Food

All Good Things

All Good Things, a market in TriBeCa

Over the weekend, I stopped by TriBeCa’s recently opened food market, All Good Things, to check out a few of the vendors. There were lots of familiar faces—along with a few new favorites.

The new space, owned and designed by Kyle Wittels, is a bit different from other markets around town, mainly due to its size—the entire space is basically a long hallway. The size constraints actually serve to make the space feel like a real bustling marketplace. The moment you step inside you are greeted with an array of beautiful bouquets from Polux Fleuriste next to Blue Bottle Coffee’s espresso bar, right across from Dickson’s Farmstand Meats.

Blue Bottle Coffee in TriBeCa's All Good Things

Polux Fluerist inside All Good Things

The various stalls throughout All Good Things cover all of your artisanal needs, from coffee and chocolate, to oysters and a bakery. Even Sag Harbor’s Cavaniola’s Gourmet has set up shop here, for those who want to bring a bit of the Hamptons to Manhattan.

The space never feels too crowded, though, as you find yourself hopping from vendor to vendor the area opens up near the mid-section, allowing you a bit of space to enjoy your Blue Marble ice cream. Further in the back of the market is a small seating section next to Nunu Chocolates.

NuNu Chocolates inside TriBeCa's new market, All Good Things

Ice cream from Brooklyn's Blue Marble ice cream being sampled at All Good Things

All Good Things Seafood and oyster bar
A particular favorite of mine is All Good Things Seafood, a seafood stall with freshly shucked oysters available for eating on the spot. Pair this with the small bar near the back with three different beers on tap and a selection of wines, and going produce shopping has never been quite so fun.

All Good Things is located at 102 Franklin Street between W. Broadway and Church Street. The market will be open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, but the bar will stay open and serve small plates till 1 a.m.

- Ryan

Chelsea Market's Dickson's Farmstand Meats new stall at All Good Things

All Good Things Entrance

All Good Things oyster shuckers hard at work

The bar at All Good Things in TriBeCa

A Daily Dinner: Back-to-School BLT

Duck Bacon BLT and Stone Fruit Salad

It was bittersweet to take my last Summer Friday and begin to think about breaking out my fall wardrobe.

On Labor Day, it was even more bittersweet to walk through the greenmarket—taking in the glut of colorful heirloom tomatoes and fragrant stone fruit—and think that, in about a month, it will all disappear until next year.

Ingredients for BLT Sandwich

Heirloom Tomato and Bluebird Plums and Nectarines

With that in mind, we made a farewell meal to summer: a BLT, made with duck bacon from the Hudson Valley Duck Farm, a juicy ripe tomato, crisp lettuce and a freshly-baked loaf of bread.

It seemed like the perfect intermediary meal for a lazy weekend between summer and fall. You wouldn’t mind eating it on the beach or as a cozy fall dinner (or finding it in your school lunchbox).

A BLT sandwich with heirloom tomatoes, duck bacon and fresh bread

We paired it with another late summer indulgence—a simple salad of bluebird plums and nectarines, dressed with some sugar, balsamic vinegar and olive oil.

Have you ever tried a bluebird plum? I hadn’t either, but we found them to be delicious and almost fig-like in taste and texture. (Locust Grove Farm has a surplus right now, if you’d like to try them.)

Nectarine and Bluebird Plum Salad

No recipe even needed—toast or grill your bread, slather on some mayonaise and mustard, slice a tomato, tear off a leaf of lettuce, and fry up some bacon. Serve with a glass of fizzy rosé for the perfect accompaniment.

- Laura

A Daily Dinner: Brown Sugar-Glazed Salmon with Green Beans

Salmon and green beans with rice and brown sugar glaze

At first glance, this seems like a relatively “boring” dinner compared to some of the other things we eat. And that’s sort of true, except for one thing…

This meal does double-duty. By that I mean that the leftovers can easily be turned into something delicious on their own. In this case, they can be repurposed for salmon fried rice with cabbage and chilies. This recipe makes enough to feed four, or just two if you save half and make the fried rice the next night.

Alaskan King Salmon fillets with sea salt

Brown Sugar-Glazed Salmon With Green Beans and Shallots
Adapted from Real Simple

1 c. long-grain white rice
2 tbsp., plus 1 tsp. olive oil
3/4 lb. green beans, trimmed
1 shallots, thinly sliced
2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
Kosher salt and black pepper
1/4 c. light brown sugar
1 tsp. balsamic vinegar
4 6-oz. salmon fillets
Lemon wedges, for serving

1. Cook the rice according to the package directions.

2. Meanwhile, heat 2 tbsp. of the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the green beans, shallots, garlic, and 1/4 tsp. each salt and pepper. Cook, tossing occasionally, until the beans are crisp-tender, 2 to 4 minutes. Add 1/2 c. water, cover, and cook until the beans are tender and the water has evaporated, 3 to 4 minutes more.

3. Heat broiler. In a small bowl, mix together the brown sugar, vinegar, the remaining teaspoon of oil, and 1/4 tsp. salt (the mixture will be very thick).

4. Place the salmon on a foil-lined broilerproof large rimmed baking sheet and broil for 5 minutes. Spoon the brown sugar mixture over the salmon, return to oven, and broil, basting twice with the liquid in the pan, until the salmon is opaque throughout, 2 to 4 minutes more.

5. Reserve half the salmon, green beans, and rice for tomorrow’s dinner. Serve the remaining salmon, rice, and green beans with the lemon wedges.

Garden-fresh green beans for dinner with salmon and rice

I’m admittedly not a huge fan of leftovers. You can just look at the tower of takeout containers in our fridge for proof of that, but the idea of actually making a new, fresh dish with leftovers was intriguing to me. Plus, you can’t beat the ease of having half of your ingredients already prepared!

This month’s Real Simple had a few other repurposed dinners that I can’t wait to try. Do you have a favorite use for common leftovers?

- Laura

A Daily Dinner: Butter-Poached Cod

Butter Poached Cod with Herb Salad

Yesterday, as you might already know, would have been Julia Child’s 100th birthday. We’ve written about Julia before and I have fond memories of watching her show along with my grandmother when I was a child, so it only seemed fitting to cook a meal that Julia would have eaten.

You know what that means. Butter. And lots of it.

Butters, herbs, and cod

Of course, all chefs like butter so it wasn’t hard to find a recipe that seemed fitting. Luckily for us, our friends Max and Eli just released their second cookbook, This is a Cookbook: Recipes for Real Life, and I was excited to give one of their recipes a try.

Their butter-poached cod (poached in a full pound of butter!) with herb salad was a perfect homage, and like all of the recipes in their book, it was incredibly easy. After poaching the beautiful cod fillets in a huge block of melted butter for about 15 minutes, we served them with a light herb salad of tarragon, mint and Italian parsley, dressed in lemon and oil.

Carrots with Poached Fish

I had picked up some carrots earlier in the day, so I broke out my copy of Mastering the Art of French Cooking to find a recipe for them. Julia’s carottes glacées—carrots slowly boiled with butter and sugar—were so tender and decadent that they almost seemed like dessert. I have to admit that Ryan and I fought over who got the eat the last one!

I hope that Julia would have been proud of our meal honoring her—fresh food, classical (but simple) technique, and big flavor. That’s what it’s all about, right?

- Laura

P.S. We might be a little biased, but we can’t recommend Max and Eli’s book enough. Targeted at 20-somethings who might order take-out in lieu of cooking, it is full of easy recipes and techniques that anyone can learn. You can pre-order it on Amazon, or if you can’t wait, Williams-Sonoma has the books available now both in store and on-line.

Arthur Avenue, the Real Little Italy

A bakery in the Bronx's Little Italy

Anyone familiar with New York City knows about Little Italy—the stretch of Mulberry and Mott Streets above Canal Street in Manhattan—but if the tourist-packed sidewalks full of restaurants trying to lure you inside for an overpriced meal isn’t your idea of la dolce vita, there is another option.

Located in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx, Arthur Avenue between 183rd and 189th Streets is home to some of the best Italian cuisine in the city, along with a staggering collection of specialty shops. I recently spent the day in Little Italy, checking out some of the shops and talking with their owners, many of whom are now in their third generation.

The olive oil selection at Teitel Brothers on Arthur Avenue

Teitel Brothers Italian market in the Bronx, New York City

Walking down Arthur Avenue from the train, you can immediately notice the Italian influence take hold. Shop windows full of bread, hanging sausages and other Italian delicacies tempt you to enter. Teitel Brothers’ tower of imported tins of olive oil out front will keep you busy browsing before you even step foot in the door. Inside, your senses will be overloaded with the smells of cheese, oil, sausages, olives and peppers.

Madonia Brothers Bakery in the Bronx's Little Italy

Cookies from Madonia Brothers in Little Italy in the Bronx

Open since 1915, Teitel Brothers supplies restaurants across the country with olive oil, cheese, and other specialties. This is the place to get that special bottle of olive oil to “wow” your guests at your next dinner party.

A few steps away, the Madonia brothers of Madonia Brothers Bakery have been baking their signature olive bread since 1918. The bakery also specializes in biscotti, traditional pane di casa and fresh cannoli “filled while you wait.”

Biancardi butcher shop on Arthur Avenue, New York City

Little Italy butcher shop in New York City

At Biancardi Meats, it isn’t odd to see entire animals hanging in the window, similarly enticing you to pay a visit. The butcher shop sells old standbys like veal, pork, and beef, but you can also get more exotic game, like pheasants and rabbits if you want. In existence since the 1930s, the bright and clean butcher shop has offered high-quality meats at a fraction of the price of other butchers in the city. Sal Biancardi, the shop’s owner, gave me a peek behind the counter to see how they make their freshly-ground sausages and other delicacies.

Spending a bit of time at Biancardi’s, you can tell that Arthur Avenue is a place not only steeped in history and tradition, but also steeped in its own familial roots. Every customer at Biancardi’s is known by name and their usual order, and it’s the same at most of the shops nearby. Even though I’m not an Arthur Avenue regular, every shopkeep greeted me with a smile and treated me as if I’d been shopping there for years (all the while filling my belly with copious samples of meats, cheeses, and bread).

Mike's Deli on Arthur Avenue in New York's Little Italy of the Bronx

Arthur Avenue Retail Market

Cigar shop in the Bronx

A sandwich at Mike's Deli in the Bronx, NYC

Mushrooms at the Arthur Avenue Retail Market in the Bronx

Olives for sale in the Bronx

Perhaps the main attraction of Little Italy is the Arthur Avenue Retail Market. Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia founded the market in 1940 to get the pushcart vendors off of the streets. Now, the market is now home to a cigar shop, flower stands, a produce shop, a café and Mike’s Deli.

Mike’s Deli is home to some the best sandwiches in the city as well as their legendary eggplant parmesan. Lines here can be very long, but they also have a few tables for service. David Greco, the deli’s owner, was happy to show off his sandwich skills for me. As he readied the ingredients, David cut me a slice of extremely fresh, tangy mozzarella that I can honestly say was the best I have ever had.

Fresh mozzarella for a sandwich

A sandwich at Mike's Deli on Arthur Avenue

Italian sub in a sandwich press

A sandwich at Mike's in Little Italy, New York City

After my sandwich spent a few minutes on the grill—just enough to toast the bread and melt the cheese—I was ready to eat. (Even though I was admittedly stuffed from a long day of Italian hospitality.)

If you’re planning a trip to the city soon, or if you live here already, skip Mulberry Street and get up to the Bronx. Getting to Arthur Avenue is a breeze from Manhattan. Take the D train to Fordham Road in the Bronx, or hop on the Metro-North Railroad for just two stops to Fordham. Finish off your day in Little Italy with a beautiful walk around Fordham’s scenic campus.

- Ryan

Roma Luncheonette in the Bronx

Italian pasta on Arthur Avenue

Cheese for sale in Little Italy