dimanche 19 juin 2011
It's called the Pantry
Last week, I said that I wanted to tell you about a new project, and I still do. It’s a project that grows out of Delancey, but it’s a whole new thing: a business headed up by two of our friends, Brandi Henderson and Olaiya Land. Brandon is technically the third partner, but this baby really belongs to Brandi and Olaiya. It’s called the Pantry at Delancey, and we’re all very excited about it. Excited. Maybe that word isn’t strong enough. Elated? Too strong? Thrilled? Let’s go with thrilled. We are thrilled.
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Easy enough
This is the last picture taken in our old kitchen. Our old kitchen, our old place, our old duplex, where we lived for almost five years, on a noisy street with the nocturnal neighbor who does outdoor home improvement projects by flashlight. I will miss that place, but only a little, and never at night.
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Dickerson, Monar selected in MLB Draft
Alex Dickerson and Blake Monar are headed to the big leagues.
Both IU juniors were selected by Major League Baseball clubs Tuesday, the second day of the organization’s 2011 First-Year Player Draft.
Dickerson, whose 47 career home runs ties IU’s all-time record, was selected with the first pick in the third round, No. 91 overall, by the Pittsburgh Pirates. Left-handed pitcher Monar was drafted by the Washington Nationals in the 12th round, No. 367 overall.
Dickerson led the Hoosiers in on-base percentage (.440), batting average (.367), home runs (nine) and RBI (49) in 2011, and he earned First Team All-Big Ten honors after being named a First Team All-American as a sophomore in 2010.
The Poway, Calif. native was projected as one of the top collegiate offensive players to potentially be selected in the draft yet was not one of the opening day’s 60 selections. The Pirates drafted Dickerson as a first baseman after he had played the majority of his collegiate career in the outfield.
Monar went 6-3 in decisions with a 3.52 ERA in 2011 after starting 13 games and pitching a team-high 79 1/3 innings. He led the Hoosiers’ pitching staff with 61 strikeouts.
The draft will continue today until the completion of the 30th round and will conclude Wednesday.
Drew Allen is a senior majoring in journalism. He is the baseball beat reporter. A staff member since 2009, he previously has served as sports editor and has covered men's soccer, women's basketball and volleyball.
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Now here, now there
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It's still at it
Yes, the official announcement came today, in Publishers Weekly, and now that I can, I had to rush over here to tell you. The book is tentatively titled Delancey, and like my first book, it’s more a story than a cookbook. It’s about a marriage, in a sense: about a man and a woman and the restaurant that they, however uncomfortably, gave birth to. It’s about what we do for the people we love. It’s about growing up. And most of all, it’s about a small business that we made with our own hands, on our own terms, and the community that came with it, a life that I had no idea would be ours.
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The Real Ride – Little 500: Zach Osterman – The Final Post
This is the true post of Little 500 riders picked to have their lives surrounding America’s Greatest College Weekend posted to the web. To find out what happens when the IDS stops just reporting and starts getting real
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Drop everything
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We have some progress
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Losing Micah Johnson a blow to Hoosiers
Saturday was not at all a good day for the IU baseball team.
Headlining all the negatives from the doubleheader against Minnesota, which included a rain delay in upwards of an hour and two losses (one a 12-1 drubbing), was the loss of sophomore second baseman Micah Johnson early in the second game to a right leg injury.
Johnson was attempting to field a one-hop grounder that hit him in the leg and caused him to roll over in pain multiple times. He was helped off the field by two coaches.
It would be a blow to the Hoosiers if Johnson were to miss significant time, which appears quite possible. In Johnson, IU would lose a .325 average and the runner responsible for the Big Ten’s second-most stolen bases. While he has struggled lately, I’m sure all would agree that the Hoosiers’ lineup is much better with Johnson than without.
For now, sophomore Casey Smith, IU coach Tracy Smith’s son, will get the nod at second base, but that could leave a pretty visible hole in that No. 2 spot in the batting order.
Drew Allen is a senior majoring in journalism. He is the baseball beat reporter. A staff member since 2009, he previously has served as sports editor and has covered men's soccer, women's basketball and volleyball.
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She got out a skillet
On the upside, I ate almost two pounds of carrots today.
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January 30
Just pancakes and coffee. Cereal. Girl Talk. Some John Mellencamp, when I have a sweet tooth. But last night, my friend Sam called, and then there was yellow curry and rice.
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Your efforts will be rewarded
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A quiet soup
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You might hear someone sing
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By popular demand
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Such is the power
I seem to have come down with some sort of virus, the kind of thing that feels totally out of place in the month of June, that keeps you in your bathrobe, eating mostly toast and canned peaches, for the better part of five days. To be perfectly honest, I can’t say that I feel like eating a deviled egg right now. But I did manage to eat a bowl of cereal this morning, and that is a great improvement. I even felt well enough for a cup of coffee! Maybe, by the time you read this, I will be wearing something other than my bathrobe. It’s halfway over, but I intend to do this month right. I have a deviled egg quota to meet.
I’ve been meaning to post this recipe for a while, because every time I make it, someone asks for it. It’s one of those recipes. Most recently, I made it for Brandi’s birthday party, and that night, I think there were actually three people who asked for the recipe. THREE! That made me particularly happy, I remember, because I had gotten a slow start in cooking that evening and had felt anything but love for these eggs as I stood in the kitchen, peeling them over the sink, already late for the party and still unshowered. But of the deviled egg, that even after making me swear and pout and show up at a party with my hair looking like I’m in Van Halen, still, still, I want to make them again. (Of course, I do have a certain fondness for David Lee Roth.)
In any case, this recipe was inspired by a deviled egg served to me by Olaiya, so I can’t take credit for it. Three summers ago, she had just moved into a house with a terrific backyard, and she threw a barbecue. She made deviled eggs and salmon burgers and a giant tomato salad and corn on the cob, and our friend Ben had just moved to town, and it was a famous night. Afterward, I wrote about it here and posted the recipe for a basil aioli that we ate on almost everything. And I started working on recreating the deviled eggs: classic ones, creamy with mayonnaise and mustard and lemon, but with a very small spoonful of basil aioli on top and, balancing on top of that, a couple of crispy fried capers.
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I am celebrating
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