• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

The Inside Press

Magazines serving the communities of Northern Westchester

  • Home
  • Advertise
    • Advertise in One or All of our Magazines
    • Advertising Payment Form
  • Print Subscription
  • Digital Subscription
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Login
  • Contact Us

Holiday

Organic Wine and Cheese Social at Life Energy Art Gallery

December 6, 2019 by The Inside Press

YOU ARE INVITED!

Where: Life Energy Art Gallery, 11-13 Main Street, Mount Kisco

When: Saturday December 7, 6-8 p.m.

Cost: Free!

Relax and make new friends in the beautiful, healing environment of our Art Gallery. Featuring a special demonstration in using art for healing, and of course organic wine and cheese, healthy snacks. Come and hang out! Bring friends and family.

Click here to RSVP

 

 

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: Art, healing, Holiday, Life Energy Arts, organic

The Joy of a “Friendsgiving” Holiday & Delicious Recipes

October 26, 2019 by Carine Feist

Our Friendsgiving Menu Chefs: (L-R): Ragini Arnin, Peiling Liu, Cecilia Chong-Wheeler, Carine Feist and Kathy Pang Lee

We are looking forward to festive times with our friends and family while giving thanks for our blessings. If you’re like me, you are thinking about shaking up the menu a bit with some international flavors. These delicious recipes are from a wonderful group of my friends whose daughters and nieces were swimming together on a synchronized swimming team. Their friendships grew as their swimming skills did. After several swam through college years, they have graduated and moved on but still enjoy getting together whenever they can.

In case you’re wondering, “Where’s the turkey?” – we’ve got a plan for that!  Since most families know how to roast a turkey (call the Butterball hotline) and make cranberry sauce (or purchase Ocean Spray), we wanted to provide some wonderful meal accompaniments. The first recipe is Cecilia’s Sticky Rice with Chinese Sausage is an incredibly delicious stuffing for your Thanksgiving turkey (or you can make it ahead to heat and serve as a side!).

My friends’ favorite recipes also include Ragini’s Indian Curry Puffs appetizer, and a scrumptious brunch recipe to serve your household guests — Peiling and Kathy’s Taiwanese Scrambled Eggs and Tomatoes and also Shredded Potato Stir Fry, an Asian spin on home fries (and better than “diner-style” eggs and potatoes) and a steaming bowl of 1-2-3 Chicken.

The Recipes:

Sticky Rice with Chinese Sausage

  • 4 flat scoops of short-grain sticky (sweet) rice if using a rice cooker, or 3 cups if cooking in a pot on the stove. Brown or white rice depending on your preference.
  • 5 oz. tray of fresh shitake mushrooms (Destemmed, wiped clean and sliced)
  • 6-8 Chinese sausages
  • 1 Tb. minced, peeled fresh ginger
  • ½ cup thinly sliced scallion (white & pale green parts only)
  • ¼ cup Chinese rice wine
  • 2 Tb. soy sauce
  • 1½ Tb. oyster sauce (omit oyster sauce and sausage for vegetarian version)
  • 1½ tsp. sesame oil

Cook sticky rice in rice cooker (or in a pot according to package directions) the night before.  Separate rice grains after cooking. Wash and chop mushrooms into coarse pieces.  Quarter the sausages lengthwise and cut into ¼ inch pieces.

Heat a wok over medium heat, add the sausages, stir for one minute, add fresh ginger, sliced scallions, and mushrooms, stir-fry for another minute.  Add cooked rice. Mix well.  Add the mixture of rice wine, soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil. Coat the rice and stir-fry to taste (may add more sauces as needed).

Scrambled Eggs and Tomatoes

(A national dish of China; simple to make.)

  • 2 Tb. oil (canola or other vegetable oil)
  • 3 ripe tomatoes, preferably peeled and cut into 1 inch chunks. (To peel the tomatoes, cut an “x” in the bottom and dip into boiling water for one minute)
  • 6 eggs, with 2 Tb. water, whipped with a whisk
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 3 cloves garlic (optional)
  • 1 Tb. ketchup (optional)
  • chopped scallion, cilantro or Thai basil to garnish (optional)

Heat 2 Tb. oil and, when hot, add in the eggs. Cook over medium heat stirring with a spatula until there is no more liquid, but do not overcook.

Remove the eggs from the pan and the add 1 tsp. of oil to the same pan and cook the tomato and garlic on medium heat until a little soft. Add the cooked egg, breaking up the egg with the spatula. Sprinkle the eggs with salt and pepper to taste and add spring onion and other garnishes as you’d like.

Note: Some families with children add a Tb. ketchup into the tomato mixture or add a pinch of sugar.

Shredded Potato Stir Fry

This is a super-fast way to cook and enjoy potatoes with a new texture that will surely surprise you! And it’s vegan and gluten-free.

  • 1 lb. russet potatoes (approx. 2 potatoes)
  • 1 large carrot, peeled and shredded
  • 1 large red bell pepper
  • ¼ cup vegetable oil
  • 4 dried red chiles (such as chile de arbol, stems discarded, or red bell pepper)
  • 4 tsp. rice vinegar)
  • 1 tsp. toasted sesame oil
  • 1 tsp. salt

Fill a medium-sized bowl with cold water. Peel the potatoes and carrot and give them a quick rinse under running water. Shred them with a mandolin or julienne along the length. The shreds should be long, thin matchsticks. Submerge the potatoes immediately in water to rinse off the excess surface starch. Usually 30 minutes is a good amount of time to soak them or overnight in the refrigerator if you want to prepare ingredients ahead of time.

Cut the bell pepper in half lengthwise and discard the stem, seeds, and ribs. Cut the pepper halves lengthwise into thin matchstick-like shreds. Ideally, they should be the same thickness as the potato shreds.

Lay out a clean cotton kitchen towel or several layers of paper towels on the counter, for drying the potatoes. Drain the potatoes in a colander and give them a quick rinse under cold running water. Give the colander a few shakes to get rid of excess water. Spread the shredded potatoes out on the towel and pat them completely dry.

Heat 2 Tb. oil in a wok or large skillet over medium-high heat. Once the oil appears to shimmer, drop in 2 of the chiles and stir them until they blacken and smell smoky, 5 to 10 seconds. Add half of the potatoes and half of the bell peppers to the smoky oil. Stir-fry them vigorously, without stopping, to briefly cook the shreds approx. 2 to 3 minutes, but still make sure they maintain their toothsome texture (do not overcook). Scrape everything into a serving bowl. Wipe out the pan with paper towels and repeat with the remaining oil, chiles, potatoes, carrots and bell peppers.

Add them to the batch in the bowl, stir in the vinegar, sesame oil, and salt, and serve warm or room temperature.  Remove the chilies before serving.

1-2-3 Chicken

(It’s as easy as 1-2-3!)

  • 2½ Tb. sesame oil
  • 6 large cloves garlic, kept whole but smashed
  • 1 large ginger root, sliced thinly
  • 1½ lbs. boneless chicken thighs, trimmed and diced into 2-inch pieces
  • ⅓ cup dark soy sauce (or regular if unable to get dark soy)
  • ½ cup sake
  • ¾ cup water
  • 2 cups loosely packed Thai basil leaves

Place 2½ Tb. sesame oil in a large skillet and heat (medium high) until glistening. Add the garlic and ginger and cook until the edges of the ginger slices are slightly browned and golden; about 7 minutes. Keep tossing the garlic and ginger so they don’t burn. When done, remove to a small bowl.

Add the chicken thigh chunks to the skillet then add the soy sauce, cooking wine, water, and basil leaves. Gently toss to coat the chicken and then turn the heat to medium low and cover the skillet and cook for 10 minutes. Then turn the chicken so the other sides of the chicken pieces cook in the sauce. Keep turning the chicken every 10 minutes until the meat is dark brown (about 35-40 minutes). Serve over rice with stir-fried greens, such as bok choi, spinach or pea shoots.

Indian Curry Puffs

(12 appetizer-sized puffs)

  • One package of puff pastry (frozen, store-bought is fine)
  • 2-3 large red potatoes (boil until tender, remove peels and mash)
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • ½ tsp. cumin seeds
  • 1½ tsp. fennel seeds (crushed or use fennel powder)
  • 1 carrot shredded
  • 1 onion, minced finely
  • Bhaji Pav Masala (spice blend from an ethnic grocery or supermarket such as Whole Foods)
  • 1 tsp. to 1 Tb. chile (your favorite jalapeno or if you like spicy, Thai chile peppers)
  • Cilantro ¼ cup minced finely (with stems)
  • Juice of half a lemon
  • 1 tsp. salt (to taste)
  • 1 tsp. sugar (to taste)

Warm the olive oil over medium heat and then add the seeds and toast for a few moments until fragrant. Add the shredded carrot and the onion and sauté for several minutes, then add the mashed potato and the spice blend. Add lemon juice and salt to taste.  Refrigerate while you continue the next recipe step.

Meanwhile, unfold the puff pastry while frozen and shake off the excess flour.  The pastry will break into three sheets; cut each piece in four. (a pizza cutter is perfect for this. Each full sheet makes 12 pieces. Put a scoop of filling into each rectangle.  Fill generously, but not so much that the filling comes out of the sides when covered.  Seal the edges well with your hands. Refrigerate at least several hours or overnight.

Bake on a cookie sheet in a preheated 350°F oven for 20-30 minutes until golden. You can freeze the uncooked puffs and bake later; just give them 10-15 more minutes of baking time. Serve hot from the oven.

Filed Under: Briarcliff Cover Stories Tagged With: Appetizers, chefs, Festive, Friendsgiving, Holiday, International Flavors, Local Chefs, Menu, thanksgiving, Thanksgiving Recipes

On Being Thanksgiving Ready

October 26, 2019 by Grace Bennett

Love Rules… and Beautiful Table Settings Build Memories too

Table by Laurie Stolowitz

Before the food ever makes its ways to the table, there’s something exquisite about being ‘Thanksgiving ready.’ Maybe one or more of your kids have helped you set the silverware or the glasses, always especially fun with the littlest ones, a glorious parenting rite of passage, too. The excitement builds and hearts overflow with gratitude knowing that the house is soon to be filled with loved ones, coming from near and far, and some of whom you may only see once a year or another who may be having a health issue or getting on in their years; in between all the food prep and clean up scrambling, you take a deep breath and think to yourself of how precious the time really is, and how fortunate you are to be celebrating Thanksgiving again in your beautiful home. Whatever stresses your life may carry, there can be a feeling of time standing still in appreciation and anticipation.

Table by Burke Irving

I’m also drawn to the pride many hosts and hostesses feel over the aesthetics of their carefully, lovingly set tables; many are proudly shared on Facebook and Instagram well before the guests arrive, which frankly was the spark for this feature. I visited the Chappaqua Moms page to ask moms about their tables, and the pictures immediately flowed.

Table by Dana Cohen Yahr

But do know… whether you’ve gone ‘all out’ as many of these moms have, or have kept it simple, we understand you. As a busy working mom raising two young kids, there were some years I pulled out the best china and took my time with my own finishing touches—usually a seasonal bouquet with autumn colors. Other years, I ran to the local party supply store the night before joining so many others scrambling to ‘pull off’ Thanksgiving; the basic themed paper felt like a godsend after the fact.

Table by Samantha Holcman

It’s ‘all good’ and the love that permeates the air is really always the story of the day. Nonetheless, a beautiful table dazzles, and we are delighted to share these and the pride these moms rightfully feel.

– Grace Bennett

Table by Melissa Benach Sussberg

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: best china, Chappaqua Moms, decor, finishing touches, Holiday, love, pride, Tablescapes, thanksgiving, Thanksgiving tables, time standing still

Enjoying ‘India Day’ at Chappaqua’s First Congregational Church

October 24, 2018 by The Inside Press

PHOTOS BY GRACE BENNETT

The Indian community in Chappaqua came together in October at the First Congregational Church on Orchard Ridge Road to celebrate Diwali–the festival of lights.

One of the most popular festivals of India, Diwali symbolizes the spiritual “victory of light over darkness, good over evil and knowledge over ignorance.” The attendees were welcomed by men, women and kids dressed in gorgeous traditional outfits.

Talented kids and adults came together for an hour long cultural event that showcased the diverse and colorful Indian culture followed by craft activities such as henna application and decorating traditional lamps. It was a lovely and lively event in which to celebrate diversity in Chappaqua! – Swati Bhargava

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: Diwali, Festival of lights, first congregational church, Holiday, India, India Day, special event

Frosty Day Parade Preview: Five Fun Facts for Those In the Know

October 24, 2018 by Stacey Pfeffer

PHOTOS BY WILLIAM MADDEN

Inside Armonk got the inside scoop on the beloved Frosty Day Parade scheduled to take place this year on Sunday, November 25 in downtown Armonk. We spoke with Armonk resident Robby Morris, the President of Friends of Frosty, Inc., the non-profit organization in charge of planning the day’s events who provided us with helpful information so you can maximize your fun this year.

1. It’s more than just the parade–it’s many hours of fun-filled activities. The event starts at 12:30 pm with three hours of free activities, rides, treats and entertainment until 3:30 pm. Then there is entertainment on Main Street just prior to the 4:00 pm parade of 40+ participants (including three trains, horse & wagon, four marching bands, antique cars and floats). Several local businesses also offer free samples and discounts throughout the day.

Forme Barre
ADVERTISEMENT

2. All are welcome to participate in this free event. Morris loves how inclusive the parade is and that Frosty is a non-denominational symbol of the holiday season. From the youngest Girl Scouts to senior residents at the Bristal that participate in a festive holiday themed van, Morris enjoys coordinating the 40+ local organizations that march in the parade.  An insider tidbit: Morris is actually no stranger to parade life. Born and bred in New Rochelle, he actually has participated in the New Rochelle Thanksgiving Day Parade for the past 50 years as a clown and his vast experience in parades makes the event here in Armonk run flawlessly.

3. Get there early to partake in events such as Build Your Own Frosty decoration at the Hergenhan Recreation Center. “The kids love making their own Frosty yard stick decorations and holding them up during the parade.” Morris, who is a grandfather himself, understands that young kids need down time, so they have plenty of activities planned for the day if your ‘wee ones are in a need of some R & R. For example, the North Castle Public Library shows Frosty cartoons all day.

4. Hours of preparation make the day one of the most anticipated local events. Morris has a team of about 12 volunteers who meet several times a year prior to the event for this “labor of love”. They assess each year what works and what they can eliminate from the parade. This year look for new businesses such as Tauk to participate. The committee also gets to audition several of the performing acts at the parade. Morris is particularly excited about Manhattan-based band Shinbone Alley Stilt Band. They are musicians on stilts and Morris and his team carefully plan out “how to utilize our entertainment to our best ability so the musicians are stationed at various points in the village throughout the day.”

5. Memories are made here. Morris loves overhearing parents and children in town talk about where they stood during the parade. “I love it when during the summer, kids can pinpoint where they stood. It is a day that provides a warm feeling for the community and puts a smile on everyone’s face.”


This is the town’s ninth Frosty Day Parade. Originally, it was a day when merchants stayed open late and was more of a winter walk. They revamped the day and added several activities nine years ago as a way to pay homage to Steve Nelson, the long-time Armonk resident who was the lyricist of the popular holiday song “Frosty the Snowman”.

The parade culminates when Frosty makes his appearance and invites all the parade spectators to “catch-me-if-you-can” with many of the attendees following him to Wampus Brook Park at 4:30 pm for a Sing-a-long and the Holiday Lighting Ceremony at the gazebo.

“It has literally turned into a five-hour free Winter Festival which would rival any Disney production,” sums up Morris.

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: antique cars, Armonk, decoration, downtown Armonk, Event, Family, Friends of Frosty, Frosty, Frosty Day Parade, girl scouts, Hergenhan Recreation Center, Holiday, Inc., North Castle

  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • New Castle Fire District No. 1 Announces Bond Referendum to be Held April 25
  • Don’t Resist JUST DESSERTS at the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center April 28-30
  • When There’s A Dog in Your Life
  • The View from Inside
  • Meet The Inside Press Contributing Team!
  • The Surprising Facts about Heart Attacks in Women

Please Visit

Chappaqua School Foundation
White Plains Hospital
William Raveis – Armonk
William Raveis – Chappaqua
Chappaqua Children’s Book Festival
Houlihan Lawrence – Chappaqua
Houlihan Lawrence – Armonk
Houlihan Lawrence – Briarcliff
Westchester Table Tennis
Compass: Miller-Goldenberg Team
Armonk Tennis Club
Raveis: Stacey Sporn
Compass: Natalia Wixom
Play Nice Together
Raveis: Grace Lobello
Stacee Massoni
World Cup Gymnastics
JRL Land Surveying
Compass: Usha Subramaniam
Briones Weight Loss
Houlihan: Tara Seigel

Follow our Social Media

The Inside Press

Our Latest Issues

For a full reading of our current edition, or to obtain a copy or subscription, please contact us.

Inside Chappaqua Inside Armonk Inside Pleasantville

Join Our Mailing List


Search Inside Press

Links

  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Subscription
  • Print Subscription

Footer

Support The Inside Press

Advertising

Print Subscription

Digital Subscription

Categories

Archives

Subscribe

Did you know you can subscribe anytime to our print editions?

Voluntary subscriptions are most welcome, if you've moved outside the area, or a subscription is a great present idea for an elderly parent, for a neighbor who is moving or for your graduating high school student or any college student who may enjoy keeping up with hometown stories.

Subscribe Today

Copyright © 2023 The Inside Press, Inc. · Log in