Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

I Made Greens Taste Like Cherry Pie

This is definitely going on the Thanksgiving menu. It tastes like cherry pie filling which is amazing and surprising.

  • Onion, chopped
  • 2 slices bacon, diced
  • garlic
  • chopped radish (like 5 radishes)
  • Sweet Vermouth
  • Big bunch of kale, washed, stems removed
  • Head of frise lettuce from my garden (yes I found time to clear the old plot and throw some see down).
  • Radish greens


This is mostly kale and frise, mostly kale really.

Cook bacon in a big saute pan. Add onion, garlic and radish chunks. Cook for 10 minutes or so.

Deglaze with about a cup of sweet vermouth! I think this is key to the cherry pie flavor.

Add the greens and some salt. Cover and cook on medium for about 10-15 minutes (until greens are tender).

Mix it all up and eat with anything.

Seriously, cherry pie.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Pulled Pork vs. Carnitas: Pulled makes a comeback

Previously I touted the superiority of carnitas when it comes to preparing a pork shoulder. I stand by the assertion, but I just made some pulled pork that closes the gap.

This technique is not how most people make pulled pork. Its more like an indian dish at the beginning, make a masala to build intense flavor, then braise the meat with this masala. But there are more European elements. The meat is seared first and braised in a liquid more common to a tuscan stew. The braising liquid becomes a bbq sauce then it is mixed together at the end like a southern pulled pork.

The flavor in this is interesting. It isn't exactly a tomato base, but there is tomato in it. The vegetables, particularly the parsnips, make a potent base. Then the cinnamon, cumin, coriander, and smoked paprika combine to make a sweet and intense sauce.

Hardware:
Dutch oven, sized appropriately for the hunk of pork. I used an enameled cast iron pot.

Software:
4-5 pound pork roast. Shoulder or boston butt, bone in is probably better but not necessary.
.25 cups canola oil
.5 cups finely diced onion
.5 cups finely diced carrot
.5 cups finely diced parsnip (thats right, parsnips)
5 cloves garlic, crushed
1-2 cups diced tomato. I used 5 plum.

Spices:
1 T cumin seeds
1 3 inch cinnamon stick
1 T coriander
1 T smoked paprika
1 tsp cayenne
1 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp turmeric
1 T salt
.5 tsp ground mustard

Braising liquid:
2 cups stock, chicken and/or lamb. I used a homemade combination of both.
1 cup red wine
.25 cups balsamic vinegar
zest of 1 lemon
bay leaf

Process:
Preheat over to 300 F.
Liberally salt the pork on all sides. Let it sit for at least 30 minutes to bring it close to room temperature.

Masala:
Put the canola oil in the dutch oven over medium heat. Add the cumin seeds.

When the seeds sizzle, add the onion, carrot, parsnips, and cinnamon stick. Cook for about 8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Then add the garlic for about 2 minutes.

Once all the vegetables are soft but not browned, stir in the rest of the spices, let it cook for about 1 minute.

Remove the masala from the pot to a separate dish.

Braised Pork
Sear the pork on all sides. It should get a nice browning.

Add the masala and the tomato. Pour in the braising liquid until the meat is 2/3 covered. This is important. 2/3 of the meat should be covered. This leads to proper braising.

Scrape up anything on the bottom of the pot. Put the lid on, put in the oven for 3-4 hours (3 for a 4 pound roast, 4 for a 5).

When its done, remove from oven, take the lid off and let it cool for an hour or 2. It is important to cool the meat in the liquid or will get dry.

When the meat is cooled off (it doesn't have to be room temperature, just cool enough to handle) move it to a big bowl. Shred it by taking two forks, simply pulling it apart.

BBQ Sauce:
Return the pot of braising liquid to the stove, (remove the cinnamon stick and bay leaf) simmer until reduced by about half. You are looking for an intensely flavored liquid because when you mix it with the pork, the pork has a calming effect on the spices. Taste the reduction, add salt or sugar is needed.

Now we have a decision to make. This pot is chock full of pork fat. Highly saturated, cholesterol laden, delicious, delicious pork fat. So you can use that pork fat or remove a good deal of it. If you choose to remove the fat, let the pot cool for a bit, then put it in the fridge over night. The fat will congeal on top then you can easily take it off.

This is just the braising liquid pureed. Dump it in a food processor or use a hand blender to smooth it out. I used a hand blender to puree it while still warm in the pot. If you cooled it off in the fridge, you might have to warm it up again, but maybe not.

Pulled Pork:
Mix some of the bbq sauce with the shredded pork. Amount is up to you, depends how wet you like it. Serve on a roll or with some cole slaw.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Mushroom and Figs

I made an interesting accompaniment with baby bella mushrooms and dried mission figs. Went well with some breaded baked chicken, but pork chops would be good also.

Software
Quart of baby bella mushrooms, sliced
Onion finally diced, about half cup
4-6 garlic cloves, crushed
Olive oil
Chopped parsley
Balsamic vinegar

Dozen dried mission figs, quartered
Cup of white win, half oz butter

Hardware
Sauce pan
Frying pan

Pattern
Toss the figs, wine, and butter into the suace pan. Simmer until reduced by half.

In the fry pan, saute the onion and garlic with olive oil. Add the mushrooms and some more oil if needed.

Reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes.

Strain the wine and fig mixture into the mushrooms. Add the parsley and splash of balsamic.

Season, stir, and reduce.

Good stuff.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Curry Shrimp

I do two versions of curried shrimp, both are pretty easy. The first is a great appetizer because it goes right on a cracker or chip. But that is for another post. This Curry Shrimp I made last night for dinner. This is potent stuff, heavily seasoned. The shrimp are cooked separately so the masala doesn't totally dominate the shrimp flavor. It would be good, and more traditional on rice, but I'm using pasta. I would use gnocchi if I had them. Potatoes would be good as well; in fact, I had it for breakfast with boiled fingerlings, excellent combo.

Software:
From Cooking

Not pictured, farfalle pasta.

Spices:
You could really use any spice blend. I tried this combination and its pretty good. If you are really lazy, its about 3-4 tablespoons of a store bought powder. Badia does a decent yellow curry powder but the McCormick Signature Collection Red Curry powder is better.

Coriander, fennel seed, fenugreek, white pepper, cardamon - Twice as much coriander as fennel. About equal amount of fennel seed and fenugreek and pepper. 6 pods cardamom. Grind into a powder using a coffee grinder.

Turmeric, about a tablespoon. I like turmeric, I use a heavy hand.

Cayenne to taste.

Everything in Place:
From Cooking

There's the farfalle!

Only chopped 2 of the 3 carrots, as they are quite large. It about the same volume carrot as onion.

I hit the diced tomatoes with the IMMERSION BLENDER!!! (this is the appropriate way to describe the coolest power tool in a kitchen) resulting in a pureed consistency. I want a smoother sauce because this will go over pasta, but it works just fine with diced tomatoes.

Everything in Place 2:
From Cooking

Heavy cast enameled cast iron pot with canola oil and a tablespoon on cumin seeds. They sizzle for about 2 minutes in the oil before the onion goes in. Flavor country.

The frozen shrimp are on a steamer rack with water below.

Control Flow:

Shrimp:
Steam pot on high with lid. Should take about 15 - 20 minutes to cook the frozen shrimp depending on size and stove power.

When done (they can be a hair under cooked as they will finish in sauce) move shrimp the ice bath to stop cooking. If they are not peeled, do so later while the masala simmers.

Aside - It is interesting my stove appears purple in the picture, its actually red.

Pasta:
I used the shrimp water to cook the pasta for some added flavor. It's almost a quick stock, i guess. So add some water to the pot, above half way full, then back on the heat to boil.

Masala:
Heavy pot gets a liberal coating with canola oil and tablespoon of cumin seeds and medium heat. Seriously, use canola. Generic vegetable oil probably is fine, but don't use olive (flavor profile and low smoke point) or peanut (won't mesh in the masala).

Cumin will start to pop and sizzle. Let it for a minute or so.

Add onion. Cook for 8-10 minutes stirring occasionally. They will just start to brown around some edges.

Add garlic. Cook for about 2 minutes.

Add homemade curry powder, stir, cook for 1 minute.

Add tomato and some salt. Stir.

Add half can of coconut milk. Cook and stir.

Note - Proportion of coconut milk to tomato is done to taste. I think minimum 2-1 tomato to coco is needed. I actually added a little more at the end.

Add carrots. Stir. Lid on. Stir it occacionally.

Let this simmer for at least 10 minutes. My heat is down to 2 and it still got a strong simmer going. It can simmer for longer, mine went almost 30 minutes due to dog walk, shrimp peel and waiting for pasta to cook.

Drop the pasta (this one says to cook for 10 minutes, i'll do 8 and let it finish in masala), time your accordingly.

Integration:
Pasta goes in masala. Some cooking water can go with it, not problem. I used a slotted spoon for the transfer.

Peeled and ice bathed shrimp go in next.

Kick the heat up a bit, stir it all together to a consistent temperature.

Serve:
From Cooking

I'd put a sprig of cilantro for color if I had it.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Leftover Breakfast: Frittata Grilled Cheese

There is nothing more rewarding about working from home then making breakfast from leftovers. And I love a good breakfast sandwich.

Let me start by pointing out there is no wrong way to make a grilled cheese sandwich. But there are some techniques I think work better. This is a slower, lower heat method, but if you have the right tools and bread, high heat fast cooking makes a great sandwich as well. See Alton Brown's technique.

1. Bread. Cut thin enough that heat can readily pass through it. It shouldn't be to dense. If you can see through it a few spots that's great.

2. Bread quality. The better the bread the better then grilled cheese. I like a multi-grain. Publix bakery does a 5 grain sourdough (not available in every store for some reason) and its perfect. Get them to cut it thin (see tip 1). I stopped buying 'manufactured' bread awhile back. Take that PepperidgeArnoldWonder jerks!

3. Cheese. There needs to be some shredded cheese in the middle. Anything will get the job done but meltability and flavor will affect the final product. I like the Artisan blends (particularly the Mexican blend) Sargento makes. This is much easier then dealing with a block of cheese, but if you really want to go gourmet, shred your own.

4. Fat. Fat goes on the outside of the bread to get that golden brown, crunchiness. Butter or olive oil are the best options. Mayo and margarine are also popular solutions but I think both suck.

5. Heat. You must cook it hot enough to brown the bread, but low enough that the heat penetrates the sandwich before burning the outside! Medium low.

Back to the leftovers. I have the bread, cheese, and butter along with fresh tomato slices (Pine Island, FL...thank you local winter crops) and the leftover 'flat' frittata discussed yesterday.

Frittata was in plastic wrap, so I tossed the package in the microwave for 1 minute on half power.

I'm using a All-Clad steel pan for this job. Medium low heat. The butter goes in early (pan isn't pre-heated yet). Add 1 piece bread to melted butter in pan.

Construction order:

1 bread slice
cheese
tomato slices
frittata
cheese
bread

I like to press the sandwich. Big spatula does the job. Weight it down with a big can of beans if you don't want to hold it. It will take anywhere from 2-5 minutes depending on your heat and pan.

Flip.

Repeat on other side.

Eat.

This was a great adventure in leftover breakfast sandwiches.

Espresso along side it.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Sunday frittata brunch.

I had no food until Saturday, fresh out. But I did get the new Food & Wine magazine (March 2011), I'm planning on making some selections. Starting with the Spinach-Arugula Frittata on page 61.

Not surprisingly (to me at least), I made several alterations. I have no arugula. However, my fridge does contain the spinach along with leaks, radicchio, and everything else. Oh, I'm replacing fresh thyme with fresh rosemary as well.

Here is by customarily brief summary of the published recipe, with my changes.

Fresh spinach
Leaks, chopped
4 eggs
5 egg whites
Fresh grated parmigiano
Canola oil
Shallot
Peppers, sliced thin, I'm using those little sweet peppers
Chopped rosemary

A frittata is basically vegetables (or whatever) saute'd. Then pour in eggs. Finish in the over and it fluffs up all nice.

I'm using two different pans. The first is a Calphalon 8 inch Infused Anondized skillet (not coated) the other a 10 inch cheap coated pan I got from Marshalls. Which cookware will reign supreme!

Process:

Poach the spinach until wilted, drain, pat dry.

I'm doing the same thing in both pans.

Saute:
Medium-Low heat.
Oil.
Shallot and peppers for about 3 minutes.
Leaks for about 3 minutes.
Radicchio for 1 minute.
Wilted spinach for 1 minute.

Eggs:
Whisk the eggs, egg whites, and some parmigiano.
After the saute, pour eggs into the pans. (add a little more oil before eggs if pan is looking dry)
It will start to set on the edges.
Put pans in 400 degree over. (top shelf according to Food & Wine) for about 4 minutes.

Non-Stick Pan results:

Notice the nice even browning. But it's not very fluffy.

Here's the anodized pan result:



It's not as pretty (it stuck a little) but it is fluffy. We liked this version better.

To be fair, I suspect I needed more egg in each pan, particularly the non-stick (since it is a bigger pan). More egg mixture should allow the egg to fluff up nicely. Also, I used to much oil. 2-3 tablespoons should be adequate.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Invented a Drink: You Name It

Minute Maid Pomegranate Blueberry juice. It's one of the healthy juices intending to increase your brain power.

2 parts juice
1 part vodka
1 park bourbon (cheap stuff)
4 parts club soda

Mix over ice.

Should be good with a lime wedge.

Fruity, but not sweet.

Name to be determined by comments.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Vij's Coconut Curried Vegetables

One of my favorite cookbooks is Elegant & Inspired Vij's Indian Cuisine


The spice combinations employed in good Indian food are a real attraction for me. I have a full stash of whole spices used in Indian food (your local Indian market is best and cheapest place to stock up). I like the India Palace on the West side of West Palm Beach. Haven't tried the restaurant but the market is great for spices, rice, and even some fresh produce (sometimes they have fresh curry leaves).

Back to the curry. You can find the recipe at Vij's restuarant site, go to Recipes then Coconut Curried Vegetables.

I find myself making this dish almost once a week. It is delicious, nutritious, great leftover, and pairs with most any protein or just with rice. Plus the variations are endless. I never knew cauliflower could be this good.

Variations:

If you don't use eggplant the sauce won't thicken as well but the flavor is quite good. The eggplant does give it a different dimension though.

I like to vary the types of peppers used. Poblano, bell, sweet italian, whatever is handy.

I like it best if its not to strong on the tomato. The coconut milk really comes through this way. If you don't care for coconut milk (looking at you, Attia) then by all means, up the tomato content.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Fresh Pasta and a Weird Herb

I asked the hippie selling organic leafy things if he had some parsley. He did not but offered me a bite of this odd leaf. It has a powerful bitter citrus finish, almost like the leaf if full of lemon zest.

Wide egg noodels, fresh from the pasta lady at the farmers market tossed with a white wine creme fraise sauce using the weird bitter citrus herb:

Diced carrot, onion, celery
1 garlic chopped

Sweat them. It's Mirepoix!

2 cups stock (I have homemade lamb/chicken)
1 cup Sauvignon Blanc
Handful of chopped weird herb. Use parsley otherwise.
Half cup creme fraise

Add stock and wine. Reduce by half, approximately.

Add herbs. Simmer for 10 minutes.

Whisk in creme fresh let it simmer until pasta is ready.

Boil pasta for 3 minutes, then drain and transfer to sauce. Its fine, probably even good, if some pasta water comes along with it. Toss and enjoy.

This came out really well. Fresh pasta is like a million times better then the dried stuff. Maybe for spaghetti and doesn't matter so much, but I think this would not work with the bag of egg noodles.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Recipe: Bucatini with Chorizo Sauce and Shrimp


We went to Italy in October, including 3 days in Rome. I've been making various pasta all'amatriciana variations ever since. Today, I planned on a pretty simple variation using the fresh bucatini pasta from the farmer's market. It was to be bacon (i don't have any pancetta on hand), basil tomato sauce, served with sauteed gulf shrimp fresh from the farmers market.

Then I opened the fridge rediscovering the chorizo sausage. Pancetta or bacon...orrrrrr...chorizo? Why not, its fatty and flavorful. Totally different set of flavors, but I think the basic mechanics of all'amatriciana will work. Hopefully the taste pans out.

Normally, I base my recipe on Batali's version from Babbo restaurant. This one is totally different.



Shrimp
  • Chorizo sausage - casing removed
  • Red onion - halved, sliced
  • 3 tomatoes - chopped
  • 2 red peppers - julienne
  • 3 cloves garlic - sliced
  • Salt and pepper
  • Olive Oil
Toss the chorizo in a pan, fire up to medium low. Break it up with a wooden spoon. Let it cook until it releases a good deal of fat.

Add garlic. Cook for about 2 minutes.

Add peppers and onions. And some olive oil if there isn't enough chorizo fat to coast. Toss it around.

Let it saute for 10 minutes or so, tossing occasionally.

Add the chopped tomato. And a shot of salt. This will deglaze the pan. Fire it up to high until it gets to a boil then back off to a hardy simmer. It will take 15 or 20 minutes to get the tomatoes down to a good enough sauce.

Fresh pasta goes into salted boiling water for 3 minutes, drain, toss with the sauce.

Shrimp

I'm not a fan of cooking really good fresh seafood into a tomato sauce because you really lose the value of getting the good shrimp. So I'm going to sauté them separately with a little garlic, parmesan, and white wine. Also, I think the flavor holds up better when cooked shell on. I'd keep the heads on if they hadn't been removed already.
  • Shrimp - 1 pound medium gulf, cleaned, shell on
  • 2 shallot - sliced thin
  • 1/2 Cup of cheap Chardonnay (any white will do)
  • Grated Parmesan
  • Bunch of roughly chopped cilantro
  • Olive Oil
Butter and olive oil go in a medium heat sauce pan. Let the water cook out of the butter then add the shallots until they start to brown. Deglaze with the wine. Reduce until there is almost no wine left.

Add shrimp, salt and pepper, and a little more olive oil. Toss. It will take about 5 minutes to finish them.

Serve on top of the pasta with some grated parmesan.

An Italian, Mexican, Gulf Coast classic. Is this fusion? Probably not.