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T O D A Y Surreal Gourmet
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - SAVE MONEY AND AVOID CHRISTMAS SHOPPING MANIA BY MAKING YOUR OWN HERBED OLIVE OILS FOR GIFTS. THE SURREAL GOURMET Bah, humbug! The official beginning of the Christmas shopping season seems to kick off a little earlier each year. In case you didn't notice, this year it leapfrogged Thanksgiving and started in the second week of November. One day there's a pumpkin patch, then -- poof! -- it's a Christmas tree lot. By the year 2034, Yuletide shopping will be rolled back so far that it'll collide with the previous Christmas and we will experience the living hell of year-round holiday Muzak and shopping-mall Santas. As with tabloid journalism, overzealous consumers are as much to blame for this invasion of our sanity as perpetrators of seasonal greed. My solution: Send retailers a message by staying away from their stores until mid-December. Save your money, make your lists of who was naughty or nice, scour those catalogs -- just don't shop until you can see the whites of Rudolph's eyes. A better way to buck the system altogether is to make your own gifts. If you have a lot of foodies on your Christmas shopping list, let your fingers do the shopping by crafting a gift that will spice up their day and save you a bundle of cash to blow on post-season sales. Herbed olive oils are very popular these days, and for good reason: They are an instant 911. A splash will instantly resuscitate pastas, pizzas and vegetables, and magically convert a plain piece of toast into a sophisticated slice of bruschetta before your very eyes. With a little creativity, you can customize labels and make your offering totally unique. Contrary to anything the folks at Williams-Sonoma might like you to believe, there's no secret recipe. Just connect the following dots. - - - - - - - - - - - - BOTTLES
OIL
SPICES
FANCY EXTRAS
TECHNIQUE (OR LACK THEREOF)
Le Secret: Stick a chopstick or fondue fork in the bottle to create an appealing arrangement. The Adventure Club: Save up the Sunday comics and use them as wrapping paper. Liability Disclaimer: The International Olive Oil Council's manual states that flavored oils should be refrigerated and consumed in two days. Let this fact be your guide. Although I am not encouraging you to follow my irreverent ways (in this particular instance), I keep my flavored oil for months and display it on my kitchen counter. Music to Flavor By: Jane Siberry, "Child" (Sheeba Records): This is an atypical collection of seasonally inspired songs -- without the sugar coating. If arts and crafts are not your thing, here are a few gifts that most foodies would love to find under their tree. 10 great gifts for foodies 1. 10-inch non-stick sauté pan -- Silverstone makes a fine pan for $25. All-Clad makes the Cadillac version for $100. 2 8-inch chef's chopping knife, $60 & up 3. Large solid colored Fiestaware dinner plates, $20 each -- Can't choose a color? Mix and match. 4. Seeds and soil for an herb garden, $20 5. Wooden Caesar salad bowl, $40 & up 6. Small braid of garlic, $15 7. A coffee plunger, $20, and a grinder, $20 8. A year's subscription to a food magazine, $18 to $30 -- Saveur gets my vote. 9. The new Joy of Cooking, $30, an excellent crash-course cookbook for new cooks and seasoned foodies alike 10. "The Surreal Gourmet," $15, or "The Surreal Gourmet Entertains," $17 -- Hey, my mother likes them! (Call 1-800-FAUX-PAS.) Three cool stocking stuffers 1. A honey bear 2. An IOU for breakfast in bed 3. A chunk of imported Italian parmesan Regiano ... and four gifts not to buy 1. An apron that says "chefs make better lovers," or anything similar 2. Potholders in the shape of fish or lobster claws 3. The latest "better mousetrap" corkscrew 4. An electric pepper grinder, or one made out of acrylic plastic Next week: Appetizers for your Christmas party: Citrus-olive tapenade and Chipotle dry rub shrimp with a cilantro dipping sauce
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