A Weekend Of Celebration, Complete With Beef Stir Fry And Turkey Potstickers

Over Easter break I got to go home to celebrate many different events! Besides enjoying all of the holiday festivities, I also went back to Minnesota for my step-dad’s 50th birthday party! He’ll hate me for outing him online but the point is that we had to do this birthday up big! The food was delicious, the 80’s music was bumpin, and all the socializing occurred throughout the Russian Museum of art, which happened to be our venue of choice. Everything was catered to my dad’s preferences, from the availability of sliders in lieu of his love for hamburgers, to the creation of a signature “Neapolitan martini” that emulated his favorite flavor of ice cream. The party was on Friday night and though I woke up at four am to take the red eye from New York, I did not get a chance to sleep until about the same time Saturday morning. This was due in part to the fact that the party lasted way longer than we expected, but also because we had a movie night afterwards.

It was a great weekend full of family bonding. On Saturday night my Step-sister Emily and I cooked dinner for everyone else. We rarely get to see each other so it was a great chance to catch up on our lives! Emily loves Asian food so we decided to be ambitious and planned to make beef stir fry along and homemade potstickers with a peanut dipping sauce. The food tasted delicious but we definitely ran into a few obstacles along the way.

I encountered the first problem in the grocery store. There was no ground pork! It was astonishing to me that such a large grocery store was lacking something so crucial. I improvised by buying ground turkey, which I like equally as much anyways. I left the supermarket with the meat, an assortment of vegetables, a few varieties of sauce, and some wonton wrappers. I had never attempted to make potstickers from scratch before. This was going to be an interesting night.

Ingredients

Stir Fry

  • Carrots
  • Broccoli
  • Snap Peas
  • Baby Corn
  • Water Chestnuts
  • Beef Strips
  • Onions
  • Garlic
  • Soy Sauce
  • Chili Sauce
  • Hoisin Sauce
  • Pepper
  • Chopped Scallions
  • Minced Ginger

Potstickers

  • Floured Wonton Wraps
  • Ground Turkey
  • Minced Ginger
  • Chopped Scallions
  • Chopped Water Chestnuts
  • Chopped Cabbage
  • Minced Garlic
  • Pepper
  • Soy Sauce
  • One Egg
  • Chicken Broth

Peanut Sauce

  • Creamy Peanut Butter
  • Minced Ginger
  • Minced Garlic
  • Coconut Milk
  • Lime Juice
  • Chili Sauce
  • Chili Pepper Flakes
  • Soy Sauce

Luckily, it turned out that Emily has actually made potstickers before, so I got a little guidance on what to do. We laid out all of our vegetables and got to chopping! I put the meat in a zip lock bag with some ginger, garlic, and soy sauce as a marinade, then began with the cabbage because it requires some weird tricks. Apparently, since cabbage has such a high water content, it is considered best to let the vegetable sit in some salt. The salt draws out the water and then you have to wring the cabbage out. While the cabbage dehydrated in a corner I finished chopping the rest of the ingredients needed for the potstickers while Emily prepped vegetables for the stir fry. I thought the hardest part would be stuffing the wonton wrappers but it turned out to be pretty fun and relatively easy. We simply put a dollop of the meat mixture on a wonton wrapper, then wet the edges, folded the wrapper in half, and squeezed the sides to create a seal. We tried to make the edges look beautiful but quickly gave up on that idea. We ended up with so many dumplings that we froze half and continued on to cook our batch by frying it and then subsequently steaming it in chicken broth. This is where I made my mistake. I accidently poured too much chicken broth. The result was that the wonton wrappers became rather soggy and some would rip apart with the slightest touch. However, even though the presentation was somewhat sloppy, the dumplings tasted amazing! The meat was extremely flavorful from the different onions and soy sauce. In turn the peanut sauce was complimentary to the potstickers with its smooth taste and tang from the lime juice. We heaped generous portions over white rice and enjoyed a long family meal by candlelight. Now it will be just one more month before I am done with school for the year and will be back home again!

A Proustian Remembrance: Turtle Bread Tomato Basil Soup

This is a writing piece I turned in to my food narratives class. The assignment was to write about a time I could not get enough of a certain food. I decided to write about my oh so deep and personal relationship with tomato basil soup but ended up realizing by the end of the writing exercise that maybe I do not just like the soup for how it tastes but for how it makes me feel….

BY THE WAY- For anyone who doesn’t know, Proust was a writer who wrote a long novel about his life. The novel begins with a scene where he remembered specific memories in his life all from the simple act of eating a cookie. Proust hadn’t eaten that cookie since his childhood. Have you ever eaten something and it reminded you of a memory that immediately brought you back to a specific time in your life? That is what happened to Proust and thus the term “proustian memory” was born. Here is my piece.

I could never forget the first time I tried the famous tomato basil soup from Turtle bread bakery and restaurant. The building was situated in the middle of Lindin Hills, an active family friendly neighborhood on the outer edges of urban Minneapolis. It was October, which meant that Minnesota was reaching the peak of its beauty before a brutal winter. The trees were covered in a spectrum of brightly colored leaves that would eventually detach and drift towards the ground through the breeze. The air itself was crisp and cool on the skin as one walked outside, but the sun was still bright enough to bestow warmth and light upon its subjects.  I have always loved autumn because the season brings so much excitement and comfort.

The day I first tried the soup was a particularly exciting day. On that day I was allowed to leave school with a few friends in order to attend a college fair. I was overjoyed at any excuse to play hooky for a few hours and thus jumped at the chance to go downtown. Eating out was not even a plan at the time, but we somehow all ended up stopping at Turtle Bread for a warm bite to eat. Thinking back to my first impression of the place brings back almost as much happiness as eating the soup. The restaurant had tall ceilings with innumerable wicker baskets hanging below. The store was filled with all sorts of decadent indulgences. Cakes, cookies, pies and pastries were all displayed next to piles of artisanal breads and counters of jams and cheeses.  The Restaurant smelled of coffee and hummed with the liveliness of a tight-knit community. I was an outsider to the people and pleasures of Turtle Bread but that would all soon change. My friend walked right up to the counter and promptly ordered a bowl of the tomato basil soup with extra bread. He swore by this meal as the signature Turtle Bread dish that was unparalleled by all other tomato basil impersonators. Convinced, I ordered the same and followed instructions on “the best way to eat it” by dunking hunks of buttered bread into the piping hot bowl. The range of flavors exploded as soon as I put the steaming, soup-soaked bread into my mouth. The chunky soup tasted fresh and tart from the tomatoes with an added depth from the basil leaves. The soup saturated the doughy ciabbatta bread and all of the flavors came together from the rich butter, which had begun to melt. I was instantly addicted. As far as I was concerned, this was the perfect meal. On cold gloomy days, this soup instantly made me feel cozy and comforted as I gazed out of the floor to ceiling windows. When I was in a good mood the soup made me even happier.  When I was sad, the thick, creamy meal would instantly warm my body and mind.  I ended up frequenting the restaurant so many times in the following months that I was offered a job there. I worked at Turtle Bread for the duration of high school and never fully realized until now how much the experience shaped me into who I am today. I came away with many new friends, an understanding for family businesses, an appreciation for community, and a love for soup. I ate my worth in soup during my time at Turtle Bread and I adore every type, though nothing comes close to the signature Tomato Basil.

I think the reason I cook so many soups now is because deep down I am longing for the taste of Turtle Bread soup but I have moved too far away to have it. So instead, I constantly try to recreate the exact blend of heavenly flavors each time I sample spoonfuls from a pot bubbling away on my tiny college stove. In this land of Hale and Hearty soups nothing can compare to what I know from Minneapolis and my high school years. When it comes down to it, I have a sort of proustian remembrance of the food. Each time I land at the Minneapolis airport I rush straight to turtle bread and am always surprised to find the same employees and customers that I was used to working and laughing with every day. I sit down by the window and gorge myself on a bowl of soup, a pound of butter and more pieces of bread than anyone needs. As I bite into the soft bread with oozing butter I am flooded with old memories and emotions of familiarity, happiness and comfort. Spurred by the intricate flavors of the signature tomato basil soup I am reminded where I am from, and I instantly know that I am home.