Brand A


sauteed leek kugel cups
December 24, 2008, 4:56 pm
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For Hanukkah a few years ago, my father bought me a book. “Low Fat Jewish Cooking.” I’m still pretty certain that this came from the Barnes and Noble humor section, which is where he has selected every Hanukkah. I’ve never felt a need to refer to it, as my primary Jewish cooking duties come once a year for a tradition my friends estabished when we all moved out to Astoria a few years ago: The Annual Feast of Fried Foods (FoFF).

Last year I made some wicked gingered apple sauce. This year, I was requested of to make kugel. I didn’t want to make the typical cheesecake-with-noodles version, and I sure as hell wasn’t going to slice 4 lbs of potatoes, even if my Cuisinart is my third-best friend (after my girlfriend and the Kitchenaid Artisan she gave me). I did some searching around Epicurious and came upon Browned Onion Kugels.

Noodly!

Noodly!


Here are the notes on my adaptations:

1. Double the recipe. Kugel is not supposed to be made in small amounts. You will always want more, and you can eat it for breakfast by itself for a week.

2. Substitute the onions with 4 large leeks, sliced thinly. I had 2-3 tbs of garlic butter in the fridge, which I used to sautee the leeks at very low heat for about 40 minutes until very translucent and about to caramelize. If you don’t have garlic butter, use about 3 tbs of oil and 3 cloves of diced garlic, and sautee that gently for about 5 minutes before adding the leeks. Season along the way with salt and pepper.

3. I traded out the cottage cheese for part-skim ricotta. Cuz I’m watching the calories. (Psht.)

4. I took the muffin pan option, and divided this up easily into 18 individual servings and a 1 quart Pyrex dish for my personal breakfasting.

Recommendations on what I’d do differently next time:

1. Up the volume of noodles by a few handfuls and cut back on the dairy by about 3/4 of a cup on the sour cream and ricotta. These came out eggy and fluffy, but might’ve been just a little better if they’d had more texture.

2. Don’t overfill, which is what I did. If you have another muffin pan, or if you want to bake in batches, do it.

3. Lube the top of your pan and put something in your oven to catch the drips. These guys will almost definitely overflow a little, leaving you with some unattractive burnt edges and a loud smoke detector.



Steve Litt’s Crudbox at ITP
December 18, 2008, 10:12 pm
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I’m going to check out the ITP (NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program) show tonight to see my brother’s piece. The work from the crazy genius artist builders is always mind boggling. I’ll be shooting to post some photos tomorrow. WP is screwing up my embedded video today, but you can be old school and click on the link to see a preview of my brother’s contribution to the show:

http://www.vimeo.com/2452074



The Micro Forecast: Data Portability
December 16, 2008, 4:33 am
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I want to put my flag in the ground now: data portability apps, the applications that allow your profile information and activity to be shared between sites, will become a fundamental part of social networking in 6 months to a year.  Right now, Facebook is awash in third party apps that will share some information between two accounts, but dependability and actual usefulness varies a lot.  The best apps are coming from partnerships where both halves support a lot of activity.  Equal in my heart are the Flickr and the Vimeo Facebook Connect apps, which automatically update my Facebook page with my uploads and *some* activity from the other sites.  I see them working out a lot of the kinks (like they delay of several hours to update between the two) fairly rapidly, and a strong following developing from socnet users who are currently becoming overwhelmed by multiple online identities and trying to share information among all their associated networks.



Are You In?
December 4, 2008, 1:32 am
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more about “Are You In? on Vimeo“, posted with vodpod
Very simply, Count Me In for Women’s Economic Independence is about all of us – women, men, entrepreneurs, employees – creating our own solution for the economy.  When I started working at Count Me In, I really didn’t care about women’s entrepreneurship and I’m certain most of America never would have.  But, as we’re watching these giants of industry fall, laying off hundreds of thousands of people and then borrowing billions of dollars, the circumstances of history are making it very clear that the success of small businesses is imperative to creating desperately needed new jobs and establishing sustainable wealth on the local and national level.

It’s not just a women’s cause, or a poverty initiative, or a lobbying effort for small businesses.  It’s actually none of those things.  Count Me In, and our work to help women grow successful, sustainable million-dollar businesses, is about employers being able to provide more health care to more employees, about generating the tax revenue to help States pay for necessary services, and about creating a new generation, and next generations, of women who will believe in and accomplish their dreams.

Please, please repost this video and encourage people to visit www.countmein.org and www.makemineamillion.org to become part of our 2009 initiative, the Make Mine a Million $ Business RACE.  You can also check out our amazing partnership with Reader’s Digest at http://www.rd.com/make-mine-a-million-dollar-business



too freaking cute for words
December 3, 2008, 3:40 am
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Some days, you just need a smile.  You know?



In Business!
December 1, 2008, 12:29 am
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I’ve put my first photos up for sale!  At amylitt.imagekind.com, you can see my first gallery and choose from a selection of my photos from 2008, printed on-demand with a variety of sizes, paper choices, and custom framing.  It’s art, it’s affordable (read: dirt cheap), it’s painfully simple.  Even if photography’s not your thing, go check out my shop at Imagekind because it’s a truly brilliant service to create and discover new art.