Recipes
Shepherd's "Pie" Twice Baked Potatoes

I made this on my live cooking show. You shoulda been there!
It’s St. Patrick’s Day here in the great US of A, the land built exclusively on the backs of Irish immigrants, who gladly plied their skills in the trades [bartending, leprechauning] for potatoes.
The best way to celebrate? Cook something vaguely Irish [this dish], and drink something definitely Irish [clover juice].
Think of this dish in sections:
First, bake the potatoes.
Second, make the filling.
Third, mash the potatoes, reserving the skins.
Fourth, Jameson.
No wait!! Before we get too tipsy [too late] we have to assemble and bake the final product.
THEN Jameson. Again. [hiccup]
(Tip of the hat to Wiff who sent me Tasty’s recipe, which was the initial inspiration for this.)
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
- 4 Russet potatoes
- 4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 lb 85% ground beef
- 1 onion, ¼-inch dice or shredded
- 1 carrot, ¼-inch dice or shredded
- 2 ribs celery, ¼-inch dice or shredded (which I don’t have…thanks, coronavirus)
- 2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced or shredded
- 4 tbsp, 75 g tomato paste
- 10oz frozen peas (I’m using baby lima beans…thanks, coronavirus)
- ½ cup, 100g beef or chicken stock
- ½ cup red wine
- kosher salt
- 5 sprigs thyme
- 4 tbsp butter
- 4 tbsp, 50g heavy cream, warmed
- 4 oz Cheddar cheese, grated
Recipe
For the potatoes
- 4 Russet potatoes
Bake at 350˚F until easily pierced with a fork, about 60 minutes.
For the meat filling
- 4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 lb 85% ground beef
- 1 onion, ¼-inch dice or shredded
- 1 carrot, ¼-inch dice or shredded
- 2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
- 4 tbsp tomato paste
- 10oz frozen peas (baby lima beans)
- ½ cup beef or chicken stock
- ½ cup red wine
- kosher salt, to taste
- 5 sprigs thyme
Heat a 12-inch sauté pan over high heat. Add the olive oil. Just as the oil starts smoking, add the ground beef. Don’t push the meat all around. Let it sit and brown for two to three minutes. Once one side is browned, move the meat around to sear the other side.
Reduce the heat to medium, push the meat to one side of the pan, and add the onion, carrot, and garlic. And salt. Stirring infrequently, sweat until tender, about 5 minutes. Move the vegetables to the side of the pan and add the tomato paste and cook for a few minutes, until it turns orange.
Add beef or chicken stock and deglaze the pan. Add the peas/beans. Increase the heat to high and cook until the peas/beans are tender. Add the wine and reduce for a few minutes longer. Turn the heat off. Time to mash those potatoes!
For the mashed potatoes
- 4 tbsp butter
- 4 tbsp heavy cream, warmed
- kosher salt, to taste
Slice each potato in half lengthwise, taking care not to tear the skin. Scoop out the potatoes and press through a ricer or tamis. Using a wooden spoon, stir in butter, heavy cream, and kosher salt.
To complete
-
4 oz Cheddar cheese, grated
Spoon some of the meat mixture into each potato skin. Top with mashed potatoes. Top with cheese. Broil about ten inches from the heating element until the cheese is melted and slightly browned, about ten minutes. Sprinkle chives on top just before serving.
Make Ahead
You can make and assemble these ahead of time. Refrigerate until ready to cook. Reheat at 350˚F for about 20 minutes, then broil for a few minutes to brown the cheese.
Watch the LIVE cooking show replay:
Meet Me At The Gala (WIP)
→ Images coming soon! ←
It’s after 8am so it’s time for a cocktail.
I open the fridge and notice a dozen lemons approaching their expiration date. They’ve lived a good life in the crisper drawer, but their time is near.
What can I make with lemons… Lemon meringue pie? Not alcoholic enough. How about life? No, that’s what gives you lemons.
Something in the sour family.
A Jasmine!
But I have bottles of Laird’s Applejack to use up since, in an effort to better connect with the fall season, I bought extra and keep forgetting to use it every time I reach for cocktail ingredients.
Not today.
I don’t want to think of a brand new cocktail. I want something fast.
What about a Jasmine WITH APPLEJACK?!?
*mixes drink, takes first sip*
Well, hello there.
*rushes to add recipe to website, drinks cocktail, forgets to take pictures*
Ingredients
1 1/2 oz Laird’s Applejack
3/4 oz Campari
3/4 oz fresh squeezed lemon juice
1/2 oz Cointreau
Recipe
Add ice to a cocktail glass. Fill with water. Set aside.
Add all ingredients to the cocktail shaker. Fill with ice. Shake until your hands freeze to the shaker, a good 30-45 seconds ought to do it.
Dump the water and ice from the cocktail glass. Double strain the shaker’s contents into the cocktail glass.
Garnish with a lemon twist.
Pasta with feta sauce
Last updated: December 29, 2025
Wiff and I were hungry this morning as we are every morning and every hour throughout the day.
She said, “PASTA!” and I said, “sounds like a plan.”
We almost always have fresh pasta in our fridge. I suggest you do the same for those moments your partner says [barks] “PASTA.”
I recommend making a double or triple batch of the feta fondue. It’ll keep for a week in the fridge, and you can use it to top Brussels sprouts, on this pasta, or maybe even as a dip for Fritos [ask me how I know].
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
450 g, 1 lb fresh pasta
180 g feta fondue [the recipe as written provides enough]
90 g, 3 oz pasta water
Recipe
Warm feta fondue in the microwave or in a saucepan on the stove.
Cook pasta al dente according to package directions. Using tongs and/or a spider, transfer to a large bowl. Add warmed fondue and a little pasta water and toss to combine.
Serve with a sprinkle of finishing salt.
The Flip & Fall
A.k.a. the ambulance chaser.
Drinking a Flip & Fall makes me feel like Rocky when he chugs whole eggs, except boozier.
This cocktail is deceptively tasty. You don’t have to use old tom gin, but I think it’s worth a shot if you can find it. Old tom gin—which sounds like a racial slur—is a tweener of sorts between Genever gin and modern London dry gin. It’s more whiskey-ish than regular gin. Imagine if Crown Royal had a British cousin… that’s what old tom gin would taste like.
Egg whites bring froth and levity to cocktails. Egg yolks, on the other hand, bring a rich and velvety texture. The whole egg puts them in the flip category of drinks, hence the name.
Ingredients
- 2 oz old tom gin
- 1/4 oz apple cider simple
- 1/4 oz fresh lime juice
- 1 egg
Recipe
Add ice to a cocktail glass. Fill with water. Set aside.
Crack the whole egg into a cocktail shaker and shake without ice to emulsify the egg.
Add the remaining ingredients to the cocktail shaker. Fill with ice. Shake until your hands freeze to the shaker, a good 30-45 seconds ought to do it.
Dump the water and ice from the cocktail glass. Double strain the shaker’s contents into the cocktail glass.
Garnish with a lime peel. (Note: When peeling a lime, it’s easier peeling from top to bottom, not around it.)
Gin one for the flipper. [Not really sure that the reference works, but we’re going with it.]
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Apples & Oranges
Chances are you never had a really good Cosmo. Until now.
Ingredients
2 oz Laird's Applejack
3/4 oz fresh squeezed orange juice
1/2 oz Cointreau
1/2 oz 1:1 apple cider simple
1 g ground cinnamon (about 1 bar spoon)
Recipe
Add ice to a cocktail glass. Fill with water. Set aside.
Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker. Fill with ice. Shake until your hands freeze to the shaker, a good 30-45 seconds ought to do it.
Dump the water and ice from the cocktail glass. Double strain the shaker’s contents into the cocktail glass.
Because you like autumn cocktails, you may also like these recipes:
Brussels sprouts, pancetta, feta fondue
Last updated: December 20, 2025
Looking for a showstopper Thanksgiving vegetable dish? Or a showstopper anytime vegetable dish? Look no further.
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
For the Feta Fondue
25 g white wine
50 g Chicken Stock
200 g cream
100 g crumbled feta cheese
15 g, 1/2 oz gin
10 g water
10 g cornstarch
7 g salt
5 g lime juice
Pinch of cayenne
To complete
450 g | 1 lb | Brussels sprouts, halved lengthwise
EVOO, as needed
225 g pancetta, 1/4" dice
Recipe
For the Feta Fondue
25 g white wine
50 g Chicken Stock
200 g cream
100 g crumbled feta cheese
15 g, 1/2 oz gin
10 g water
10 g cornstarch
2 g salt
5 g lime juice
Pinch of cayenne
In a six cup saucepan over medium-high heat, reduce wine until almost dry. Add stock, reduce until almost dry. Add cream, reduce by a quarter.* Add the cheese and blend using an immersion blender. Add gin. Combine water and cornstarch to make slurry, gently whisk into sauce. Cook for a minute. Remove from heat and mix in salt, lime, and cayenne. Set aside until ready to complete. May be made up to two days ahead of time.
*I find I usually underestimate the reduction in this step. Here’s a way to accurately measure the reduction: Weigh your saucepan immediately before adding the cream. This is your starting weight. Your goal weight is the start weight plus 150 g. If you double the recipe—which I recommend—your goal weight will be your start weight plus 300 g.
To Complete
450 g | 1 lb | Brussels sprouts, halved lengthwise
EVO
5 g kosher salt
225 g pancetta, 1/4" diced
Feta Fondue, from above
Coat the sprouts in olive oil, place them cut side down on an unlined baking sheet, and roast at 450˚F for 15 minutes. While they roast, add diced pancetta to a sauté pan large enough so the pancetta forms one layer, and cook over medium or medium-low heat until crispy, about 15 minutes.
Remove the sprouts from the oven, place in a bowl. Using a slotted spoon, spoon pancetta bits on top of sprouts spoon feta fondue over top. Serve.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
Apple Cider Simple Syrup
Ingredients
250 g apple cider
250 g light brown sugar
Recipe
Microwave method:
Add apple cider and light brown sugar to a heatproof bowl and microwave on high until it boils, 3-5 minutes depending on the power of your microwave. Carefully remove from the microwave and stir until the sugar is completely dissolved. Cover with plastic wrap and cool to room temperature. Transfer to a glass or plastic squeeze bottle and refrigerate.
Stovetop method:
Note: You can also make this on the stovetop. Add the brown sugar and apple cider to a small saucepan set over high heat. Bring to a boil. Stir to dissolve all the ingredients. Cover and cool to room temperature. Transfer to a glass or plastic squeeze bottle and refrigerate.
The Cosmopolitan
Chances are you never had a really good Cosmo. Until now.

Chances are you never had a really good Cosmo.
You were probably at an Outback, or a “lounge” with one of your girlfriends, or maybe you kicked your husband out of the house for a girls’ night. Someone said, “Let’s get what the girls on Sex in the City got!” and then squealed when they arrived. [At least that’s what I do.] But then you took your first sip and it was just kinda…okay.
Not these.
These are fantastic Cosmos. These are perfectly balanced Cosmos. A bit of sweetness from the cranberry juice cocktail and the Cointreau, a bit of tart from the lime juice. And a weeeeee bit of warmth from the vodka.
Make sure to get regular ol’ cranberry juice cocktail, the kind with sugar listed as the second ingredient. Straight cranberry juice can be quite bitter and tart [like me], and we need the extra sugar to smooth things out.
Also, I specifically call for Cointreau. If you use regular triple sec, or any other orange liqueur, your results will differ. Not saying they’ll be bad—I’ve used every triple sec under the sun in Cosmos—but just know it won’t turn out the way I intended. Triple sec has more sugar than Cointreau, so you may want to try one of the hippie-dippie cranberry juice brands to compensate.
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 oz vodka
- 1/2 oz Cointreau
- 1 oz cranberry juice cocktail
- 1/2 oz fresh squeezed lime juice
Recipe
Add ice to a cocktail glass. Fill with water. Set aside.
Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker. Fill with ice. Shake until your hands freeze to the shaker, a good 30-45 seconds ought to do it.
Dump the water and ice from the cocktail glass. Double strain the shaker’s contents into the cocktail glass.
Garnish with a lime peel. (Note: When peeling a lime, it’s easier peeling from top to bottom, not around it.)
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Cheddar Cheese Coins
I’m gonna come right out and say it: These are better than Cheez-Its.
I don’t say that lightly. As someone who is married to a Cheez-It hound, I could be murdered for uttering that phrase since, in the eyes of anyone who loves them as much as her, nothing can compare to Cheez-Its. [Not even my love.]
You can substitute whatever cheese you like. Regular cheddar? Sure. Gruyère? Oui. I’ve mixed both of them with Piave and it was amazing. A funky cheese might be weird, but I won’t judge [I will]. If you go rogue and use a soft cheese you may need more flour to tighten it up.
Feel free to omit the cayenne if you can’t handle a tinge of spice [weakling].
Double or triple this batch. They go down fast.
Ingredients
Makes 45 coins
150 g all purpose flour
2 g smoked paprika
.5 g cayenne pepper
2 g kosher salt
100 g butter
15 g thyme, leaves left on stems
200 g Vermont Cheddar cheese, grated
Recipe
Thyme Butter
100 g butter
15 g thyme, leaves left on stems
Add to a small saucepan on medium low heat. Remove from the heat when the butter begins to boil, but before it starts to brown, about 10-15 minutes. Strain through a mesh strainer, discard solids, and reserve thyme butter.
To Complete
150 g all purpose flour
2 g smoked paprika
.5 g cayenne pepper
2 g kosher salt
200 g Vermont Cheddar cheese, grated
Thyme butter, from above
Olive or canola oil, as needed
Heat the oven to 350˚F and set the rack in the middle of the oven.
Spray three 9.5” x 13” baking sheets with oil. Alternatively, put a teaspoon of oil on each sheet pan and wipe with a paper towel.
Mix the flour, paprika, cayenne pepper, and salt in a small bowl. Set aside.
In a large bowl, mix cheese and butter. Add flour mixture and mix to combine. Squeeze dough together into a firm ball. Set the bowl on a scale and tare. Remove 10g of dough, shape into a ball, and place on the sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough. You should have 15 balls on each sheet, arranged in a 3 x 5 pattern.
Bake for 20 minutes or until crisp and golden brown. Rotate each pan 180 degrees after 10 minutes.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
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Check Out My Nuts

These nuts are stupid easy to make. There’s no excuse not to pull these out of the oven the moment your guests arrive for cocktail hour. And, if you’re running behind schedule, these nuts will buy you some extra time to get the appetizer and dinner courses finished.
I only recommend Irish or European butter. Despite being inhabited by bohemian commies, Europe makes the best damn butter around.
And don’t get too bent out of shape trying to find The Perfect nut balance. My favorite nuts are pecans, so I lean pretty heavily on those. Cashews are next. Almonds are a distant third. Peanuts are dead last because, no matter how great the rest of your life is, they come across as “I’ve given up.” [If you can afford pistachios, your assistants are probably reading this for you.]
Ingredients
-
90 g, 6.5 T Irish or European butter (such as Kerrygold or Plugra)
-
900 g, 2lbs mixed nuts
-
25 g, 1/2 cup fresh rosemary, leaves removed from stems and minced
-
25 g, 1/2 cup thyme, leaves removed from stems and minced
-
kosher salt, as needed
Recipe
-
90 g, 6.5 T Irish or European butter (such as Kerrygold or Plugra)
-
900 g, 2lbs mixed nuts
-
25 g, 1/2 cup fresh rosemary, leaves removed from stems and minced
-
25 g, 1/2 cup thyme, leaves removed from stems and minced
-
kosher salt, as needed
Heat your oven to 450˚F. I don’t say preheat because that word doesn’t make sense to me.
Line a baking sheet with heavy duty aluminum foil. Melt the butter in a small saucepan over medium low heat. Mix everything together in a large bowl.
Dump the nuts on the foil-lined sheet and arrange into one layer. Put the tray in the oven, lower the heat to 350˚F, and roast for 10 minutes. Rotate the sheet 180 degrees and roast for another 10 minutes.
Cool until they’re cool enough to handle without burning your face off.
Serve with Manhattans.
*In batch pictured here, the pecans were raw, but the almonds and cashews were both salted and roasted. I ended up not adding any additional salt.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
Eye contact is mandatory.
Suggested pairing: Manhattans
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Homemade Doughnuts
If you don’t want to ruin every other doughnut for the rest of your life, don’t make homemade doughnuts.
Epicurious invited me back to their 4 Levels series. This time, it was for doughnuts. Watch the video below to see how my doughnuts stacked up to the competition, and check out the recipe below if you’d like to make them for yourself. [You will.]
Ingredients
Makes 8 doughnuts and 8 holes
500 g, (3 ½ cups) AP flour
15 g (1½ tablespoons) instant yeast
225 g (1½ cups) granulated sugar
10 g (1 tablespoon) kosher salt
250 g (1 cup) whole milk, 75˚F, about 30 seconds in the microwave
110 g eggs (2 eggs)
5 g (1 teaspoon) vanilla extract
50 g (2 oz) unsalted butter, room temperature, cut into 1/2" cubes
2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
Canola oil, as needed
DIRECTIONS
For Dough
500 g, (3 ½ cups) AP flour
15 g (1 ½ tablespoons) instant yeast
75 g (½ cup) granulated sugar
10 g (1 tablespoon) kosher salt
250 g (1 cup) whole milk, 75˚F, about 30 seconds in the microwave
110 g eggs (2 eggs)
5 g (1 teaspoon) vanilla extract
50 g (2 oz) unsalted butter, room temperature, cut into ½" cubes
Place flour, yeast, sugar, and salt in bowl of a stand mixer and mix well. Add milk. Mix on low until smooth, 5-10 minutes. Add eggs, mix until incorporated, about 5 minutes. Add butter. Mix for 5 minutes more.
Spray a large bowl with non stick spray (or wipe with an oiled paper towel).
Turn dough onto floured work surface. Work into rectangle. It. Will. Be. Sticky. Pull one of the long sides and fold over 2/3 of the rectangle. Like folding a letter. Repeat with the top and then the bottom.
Place seam side down into the prepared bowl. Let sit at room temp for an hour. Refrigerate overnight.
Turn onto lightly floured work surface. Shape into 11-inch round. The dough should be about 1/2" thick.
Line a sheet pan with parchment paper and spray with nonstick spray. Cut 3.5" rounds from dough, then cut 1.5" holes. Place on the prepared sheet pan. Reshape and roll dough to make enough doughnuts.
Cover sheet pan with plastic wrap and proof at room temperature until doughnuts have doubled in size, about an hour.
To Complete
150g, 1 ½ cups granulated sugar
2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
Canola Oil, as needed
In a large bowl, add sugar and cinnamon.
Heat canola/grapeseed oil to 350˚F. Fry a few doughnuts for 30 seconds (don't overcrowd). Flip and fry for 45 seconds. Flip and fry for 45 seconds. Place on a cooling rack over a sheet pan. Let cool until you're ready to remove the next batch from the oil. At that point, toss the cooled doughnuts in sugar and cinnamon mixture.
Repeat with the next batch.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
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Fried Squash Blossoms
I love playing the “what else can we fry?” game.
I love that you can actually SEE the salt crystals on these little guys. They were SO SO SO SO good.
Oh.
My.
God.
Why do I keep playing the “I wonder what else we could fry” game? It’s becoming a problem. These little buggers are so easy and so delicious. Some would say too easy. And too delicious.
And also surprisingly light?!?
Ingredients
Makes 24 stuffed squash blossoms
-
24 squash blossoms
-
150 g fresh ricotta
-
50 g heavy cream
-
1 g | 1/2 tsp lemon zest
-
3.5 g kosher salt
-
225 g all purpose flour
-
250 g cold sparkling water
Recipe
Filling
-
150 g fresh ricotta
-
50 g heavy cream
-
1 g | 1/2 tsp lemon zest
-
1 g kosher salt
Add all ingredients to a bowl and mix throughly. Transfer to a freezer strength Ziploc bag, remove as much air from the bag as possible, and reserve in the refrigerator. Use regular strength bags at your own risk. They may spring a leak when you pipe the filling into the blossoms.
Batter
-
225 g all purpose flour
-
2.5 g kosher salt
-
250 g cold sparkling water
Add flour and salt to a large bowl and mix. Add sparkling water and mix. Reserve in the refrigerator.
To complete
Prepare a tray to hold the filled squash blossoms. I use baking sheets lined with parchment paper.
Snip off one of the corners of the bag containing the ricotta filling. Snip off a smaller part of the corner than you think you need, as removing too much will create too large of an opening which will make sliding the tip into the blossom more difficult.
Pipe one tablespoon of the ricotta filling into each squash blossom. Gently squeeze the base of the blossom to open it. Alternatively, and much less hygienically, you can gently blow into each blossom to open it.
Add a few inches of olive oil to a pan and heat to 375˚F. Use a pan deep enough that the oil doesn’t go over 1/3 the height of the pan, but not SO large that you’re using gallons of oil. I use a 1.5qt sauce pan.
Line a baking sheet or plate with paper towels. This will be where the hot blossoms will go when they’re finished frying.
Dredge each squash blossom through the batter and gently drop into the hot oil. Work in batches, being careful to not overcrowd the pan for two reasons: 1, they’ll stick together and, 2, the oil temp will drop too low. While you’re frying, adjust the burner to keep the oil temperature at 375˚F. Fry until golden brown, about 3 minutes. Use a spider or slotted spoon to carefully remove each blossom to the prepared sheet. Immediately sprinkle with kosher salt.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
Got a little something on your … blossom… 😐

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Apple Cider "Mimosa"
Cheers
Recipe
-
Granulated sugar, as needed
-
Ground cinnamon, as needed
-
Apple cider, as needed
Mix enough granulated sugar and ground cinnamon to cover a small appetizer plate. Pour a little apple cider on another small appetizer plate, enough to cover the plate with 1/8” of cider. Dip the rim of each wine glass in the cider, then into the sugar and cinnamon mixture.
-
1 quart good apple cider.
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1 bottle sparkling wine, inexpensive but tasty. DO NOT BUY KORBEL. or Andre. That stuff is California’s finest sparkling whiz. An inexpensive French sparkler—like Delacroix—is perfect. Or a Prosecco. Something in the $10 to $15 range is fine.
-
Cinnamon sticks, as needed
Pour one and a half ounces apple cider into each wine glass. Top with four and a half ounces sparkling wine. You can eyeball it if you prefer.
Garnish with a cinnamon stick.
Travel Guide: Hudson, NY
Hudson is one of my favorite getaways from the city. It’s easy to get to, has excellent food and drinks, and there’s even a few hikes just a short drive away. Oh, and it’s haunted to boot.


Wiff and I love Hudson because it’s a short drive from the city, it’s got great food and drink, and it’s haunted.
Our first visit was on Halloween. And as we walked back from the restaurant to the hotel we came across the house pictured here. It was rundown, dilapidated. And obviously haunted. There was a black cat in the front yard. I assumed the house was his. After exchanging pleasantries, talking briefly about our dinner and how it nice the weather had changed from summer fall, he followed us the half mile back to our hotel, demanding pets along the way.
Hudson has several great restaurants. The food in the town is awesome. The produce is super tasty, I think, because it comes from local farms. Normally I care zero percent about eating local, but in this case the taste is perceptibly better. I’m still swooning over the baby kale from Swoon’s salads.
Drinks are equally fun too. WM Farmer & Sons has the most interesting cocktail program. Go at 5pm for happy hour—it’s the best in town. Two words: DOLLAR OYSTERS!?!??! They’re always fresh and briny. Two more words: bone marrow. We get it every time. The menu changes every season or so, but they don’t change every item completely. For instance, they always have aa bone marrow, but they change the preparation. During our last visit, they’d changed the preparation to include snails. They were magnifique.
Getting there
Rental car. I love Silvercar. So much more than other rental car companies. Despite my top tier status with Hertz, Silvercar’s experience blows Hertz’ out of the water. Everything is easy with Silvercar. You walk up, scan your car with your phone, get in, and go. All Silvercar cars are fully loaded Audi A4s, Q5s, and Q7s. And they rock. Driving a Q5 for $64/day beats driving a Corolla for $50/day every day.
Pro tip: If you click THIS LINK you and I will both earn $25 toward our next Silvercar rental.
The Train. Hudson is 2 hours north of NYC by train. And the train station is across the street from the two lodging options below. How easy is that!?!
Where to stay
-
WM Farmer & Sons. (UPDATE 11/20/19: we LOVED our stay at WM Farmer & Sons. I definitely recommend if you’re in the mood for more of a B&B feel.)
-
That’s about it.
Dining Options
-
WM Farmer & Sons. Happy hour is dollar oysters (!). They’re always good. Really fun cocktail program.
-
American Glory. I love that name. Ribs and whiskey are the reason to go.
-
Swoon Kitchenbar. Two words: Deep Fried artichokes. [I’m counting deep and fried as one.]
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Oak Pizzeria Napoletana. Excellent pizza. Great wine list.
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Fish & Game. We have NOT been here, but everyone says good things so I’m adding it.
Local hikes




Chicken Croquetas
Makes 32-36 balls
150 g, 1 1/2 cups Spanish onion, 1/4" diced
114 g butter, 8 tbsp
375 g, flour, (about 2 1/2 cups)
5 g, 5 tsp kosher salt
1000 g, ~1 L, 4 cups milk
300 g chicken
Flour, as needed (1 1/2 cups)
2 large eggs, beaten
2 cups Panko breadcrumbs
Olive oil, as needed
150 g, 1 1/2 cups Spanish onion, 1/4" diced
114 g butter, 8 tbsp
Melt butter over medium heat. Add onions and sweat until translucent.
375 g, flour, about 2 1/2 cups)
5 g, 5 tsp kosher salt
Slowly add flour, stirring to incorporate fully. Cook over medium heat until the flour taste cooks off. Stick a spoon in there and taste it if you’re not sure what that means.
1000 g, ~1 L, 4 cups milk
Add milk. Bring to simmer. Stir to fully dissolve the flour into the milk.
300 g chicken
Add chicken. Continue cooking over medium heat until the mixture is shapable by hand. Don’t reach in there and grab it! You’re not an idiot. Give it a few minutes. Stir enough so that it doesn’t burn. It’ll get a little tough. That’s okay. Once it’s pretty stiff, reserve to a parchment paper-lined baking sheet until cool.
Flour, as needed (1 1/2 cups)
2 large eggs, beaten
2 cups Panko breadcrumbs
Olive oil, as needed
Place the flour, eggs, and Panko in three separate bowls. Heat 2 inches of olive oil to 375˚F in a heavy bottomed, deep sided pan. Grab small handfuls of the cooled batter and shape into small balls [hehe]. Dredge the little guys in flour, then the egg mixture, then Panko, and then directly into oil. Work in batches of 4-5 balls so the temperature of the oil doesn’t drop. Adjust the heat to keep the temperature as close to 375˚F as possible. Cook until brown. Repeat with remaining balls.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.

Fried 🍆
I was one of the only half-Italians in the world to hate eggplant. Until this recipe…

People call me crazy for hating eggplant as much as I do. I can’t blame them, really. With a complete lack of flavor and texture, I’m surprised anyone out there hates it!
I’ve had eggplant cooked dozens of ways, all terrible. In Indian food it taste like mushy tofu. In Ragouts or stews, it tastes like mushy paper towels. Whether it’s grilled, roasted, or pureed, it’s disgusting.
But fried?
Oh man. Now we’re talking.
I ordered a farm box from my grocery delivery service, because that’s step two in “becoming an annoying millennial-hippie”. [Step one? Stop wearing deodorant.]. A “farm box” is fancy term for a box of whatever produce the local farms have just harvested. The produce is generally good—the greens are more flavorful than your typical grocery store greens. The artisan cheese is generally terrible. Last week I had a “Monterey Jack” that tasted like weed smells, if that makes any sense.
This week’s box featured an eggplant. Normally I would have thrown it right out the window. But I wouldn’t wish Death By Eggplant upon my worst enemy, and I was having a hippie dippie moment, so I thought, “let’s see if there’s a way to use this disgusting vegetable that makes it edible.”
Never being one to backdown from a self-imposed challenge, I looked for inspiration—which meant I asked Wiff “any ideas for eggplant recipes that don’t suck?”
She found one from José Andrés that looked simple enough: breaded and fried. I changed it for my tastes and processes, and the final product made me hate eggplant a little less.
And love fried food a lot more.
Seriously, it’s amazing. Go make it.
Ingredients
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1 eggplant, 1/4” slices on the bias [fancy term for “at an angle”]
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Kosher salt, as needed
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Whole milk, as needed, about 2 cups
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Extra Virgin Olive Oil (or Canola Oil), as needed, about 4 cups
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Flour, as needed, about 1 cup
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Sea salt, as needed
Recipe
Arrange the eggplant slices on a baking sheet. Sprinkle liberally with salt. Place another similarly sized baking sheet on top of the salted slices and weigh it down with a pan. Let sit for an hour or two. The longer you let it sit, the more flavorless water you draw out from the eggplant.
Place the eggplant slices in a bowl and cover with milk. Then cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight or at least a few hours.
Put the flour into a bowl or plate.
Heat an inch of oil to 350˚F in pan with high enough sides so that, in case the oil pops and spits, it won’t make a mess or worse, burn you. I use a Le Creuset Dutch Oven [one of the first items I’d grab if my home were on fire, perhaps from some errant oil that ignited].
Working one eggplant slice a time, remove from the milk—shaking off excess liquid—and dredge in the flour. Flip it over a few times to ensure there are no bare spots. Remove from the flour and carefully place into the hot oil, taking special care not to burn your face off. Cook for about 3 minutes, or until the coating has browned. Use tongs or a spider to remove the eggplant slices from the oil and place on a paper towel-lined plate. Immediately sprinkle sea salt.
Repeat with the remaining slices, adding only a few slices at a time.
NOTE: When you shallow fry like this, take special care to keep the temperature of the oil hot enough. When you add food to hot oil, the temperature of the oil will drop. I suggest heating the oil to 360˚F or so so that it doesn’t drop below 350˚F when you add the eggplant.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
Arancini with Kalamata Aioli
If someone had told me how easy it was to make arancini, I would have occasionally set aside some risotto for leftovers.
Actually that’s a lie.
I’d still probably eat it all. But I’d cook more specifically for arancini.
These balls are perfect to pass around while your guests arrive. They’re small enough to grab with two fingers and eat in two bites. Make more than you think you’ll need…trust me.
Ingredients
500 g leftover risotto
50 g kalamata olives, food processed into a paste.
50 g good mayonnaise
100 g all purpose flour
2 eggs, beaten
100 g panko
60 g mozzarella, broken into 12 small chunks
olive or canola oil, as much as you need for frying
Recipe
Stir the olive paste and the mayonnaise together in a small bowl until well mixed. Reserve in the refrigerator.
Prepare three bowls, one each for the flour, beaten egg, and panko. Set a large piece of parchment near the bowls. This is where you’ll place the coated balls.
Using your hands, form small balls [tee hee!] of leftover risotto. The balls should be about 35-40g each, a little larger than a golf ball. Stuff each ball with a piece of mozzarella and reform the ball.
Roll the ball in flour, then in the egg, then in the panko. Reserve on a piece of parchment paper.
Heat oil to 325˚F in a deep-sided pot. You’ll need a few inches’ worth, enough to let the balls float freely. Use a spider to carefully lower a few balls into the oil and fry for 3-4 minutes, until the balls are golden brown. Work in small batches, about 3-5 balls, so that the oil temperature doesn’t drop too low.
Serve immediately with the reserved kalamata aioli.
Note
This is part of a cookbook proposal that’s out on submission right now. If you’d like to see what a book proposal looks like, click here.
Whipped Ricotta, Honey, Chives, Pine Nuts
Last updated: February 18, 2026
I love dips. All dips. Cheesy dips, creamy dips, weighted chest dips, Freak Nasty’s “The Dip.”
I love the lightness and freshness of this dip and so do my guests—assuming I haven’t already finished it by the time they arrive. The thyme and chive oils add just a nice zip of flavor that surprises you. Well, not you, since you’re the one putting it in the dish. But your guests will be surprised.
Do yourself a favor run a paper towel around the rim of the bowl to clean it up. It ups your presentation game.
Ingredients
400 g fresh ricotta
2 g kosher salt
Extra virgin olive oil, as needed
20 g chives
20 g honey
20 g pine nuts
5 g chive oil [optional]
5 g thyme oil [optional]
Recipe
Add the pine nuts to a medium skillet over medium-low heat. They’ll start smelling nutty when they’re toasted. That’s your sign that they’re done. Once finished, transfer to a small bowl. Set aside.
Add ricotta, salt, and a few tablespoons of olive oil to a food processor with the blade attachment. Process for a ten to twenty seconds to whip the ricotta. You want the ricotta the texture of gritty toothpaste; depending on the moisture content of your ricotta, you may need another few tablespoons of olive oil.
Transfer the ricotta mixture to a serving bowl. Smoosh it down so it’s flat for a sleeker presentation—or go with a more rustic approach, your call!
Spinkle pine nuts and drizzle honey. Finish with optional oils. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to serve.
How to Cook Sous Vide Chicken Breast
Never done sous vide before? Start here. All the cool kids are doing it…
Last updated: March 24, 2026
Ingredients
Chicken Breast
Extra virgin olive oil
Directions
Heat a water bath to 65˚C. (I use the Sansaire immersion circulator, but I know a lot of folks who use and love the Anova.)
Chicken Breast
Extra virgin olive oil
Put the chicken breast into a Ziploc freezer bag with a few glugs of olive oil. The amount doesn’t matter; you’re just lubing the chicken so it doesn’t stick to the bag. Seal the bag, removing as much air as possible.
Cook sous vide for 75 minutes.
If you’re going to eat it immediately, remove the bag from the water, remove the chicken from the bag, pat it dry, then sear in a pan over medium heat for 30 seconds per side. Serve immediately.
If you’re saving it for later, chill the chicken—still in the bag—in an ice bath, and then refrigerate.
See How To Do It
Note: In the video below I cook the chicken at 63˚C, but I’ve since changed my preference to 65˚C.
