Thursday, October 15, 2009

Recipe: Acorn Squash Soup

It's a crummy, cold, rainy day, so "comfort food" was in order for dinner. My theme was squash.

Yield: approx. 1.5 qts.
Time: 1 hour to roast and cool the squash, plus 1/2 hour to cook the soup

Ingredients:
  • 1 large acorn squash, roasted, and mashed
  • 2 c. chicken broth
  • one onion, chopped
  • salt
  • pepper
  • cumin
  • Madras curry powder
  • pinch of five spice powder
  • one large or two small bay leaves
  • dollop of sour cream for garnish, right before serving
  • optional garnish: a few roasted seeds from the squash
Method:
  1. cut open, clean, roast and mash the squash
  2. sautee the onion until translucent, and add the chicken broth, and spices
  3. stir in the mashed squash
  4. simmer for about half an hour, adding more liquid, if needed
  5. adjust seasonings
  6. garnish and serve

Monday, October 12, 2009

Recipe: Salsa Verde

There are probably as many ways to make this as there are people making it -- sort of like chili, really. Here's my version.

Yield: 2/3 of a quart
Time: 20 minutes, if you chop everything by hand, or less, if you use a food processor

Ingredients:
  • 7 or 8 tomatillos, finely chopped
  • 4 -5 large cayennes, still at the green stage, seeds, ribs, and all
  • a good handful of fresh cilantro leaves, finely chopped
  • half a large onion, or one small one, finely chopped
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic, minced
  • salt, black pepper, and lime juice
Method:
  1. finely chop all your ingredients, except for the garlic, salt, black pepper, and lime juice
  2. combine them, stirring well
  3. Mince your garlic, and stir it in to incorporate it
  4. Season with salt, black pepper, and lime juice until it meets your satisfaction
Notes: This might look watery at first, but tomatillos will set up a bit after the pectin they contain releases. Stir it around, and you have one nice hot sauce to pour over chicken, or dip pita chips. It looks harmless, but it's hot. If you want, you can run it through a food processor, or take a boat motor (immersion blender) to it, but I prefer it with some texture.

Thursday, October 08, 2009

Recipe: Feather Bread

This is a fairly quick yeast bread to make, as it only requires one rising before baking. Crunchy on the outside, with a chewy inside, it makes great garlic toast, as well as anything else you might use a baguette for.

Yield: 1 loaf
Time: 10 minutes prep; about an hour to rise; 40 minutes to bake at 425F

Ingredients:
  • 1 packet of yeast
  • 1/2 c. warm water
  • 1-1/2 tsp. sugar
  • 3 oz. hot water
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 3 Tbs. butter, cubed
  • 2-1/2 to 3 c. flour
  • egg wash (optional)
Method:
  1. proof the yeast with the sugar in the warm water
  2. melt the butter into the hot water with the salt, and let cool
  3. combine the butter and yeast mixtures
  4. stir in flour, one cup at a time, until it pulls away from the sides of the bowl (it'll be a bit sticky, but that's alright)
  5. turn out the dough onto a floured board, and knead it for a few minutes, working in more flour as needed, until it's soft, elastic, and no longer sticky
  6. roll it out into a rectangle, approx. 8" x 12"
  7. roll it up along the wide side like a jelly roll, pinching the ends together as you go
  8. place the formed loaf on a greased baking sheet, cover with a towel, and let rise until doubled in bulk (approx. an hour, or faster, if you use rapid-rise yeast)
  9. optional: brush with egg wash
  10. bake at 425F for 40 minutes, until it looks done, and sounds hollow when you flip it over and rap the bottom with your knuckles
Note: I did not bother to use egg wash on this particular loaf.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Almond Biscotti

I baked these this afternoon. If I'd realized how easy they are to make, I'd have done so before now. The dough is really stiff and crumbly, but the warmth of your hands makes it hold together when you shape it out on the cookie sheet. I probably should have let them cool a little longer before slicing them between bakings, but in the end, they came out fine.

The only part that was kind of a pain was that I didn't have slivered almonds, so I had to soak the whole salted ones I had in warm water for a few minutes, then peel and sliver them by hand, but it wasn't that big a deal.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Pecan Pie

I've never before baked a pecan pie, but the recipe (straight from the Betty Crocker cookbook) looked really easy, and I had all the ingredients on hand, so . . .


It smells divine! I'm finally getting used to this electric oven. It browns pie crust better than my previous gas oven did.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Review: The Blue Tortilla

Type: Mexican
Location: 18 N. Main St., New Hope, PA, 18938
Phone: 215-862-5859
Website: http://www.thebluetortillarestaurant.com
Liquor License: No
Take-Out: Yes
Price Range: $16 - $20 for entrees, with a $13.95 lunch special for all regular menu entrees ($15.95 for special entrees)

We went into New Hope yesterday to poke around the shops for the afternoon and grab a bite to eat. Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on your viewpoint, we happened to hit an all-weekend arts & crafts fair, which meant the town was mobbed, with several blocks closed to all but pedestrian traffic, and loads of vendor tents/booths. After poking around the booths, and a few of the shops, we settled on The Blue Tortilla for a late afternoon lunch.

Before writing this review, I decided to check on its reviews at Trip Advisor, and mostly agree with them. Apparently, The Blue Tortilla has been there for years, but I never noticed it, right next to The Landing, the latter of which I've eaten at many times over the years.

We caught the $13.95 lunch special deal for any entree on the menu, that runs from noon to 4pm. At 3:30pm, despite the crafts fair, most of the lunch crowd had disspiated, and we found a seat-yourself table outside for two. The waitress/hostess brought us menus within a few minutes, and a waiter came by a few minutes later to take our order.

I opted for the chile relleno, and my companion opted for the chicken enchiladas with mole sauce. Below are the descriptions of each dish, from their menu.

Chile relleno: Poblano Pepper roasted and stuffed with mozzarella cheese, dipped in egg, lightly fried and baked. Served covered with our Grandmother's Tomato Sauce, re-fried beans, rice and hand-made corn tortillas. Um, no, there were no beans served with this dish, refried or otherwise.

Chicken Mole Enchiladas:
A soft corn tortilla is dipped into our homemade dark red Molé Sauce. We wrap shredded chicken breast in it and top it with cream. Served with re-fried beans and Mexican style rice. Ditto on the beans -- there were none.

While the food was tasty, it seemed expensive for Mexican. For that price, any other Mexican restaurant I've been to would have served two chiles relleno, not one. Both my tomato sauce, and the mole sauce were very good.

Several reviewers at Trip Advisor complained about lousy service, and a few complained about being served the meat version of vegetarian orders, and being forced by the owner to pay for them anyway.

We didn't have any of those problems, but it's a bit of an issue when the dishes you are served are not as advertised on the menu, and are missing a component. Although being served entrees without the beans that the menu clearly states come with them isn't quite the same as being served chicken mole without any mole, or a chile relleno without the chile, it's just plain wrong.

To put this in context, New Hope is a touristy town with cute little shops, antiques, and art galleries, that attracts a lot of day-trippers on weekends. With a location on Main St., right smack in the center of town, The Blue Tortilla can get away with charging high prices, but when it completely omits ingredients listed on the menu for its entrees, and keeps raising its prices as another reviewer noted, it probably can't count on a lot of repeat business from locals such as us.

For my money, I think I'll stick to The Landing, Ninety Main, or the Mansion Inn.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Recipe: Spice Cake with Caramel Frosting

I needed to bake a birthday cake, and settled on spice cake. The cake batter recipe is a bit of a mish-mash of several other spice cake recipes I read that sounded pretty good. I'm sure this would be good with buttercream or cream cheese frosting, but caramel sounded good to me, so I went with that.

Spice Cake

Yield: one 2-layer cake, or one sheet cake
Time: 15 minutes prep; 30-35 minutes at 350F, plus cooling time

Ingredients:
  • 2 c. all-purpose flour
  • 1-1/2 c. packed brown sugar
  • 1 c. sour cream
  • 1/2 stick of butter (1/8 lb., or 1/4 cup)
  • 1/4 c. shortening or vegetable oil
  • 2+ tsp. ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp. ground cloves
  • 1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp. ground allspice
  • 1-1/4 tsp. baking soda
  • 1 tsp. baking powder
  • 1/2 c. water
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 c. walnuts, chopped (optional)
  • frosting
Method:
  1. preheat the oven to 350F, grease and flour your cake pan(s)
  2. make sure the butter/shortening is soft, and toss all but the last two ingredients into a big bowl
  3. stir everything together, then start off slowly with a hand mixer, and increase the speed when all danger of flying flour is past, until the batter is smooth
  4. pour it into your cake pan(s)
  5. bake for 30-35 minutes at 350F
  6. cool in the pan(s) on a rack for 10 minutes, then turn out onto the rack to cool completely (or just cool in the pan if you use a 9" x 13" dish, and only frost the top)
  7. frost the cake (I'm awful at this, but whatever)
  8. sprinkle the chopped walnuts on top of the frosting
Notes: Some people mix the walnuts right into the batter, but I used them to partially hide my lack of frosting skills. Also, add a pinch of salt, if you use unsalted butter. I also piped on little peaks of cream cheese frosting around the edge, just for the fun of it.

Caramel Frosting

Yield: approx. 2 cups
Time: about 45 minutes, but most of that is spent waiting for the caramel sauce to cool before beating in the powdered sugar

Ingredients:
  • 1 stick of butter (1/4 lb., or 1/2 cup)
  • 1 c. packed brown sugar
  • 1/4 c. milk
  • 2 c. powdered sugar
Method:
  1. melt the butter in a large saucepan
  2. stir in the brown sugar, and bring it to a boil on medium heat, stirring constantly
  3. reduce the heat to low, and boil for 2 minutes
  4. stir in the milk, and bring it back to a boil
  5. remove it from the heat, and cool to lukewarm
  6. stir in the powdered sugar, a little at a time, then beat until smooth
Note: If you stop after step 5, you basically have a caramel sauce that you could use on ice cream, or whatever you like.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Eggplant Gratin

We've had quite a crop of eggplant this year, from a mere six plants. Although we have given more than a few away, we mostly are looking for different ways to disguise the fact that the main ingredient is eggplant. Don't get me wrong -- we both like it -- but in and of itself, eggplant has more texture than flavor, and has a way of soaking in the flavor of anything with which you cook it.

I'm getting sick to death of ratatouille and eggplant parmesan, so I decided to do an eggplant gratin today. What's not to like about any veggie hidden within layers of cheese? I adapted this from Ina Garten's recipe on Food network. Ina's recipes are always pretty reliable, and the reviews of this one give it five stars, overall.

Yield: 2 servings
Time: 20 minutes prep/assembly, and 30 minutes to bake at 400F

Ingredients:
  • 3/4 pound eggplant, unpeeled, sliced 1/2-inch thick
  • 1/4 cup ricotta cheese
  • 1 extra-large egg
  • 1/4 cup half-and-half
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan
  • Kosher salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 cup good bottled marinara sauce (I didn't use any, so I'd call it optional)
Note: I have plenty of quarts of my own homemade tomato sauce, canned, and I didn't have to open a new one for this. It really doesn't need any, one way or another.

Method:
  1. slice your eggplant into 1/2" slices, brush it with olive oil, and roast it at 400 - 425F for approximately 20 minutes, flipping it over once (you can fry it in a pan for a lot less time, but that soaks up way too much oil, even if your pan is almost smoking hot)
  2. Take it out to cool down, either on a cooling rack, or paper towels
  3. mix up the egg, ricotta, milk, salt and pepper (it's okay if it's still a little chunky, but smooth works, too)
  4. layer in the roasted or fried eggplant, with the mixed up wet ingredients, topping it all off with shredded cheese
  5. bake uncovered at 400F for about half an hour, until the top browns nicely
  6. let cool for a few minutes, and serve while still warm
Note: I used 10-oz. ramekins for this. It doesn't really matter what you use, but you may have to adjust the cooking time accordingly.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Review: Siam Cuisine

Type: Thai
Location: 4950 York Rd., Buckingham, PA
Phone: 215-794-7209
Fax: 215-796-7216

According to its website, there are several locations of this restaurant. We went to the one in Buckingham. In theory, the Doylestown location might have been closer to home, but parking in downtown can be a real PITA, and the one in Buckingham is in a cute little strip mall with upscale stores that's right near my cats' veterinarian. There are no parking issues in that mall, especially on a Monday night.

We each ordered soup to start, and split a mixed seafood dish. My other half ordered the hot & sour soup for $4; I went with the tom yum gai. The hot & sour soup was allegedly delicious. My soup, on the other hand was not so stupendous. The broth was great -- nice and lemongrassy-spicy the way it's supposed to be -- but the sliced chicken thrown into it was worthy of a rubber chicken circuit hotel lunch. It's as if the chef tossed the chicken into the boiling broth, forgot about it for 10 minutes, and said "eh, serve it anyway."

Granted, it was a Monday night, and we were the only two people in the restaurant for the duration of our meal, so maybe the chef wasn't on his game when we visited. Still, overcooked chicken slices do not belong in a soup, if they are the featured ingredient. Overcooked chicken can be used in a soup, but chop it up into small chunks, and make it into something like a semi-thin pot pie filling, with carrots, peas, and diced potato.

Our mixed seafood dish was also partially overcooked. We ordered "seafood ginger" for $20. The angel hair pasta on which it was served was great. The shrimp were only slightly overcooked, but the scallops were overcooked big time. I don't really like scallops to begin with, but I will eat them them if they are prepared correctly. Little white hockey pucks don't do it for me.

On the upside, the squid and salmon components of the dish were perfectly cooked.

Honestly, I don't know whether to give this place a thumbs up or down.

Maybe I should not order chicken or any form of seafood. What they toss into the sauce is overcooked, but the sauce itself is wonderful.
215-794-7209
215-796-7216 fax

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Recipe: Peanut Brittle

This recipe is fairly idiot-proof. I've adapted it from one I found on Food Network, attributed to "Sweet Dreams," which I believe was Gale Gand's cake/pastry/muffin dessert show from several years ago.

I've made English toffee (think the inside of a Heath or Skor bar) many times before, so how difficult could peanut brittle possibly be? It came out perfectly! You don't even really need a candy thermometer, although you might want to use one the first time, so that you can gauge the color of the boiling syrup when it hits the right temperature.

Yield: a little less than an 11" x 17" jellyroll pan
Time: approx. 15 - 20 minutes

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 c. water
  • 1/4 tsp. cream of tartar
  • 2 c. sugar
  • 1 c. light corn syrup
  • 2 Tbs. butter
  • 2 c. roasted peanuts
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • pinch of salt
Method:
  1. mix the first four ingredients and bring them to a boil on medium heat
  2. let the mixture boil, stirring occasionally, until it hits 340F (a rich, semi-dark caramel color in the pot, which looks lighter when it gets poured out); the original recipe said 10 minutes, but it took me closer to 20 minutes on my glass top stove, which regulates the heat level via timed on-off electric, rather than a steady adjustable gas flame
  3. quickly stir in the butter until it melts, then stir in the other ingredients; it'll foam up like crazy, but that's fine
  4. spread it out in a greased jelly roll pan, and smooth it out before it sets
  5. when it cools completely, break it up into pieces, and store it in an airtight jar
Notes: The original recipe used salted peanuts, and unsalted butter, but I had salted butter and unsalted peanuts, so I added just a pinch of salt at the end. I did not add the 2 tsp. of ground cinnamon that the original recipe called for, because I wanted just a classic peanut brittle. As the mixture boils, you may need to stir down a few sugar crystals, if they start to form around the edge of the pot. At the end, you'll have to work fast, stirring in the last few ingredients, and spreading it out to cool, because once off the heat, it'll cool and start to harden pretty quickly. If you want, you can score the brittle with a knife or pizza cutter after you spread it out to cool, which will make it easier to break into neatly shaped pieces, but I sort of like it broken up into odd-shaped pieces of different sizes.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Recipe: Cream Puffs with Mocha Pudding Filling

My mom owned a cookie press thingy for as long as I can remember. Not too long ago, she gave it to me. It came with a bunch of different tips for both cookie shapes and for forming pastry or meringue. Some of the cookie tips can be used for cake decorating with frosting. It's like a pastry bag, really, except that it's an aluminum cannister with a top that screws down to press out the batter or dough.

I've always wanted to try making cream puffs or eclairs, and today wasn't too hot or humid, so I gave it a whirl.

Basic Cream Puff Dough

Yield: about 20 smallish cream puffs
Time: 20 minutes prep; 15 minutes at 450F, and 20 more at 325F

Ingredients:
  • 1 c. boiling water
  • 1/4 lb. (1 stick) of butter
  • 1 c. flour
  • 4 eggs
  • pinch of salt
Method:
  1. melt the butter into the boiling water
  2. stir in the flour, a little at a time, until it pulls away from the sides of the pot
  3. let it cool
  4. mix in the eggs, one at a time, thoroughly incorporating each, and mix in the pinch of salt
  5. form the cream puffs on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper or a silpat
  6. bake at 450F for 15 minutes, then turn down the heat to 350F and continue to bake another 20 minutes
  7. Let them cool
  8. slice a slit in the side, and fill them


Mocha Pudding Filling

Yield: 8 servings as pudding, or enough to fill the 18-20 cream puffs.
Time: 15 minutes prep; 30-35 minutes at 350F (in a bain marie) or on the stovetop (in a double boiler)

Ingredients:
  • 1 egg
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 c. strong coffee, at room temperature
  • 1 Tbs. melted butter
  • 1-1/2 c. flour
  • 1-1/2 tsp. baking powder
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 4-1/2 Tbs. cocoa powder
  • 1-1/2 Tbs. of vegetable oil
  • 1/2 tsp. vanilla
  • a little milk to thin it out at the very end
Method:
  1. whisk the egg until light and fluffy
  2. slowly whisk in the sugar
  3. stir in the coffee
  4. stir together the cocoa powder and oil (or melt 1-1/2 squares of baker's chocolate -- 1.5 oz), and stir it into the wet ingredients
  5. sift together the dry ingredients
  6. whisk the dry ingredients to the wet ones, a little at a time, so the flour doesn't clump
  7. stir in the vanilla
  8. pour into a baking/casserole dish and bake in a bain marie at 350F for half an hour; alternatively, let it cook in a double boiler on the stovetop on low for half an hour until it thickens
  9. let it cool
  10. for plain old pudding, stop; for filling the cream puffs, you may need to thin the pudding with a little milk to get the right consistency for piping or spooning into the pastry
  11. optional: dip the tops of the cream puffs in chocolate ganache, or spoon on a little whipped cream
Notes: For a lighter filling, fold some whipped cream into the pudding. My cream puffs came out about 3" across, and not really as puffy high as I expected, but they had a nice hole in the center for the filling. Maybe it was more hot and humid than I thought, although it didn't seem too bad today. Maybe I should have chilled the dough a little before I piped it onto the parchment paper. Still, for a first attempt, I could have done a lot worse. As you can see, I didn't bother with anything on top of them.

Recipe: Butterscotch Topping

This is really easy to make with nothing but butter, corn syrup, sugar, salt, and cream. It's wonderful on ice cream or bananas. Use your imagination for a decadent dessert.

Yield: about a cup
Time: about 10 minutes on medium to medium-low

Ingredients:
  • 5/8 c. packed brown sugar
  • 1/3 c. light corn syrup
  • 2 Tbs. butter
  • pinch of salt
  • 1/3 c. cream (or evaporated milk)
Method:
  1. Mix together everything but the cream and bring it to a boil
  2. Let it go, stirring occasionally, until it's the consistency of a thick syrup (like room temperature corn syrup or honey), which is about soft ball stage
  3. Let it cool, and stir in the cream
Note: I used evaporated milk, and find that it stirs in most easily if the rest of the ingredients are not completely cool, but still slightly warm. I can't taste the difference from using cream, but my wallet sure knows that evaporated milk is a lot less expensive.

Canned Stewed Tomatoes

The tomatoes are ripening fast and furious now -- faster than we can eat them, so it's canning time! I got nearly two quarts from the red ones that were ripe.

Might have enough yellow ones to separately can a quart of those, but it's probably safer to wait another couple of days for three or four more to ripen. We only have one plant that produces yellow tomatoes, and I really hate canning partial jars. Mostly, we have quart size jars, and not many of the pint and half pint size ones.

It's simple to can your own tomatoes:

  1. sterilize your mason jars
  2. cut a cross in the bottom of each tomato, and blanch them until the skin splits, then submerge them in cold water until they're cool enough to handle (you may have to do this in batches)
  3. peel the skin, and get out as many clumps of seeds as you can without being too obsessive about it
  4. cut or tear up the tomatoes, removing the part around the stem end, and stew them on low for however long you want, but I find 10-15 minutes is sufficient for canning
  5. pour 1 Tbs. of lemon juice into each 1-qt. mason jar, and fill it with the stewed tomatoes
  6. place an unused lid on top of each jar, and loosely screw down the ring top
  7. boil, submerged, for about 10 minutes, and remove to cool
  8. when the lids make a pop, screw the ring tops down tightly
Note: you'll see seeds in the jars pictured, but I really did get out the vast majority of them. Some people leave them in, but I think it just makes the whole thing more watery than necessary, and I really don't like getting a bunch of seeds stuck in my teeth, if I later use them, and leave them chunky in a sauce, rather than use a boat motor on them.

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Homemade Pizza

This pizza was surprisingly tasty. I made a batch of basic foccacia dough (recipe here), let it rise, punched it down, divided and shaped it into two disks, and froze one of them. With the other, I mostly rolled it out on a 12" x 11" cookie sheet, and formed the edges by hand.

The tomato sauce was something I made yesterday from fresh tomatoes from our garden (blanched, peeled, deseeded and crushed between my fingers), diced onion, minced garlic, salt, pepper, oregano and basil. That simmered on low for 3+ hours before I took a boat motor to it, and filled a 1 qt. mason jar. No need to go through the whole canning process to vacuum seal it, since I knew we were going to use it over the next few days.

Here's where it gets weird. I didn't have any Italian sausage, and I didn't have any mozzarella. So, I sliced up a pre-cooked bratwurst, and used that with some monterrey jack I shredded on top of it. Somewhere, someone is probably thinking that's sacriligous. Actually it worked out fine.

I prefer my crust thinner, but I didn't have anything wider than my cookie sheet on which to bake it. I suppose I could divide the dough into three portions next time. Nonetheless, the crust came out very much like regular NY-style pizza crust, as opposed to that nasty thick Sicilian style stuff. It didn't droop at the point, when I held a slice up in the air, so I managed to get it crispy enough

Although I didn't time it, I popped it in a 425F oven until I could smell it in the next room. When I checked on it, the cheese was bubbly, and had browned nicely. It probably took around 15 minutes, if I had to guess. Pizza crusts don't normally brown very well in my oven, but I didn't brush the edge with any olive oil, either, so . . .

Monday, August 31, 2009

Recipe: Crisp Toffee Bars

I've had this recipe for as long as I can remember, and have no idea where I got it. Haven't made it in years, but when I was flipping through my recipe box, I came across it and remembered how much I love these things.

Yield: one 11" x 17" jelly roll pan
Time: 10-15 minutes prep; 25 minutes baking at 350F

Ingredients:
  • 1 c. (2 sticks) of butter
  • 1 c. brown sugar
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 2 c. sifted flour
  • 6 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1 c. chopped walnuts
Method:
  1. thoroughly cream together the butter, sugar, and vanilla
  2. add flour, about half a cup at a time, and mix well between additions
  3. stir in the chocolate chips and walnuts
  4. press the dough into the jelly roll pan
  5. bake for 25 minutes until golden brown
  6. cut into bars while still warm, then let cool completely before removing from the pan
Note: if you use a smaller pan, the bars will be thicker, and you'll probably have to add a few minutes to the bake time.

Recipe: Hot Pepper Jelly

Last night, I made a small batch of blackberry jelly with the last of the harvest. Half a pint of blackberries, plus almost a cup of sugar, plus a little splash of water was enough, after a 10 minute boil to make it gel when it cooled without using any pectin. I got about a teacup's worth of jelly after running it through a fine strainer. Dee-lish on Sally Lunn or rye bread.

We have lots of peppers growing in our vegetable garden -- cayennes and sweet banana peppers -- so today I decided to try my hand at making hot pepper jelly. It worked out just fine.

Yield: 3 cups
Time: 10 minutes cooking; 10 minutes to can

Ingredients:
  • 1/8 cup of finely minced fresh hot peppers (I used cayenne, but jalapeno or serrano would work as well)
  • 3/8 cup of finely minced fresh sweet pepper (I used banana, but bell is fine, too)
  • 3/4 cup of white or cider vinegar
  • 3 cups of sugar
  • 1 packet (1.75 oz.) of pectin
  • 1-2 drops of green food coloring
Method:
  1. sterilize your mason jars, and have at the ready ring tops (used or new) and unused lids
  2. mix all the ingredients in a pot and bring them to a boil
  3. whisk in the pectin and food coloring, let it go for another minute or so, then turn off the heat
  4. pour into your mason jars, place the lids on, and screw down the ring tops fairly loosely
  5. boil the jars, submerged, for 8-10 minutes, and remove them to cool (when the lids "pop," screw the ring tops down tightly)
Notes: The food coloring really is optional, and you could use red if you prefer. It's just that without it, it sort of looks like bits of pepper in light corn syrup. I used a mix of both red and green cayennes and yellow and orange banana peppers, simply because that's what I happened to have on hand. The minced pepper tends to float in the jars, so you may want to flip the mason jars upside down, then right side up, every 15 minutes or so as the jelly cools, just to get them distributed a bit better throughout the jars.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Blackberry Syrup or Jam

Raspberry season is basically over, except for a few stragglers on some "everbearing" variety we just started this year, but blackberry season is still going.

The blackberries just grow wild along the wood margin out back. They don't keep very long, even in the fridge, so every time I get about a pint or so, I make it into syrup. Sometimes it sets into jam when it cools, hence the title of this blog entry.

Add 1/3 to 1/2 a cup of sugar to a pint of blackberries and simmer on medium-low for about 20 minutes after it comes to a slow boil. Strain out the pulp, and let it cool.

I don't have cheesecloth, so I just use a big strainer. Some of the seeds get through, but they float, and can be skimmed off the top, which I hadn't yet done with this still hot off the stove batch. This pint of blackberries yielded not quite a teacup full of syrup, or jam/jelly, if that's what it turns into when it cools.

If it stays syrup, it's great on pancakes, waffles, or vanilla ice cream. Might be good on chocolate ice cream too, inasmuch as chocolate goes well with raspberries. If it gels, then it's good on toast, for use in the center of "thumbprint" cookies, or even cooked further into hard candy.

Apple Bars

Yield: 4 dozen
Time: 20 minutes prep, 20 minutes bake at 350F, 30 minutes cooling before glazing



Ingredients:
  • 1 c. brown sugar, packed
  • 1/4 c. milk
  • 1/4 c. vegetable oil
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 1-1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp. ground cloves
  • 2 c. flour
  • 2 small to medium sized apples, peeled and cut into approx. 1/4" dice
  • 1 c. chopped walnuts or pecans
  • cinnamon glaze


Method:
  1. spray a 13" x 9" baking dish with non-stick spray, and heat the oven to 350F.
  2. mix the oil, egg, milk, and sugar
  3. stir in the dry ingredients: flour, baking soda, and spices
  4. stir in the apples and nuts
  5. spread it out in the baking dish, and bake for 20 minutes, until a toothpick or bamboo skewer comes out clean from the center
  6. let it cool for half an hour, in the pan, on a rack
  7. mix your glaze: 1 c. powdered (confectioner's) sugar, 1 tsp. of cinnamon, and 1-1/2 Tbs. of water
  8. drizzle the cinnamon glaze over the bars, while still in the baking dish
  9. let cool completely, then slice into bars


Notes: This recipe has a moist, but fairly light texture, like good gingerbread. If you don't use air conditioning in the summer, and it's humid, you may want to refrigerate them to get the glaze to set; otherwise, it stays a bit sticky.




Garden Update: Eggplant

My veggie garden has been yielding a lot of produce lately: tomatoes, squash, cayennes, banana peppers, and eggplant. The canteloupe and corn have sort of been a bust, and the cucumber vine died after it gave me two decent cucumbers.

Lately, the big producers have been the eggplant. I sent my other half in to the office today with three of them to give his business partner, who loves them. We do too, but after making stuffed baked eggplant (sort of my own twist on the recipe from the 1950s Fannie Farmer's cookbook, adding ground beef and cayenne), eggplant disk "pizzas," eggplant parmesan, and ratatouille, we can afford to give a few away. There are plenty more that could be picked any time within the next week, before they get so big that the skin becomes tough.

Oddly enough, I've always made ratatouille without consulting a recipe, but when out of curiosity, I checked Tyler Florence's recipe for it on the Food Network site, I was flabbergasted. My recipe is virtually identical to his, except that I don't use anchovy, and I don't sprinkle it with balsamic vinegar at the end. Heck, I even cook the veggie components in the same order he does! So . . . I've been doing it right all these years. Who knew?

I'm afraid I have no pictures of any of my eggplant dishes. One, it didn't occur to me to take any. Two, by the time eggplant gets cooked, it takes on a rather unappealing grayish-brown color, anyway.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Tomatoes!

My vegetable garden has produced a fair amount of veggies, so far -- tomatoes, peppers, green beans, cucumbers, eggplants, and squash. The corn is coming along nicely, as are the canteloupes, but they're not ready to pick.

It's green bean and tomato season. Good thing I love green beans, because I can pick a pint of Kentucky Wonder pole beans every morning, and eat them every night without getting sick of them.

The yellow banana peppers are nice (perhaps a little milder than bell peppers, although similar in taste), but honestly, I prefer the cayennes. Mince one of those, and toss it into dinner, seeds, pith and all, and it's got just the right amount of mouth-numbing heat, without killing the taste of the rest of the food.

We have seven different varieties of tomatoes: cherry, Big Boy, some sort of yellow one that's proving to be really prolific, Bush Early Girl, Bush Goliath, Mr. Stripey (an heirloom), and something that was labeled as Roma, but obviously isn't, given the size and shape of the fruit it produces.

We have a half dozen full-sized tomatoes waiting to be eaten, but tonight's dinner features a good pint's worth of cherry tomatoes from my garden, simply sauteed in 1.5 Tbs. of olive oil, with nothing more than chopped fresh oregano and basil, also from my garden, plus a couple of cloves of minced garlic, salt, and freshly ground Tellicherry pepper. My whole house smells phenomenal.

It'll only be a side dish, but during the past couple of weeks, dinner has consisted of mostly two or three vegetarian side dishes. Neither of us are vegetarians, but we can go for a few days without eating animal flesh when the veggies taste this good!

Saturday, July 11, 2009

K.I.S.S.

Like many foodies, I enjoy watching certain shows on Food Network. One of the ones I never saw until this season was "The Next Food Network Star." To be perfectly honest, I don't think any of the contestants this season has any real staying power for a TV show. Somebody will win, obviously, but there's something I find annoying about every contestant, whether it's an over-the-top personality, or simply a too frantic/overly animated on camera presence.

Regardless, I find Bob Tuschman's blog about the show to be interesting. The question he keeps posing is "What is your food philosophy?" It seems to him, and to me, that some of the contestants simply don't have one. That got me thinking about what my own food philosophy is. The answer: unless you're entertaining company, keep it simple, stupid.

For instance, today I made a really simple, refreshing salad using fresh cucumber, tomatoes, and basil from my own garden. Other than adding half a small Vidalia onion, which I don't grow, I simply dressed it with a little oil and some lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Peel and dice the cucumber, dice the tomatoes and onion, toss it all together with salt, pepper, the oil and lemon juice, and a chiffonade of basil. How easy could that be?



Another example is the lemon quick bread I made a few weeks ago. I didn't have zucchini or bananas, but had plenty of lemon juice. Like all quick breads, it's just a batter bread that uses baking powder and baking soda for leavening. I used two half sized loaf tins, instead of a regular sized one. It's a little tangy (and is supposed to be that way), but is great with butter and apricot jam. The original James Beard recipe called for butter, but I was out of it. I substituted canola oil, and it worked out beautifully, although I wouldn't dare try that with anything other than a quick bread.



A third example is a pot of soup I made last month. We were out of a lot of staples, but rummaging around in the fridge and pantry, we had a huge onion, celery, macaroni, a bag of pinto beans, bay leaves, dried oregano, cans of diced tomatoes, bread crumbs, eggs, some frozen ground beef, and some beef broth. I didn't follow a recipe, but the result was pretty tasty, and went over really well with the rest of my household. I'd never in my life made meatballs before I made that soup, but they were probably the tastiest part of the whole thing. Yes, it was "comfort food." Still, it was fairly light compared to a chowder or bisque.



Taste, taste, taste, as you go along, and correct the seasonings at the end, if necessary. If it doesn't taste good to you, chances are really high that it won't taste good to anyone else. That, and don't get stuck in a rut with nothing but comfort food or Asian inspired marinades for that pork tenderloin or flank steak in your repertoire. There's a place for those, but they do get boring after a while.

Desserts aren't really my thing, because I seldom have any desire to eat them, but I can still make a mean cheesecake, carrot cake with buttercream frosting, angel food cake, or pavlova from scratch. None of those are complicated. The only difference I find with baking bread or desserts vs. just cooking dinner, is that I actually take the time to measure the ingredients reasonably accurately, rather than simply winging it.

Granted, when rolling out pie crust or kneading yeast rising bread dough, it can take a little more flour than you might think you need, on the board, depending on the humidity in your house at the time you make it. So what? That's par for the course.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Wild Sockeye

It's that wonderful time of year when wild sockeye and soft shelled crabs are available. I don't know what to do with a soft shelled crab, nor does the idea of eating one particularly appeal to me, but I sure as shooting know how to prepare a hunk of salmon.

Wegmans advertised wild sockeye for $14.99 a pound. I'm used to paying almost $20 a pound for it, so that seemed like a good deal, and well worth the trip to the store. It was $12.99 a pound when I got there, and there wasn't much left, but I snagged half a fish for about $20. They also had farm-raised Atlantic salmon for half the price, but it's just not the same thing as wild Alaskan sockeye. Flabby and light pink to start with vs. firm and almost red . . . well, there's no comparison.

I sliced off the third of the fillet closest to what used to be the head of the fish, slathered it with some canola oil (we had a really hot charcoal fire on the BBQ, so I didn't want to use olive oil), and gave it the old salt and pepper treatment, before tossing it on the grill. It came out perfectly. Firm, dark, delicious flesh, that needed nothing other than a squeeze of lemon juice, was what I was shooting for, and achieved. The fish didn't stick to the grill, and we didn't even get any flare-ups.

My partner in eating crime likes salmon, but was really skeptical about throwing fish directly onto the grill rack. I was out to prove him wrong, and I did. Oil the fish, not the grill rack, and don't even think of poking the fish for the first three or four minutes. I'd recommend wrapping farm-raised salmon in foil before chucking it on the grill, but that's not necessary with wild sockeye.

We still have 2/3 of that side of fish left, so I think I'll just bake it, let it cool, then make salmon salad from it. I could also use it for salmon croquettes, but that seems like a waste to me.

For those of you in the U.S., happy Independence Day! Fire up your grills, folks, and celebrate.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Strawberry Pie with Crumb Topping

Yield: one pie
Cook time: 15-20 minutes on the stovetop for the filling; 15 minutes in the oven at 375F, plus another approximately 45 minutes at 350F

Ingredients:
  • 1+ qts. of strawberries, washed, cored, and sliced
  • 3/4 c. of granulated sugar
  • 1 c., plus 2-3 Tbs. of flour
  • 5-6 Tbs. of butter
  • squirt of lemon juice
  • 1/4 tsp. of ground nutmeg
  • 1/2. c. of brown sugar
  • 1 graham cracker crust (pre-made is fine)
Method:
  1. cook the sliced strawberries with 2 Tbs. of butter, 2-3 Tbs. of flour, nutmeg, lemon juice, and the granulated sugar until they cook down, and the juice thickens up a bit
  2. pour them into a strainer over another pot, and let the juice drip through
  3. reduce the juice by about 1/3 to 1/2 until it thickens some more, while the strawberries cool
  4. melt 3-4 Tbs. of butter, add the brown sugar and flour, then mix it until crumbly
  5. spread the strawberries out in the pie crust, and pour the reduced juice over them
  6. sprinkle the topping over it, and bake at 375F for about 15 minutes, then turn down the heat to 350F, and bake for another 45 minutes or so.
  7. cool on a rack and serve with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream, and a sprig of mint

Notes:
  1. The top on this pie browned more than I would have liked, but did so almost all within the first 10 minutes in the oven.
  2. Normally, I'd use a regular pie crust, but I didn't have enough butter, so I went with a store-bought graham cracker crust I happened to have on hand.
  3. I recommend using a cookie sheet under the pie dish, since the filling will bubble over a little.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Recipe: Raw Apple Bread

Yield: 1 loaf
Time: 20 minutes prep; 50-60 minutes at 350F
Source: Beard on Bread, Ballantine paperback edition, 1981, pg. 153

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 c. butter or margarine (1 stick)
  • 1 c. of granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 c. of flour
  • 1/2 tsp. of baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp. of salt
  • 1 tsp. of baking powder
  • 1 tsp. of vanilla extract
  • 2 Tbs. of buttermilk, or soured milk
  • 1 c. coarsly chopped unpeeled apples
  • 1/2 c. of chopped walnuts
Method:
  1. cream the butter
  2. mix in the sugar, a little at a time, creaming it into the butter thoroughly between additions
  3. beat in the eggs, milk, and vanilla
  4. sift together the dry ingredients
  5. mix them into the wet ingredients, a little at a time
  6. stir in the chopped apple and walnuts
  7. spoon it into a greased loaf tin
  8. bake at 350F for 50-60 minutes
Notes:
  1. this makes a pretty sticky batter
  2. I used approx. 2 cups of chopped apple, and 3/4 c. of chopped walnuts; everything else I measured pretty accurately, as per the recipe
  3. according to James Beard, this tastes better left to sit for a day (it tastes pretty good still slightly warm from the oven, though, IMHO)
  4. it supposedly stores really well