Archive for the ‘dinner’ Category

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Red Wine Braised Short Ribs with Olives and Onions

So um, yeah, 2011 can still suck it. Two days after my last post, when I thought perhaps the suck that is 2011 might be over, I rolled my ankle while leaving a client’s house after a night of catering. It was sooo dark and I just couldn’t see the edge of the driveway.

After three days of pain, I finally went to the doctor yesterday. After an exam, and a few x-rays, it was determined that no severe damage had been done (no broken bones, no torn ligaments) but it was definitely sprained. Gotta say, this is going to put a hamper on my triathlon training. Swimming is okay, biking is a maybe, but walking is a no go for at least two (but likely four) weeks.

As I am generally a glass is half-full person, I am grateful that the ankle that I rolled was my right ankle and not the left since it has not even been a year since my ankle surgery. The x-rays also showed a pretty awesome bone spur which is the likely cause of heel pain that I have been suffering through for years. So, once this triathlon is over, I can deal with that and hopefully rid myself of some pain.

So, because I have a sprained ankle and can’t really stand for long periods of time, there is not much cooking going on in my house. This makes it kind of hard create a new recipe. However, my cousin Mariah asked me to post the recipe for the short ribs that I posted pictures of in December so this seemed like the perfect chance.

Here’s the line-up:

In a heavy pot, cook the bacon until it is nice and crispy. Now honestly, you could totally skip the bacon and just warm a couple tablespoons of oil in the pan instead. How do I know? Well because I completely forgot to add the crispy bacon to the finished dish and I didn’t miss it at all (the dish ends up plenty rich on it’s own).

While the bacon renders (or the oil heats), combine the flour with salt, pepper and fresh thyme.

Dredge each of the short ribs in the mixture.

Once the bacon is crispy remove it from the pan then brown the short ribs on all side in the bacon fat (or the oil that you have been warming if you are skipping the bacon).

Do the browning in batches so that the pan isn’t too crowded (they’ll brown better that way) and once they are brown remove them from the pan.

Mmmmm, fond.

Add the chopped onions and the garlic to the now empty pan and cook until they have softened a bit.

You may ask, why use both chopped onion and pearl onions in the dish. Well, over the long cooking time, the chopped onions kind of just melt into the sauce while the pearl onions stay whole and provide a yummy bite all on their own.

Add the wine to the pan and scrape with a spoon to get all the tasty bits off the bottom.

Add the pearl onions and olives to the pan.

Then nestle in the browned short ribs and the fresh thyme. Don’t add any salt to the pot at this point because the olives are going to give a lot of salt to the dish.

Add a lid (or aluminum foil if your pot doesn’t have a lid) and pop the pot into a 350 degree oven.

After two hours take the pan out of the oven (mmm, looking good so far).

And stir in the potatoes. Adding the potatoes later in the process keeps them from getting too soft.

Put the lid back on the pot and pop it back into the oven for another hour.

With the cooking now done, if you have opted to use the bacon, stir it into the dish. But if, like me, you forget, you still get this delicious looking concoction.

Remove the thyme sprig then test for seasoning and add some salt and pepper if you want. On each plate place a rib (or two if you are hungry) and a few potatoes along with some of the olive and onion mixture. A little sprinkle of parsley wouldn’t hurt either.

Unctuous, delicious meat, falling off the bone. Perfectly tender potatoes. And did I mention the aroma in the house? Oh my.

xx

RED-WINE BRAISED SHORT RIBS WITH OLIVES AND ONIONS
serves 3-6 depending on your appetite

This is a bit of a “project” meal with it’s long cooking time, but it is, for the most part, untended cooking. Start it after lunch on a lazy Sunday and by dinner (or supper for those in the midwest) time your meal will be ready.

3-4 strips bacon, cut into 1″ lengths (optional, if not using substitute 2 tablespoons vegetable oil)
3/4 cup flour
1 Tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
2 teaspoon kosher salt
2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
1 onion, chopped
3-4 cloves garlic, chopped
2 cup red wine
3/4 cup kalamata olives, pitted
1 bag frozen pearl onions, thawed
6 meaty short ribs
1 sprig fresh thyme
1 1/2 pound small waxy potatoes (yukon golds, reds or fingerling potatoes work well)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

In a large, heavy pot, cook the bacon over medium high heat until it is brown and crisp. If not using bacon, heat oil in the pan instead.

Meanwhile, combine the flour with salt, pepper and fresh thyme and stir to combine. Dredge each of the short ribs in the mixture.

Once the bacon is crisp, use a slotted spoon to remove it from the pan then brown the short ribs, in batches, on all sides in the remaining bacon fat or the heated oil. As they brown remove them from the pan. Add the chopped onions and the garlic to the now empty pan and cook until they have softened a bit. Add the wine to the pan and scrape with a spoon to release the fond from the bottom of the pan. Add the pearl onions and olives to the pan, then nestle in the browned short ribs and the fresh thyme.

Cover the pot with a tight-fitting lid or aluminum foil and place in oven. After 2 hours, add the potatoes to the pot, stirring to combine. Re-cover the pot and return it to the oven for an additional hour.

If using the bacon, stir it into the dish. Remove the thyme sprig then test for seasoning and add some salt and pepper if needed. On each plate place a rib or two and a few potatoes along with some of the olive and onion mixture.

Friday, November 12th, 2010

Red Curry Fried Rice

There are times during the year when it is hard for me to get in the kitchen and cook. Often this happens for me in the weeks just preceding Thanksgiving. This year is no exception.

Right now I am being pulled in so many directions. Business is busy with clients and scheduling Thanksgiving prep (but there is always room for another client or two). Training for this years Lavaman Triathlon has just started, and with that, my Leukemia and Lymphoma Society fundrasing has started as well. I had the bright idea to sell pies for Thanksgiving (donating the proceeds to LLS) and the response has been overwhelming (for which I am grateful). Last weekend I made 19 pies, This weekend I will be making at least 26 (orders are still coming in today). To top all that off, our dog Jones had to have surgery last week so quite a bit of time has been dedicated to his recovery.

I have so much to do, I can’t decide where to start. Right now, if it doesn’t have a deadline, it just isn’t going to get done.

With so much time spent in the kitchen for my clients and with the making of many pies, cooking for pleasure has, sadly, gone out the window. Right now, I am cooking just to eat. However, I am not without cravings. Spicy food is my comfort food right now (well that, and cookies). Fried rice is a quick to cook meal and the addition of the curry sauce made it spicy enough to fit the bill. Plus, it used leftovers from two other meals as well as a baby bok choy that was starting to wilt.

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Here’s the ingredients.

Oil should really be in this picture too, because it is essential to the process. The leftovers I speak of are the rice (leftover from a simple beans and rice meal) and half a can of coconut milk (left from a lovely curried squash soup, which I will be blogging soon). I almost always make extra rice when I cook it at home. It is such an easy go to for the start of a great meal. It’s important to use cold rice to make fried rice, it helps to separate the individual grains of rice.

It’s also important to have everything ready to go, veggies chopped, sauce mixed, before you start cooking. The cooking process goes faster than you think.

I used a wok to make this meal. However, it can certainly be made in a large skillet or frying pan. The only reason I even own a wok is because my dad bought it, never used it, so then it was passed to me.

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Start by heating a little oil in the wok. While it heats, beat an egg or two (I used a duck egg because I love them, but any old egg would do) then add it to the oil.

Keep it moving to scramble it. It will cook pretty quick so keep your eye on it.

Once it is cooked take it out of the wok.

Add a little more oil to the wok. Once it is hot, add the chopped bok choy stems and fry them for about a minute.

Next, add the chinese pork and fry that for a minute. Keep it moving.

Finally add the peas and the bok choy leaves. Fry the whole shebang until everything is just warmed through.

Then take that out of the pan.

Add a little more oil to the pan and once it’s hot, add the rice.

Once the rice is hot, add the vegetables back to the mix,

And then the sauce (which I had stirred together before I started cooking).

Warm it through and then stir in the egg and chives. Done and done.

This is not your traditional fried rice since it has a sauce but I love the creamy texture it gives to the dish. It’s also a lovely one dish meal, protein, starch and vegetable all in one. For me, this could have been a little spicier (though the husband said it was just fine) but it was nothing a little Sriracha couldn’t fix.

xxx

RED CURRY FRIED RICE
Serves 2 generously with leftovers

If you don’t have (or don’t like) the vegetables that I’ve used, use whatever you happen to have around. Just start with the vegetables that require the longest cooking time, and add the vegetables that require less cooking as you progress.

1 cup coconut milk
2-3 Tablespoons red curry paste
2-3 Tablespoons soy sauce
1/2 cup corn or vegetable oil
1 duck egg or 2 chicken eggs, beaten
1 baby bok choy, stems and leaves chopped separately
6 ounces Chinese barbecued pork, chopped
3/4 cup frozen peas
3 cups cooked white or brown rice
1/2 cup chives, chopped

Stir together coconut milk, red curry paste and soy sauce. Taste for spiciness and saltiness and add more curry paste or soy sauce if desired. Set aside.

Heat a wok or frying pan and add 1 Tablespoon oil. When it is very hot, add the egg and scramble until they are cooked through. Remove from pan and set aside

Return the wok to the heat and add 1 Tablespoon oil to the pan. Fry the meat and vegetables starting with the bok choy stems, followed by the barbecued pork, peas and bok choy leaves, cooking for about a minute between each addition. Once the vegetable are soft and the meat is heated through, remove from pan and set aside.

Return the wok to the heat and add 1 Tablespoon oil to the pan. Add the rice and heat it until it is warmed through, about a minute, stirring to make sure thatit doesn’t stick and to break up any clumps.

Add the sauce and continue to cook until it is warmed through. Stir in the egg and chives. Enjoy.

Sunday, October 17th, 2010

Beans and Greens Soup

Lately I’ve been in the mood for soup. Maybe it’s because of the change of seasons (fall is, after all, the season of soup) but I think it’s more likely because I’ve been a little under the weather for a coupe of weeks. A bowl of soup can be a big bowl of comfort, warming you up and making you feel better from the inside out.

This soup could really not have been much easier. Throw some stuff in a pot. Cook for a couple hours. Throw some more stuff in the same pot. Cook for another hour or so. Eat.

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I used purple and white carrots but that’s just because that is what I had in my crisper, orange carrots will work just fine. Same goes for the leeks, I could have used plain-ole onions but I was completely out of those, so leeks instead. Here’s the lineup.

To start, I threw the beans and a ham hock in a stock pot with a bunch of water. It’s a myth that beans need to be soaked overnight (they just take a little longer to cook if you don’t soak them).

I added a generous dose of salt to the pot after about an hour and let it continue to simmer for another hour or so (I kind of lost track of time after being sucked in to a movie). Once the beans were soft I dumped in everything else and let this simmer for another hour.

Once the collard greens were tender I took the ham hock out of the pot, let it cool for a while (until It was cool enough to handle) and then set to picking all the tasty goodness from the bones. I pulled all the meat from the hock, shredded it and then discarded the fat, gristle, bones and what not.

That shredded meat went back in the pot just to heat through and then It was time to eat. I decided to top the soup with a bit of pesto from the freezer (I had mixed herb pesto, but any pesto would work) and a sprinkle of Parmesan cheese. The pesto adds a nice bit of brightness to the flavor of the soup so I highly recommend this addition.

xxx

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Served with a nice bit of crusty bread, this was a wonderful fall dinner. Warm, delicious and exactly what my beat-down body was craving.

xxx

BEANS AND GREENS SOUP
serves 6-8 as a main dish

This makes a ton of soup but it freezes well. Ham hocks and dried beans are very inexpensive ingredients so this soup is easy on the pocketbook.

1 pound dried white beans
1 smocked ham hock (may be sold as a ham shank)
10 cups water
4 leeks or 2 onions, chopped
4 carrots, peeled and chopped
3-4 cloves garlic, minced
1 bunch collard greens, washed and cut into 1-inch pieces
2 cans diced tomatoes with juice
pesto (optional, but highly recommended)
Parmesan cheese (optional)

In a large pot combine the beans, ham hock and water. Bring to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for two hours, or until the beans are tender adding a generous amount (a tablespoon or so) of salt about one hour into the cooking time.

Add the remaining ingredients to the pot and continue to simmer for another hour.

Remove the ham hock from the pot and let cool. Once it is cool enough to handle separate the meat from the bones and any large pieces of fat, then shred the meat. Return the shredded meat to the pot and heat through.

Ladle soup into bowls and top with Parmesan and pesto (if using).

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

Cuban Mojito Simmer Sauce (Just Like Trader Joe’s)

A while ago (longer than I would like to admit) one of my best friends pressed a jar of Trader Joe’s Cuban Mojito Simmer Sauce into my hands and said “I love this sauce but Trader Joe’s has discontinued it, can you figure out how to make it for me.” “Well of course” I replied and then I put the jar on a shelf and forgot about it.

While doing a little spring cleaning I came across the jar. I put it on my desk as a reminder and it sat there, mocking me, all summer.

This weekend I decided, finally, that it was time to get it done. I took a look at the ingredients, onion, orange juice, water, olive oil, cilantro, cider vinegar, lime juice, garlic, sea salt, cumin, arrowroot, black pepper, oregano and xanthan gum. Well, except for the arrowroot (a thickener) and the xanthan gum (a stabilizer) the ingredients seemed pretty straight forward.

The most important thing (other than getting the flavor spot on) was that the sauce had to be easily cooked by my friend (a very busy working mother of two). I also hoped to make sure the recipe could be doubled, tripled, maybe quadrupled and then stashed in the freezer for an easy weeknight meal.

It took two tries, but I think I got it right. Here’s the line-up (I also added just a touch of sugar to balance the flavors but it’s not in the picture).

I started by chopping the onion and smashing the garlic.

I cooked the onion and garlic in the oil in a medium-size saucepan.

When the onion was soft and translucent I stirred in the cumin, oregano and flour and cooked it for another couple of minutes, stirring constantly, to make a roux.

I added in all the liquids, stirring to make sure I didn’t get any lumps.

Then added the cilantro.

I gave the whole thing a whiz with the stick blender.

I tasted my sauce, then Trader Joe’s, then mine, then Trader Joe’s. It just wasn’t right. I added a bit of sugar to help balance the acidity and a bit more salt. Tasted again, but it was still just not right. The Trader Joe’s sauce just seemed more developed, more complex. The best way I know of to develop the flavor of a sauce is to let it simmer for a while so that’s just what I did. After 20 minutes of simmering, the flavor was spot on.

The next challenge? Freezing. I cooled the sauce then popped it in the freezer overnight. Then I thawed it in the refrigerator and it came out perfect. Time for dinner.

I browned a couple of chicken breasts then added some of the sauce to the pan. I turned down the heat and simmered the dish until the chicken was cooked through, About 10 minutes. I served the chicken with white rice and a few sauteed green beans.

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This sauce may not be much to look at, but I totally get why my friend wanted it back in her life. A little bit tangy and completely tasty. Kerry, I hope this recipe serves you well.

xxx

CUBAN MOJITO SIMMER SAUCE
makes 12 ounces

If you don’t have a stick blender the sauce can also be pureed in batches in a food processor or blender. Sauce can be frozen for up to three months, just thaw it in the refrigerator before using.

1 Tablespoon oil
1 onion
4 clove garlic
1 Tablespoon flour
1 1/2 Tablespoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon dried oregano
3/4 cup orange juice
1 lime, juiced (approx. 1/4 cup)
1/4 cup cider vinegar
1/3 cup cilantro leaves
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon sugar

Peel and chop the onion then smash the garlic with the edge of a knife. Heat oil in a medium-size saucepan over medium-high heat. Saute the garlic and onion until it is soft and translucent. Stir in the cumin, oregano and flour and cook for two minutes, stirring constantly, to make a roux. Add all the liquids, stirring rapidly to make sure no lumps form. Cook for two minutes, then add the cilantro. Using a stick blender, puree the sauce until smooth. Reduce heat, and simmer for an additional 20 minutes. Stir in salt, pepper and sugar. Taste for seasoning add adjust if necessary with additional salt, pepper or sugar.

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

Potato and Carrot Casserole (In the Style of Pommes Anna)

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Pommes Anna has just three ingredients (counting salt) but yet it is one of the most delectable potato dishes on the planet. Delightfully crispy on the outside, smooth and creamy on the inside.

I decided to create a take on this classic French dish. Pommes Anna is usually made with peeled russet potatoes. I used red potatoes (and didn’t bother to peel them). I also decided that adding carrots might be a good idea, a little sweetness added to the mix. The last change I made was to add a couple of cloves of garlic to the butter while it was melting, just to add an extra bit of flavor.

Here’s the ingredients. And yes, that is a whole stick of butter and although it probably won’t all get used, this is not a low-fat dish and is definitely best eaten in moderation.

Using a mandoline I sliced the potatoes and carrots very thin (to about the thickness of a quarter). I discarded the first and last slice off of each potatoes because the skin on those outer edges prevents the potatoes from sucking up butter. I cut the carrots on an angle so that the slices were just a little larger. This step could probably be done by hand if you have a very sharp knife, but it would be very tedious (and hard to get all the slices the same thickness).

While I was slicing I melted the butter, along the the garlic in a small pot on the stove top.

Traditionally pommes anna would be made in a round dish, often a cast iron pan, but my cast iron pan is way two big (I would only get maybe three layers in my giant pan) and this square pan was the first baking dish I came across, so I used it. I used my fancy new silicone basting brush and buttered the dish with the melted butter.

Then I started the layering, potatoes, brush with butter, carrots, brush with butter, sprinkle with a wee bit of salt, repeat. The potatoes should overlap just a little bit. You don’t want to salt every layer or the dish can end up too salty, every other layer seems to work best. And if you are using salted butter you should go really easy on the salt additions.

I ran out of carrots before I ran out of potatoes, so the last few layers of mine were just potatoes. One final brush of butter and into the oven (and see, I didn’t use all the butter, it’s not so bad after all).

I baked the dish at 400 degrees for an hour until the top was browned and the potatoes and carrots were soft.

You’ll often see finished pommes anna inverted onto a serving plate, but I decided to forgo that step, instead just cutting it into quarters and carefully moving each slice to a plate.

I served the potatoes as a complement to pork chops with plum sauce and some roasted then sauteed beets (that I sauteed in that leftover butter, cause that’s how I roll).

The carrots definitely added a nice sweetness to this classic dish. I suppose you could say that the carrots add a little but of healthiness to the dish, but really, there is no making this dish healthy, just tasty.

xxx

POTATO AND CARROT CASSEROLE
serves 4

This makes an excellent side dish for pork, beef or chicken.

1 stick (8 Tablespoons) butter
2 clove garlic
8-10 red-skinned potatoes, scrubbed clean
6-8 small carrots (about 6″ long) scrubbed clean

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. In a small saucepan, melt the butter along with the garlic over medium heat on the stove top. While the better melts, use a mandoline to cut the potatoes and carrots very thin (about the thickness of a quarter). Butter the bottom and sides of a small casserole dish. Starting with potatoes, alternate layers of potatoes and carrots, brushing each layer with the garlic butter and seasoning every other layer with salt. Bake in preheated oven for an hour until the top is browned and the potatoes and carrots are soft.

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Roasted Pepper and Cheddar Pie

As I think back on this summer, I realize that for me, it was all about getting better. I mean that literally of course as I refer to my recovery from ankle surgery. But I also invested quite a bit of time to make myself, my blog and even my cooking better.

Most recently I attended the International Food Blogger Conference which was held right here in Seattle. Two full days (and two evenings) chock full of panels, new (and old) friends and lots of tasty food. My favorite session was an inspirational slide show and talk from photographer Penny De Los Santos. She just made me (and I think everyone else there) want to be better. Because of her, you’ll probably be seeing a few more photo essays on the blog (much like this one from last Saturday) as I self-assign new photography projects for myself.

My other big summer project was a 5-week class series at Cornish College for the Arts called the Art of Food. Here’s the description:

A series of evenings in which different aspects of food + art get explored: food AND art, food AS art, artists and their food practices, food blogging, food as a medium for leading a creative life, food photography, the creative practice of gardening, art + food + sustainability. Participants include author and master forager Langdon Cook, Chef Becky Selengut, “Top Cheftestant” and artist Robin Leventhal, photographer Clare Barboza, food writers Molly Wizenberg and Shauna James Ahern, and Delancey owner and composer/dancer Brandon Pettit.

My favorite weeks were the two that were focused on photography with Clare Barboza and food writing with Molly Wizenberg and Shauna James Ahern. I’ve really been trying to improve my food photography over the last year and it was great to have input from a professional. Here’s a couple of the photos I took at class:

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You can see the rest at my Flickr site here.

I also really enjoyed the week focused on food writing. I am always a little nervous about my writing and I am really trying to improve this as well. During the class we read examples of several popular food writers, Frances Lam, Jonathon Gold, MFK Fisher, Laurie Colwin and others. The piece from Laurie Colwin was titled “Tomato Pie” from the book More Home Cooking. It was a beautiful description of a recipe for Tomato Pie.

“I have never yet encountered tomatoes in any form unloved by me. Often at night I find myself ruminating about two previously mysterious tomato dishes, which I was brazen enough to get the recipes for. One is Tomato Pie and is a staple of a tea shop call Chaiwalla, owned by Mary O’Brien, in Salisbury, Connecticut. According to Mary, the original recipe was found in a cookbook put out by the nearby Hotchkiss School, but she has changed it sufficiently to claim it as her own. The pie has a double biscuit-dough crust, made by blending 2 cups flour, 1 stick butter, 4 teaspoons baking powder, and approximately 3/4 cup milk, either by hand or in a food processor. You roll out half the dough on a floured surface and line a 9-inch pie plate with it. Then you add the tomatoes. Mary makes this pie year round and uses first-quality canned tomatoes, but at this time of year 2 pounds peeled fresh tomatoes are fine, too. Drain well and slice thin two 28-ounce can plum tomatoes, then lay the slices over the crust and scatter them with chopped basil, chives, or scallions, depending on their availability and your mood. Grate 1-1/2 cups sharp Cheddar and sprinkle 1 cup of it on top of the tomatoes. Then over this drizzle 1/3 cup mayonnaise that has been thinned with 2 tablespoons lemon juice, and top everything with the rest of the grated Cheddar. Roll out the remaining dough, fit it over the filling, and pinch the edges of the dough together to seal them. Cut several steam vents in the top crust and bake the pie at 400 degrees for about 25 minutes. The secret of this pie, according to Mary, is to reheat it before serving, which among other things ensures that the cheese is soft and gooey. She usually bakes it early in the morning , then reheats it in the evening in a 350 degree oven until it is hot.

It is hard to describe how delicious this is, especially on a hot day with a glass of magnificent iced tea in a beautiful setting, but it would doubtless be just as scrumptious on a cold day in your warm kitchen with a cup of coffee.”

Her description was so lovely that I knew I just had to cook this dish. I made it for brunch for a group of friends (several of whom are, or used to be, fellow personal chefs) and it received rave reviews. Basically the pie was  tomatoes, cheddar cheese in a biscuit crust (and really, how could that combo not be good). It was obvious that this recipe was ripe for adaptation.

After the last class (the food photography session), many of the props (read leftover food) were divided among the students that had stayed to help clean up. I ended up with 2 mini cupcakes, one tomatillo, a lime and a bunch of bell peppers and hot peppers. So, after I ate the cupcakes, I decided to get to work on turning the peppers into something delicious. Of course, I would roast the peppers and make a version of that delicious pie.

Here’s the ingredients for the filling:

And for the crust:

I started by roasting the peppers. I roasted mine right over the flame on my gas stove, but they can easily be done on a grill or under the broiler. Just cook the peppers until they are blackened then through them in a covered bowl and let them sit for at least five minutes.

Once they are cool enough to handle the skins will peel right off. Try to keep the seeds out of the peeled pepper pile and no matter how much easier it would make things, do not run the peppers under water or all the roasty-toasty goodness will go right done the drain. Oh yeah, and notice the gloves, gloves are a must when you are seeding really hot peppers (because if you don’t wear gloves you will invariably touch your eye and then pain will ensue).

I cut the bell peppers into strips and then diced the smaller peppers (I wasn’t sure just how hot they were and I didn’t want to end up with a huge bite of “burn your mouth” hot pepper in the finished dish). Then I set this aside to work on the crust.

The crust comes together very easily in a food processor. Just whir together the butter, flour and baking powder until it looks a bit like fine sand. It doesn’t take long, maybe 10 seconds.

I added the milk and then gave it another whir. It will come together as a dough fairly quickly.

At this point I moved the dough to a very well floured work surface. This dough is very sticky so flour is your best friend. Flour your hands, flour the rolling pin, flour the work surface, trust me.

I divided the dough into two halves and rolled one of them out until it is large enough to cover the bottom and sides of the pan. In addition to being sticky, this dough is also very forgiving. Holes can be easily smushed back together.

Once the bottom crust was in the pan I laid in the peppers, the tomatillo (which didn’t add much to the mix so I’ve left it out of the recipe below) half the cheese and the chopped scallions.

I stirred together the juice of a lime and 1/3 cup of mayonnaise and drizzled this over the pie.

Then I added the rest of the cheese and topped the pie with the second half of the biscuit dough, trimmed off the excess dough, pinched together the edges and then cut a few vent holes in the top.

Into the oven (I used my toaster oven) for 25 minutes until the crust was golden brown and delicious and the pie was warm and toasty inside.

While I adored the tomato version of the pie that Laurie Colwin write so beautifully about this version was another lovely take. Sharp from the cheddar and tangy from the lime with a beautifully crisp and tender crust.

My friends who were over for yet another potluck (and belly dancing, but we’re not going to talk about that) all agreed it was delightful as well.

Next up I think a sweet version of this pie is in order. I think berries with goat cheese might be nice but it’s a little past berry season. Maybe plums…

xxx

ROASTED PEPPER AND CHEDDAR PIE

Crust:
2 cups all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, cut into cubes
2/3 cup milk

Filling:
4 bell peppers
5-6 jalapenos, serranos or other hot peppers
1 1/2 cups grated sharp Cheddar cheese
6 scallions, chopped
1/3 cup mayonnaise
juice from one lime

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Roast and peel the peppers and hot peppers. Cut the peppers into strips and dice the hot peppers. Stir together then set aside. In a small bowl or measuring cup stir together the mayonnaise and lime juice.

In the bowl of a food processor pulse together the flour, baking powder and butter (it should resemble dry sand). Add the milk and continue to pulse until the dough come together. Divide the dough into two pieces. On a well-floured surface roll out half the dough and line a 9-inch pie plate with it.

Cover the bottom of the pan with the pepper mixture. Sprinkle on half of the cheese and all of the scallions. Drizzle the mayonnaise mixture evenly over the  scallions then sprinkle on the remaining cheese.

Roll out the second half of the dough, lay it on top of the filling, trim off the excess dough and pinch the edges of the dough together to seal them. Cut several slits in the top crust to vent.

Bake the pie for about 25 minutes or until the crust is golden and the filling is warmed through.

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

A Tale of Two Chickens

This week I decided to take on a couple of recipes from Thomas Keller’s Ad Hoc at Home Cookbook. The recipes from Ad Hoc are intended to be family-style “you can make this at home” recipes. I like this idea because some of the recipes from say his French Laundry Cookbook which might call for something like, an entire pig’s head (not really an everyday ingredient) or require three days of prep are not too accessible for the casual cook and are certainly not intended for weeknight dinner type cooking (at least not at my house). Not to say I don’t cook from it, or from his other cookbook Bouchon, because I have and everything I have made has been phenomenal, it’s just not “everyday” cooking.

I had lots of tasty root vegetables waiting around so I decided to start with the recipe for Whole Roasted Chicken on a bed of Root Vegetables. Out of respect for the author, I’m not going to reprint the recipe here, but if you have the book (and if you don’t I recommend it) you’ll find the recipe on page 22.

The thing about Thomas Keller recipes is that they are precise, explaining exactly how each ingredient should be trimmed and cut. The thing about me is, I’m not that precise when it comes to chopping vegetables, I mean, I cut everything pretty close to the prescribed sizes, but I certainly am not as exact as he is.

I did make a couple of changes to the recipe. First, it calls for leeks, rutabagas and turnips in addition to carrots, onions and potatoes. Well I didn’t have leeks and I just flat out don’t like turnips (and I am a grown up so I don’t have to eat them if I don’t want to). It’s been so long since I’ve had rutabagas I can’t remember if I like them or not. If I get the opportunity to get them in my CSA box I will happily try them again, but I had no interest in a special trip to the store to pick up a item I may or may not like, so I left them out too. What I did have was parsnips and golden beets, and since I like both of those things, into the mix they went.

Otherwise I followed Keller’s instructions. I pulled out my ginormous cast iron pan and deposited my olive oil dressed vegetables along with my trussed chicken which I had rubbed the inside of with fresh thyme and garlic. Then I but 4 TABLESPOONS or butter on top of the chicken (along with some salt and pepper) and popped it into the oven. The thing is, I must have been really sleepy when I was making this because after I trussed the chicken I stupidly put the chicken into the pan breast side down instead of breast side up.

So, while it cooked just fine, the yummy crispy skin was on the wrong side of the chicken (sad). However, the chicken itself was wonderful, moist and gently seasoned. While the vegetables were really good, I personally think that 4 tablespoons of butter was at least 2 tablespoons to much. A little too greasy and not quite crispy enough for my taste. So when I make this again I think I’ll go with less butter and maybe a few less vegetables in the pan (I think they might brown better if they weren’t as crowded).

So, one chicken down, one to go. Each year I cook dinner for two of my best friends, their family and of course the husband and myself as my birthday gift to them (their birthdays are on two consecutive days so I can get away with one dinner as two gifts). The recipe that seems to get the most attention from this cookbook is the one for Buttermilk Fried Chicken. Because I had heard so much about this recipe I asked if I could put it on the menu. I like to try out new things on this group because they are always (luckily) a forgiving group.

This recipe is really easy to find online (in fact it is on the Amazon sale page linked above) so I’ll leave you to find it for yourself. You can also buy it as a kit (which frankly seems silly to me, but you know, to each his own).

Keller specifically calls for 2 1/2 to 3 pound chickens stating that you may need to go to a farmers market to find them. However, I did not have the time to search out tiny chickens, so, I went for the smallest chickens I could find at my local QFC which were 4 pounds each.

So, once again I followed the instructions. Brined the chicken overnight, combined all the ingredients for the coating then packed everything up to prepare at my friends house.

Once there I set up two pans with oil (one for light meat and one for dark) as well as a dredging station (the chicken goes through the flour coating, then into buttermilk, then into a second batch of coating, then onto a parchment lined baking sheet until each piece was coated) and a cooling rack. This took A LOT of room.

So into the oil went my first two batches of chicken (one with thighs and one with breasts). This is when I started having serious heat control issues. A lot of the coating came off and even though the chicken was cooked to temperature the skin wasn’t even crispy. Sad fried chicken.

This is when I started to get despondent (and thankful for a kind group of friends (and my cocktail)). Time for a few adjustments. We turned off the kitchen fan, readjusted the temperature controls and waited for the oil to come back up to temperature. In went the drumsticks, a second batch or breasts and once they were done, the legs.

Success (mostly). As we gathered around the table I encouraged everyone to try the drumsticks first (as they were the most golden brown and delicious) then the breasts, then the legs (I didn’t even serve those first two batches, bleaagh). I was supposed to have fried up some fresh thyme and rosemary to sprinkle over the top, but at this point I was just happy to be getting something edible on the table so we decided to just dig in.

You can see from the picture that I also served a tower of biscuits. What not pictured is some very delicious macaroni and cheese (which my 5-year old picky-eater Goddaughter actually approved of) and a salad made with greens, the white-wine poached pears that I canned in November, blue cheese and glazed nuts.

The chicken was really good. The brine kept it really, really moist (and added a great flavor) and the coating was lightly seasoned, crispy and delicious. In the cookbook Thomas Keller says that once you try this chicken you’ll want to add it to your weekly routine. Well, while it was very good, it was a lot of work. It might make an every six months routine at our house.

To end the meal I served cake balls (similar to these). One of my diners was almost two-year old Rowan. He was cracking me up while he was eating them so I snapped a few pictures (yeah, they’re a little blurry but it was a little dark and little kids move fast).

Here’s the approach.

Next a few nibbles off the bottom.

Then the whole thing went in.

He looked like a chipmunk hoarding nuts.


Too cute.

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Dinner For Friends

Friday night I had the opportunity to make dinner for a few friends to celebrate two of their birthdays. I always like to try out a new thing or two when I cook for friends as they are generally a forgiving group if something doesn’t turn out right.

I presented a few menu options to my friends and they picked this one:
Fettuccine Bolognese with Homemade Egg Pasta
Chopped Salad
Garlic Bread
Lemon Creme Brulee with Fresh Blueberries

I wanted to make a classic Bolognese sauce so I turned to Italian Classics from Cook’s Illustrated.

You can look up the recipe, but basically the sauce is made up of equal parts minced carrot, onion and celery (4 tablespoons of each) with equal parts ground beef, pork and veal (a half-pound each). This gets browned then you add milk and let it simmer until it is gone, then add white wine and let it simmer until it is gone, then add tomatoes and simmer for what seems like forever. All in all it was simmering for about 8 hours. I served this over some homemade fettuccine.

Check out my mad knife skillzs.

And the finished product.

xxx

The chopped salad I made is a copy of the Pagliaccio salad from Pagliacci’s Pizza here in town. About a year ago I asked them is they would share the recipe for the dressing. The person who responded to my request said that they could tell me what was in it, but not the amounts. After a little tinkering I have created a reasonable facsimile. Here’s the recipe I came up with.

Chopped Salad with Dijon-Tarragon Dressing
1 head romaine lettuce, chopped
1 can garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed
1 red bell pepper, chopped
1/2 red onion, chopped
1 cup mozzarella cheese
4 ounce salami, diced
1 recipe Dijon-tarragon dressing

Toss together all ingredients with enough dressing to coat.

Dijon-Tarragon Dressing
1 clove garlic
2 Tablespoon red wine vinegar
2 Tablespoon lemon juice
1 egg plus 1 egg yolk
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/4 teaspoon sugar
1 Tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 Tablespoon fresh tarragon
1 2/3 cup olive oil

Add all the ingredient except the oil to the work bowl of a food processor. Pulse to chop. Turn processor on and add oil in a steady stream until incorporated. Keep at room temperature for 2 hours. Refrigerate for up to 1 week.

I bought a par baked foccaia bread (I was feeling too lazy for bread baking, especially after the fresh pasta making) and made an olive oil and herb topping with minced garlic, rosemary, sage, basil salt and pepper. This smelled divine as it was cooking (and received a very picky four-year old’s thumbs up, high praise indeed).

xxx

I used the recipe for creme brulee from Cook’s Illustrated but, knowing that I was going to pair it with the fresh blueberries from the CSA box this week, I added the zest of a lemon and a little squeeze of lemon juice to the cream as it was steeping (because I love lemon with blueberries).

xxx

Yum.

xxx

Since I had some extra egg whites (since the Creme Brulee only uses yolks) I did the only responsible thing. I made Meringues. But not just Meringues, Five-Spice Cocoa Meringues.

I started with the recipe from Epicurious for Cocoa Meringue Kisses but with a few tweaks. I added about two teaspoons of five-spice powder and since I didn’t have cream of tarter, I used lemon juice instead and since I used lemon juice instead of cream of tarter I added about a tablespoon extra of sugar. I toyed with adding some cayenne to the mix but since a four-year old was to be one of the guests I didn’t think that was a great idea (but I do think it would have been fantastic). I baked them for 35 minutes. They were crunchy on the outside and chewy on the inside.

Here they are.


Again, yum.

Dinner (and dessert) was all great! And of course the company was delightful. I’m always so glad to be able to share my gifts with people in my life (and judging from the raves, they are happy for that too).

I’m so glad that I had the forethought to make lots of extra sauce so that I can eat it again (perhaps tonight). And, oh my, I just remembered that I have extra creme brulee in the fridge. Gotta go!

About Me

I'm a personal chef living happily with her picky-eater (but willing to try anything) husband and neurotic black lab.

I watch way too much TV and enjoy hip-hop more than any reasonable grown-up should.

I'm an avid swimmer and sometime triathlete (whenever I'm not nursing an injury).

Find out more about me here.

About This Blog

This blog details what I make with the contents of my box of fruits and veggies from my local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) box and the occasional trip to the farmers market.

I am also a charcuterie enthusiast so the occasional project will show up here..

Every once in awhile I blog a random thought or two.

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