Sally's blog

Archive - all the best places to eat, shop and stay in Ireland. A local guide to local places.

John McKenna reviews Our Korean Kitchen, by Jordan Bourke and Rejina Pyo [Book Review]

The “Warming Chicken and Potato Stew” did it. The minute I saw the recipe, featured in The Guardian, I knew I had to cook the dish. It pushed a button that was more pathological than culinary, or simply curious. Something about “Warming Chicken and Potato Stew” screamed at me, and what it screamed was: you need this in your life, so go get the gochujang.
So I did, and I cooked it, and it was stunning, and I have been slowly and steadily cooking my way through Our Korean Kitchen ever since.

Andarl Farm Pork

People get nostalgic about pigs, about pork. Attend any pig-in-a-day class, and you get to see adults who positively romanticise the pig, and see themselves surrounded by happy piglets, happy in shit.

Seaweed in the Kitchen [Book Review] by Sally McKenna

Fiona Bird is a forager, living in the Outer Hebrides. She’s a seaweed specialist, but also has a terrific understanding of the entire edible coastline. This is her third book, the others being a book on foraging, and a book for children. She also, as one always has to say, is a previous finalist in MasterChef. Put all this together, and you have an exciting mix of talent, enthusiasm, inquisitiveness, pioneer spirit and adventure, and this book was always destined to be a good read.

Kitchen Mechanics by Gary O'Hanlon, 3rd in the series

The “KP”

June 25th, 1993. The day before I turned 15, and my first day in a professional kitchen.

It was also the first day I held a proper knife and the first day I realized the top flap of your thumb hurts like hell when you slice it off. I don’t want to jinx myself but I’ve only ever cut myself bad once since and even that wasn’t all that bad.

It didn’t put me off.

Food on the Edge - have you got your tickets yet?

Here's the thing about Food on the Edge: if you are going to be there, in Galway on October 19th and 20, it will be the equivalent of having been at the first MAD symposium. It will gift you the same life-long bragging rights as having sat down at the table at the opening night of Dilisk. You will forever have the same once-in-a-lifetime thrill of hearing Rene Redzepi speak at Litfest.

Theatre of Food 2015 [Video]

Already described as "Ireland's MAD", Theatre of Food just gets bigger and better, and is now a pivotal part of Electric Picnic.

This year huge crowds descended on the tent, for both our demos and our workshops. It was a blast, as this video demonstrates. Roll on EP2016. Though how we're going to top this year, I really don't know. It's worth coming to Electric Picnic, just to see Theatre of Food.

Thanks to all the brilliant people who came and gave it loads, including artists and crew.

 

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