Category Archives: Melissa Schilling

Street Shrimp Boil

There I was in New Orleans, minding my own business, walking down the street in the Marigny district, when I saw a man heave two huge laundry-like baskets full of shrimp onto the street. Of course, said my friend Megan, It’s the Friday Street Shrimp Boil.

I met Pete & the boys on the corner of Royal & Kerec in front of the Royal Inn. They do a “frahday shrimp boyl. Do it ever’ frahday.”
They made me eat a whole clove of garlic and sample spicy headcheese (see above photo) before they let me join them behind the line of generators, on the street. It’s nothing short of bad ass to see three men set up and make enough shrimp for 50 people, give it away, break down the equipment and hose off the street in under four hours.
In no terms was I infringing on them, they were so happy to tell their story. This was a total PARTY and neighbors from up and down the street came out to the corner with camping chairs and beers to watch and sample the festivities.
In fact, when I saw them a week later in the same place doing the same thing. They waved me over so I could inspect that weeks haul of shrimp.

One of the men, a Cajun that I think (I’d had four beers at this point) said his name was Dave, told me he used to be a shrimper until Katrina. His boat was wiped out and he hasn’t been able to replace it. He’s doing office work now. I could tell the job was killing his beautiful outdoorsmen spirit. The wistfulness in his voice and the sad cloud that descended upon his face was heartbreaking. But only for the briefest of seconds. Then in true cajun form, he busted open a few beers and started speaking in melodically upbeat tones about the magic of the Gulf and the resilience of the Gulf.

“These here are white shrimp, mimi. They carry they babies above they tails. When this season over, they gonna go into the Gulf. That’ll be the real testament for that oil. If they don’t come back, next year, they gone. The oil is more than we dreamed, then. We don’t know what all is going on out theah. But these here are 12-16′s of white shrimp. The number refers to the number of’em in a pound.I never eat less than a twelve.” -Cajun Dave


“This a real good community. This here’s a neighborhood boyle.”
– Pete

“Who dat for?
Fer dah peaux-peaux right there.”

A policeman stopped his squad car, in the middle of the street for a to go container of potatoes, onions, shrimp and corn.

For more information about the BP Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico, click here

Boiled Shrimp a la Royal
For easy cleanup, line your table with newspaper so everyone can have fun peeling and eating the shrimp. Serve with corn on the cob and boiled potatoes.

Ingredients
20 quarts water
Ladies clean nylon stuffed with Shrimp Boil Spices*
6 teaspoons ZATARAIN’S® Concentrated Shrimp and Crab Boil
3 tablespoons salt
6 lemons halved
4 pounds large shrimp with shells on
10-12 small red potatoes
10 ears corn on the cub, cleaned and halved
4 onions, peeled & cut into wedges
4 entire bundles of garlic, unpeeled, thrown into the pot
10-12 stalks of celery, cut in half
5-8 carrots, cut into thick thirds
1 lb of asparagus, trimmed

Directions
1. Bring water and salt to boil in large saucepot.

2. Stir in shrimp and Crab Boil, Nylon Bag Seasonings and Lemons. Return to boil; cover.

3. Add in Potatoes, Garlic and Onions let cook for 8-10 minutes.

4. Add Corn. Continue cooking additional 4-6 minutes.

5. Add shrimp. Cook 2 minutes or until shrimp turn pink. Remove from heat. Let stand 2 minutes. Drain well.
You may reserve liquid to use as seafood stock for soups, gumbo or dirty rice.
Serve with crusty baguette, lemon wedges and plenty of napkins.

*Ingredients Shrimp Boil Bag:
* 1/4 cup pickling spices
* 1/4 cup sea salt
* 2 Tablespoons mustard seeds
* 2 Tablespoons whole black peppercorns
* 2 Tablespoons hot red pepper flakes
* 1 Tablespoon celery seeds
* 1 Tablespoon minced dried chives
* 2 teaspoons ground ginger
* 2 teaspoons dried oregano
* 5 bay leaves
Cut the leg off a pair of nylons, stuff in your spices and tie the leg off. Trim excess material.

Deep in Louisiana

Greens, Cajun Pork Butts, Gumbo, Crepes, Sweet Potato Pie, Boiled Shrimp … just a few of the things I’ve cooked during my 5 dinners down here. I have one more to go on Sunday. And then I fly home. In the meantime, enjoy these raw images.
:)

and of course, a big thank you to Murphy Goode Winery for the sponsorship of this trip.

Gnocchi with The Vigliecca’s

Tips for making Homemade Gnocchi:

-Must be made fresh, you can NOT freeze the dough (it might turn wickedly wild colors)
-Cool your potatoes before mashing them into the dough, hot potatoes make the dough soft.
-Keep adding flour until you have a bread-dough-like consistency
-When you can pierce the dough with a knive, and it comes out clean, you are ready to begin curling and forming the gnocchi
-Salt the cooking water, not the dough, and the salted water will take you to the right flavor
-Let the rolled gnocchi dry for about an hour before cooking

“It’s a competition! Who can go the fastest!!” – Beverly Vigliecca
“We practiced yesterday, so we are in fighting form.” - Roy Vigliecca

“Thats the fun of it, they’re home made. Not perfect from a store. It’s all about participation and family. Being together.” -Linda West to Jared Vigliecca (age 9)


“Some of them won’t turn out right. It’s just like real life. Some good. Some bad.”
- Beverly Vigliecca

“I tried to make these in Junior High for a boy. I failed so hard. Oh the boy? He was named Dennis.” - Linda West

“Haha. I make’em bigger than that! (pointing to Linda’s Gnocchi)” – Carolyn Tognetti

Italian Gravy, by Carolyn Tognetti

Saute 1 onion and 2 garlic cloves, diced. Add 1lb of ground chuck and 1 italian sausage, cubed. Brown for about 10 minutes. Add a 6oz can of muchrooms or 1/2 cup fresh mushrooms sliced. Add a large can of canned tomatoes or 3 large tomatoes, diced. Add in pinches of fresh salt, pepper, italian seasoning, oregano, basil and 1 small can of tomato paste.

Cover and simmer for 1 hour. You may add reserved liquid from the canned mushrooms and tomatoes, or a can of water. Add several tablspoons of fresh chopped italian parsley. Simmer for an additional 90 minutes.
Enjoy with your favorite al dente pasta.

Monday Night Family Dinner with The Viglieccas

Every other Monday Night, My large Italian Clan comes together for dinner. It’s almost always held at my grandparents house in Aptos. This gnocchi dinner, this last Monday was held at my Aunt and Uncle’s house in Los Gatos. There were five dough makers, rollers and air dryers. One gravy maker. Two salad makers and several little italian elves who helped set the table.

Stay tuned for recipes and wisdom galore from my grandfather, Roy Vigliecca. My grandmother Beverly Vigliecca and my great-cousin Carolyn Tognetti along with my Aunt Linda West helped round out the luaghs, advice and family loving time.

A big huge kiss to each and every person who came together to help prepare a very special meal.

Day in The Life . . .

Jamie and I are gearing up to hit the road this Summer. We’ll be traveling from The Great Lakes to The Big Easy over the course of 4 weeks and hope to dine with as many strangers as possible.

As we begin all our preparations to be on our Culinary Road Trippin’ adventure, we’d like to take a moment and reflect back on all the good times. The swell times. The sit-in-the-car-so-long-you-get-stir-crazy times. The tired times. The exciting times. The times where you wish had a clean pair of socks and a teddy bear. The times where you walk into a bar packed with military men during happy hour.

Healdsburg: a photo montage

Jamie and I went up to visit winery Murphy-Goode last week. It was raining and a bit dreary. Somehow we managed to have a bunch of fun anyway.
And Jamie is still wearing her viking horns, around Berkeley, that the MG people handed over to us (after singing a little bit of Vanilla Ice ‘Ice, Ice, Baby’).
I keep trying to swipe them, but she’s a fast little sucker with a. erm. viking grip.
*sigh*

Kiddies – Superbowl Party with The Bilodeau’s

Sugar and Kids always seem to go hand in hand. Jamie and I kept passing the camera back and forth in order to stay on top of all the cuteness around us.
The kids definitely overshadowed the food, at times.

Happy Friday Ya’ll!

Finger Foods – Superbowl Party with The Bilodeau’s

Finger foods are the staples at any Superbowl Party. It’s a jeans and paper napkin culture at any football eating event. And The Bilodeau’s serve it up hot and fresh. Pop’s will never reveal the secret to his Beef Jerky, but if you’d like to order some of his famous jerky you can get in touch with him by emailing us at Sip Snap Savor (sipsnapsavor@gmail.com)

Hot & Spicy Shrimp
“…they look gelatinous,” said Katy Bilodeau

“We’ll find out if they’re spicy. Man they’ll make one heckuva fajita!” – Pops

Marinate shrimp in pepper plant hot sauce, paprika, chili pepper and olive oil – to taste and to coat. Marinate for 90 minutes or overnight. Bake at 450 degrees for about 20 minutes.

Beer Soaked Wienies

“Everybody does beer soaked wienies. We used two bottles of of beer, Fat Tire to be exact. It adds flavor.” – Tracy De Jong

Curry Cheese Crostini

Use equal parts cheddar and mozzarella, shredded so you have about 3 cups of shredded cheese. Ad in a quarter cup to a half cup of green onion, diced and a few tablespoons of yellow curry powder. Blend the mixture together using your fingers or a spoon then top sliced baguette rounds with the cheese mixture. Broil for 4-6 minutes depending on the strength of your oven until the bread is toasted and the cheese is a melted golden color.

We interrupt this meal, to bring you this special message-

Today, our very special new friend Julia from Conde Nast Traveler, decided to feature this project on their blog, Moveable Feast.
We are honored.
Overjoyed.
Proud.

Thank you to everyone who supports us and believes in us. You help us drive that extra mile, capture that story, snap that picture and write the whole thing up for everyone to enjoy.

Superbowl Sunday coming up, next.

Empanadas with the Morales’ – Alameda, CA

“My grandmother used to make tortillas. So this empanada making is similar.” – Polo Morales

Fusion is a common theme amongst most families we encounter during our culinary road trips. But no where was it as prevalent as in our most recent dinner in Alameda, CA with Claudia (6months pregnant) and Polo Morales.

He is the son of Mexican parents, his Father is from the Zacatecas and mother & grandmother from Jalisco. His mother is very proud of her cooking and passed along recipes and techniques to her children. Stews in his family were common and were based on what part of the pig was being used for that nights meat portion of the meal. “The cut of meat makes the meal!” – Polo

She is the daughter of a Colombian-born mom and an English-Canadian dad. Since her mother handled most of the cooking in their family most of everything she knows is steeped thickly and heavily in the culture of her mother’s family back in the Quindio coffee region of Colombia.



“Je no soy gringa!”
– Mama Ross

Claudia recounts the story of her mother and how she came to the United States.

“My mother saw her sisters and cousins getting married very young, around 13 years old, and starting families. She wanted more for herself. So she went away and became a nun. She earned her degree and eventually became a superintendant of a local school district. And at 25 years old when she decided she wanted a family she was essentially an old spinster.



The War of Colombia
had diminshed the marriable male population. She saw how equal the gringos in the peace corps were. How the women were treated the same as the men. And she wanted to marry a gringo. So she came to the US, met my father, had my brother and I.”
– Claudia Ross

Ballsy



“The filling needs to be really strong, because you only use a little bit of filling for each empanada and the masa is almost tasteless.” – Claudia















Tips for making Empanadas

1. Firm Binding Technique: use wax paper to fold over the empanada, it won’t stick and it will help you get the hang of creating the dumplings.

2. Keep practicing.

“They get better as you go, just watch, they’ll be beautiful.” – Claudia

3. Use less filling than you think you need

4. To make the ridges, “just pop your finger in and create them manually.” – Polo

5. Use a cup to form the domed shape of the empanada.






Smashed Plantains: Slice 4 plantain “bananas” into 1/2″ thick disks. Heat 3-4 inches of corn or vegetable oil in a skillet. When hot, add plantains. When the float, fish them out of the oil, smash them with a spatula, return to the oil for another 3-4 minutes, Drain and salt them.









Empanada Masa Dough:

Take 2.5 C of warm water, 2 C Pan Masa (found in hispanic grocery sections or supermercados) and 8-10 cucharditos (teaspoons) of salt and mix in a large bowl. Knead until smooth and let rest for a few minutes.



Empanada Filling:


Fry 4 potatoes diced, 2 whole, diced onions and 4 cloves of garlic on medium heat with a little oil to coat the pan. Add a pound of ground beef or ground turkey for a lighter filling. Also add a bunch of diced cilantro, several tablespoons of cumin, salt and pepper to taste. As the mixture cooks add the juice of 6-10 limes and a cup of fresh peas (canned or frozen are fine).



Empanada Hot Sauce:


Create this fresh, raw sauce for topping off your fried empanadas. Combine 1 onion, diced, 1 fresh chile diced & 1 bunch of cilantro, diced into the juice of 10-15 limes. Salt the sauce to taste.

1. Form a disk in your hand the size of your palm, about 1/4″ thick.

2. Add filling in small spoonfuls, fold the disk in half.

3. Use a small cup or bowl to secure in place.

4. Pinch in place and to seal closed.

5. Fry for 3-5 minutes per side, in corn or vegetable oil.

Top with hot sauce and serve alongside, hot salted plantains.