I met Cathy last year at SXSW in Austin. She was speaking on a panel about how to be a successful food blogger. Interestingly enough, this was before Forking Tasty had launched. After the session I went up to introduce myself because I loved her blog, we had a mutual friend and we called the same borough home. Since that moment last March I have competed against her, cooked with her and ate next to her on various occasions.
Last week an advanced copy of her book arrived at my door. Her blog, Not Eating Out In New York, had been translated into a memoir/cookbook of her two years not eating in restaurants. How she did this I am still not sure. Even as an avid reader of her blog and 7 chapters into her book, The Art of Eating In, I still can’t believe her discipline.
With inspiration from chapter 7, (Not ordering in: less haste, less waste) I attempted a recipe from the end of the chapter. In this chapter Cathy mentions the 45 billion disposable chopsticks used once and discarded every year. This is a gross travesty and the same forest raping, landfill filling disaster the pizza box produces. Because of that I decided to make her kale, radicchio and sausage pizza and do my part to keep one more used pizza box off of Staten Island.
My trepidation of buying the dough from my local pizza shop and attempting to recreate that famous NY slice was a little less than Cathy’s. I thank the vowel at the end of my name for that.
Although I had made pizza many times before I had never thought to top it with kale or radicchio. I opted for mini pies since I have not used my mini-pizza pans in over a year. Usually, a single use item like this would find its way out of my kitchen and into the salvation army box but for some reason these pizza pans I have always hung onto. After digging deep into the seldom-used-kitchen-tool drawer and extracting the pans, I got to the fun stuff, stretching the dough. I love the throwing, spinning and stretching part of making pizza. My mother would argue this is because I LOVE to make a mess in the kitchen. Secretly she is right. It shows accomplishment and good work ethic.
On went the toppings that I prepped before stretching the dough and into the pre-heated 400 degree oven slide my pies. In the 20 minutes it took for these bad boys to bake I chose a delicious meritage from my wine storage and cracked it open to breath. The alarm on my kitchen timer rang and I pulled the fragrant and crispy pies from the oven. The pizza cutter sliced through the pies releasing echos of breaking crust and smells of Italian sausage and greens through my apartment. A quick drizzle of extremely good olive oil was my final touch. With my pizza hot and wine opened up, I sat down at the table and started into chapter 8. Both the pizza and the book were outstanding. Thanks Cathy.
For the full recipe and the rest of Cathy’s story of not eating out in New York pick up her book.






February 22nd, 2010 at 1:16 pm
I just ate, but now I’m hungry again!!!
February 22nd, 2010 at 1:27 pm
Great post, J!
February 22nd, 2010 at 3:20 pm
The book is chock full of stuff that makes you hungry
February 22nd, 2010 at 9:38 pm
Mother knows best!!
February 23rd, 2010 at 7:40 am
I’ve been reading Cathy’s blog for the past few years – I’m amazed that she could go so long in this city without eating out. I will definitely pick her book up. If you’re looking at other cookbooks – you should check out the Sullivan St. Bakery cookbook – of the no-knead bread method – I’ve been obsessed with their pizza bianco and pecorino for the past five years…and now I make it almost every weekend.
February 23rd, 2010 at 5:20 pm
might have to get this book – looks/sounds great.
March 8th, 2010 at 3:08 pm
The dump on Staten Island is closed :) but that pizza looks mighty tasty! Thanks for keeping the pizza box off a dump some where :)
March 10th, 2010 at 11:44 pm
Yeah, I know. But after all the Jersey shore “situation” I figured I would lay of the NJ.
June 17th, 2010 at 12:44 am
This internet site just made my week! I have been seeking around for information on this. I’m glad now that I ran across this webpage. Woohoo!
July 1st, 2010 at 11:46 am
The book is chock full of stuff that makes you hungry
July 1st, 2010 at 7:28 pm
We, of course, totally agree.
July 2nd, 2010 at 4:17 pm
Fantastic resource thanks a bunch! Check out Tony Sacco’s. I look forward to reading more from your blog. fort myers pizza is the best.