Articles for September 22nd, 2010

Kent Rathbun and Central Market Host From Pint to Plate tonight

(image courtesy of Central Market)

New uses for our favorite ingredient? We are SO there! Kent Rathbun kicks off tonight’s Brewtopia festival of beers at Central Market with a crash course in cooking with beer aptly named From Pint to Plate. This Cooking School event follows a Rahr sampling in the beer & wine department, so start there and work your way over to the Cooking School. Rathbun gives the evening’s beers (not sure which ones will be decanted for the cooking) both starring and cameo appearances in dishes like:

  • Spicy Lamb Meatballs with Beer Braised Vidalia Onions & Ancho Barbecue Sauce (What beer will he use?)
  • Grilled Chicken & Shishito Pepper Skewers with Jasmine Rice & Yellow Curry Sauce (I wonder where the beer will turn up.)
  • Pan Roasted Striped Bass, Bourbon Cream Corn & Texas Peach Barbecue Sauce (Is the beer in the BBQ sauce?)
  • Cinnamon-Chocolate Molten Cake with Cherry-Beer Ice Cream (Beer ice cream? what, what?)

The class runs from 6:30-9  and will cost you $65. At my last check there were still 13 seats available. Come on over and say hi!

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Lalibela Ethiopian Restaurant in Dallas Saves Another Marriage

Anyone who’s said “I do” can tell you that marriage is as filled with pros (having a special someone who’s legally obligated to listen to you complain about Valentine’s Day, ingrown hairs, and the jackass who ate your sandwich/onion rings/pudding cup at work) as it is with cons (having someone who you’re legally obligated to do the same for, knowing all the while that even that single guy who ate your onion rings is getting laid way more often than you are).

Thankfully, there’s something new to add to the Pro column: having someone to double team the menu at Lalibela with. For those of you who have yet to fling yourselves headlong into the gustatory joy that is Ethiopian cuisine (and a sad, sad lot you are), Lalibela provides one of the finest examples of the style that I’ve found in my extensive research (read: gluttonous eating) in New York, Los Angeles, and many many points in-between. (Take that, Little Ethiopia).

If you’re new to the genre, do as I say and order one vegetarian sampler and one meat sampler. What arrives at your table will be a round platter of spongy injira bread topped with assorted piles of stews, lentils and mashed vegetables. Using your hands (no utensils here), tear off a two-inch square of injira and use it to grab from the piles. Pop the bundle in your mouth and prepare for speechlessness. This is a cuisine best eaten slowly with a Zen-like attention to flavor, texture and stomach fullness, which will creep up on you with surprising speed, so keep your wits about you and make note of every flavor. I promise, you’ll forget about those onion rings in no time.

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