TranceAddict Forums

TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Canada - Toronto & Southern Ont.
-- Grilled Cheese
Pages (3): « 1 [2] 3 »


Posted by Geoffb3 on Feb-09-2009 16:53:

quote:
Originally posted by Abercrombie
i sense a TOTA grilled cheese shitshow


Thats one Cheesy Shitshow


Posted by *~LiSa-LoO~* on Feb-09-2009 17:16:

quote:
Originally posted by Abercrombie
i sense a TOTA grilled cheese shitshow


We should all make a bunch of grilled cheese's the way we like them, and then sample them all!


Posted by rabbitjoker on Feb-09-2009 17:19:

grilled cheese w/ mustard
grilled cheese w/ pickles
grilled cheese w/ lobster

YUM!


Posted by smuncky on Feb-09-2009 17:23:

quote:
Originally posted by *~LiSa-LoO~*
We should all make a bunch of grilled cheese's the way we like them, and then sample them all!


while watching the food network!


Posted by Geoffb3 on Feb-09-2009 17:44:

quote:
Originally posted by Susan Sampson

Call it a designer grilled cheese.

Chef Brock Shepherd slips buffalo mozzarella, arugula and truffle oil between two slices from a custom focaccia sandwich loaf. He "griddles" it, cuts it, then prettifies it with shards of toasted garlic, pea sprouts and mini roma tomatoes.

It's off the cuff, not off the menu � something to munch on as he discusses the allure of the grilled cheese sandwich.

"It's comfort food. It brings us back to childhood," says Shepherd, owner of the Wich? sandwich bar in Kensington Market. "As we age, we can fancy it up. But in the end, it's just bread and cheese."

Yes, there's grilled cheese. And then there's grilled cheese.

There's the sandwich of our childhoods: a square of processed cheese in soft white bread, buttered on the outside, toasted and pressed into a skillet with a spatula until golden brown. The cheese, molten and satiny orange, oozes as the sandwich is separated into two triangles. The corners are dipped in ketchup. Maybe there's a pickle alongside, or warm, canned tomato soup.

And there's grilled cheese for grown-ups � fresh takes on a classic, sitting on the culinary horizon. "Elevated grilled cheese," Shepherd calls it. Example: Danish blue with pear and toasted garlic on sourdough rye.

Thanks to evolution and one-upmanship, toasted bread and cheese comes in many guises. Those embellished with meat or coatings bother cheese purists. France's croque monsieur is a cross between grilled cheese and french toast, with ham added. Italians enjoy the breaded mozzarella in carozza with tomato and anchovy accents. And, of course, they are apt to press anything inside a panini, or grilled sandwich. The signature Cuban sandwich is the cubano, with pork, ham, swiss and pickles, pressed in a skillet. Mexicans translate grilled cheese into quesadillas, with tortillas substituting for the bread. Chefs, meanwhile, constantly push boundaries. At Toronto's Brassaii resto, a croque monsieur involves duck confit, brie and tomato jam.

According to Foodtimeline.org, most cultures and continents are home to cooked bread-and-cheese combos. The earliest such recipes are found in ancient Roman texts. The grilled cheese, as we know it, was born in the 1920s, when stores began to stock processed cheese (a.k.a. American cheese) and cheap, sliced white bread. By World War II, navy cooks at sea were broiling "American cheese filling sandwiches" by the hundreds. Institutional kitchens and cafeterias followed suit.

In the '40s and '50s, these sandwiches were opened-faced. It was not until the 1960s that the top slice of bread became standard. Why, no one is sure. Maybe it's because double-sided sandwiches are more portable.

A review of old recipes shows these sandwiches being broiled, baked or fried in skillets or on griddles, and called a variety of names. In 1902, there was Melted Cheese, and in 1916, Cheese Dreams. In 1953, The Joy of Cooking suggested a "maidless cook" could prepare Waffle Sandwiches, or grilled cheeses made in a waffle iron.

The world's most famous grilled cheese sandwich was made in a pan. Diana Duyser of Hollywood, Fla., auctioned the sandwich on eBay for $28,000 (U.S.). Duyser told the world she had made it a decade earlier, took one bite, then saw a likeness of the Virgin Mary on it. She cradled the sandwich in cotton wool and sealed it in a plastic tub. Duyser claims that the lack of mould is "a miracle." So, perhaps, is the staying power of processed cheese.

In another miracle, Joey (Jaws) Chestnut downed 47 grilled cheese sandwiches in 10 minutes last year. The speed eater set a world record in a competition in Las Vegas that was sponsored, not coincidentally, by the online gambling site GoldenPalace.com., owner of the Virgin Mary grilled cheese.

"I believe this contest will highlight the grilled cheese's position as one of history's great sandwiches," George Shea, chairman of the International Federation of Competitive Eating, said before the event.

Uncomplicated, warm, soothing, the grilled cheese is beloved by home cooks as well as denizens of dining halls, cafeterias and greasy spoons everywhere. Like many of us, Christie Silversides has grilled cheese memories from her childhood.

"My dad stayed at home a lot," Silversides recalls. "He cooked me lunches. It was usually grilled cheese and tomato soup."

Silversides is a chef who manages Leslieville Cheese Market & Fine Foods. The young shop sells four designer grilled cheese sandwiches, with riffs on ingredients such as rosemary olive oil bread, maple-smoked cheddar, provolone, beef summer sausage, sun-dried tomatoes, artichoke hearts, grilled mushrooms and balsamic ketchup.

As a child, Silversides remembers coming in from the cold to the scent of grilled cheese � almost worth traipsing home in a blizzard. Nowadays, her thoughts are turning to a winter menu. Perhaps potato chive bread with molten raclette cheese?

Shepherd, too, likes to experiment. His latest is a weird take on grilled cheese for carb-loaders: a mac-and-cheese sandwich with organic ketchup.

Wich? opened in the back room at the Rice Bar last summer. The concept here is create-your-own, mix-and-match.

"Everyone understands sandwiches," Shepherd says. "You can make a sandwich as interesting as an entr�e, like a green curry chicken sandwich ... You can put anything inside bread."

For months, he frequented local cheese shops for test slices of this and that. He also played with condiments for grilled cheese, ranging from strawberry jam to sriracha hot sauce. The jam completes the cheese and fruit equation. As for the sriracha, he says: "That's the real ketchup substitute."

Shepherd even thought about offering white bread and American cheese. "But that's not me," he says.

Whether a cook's doing it old school or new, it's hard to mess up grilled cheese. That's a plus in this cooking-challenged world. "Anyone can make it," Shepherd says.

That may also be its downfall in restaurants. We think of grilled cheese more as something mom makes than a dish to dine out on. Sure, it's a staple at diners, but it can be a hard sell on more ambitious menus.

Shepherd found his grilled cheese sales too slow, so he stepped in with four designer sandwiches.

When diners think of grilled cheese, they do think, "Hey, I can make this at home."

But Shepherd adds: "If you make it a little more interesting, they're not going to make that at home."



Source : http://www.thestar.com/comment/colu.../article/269632

hmm i think i will stop by Leslieville Cheese Market and Fine Foods ... mmm hungry

Leslieville Cheese Market Inc� -
891 Queen Street East, Toronto, ON M4M 1J4, Canada� - (416) 465-7143�


Posted by ChemEnhanced on Feb-09-2009 17:49:

quote:
Originally posted by rabbitjoker
grilled cheese w/ mustard
grilled cheese w/ pickles
grilled cheese w/ lobster

YUM!


grilled cheese w/ left over Spaghetti is beyond words.


Posted by TheVrk on Feb-09-2009 18:13:

quote:
Originally posted by *~LiSa-LoO~*
I love cheese. Cheese on anything.

Not a fan of the white cheddar though. It's okay, but I prefer orange. It's a mental thing.

I'm so with ya Lisa...cheese on anything.
Any form of grilled cheese works for me...
And ya, orange cheddar is much better than white cheddar


Posted by Abercrombie on Feb-09-2009 19:04:

Isn't a Panini in reality a grilled cheese for grown-ups?


Posted by Pett on Feb-09-2009 19:39:

mmmmmmmmm bacon......mmmmmmmmmmmmmm


Posted by ChemEnhanced on Feb-09-2009 21:56:

stupid TA and the Food Threads

I had to make grilled cheese for dinner just because of this thread. I had a provolone, tomato and bacon grilled cheese and a Hivarti, prosciutto, and egg plan grilled cheese....sooooooo good.

edit: had a sour cream and salsa mixture for dipping


Posted by Geoffb3 on Feb-09-2009 21:59:

quote:
Originally posted by ChemEnhanced
stupid TA and the Food Threads

I had to make grilled cheese for dinner just because of this thread. I had a provolone, tomato and bacon grilled cheese and a Hivarti, prosciutto, and egg plan grilled cheese....sooooooo good.

edit: had a sour cream and salsa mixture for dipping



sounds very good


Posted by Geoffb3 on Feb-09-2009 21:59:

quote:
Originally posted by ChemEnhanced
stupid TA and the Food Threads

I had to make grilled cheese for dinner just because of this thread. I had a provolone, tomato and bacon grilled cheese and a Hivarti, prosciutto, and egg plan grilled cheese....sooooooo good.

edit: had a sour cream and salsa mixture for dipping



sounds very good


Posted by T_ALI on Feb-09-2009 22:02:

I'm at university right now surfing the internet while sitting through a boring lecture.

I can't wait to make a one when I get home.



Posted by jchung52 on Feb-09-2009 22:05:

quote:
Originally posted by T_ALI
I'm at university right now surfing the internet while sitting through a boring lecture.

I can't wait to make a one when I get home.




r u serious?


Posted by T_ALI on Feb-09-2009 22:06:

in soviet russia, car drives u....yea that was pretty lame


Posted by ChemEnhanced on Feb-09-2009 22:09:

quote:
Originally posted by Geoffb3
sounds very good


I always use the BBQ to grill my eggplant and to cook my grilled cheese....so much better.


Posted by Geoffb3 on Feb-09-2009 22:12:

quote:
Originally posted by ChemEnhanced
I always use the BBQ to grill my eggplant and to cook my grilled cheese....so much better.


bbq+ grilled cheese = WIN


Posted by MissK on Feb-09-2009 22:46:

this thread made me have grilled cheese for breaky this morning.

w/ ketchup!!!!!! (of course)


Posted by jchung52 on Feb-09-2009 22:55:

wonder how many TA's had grilled cheese today


Posted by VERTiG0 on Feb-09-2009 23:19:

quote:
Originally posted by MissK
w/ ketchup!!!!!! (of course)


AGH this is just wrong!


Posted by *~LiSa-LoO~* on Feb-09-2009 23:23:

quote:
Originally posted by jchung52
wonder how many TA's had grilled cheese today


Not me! I had tacos


Posted by Knox on Feb-09-2009 23:28:

quote:
Originally posted by *~LiSa-LoO~*
Not me! I had tacos


"Taco Grill Cheese" is SO good. Use the leftovers... amazing


Posted by The Ear on Feb-10-2009 01:32:

quote:
Originally posted by jchung52
r u serious?


Posted by jchung52 on May-22-2009 23:09:

yum


Posted by gummybear on May-22-2009 23:19:

i could live off of bread and cheese that has been fried..mmmmmmmmmmmmmm........


Pages (3): « 1 [2] 3 »

Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.