HBO is beginning to hype up fans for the upcoming House Of The Dragon series, and their first stop is an immersive fan experience at this year’s Comic Con in San Diego.
Fans lucky enough to brave the overbearing crowds at this year’s con will get early access to the immersive app, House Of Dragons: DracARys, emphasis on the “AR” because it’s an AR game. Makes sense, yes? There, they will step into the world of dragons and even get to raise their own that they virtually can keep in their pocket, similar to every child carrying around a Tamagotchi in 1999, which is now likely gathering dust under your childhood bed. Please feed them.
Fans will be able to attend an egg-hatching ceremony, then become their own mother of dragons while caring for their little scaley guys so they can grow up and breathe fire, presumably. In case you were wondering, the app is developed by Niantic Inc., which famously changed the world in 2016 with the introduction of Pokemon Go, the last thing that the people of the world seemingly agreed on.
Mazis! Raise your own virtual dragon and gain early access to the House of the Dragon: #DracARys app at #HOTDSDCC.
— House of the Dragon (@HouseofDragon) June 28, 2022
Pia Barlow, EVP of originals marketing at HBO Max, said in a statement: “We’re creating an immersive experience that will allow old and new fans alike to engage in a unique journey, bringing them closer to the Westeros featured in the new series House of the Dragon.” The app will have a global rollout on July 25th.
Chris Pratt is finally opening up about his controversial faith, which has been part and parcel of his internet status as the “Worst Chris.” After Elliot Page called out Pratt in 2019 for belonging to Hillsong an “infamously anti-LGBTQ” church, the Guardians of the Galaxy star hasn’t said much about the topic except for a statement in response to Page where Pratt denounced “hate” but notably did not deny attending Hillsong.
“I go to a church that opens their doors to absolutely everyone,” Pratt said in a Instagram video. “My church is important to me but no church defines me or my life. I am not a spokesperson for any group of people. My values define who I am. We need less hate in this world, not more. I am a man who believes that everyone is entitled to love who they want free from the judgment of fellow man.”
However, Pratt has finally addressed the controversy by revealing to Men’s Health that he’s never actually been to Hillsong or even knows anyone that goes there. (He attends Zoe Church, but not regularly.) When asked why he didn’t just say that at the time, Pratt didn’t want to “throw a church under the bus.” As for his beliefs, Pratt says he isn’t religious despite proclaiming that “God is real” during an acceptance speech at the MTV Movie Awards.
“Religion has been oppressive as f*ck for a long time,” he says as we walk over a tiny footbridge, the words spilling out in an emotional tidal wave. “I didn’t know that I would kind of become the face of religion when really I’m not a religious person. I think there’s a distinction between being religious — adhering to the customs created by man, oftentimes appropriating the awe reserved for who I believe is a very real God—and using it to control people, to take money from people, to abuse children, to steal land, to justify hatred. Whatever it is. The evil that’s in the heart of every single man has glommed on to the back of religion and come along for the ride.”
In an even further introspective moment, Pratt admits it was “hubris” for him to proselytize at the MTV event. “For me to stand up on the stage and say the things that I said, I’m not sure I touched anybody,” he said
Lauv is set to return with his sophomore album, All 4 Nothing, this summer. On his second effort, Lauv plans to dive into deeper elements of storytelling, consisting of themes of nostalgia, conflict, and self-empowerment.
“My album All 4 Nothing curates an energy of openness, wonder, and excitement, but also vulnerability and realness,” Lauv said in a statement. “I hope it opens up a vortex to something you haven’t felt in a while — a place where you can build yourself up from.”
Ahead of the album, Lauv has premiered a new single called “Kids Are Born Stars.” In the song’s accompanying music video, directed by Hannah Lux Davis, Lauv is seen spending time with a younger version of himself. Before filming the video, Lauv said he spent a lot of time trying to channel his inner child.
“When I started making this album, I was doing a lot of inner child meditation work and this song was me getting back in touch with my 8th grade self and giving him a little dose of confidence because Lord knows he would’ve needed it back then,” Lauv said. “As an adult, I had lost touch with my sense of confidence too and making this song and the whole album helped me get back in touch with the person I really am.”
Beginning in August, Lauv will embark on a North American headlining tour with Hayley Kiyoko opening on all dates.
Check out “Kids Are Born Stars” above and the All 4 Nothing album artwork below, as well as Lauv’s tour dates.
Hannah Lux Davis
08/12 — Minneapolis, MN @ The Amory
08/12 — Chicago, IL @ Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom
08/13 — Detroit, MI @ Meadow Brook Amphitheater
08/15 — Toronto, ON @ RBC Echo Beach
08/16 — Montreal, QC @ Place Bell
08/17 — Boston, MA @ Leader Bank Pavilion
08/19 — Philadelphia, PA @ The Met
08/20 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Stage AE
08/21 — Cincinnati, OH @ Icon Festival Stage at Smale Park
08/23 — Columbus, OH @ KEMBA Live!
08/25 — Washington, DC @ The Anthem
08/26 — New York, NY @ Hammerstein Ballroom at Manhattan Center
08/28 — Ashbury Park, NJ @ Stone Pony Summer Stage
08/30 — Charlotte, NC @ Charlotte Metro Credit Union Amphitheatre
08/31 — Atlanta, GA @ Coca-Cola Roxy
09/01 — Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
09/03 — Houston, TX @ 713 Music Hall
09/04 — Dallas, TX @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory
09/06 — Denver, CO @ The Mission Ballroom
09/07 — Ogden, UT @ Ogden Amphitheater
09/09 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
09/11 — San Diego, CA @ Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre
09/12 — Phoenix, AZ @ Arizona Federal Theatre
09/15 — Berkeley, CA @ Greek Theatre – UC Berkeley
09/17 — Vancouver, BC @ Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre
09/20 — Seattle, WA @ WAMU Theater
All 4 Nothing is out 8/5 via Lauv. Pre-save it here.
Hayley Kiyoko is a Warner Music Artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
It looks like Eminem is the latest rapper to join the Metaverse. In a video shared by Snoop Dogg’s son, Cordell Broadus, Snoop is seen talking to Eminem on the phone, trying to persuade him to join the NFT space.
Cordell shared a video on his NFT-centered Twitter page, breaking down in a thread how Snoop convinced Eminem to enter the Metaverse.
“Story time with #ChampMedici,” Said Cordell in a tweet. “I saw Paul Rosenberg eating dinner at Barclays November 3rd 2021 and I didn’t hesitate to tell him to bring Em 2 this space, he wasn’t convinced / so I had my client @SnoopDogg call Em November 21st to convince him (here’s the phone call).”
During the call, Eminem can be heard saying, “That’s a crazy-ass idea.”
Story time with #ChampMedici I saw Paul Rosenberg eating dinner at the Barclays November 3rd 2021 and I didn’t hesitate to tell him to bring Em 2 this space, he wasn’t convinced / so I had my client @SnoopDogg call Em November 21st to convince him (here’s the phone call ) pic.twitter.com/dsczQaHas5
Deeper into the thread, Cordell revealed how Eminem and Snoop linked to collaborate on the song “From The D 2 The LBC,” and how they worked with Gary Vaynerchuck to produce the song’s NFT music video.
“Im not bragging or making this about me it’s just a beautiful thing to see how time works and ideas are always on our side,” he wrote on Twitter. “Any go getters out there that may have to go through a journey of people fully not understanding ur vision…have faith & be patient.”
Im not bragging or making this about me it’s just a beautiful thing to see how time works and ideas are always on our sideto any go getters out there that may have to go through a journey of people fully not understanding ur vision stay down for the come have faith & be patient pic.twitter.com/I63xux7oKL
After a lengthy, some might say girthy absence, our famous food face-offs are back, baby! And this theme is perhaps our easiest ever. The kind that’s so self-explanatory that it doesn’t need a big preamble by me. I texted “sexy pasta” to the group chat, everyone gave it a thumbs up, and we were off to the races!
Ready to dive into some of the most sumptuous, sultry, silky pasta on the planet? Let’s go! (And, as always, we’re eager to see your votes and roasts in the comments!)
We’re giving three points to the winner and one to second place for each round. All votes are counted equally. As it stands, the score is:
ZACH: 53 VINCE: 49 STEVE: 39
Steve’s Deconstructed Carbonara With King Crab Claw “Scarpetta”
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
When I think “sexy pasta” which — to be transparent — was my idea for a contest theme, I think the following: silky, sensual, slurpy, and rich without being a gut bomb. I don’t want garlic or onions or other random aromatics near my dish. It’s got to be simple. I was raised on sitcoms and movies that made it seem like a man knowing how to scramble eggs was the most amazing foreplay on earth. So spending eight hours on a dish is not the vibe. In fact, it’s why I stayed away from stuffed pasta.
Sounds like the exact opposite of the cooking philosophy that has pushed me to a deeeeeep third place in this contest, right? Maybe I have a chance!
To help me out, I asked the mega-talented Ashley Wilhardt, founder of Cayenne Agency, to bring together some friends for an impromptu dinner party. In exchange for cooking, she agreed to photograph it all and let me use the photos.
Does having good photos help my chances? Probably. But I think this dish is able to speak for itself.
Ashley Wilhardt
This starts with a pasta called strapponi (if you can’t pull innuendo from that, you’re repressed) which Vince learned via me (though there’s not anything to it) and then immortalized here. Since silkiness was the order of the day, I used double yolks and 00 flour.
2 cups Tipo 00 flour.
3 eggs.
3 yolks.
Two glugs of EVOO
Since I wasn’t making a stuffed pasta and wasn’t particularly worried about the pasta tearing, I was able to add a tad more olive oil. Knead that until a thumb pressed into the doughball retains its shape and the dough pulls apart rather than snapping. Then let it set in a cool place in a covered bowl for at least 30 minutes to let the gluten bonds form.
I rolled that out to the thinnest setting on the pasta machine. Doing this with your date is a nice bit of foreplay for anyone taking the “sexy” assignment super literally. Food, like sex, is 80% about anticipation.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
From there, this is a single pan sauce (technically I used two because I browned butter). Once again, this went against precedent. Typically I use 17 pots per dish. Once I had the strapponi, I boiled up some water in on pot and began toasting some pancetta in another.
Pork fat is luscious and musky and animalistic, so I was glad to have it. That said, I used about 1/3 of what I’d use in a more traditional carbonara.
Ashley Wilhardt
Once the fat was rendered and the Maillard reaction started to be visible on the pancetta, I added crushed walnuts to the pan. Walnuts start acrid and get sweet as they toast before going back to being acrid when they’re overcooked. If this all stresses you out, just remove them from the pan with a slotted spoon and put them back later — that way you don’t need to have it all quite so timed out.
Ashley Wilhardt
Next, I dabbed up a bit of the pork fat and replaced it with browned butter to enhance the nutty notes of the dish. I cracked black pepper into the pan and let it open up, turning the burner to low.
Next, I wrapped the long pasta sheets onto a wine bottle and let my guests tear them into the pot. The pasta is thin and cooks to the al dente level incredibly quickly, so this next bit you have to move quickly for:
Draw noodles out of the pot and straight into the pan. They’ll carry a bit of water along with them. Do not strain the noodles in the traditional sense. Toss the noodles as you finely shred 24-month parmesan over the top. A younger parmesan will be a tad more “milky” — which I like.
Toss but don’t overwork your noodles. The pasta water will make your sauce silky and you’ll find — another absolute rarity for me — that you don’t need a ton of cheese.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
Finally, I added oregano to the pan and tossed one more time. Then I plated. The pasta was piping hot, so rather than doing the traditional carbonara egg yolk in the pan, I drizzled the yolk over the plate and let it thicken thanks to the heat of the noodles. For people who don’t live and breathe food the way Vince, Zach, and I do (e.g. my guests), that drizzling of the yolk seemed very inventive and impressive.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
A different plate.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
The crab leg scarpetta idea came to me when composing the dish. Scott Conant famously calls his flagship restaurant “Scarpetta” after the crust of bread you dredge across your plate at the end of eating pasta. But since the goal here was to leave people feeling light and sexy, I didn’t want carbs on carbs. So I boiled a king crab claw and refrigerated it, leaving it light and springy, cracked the claw, peeled back the shell, and voilá —
Ashley Wilhardt
You slurp out the crab easily and get crab plus sauce. Simple.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
Light and easy and silky AF and it feels effortless.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
Clearly, I didn’t play so far against type that I cleaned my workstation while cooking. That’s still beyond me. But still… the result delivered.
Ashley Wilhardt / Cayenne Agency
How can you tell that I killed it? I don’t have to belabor the point and I’m not afraid of a closeup!
Vince on Steve’s Dish:
You’ve clearly taken to heart getting constantly dinged for unnecessarily complex food. AND YET, your conception of “simple” still includes two herb garnishes, three different types of fat (egg yolk, brown butter, pancetta), and a chilled crab claw to finish (“Oh, this old thing?”). Honestly, the crab claw was very Steve and kind of fun, and I think you would’ve had me if you’d left out the oregano and walnuts. But you can’t, not with that very special brain of yours. I feel like you worried that in replacing crunchy bread with a soft crab claw you’d lose some texture. But if that’s the case — why not some bread crumbs over the top at the end? That seems less “forced” than walnuts. And oregano just doesn’t seem like it goes with anything here. Why not parsley? Or even tarragon to go with the crab? Your herb use always feels a little… frantic.
Lastly, how are you going to make strapponi but still use a pasta machine for it?? To me, half the whole point of strapponi is that all you need is a rolling pin, a table, and some elbow grease. Putting the dough through a machine and then wrapping it around a wine bottle (rather than just rolling it out on the wine bottle) seems fussy and fey. Like eating a Snickers with a knife and fork. Sort of the opposite of things I associate with sexiness — earthy, capable, willing to get your hands dirty. Makes me think that you’re going to keep your clothes on during sex and just put your pee-pee through the little hole in the front of your underpants.
Zach on Steve’s Dish:
I’ve been saying this for years, Steve has to go more simple in his recipes and he’ll start winning. And here we are, years later, and it’s happened! Besides the fact that this isn’t really a carbonara in the classic, Italian sense, it’s still a good dish. I would eat. I would be happy.
I do think you used the wrong pasta shape though. I know you and Vince like strapponi but there are other pasta shapes that are better for this recipe. Carbonara specifically needs a thinner pasta so that the fat from the pork and cheese doesn’t overwhelm and weigh down the pasta. Having these massive sheets slathered in dairy and porcine fat cannot have been light. Just looking at the plates and I already need a nap.
Yes, yes, you have the requisite photos of magazine hot people pretending to eat food they cannot have more than one bite of to keep their jobs. But that’s just it, one bite of this sounds about right. No one wants one one bite when it comes to sex, dude. I feel like I’d tap out after two or three mouthfuls and need some Tums to get through the night.
Vince’s Sweet Corn Agnolotti
I was a little hesitant about a “sexy pasta” battle, if only because I have mixed feelings about people calling food “sexy” in general. I’m trying to eat it, not fuck it. I like both sex and eating but with all due respect to Marlon Brando, I’m not sure we need to combine the two. “Sexy” means lots of different things to lots of different people. Some people like ball gags, other people want to watch hot people drown in quicksand. Whatever floats your boat, man.
I guess if I squint, food can be “sexy” in the sense that eating and screwing are both the most natural, sensual, animalistic things you can do. So when I think of “sexy food,” I guess I think of things that are earthy, fresh, vibrant. Things that taste like what they are and where they came from (heh-heh, “came”). Foods where you can smell the rain and feel the dirt between your fingers when you take a bite and all of that. (Debatable whether that describes “sexy” food or just good food, but we can table that for another time).
For whatever reason, people seem to associate seafood with sex. I think it’s a combination of seafood being traditionally expensive (luxury = treating yourself = sexy) and the whole oysters-are-an-aphrodisiac legend. I love shellfish, and shellfish pasta especially (clam fideos and squid ink fettuccine being just two examples of shellfish pastas I’ve cooked for this very series), but for one thing I knew both Steve and Zach would be making seafood pastas for this challenge, and for another I didn’t think seafood would be the sexiest thing to cook where I live.
Sexy food to me is fresh. Temporary, ephemeral — like life, in the grand scheme of things. Sorta the whole point of sex is that it’s the most visceral reminder of being alive and present in the moment. I live in Fresno. While it’s not a long journey to the coast (closer than most places in the country), and it’s not hard to find great seafood here, seafood doesn’t conjure quite the image of fresh, natural ingredients I associate with sexiness. Sexy ingredients are not things that are available all the time everywhere. For Steve or Zach, who grew up in the Pacific Northwest where the sea air is inescapable, I understand the seafood-as-sexy thing.
One thing we have here is tons of agriculture and some of the best, freshest produce anywhere on Earth. We’re surrounded basically on all sides by farms and dairies. One of the greatest local products is the “Fresno State Corn.” Fresno State’s ag department grows corn and sells it every year, incredibly sweet and delicious and it’s always sort of a big deal when it comes in — articles in the paper, all that shit. I ride my bike past the fields every day. My favorite local restaurant The Annex does Sweet Corn Agnolotti when it’s available and my wife (*Borat voice*) and I always do a date night there just to eat it. In my mind, it’s synonymous with seasonal, ephemeral perfection. And it tastes decadent and luxurious despite being vegetarian (though I should note that it is extremely not vegan).
So, I decided to recreate it for this challenge (which is to say, rip it off wholesale). I’ve never seen The Annex’s recipe for it, but I’ve eaten it a few times, and Wolfgang Puck had a recipe for sweet corn agnolotti online, and since he and I are basically best friends now I figured his was a good place to start.
For The Filling
Vince Mancini
1 cup heavy cream
4 ears white corn
1 teaspoon Diamond crystal kosher salt
1/4-teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
1 teaspoon sugar
3 ounces mascarpone
1/8 cup grated Parmesano-Reggiano
Tablespoon lemon juice and lemon zest
Puck’s recipe also called for goat cheese and thyme, which I omitted because they seemed unnecessary (I feel like people put goat cheese on everything in the late 80s and 90s just to be trendy). I added some lemon instead, which I grow in my yard. It also called for grating the corn in a box grater, a simple innovation I’d never tried before, but worked great. Then I just followed the recipe — reduce the heavy cream by two-thirds in a sauce pan, then add the grated corn and bring to a low simmer. Cook until “the mixture reduces and thickly coats the back of a spoon,” according to the recipe.
Vince Mancini
I transferred that to a bowl and added in the three ounces mascarpone, eighth cup parmesan, salt, sugar, pepper, and lemon (I assume Puck’s goat cheese added a similar acidic note as my lemon).
Vince Mancini
I mixed that up real nice until the cheese and mascarpone were melted and it was all uniform. It doesn’t taste exactly like The Annex does it, but it is delicious — sweet and creamy and just a little funky from the mascarpone. I put that bowl over an ice bath to chill it down and then covered it and stuck it in the fridge.
Meanwhile, I reserved the corn cobs and added them to a pot of hot salty water to make a sort of corn stock to boil my pasta in.
Vince Mancini
For The Dough
Vince Mancini
When people ask me how I got into cooking, I usually say “making ravioli for Thanksgiving.” I graduated from cheese grating to filling scooping to pasta rolling to ravioli construction until I eventually moved away and learned to do the process by myself to bring a little taste of home to my grad school Friendsgivings (not all that successfully at first). Basically, I know my way around some ravioli dough. And yet, when I looked at Wolfgang Puck’s recipe, calling for 3 cups flour, 8 egg yolks, 1 teaspoon kosher salt, 1 teaspoon extra-virgin olive oil, and 2 to 3 tablespoons water, I thought, in the spirit of experimentation, fuck it, I’ll try it that way.
Just as I suspected, three cups flour is way too much flour for eight yolks. I added 10 yolks and still ended up adding probably double Wolfgang’s listed amount of water (which sort of defeats the purpose of an all-yolk dough, doesn’t it?). If I had it to do over again, and if I’m recommending how to do this to you, the reader, I’d go with my standard pasta dough recipe, which is:
2 cups flour (I use all 00 flour for filled pastas, for noodles I’d sub in 1/4th or 1/2 cup semolina)
3 whole eggs
3 egg yolks
Drizzle of extra virgin olive oil (call it a teaspoon)
Mix all that together until it’s mostly uniform and probably seems a smidge dry (it shouldn’t be sticky). Then cover and let rest for at least 20 minutes or so. Then roll out your pasta into sheets. I tried to freestyle it at first and I did my first batch that way, but I was getting real sweaty to the point that it probably wasn’t that sexy. So I just busted out the machine instead, which is actually kind of perfect for making the long rectangles you need for this kind of pasta anyway.
Vince Mancini
Before you ask, those spots are condensation drops from the filling bag, not sweat from my forehead. I kept my pastry bag full of filling in a bowl of ice to keep it cold in between batches.
If you want to know how to make agnolotti perfectly, watch these ladies:
My technique — well… it ain’t perfect. I don’t have those small arthritic fingers that the best pasta makers seem to have. I have big clumsy walnut crushers. Probably that’s an excuse, but anyway, my agnolotti are more like three-sided ravioli.
Vince Mancini
Still cute, imo.
The Sauce
Vince Mancini
Wolfgang’s recipe calls for sage, but I know The Annexe uses chives, and I have chives in my garden so I used chives (I also love chives, I could eat them on almost anything, and they go especially well with corn). Chives say “summer” more than sage, if you ask me.
1.5 sticks of butter (about 6 ounces)
1/2 cup chicken stock
1 bunch of chives
As per Wolfgang’s instructions, I melted the butter over medium heat, then poured in the chicken stock and boiled it until the mixture emulsified. Then I added the chives.
Vince Mancini
FINISH THEM
The agnolotti go in the salty corn water until they start to float. Then I remove them with a slotted spoon directly into my butter reduction pan. A few spoonfuls of the starchy water go in there as well to get it nice and velvety/gooey.
Vince Mancini
There’s a beautiful alchemy that happens when you boil the agnolotti with the chilled filling. The mascarpone and cream and cheese mixture melt into a liquid in there and kind of burst in your mouth when you eat them.
Vince Mancini
Admittedly, not quite as cute as The Annex’s version, but they’re still so amazing. They’re decadent and rich, but fresh and super simple. Just sweet corn, creamy, slightly funky cheese, a hint of acid from the lemon, and the fresh crunch of chives. To me, the simplest pasta is most true to the spirit of pasta (and to Italian cooking in general, which basically invented modern European cuisine during the Renaissance). “Sexy pasta” to me is this creamy concoction of simple ingredients fresh out of the ground, elegantly combined, and bursting with sun-kissed flavor that melts in your mouth.
You feel sated but not heavy afterward, and as the cherry on top, it doesn’t leave your kitchen smelling like rotting fish carcass.
Steve on Vince’s Pasta:
I love this dish and have had it other ways at other restaurants. The corn broth is inspired — nice one. But sage was the right call here. I love a chive but you needed to highlight the earthiness and instead, you veered bright. For a dish that is absolutely laden with dairy, that plays more like you got insecure and tried to brighten the dish than went an arbitrary direction at a fork in the road.
Also, and I cannot believe I’m writing this but… mascarpone and parm? And then a butter and cream sauce? The dairy-based filling clearly ratioed the corn to the degree that the filling looks pure white. The sauce looks more like melted butter than anything else. I think that’s overkill. As the great New Girl quote goes, “Is there a hot way of saying I don’t feel sexy after I’ve had a lot of cheese?”
For a guy who spent a cool 500 words programming us all to feel like fresh produce was ephemeral, this is really more of a cheese on cheese on butter dish than a corn one. Four cobs for a whole pan of agnolotti? I don’t think you create the ode to seasonal produce you thought you did. Instead, you made vanilla sex in pasta form.
Zach on Vince’s Pasta:
Man, that intro makes it really hard to burn Vince’s dish. Then the dish makes it even harder. I guess I really only can fault the simplicity of this. It seems kind of phoned in, which is weird given that you made pasta from scratch. This might be the most Bramucci thing I’ll ever say, but I need a little something more. Crumbled fried pancetta? Deep-fried lardons? A clam (something, something, Steve’s mom)? Hell, dried fried onion bits? Something…
I feel like this is what you’d serve me and then we’d watch NFL in silence while sipping our Negronis. I just don’t think anyone’s having sex after this dish is served.
Zach’s Lobster Confit Ravioli with Bouillabaisse sauce and Beluga Caviar
Zach Johnston
When I think of “sexy” pasta, my mind goes to seafood and caviar. The last thing I want is fatty meats and tons of cheese. The fat has to be layered and take second place to the light seafood and pasta in my book. That’s not to say it shouldn’t be rich. In fact, it should be rich as f*ck. You want decadence. But when you build that rich decadence into the dish, you don’t need a lot to feel that satisfaction.
So, I’m making a lobster confit rav cooked in a bouillabaisse sauce and topped with Beluga caviar. It’s a great combo of rich, decadent, light, and bright while adding some serious sexiness. If you don’t think caviar is sexy, then we probably can’t be friends (or you need to get a new caviar crew).
Ingredients:
Zach Johnston
For the pasta
2 1/2 cups 00 flour
3 eggs plus 3 egg yolks
Pinch of salt
Zach Johnston
For the filling
One lobster, deshelled
250 grams of smoked butter
Zach Johnston
For the seafood broth
1 lobster shell
Prawn shells from 1 lb. of prawns
1 celery stalks
1 yellow onion
1 carrot
1 head of garlic
1 cinnamon stick
2-star anise
10 black peppercorns
4 allspice berries
1/2 gallon water
1/2 cup sea salt
Zach Johnston
For the sauce
4 cups seafood broth
1 tube concentrated tomato paste
1 carrot
1 celery stick
1 yellow onion
1 yellow bell pepper
1 bouquet garni (fresh bay, oregano, thyme, sage, parsley, tarragon)
1 cup heavy cream
1 cup brandy
Salt, Cayenne, and Pepper to taste
Zach Johnston
Extras
10 grams Beluga Caviar
Chives
Zach Johnston
What You’ll Need:
Large pots
Small pot
Medium pan
Cutting Board
Kitchen knife
Spoons
Bowls
Pasta machine
Ravioli cutter
Tongs
Strainer
Zach Johnston
Method:
Bring a large stock pot full of water up to a brisk boil. Use the tip of a kitchen knife to kill the lobster by piercing the head right in the middle. Drop the lobster into the boiling water for one full minute and remove to an ice bath to stop the cooking. Use the end of a wooden spoon or ladle to crack all the shells and pull out all of the meat. Set aside.
Leave about 1/2 gallon of water in the large stockpot. Add the lobster shells back in along with prawn shells and roughly chopped celery, yellow onion, carrot, and a head of garlic. Add in the cinnamon stick, star anise, black peppercorns, allspice berries, and salt. Bring to a boil and reduce by half. Once reduced, strain the contents with a colander and save the seafood broth in a smaller stock pot.
Add the tomato paste and diced carrot, celery stick, yellow onion, and yellow bell pepper with a bouquet garni to the seafood stock and simmer for about 15 minutes, or until all the veg is soft and falling apart. Remove the bouquet garni and use a hand blender to blend the contents of the sauce until completely integrated. Use a strainer to strain the sauce into a smaller sauce pot and discard all the bits that didn’t make it through. Return to a simmer and add the brandy to the sauce and light on fire to let the alcohol burn off. Finally, add the cream and stir until fully emulsified. Turn off the heat, put on a lid, and save until the rest is ready.
Make the pasta by combining the dry and wet ingredients on a work surface or in a small bowl. Knead until a smooth ball forms. Cover in plastic wrap and place in the fridge for at least an hour to allow the gluten to form.
In the meantime, melt the smoked butter in a small saucepan. Add the chopped-up lobster to the butter and let simmer on the lowest temp for about an hour. The lobster will turn chewy but then it’ll start to break up and get soft again. Once it’s soft and falling apart, it’s ready.
Remove the pasta from the fridge and work the dough on a floured surface through the pasta machine until you reach the thinnest setting with each sheet.
Lay the pasta sheets out on kitchen towels and spoon large bites of the butter-poached lobster onto half of the pasta sheet (save the butter). Once you have three or four morsels of lobster spooned onto the pasta sheet, fold it over to cover the lobster. Use a ravioli cutter or press to cut the ravs. Set aside as you repeat the process. You should get about ten ravs from one lobster.
Bring the bouillabaisse sauce to a very low simmer. Warm a small frying pan on medium-high heat. Add the butter from the lobster confit to the pan and add half of the ravs. Add about 1/8 cup of boiling water and let it completely simmer off, cooking the ravioli. Finally, ladle about a half-cup of the bouillabaisse and bring to a brisk simmer to finish cooking the ravs (this should take no more than two minutes).
Plate two ravs on an oven-warm plate with a bit of sauce underneath. Use a small pearl spoon to place about two grams of Beluga caviar on each rav and then cross two chives spears, creating an “X” or “kiss” in the middle. Serve.
This was pure decadence on a plate. I mean, come on! It’s f*cking lobster confit in a creamy bouillabaisse with mother-f*cking Beluga on top. If that’s not sex on a plate, I don’t know what is. And yes, I served this with a nicely chilled Bollinger Rose.
Okay beyond the boasting, this was within the top three portions of ravioli of my life — and, please note, I spend a lot of time in Bologna. The confit lobster was smoky, buttery, and had become this distillation of the sea with a soft meatiness. The sauce was lush and yet somehow bright and playful. The last-minute dash of cayenne really brightened things up. And the caviar was the perfect accent to everything. It lightened the mood while adding a lusty kiss from a mermaid to every bite.
Lastly, this is labor-intensive. But you can literally make everything but the pasta the day before and let it set overnight (which will help deepen the flavors). Then you can get dusty making some pasta with your loved one and press out those ravs together before cooking them off in butter and sauce and digging in.
Steve on Zach’s Dish:
Vince and Zach have made this all into a compliment section rather than roasting so, Zach, please assume all the natural Zach compliments: technically proficient, layered, etc. I would — and I mean this sincerely — love to eat it.
But honestly, this dish inspires very little excitement in me. I know this is going to enrage you and I know this is more the thing you do to me than vice-versa but… I don’t think that’s a bouillabaisse. I think you made bisque. I’m searching the internet rabidly and cross-referencing my own memory and bouillabaisse virtually always has multiple fish (beyond shellfish), saffron threads, fennel, and orange peel. You have none of those.
Very few recipes seem to have brandy. You know what always has brandy? Lobster bisque. I wouldn’t be a stickler about this, except that being unbelievably pedantic with me has been your #brand in this series, so fuck it.
Beyond that, this dish just feels exhausting. Lobster “poached in butter” and then boiled inside a noodle? Could anyone identify it as lobster when tasted blind? Caviar on top? That seems like a flex more than a complimentary flavor. Caviar is briny and your sauce is silky with acid from the tomatoes.
A broth that turns to a sauce and looks pungent and powerful enough to obliterate the thrice-cooked (I forgot one, it’s tossed in the sauce ’til boiling again!) ravioli?
Maybe we approach sex differently, but this feels far more like the guy who had sex with robots than a real-live pasta to serve to a breathing human. Still, you gave me a chance to post this:
Vince on Zach’s Dish:
Lobster ravioli with caviar… does it sound like “sexy pasta?” Yes. Does it present well? Absolutely. Is it something I’d eat? Most definitely. It looks beautiful and tasty and I think you’d win the “super husband” prize for the night. But god damn, man, you basically made an entire seafood bisque and then turned it into a pasta sauce. Something about that feels… not just labor-intensive but labored, which feels not only anti-sexy but contrary to the spirit of pasta. Pasta should feel kind of simple, shouldn’t it? I don’t think that beautiful lobster confit inside a ravioli with caviar really needed a whole reduced soup to go with it. Plus, however sexy this dish is, it feels like it’s going to be undercut by the fact that you stunk up the entire house to make it. Taking a restaurant dish into your home doesn’t always make it better, sometimes there’s a reason people prepare things off-site.
I mean, if I wanted my house to smell like an open-air fish market I’d call Steve’s mom.
The House select committee investigating the January 6th attack on the Capitol was expected to take a hiatus until the week of July 11. But yesterday, the committee announced a surprise Tuesday hearing “to present recently obtained evidence and receive witness testimony.” If you were expecting a bombshell today, you got one.
Cassidy Hutchinson, a former-top aide for White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, testified that then-president Donald Trump wasn’t worried about weapons in the crowd on January 6 because “they’re not here to hurt me.”
In a pre-recorded video, Hutchinson said, “I was in the vicinity of a conversation where I overheard the president say something to the effect of, ‘I don’t f*cking care that they have weapons. They’re not here to hurt me. Take the f*cking mags away. Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in. Take the f*cking mags away.’” Magnetometers, or “mags,” are used by the Secret Service to detect weapons.
You can watch Hutchinson’s testimony below.
Trump was furious the Secret Service was screening people at his rally for weapons.
“They’re not here to hurt me. Take the F’ing mags away. Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol from here.” pic.twitter.com/YEQGkbjuiM
— January 6th Committee (@January6thCmte) June 28, 2022
Trump was also overly (and consistently) concerned about the size of the crowd.
Hutchinson told the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 riots that Trump was “furious” that the Ellipse near the White House had not filled up to capacity for a rally on the morning of the Electoral College certification.
“Trump Knew” started trending after Hutchinson’s testimony was made public.
Donald Trump knew that the people in the J6 crowd were armed, but ordered the Secret Service to “take the fucking mags away” and let them in.
Trump KNEW he lost in November 2020. Trump KNEW there was no election fraud. Trump KNEW there would be violence on 1/6. Trump KNEW the rioters were armed & dangerous. Trump KNEW these armed rioters would march on the Capitol.#TrumpKNEW
So Trump knew the crowd was armed, used language in his speech his attorneys thought would result in criminal charges, and attacked a Secret Service agent when he couldn’t personally lead the attack on the Capitol. That is pretty damning.
Donald Trump knew that his mob was armed and dangerous, but he didn’t care because – as he said – “they’re not here to hurt me.”
He knowingly incited a mob of extremists armed with AR-15s to storm the Capitol. This is the biggest scandal in American history. https://t.co/jU3s0Ds5Ny
It’s never too early to get into the Halloween spirit, and Disney knows this, which is why they have decided to bless the world with the first teaser trailer for the highly-anticipated Sarah Jessica Parker revival (NOT that one) of Hocus Pocus 2. Who cares that it’s been summer for just a week?! It’s time for spooky black cats and dark magic.
The Sanderson sisters, played by Parker, Bette Middler, and Kathy Najimy, are back to potentially suck the youth out of a group of teens living in Salem, Massachusetts. But this time, it seems like the teens have powers of their own. And yes! Their creepy, one-eyed spell book is back.
The film also stars Gossip Girl’s Whitney Peak, Lilia Buckingham, Belissa Escobedo, Ted Lasso’s Hannah Waddingham, Tony Hale, and Sam Richardson. Here is the official description:
It’s been 29 years since someone lit the Black Flame Candle and resurrected the 17th-century sisters, and they are looking for revenge. Now it is up to three high-school students to stop the ravenous witches from wreaking a new kind of havoc on Salem before dawn on All Hallow’s Eve.
Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker and Kathy Najimy reunite for the highly anticipated Disney+ Original Movie Hocus Pocus 2. The live-action, long awaited sequel to the perennial Halloween classic, which brings back the delightfully wicked Sanderson sisters for more comedic mayhem, will debut on Disney+ on September 30.
The spooky candle will be lit once again on Disney+ this September. Check out the trailer above.
Tuesday brought an official trailer for Season 3 of Harley Quinn, which looks to be picking up right where the show left off when it comes to humor and absurdity. Unshackled with the seriousness modern Batman movies are forced to carry, Quinn is one of the funniest and best comic adaptations ever made. It’s the only show where Robin will refuse a custom grilled cheese with all the crusts cut off, just like he prefers.
Season 2 of Harley Quinn ended with (spoilers incoming!) the start of Quinn’s relationship with Poison Ivy. And the Season 3 trailer shows them squarely in the happy times of young love.
“What is it with you and, like, bags of people?” Ivy asks as Harley delivered a two-week anniversary gift to her girlfriend: Suicide Squad leader Emilia Hardcourt. That’s just one bit of the “Eat. Bang! Kill. Tour” Harley and Ivy are on as a new power couple in Gotham. But they’re not the only familiar faces seen in the trailer. Clayface and King Shark appear to be broken out of prison, and there’s plenty of talk about what Ivy and Harley are doing when no other heroes are around.
“It’s so fun, and raunchy. And then a little scary,” Lake Bell’s Ivy says during the trailer, which is actually a pretty great logline for the show through its two seasons and counting.
Season 3 promises to be, in no particular order: wetter, freakier, squishier, filthier, and creepier. Also, an animated James Gunn obliges when a man demands to be sat on. If you’re just catching up on all of this, well, you have a bit of time to find yourself ready for Season 3. It hits HBO Max on July 28.
Indie music has grown to include so much. It’s not just music that is released on independent labels, but speaks to an aesthetic that deviates from the norm and follows its own weirdo heart. It can come in the form of rock music, pop, or folk. In a sense, it says as much about the people that are drawn to it as it does about the people that make it.
While we’re at it, sign up for our newsletter to get the best new indie music delivered directly to your inbox, every Monday.
Soccer Mommy — Sometimes, Forever
Soccer Mommy’s anticipated third studio album Sometimes, Forever is finally out. Featuring heavily layered production jam-packed with cascading melodies thanks to producer Oneohtrix Point Never, the album digs deeper into her grunge-inspired music with a modern-day spin. Songs like “Darkness Forever” adopt a masochist lens while others like “Feel It All The Time” are a bit more sunny and optimistic.
MUNA — MUNA
Indie pop trio MUNA has been making music since 2017, but officially earned their indie stripes when signed to Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory label. Since then, they’ve been releasing danceable tunes rife with summery synths and confident lyrics. This conviction is on full display on their self-titled third album, which is laced with shimmering chords and veiled lust.
Tim Heidecker — High School
With his new album High School, Tim Heidecker drops his version of an autobiographical project filled with wistful, twangy, and confessional tracks. While funny at times, the project overall distances himself from his brand of weirdo comedy popularized by his breakout show Tim And Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!.
Automatic — Excess
LA trio Automatic bring riot grrrl revival with an ‘80s-inspired twist on their new album Excess. Fans of groups like Kraftwerk and Devo will love this conceptual and hard-rocking project. Armed with a sense of coy sarcasm, the LP critiques the mundanities of corporate culture and modern existence.
Alex G — “Runner”
Prolific indie favorite Alex G looking to expand his reach with the forthcoming God Save The Animals, which was announced this week alongside the anthemic “Runner.” The laid-back song is both playful and charming and arrives just in time for summer.
Stella Donnelly — “Flood”
Aussie singer Stella Donnelly shared the enchanting title track off her upcoming album Flood this week. The song was written during a winter lockdown in Melbourne when it felt like a “flood of trauma” and everyone around her was struggling. Even still, the song has a hopeful air about it as she sings of being kind to strangers and holding onto ambition.
Gorillaz — “Crackerhead Island” Feat. Thundercat
After kicking off their world tour, Gorillaz made a return with new music in the form of the Thundercat-featuring track “Crackerhead Island.” With funky instrumentals and a punchy rhythm, Thundercat’s influence on the track is clear, but it also sounds like a return to Blur’s pop-leaning Parklife era. Band member 2D said of “Cracker Island,” “It’s nice to be back, I’m well into our new tune, it brings back weird and scary memories of stuff that hasn’t happened yet.”
First Aid Kit — “Angel”
Breakout Swedish sister duo First Aid Kit decided to end their hiatus and return with new music in light of the events of the past few years. Their new anthem “Angel” showcases their signature harmonies over comforting chords. “Angel is a hopeful song, about accepting yourself and accepting other people even if you don’t always see eye to eye,” the band said about the song.
The Mars Volta — “Blacklight Shine”
Nearly a decade after breaking up, The Mars Volta is making a triumphant return with the rhythmic number “Blacklight Shine.” Infused with Latin roots, punk, noise, and math rock, the song points to the possibility of a new The Mars Volta project on the horizon.
Tianna Esperanza — “Princess Slit And The Raincoat Prince”
Rising songwriter Tianna Esperanza is just around the corner from releasing a new album, which she previewed with the addictive single “Princess Slit And The Raincoat Prince.” Starting off sweet and slow, the song transforms into a hard-rocking anthem that acts as a tribute to individuality. The grandaughter of legendary UK punk outfit The Slits founder Paloma McLardy, Esperanza said: “I wanted to write a song that was an homage to my punk roots and one that celebrates queerness.”
Djo — “Change”
Joe Keery is primarily known for his acting work and breakout role of Steve Harrington on Netflix’s Stranger Things. But when he’s not battling demons on screen, he’s making groovy psych-rock music. Using the moniker Djo, Keery combines swirling chords and a groovy mindset, exemplified by his new track “Change.
Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
R.E.M. are celebrating the 40th anniversary of their debut EP Chronic Town. For the first time ever, the critically-acclaimed, five-song EP will be released as a CD with extensive liner notes by Mitch Easter, who produced it. It’ll be available also on picture disc and cassette on August 19 via I.R.S./UMe.
Last year, Michael Stipe directly addressed rumors that R.E.M. might be getting back together. An interview brought up a Rolling Stone piece that gave the chance of their reunion a 30% chance, but Stipe said, “That’s wishful thinking,” he began. “We will never reunite. We decided when we split up that that would just be really tacky and probably money-grabbing, which might be the impetus for a lot of bands to get back together.”
They also unveiled the Hib-Tone version of “Sitting Still,” the B-side to the band’s 1983 debut single “Radio Free Europe,” last year. “We were all just kind of finger-painting,” Mitch Easter, who produced “Radio Free Europe,” told Rolling Stone in May. “They weren’t super-deliberate about anything. I loved that about the sessions. Even when we did the LPs, nobody was really taking any orders from anybody. There might have been people advising R.E.M. on the business end of things, to do this, that, or the other. But they pretty much ignored all of them.”
Listen to the EP’s first track “Wolves, Lower” above.
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