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Monday, April 30, 2012

Vegetables and mushrooms sauteed

Vegetables and mushrooms sauteed

Vegetables and mushrooms sauteed

 Vegetables and mushrooms sauteed

Ingredients:

For four people (250 kcal per serving)
Butter 70 g
Carrot keep: 100 g
Onions: 2
porcini mushrooms: 600 g
Potatoes: 1/2 kg
Pepper: to taste
Salt: to taste

Preparation:

Cut the onion, clean the mushrooms, slice them. Peel and cut potatoes into cubes. Sauté everything in a pan with one ounce of butter. Add, once removed everything from the fire, the remaining butter and sauté the potatoes and carrots, boiled previously. Finally refit all the frying pan for gold.

Tuscan Vegetables

Tuscan Vegetables

Tuscan Vegetables

Tuscan Vegetables

Ingredients:

For four people (300 kcal per serving)
Time : one hour and 15 minutes Difficulty : Easy
Vinegar: 2 tbsp
Garlic: 1 clove
basil: qb
Artichokes: 2
Onions: 250 g
beans: 250 g
Fennel: 1
Lemon: 1
olive oil 4 tablespoons
peas: 250 g
Tomatoes: 4
Leeks: 2
Parsley: to taste
Salt and pepper to taste
Celery Green: 1
Sugar: 2 cubes

Preparation:

Wash the vegetables and then soak the artichokes in acidulated water with lemon not to darken. Blanch in boiling salted water artichokes and broad beans for ten minutes. Once drained, are then peeled if they are not tender. Slice the onion, fennel, celery and leeks in the white pulp. Put these vegetables into a saucepan and let soften in the oil over medium heat. When the vegetables are almost colorful, add the beans, peas, artichokes, tomatoes and a clove of minced garlic. Season with salt, pepper and sugar. Stir, cover and cook over low heat, stirring occasionally. When the vegetables are cooked but not mashed, pour the vinegar. Cook over high heat, sprinkle with chopped parsley and basil previously. Add salt and pepper if necessary. Remove from heat and serve hot or cold.

 

World of cooking

Vegetables with Parmesan

Vegetables with Parmesan

Vegetables with Parmesan

 Vegetables with Parmesan

Ingredients:

For four people (220 kcal per serving)
Time : one hour and 30 minutes Difficulty : Difficult
Garlic: 1 clove
basil: a bunch
Eggplant: 200 g
Mozzarella: 120 g
oil: 10 g
grated Parmesan cheese: 60 g
Tomato sauce: 300 g
potatoes 200 g
Pepper: 200 g
Salt: to taste
Zucchini: 400 g

Preparation:

Wash and slice the zucchini and eggplant. Boil the potatoes for about twenty minutes. Remove the seeds and cut peppers into strips. Cook zucchini and eggplant on the grill. Heat the tomato lightly salt it and add crushed garlic and basil leaves cleanse. Cook over medium heat with oil. Slice the mozzarella well. Remove the garlic. In a baking dish covered with a sheet of parchment paper, place the bottom a bit ‘of tomato, then the sliced ​​potatoes, a layer of zucchini, peppers and eggplant, mozzarella cheese to finish, yet seasoned with tomato, sprinkle with cheese. Bake at 200 ° C for 30 approximately.

Learning about Tabasco


Tabasco sauce isn't just for dousing on eggs or doctoring your bloody mary. In fact it takes on a completely different character when used in cooking rather than as a finishing sauce. It's a surprisingly versatile condiment that can be used in a wide variety of dishes and drinks. There are seven different varieties of Tabasco sauce (actually there are a couple more as well that are not widely available). I learned all of this and more on a recent visit to Avery Island, home and birthplace of Tabasco sauce. The trip to Louisiana was with the inaugural group of Tabasco tastemakers. As one of the "tastemakers," I will be creating several recipes using Tabasco (for which I am being compensated).

During my visit I saw the pepper fields, the barrel room (where I tasted chili pepper mash), the factory (where I breathed in vinegar fumes), the lab, the bottling rooms and learned just how Tabasco is made. While almost 99% of the Tabasco chile peppers come from places like Latin America and Africa, all varieties of Tabasco sauce are made on Avery Island. The peppers are processed, made into a mash with salt, aged and fermented in bourbon barrels, then transformed into sauces.

At a dinner for the Tabasco tastemakers I was blown away by how chef Alon Shaya of Domenica restaurant in New Orleans used Tabasco in his cooking. Twice nominated for a regional James Beard award, Shaya cooks his unique version of Italian food using the best local ingredients he can find, and a good deal of restraint in a town where excess is generally taken to an extreme. He used Tabasco in everything from a simple yet intensely flavored handmade pasta with shrimp to a chocolate dessert.

Finally bartender Neal Bodenheimer of Cure used Tabasco in cocktails with spirits like Pimm's and rum and creme de banane. One of the drinks he made was a "cobbler" which traditionally is a drink made with wine or sherry, sugar and fresh fruit. His cocktails were both unexpected and amazing. Stay tuned for my first recipe...

Read more blog posts about the Tastemaker trip:

Comic strip of Camper English tasting pepper mash from Alcademics

Of Mash, Marsh and Memorable Meals from Food Orleans

Avery Island, part deux: boils, bottles, bloodies & boudin from Food Orleans

Tabasco taste test from Fritos and Foie Gras

Chef Alon Shaya goes Tabasco crazy from Fritos and Foie Gras

A Visit to Avery Island Louisiana Home of Tabasco Sauce from Recipe Girl

A Trip to Avery Island Louisiana from Eat, Live, Run

Top 10 Avery Island Louisiana from What's Gaby Cooking

Disclaimer: I visited Avery Island as a guest of Tabasco

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Day 191! Vanuatu- Citrus Baked Fish in Coconut Cream - Up Next, Vatican City


After a brief world-cooking hiatus (forced upon me by life's ever-so annoying demands, like work), I'm back and jumping right into the first of the "V" countries with the beautiful South Pacific Island, Vanuatu. After this, I'll only have 6 countries left to go which fills me with a combination of excitement over continued possibilities and more than a little sadness over the impending end of this wonderful journey. But until then, onward with this island stop and citrus baked fish.

Map Courtesy of Lonely Planet
Located in the South Pacific, Vanuatu is an island nation, "Y" shaped archipelago of 83 islands. The islands share their maritime borders with Australia, Fiji, New Caledonia and the Solomon Islands. Mostly mountainous and volcanic, the climate is tropical and subtropical. The majority of the population are Vanuatu, with the remainder being Pacific Islanders and Asian. The primary source of income on the island is local aggriculture, fishing and forestry. First sited by European explorers, the island has probably existed for some 4,000 years, with pottery fragments dating back to 1300-1100 BC as evidence of human existence. With the discovery of sandalwood on the island, the islanders were exploited as laborers for many years. In 1906, French and British missionaries and settlers hoped to establish cotton plantations, but later switched to cocoa and coffee production. Finally, after years of dual governance by the French and British, the country established independence in 1980.

Vanuatu cuisine is typical of Pacific Island cooking, with fish, root vegetables, fruit and vegetables being the staples. Most islanders have back yard gardens, and food is plentiful. Papaya, pineapples, mangoes, plantains, sweet potatoes, taro, yams and coconut are all enjoyed. Kava, a non-alcoholic drink with mild sedative properties is the national drink and is mostly used at night due to its relaxing effects. I think I need some of that.

I used Branzino - aka Mediterranean Sea Bass
Layer orange and lemon slices on top
Pour some coconut milk around the little darling and season with salt and pepper
Wrap up in several layers of banana leaves so you have little packets - secure with kitchen twine
Serve with a salad, plantains or rice - the fish is so tender, the meat falls off the bones

Citrus Baked Fish in Coconut Cream (Recipe Adapted from Healthy Life)

2 medium whole fish  (I used Branzino, weighing about 2lbs. total)
½ tbsp. ground black pepper
1 lemon
1 orange
½ c. light coconut milk
Salt to taste
Banana leaves

Wash and clean fish and place on a softened banana leaf. Thinly slice the lemon and orange and alternate the slices on top of the fish. Sprinkle pepper and pour coconut cream around the fish. Wrap the fish well in about 3 layers of softened banana leaves and bake in a moderate oven for about 40 minutes or in an earth oven for about 1 hour.


© 2010-2012, What's Cooking in Your World? Sarah Commerford/All Rights Reserved

Homemade Cheez-Its


After seeing these on Dara’s blog, Gen Y Foodie, I was smitten.  We needed to make them.  But instead of being all responsible and healthy with the olive oil and flax seeds, I went with good old butter.  We love butter.  We love Julia Child’s "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" for that reason.  So back to the cheez-its – It is exciting for some reason to make a homemade version of packaged food item.  Especially in this case, the buttery, cheesy crackers emerging fresh from the oven makes for such a lovely snack.  Now Seth likes to destroy this delicate harmony of the home-baked cheddar cracker by actually dipping them in this ridiculous store bought cheese dip.  If you notice, it isn’t even packaged in a jar.  It is a tin can that you open like a can of cat food.  Super classy.  He swears by it.  He claims that because the cheez-its taste so strongly like cheese, it helps to dip them into something that doesn’t taste anything like cheese… like pre-packaged cheese dip… While this is the dip he grew up with, and sometimes you just can’t fight nostalgia, I think we’d both agree that these crackers taste great with almost any dip.

Ingredients
1 cup whole wheat flour
8 ounces extra sharp cheddar cheese, coarsely grated
½ teaspoon kosher salt, plus more for sprinkling on top
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
¼ teaspoon paprika
¼ teaspoon powdered mustard
¼ teaspoon onion powder
4 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into tiny pieces
6 – 8 tablespoons ice water

Instructions
In a small bowl, mix together ½ teaspoon kosher salt, pepper, paprika, powdered mustard, and onion powder.  In a medium bowl, mix together flour, cheddar, and the seasoning mix.  Add the pieces of butter and using your fingers work the butter with the flour mixture until it resembles coarse crumble.  Add 6 tablespoons ice water, adding more if needed for the dough to come together.  You might want to use your hands to work the dough into a large ball.  Refrigerate for 1 hour.  Heat oven to 350.  I like to roll the dough out on a Silpat or parchment paper cut to fit a baking sheet to get the right size thickness (about 1/8 inch), and then transfer the Silpat or parchment to a baking sheet. If you aren’t using these, the dough should be rolled out to roughly fit a baking sheet.  Use a pizza cutter or fluted pastry wheel (gives that nice deckled edge) to cut the dough into squares.  It helps to use a ruler to evenly space out the cuts.  Use a chopstick to make the classic hole in the center that store-bought cheez-its have.  Sprinkle more kosher salt on top then bake for about 20 minutes.  You want the crackers to be crisp, but not burnt; you may wish to remove the outer couple rows, then put the pan back in and finish the inner rows.  Once they are done, use the same pizza cutter or fluted pastry wheel (lined up with your previous cuts) to separate the crackers fully.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Glazed Chocolate Chip Scones with Rosemary and Cara Cara Orange


Scones make me happy.  I’m not sure why.  Or maybe I do know why, but it actually doesn’t make sense.  Maybe it is because they are associated with tea; which, again, is kind of strange because I drink more coffee.  I drink tea when I’m sick or on random chilly nights.  But tea also makes me think of growing up.  In both my mom’s house and my gram’s house, tea facilitated talking.  There was nothing that couldn’t be made all better with a talk, a kitchen table, and a pot of tea (usually accompanied by some sweet treat).  So, despite the associations of tea with being sick, tea makes me happy.  And therefore, scones make me happy.  Scones are also just these super fun biscuits that you can stuff with all sorts of flavors.  Here, we went with rosemary, fresh Cara Cara orange, and semisweet chocolate chips.  So go ahead and bake up a few of these, pour yourself a warm cup of tea, pull up a seat at the kitchen table, and be happy.

Ingredients
For the scones:
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
3 tablespoons sugar
pinch of kosher salt
½ teaspoon orange zest from a Cara Cara orange
1 tablespoon minced fresh rosemary
5 tablespoons butter, cut into tiny pieces
1 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons fresh juice from a Cara Cara orange
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips

For the glaze:
1 cup powdered sugar
3 tablespoons orange juice
1 tablespoon milk

Instructions
Heat oven to 375.  In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, sugar, salt, orange zest, and rosemary together.  Using your fingers or a pastry blender, cut the butter into the flour mixture.  Work the butter into it until the mixture looks like coarse crumble.  Stir in cream and orange juice until dough forms.  Fold in the chocolate chips.  Divide dough into equal size pieces (I got 8 large scones), and drop onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper or a Silpat.  Or you can be fancier and roll the dough into a 1-inch thick circle and cut the dough like a pizza.  Bake for 15 minutes, or until golden brown.  In a small bowl, mix together powdered sugar, orange juice, and milk.  Let the scones cool for just a bit, then brush on orange glaze.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Some of my Favorite People (and things)




Diane and Brian Campbell of The Candy Store

I feel like I was one of the first to discover The Candy Store because it's just a few blocks from my home. In fact I wrote a review of it almost five years ago, just months after it opened. And oh my, how far it's come since then! The store is compact, but carefully curated by the delightfully enthusiastic Diane and her husband Brian, a passionate burgeoning candy maker. Every time I visit the store there is something new and special to try from unusual Swedish candies to deluxe and nearly impossible to find chocolate bars made by a pastry chef. And that's in addition to the classics like wine gums, old fashioned marshmallow ropes, candy buttons, and more varieties of sours, licorice and gummies than you've ever imagined. Most recent accolades come from Target who chose their store as one of only five in the US for their store-within-a-store concept launching in May. Candy is one of the last great affordable luxuries, so visit their store on Russian Hill or this charming video featuring Diane, Brian and their store.

Daphne Mazarakis of Better Whey of Life Greek yogurt

Remember when Greek yogurt became all the rage? I did a review of all the ones I could find a little over three years ago. Since then, even more Greek yogurt brands have entered the market, but one in particular caught my attention. It was developed by Daphne Mazarakis, a Greek American, who used to work for Kraft but was looking for "a better way". Her yogurt has some real advantages versus most other brands. It is made from whey and has more protein, more calcium, more fiber, and is lower in sugar. But never mind all that, its most amazing benefit is how insanely creamy it is. The yogurt is low fat (only 1.5% fat) and yet tastes as creamy or creamier than other low fat varieties. There is no chalkiness and it's not too sour. I hope it will be more widely available soon, and in larger quantities. Right now you can find it in individual 6 ounce cups in just a few states.

Betty Teller of Betty's Amuse Bouche

I met Betty a few years ago at the International Association of Culinary Professionals (IACP) conference in Chicago which is kind of funny since she lives not so far away, in Napa. Since then I've bumped into her in the Bay Area, but I feel like I am in touch with her on a more regular basis since I subscribe to her newsletter which is her column from the Napa Valley Register. Betty is a hoot; she's funny, chatty, insightful and a good cook. Her column/newsletter gives you a peek into whatever she is up to and her unique take on life up in Napa. Check out her columns online, if you enjoy them as much as I do, you'll want to subscribe to her newsletter so you can catch them all.


Cheryl Sternman Rule of Five Second Rule

I hate awards, I really do. But I am very happy for my colleague Cheryl Sternman Rule. For the past two years, Cheryl and Dianne Jacob and I have shared the stage at the Book Passage Travel Writers, Food Writers & Photography conference. Cheryl won the 2012 IACP award for best blog. She also has a new book out called Ripe all about the vibrant colors and flavors of fresh fruits and vegetables that I can't wait to check out. If you don't know her blog, do scurry on over to 5 Second Rule. She will also be at Omnivore Books on April 26th.

Michael Procopio of Food for the Thoughtless

Another pal of mine is Michael Procopio. We blogged at KQED's Bay Area Bites for years before I moved on to greener pastures. He has a truly unique voice that it seems the world is just now discovering--his writing is in the Best Food Writing of 2011 and he was recently featured in Bill Daley's article in the Chicago Tribune Dishing About Food Writing (one of seven writers your should know). His blog posts and recipes are always thoughtful, whether serious or silly and he is the only writer I know whose recipes are inspired by everything from the sinking of the Titanic to the candidacy of Rick Santorum. For a dose of dry wit, head over to his blog.


Sunday, April 22, 2012

Bacon Wrapped Egg Cups with Horseradish and Cheddar


I’m a big fan of the muffin pan.  It makes individual-sized cakes.  And individual-sized quick breads.  Individual-sized fun for everyone! And don’t even get me started on the virtues of the mini muffin pan.  There is something less intimidating about the muffin pan when compared to a regular cake pan or a loaf pan, etc., like you aren’t putting all your eggs in one basket, so to speak.  You have multiple opportunities, twelve to be exact, for obtaining success, which is actually not true at all.  I mean, the same batter goes in each little cup. But I like to pretend it’s true, and that’s what matters.  Because we are such fans, we wanted to use the muffin pan for something a little out of the ordinary, something savory, and something breakfasty (I’m standing by this as a word). So, here are our spicy bacon wrapped egg cups with horseradish and cheddar.

Ingredients
9 eggs
¼ cup milk
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/8 teaspoon paprika
¾ teaspoon prepared horseradish
3 scallions, chopped
1/3 cup grated extra sharp Cheddar cheese + 1 tablespoon, divided
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan, divided
1 jalapeno, chopped (optional)
12 pieces bacon

Instructions
Heat oven to 375.  Grease a muffin tin.  In a bowl, whisk eggs and milk. Then stir in pepper, paprika, horseradish, scallions, 1/3 cup Cheddar cheese, and 1 tablespoon Parmesan.  Add in jalapeno if using as well.  Line the outer wall of the muffin cups in the tin with bacon.  You may have to trim the bacon slices to fit.  Then pour in about ¼ cup of the egg mixture in each cup.  Sprinkle each with the remaining cheddar and parmesan.  Bake for 20-25 minutes, until the tops are browned, the bacon is crispy, and eggs are cooked through. 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Roasted Cauliflower Dippers with Smoked Paprika Aioli


I find cauliflower to be a rather deceptive and mendacious vegetable.  Why? A head of cauliflower is a pleasing sight to behold.  All those pretty white florets all bunched together in a nest of green leaves – it looks like a pretty flower! Even the word floret is pleasing, evoking images of tiny flowers. And once this vegetable catches your eye, it is hard to resist.  And then you bring it home and put it in the fridge until you need a veggie side dish.  And then that day comes when you actually need that veggie side dish…and you feel disappointed.  You now have to actually eat the cauliflower, not just look at it.  Cauliflower isn’t horrible, just blandly cabbage-y.  And I seem to fall for this ALL the time.  Finally, I said, how can I make this taste as pleasing to my taste buds as it looks?  So I gave them a vibrant coating of seasonings like smoked paprika, cumin, and coriander, roasted them up, and turned them into dippers. What better dip than a nice from-scratch smoked paprika aioli?  Dipping really does make everything better.

Ingredients 
Spice Mix:
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Cauliflower:
1 small head cauliflower, cut into florets
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 teaspoons lemon juice, divided
1 ½ teaspoon seasoning mix
¼ teaspoon garlic powder

Aioli:
2 egg yolks
1 cup vegetable oil
2 ½ teaspoons seasoning mix
1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
3 cloves garlic, minced
¼ teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 ½ teaspoons lime juice
¼ teaspoon salt

Ingredients
In a small bowl, mix cumin, coriander, smoked paprika, sea salt, and black pepper.  Set aside.

Heat oven to 400 degrees.  In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, 1 teaspoon lemon juice, 1 ½ teaspoons seasoning mix, and garlic powder.  Place florets in large bowl.  Drizzle oil mixture over the cauliflower and toss with tongs.  Place on baking sheet.  Roast for 25-30 minutes. Drizzle remaining lemon juice over the cooked florets.

I like to make mayonnaise by hand, though I know others find the food processor easier to use for this.  I place the egg yolks in a small bowl.  I place a cup of oil next to me and get out a tablespoon.  Whisk the egg yolks to break them up.  Add a tablespoon of oil.  Whisk that into the egg yolks so the yolks absorb it.  Then repeat.  And repeat.  Just be patient.  It will probably take about 10 minutes to get through all the oil.  Then stir in the seasoning mix, white wine vinegar, garlic, mustard, lime juice, and salt, and you are good to go.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Day 190.5 Rosemary Shortbread


This easy Rosemary Shortbread recipe is undoubtedly my favorite cookie of all time. It comes from Joanne Chang's delectable baking book, Flour, which is filled with one amazing cake, cookie, bar and pastry recipe after another. Golden and tender, these simple cookies are not too sweet and veritably melt in your mouth. They have just the right amount of fresh rosemary, which lends them a sublimely delicate, savory flavor and fragrance - a more elegant cookie does not exist. I'm that sure.

I adapted the recipe by substituting sea salt for kosher salt, because I'm a salt freak, (an inherited trait shared by my brother and sister as well - thanks, Mom!). By using larger grain salt, you get little random crunchy bursts of saltiness throughout the cookie - which makes my tongue ever so happy. You can cut them in any shape you like with a good sharp knife, but I used a heart-shaped cookie cutter because I made these cookies-of-love for the men-folk in my house. Enjoy!

Just 8 ingredients needed
 Add egg yolk to creamed butter and sugar, along with rosemary
 Add sea salt - if you don't want that much crunchiness, substitute kosher salt 
 Make and 8-inch disk, refrigerate for 30 minutes until firm, but not hard
 Roll out cookies on floured surface - cut with a knife or cookie cutter of your choice
 Cool on the cookie sheet for 15 minutes, then transfer to wire rack until completely cooled 
 Serve - will keep for up to 4 days in an air-tight container

Rosemary Short Bread (Recipe adapted from Joanne Chang's Flour cookbook)

1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
1 egg yolk
1 tsp. finely chopped fresh rosemary
1-1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
3/4 tsp. sea salt
1/2 tsp. baking powder

Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream the butter on medium speed until light and fluffy (about 2 minutes). Add the sugar and beat on medium speed for 3-4 minutes until light and fluffy, scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl occasionally.

In a small bowl, sift together the flour, cornstarch, salt and baking powder. On low speed, slowly add the dry ingredients to the butter-sugar mixture, and mix just until flour is incorporated and dough is evenly mixed.

Scrape dough onto a piece of plastic wrap, then wrap up and press down to form an 8-inch wide, 1" thick disk. Refrigerate about 20 minutes.

On a floured board (the dough is sticky!), roll out to a 12x10-inch rectangle. Use a sharp knife or cookie cutters to cut shapes, then arrange on an ungreased or parchment paper-lined cookie sheet about 2-inches apart.

Bake on center rack in 325F oven for 15-18 minutes, or until gold brown. Let cool on the baking sheet on a wire rack for 15 minutes (which lets them brown up a tad more without over-baking), then transfer to wire rack and cool completely.

P.S. This dough freezes well. Cookies can be stored in airtight container for up to 4 days.

© 2010-2011, What's Cooking in Your World? Sarah Commerford/All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Cooking from another Culture


When it comes to cooking the food from another culture, the ingredients and techniques can be unfamiliar. Going to a foreign country and taking a cooking class is great, but not a readily accessible opportunity for most. Fortunately there are local cooking classes and cooking kits.

Recently launched Global Grub offers cooking kits with extremely well written instructions that will help you succeed in making things like sushi, or jerk chicken with coconut rice and beans. I used the tamales kit and was very impressed with the quality of the ingredients, the clear instructions and the wonderful results. My dad said the tamales were the best he'd ever eaten!

Kits include the dry and hard to find ingredients, and range in price from $13.99 up to $19.99 and for every kit purchased, Global Grub donates a meal to someone in need through their local food bank. Global Grub offers tutorial videos on their site, and the instructions with each kit are easily folded into a stand for easy reference as you cook.

I'm a big fan of La Cocina. I've volunteered with them, written about them and took a wonderful mole class at their Mission location. Now they are holding even more classes that you can take from cooks who are part of their culinary business incubator program. Classes are an "interactive cooking party" and also include a meal. The $65 class fee supports the non-profit programs at La Cocina.

Though I don't have any direct experience to report, I'm intrigued by Culture Kitchen. They are combining classes with home cooks, videos and cooking kits to get you up to speed cooking things like pad thai, masala chai and eggplant with garlic and mint. Each class costs $60 and includes a full meal, locations vary, kits are $34.99.

Note: I paid for the class I took at La Cocina, the tamales kit from Global Grub was a sample.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Sliders with Jicama Slaw


As I sat in the dentist’s chair during a cleaning, I started to daydream.  I mean, what else can you really do while you sit in the chair?  Of course, I started thinking about food.  Then, I started thinking more specifically about jicama… which is strange.  Why is that strange?  Because I had never had it.  I wouldn’t even have been able to tell you what it looked like.  Now that I think about, how can you even daydream about something you’ve never had?  Maybe it wasn’t daydreaming?  Maybe I was just thinking about it, but I couldn’t stop thinking about it.  I had it in my head it was crunchy.  I don’t know why I thought that, but alas, that is what I thought I knew about jicama.  And indeed, I was actually right about that!  So I thought, hmm, maybe it would be cool in a coleslaw kind of thing.  But then, I don’t really want to eat just coleslaw.  So what could go with it?  After I got home, the question was still burning, so I asked Seth.  He suggested pulled pork.  Bingo!  Plus, it was an opportunity to give some love to a much neglected piece of equipment in our kitchen, the slow cooker.  So, thanks to a trip to the dentist, here are some juicy and tender pulled pork sliders with red cabbage, carrot, and jicama slaw dressed in a cider and walnut oil vinaigrette.  I wonder what the dentist would think about all this…

Ingredients
For the pulled pork:
3-4 pound pork shoulder, bone in
½ teaspoon kosher salt
½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 shallot, chopped
1 jalapeno, minced
20 ounce container ketchup
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
1 teaspoon maple syrup
1 teaspoon brown sugar
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon liquid smoke
1 bottle beer (we used Fat Tire amber ale)
King's Hawaiian sweet rolls
Frank's Red Hot Sauce (optional)

For the slaw:
2 cups julienned red cabbage
1 cup julienned carrot
2 cups julienned jicama
2 teaspoons walnut oil
½ teaspoon apple cider vinegar
¼ teaspoon salt
1 ½ teaspoon lime juice
2 tablespoons sour cream

Instructions
Sprinkle salt and pepper on the pork shoulder then place in crock pot.  In a medium pot over medium heat, melt the butter.  Add the garlic, shallots, and jalapeno and sauté until soft (about 3 minutes).  Stir in ketchup, vinegar, maple syrup, brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, and liquid smoke.  Simmer for 3 minutes, until the sugar has dissolved.  Stir in the beer, and then pour the entire mixture over the pork shoulder in the crockpot.  Turn on high and cook for 6.5 hours, or until the meat is falling off the bone.

Place the cabbage, carrot, and jicama in a large bowl.  In a small bowl, stir walnut oil, apple cider vinegar, salt, lime juice, and sour cream.  Pour the walnut oil mixture over the vegetables and toss to coat.  Refrigerate until serving time.

To assemble, cut King's Hawaiian sweet rolls in half, and stack with pulled pork, hot sauce, and jicama slaw.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Day 190! Uzbekistan - Chicken Osh/Plov - Up Next, Vanuatu


Here's a simple, satisfying family-friendly dish that's got lots of flavor and a nice little quick, thanks to the addition of crushed red pepper. The original recipe called for lamb, but as I was short on both time and cash, I opted to use boneless chicken thighs, which are a perfectly acceptable substitution for plov. The closest I can get to comparing this dish to American food is rice pilaf, although the cooking method for this traditional meal is quite unique and fun to make. Enjoy!

Map Courtesy of Lonely Planet
Located in Central Asia, Uzbekistan is the only country in that part of the world that is doubly land locked. It shares its borders with Kazakstan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan.The country was originally part of the Persian Samanid and the Timurid empire, the land was conquered in the 16th century by Uzbek nomads who spoke Eastern Turkic. Later, Uzbekistan was part of of the Soviet Union, until it gained its independence in 1991. Today, most of the population belong to the Uzbek ethnic group and speak Uzbek. Industry in this country is based on the production and mining of cotton, gold, uranium, potasium and natural gas. Although the country has made significant economic strides, many of its political and human rights policies (particulary as they related to women and reproductive rights) continue to be of concern in the larger global community.

Much Uzbek cooking has its roots in nomadic traditions. Local aggriculture, farming, breads, noodles and mutton round out the country's cuisine. Palov, Osh or Plov is largely considered the most widely eaten meal enjoyed in Uzbekistan, being eaten for breakfast, at family gatherings and for cermonies and celebrations. In addition, many soups, stews, noodle-based dishes and kebabs are eaten as well. Green tea is the most popular national drink.

Basmati rice is rinsed then soaked for 30 minutes
 Seasoning and Spices: Cumin, coriander, crushed red pepper, sea salt, black pepper and garlic 
 Thinly sliced onions and carrots
 Brown onions, add garlic, chicken and carrots. Add water, then make a well and add rice.
 Plov!


Chicken Osh/Plov (Recipe Adapted from food.com)
2 cups Basmati rice
1-1/2 pounds chicken, cut into cubes
6 tablespoons vegetable oil
3 medium onions
4 carrots
4 garlic cloves
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon coriander
1 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon salt

Directions:

Zirvak - First Step
1. Rinse rice, then soak for 30 minutes
2. Cut chicken into cubes.
3. Slice the onions thinly and cut the carrots into strips. You should about the same amount of carrots, onions, and chicken.
4.Heat a large cast-iron or metal wok with the oil.
5. Fry the onion until golden brown.
6.Add chopped garlic and lightly brown. You can alternatively put the whole cloves into the rice when you cook the rice.
7.Add chicken and fry until cubes are lightly browned.
8.Add carrots, salt, pepper, all spices (adjust to your taste), and 2 cups of water. Turn down the fire, mix well, and cover for 5 min to allow carrots to soften.

Second Step
9.Push the ingredients to the outer parts of your cooking wok/pot creating a large hole in the centre which will be filled with liquid.
10.Carefully add your rice to the centre of the pot. Do not mix it with the rest of the ingredients. Try to fit most of it in the centre "hole".
11.Add another 1.5 cups of water, cover the pot and allow to simmer until the rice is cooked and water has been dried up. This will take approximately 30 minute.
12.Stir the entire mixture well and serve on a hearty plate or bowl. Top with spring onions. It goes well with a side-serving of salad, tomatoes, and bread. Naan or other type of flat bread would be best.


© 2010-2011, What's Cooking in Your World? Sarah Commerford/All Rights Reserved

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Nutella Fudge Candy


If I were handing out awards to the contents of our pantry, sweetened condensed milk would definitely get an MVP.  Hmm...I’m loving this idea, actually. Seth, Max and I could get all dolled up, head to the kitchen with stacks of envelopes, and announce winners for awards, like the people's choice award for favorite vegetable, or most improved in pasta... Anyway, sweetened condensed milk always comes through.  You can turn it into dulce de leche (and put it on anything and everything – ice cream, cookies, these rice krispies treats). It can make an awesome pumpkin pie filling, and it makes super easy candies.  Combining it with cocoa powder and Nutella (Nutella would totally be in the running for an award as well – best in spreads/condiments perhaps) makes for some fun and chocolaty goodness.  Yay for sweetened condensed milk!

Ingredients 
3 tablespoons cocoa powder
3 tablespoons Nutella
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 can sweetened condensed milk
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
bowl of chocolate sprinkles

Instructions
Combine cocoa powder, Nutella, butter, salt and condensed milk in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Cook, stirring continuously, until mixture becomes super thick and pulls away from the sides of the pan, about 10-15 minutes. Remove from heat and let rest until cool enough to handle. Spray some cooking spray on hands and form into small balls. Roll the balls in the bowl of chocolate sprinkles.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Vegetable Fried Wontons


Since making our pork flower dumplings a couple weeks ago, those leftover wonton wrappers have just been calling out to us. “Please use me, for the love of god please use me!” could be heard every time we opened the refrigerator door.  These exclamations probably rang so clear because there they were, right there on the top shelf on the side of the fridge door.  Not hidden way in the back or in one of the drawers or lost under a pile of stuff.  Right there on the side of the door.  So, being that the refrigerator door is opened multiple times a day, we caved.  This time, we went veggie.  We minced up some sturdy vegetables like jicama, carrot, and celery, gave them a soak in a savory sauce, and then deep fried them to get a crunchy golden exterior.  The really neat thing is that they are more flavorful than almost any meat dumpling I’ve had!  Some cinnamon sprinkled on top adds a nice final touch and helps round out the sweet, savory inside with a bit of fragrant spice on the outside. 

Ingredients 
1 scallion, minced
¼ cup minced jicama
¼ cup minced carrot
¼ cup minced celery
2 teaspoons minced ginger
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 teaspoon oyster sauce
½ teaspoon honey
1 teaspoon rice wine
2 tablespoons chicken broth
16-20 wonton wrappers
canola oil, for frying
pinch of cinnamon
sweet and sour sauce, for serving

Instructions
Place the scallions, jicama, carrot, celery, ginger, and garlic in a medium-sized bowl.  In a small bowl, whisk soy sauce, oyster sauce, honey, rice wine, and chicken broth.  Pour the liquids over the vegetables.  Let the mixture sit for at least 30 minutes.  Take a wonton wrapper and place in the palm of your hand.  Place ½ tablespoon of the mixture in the middle.  Dab water around two adjacent sides of the wrapper, then bring up the other two sides of the wrapper to form a triangle.  Place canola oil in small pot and heat to 325-350 degrees.  Fry 4-5 wontons at a time until golden brown, about 5-8 minutes.  Place on paper towels and then fry another batch.  Sprinkle cinnamon on the wontons, and then serve with sweet and sour sauce.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Day 189.5 Braised Squirrel Aurora


Squirrel. Squirrel?!! Those little b*st*rds that chewed through the fascia board on our 140 year old house, got in the walls and partied for a week straight before we caught and "relocated" them? Yes, squirrel. And why not?

American Red Squirrel -
Photo Courtesy of Animal Galleries
Now, I can fish (although I've been known to cast out and catch my husband's hat - or shirt - or arm). And, nothing - I mean, nothing in the wild kingdom scares or grosses me out. Add to that, my long-held belief that overall, we as a nation are way too removed from the source of what eat - meat, vegetable or tofu.  Enter, Alex and his family - friends, avid hunters and adventurous eaters. After telling Alex that I'd been thinking about learning how to hunt small game, he mentioned that he just happened to be heading north, and offered to bring back squirrel. Which he did; Dressed, skinned and on ice. I asked Alex to tell me a little about himself, and this is what he sent me. It's so beautifully written that I've included his "essay" as is - no editing.

These squirrels were shot in Gilmanton NH. It's just south of Laconia and Belmont, about 5 miles south of the semi popular Gunstock Ski area. (It's also the town that the novel "Peyton Place" was written largely about. The book’s author Grace Metalious is still buried there.) There are forests there now, but 150 years ago, it was all clear farmland. They are in fact American red squirrels. These squirrels are widely distributed throughout North America. They survive mainly on pinecone seeds, and they are more common in the Northeast these days as pine forests have sprung up in areas that used to be hardwood forests. Their calls are quite distinctive. They chirp like birds and chatter at intruders.

To hunt them I used a Ruger 10/22 semi auto rifle, using 22 LR ammo. 22 rimfire is probably the most popular round used on small game, and nearly everyone learns how to shoot with it. When it comes to hitting the squirrels, it depended on where I found them and what they were doing. I found one in an area thick with pine, and it was only 5 yards away. Sometimes when alarmed they hold up against a tree and don’t move in an effort to remain invisible. If you see them then they are easy to hit. When you see them up high in the trees though, they tend to race from branch to branch and they are nearly impossible to hit.
Alex, on the move

In order to dress them, I first slit the bellies open up to the breast taking care not to puncture the intestines. The idea is to cool the meat as quickly as possible in order to avoid spoilage of the meat. Then I pulled out the internal organs. This procedure is standard for all game, with variations given to different animal types. (For instance, remove the feathers first when dealing with birds.) I then removed the heads and tails. Using the area near the open neck, I pinched the skin layer and peeled it back. From there I peeled back the skin and pulled it off entirely. Note that I am still somewhat of a self taught amateur, so my technique is not perfect. This is the first time I have dressed squirrels and I have yet to eat them.

I have been hunting of a sort all my life and I suppose I was no more “taught” how to hunt then I was “taught” to speak and walk. I used to accompany my uncle on small game and deer hunts starting at the age of three. At about eight years old my father and uncle taught me to shoot and I started hunting small game, mostly small rodents (including squirrels) in order to keep them out of my uncle’s garden. They filled me in on the basics. Shoot a deer here, you can find them in areas like this, don’t move a muscle when stand hunting, walk slow and the like. I taught myself the rest. I shot my first large animal, a turkey at age 17 and my first deer this fall.

Turkey is Alex's favorite thing to hunt
Far and away my favorite thing to hunt is wild turkeys in the spring. Most hunters would say deer, but deer hunting is a lot of sitting and waiting, and a lot of seeing nothing, even in a good year. Turkey hunting by comparison is more active. You call the male birds in using mating calls, and you hear them make their famous “gobble” as they talk back to you. You feel a lot more involved with the animal, which in my mind makes it all the more special. Oddly enough though, my favorite tool is my deer rifle, a bolt action Sauer 200 in 308 Winchester, with a Schmidt and Bender scope. It was a 16th birthday gift from my uncle, and I lovingly call it “Vera.”

I am one of those guys that see all animals as equal, equal to me and to other animals. I see no difference between a trout and a turkey, or a dung beetle and a deer. Therefore the things I will not hunt comprise a very basic list. I will not hunt anything protected by law, and that includes the two things that I would not hunt if otherwise. Those two things are bats and owls. Owls are my steadfast hunting buddies, as there is always one around when I’m out in the woods, and I find bats fascinating. Not that I’m not fascinated by the animals I do hunt, but bats are special to me for some reason. I can’t fully explain it.

If there was one final thing to say it would be this. There are a lot of folks out there who don’t exactly take kindly to what it is I do. They seem to think I “hate” wildlife. Nothing could be further from the truth. I love wildlife. I’d do anything to preserve it. I just express that love in a different way. The way I see it, I’m just doing what I see as a natural human activity, something we have done for millions of years. By doing it this way, I yearn for a stronger connection to wild. I don’t just observe nature. I’m a working part of nature.

The brine: cracked pepper, salt, thyme, bay leaves and water
Combine in a sauce pan, cover, bring to a boil and cool to room temperature
 Add meat, cover and refrigerate for 6-8 (but no more or the meat becomes uber salty)
Cutting a squirrel to serving size pieces is similar to cutting up a rabbit or chicken - only tiny
Toasted almonds and lots of garlic are chopped and added to the sauce later on
 Green Spanish olives add a rice, piquant flavor to the sauce
 Slice a 1/2 a whole onion; grate the other half for the sauce (I forgot the pix of of the hot pepper
 1 cup of white wine, 1/2 cup of chicken broth
 I used baby potatoes
Dredge squirrel in flour and brown in olive oil
Bring to a boil, then pop in the oven
 Behold - Braised Squirrel Aurora

To view the recipe and technique in its entirety, please Hank Shaw's most excellent website, Hunter Angler Gardner Cook,   Honest Food 



© 2010-2011, What's Cooking in Your World? Sarah Commerford/All Rights Reserved