1. The 2005 late autumn harvest is in.
I've touted for a while what seems to me one of the great Costco values, i.e. their Kirkland label extra-virgin oil in the 1 ltr. jar which is not only region specific (Toscano), but dated by year and season of harvest.
There are oils on the shelves of specialty shops all over town at 3 times the price which carry no harvest info and which I strongly suspect are often 2-3 years old and mere shadows of their former fruity selves. But Costco bottles and dates this very nice Tuscan oil for about what you'd pay for something decent but less fresh and more generic like Colavita or any of the big names that blend oil from all over. And of course, one has to read the labels on inexpensive oils very carefully, as often the Italian brand name is belied by the small print - "packed in Italy" but originating in Greece or Turkey or the Middle East. (Not that there's anything wrong with that. There's good oil from all those places -- but it's not likely to be the same stuff sold in bulk and then repackaged pretending to be Italian.)
2. I was searing a steak in my cast iron skillet, when my friend and dinner guest started getting antsy about the smoke and urged me to turn it. I replied that this was the second side and that ideally one doesn't want to flip meat back and forth, but just hit it once on each side sufficiently to be done. My friend is a fine cook, and a former food/wine professional and had never heard this bit of advice, which made wonder if it was in fact true and where I might have picked it up.
My understanding has always been that on the grill or in the skillet, you want to sear your meat well on each side once and not go back and forth because this will toughen it. Is this true, or some bit of culinary apocrypha? Any expert opinions?
"Strange how potent cheap music is."