Friday, May 28, 2010

Garlic Noodles as Art


Last July my friends Barbie and John invited my husband and me to San Francisco to bask in the gray gloom, a refreshing change from Arizona's unrelenting heat. The first night we were there we walked to a neighborhood Vietnamese restaurant for dinner. We all ordered different dishes to share but John ordered garlic noodles. For an entire year I've been dreaming about garlic noodles but have yet to find a local restaurant that serves them. 
Recently, we had an Asian market, Lee Lee, make its home in the desert. I went last week and spent two hours wandering the aisles, taking in every Asian delicacy they offer. There is an aisle for Turkish cuisine, Indian, Japanese, Chinese, Thai, and the list goes on. 
I ended up buying quail eggs (for an oil painting still life), mochi, Turkish cardamon tea, and four key ingredients for garlic noodles; fresh Asian noodles, oyster sauce, cilantro, and fish sauce. The fish sauce posed a dilemma for me, most were the color and consistency of pureed beans or beef tongue. I just couldn't get past the appearance so I opted for a strained Thai fish sauce. I also bought a bottle of Asian pear saké, I had the pleasure of trying it at a sushi restaurant in Maine and it's so elegant. It is served very chilled and in a champagne flute.
I came across a recipe for garlic noodles on the internet but several people had things to add to the noodles so I came up with my own recipe tonight that I will make again on Monday for Barbie and John.

Here is my rendition of garlic noodles:

1 lb. fresh Asian noodles (white or rice would work)
4 cloves garlic, minced and mashed or 3 T minced garlic in jar
4 T olive oil
5 T unsalted butter
1-1/2 tsp. brown sugar
2-1/2 T garlic powder
1 tsp. chicken bouillon
3 T oyster sauce
1-1/2 tsp. fish sauce
2 T cilantro, chopped finely
2 T minced garlic

Rinse noodles in cold water several times until water is clear and set aside. Boil 6 cups of water and add noodles to water, cook until done about 7-8 minutes. Drain, rinse, and set aside. In a large sauté pan, heat olive oil and add mashed/minced garlic, cook until garlic is slightly brown, with slotted spoon remove garlic, and add butter. Melt butter and add sugar, garlic powder, bouillon, sauces, and bring to a soft simmer. Whisk mixture well and add cilantro and fresh minced garlic. When cool, stir into noodles until well incorporated.
I added shrimp, I purchased raw shrimp and placed them in a grill colander and tossed them with a little olive oil and crushed red pepper. Grill until pink.
Serve with chilled saké...bon appetit!
Garlic Noodles with Grilled Shrimp

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

New Addiction(s)

Okay, I know, I haven't posted since last August. It wasn't that I was being lazy. Well, maybe a little bit. As I stated on my painting blog, life was a bit hectic but is now calming down. The other thing that hasn't helped my focus, is the fact I got an iPhone in January. I have a whopping 3.2 meg camera with me at all times, not to mention a gazillion photo apps and instant information. There are some apps that are really interesting and mimic darkroom processes.
My favorites are Format 126, Hipstamatic, FilmLab, SwankoLab, TiltShift Gen, and Vint B&W. The photos actually print out surprisingly well but some of the apps that do not take photos in the native resolution of the iPhone are only good for posting to Twitter, Facebook, or sending via email. It doesn't replace film or my Canons but I love the spontaneity. The following photos were taken in a nearby park with various apps.


Clouds

                                        

Teddy Bear Cholla


Bat Tree



                                                 Evening Tree                                                                     


I was fortunate enough to take a fabulous moku hanga workshop with Hiroki Morinoue from Hawaii. It was two day and he brought a lot of carved blocks for students to print from. We printed our backgrounds using plain birch plywood, watercolor, and rice paste, slowly building color. The carved blocks were then used to overprint onto the backgrounds. It inspired me to carve some abstract designs onto wood. I'm almost finished with my first block and will post the process photos as well as the print.

Hiroki preparing to print, he has everything, including paper, within arm's reach.



   Two of Hiroki's recent abstract prints, he uses a lot of symbols that have deep meaning to him.




Student work (making backgrounds then overprinting with carved blocks).
I like the fact he also uses litho inks (lithography inks that don't contain a drier so it has a long tack time) for his larger work. Litho inks have a richness so I will probably experiment with both watercolor and ink.