Chef Dina
Now available for Bay Area full service catering in conjunction with "A Fork Full of Earth" organic catering, intimate dinner parties and weekly meal preparation.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Key Lime Pie
At the request of one of our guests tonight....Key lime pie, ladies and gentlemen.
I know this is good key lime pie, probably the best you'll ever have. I know this because I used to work in the Florida Keys and ate many a key lime pie in my day. I actually never liked it much, until I met this recipe. Honestly, I think sweetened condensed milk is probably one of the more disgusting, yet unique products on the market. The main reason I like it, despite it's mysteriously disgusting nature, is because you can make caramel out of it....right in it's own can (see instructions below). Of course, I also like it for my Key lime pie.
Crust (NO, the store bought graham crust in the disposable tin is NOT an acceptable substitute)
- 3/4 pound graham crackers (about half the box- 1 cello-wrapped pkg.
- 4 Tbsp. granulated sugar
- 2 sticks melted butter
- 1/4 tsp. sea salt
I find this is enough for 2 pie crusts, unless you have a deeper pan and like thick crust. Otherwise, divide it in half and freeze it for later. Process crackers in a food processor. Add sugar and drizzle in butter while pulsing the motor (or just mix it in). Press into a greased 9" pie pan and bake at 350 for 10 minutes.
Filling
- 4 egg yolks
- 1 can (14 ounces) condensed milk
- 2/3 cup fresh Key lime juice (you can use Nellie and Joe's in a pinch, or regular lime juice)
- 1 lime , grated zest
Make this while the crust rests. Whip the egg whites and lime zest until soft to medium peaks form. Beat in the condensed milk and lime juice, beat for 2 minutes or so. Pour into pie crust and bake at 350 for 15 minutes (I usually have a little filling left over that doesn't fit into the crust). Take out and let cool completely to room temperature and chill. Top with fresh whip cream (and add lime zest to it...).
***FUN FACT***
Yes, you can making caramel sauce from sweetened condensed milk! Its really easy and really good. I learned this from an English sailor who was begging me to make Banoffee Pie (a British banana cream pie on steroids) for the crew. All you do is completely submerge the tins of milk in water and boil for 2 hours. Be sure to keep them completely submerged or you will be cleaning toffee sauce out of your hair- I know this from experience. You can do this to several tins at once, and they will keep in the pantry for months, and you will always have a toffee sauce on hand for an easy dessert (thanks, Nigella Lawson, for that tip!).
Monday, April 2, 2012
Breakfast of champions
Want a super easy breakfast that will last you (well, some of you...I'm hungry two hours later no matter what) all morning?
1 egg
1 egg white
cooked beans of your choice, mine were dried *favas
chopped herbs (I used some *wild fennel fronds and garlic chives)
salt and pepper to taste
a swipe of grease of your choice for the *pan
Beat the egg. Heat the pan med-lo. Swipe the grease across the bottom. Pour the egg in the pan in one thin layer. as it cooks over med-low heat, lift up the edges of the egg and tilt the pan so the uncooked egg on the top slides underneath and it cooks in one thin sheet. throw a lid on for a second to cook the top a bit more. scoop some cooked beans in the middle and fold up the edges of the egg around it. Sprinkle chopped fresh herbs. Serve with a scoop of rice (eggs and rice really fill me up for a while, so I try to keep some cooked rice in the frig for breakfast).
Learn something new today (maybe):
*favas - most of you are probably familiar with fresh fava beans here in northern CA. Well, they also come dried (i get them at the arab markets) and soak and cook them myself to make foul madammas, one component of my favorite breakfast- a big traditional arab spread. See the link for more info.
*wild fennel- it grows EVERYWHERE around here. trust me, its probably in your back yard or at least on your way to work. Look for it. Wild fennel, you can only use the fronds, there is no bulb. The fronds, however, are much more flavorful than the kind you get in the store or at the farmers market with the big bulb attached- all the flavor there is in the bulb, but the fronds are still good too.
I did see it for sale at the farmers market for $8/lb and had to laugh- don't be the butt of my jokes!!
*the pan- my favorite egg pan is my "Scan pan". Got it at Sur la Table, fairly pricey but it's. worth it. Nothing sticks to it, you hardly have to grease it, and you can use metal on it. Check it out.
Beat the egg. Heat the pan med-lo. Swipe the grease across the bottom. Pour the egg in the pan in one thin layer. as it cooks over med-low heat, lift up the edges of the egg and tilt the pan so the uncooked egg on the top slides underneath and it cooks in one thin sheet. throw a lid on for a second to cook the top a bit more. scoop some cooked beans in the middle and fold up the edges of the egg around it. Sprinkle chopped fresh herbs. Serve with a scoop of rice (eggs and rice really fill me up for a while, so I try to keep some cooked rice in the frig for breakfast).
Learn something new today (maybe):
*favas - most of you are probably familiar with fresh fava beans here in northern CA. Well, they also come dried (i get them at the arab markets) and soak and cook them myself to make foul madammas, one component of my favorite breakfast- a big traditional arab spread. See the link for more info.
*wild fennel- it grows EVERYWHERE around here. trust me, its probably in your back yard or at least on your way to work. Look for it. Wild fennel, you can only use the fronds, there is no bulb. The fronds, however, are much more flavorful than the kind you get in the store or at the farmers market with the big bulb attached- all the flavor there is in the bulb, but the fronds are still good too.
I did see it for sale at the farmers market for $8/lb and had to laugh- don't be the butt of my jokes!!
*the pan- my favorite egg pan is my "Scan pan". Got it at Sur la Table, fairly pricey but it's. worth it. Nothing sticks to it, you hardly have to grease it, and you can use metal on it. Check it out.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Leek and Gruyere Tarts +
petite salad with tarragon vinaigrette
This is an old standby for a nice first course. If you plan on doing a multi-course, small plate style dinner, it is always nice to have a little salad, and the tart alongside makes it a more substantial course. You can prepare this as one dish and cut it into segments, or make individual tarts. The quantities in this recipe are not exact for doing it any one way. The recipe below gives you enough for one 9" pie pan, and the eggs enough for a quiche. I say 6 leeks, and you may have some left over depending on how you spin it or how full of leeks you want your tart. I personally like more leeks and less egg...unless I am serving this breakfast-quiche style. There are many components to this dish, but they are all very versatile and its nice to have extras of everything on hand.
You can also use puff pastry (which I often do when I am in a hurry) instead of making pastry dough and omit the egg filling altogether. Just cut the puff pastry sheets (sold in the freezer section) into squares, brush with a beaten egg, sprinkle with cheese, then layer leeks and more cheese and bake until puffed and golden.
BASIC PASTRY CRUST
courtesy of Julia Child
5 parts flour: 4 parts butter (3 parts butter:1 part shortening)
(double the recipe as long as you are going to the effort, and divide in two rounds and throw one in the freezer)
1 C flour (5oz)
3 oz cold butter
1 oz cold vegetable shortening (I like soy margrine as opposed to Crisco)
1/2 tsp salt
1/4-1/3 c ice water
Either do it by hand or with a food processor, I prefer the results using my hands, so I will describe that process.
Cut butter into very small pieces. mix it into the dry ingredients and very, very quickly, rub it in with your finger tips until it is broken down into oatmeal flake size pieces. Try not to hold any one piece of butter too long so as not to melt it. The colder the butter stays the flakier the crust. Don't overdo this because the fat and flour will be blended more thoroughly in the fraisage (final blending).
Add water slowly and blend quickly with one hand, as you rapidly gather dough together in a mass. sprinkle a little more water over any dry droplets and press dough firmly into a roughly shaped ball. It should be just held together but not sticky.
Place the dough on a floured surface and with the cool heel of your hand rapidly press the pastry down (in 2 spoonful bits) on the board and away from you in a firm quick smear of about 6 inches. With a bench scraper or spatula, gather dough into a mass and knead it very briefly into a fairly smooth round ball. Sprinkle with flour, wrap and refrigerate for at least an hour.
Roll out the dough as quickly as possible and form it into whatever vessel(s) you desire. Refrigerate (or pop it in the freezer) while the over heats up to reduce shrinkage.
LEEKS IN WHITE WINE
I love leeks this way and they are awesome when you top a scoop of goat cheese with 'em and warm it in the oven. Serve with crackers and bread. YUM
6 large leeks, cut in half length wise and rinsed clean chopped in 1" pieces
1/2 stick butter
2 T olive oil
1/2 c white wine
salt, pepper, and a pinch of nutmeg
Melt butter and olive oil over medium heat, add leeks and toss to coat. once they start going, add the wine and reduce to med-low. let cook until "melted" and liquid has evaporated.
EGG FILLING
2 whole eggs
2 egg yolks
1 1/4 c half and half
pinch of nutmeg
salt and pepper
whisk.
TARRAGON DRESSING
I love this dressing, and always keep a bottle in the fridge and we dress all our lunch time salads with it, toss it with roasted veggies (beets and tarragon are an especially good combo) or marinate chicken in it.
1 bunch tarragon
1 small shallot
1 small clove garlic
1 T dijon mustard
2 T red wine or champagne vinegar
juice from 1/2 a lemon
pinch of sugar
salt and pepper to taste
Put all ingredients in a blender and puree. Gradually add 1 CUP BLENDED OIL until emulsified. I use a combination of olive oil, canola, and grape seed. It is up to your taste buds. I tend to find using all olive oil overpowers. One thing about dressings....adjusting to taste is almost always necessary. It's hard to have a hard and fast recipe. depends on the size of your garlic and shallot, the strength of your tarragon, your oil, etc...
ASSEMBLY
Par bake pastry crust at 350 (10-20 min) it should be firm but not golden. Make sure to poke holes/use pie beans. If weighting crust with dry beans, remember to take them out 3/4 of the way through par baking and let it finish with out them otherwise it doesn't really cook very well.
Sprinkle a good cave aged gruyere that you have shredded on the bottom of the crust, fill with leeks, top with a little more cheese and fill very slowly with egg mixture. Bake until puffed and golden.
Get a nice bowl of fresh spring greens (baby mizuna, wild arugula, baby spinach, radicchio) and toss them with a little salt, a sprinkle of good olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, fresh cracked pepper and some of the dressing. Place tart on salad and a sprinkling more of grated cheese.
** Comte or the Point Reyes Toma (a bit more subtle flavor) cheeses also work well. I also like to grate some of the dry and delicious "Capricous" cheese (I get at the Marin farmer's market) that you can leave sitting on your counter top in a tupper ware for up to 6 months, nice sharp flavor, over the finished product.
petite salad with tarragon vinaigrette
This is an old standby for a nice first course. If you plan on doing a multi-course, small plate style dinner, it is always nice to have a little salad, and the tart alongside makes it a more substantial course. You can prepare this as one dish and cut it into segments, or make individual tarts. The quantities in this recipe are not exact for doing it any one way. The recipe below gives you enough for one 9" pie pan, and the eggs enough for a quiche. I say 6 leeks, and you may have some left over depending on how you spin it or how full of leeks you want your tart. I personally like more leeks and less egg...unless I am serving this breakfast-quiche style. There are many components to this dish, but they are all very versatile and its nice to have extras of everything on hand.
You can also use puff pastry (which I often do when I am in a hurry) instead of making pastry dough and omit the egg filling altogether. Just cut the puff pastry sheets (sold in the freezer section) into squares, brush with a beaten egg, sprinkle with cheese, then layer leeks and more cheese and bake until puffed and golden.
BASIC PASTRY CRUST
courtesy of Julia Child
5 parts flour: 4 parts butter (3 parts butter:1 part shortening)
(double the recipe as long as you are going to the effort, and divide in two rounds and throw one in the freezer)
1 C flour (5oz)
3 oz cold butter
1 oz cold vegetable shortening (I like soy margrine as opposed to Crisco)
1/2 tsp salt
1/4-1/3 c ice water
Either do it by hand or with a food processor, I prefer the results using my hands, so I will describe that process.
Cut butter into very small pieces. mix it into the dry ingredients and very, very quickly, rub it in with your finger tips until it is broken down into oatmeal flake size pieces. Try not to hold any one piece of butter too long so as not to melt it. The colder the butter stays the flakier the crust. Don't overdo this because the fat and flour will be blended more thoroughly in the fraisage (final blending).
Add water slowly and blend quickly with one hand, as you rapidly gather dough together in a mass. sprinkle a little more water over any dry droplets and press dough firmly into a roughly shaped ball. It should be just held together but not sticky.
Place the dough on a floured surface and with the cool heel of your hand rapidly press the pastry down (in 2 spoonful bits) on the board and away from you in a firm quick smear of about 6 inches. With a bench scraper or spatula, gather dough into a mass and knead it very briefly into a fairly smooth round ball. Sprinkle with flour, wrap and refrigerate for at least an hour.
Roll out the dough as quickly as possible and form it into whatever vessel(s) you desire. Refrigerate (or pop it in the freezer) while the over heats up to reduce shrinkage.
LEEKS IN WHITE WINE
I love leeks this way and they are awesome when you top a scoop of goat cheese with 'em and warm it in the oven. Serve with crackers and bread. YUM
6 large leeks, cut in half length wise and rinsed clean chopped in 1" pieces
1/2 stick butter
2 T olive oil
1/2 c white wine
salt, pepper, and a pinch of nutmeg
Melt butter and olive oil over medium heat, add leeks and toss to coat. once they start going, add the wine and reduce to med-low. let cook until "melted" and liquid has evaporated.
EGG FILLING
2 whole eggs
2 egg yolks
1 1/4 c half and half
pinch of nutmeg
salt and pepper
whisk.
TARRAGON DRESSING
I love this dressing, and always keep a bottle in the fridge and we dress all our lunch time salads with it, toss it with roasted veggies (beets and tarragon are an especially good combo) or marinate chicken in it.
1 bunch tarragon
1 small shallot
1 small clove garlic
1 T dijon mustard
2 T red wine or champagne vinegar
juice from 1/2 a lemon
pinch of sugar
salt and pepper to taste
Put all ingredients in a blender and puree. Gradually add 1 CUP BLENDED OIL until emulsified. I use a combination of olive oil, canola, and grape seed. It is up to your taste buds. I tend to find using all olive oil overpowers. One thing about dressings....adjusting to taste is almost always necessary. It's hard to have a hard and fast recipe. depends on the size of your garlic and shallot, the strength of your tarragon, your oil, etc...
ASSEMBLY
Par bake pastry crust at 350 (10-20 min) it should be firm but not golden. Make sure to poke holes/use pie beans. If weighting crust with dry beans, remember to take them out 3/4 of the way through par baking and let it finish with out them otherwise it doesn't really cook very well.
Sprinkle a good cave aged gruyere that you have shredded on the bottom of the crust, fill with leeks, top with a little more cheese and fill very slowly with egg mixture. Bake until puffed and golden.
Get a nice bowl of fresh spring greens (baby mizuna, wild arugula, baby spinach, radicchio) and toss them with a little salt, a sprinkle of good olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, fresh cracked pepper and some of the dressing. Place tart on salad and a sprinkling more of grated cheese.
** Comte or the Point Reyes Toma (a bit more subtle flavor) cheeses also work well. I also like to grate some of the dry and delicious "Capricous" cheese (I get at the Marin farmer's market) that you can leave sitting on your counter top in a tupper ware for up to 6 months, nice sharp flavor, over the finished product.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Valentine's day Chocolate
It's almost Valentine's day, my favorite hallmark holiday...well, aside from secretary's day which I hold very near and dear to my heart (insert sarcasm font here). At lease we have an excuse to eat chocolate. SO, if you want to bake something chocolaty and delicious for YOUR valentine, I have 2 options for you, at the request of one of our guests...thanks for coming Katja! I also have a post regarding a certain delicious beetroot and chocolate brownie sundae from May 2011, with a delicious frozen custard recipe to go along beautifully with either one of these concotions.
I'll be making this one and putting and orange twist on my custard along with a strawberry coulis....
MOLTEN CHOCOLATE CAKE
8-9 oz semisweet chocolate (chocolate chips work just fine!)
1 stick butter, cubed
3 eggs
3 yolks
1 c. sugar
4 Tbs flour
2 T Grand Marnier (optional and substitutable)
1 tsp vanilla
Melt chocolate and butter in the microwave (not too long...until butter melts, take it out and stir chocolate until melted) or in double boiler.
Combine eggs, yolks, and sugar and whisk. Temper in chocolate mixture. Add liquor and vanilla. Stir in flour.
Pour into greased ramekins or molds of some kind about 2/3 of the way up. Bake at 425 for 10 minutes (until tops are rounded and possibly cracked). Don't over bake or you will lose the molten! Invert onto plate, they should pop out as easy as muffins. In fact, if you are making multiple cakes all at the same time, you can use a muffin pan.
Flourless Chocolate cake
7 oz semisweet chocolate (45-50 % cocoa)
1 1/2 sticks butter
1 cup sugar
4 eggs, separated
Preheat oven to 350deg F
Line a 9 in cake pan (springform if you have it) with greaseproof or other non-stick paper and grease the tin.
Break the chocolate into small pieces and melt it with butter over hot water. (you can also throw it in the microwave, but don't scorch the chocolate. Take it out before it is totally melted and stir to finish)
Beat the egg yolks with half of the sugar.
Fold in the melted butter and chocolate mixture.
Beat egg whites until frothy by using an electric mixer; gradually add the remaining sugar, beating until stiff peaks form.
Fold in the beaten egg whites.
Bake at 350 degrees until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean, approximately 40 minutes. Let it cool for an hour before you try to remove it from the pan. The cake will be quite sticky. You can also chill it for a bit to help the chocolate set.
Happy Valentine's Day!
I'll be making this one and putting and orange twist on my custard along with a strawberry coulis....
MOLTEN CHOCOLATE CAKE
8-9 oz semisweet chocolate (chocolate chips work just fine!)
1 stick butter, cubed
3 eggs
3 yolks
1 c. sugar
4 Tbs flour
2 T Grand Marnier (optional and substitutable)
1 tsp vanilla
Melt chocolate and butter in the microwave (not too long...until butter melts, take it out and stir chocolate until melted) or in double boiler.
Combine eggs, yolks, and sugar and whisk. Temper in chocolate mixture. Add liquor and vanilla. Stir in flour.
Pour into greased ramekins or molds of some kind about 2/3 of the way up. Bake at 425 for 10 minutes (until tops are rounded and possibly cracked). Don't over bake or you will lose the molten! Invert onto plate, they should pop out as easy as muffins. In fact, if you are making multiple cakes all at the same time, you can use a muffin pan.
Flourless Chocolate cake
7 oz semisweet chocolate (45-50 % cocoa)
1 1/2 sticks butter
1 cup sugar
4 eggs, separated
Preheat oven to 350deg F
Line a 9 in cake pan (springform if you have it) with greaseproof or other non-stick paper and grease the tin.
Break the chocolate into small pieces and melt it with butter over hot water. (you can also throw it in the microwave, but don't scorch the chocolate. Take it out before it is totally melted and stir to finish)
Beat the egg yolks with half of the sugar.
Fold in the melted butter and chocolate mixture.
Beat egg whites until frothy by using an electric mixer; gradually add the remaining sugar, beating until stiff peaks form.
Fold in the beaten egg whites.
Bake at 350 degrees until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean, approximately 40 minutes. Let it cool for an hour before you try to remove it from the pan. The cake will be quite sticky. You can also chill it for a bit to help the chocolate set.
Happy Valentine's Day!
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Preserving lemons and Moroccan Tagine
I just went to visit my aunt in San Diego and assaulted her orange and meyer lemon trees...brought back a big ol' box of each. Time to get to preserving. I LOVE preserved lemons. I mainly use them nowadays to make chicken tagine, the signature dish of Morocco, here for our guests. I found a beautiful clay pot at the thrift store that I use in lieu of a traditional tagine so I can make large batches (you can also use your enameled cast iron pot). These lemons have tons of uses, tho. I love them chopped up in a pasta salad with chickpeas, mint, garlic and parsley, in gremolata, tossed in salads and soups, chopped up fine and served with vanilla ice cream, mashed up in some butter with herbs and slathered on baked fish or chicken. Possibilities are endless...

PRESERVING YOUR LEMONS
easy as 1, 2, 3...
1. Quarter your lemons, but don't cut all the way through. basically make a big X in them from top to bottom, stopping before you cut all the way through (If you do, it doesn't matter). Squeeze them lightly over a bowl or measuring cup.
2. Fill them generously with kosher salt (don't use table salt) and put them in a quart jar. press them down firmly into the jar so they release even more of their juices. Put some more salt on top and cover completely with lemon juice (you may need extra juice)
3. Shove some bay leaf, cinnamon stick, and peppercorns or red chilies in the jar if you wish (totally optional) and seal the jar. Leave the jar on the counter and wait a month.
*you can poke at them and tease them around a little bit, push them around the second day so that they release more juices. Flip the jar upside down and back again.
TO USE YOUR LEMONS:
fish them out as you need them, rinse them off, remove the pulp and white pith and finely chop the rind.
CHICKEN TAGINE
I have used a variety of spice mixtures for the chicken, and all come out equally delicious. The major players are: turmeric, cumin, cinnamon, ginger
You can certainly play around and alter the proportions to your tasty buds. It really doesn't need to be an exact recipe. However, if you are one of those exact recipe liking people, I have 2 for you to try out. If you can get your hands on some good quality Argan oil for cooking, it is a wonderful and traditional addition to the recipe.
Spice mix 1:
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp ground ginger
pinch of saffron
1 tsp cumin
1 tsp turmeric
1 cinnamon stick or 1 tsp ground
1 tsp coriander
Spice mix 2 (ras el hanout):
2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cardamon
2 tsp ground mace
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ground allspice
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp ground nutmeg
1 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp each black, white and cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp ground anise seed
1/4 tsp ground clove
p.s. I use whole spices whevener possible and grind myself. I also make 4x as much and store it in a jar.
Method:
I usually take the skin off my chicken, as it tends to get slimy when it is braised. Crispy skin is the only way to go in my book. I use thighs and drumsticks with the bones.
Brown the chicken hard on all sides and let it cool.
Season chicken liberally with spice mixture and a bunch of fresh minced garlic and toss to coat. If you have argan oil, throw some of that on, too. Let it marinate as long as you can.
Sautee some onions and a cinnamon stick (in the same pan you browned the chicken in if you like, scraping up the brown bits, aka fond)
Return chicken to the pan with the onions and stir it all around a bit, then add enough chicken stock to come 3/4 of the way up the chicken. Bring to a light boil then turn the heat down and simmer, partially covered, for about an hour or two... until the chicken is very tender and not quite falling off the bone. *Add your olives about half way through cooking
Remove chicken from the pot with a tongs and add your preserved lemon rind to the liquid. Reduce the cooking liquid until it is slightly thickened. Arrange chicken on a platter and pour liquid over the top. Sprinkle with chopped fresh parsley. Serve with basmati rice or cous cous and plenty of warm Kangaroo Pita bread to sop up the juices!

PRESERVING YOUR LEMONS
easy as 1, 2, 3...
1. Quarter your lemons, but don't cut all the way through. basically make a big X in them from top to bottom, stopping before you cut all the way through (If you do, it doesn't matter). Squeeze them lightly over a bowl or measuring cup.
2. Fill them generously with kosher salt (don't use table salt) and put them in a quart jar. press them down firmly into the jar so they release even more of their juices. Put some more salt on top and cover completely with lemon juice (you may need extra juice)
3. Shove some bay leaf, cinnamon stick, and peppercorns or red chilies in the jar if you wish (totally optional) and seal the jar. Leave the jar on the counter and wait a month.
*you can poke at them and tease them around a little bit, push them around the second day so that they release more juices. Flip the jar upside down and back again.
TO USE YOUR LEMONS:
fish them out as you need them, rinse them off, remove the pulp and white pith and finely chop the rind.
CHICKEN TAGINE

You can certainly play around and alter the proportions to your tasty buds. It really doesn't need to be an exact recipe. However, if you are one of those exact recipe liking people, I have 2 for you to try out. If you can get your hands on some good quality Argan oil for cooking, it is a wonderful and traditional addition to the recipe.
Spice mix 1:
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp ground ginger
pinch of saffron
1 tsp cumin
1 tsp turmeric
1 cinnamon stick or 1 tsp ground
1 tsp coriander
Spice mix 2 (ras el hanout):
2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cardamon
2 tsp ground mace
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ground allspice
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp ground nutmeg
1 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp each black, white and cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp ground anise seed
1/4 tsp ground clove
p.s. I use whole spices whevener possible and grind myself. I also make 4x as much and store it in a jar.
Method:
I usually take the skin off my chicken, as it tends to get slimy when it is braised. Crispy skin is the only way to go in my book. I use thighs and drumsticks with the bones.
Brown the chicken hard on all sides and let it cool.
Season chicken liberally with spice mixture and a bunch of fresh minced garlic and toss to coat. If you have argan oil, throw some of that on, too. Let it marinate as long as you can.
Sautee some onions and a cinnamon stick (in the same pan you browned the chicken in if you like, scraping up the brown bits, aka fond)
Return chicken to the pan with the onions and stir it all around a bit, then add enough chicken stock to come 3/4 of the way up the chicken. Bring to a light boil then turn the heat down and simmer, partially covered, for about an hour or two... until the chicken is very tender and not quite falling off the bone. *Add your olives about half way through cooking
Remove chicken from the pot with a tongs and add your preserved lemon rind to the liquid. Reduce the cooking liquid until it is slightly thickened. Arrange chicken on a platter and pour liquid over the top. Sprinkle with chopped fresh parsley. Serve with basmati rice or cous cous and plenty of warm Kangaroo Pita bread to sop up the juices!
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Smoked Tomato Jam
Now, I know what you are thinking, there are much better things to smoke up here in Northern California. However, if you've never tried it I suggest you test the waters. I'll be happy to hold your hand your first time...
HOW TO SMOKE YOUR TOMATOES
There are plenty of methods used to smoke food. I will give you two methods that I have MacGyvered in my kitchen. On the (gas) grill because I don't have a charcoal one out here, and on the stove top.
Hickory Smoked on the Grill
You'll need:
- 2 aluminum roasting pans, the disposable kind you can get at the grocery store
- charcoal/lighter fluid
- hickory or some kind of smoking wood chips
I put one roasting pan full of charcoal on the bottom rack, and one roasting pan full of oiled and salted tomatoes on the top rack. Follow instructions on the wood chips. I smoked them for about 30 minutes. Obviously, if you have a charcoal grill, more power to ya. A smoker, I'm sure, works miracles. Unfortunately, mine got left behind somewhere.
Tea Smoked on the Stove
I love this method for all of my smoking needs! You will have to invest some time getting a stove top set up, but then you will have it and will be able to smoke your pork, salmon, whatever. Delicious.
You'll need:
- a wok
- a grate or perforated pan of sorts that fits inside. Initially, I though of a round cooling rack, but I couldn't seem to find one that was just the right size. Also, the legs are too short for it to sit high enough above the smoking mixture. I perused Bed Bath and Beyond for some sort of grate that would work. Right before I was about to give up, I saw this pan with holes all over it that is used for cooking vegetables on the grill. It fits PERFECTLY inside the Wok....after you wrestle the handle off of course....that's what husbands are for. You can also use a bamboo steamer on top of the wok, but you have to tuck wet cloths all around the gap between the basket and the wok, which I find clumsy and annoying. I'm sure Ming Tsai or someone like that could explain this method better. http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ming-tsai/tea-smoked-salmon-with-wasabi-latkes-recipe/index.html . If you are in a pinch, or too impatient to find a good rack, you can use an upside down aluminum pie pan with holes poked in it.
- aluminum foil
- a lid that fits securely over the whole set up.
- 1 c loose tea
- 1 c rice
- 1 c brown sugar
Mix together the rice, tea and sugar. Line the inside of the wok and lid with aluminum foil. Put the tea mixture on the bottom of the foil lined wok and place rack on top. The rack should really sit at least an inch or two above the smoking mixture. Place tomatoes on the rack. Turn heat to high for 5 minutes or so until the mixture starts smoking. Secure the lid tightly, making sure there are no holes the smoke can leak out of and turn the heat down a bit. After about 15 minutes, turn off the heat and let them sit in there for 15 more minutes. There, your tomatoes are smoked.
NOW, you've smoked your tomatoes and you're ready to make your munchies!
For the Jam:
3 lbs tomatoes (I had little grape tomatoes so I didn't even chop them up, just smashed them against the side of the pot as they were cooking.)
1 small red onion
4 cloves minced garlic
1 C sugar
a small handful chopped fresh parsley or chervil
1/2 t red pepper flakes
fresh ground pepper
Sautee your onion and garlic. Add everything else and bring to a boil. Cook until thickened and all the water from the tomatoes has evaporated. Jar it up!
WHAT DO I DO WITH MY SMOKED TOMATO JAM??
BLT's with avocado or other sandwich spread
crostini with fresh ricotta cheese
baked chicken topper
Get creative! I've done enough here...
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Muffin Lady
Every morning I get in the galley by 8:20 so I can get muffins in the oven by 8:30> Easy Peezie and mmm...mmm good.
1 3/4 c flour
2/3 c sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 cup melted butter (or fat of your choice)
dash of salt
milk, or other liquid added a little at a time to desired consistency.
Helpful hints:
Vary the sugar from 1/2-1 cup, depending on the sweetness you desire or what the other additions are.
Use yogurt, sour cream or butter milk in place of milk or liquid for a yummier muffin. Who cares about the fat, I say...it's a muffin. It's not going to be a health bomb any way you work it. If it's almond milk or sour cream...I know what I am picking. If I want almond milk, I'll put it on my cereal. For quick, easy and delicious baked goods, don't skimp on the fat. If you have some serious time on your hands, you can experiment with the egg-replacers and non dairy substitutes...good luck to the busy home cook. I do, however, have a great vegan cupcake recipe I will follow up with. Can't say they are any healthier, but if you are one of those trendy cooks (or just plain have allergies, I suppose)...
Coffee is also a good liquid to use with chocolate muffins. Coffee brings out the chocolate flavor.
Baking soda can also be used in place or in combination with the powder for muffins with ingredients higher in acid.
Be careful with banana and other high moisture ingredients, you may need very little to no additional liquid.
Toss your fruit or chocolate chips in with the dry stuff so they don't sink.
Soak dry fruit, like craisins, in hot water so they plump up.
Make sure your oven is HOT before you put the muffins in- this guarantees a good rise. Don't be hasty or you'll be sorry.
Know your consistency. Muffin batter should generally be pretty thick. If you have too much liquid, they will fall and be wet in the middle. You should be able to scoop it with an ice cream scooper, plop it in the tin, and have it mound up a little higher in the center.
Cream the butter and sugar, and eggs one at a time until you have a nice fluffy wet mixture to fold into your dry. I don't always do this, but I definitely do with this blueberry muffin recipe.
If you want to turn any flavor muffin into a chocolate combination, I think 1/4-1/3 c. sifted cocoa powder should do the trick. I like to make zucchini-chocolate :)
PERFECT BLUEBERRY MUFFINS
2c All-purpose flour
2tsp baking soda
1/2tsp salt
zest of one lemon
1tsp vanilla extract
2 large eggs
1c sugar
1 stick butter, softened
2/3c sour cream
1.5 cups dried blueberries
Preheat oven to 375.
Cream butter, sugar & lemon zest. Gradually add egg, vanilla & sour cream.
In a separate bowl, mix dry ingredients.
Toss blueberries in flour mixture.
Fold wet ingredients into dry ingredients.
Use a large ice cream scooper to fill greased muffin tin (fill any empty cups with water to ensure even baking).
Sprinkle brown sugar on top (optional) and bake for 10-15min or until muffins spring back when pressed lightly in the center.
Unmold muffins, cool on wire rack & enjoy!
Other easy muffin ideas that work with this ratio:
orange- craisin (orange zest, craisins, and oj for the liquid. sub out 1/4 cup of the flour for almond meal)
chocolate chocolate chip (choco chips, a 1/3 c cocoa powder and coffee for the liquid)
blackberry lime (lime zest, juice, and blackberries)
banana-date-sesame (sprinkle some seeds on top. 1 smashed banana should suffice)
For other awesome muffin ideas, and another great base recipe, visit www.food.com/recipe/master-recipe-for-sweet-tender-muffins-cooks-illustrated-409607
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Onion soup for Cold Summer nights
I would have to agree with Frank Sinatra's tramp, whoever she is, the one who "hates California, it's cold and it's damp..."




I thought I was out of soup season and into salad season, but apparently not. Summer does not exist in the middle of the Bay. Oh well, a good excuse to make onion soup! My garden is poppin' with onions and leeks- I'd say I have more than I know what to do with...except I know exactly what I am going to do :)

Classic onion soup
half to 3/4 a pot full of onions, sliced. don't skimp! They cook down to nuthin'!
2 T butter
a healthy pour of olive oil
Salt- a pinch with all 5 fingers
1 tsp brown sugar (optional, to help the onions brown)
1/4 c flour
1 qt Chicken stock
1 qt Beef stock
Thyme, parsley, bay leaf bouquet
1/2 cup dry white wine or dry vermouth
a dash of Worcestershire
fresh ground pepper
a healthy splash or good brandy or cognac

Fill the pot with the sliced onions, butter, olive oil and salt. Let them cook over a very low heat for a very long time- I cook them for about an hour. You can speed this process up and turn up the heat a bit, but I think the results are
richer with slow cooking.
You can also add a little sugar to help them along.

Stir in the flour once the onions are caramelized. Stir in the hot stocks. Add the worchestershire, wine and herb bouquet and simmer for about 45 minutes. I used sherry vinegar this time around, I don't recommend it- too tart.
Season to taste, and add the brandy or cognac last. I will also be garnishing this with a baked baguette slice heavily coated with gruyere and parmesan!

Saturday, July 2, 2011
4th of July kebabs
Awesome little treat for your 4th of July party! All of our guests will be getting one in their party bags this Monday!
Shrimp, Watermelon, & Padron Pepper Kebabs with Basil-Parsley Gremolata
what you will need:
Watermelon cubed
Shrimp shells on or off, big or small....just please de-vein them meticulously for god's sake- no one likes pulling a string of black doodie out of their meat! Pet peeve.
padron peppers ('tis the season, California) if you can't find them, use jalapenos or serranos, or any pepper of your choice left whole or cut into any shape you like that will fit securely on a stick. I like the padrons because they are cute and mysterious, same way I like my men ;) Apparently, every 1 out of 10 is a hottie. I have been told the bigger they get and the later in the season the better your odds are.
Basil fresh, obviously.
Parsley
Mint, if you're feeling frisky
Garlic
Olive oil
Lemon
Salt
Skewers if using wood, soak them in water for a half hour so they don't burn up.
Make your gremolata. Mince garlic, fresh herbs, and salt. Make a paste in a paste-making vessel of your choice- I use a mortar and pestle. Add a healthy squeeze of lemon and its zest and some olive oil. BTW, garlic turns from minced to paste much easier with the help of its abrasive friend, salt.
Prep your players.
Toss your watermelon and shrimp with the gremolata. Toss the peppers with some olive oil and salt.
Thread them up and throw them on the grill. Baste them again with the gremolata right before they are done. Watch them carefully because they don't take long. You will be amazed at how many people ask you, "what's the red stuff?"
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