Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Raw KALE Salad { Denver Culinary Photographer }


OK, please bear with me for an itty bitty side-trip down a culinary road.

This salad is ridiculous. I love LOVE kale, but I honestly never knew you could eat it raw -- RAW -- until a recent visit to Dr. Andrew Weil's True Food restaurant (which just opened up blocks from me). The waitress was kind enough to share their basic recipe, and I've been playing with it for a few days until reaching this recipe tonight, which tasted like perfection.

I'm absolutely addicted.

Thankfully, it's ridiculously easy to make!



INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 bunch fresh lacinato KALE
  • 1-2 lemons (I use the juice of about 1 1/2)
  • olive oil (about 1/4 to 1/2 cup)
  • fresh turmeric root (about 1/4 tsp)
  • parmegianno regianno
  • red pepper flakes
  • salt & pepper to taste

METHOD:
1. Chop a whole bunch of fresh, washed kale (I used Lacinato - removed stems, rolled leaves and chopped into very thin strips).
2. In a glass (or if you have a better mixing glass for salad dressing, by all means, use that!), combine equal parts the juice of both lemons and olive oil; minced fresh turmeric root; a dash of red pepper flakes; dash of salt & pepper; and grate in about 1/4 cup of the parmesan.
3. Whisk together dressing and toss over kale to coat.
4. Let stand for about an hour at room temperature. The lemon will soften the kale just enough to be absolutely perfect to eat (while also preserving it's nutritional value which would otherwise be diminished if you cooked it).
5. I added some more parmesan, slivered almonds and a croutons for good measure.

Serves 2 as dinner salads, or 4 if you're making as side salad.

Enjoy!

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Veggie Paprikash [ recipe-ish post ]

To be clear, I am not a food blogger. {Shout out to the many amazing food bloggers out there!} So, with that disclaimer out of the way, I have been inspired lately by some amazing recipes -- and photos -- on Pinterest, and my creative juices are on overdrive. Setting out these veggies for dinner the other night, they struck me as too pretty not to capture.

I do love cooking. And yes, I am a photographer. So while this dish isn't exactly traditionally beautiful, it is delicious, and colorful, and I would love to share this pseudo recipe with you ("pseudo" because I never measure anything and this varies every time I make it, so this is really more of an outline than a recipe!)  This all veggie meal is my new favorite, and honestly, too good not to share.





This vibrantly hued creation was inspired after making chicken paprikash for the first time a few months ago. The comfort in that bowl was indescribable, and I got to wondering how those basic comfort flavors would translate in an all veggie dish -- and without the extra carbs in the egg noodles.

As an aside, how GORGEOUS are the colors of fresh ground turmeric and paprika?



If you've been wondering what all the Turmeric fuss is about lately, it is part of the ginger family (ever since buying it for a photo shoot, I now buy the root when I can find it fresh, but here I used the ground spice).

Turmeric has been used for thousands of years, but is one of the wonder spices being praised lately for both anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, as well as many other health benefits, including possibly even slow the progression of Alzheimer's.

OK, so, as you'll see below, this dish is not traditionally photogenic, but what it lacks in formal presentation it more than makes up for in COLOR.  And my goodness is this dish ridiculously tasty! My 12 year old son and I think it is every bit as delicious as dessert. If you make it, be sure not to cook too long in order to keep the veggies as firm as possible -- healthier and the extra texture is fabulous.

Seriously. If you think you "don't like vegetables" -- I dare you to try this and not fall in love with the amazing flavor of nothing but real, healthy food. 

Ingredients:

Red Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes (Jewel)
Olive Oil
Onion
Heirloom or Grape tomatoes
Garlic
Hungarian Paprika
Turmeric
Chicken or Veggie Broth
Broccoli
Carrots
Beets
Kale
Marscapone
Salt and Pepper
Crispy Fried Onions (for garnish)


Other ingredients we've loved in here include:

Mushrooms
White Beans
Garbanzo Beans
Cauliflower








Method:

Bring cubed red and jewel potatoes to a boil until just starting to soften (I use Jewel potatoes since learning that they stay firmer than garnet, and I like my veggies firm!).  Remove, drain, and set aside.

Meanwhile, sauté slivered onion in olive oil over med-low heat in olive oil until onions are soft and clear.

Add chopped heirloom or grape tomatoes and garlic

Season with generous amount of paprika (seriously, I use at least a teaspoon -- I personally love Smoked Hungarian Sweet and Spicy) and another heap of ground turmeric. Stir for a moment and allow spices to become fragrant... 
Reduce heat to simmer and add chicken or veggie broth (maybe 1/2 cup? Basically you want enough to mix flavors, spices and create a sauce in which veggies can gently steam without having to cook them too long). 

Add whatever veggies you like next -- we love broccolicarrotscauliflower and beets in this dish... 

Stir the (firm, nearly cooked) potatoes back into rest of veggies... Stir and simmer for just a moment or two, just long enough to barely soften the broccoli, beets and carrots. Everything should still be very firm when you remove it from the heat -- healthiest that way!

Remove from heat, add chopped kale, and a big spoonful of marscapone.  Stir until kale is wilted and marscapone has melted ...

Salt and Pepper to taste... and add Crispy Fried Onions for garnish, if you're so inclined. 

Here's to your health... and your tastebuds!!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Green Gourmet Cooking | New Merritt Design Photo Magazine!

So excited to share this new project which I photographed and designed for a wonderful new client, the uber talented Lucy Warenski, chef at Green Gourmet Cooking.

Within hours of uploading the finished artwork, I was contacted by the Director of Marketing at MagCloud, saying how much she loved this piece and asking if she could feature our first issue as part of the launch of MagCloud's new 8x8 format square magazine later this week -- very exciting!

Green Gourmet Cooking
28 pages, published 27 APR 2012
Yum! Our premiere issue of Green Gourmet Cooking features information, recipe, sample menu and delicious photos of Denver Colorado based organic chef, Lucy Warenski. Photography by Jennifer Koskinen

Watch for big things from Lucy and me as we strive to take the culinary world by storm!

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Restaurant Interior Photography | Ambria, Denver


I was thrilled to be commissioned by Aspen and Denver based architecture firm, Rowland + Broughton Architecture and Urban Design to photograph their recently completed remodel of this beautiful new restaurant, Ambria, on the 16th Street Mall in Denver. Warm, smoke colored Roots Lotus lights and a long community table create a beautiful gathering area central to the space, while flowing fabrics help define more intimate areas within a mostly open floorplan.
And if you were curious, yes - the food is amazing!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Stir Cooking School

Cleaning out some old files over the weekend I realized that I never posted these photos of the gorgeous, Naka Designs interiors of Stir Cooking School in Highlands (Denver) CO.  Photographed in collaboration with architectural photographer Jason Jung, this was a great opportunity for us to compare styles and methods.  The final results hopefully combine the best of both worlds!


Monday, May 16, 2011

American Lamb Board | CU Campus


The American Lamb Board recently commissioned Merritt Design Photo for some photos of the incredible new dining facility which features a Persian Station, at the  CU Center for Community building on the Boulder, CO campus.

We were excited to learn that Food Management magazine wanted to run some of the photos, including this photo of lamb kabobs on the grill, which is on the cover of their April 2011 issue.  



Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Delicious Panzano's...

Hungry??  So was I when photographing these culinary works of art!!  See more of Chef Elise Wiggins' impossibly delicious creations at Panzano Restaurant in the gorgeous Hotel Monaco, right in the heart of downtown Denver.
Cheers!!


Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Macro Food Photography



Denver architect Gosia Kung of Kung Architecture, recently commissioned me after seeing some of my macro floral work, for a super fun (and educational) assignment, to create artwork for the walls of a Vietnamese restaurant she is designing.
Every part of this project was fun for me, from shopping the Asian market, to composing and shooting, to getting creative in the kitchen with the "leftovers" (food which did not wilt under the heat of the lights).  These ingredients are so luscious and sensual... I had no idea there was a natural edible color such as the hot pink of a gorgeous Dragon Fruit, nor did I realize you could cook with fresh turmeric (quite tasty).  My cutting boards will never be the same!
Pho-natic is scheduled to open early August at Colfax and Grant, across from the Capitol Building in Denver.  I can't wait to check it out!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

To Specialize... or NOT?!



Years ago I listened as Director, Robert Altman accepted a lifetime achievement award and said that he never took a job that he knew, at the outset, how to do...

I always loved that, and would say that while I am fairly knowledgeable about the workings of my camera, lenses, light, etc., I STILL get nervous before every single shoot.

It is one of the things that keeps me fresh and passionate about my work - the fact that every shoot provides a new opportunity to learn, to compose, to work with unique light, color and subject matter - and I almost never know how I'll approach these unique conditions until I'm there.

This commission, though, really threw me for a loop as I've never shot food! Through twitter, I have been introduced to work of some incredible culinary photographers, such as NY based Adriana Mullen - LOVE her work - and have been curious to try.

I met Elise Wiggins, Executive Chef at Panzano Restaurant in Denver, while shooting the Telluride Festival of the Arts a few years back and we have been in touch ever since. When she asked me to shoot a few lamb dishes for a client of hers, I was quite nervous (even reluctant!) but excited!

Watching her prepare these dishes I couldn't help but see her as an artist sculpting works of fine art (only these sculptures taste divine), and immediately I was excited to capture whatever essence of these dishes I possibly could. My hope is that these photos make you feel perhaps a bit hungry... If so, be sure to check out her incredible creations next time you are in Denver!