12/29/2006

Pennsylvania Dutch Chicken Pot Pie

A family tradition passed down from my great-grandmother (at least). It's not really a pot pie in the usual sense, but rather chicken, potatoes, and homemade noodles in a thick broth. Leftovers can be reheated in the microwave (yummy) or pan-fried in butter (haven't tried it, but sounds good). Total prep time is 2.5 - 3 hours.

In a large (10 qt) pot, bring to a boil over high heat

  1. 2 lbs. bone-in chicken (small chicken quartered, or two breasts and a thigh)
  2. 4-5 qt. water (about 3/5 full, still needs to be measured)
Boil for 20-25 minutes, covered, until chicken is done. Remove from heat and uncover. Remove chicken to a plate. Cool 20-30 minutes.

While chicken is cooking, combine in a large bowl
  1. 4 c flour (King Arthur all-purpose)
  2. 1 stick butter (8 T)
Rub butter into flour until the size of small peas. Whisk in
  1. 1 t salt (maybe 2 if using unsalted butter)
In a Pyrex cup measure, beat
  1. two eggs
Supplement with
  1. ice water (about 1/2 cup)
to make 1 c total liquid (or a touch more). Mix into flour until a firm dough forms. Mom suggests working the dough as little as possible, but it still requires kneading to bring together. Cover with plastic and refrigerate.

Bone chicken and cut into bite-sized chunks. Strain cooled broth, clean pot, and return broth to pot. Add to broth
  1. 1 large or 2 small russet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1" or 1.5" chunks
Cover pot and heat to a gentle boil. Take 1/8 of the dough from the refrigerator, flour liberally, and roll out as thin as possible, until translucent. (A pasta machine might make this easier, though don't go to the thinnest setting.) Cut noodles into 2" squares and add to boiling broth one at a time. (As the pot fills up, aim for the bubbling places.) Add a grind of
  1. black pepper
stir carefully, and re-cover. Roll out another portion of dough, stirring pot again gently before adding noodles as before.

Cook at a gentle boil for 15 minutes. Stir occasionally to prevent sticking to the bottom. Add flour paste or chicken broth as needed to adjust the consistency to that of a thin gravy. Add chicken and cook until warmed through. Serve and gorge! Pass pickles on the side, if you like that sort of thing.

12/15/2006

Crook's Corner Shrimp & Grits

Crook's Corner in Chapel Hill does a mean rendition of some Southern classics. This recipe, published in Duke Magazine, claims to be the authentic recipe of the late Bill Neal. I can't vouch for that, but it sure does taste like the wonderful stuff served at his restaurant.

Cheese grits
These take 4 cups of liquid rather than the 3 called for on the package because the cheese thickens up the grits considerably.
Bring to a boil

  1. 4 c milk (or water, in a pinch)
Stir in
  1. 1 c stone-ground or quick grits (not instant)
Cook until thickened, stirring constantly. Stir in
  1. 1 c grated Cheddar
  2. 1/4 c grated Parmesean
  3. 4 T butter
  4. 1/2 t salt
  5. 1/8 t pepper
  6. pinch cayenne pepper
  7. 1/4 t Tabasco (or more to taste)

Shrimp and Grits
In a skillet, saute until browned but not crisp
  1. 6 slices bacon, diced
Remove to paper towels to drain, leaving grease in pan. Add to pan
  1. peanut oil (as necessary to cover the pan bottom with fat)
  2. 1 lb. fresh shrimp, peeled, deveined (optional), rinsed, and patted dry
Turn shrimp when colored on one side and add
  1. 2 c sliced white button mushrooms
Saute about 4 minutes, stirring. Add
  1. 1 c minced scallions (white and green parts)
  2. 1 large clove garlic, minced
Cook another minute, then add
  1. 4 t lemon juice
  2. Tabasco sauce
  3. salt and pepper
  4. 2 T chopped fresh parsley
Divide grits (above) among 4 plates, top with shrimp mixture and reserved bacon. Serve immediately!

Guacamole

This was an accompaniment to some Emeril recipe on Food Network, but it's the best guacamole I've ever had. It's pretty much the only one Katy will eat, too. We like to serve it with the scoop-shaped tortilla chips and the white queso you can find in the refrigerator case (not the nasty orange "nacho cheese").

  1. 2 large firm-ripe avocados, peeled, pitted and cup in 1/2-inch pieces
  2. 1/4 cup minced white onions
  3. 2 T minced fresh cilantro leaves
  4. 1 T fresh lime juice, or more to taste
  5. 1 t minced Serrano or jalapeƱo chile
  6. 1/4 t ground cumin
  7. 1/4 t minced garlic
  8. 1/4 t salt
  9. Pinch cayenne
In a large bowl, combine all the ingredients and mash with the back of a fork until mostly smooth with a few chunks. Adjust the seasoning to taste, and serve. I tend to substitute 2 t dried cilantro or use less of the fresh stuff to tone down that flavor.

11/29/2006

Turkey salad

A nice use for Thanksgiving leftovers, kindly provided by my Mom. The eggs really make it. I usually think Miracle Whip is too sweet compared to mayonnaise, but in this case it's not objectionable.

  1. white and dark turkey meat, cooked and diced
  2. eggs, hard-boiled and diced
  3. celery
  4. onion
  5. celery seed
  6. salt and pepper
  7. Miracle Whip

9/13/2006

Port Wine Apple Sauce

Mmm, more apple goodness. This is a slight variation on a great Emeril recipe -- I didn't have any bourbon (and don't like it), but I had some port left over from a wine tasting at A Southern Season. It's full of spice flavor, and great hot or cold. I developed it to go with cast-iron seared pork chops, but it's yummy solo too.

In a medium pot or large (4 qt) sauce pan over medium heat, saute for 1 minute:

  1. 1 T butter
  2. 1 1/2 T chopped fresh ginger
Add in
  1. 6 Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored, and diced
  2. 1 c dark brown sugar
  3. 1 t ground cinnamon
  4. 1/2 t salt, plus more to taste (about 1 t total?)
  5. 1 c port wine
Simmer uncovered until apples are tender but not mushy, about 40-45 minutes. Some liquid will have been absorbed or reduced away, but a lot will be left. Mash by hand with a potato masher until broken up but still chunky.

8/21/2006

Tarte Tatin

That's [tar-TUH tah-TAHN], a rustic, French, upside-down apple tart -- apparently I'm on a quest for upside-down pastry. I somehow got it into my head to make this without really knowing what it was, but the good news is it's easy and delicious. I used a recipe from Sara Moulton / Food TV, which seems to have come by way of Gourmet magazine. It's short and simple, but her directions are so terse I'm going to elaborate on them a bit here. Start-to-finish time for me was just under 2 hours.

Pull out to thaw on the counter top

  1. 1 sheet (1/2 lb.) puff pastry
Keep it covered with a bit of plastic wrap. Once it gets a bit pliable, you can prop it open as a triangle. If it gets fully thawed before you finish with the apples, just put it in the fridge.

Now start with
  1. 3 lbs. apples, peeled, halved, and cored (about 5 grocery store large size)
Sara recommends Golden Delicious, and I used Braeburn because they were on sale, but I think Granny Smith would be the killer app here. If you don't have a corer, don't use a small cookie cutter like I tried to -- you do too much damage. Just cut a triangular wedge with your knife. To prevent browning, brush each apple as it is finished with
  1. Juice of 1-2 lemons
In the bottom of a 10-inch skillet, layer
  1. 1 stick (1/2 c) unsalted butter, sliced thin
  2. 1/2 c sugar
On top of that, place the apple halves in a circle, rounded side down, with two more pieces to fill in the middle. After searching Google Images, I think I have it right -- see the picture.

Cook the apple mixture over medium heat for 30-35 minutes, until the carmel bubbling up starts to become golden. Slide the whole thing into a preheated 400 F oven for 10-15 more minutes, until the apples are tender. Let cool 5 minutes.

While the apples are cooking and cooling, pinch together the seams on the puff pastry and then roll it out and trim to a 12" diameter circle. Two sheets of wax paper and a little sugar to soak up the condensed moisture helps here. I use the destination plate as a template to cut the circle. Oh, and Alton Brown would want you to use a sharp knife on the pastry. Return the circle to the fridge to firm up again.

After the apples have cooled 5 minutes, drape the pastry over top. As the heat softens it a bit, tuck the edges down between the side of the pan and the apples. Prick the dough with a fork and return it to the 400 F oven for 15-25 minutes, until the pastry is dark golden but not burned. Remove from oven and invert on serving plate to cool. Yummy hot or cool, with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.

Dinners out: Spice Street and Four Eleven West

I had some fantastic meals this weekend. It started off with a quick dinner at Spice Street after working wine tasting at A Southern Season. I had seared scallops over saffron rice with peas, red beans, and other goodies in it. This is the first time I've recognized what saffron actually tastes like, and I loved the savory richness it brought to the whole dish. I've been really impressed with that restaurant the two times I've been there...

Saturday night Katy and I went to Four Eleven West for some Italian food. They've always been good, but the dishes we had that night were outstanding. The starter was an artichoke dip served cold with thin, crisp pita wedges. The pita was on the edge between bread and cracker, and it had the wonderful, slightly ashy crispness that comes from a really hot wood oven -- similar to pizza crust in Rome. The icecream scoop of dip looked like industrial chicken salad, but it tasted more like a Caesar dressing, with that little bite the really good ones have. We tried to figure out what was in it, and we know artichoke, mayonasise, dill, and Parmesean; and possibly sour cream, lemon juice, garlic, and anchovy. I'm not sure what else, but I'll try to recreate it some time.

My entree was black pepper angle hair (pepper in the pasta dough), covered in a dill cream sauce with more black pepper, and topped with a mostly raw slab of smoked salmon (cold). Killer good. I'm too lazy to make pasta and don't have access to that kind of salmon, but I'd definitely go back for that dish!

Sunday brought a tarte Tatin and homemade vanilla ice cream, but that's another post...

7/12/2006

Berry sauces / syrups

I love berries, of all varieties, and this is the time of year for them. I've recently discovered two berry sauces that I love, both based on the same ingredients: fruit, wine, vinegar, sugar, and heat. The flavors are amazingly intense, and they'd be delicious on many things -- cheesecake, ice cream, even meat! I don't think you'd need particularly good berries because of the strong extra flavors, so frozen would probably be fine. But if you have some nice berries already...

Recipe number one comes from Gail Kyle at the Jordan Follow Farm Inn, via Food Network. It was originally intended to serve with pork crusted in herbs, but its so sweet it would work fine with desserts too.

Wild Huckleberry Sauce
In a medium saucepan, combine

  1. 2 c fresh huckleberries or blueberries
  2. 1/3 c sugar
  3. 2 T raspberry vinegar (I used balsamic; red wine vinegar would probably also work)
  4. 1/4 c white wine
Simmer gently until most berries burst and sauce is slightly thickened, about 10-15 minutes.

Recipe number two from an elaborate but delicious recipe for semolina cake (almost like cheesecake in texture) in some spring 2006 issue of Bon Appetit. I don't know if this one would work for meat dishes, but it's great on cakes and other desserts!

Strawberries in Red Wine and Balsamic Syrup
In a medium saucepan, combine
  1. 1 bottle red wine (750 mL, something fruity, I use a Cab)
  2. 6 T sugar (3/8 c)
  3. 1 T balsamic vinegar
Simmer until reduced to 1/2 cup, about 35 minutes. Cool to room temperature and combine with
  1. 1 lb strawberries, hulled and sliced

7/03/2006

Upside-Down Cakes

I've had good luck with upside-down cakes lately, an apple one and a banana one. The recipes are quite similar, so I thought it would be fun to put them side-by-side for comparison. Personally, I think I prefer the apple variation -- chunks of fruit in the cake is really nice, and the butterscotch is a nice twist.

Banana Upside Down Cake(s)
Butter 8 1-cup ramekins or a 9 inch cake pan. Over medium heat, whisk together until smooth and bubbly:

  1. 12 T butter (1 1/2 sticks)
  2. 3/4 c brown sugar
Pour into the bottom of the ramekins or cake pan. Peel and slice 1/4" thick, placing in concentric circles in bottom(s) of ramekins/pan:
  1. 4 large ripe bananas (spotted but not mushy)
Sift together:
  1. 1 1/2 c cake flour (6 5/8 oz White Lily)
  2. 1 t baking powder
  3. 1/4 t baking soda
  4. 1/2 t cinnamon
  5. 1/4 t Kosher salt
In the mixer, cream together:
  1. 1 c sugar
  2. 8 T butter, room temperature (1 stick; 2 1/2 sticks total for this recipe)
Scrape down sides and mix in:
  1. 2 eggs
  2. 2 t vanilla
Alternately add dry ingredients and buttermilk, and mix until smooth:
  1. 5 fl. oz. buttermilk (1/2 c + 2 T)
Pour batter into ramekins/pan and bake at 350 F, on a rimmed baking sheet (this bubbles over). Ramekins need 35-40 minutes; cake pan needs 45-50 minutes. Cool slightly, then loosen sides and invert onto serving plate(s).

This recipe comes from Karen Barker's Sweet Stuff, she of Magnolia Grill fame. She suggests blueberries, plums, fresh pineapple, and cranberries as possible alternates for the bananas.

My two cents on this: the baking powder (1 t) and baking soda (1/4 t) have equivalent leavening power, but the 1/4 t soda will neutralize the acidity from the ~1/2 c buttermilk completely, so the other half of the leavening needs to supply its own acid (which is what baking powder does).

Upside-Down Butterscotch Apple Sour Cream Cake
In a 10" skillet over medium heat, melt and whisk together till smooth and bubbling:
  1. 6 T butter
  2. 1/3 c brown sugar
  3. 1/3 c butterscotch morsels
Add and cook about 5 minutes:
  1. 2 large apples, pleaved, cored, and sliced (1/4")
Cool slightly, then arrange slices in concentric circles if desired. (Too much work for me.) If your skillet is shallow or not ovenproof, you should move the contents to a deep 9" cake pan instead.

Sift together:
  1. 1 1/2 c flour (6 5/8 oz White Lily)
  2. 1 1/2 t baking powder
  3. 3/4 t salt
In the mixer, cream together:
  1. 8 T (1 stick) butter, room temperature
  2. 2/3 c sugar
Scrape sides down and mix in:
  1. 2 eggs
  2. 1 1/2 t vanilla
Beat in dry ingredients, then
  1. 1/2 c sour cream (low fat is OK, not fat free)
  2. 1/2 large apple, peeled, cored, and finely chopped (~3/4 c)
Spoon batter carefully over the apples and smooth it out. Bake for 30 minutes at 375 F, with something in place to catch any drips. Cool slightly, loosen edges with a knife, and invert onto serving plate.

I would use Gala apples for this, or maybe Granny Smiths, but the original recipe from Bon Appetit (March 2006) called for Golden Delicious (ugh).

As I said, these recipes are very similar. I slightly prefer the effect of sour cream to that of buttermilk, and I think the fruit in the cake and the butterscotch morsels are both killer additions. On the other hand, a little cinnamon in the batter is also a nice touch.

4/23/2006

Apricot-ginger-jalepeno sauce

This was originally a dipping sauce for the coconut shrimp recipe below, but it's so tasty and versatile it gets its own entry. I'm going to serve it with grilled salmon later this week, or you could pour it over a block of cream cheese and serve with crackers for a tasty appetizer.

In a food processor, blend until smooth:

  1. 1/2 c apricot jam
  2. 1 T freshly grated ginger*
  3. 1 T Dijon mustard
  4. 1 jalepeno pepper, seeded and minced
  5. 2 T rice wine vinegar and/or fresh lime juice
  6. up to 2 t sugar, to taste

* The easiest way to do this is with a microplane grater/zester. It's really a great kitchen tool for ginger, nutmeg, citrus zest, etc. and well worth the money.

Coconut shrimp

To continue the frying madness, we made some coconut shrimp. (We had a bag of shredded coconut left over from one of Katy's class projects.) These turned out far better than I ever expected -- crisp and sweet, with none of the objectionable texture of shredded cononut. I got this recipe from Food Network.

For the beer batter, mix together:

  1. 1 c flour
  2. 1/2 c beer (something pale and mild)
  3. 3/4 t baking soda
  4. 1/2 t salt
  5. 1 t cayenne pepper
  6. 1 egg
Peel and devein
  1. 12 shrimp (16 to 20 count)*
Dip the shrimp in the beer batter and roll them in
  1. 2 c sweetened shredded coconut
Fry shrimp in oil at 350-375 F until golden brown and crispy. They're delicious on their own, or with the apricot-ginger sauce described in the next entry.

* Smaller shrimp work fine too; we used some frozen ones from Costco.

Churros

We had fun this week because Carrie got a deep fryer for her birthday. So of course we all had to rush over and play right away, frying everything we could get our hands on. Churros were a great success.

Churros are a type of fried dough that's very popular in Spain. It's usually served with a small mug of thick, rich chocolate for dipping, and might be rolled in (cinnamon) sugar. This recipe comes from the King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion.

It would be nice to have a 1/2" star tip for piping these out, because that shape gives more crispy surface and makes sure the inside is cooked by the time the outside is browned. But we didn't have one, so we just snipped the corner of a plastic bag and squeezed it from there. It worked pretty well, though the center was still quite wet and undercooked.

Heat to a rolling boil:

  1. 1 c water
  2. 8 T butter (1 stick)
  3. 1/4 t salt
Dump in and stir vigorously until dough forms a ball:
  1. 4 1/4 oz (scant 1 cup) all-purpose flour
Stir in all at once:
  1. 3 eggs
Beat until dough is smooth.

Pipe out the churros about 1/2" in diameter directly into oil at 375 F. Fry about 4 minutes, until golden. If desired, sprinkle with cinnamon sugar (1/4 c sugar + 1/4 t ground cinnamon). Eat while still hot.

The King Arthur recipe for dipping chocolate was a bit of a disappointment. A warm chocolate ganache might be a better choice.

4/08/2006

Biscuit-ology 101

For years now, a light and fluffy Southern biscuit has been beyond my reach. After exhaustive experimentation, here is my lab notebook -- and my conclusions.

Start with

  1. 4 3/8 oz (1 cup) low-protein or Southern all-purpose flour (such as White Lily), sifted
I use low protein flour to avoid formation of gluten, the tough protein fibers that make yeast breads hold their shape. For biscuits, however, gluten just makes them tough. The amount of gluten formed is minimized by minimizing mixing once liquid is added, but more on that later.

Using your fingertips, rub in
  1. 1 oz (2 T) cold butter, cut in small cubes or thin slices
  2. or 7/8 oz (2 T) vegetable shortening
Now shortening is traditional in most Southern recipes, but I find the butter gives a beautifully crispy, golden bottom crust, almost as though it were fried (which in a sense, it is). Either way, rub the fat between your floured fingertips until the largest chunks are the size of small peas. I know this is what all recipes say, but basically you can't get them smaller without a lot of patience and melting the fat to boot. It only takes a minute or two at most. If you think you've gotten it too warm, toss in the freezer for a few minutes to firm up.

Whisk in the leavening:
  1. 1/4 t baking soda
  2. or 1 t baking powder
You may only use the soda if you're using buttermilk as the liquid: the acidic buttermilk will perfectly neutralize the soda (in these proportions), generating lots of carbon dioxide bubbles to make the biscuits rise. If you're using milk/cream/etc, you must use baking powder, which contains 1/4 t soda and the appropriate acids to neutralize it, activated on heating. If you use half buttermilk, you can use 1/8 t baking soda and 1/2 t powder. I advocate using baking soda whenever using buttermilk, to leave the biscuits closer to neutral pH: acidic environments inhibit browning, so the outside of your biscuits will be slightly paler when using baking powder together with buttermilk.

Also, I think baking powder can leave an unpleasant soapy-chemical taste, especially in large quantities. Speaking of which: Cookwise warns that using too much leavening can make baked goods flat as easily as too little, so don't supplement the amounts here. I do add it after the fat rather than sifting together with the flour, as otherwise I'm concerned that the leavening agent will get coated in fat and be unable to react with the (water-based) dairy liquid. This leads to flat biscuits and the soapy taste of unreacted soda.

Also whisk in
  1. 1 t salt
  2. 1 t sugar
Use whatever you like; I prefer Kosher. A little salt adds taste to all sorts of things, so don't leave it out, or the biscuits will taste more like hard tack, no matter how fluffy they are. The small amount of sugar promotes browning without making the biscuits perceptibly sweet. Without it, the biscuits are still very pale even when fully cooked.

Finally, stir/fold in gently just until ingredients are evenly moistened
  1. 3.5 - 4 fl. oz. (1/2 c) buttermilk (see below)
Use 3.5 oz if using White Lily, or 4 oz if using 1 cup national brand AP flour. To make fake buttermilk, mix 1 cup milk with 1 T lemon juice or white vinegar and let stand 10 minutes. Fake buttermilk is thinner than the real stuff and will give wetter dough. Don't stir too much at this point, as you'll create gluten that leads to tough, flat biscuits. You already sifted the flour, so any lumps are already gone. I like a spatula-spoon for this operation. It will look like a batter rather than a dough -- that's OK. Once the dairy is in, the leavening will start reacting to make CO2, especially if using buttermilk and baking soda. That means if you're prepping ahead of time, don't add the dairy until you're ready to put them in the oven. Drop the batter in four big heaps on a cookie sheet (I line mine with a Silpat first). Just drop them fairly close together to help them rise higher -- I don't know why this works, but it seems to. Bake in a preheated 425 degree oven for 14-16 minutes until done. They will be lightly golden on top. Baking at 450 makes them too hard, but 400 is workable if push comes to shove.

I abandoned the roll-and-cut (or pat-and-cut) method in favor of drop biscuits after many failed attempts. To get a workable dough, it has to be too dry -- only a wet dough creates enough steam to get tall and fluffy when baked. To shape a really wet dough, you have to flour the outside heavily, and that inevitably leads to clumps of uncooked flour. Plus, all the cookbooks say you need a sharp cutter and can't twist it when pressing down (or the biscuits won't rise). Then the wet dough sticks to the cutter anyway, or to the counter. Too much trouble! Embrace the ugly but deliciously effective method that is drop biscuits. I've even baked them in jumbo muffin cups, which gives a different outside texture (like biscuit bottom all over), but works pretty well.

Even better is a cast iron biscuit pan made by Lodge. Grease cups with spray oil before filling. One batch of this recipe fills two of the seven cups almost to the top; three batches fills six cups. (Don't use the center one as it cooks slower.) Smooth tops of cups with wet back of spoon or wet fingers. Baking takes longer since the pan can absorb so much heat, about 18 minutes at 425.

This recipe was assembled with input from Shirley Corriher in Cookwise, Alton Brown on Food TV, Katy's Grandma Rose, and the back of the White Lily bag. My biscuits aren't like any of theirs, but they helped me get there. I've probably forgotten some other sources, but a lot of this comes from experimentation too. I hope it helps someone else make a delicious biscuit.

By the way, this recipe makes four biscuits, an improbably small number. But it's good for families of two, and good when you're making a lot of different batches of biscuits. It should scale up 2, 3, or 4 times with no problems. You might try cutting the fat into the flour with a food processor (using short pulses). You can even "sift" the flour first by processing it, and incorportate the leavening and salt this way. But don't use the processor for mixing with the dairy or it will really overwork the dough.

3/25/2006

Cole slaws

Mmm, cole slaw. Both the recipes here make enough for 1 lb. of shredded cabbage, which I usually buy pre-cut as a package of tri-color slaw from the grocery store. Gudda's recipe is creamy and savory; not really my favorite, but recorded for here for posterity. I suspect it's pretty typical Pennsylvania Dutch. The other is my creation, modeled after the NC slaws I associate with church pig-pickin's and carry-out fried chicken. It should sit in the fridge for at least 24 hours, so the sugar can draw some water out of the cabbage -- otherwise the dressing is too heavy and too sweet.

Gudda's Cole Slaw

  1. 1/2 c mayonnaise
  2. 2 T cider vinegar
  3. 1 T grated onion
  4. 1/2 t celery seed
  5. 1 t sugar
  6. 1/2 t salt
  7. 1/8 t pepper

My Sweet White Slaw
  1. 1/2 c mayonnaise
  2. 1/4 c sugar
  3. 2 T white wine
  4. 2 T white wine vinegar
  5. salt, pepper, celery seed

3/17/2006

Black pepper-crusted steak with red onion chutney

My friend Colin Crossman made this recipe for Katy and me shortly after we met -- and we've been friends ever since. That story came up at his wedding shower a few days ago, so I decided to post the recipe here to share with everyone. The original calls for grilling New York sirloins, but I've used fillet mignon and a hot skillet or grill pan (no grill allowed at the apartment) with great success.

For the chutney, saute until deep brown and carmelized:

  1. 4 small red onions, sliced in thin half-rings
  2. 3 T olive oil
Stir in
  1. 1/4 c balsamic vinegar
  2. 2 T brown sugar (packed)
  3. 2 T fresh oregano
  4. salt and pepper to taste
Cook for 1 minute and remove from heat. Reserve.

For the steaks, mix together
  1. 1/4 c kosher salt
  2. 1 c black peppercorns, crushed with a rolling pin or coarsly cracked in a food processor (whole, if you're lazy, but not ground)
Press steaks onto this mixture, packing the salt and pepper on both sides of
  1. 4 New York sirloin steaks (12 - 16 oz each), 1.5 - 2 inches thick
Thick steaks are important, so you can sear the outside nicely without overcooking the inside. Grill steaks to desired doneness (about 10 min. per side for medium) and serve topped with chutney.

3/09/2006

Baked Vidalia dip

A warm & cheesy appetizer made with sweet Vidalia onions. I got this one from my mother, but I don't know where it originally came from.

In a large bowl, mix:

  1. 1 extra-large sweet onion (1 - 1.5 lbs), sliced into thin half-rings (about 2 cups)
  2. 1 c mayonaise (store-bought is fine)
  3. 1 c grated sharp Cheddar or Swiss cheese
  4. 1/4 - 1/2 t Tabasco
Pack into a medium size cassarole or 9" square Pyrex. Top with:
  1. 1/2 c grated Parmesean
  2. hot paprika (to taste)
Cover and refrigerate if desired. Just before serving, bake for 30 minutes at 350. Serve hot with crackers or baguette slices.

3/07/2006

Straw and Hay

We fell in love with this dish at Amerigo's in Nashville, TN. If you want to get the namesake look, you'll need half regular fettuccine and half spinach fettuccine, but any kind of pasta tastes delicious. This recipe is based on the one in Betty Crocker's Cookbook, but I substituted peas for mushrooms, bacon for ham, and sherry for brandy. Quantities are very approximate -- none of this really needs to be measured out.

In a large skillet, cook until almost done:

  1. 6 slices bacon, cut into small pieces
Pour off some drippings to reduce fat to 1 - 2 T. Add and cook until tender, stirring occasionally:
  1. 2 T chopped fresh parsley
  2. 1/4 c chopped red onion
  3. 1/2 c frozen green peas
Stir in and cook until evaporated:
  1. 1/4 c sherry or marsala wine
Stir in and cook until thickened:
  1. 1 c whipping cream
  2. 1/4 c grated Parmesean cheese
  3. salt and pepper to taste
Serve over a 50:50 mix of plain and spinach (green) fettuccine, cooked according to package directions. I've also had great luck making zucchini noodles by running a vegetable peeler down a zucchini (throw out the seed-filled middle); toss these with the sauce for a minute or two to soften up and then serve with a normal white pasta like angel hair. In theory this serves 4, but Katy and I can polish it off no problem.

White BBQ Chicken

After a long delay -- I'm back! This is a very simple marinade / sauce that's quite different from a normal red barbecue sauce. The recipe is from The Ultimate Southern Living Cookbook, which is one of my all-time favorites.

In a glass 2-cup measuring cup or small bowl, whisk together:

  1. 3/4 c mayonaise (store bought is fine)
  2. 1.5 oz (3 T) cider vinegar (white works but has less flavor)
  3. juice of one lemon*
  4. 1 T sugar
  5. 1 T fresh-ground black pepper
  6. 1 T white wine Worcestershire sauce ("for fish or chicken")

Save half the sauce for dipping the cooked chicken. Put the other half in a big zip bag with 2 - 4 chicken breasts, and marinate the whole thing in the refrigerator for 24 hours. Cook chicken as desired -- on the grill, in a skillet, etc. -- and serve with reserved sauce.

* That's about 1 oz. (2 T). And no, you may NOT substitute that stuff in the plastic fruit, or the stuff in the glass bottle. Go get a real lemon.

1/11/2006

Chocolate truffle tart

An easy dessert that looks fancy, and a chocolate lover's heaven. It's basically a chocolate ganache in a chocolate pastry crust. I've seen a lot of versions of this recipe, but this one (from Favorite Brand Name Best-Loved Chocolate Recipes) is the only one I've made. I guess I've never seen a reason to change... :)

In the bowl of a mixer, thoroughly cream together

  1. 6 T butter, softened
  2. 1/2 c sugar
Add the following ingredients, and mix until a soft dough (finally!) comes together:
  1. 2/3 c flour (softer is better, e.g. White Lily)
  2. 1/2 c ground walnuts
  3. 1/3 c cocoa powder
Press into an ungreased 9" removable-bottom tart pan (or a pie plate, if you don't have a tart pan) and bake 12-14 minutes in a preheated 350F oven. Cool completely on wire rack, but leave it in the pan.

Heat to a bare simmer
  1. 1 1/4 c heavy cream
  2. 1/4 sugar
Remove from heat and add
  1. 12 oz (~2 c) semi-sweet chocolate chips*
  2. 2 T fruit jam, such as seedless raspberry
Let stand ~5 minutes to soften, then whisk until smooth. Cover and chill about one hour, until somewhat thickened but not yet solid. Beat with a hand mixer until color lightens. (This incorporates some air and makes the texture softer and lighter.) Spoon into cooled crust and chill until firm. Serves 12 to 16; keeps several days in the fridge, covered. Fresh raspberries, halved strawberries, whipped cream and vanilla ice cream all make nice accompaniments.

* Such as Ghirardelli 60% Cocoa, my favorite for all sorts of baked goods.

1/10/2006

"Indonesian" peanut chicken

I don't think this is in any way authentic (it comes from Betty Crocker's Bridal Cookbook, for goodness sake), but it sure is tasty. The thick peanut sauce is great over rice too. While you could easily do 4 breasts with this recipe (the original was written for a 3lb broiler-fryer), I like to make sure there's plenty of sauce to go around.

Season the chicken with salt and pepper and let sit at room temperature for up to 30 minutes before beginning; the salt dehydrates the surface, which will improve browning. Then, in a hot skillet over medium-high heat, brown

  1. 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, in
  2. 2 T peanut oil (canola, vegetable, whatever)
It'll probably take 4-5 minutes on each side, depending on how hot your pan is. Remove chicken and keep warm (it'll finish cooking later). Add a bit more oil if necessary, then soften
  1. 1/2 c chopped onion
  2. 1/4 c chopped red bell pepper (or green, or leave it out)
In a small bowl, whisk together
  1. 1/3 c peanut butter
  2. 1/4 c chili sauce*
  3. 1/2 c water
Doing it this way makes it easier to get smooth. Add peanut butter mixture to the skillet and stir to combine; add more water if the sauce is too thick for you, up to 1 c total water. You can also add some cayenne pepper for heat; or you could have blackened some dried chiles in the oil with before the onion went in. Katy and I prefer this one non-spicy, though. Now return the chicken to the skillet and simmer covered until cooked through. Serve sauce over chicken and rice, and top with
  1. crushed/chopped peanuts
  2. fresh-squeezed lime juice
I include extra lime wedges on the plate, too.

* Chili sauce is available in the oriental foods section of many grocery stores (for instance, H.T. Traders Red Chili Dipping Sauce). Mine has a clear red gelatinous base with tiny chunks of stuff suspended in it, and it's sweet and very mildly hot. Don't confuse this with the American ketchup-like condiment made by Heinz, and please don't confuse it with the uber-hot Thai chili (garlic) sauce that looks like tomato sauce with chile seeds in it. A quarter cup of that stuff will burn your tastebuds right out of your mouth...

1/05/2006

Refrigerator flatbread

I love fresh, hot bread with dinner, but it's just not an option on a normal workday -- who has 3+ hours of lead time for dinner? This recipe has two advantages, though. First, the dough is made ahead and waits in the refrigerator until you're ready to bake it, up to about a week. Second, it's cooked on the grill, so there's no waiting to heat the oven and baking stone. Since I have no grill at my apartment, I cook it in a grill pan over the stove.

This bread is great on its own or dipped in herbed olive oil. It's a natural parner for hummus, and it makes a good pizza crust too (especially for grilled pizzas). You could even slice a flatbread open and stuff it with some kind of filling. It's about the most versatile bread recipe I know.

The ingredients and basic procedure come from Bobby Flay's Boy Gets Grill; the slow rise is my modification, inspired by Peter Reinhart.

In large mixing bowl, combine

  1. 1 1/2 c warm water (below 110F or you'll kill the yeast)
  2. 1/2 t instant yeast
If using active dry yeast instead, wait 10-15 minutes for it to proof; otherwise, immediately mix in
  1. 9.5 oz (2 cups) King Arthur unbleached all purpose flour
Use the paddle on your mixer; mix for about 1 min on low speed once everything is together. Cover the mixer with a towel and let rise until doubled, 1-2 hours (usually 1). Briefly mix in
  1. 1/2 t salt (kosher or sea)
  2. 2 T olive oil
  3. herbs and spices, if desired (?)
These aren't added initially because salt slows the yeast growth and oil can interfere with gluten formation. I think this would be a good time to add herbs or spices if you wanted (black pepper or rosemary, maybe?). Many of them actually boost yeast growth, but a few can inhibit it. (Read more in Shirley O. Corriher's CookWise, a book everybody should have.) Now swap the paddle for the dough hook and add another
  1. 9.5 oz (2 cups) King Arthur unbleached all purpose flour (that's 19 oz or 4 cups, total)
Knead with the dough hook until bread is smooth and plastic, about 10 minutes. It should stick to a small spot on the bottom of the bowl, but not come up the sides. Add a little flour if it does, or a little water if it doesn't stick at all.

Now, you could leave it on the counter another 2 1/2 hours and then procede straight to shaping. But instead I transfer it to a plastic container sprayed with non-stick spray (or lightly oiled), and I shove it in the fridge. Here it can sit for at least 12 hours, and up to a week. The container needs a cover that will let gas escape so pressure doesn't build up; aluminum foil or plastic wrap is fine. I prep this dough as I'm making dinner, and by the next morning it has almost doubled in size again, ready to use. As an added bonus, the long slow rise develops all sorts of nice flavors you just don't get from an hour or two on the counter top.

The recipe makes enough for 4 flatbreads. When you're ready to bake, remove a portion, shape into a ball and then flatten into a disk. Stretch it like pizza dough, either tossing in the air or poking with your finger tips on the counter. If you can't stretch it as thin as you'd like, let it relax for 5-10 minutes and try again. It needs to sit, covered loosely with plastic wrap, until the dough comes to room temperature and has puffed up a bit. To speed things up, I put it on a non-insulated cookie sheet over a pan half full of hot tap water, which gets it ready to cook within 30 minutes. Hmm, just enough time to get the rest of dinner together...

Heat your grill (pan) to medium or medium-high heat. Brush or spray the top of the bread with oil, and sprinkle with kosher salt and fresh ground pepper. Flip that side onto the grill, and then oil and season the other side while the first one cooks. The top of the bread will develop bubbles as it cooks; once the bottom has some nice char marks and is lightly golden, it's ready to flip. It's pretty hard to screw the cooking part up -- if the outside looks like something you'd want to eat, the inside will be fine.

1/03/2006

Chocolate Orange Rice Pudding

I fell in love with rice puddings in Toledo, Spain, where Katy and I had a wonderfully cool arroz con leche in a small but blissfully air conditioned restaurant -- Toledo is hot in August. The traditional version is scented with lemon peel and stick cinnamon, so it keeps its pure white color. Since this version is dark brown anyway, the ground cinnamon doesn't hurt its looks, and means you need one less unusual ingredient.

I cooked up this version in honor of Katy's birthday, since she's a chocoholic and especially loves those chocolate oranges they sell around Christmas. To give credit where it's due, the recipe is based on largely on one from Saveur magazine's Tex-Mex special issue, with inspiration from Maricel Presilla's complicated but intriguing version. The combination of spicy peppers and chocolate is one I've had several places; the heat does something to really bring out the chocolate flavor. The idea of a carmelized "brulee" topping came from Bakus in Durham, which I wrote about earlier.

While you could easily make it with leftover Uncle Ben's from last night's dinner, the shorter grain rices release more starch and hence give a stickier, creamier pudding. This can also be adapted back to a non-chocolate version, by using only 1/4 + 1/8 c sugar (since there's no chocolate bitterness to counteract) and lemon zest instead of orange. Obviously, omit the chocolate and cayenne pepper.

In a medium sauce pan, bring to boil (covered) 1 cup water, and add

  1. 1/2 c short- or medium-grain rice
Reduce heat and simmer for 20 minutes or until rice is tender and all liquid is absorbed. Add in
  1. 1 c whole or reduced-fat (not skim) milk
  2. zest of 1/2 orange (1 long strip if possible)
  3. 1/4 t ground cinnamon
  4. 1/16 t cayenne pepper (optional)
  5. 1/4 t kosher salt
  6. 1/8 c cocoa powder
  7. 1/2 + 1/8 c sugar
Cook, stirring very frequently until thickened. Keep in mind that it will thicken more as it cools, so stop a bit short of where you want it. Remove from heat and stir in
  1. 1 t vanilla extract
At this point, you can chill it in an ice bath or go ahead and put it in ramekins and put it in the refrigerator. You could stir in some semisweet chocolate chips once it's cool, too, for a double-chocolate version. When you're ready to serve, sprinkle some
  1. light brown sugar
on top of each pudding and carmelize with a torch or the broiler. (Propane torches are about $20 at the hardware store for a nice big one.) Serves 4.

1/02/2006

Holiday Traditions II: Potato-Sausage Casserole

Christmas dinner I can take or leave, but Christmas brunch is a tradition. This is one of two casseroles we always make, and for many years my Gudda kept this recipe a secret. But now that she can't make it anymore, it seems a shame to hide it from the world.

Combine:

  1. 1 lb. bulk pork sausage, browned and drained (if doubling recipe, go 50:50 mild to hot)
  2. 1 can (10 3/4 oz) condensed cream of mushroom soup
  3. 3/4 c milk
  4. 1/2 c chopped onion
  5. 1/2 t salt
  6. 1/4 t pepper
In a greased 2 qt casserole, make two layers each of sausage and
  1. 3 c raw potatoes, hash brown cut*
Bake covered at 350F for 1 hr. Sprinkle with
  1. 8 oz shredded Cheddar
and return to oven until cheese is melted. Garnish with parsley.

* Raw shredded potatoes are often available in the refrigerator case around the holidays. If you can't find any, either shred your own or thaw some frozen ones.

Holiday Traditions I: Grandma Zales' Corn Casserole

Every family has foods that make an appearance at the holidays, and this is one of my favorites from the Davis clan. We don't know who Grandma Zales was, since this recipe came out of some old newspaper or magazine. But her casserole is wonderful!

In a casserole, mix:

  1. 2 (12 oz) cans corn, such as Green Giant Niblet (drained?)
  2. 2 eggs
  3. 3 T minced onion
  4. 1/2 t salt
  5. 1/4 t pepper
  6. 1 t baking powder
  7. 1/3 c light cream or half & half
Top with:
  1. squares of uncooked bacon
  2. shredded sharp Cheddar
Cover and bake at 350F for 55 minutes.

Flour of all trades, master of none

The more baking I begin to do, the more I feel there's no place in my kitchen for "all purpose" flour. Like most all purpose things, it's not particularly good at anything -- not enough protein for bread, and too much for biscuits. So instead, I'm going to try to keep two flours: King Arthur unbleached all-purpose (which, despite the name, is closer to a bread flour) and White Lily. The King Arthur is good for breads and breadings, where you want high protein content (for strength and for browning, respectively). The White Lily is good for biscuits, cakes, and pastry, where you want to avoid developing much gluten. We'll see how this scheme works out.

On the subject of flour, I've realized there's a lot of variation in whole wheat flours. I had a bag of Hodgson's Mill "stone ground" whole wheat hanging around, and the two things I baked with it turned out different (read: worse) than when I'd used King Arthur whole wheat, which seems to have much finer particles. I've seen in the King Arthur's catalog that they have a "white whole wheat", which supposedly tastes and bakes more like white flour but still has all the good fiber of whole wheat. I'll be excited to try it...

1/01/2006

Navy bean salad at Bakus

Katy and I had the best New Year's dinner, at a tapas bar on 9th St (www.bakus.us). Though it's gotten mixed reviews, we loved the slightly Americanized yet still Spanish-gourmet plates. We had pork in a fig-sherry-cream sauce, apple wedges with almonds slivers and creamy cinnamon dressing, and fried plaintain slices with goat cheese. We shared a chicken breast entree that paired tomatoes and spinach with apples and raisins, which was a much better combo than I would have thought. But my favorite was the bean salad that accompanied the cheese plate: it could stand in for a potato salad any time. Via our kind waitress, the chef said there were 10 ingredients, which I can mostly remember:

  1. navy beans
  2. chorizo sausage (presumably Spanish style, not Mexican)
  3. red (bell) pepper
  4. onions
  5. olives (black or green?)
  6. cilantro
  7. cumin
  8. olive oil
  9. lemon juice
  10. salt & pepper
I haven't worked out the proportions yet, but I'll post it here sometime if I do!

Come to think of it, this would make a nice hummus too. Maybe I'll try that some time...