Ask the Chef

February 16, 2005  ...  by Chef John Pisto

Q). This will be one of the odder questions you get, I'm betting. We were in a Mexican restaurant in South Carolina last week, and my husband ordered Jim Beam and diet Coke. It wasn't strong enough, so he ordered an extra shot. The shot was served in a sundae glass rimmed with salt and lime. We were surprised and somewhat amused that he'd been served tequila when he clearly ordered Jim Beam. When the bill arrived, my Corona was noted at the bottom, and his beverage was noted as "Pisto." Unfortunately, the gentleman I paid did not know much English, but I clearly heard him say tequila when I asked

what Pisto meant. So, I was wondering: What is the origin of your name? Does it mean tequila or something else entirely?
Thanks a bunch!
Via e-mail
Ellen & Howard Wager
Land O' Lakes, FL

A). Ok let's tackle Pisto first. Actually, the correct spelling is "Pisco" which as a brandy much like grappa and it's some pretty hairy stuff. Tequila is made from a cactus plant and Pisco is made by distilling what's left over after you crush grapes - big difference. The origin of my name is derived from the Greek name "Pistos" and we

believe my relatives came to Sicily five or six hundred years ago. I have visited the original village which is in Calabria, very close to Messina. My family now resides in a small village near Toremina called Furci Siculo. I visited the old graveyard in Storella, Calabria and never knew so many Pistos existed. Sicily was settled by so many different nationalities over the centuries that there is really no common face. Some are dark, some are blond, others are short or tall with red, straight or curly hair.

Comment: Want wild salmon? It's available! Frozen Alaskan sockeye for $7.99 per pound at Safeway.

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I have requested a great shrimp recipe from a good friend Stalee VanderWoude. This one is definitely worth a try.

Stalee's Boiled Sweet Sake Shrimp Recipe

1 Cup Sake
1/2 Cup Sugar
3 teaspoons salt
2 lbs Shrimp

Leave shrimp in the shell, but cut through shell along the back and de-vein. Mix together ingredients for sauce and then pour into a large saucepan or non-stick skillet. Add shrimp and cook until done (approximately ten minutes). Serve warm as is or with cocktail sauce.
Q). Dear Johnny,
We caught your show on the lamb shank and that is the biggest lamb shank I have ever seen. It looked like the whole lamb. Why do the call it a lamb shank when the shank was bigger than a lamb? Why don't they call it sheep shank?
Via e-mail
Sonny

A). Out west everything is a little bigger - you ought to see our cattle.

Comment: Dear John, Please do not regale us with accounts of unhealthy eating.
Thank you
Marilyn McMasters
Via e-mail

Response: Now just hold on to your skivvies, darling. You're talking about our five restaurant dine

around with John Madden. I know we had multiple dishes, 15 to be exact, plus dessert, but as I said (check the column) we had bites, small bites, what do you think we are animals? A varied diet is what we are supposed to eat - varied and in moderation and that's what we did, honey. Thank you for reading the column!

Q). Hi John,
Thanks for your column. My girlfriend and I had a wonderful chocolate lava cake at the Chart House in Malibu. You mentioned a chocolate lava cake in your article of Feb.9th. Where did you have that and how did it rate? Thanks,
Via e-mailRick

A). Hi Rick,  Blue Moon and the Whaling Station. I think they're out of this world!

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At Clint Eastwood's request, a new addition to our annual AT&T celebrity party will return next year. World-class mushroom expert, David Arora will do an encore of his tales of humorous fungus collecting. This party, co-hosted by Dr. and Terice Clark and Mr. & Mrs. Eastwood, gives a group of celebrities a chance to relax during a demanding week and spend some time together. I had gathered some wild mushrooms to serve with dinner and invited David to talk a bit about them. To my surprise, he launched into a somewhat meandering tale about him and a buddy taking an "exuberant" blindfolded young lady to a secret spot to collect some rare mushrooms. This really is an amusing story but these people were hungry, having come off a long day of playing golf.

Finally, musician Kenny G. stood up and yelled, "But what did the mushrooms taste like?!" David finished his story and received a loud standing ovation. Later, as has become custom, several people stood up to tell a story or two. Comedian Tom Dressen broke everybody up when he opened with, "Two mushrooms walked into a bar..." Michael Bolton did a Rodney Dangerfield skit and Huey Lewis told a very funny joke, that wouldn't make it past the editor. As for the menu, this year I pulled out all the stops. I phoned the salmon farm in B.C. and asked for a next-day air delivery of salmon. Wow, folks, this is hard to beat, wild or farmed. I was also sent some delicious smoked salmon nuggets from Hardy Buoy Smoked Fish Inc. (250-949-8781) done only with salt,

sugar and alder wood chips. Try it out. For dessert, I presented Mr. Eastwood with a lemon meringue pie with boxing gloves on top. He seemed delighted, but when he cut into it I could see that it hadn't set up. I served him lemon-meringue soup! Luckily I had three others that were perfect - I always say I hate baking. Some final notes: Dina Eastwood has to be one of the world's nicest persons; country singer Clay Walker and Lindsay Clark promised to do a cooking show with me - what a nice couple; David and Terice Clark deserve praise for seven days and nights of hard AT&T work; you might all get a chance to see this on HBO soon as Ray Romano and Kevin James walked in with a film crew doing a documentary of Ray's effort to make the cut (which he did).

For more info about John Pisto's fine restaurants
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