Monday, June 24, 2013

Food Specialties of Central New York

We take a lot of our food around the Central New York area for granted.

This is probably partly true because we have an incredible Regional Market (locals call it the Farmers' Market) where you can find almost anything and everything every Saturday morning from May through November, from around 6 to 11.

 We also have a really diverse group of restaurants, but if Syracuse specializes in anything (besides the Dinosaur Barbecue!!) it's Italian.

Until this summer, I'd never had one of the region's most famous dishes, Utica Greens.

No matter which recipe you use, this is pretty much how they should look.




The first time I tried them, it was on a delicious sandwich, the blank, at Hullar's, in Fayetteville. (They also have fantastic French onion soup and the best fried haddock around).

I had them again with friends at Frankie's Piccolo Bistro, on North Salina Street, where they also serve an absolutely exquisite Espresso Martini.



 But I digress....

After that, I was hooked.  On Utica greens, that is. You can also find a good example at Delmonico's, on Erie Boulevard.

Joey's doesn't list Utica greens on the menu at his classic restaurant, but he does have an escarole appetizer that looks pretty close, and at his Pronto restaurant, you can get steak and greens. Joey's Cookbook is where I found my favorite Utica greens recipe. I don't follow it exactly, but it's a good place to start. You can find Joey's recipe as a PDF if you Google JoeysItalianRestaurant.com + Utica Greens. If you don't have this cookbook, you might just want to order it. The recipes are great, and nobody beats Joey's Butternut Squash Soup.

The first recipe I tried was from the Ridiculous Food Society of Upstate New York Blog

Here's another one from the December 2011 Saveur. I'm including it, even though I don't like potatoes in my greens.

If there's controversy about how to make Utica Greens, there are a couple of places where cooks have a difference of opinion.

First, whether to use bacon, prosciutto (Italian ham) or pancetta (Italian bacon). (I don't think it matters.) The second is whether to add sausage. (You might as well.) Third, people might also disagree about the bread crumbs. Diced, or crumbled. Diced, definitely. Don't look for them with the breadcrumbs, look for them in the aisle where they keep the stuffing.

Finally, how to cook the greens. In my quest for the perfect Utica Greens recipe, I've tried just about everything. Since you're going to want to eat a lot of them, you might as well keep the calorie count as low as possible. Steam them. They wither down no matter how you cook them, so it makes no sense to soak them in olive oil.

Okay, here's my recipe. It's been approved, even though I'm not Italian.

Utica Greens, pig-out style
  • 3 good heads of escarole, around 3 pounds. Any less is a waste of time. 
  • Olive oil, lots.
  • 2-3 Tablespoons chopped garlic. I don't care if it comes in a jar. Add it to the onions.
  • 2-3 good sized onions, 2-3 inches across, each, diced, stirred with 1 teaspoon oil, then microwaved for 3 minutes, with the garlic, or until meltingly soft
  • 1/4 lb bacon or pancetta or prosciutto, whatever, chopped and cooked. Save the fat.
  • 1/4 Italian sausage, hot, sweet, I've even used maple flavored breakfast sausage, chopped and cooked. You can cook them together, but save the fat in the pan.
  • 3 hot cherry peppers in vinegar, drained, stemmed, seeded, and chopped, (or not, or use only two if you can't take the heat. Or one, if you're a sissy.)
  • 1/2-1 cup of chicken stock
  • 1/2-1 cup of diced, seasoned stuffing style bread cubes (crumbs make it gummy)
  • At least 1 cup of grated Asiago cheese
Escarole is pretty sandy, so you'll have to wash the daylights out of it. Try dunking it upside down in a big pot, then swish it around, then go over the leaves individually. Twice. No kidding. This is why I say three heads. Better to do one big batch then two small.  Before you put them in the pot, roughly chop them into 4 inch chunks. If you're in a hurry, or you don't mind spending extra, you can buy the washed and chopped escarole in a bag at Wegmans.

Everything you need to make Utica Greens can be found here.
Get out your biggest pot and your steamer tray. Fill the bottom couple of inches with water and stuff the escarole in the pot with the lid on. It will take 5-10 minutes to soften up. Chop up those onions, add the garlic and the oil, stir, and put them in the microwave while you're waiting. Don't let them brown, just cook til they're nearly translucent.

Add everything except the bread cubes to the fat in the skillet, cook on medium high heat until the broth is mostly absorbed, and then add the bread cubes.

If you're using an oven proof skillet you can stir in the cheese and let it bake at 350 for 15 minutes until the cheese melts, or you can transfer it into a baking dish and layer the cheese, then put in the oven. It's time consuming, I admit, but it's not really fussy.

Let me know how it comes out. The leftovers are great in an omelet, BTW.







The market is back in business, so let's review!


It's hard to believe that I posted this nearly seven years ago. But after all that we've been through in the real estate market since September of 2008, nothing has changed. 

If you really want to sell your house, 
or if you really need to sell your house, read on.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Things to think about before you sign a contract with a realtor!

There are a lot of things to consider when you choose a realtor and his agency, and first and foremost among them is your pototential agent's sense of personal responsibility and ownership in the listing of your property.

Personal Commitment and Focus on Your Home
Particularly as home prices soften and inventory increases, your first instinct may be to hire an agent who already has a lot of listings. Choosing someone who seems to have blanketed the market with signs is a natural reaction, but it's not necessarily in your best interest to do so.
In the first place, the more listings an agent has, the more difficult it will be for him or her to focus his marketing effort on your property, especially if the agent has many listings that are comparable to yours.

We know of a case where an agent had two virtually identical homes at virtually the same price, and not only were they in the same neighborhood, they were right next door to each other!!! An agent in this situation may try to sell you on the idea that any buyer who comes to see one property will invariably look at the other, but that would be true in any case, no matter which agent or company had the listing next door.

If the listings are substantially different--for example, one is a ranch and the other a colonial, or one has 1500 square feet and the other 2500, or one is priced $50K to 100K over the other, then they aren't comparable, and then it's an advantage to have both houses listed by the same office because of the extra attention your particular street will receive from that company, and because the sellers of one house won't be competing with the sellers of the other house for the same pool of buyers.

But if both houses have the same number of bedrooms, bathrooms, square feet, and are close in price, how can one agent possibly market both homes equally? He can't, any more than he could marry two people or vote for two candidates for the same office.

Bottom line, think about how you'll feel if your agent sells your neighbor's house first. Believe me, you won't like it, especially when the house that sells first will almost certainly be perceived as somehow superior, and people start wondering what might be the reason that your house still hasn't sold. The pressure to drop the price will be strong, and not unreasonably so.

Think about it: if the house next door sells first, then the next buyer may well perceive that your house is worth less, irrespective of the current listing price. If there are two nearly identical pairs of pants in the store and one pair sells and one doesn't, the merchant will eventually lower the price of the second pair.

So, if the agent already has a listing on your street, ask this question:
"If I list with you, how can you assure me that you'll devote your full marketing efforts toward the sale of my home?"

If the agent can demonstrate how the other home differes substantially from yours in several aspects, then you can make an informed decision. It may also be to your advantage to investigate the other listing yourself, to see how a prospective buyer would compare them. If the agent can't satisfy you that your house won't be competing for the same pool of buyers, you should keep interviewing.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Wegmans, still one of the best.

Wegmans is once again in the Fortune list (5 of 100) of the top best places to work.

CNN Money began their survey in 1988. Here is the list of the companies who have been on the list every year since.


Thursday, October 11, 2012

Way Better Than You Think

I used to think all the time about leaving Syracuse. Then I left it, briefly, for an even smaller NY town, which shall, for the moment, go unnamed. I found I really missed Syracuse. Okay, I did not miss the weather. But the rest of it, yes. For example, I missed the huge variety of restaurants, even though I rarely go to restaurants. I guess I just like having a lot of possibilities, in case I ever do decide to go out. I really missed the sky. Yes, that's right, the sky. We can actually see it here; it isn't obstructed by huge hills, really really close, almost in your face. Hills so high that roads just dead end when they get to the seam where the road runs into the vertical.
See what I mean? There you are, in the parking lot, and when you look up, all you get are trees. On a hill. With nothing else. Trust me, you end up feeling not just hemmed in, but a little claustrophobic. And remember, next to, behind, and in front of that hill, there are others. Lots of others.

Friday, January 01, 2010

By George - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com

By George - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com
If you really want to know what's going on in the housing market, this is all you have to read:

December 30, 2009 New Slip in Housing Prices Undercuts Fragile Optimism By DAVID STREITFELD
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/30/business/economy/30econ.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

Friday, October 27, 2006

Choosing a real estate agent to list you home- What are you paying for?

A Brokers Open The first thing you should expect of your real estate broker is a "brokers open," which is part of an open house tour, usually on a week day, held specifically in order for brokers to preview new inventory and familiarize themselves with the features of your home before presenting it to prospects. By the way, homes have been sold during brokers opens by home buyers who stopped in while cruising the neighborhood!

You should also expect him to serve some kind of refreshment. If your agent tells you that it's not worthwhile, that the brokers "only come to eat," tell him or her that's precisely the reason why you expect him to serve something. It's no secret that brokers, like other rational humans, will go where there's food, open houses included.

The marketing of your home is a kind of courtship, and the more suitors who view your home, the more likely you are to sell it- and in a timely fashion. That's why it's so important to price your home correctly, right out of the box. All the food in the world can't help brokers sell an over-priced home.

You're also entitled to a Sunday open house, at least one Sunday a month (we hope it sells in 30 days). Yes. Undoubtedly, you'll get some "nosy neighbors." Let's hope so. Someone who likes his neighborhood enough to go to an open house is the best kind of advertising. Let's also hope that a home buyer who comes to your open house asks your neighbor about the neighborhood- he'll most likely rave! And if the neighbors come to your open because they're thinking of putting their house on the market too, let's make absolutely certain that your house is perfectly priced - so that yours is the one that sells first!


Yes, we understand. You work hard all week and you don't want to have to vacate your home on your day off for an open house. As much as we're sympathetic, open houses are important.

Here in Central New York, industry research suggests a strong correlation between open houses and the reading of real estate ads. That means that open house ads are read, and ads for houses that are for sale, but not open, are not read.

Frequently, those non-open ads are run as a substitute for an open house by an agent who is too busy to hold one. If your agent can't hold it himself, he's responsible for finding an agent who can. Let's also say here that you shouldn't offer to hold it open yourself. That's your agent's job, not yours, and it's one of the reasons he earns his fee-for-service (commission). Another reason (among many) for not holding your own house open for your agent is that it puts you in direct contact with the buyer and his agent. This does not optimize your negotiating position, to say the least.

Internet Knowledge, Expertise, and Presence
Currently, around 70 percent of home buyers do their research on-line. That means that if your house isn't fully available to internet home buyers, it's not being marketed effectively and you're losing buying prospects. Make sure that the agent you choose is internet-saavy and works for an agency that has up-to-the-minute internet capabilities and a staff who can implement them.

Visit the websites of the real estate brokerages in your area and evaluate for yourself the sites' ease of navigation, quality and number of photos, content, appropriate and easy to use links and FAQS. While you're at it, check out ours at www.prudentialfirstproperties.com .

Photos and Virtual Tours
This means that there should be the maximum allowable number of (good quality) photos of your home, interior and exterior, at the very least, and more if the agency's website has the capability to present more photos than the local multiple listing service. At www.prudentialfirstproperties.com , we have the ability to post up to 20 photos.

You should also ask to see the agency's internet posting of your home. That way, if the photos are of poor quality, or, worse still, not there at all, you can hold your agent accountable. A reliable agent will be mortified (our local board fines us if the listing photo is missling) and take care of it immediately. Accidents happen, but follow through to make sure the omission was corrected.

Depending upon the competition, market price, and other factors, it may be in your best interest to ask for a virtual tour. As a rule, the more expensive the home, the more this is true. It goes without saying that a virtual tour of a home that's not in tip top condition is more likely to turn buyers away than bring them in. This is also true of still photos. If you haven't maintained the front of your property, you can't blame your realtor for a bad photo. If you don't like what you see, neither will a prospective buyer. Do what's necessary, and request that your realtor take a new picture.

It's also true that it's entirely reasonable that the agent who spends out of pocket to pay for your home's virtual tour asks you to extend your listing contract. After all, you're asking for him or her to commit to extra marketing expense, it's only reasonable that he or she have the extra marketing time that a more expensive home frequently requires.

Make sure you get to see the "Realtor's View Residential Listing Sheet" for your home. This is your opportunity to make sure that all the information on the listing is correct, and that your home is presented in the best possible light. We hope your agent has some flair when it comes to writing copy, as well as a good and accurate sense of direction so that agents can find it - without getting lost! You have the right to hold your agent responsible for correct directions to your property.



Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Things to think about before you sign a contract with a realtor!

There are a lot of things to consider when you choose a realtor and his agency, and first and foremost among them is your pototential agent's sense of personal responsibility and ownership in the listing of your property.

Personal Commitment and Focus on Your Home
Particularly as home prices soften and inventory increases, your first instinct may be to hire an agent who already has a lot of listings. Choosing someone who seems to have blanketed the market with signs is a natural reaction, but it's not necessarily in your best interest to do so.

In the first place, the more listings an agent has, the more difficult it will be for him or her to focus his marketing effort on your property, especially if the agent has many listings that are comparable to yours.

We know of a case where an agent had two virtually identical homes at virtually the same price, and not only were they in the same neighborhood, they were right next door to each other!!! An agent in this situation may try to sell you on the idea that any buyer who comes to see one property will invariably look at the other, but that would be true in any case, no matter which agent or company had the listing next door.

If the listings are substantially different--for example, one is a ranch and the other a colonial, or one has 1500 square feet and the other 2500, or one is priced $50K to 100K over the other, then they aren't comparable, and then it's an advantage to have both houses listed by the same office because of the extra attention your particular street will receive from that company, and because the sellers of one house won't be competing with the sellers of the other house for the same pool of buyers.

But if both houses have the same number of bedrooms, bathrooms, square feet, and are close in price, how can one agent possibly market both homes equally? He can't, any more than he could marry two people or vote for two candidates for the same office.

Bottom line, think about how you'll feel if your agent sells your neighbor's house first. Believe me, you won't like it, especially when the house that sells first will almost certainly be perceived as somehow superior, and people start wondering what might be the reason that your house still hasn't sold. The pressure to drop the price will be strong, and not unreasonably so.

Think about it: if the house next door sells first, then the next buyer may well perceive that your house is worth less, irrespective of the current listing price. If there are two nearly identical pairs of pants in the store and one pair sells and one doesn't, the merchant will eventually lower the price of the second pair.

So, if the agent already has a listing on your street, ask this question:
"If I list with you, how can you assure me that you'll devote your full marketing efforts toward the sale of my home?"

If the agent can demonstrate how the other home differes substantially from yours in several aspects, then you can make an informed decision. It may also be to your advantage to investigate the other listing yourself, to see how a prospective buyer would compare them. If the agent can't satisfy you that your house won't be competing for the same pool of buyers, you should keep interviewing.