I admit, it's very easy to impress the people I usually have over for Christmas. They don't eat out much. That doesn't stop me from making fine dining choices.
This one is a huge cheat that's sure to impress with very little effort. The total active time is less than 10 minutes, though it does take a couple of hours to get everything put together and baked.
I actually didn't use spinach in mine. I used fresh greens off my radishes. You could use any leafy green you like, but I find spinach to be the most widely available. Plus, defrosting a brick of it is a massive time-saving device.
1 lb rainbow carrots
1 lb fresh spinach leaves or 10 oz frozen spinach, thawed and drained
1 Tb olive oil
kosher salt
1/2 tsp rosemary
1/8 tsp black pepper
1/4 C crumbled bleu cheese
1 sheet puff pastry
flour for rolling the pastry
1. Preheat oven to 375º. Peel carrots, then cut into batons, about 1/4 of the diameter and 2" long. Toss in olive oil, a pinch of salt, rosemary, and pepper. Bake on a foil-lined sheet until cooked through, about 30 minutes. If working from fresh spinach, cook until lightly wilted.
2. While the carrots are cooling, defrost the puff pastry. It takes 30-40 minutes. You can keep the oven on, so it doesn't have to reheat. There can be some overlapping of these steps.
3. Roll the pastry on a lightly floured surface to get rid of the creases. Place on a baking sheet. Distribute drained spinach on pastry, keeping the rims clean. Then spread carrots over the same area. Finally, sprinkle cheese sparsely over the veggies. One crumble per bite is more than enough.
4. Bake until golden, about 20 minutes. Allow to cool slightly, then cut into pieces with a pizza cutter. Serve immediately. The pastry gets soggy if you try to serve it as leftovers, but it can be revived a bit in the toaster oven if it isn't too dark to start with.
Serves 6 as a side, 12 or more as an hors d'oeuvre
Difficulty rating π
Friday, December 29, 2017
Monday, December 25, 2017
Doughnuts
Appropriately enough, I asked for a deep fryer for Chanukah. Then I didn't have time to use it until after the holiday. Merry Christmas!
Techie Smurf went a little overboard and got me the deluxe model that's twice as big as the one he has. I'm not opening a donut shop. Still, this project would have taken three times as long to fry with the slimmer model. After the holes, I switched from the double basket to the full one and got in all four of the twists at once instead of one at a time. And now I can fry my own tortilla chips, crispy won tons, and anything else I've been half-assing in skillets and saucepans.
The big thing I learned while doing this project is there's nothing to be afraid of. Doughnuts sound all kinds of intimidating, but it's just a dinner roll recipe that you fry instead of bake. I'm not kidding. If you've ever made kick-ass rolls, or any other roll, the only difference is the cooking method. Yes, I gave them the third level of difficulty, but that's for working with hot oil and three hours start to finish.
You also don't actually need a deep fryer to make these. I asked for one because of the apple fritter incident. If you can control your oil temperature on the stove, any heavy pot will do. They actually made them in a pot on The Chew the day I opened the fryer.
This is a half-recipe out of the Bible. It's almost identical to Alton Brown's, but he uses shortening instead of butter and doesn't put in cinnamon. You don't really taste the spices, especially after glazing, which is the point. In this case, the use of spice is to avoid any bland bites and not to add a definitive taste.
2-1/2 C flour
2 Tb sugar
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 packet (2-1/2 tsp) yeast
1/2 C + 2 Tb milk
2 Tb butter
1 egg
1. In a stand mixer with the paddle, combine salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and 1 cup of flour. Separately, warm milk, butter, and sugar to 100º. Butter does not need to melt. Stir in yeast and allow to get foamy, about 5 minutes.
2. Pour milk mixture into flour and beat into a thick, stringy batter for 2 minutes on medium. Add egg and another cup of flour and beat again into a dough that comes off the paddle easily. If you wish, you can switch to the dough hook for this second addition. I didn't want to wash it.
3. Turn out dough onto a surface floured with the remaining 1/2 cup. Knead until smooth, about 5 minutes. Because this is an egg dough, it will always be a little sticky. It's also going to be more firm than most of my dough recipes. Don't worry about the extra weight. Turn over ball in a greased bowl and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 hour.
4. Punch down dough and let rest for 10 minutes on a rolling surface. I just didn't wash the pastry board after step 3 and there was enough flour to finish. Or, you can add more as needed.
5. Roll out dough to 1/4" thick. Yes, that thin. I guess I don't have Grandma Sophie's doughnut cutter anymore, so I experimented with the round cutters I do have, not knowing in which directions the dough would rise. Turns out, it pretty much goes straight up, so I could have used the next size up for the outer ring. (A quick side note: the point of cutting a hole is because a torus shape will fry evenly. If you're doing solid, filled donuts, you just have to cook them longer so the center isn't doughy.). After cutting out round doughnuts and holes, transfer them to a lightly floured baking sheet to rise for 30 minutes. You can re-roll the scraps because yeast dough doesn't get tough like cookie dough does. I chose to form the scraps into ropes and make twists instead.
6. Fill your pot or fryer with 1" of oil and heat to 370º. Gently place the risen doughnuts into the oil and fry until lightly golden, about 2 minutes. Turn and fry other side until it matches, slightly less time. Remove to a paper towel-lined plate or a cooling rack so any excess oil can drip off.
7. I went a little nuts with the decorating and made them all a little different. If you're rolling in sugar, cinnamon sugar, chocolate sugar, powdered sugar, etc, do it while they're warm so the granules can stick to the oil. To make a simple powdered sugar glaze, combine milk and powdered sugar to desired consistency. Dip or roll cooled doughnuts in the glaze and allow to firm up for about 10 minutes. You can add sprinkles, coconut, nuts, chopped bacon, etc while the glaze is soft. To make a "maple" glaze, add brown sugar to the basic glaze. I didn't have much luck with adding chocolate chips to the glaze and melting the whole thing together. Better to use a regular ganache. For simplicity's sake, it really is easier to make them all the same kind and just change up the sprinkles.
8. Serve within 4 hours (uncooked milk in the glaze, plus they get stale) or freeze unglazed once cooled. To revive, let defrost to room temperature, then freshen up in the toaster oven for a few minutes. Glaze and serve.
Makes about 1 dozen, plus their holes
Difficulty rating :-0
Techie Smurf went a little overboard and got me the deluxe model that's twice as big as the one he has. I'm not opening a donut shop. Still, this project would have taken three times as long to fry with the slimmer model. After the holes, I switched from the double basket to the full one and got in all four of the twists at once instead of one at a time. And now I can fry my own tortilla chips, crispy won tons, and anything else I've been half-assing in skillets and saucepans.
The big thing I learned while doing this project is there's nothing to be afraid of. Doughnuts sound all kinds of intimidating, but it's just a dinner roll recipe that you fry instead of bake. I'm not kidding. If you've ever made kick-ass rolls, or any other roll, the only difference is the cooking method. Yes, I gave them the third level of difficulty, but that's for working with hot oil and three hours start to finish.
You also don't actually need a deep fryer to make these. I asked for one because of the apple fritter incident. If you can control your oil temperature on the stove, any heavy pot will do. They actually made them in a pot on The Chew the day I opened the fryer.
This is a half-recipe out of the Bible. It's almost identical to Alton Brown's, but he uses shortening instead of butter and doesn't put in cinnamon. You don't really taste the spices, especially after glazing, which is the point. In this case, the use of spice is to avoid any bland bites and not to add a definitive taste.
2-1/2 C flour
2 Tb sugar
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 packet (2-1/2 tsp) yeast
1/2 C + 2 Tb milk
2 Tb butter
1 egg
1. In a stand mixer with the paddle, combine salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and 1 cup of flour. Separately, warm milk, butter, and sugar to 100º. Butter does not need to melt. Stir in yeast and allow to get foamy, about 5 minutes.
2. Pour milk mixture into flour and beat into a thick, stringy batter for 2 minutes on medium. Add egg and another cup of flour and beat again into a dough that comes off the paddle easily. If you wish, you can switch to the dough hook for this second addition. I didn't want to wash it.
3. Turn out dough onto a surface floured with the remaining 1/2 cup. Knead until smooth, about 5 minutes. Because this is an egg dough, it will always be a little sticky. It's also going to be more firm than most of my dough recipes. Don't worry about the extra weight. Turn over ball in a greased bowl and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 hour.
4. Punch down dough and let rest for 10 minutes on a rolling surface. I just didn't wash the pastry board after step 3 and there was enough flour to finish. Or, you can add more as needed.
5. Roll out dough to 1/4" thick. Yes, that thin. I guess I don't have Grandma Sophie's doughnut cutter anymore, so I experimented with the round cutters I do have, not knowing in which directions the dough would rise. Turns out, it pretty much goes straight up, so I could have used the next size up for the outer ring. (A quick side note: the point of cutting a hole is because a torus shape will fry evenly. If you're doing solid, filled donuts, you just have to cook them longer so the center isn't doughy.). After cutting out round doughnuts and holes, transfer them to a lightly floured baking sheet to rise for 30 minutes. You can re-roll the scraps because yeast dough doesn't get tough like cookie dough does. I chose to form the scraps into ropes and make twists instead.
6. Fill your pot or fryer with 1" of oil and heat to 370º. Gently place the risen doughnuts into the oil and fry until lightly golden, about 2 minutes. Turn and fry other side until it matches, slightly less time. Remove to a paper towel-lined plate or a cooling rack so any excess oil can drip off.
7. I went a little nuts with the decorating and made them all a little different. If you're rolling in sugar, cinnamon sugar, chocolate sugar, powdered sugar, etc, do it while they're warm so the granules can stick to the oil. To make a simple powdered sugar glaze, combine milk and powdered sugar to desired consistency. Dip or roll cooled doughnuts in the glaze and allow to firm up for about 10 minutes. You can add sprinkles, coconut, nuts, chopped bacon, etc while the glaze is soft. To make a "maple" glaze, add brown sugar to the basic glaze. I didn't have much luck with adding chocolate chips to the glaze and melting the whole thing together. Better to use a regular ganache. For simplicity's sake, it really is easier to make them all the same kind and just change up the sprinkles.
8. Serve within 4 hours (uncooked milk in the glaze, plus they get stale) or freeze unglazed once cooled. To revive, let defrost to room temperature, then freshen up in the toaster oven for a few minutes. Glaze and serve.
Makes about 1 dozen, plus their holes
Difficulty rating :-0
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
French Twists
I'm working on something big, but in the meantime: Christmas Cookies!
This recipe was one of the finalists in this year's LA Times Holiday Cookie Bake-Off. It was the easiest of the recipes I hadn't done in some form. I would really like to do the baklava rouladas, but the relative humidity is just too low to open a package of filo. There isn't enough butter in the world.
The story behind these is that the submitter's Italian grandmother used to make them. Therefore, I'm not sure if the "French" part is supposed to be derogatory. Let's go with the pretend notion that Grandma was from Northern Italy and these originated in Southern France. The cultures meld there because the boundary has shifted back and forth over the centuries. Natives of Nice and Cannes even speak French with the slightest Italian accent.
Reading the recipe, these are a lot like rugelach, just shaped different. I'm not a fan of rugelach, and need a big cup of café au lait to make them palatable. Having these in stick shape instead of crescent makes the dunking easier, but they don't really need it. They maintained quite a bit of moisture, despite being basically pie crust. The original recipe suggests apple or raspberry jelly. I don't like either and hauled out a jar of apricot orange jam. While not as smooth as jelly - but close - it's what I would have used when I was considering doing the rugelach. I also subbed sliced almonds for the walnuts because that's what I had in the pantry. I say, come up with any jam/nut combination that works for you. The coconut mellows out the flavors, so don't omit it, but I used unsweetened flakes since there seemed to be plenty of sugar between the jam and cinnamon sugar.
I'm decreasing the volume of the fillings slightly because a lot of it ended up on the cutting board. I may not have rolled the dough thin enough, but it still would have been a lot if I had gone a couple more inches in both directions.
2-1/2 C flour
1 Tb baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 C (1 stick) cold, unsalted butter, cut into cubes
*1 egg
*1/2 C milk
*1 C jelly or smooth, unseeded jam
*1 C coconut
*3/4 C chopped nuts
1/4 C sugar mixed with 1 tsp ground cinnamon
Powdered sugar
1. In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Cut in butter until it is pea-sized.
2. Separately, beat together the egg and milk. Make a well in the middle of the flour and add the milk mixture. Gently stir the ingredients until they come together into a dough. I ended up adding about a tablespoon more milk to make it work, but it was a dry day. The dough will seem to get more hydrated as it rests, so it's ok if it seems sort of dry at this point, as long as you can get it all to stick together in a single ball.
3. Shape dough ball into a rectangle approximately 4" x 8". This will make it easier to roll out later. Wrap in plastic or wax paper and refrigerate until firm, about 2 hours. Or, wrap again in foil, seal in a plastic bag, and freeze for up to 3 months.
4. Preheat the oven to 350º. Line 2 to 3 baking sheets with parchment or a silpat. I used a silpat, and the cookies came off easily. More important, the burnt jam came off the silpat easily. And trust me, any jam that leaks out of the cookie will end up burnt. How badly depends on whether your jam was sweetened with real sugar or corn syrup. Not sure how sugar-free jams react to high temperatures.
5. Place dough on a large, lightly floured surface and roll to 1/8" thick, trying to keep that rectangular shape. I ended up taking pieces off one side and patching others. Dough can do that.
6. Spread a thin layer of jam over the entire rectangle, all the way to the edges. On the lower half, sprinkle the cinnamon sugar, coconut, and nuts. Fold the top half of the dough over the bottom half to completely cover the filling. Lightly press the halves together.
7. Using a sharp knife, cut the rectangle crosswise into 1/2"-thick strips. The fold will be at the top of each strip. Carefully twist each strip to form a spiral. Place the spirals on the prepared baking sheets, spacing them about an inch apart.
8. Bake the cookies until they are set and golden, 12-15 minutes. Remove the cookies from the sheet to fresh parchment paper when cool enough to handle, or the jam will glue them down. For Silpat, you can wait until they're halfway cooled. Either way, dust with powdered sugar when cool.
Makes about 2-1/2 dozen
Difficulty rating. :)
This recipe was one of the finalists in this year's LA Times Holiday Cookie Bake-Off. It was the easiest of the recipes I hadn't done in some form. I would really like to do the baklava rouladas, but the relative humidity is just too low to open a package of filo. There isn't enough butter in the world.
The story behind these is that the submitter's Italian grandmother used to make them. Therefore, I'm not sure if the "French" part is supposed to be derogatory. Let's go with the pretend notion that Grandma was from Northern Italy and these originated in Southern France. The cultures meld there because the boundary has shifted back and forth over the centuries. Natives of Nice and Cannes even speak French with the slightest Italian accent.
Reading the recipe, these are a lot like rugelach, just shaped different. I'm not a fan of rugelach, and need a big cup of café au lait to make them palatable. Having these in stick shape instead of crescent makes the dunking easier, but they don't really need it. They maintained quite a bit of moisture, despite being basically pie crust. The original recipe suggests apple or raspberry jelly. I don't like either and hauled out a jar of apricot orange jam. While not as smooth as jelly - but close - it's what I would have used when I was considering doing the rugelach. I also subbed sliced almonds for the walnuts because that's what I had in the pantry. I say, come up with any jam/nut combination that works for you. The coconut mellows out the flavors, so don't omit it, but I used unsweetened flakes since there seemed to be plenty of sugar between the jam and cinnamon sugar.
I'm decreasing the volume of the fillings slightly because a lot of it ended up on the cutting board. I may not have rolled the dough thin enough, but it still would have been a lot if I had gone a couple more inches in both directions.
2-1/2 C flour
1 Tb baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 C (1 stick) cold, unsalted butter, cut into cubes
*1 egg
*1/2 C milk
*1 C jelly or smooth, unseeded jam
*1 C coconut
*3/4 C chopped nuts
1/4 C sugar mixed with 1 tsp ground cinnamon
Powdered sugar
1. In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Cut in butter until it is pea-sized.
2. Separately, beat together the egg and milk. Make a well in the middle of the flour and add the milk mixture. Gently stir the ingredients until they come together into a dough. I ended up adding about a tablespoon more milk to make it work, but it was a dry day. The dough will seem to get more hydrated as it rests, so it's ok if it seems sort of dry at this point, as long as you can get it all to stick together in a single ball.
3. Shape dough ball into a rectangle approximately 4" x 8". This will make it easier to roll out later. Wrap in plastic or wax paper and refrigerate until firm, about 2 hours. Or, wrap again in foil, seal in a plastic bag, and freeze for up to 3 months.
4. Preheat the oven to 350º. Line 2 to 3 baking sheets with parchment or a silpat. I used a silpat, and the cookies came off easily. More important, the burnt jam came off the silpat easily. And trust me, any jam that leaks out of the cookie will end up burnt. How badly depends on whether your jam was sweetened with real sugar or corn syrup. Not sure how sugar-free jams react to high temperatures.
5. Place dough on a large, lightly floured surface and roll to 1/8" thick, trying to keep that rectangular shape. I ended up taking pieces off one side and patching others. Dough can do that.
6. Spread a thin layer of jam over the entire rectangle, all the way to the edges. On the lower half, sprinkle the cinnamon sugar, coconut, and nuts. Fold the top half of the dough over the bottom half to completely cover the filling. Lightly press the halves together.
7. Using a sharp knife, cut the rectangle crosswise into 1/2"-thick strips. The fold will be at the top of each strip. Carefully twist each strip to form a spiral. Place the spirals on the prepared baking sheets, spacing them about an inch apart.
8. Bake the cookies until they are set and golden, 12-15 minutes. Remove the cookies from the sheet to fresh parchment paper when cool enough to handle, or the jam will glue them down. For Silpat, you can wait until they're halfway cooled. Either way, dust with powdered sugar when cool.
Makes about 2-1/2 dozen
Difficulty rating. :)
Friday, December 15, 2017
Pasta with Squash Sauce
Ok, maybe not the best title. I mixed leftover canned pumpkin and half a roasted butternut squash for this one. I'm making the recipe slightly larger for four servings and an entire squash.
I did discover that butternut squash is a whole lot easier to cut if you buy the smallest one in the pile. The larger ones are dense and generally have it out for me, but I had no trouble getting through this one. Peeling it raw is still pretty much impossible, so it was just as well I wanted the roasted flavor in the sauce.
As for the pasta, the photo shows some leftover soba noodles. A white pasta would be considerably more appetizing. That little patch of green at the top is the greens from the first radishes I picked. I'm good at growing radishes. The greens taste like spinach when blanched. Need to come up with more uses for the radishes themselves.
*1 small butternut squash
*1 C canned pumpkin
*1/2 C diced onion
1 Tb olive oil
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp white pepper
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1/4 C mascarpone cheese
milk as needed
2 Tb pine nuts for garnish
4 servings cooked pasta of choice
1. Preheat oven to 375º. Line a baking sheet with foil. Cut squash in half and scoop out seeds. Place cut-side down and roast until skin is easily pierced by a fork, about 45 minutes. Allow to cool until you can handle it and peel off the skin. Dice flesh into bite-sized pieces.
2. Start boiling water for your pasta. Drizzle oil in a 10" skillet and heat over medium. Cook onion until softened, 3-5 minutes. Add pumpkin and squash. Once everything warms together, the butternut will start to give off more moisture. If you want the sauce thinner, stir in half a cup of water or vegetable broth. That's what I did. Stir in salt, pepper, and nutmeg.
3. When your pasta is finished and draining, add mascarpone cheese to the sauce and stir until creamy. If you need to thin out the sauce again, use milk. Either add pasta to skillet and toss to coat, or plate pasta first and spoon sauce on top. Sprinkle with toasted pine nuts if desired and serve hot.
Difficulty rating. :)
I did discover that butternut squash is a whole lot easier to cut if you buy the smallest one in the pile. The larger ones are dense and generally have it out for me, but I had no trouble getting through this one. Peeling it raw is still pretty much impossible, so it was just as well I wanted the roasted flavor in the sauce.
As for the pasta, the photo shows some leftover soba noodles. A white pasta would be considerably more appetizing. That little patch of green at the top is the greens from the first radishes I picked. I'm good at growing radishes. The greens taste like spinach when blanched. Need to come up with more uses for the radishes themselves.
*1 small butternut squash
*1 C canned pumpkin
*1/2 C diced onion
1 Tb olive oil
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp white pepper
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1/4 C mascarpone cheese
milk as needed
2 Tb pine nuts for garnish
4 servings cooked pasta of choice
1. Preheat oven to 375º. Line a baking sheet with foil. Cut squash in half and scoop out seeds. Place cut-side down and roast until skin is easily pierced by a fork, about 45 minutes. Allow to cool until you can handle it and peel off the skin. Dice flesh into bite-sized pieces.
2. Start boiling water for your pasta. Drizzle oil in a 10" skillet and heat over medium. Cook onion until softened, 3-5 minutes. Add pumpkin and squash. Once everything warms together, the butternut will start to give off more moisture. If you want the sauce thinner, stir in half a cup of water or vegetable broth. That's what I did. Stir in salt, pepper, and nutmeg.
3. When your pasta is finished and draining, add mascarpone cheese to the sauce and stir until creamy. If you need to thin out the sauce again, use milk. Either add pasta to skillet and toss to coat, or plate pasta first and spoon sauce on top. Sprinkle with toasted pine nuts if desired and serve hot.
Difficulty rating. :)
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Basic Plating
"Plating" is the fancy word for putting food on a plate. It's considered as much a part of a restaurant's menu as the food itself. You want the food to look at least as good as it tastes. There is often an employee called the "expeditor" whose function is to check the appearance of an item before it leaves the kitchen. They wipe off stray bits of sauce, add a final garnish, and make sure the temperature is appropriate.
Some restaurants lately have taken the concepts of plating and presentation to extremes. The presentation should not overshadow the food itself. Bubbles of ganache that house mint-infused CO2? Truffle foam? That's not food, it's performance art. That said, there are some practices from finer restaurants that can be applied at home.
The simplest is putting food on the plate in a clean and organized manner. Not only does it reduce sibling quarrels over who got the biggest piece, it looks nice. I use this technique a lot when I do cold dinners, arranging the different pieces of the tapas into their own areas of the plate.
Generally, the central focus of the dish should be either in the middle of the plate or the spot closest to the diner. I'm left-handed, so I tend to put it in the 8 o'clock position, nearest to the hand holding the fork. You'll notice the edge of the table in the above photo. Tilt your head a little to the right, and the meatballs are at 8 o'clock. If you use formal-style table manners, you're holding the fork in your left hand when you cut, so that's still a thing. I learned how to use the knife with my right hand and don't have to switch.
Garnishes don't have to be parsley. I made some lemon meringue tarts on a whim to use up pie crust, and garnished the plate with a few grapes. An already above-average tea treat went gourmet in five seconds.
Negative space is a technique I don't use all that often because it requires a plate larger than the food needs. I generally do portion control when I plate something, and using a large plate runs counter to that. I went hunting through my photos and found a decent picture of the concept in yam toasts. If I'd garnished the board with raisins or some kind of sauce, you'd get a better idea.
Some restaurants lately have taken the concepts of plating and presentation to extremes. The presentation should not overshadow the food itself. Bubbles of ganache that house mint-infused CO2? Truffle foam? That's not food, it's performance art. That said, there are some practices from finer restaurants that can be applied at home.
The simplest is putting food on the plate in a clean and organized manner. Not only does it reduce sibling quarrels over who got the biggest piece, it looks nice. I use this technique a lot when I do cold dinners, arranging the different pieces of the tapas into their own areas of the plate.
Generally, the central focus of the dish should be either in the middle of the plate or the spot closest to the diner. I'm left-handed, so I tend to put it in the 8 o'clock position, nearest to the hand holding the fork. You'll notice the edge of the table in the above photo. Tilt your head a little to the right, and the meatballs are at 8 o'clock. If you use formal-style table manners, you're holding the fork in your left hand when you cut, so that's still a thing. I learned how to use the knife with my right hand and don't have to switch.
Garnishes don't have to be parsley. I made some lemon meringue tarts on a whim to use up pie crust, and garnished the plate with a few grapes. An already above-average tea treat went gourmet in five seconds.
Negative space is a technique I don't use all that often because it requires a plate larger than the food needs. I generally do portion control when I plate something, and using a large plate runs counter to that. I went hunting through my photos and found a decent picture of the concept in yam toasts. If I'd garnished the board with raisins or some kind of sauce, you'd get a better idea.
I'm not a huge fan of using height as a presentation tool. If something falls between plating and setting down the dish, it just ends up looking sloppy. The easiest example of this is leaning ribs or chops up against each other so the bone sticks up. Here's a photo of doing it with scones.
You could get height by sticking a spring of garnish that stands up, by using a stemmed goblet instead of a soup bowl, and by making a stacked dish like a sandwich. Again, I don't really care how tall my food is. It's just another presentation option.
The timing of this post is a good reminder of presentation during holiday parties, but these techniques can be applied to any meal. Cut a PB&J in a new way and you've made your kid a special treat. Set up plates instead of serving family-style and a weekday meal feels unique. A meal can be as interesting as you feel like making it, even something as boring as mac-and-cheese out of a box.
Saturday, December 9, 2017
The Office Potluck
It's that time of year again, when everyone has to bring something to work for the holiday party. An office potluck inevitably turns into 3/4 desserts and 1/4 veggie and fruit trays from the people who forgot until that morning.
I signed up to bring a brisket and didn't find out until after it was bought that one person didn't eat red meat, another was vegetarian, and a third is trying to be vegan. Feeling guilty, I also signed up for a vegan main dish. I'm turning the polenta with broiled vegetables vegan, with soy milk and nutritional yeast taking the place of the goat cheese. I've never used nutritional yeast before, so I'm glad they carry it in the bins at Sprouts. I don't want to be stuck with a full package of something I might never use again. The rest of the soy milk I can use in coffee or tea. Not my first choice, but I don't dislike the taste. Mostly, I still have dairy at least once a day because you lose the enzymes to digest it if you go off dairy completely. I haven't been able to drink a cold glass of milk in over a decade, but I can have some in coffee or any heat-treated dairy product.
I also dug out the hot plate I never use. It's probably from the '70s, but hasn't started a fire yet. The oven at work is the size of a closet, so reheating wasn't an issue. This was just for anyone who wanted to keep things warm afterwards.
What I've learned from this year's endeavor is that there are too many specialized diets out there and you can't please everyone. I only did the broiled veggies because I seriously doubted anyone else would bring something with nutritional value. And because it goes with the brisket. My advice is to bring something you like and don't mind bringing home the leftovers. If everyone does that, they'll at least be able to eat their own dish.
I signed up to bring a brisket and didn't find out until after it was bought that one person didn't eat red meat, another was vegetarian, and a third is trying to be vegan. Feeling guilty, I also signed up for a vegan main dish. I'm turning the polenta with broiled vegetables vegan, with soy milk and nutritional yeast taking the place of the goat cheese. I've never used nutritional yeast before, so I'm glad they carry it in the bins at Sprouts. I don't want to be stuck with a full package of something I might never use again. The rest of the soy milk I can use in coffee or tea. Not my first choice, but I don't dislike the taste. Mostly, I still have dairy at least once a day because you lose the enzymes to digest it if you go off dairy completely. I haven't been able to drink a cold glass of milk in over a decade, but I can have some in coffee or any heat-treated dairy product.
I also dug out the hot plate I never use. It's probably from the '70s, but hasn't started a fire yet. The oven at work is the size of a closet, so reheating wasn't an issue. This was just for anyone who wanted to keep things warm afterwards.
What I've learned from this year's endeavor is that there are too many specialized diets out there and you can't please everyone. I only did the broiled veggies because I seriously doubted anyone else would bring something with nutritional value. And because it goes with the brisket. My advice is to bring something you like and don't mind bringing home the leftovers. If everyone does that, they'll at least be able to eat their own dish.
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Leftovers in Action
By now, everyone has fruit and vegetables in the crisper that are threatening to turn. My main culprit was celery. I actually had to throw away half the bag. It took some serious trimming to come up with enough for a Waldorf salad, but the only thing I had to buy for it was the grapes. I usually catch things like that and transfer them to the broth bag, but I had just finished another 45 hour work week.
The other thing was coming up with a use for the sauerkraut other than grilled cheese. I went with the obvious and grilled up some bratwurst.
So after putting on a bit of weight from that little adventure, I went through the pantry for some plant-based protein. That ended up being some black bean veggie burgers, but with butternut squash instead of the one sorry plantain at Sprouts.
The fridge is mostly empty now, and I don't have a lot of leftovers in the freezer. This works because my garden is getting useful again. Produce doesn't go bad as quickly when it's still in the ground.
The other thing was coming up with a use for the sauerkraut other than grilled cheese. I went with the obvious and grilled up some bratwurst.
So after putting on a bit of weight from that little adventure, I went through the pantry for some plant-based protein. That ended up being some black bean veggie burgers, but with butternut squash instead of the one sorry plantain at Sprouts.
The fridge is mostly empty now, and I don't have a lot of leftovers in the freezer. This works because my garden is getting useful again. Produce doesn't go bad as quickly when it's still in the ground.
Saturday, December 2, 2017
Radish Farm
Ok, I admit I'm doing a gardening post because I haven't had time to cook anything interesting. There was going to be one on fixing a broken hollandaise, but I didn't manage to resurrect it. I've also been looking for a gap to show off my latest gardening coup.
For the most part, my winter seeding has not been going well because the weather is not cooperating. My large tray of indoor seeding has produced two struggling celery sprouts. Period. The lettuce patch has a solid row of little arugula and sprouts of what I assume is Romaine. I kind of forgot what I put where. The herb pots haven't sprouted squat.
The Pond is doing slightly better. I have two solid rows of carrots after two seedings, but they take months to grow. The beet seeds must be quite old, because I only have four plants out of two rows, and they're struggling. I'll try again. I have a slightly newer packet of beet seeds that are a different variety.
Where I'm succeeding beyond all expectations is the radishes. I hope I like them, because there are two solid rows of a radish every 2-3 inches. While weeding, I found out the leaves have little spikes on the underside, like nettle leaves. I appear to be slightly allergic to whatever natural defenses those leaves contain. Generally, blanching makes them edible. I have to remember not to eat them raw.
The citrus tree is doing quite well this year. The fruit is smaller than usual, but there's a lot of it. Normal sized lemons for a change. There are even two grapefruit way up there. Maybe this year they'll ripen. I haven't had very good luck with the grapefruit. There are even more navel oranges than I'm used to. Really hoping I can do something with them for Christmas.
For the most part, my winter seeding has not been going well because the weather is not cooperating. My large tray of indoor seeding has produced two struggling celery sprouts. Period. The lettuce patch has a solid row of little arugula and sprouts of what I assume is Romaine. I kind of forgot what I put where. The herb pots haven't sprouted squat.
The Pond is doing slightly better. I have two solid rows of carrots after two seedings, but they take months to grow. The beet seeds must be quite old, because I only have four plants out of two rows, and they're struggling. I'll try again. I have a slightly newer packet of beet seeds that are a different variety.
Where I'm succeeding beyond all expectations is the radishes. I hope I like them, because there are two solid rows of a radish every 2-3 inches. While weeding, I found out the leaves have little spikes on the underside, like nettle leaves. I appear to be slightly allergic to whatever natural defenses those leaves contain. Generally, blanching makes them edible. I have to remember not to eat them raw.
The citrus tree is doing quite well this year. The fruit is smaller than usual, but there's a lot of it. Normal sized lemons for a change. There are even two grapefruit way up there. Maybe this year they'll ripen. I haven't had very good luck with the grapefruit. There are even more navel oranges than I'm used to. Really hoping I can do something with them for Christmas.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Sauerkraut
I was looking for a recipe to use up half a head of cabbage on the same day Food in Jars posted this month's preserving challenge. It's fermentation, and she suggested that newbies try sauerkraut. Unlike my resistance to trying this concept before, the cabbage was going to waste anyway. I wasn't buying anything new if this didn't work. I also realized that others might be faced with a similar vegetable problem after Thanksgiving, so this is good timing.
I expected this to be a whole lot harder than it was. Shredding the cabbage took a little while, even on the V-slicer, but it was super easy after that. Massage for a couple of minutes with salt, come back in 15 minutes, and stuff it in a jar. Ok, and the part where you have to ignore it for a week.
I tend to think of sauerkraut as limp and a bit slimy. This was still a little crunchy, but definitely had a fermented tang. It tasted like I had put vinegar in it. I'm assuming that's the goal. Maybe if you process it for canning it gets limp. I had it with a grilled cheese sandwich (pictured at top). I've gotten used to having them with homemade mustard and ran out. This was the same kind of sharp taste.
I do have to admit that I almost didn't try it. Everything in my food safety training tells me this is a bad idea. But then I thought of all the foods we buy that are fermented or aged: vinegar, yogurt, cheeses, preserved meats, wine, beer, kimchi, pickles... The only difference was I wasn't processing it afterwards. If I'm still leery of it tomorrow, I'll simmer it for 5 minutes and put it back in the fridge.
*1-1/2 lb cabbage
2 tsp salt
1. Wash out a wide-mouthed quart jar and whatever you're going to use to weigh down the kraut. There was some research involved, and you don't need to sterilize the fermenting jar. If you're going to boil-bath can it later, definitely sterilize those jars. I used a half-pint jar as a weight because it fit very well in the larger jar just as deep as I needed it to go. Wash your hands carefully, especially under your nails. Remove any rings, which tend to harbor bacteria.
2. Thinly shred cabbage and discard core. I kept one leaf to cover the top of the batch and help keep everything submerged.
3. Sprinkle shreds with salt and massage with your hands until they start to give up water. After about two or three minutes of squishing, you can go do something else for about 15 minutes. The cabbage will continue to break down without your help.
4. When you come back, knead the shreds again and watch them magically clump up into a ball surrounded by water. Pack the shreds into the jar, making sure to get out as many air bubbles from the bottom as possible. Pour liquid on top. If you saved a leaf, place it on top of the shreds.
5. Get your weight/jar filled with water/plate or whatever. Press it down into the jar and make sure it keeps everything submerged. That brine prevents bad things from growing until the fermentation kicks in. At that point, the lactic acid will ward off evil bacteria. Put a dish towel or double layer of paper towel over the jar lid and secure with a rubber band.
6. Here comes the hard part. Place the jar on a plate (in case anything bubbles out) and place in a room-temperature spot away from sunlight. Now, leave it there for a week. Look in on it daily to make sure there's no mold. Skim off any scum from the surface before that happens, but otherwise don't touch the jar. After a few days, you'll notice the color start to fade as the acid begins to develop.
7. The Ball book said that the kraut is done when it stops bubbling. I never really got a head of foam on mine, and gave up after 10 days because the water was starting to evaporate off during the Thanksgiving heat wave. Possibly, everything was too clean and didn't have the necessary natural yeasts for a full ferment. Since this was such a small batch, it just went straight in the fridge. If you're doing the 25 pounds in the Ball book then yes, you would probably want to process it. Refrigerating slows the fermentation to almost nothing. Boil-bath canning for 15 minutes stops it and makes everything shelf-stable.
Makes about 3 cups
Difficulty rating π
I expected this to be a whole lot harder than it was. Shredding the cabbage took a little while, even on the V-slicer, but it was super easy after that. Massage for a couple of minutes with salt, come back in 15 minutes, and stuff it in a jar. Ok, and the part where you have to ignore it for a week.
I tend to think of sauerkraut as limp and a bit slimy. This was still a little crunchy, but definitely had a fermented tang. It tasted like I had put vinegar in it. I'm assuming that's the goal. Maybe if you process it for canning it gets limp. I had it with a grilled cheese sandwich (pictured at top). I've gotten used to having them with homemade mustard and ran out. This was the same kind of sharp taste.
I do have to admit that I almost didn't try it. Everything in my food safety training tells me this is a bad idea. But then I thought of all the foods we buy that are fermented or aged: vinegar, yogurt, cheeses, preserved meats, wine, beer, kimchi, pickles... The only difference was I wasn't processing it afterwards. If I'm still leery of it tomorrow, I'll simmer it for 5 minutes and put it back in the fridge.
*1-1/2 lb cabbage
2 tsp salt
1. Wash out a wide-mouthed quart jar and whatever you're going to use to weigh down the kraut. There was some research involved, and you don't need to sterilize the fermenting jar. If you're going to boil-bath can it later, definitely sterilize those jars. I used a half-pint jar as a weight because it fit very well in the larger jar just as deep as I needed it to go. Wash your hands carefully, especially under your nails. Remove any rings, which tend to harbor bacteria.
2. Thinly shred cabbage and discard core. I kept one leaf to cover the top of the batch and help keep everything submerged.
3. Sprinkle shreds with salt and massage with your hands until they start to give up water. After about two or three minutes of squishing, you can go do something else for about 15 minutes. The cabbage will continue to break down without your help.
4. When you come back, knead the shreds again and watch them magically clump up into a ball surrounded by water. Pack the shreds into the jar, making sure to get out as many air bubbles from the bottom as possible. Pour liquid on top. If you saved a leaf, place it on top of the shreds.
5. Get your weight/jar filled with water/plate or whatever. Press it down into the jar and make sure it keeps everything submerged. That brine prevents bad things from growing until the fermentation kicks in. At that point, the lactic acid will ward off evil bacteria. Put a dish towel or double layer of paper towel over the jar lid and secure with a rubber band.
6. Here comes the hard part. Place the jar on a plate (in case anything bubbles out) and place in a room-temperature spot away from sunlight. Now, leave it there for a week. Look in on it daily to make sure there's no mold. Skim off any scum from the surface before that happens, but otherwise don't touch the jar. After a few days, you'll notice the color start to fade as the acid begins to develop.
7. The Ball book said that the kraut is done when it stops bubbling. I never really got a head of foam on mine, and gave up after 10 days because the water was starting to evaporate off during the Thanksgiving heat wave. Possibly, everything was too clean and didn't have the necessary natural yeasts for a full ferment. Since this was such a small batch, it just went straight in the fridge. If you're doing the 25 pounds in the Ball book then yes, you would probably want to process it. Refrigerating slows the fermentation to almost nothing. Boil-bath canning for 15 minutes stops it and makes everything shelf-stable.
Makes about 3 cups
Difficulty rating π
Friday, November 24, 2017
Farmer's Pie (Poultry)
Today officially marks the start of the week of creative Thanksgiving leftovers. While I used ground turkey, you can use shredded leftover turkey or chicken and make this in half the time. It already only takes 45 minutes.
This is a lot like Shepherd's Pie, but shepherds grow sheep and this has turkey in it, so I'm calling it Farmer's Pie. While cheddar does go well with turkey, I chose to top this with some herb goat cheese mashed potatoes. They make everything taste better. I didn't get out the food mill this time, used russets, and left the skin on, but goat cheese makes everyone forgive shortcuts. You could also use whatever mashed potatoes you had at Thanksgiving. This definitely counts as a leftovers recipe.
1 lb ground turkey or shredded leftover turkey
*2 C frozen veggies like peas and carrots
1/2 onion, diced
1 Tb olive oil
*2 ribs celery, diced
*2 Tb tomato paste
1/2 tsp each salt, dried sage, and thyme
1/4 tsp pepper
1 batch herb goat cheese mashed potatoes
1. Start preheating oven to 350º. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion and celery and cook until they start to soften. If working with raw meat, add to skillet and cook until browned. With leftovers, skip to next step.
2. Add frozen veggies, tomato paste, spices, and cooked turkey. Cook until everything is heated through and uniform, about 5 minutes.
3. Spoon meat mixture into an 8x8 baking dish and spread evenly. Top with the mashed potatoes and sprinkle with parmesan (from the mashed potato recipe). Bake until bottom layer is bubbly and top is lightly browned, about 15 minutes. Let sit until it stops boiling before serving.
Difficulty rating :)
This is a lot like Shepherd's Pie, but shepherds grow sheep and this has turkey in it, so I'm calling it Farmer's Pie. While cheddar does go well with turkey, I chose to top this with some herb goat cheese mashed potatoes. They make everything taste better. I didn't get out the food mill this time, used russets, and left the skin on, but goat cheese makes everyone forgive shortcuts. You could also use whatever mashed potatoes you had at Thanksgiving. This definitely counts as a leftovers recipe.
1 lb ground turkey or shredded leftover turkey
*2 C frozen veggies like peas and carrots
1/2 onion, diced
1 Tb olive oil
*2 ribs celery, diced
*2 Tb tomato paste
1/2 tsp each salt, dried sage, and thyme
1/4 tsp pepper
1 batch herb goat cheese mashed potatoes
1. Start preheating oven to 350º. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion and celery and cook until they start to soften. If working with raw meat, add to skillet and cook until browned. With leftovers, skip to next step.
2. Add frozen veggies, tomato paste, spices, and cooked turkey. Cook until everything is heated through and uniform, about 5 minutes.
3. Spoon meat mixture into an 8x8 baking dish and spread evenly. Top with the mashed potatoes and sprinkle with parmesan (from the mashed potato recipe). Bake until bottom layer is bubbly and top is lightly browned, about 15 minutes. Let sit until it stops boiling before serving.
Difficulty rating :)
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Creamed Corn Rolls
This is what I get for gloating about my whopping two days off. More people quit before the new hires were on the schedule, so I'm pulling 45 hour weeks in 6 days. Everyone is, but the point is that none of us should be working that much. Next week it should start to get a little better, unless someone else quits.
Oh, and I caught a cold. So yeah, a couple of long weeks. For once, I'm glad I'm not hosting Thanksgiving. I made a big pot of Spice Soup, heavy on the ginger root. After a week, I'm feeling mostly better, at least well enough to feed myself. All that salt from drive-thrus and Chinese food was taking its toll. So I threw a pot of Baked Beans in the oven and went shopping.
I didn't want to have regular cornbread with the beans, and got it into my head to have a yeast bread flavored with a can of cream-style corn. Surprisingly few recipes exist for it, so I took the lessons of recipes that weren't exactly what I had in mind and struck out on my own. What I ended up with does not taste heavily of corn, just as challah does not taste heavily of egg. It's a subtle richness, not an attack.
1 15 oz can cream-style corn
2 Tb butter
1-1/2 tsp yeast
2 Tb sugar
3-4 C flour
1/2 tsp salt
more butter for brushing
1. Warm corn, butter, and sugar to 100º. Butter does not need to melt. Stir in yeast and let sit until it starts to get foamy, 5 minutes.
2. In stand mixer, combine 2 C flour and the corn mixture with the paddle. Beat into a thick batter for 2 minutes. Add salt and half a cup of flour and beat again. If still too soft to knead, add another half cup of flour.
3. Turn out dough onto a floured board and knead until smooth, about 5 minutes, adding as little flour as necessary. Turn over in an oiled bowl and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 hour.
4. Punch down dough and let rest 10 minutes. With a scale, weigh out 2 oz rolls. Round into balls and place in greased muffin pans. I got 12 rolls and a mini-loaf out of my batch, which would have been 16 rolls. Allow to rise again, 45 minutes.
5. Preheat oven to 350º. Brush tops with melted butter and bake for 20 minutes, until lightly golden and crust has started to set. Remove from pan as soon as they're cool enough to touch and they won't stick. Cool on a rack thoroughly before freezing, or serve immediately. I do recommend freezing any leftovers. They will spoil at room temperature within a day or two because of the corn.
Makes about 16 rolls
Difficulty rating :)
Oh, and I caught a cold. So yeah, a couple of long weeks. For once, I'm glad I'm not hosting Thanksgiving. I made a big pot of Spice Soup, heavy on the ginger root. After a week, I'm feeling mostly better, at least well enough to feed myself. All that salt from drive-thrus and Chinese food was taking its toll. So I threw a pot of Baked Beans in the oven and went shopping.
I didn't want to have regular cornbread with the beans, and got it into my head to have a yeast bread flavored with a can of cream-style corn. Surprisingly few recipes exist for it, so I took the lessons of recipes that weren't exactly what I had in mind and struck out on my own. What I ended up with does not taste heavily of corn, just as challah does not taste heavily of egg. It's a subtle richness, not an attack.
1 15 oz can cream-style corn
2 Tb butter
1-1/2 tsp yeast
2 Tb sugar
3-4 C flour
1/2 tsp salt
more butter for brushing
1. Warm corn, butter, and sugar to 100º. Butter does not need to melt. Stir in yeast and let sit until it starts to get foamy, 5 minutes.
2. In stand mixer, combine 2 C flour and the corn mixture with the paddle. Beat into a thick batter for 2 minutes. Add salt and half a cup of flour and beat again. If still too soft to knead, add another half cup of flour.
3. Turn out dough onto a floured board and knead until smooth, about 5 minutes, adding as little flour as necessary. Turn over in an oiled bowl and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 hour.
4. Punch down dough and let rest 10 minutes. With a scale, weigh out 2 oz rolls. Round into balls and place in greased muffin pans. I got 12 rolls and a mini-loaf out of my batch, which would have been 16 rolls. Allow to rise again, 45 minutes.
5. Preheat oven to 350º. Brush tops with melted butter and bake for 20 minutes, until lightly golden and crust has started to set. Remove from pan as soon as they're cool enough to touch and they won't stick. Cool on a rack thoroughly before freezing, or serve immediately. I do recommend freezing any leftovers. They will spoil at room temperature within a day or two because of the corn.
Makes about 16 rolls
Difficulty rating :)
Saturday, November 18, 2017
Leftovers Salad
Admittedly, I had some pretty fantastic leftovers this day. Pomegranate seeds, half a cucumber, green onion, and some sliced almonds. I bought a small package of arugula on discount and cooked up some dried chickpeas from the pantry. Drizzled with balsamic vinegar and grapeseed oil and rounded out with a bit of bread from the freezer, this main-dish salad cost me $2.50 for four servings. Then I added a couple of pan-seared scallops on top because they were also on sale and I hadn't spent much on the rest of it.
Just remember that any day can be "Thanksgiving" if you present the meal with care. Even leftovers.
I bring this up partly for a presentation topic and partly because most people are out spending a whole lot on groceries this week. Using your leftovers to make salad, quiche, stew, soup, or casseroles will help you to recover from the spending spree. Even those who aren't hosting tend to spend more because the sales are so good.
Just remember that any day can be "Thanksgiving" if you present the meal with care. Even leftovers.
Wednesday, November 15, 2017
Pomegranate Bread
I really debated what to call this. It's a naan bread recipe with a few additions, but baked in free-standing loaves instead of pan-fried. It would have helped if the Internet was more forthcoming with a recipe to match what I wanted to make. All of the pomegranate bread recipes I found were sweet quick breads. Just because it isn't there doesn't mean it isn't worth trying.
These breads are tangy and lightly sweet, but the addition of rosemary keeps them savory. I highly suggest them for Thanksgiving, if you have time to make a yeast bread on top of everything else. They're definitely a step up from the butter rolls that grace most Feast tables. It's just amazing to have a burst of juice come out of a bite of bread. Slight warning, you don't get that pop if you freeze and defrost them later. They taste the same, though.
1/2 C warm water
2 tsp yeast
2 tsp sugar
1 Tb olive oil
*1/3 C Greek yogurt
*1/2 C whole wheat flour
1-1/2 to 2 C all purpose flour
1/2 tsp salt
*1/2 tsp dried rosemary, crumbled
1 C pomegranate arils
1 tsp sesame seeds to garnish (optional)
1. Combine yeast, sugar, oil, yogurt, and water and let sit until yeast starts to proof, about 5 minutes.
2. In a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, stir together wheat flour and 1/2 C of the a.p. flour. Add liquids and beat into a batter, about 2 minutes. Add salt, rosemary, and 1/2 C flour and beat again. Beat in 1/2 C more flour to make a dough, then transfer to a floured board.
3. Knead dough until it starts to get the smooth and elastic consistency, then very gently knead in the arils. I kind of developed a kneading technique that pushed horizontally rather than down towards the board, but I could still feel some of the arils pop. Knead only until arils are evenly distributed. Let rest 10 minutes while you pan-spray parchment on a sheet pan (or use a silpat).
4. Divide dough into 4 pieces for small loaves or 8 for dinner rolls, or bake as a full round loaf. I have no idea if making this in a loaf pan or muffin cups is a good idea. Round off dough pieces and transfer to prepared baking sheet. For loaves, flatten slightly. Allow to rise in a warm place for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until doubled.
5. Preheat oven to 375º. Spray loaves lightly with water and sprinkle with sesame seeds. You could alternatively sprinkle with more rosemary and/or a bit of kosher salt. Bake 20 minutes for 4 loaves, about 30 for a single loaf, and maybe 15 for rolls. Bread is done when lightly browned and crust has formed. Remove to a cooling rack for at least 5 minutes before serving.
Difficulty rating :-)
These breads are tangy and lightly sweet, but the addition of rosemary keeps them savory. I highly suggest them for Thanksgiving, if you have time to make a yeast bread on top of everything else. They're definitely a step up from the butter rolls that grace most Feast tables. It's just amazing to have a burst of juice come out of a bite of bread. Slight warning, you don't get that pop if you freeze and defrost them later. They taste the same, though.
1/2 C warm water
2 tsp yeast
2 tsp sugar
1 Tb olive oil
*1/3 C Greek yogurt
*1/2 C whole wheat flour
1-1/2 to 2 C all purpose flour
1/2 tsp salt
*1/2 tsp dried rosemary, crumbled
1 C pomegranate arils
1 tsp sesame seeds to garnish (optional)
1. Combine yeast, sugar, oil, yogurt, and water and let sit until yeast starts to proof, about 5 minutes.
2. In a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, stir together wheat flour and 1/2 C of the a.p. flour. Add liquids and beat into a batter, about 2 minutes. Add salt, rosemary, and 1/2 C flour and beat again. Beat in 1/2 C more flour to make a dough, then transfer to a floured board.
3. Knead dough until it starts to get the smooth and elastic consistency, then very gently knead in the arils. I kind of developed a kneading technique that pushed horizontally rather than down towards the board, but I could still feel some of the arils pop. Knead only until arils are evenly distributed. Let rest 10 minutes while you pan-spray parchment on a sheet pan (or use a silpat).
4. Divide dough into 4 pieces for small loaves or 8 for dinner rolls, or bake as a full round loaf. I have no idea if making this in a loaf pan or muffin cups is a good idea. Round off dough pieces and transfer to prepared baking sheet. For loaves, flatten slightly. Allow to rise in a warm place for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until doubled.
5. Preheat oven to 375º. Spray loaves lightly with water and sprinkle with sesame seeds. You could alternatively sprinkle with more rosemary and/or a bit of kosher salt. Bake 20 minutes for 4 loaves, about 30 for a single loaf, and maybe 15 for rolls. Bread is done when lightly browned and crust has formed. Remove to a cooling rack for at least 5 minutes before serving.
Difficulty rating :-)
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Mrouzia (Moroccan Honey Lamb)
I still haven't found anyone to go with for Moroccan, so I decided to try to make honey lamb at home. This can also be done with chicken thighs if you're on a budget. And I did kind of break the budget on this meal, even using cheaper cuts of lamb that were on sale. Let's call this a weekend-company dish. Not quite as all-out as a holiday, but definitely more work than you would want on a weeknight.
For the Ras El Hanout, I suggest looking for something labeled Tagine Spice if you can't find it by its original name. Several national brands call it that. Warning, you may end up at Whole Foods. I got mine at Williams-Sonoma, but they don't seem to be carrying it at the moment. It's basically a whole bunch of Middle Eastern spices all mixed up together with a touch of cayenne and probably something else hot. My blend is pretty mild because it's W-S, but a more authentic version may be hotter. If you have access to a Middle Eastern market, they'll definitely have a good selection.
In researching a recipe, I discovered Cooking with Alia. She specializes in making Moroccan food easier to prepare, but still authentic. That was exactly what I had in mind, so here it goes.
1 lb lamb stew meat (add 1/2 pound if bone-in)
*1/2 Tb Ras El Hanout
1/2 tsp ground ginger
generous pinch saffron
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1 medium onion
1/2 C raisins
1 Tb oil
1 Tb butter
2 cinnamon sticks
*1/4 C honey
almonds for garnish
1. The day before, combine Ras El Hanout, ginger, saffron, salt, and pepper. Rub into meat. Place in a large ziplock bag and add 1/2 cup of water, just enough to activate the spices and keep everything moist. Refrigerate until it's time to cook.
2. Ok, here's the thing. I don't grate onions. It's crazy hard to do, and risky to the fingers. Go ahead and do it if you want, but I'm recommending either running the onion through the food processor's grating disc or mincing it. I used the whacker-chopper, which practically puréed it in about a minute. Oh, and start soaking the raisins in some hot water to plump them.
3. Drizzle the oil and butter into a large saucepan over medium heat. Cook the onions until soft, then add the meat and any spice juice in the plastic bag. Cook until meat is browned on all sides, about 10 minutes total. Add cinnamon sticks and water to cover and bring to a low boil. Lower heat to a simmer, cover, and cook until meat is falling off the bones, at least 2 hours.
4. Drain raisins and add to pot. Stir in honey. Fish out cinnamon sticks. Leave off lid, raise temperature to medium, and allow sauce to cook down and thicken by half. Move meat to a serving platter, spoon sauce over, and garnish with almonds. Whole almonds are traditional, but I prefer sliced or slivered because they're easier to chew.
Difficulty rating. :)
For the Ras El Hanout, I suggest looking for something labeled Tagine Spice if you can't find it by its original name. Several national brands call it that. Warning, you may end up at Whole Foods. I got mine at Williams-Sonoma, but they don't seem to be carrying it at the moment. It's basically a whole bunch of Middle Eastern spices all mixed up together with a touch of cayenne and probably something else hot. My blend is pretty mild because it's W-S, but a more authentic version may be hotter. If you have access to a Middle Eastern market, they'll definitely have a good selection.
In researching a recipe, I discovered Cooking with Alia. She specializes in making Moroccan food easier to prepare, but still authentic. That was exactly what I had in mind, so here it goes.
1 lb lamb stew meat (add 1/2 pound if bone-in)
*1/2 Tb Ras El Hanout
1/2 tsp ground ginger
generous pinch saffron
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1 medium onion
1/2 C raisins
1 Tb oil
1 Tb butter
2 cinnamon sticks
*1/4 C honey
almonds for garnish
1. The day before, combine Ras El Hanout, ginger, saffron, salt, and pepper. Rub into meat. Place in a large ziplock bag and add 1/2 cup of water, just enough to activate the spices and keep everything moist. Refrigerate until it's time to cook.
2. Ok, here's the thing. I don't grate onions. It's crazy hard to do, and risky to the fingers. Go ahead and do it if you want, but I'm recommending either running the onion through the food processor's grating disc or mincing it. I used the whacker-chopper, which practically puréed it in about a minute. Oh, and start soaking the raisins in some hot water to plump them.
3. Drizzle the oil and butter into a large saucepan over medium heat. Cook the onions until soft, then add the meat and any spice juice in the plastic bag. Cook until meat is browned on all sides, about 10 minutes total. Add cinnamon sticks and water to cover and bring to a low boil. Lower heat to a simmer, cover, and cook until meat is falling off the bones, at least 2 hours.
4. Drain raisins and add to pot. Stir in honey. Fish out cinnamon sticks. Leave off lid, raise temperature to medium, and allow sauce to cook down and thicken by half. Move meat to a serving platter, spoon sauce over, and garnish with almonds. Whole almonds are traditional, but I prefer sliced or slivered because they're easier to chew.
Difficulty rating. :)
Thursday, November 9, 2017
Homesteading Weekends
After a couple of months of split days off, I'm finally back to two consecutive days. It involved training a new baker and losing my baking shifts, but I'm so tired that I'm ok with it. Not much point of earning a fantastic paycheck if you're too tired to do fun stuff. I'm still working a lot of overtime, just on different days. Oh, and our new delivery driver can't find her way out of a paper bag, so I'm doing the vast majority of deliveries until another new driver can be trained.
And what did that rant have to do with this blog, you may ask? With two days off in a row, I had time to do some home improvements that I'd been postponing because I just wanted to sit around on my split days off and do as few projects as I could get away with.
First up was yet another rearranging of the spice cabinet. I finally realized that I can't get everything in there neatly because some containers are quite large. I bought some wedding favor jars that look like Weck canning jars, but they're only 2oz. Spices that I usually spoon or pinch went in those, while shaker types stayed in the manufacturer's container. I ended up with far more going in the overflow spice box in the main pantry than expected. I also finally admitted that I was never going to finish the tiny container of cayenne because I'm allergic to it and threw the thing out. I haven't given up on some other items that I probably should have tossed long ago, but an allergy is a legitimate wake-up call. I also rubbed the dried fennel seeds off their stems, which is why this whole thing was happening now, and one plant's worth nearly filled a jar. I'm going to have to start using fennel seeds.
Once that was done, I planted the Pond. Two rows each of carrots, beets, and radishes. The shallow sides have cress. The starters I made failed their first round, so I may just have to do some direct sowing. I'll give it one more try before letting nature have a crack at it. Since five different kinds of seeds failed, I'm pretty sure it's something I did.
I also went to a couple of estate sales. It always feels a bit like grave digging, or those scavengers out of "A Christmas Carol". But I also feel like I'm rescuing items that meant something to someone. Not sure if the half-cup plastic containers were all that loved, but I'm making a home for the non-stick egg pan. The rubber grip is gone, so I need to use a towel over the handle. Still means I can finally have round over-easy eggs. I also got a havdalah plate that was missing its assorted pieces, but I have the cup, candlestick, and spice box. I just needed a better plate. I also got The Book of Garnishes, from the same series as The Book of Afternoon Tea. Lots of cute ideas to go with the current presentation theme. In the non-food-related category, there was a record of the music from the movie "Mary Poppins". We never had that, just a story version with Marni Nixon singing Mary. Pretty good haul for $5. More important, I've already used everything. It isn't just going to a shelf or my next garage sale.
The next "weekend", which is really Wednesday and Thursday, I picked the last watermelon and cleared out the patch in the front yard. 20 lbs 5 oz. Everyone I knew got some. It probably could have spent another week on the vine, based on the thickness of the white, but I didn't want to leave it out over Halloween. The ripened parts were delicious.
On cue, the weather turned cool enough to sow greens. After some soil conditioning and yet more water, I planted the lettuces. The radishes and beets in the pond were already coming up. I'm still hoping for a home-grown salad next month.
I'm catching up on other projects, too. I've had time to go to the mall. A big cooking afternoon doesn't make me feel like I've wasted a day. I was able to stay up a bit on Halloween to give out candy, but I did fall asleep before the end of Game 6. I could still use a staycation, but this is the next best thing.
And what did that rant have to do with this blog, you may ask? With two days off in a row, I had time to do some home improvements that I'd been postponing because I just wanted to sit around on my split days off and do as few projects as I could get away with.
First up was yet another rearranging of the spice cabinet. I finally realized that I can't get everything in there neatly because some containers are quite large. I bought some wedding favor jars that look like Weck canning jars, but they're only 2oz. Spices that I usually spoon or pinch went in those, while shaker types stayed in the manufacturer's container. I ended up with far more going in the overflow spice box in the main pantry than expected. I also finally admitted that I was never going to finish the tiny container of cayenne because I'm allergic to it and threw the thing out. I haven't given up on some other items that I probably should have tossed long ago, but an allergy is a legitimate wake-up call. I also rubbed the dried fennel seeds off their stems, which is why this whole thing was happening now, and one plant's worth nearly filled a jar. I'm going to have to start using fennel seeds.
Once that was done, I planted the Pond. Two rows each of carrots, beets, and radishes. The shallow sides have cress. The starters I made failed their first round, so I may just have to do some direct sowing. I'll give it one more try before letting nature have a crack at it. Since five different kinds of seeds failed, I'm pretty sure it's something I did.
I also went to a couple of estate sales. It always feels a bit like grave digging, or those scavengers out of "A Christmas Carol". But I also feel like I'm rescuing items that meant something to someone. Not sure if the half-cup plastic containers were all that loved, but I'm making a home for the non-stick egg pan. The rubber grip is gone, so I need to use a towel over the handle. Still means I can finally have round over-easy eggs. I also got a havdalah plate that was missing its assorted pieces, but I have the cup, candlestick, and spice box. I just needed a better plate. I also got The Book of Garnishes, from the same series as The Book of Afternoon Tea. Lots of cute ideas to go with the current presentation theme. In the non-food-related category, there was a record of the music from the movie "Mary Poppins". We never had that, just a story version with Marni Nixon singing Mary. Pretty good haul for $5. More important, I've already used everything. It isn't just going to a shelf or my next garage sale.
The next "weekend", which is really Wednesday and Thursday, I picked the last watermelon and cleared out the patch in the front yard. 20 lbs 5 oz. Everyone I knew got some. It probably could have spent another week on the vine, based on the thickness of the white, but I didn't want to leave it out over Halloween. The ripened parts were delicious.
On cue, the weather turned cool enough to sow greens. After some soil conditioning and yet more water, I planted the lettuces. The radishes and beets in the pond were already coming up. I'm still hoping for a home-grown salad next month.
I'm catching up on other projects, too. I've had time to go to the mall. A big cooking afternoon doesn't make me feel like I've wasted a day. I was able to stay up a bit on Halloween to give out candy, but I did fall asleep before the end of Game 6. I could still use a staycation, but this is the next best thing.
Monday, November 6, 2017
Chicken Quinoa Lettuce Wraps
I was torn between my desire for harvest-y foods and 100º weather. So I invented a hearty stuffing and turned it into a lettuce wrap. This can count as a casserole without the lettuce, and nutritionally is a full meal. Or you could put it on top of torn lettuce and make it a salad. If your traditions allow quinoa, it's KLP. Any of these ways are low-effort and take maybe half an hour to make.
I went to Sprouts to get the chicken apple sausage for this, and they had pumpkin spice chicken sausage. If I was using squash instead of an apple in this, I probably would have gone for it. Even the butcher confessed he hadn't tried it, and his boss was ready to chuck the rest of the batch if no one bought it. Maybe there's a limit to what people will buy Pumpkin Spiced.
At least I finally made a quinoa dish that doesn't smell and taste like a freshly mowed lawn. I know it's a grass seed, but does it have to taste like it? The tricolor I'm calling for is to give the mix some color contrast. All of the ingredients are off-white, and plain white quinoa would make for a boring mass inside a leaf of lettuce.
3/4 C tricolor quinoa
*1 Gala apple, diced
1/2 tsp dried sage
salt and pepper
1 lb chicken apple sausage, or ground chicken
*1/2 C diced onion
*1 rib celery, diced
2 Tb pine nuts
Lettuce leaves to serve
1. Stir together dry quinoa, 3/4 C water, sage, and a dash each of salt and pepper. Cover and bring to a boil over medium heat, lower to a simmer, and cook for 10 minutes, by which time everything else is going to be done.
2. Heat a 10" skillet over medium heat. Put pine nuts in the dry pan and sprinkle salt over them. Shake every couple of minutes, while you're dicing the apple, onion, and celery and checking to see if the quinoa is boiling. Once pine nuts are starting to brown, remove them from the heat and transfer to a container so you can use the skillet.
3. Put chicken sausage in the skillet and brown, crumbling as you go. Once mostly cooked, add onion, celery, and apple. Cook, stirring frequently, until the quinoa is done. Add to skillet and stir to combine. Taste and add salt and pepper as necessary. Toss nuts in at the last moment.
4. Arrange large leaves of lettuce on plates and top with the stuffing. Serve with the filling warm and the lettuce cold.
Difficulty rating π
I went to Sprouts to get the chicken apple sausage for this, and they had pumpkin spice chicken sausage. If I was using squash instead of an apple in this, I probably would have gone for it. Even the butcher confessed he hadn't tried it, and his boss was ready to chuck the rest of the batch if no one bought it. Maybe there's a limit to what people will buy Pumpkin Spiced.
At least I finally made a quinoa dish that doesn't smell and taste like a freshly mowed lawn. I know it's a grass seed, but does it have to taste like it? The tricolor I'm calling for is to give the mix some color contrast. All of the ingredients are off-white, and plain white quinoa would make for a boring mass inside a leaf of lettuce.
60¢ of pine nuts, 75¢ of pintos |
*1 Gala apple, diced
1/2 tsp dried sage
salt and pepper
1 lb chicken apple sausage, or ground chicken
*1/2 C diced onion
*1 rib celery, diced
2 Tb pine nuts
Lettuce leaves to serve
1. Stir together dry quinoa, 3/4 C water, sage, and a dash each of salt and pepper. Cover and bring to a boil over medium heat, lower to a simmer, and cook for 10 minutes, by which time everything else is going to be done.
2. Heat a 10" skillet over medium heat. Put pine nuts in the dry pan and sprinkle salt over them. Shake every couple of minutes, while you're dicing the apple, onion, and celery and checking to see if the quinoa is boiling. Once pine nuts are starting to brown, remove them from the heat and transfer to a container so you can use the skillet.
3. Put chicken sausage in the skillet and brown, crumbling as you go. Once mostly cooked, add onion, celery, and apple. Cook, stirring frequently, until the quinoa is done. Add to skillet and stir to combine. Taste and add salt and pepper as necessary. Toss nuts in at the last moment.
4. Arrange large leaves of lettuce on plates and top with the stuffing. Serve with the filling warm and the lettuce cold.
Difficulty rating π