Griz's easy Blue cheese Cole slaw
1 pkg shredded broccoli/carrot/red cabbage. about 2 cups
1 cup Ken's Stake house chunky Blue cheese dressing
5 oz pkg Blue Cheese crumbles
1 tbl spoon Dijon mustard
1 tbl spoon malt vinegar
1/2 ts spoon Mrs Dash garlic and herb, more or less to taste
fresh ground black pepper
a bunch of red grapes cut in half
Whisk together the BC Dressing, BC Crumbles, Dijon, malt vinegar, Mrs Dash and black pepper, add salt if you like, I'm trying to cut down.
fold in the shredded vegs and grapes, chill (you and the mixture) .
It was pretty good last night and it was great this evening.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Cauliflower Kugel by bookseller
At Whole Foods, they called this Cauliflower Kugel, and they served it as part of a Passover line-up, but there's nothing particularly Passover-y about it, except that the original recipe called for some matzoh meal (which I didn't have, and so used flour instead). The flavors of dill and sour cream (I used yogurt) are in fact very eastern European and thus part of the Ashkanazik larder. And this would be a great side dish at a Seder -- or any other meal -- that featured salmon, say. But still, it's just a tasty veg dish, not particularly Jewish or Passover-y.
Slice up a bunch of members of the onion family (recipe said leeks; I used scallions and some wild garlic), and sweat them in butter till soft. I used three bunches of scallions and three large stems of wild garlic in about two tablespoons of butter. Mix with about 1/3 - 1/2 cup each chopped fresh dill and fresh parsley, about 1/3 cup sliced or chopped almonds, 1/2 cup flour or matzoh meal (or cracker meal), and 20 oz. (raw weight) cauliflower florets that have been chopped into small bits and microwaved for about 2 minutes with a couple splashes of water.
If you used zucchini, some mushrooms -- also cooked first, to cook out the water -- would be a terrific addition. Mmmmmm, I bet that would be better than the cauli, even.
In another bowl, soften a bit more than half of an 8 oz package of cream cheese (nuke it for a minute), and mix it well with a scant cup of Greek yogurt (or sour cream), a large egg, 1.5 tablespoons of butter, and a teaspoon of lemon juice. Add salt and pepper to taste (I like a lot of black pepper). Mix this with the veg, and scrape everything into an oiled or Pam-med 9 x 13 baking pan. Sprinkle another 1/3 cup of almonds (I used pumpkin seeds) over the top, and bake at 325 for about 35 minutes; check after 10 to see if it's browning too quickly, in which case cover with tin foil.
Slice up a bunch of members of the onion family (recipe said leeks; I used scallions and some wild garlic), and sweat them in butter till soft. I used three bunches of scallions and three large stems of wild garlic in about two tablespoons of butter. Mix with about 1/3 - 1/2 cup each chopped fresh dill and fresh parsley, about 1/3 cup sliced or chopped almonds, 1/2 cup flour or matzoh meal (or cracker meal), and 20 oz. (raw weight) cauliflower florets that have been chopped into small bits and microwaved for about 2 minutes with a couple splashes of water.
If you used zucchini, some mushrooms -- also cooked first, to cook out the water -- would be a terrific addition. Mmmmmm, I bet that would be better than the cauli, even.
In another bowl, soften a bit more than half of an 8 oz package of cream cheese (nuke it for a minute), and mix it well with a scant cup of Greek yogurt (or sour cream), a large egg, 1.5 tablespoons of butter, and a teaspoon of lemon juice. Add salt and pepper to taste (I like a lot of black pepper). Mix this with the veg, and scrape everything into an oiled or Pam-med 9 x 13 baking pan. Sprinkle another 1/3 cup of almonds (I used pumpkin seeds) over the top, and bake at 325 for about 35 minutes; check after 10 to see if it's browning too quickly, in which case cover with tin foil.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Peach Cake by Picklehead
2 T golden syrup (is there golden syrup in the US? Is it called something else?)
3 large peaches, skinned and cut into eighths (the recipe calls for tinned peaches, but when you have fresh ones available, using tinned is an abomination unto the Lord)
5 1/2 oz. butter, melted
5 1/2 oz. golden caster sugar
2 large eggs
4 fl. oz. buttermilk (single cream also works)
1 t. vanilla
1/4 tsp. baking soda
6 oz. flour
Preheat the oven to 180 C/350 F. Grease a 9-inch cake pan and line the bottom (not the sides) with wax paper. Drizzle the golden syrup over the base and arrange the peach slices on top.
Whisk the butter and sugar. Add the eggs and whisk. Add the buttermilk, vanilla and baking soda. Sift in the flour and stir.
Pour the batter over the peaches and bake for 45 minutes. Cool for five minutes, then turn out onto a platter.
Serve with vanilla ice cream.
3 large peaches, skinned and cut into eighths (the recipe calls for tinned peaches, but when you have fresh ones available, using tinned is an abomination unto the Lord)
5 1/2 oz. butter, melted
5 1/2 oz. golden caster sugar
2 large eggs
4 fl. oz. buttermilk (single cream also works)
1 t. vanilla
1/4 tsp. baking soda
6 oz. flour
Preheat the oven to 180 C/350 F. Grease a 9-inch cake pan and line the bottom (not the sides) with wax paper. Drizzle the golden syrup over the base and arrange the peach slices on top.
Whisk the butter and sugar. Add the eggs and whisk. Add the buttermilk, vanilla and baking soda. Sift in the flour and stir.
Pour the batter over the peaches and bake for 45 minutes. Cool for five minutes, then turn out onto a platter.
Serve with vanilla ice cream.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Huge Salad by Sicut Cervus
Just made one of those for dinner, using pretty much everything in the fridge and then some:
meat loaf, cubed
rice
1 endive, sliced
onion, chopped
basil, from garden (LOTS)
grated mozzarella
leftover peas
vinaigrette salad dressing
2 large fresh tomatoes (no, not from garden, though we're getting close), diced
juice of one lemon
lots of fresh ground black pepper
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Broiled Crab Cakes by Grizzled Adams
I just made broiled crab cakes last night, easiest recipe ever....
1 egg yolk
1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon dry mustard
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
1 pound Maryland jumbo lump crab meat
Preheat the broiler.
In a large bowl, combine the egg yolk, salt, pepper, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, mayonnaise and parsley. Then, gently fold in the crab meat (be careful not to break up the lumps). Shape into cakes and broil for 5 minutes.
I dusted the 4, 1/4lb cakes with Old Bay b4 broiling....very tasty
1 egg yolk
1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon dry mustard
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
1 pound Maryland jumbo lump crab meat
Preheat the broiler.
In a large bowl, combine the egg yolk, salt, pepper, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, mayonnaise and parsley. Then, gently fold in the crab meat (be careful not to break up the lumps). Shape into cakes and broil for 5 minutes.
I dusted the 4, 1/4lb cakes with Old Bay b4 broiling....very tasty
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Chicken and Sausage Gumbo by Erythrosine
four chicken leg quarters, or ten chicken thighs (with bones)
one pound of smoked sausage such as Andouille or a slightly
dried smoked sausage labeled "Cajun flavor", or any
smoked sausage
1/2 cup bacon grease, or vegetable oil, or clarified butter
[I used the fat from a 12-ounce package of bacon]
1/2 cup unbleached white flour
2 onions (preferably hot), diced
two bell peppers (one red and one green), diced
half a large bunch of celery, diced
one 32-ounce can of diced or crushed tomatoes
one pound of sliced okra, fresh or frozen (16-ounce bag)
one 16-ounce bag of frozen corn kernels
5 dried or fresh bay leaves
1.5 teaspoons dried thyme, or the fresh equivalent (grocery
store dried thyme is often moldy-smelling, so I prefer
Penzey's dried thyme)
one teaspoon salt (to taste)
1/8 teaspoon ground celery seed
one teaspoon ground cumin seed
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
one teaspoon smoked Spanish paprika
Making the broth might be most conveniently done the night before, or in the morning. Cook the chicken thighs or leg quarters in just enough water to mostly cover, with a lid on the pot, turning the chicken pieces once or twice, for about an hour. You do not need to remove the skin first. Remove the chicken pieces to a plate and allow to cool. remove the meat from the bones and put the bones, skin, and hard bits back into the broth. Cook the broth on low for another hour or longer, to extract more flavor from the skin and bones. Cool the broth and chill it so that you can easily remove the thick layer of fat from the top. Discard the bones, etc., and reserve the broth. I think I had about six cups of broth.
Then, start by making the roux. In a heavy-bottomed frying pan, over medium heat, cook flour in grease or oil, stirring constantly, until distinctly browned. Do not burn the roux; if it burns and gets black specks in it, throw it away and start again. Don't allow the roux to spatter, because it can cause bad burns on your skin.
Allow the roux to cool a little, then try tossing in a piece of diced onion. If the sizzling is not too dramatic, add the onion and celery to the roux and cook until the onion is somewhat translucent. Add the bell peppers. If you want to add a chopped seeded jalapeƱo, now is the time.
At this point, transfer to a soup pot or a slow cooker. Place the roux and vegetables in the slow cooker or soup pot, along with canned tomatoes, okra, and corn. Add bay leaves and thyme. Slice smoked sausage and add to the gumbo. Add reserved chicken broth and stir. Cook on the highest setting in the slow cooker, or medium heat on the stove top, until the gumbo starts to simmer (small bubbles at the edges and hot throughout). Chop the chicken into bite-sizes squares and add it to the gumbo, turn the heat to low and cook for several hours. If the low setting on your slow cooker is too high, so that it causes the gumbo to boil at the edges, turn to the "keep warm" setting instead. If the low setting on your stove is not low enough to prevent burning and sticking, then watch carefully and stir frequently, and turn the heat off for up to one hour at a time (not more than two hours off at a time). Taste the gumbo, and add salt as needed (one teaspoon was right for me), plus ground celery seed, ground cumin, red pepper flakes, and paprika (preferably smoked paprika, if you can get it). If, after eating a quarter-cup of the gumbo, you decide it's too mild, add more crushed red pepper, or chopped seed
Friday, June 25, 2010
Paneer by Pagan Mama
So I Googled, and by golly, believe it or not, you too can make your own Indian fresh cheese in about an hour. It's incredibly easy and fun and it WORKS. We've just finished a glorious mess o' saag paneer. This is the paneer recipe I used:
Paneer
Yield: 1 1/2 cups
1/2 gallon whole milk
2 TBSP lemon juice
1. In a heavy saucepan, bring milk to a boil. (When it has reached full boil, it will look very foamy and quickly - QUICKLY, I say - rise in the pot. To avoid the ensuing mess, remove it from the heat right away.) Add lemon juice and stir until small curds separate from the whey, about 2-3 minutes.
2. Let sit 10 minutes so curds can develop, then drain into a collander lined with 2 layers of cheesecloth. When cool enough to handle, tie up opposite ends of the cheese cloth and squeeze out remaining liquid.
3. Place paneer, still in cheese cloth, on a plate. Flatten to 1/2" thick and top with another plate. Rest something heavy on top (such as several cans or the Joy of Cooking) and let sit 20 minutes.
4. Pour off any liquid that remains and refrigerate overnight, or use immediately by cutting paneer into 1/2" cubes and frying gently in oil, turning to brown each side.
Paneer
Yield: 1 1/2 cups
1/2 gallon whole milk
2 TBSP lemon juice
1. In a heavy saucepan, bring milk to a boil. (When it has reached full boil, it will look very foamy and quickly - QUICKLY, I say - rise in the pot. To avoid the ensuing mess, remove it from the heat right away.) Add lemon juice and stir until small curds separate from the whey, about 2-3 minutes.
2. Let sit 10 minutes so curds can develop, then drain into a collander lined with 2 layers of cheesecloth. When cool enough to handle, tie up opposite ends of the cheese cloth and squeeze out remaining liquid.
3. Place paneer, still in cheese cloth, on a plate. Flatten to 1/2" thick and top with another plate. Rest something heavy on top (such as several cans or the Joy of Cooking) and let sit 20 minutes.
4. Pour off any liquid that remains and refrigerate overnight, or use immediately by cutting paneer into 1/2" cubes and frying gently in oil, turning to brown each side.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Watermelon, Feta, and Arugula Salad by Grizzled Adams
Ingredients:
4 cups watermelon, cut into one inch cubes
3 cups loosely packed baby arugula
6 ounces crumbled or cubed feta cheese
About 20 peppermint leaves, chiffonaded (wash them, dry them, roll them up, then thinly slice into strips)
2 tablespoons fresh orange juice
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons minced shallots
1 1/2 teaspoons honey
1/4 cup olive oil
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Fresh ground pepper, to taste
Directions:
Make the vinaigrette: In a small bowl or container, whisk together the orange juice, lemon juice, shallots, honey, salt and pepper.
Pour in the olive oil into the vinaigrette mixture in one thin stream, whisking briskly as you pour to blend.
In a large bowl, gently toss the watermelon, arugula, feta, and peppermint.
Drizzle the vinaigrette over the salad and toss until evenly distributed.
Enjoy!
And NO, I did not "chiffonaded" the fucking mint, I just chopped it into strips....
4 cups watermelon, cut into one inch cubes
3 cups loosely packed baby arugula
6 ounces crumbled or cubed feta cheese
About 20 peppermint leaves, chiffonaded (wash them, dry them, roll them up, then thinly slice into strips)
2 tablespoons fresh orange juice
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons minced shallots
1 1/2 teaspoons honey
1/4 cup olive oil
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Fresh ground pepper, to taste
Directions:
Make the vinaigrette: In a small bowl or container, whisk together the orange juice, lemon juice, shallots, honey, salt and pepper.
Pour in the olive oil into the vinaigrette mixture in one thin stream, whisking briskly as you pour to blend.
In a large bowl, gently toss the watermelon, arugula, feta, and peppermint.
Drizzle the vinaigrette over the salad and toss until evenly distributed.
Enjoy!
And NO, I did not "chiffonaded" the fucking mint, I just chopped it into strips....
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Sophie's Choice Cocktail by bookseller
I peeled about 6 oz. of fresh ginger, and threw it into the food processor with half a peeled cucumber, half a bunch of mint (I had more), and the heart of a stalk of lemongrass; processed till everything was very finely chopped. Dumped this slush into a small saucepan with 1/4 cup fresh lime juice, half a cup of brown sugar (ok, I used my much loved sugar sub, the brown version), and 6 tablespoons of honey (or, if you're me, 6 tablespoons of mint syrup, which is pretty much the sweetness and consistency of honey). Also half a tablespoon of whole black peppercorns, and a cup of water. I simmered everything for about 10 minutes, strained it, and am now boiling down the syrup to...syrup consistency.
It's pretty amazing. You smell the mint first, then you get a sweet-lime taste with a slight floral note from the cucumber, and then a real bite from the ginger and the pepper. According to the original recipe, it's supposed to be mixed in equal parts with whiskey, lime juice, and club soda, over ice. I'm thinking this is going to be pretty fabulous. I have no recollection of what the original cocktail was called, and in any case I did tweak it fairly substantially, so I reserve the right to name my version.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you....the Sophie's Choice.
It's pretty amazing. You smell the mint first, then you get a sweet-lime taste with a slight floral note from the cucumber, and then a real bite from the ginger and the pepper. According to the original recipe, it's supposed to be mixed in equal parts with whiskey, lime juice, and club soda, over ice. I'm thinking this is going to be pretty fabulous. I have no recollection of what the original cocktail was called, and in any case I did tweak it fairly substantially, so I reserve the right to name my version.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you....the Sophie's Choice.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Pea and Almond Soup by bookseller
Chops three large carrots, two large onions, and a couple cloves of garlic, and sweat them in 3 T olive oil until soft and light gold. ("Sweat" meaning over very low heat, not shooting for browning.) While the veggies are softening, top and tail a pound of green beans, and half a pound of sugar snap peas. When the onions and friends are soft, add in the beans and peas, stir around to mix them with the rest of the kids in the pool, and let it all meld together over medium heat for about five minutes.
Pour in a quart of chicken broth, cover the pot, and let it simmer away over low heat for about 30 minutes. Somewhere in that 30-minute period, measure out 1 cup or 4 oz. (by weight) of almond meal (you can get it at the health-food store or at Whole Foods; Bob's Red Mill is a very reliable, nationally distributed brand -- it's just finely ground blanched almonds, might also be called almond flour). Pour it into a small non-stick frying pan over medium-high heat, and stir constantly for about 2 minutes, as the almond meal toasts, gets darker, and starts to smell good. Once it has definitely taken on a toasted color (it may not be an even color -- some bits will be darker than others), pour it into a bowl or onto a plate, so it stops cooking.
When the beans et al. have been cooking for 30 minutes, taste the broth for seasoning. I wound up adding a fair amount of salt, some black pepper, and the juice of a lemon. Stir in the toasted almond flour, turn off the heat, and let the mixture cool down a bit. Blend it with a stick-blender or in batches in a regular blender. Should make about 6 cups.
The astonishing thing, for me, is that it not only looks like pea soup -- which I love, but have to steer clear of, mostly -- but it tastes very much like it. Adding the lemon juice actually took it in a different direction, but without that addition, and with a little chopped ham or smoked turkey, it would do a really good pea soup imitation. And the almond meal gives it the body that makes it feel like a meal. Pretty cool.
Pour in a quart of chicken broth, cover the pot, and let it simmer away over low heat for about 30 minutes. Somewhere in that 30-minute period, measure out 1 cup or 4 oz. (by weight) of almond meal (you can get it at the health-food store or at Whole Foods; Bob's Red Mill is a very reliable, nationally distributed brand -- it's just finely ground blanched almonds, might also be called almond flour). Pour it into a small non-stick frying pan over medium-high heat, and stir constantly for about 2 minutes, as the almond meal toasts, gets darker, and starts to smell good. Once it has definitely taken on a toasted color (it may not be an even color -- some bits will be darker than others), pour it into a bowl or onto a plate, so it stops cooking.
When the beans et al. have been cooking for 30 minutes, taste the broth for seasoning. I wound up adding a fair amount of salt, some black pepper, and the juice of a lemon. Stir in the toasted almond flour, turn off the heat, and let the mixture cool down a bit. Blend it with a stick-blender or in batches in a regular blender. Should make about 6 cups.
The astonishing thing, for me, is that it not only looks like pea soup -- which I love, but have to steer clear of, mostly -- but it tastes very much like it. Adding the lemon juice actually took it in a different direction, but without that addition, and with a little chopped ham or smoked turkey, it would do a really good pea soup imitation. And the almond meal gives it the body that makes it feel like a meal. Pretty cool.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Wine Sauce for Lamb Chops by bookseller
I did some interesting old-school cooking. I wanted -- don't ask why -- to make a wine sauce to go with lamb chops, and I did it, as I say, really old school. Which is to say that I browned three pounds -- THREE POUNDS -- of lamb neck (admittedly, too bony and gristley to make good eating), working really slowly to brown every side, took about, jeez, an hour maybe. Removed the meat, and in the fat that had rendered I browned -- deeply browned -- some chopped onion and garlic and carrots, with a little fresh thyme and a bay leaf. Added the lamb back into the pot, and poured in an entire bottle of red wine plus about a quart of chicken broth, and let it all cook down for...three hours maybe. Strained it and degreased it (and was delighted to learn that those gravy separator thingies really do work), and then reduced it down to about a cup. Added about 1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt -- the only salt I had added so far, which really made it come together, and then thickened it with a beurre manie, which is a variation on a roux; it's a small amount of softened butter smushed together with a small amount of flour, and then dropped into simmering liquid in tiny clumps.
Anyway, the sauce thickened beautifully, all glossy and with a lovely body, and the salt pulled all the flavors together. And after all of this, I got a scant cup of this gorgeous sauce. It's intensely flavorful; I can't see wanting to use more than, say, 2 tablespoons per serving. But all that meat, and all that wine, and all that time, for ONE CUP of glaze....wow. It's a very 19th-century kind of cooking, and deeply French, rather than American; we just don't do those kinds of reductions. And I had never made one before, but I gotta say, the result is a knockout.
Anyway, the sauce thickened beautifully, all glossy and with a lovely body, and the salt pulled all the flavors together. And after all of this, I got a scant cup of this gorgeous sauce. It's intensely flavorful; I can't see wanting to use more than, say, 2 tablespoons per serving. But all that meat, and all that wine, and all that time, for ONE CUP of glaze....wow. It's a very 19th-century kind of cooking, and deeply French, rather than American; we just don't do those kinds of reductions. And I had never made one before, but I gotta say, the result is a knockout.
Chicken for Chicken Salad by bookseller
So I had four chicken thighs and I wanted to make chicken salad from them, and I also had a couple cartons of organic chicken broth. Put the thighs in a pan, covered them with chicken broth and NOTHING else, brought them to a simmer and held them there for three minutes, kicked it up to a boil, slapped a cover on, turned off the heat, and let them sit for 45 minutes. The result: PERFECTLY poached chicken, moist and juicy, ideal for chicken salad. And what's really interesting to me is how flavorful the chicken is, as though I had spiced the broth. And the broth, too, is terrific. Straight out of the carton, it's bland and dull, but now infused with double-chickaliciousness, it's something I would actually choose to eat as soup.
[Later] Nomming my chicken salad, and I will never cook chicken -- for salad -- any other way again. This is amazing. I recommend highly.
[Later] Nomming my chicken salad, and I will never cook chicken -- for salad -- any other way again. This is amazing. I recommend highly.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Spanish-Style Pork Chops by Picklehead
Pork chops:
Crush some garlic and fry it in olive oil with a pinch of Spanish saffron.
Cover the pork chops in a mixture of flour, salt, pepper, cayenne pepper, nutmeg, and paprika.
Fry 'em up. When almost done, pour some white wine over them.
Polenta:
Fry it with some salt and pepper. When done, grate a bit of parmesan cheese over it.
We had broccoli for veggies, which worked nicely. It was all very yummy.
Crush some garlic and fry it in olive oil with a pinch of Spanish saffron.
Cover the pork chops in a mixture of flour, salt, pepper, cayenne pepper, nutmeg, and paprika.
Fry 'em up. When almost done, pour some white wine over them.
Polenta:
Fry it with some salt and pepper. When done, grate a bit of parmesan cheese over it.
We had broccoli for veggies, which worked nicely. It was all very yummy.
Vegetable halva by bookseller
Last night I was trying to figure out what to do with a zucchini and a couple of large carrots. I figured I would just cut them into sticks and eat them as veggie snacks, though that did seem extremely boring. And then I remembered a recipe I had recently seen for "halvah" (though of the Indian, rather than Middle Eastern, variety) made from vegetables. I'd never made anything like this before. The grated vegetables went into a wide skillet, along with about a teaspoon of the little black seeds from inside a cardamom pod, and two cups of milk. Oh, and half an ounce of raisins, which is about a tablespoon. Really low heat, and occasional stirring until the milk gradually, gradually reduced and was almost entirely absorbed -- probably took about two hours. Six tablespoons of sugar (sub), two tablespoons of butter, an ounce of sliced and toasted almonds, and half a teaspoon of rosewater. Mixed it all in, let it cool overnight, and I have to say, this is delicious. Really weird, but delicious.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Apple Clafouti by Picklehead
FOR THE BATTER:
3 eggs
1 cup milk or heavy cream
8 tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2⁄3 cup all-purpose flour
1⁄2 cup sugar
1⁄2 tsp. salt
FOR THE APPLES:
4 tbsp. unsalted butter
4 tart apples, peeled, cored, and sliced
1⁄2 cup plus 2 tsp. sugar
2–3 tbsp. brandy
Ground cinnamon
1. For the batter: Preheat oven to 400°. Put milk, eggs, 6 tbsp. of the butter, vanilla, flour, sugar, and salt into a blender, blend until smooth, and set aside. Grease a 10" pie plate with remaining butter, then set in oven to heat.
2. For the apples: Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add apples, 1/2 cup of the sugar, and brandy and cook until apples are glazed and warm, about 5 minutes.
3. Remove pie plate from oven and immediately pour in half the batter. Arrange warm apple slices over batter, reserving juices, then pour remaining batter over apples. Sprinkle remaining sugar and a little cinnamon over batter and bake until clafouti is golden and set in the center, 25–30 minutes. Drizzle with warmed reserved apple juices.
3 eggs
1 cup milk or heavy cream
8 tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2⁄3 cup all-purpose flour
1⁄2 cup sugar
1⁄2 tsp. salt
FOR THE APPLES:
4 tbsp. unsalted butter
4 tart apples, peeled, cored, and sliced
1⁄2 cup plus 2 tsp. sugar
2–3 tbsp. brandy
Ground cinnamon
1. For the batter: Preheat oven to 400°. Put milk, eggs, 6 tbsp. of the butter, vanilla, flour, sugar, and salt into a blender, blend until smooth, and set aside. Grease a 10" pie plate with remaining butter, then set in oven to heat.
2. For the apples: Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add apples, 1/2 cup of the sugar, and brandy and cook until apples are glazed and warm, about 5 minutes.
3. Remove pie plate from oven and immediately pour in half the batter. Arrange warm apple slices over batter, reserving juices, then pour remaining batter over apples. Sprinkle remaining sugar and a little cinnamon over batter and bake until clafouti is golden and set in the center, 25–30 minutes. Drizzle with warmed reserved apple juices.
Otter Chowder by Grizzled Adams
1Cup chopped onion
1/2 cup chopped green pepper
1/2 cup chopped celery
3or4 garlic cloves chopped
put a couppla glugs of olive oil in a heavy soup pot add 1st 4 ingredients fry till onions are translucent
1/2 lb mild whitefish
1 qt lowfat/low salt chicken broth
add fish to onion mix, when half done add chicken broth then add
1 teaspoon Smoked Paprika
1 teaspoon Mrs Dash Garlic and Herbs
1 teaspoon Old Bay
1 4oz can chopped green chilies
1 small can tomato paste
1 14 oz can whole tomatoes and juice
add 2 potatoes cut into 1/2 inch cubes and bring to a boil, then simmer for 45 min
next you will need;
1/2 lb "seafood mix"(raw octopus,raw cuttlefish,raw squid,raw shrimp and cooked clams and mussels)
1/2 lb salmon cut into large chunks
4 oz bay scallops
4oz backfin crab meat
4oz oysters
olive oil
white wine
garlic chopped
juice from one lemon
add olive oil to fry pan, when it is hot add garlic after about a minute of pushing the garlic around put in the "Seafood mix" turn the heat down, what you want to do is heat up the seafood mix in a scampi sauce, so add the lemon and wine and let it cook down keep stirring.
when the potatoes are about done, add the scampi, and the salmon chunks and simmer till the salmon is almost done. Then add the crabmeat and about 2 minutes before you serve add the oysters.
Serve with a salad and garlic bread.
Now I thought this tasted pretty damn good, and Leviticus would have tasted it, his book would have been half as long.
1/2 cup chopped green pepper
1/2 cup chopped celery
3or4 garlic cloves chopped
put a couppla glugs of olive oil in a heavy soup pot add 1st 4 ingredients fry till onions are translucent
1/2 lb mild whitefish
1 qt lowfat/low salt chicken broth
add fish to onion mix, when half done add chicken broth then add
1 teaspoon Smoked Paprika
1 teaspoon Mrs Dash Garlic and Herbs
1 teaspoon Old Bay
1 4oz can chopped green chilies
1 small can tomato paste
1 14 oz can whole tomatoes and juice
add 2 potatoes cut into 1/2 inch cubes and bring to a boil, then simmer for 45 min
next you will need;
1/2 lb "seafood mix"(raw octopus,raw cuttlefish,raw squid,raw shrimp and cooked clams and mussels)
1/2 lb salmon cut into large chunks
4 oz bay scallops
4oz backfin crab meat
4oz oysters
olive oil
white wine
garlic chopped
juice from one lemon
add olive oil to fry pan, when it is hot add garlic after about a minute of pushing the garlic around put in the "Seafood mix" turn the heat down, what you want to do is heat up the seafood mix in a scampi sauce, so add the lemon and wine and let it cook down keep stirring.
when the potatoes are about done, add the scampi, and the salmon chunks and simmer till the salmon is almost done. Then add the crabmeat and about 2 minutes before you serve add the oysters.
Serve with a salad and garlic bread.
Now I thought this tasted pretty damn good, and Leviticus would have tasted it, his book would have been half as long.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Long-Rise Bread with Carrot and Walnuts by MollyDunlop
OK, here's the recipe for the long-rise bread. It's from Jim Lahey's book My Bread.
3 cups flour (I use 2 of bread flour and 1 of WW)
1/4 teaspoon dry yeast
1 to 2 tspns salt (to taste)
1 1/2 cups fresh carrot juice (I grate a couple of carrots and run them through the blender)
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
3/4 cup currants (optional)
about 1 tspn whole cumin seed
Mix flour, yeast, and salt in a large bowl. Stir in the juice to form a soft, "shaggy" dough; it should be just too wet to knead. Add water by tablespoons if required. Work in the walnuts and currants. Cover bowl with oiled plastic wrap and leave at room temperature for 18-24 hours.
Turn the risen dough onto a floured surface and fold it over a couple of times. Shape it into a round loaf. Take a clean cloth (cotton or linen dish towel is ideal) and cover it heavily in flour. Scatter the cumin seed over the flour. Dump the shaped bread onto the cloth and leave it for an hour or so. Heat your oven about as hot as it will go, 450-475 F. Heat up a large, lidded cast-iron or earthenware pot in the oven. Once hot, remove the pot, dump the loaf into the pot (don't worry if it goes in upside-down), replace the lid, and put it back in the oven for about 35-45 minutes. Remove lid and bake to a deep brown (about another 25 min). Carefully remove the whole shooting-match from the oven and tip out the loaf. Tap the bottom to make sure it sounds hollow; if not, return to oven and bake in 5-minute increments until done (don't bother putting it back in the pot). Cool on a rack; freezes well. You can bake it as two loaves if you like. Or use a cast-iron skillet instead of the pot and don't cover it, but throw half a cup of water onto the oven floor just before you close the door on the loaf (the idea is to create a steamy atmosphere for crust formation).
The currants are in the original recipe, but I sometimes leave them out.
3 cups flour (I use 2 of bread flour and 1 of WW)
1/4 teaspoon dry yeast
1 to 2 tspns salt (to taste)
1 1/2 cups fresh carrot juice (I grate a couple of carrots and run them through the blender)
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
3/4 cup currants (optional)
about 1 tspn whole cumin seed
Mix flour, yeast, and salt in a large bowl. Stir in the juice to form a soft, "shaggy" dough; it should be just too wet to knead. Add water by tablespoons if required. Work in the walnuts and currants. Cover bowl with oiled plastic wrap and leave at room temperature for 18-24 hours.
Turn the risen dough onto a floured surface and fold it over a couple of times. Shape it into a round loaf. Take a clean cloth (cotton or linen dish towel is ideal) and cover it heavily in flour. Scatter the cumin seed over the flour. Dump the shaped bread onto the cloth and leave it for an hour or so. Heat your oven about as hot as it will go, 450-475 F. Heat up a large, lidded cast-iron or earthenware pot in the oven. Once hot, remove the pot, dump the loaf into the pot (don't worry if it goes in upside-down), replace the lid, and put it back in the oven for about 35-45 minutes. Remove lid and bake to a deep brown (about another 25 min). Carefully remove the whole shooting-match from the oven and tip out the loaf. Tap the bottom to make sure it sounds hollow; if not, return to oven and bake in 5-minute increments until done (don't bother putting it back in the pot). Cool on a rack; freezes well. You can bake it as two loaves if you like. Or use a cast-iron skillet instead of the pot and don't cover it, but throw half a cup of water onto the oven floor just before you close the door on the loaf (the idea is to create a steamy atmosphere for crust formation).
The currants are in the original recipe, but I sometimes leave them out.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Beans with Greens and Olive Oil by bookseller
Soak 1/4 pound dried white beans (I used cannelini; lots of others would probably work as well) overnight in water to cover generously. Drain, cover generously with water, and add any aromatics that you think might be nice; I used half a chopped onion, a clove of mashed garlic, a bay leaf, and a piece of dried chorizo. Bring to a boil, turn heat down, and simmer till beans are tender (mine took about 90 minutes; timing will vary according to both the kind and the age of your beans). Drain, and eat any pork products you had in the pot.
Julienne the leaves only (save the stalks for some green gumbo) of four stalks of chard (I used red; any other kind -- or any other kind of dark green leafy green, for that matter -- would work as well). Chop half a small onion and one or two cloves of garlic.
Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil (I used garlic oil, in which I had soaked cloves of garlic) over medium-high heat in a largeish pan; spread the drained beans in a single layer, stir them around, and then let sit 3-4 minutes until they are starting to get brown and crusty.
Trickle perhaps a teaspoon of olive oil down the side of the pan, stir the beans around again until the brown sides are facing up (don't make yourself crazy here, MOST of the brownsides, SORT OF up), and repeat till brown and crusty on the other side.
Add a bit more olive oil (the beans do soak that stuff up!), the onion and garlic, and a generous amount of kosher salt and pepper; stir-fry perhaps 2 minutes till the onion and garlic are smelling good. Add in the chard -- plus, if you're feeling reckless, some more olive oil -- and stir everything around until the chard wilts down. Taste for seasoning (mine needed nothing), and scarf. Makes an extremely tasty and healthy side-dish for 3-4.
Julienne the leaves only (save the stalks for some green gumbo) of four stalks of chard (I used red; any other kind -- or any other kind of dark green leafy green, for that matter -- would work as well). Chop half a small onion and one or two cloves of garlic.
Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil (I used garlic oil, in which I had soaked cloves of garlic) over medium-high heat in a largeish pan; spread the drained beans in a single layer, stir them around, and then let sit 3-4 minutes until they are starting to get brown and crusty.
Trickle perhaps a teaspoon of olive oil down the side of the pan, stir the beans around again until the brown sides are facing up (don't make yourself crazy here, MOST of the brownsides, SORT OF up), and repeat till brown and crusty on the other side.
Add a bit more olive oil (the beans do soak that stuff up!), the onion and garlic, and a generous amount of kosher salt and pepper; stir-fry perhaps 2 minutes till the onion and garlic are smelling good. Add in the chard -- plus, if you're feeling reckless, some more olive oil -- and stir everything around until the chard wilts down. Taste for seasoning (mine needed nothing), and scarf. Makes an extremely tasty and healthy side-dish for 3-4.
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Lentil Dip by Highgate
Please be warned that the recipe isn't too accurate - I just taste and keep adding olive oil to taste...
Small, red lentils - I used about 400 ml. Rinse, boil in salted water until soft (these took 12 minutes), drain.
Put 1/2 smal chili (not the hottest kind, please!) and 3-5 garlic cloves in the food processor, blend. Add the lentils (lukewarm, not boiling hot), blend. Add olive oil (around 100 ml, possibly more), blend. Add salt to taste and blend.
Tastes really good on carrot sticks.
Small, red lentils - I used about 400 ml. Rinse, boil in salted water until soft (these took 12 minutes), drain.
Put 1/2 smal chili (not the hottest kind, please!) and 3-5 garlic cloves in the food processor, blend. Add the lentils (lukewarm, not boiling hot), blend. Add olive oil (around 100 ml, possibly more), blend. Add salt to taste and blend.
Tastes really good on carrot sticks.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Relish for Grilled Fish by bibbety
Coarsely chop some black olives (those wrinkly French ones are the best), garlic, sun-dried tomatoes and add in some olive oil, capers and the zest of one lemon. You could also add basil. Serve it at room temperature over grilled tuna. I serve it on halibut all the time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)