Food

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Boston and Cambridge are simply teeming with new restaurants! With marathon training in full swing (I ran almost 9 yesterday!), I am trying to cook more at home and to eat more healthily, so I have not been as up on my restaurant visits as I normally am. Plus, there are so many new Boston restaurants, I feel like I can’t keep up!

Last week I met up with Megan for an event, and after we decided to check one of the restaurants off of our lists. It was a warm December night, and we walked to The Salty Pig, located across from the Back Bay MBTA stop.

The Salty Pig

Despite the crowd we encountered at The Salty Pig, we were seated pretty much immediately at a high top, communal table near the bar.

The Salty Pig

While we scanned the menu, trying to decide on meats and cheeses to share, I sipped on a glass of Verdejo. The Salty Pig definitely gets a thumbs up for its beer and wine lists which are diverse and offer some interesting choices.

Watching the action in the open kitchen, including the slicing of tons of raw onions on to a pizza, provided entertainment and warmth. I’d say my only complaint about the restaurant was that it was too warm.

The Salty Pig

We decided to take advantage of the opportunity to create our own tasting board. Our board included:

Hot Soppressata, Citterio, USA

Pork Rillettes

Speck, Alto Adige, ITA

Reading Raclette, Reading, VT

Balsamic Onion Jam

A Pumpkin Ginger Spread

Basque Peppers

And some other cheeses that I can not recall, but I enjoyed them! Megan?

image

Eating little bites is such a great way to dine with a friend. Over more wine and this fresh and flavorful variety of meats, cheeses, and condiments, we had a great time catching up. And while the Pork Rillettes were my favorite (along with the homemade pickles, of course!), I really loved everything. You could tell that there is a great attention to detail to the ingredients chosen at The Salty Pig. When you eat so simply, the ingredients have to be good!

My husband arrived toward the end of our meal, and he ordered meatballs and salad to go. I promptly snagged a meatball when we got home, and I have to say that they were some of the best meatballs I have ever eaten. Even the salad, dressed in a nice balsamic vinaigrette, was really good. I have a feeling we will be dining at The Salty Pig again soon!

Have you tried any new restaurants lately, or do you have a wish list?

Mine is SO long: Hawthorne, Kika, Trade, Sweet Cheeks, Casa B, Bondir. . . and on and on and on.

Salty Pig on Urbanspoon

Tags: Boston, dinner, Food, Restaurants, wine

The past few weekends have been quite busy! First, we were in Ireland for two weekends in a row, then traveled to Stowe, and this past Saturday, we made the short trip to Newburyport, expecting one of our favorite New England towns to be decked out for Christmas.

I love visiting Newburyport year-round. We enjoy drinks at The Black Cow in the summer, overlooking the bustling harbor, and absolutely adore 10 Center any time of year. On this visit we decided to visit Ceia Kitchen + Bar after I received some information about the restaurant from their PR agency.

We arrived in Newburyport pretty hungry and decided to head straight to Ceia to warm up and fill up.

Ceia

I loved the wine bar ambiance. It reminded me of a wine bar in Europe, and I really wish there were more places like this to leisurely sip wine in Boston.

Ceia

Since we were having a date day before the rush of the holidays, I decided to start with a glass of Henriot Champagne while my husband went for the Tempranillo. I absolutely loved Ceia’s stemware.  Check out this pretty glass.

image

We were also offered water, tap or bottled, and went for tap as it’s usually just fine.

Here’s where there was a little problem. Our water tasted like it was rainwater collected from a basement floor. You could smell the dank, mildew-like odor from a few inches away. Why we decided to take a sip is beyond me, but I had to spit it back into my glass. It was bad.

We politely asked for another bottle of water, and our server informed us that Newburyport water is just really bad. I’ve had tap water in Newburyport before at four or five other restaurants, and it was never anything like this. I wish she had smelled or tasted it herself because it had to be worse than usual.  If the water is indeed that bad at Ceia, they might want to put a disclaimer on it. We could literally still taste it hours later and did not feel well.

We moved on from the foul water to order lunch, a BLT for him and a salad for me. Served on soft, warm focaccia, the BLT was delicious. I loved the thin sweet potato chips that came alongside the sandwich. It was on the small side but definitely included quality ingredients.

BLT

My salad: Beet- Arugula, Pear Tomato, Cabrales Blue, Truffle Vinaigrette

salad

Where are the beets? Sad smile  It turns out that they were under the arugula, three very thin slices of beet that definitely did not even make up a whole beet. I didn’t taste any truffle vinaigrette either. The Cabrales Blue was salty, nutty, and flavored the arugula and tomatoes well, but overall I was a little disappointed. Beet salads are usually enough to fill me up, and I left lunch hungry.

Ceia has won a ton of awards, and I would give it another shot based on that and the fact that we only had lunch. I would be sure to order more food next time as portions are small, even for a small portion eater like me. I would definitely come back to have a glass of wine from their great wine list at the wine bar.

Souffles Newburyport

Our wanderings around Newburyport brought us to the cute kitchen store and café, Soufflés. Being as chilly as we were, we decided to share a large gingerbread latte for a bit of dessert.

Souffles

It was just the thing as we wandered toward the chilly waterfront. What a gorgeous sky!

Newburyport

We wandered a little more, taking in the holiday decorations in this adorable town before seeking out our final stop.

Newburyport

Though I am not a huge sweets lover, since my marathon training started, I have been craving cupcakes and cookies. I knew Newburyport had quite a few bakeries, but I confirmed with Megan that Eat Cake! was the place to be when it came to cupcakes. My husband initially thought he put the address of Eat Cake! into the GPS. It turns out, the GPS was sending us to the location we were at, so we walked around the same block a few times before realizing the bakery was a few weeks over. Oops.

Eat Cake

Eat Cake

It turned out the website did not have the accurate listing of cupcakes of the day, so there were no cupcakes with lemon curd buttercream as I had hoped. Instead we got a raspberry-filled cupcake with white chocolate buttercream (I think?) and one with a coffee/Bailey’s buttercream. I proclaimed the rest of the day the                   Pop! Marketing Communications holiday party for two.

cupcake

The raspberry-filled cupcake was amazing, soft, moist, with a perfect buttercream. The other cupcake, which we saved to eat second, was sadly VERY dry and dense. The flavors were good, but the texture made it seem a few days old. My cupcake craving lives on. . .

cupcake

Newburyport is always a great place to visit with a number of restaurants, cafes, and bakeries to satisfy just about every taste. We visit about every two months, and it is always nice to be there during the holiday season!

Stay tuned this week for a post on holiday bubbly, a recap of the Pop! Marketing Communications tapas dinner, some Boston restaurant posts, and more.

What did you do this weekend? Eat anything delicious?

Ceia Kitchen + Bar on Urbanspoon

Tags: Cupcakes, Food, Lunch, New England, Newburyport, Travel, wine

 

For the past few weeks, I have had Eastern European food on the brain. We stopped into a Slavic café in Galway (which was not serving food at the time), and I have been dreaming of visiting Café Polonia again. This week I decided to make paprika chicken, and while I wanted the creamy comfort of the traditional recipe, my marathon training made me lean towards lightening up and adding nutrition.

To get started, I consulted about a dozen recipes online before deciding on how to make my chicken. While doing so, I also started making slow-cooker sweet and sour purple cabbage as a side. My Lithuanian nana would have been proud! I can share that tangy vegan recipe in another post. Sooo good!

I started off by cooking four chicken breasts in a bit of olive oil until brown on both sides, dusting them with paprika as I went along.

paprika chicken

Once the chicken was browning, I chopped up some carrots, about three cups’ worth, and one large yellow onion and tossed them on top of the chicken. In went two cups of organic chicken stock, and then I left this on the lowest flame possible while I went back to work.

paprika chicken

Every time I went to check on the chicken, I added a few more teaspoons of paprika, ensuring that my chicken was flavorful and colorful.

paprika

paprika chicken

When it was time to serve, I cooked  up a bag of egg noodles (some for dinner and some for leftover lunches), topped the noodles with heaping portions of chicken and the resulting sauce, then stirred in something different than the typical sour cream required for this dish. . . Fage Greek yogurt.

Fage Greek yogurt

To each dish, I added about two tablespoons of yogurt and stirred thoroughly, finishing the dish off with a dash of smoky paprika.

paprika chicken

This dinner was every bit the comfort food I was craving after a long workout and day of work. As an added bonus, it warmed me up in our freezing house! I don’t think the yogurt made much a difference from paprika chicken made with sour cream, and I was excited to have an extra bit of protein and calcium in my dinner. Leftovers were plentiful  and will serve us both for lunch for a few days.

Have you healthifed any traditionally heavy recipes lately?

Tags: chicken, dinner, Food, paprika, recipe

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