Grocery Outlet had these cookies for sale last week in a variety of flavors. Some of the no-name products have actually turned out to be quite good, so I decided to give the chocolate walnut cookies a try. Well, they were so bad that my 7-year old daughter, not the pickiest of gourmands, stated that these “must be the worst cookies ever”. Mike also commented as to how bad they are.
Alas, I have to agree, they have no chocolate flavor whatsoever and nothing that could be identified as a walnut. They just suck. Perhaps other flavors are better, but I wouldn’t hold my breath.
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I just received the following e-mail which is clearly a scam. In the e-mail a purported company wants to make reservations at “your” restaurant. They ask for a set menu and offer to provide their credit card details for full payment.
Now, I’m not sure *how* this scam works exactly* – but I know it’s a scam because of several “clues”:
-The letter is written in the ultra-formal/non-idiomatic/contrived English that Nigerian/African scammers usually use.
-It purports to come from a representative of the company, but it uses a yahoo.com reply-to address. It’s sent, however, from a bluehost.com server.
-It does not name the restaurant where they are making the reservations, just calling it “your restaurant”. Same with the location of the restaurant, “your area”.
-There is no info online on “Exxon Energy Plc.”, and a search of the address or phone number lead nowhere.
Update Through the years the scam has gone beyond restaurants to include hotels, tour companies and even painters. Please read through the comments for copies of scam letters sent by readers from all over the world.
I also learned how the scam works. The scammer will make a big reservation/purchase from you. He will then tell you that he also needs to pay someone else (limo drivers, transportation company, etc.) but for some reason he can’t do it directly, so he says he will pay you what he owes you plus what he owes the other company, and ask you to pay the other company for him. He will then give you either a stolen credit card number or a fake check. When your bank figures out that the credit card was stolen or the check was not good, it will require that you pay the falsely credit amount. By then you will have paid the shipping company that is in cahoots with the scammer, and you’ll be losing a big chunk of money.
Date: Mon, 03 Aug 2009 09:05:36 -0600
To: marga@lacabe.com
Subject: Enquiry.
From: Stewart Graham <stgraham93@yahoo.com>
Hello,
I am Stewart Graham, Public Relations Officer (P.R.O) of Exxon Energy Plc. United Kingdom. Your restaurant has been approved by my company for dinner reservations for my workers visiting your area for a project, so i therefore want to book dinner for this group of workers.
They will all come for dinner in your place as from AUGUST 18th, 19th and 20th, 2009 by 8:00pm each day. They are fifteen (15) in number.
**NOTE THAT IT WILL BE THE SAME 15 GUESTS EACH NIGHT**.
We will appreciate if you prepare a 3 course menu for my group for the dinner. No special dietary. Also your suggestion will be appreciated since this is our first dinner in your restaurant.
Kindly provide the total cost of the dinner for the 15 persons for the 3 nights dinner so as to provide my credit card details for full payment confirmation if there is availability in your restaurant.
Your swift response will be appreciated.
Regards,
Stewart Graham
40 Lothian Road
EH3 9BY,
Edinburgh,
SCOTLAND.
Phone number:+44(0)7024014792
*NOTE Here is an explanation of how the scam works.
I think that with my finishing of this Cypriot Menu I’m off the Mediterranean for a while – though I still have to make desserts from the Baleares to finish off the area. I ate a lot of Mediterranean food in May and June: Balearic, Cretan, Cypriot, Corsican, Caprese and Catalan. Though Mediterranean food is great, I can’t say that I’m sorry to leave this region to explore others.
Marga’s International Recipes.
Some time, in food as in life, less is more. This is invariably true with respect to cheesecakes. You can adorn them any way you like, with chocolate and caramel, strawberries or pumpkins, even chilli peppers, but nothing is as good as a plain, old, New York cheesecake. This epicurious.com recipe is a breeze to make and positively delicious. I’ve made it a bunch of times, modifying it as I’ve gone along. Graham crackers traditional for the crust, but use Nila wafers instead and you’ll have heaven on your plate.
If your springform pan is tight enough, you can make the cheesecake directly on it. If you have doubts about it, you can also line it with parchment paper. Just remember to grease both the pan and the top surface of the paper.
One word of warning, while the first time I made this cheesecake it did not crack, it has cracked for me every time since.
New York Cheesecake
Graham crust
- 1 1/2 cups finely ground graham crackers
- 5 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
- 1/3 cup sugar
- 1/8 tsp. salt
Nila wafer crust
- 1 1/2 cups finely ground Nila wafers
- 5 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
- 2 Tbsp. sugar
- 1/8 tsp. salt
Filling
- 4 8-oz packages cream cheese, at room temperature
- 1 1/2 cup sugar
- 3 Tbsp. all-purpose flour
- 5 eggs
- 2 egg yolks
Instructions
Preheat oven to 475F.
Make the crust by mixing the cookie crumbs with the butter, sugar and salt. Grease a 9″ springform pan. Press crumb mixture onto the bottom of the pan and 1″ up the sides. Pun the pan on a shallow baking sheet and set aside.
In an electric mixer, mix together the cream cheese, sugar and flour using high to maximum speed. Add eggs and yolks, one by one, mixing at low speed. Mix until they are fully incorporated, scraping the sides as necessary.
Pour the filling into the crust. Place the baking sheet and pan in the middle of the oven and bake for 10 minutes. Reduce the temperature to 200F and bake for one hour, or until the cake is mostly firm.
Cool on a rack and then refrigerate for at least 6 hours. A half hour before serving, carefully separate the cake from the pan using a knife, if necessary, and open the springform pan. Transfer the cake to a serving plate. Let rest at room temperature for about half an hour and serve.
Today I had a BBQ and made this marinade from an epicurious.com recipe. I thought it was quite yummy and somewhat reminiscent of chimichurri. I’d make it again.
Put thyme, oregano, salt and garlic is a mini-chopper. Process until garlic is finely chopped. Add lemon juice and process until well mixed. Repeat with olive oil.
Marinade tri-tip in the sauce for at least 2 hours.
I’ve been enjoying watching Top Chef Masters – in particular this last show, in which the winners of the last six previous episodes competed against each other by making each other’s signature dishes. Part of what I’ve enjoyed is getting to know the chefs, some of whom were completely unknown to me.
I’ve been rooting for Hubert Keller, the chef-owner of Fleur de Lys, a restaurant that I’ve gone to a couple of times. I loved the food last time, though the service and timing left much to be desired. In any case, Hubert is local and seems like a very cool guy, he has these big, puppy dog eyes and gives an aura of happiness. He is also clearly very secure on himself and his cooking, clearly he has mastered both technique and flavor profiles, and yet you don’t ever see him boast. I think he is the true master.
And yet, I was very surprised on how well Rick Bayless has done. I’ve seen some of his shows and I have not been particularly impressed by him. Part of it is that I’m prejudiced about a non-Mexican becoming the voice for Mexican food in America – mostly through his television programs. It seems sort of unfair. It’s difficult to believe that there aren’t Mexican chefs that are just as accomplished. I’m also prejudiced against the true cooking abilities of television chefs. Clearly there are some who are marvelous cooks, such as Jacques Pepin – his techniques are so beautiful and effortless, you know the end result must be great. But others seem too young, too inexperienced to be the experts they proclaim themselves to be. And of course, some are truly grating (Joanne Weir in particular). Until this show, I would have put Bayless in that category. He seems quite arrogant about his knowledge of Mexican cuisine and enunciates too much when he speaks. But seeing him in the last two shows has made me change my mind. For one, I learned that he was in Mexico working on his PhD in Anthropology when he fell in love with cooking. That indicates to me that his primary interest is, or at least was, on the Mexican people – that he wants to know about them (even if through their cuisines) and that he probably does have a respect for Mexican culture that was not apparent to me before. In other words, maybe he is, indeed, paying an homage to Mexican cuisine by bringing it to this country, instead of just stealing it for fame and profit. The other thing that impressed me is that he clearly is a good cook who understands the fundamentals of cuisine. He won by making an Italian dish, after all, something you wouldn’t expect from him.
My suspicion of TV chefs also made me wonder about Michael Chiarello; but I’ve been impressed by his modesty (even though he did say he was going to win the show). Clearly he understands his own limitations (while Keller, for example, doesn’t seem to think he has any).
I was happy to see Anita Lo do so well. I hadn’t heard of her before the show started, but it’s nice to see a minority woman do so well (in particular given this). Her food seems really interesting as well. I think it’s really hard to do fusion food well, it requires an intense knowledge of several cuisines, great technique and creativity, which I think many fusion chefs don’t have. I’d love to go to her restaurant.
I have little opinion of the other two chefs. Suzanne Tracht didn’t seem to have much of a personality. I loved Art Smith’s personality, but I think I may be partial to teddy-bear gay guys.
Anyway, I can’t wait to see what happens. And I’m still rooting for Keller.
Alice Waters has gotten into pr trouble by stating that she’d want her last meal to be shark fin soup – apparently unaware that sharks are caught, had their fins cut off and then are thrown back into the sea to die. Now that she knows, she’s changed her mind.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/mbauer/detail?entry_id=44654&tsp=1
It seems a bit surprising that she wouldn’t know about the horrible treatment of sharks in the first place, but then again – how much of the food we consume is from animals that have been horribly treated? Sometimes I think the only ethical choice is to be a vegetarian – too bad I don’t like vegetables.
I would never have guessed that they have cooking videogames, but apparently there are several out there. The skills they “teach” seem to be quite basic (e.g. how to shake salt into ground beef to make a hamburger), and I wonder how they can be in any way more helpful than watching a food show on TV. But hey, to each its own.
I made this cheesecake for dinner tonight – there was some leftover breadcrumbs and filling so I put them in some ramekins and cooked them with the cheesecake. My kids loved it, which is a pretty good recommendation 🙂 I made a couple of changes from the original recipe and would make slightly less crust next time (as per the recipe below), but I like having extra filling to taste before cutting the whole recipe.
Turtle Swirl Cheesecake
– 8 oz chocolate graham crackers, finely chopped
– 2 Tbsp white sugar
– 1 Tbsp brown sugar
– 5 Tbsp unsalted batter, melted
– 4 8-oz packages of cream cheese
– 1 cup sugar
– 4 eggs
– 2 Tbsp. whipping cream
– 2 1/2 oz dark chocolate, chopped
– 1/2 cup pre-made caramel sauce (store bought or home made)
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350 F
Mix the cookie crumbs with the sugars and melted butter. Grease a 9″ springform pan and cover the bottom and 1″ of the sides with the cookie crumbs. Wrap the outside of the pan with aluminum foil. Place in the refrigerator and refrigerate while you prepare the filling.
Put the cream cheese in the bowl of an electric mixer and mix on high to maximum until the cheese is quite fluffy. Slowly add the sugar and mix until it’s fully incorporated. Add the eggs, one at the time, until fully mixed in.
Prepare the chocolate sauce by bringing the whipping cream to a simmer in a small saucepan, adding the chocolate and cooking, stirring constantly, until it’s all melted.
Remove the pan from the fridge and pour half of the cheese mixture into it. Spoon half of the chocolate sauce onto the cheese. Swirl with a fork. Repeat with half of the caramel sauce. Pour the rest of the cheese mixture into the pan and add the remaining chocolate sauce and caramel sauce. Swirl.
Fill a roasting or lasagna pan with 3/4″ of water and place the springform pan in it. Bake for an hour or until the sides are set. Cool in rack and then place in the fridge and cool for at least 8 hours.
It’s once again time to < href="https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/61507">order your tickets for the 2009 Women of Taste event. Women of Taste is a fundraiser thrown by Alameda County’s Girls Inc., an organization that helps empower girls.
“Held Saturday, September 26th in the outdoor gardens of the Oakland Museum of California, this unforgettable affair features tastings from over 30 notable restaurants and 20 beverage companies, an extensive silent auction, live entertainment, dancing, and an art exhibit.”
It’s quite cool, you get a tray and a wine glass (yours to keep) and you wander from booth to booth picking up a bite-size appetizer, dessert or taste of wine. I’ve enjoyed it tremendously the two times I’ve gone.
You can read my notes from last year’s event.
I’m not sure if we’ll go this year, I don’t think we can afford it, but I encourage everyone else (who can) to do so.
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