large calzones - but it was clear that they were a sweet.

I had to inquire.

Turns out they are called "Apple Jacks."  I have seen hand pies and popovers, turnovers and individual pies - but I had never seen an Apple Jack.  The nice man behind the counter when asked kindly explained that they are made using a recipe of his great great grandmother.  I am not cynical, but I did wonder slightly if that was merely a line, a selling point - but on some more true heartfelt level I believed I was in the presence of a familial legacy.  The man explained that one of the special ingredients was powdered (as opposed to granulated) sugar.  He said that this made it a sweet dough.  He also said he used dried apples.  And that he also makes them in peach and sweet potato.  All of this seemed too specific, too knowledgeable, too detailed to be mythology.

What he did not know was that two of the details, the powdered sugar / sweet dough pitch - as well as the dried apples aspect - were both strikes against the pastry.  But I had already purchased it.  I held it, wrapped in its waxed paper cover held within a white paper bakery bag, swathed in a white plastic grocery bag that thanked me for having made my four dollar purchase.

Here's the thing.  When I took it home, I made some hot tea.  It was perfect.  Crunchy outer shell, the perfect chew, the apple filling not too sweet, generous but not overfilled - and the crust delivered the salt notes that were required to elevate its status to Pie Hero.

Now, I admit that mistakes were made.  Ultimately, for example, I ate the whole thing.  You will note from the picture that I provide here that the thing was huge.  That is not a small pastry plate - it is a large honking dinner plate - and the Apple Jack barely fits on it.

Nevertheless, I regret nothing.


p.s.: I will preemptively fully acknowledge that this post is peripheral at best to breakfast.  For example, the pastry in question was consumed in the late afternoon.  It is fully disclosed here that it had not been the first meal of the day.  But it has great breakfast potential.  And that is all I feel I need to say in this regard.  Thank you for your time.  

Friday, February 5, 2016

Waffle House Redux

I have been to The House so frequently that I had gotten past needing to talk about it.  Although in the past year there was a moment when Anthony Bourdain was inducted into the Waffle House experience by Sean Brock, which was kind of a letdown and not as awesome a thing as you might think.  But this morning somewhere in Wake County we were super hungry from various adventures and I think I might have had the singular most effective and tasty WH breakfast moment of all.  I will enumerate the elements:

* Coffee - hot!  Fresh!
* Scrambled eggs - hot, fresh, flavorful
* Grits (not mine - but you can bet I forked freely off of those of my companion) - wonderfully corn-y, buttery and dense - lumpy if you will - but in the best way
* Hash Browns - Diced and Peppered (translated: with onions and jalapenos) - I had asked for extra crispy but really in a Waffle House you can ask but you don't always get extra crispy but today it was - super hot, extra crispy, and mighty spicy - with ketchup and Tobasco combo
* Biscuit!  Had never ordered this and really should hold off doing this with any regularity but apparently the m.o. with the biscuits is they slice 'em down the middle and put them face down on the griddle so they get this crunchy top and absorb pretty much I guess we have to call it lard but whatever it is - you get these super subtle bacony and/or country hammy notes - just amazing - way too rich - but savory and soul good.

Forgot to shoot it in advance.  Had not even considered getting a picture in advance.  But at least here's a picture of the aftermath:



Friday, April 4, 2014

Breakfast-like

If you have followed this blog, you may have noticed a slight - ahem - lull in posts.  There is a reason for this: I have more or less ceased to eat anything that resembles breakfast.  This turn of events has nothing to do with a diminished passion for the mightiest of meals - not at all.  Through a sheer quirk in my somatic fate, it has become clear that if I eat a particularly limited diet that consists primarily of meat, vegetables, fruit, sweet potatoes, coconut, olives and olive oil - with a few fermented products thrown in (saurkraut, kim chi, pickles) - I function much better and most poignantly get fewer migraines.  My whole dietary situation is way more complicated than the gluten-free approach that I mentioned in my last post, which was the first of many twists and turns on this path.  I will post a link to the diet below, if anyone is interested.*  Meanwhile, I have recently discovered one thing I can make that actually has some of the breakfast like qualities that I so love.  It is humble, so please don't get your hopes up too much, reader - but I have discovered that slowly-toasted coconut gives me much of what has been lost - most notably what can be described as the warmth, mild sweetness, crunch and richness of hot buttered toast or English muffins.  With a side of fresh fruit, I am pleased to report this simple repast replenishes and nurtures some of my longing for the breakfasts of my culinary past.


* http://thyroidbook.com/blog/autoimmune-gut-repair-diet/

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Chain of love



When I visit NYC or Los Angeles I always have to get to Le Pain Quotidien.  Yes.  It is a chain.  But hell, if I can enjoy a Waffle House, I can certainly find joy at Le Pain Quotidien.

Before I continue, I need to share something with you, dear reader.  I suppose you might call it full disclosure.  I no longer eat gluten.  How trendy and boring is that?  Suffice to say it seems to have become necessary and it has demoralized some of my breakfast love.  But I need to qualify that statement.  My passionate love of breakfast has not been quelled.  I simply could not figure out how one might go about blogging breakfast without the joys of waffles, bagels or toast.  However.  I have actually had some pleasurable and joyous breakfast moments, and I have decided that they are worth sharing with you here.

Le Pain Quotidien.  Sanded heavy wood tables.  Substantial flatware.  Classic white dishware.  Linen napkins.  Perfect soft boiled eggs.  And, pictured here, quinoa salad.  This was gorgeousness.

And hot coffee.

I am not currently drinking coffee, either!  I think perhaps a post that is devoted to my grief over coffeelessness is in order.

But, yes.  Le Pain Quotidien.  Not a paid advertisement.