Welcome to my first blog, made possible in part by the charming young Amy from St. Augustine, niece of Theresa and Don Paul, www.prairiepaulsstudio.com, who stayed over one night recently. She, a social network manager and website designer, inspired me to give it a go. A creative venture to be enjoyed while seated, sounded good to me having been standing for days on -end printing linocuts and cleaning ink covered rollers and slabs.
She advised, “write as you would converse in person, never mind a plan of topic nor editing beyond the typos”. “OK…will anyone want to read it?” Well… she didn’t go into that.
Back to that evening; we dined at India Palace, a favorite place of ours. We were rewarded by Don’s interest in the tandoori oven used to cook his food, by a guided tour into the kitchen to see the amazing tandoori oven.
It was a cylindrical stainless appliance resembling a kiln when looking down into its open top. The interior walls were ceramic; the fire, likely gas was smoldering at the bottom. The chef threaded chicken meat onto the mid-section of long spears; these he positioned to the fire, leaning them diagonally upward against the tandoori walls. After the meat was browned, he lifted the spear and hung it by its crook at one end from a stainless bar above the oven, keeping the meat warm.
The chef also demonstrated how naan is made. He rolled out an amount of dough unto a slab before tossing it about like pizza dough to stretch it. He draped the dough over the flat wide end of a long handled steel tool then reached it into the tandoori; the dough grabbed the wall and began to expand into a bubbly browned bread. He wrapped the baked naan in foil and sent it home with us.
The experience reminded me of standing around the ceramic kiln anticipating the mystery going on inside.
Loved this evening...sue
She advised, “write as you would converse in person, never mind a plan of topic nor editing beyond the typos”. “OK…will anyone want to read it?” Well… she didn’t go into that.
Back to that evening; we dined at India Palace, a favorite place of ours. We were rewarded by Don’s interest in the tandoori oven used to cook his food, by a guided tour into the kitchen to see the amazing tandoori oven.
It was a cylindrical stainless appliance resembling a kiln when looking down into its open top. The interior walls were ceramic; the fire, likely gas was smoldering at the bottom. The chef threaded chicken meat onto the mid-section of long spears; these he positioned to the fire, leaning them diagonally upward against the tandoori walls. After the meat was browned, he lifted the spear and hung it by its crook at one end from a stainless bar above the oven, keeping the meat warm.
The chef also demonstrated how naan is made. He rolled out an amount of dough unto a slab before tossing it about like pizza dough to stretch it. He draped the dough over the flat wide end of a long handled steel tool then reached it into the tandoori; the dough grabbed the wall and began to expand into a bubbly browned bread. He wrapped the baked naan in foil and sent it home with us.
The experience reminded me of standing around the ceramic kiln anticipating the mystery going on inside.
Loved this evening...sue