Studio of Good Living

Attend a cooking class at Studio of Good Living in San Francisco and you’ll soon discover a new world full of culinary adventures. More than just a cooking school, the Studio of Good Living shares the art of living well with all its students!

Studio of Good Living offers exceptional cooking classes and events in the Bay Area and Beyond. Want to learn how to cook or brush up on your cooking skills? Take a class with us! Escape to San Francisco for a Taste of San Francisco or indulge yourself with Cook, Shop, Spa. Burned out? Drop into Live Well, Eat Well for yoga lovers. Continue the journey with the Art of Dinner Blog and view our video classes for new ideas to spice up your dinner table. . Need a change of scenery? Join us for a total culinary and lifestyle retreat in beautiful Maine. Discover the possibilities with Chef Phoebe Schilla and the Studio of Good Living. Life is Beautiful by Design.

The week in review: Cherries, Mocha Fudgesicles and Kim Severson

Posted May 26, 2010 under: Dessert, Family Meals and Recipes

Not every week, but most weeks I like to try out a few different quick and easy recipes.  Most often it’s dessert recipes for my incurable sweet tooth, but I like to play around.   I love fresh cherries; the season always passes much too quickly for my taste.  I think that Cherries just may be nature’s perfect fruit.  So small, so round, so pretty, so full of vitamin C and anti-oxidants.  Mostly I just eat them out of hand.  However, when I came across a recipe for candied Cherries in David Lebovitz’s ‘Ready for Dessert’ I had to make it.  It only has 3 ingredients—well 4 if you add a little almond extract (I did).  The other ingredients are pitted fresh cherries (duh), sugar and water.  Place 2 cups of pitted cherries in a pot with 1 cup water and 1 cup sugar and simmer until thick and syrupy. The most beautiful thing about this recipe is that it keeps 6 months, yes, 6 MONTHS, in the fridge. These candied cherries are great on their own, over ice cream, folded into Greek yogurt or spooned over lightly sweetened mascarpone.  Now I can have cherries for at least half the year.

The next recipe that I attacked was one for fudgesicles.  I have an excuse, really I do.   They were selling Popsicle molds at the local grocery store and Lily is teething. I thought that if my mouth hurt I would want a chocolaty fudgesicle. They are actually the pudding pops from the ‘Baked, New Frontiers in Baking’ by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito cookbook.  I have a distinct fondness for pudding pops.  Remember the Jell-O pudding pops that were popular in the ‘80’s?  I checked several different grocery stores for them, but couldn’t find any.  I guess they stopped making them, so I was very pleased to make my own.  These are delicious and just the perfect thing whether your mouth is sore or not.

Somewhere in between Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain, Michael Ruhlman’s ‘Making of a Chef’ and Julie and Julia I lost my appetite for food memoirs.  I mean, there are so many of them out there!! I don’t have a lot of time for just pleasure reading these days, but when I read the Food Gal, Carolyn Jung’s blog, about Kim Severson, the New York Times food writer and her memoir, Spoon Fed, I knew that I would have to read it. It’s flat out wonderful.  It takes so much courage to tell your story and Kim does it so well, with grace, wit and compassion. I highly recommend that you seek out your own copy.

Cheers!

Phoebe

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What I’m Reading and Cooking from: Good to the Grain ‘Baking with Whole Grain Flours by Kim Boyce

Yes, it’s true.  I suffer from OCD.  That’s Obsessive Cooking Disorder, not that other one.   This past Friday was my first day off in 2 weeks.  (Every mom knows that it wasn’t really a day off—more like a ‘spend the day with Lily and catch up on laundry’ day) That means I wasn’t cooking for Other People, just me.  I got to make us whatever I wanted, and I went a little nuts.  You see, I had just picked up my copy of ‘Good to the Grain’ Baking with Whole Grain Flours by Kim Boyce.  It’s the cookbook that all the food bloggers are discussing right now with rave reviews and I had to have it.   This book inspired me to go to Whole Foods and pick up not one, not two, but five different flours to play around with.  (Oat, Barley, Graham, Buckwheat and Rye, if you must know.)   So, Friday morning, baby on my hip and blender at the ready I made two different batches of crepes.  It’s a good thing that I perfected cracking an egg with one hand years ago.  For those of you not in the know, crepe batter is a marvelous thing; you can make it in the blender and put it in the fridge to use for breakfast the next morning.  Just wake and bake, or griddle rather.   I also made the Whole Wheat Chocolate Chip cookies and—drum roll please—homemade Grape Nuts!  I have never seen a recipe for homemade Grape Nuts before and I was hopelessly intrigued and powerless to resist.  The recipe was fabulously easy and was calling my name.   They were delicious the next morning with Vanilla Almond Milk and fresh blueberries. They tasted just like Grape Nuts, only better.  I also selected the Barley Crepe recipe, with beer and molasses and the Ricotta Crepes substituting Graham flour for the spelt.  (Whole Foods was out of spelt flour—this book must have started a craze!!) Lily and I loved the Barley crepes. This batter was quite tender and a little finicky to deal with.  The crepes broke easily during cooking.  However, they were delicious and I ended up stuffing them with creamed mushrooms and asparagus for dinner.  The Ricotta Crepes were delicious too.  I had to thin the batter as suggested with extra milk, and I served them with butter and maple syrup for breakfast.  The chocolate chip cookies were good too.  I mean really, what’s not to like about a Chocolate Chip Cookie?  Next up, next week: Sand Cookies

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Old Fashioned Chicken Stew

Weekend Breakfast: Dutch Baby aka German Pancake, Puff Daddy

Posted December 11, 2009 under: Family Meals and Recipes, Vegetarian Recipes, Videos

Family Cooking 101 Meatloaf

Posted July 4, 2009 under: Beef Recipes, Family Meals and Recipes

6a00d8341c63d853ef00e54f83be378834-800wiMy favorite meatloaf recipe comes from cook’s illustrated. It’s simple, classic and tastes wonderful. I’ve also included notes on how to adapt this recipe to be gluten and dairy free and a second adaptation using chicken or turkey and ground flax meal if you are feeling ultra hip and healthy. I sauteed some spinach, boiled some new potatoes from the farmer’s market, tossed them with butter, parsley, salt and pepper and voila! Dinner is served.

*Just a brief note on potatoes from the Farmer’s Market. They are awesome–hands down the best, most flavorful potatoes that I have ever had. They are well worth seeking out. Grocery store potatoes don’t even compare.

All American Meatloaf
Adapted from The America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook
Preheat the oven to 350F and line a baking sheet with tinfoil.

Ketchup Glaze
1/2 c. Ketchup
1/4 c. brown sugar
2 tsp. cider or white vinegar
Combine the above ingredients and set aside.

Meatloaf
2# meatloaf mix–I like using equal parts ground beef, veal and pork. However, I have also used ground turkey or chicken with success. (If you do use ground poultry I would recommend thigh over breast. Ground breast is too lean and dries out in my opinion.)
2 eggs
2 tsp. worcestershire sauce
2 tsp. mustard
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. pepper
2/3c. crushed saltines (about 1/2 a sleeve) or 2/3c. dried breadcrumbs
1/2c. milk
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves of garlic, chopped
1 tsp. of dried thyme
1 Tbsp. Oil

Heat the oil in a saute pan on the stove top. Saute the onion over medium heat until it is softened. Add the garlic and thyme and cook for a minute or two until the garlic is aromatic. Set aside.
Place the crushed saltines or breadcrumbs in a bowl and pour the milk over. Let stand for a few minutes until softened, and then add the eggs, worcestershire, mustard, salt and pepper. Stir to combine, then add the cooled onion mixture and the meatloaf mixture. I always mix meatloaf with my hands, but you can use a spoon if you prefer. Once the meatloaf has been mixed, turn it out onto the foil lined pan and shape it into a loaf. I typically make a low and flattish loaf in order to optimize the meat to glaze ratio. Now, brush the loaf with half of the ketchup glaze and bake for 45 minutes. After 45 minutes, pour the remaining glaze over the meatloaf and bake for another 15-20 minutes. It’s hard to overcook meatloaf, so if it is in the oven for a few more minutes don’t worry about it. It’s easiest to slice the meatloaf if you let it cool for 15 minutes or so.
Now, to make a gluten and dairy free meatloaf simply substitute rice or soy milk for the whole milk. Make sure to use plain unsweetened. Save the vanilla flavor for your breakfast cereal. In place of the cracker or breadcrumbs, I use gluten free bread crumbs from kinnikinnick. (kinnikinnick.com) To add fiber and omega 3’s to your meatloaf, replace 1/2 of the bread or cracker crumbs with flax meal.

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