Monday, August 23, 2010

A Summer for Eating Outside

Every once in a while, just to make sure it's really summer, I eat a meal outside. When the air feels warm and non-air conditioned, and a breeze carries the scent of grilled meat, and I can sit on my balcony and stare down at the neighbors who camp on their porch all weekend as though we lived in the deep south - then I know it's summer.

This summer I've eaten lunch on my balcony every weekend. I've eaten rapidly melting mint chocolate chip ice cream while walking down the street, or frozen custard while sitting outside the frozen custard shop watching people at the walk up window with their dogs in tow. I've eaten outside but inside my parents' enclosed patio with the wind blowing through the screen but the bugs staying thankfully in the yard. I sat on a deck drinking beer and grilling hamburgers in Virginia on July 4th, and the next day I squatted on a blanket eating chicken salad and veggies and dip while listening to the North Shore concert band in Illinois.

It's been a summer for eating outside, where the food tastes so fresh, it's like it grew out of the ground just a few feet from where I sit.

Last night I sat outside again, at a picnic table eating fresh tomatoes. If you're going to eat anything outside, it should be a ripe, summery tomato. It should be bloody red, juicy, topping sandwiches or layered with fresh mozzarella or eaten like an apple, out of hand. Or best of all, toss it with some toasted Italian bread cubes, basil, olive oil, salt, and pepper for a tomato-bread salad. And eat it fast, before the bugs or the end of summer get you.


Panzanella (Italian Bread Salad) by Emeril

Ingredients

  • 1/2 French bread loaf cut into 1" cubes
  • Olive oil for frying
  • Salt and pepper
  • 3 tablespoons chiffonade of basil
  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 4 Italian Roma tomatoes, cut into 1/2 " slices

Directions

For croutons: In a large saute pan, heat the olive oil. When smoking hot, add the bread cubes and fry until golden, about 3-4 minutes. Stir often to prevent from sticking. Remove from pan and drain on a paper-lined plate. Season with salt and pepper. Toss the remain ingredients together in a mixing bowl. Season with salt and pepper.

To assemble, toss the fried bread with the other ingredients and place on a platter. Can be made ahead of time, by keeping the bread separate until serving.

NUTRITION TIP[ OF THE WEEK

                   DOUBLE CLICK ON ABOVE IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Another day, Another Burnt Pizza

Let's quickly refresh the scoreboard here...Pizza - 5, Jess - 0

Today's lesson is: don't do ANYTHING but stand anxiously outside the oven and check your pizzas every thirty seconds while it's under the broiler on the very top rack. It takes a surprisingly short amount of time for them to burn.

Luckily it wasn't the DINNER pizza, but just the "oh let's be clever and make extra pizzas for lunch tomorrow" pizzas. And they were just on pitas as we only had enough dough for the dinner pizza. So it could have been worse. But I'm still not over it.

By the way, the dinner pizza had SPAM on it. And it was delicious! I'm calling it my "true" Hawaiian pizza. Hawaiians love their SPAM. So do Koreans. Yum.

Visiting Goats in Michigan

Over the last couple of years I have become very fond of goats. I was introduced to them in Albuquerque by Susan Main who spent some time last fall at the South Mountain Dairy (“It’s all about the girls!”) helping the two women who own the place with milking, feeding and cheese-making. She has been making regular trips to the goat exhibit at the state fair for years and is a far more advanced goat fancier than I. But I am on my way.

















Little did I know that on my trip to Michigan this year I would have another chance to visit some goats. On our way home from the Farmers Market in Montague, we decided to stop by a farm that our friends said had five goats, all female, ranging in age from a couple of months to several years. One of the little ones is bow-legged.

We were welcomed by the three boys Jake, Silas, and Clay who help to tend the goats and by their mom, Jennifer. For a while we chatted over the electrified fence: boys and goats on one side, me on the other. At last the boys invited me into the pen. I was thrilled.


After plying the boys with questions and snapping a few more pictures, we moved across the road to see the chickens and ducks and bought a 5.4 pound chicken ($2 a pound) they had recently slaughtered--Jennifer was in charge of gutting all 25 chickens, an experience she doesn’t want to repeat--and a dozen eggs, four of which were from the ducks ($2 a dozen).
















When I returned to Sonoma, a large box was waiting for me on my front stoop. It contained three goats, two big ones and a little one, fashioned, I think, from recycled oil drums. These adorable creatures look out over our freshly planted front yard. Every morning I check in with them. Most folks walking by smile when they spot them lurking in the shadows. Our next door neighbor's dog sniffs them and barks. Children can't quite believe it. It's fun to watch the reactions. So here where it stands: I hang out with the live ones when I can. The rest of the time the faux goats will do very well indeed, bringing pleasure to one and all.

Cooking Mama 2 Cake Mable

23 Agustus 2010, Senin

Kemarin pas ke toko second book, ketemu buku resep kue yang sip banget, soalnya harganya murah banget, bayangkan kalo beli di toko bisa sekitar 1500an yen jadi 105 yen. Busettt, murahnya uda mana bukunya tebel 200an halaman, so bisa dibayangkan berapa banyak resep kue yang ada di situ? hehehe.

Kebetulan bulan ini cooking mama bertema "kue" jadi kemaren nyempetin da bikin Cake Mable ini, murah meriah n praktis.




Bahan
130 gr mentega bebas gula-->gw pake 100 gr, suhu ruangan
130 gr gula --> 100 gr
130 gr telur --> kira2 3 biji ukuran M
1 tetes vanila essence
130 gr tepung trigu
1 gr baking powder
9 gr cocoa bubuk
Cara
1. Aduk gula n mentega sampai putih mengembang
2. Kocok telur hingga rata, aduk bersama adonan 1
3. Teteskan vanila
4. Campur tepung terigu n baking powder, ayak rata
5. Campur ke adonan 3
6. Bagi adonan menjadi 2 bagian, 1 bagian aduk rata dengan cocoa powder
7. Masukkan adonan 3, lalu campur dengan adonan cocoa, aduk dengan tusuk sate
8. Oven listrik 180 derajat 30 menit, lalu 170 derajat 10 menit ato
oven gas 170 derajat 30 menit, 160 derajat 10 menit.

Rasanya enak, kayak bolu gitu, cuman kurang lembut aja, mungkin karena pake telornya sedikit kaleee ya?? Menurut gw, resep2 Japanese buat kue, ga terlalu banyak pake telor deh, jadi lebih rendah kalorinya, ga bikin endutt deh...sapa mo coba bikin??

Menu 19: Summer Supper

A quiche all creamy and full of spinach, a zucchini salad with the tantalizing flavors of Provence, followed by a Lemon Ice (from the market or check out my March 22, 2011 blog). Seems like a pretty perfect summer supper to me.

Spinach Quiche
I love this quiche and I don’t care whether quiches are in or out of fashion. If you are not up for making a pie crust, buy one. If you are not up for a pie crust of any kind, make this quiche without one. I have a friend who actually prefers it that way.

















1 partially baked 8-9 inch pie shell (Recipe below) or purchase one from the supermarket.
Note: If the supermarket one comes unbaked, follow the instructions on the wrapper for partial baking or look to the recipe below.

2 tablespoons butter
½ onion, chopped
4 cups finely chopped spinach or 1 package frozen chopped spinach, thawed and squeezed dry
1 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
¼ teaspoon smoky sweet paprika
1 cup grated cheese, whatever you like or have on hand cheddar, Swiss, Parmesan or a mix
1¼ cups heavy cream, warmed in the microwave
4 eggs, lightly beaten

1. Preheat oven to 375ºF.
2. Melt the butter in a large skillet and sauté the onion until tender but not browned.
3. Add the spinach, cover and cook for 5 minutes. If you use fresh, you’ll need to chop again. No need to do that if you use frozen. Add the salt, pepper, nutmeg, paprika, and ½ cup cheese.
4. Pour the warm cream slowly over the eggs while beating. Gradually beat in the spinach mixture. Taste for seasonings. Ladle into the pie shell. Sprinkle with the remaining cheese.
5. Bake for 30 minutes or until set. It will take longer for larger pies—45 minutes perhaps. Let sit for 15-20 minutes before serving. Serve warm.

Notes:
For a bigger pie shell, increase the cream to 1¾ cups and the eggs to 5.
If you make this quiche ahead of time (the day or the morning before serving), refrigerate and then reheat at 300ºF. for 20-30 minutes to warm it slightly.

6 servings
Adapted from Craig Claiborne’s The New York Times Menu Cookbook

Pie Crust

For an 8 or 9-inch pie plate or tin:
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
½ cup plus 3 tablespoons (1 stick plus 3 tablespoons) cold unsalted butter, cut roughly into ½-inch pieces
7 tablespoons ice water or more if necessary

1. Combine the flour and salt in the container of a food processor. Add the butter and pulse until the butter and flour are blended and the mixture looks like cornmeal, about 10 seconds.
2. Add the ice water to the mixture. Pulse until you see the mixture coming together. If it doesn’t after a couple of additional pulses, add more ice water, 1 tablespoon at a time, until it does.
3. Dump the contents of the container onto a sheet of plastic wrap and mold it into a ball. Flatten the ballot a disk; bring the plastic up around the dough to cover it completely. Either freeze for 10 minutes or refrigerate for 30 minutes. (You can also refrigerate the dough for a day or two or freeze it almost indefinitely. If frozen, defrost before rolling.)
 4. Sprinkle a smooth countertop or a large board with flour. Unwrap the dough and place it on the work surface; sprinkle the top with a little flour. If the dough is hard, let it rest a few minutes to warm up just a little.
5. Roll with light pressure, from the center out. Continue to roll, adding a small amount of flour as necessary, rotating the dough occasionally, and turning it over once or twice during the process. When the dough is about 1/8-inch thick, place your plate upside down over it to check the size. You want your circle of dough to be about 2-3 inches bigger than the plate it will go into.
6. If the size is correct, move the dough into the pan by folding the dough in half and placing the fold in the middle of the pan. Carefully unfold the dough and press it gently into the outer edge of the plate.
7. Trim (I use scissors) the extra dough about 1 inch above the rim. Fold the dough above the rim in half (to ½ inch) and crimp with your fingers to make a decorative edge. With the scraps, you can fill in any part of the circle that’s missing.
8. Place the plate in the freezer for 10 minutes or the refrigerator for 30 minutes.

Partially Baked Pie Crust

1. Preheat the oven to 400ºF.
2. Prick the dough all over with a fork to help prevent the crust from poufing. (You’ll see what I mean when it happens.)
3. Tear off a large piece of aluminum foil. Press the sheet into the dough, especially on the sides. Weight the foil with a pile of dried beans or rice, pie weights, or a tight-fitting oven-proof skillet or saucepan—anything that will sit flat on the surface and hold the dough in place. Sometimes I just do the foil and don’t weight it with anything and it’s just fine.
4. Bake for 12 minutes. Remove from the oven; remove the weights and foil. If it has poufed, wait for a few minutes for it to settle and then prick the bottom, once again, with a fork.
5. Bake for another 4-5 minutes or so until the crust is just starting to turn a light brown and the bottom looks set.
6. Remove from the oven and cool on a rack.

Adapted from Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything: Simple Recipes for Great Food, Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking and M.F.K. Fisher’s The Cooking of Provincial France

Green and/or Yellow Zucchini Salad with Feta (also Summer Squash)

















1¼ pounds squash of your choosing, roasted (see recipe below)
½ cup drained and chopped oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes
OR
½ cup dried sun-dried tomatoes (not packed in oil), chopped
½ cup pitted and sliced Kalamata or Nicoise olives
1 red bell pepper, chopped
2 tablespoons chopped shallots or green onions
1 tablespoon chopped fresh basil or more if you’d like
1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint or more if you’d like
6 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons raspberry or red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon honey
Salt and pepper to taste
3 ounces crumbled feta cheese

Roasting the squash:
1. Cut into ½ -inch slices.
2. Place on a rimmed baking pan and mix with 2 tablespoons olive oil and some salt and pepper.
3. Roast at 425ºF. for about 30-40 minutes turning them mid-way. They should be nice and brown on both sides. Let cool slightly before continuing with the rest of the salad.

Making the salad:
1. In a medium bowl, combine all the remaining ingredients, except the feta. You can do this while the squash is roasting. Add salt and pepper to your taste.
2. In a serving bowl, layer the cooled squash with the other combined ingredients. Sprinkle the top with feta cheese.
3. Serve at room temperature. If you make it ahead, refrigerate until about an hour before serving.

4 servings
Adapted from John Ash’s From the Earth to the Table

Menu Plan Monday

Here is my menu for the week!

Mon - Enchiladas
Tues - Chili with cornbread
Wed - Farfalle Pasta with Zuchini & Lemon Cream Sauce (new recipe from www.allrecipes.com)
Thurs - Anniversary Dinner out :) (Our Anniversary is actually Friday but we are going out early)
Fri - Dinner @ In-laws
Sat - Leftover buffet
Sun - Misc. sandwiches possibly grill out


Heather

Recipe of the Week - 7 Layer Bean Dip

I know this is a day late, however yesterday I was busy and tired of top of it so I never got around to posting! So here is this week's recipe. I got this recipe from an old co-worker of mine and it is a great party dish to have!


7 Layer Bean Dip

1 can of re-fried beans
1 package of taco seasoning
1 sm. container of sour cream
shredded cheese of your choice.
Sm. head of Lettuce
1 tomato
1 can of olives

1 bag of corn chips

Spread the re-fried beans evenly on the bottom of your dish (I use a medium size glass casserole dish). Next, spread your sour cream over the re-fried beans. Sprinkle one package of taco seasoning over the sour cream. Next, sprinkle the shredded cheese. Cut up lettuce, olives, and tomatoes and layer on top. You can refrigerate this before serving or eat it as soon as you make it. And of course you need the bag of chips to eat it with! :)

Enjoy! Be sure to link up with your recipes below!

Heather

Yummy yummy!! Pasta with leeks and bacon (and an outfit for today!)

Hey everyone! It's been a hard weekend and I must catch up all the comments and blog entries from last week, but I promise I'll do it in a while!




Last thursday I was alone at home, so I cooked for myself some pasta with leeks, onion, bacon and cheese... and here you've got the recipe!

1. Put some pasta in boiled water with some oil and salt. Wait until it is al dente!


2. Take an onion and some leeks, and cut it into little pieces. 


3. Take a fried pan and put some oil on it, the onion and leek. Add some salt if you want and cook it for about 5 minutes. Don't forget to move it, leeks burn easily!


4. Cut some bacon and add it to the fried pan. If you want, you can add some white wine!


5. Take some of your favourite chees and cut it into little dices, and add it with the pasta!


6. ... et voilá!


It's really delicious! If you do it, let me know!!

And today I woke up early in the morning and went into my old office, where my mum also works. Cristina took me some pictures in the backyard... 




Summers is also gone, and now I must search for a new flat (it's a long story) and wait until september the 3rd, when I would start working at the Barbie Store!! Yaw for me!

Fillet of Baked Pike with Meuniere Sauce, Salad and New Potatoes



There are a great many people here in the UK who believe either that pike should not be eaten or that it does not afford an enjoyable eating experience. Although I had eaten pike before, in both Austria and the Czech Republic, I had never until very recently had the opportunity to actually cook pike.

That all changed one night last week when I got a phone call to enquire whether I could use a pike which had just been caught. I established that the pike was about two and a half pounds in weight and in good condition. I delightedly therefore accepted the offer and headed off to collect the fish that would form my dinner the following evening.

I gave considerable thought as to how I would cook my pike. On the two previous occasions I remember eating pike, it was on one occasion barbecued and on the other, poached in a fish kettle. In the name of variety and experimentation, I therefore decided to cook it a different way altogether and bake it in the oven.

What I did was gut the pike but otherwise left it whole. I then sat it on a bed of sliced lemon and white onion and made four large scores in the uppermost side of its flesh. I then prepared a very basic meuniere sauce by melting and browning some butter in a saucepan and adding lemon juice and freshly chopped parsley, which I poured over the pike before covering the baking tray with aluminium foil and baking it an oven pre-heated to 375F/190C/Gas Mark 5, for twenty-five minutes.

For more detailed instruction in this process and accompanying photographs, click on the link below:

How to Cook Pike



The cooking of the pike was carried out very late on one evening, so this was the principal reason why I decided to eat it cold the next day. I simply allowed it to cool when it came out of the oven, before refrigerating it whole in a large dish covered with clingfilm until the following evening.

The skin of even a small pike like this is very thick compared to most other edible fish. This actually in a sense makes it easier to remove, however, and by making an incision behind the gill, I was able to strip the skin completely off the uppermost side of the fish. The fillet could then simply be slid from the bones with the aid of a blunt knife and a fish slice. By lifting the head and again using a blunt knife if required, the entire skeleton of the fish should then be lifted away from the second fillet. I then shredded some lettuce and white onion and used it to form a bed for the pike fillet.



I have served the pike fillet here simply with some new potatoes in butter and parsley, some blanched baby corn, cherry tomatoes and a fresh batch of meuniere sauce, made up at the very last minute.

Lime Curry Ribeye

  
  
This past weekend I was in the mood for something tropically inspired.  Ok, I'll admit it, I saw Eat Pray Love.  I suppose there's no reason to fear for my man-cred here, this is a cooking blog after all.  What flavors conjure better than lime and curry?  Although, I suppose gravitating toward beef is hardly an homage to India, but let's just say the curry was India inspired and the lime and cilantro SE Asia inspired.  Cooking doesn't always have to make sense though.  It's a reflection of ourselves, our wants and needs at the moment.  So, all in one it is possible to grill something for a summer menu, make it interesting with lime and curry, and still hit that meat and potatoes comfort spot.  On the latter, the recipe is really more American, but like everything, a little lime juice and cilantro instead of lemon and parsley can pair it well with another dish.  As for the marinade?  It took 30 seconds and 3 ingredients.  Serves 2.
    
Ingredients:
salt/pepper
juice of 1 lime
1 tbsp curry
3 tbsp olive oil
2 ribeye steaks
2 large or 4 small red potatoes
2 strip bacon, chopped
1/2 yellow onion, diced
1 garlic clove, diced
1 tsp rice wine vinegar
2 tbsp fresh cilantro, chopped
    
Directions:
Set a medium pot with water on high heat to boil.  Season steaks on both side with salt and pepper.  Mix all but 1 tsp (reserving for later) of the lime juice with the curry and 2 tbsp of olive oil.  Put marinade in a ziploc with the steaks and coat all sides.  Heat a grill or grill pan to medium.  When hot, add the steaks and cover.  Cook for a total of 10 minutes, turning once.  When the water is boiling, add the potatoes and cook for 12 minutes.  Meanwhile, in a medium fry pan over medium heat, cook the bacon and onions.  Drain and remove to a plate.  Remove the steaks when done to a plate and cover.  When the potatoes are done, remove and allow to cool a little, perhaps running under cold water if desired.  Mix together 1 tbsp olive oil, rice wine vinegar and remaining lime juice.  Season with salt and pepper.  Cut the potatoes into 1/2 inch pieces and mix with the dressing, bacon, onion and garlic mixture and cilantro.  Plate the steaks and serve with the potato salad.
    

Sweet and Sour Salad Jakarta Style (Asinan Betawi)

Sweet and Sour Salad Jakarta Style (Asinan Betawi)

400 g carrots, shredded or thinly sliced
400 g cabbage, finely sliced
250 g cucumber, cut into small pieces
200 g bean sprouts
400 g lettuce, shredded
400 g tofu, steamed and cut into small pieces
400 g pineapple cut into pieces
Noodle crackers, fried

Marinade sauce :
100 g sugar
2 tsp salt
2 tbsp sliced red chilies, blended
2 tsp vinegar
200 ml boiled water

Peanut sauce :
50 g peanuts, fried
25 g dried shrimps
2 tbsp sliced red chilies
50 g sugar
1 tsp salt
200 ml boiled water

Marinade sauce :
Put sugar, salt, red chilies, vinegar, and water in a bowl, mix together.

Put cucumber, cabbage, carrots, bean sprouts, tofu, and pineapple into the marinade mixture, let stand for 15 minutes drain.

Peanut sauce :
Blend peanuts, red chilies, and dried shrimps into a paste. Add sugar, salt, and water into the paste, set aside.

How to serve:
In a salad bowl, arrange lettuce, marinated vegetables, and tofu on top.

Pour in the peanut sauce
Serve with fried noodle crackers.

Sweet and Sour Salad Jakarta Style (Asinan Betawi)

Sweet and Sour Salad Jakarta Style (Asinan Betawi)

400 g carrots, shredded or thinly sliced
400 g cabbage, finely sliced
250 g cucumber, cut into small pieces
200 g bean sprouts
400 g lettuce, shredded
400 g tofu, steamed and cut into small pieces
400 g pineapple cut into pieces
Noodle crackers, fried

Marinade sauce :
100 g sugar
2 tsp salt
2 tbsp sliced red chilies, blended
2 tsp vinegar
200 ml boiled water

Peanut sauce :
50 g peanuts, fried
25 g dried shrimps
2 tbsp sliced red chilies
50 g sugar
1 tsp salt
200 ml boiled water

Marinade sauce :
Put sugar, salt, red chilies, vinegar, and water in a bowl, mix together.

Put cucumber, cabbage, carrots, bean sprouts, tofu, and pineapple into the marinade mixture, let stand for 15 minutes drain.

Peanut sauce :
Blend peanuts, red chilies, and dried shrimps into a paste. Add sugar, salt, and water into the paste, set aside.

How to serve:
In a salad bowl, arrange lettuce, marinated vegetables, and tofu on top.

Pour in the peanut sauce
Serve with fried noodle crackers.