Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Martha's Scalloped Potatoes

  
   

Where do we put Martha Stewart in the Pantheon of chefs?  In our modern era of haute cuisine we may not think of her with Ripert, Ducasse or Keller.  In our current age of celebrity chefs we may not think of her with Batali, Flay or DeLaurentiis.  But there should be no doubt that she deserves a place in the Pantheon, to carry the metaphor, as one of the 12 Olympians of modern cooking.  Zeus, Poseidon, or Hades she may not be, but we can note that Dionysus, also one of the Olympians, is the god of wine, festivals and celebration.  We should also remember that not only has Martha been authoring cookbooks for a long time, one reason we may no longer think of her has a chef is her success in creating and diversifying her home living brand.  What’s more, Martha has been working many of our current themes for years: seasonal eating; healthy, fresh, simple ingredients; and simple mid-week meal menus.  Her cookbook What to Have for Dinner: 32 Easy Menus for Every Night of the Week published in 1996 does this to the nines.  This recipe for gratin potatoes is my go-to potato accompaniment for lamb chops.  It avoids the fat and calories of heavy cream and butter-based gratins.  Yet, it is still full of flavor with its use of stock, herbs and Gruyere.  Make it part of your fall and winter menus.  Serves 2.
   
Ingredients:
3 Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and sliced to 1/8 inch thickness
1/3 cup grated Gruyere cheese
1/2 tsp olive oil
¼ tsp dried thyme leaves
¼ tsp salt
¼ cup chicken stock
   
Directions:
Heat oven to 400 degrees F.  Butter a small baking dish.  In a mixing bowl, combine the potatoes, half of the cheese, oil thyme and salt.  Arrange the potatoes in the baking dish, overlapping flat if desired.  Pour the stock over the potatoes and sprinkle the remaining cheese on top.  Bake the potatoes until tender and starting to brown, about 45 minutes.
   

Mrs O's Apple Pie


try this one: you'll like it
Autumn is  a nostalgic time with the nights drawing in, leaves falling from the trees. But it is also the season for apples and for pies, and here we have both in one. This recipe is a real star, passed on to me by my dear friend Lyn who acquired it oh so long ago from her Turkish mother-in-law, the redoubtable Mrs O, and I have made it innumerable times. The family name was a difficult one so for all of us greenhorn gelins or brides, Mrs O was always known and referred to as Mrs O – just not to her face! But she was one of those truly great Turkish cooks and really knew what was what in the kitchen. The only thing was that like all those of her generation, she was used to giving her measurements Turkish-style in glasses, but Lyn managed to adapt this one in such a way we could cope and in fact, it is easy.
But I've just learned something new: according to Sibel, Mrs O’s granddaughter who was visiting Istanbul from London recently with her new baby, it actually came from none other than Zsa Zsa Gabor. This sounds incredible but it seems that she was briefly married to a Turk and lived in Ankara, where her teaparty circuit obviously crossed with Mrs O’s. So here is a Hungarian recipe with Turkish overtones that actually, whatever the origin, everybody always loves:
Ingredients for Mrs O’s Apple/Elma Pie
3 cups plain flour
2 eggs (1 ½  in pie, yolk of second on top)
1 coffee spoon Baking Powder/kabartma tozu
¾ packet/180g butter, at room temperature
1 cup sugar
Cinnamon/tarçin (pron: tar-chin)
3 big, tart apples
Method
§  Heat the oven to 350F/180C.
§  Grease and flour a 8-9 inch/20-22cm round tin. Mine was 8 ½ in.
§  Separate one of the eggs, reserving the yolk to glaze the top of the pie.



§  Peel, core and slice apples quite thinly and put into a saucepan with a little sugar and water (depending on how sour and juicy your apples are). Cook over gentle heat till they turn yellow. Stir from time to time. Cool.


§  In a large bowl, sieve the flour and add the butter cut into small pieces. Make a well in the centre and add the 1 ½ eggs, Baking Powder, sugar, and mix with your hands to make the pastry. Divide into two, one for the top layer, one for the bottom. The bottom piece will be a little bigger.

a lovely easy-to-work-with dough


§  Now, on a floured surface, gently roll out each piece. The beauty of it is that you can use your fingers if you like.  Place the larger piece in the prepared tin and push round the edges. Spread the cooled apple slices over it and sprinkle with a little cinnamon. Then place the remaining layer of pastry on top. There shouldn’t be any gaps round the side of the tin, the apple should be covered.

the heart of the pie: apple and cinnnamon
§  Brush the remaining yolk all over the top of the pie with either a pastry brush or the back of a spoon, and sprinkle with chopped nuts. Put in the centre of your pre-heated oven and bake for 45 minutes. It will rise and turn a beautiful shade of brown. Also the smell from the oven will be most enticing!
§  Run a knife round the edges before turning out of the tin to cool on a baking rack. Can be served as a dessert, especially if warm from the oven, with whipped cream.
Thanks Mrs O and Zsa Zsa!

Tips
1.       I find apples in Turkey disappointing in terms of variety as there are very few. Ekşi elma or cooking apples, seem to have all but disappeared. Ekşi means sour. Today at Ezine Pazarı I bought some firm red apples which do look good and were described as mayhoş (pron: my-hosh) Apparently the taste is tart as opposed to sour. But the elma I buy now in Istanbul are a new variety called Fuji. They are nice eating apples and cook well too.
2.       I remember serving this pie as dessert once in Yeniköy, where we used to live. The electricity went off as was its wont in those days, and somehow in the dark, this little elma pie tasted positively ambrosial!
versatile apples

camera x de bttry hari ni, so kte update yg ahad lpas :P

assalamualaikum! XD

tgh pk. esok nak pakai bju ape? bju kurung cam mane, ke kebaye ke, ke ape ke? muahaha. pdhal raye KL duk rumah je pun. pftt~ tadi kan sy baru lepas big walk 4km. hebat tak? tak sampai 50minit. CEHH. lembab. :P oh ye, selamat hari raya aidil adha :)

ahad lepas, lunch dkt luar. saje 1 fmly. abah bwk kte org pergi mkn masakan kmpng (lebih kpd Kelantan, kot) dkt Kg Baru. punye lah ramaiii dlm tuh. time sampai pun tak bape banyak lauk.



tlg ye, ni mama sy. bukan kakak ye :P


ini lah dia restoran tu. nmpk mcm sunyi je kan.
sekali mak aih dlm die. mcm kenduri!


die buh lauk bebnyk siap2 dlm mangkuk, so just ambik.


ayam gulai. nyum2.


ikan bakar.


sayur lemak putih.


daging masak kicap.


air asam kegemaran. skeeee sgt.


cuba teka apa ni? mama & abah tgk gmbr pun tak cam.
ha bkn gulai bkn asam pedas.
budu dgn tempoyak. HAHA :P



ok. skrng muke excited. cube teka kenape. teka teka!


sbb pergi JJ wngsa maju! tapi tu bukan sebab utama. . .


sampai2 je JJ, abah serbu mesin air.
beli air, siap blh berebut dgn mama '-___-''


lepas tu serbu counter redemption JJ card.
ambik voucher! dpt 50 hinggit je. kdekot JJ :P


lepas tu pergi dkt ade Fitness Shop.
skrip mama time nih "apa berat sgt lemak nih?"


bincang-bincang, mama beli treadmill. hari ni baru sampai.
blhlah buat 'pengurusan' diri dgn lebih berkesan! :P


haaaa. ni la sbb excited yg utama. CAKE! secret recipe.
malangnya cake yg sy nak ta de. T____T tak puas benarnye...


bantai 2 famous amos soft cookies plak. *nyum nyum*




lepas tu balik rumah... time sebok transfer gmbr nih, ade makhluk dpn mata, muka cari gaduh


................




ade bran? *sugar demok*



ok jmpe esok! SELAMAT HARI RAYEEEE XD


Monday, November 15, 2010

Kolak Ubi merah

14 november 2010, minggu

Diundang makan ma temen acara ultah anak2, lagi mikir mo bikin apaan ya?? Dingin2 gini kayaknya enak bikin kolak deh. Kebetulan punya satsumaimo-ubi merah dari mertua. Pagi2 uda berkecimpung di dapur deh.


Bahan
1 lt air mendidih
ubi merah, kuliti n dipotong sesuai selera
butiran mutiara tapioka
santan bubuk "Kara' 1 bungkus
Cincau matang
Gula merah secukupnya

Cara
Masukkan ubi n tapioka dalam air mendidih. Masak hingga matang, lalu masukkan gula merah, masukkan santan, masak hingga ubi lunak n tapioka matang. Siapkan dalam keadaan hangat, n campur cincau ke dalamnya sesuai selera

Menu Plan Monday





This week I am making all my meals from items already in my pantry! We'll see how it goes! I will be making a grocery run for lunch items for myself and fresh fruits/veggies.

Monday - BBQ Chikettes, mashed potatoes, broccoli
Tuesday - Sandwich wraps
Wednesday - Mexican Chili
Thursday - Fried Rice and Eggs
Friday - Vegetable Soup
Sabbath - Italian Noodles and broccoli
Sunday - Order out Pizza

Have a great week!