food

  • Medical Food For Thought

    I havent done anything educational here for a while. No, it has just been comics, and occasional mentions of my travels (still have a ton of australia posts to do) or my love life (spending time with girlfriend takes precendence over updating the intarwebs). Medicine works its way in every so often as well.

    SO today, I am going to learn you all good about some handy dandy food products you can use for medical conditions. Please note, none of this constitutes actual medical advice, as for all you know I could be a cabbage farmer in Siberia (bUy our cabbage, it makes you strong like bull!)

    Cranberry Juice:

    This is the one you probably all know about already, but a recent review of the medical literature shows that cranberry juice may actually be helpful for preventing UTI’s in woman who expereince them recurrenctly

    Coffee:

    Caffeine is structurally remakrably similar to theophylline, an old-timey treatment for asthma little used today. Although we have access to beta blockers and inhaled corticosteroids, should you be on vacation and suffering from an asthma attack with no nearby hospital and no meds on hand, downing as much coffee as you can should help ease your breathing while en route to proper medical care

    Honey (yes dear?):

    Yet another cochrane study although of much lower quality showed that honey may be better than placebo in relieving the pain of partil or full thickness burns…so next time you have a sunburn, dribble some honey on it. Also effective? the tannic acid in lipton tea bags…slather yourself in a little english breakfast and watch as that burn fades away!

     

    Vinegar:

    In one that is close to my heart, especially during the summer season, vinegar should be liberally poured over any jellyfish stings, as it will prevent the undischarged stinging cells from firing. Contrary to popular belief, urinating on it will not work and will just embarass you and whoever you are urinating on…unless you are into that sort of thing, which is an entirely different problem.

     

    Bacon!:

    Myiasis is tissue infestation by fly larvae (Order Diptera). There are different types of cutaneous myiasis, including wound-infestation, migratory and furuncular. Furuncular myiasis results from the fly larvae penetrating the skin where they feed in the subcutaneous tissue. The larvae still need to pop up for air now and then, so seeing a wriggling white thing with black “eyes” (respiratory spiracles) poking out of a skin lump is a dead give away. There are two important types of fly that cause furuncular myiasis. The human Bot fly (Dermatobia hominis), found in Central and South America, and the Tumbu or Putsi fly (Cordylobia anthropophagia) from Central and Southern Africa (plus at least one case from Portugal!).

    The furuncles are left covered with bacon fat. This encourages the larvae to exit the skin, either due to suffocation or an attraction to bacon. After about 3 hours the bacon fat is carefully removed with forceps at the ready to help fully extricate the larvae

    Myiasis eye Bringing Home the Bacon

    So if any of you were planning a trip to central america, or africa, keep some bacon handy, it might just prevent some uncomfortable furuncles…plus you will be able to eat bacon!

     

    So there you have it, dont say I never taught you anything

    -Dr J

  • Thank Goodness, Thanksgiving-Part 2

    Welcome Back!

    When last we left our intrepid adventurers, they were shooting up a turkey like a heroin addict


    But what came after? Continuing the preparation, off we go!

    It was time for me to step up to the plate and get cracking on the stuffing before the dish ran away with the spoon

    I chose to put a mushroom and herb twist on the classic dish. Above are the more traditional celery and onion, finely chopped

    Those would be croatian sage, california parsley flakes, marjoram, and hawaiian red sea salt (i liked the color)
    Throw it together with some butter, and crimini mushrooms that have been pre-roasted with granulated garlic, mix it up with some ciabatta and foccacia bread and you get…

    The non-cooked version!
    Of course, the speed and ease with which this was prepared was due in part to the help of my sous chef and our late arrived final guest
     
    Merlin, the kitchen magician, second maker of deserts and appetizers. So while we let the ladies get to work on their sweets




    The guys settled down to relax and let our dishes cook

    I almost forgot to show my mascot

    This little feller arose out of fast, but incomplete knife skills. Tremendous loss of points on technique had I been on top chef. Let’s check back in with our ladies. How you doing wendy?

    Hmm…why dont we give he a little more time to peel those potatoes while we have some more to drink

    Okay, how is wendy doing now?

    Much better, but what is she making?


    Ohhhh. Sweet potato fries!

    And here are some chile peppers with peanut sauce from merlin.

    Table decided to help set the mood. Then it was time to get our drink on while all the dishes were slowly finishing up and being set out.

    Alright, so let’s go.

    Sweet Potato fries with an avocado corn salsa

    At one point, the robot’s circuits broke down and she had to be rebooted.

    Who needs air guitar when you have hair guitar. Of course this led to a who is hairiest competition

    Which I lost


    Herb and Salt Encrusted Turkey, no brining necessary

    Roasted Mushroom and Herb Ciabatta/Foccacia Stuffing

    Duck Fat Fries

    Ground Turkey and Dill stuffed grapevine leaves in lemon brine

    Since The food’s almost ready, why dont we say grace

    Okay, admittedly we may have been a bit tipsy by this point


    Okay, we were drunk. But after the meal, we…erm…well, continued drinking

    At some point during the night, we discovered the BEST. GAME. EVER.


    It consisted of taking that wheeled chair you see tipped over from round one, having one person sit in it, and another person push it as fast as they can down that long hallway you see behind jayan. Timed. To see who could do it the fastest without banging into the walls, injuring both the rider and the pushee. Oh and trying to stop before this happened.

    But look how much fun we had. When the chair was eventually taken away because we were too drunk. (how drunk is too drunk…allow the next photo to demonstrate)

    I thought this was perfectly centered. SMILE!
    We eventually resorted to running down that same hallway on our socks and seeing how far we could glide. This also resulted in injuries and laughs. More things happened, but I dont remember most of them, so why dont I leave you with the group photos

    The next morning, the two of us who didnt have clinics or lectures to go to got up and did dishes

    This is nowhere near everything, just everything we could fit on the table. That concludes the thanksgiving post, hope yours was as good as mine!

  • Thank Goodness, Thanksgiving-Part 1

    Back from my food coma at last, and with all the pictures off the camera and on to the computer, I can finally tell you all the story of Thanksgiving. Well, the one I attended anyway. In an effort not to utterly destroy slow-loading times, I will endeavor to break this into multiple parts

    This year marked a fairly special thanksgiving, as it is the final year of med school, and come july, the friends I have spent the last 5 years with will be dispersed to the four corners of the states, and some may even go to Canada, America’s hat. So we wanted to step up our game and a few of us decided to throw a gourmet meal, complete with endangered species centerpiece. But more on that later…first, lets introduce the cast of characters.

    This is table. Table helped out throughout the day by storing supplies, acting as a prep surface, and eventually holding the finished product of everyone present. Thanks table!

    Now on to introduce the real people who made the meal what it was in every sense of the word


    Wendy, a fellow capoeirista from college turned tooth fairy dental student, mixmaster of potatoes
       
    Ritika, chief decorator and baker of pie

    Tony, Thai Knife-wielding fry cook and first assist on turkey preparation. Also the host for this years shindig.

    Yours truly, the designated photographer for the majority of the shots, along with stuffing imagineer, and dolma creator, bringing the ethnic touch to this American holiday.

    Before I continue, I should mention we had all arrived at Tony’s the night before, and spent the entire day cooking at his place. This means breakfast too

    That’s right, homemade egg mcmuffins with both real and fakin bacon

    Cheers! On the right, the mysterious member of the party is Jayan, mastermind of the menu and tsar of turkey.
    Onward to preparation!

    The first rule of this Thanksgiving was that everything had to be made from scratch…no half assing. As sultan of stuffing, I opted for a ciabatta and foccacia loaf. Here is the ciabatta freshly cut to prove there was no cheating
    Note to those at home. Cutting bread into one inch cubes is more difficult than the cooking shows make it look, even with a bread knife.

    French Freedom Fries are a classic americana dish, and Tony set to work on carving them with a vengeance

    Of course, while we were prepping the food, Table was getting all made up for later

    Table with Chief Decorator Ritika

    This is an artsy shot. You will notice more of these as the participants begin to imbibe more alcohol over the course of the day

    Table’s kid brother wanted in on the act


    Seasonings to be stuffed in the turkey (more on that in a moment)


    In keeping with our gourmet Thanksgiving, this year’s bird was a heirloom turkey. Heirloom or heritage turkeys are a variety of domestic turkey which retains characteristics no longer present in the mass produced poultry raised for consumption today

    With the advent of factory farming turkeys were selectively bred for increasingly larger size, focusing especially on the production of breast meat. Beginning in the 1920s broad-breasted fowl began to replace all other types of turkey in commercial production.

    The goal in turkey farming became the production of the maximum amount of breast meat at the lowest possible cost. As a result of this selective breeding, 70% of the weight of mass market turkeys is in their breast. Consequently, the birds are so heavy that they are completely incapable of reproducing without artifical insemination and they reach such extreme weights so quickly their overall development fails to keep pace with their rapidly accruing muscle mass, resulting in severe immune system, cardiac, respiratory and leg problems

    Unlike turkeys bred for industrial agriculture, heritage turkeys can do the wild thing without human intervention, have a relatively long lifespan and a much slower growth rate. Chefs, farmers and food critics contend that heritage turkey meat tastes better. Despite increasing interest in heritage turkeys, they are still in the minority, and most heritage breeds are endangered in some respect. So we ate an endangered species. GO US

    And now that I have taken a moment to educate you, I shall remind you of our immaturity

    Yes, we gave each other turkey flavored booster shots.

    And with the bird trussed up like a BDSM fetishist, we began injecting it with the true essence of flavor!

    Meanwhile, table was just about done.

    More to come next post, loyal viewers!

  • Top Chef Showdown

    I fancy myself a bit of a chef. If the tv is on in my house and NOT tuned to ‘toons, It is usually on the food network (esp if Good Eats is on) or bravo, if top chef is playing. In fact, I have a couple of friends, jayan and ritika with whom I have been cooking since last year.

    It began simply enough-we would watch tv programs at each others places, and given the hours the programs were on, we would cook for each other. But when the three of us got into Top Chef, things began to escalate.

    Watching up and coming chefs compete in some crazy challenges and judged by the likes of well known chefs such as anthony bourdain and erikt ripert we subsconsciously began to step up our game for each other. Beyond the usual fair we would make for ourselves, we began trying out techniques and flavor combinations we saw, inventing a bunch of our own dishes along the way

    Well the most reason season of top chef (season 4-spotlight chicago!) just ended, and given that  with our 4th year of med school starting and the three of us scattered around the states on electives, we probably wouldnt be able to do this again for a long time-so we decided to celebrate this finale with our own Top Chef Showdown

    A brief summary of how top chef works (from wikipedia)
    In the Quickfire Challenge, each chef is asked to cook a dish with certain requirements (for example, using specific ingredients or to inspire a certain taste) or participate in a culinary-related challenge (for example, a mise en place relay or a taste test). They are usually given an hour or less to complete these tasks. A guest judge selects one or more chefs as the best in the challenge. In most cases, the winning chef(s) are granted immunity from the following Elimination Challenge, though they may also gain an additional reward (such as being team captains for a team challenge).

    n the Elimination Challenge, the chefs have to prepare one or
    more dishes to meet the challenge requirements
    . The chefs may have
    from a few hours to a few days to complete this challenge. If specified
    by the challenge, the chefs are given a limited
    budget to shop at a specific food store
    (ed note: the chicago one was at my Big Gay Whole Foods on Halsted!) to complete their task. The contestants then
    cook for four judges. The four judges may include one guest judge. In
    most cases, the contestants cook for the four judges and a group of
    guests or customers (for example, the cowboys in Colorado). The judges
    and the guests sample the food and
    rate
    the individuals or teams. At the end of the challenge, the chefs wait
    to be brought to the Judges’ Table, where the four judges discuss the
    dishes. 

    Ingredients for courses are generally limited to what is present in
    the “Top Chef” pantry and what the chefs purchase at a store as part of
    the challenge, but certain challenges may provide specific ingredients
    or limit the type or number of ingredients that can be used, while
    others require non-traditional methods of obtaining ingredients (such
    as asking people door-to-door).
     

    ***

    So one of the challenges that took place this season was that at a performance by second city, audience members shouted out a color, an emotion, and a food you would find in the kitchen. The chefs then had to make these dishes. We liked this idea, and decided to do it for the season finale. Of course, just the three of us judging each others dishes would be difficult, so we invited a couple of friends to be impartial judges

    We each drew two combinations to make, given one week to prepare. Judging would then be done based on Plating, Creativity, and Taste. What follows is pics of the dishes made


    The first plating


    Josh’s First Dish
    Challenge: SMOOTH RED TOMATO
    Dish: Gazpacho made with tomatoes, butternut squash, parsley, dill, sea salt and lemon served in a Tomato Bowl
    Comments: This challenge was made bit more difficult on me given that a day after we got our ingredients, the whole tomato salmonella scare came out. Luckily vine ripe tomatoes are supposed to still be okay, so i just had to pay a little more. The adjective and food pairing here kind of worked against me…i basically had to present a smooth tomato dish, leaving me the options of pasta or soup. So given the arrival of summer, i made my own interpretation of a spanish gazpacho, a cold summer tomato soup. The dots around the plating are also droplets of gazpacho, and the bowl was just the cored tomato stuck in the freezer. In the future, I will probably make this a little bit less thick in consistency


    Jayan’s First Dish
    Challenge: SASSY PURPLE MUSHROOM
    Dish: Chicken Mushroom Marinade on Cabbage leaf with plum sauce, shallots, and limes to garnish
    Comments: jayan got a fairly difficult challenge here. how do you represent sassy? I liked the plating going for a face, and the chicken and mushrooms were done so well, you couldnt tell which was which until you bit into a piece…though i didnt care for the flavor combination of plum sauce and limes, or limes and shallots.


    Ritika’s First Dish
    Challenge: HAPPY GREEN ONIONS
    Dish: Onion Coconut Curry with tofu served in a coconut bowl accompanied by coconut water spritzer
    Comments: Ritikas dish conjured up a day at the beach with the green onion straw, and turning the coconut water into an accompanying drink was pure brilliance. The tofu was well marinaded and cooked, something that can be difficult to do with tofu unless you have been working with it for a while. My main detraction from this dish was that it seemed to me that the dish emphasized the coconut more than the green or the onion. The other judges were not as impressed with the coconut bowl, as they had seen it done at a local restaurant, Joy Yees Noodle House. We all agreed the dish was excellent however

    We then had an hour to prepare our second dishes, in time to catch the season finale winner, local chicago chef Stephanie Izzard.


    Ritikas second dish
    Challenge: FIERCE YELLOW SCALLOPS
    Dish: Seared scallops in a mango habanero sauce
    Comments: This dish was quite the comedy of errors in the making, as Ritika will absolutely not touch meat in any form. So the scallops she purchased in a container from a local fish market (what does one call a fish market-fish merchanter? fisherer? fishmongerer?) and then simply upended the container over the saute pan. To this she added the mango marinade and habanero powder from our favorite seasoning merchant, The Spice House (as promoted by Alton Brown of Good Eats). While she was watching the show, she forgot to check her sauce, leading the dish to burn slightly and changing its color from yellow to brown. that said, this was no hands down the FAVORITE dish of the night, beloved by all the other judges but one. The combination of sweet and spicy may sound surprising but is often a winner, and the texture of the chewy scallops in a much more fluid sauce with warm mangos was described by one judge as “like a party in my mouth”.


    Josh’s second dish
    Challenge: GLOOMY ORANGE NUTS
    Dish: Nut encrusted orange roughy with onions in an orange saffron sauce
    Comments: The difficulty of this challenge made ME gloomy. I went for broke with this idea, pulling whatever tangential relations together i could think of. I went with simple color association for my protein, picking orange roughy, and deciding to work the nuts in as a breading for a broiled fish. In the future, i will remember that walnuts are much easier to crush in a pestle than almonds. I thought of adding the onions to the fish not only to add a little bitterness to the sweetness in the walnut, but also to help get gloomy across, as onions are known for making people cry. Cheesy, yes. Then, a day before the challenge, i thought, why not make a sauce for the fish and grabbed an 8 oz bottle of OJ, some white wine, and some saffron from the earlier noted Spice House. Crushed the saffron threads and lightly toasted them, adding the wine with some onions and about 5-6oz of OJ and simmering on a medium heat while i broiled the fish. A few spoons of cornstarch thickened it up nicely. I tried to cut the fish into teardrop shapes, but the nut crusting rather hid that fact. One judge suggested gloomy could have been better represented by plating the fish at the top like a cloud, and drizziling sauce down like rain. However, the fish cooked very well, retaining a moist flaky inside with a crispy breading, and it was complimented well by the sauce, though to some of the judges the sauce was a little too sweet and the orange flavor slightly overpowering. Good thoughts for next time, as the sauce WILL be made by me again


    Jayans second dish
    Challenge: CONFUSED BROWN SAUSAGE
    Dish: Bacon wrapped 4 flavor sausage on a bed of couscous
    Comments: in Jayan’s words, “this turkey didnt know what it wanted to be…each sausage is flavored differently. One has habanero pepper for spicy, another has ancho chili for heat and sweet, another one tastes fruity, so you have no idea what you will get next” This too me was probably the most creative interpretation of the night. We were also amused by the hidden “sausage” shaped by the chives and two onions. “The onions are from the previous dish, and are also confused. They are all ‘wait! how the hell did we get here? this is confusing’” Jayan went on to add. The spicy sausages were too hot for one judge who hasnt been accustomed to the heat we normally pack on to our food. As for me, the spicy sausages were good, but i was unable to detect the flavors in the fruity one, and was left just feeling the tingle of the spice with the couscous.

    So based on what you have seen and heard, who would you pick as the winner?

    …It was Jayan, followed closely by Ritika, and me bringing up the rear  (T_T) Oh well, at least i learned something, and we all had quite a lot of fun. That concludes the current season of “Cooking with Almost Dr J” join us next time when Josh gets hungry and remembers his camera

  • Greek Easter 2008

    Once again it is time for my yearly Greek Easter Feast.

    For those new to the game, every year since college I have prepared a traditional greek easter meal for my friends. This tradition began way back when i was a little kid, leaving easter church services (which i could not stand) The one upside was that after the mass, we would go to my aunts house and have easter dinner with a bunch of greek food. So of course i spent all my time in the kitchen and little by little my aunt began to teach me how to make some of the traditional foods.

    I am no longer greek orthodox, but i still hold dear the traditions and foods associated with easter and wanted a way to share my greek heritage with my friends, so i began making the easter dinner for them. Simple at first, just a few friends and some lamb and dolma. Years later I can make all of the easter foods, more than my aunt or mother does since they dont enjoy cooking, and i prepare an 8 course meal for about 15 people every year that takes me about 4-5 days to make in entirety. I plan on continuing this for as long as it is humanly possible, though admittely it got a little trickier with 3rd year schedule

    So lets start cooking!


    First we saute about 4 lbs of spinach, then mix it with onions and feta cheese and cover it in phyllo dough, that paper thin pastry that is so fragile it rips if you breath on it and dries almost as soon as you take it out of the package.

    After 4 years I finally have gotten the hang of working with the phyllo dough and with my rhythm going, i barely cursed at all this year. Yay me!

    Next day was the dolmathes, stuffed grapevine leaves


    The leaves are edible and impart a lemony tang to the meat

    Then the pastitsio or greek lasagna


    Followed by my famous lamb stew with a tomato sauce and merlot base (this year with 8 lbs of lamb, fresh from the butcher)


    And another favorite, the Chicken Avgolemono…chicken sauted in butter and onions, boiled with dill, and then covered in a avgolemono sauce and placed on grapevine leaves with olives

    Then it was time for the other big easter event for me…saturday, the day before easter, I dye the eggs and bake the Tsoureki, a traditional sweet bread made only for easter.

    Weird fact about me, I like to draw on eggs. This is mostly because when I was little, my mom would write H on hard boiled eggs so we knew which ones they were…my brother and I just started doodling cause we though writing on eggs was fun. hijinks ensued

    The dye for the eggs is a special red dye i purchased from greektown, and one that is only sold around easter. The second pic is simply my collection of spices, the majority of them fresh from the Spice House, a local chicago spicery

    The above ingredients are what I use to make the bread. From Scratch. Not only do I cook, I BAKE! Line forms to the left ladies

    Ha , I kill me

    So here is the raw dough, which is left to rise for several hours. Then I take strips of the dough and roll them out while jamming to streaming greek music from my computer, and fold the strips into little bread dolls, or jesus fish

    One doll for each of my guests, or about 14 in total. You may notice that the top left doll is much cleaner looking than the bottom right. Well, lets see how good your bread making technique is when you only do it once a year

    Okay so all the food prepared, lets spruce the apartment up a little, eh?


    Purchased some flowers in the color of the greek flag to serve as a centerpiece, and arranged them in an ascending staircase. The blue ones are iris and the white i dont know but if you do, tell me please


    This old school mortar and pestle isnt just for show…its what I use to crush the almonds and walnuts to make the one greek dish everyone knows…baklava!


    Here is what the final table looked like…lets delve a little closer shall we?

    Spanakopita, Baklava, Pastitsio, and Dolmathes

    Tsoureki and Rosemary Potatoes

    Spanakopita and Dolmathes again, with Chicken Avgolemono. The Lamb remained on the stove simmering.

    So happy easter in greek is Kalo Pascha. Anytime you answer the door, you greet your visitor with Xristos Anesti, which means CHrist has risen. If they know greek or have done this easter thing with me before, the response is Alithos Anesti, or truly, he has risen.

    A similar game is played with the tsoureki, called Tsourimos. Everyone takes an egg, which in this case was baked into the bread. The eggs, a symbol of life held in abeyance, or a symbol of rebirth, are dyed red for the blood of christ. Two guests will turn to one another and say xristos anesti while the other answers alithos anesti. Then, they will tap their eggs against each other, checking to see if one has cracked. All the guests do this until only one uncracked egg remains. That person will receive a year of strength. The eggs are cracked to represent the resurrection, life springing forth from death.

    The other tradition done exclusively with the bread. Into one loaf of bread (or in this case, one doll) a drachma (or quarter for me) is baked. As each person eats their bread, the one who finds the quarter will be treated to a year of good fortune, provided they keep the quarter on their person.


    With all the tradtional games out of the way, we all had a wonderful dinner

    Everyone stuffed but not quite ready to retire, I busted out one more toy from my culture

    WHat better way to end a night of fun and feasting than some after dinner hookah and conversation.

    Until next year, Happy Easter

  • Cooking with almost Dr. J-soups on!

    Many of you have left me comments about the being sick, and I thank you heartily for your recommendations. SO for this segment of cooking with almost Dr J, I am going to share the recipe for hot and sour soup i subsisted on most of last week. Here are the ingredients you will need


    4 cups chicken broth (i make mine from a powder)
    1 1/2 ounces dried shitake mushrooms (i was fresh out)
    5 tbsp rice vinegar
    2 tbsp cornstarch (only if you want a thicker consistency-otherwise leave out)
    1 1/2 tbsp sesame oil
    3 tbsp minced ginger (i used ginger powder)
    1 tbsp soy sauce
    1 tbsp minced serrano chiles
    1/2 package daikon radish
    2 cloves garlic

    1. Combine broth and mushrooms, let stand about 20 minutes on very low heat until mushrooms soften. (make tea while waiting)
    2. combine vinegar and cornstarch in small bowl. stir to blend. If you didnt use cornstarch, skip this step
    3. add all remaining ingredients and bring to boil, then reduce heat to medium low and simmer covered 5 minutes
    4. add cornstarch mixture, stir until slightly thickened, about 1 min

    There is no pic because i was hungry and sick and forgot to take one, but the final product should have a dark to reddish brown color. If you want to make egg drop soup, crack an egg into the soup when it is boiling during step 3

    enjoy

  • Death Wings

    So I had the Death Wings.

    The Challenge

    The waiver we had to sign to be allowed to eat the wings


    Tony, Buch, and I ready for the challenge

    All the necessary supplies. A firemans hat, some beer, and the rescue bell. If it gets too hot, you ring the bell and you are brought…
     
    A tiny little tray with a shot of milk, some ice cream, sugary cream and a slice of bread. So as you can see, I was eating the wings without a safety net (new readers: i am HORRIBLY lactose intolerant…possibly even lactose rascist)

    chaser: who could possibly need this?

    A couple wings in….he could

    And how did I fare? well, i managed to pack away 4 of the wings in the basket, with the other 6 by buch and tony.

    okay, so i worked up a bit of a sweat, and maybe my face felt a LITTLE tingly and numb, but overall did i think they were spicy? not very…

    well, okay, maybe just a little bit. I resorted to this after i had chugged 2 beers at the table to douse the fire in my mouth from the combined wings and habanero pepper i ate straight following said wings. Mind you, one of those beers was not even mine, it was simply liberated from buch when i couldnt take the heat.

    Seriously though, the wings WERE spicy, but not as much as I had expected them to be…after all, i still have yet to finish Orochon’s special #2 ramen, and yet i could have easily polished off a basket of these wings.

    To celebrate our acommplishent, the bar staff, took our picture for the wall of bravery and gave us a pin that said we did it. I wore my firemans hat the rest of the day as we wandered up and down michigan avenue

    The end of this culinary adventure…what else lies in store for The Josh in 2008?

  • Chicken wings of Death

    Many of you know me as an adventurer. Well later today, I shall be taking on one of the greatest culinary adventures of my life to date:

    “Jake Melnick’s will begin serving hot wings coated with Red Savina pepper
    — aka “Dominican Devil’s Tongue Pepper” and holder of Guinness World
    Record for hottest pepper from 1994–2006. The pepper’s heat has been
    measured at 577,000 scoville units (for comparison’s sake, that’s twice as hot as a habanero and 60 times hotter than a jalapeno).

    The pepper sauce is so hot that before chowing down, diners will
    have to sign a waiver saying they won’t sue if injuries ensue. Diners
    will also be outfitted with an alarm bell if they need to summon their
    server over for heat-reducing sour cream, milk, sugar or white bread.”

    Thats right. I will be eating chicken wings so hot, i have to SIGN A WAIVER. This experience will be documented and posted once i come home and stop breathing fire

    i bid you good day, and possibly, goodbye

  • Let’s Eat!

    For no good reason other than that I like food, here are some of the things i ate in thailand


    Thus ends my thai vacation. With shelf exams, finals and step 1 coming up, i am sure i will have plenty of procrastinating power to keep you all amused for the next couple months

    -J