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On Play Me a Recipe, your favorite cooks will walk you through their most treasured recipes, offering all the insider tips, stories, and tricks you won't get from a written recipe—and you'll be right alongside them, every step of the way. Feel free to pause, jump back, or navigate the steps via the podcast chapters (if you're in Apple Podcasts, swipe up on the episode player page—the podcast chapters will be at the bottom). If you're cooking along, here's the recipe we're making today. Go ahead and grab the ingredients below (Julia starts listing them at :47) before starting the episode.Gluten-Free Buckwheat Groat PancakesServes 5 to 71 1/2 cups (270 grams) hulled buckwheat groats1 teaspoon apple cider vinegarDried or dehydrated blueberries (optional)2 dates, pitted1/2 cup (120 milliliters) plain full-fat yogurt1/2 cup (120 milliliters) milk, buttermilk, or almond milk4 whole large eggs2 large egg whites2 ripe bananas1 teaspoon kosher salt1/2 teaspoon almond extract2 teaspoons baking powder1/2 teaspoon baking sodaGhee or coconut oil, for cookingDo aheadAdd the buckwheat groats to a bowl with the apple cider vinegar and cover with 3 inches (7.5cm) of water. Let stand for 8 hours of overnight. In the morning, drain and rinse until the water runs clear.Make the pancakesIf using dried blueberries, soak them in warm water in a small dish to rehydrate for 10 minutes. Remove them from the water and squeeze them dry just before cooking.Preheat the oven to 200°F (90°C) and place a baking sheet inside to keep your pancakes warm.If your dates are leathery and tough, add them to a small dish and cover with hot water. Set aside for 5 minutes to soften and then discard the water (or add it to your iced tea as a natural sweetener). In a high-speed blender, combine the soaked and rinsed buckwheat, the yogurt, milk, eggs, egg whites, bananas, drained dates, salt, and almond extract and blend until smooth. Add the baking powder and the baking soda and pulse just to combine.Place a 10-inch (25 cm) cast-iron skillet over medium heat. When the pan is hot, add the ghee or coconut oil and swirl to coat the pan. Pour a ladle full of batter into the pan and reduce the heat to medium. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes, until bubbles form on the surface of the pancake and the batter begins to dry out (if using blueberries, add them to the pancake now). Flip the pancake and cook on the second side until golden brown. Adjust the heat as necessary and use additional ghee as needed to keep your pancakes cooking evenly. Transfer the pancakes to the oven as you go to keep them warm.Serve with Greek yogurt, whipped ricotta, Macerated Meyer Lemon (page 207), Cacao Buckwheat Granola (page 276), or the labneh whipped cream filling from the banana cream pie (see page 80).Is there a recipe you'd like to hear us make? Tell us all about it at podcasts@food52.com!Lobby Time Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
On Play Me a Recipe, your favorite cooks will walk you through their most treasured recipes, offering all the insider tips, stories, and tricks you won't get from a written recipe—and you'll be right alongside them, every step of the way. Feel free to pause, jump back, or navigate the steps via the podcast chapters (if you're in Apple Podcasts, swipe up on the episode player page—the podcast chapters will be at the bottom). If you're cooking along, here's the recipe we're making today. Go ahead and grab the ingredients below (Julia starts listing them at :47) before starting the episode.Gluten-Free Buckwheat Groat PancakesServes 5 to 71 1/2 cups (270 grams) hulled buckwheat groats1 teaspoon apple cider vinegarDried or dehydrated blueberries (optional)2 dates, pitted1/2 cup (120 milliliters) plain full-fat yogurt1/2 cup (120 milliliters) milk, buttermilk, or almond milk4 whole large eggs2 large egg whites2 ripe bananas1 teaspoon kosher salt1/2 teaspoon almond extract2 teaspoons baking powder1/2 teaspoon baking sodaGhee or coconut oil, for cookingDo aheadAdd the buckwheat groats to a bowl with the apple cider vinegar and cover with 3 inches (7.5cm) of water. Let stand for 8 hours of overnight. In the morning, drain and rinse until the water runs clear.Make the pancakesIf using dried blueberries, soak them in warm water in a small dish to rehydrate for 10 minutes. Remove them from the water and squeeze them dry just before cooking.Preheat the oven to 200°F (90°C) and place a baking sheet inside to keep your pancakes warm.If your dates are leathery and tough, add them to a small dish and cover with hot water. Set aside for 5 minutes to soften and then discard the water (or add it to your iced tea as a natural sweetener). In a high-speed blender, combine the soaked and rinsed buckwheat, the yogurt, milk, eggs, egg whites, bananas, drained dates, salt, and almond extract and blend until smooth. Add the baking powder and the baking soda and pulse just to combine.Place a 10-inch (25 cm) cast-iron skillet over medium heat. When the pan is hot, add the ghee or coconut oil and swirl to coat the pan. Pour a ladle full of batter into the pan and reduce the heat to medium. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes, until bubbles form on the surface of the pancake and the batter begins to dry out (if using blueberries, add them to the pancake now). Flip the pancake and cook on the second side until golden brown. Adjust the heat as necessary and use additional ghee as needed to keep your pancakes cooking evenly. Transfer the pancakes to the oven as you go to keep them warm.Serve with Greek yogurt, whipped ricotta, Macerated Meyer Lemon (page 207), Cacao Buckwheat Granola (page 276), or the labneh whipped cream filling from the banana cream pie (see page 80).Is there a recipe you'd like to hear us make? Tell us all about it at podcasts@food52.com!Lobby Time Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Julia Sherman is a photographer, writer, cook, and author of Salad For President, her new book Arty Parties is out now. She lives in Pasadena but spoke with us from her parent's home in New York. We chat about our New York show, Chris beefing with weather and dogs, Chris bestows some sage book writing advice to Julia, the difficulties of baking versus cooking, different fast-casual salad restaurants, Julia's pop-star nanny, some healthy Halloween treats instead of standard capitalist candy, us drawing a nude model at her last cookbook party, shutting down a New York supermarket, Julia's brother being a member of the graff community, and what it takes to throw a good party…..with art. instagram.com/saladforpresident twitter.com/donetodeath twitter.com/themjeans --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/howlonggone/support
We're chatting with Julia Sherman of Salad for President all about where food and art intersect. Through Julia’s history growing up with artists, studying and practicing art, and ultimately finding her artistic expression through salad, we experience food in wholly new way. From living with Benedictine nuns clad in denim habits, to constructing gardens on the rooftops of venerable art museums, Julia reminds us that we are all creative. We don’t need to study art history or master the art of French cooking to express ourselves. We #pinefor her because she encourages us to find the artists within ourselves by stealing ideas, breaking the rules, finding the magic in the everyday, and simply creating.
On today's episode of THE FOOD SEEN, Julia Sherman, an artist in her own rite, muses through candid conversations about people's creative procesess, strikingly similar to how we talk to chefs about composing dishes. Her blog turned book "Salad for President", documents the likes of photographer William Wegman (and his famed Weimaraners) while making Charoset, how to transpose leftover lettuce to breakfast tacos with Alice Waters, what belongs to be eaten out of a bowl with Yui Tsujimura, a ceramaicist from Nara, Japan, and how a Mizuna Salad with Konbu Tea Dressing tacitly comes from one of the loudest bands you've ever heard. There are also Sherman's salads, which range in reference to her travels throughout Mexico, Austria, countryside France and even backyard barbecues (Soft Eggs Avocado Radish and Peanut-Pasilla Salsa, Toast with Styrian Black Pumpkin Seed Oil and Parsley Mint Salad, Sardine Niçoise, Grilled Peach Panzanella with Almond Essence and Purple Basil). Sherman shows us that a salad can reflect our innate sense of the world, nourishing us while also giving us much food for thought.
This week on Eat Your Words, host Cathy Erway is joined in the studio by Julia Sherman, an artist, cook, creative director, and author of the new cookbook Salad for President: A Cookbook Inspired by Artists. The book includes 75 of Sherman’s own recipes organized by occasion, and features contributions from artist, musician, and director Laurie Anderson, photographer William Wegman, chef/activist Alice Waters, musicians Shinji Masuko and Maki Toba of Boredoms, and many more.
Julia Sherman is a feminist Tony Bourdain who explores the world through art, writing and cooking. An obsessively creative person, Sherman has charted a unique path from an MFA at Columbia University to a super popular blog Salad For President. Her first book, Salad For President: A Cookbook Inspired by Artists, will be published this spring. Tune in to hear about maintaining artistic integrity while growing a passionate following.
Our second Julia in a row! This week, it’s Julia Sherman. She’s an artist, writer, and founder of the website (and future book!) Salad For President. Yes, SALAD FOR PRESIDENT. The best name for anything. Ever. Listen in to hear us discuss the things we had to eat, the people we thought were neat, and all the things […]
Today’s episode of Radio Cherry Bombe is all about women who grow food and are committed to making the world full of great produce! Host Julia Turshen is hanging out with Katie Baldwin and Amanda Merrow, the ladies of Amber Waves Farm and Julia Sherman, an artist who runs SaladForPresident.com. The mission of Amber Waves Farm is to produce organic, healthy, nourishing food for the local community and to provide the public with an educational outlet to learn about the joyful process of growing food by using the land as an outdoor classroom. Salad For President is a website where gardening and culinary collaboration serve as a platform to discuss creative production in its varied forms. This program was brought to you by Edwards VA Ham. “When I was younger I’d take kumquats off the trees in California.. there are very sticky food memories that stay with you as an adult.” [17:00] “We have linked up with a lot of other women in food – we’re all a part of this tidal wave of excitement and change in food.” [19:00] –Amanda Merrow on Radio Cherry Bombe “The shisito pepper is the new Kale.” [23:00] — Amanda Merrow on Radio Cherry Bombe “Salad is a low barrier for entry – if it was baking for president it might be harder to find people with stories to share.” [38:00] –Julia Sherman on Radio Cherry Bombe
Darin Bresnitz packs the house on this week’s edition of Snacky Tunes! First up is Lee Schrager of Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival, a food and wine festival with a long history in the beautiful city of Miami. Tune in to hear Lee discuss some of the new exercise and food-based events on the Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival roster! Find out how the fest will celebrate The Spotted Pig’s anniversary, and find out what new events are sparking Lee’s interest. Julia Sherman is the artist responsible for the amazing food blog Salad for President; tune in to hear why Julia’s obsessed with ‘the perfect bite’, and hear how she defines a salad. Later, Williamsburg keyboard band Au Revoir Simone joins the studio to talk about their new album, Move In Spectrums. Hear about some of their interesting locations for salad preparation while on tour, and why they’re all pretty obsessed with quality produce! Tune in to hear Au Revoir Simone live in the HRN Studios! Thanks to our sponsor, Rolling Press. “I think we have some of the best culinary talent here in South Florida. It’s a very diversified scene down here in South Beach.” [9:30] “Not everyone goes to a fashion show, but everyone eats.” [13:15] — Lee Brian Schrager on Snacky Tunes “Salads contains pieces of things that come together… in each post, I take a picture of ‘the perfect bite.'” [24:45] — Julia Sherman on Snacky Tunes