Tag: Kitchen Stories

Monique Henry – The Eatinist Bitch

https://www.instagram.com/eatinistbitch/

Monique has spent over a decade in the culinary and hospitality industries at places like: Balthazar Bakery, Liddabit Sweets, and Russ & Daughters. She loves cooking, refining silly snack opinions, and devouring as many foods and experiences as possible to earn the title of “The Eatinist.” Monique lives in Jackson Heights, Queens and enjoys spending way too much money on live music, taking pictures of sunsets in the neighborhood, and eating ice cream for breakfast.

She is on all social media platforms but Insta is her most active one. Where she also shares her beauty moments like freshly done out of nail salon, new hairdo, her cat sitting moments just to mention a few. Her kind human self.

I also was obsessed with all of the cooking shows on public television! Right after Sesame Street and Mr Rogers were done for the morning, I would watch Julia Child, Martin Yan, Mary Ann Esposito, Nathalie Dupree, Cooking Secrets of the CIA – pretty much anything having to do with cooking

Oh and we now share the passion for some series, especially Severance which she got me totally hooked on. So many messages we’ve exchanged over the second season. (more laughs!!)

Thank you Monique for accepting to share your Kitchen Story.

1. What is the importance of your kitchen in your house?

My kitchen is really the heart of my apartment. As soon as I use the bathroom in the morning, the first thing I do is fire up the electric kettle so my husband and I can have our morning tea (Earl Grey for him, Assam or Chai for me). Mornings during the winter are difficult for me haha, so I need warmth and caffeine. I wander in and out of the kitchen most of the day eating snacks, figuring out grocery lists, washing dishes, and looking at the neighborhood cats from the window. There’s great light that streams in all day in there so it’s kind of like a beacon of coziness that calms me throughout the day.

2. What’s the best part of the day for you to cook?

Honestly? Early in the morning when no one else is awake. When I’m baking/cooking a bunch of things for an event or a holiday, I love to take advantage of the solitude. I think it takes me back to when I worked early mornings in a commercial kitchen and me and my coworkers would be working to music or even the thrum of the machines. It makes me feel purposeful and accomplished – and even though I love to cook with friends, I get easily distracted haha. Sometimes my brain works better with the quiet.

3. Are you a creative chef or simply love to follow recipes?

I love the structure of a recipe and I like to see how other recipe writers’ brains work. I’ll follow my favorite recipes for a while but then I’ll augment them to my tastes. I do wish I was better at writing down my changes though – definitely something to work on this year!

4. Three ingredients that are never missing from your kitchen cabinet?

Canned/Dried legumes, kosher salt, tinned fish

5. How did your passion for cooking come about?

Definitely from my parents. My mom would cook for my family during the week as much as possible (she worked too!) and my dad loved to go out to eat and try new things. I also was obsessed with all of the cooking shows on public television! Right after Sesame Street and Mr Rogers were done for the morning, I would watch Julia Child, Martin Yan, Mary Ann Esposito, Nathalie Dupree, Cooking Secrets of the CIA – pretty much anything having to do with cooking. My mom also has a small cookbook collection that I would spend hours reading. As soon as I was 9 or 10, I started helping to make dishes for our holiday meals too.

6. What’s your favourite dish to cook that you know can never go wrong with it?

Samin Nosrat’s Buttermilk Brined Chicken! And if you have a container of Puerto RIcan Sofrito in your freezer, you have a foolproof ingredient that will bring so much flavor to any savory dish.

7. Would you receive an entire TV crew in your kitchen for a day?

If you mean one person with a camera and one person with a boom mic hahaha – I have a classic NYC kitchen. It’s pretty dang small but also is fairly easy to cook in and navigate.

8. Do you follow any tv shows or have a favourite cooking book?

Oh gosh – that’s really hard. I don’t follow a lot of food reality TV if I’m being honest but when I’m in the mood for:

Something comforting: Great British Bake Off, any Nigella cooking show, Two Fat Ladies, International food videos on YouTube

Something silly/trashy: Kitchen Nightmares, Bar Rescue

Something educational: Tasting History on YouTube, High on the Hog (Netflix)

My favorite cookbooks right now are: Diasporican by Illyana Maisonet, Start Here by Sohla El Wally, I Dream of Dinner by Ali Slagle. My favorite food newsletters are Alicia Kennedy’s (a great combo of food/political writing and fantastic vegetable recipes/methodologies) and Hetty McKinnion’s (amazing recipe writer and person – she’s also very vegetable focused and her recipes are flavorful and well-written). 

Monique and I also share the love for a great New Yorker baker, Jessie Sheehan. I’ve seen quite a few times Monique baking /sharing on IG stories great results from Jessie’s books! You can actually read Jessie’s Kitchen Story here.

Another curiosity that hit me while putting this post together was about Monique’s nickname – The Eatinist Bitch. So I’ve asked and she told me this pretty funny story from early years of college time, during summer job as a theatre usher…inside story. The things you do for an extra bite and $7 bucks. Put it that way, from early years of college to grown up life and it became her trademark.

A darn good I’d say!

Andrea Strong

Andrea Strong

Over the course of her career, Andrea has been a lawyer, a restaurant manager, a waitress, a farm hand, a humanitarian activist, an advocate, and for the past two decades, a journalist. 

Known for her pioneering food blog, The Strong Buzz, Andrea covers the intersection of food, business, culture, policy, and the law. Her work appears in The New York Times, Food & Wine, New York Magazine, Heated, Eater, and more.  

1. What is the importance of your kitchen in your house?
 
The kitchen is the heart of our home. I live in a garden apartment in Carroll Gardens with my two kids Sam and Eiji who are 9 and 13 now. I am always in the kitchen, probably because it’s the biggest room in the house. It’s large enough to fit my desk where I write and work, and a big, old well-loved (marginally destroyed) dining room table where we eat all our meals, but also do homework, play board games, and have fierce games of cards. It’s where the kids can sit around with their friends and be ridiculous when they are not in front of the TV and their phones. I love to read and the kitchen is full of bookshelves stuffed with novels and many cookbooks. The front door opens right up into the kitchen, and it’s very homey and warm, and that’s important to me. When people come over I hope they feel the warmth and the love that’s in this room. 
 
andrea strong work area
 
2. What’s the best part of the day for you to cook?
 
I have two kids so I cook all the time – particularly during the pandemic, it was three meals a day, for everyone, every day for months. It was a bit bananas. But things have smoothed out now, thankfully, and mostly I cook in the late afternoon. We eat dinner together as a family every night we are home, and the kids get hungry early (well honestly they are hungry all the time), so I cook around 4ish and we eat by 5:30pm-6pm. But I am always putting out snacks, slicing veggies and fruit for them, or making them toast, or bagels or what have you. I’m a very good short order cook. 


I should also say that both my kids can cook, particularly my older son Eiji. Both kids have been cooking with me since they could stand. They started out putting flour in the bowl, stirring, adding chips to cookies, and as they got older, they did more. Eiji went to the Dynamite Shop, a tween and teen cooking school in Park Slope, and thanks to that he can cook anything. He cooks once a week for his Volleyball team. He’s amazing. Sam is also getting good—he can make scrambled eggs, fried fish, and lasagna. They both love to bake. Sometimes I’ll wake up to them in the kitchen making muffins. Lest you imagine some dreamy scene, you should know they are not particularly tidy cooks. The kitchen is usually a massive mess, like a tornado has blown through. But I don’t care. I am happy to see them cooking and enjoying being together. These are the memories that they’ll have forever. So if we have to clean up for a while, so be it. 
 
 
3. Are you a creative chef or simply love to follow recipes?
 
I’d say I follow recipes and then create. I like the NY Times Cooking and Smitten Kitchen in particular. Once I have cooked a recipe once, I’ll put my own spin on it. I tend to like things with high acidity and some heat so I’ll usually add a squeeze of lemon juice and red chile flake to nearly every recipe I make. And I’ll play with different vegetables or grains or proteins, whatever is in season and in the house.
 
 
4. Three ingredients that are never missing from your kitchen cabinet?


As I mentioned I like heat, so I always have a jar of Onino on hand. This is an amazing crunchy chili made in Brooklyn by Cristy Lucie-Alvarado, a recipe developer who has worked most of her life in food marketing. It’s nutty, spicy, garlicky, and just amazing on EVERYTHING. I eat it by the spoonful. No that’s not weird; try it and you will too.
 
andrea strong onino

I love good salted butter so I always have that out on the counter. I really don’t like cold butter, so it’s never in the fridge. 


I love pesto, so I try to have pine nuts, or even pistachios or almonds in the pantry, some sort of nut that I can toast, toss in the food processor with a clove of garlic, some good Parmesan cheese, lemon, olive oil, and basil and make a quick pesto. Sometimes I’ll add some avocado or a zucchini or half a chili pepper. I told you, I like it spicy. And pesto is so versatile and forgiving. It’s also one of those sauces that’s just great on pasta but also as a sandwich spread, or on fish or chicken, even with raw veggies.
 
 
5. How did your passion for cooking come about?
 
I’d say I first had a passion for eating and for food and restaurants that grew into a passion for cooking. 


My parents divorced when I was very young and my dad did not know how to cook. We’d see him once a week at his apartment in the Upper East Side of Manhattan and he’d take us out for dinner, sometimes to neighborhood places and diners, but other times to really wonderful restaurants like Rumplemeyers and Maxwell’s Plum (I am giving away my age here). I was captivated by the food and the dazzling rooms, the magic of restaurants. 


I studied law and practiced for a while and my passion for restaurants only grew – I was lucky enough to be eating out at the best restaurants in the city. Then I ended up working in restaurants and writing about them. I did go to Peter Kump’s Cooking School for a semester (now Institute of Culinary Education) so I had the basics down, but honestly I didn’t cook much until I had kids because I was too busy eating out. Sure, I’d cook a special occasion meal, but mostly on the rare occasion when I was home I ate a bowl of cereal or ordered in sushi or Chinese. But when I had kids that all changed. I needed to cook for my family, and I learned to cook family recipes from my Persian grandmother, and the rest I sort of cooked what I knew I liked to eat and what I knew they would eat. I was never into making one meal for the kids and one for the grown ups. We all ate the same thing. (Even though Sam used to be quite picky — I’d just make sure to have rice and beans for him at every meal.) And we always ate together. Family meals are very important to me. Yes there are many pizza nights in front of the TV, but I really like the ritual of sitting down to dinner together. Even if it’s fast and furious, it’s together. There are some words of conversation even too.
 
andrea strong kitchen
 
6. What’s your favorite dish to cook that you know can never go wrong?


That’s an easy one—Persian Rice and Choresh. These are two Persian recipes that my Bibi taught me. Choresh is a stew, there are many variations on it, but every Friday night I make Chickpea Choresh and a big pot of rice with a potato crust. We are Jewish and while we are not religious, I like the customs and the notion of having a special Friday Sabbath meal where we eat Persian food that my mother and my grandmother used to make for me as a child, It makes me feel like I am creating this lineage of love through food and the generations.
 
 
7. Would you receive an entire TV crew in your kitchen for a day?
 
If they can fit inside, yes!
 
 
8. Do you follow any tv shows or have a favorite cooking book?
 
We love to watch “Nailed It” as a family. The show cracks us up. It’s great. We have also watched the Great British Baking Show but it makes me too hungry. I always want to eat many pieces of cake afterwards.
 
 
 

Tamar Arslanian

Tamar Arslanian

Tamar Arslanian is founder of the popular blog IHAVECAT and author of the book Shop Cats of New York written-up in the New York TimesUSA Today and New York Post. Most recently Tamar has founded “Flirting With Vegan,” a community and tour company that encourages all foodies to give delicious plant-based cuisine a chance.

Because no one has time for mediocre food.

Tamar kitchen stories

1. What is the importance of your kitchen in your house?

Well I love to eat so I do spend quite a bit of time there. I live in NYC so by our standards I have a good sized kitchen. In the rest of the United Stated however, it would be considered minuscule.

2. What’s the best part of the day for you to cook?

Evenings.

3. Are you a creative chef or simply love to follow recipes?

I started off following recipes but during COVID I had more time to cook and became more comfortable with “going with my gut” so to speak. It was exciting to know what flavors go together to enhance a dish.

4. Three ingredients that are never missing on your kitchen cabinet?

Olive oil, zataar and salt.

Tamar kitchen stories

5. How did your passion for cooking come about?

To be honest I would say I have more of a passion for eating well than for cooking, but seeing as I live alone, I have had to learn how to cook! My mom is an excellent self-taught cook so she has taught me to be very discerning when tasting food. She cooks delicious low-fat high flavor dishes from all cuisines and finds using butters and creams the lazy way of making a dish taste delicious.  Herbs and other seasonings are her favorite.

6. What’s your favourite dish to cook that you know it can never go wrong with it?

A veggie curry with coconut milk.

7. Would you receive an entire tv crew in your kitchen for a day?

Of course as long as they were a NYC size crew to fit into my NYC size apt!

8. Do you follow any tv show or have a favourite cooking book?

My greatest inspiration comes from all the amazing TikTok chefs who are able to share incredible inspirational meals in 3 minutes or less.