My Christmas Gift this year - a FANCY new home for Cheeky Kitchen. Visit it today (still under construction.....check back often!) I've migrated all this content over to my fancy new home, and maybe in the coming months I'll unveil even more special surprises....
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Monday, December 13, 2010
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Tacos Al Pastor, Fake-Out Style
Remember that post where I said if you have rice noodles and pad thai sauce in your cupboard, you will always have a dinner on hand? It was true. But I forgot to mention one important thing.
Did you know that you can put lots of things in a tortilla? Like…ANYTHING. Veggies, beans, meat, it don’t matter. Saute it all up with some spices, roll it up in a tortilla, and you have yourself tacos. If you keep a package of flour tortillas in your fridge (and they keep for a surprisingly long time…thanks artificial preservatives!) then you’re already one step closer to dinner. Corn tortillas are better, and more authentic, but they also have a very short shelf life. If you're lucky enough to live in Chicago or any city with a strong Hispanic presence, though, you can buy still-warm corn tortillas in many an ethnic grocery store across the city.
The key here is not to think about Ortega and “gringo tacos” with lettuce, tomato, cheese, etc. Sure, you can always go that route, but making an improve taco dinner requires a bit more imagination…more finesse. Plus, you surely can make a better taco yourself with less meat and less salt than those ground-beef-and-giant-MSG-packet dinner kits.
Tangerines floating in the marinade... |
Don't have the spice kit? Seriously, you can use anything to flavor the mixture, and you probably need a whole lot less seasoning too, since you're adding in more flavor. I prefer cooking up onions, meat, and veggies and then liberally seasoning with my handy stove-side spice drawer wide open - garlic, onion, oregano (the mexican kind is best), chili powder, hot sauce, etc. Give it a little moisture with, really, just about anything - salsa or tomato/enchilada sauce is an easy fix; chicken stock will do.
See what I'm getting at here - a taco is nothing more than a blank palate for whatever you put insdie of it. And on top? Forget the American-style salad bar. In mexico, they top tacos with nothing more than onions and cilantro. I never turn away a little cheese, and if Sour Cream must be had, try 2% greek yogurt - just as tangy and cool, and much better for you. So you can have that third taco.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Indian-Spiced Potato Samosas with Curry Lime Yogurt
My favorite part of any meal is the appetizer. For some reason, these small tasting portions hold a spell over me, tempting me from the left side of the menu to abandon the large entrees on the right and run away together. Be it a relish tray, appetizer, tapas, tasting menu, amuse bouche, or any other small-plate derivative, if it comes before the main course I'm dying to have a love affair with it.
I think the love comes from the smaller size - for, logically, if it's smaller than an entree I need to eat more of them. Thus, I get to try more food, instead of being stuck with just one type of food on my plate. Gluttony, it seems, knows no bounds. Of course, with the way serving sizes have grown exponentially, an appetizer from a restaurant is usually more than enough food for a normal person's meal. Even a not-so-normal person like me.
But aside from their adding more food to a meal, appetizers have a different sort of feel than a main course. They're smaller, more playful. Many are made to be eaten with fingers, so wrapped up in a pastry or on a stick. Dolloped with sauce or dipped into a bowl, they're just more FUN than big food.
Because of this fascination with appetizer foods, I have tons of recipes bookmarked to try. Problem is...i just don't make appetizers in my day-to-day life. And who does? I'm going to come home from work and assemble a ton of mini crab cakes before making dinner? NO.
So when C asked me to bring an appetizer to her dinner party on Saturday, I just about leapt with joy. Finally the excuse I've been craving - I get to make a finger food! Whatever one I want! And I can eat as many of them as I want before I go to the party too!
Scanning through the bookmarks, I was instantly drawn to a Cooking Light makeover of samosas, the traditional Indian snack. Typically filled with curried potatoes and peas, then deep-fried and served with chutney, Samosas seem exotic but are a food common across many cultures - dumplings. And who doesn't like a dumpling!? This version replaced deep-fried dough with phyllo dough, keeping the crunch while removing the calories. I made many tweaks on the spices, potatoes, and amounts, but otherwise stuck fairly close to the recipe as written. I also decided that any finger food worth its salt needs a dip, so I combined some curry and lime with greek yogurt for a cooling, different twist.
Maybe because the three couples at the party with us are about the nicest people on earth, but these samosas got rave reviews. I almost wish I had been a shadester and stolen the leftover dumplings to take them back home with me...but knowing that our kind hosts got to have an extra helping is more important. Besides, I have another roll of phyllo dough in the freezer and no scruples to stop me from making another batch.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Snappy Joe, or Sucio Lucio?
I'm starting to like the Sucio Lucio |
Snappy Joe, originally a recipe from mommie. I LOVE the sandwiches, but yeah, the name of this easy-peas dish is the dumbest thing ever. I’m sure it comes from a cutesy women’s magazine trying to cover up a fairly bland, “healthy” makeover of boring sloppy joes with a fancy new name, a snappy new name that looks great with the model’s stirrup pants, permed hair and caked-on blue eyeliner. SNAPPY.
Then again, I’m the one who made it the other night, so my sitting here making fun of it isn’t really helping my cause at all. And sharing the fact that I spent 2 hours after dinner “crafting” homemade xmas cards doesn’t lend a lot of weight to the “I’m so cool” movement either. Cutting edge, I’m not, but at least I don’t have a perm.
Since A was supposed to be at a work event the night in question, I didn’t plan a dinner, figuring I could just eat leftovers or weird things I eat when nobody’s watching. (I’m not alone – check out these two books I really, really want to read.)
With nothing planned, I went into safe mode, much like my archaic computer does when trying to run any program with a birthdate after 2007. Spying a pound of sirloin and some random sausage buns in the freezer, and a recipe began to take shape. Based on my mom’s “Snappy Joes,” a sillily named turkey and cabbage-based take on sloppy joes, I wanted to really snap these Joes up a bit. Yeah, I’m going all out on this snappy theme.
A few too many jalapenos in the fridge, some chorizo in the meat drawer, and an extra can of goya tomato sauce meant I was taking these Joes into spicy territory. (Somebody help me. Why am I writing like this?) I cut up a bunch of peppers, jalapenos, and onion, then sautéed them with ground sirloin. AND I FORGOT THE CHORIZO. Dumb, dumb, dumb. Anyway, then you add in some tomato sauce, BBQ sauce, hot sauce, and some shredded cabbage, and let it simmer away for 10 minutes. DONE.
Rachael Ray, who probably would LOVE the name Snappy Joe, did a running series once where she took Sloppy all around the world. She made Messy Giuseppes (Italian), Sloppy Cubanos (with pickles and swiss), and a few other versions. I tried a couple, being an avowed Sloppy Joe fan (comfort, messy, sandwiches).
I like this one the best. Should we name it -- a Sucio Lucio, perhaps? It’s easy, quick, and sneaks in a bunch more veggies than you would think. It’s also awesome cold the next day, scooped hastily onto crackers or corn chips. Not like I’ve ever done that, or anything. Sloppy told me.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Smokey Corn & Cheddar Chowder
Oh, man. You have no idea how good this is. And I'm not even blaming copious quantities of butter and cream -because there aren't any! Score one for the good guys.
Yes, it's not usually hard to figure out why people love creamy soups. Chowders, Cream ofs, Bisques, you name it. These beauties often get their richness from copious quantities of heavy cream, used to thicken up the broth or finish a blended soup or just make something so humble as mushrooms be elevated through the power of CREAM. And who can blame chefs? If it's thickened with cream, you can bet it'll be a top seller.
Anyway, creamy soups can be really good - but also really, entirely, too rich. Sometimes, following a "more is more" ethos that I usually espouse, cooks will just use tons of the stuff, leading to a heavy taste, where cream's fatty richness overpowers everything else. Plus, although I'll occasionally yield to the desire for cream of asparagus or lobster bisque in a restaurant, it's a lot harder for me to justify buying a quart-size heavy cream if I have the urge to make creamy soup myself.
Which I did the other night. What to do, what to do....
Um, milk?
But the problem is, milk’s relative leanness just can’t compensate for all that lost butterfat. People try to blend their soups, but this usually (to me) results in an off-putting graininess. Instead, I go a three-fold starch route, using the natural starches in flour, corn and potatoes to thicken the soup and trick you into thinking it’s really creamy. And, add some of that butter fat back in, along with extra flavor, in the form of CHEESE. Clever, am I. Oh, yes.
First, you just have to use a good knob of butter (yeah, in addition to some of the bacon fat – but not much) plus flour to build a nice, golden roux. This will give the initial soup a good deal of body. If you’re using homemade stock, instead of broth (stock is made with bones, broth with meat), the stock’s collagen content will add a thicker “mouthfeel” and give the soup more body as well. Next, cook potatoes and corn right in the pot. These will let off starches that will further enrich and thicken the soup. Finally, stir in a handful of cheddar cheese at the end. Not only does it taste gooood, but it amps up the creamy factor with a lot fewer calories than cream itself.
People, this soup is good. It’s based on Barefoot Contessa’s recipe, but I’m recounting my lower calorie (and scaled-down) version below.
Alas, we were far too busy eating it to take any pictures, but trust me on this one – you want to make this.
Alas, we were far too busy eating it to take any pictures, but trust me on this one – you want to make this.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Claire's Dad's Muffins
Yet another weekend has passed us by, and yet another Monday morning finds me reluctant to leave the warm confines of my nighttime oasis to begin another week of work. Good thing that I had a personal day I had to use in the next 3 weeks, because playing hooky never feels better than on a Monday in the wintertime.
But staying home from work also means that my drawer full of oatmeal packets and honey nut cheerios, what I keep stashed in my desk for at-work breakfasts, are far from my belly. Good thing I spent the weekend cooking - making samosas for a dinner party, testing Christmas cookie recipes, whipping up a batch of dough for weekday pizza/calzone making, and baking a batch of fruity oatmeal muffins as a small thank-you for the hostess with the mostess. And, since they were her dad's recipe, it was one homemade gift I knew would be well received!
I do have to shout out C's generosity (not to mention the AMAZING peppery arugula pasta with shrimp and scallops and chopped greek salad upon which we feasted on Saturday!) for sharing this special recipe with me. It's her dad's muffin recipe, special in itself for the many memories they are sure to contain, but even more special for its location in a family heirloom recipe book. If I have my facts right, C's sister assembled many of their family's traditional recipes into one custom cookbook so that everybody would always remember how to make the meaningful dishes that fed their family's bellies and souls.
Do me a favor and ignore the dirty stove. We cleaned after this photo was taken... |
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Turkey Cranberry Strudel
Turkey. What to do, what to do, with those giant chunks of leftover turkey. The freezer is always an option, true. Save it for either stock or broth, or even an upcoming soup. I’ve been seeing a lot of recipes for turkey hash as a creative way to use up the meat after turkey sandwiches lose their appeal. But as I’m apparently ahead of the hash-trend curve, and having already made up my other go-to leftover user (Turkey a la King), I needed fresh ideas.
Then, like a bright beacon of light, an image came to me…turkey, nuts, cranberries, all encased in a golden shell of….CRESCENT ROLLS! Yes! The much esteemed by sissy and me, deliciously kitschy Turkey Cranberry Ring my mom concocted long, long ago, based perhaps on a Papered Chef recipe, was calling to me. It was then that I knew. I must make it. Now.
It's a fairly simple idea. Use crescent rolls as pre-made struedel dough, wrapping the rolls around a filling bursting with turkey, nuts, fruit, and a little bit of cheese (because, when does cheese ever hurt?). You can use whatever is on hand, swapping in what you have and leaving out what you don't. It's simple to assemble and looks like it took a lot more effort than it really did. Perfect for a weeknight, or a buffet, or anytime.
It's a fairly simple idea. Use crescent rolls as pre-made struedel dough, wrapping the rolls around a filling bursting with turkey, nuts, fruit, and a little bit of cheese (because, when does cheese ever hurt?). You can use whatever is on hand, swapping in what you have and leaving out what you don't. It's simple to assemble and looks like it took a lot more effort than it really did. Perfect for a weeknight, or a buffet, or anytime.
This seriously was an embarrassing combination of leftover bits n pieces we had laying around. Four old pieces of pre-cut celery that had gone uneaten in the week’s lunches, a hardening handful of dried cranberries left in the bottom of a bag, some aging swiss cheese slices that had outlasted their sliced turkey companions.
But you know what? You would never know that this delicious combination was anything other than a planned-out dish. It tastes rich but isn't too unhealthy. It stretches a lot of odds and ends into several meals worth of food. Try it with broccoli and cheddar instead of cranberries and almonds. Or peppers and pepper jack. Or whatever you have on hand. Probably due to my inexplicable love for crescent rolls, I bet that whatever you throw down the middle would be good.
Because I’m cheap, I had saved the lone egg white left over from mixing a yolk into my Shepherd’s Pie potatoes. That one lone egg white would now be brushed on the top of my log of cranberry goodness, helping it to brown up into a rich, golden, glistening shell. A shell of love. The most delicious shell in the world!!!!!!!!!
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Shepherd’s Pie, or the Home for Leftover Potatoes
Operation use up thanksgiving leftovers, part two: Shepherd’s Pie.
I don’t love mashed potatoes. They’re alright, I suppose. When heavily laden with cream and butter and garlic and god knows what else, sure, they can be pretty damn good. But the usual, more restrained, version just doesn’t do it for me. I like potatoes plenty, but there are just so many better ways to enjoy them than all smashed up.
Thus, leftover mashed potatoes usually languish unloved in my fridge. I’ve tried making potato cakes from them, or mixing in the loaded baked potato fixins and heating them up. You can stir mashed potatoes into soups to thicken up the broth. There are probably 500 ideas you all have on how to use them up.
Me, I could only think of one – shepherd’s pie. I had never made one before, so that was a plus, as I’m trying to step outside of the same-6-recipes-I-make-over-and-over comfort zone. I had the basic ingredients on hand – ground beef, carrots, frozen peas, onions, and beef stock. And I had a ton of mashed potatoes that would invariably be thrown away unless I could make them palatable again.
A traditionally English dish, shepherd’s pie isn’t something I make, but it speaks to my simple, comforting sensibilities. A pot-pie like filling on the bottom, browned and creamy potatoes on the top, it is a meal in one dish, and a cheap one at that. Now that the temperatures are closer to zero than 100, it’s the sort of warm, homey winter-friendly food that I can’t get enough of.
When "researching" different recipes, I came across this charming story about how shepard's pie got its name because the shepherd's wife would make the pie in the afternoon, but it would stay warm until whenever the shepherd returned home because the rich filling was insulated by the top crust. A good shepherd's pie would stay warm for hours, until the top crust was broken and the steam could escape. Alton Brown advised cooks to start spreading the potatoes at the edges to be sure you get a good seal going.
A word of caution, though. Put a cookie sheet under your dish, especially if you aren't sure if you achieved the proper seal. We didn't, and I soon heard telltale sizzling letting me know that boiled-over gravy was hitting the oven floor. At least the smoke alarm didn't go off! After resting for 10 minutes, we dug into this bad boy with gusto. It's good. Just, good. Not breaking any boundaries, not challenging any traditions. Just good.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Cranberry-Orange Compote & Ultimate Thanksgiving Sandwiches
The Ultimate Thanksgiving Leftover Sandwich, version one.
Honestly, I cannot take credit for this genius sandwich. It was sourced on a Silver Cloud sammich sissy and I shared a few weeks back, when our eager tummies sought a taste of the rapidly approaching thanksgiving holiday. Served on white bread with canned, jellied cranberries and Stove Top stuffing, it hit a nostalgic spot on the taste buds and got us both salivating for the feast to come.
When Sunday night following Thanksgiving rolled around and heating up yet another round of leftovers seemed, somehow, boring, I reached into the not-too-deep recesses of my food memory bank and found this sandwich waiting there. I wanted to copy that interesting, dumbed-down version with the fancy-ass delicious leftovers now crowding my fridge. So I checked our leftover stock to see if it could be possible: seedy whole-wheat bread, check; sage & mushroom ciabatta dressing, check; lots and lots of leftover cranberry-shallot glazed turkey, check. Yet, alas! We had no more cranberry sauce left!
Boiling away... |
A Thanksgiving dinner is nothing without that tiny dollop of tart cranberry sauce. We always had two in our family – my grandpa’s traditional cooked cranberry sauce, and the tarter orange-cranberry relish that is uncooked. To properly enjoy your turkey, you needed both. And to properly enjoy my leftover turkey sandwich, I needed at least one.
Lacking cranberries, I remembered K’s basic instructions on how to make a chutney – “you need fruit, spices, sugar, and vinegar.” Would dried cranberries suffice? I thought I could plump them up by cooking them with some acid and juice. I threw in a handful of raisins, too, to beef up the berreis’ relatively low number. A hearty squeeze of lemon juice stood in for the vinegar, and a tangelo (skinned, sectioned, and squeezed) complimented the tart berries with some sweet citrus, instead of sugar. Oh, and a Tablespoon or so of cranberry juice concentrate and apple jelly added intensity of flavor and a bit more substance, respectively.
The assembly line |
Boiled down until syrupy, this improvised cranberry orange compote really popped. It just fell in love with the turkey, but I can see this tarty mixture giving herself equally well to a pork tenderloin or perhaps even atop a nice creamy brie....
So on to the sandwich! First, I set four slices of grainy wheat breat to toast, so that they’d be sturdy enough to hold their husky fillings. I added a bit of stock to the stuffing to remoisten it, then after heating it up (microwave) I mashed it lightly with a fork – going for a more cohesive, spreadable texture here. I thinly sliced some white-meat turkey, and then set to assembly: bread, thin layer of mayo, stuffing, turkey, cranberry, bread. Some reheated green beans went alongside.
This is just a flipping awesome sandwich. Bright, tart fruit flavors on the sandwich are needed to cut through the relatively heavy layers of turkey and stuffing. This, dare I say, may have topped the “leftover turkey and plochmann’s mustard on grandma’s dinner roll 4 hours after dinner” as my all-time favorite leftover thanksgiving sandwich. But, you know, I’m not done with all those leftovers yet either…
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Grandma's Thanksgiving Rolls
My mom's family has a theory about Thanksgiving: you must spend at least a week prior to the holiday "training" your stomach. By eating too much in the days leading up to Thanksgiving, your stomach will be adequately stretched out and able to take in much more holiday food than it otherwise could.
If my maternal family instilled in me a lifelong obsession and hunger for food, my paternal side gave me the respect and craving for simple, hearty fare. They are farm people; in their kitchens, nothing is ever wasted, nothing is thrown away. You won't find fois gras in the farm kitchen, but you will learn how to de-bone a chicken, cook the meat, make stock from the skin and bones, and throw whatever's left into the ensuing soup. Bonus points if there is a dog around to slurp up the scraps.
I spent hours as a kid helping my grandmother, and then my father, learning to cook in their farmhouse tradition, where nothing was wasted and everything came from scratch. Thanksgiving and Christmas turkey carcasses always became pots of stock and chicken soup (with homemade noodles, carrots, celery, onions, and parsley, plus lots of black pepper - simple perfection) the next day. In fact, most leftovers that didn't get subsumed into a following meal got thrown into a soup pot for the best sort of recycling I've ever tasted.
My grandma (both of them, actually) passed on when I was just a child, so my memories of her I savor and relish. I make her rolls every holiday, not only because they are the best vehicles for turkey sandwiches (with only yellow mustard - I'm a purist), but because thoughts of grandma showing me how to make them permeate their flavor still.
These are a simple variation on a classic parker house roll. You heat water, sugar and butter to boiling. Cool, sprinkle with yeast, then mix in eggs, flour, and salt. An overnight rise, then they're rolled out, stamped, and patted with more butter before being left to rise a second time before being baked up into buttery, slightly sweet golden perfection.
Our tradition was to pat one roll with jam instead of butter. The person who unwittingly took the jam roll from the basket was blessed with good luck in the coming year. These so remind me of my family and my grandma that regardless if whether I get the jam roll, I'm still lucky.
If my maternal family instilled in me a lifelong obsession and hunger for food, my paternal side gave me the respect and craving for simple, hearty fare. They are farm people; in their kitchens, nothing is ever wasted, nothing is thrown away. You won't find fois gras in the farm kitchen, but you will learn how to de-bone a chicken, cook the meat, make stock from the skin and bones, and throw whatever's left into the ensuing soup. Bonus points if there is a dog around to slurp up the scraps.
I spent hours as a kid helping my grandmother, and then my father, learning to cook in their farmhouse tradition, where nothing was wasted and everything came from scratch. Thanksgiving and Christmas turkey carcasses always became pots of stock and chicken soup (with homemade noodles, carrots, celery, onions, and parsley, plus lots of black pepper - simple perfection) the next day. In fact, most leftovers that didn't get subsumed into a following meal got thrown into a soup pot for the best sort of recycling I've ever tasted.
My grandma (both of them, actually) passed on when I was just a child, so my memories of her I savor and relish. I make her rolls every holiday, not only because they are the best vehicles for turkey sandwiches (with only yellow mustard - I'm a purist), but because thoughts of grandma showing me how to make them permeate their flavor still.
These are a simple variation on a classic parker house roll. You heat water, sugar and butter to boiling. Cool, sprinkle with yeast, then mix in eggs, flour, and salt. An overnight rise, then they're rolled out, stamped, and patted with more butter before being left to rise a second time before being baked up into buttery, slightly sweet golden perfection.
Our tradition was to pat one roll with jam instead of butter. The person who unwittingly took the jam roll from the basket was blessed with good luck in the coming year. These so remind me of my family and my grandma that regardless if whether I get the jam roll, I'm still lucky.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Thanksgiving!!!
Contrary to the carols that now stream endlessly from every easy-listening radio station and elevator, Thanksgiving is the most wonderful time of the year. A holiday centered on FOOD, family, and appreciating what we have. Adding to the food-centric splendor, Thanksgiving also kicks off a month-long holiday season leading up to Christmas, the reason why I never mind winter's return every year.
Thanksgiving is over, alas, and my favorite food-centric holiday is but a memory (unless you count the extra gooshiness around my waistline, which will take a bit longer to fade away). Surprisingly, I did very little cooking this year, as we had two sets of parents and siblings all pitching in to create one spectacular feast. We started off they day with some cranberry Prosecco fizzes, samples of two batches of home-brew beer, and a spread consisting of a sweet-n-spicy brown sugar snack mix with wasabi peas and cranberries, smoked gruyere, water crackers, prosciutto, Reem's chipped beef dip, and a brie in puff pastry with almonds and apricots. I can take credit for a batch of beer and the brie - recipe for the latter coming soon.
Several hours after letting this initial feast settle, we dove into the main event - fresh turkey with cranberry shallot glaze, roasted sweet potatoes with sugared pecans, three kinds of dressing (cranberry cornbread; traditional oyster; sage and mushroom), fancy green bean casserole, apple cider gravy, and grandma's rolls (another recipe on its way). So much food...so much family...so much fun...so much love.
Until I get the few recipes posted - including my most favorite to-date leftovers sandwich - I leave you with simply the eye candy that was our spread of food. I hope all of your holidays were as memorable and filling as ours.
Thanksgiving is over, alas, and my favorite food-centric holiday is but a memory (unless you count the extra gooshiness around my waistline, which will take a bit longer to fade away). Surprisingly, I did very little cooking this year, as we had two sets of parents and siblings all pitching in to create one spectacular feast. We started off they day with some cranberry Prosecco fizzes, samples of two batches of home-brew beer, and a spread consisting of a sweet-n-spicy brown sugar snack mix with wasabi peas and cranberries, smoked gruyere, water crackers, prosciutto, Reem's chipped beef dip, and a brie in puff pastry with almonds and apricots. I can take credit for a batch of beer and the brie - recipe for the latter coming soon.
Several hours after letting this initial feast settle, we dove into the main event - fresh turkey with cranberry shallot glaze, roasted sweet potatoes with sugared pecans, three kinds of dressing (cranberry cornbread; traditional oyster; sage and mushroom), fancy green bean casserole, apple cider gravy, and grandma's rolls (another recipe on its way). So much food...so much family...so much fun...so much love.
Until I get the few recipes posted - including my most favorite to-date leftovers sandwich - I leave you with simply the eye candy that was our spread of food. I hope all of your holidays were as memorable and filling as ours.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Early Thanksgiving Bonus Recipe - Banana-Cranberry Muffins with Streusel
Thanksgiving is just around the corner, my dear friends. I am only cooking small contributions to the big meal this year, having shuffled off hosting duty to my wonderful parents-in-law AND gotten my own parents to come down, too. Two families' worth of food traditions? This Thanksgiving will be, as Swarles Barkley says, LEGENDARY.
So I am whipping up a few family specialties - my grandma's exquisite buttery dinner rolls, a brie in puff pastry with almonds and apricots (for the before time...to keep the cooks' energies up!). Maybe my grandpa's orange-cranberry relish. These little post-a-roos will come after the holiday bloat, after the meal is digested, when you're looking at a fridge full of leftovers and wondering, "what now?"
This little recipe concoction calls for dried cranberries to be mixed right into the batter - a fine way to enjoy them. But, in the spirit of Thanksgiving leftovers, why don't you try it with leftover fresh cranberries (made the same way, just increase the amount to a cup) or with leftover cranberry sauce. The latter would probably be good either mixed in (thought it will muddy the color) or, better yet, left out of the batter -- then spooned in to the center of each full muffin cup, like a surprise filling! Or 'marbled' onto the top, before the streusel goes on. Oh, there are just so may options...just like a Thanksgiving table!
What sets these muffins apart from regular banana breads is the citrus zest. In fact, the first time I made them, I replaced the cinnamon/clove/nutmeg with a pumpkin pie spice mix that had lemon essence/extract in it. If you're looking to amp up the citrus notes, feel free to add lemon zest too. Hey, you could even try replacing the water with orange juice, although I wonder if that would muddle flavors too much. The banana is present but not overwhelming; the cranberries are tart but still sweet; and the citrus is almost an aroma in the palate – a hint, but a strong one. Like my hint for you to make me some of these.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Marinated Cauliflower...
Wherever it is from, behold: This is a strange beast.
I initially pulled it out (from….um….Cooking Light? I have no idea) because I needed something to do with a leftover ½ head of cauliflower. And I'm always on the lookout for different, interesting things to do with vegetables besides steaming them or roasting them, two options it seems that I just default to time and time again. (Both are good ways to prepare them, but you get bored doing the same thing over, and over...) After I made it…well, there are better things to do with leftover cauliflower. It’s not that it’s a bad recipe – the flavors are good, and the vinaigrette dressing uses common ingredients and good flavors that I’ve used in many, many a vinaigrette before (Dijon mustard; red onion; olive oil). I like the saltiness of the olives (I didn’t have capers) and the bite of the vinegar, but it just didn’t come together for me.
The vinegar was too strong – instead of the called-for white, I’d use cider. The salad tasted more pickled than marinated – not bad, but not what I was after. And with nothing else in the salad, it just seemed a little…empty. It’s OK, and it would probably be a big hit on, say, an Italian antipasti platter, because the acidity would cut right through the rich, saltiness of salumi and cheese. But as a side dish it left me wanting…something else.
If you have a leftover head of cauliflower, and you don’t know what to do with it….ROAST IT! Tossed with olive oil, salt & pepper, give it 20-25 minutes in a 425 oven. It gets brown, nutty, and delicious – truly different than most of its usually uncooked applications.
If you don’t want to roast it, or if you have an antipasti platter laying around, you could try this. It’s not that bad…but it’s not that good either. But, hey, at least we used up that cauliflower. Modified recipe after the jump.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Chicken Pesto Pizza
This is another one from the archives, another testament to the inner chubster who guides my every waking moment with thoughts of food, more food, and "hey, how 'bout s'more food."
So I think people who look at the recipes on this blog know that I favor simple foods. Not that I don't enjoy different, exotic, dare-I-say gourmet creations. It's just that my budget, ability, and time preclude me from fixing them in my own home. I let restaurant chefs have control over the gourmet, and I follow my own personal ethos of simple, satisfying and comforting at home, for the most part.
Which somehow brings me once again to the topic of pizza, and how much of it I make. Perhaps its my mild obsession with finding the perfect dough recipe, or a chronic addiction to my pizza stone, an ongoing hunt for fresh and full-fat mozzerella varieties in every store, or just the simple reason that I really, really, really like it that explains why I make pizza so darn much.
Really, despite its reputation as a "bad for you" food, pizza is only what you put on it. You could make it entirely without cheese and remove a large portion of the fat & calories. Use whole-grain or whole-wheat flour (unbleached white at the very least, my usual go-to) in the crust and feel better about the carbs. At the very least, you control how much of anything you put on it, so you have a good idea how healthy or indulgent any given pie will be.
This one came about because of a marriage of circumstances: an abundant CSA share led me to make a huge batch of Basil-Arugula Pesto (recipe below), an aging dough from Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day needed to be used up, and some cooked chicken breast (a great thing to make in advance and keep for quick dinners and add-ins) was on hand. Huzzah, and behold the Chicken Pesto Pizza!
Unlike many proper pestos, I tend to make mine pretty scant on the olive oil. As a result, this pizza didn't have the overly oily top that I've seen on restaurant versions. I "dried" the tomatoes on paper towel before topping the pizza to keep the moisture level down as well (soggy crust is a big no-no in Cheeks' kitchen) and sauteed the mushrooms to deepen their flavor before adding them as well. A few chunks of fresh mozzerella substituted well for a richer blanketing layer. Accompanied by a green salad, the humble pesto pizza becomes a rounded and, certainly, healthier take on a much-maligned, but much loved, dish.
Friday, November 19, 2010
Sausage Rolls
What do you do with Italian sausage? This is the question in its entirety that I googled yesterday trying to think of something to do with the two sweet Italian sausage links sitting in my fridge. I quickly crossed of the most common options:
- Sausage sub/hero/on a bun: not what I wanted, had no buns, kinda boring
- Pasta with sausage: again, just seemed boring and uninteresting for dinner, and I'm generally not a big pasta fan at all, so....
- Risotto, perhaps with spinach: I love risotto in restaurants, but never like it when I made it at home...probably due to my unwillingness to use a stick of butter and lots of cream and cheese.
- Pizza...a worthy suggestion, but it happened to be the reason I bought the sausage (and used a link) in the first place, so going back to it seemed "cheating"...
- Hmmmmm....that's about where my ideas ended.
So, hence the google search, which pulled up lots of ideas...for sausage heroes, sausage pasta, sausage risotto. Le sigh. But wait! An unassuming link promised something I'd seen mentioned many times on The Food Pornographer's website, perhaps an Australian tradition but not one I'd ever had - Sausage Rolls!
Basically, you make a meatball-ish mixture using the sausage meat, encase it in puff pastry, slice the logs into bite-size pieces, and bake them up into little pop-able morsels, serving with marinara sauce to dip. Sounds delicious, right? Why have I never had something so good?! It was time to remedy the sitch. And, I figured, if I made a giant spinach-and-veggie salad to be the major space-holder on our dinner plates, I could sneak these indulgent treats by as a side, rather than a main. Dinner was planned!
Turns out defrosting puff pastry in the microwave is not a good idea - something I could have figured out, but didn't, and had no time to spare anyway. Unrolling my sticky, melty puff pastry and trying to roll it out was not a fun process, boys and girls, but I made it work. However, I think it might have impacted the puffiness of my rolls - although, thankfully,not their taste.
How did they taste? Delicious! Mixing the sausage meat with fresh (challah) breadcrumbs, milk, onion, garlic, and seasoning kept it tender while also freshening up the flavor. The pastry got nice and crispy, with an irresistable browned top that kept us reaching back for more. Plus, it streched 1/2 a package of puff pastry and 2 sausage links to at least 36 appetizers, making it fairly economical.
In addition, we've got a spare log in the freezer (though had I not saved it I bet we could have eaten the whole thing), so it's an easy make-ahead and cook-when-needed appetizer. And...c'mon, pastry and sausage? What's not to like.
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