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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Baked Ziti, Once Again, Mom's Recipe

Baked Ziti is another one of my mom's favorites that I've learned. It's surprisingly easy, and even I've successfully made it and served it to all my friends.

Ingrediets
Penne, Cottage Cheese, Ricotta Cheese, Parmesan, Shredded Mozerella, Diced tomatoes OR marinana sauce, Onions, Chicken Broth, Milk OR Heavy creme

1. Bring water to a boil and cook pasta. Make sure to put salt in the water before boiling!

2. Chop onions and carmelize them. Also in the meantime, mix 1 cup cottage, 1 cup ricotta, 1/2 cup parmesan and 1/2 cup mozarella in a bowl.

3. When pasta is done, butter them. Add chicken broth and diced tomatoes on a low heat.

4. Add the cheese mix, onions, and milk.

5. Mix all together in the sauce pan and transfer to a baking sheet and add a layer of mozarella.

6. Bake at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes.

Surviving the Dining Hall

This is an article I wrote about how students try to entertain themselves while eating at BU dining halls. It tells you how to enjoy some Warren Towers food.


Hundreds of droids darted out of the “Lambda Class Shuttle” toward a mob of Jedi. At the center of the chaos were Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader in the galaxy far far away. This battle scene occurred not only in Star Wars: the Empire Strikes Back, but also on the dessert plate at Boston University’s Warren Towers dining hall. Two students, Carolyn Cosgrove Payne and Tim Nicklas, discovered an innovative way to enjoy the same day-old salads, the same burnt burgers and the same stale brownies. Thanks to what Nicklas entitled “dessertstry,” Cosgrove Payne and Nicklas invented artworks with dessert items offered at the dining hall. The creations include a gourmet brownie sundae topped with strawberries and whipped cream, an erupting chocolate and banana volcano and the “Oil Tank Spill.”

A discussion in Oceanography last semester inspired Nicklas to create the “Oil Tank Spill.” As the class learned about the Exxon ship’s accident, he imagined recreating the incident with bananas with chocolate syrup oozing out.

“I consider myself an artist. I love the rich depth of colors. It is like a palette of dessert items,” Nicklas said.

Every day students walk into the dining hall to find “day old brownies with a lack of temperature variance and occasional staleness,” Cosgrove Payne said. She suggested the perfect remedy for the hardened brownies: “Douse the brownies in chocolate syrup and heat them up in the microwave for exactly 25 seconds. Then simply add vanilla ice cream, whipped cream and strawberries.”

Nicklas’s close friends recognize and honor him as the creator of “TGIF-style dessert” at the Warren Towers. Once he built a Batmobile with ice cream cones as the exterior, bananas as the interior, brownies as decorations and peanut butter as the adhesive material. He said, “I have always wanted to eat a Batmobile, but you can’t exactly eat metal.”

Cosgrove Payne and Nicklas proved the possibility of devouring high-quality desserts at a college dining hall. Cosgrove Payne said, “It’s a dessert monstrosity and a food orgasm.”

The next item in the “dessertstry?” Nicklas gave a hint. “I cannot tell you, but big things will happen! When you draw something, no one can see it until it is done. The ‘dessertstry’ is the same way.”

Because You Don't Want to Mess with Texas


This week I'm traveling up and down my beloved state Texas to promote Boston University. So far I'm having a wonderful time, spending some time at home with my family and working with Bobby and Zoe who both are assistant directors on the Board of Admissions. As a student speaker, I feel pretty privileged to be here.

As I'm traveling around Texas but missing Boston quite a bit, it is pretty inevitable that I always notice some differences between the two states. Texas is one of more notoriously republican state while Massachusetts is quite liberal. Texas produces southern gentlemen (supposedly) while Massachusetts apparently has "massholes." Texans yield and open doors for you while "Massholes" just slam the door in your face. So I decided to write about some survival tips in the state of Texas. After all, everyone says, don't mess with Texas.

1. Learn how to use the word "Ya'll." I understand, it sounds unnatural at first, but it will come flawlessly after a couple times. Texans don't believe in wasting a word by saying you all or you guys. It's simple, ya'll.

2. Please be considerate and open doors for other people. It usually earns to brownie points, but really, in TX, people will give you the dirtiest looks ever if you slam the door in others' faces. This goes to not just the guys, but also the girls as well.

3. Accept and welcome southern hospitality. If someone's being nice to you - say, let you go first, open the door, give up the seat, it's not weird. Just thank them and smile. Not hard at all. If southern hospitality is offered, it is expected that you accept it politely.

4. Cowboys = Life. Football = Life.

5. Trucks are perfectly okay. Why drive mini coopers when F350's are available?

I think that's about it. Very very basic tips. If you keep all these in mind, you will have no problem blending in with a bunch of Texans.

Peace, Love, TX ;)

Monday, September 28, 2009

Wanna Be Like Martha?


Since classes started again, I haven't really had time to go experience new restaurants in the Greater Boston area every Friday, which is extremely unfortunate. I did enjoy discovering new places to have soul food, pizza or hamburger. However, my little (in ADPi) Caitlin and I have made commitment for a similar activity: trying out new recipes.

Last Thursday, we had our second round of new recipe dinner. Caitlin found a Martha Stewart recipe - chicken with mustard and bread crumbs. It only took about 40 minutes to cook, including the prep time. Also this didn't require too many ingredients at all. Definitely perfect for college students on a budget.

So here's the recipe:

You'll need chicken breasts, salt, pepper, olive oil, bread crumbs, dijon mustard, chicken broth, heavy creme, butter

Step 1.
Brush olive oil on chicken breasts and season them with salt and pepper
Pre-heat the oven to 375 degrees

Step 2.
Cook chicken breasts in a frying pan - about 3 minutes on each side
While waiting, melt 2 tablespoons of butter
Mix the melted butter, dijon mustard and a little bit of salt and pepper

Step 3.
Transfer the chicken to a baking sheet, coat the chicken with the mustard mix and add bread crumbs
**If you don't have bread crumbs, you can crush up croutons and use them instead

Step 4.
Bake chicken in the oven for 15-20 minutes
In the mean time, mix chicken broth and heavy creme (1:1 ratio), bring to a boil and simmer. This will be a really good sauce for the chicken.

Step 5.
When the chicken's done, take it out of the oven, serve with sauce!

Prettyyyyyy simple. Caitlin and I definitely loved this and we made enough to serve three other people. Lovely!