Archive for the ‘Cooking’ Category

13
Nov

Pho Ga with in the Daring Kitchen

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

 

Okay, I’m back. 

This challenge is from October and I’m not really sure why I haven’t posted it yet.  I actually had been sick for about 5 weeks during the challenge and had refused to take anything (cold meds to antibiotics) to kick it.  I was actually relying quite a bit on bone broth soups to get me thru.  That and boxes and boxes of tissues.    So of course I was thrilled about Octobers Challenge.  I even made it several times.  But didn’t find the time to post it.  *scratches head*  Go figure.  Just have a lot going on, with a healthy dose of lazy I guess.

October’s Daring KitchenChallenge is soup - chicken noodle soup - with a twist.  This soup is Pho Ga.  Huh?   PHO GA.  Vietnamese chicken and noodle soup.  The recipe and challenge comes from Jaden of Steamy Kitchen, a totally scrumptious blog that you must check out if you like Asian foods and fantastic photography.  And come to think of it, if you are a fan of Asian foods and fantastic photography, you should check out her first book The Steamy Kitchen Cookbook  (yeah Jaden, you rock).  So consider this recipe a preview of many tasty recipes in her cookbook and make sure you visit her site, too.

That said, this was not my favorite Vietnamese soup.  I much prefer another soup I make with prawns and pork.  But I learned so much and many of the ideas of this soup were fantastic (and will be repeated).  First, the long cook broth with roasted ginger and onions is pure genius as it imparts unbelievable flavor.  Also the idea of  balancing all your flavors in the bowl with lime, fish sauce, sriracha and hoisin is nothing shy of brilliant!  Talk about personalizing your flavors. 

On the down side, I discovered that I really don’t like cloves and bean sprouts.  Something I didn’t know.  And I learned to not use a cleaver and a thin plastic board directly on my granite counter tops.  Ouch.  I have nice big cuts in the island now.

So go forth and make soup… It is the perfect time of year.

Jaden’s long cook version of this soup is available on her website.  It is the version that I chose to cook and would recommend you try as well.  It is available here.

 

And don’t forget to check out what the other Daring Cooks have done as well.

Tomorrow expect to see the November Daring Kitchen posting (it’s good) and more things later this week.

 

~Blondie

14
May

Dinner with blondies

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

I’ve been meaning to tell you something…
 

I have found the best recipe for Pecan Blondies…

You must make these tonight…

They are really, really good *she says while licking the computer monitor*…

Pecan Blondies from Fine Cooking Magazine

  • 1/4 lb. (1/2 c) unsalted butter; more for the pan
  • 1 1/2c firmly packed dark brown sugar
  • 1 large egg plus 1 large egg yolk, at room temperature
  • 1 1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • 5 oz. (1 cup plus 2 Tbs.) all-purpose flour
  • Scant 1/4tsp. table salt
  • 2 oz. pecans, toasted and coarsely chopped (3/4 cup)

Position a rack in the middle of the oven and heat the oven to 350d.  In a medium sauce pan over medium heat, heat the butter and brown sugar, stirring frequently, until the sugar has dissolved.  Cook, stirring, about 1 minute longer-the mixture will bubble but should not boil.  Set the pan aside to cool for about 10 minutes.

Meanwhile, butter an 8-inch square pan, line the pan bottom with parchment (or waxed paper), and then butter the parchment.

Stir the egg, egg yolk, and vanilla into the cooled sugar mixture.  Add the flour, salt, and nuts, stirring just until blended.  Pour the batter into the prepared pan.  Bake until the center is springy when touched and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs clinging to it, 25 to 35 minutes.

Set the pan on a rack until it’s cool enough to handle.  Run a paring knife around the the inside edge of the pan and then invert the pan onto a flat surface and peel off the parchment.  Flip the blondie back onto the rack and let cool completely.  Cut into squares with a sharp knife.

I don’t want to seem pushy here, but you must make these. They are that good.

8
May

Pork Pozole

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

Pah zo leigh - Pozole people, do you know it?  Have you had it?  Did you/Do you like it?  Tell me…  ‘Coz I for one love it. 

It’s all dark and mysterious, it’s spicy, it’s meaty, it’s brothy, it’s good.  Jason, he’s not a fan.  I think it’s too, um… fussy for him?  No, stewy.  He’s no stew boy (what?).  But it could also be the fussy that keeps stew boys (and girls) away.  You know with all the garnishes and toppings, you really have to be friends with your food to get your eat on.  I personally find it suits my picky-eater style, yes that’s right, I am a world class picky-eater.  But I’m in a program now so it’s all good. 

For me pozole and all it’s lovely toppings is akin to chili,  if you got it and topped it yourself.  Except I don’t like chili, well chile verde yes and white chicken chili.  But chili, like American red chili with beef and kidney beans… no thank you.  I mean aside from the fact that I don’t eat beef and I don’t care for tomato sauces there is the issue of kidney beans.  I mean really?  That is the nastiest freakin bean in the world, it should go away and die some lonely painful death. Now I don’t generally get all hostile and aggressive towards food but there are a few.  Veal.  Well, not veal itself.  But what’s up with the sick bastards that eat baby-cow-raised-in-a-box-so-it’s-fork-freakin-tender?  I’m just sayin. 

And I think I’ll look into if my picky-eater program has an affiliate food-aggression program.

In the mean time, here’s my recipe for tender, delicious pork pozole.  It becomes tender with that fall apart quality because you simmer a cheap cut of pork for three hours.  So please don’t use baby-cow-raised-in-a-box-so-it’s-fork-freakin-tender …  Enjoy.

Blondie’s Pork Pozole

  • 2 1/2 pounds of pork, in 1″ cubes (pork shoulder or country pork ribs or rib tips) and the bones
  • 1 large brown onion, diced
  • 10 cloves of garlic, minced
  • Large can of hominy
  • Olive Oil
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Cumin
  • 4 whole dried Ancho Chiles
  • 6 cups homemade chicken stock
  • Water

For garnish you will need

  • Cabbage, shredded
  • Radish, sliced
  • Cilantro
  • Onion, diced
  • Limes

Heat a little oil in a large heavy pot and add the cubed pork.  Seasoned with salt & pepper and brown on all sides, you may have to do this in batches.  When browned on all sides, remove pork from the pan with a slotted spoon, set aside in a bowl or platter (juices will accumulate). 

Browned Pork
Add the onion and garlic to the pan and cook in the pork fat that should have rendered out, sautee until translucent.  Remove and add to the deep dish with the browned pork.  Make sure there is sufficient oil in the pan, adding if necessary and put the dried ancho chiles in the hot fat.  Cook them for about 4-5 minutes on each side to blister and develop the flavors.  Remove into a separate bowl and cover with hot water, submerging with another bowl if necessary, until soft and tender about 15 minutes. 

In the mean time, add the pork, onions and garlic back into the pan, along with any drippings, add the hominy and the chicken stock and as much water as needed to cover.  Bring to a simmer.

Dried Ancho Chiles

When the chiles are soft, remove the stems and seeds,  dice or puree the chile.  Add both the chiles and the broth to the pozole.   

Simmer over medium heat for about 3 hours, adding more water if necessary to maintain the level of liquids, until the pork is fall apart tender.  Adjust seasonings with salt and pepper and cumin.

Serve with a platter of garnishes and a ice cold corona or a real margarita.

Note: To all the chili aficionados - I realize that red chili as should be made the Texas way, does not have a tomato sauce - it’s the chiles that make it red.  And that the presence of beans is debatable and is never a nasty freakin kidney bean.  But good proper chili is not so easy to find.  It’s an art and if you make it, your an artist.  And if you’ve ate it, you are indeed lucky.  But I think most chili served in the States closely resembles the gruel that you would find at Wendy’s (not that I have ever had it).

Another Note: I realize that the sweet little innocent calves are not actually raised in boxes. Blonde and stupid are not the same things.

And now, in case you wanted to know: Pozole is a traditional Pre-Columbian soup that perhaps came from Jalisco, Mexico (lots of references to Jalisco on the web). It is a soup or stew with a combination of hominy (corn) and pork and chiles in a broth, served with various accompaniments, to be dressed by the lucky individual who is eating this spicy, delicious soup.

5
May

Technical Difficulties

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

Okay, I am having technical difficulties in posting pictures for some reason.  So until I sort it out let me just say “Feliz Cinco de Mayo”.

Hopefully we will be posting pictures tonight of yummy Mexican food, including fresh tortilla chips, salsa, guacamole,  authentic margaritas (no mix baby), pork posole, the girls making tamales and more… basically a page from my Latina Cantina diet, which by the way is not really working out for me.

And from Tutu’s birthday feast (Monday).

A smarter Chica would know how to remedy mi problemita - but this Chica has to delve into the Codex files and figure out what the heck is going on!

Posting soon…

Adios Amigos!

15
Apr

Potato Leek Soup or WTDWLEH Part II

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

Still using up the Easter Ham… and thinkin’ Jazzed Up Potato Leek Soup with Crispy Ham garnish. 

Skill-wise this soup really lends itself to the beginner/non-cook kinda cook.  Really.  Chandler made it for me last year.  She was 5.  She wanted to be the next iron chef.  I had two broken arms.  I needed an iron chef.  It was delicious.

So here it is…  

Blondie’s Jazzed Up Potato Leek Soup with Crispy Ham Garnish or WTDWLEH Part II
Recipe inspired by Julia Child

  • 3-4 medium potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 2 thinly sliced leeks including the tender greens
  • 3 cloves of garlic, roughly chopped
  • 1 quart chicken stock
  • 1 Tbl salt 
  • 1/2 Tbl pepper 
  • 1/4 cup of milk, cream or half and half
  • 1/4 cup parmesan cheese, grated
  • 1/3 cup minced parsley 
  • 1 cup left over Easter ham (ha ha) cubed

Simmer potatoes, leeks, garlic and salt in chicken stock until tender, about 20 minutes.  Once tender the fun begins.  Choose your weapon… Mine is an immersion blender - I highly recommend this gadget, you just stick in the pot and whirl away to desired consistency.  Or go old skool and blend in batches in your blender, but do not fill over half way, unless you want to clean your ceilings tonight (again, I’m speaking from experience).  Or go really old skool and pass thru a ricer (does any one have these anymore?  I mean non-kitchen geeks)

After you blend/puree/mash/rice(??) return to the pot and gentle rewarm (if necessary), add cream and maybe a touch of butter, a hand full of parmesan cheese and adjust the seasoning.  White pepper is purdy in this soup because it disappears… but I didn’t use white pepper in my chicken stock, in fact it’s all full of yummy looking specks - so black pepper it is for me. 

In the meantime, heat a little olive oil in a small skillet and fry your ham until it is crispy but not dry.   You do not want hard and dried out ham as a garnish, you want nice, moist, juicy, crunchy ham.

Ladle the soup into bowls and top with the crunchy ham and a sprinkle of cheese and herbs.  Yummy.

Next time WTDWLEH Part III : Pasta Carbonara… (ish)

29
Mar

Not so borracho

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

Okay, so the beautiful thing about having a brand new blog is that you really have nothing to loose.  Hypothetically speaking, a person with a new blog could throw caution to the wind, could post or not post, she could check the new blog obsessively to see if anyone has read her first post - or not.  She could cook naked - or not.  And she could even enter a food blog competition *gasp* like she actually knows what she is doing!  Perhaps cooking naked would be easier?

Lets back up a little… It all started a couple of weeks ago when I was reading about food photography on Rasa Malaysia’s blog (www.rasamalaysia.com)  and in her Q&A about photography she mentioned Donna Hay and the clean, beautiful, simple food photography featured in her cookbooks, magazines and web site.  Huh, Donna who?  I’m a “whose that?” kinda girl so I searched further and I’m glad I did.  Donna Hay is sort of the Aussie version of Martha (geez, I’m sure that statement will inspire both nods in agreement and spit wads in disgust), and she is my new favorite cooking and lifestyle guru.  Such talent.  (Hello Donna, so nice to meet you, where have you been all my culinary life?)  Then I discovered (last week) this little food competition in her honor -  Hay Hay it’s Donna Day - and I knew I had to give it a go. 

The hostess (Soma at www.eCurry.com) this month selected Chicken and Roasted Capsicum Pasta, and the photograph (oh I have such photo envy) reminded me very much of my favorite pasta dish at The La Quinta Cliff House called Pasta Borracho (now called Cactus Grill Penne - whatever, it’ll always be borracho in my heart).  A delicious penne pasta with chicken, roasted corn and red bell peppers in a creamy borracho sauce (that’s tequila sauce to you gringos).  Delicioso.

So my challenge was to figure out how to translate this pasta dish with the guidelines provided (not cheesy, not creamy, not sauced, no-no borracho) and then photograph it, post it, e-mail it… oh yeah, and get my blog and running in a couple days (thank God the deadline was moved a week!).  If I had more time I would have attempted to incorporate the tequila into the dressing somehow, but as I was feedin the fam, and I couldn’t very well add a shot without first cooking out the alcohol and I have never done that before - ya know in a dressing… (read: if anyone knows how to do this call me and you’ll be my new best friend). 

Not so borracho

So here it goes…  Not So Borracho Pasta

2 chicken breasts with skin on and ribs attached
2 ears of sweet white corn, husks and silks removed
2 red bell peppers
1 large white onion, quartered
3 roma (plum) tomatoes, quartered
1 cup fresh baby spinach
1 pound penne rigate, cooked

Dressing:
Juice from 1 lemon and 1 lime 
An equilvelent measurement of extra virgin olive oil (1:1= lemon/lime:ev olive oil) 
1 clove minced garlic
3 Tbl minced cilantro leaves
1 Tbl cumin
Salt and Pepper

Garnish :
Cotija (mexican cheese)
Cilantro
Pepitas (mexican roasted pumpkin seeds)
Lime wedges

Directions:
Season the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper and cumin, sprinkle with olive oil and place on the grill over medium heat.  Grill until no longer pink in the center, about 15-20 minutes.  Grill corn and red peppers until charred and tender, about 15 minutes (note: I do not peel my peppers after I prepare them - I like the skin and all).  Place the onion and tomatoes in a grill basket and cook until charred and tender.

Grilled ChickenRoasted CornRoasted Vegetables

In the mean time prepare the dressing.  I placed all ingredients in a jar and shook it up - easy style.

Pull the cooked chicken from the bone and discard bone and skin (I think this makes for a tastier and more moist end product).  Shred the chicken, slice the corn off the cob and julienne the peppers, tomatoes and onions.  Toss chicken, grilled veggies and dressing  in a large bowl with the steaming hot pasta and fresh cold spinach.  Top with cotija, pepitas, cilantro and lime.

It was a lighter version of Pasta Borracho and every bit as yummy!  So a big thank you to the facilitator, Bron at http://bronmarshall.com and the hostess, Soma at www.ecurry.com and I look forward to doing more challenges.  It was great fun. 

And don’t worry, as for the borracho, well I can remedy that.

Milagro

27
Mar

Mise en place, not

   Posted by: Blondies Blog

 Mise en place (pronounced miz a~n plas) is a french phrase used in the culinary world,  meaning everything in its place.  As in, you have everything in its place before you start…

Okay, so technically this little blog was to be up and running January 1st… uh, well - many things prevented that from happening.  You know it’s hard to find time when your mother of the year, have the perfectly organized home and the best behaved children (and husband) and in general the perfect- blah, blah, blah!  The reality is that taking this step has been a huge undertaking for me.  I thought I would be so organized, with a thesis and a functioning-train-of-thought, but not so much.  What I have is a desire to get going and a laundry list of content ideas.  So why take myself so seriously?  I don’t generally subscribe to the serious blog - it makes my eyes twitch and I yawn a lot.  Who wants that? 

I just want to have fun.

No time for mise en place - so here it is.  I am a food obsessed mother of 2, wife of 1 (sometimes I think mother of 1, wife of 2 might be easier…), I’m right brained - no left brained - uh, I often function with no brain.  My interests are very fragmented, intense and then fleeting (don’t laugh, I can’t be the only one) and I am simply complicated.

 Hypothetically,  some of my first posts will be about my girls, my chickens, my garden, the construction of my wood-fired oven and oh, my Mr. Perfect (seriously).  But really, when you suffer from ADD, MPD and OCD you really never know what will show up here…