Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Villeroy and Boch

Submitted by Steve
So if you were going to go with Villeroy and Boch, where would you begin? New Wave and New Caffe add up to be the most popular pattern, but here in the States, we also love French Garden, a very interesting pattern with a colorful, classic look.

I can see people's appeal in the New Wave, but if you need something more traditional, French Garden would be a good start.


Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Villeroy & Boch Visits DD&M

Submitted by Steve
Villeroy & Boch stopped by today to give us a rundown of their product, as we've begun selling it recently. They explained the philosophy behind their design, and it actually made us like it a whole bunch more!

They go for a mix and match strategy that not only allows you to match all sorts of dishes, but also to use them for whatever you may need at the time. Villeroy & Boch china is meant to be versatile, as well as durable and stylish. You can use the party plates as saucers, but also as garnish plates or even sushi plates. (Yum!) They purposely name the plates vaguely so you don't have a predisposed idea as to what you are using. Use that vase as an ice bucket for your wine glass or that mug as a pencil holder.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Blown Glass

Submitted by Steve
My mother-in-law has been blowing glass as a hobby lately, and she's shown me some of the beautiful art you can make, and I must say, it is impressive. Since we have an actual glass guy that will be making some custom pieces for us, I thought I'd interview him. It's an interesting craft. I was holding off for a few more visitors to our little page here, but I guess I'll go ahead and get him on the phone and see what he has to say. Look for the interview here in a couple days (probably next Monday, actually).

Monday Woes

Work doesn't dissappear on the weekends, it just piles up to surprise us when we come into the office on Monday!

Friday, May 18, 2007

How Valuable is Your China?

Submitted by Steve
One question we receive often is along the lines of "How valuable is my china?" Many of these people are just curious, but others are actively interested in selling their antique porcelain. Our site sells primarily new lines, with the occasional discontinued piece that we just happen to have in stock, but we can often direct people to someplace that deals in hard to find dinnerware, and those sources can help find what your pieces are worth.

If you are interested in selling your antique dinnerware, here is a handy link from a seller on eBay with tips for doing so. Some points of note:

Be very conscious of the condition of your china. Fractures, wear, scratches, even very minor defects in the glaze can have a significant impact on the value.

Research everything you can. Collectors are often more interested in the history surrounding your antique than the antique itself, so the more you know, the more it is worth!

Contact us to see if we can help.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Submitted by Steve
Its Graduation Time! Planning to throw a huge get together to celebrate? About has a guide to help parents plan, but you can also try it the way we do in small towns. Have a DIY catering job down at the firehall.
Congrats, Graduates! Now its time to get working! (Or more schooling, I guess...)

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Flickr Pic: Norwegian wedding

Submitted by Steve
This picture didn't shrink very well, but it shows a very nice wedding dinner with a nice place setting. Over at Flickr, I've been browsing through some wedding photos, and there are some impressive pictures out there! The setting pictured at the left is Flickr User Ramon Arrellano's Norwegian wedding. Very nice! I like the stone!

Monday, May 14, 2007

What's Next? 777!

Submitted by Steve
Mother's Day has past! Did you get Mom anything good? There are some orders here that didn't make it for Mother's Day, but it is hard to ship something fast enough when you ordered the day before! Doh! In any case, if the above describes you, please let us know, so we can see what we can do for you.

In more exciting news, Wedding season is about ready, though I bet there are less June brides are more July brides this year with everyone jumping on the opportunity to have a 7/7/07 wedding. (I wonder how many weddings there were last year on June 6?)

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Friday, May 11, 2007

TGIF!

Submitted by Steve
Terribly Gleeful It's Friday.

Actually, I've never heard anyone ever spell TGIF out that way, but that is apparently one of the meanings... TGIF anyway!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Mother's Day Gifting woes

Submitted by Steve
Time's almost up! Are you still looking for last day Mother's Day gifts? Call us and see if we can get you something overnight. As for me, how do I avoid the trap of getting Mom the same Hallmark card and flowers as last year?

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

2007 James Beard Cookbook Awards

Submitted by Steve
Over at Amazon Daily, they mentioned that the annual James Beard Cookbook Award results have come in. I've never heard of James Beard, but the cookbooks that won look interesting enough. Click through to Amazon Daily.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Vegetarian Food For The Rest of Us

Submitted by Steve
If you ever get a chance to visit Athens, GA, you'll find a number of great local restaurants to try, but if you can only try one, I have to recommend The Grit. Now, if you are not from the South, then you probably already hate grits, and then finding out that the place is a vegetarian restaurant... well, I can see why you'd might want to avoid the place, but trust me, you'll be blown away. When most people hear about vegetarian food, images of veggie burgers and tie-died shirts pop into their heads. Well, according to Yahoo! Travel, The Grit is "so good that even nonvegans wait in line for the tofu chicken salad." I recommend the Golden Bowl.

Check it out. Pick up their recipe book. Maybe, you'll spot Michael Stipe!

Monday, May 7, 2007

Desayuno Tipico

Submitted by Steve
A few years back, my friends and I made a trip to Manuel Antonio National Park in Costa Rica, a beautiful Pacific rainforest. Besides the monkeys that try to steal your socks and poisonous frogs the color of crayons, what I remember most is what I was served for breakfast each morning.

Desayuno Tipico--the "typical breakfast"--is so aptly named, that you have to wonder if someone at Denny's should take a trip down south and rewrite their menu. (Moons Over My Hammy? Are they sure that isn't an episode of Loony Toons?). For the Manuel Antonio Costa Rican, Desayuno Tipico is a serving of scrambled eggs, sausage, corn tortillas, a green tomato-based sauce, and an amazing sour cream. The combination of which is brilliant in its simplicity. I think the secret is in the corn tortillas, but I've never had breakfast

Friday, May 4, 2007

Genies and Spirits

Submitted by Steve
Could there be anything cooler than pouring your Yellow Tail out of a crystal decanter resembling something that seems like it could house a genie?

Decanters make for a flashy presentation and serve to oxygenate your wine while also keeping it separate from any sediment that comes in the bottle. This can be especially useful for bringing out the flavor of younger wines.

Pictured is a Lady Anne wine decanter, an inexpensive piece of crystal that you can find on our site, but we also sell a number of others, and you can Google for others, as well.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

The Fun in Fondue

Mauviel Cupretam Tinned Copper Fondue
Submitted by Steve
When I mentioned our new blog to our Customer Service team, I was first laughed at. What would we talk about? Would anyone care? Well, frankly, I don't know how many people will care, but we already have some topics to bring up. In fact, Tara from our Marketing team recommended I talk about fondue. "Fondue?" I asked. I must have missed something in my twenty some years, because I have never eaten fondue, and I never thought I'd blog about it. Meanwhile, Tara meanwhile has been having fondue parties!

What exactly is a fondue party, and why hasn't she invited me? Here's the skinny (on the first part... I still haven't figured out why she hasn't invited me):

You start off with a melted yummy goo of most often cheese, but perhaps chocolate instead... mmm... This is melted in a small burner, and you toss in bread or cake crumbs, and any other tasty thing you can find. Then you use that melted yummy goo as a dip for your crackers, strawberries, whatever! Find out more at Wikipedia.

If you are wondering about some fondue recipes, try out http://www.fonduebits.com/ for a good start.

If you think you are ready to make the plunge into some yummy fondue goodness, you'll need a fondue pot! You can pick up a Le Creuset or Mauviel piece from our site, but you can also find some sets at someplace like Target.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Easy Cooking for Mother's Day part 2

Submitted by Jim
Still looking for ways to impress Mom? This one is good for the kids, too.

Baked French Toast

Keeping with my promise to keep you away from an open flame, this French Toast recipe is simple and will amaze and impress any mom you may know. French toast in general is about as easy as it gets, but I have a method that is even simpler. This way we can bake the whole mess while keeping the counter clear and kitchen clean.

You need french bread, 1 cup of half and half, 1 cup of milk, 2 tablespoons of powdered sugar, 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract, eggs.
  1. To feed about 6 people, start with loaf of French style bread. Find a loaf with a nice thick of crust. Cut this in slices about 1 inch thick and set it aside.
  2. Take one cup of half and half cream (you can buy small containers like you used to drink milk from in school) and one cup of milk.
  3. Wisk in 2 tablespoons of powdered sugar until it dissolves and add 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract.
  4. Grease the inside of an oven proof cake pan and arrange the bread slices in it.
  5. Pour the egg mixture over it. Let sit a few hours or ideally over night.
  6. Bake 350 degrees for 35 –40 minutes. If it’s runny, bake it a little longer, otherwise you are done!
Goes great with real maple syrup.

These tips work great with kids of almost any age. Mine started cooking young and have mastered these quite well along with other recipes by about age ten.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Easy Cooking for Mother's Day

submitted by Jim
Nothing makes Mom feel special and appreciated on “Her Day” more than breakfast in bed. Now of course, the Family Circus version of burnt pancakes from a flour strewn kitchen are perfectly acceptable. Once. After that, your choices are to get better or make brunch reservations. Dad's that don't like to cook, like mine was, can master one or two signature items for these special occasions, under controlled conditions.

Impact is important for the occasional chef, and for Mothers Day, a positive one is preferred. (The making of memories should not have to include fire suppression). Hence, my suggestions will focus on the oven. For you real novices, that is the metal box under the burners. Besides not exposing yourself to the dangers of open flame, it is harder to screw up stuff in the oven. The dishes I will recommend will be either obviously under baked (i.e. runny) or done. If it’s a little over done, well heck, what can she expect, you only cook once a year right?

Quiche for the Queen
What is great about quiche is that you can put anything you like in it, and it’s still pretty good. I have made great quiche with leftovers from old pot roast, burnt bacon and produce well past its peak. Pick ingredients the mother in your life loves, and have about a 1 ½ cups of them pre-cooked and ready. I’ll cover how to pre-cook them in bit.

The basic quiche is really simple.
Step one: Buy Pillsbury ready-to- use pie crust. The ones in the refrigerated section of the grocery store, not the nasty frozen kind. They will probably be between the dozen large eggs and the 8 oz. package of shredded cheese you will need too. Just walk the full length of the dairy case and look for them all and get a small container of sour cream while you are there.

IMPORTANT NOTE: This is not a healthy recipe. If you want be impressive and slimming too, try reduced fat cheese and low fat sour cream if you like. But around our house, that just ain't quiche.

Step two: Prepare the filling for use. Spinach and mushrooms make good filling, and I have had luck with Tomato, Bacon and Seafood. (Some take a little more work, but are usually worth it). I saute a box of frozen spinach in a bit of butter with lots of garlic and bit of salt & pepper. Be sure to cook it until all the liquid is gone or the quiche won’t work. For tomato & bacon, I cut 4 strips of bacon in bits, brown them and a diced tomato once the bacon in nearly done. Drain the oil be fore adding to the quiche. Easiest of all, is mushroom: Take an 8 oz. Package of sliced mushrooms, add a dap of butter and cook in the microwave for about 90 seconds. Pour off the excess liquid.

What is great about this step is it can be done in advance. When I am going to be making a lot of quiche in different varieties, I will make these up the night before so I can bang out 3 or 4 flavors in no time.

Step three: Roll out the crusts. Hey, the fat little dough boy did the hard part for you already. So now, instead of fighting with the rolling pin and covering yourself with sweat and flour, just set the oven to 400 and unfold the pie dough in a pie pan.

Tip: when I am making multiples, I will often buy disposable pans to make cleaning up very easy.

This is also the time you get to scrunch the edge of the pie crust by pinching the excess together. If you’re not sure what I mean, look at the picture on the box. Do that. If you can't, it's not too late to call Mom's favorite eatery and book a table.

Step four: Mix the core quiche ingredients. Crack 8 eggs into a large bowl and whisk them. I like to add about a tablespoon of flour and add about ½ cup of the sour cream too.

Step five: Ladle about ½ cup of the egg mix into pie pan and add half the cheese. Then put in whatever ingedient you have chosen, top it with the rest of the egg and add the remaining cheese. Gently fold the fillings together.

Step six: Bake at 400 degrees for about 40 minutes. Check it. If it is still runny, bake longer. If not, it’s done!

This is great with cut fruit and will feed a couple adults and children. Check back again tomorrow for another quick Mother's Day recipe!