Sunday, April 7, 2013

Perfect Pork Pastie

In the pastie line, this was my first real attempt. Because of the success of the dough, I think, it came out very well and is worth recording here to try again later. It was made from leftovers of a sort of pork stir-fry. The result was a holdable delicious combination of meat and crispy dough with a bit of sweetness from sprouts. Everything in this except non-perishables was local and sustainable.

Filling Ingredients
1/2 med. onion, chopped 1/2 in to 1/4 in. pieces
1 lb. pork cutlet from local provider at Fair Foods. Cut was tender and thinly sliced. I cut it in strips to create texture similar to beef stir-fry meat you can buy.
1/2 piece thick cut smoked bacon across width in 1/4 in slices
1 1/2 boxes (pt. size) Brussels sprouts, trimmed and chiffonade, not too thin.
paprika, about 1/4 t
cayenne pepper, sprinkle--1/8 t or less
thyme, 1/2 t
salt to taste
black pepper, 1/8-1/2 t
olive oil

Directions
Dough
Make and refrigerate dough. Used processor dough recipe from Jane. Used 1/4 c. butter and 1/4 c. rendered fat with 2 c. white flour, baking powder, and salt.

Filling
  1. In large (14 in.) pan, brown onions in 2-3 T oil to darkish, then cut heat to low and caramelize briefly--5-10 min. while prepping other ingredients.
  2. Put chopped port in bowl. Add a little oil and the spices. Toss.
  3. Put heat to high and move onions to perimeter of pan. Add meat to center. Let heat through. I added the bacon then, but could be earlier. Cook through, tossing in pan and mixing with onions when browned.
  4. Push all of this to perimeter of pan. Add Brussels sprouts to center on high heat. Let sit and sear, then toss and wait again. When well seared--some black here and there--cut heat to med or med-low, and cover pan for two minutes to cook them through. 
  5. Deglaze pan with a bit of water to get everything that may be stuck to it.
  6. Add salt and black pepper and more cayenne to taste.
Pastie
The sealing process for this was not elegant but it worked.

Preheat oven to 400. Rack on top setting.
  1. Let dough warm from refrigeration--5 to 10 minutes.
  2. With lots of flour on hand, make ball just a little bigger than a golf ball.
  3. Roll into circle that's 9" in diameter. I traced a plate with a knife. It should be pretty thin.
  4. Put 1/2 c of the filling into the center and fold in half--moon shape. 
  5. Dampen edges with water on finger, then fold them over in one direction. Press with fork from both sides.
  6. Place on pan in hot oven. Check in 15 min. Should be nicely brown on both top and pan side. 
I liked that the dough took on the lumpy shape of the filling and that it was quite crisp. The filling also tended to stay in the pastie when you ate it--neater eating.  A reheat in microwave for about 15 sec. from room temperature was good. Could be a little longer probably.


Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Nathaniel's Amazing Sausage and Apple Pizza

This pizza was created (and baked) by Nathaniel with me helping out. It is one of the best pizzas I ever tasted. It's based off of a bacon and apple one they do at Otto where here worked in Boston. The taste combination was just terrific. The sausage was called Linguica  from a local farm. It was mildly spicy and had a rich wine flavor, paring well with the apple, fresh mozzarella cheese and herbed crust.

Ingredients:

pizza dough, herbed (could use plain)
garlic, 4 large cloves minced
olive oil
half and half, about 2 T
oregano
about 1 lb. Linguica  pork sausage
med red onion, thin sliced
1 Gold Rush (sweet-tart) apple, thin sliced in crescents
Asiago cheese, about 2 oz. plane grated (could use a medium hot sausage of most kinds)
1 lb. ball fresh mozzarella cheese, sliced in rounds
fresh ground pepper
salt

8 slices
Preheat oven to 500 or Broil.

Directions:
  1. If refrigerated, set dough out to warm while you prep.
  2. Prep garlic. Put cloves of the minced garlic into 1/3 c. olive oil to steep. Reserve rest.
  3. Slice sausage and cook in large skillet--high heat, then lower until cooked through. (About 1/2 in. slices or as thin as you can make it.) Remove from pan.
  4. Add onions to pan on high heat until soft, then low for at least 5 min. 
  5. Flatten and stretch dough to 16" circle. Sprinkle corn meal on pizza pan (or oil it), then lay dough on it.
  6. Brush dough with garlic oil then layer on in this order: 1/2 Asiago cheese, black pepper, apple, cream, onions, minced garlic, mozzarella, sausage, oregano, salt, and top with rest of Asiago.
  7. Cook on top shelf in oven 12 min. or until edges are nicely toasted.
 2 slices is a good serving as it's very rich and delicious!




Saturday, February 23, 2013

Warm Winter Fish Chowder

This is a fish chowder I cooked up on a coldish rainy day in February. All foods were local and in season except for the tomato sauce I made last summer and froze. It's a not too creamy but well blended group of flavors and had a beautiful pinkish tinge from the cream and tomato sauce together. The Brussels sprouts were a bit of a risk but I used them in lieu of something sweet like corn. I think they worked well.  Here's how it went:


Serves 4-6 as main course.

Ingredients:

3 thick slices bacon
1 large onion, chopped small
2/3 of a head of garlic, minced
1 med carrot, chopped small
1 pt. Brussels sprouts, chunky chopped into 4-6 pieces each
2 large Yukon potatoes, peeled and 1/2 in. diced
1 small fillet flounder
1 med. fillet monk fish
4 large dry scallops
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
1 cup whole milk
2 T butter
salt and pepper
Cajun season mix
2 T olive oil
1/2 bunch parsley

Directions

  1. In a large soup pot, slow cook bacon slices whole, rending as much fat out as possible.
  2. While bacon is cooking (maybe 20 min, turned occasionally), prep veggies--onions, carrot, garlic, potatoes, sprouts.
  3. Remove bacon from pan and reserve. Add chopped onions and carrots on high heat. Soften, then turn to low heat, add, garlic, mix through, and let caramelize for maybe 5-10 minutes.
  4. While veggies caramelize, first prep parsley by rough chopping enough leaves to garnish soup--3-4 T. Then fine chop the rest, stems and all. 
  5.  Prep fish by cutting into bite-size pieces--about 1 in. chunks. I cut scallops into eighths. Put in a bowl. Add 2T olive oil, 1 T Cajun season, 1/4 t salt, and fine chopped parsley. Stir in gently with rubber spatula and let sit.
  6. After  veggies caramelized a while, push to sides of pot. Turn heat to high, and add sprouts to center of pot. Let sit for 3-4 minutes, then mix it and continue on high heat. 
  7. After about 4 min., stirring frequently, add the tomato sauce. Heat through. 
  8. Add the diced potatoes and then add enough boiling water to cover them well--probably 3-5 cups. Bring to boil, then let simmer until potatoes are soft.
  9. Add fish and more water if needed to cover well. Bring to boil and simmer for 2-3 minutes or until fish tastes well done.
  10. While fish is simmering, dice the three pieces of bacon for garnish.
  11. Add cream and mile a bit at a time, stirring with rubber spatula. Add the butter and stir in.
  12. Adjust for salt and a generous about of fresh ground black pepper.
  13. Ladle into wide bowls and garnish first with bacon and then parsley.
We ate this simply with some oil crackers and a mixed green salad with Balsamic vinaigrette.  Very warming, tasty, and satisfying.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Carnival 2013: with Roasted Beet Soup recipe

Just wanted to record the feast prepared for Carnival 2013, a nice quiet dinner for 6:
appetizer:
brochette with sauteed pea greens and garlic; brochette or cracker with Doe Run Barn Owl cheese (very bloomy); carrot squares with Shepherd's Hollow Blue de Ewe cheese. 
-->The sauteed pea greens and garlic came out particularly well. Small amount of oil to toast the two cloves of minced garlic, then what probably amounted to two cups plus of pea greens, just past wilted. One teaspoon full spread on each toasted baguette round. Also prepared the carrots in squares by using very large (but good) storage carrots--maybe a 1 1/2 to 2 in. diameter--and slicing them into 1/4 inch slabs then cutting those to roughly square pieces. Crumbled the blue on top. A great pairing.

soup:
variation on Roasted Beet Soup with Creme Fraiche
Here's the recipe. I altered a recipe from epicurious.com to create it:
Ingredients:
8 med. beets, roasted at 350 for 1.5 hrs.
3 med. leeks, white end only, sliced
1/2 med. red onion, thin sliced
3 T butter
1/4 t each of ground ginger, allspice, and white pepper
2 bay leaves
sprigs of fresh thyme
4 sprigs fresh parsley
3+ cups water
creme fraiche (optional)
salt to taste

Directions.
  1. Roast and peel beets. Cut 1/2 of one into small cubes. Reserve for garnish.
  2. Saute leeks and onion in pan until soft and starting to brown.
  3. Add spices and beets, quartered. Simmer for 10-15 min. Adjust salt. Remove bay and sprigs as much as possible.
  4. Puree and add water to make a medium consistency.
  5. Let cool to room temperature. 
  6. Serve each bowl with handful of beet cubes and garnish with sprig fresh thyme. Also garnish with creme fraiche if desired. (I served without and like the lightness of it as a first course.)
entree
my version of a traditional Galician Cocido: pork, chicken, beef, chorizo, greens, chick peas, cabbage, carrots, and potatoes
It will be based on what I did in 2011 (nice picture of Nathaniel eating it), the description of it in John Barlow's Everything but the Squeal, and my friend Anxo's description of what his mother prepared every Sunday.  This is also traditional Carnival fare in Galicia. 
This dish included:
*1/2 of a smoked chicken, about 5-6 lb. chicken
*about 2 lb. or country pork ribs that I covered in about 3 lb. of salt with a maybe a 1/2 cup of my dry rub mixed in. cured overnight in refrigerator.
*a beef chuck roast of about 2 1/2 lb.
*2 lb. of fresh Chorizo sausage
*about 2 lb. of pork cheeks
Seared all of the meats first, then braised in a lot of liquid for about six hours. Added soaked chick peas after about three hours of cooking. Also cooked separately: 5 Yukon potatoes, 2 very large carrots, 1 small head purple cabbage. Cooked cabbage, then changed water, added others, and added a few cups of the meat stock.

salad
Boston lettuce with radishes and mustard vinaigrette and salted sweet potato chips.

dessert
fried Haloumi cheese with pear and spiced dates
Recipe from Spice by Ana Sortun. Used Tina's homemade plum brandy instead of the recipe ouzo for flambe. 

chocolates by John & Kira with decaf San Francisco blend from Old City Coffee

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Paleo-Local Brisket - September 16, 2012

This was a local ingredients version of Sylvia's traditional brisket recipe, substituting in-season fruits and other ingredients for the usual catchup, ginger ale, and Lipton onion soup mix. It was fabulous and even Murray loved it.

3 lb. local grass-fed brisket
2 large onions, chopped
1 peach
1 nectarine
2 pears
1 apple
ground cloves
ground cinnamon
salt
pepper
bunch parsley
few leaves basil (5)
olive oil
balsamic vinegar
1 ½ cups prune juice
1 ½ cups water
10 Yukon Gold potatoes, med./small
6 medium carrots

Preheat oven to 350.

1. Pat dry meat. Generously salt and pepper it on both sides. Add 3 tblsp olive oil to heavy pan over high heat. Seer brisket until browned and a little crisp, about 3-4 minutes/side. Remove brisket.

2. Add chopped onions to pan. Add ¼ tsp. salt. Cook on high 3-4 minutes until soft. Reduce to low. Cook for 5-10 minutes.

3. Seed and roughly chop all of the fruit. Also roughly chop bunch parsley (stems removed.) When onions slightly caramelized add the fruit and parsley. Cook on high heat 2-3 minutes.

4. Remove about ⅔ of the onion fruit mixture from the pan. Then add meat to the pan. Add prune juice, water, 3 tblsp. balsamic vinegar, ¼ tsp. of cloves, and ¼ tsp. of cinnamon. Place onion fruit mixture back on top of the meat and cook on high heat until it starts to boil.

5. Cover and put in oven.

6. Peel and quarter potatoes. Peel and chop carrots into 1 ½ “ sticks. Steam them until al dente, about 20 minutes.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Paleo Toe In The Water

I'm just posting here to record a bit of my diet using the guidelines of my dear paleolithic ancestors.
I've been winging it for a week on recipes, and made a few good meals. Generally, though, I end up with greens of some kind cooked in fat, pushed out to the side of the pan, then cooked some more as I cook the main meat or fish dish in the center.

For example tonight's meal:
  1. About a pound of local pork sage sausage chopped and put in pan with some butter (just found out I'm not supposed to use this--oops); half onion sliced and put in. 
  2. When onions soft, prepped string beans added to center well. High heat about five minutes tossing occasionally. Pushed everything out to the side then, 
  3. Added maybe 2T slivered almonds; toasted in middle of pan with light sprinkle of Cayenne pepper. Mixed in, pushed everything out to side then,
  4. Added three blue fish fillets, prepared with salt, pepper, and some ground mixed tree nuts and a sprinkling of fresh tarragon. Cooked on high heat, flesh side down.
  5. Made sauce with melted butter added to Dijon mustard, cumin, and a dash of Balsamic vinegar. 
  6. Served fish topped with more fresh tarragon and spooned mustard-cumin sauce over; beans and almond served on the side (saved the sausage for another meal.) Also served green salad on the side.
I'm working on getting away from the one-pan version, though. Here are some menu ideas I have for this week, based on what's in the fridge and freezer--all local:

  • Baked round zucchinis stuffed with ground pork and onions.
  •  Grilled pork chops on a bed of grilled apples and celery.
  • Sliced cooked tuna with ginger tossed with Swiss chard and ginger.
  • Slow-cooked zucchini and ground lamb served on a grilled portabella mushroom.
  • Chopped beans and sausage (leftover from tonight's meal) mixed with leftover summer squash, eggplant, and chorizo dish, wrapped in a collard leaf and baked.
  • Diced cantaloupe tossed with bacon drippings, crushed cooked bacon, and fresh tarragon.
I'm liking the sound of these and feel like I'm just getting the hang of starting to think in a new language. We'll see if it's lost in translation to the table!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Chicken Pot Pie Happiness

This turned out to be one of the most comforting dishes I've made in a while, and who doesn't want to remember comfort? So here it is. It's loosely based off of a recipe in Best Recipe of Cooks' Illustrated. It's heavy on the carrots and celery (something I don't usually like too much), but was beautifully balanced in the end and worked both in terms of texture and aroma. (My pie did not actually look like this.)

For a 9" pie. 6-8 servings.

Ingredients
pie crust for top and bottom--whatever recipe or prepared version you like

1.25 lb. chicken breast on bone (I used local fresh chicken. So flavorful.)
3 c chicken broth (Used Trader Joe's organic, boxed.)
2T + 4T butter
1 t dried tarragon
1 med potato, peeled and diced to about 1/2 in.
2 T olive oil
3/4 large onion, diced
4 med carrots, diced
5 stalks celery, lightly peeled, dices small (sliced lengthwise 3 or 4 times, then chopped) It will be more celery than the carrots and onion combined.
3T white flour
3t dried thyme
1 1/2 heads garlic, minced (Yes, a lot. Some of mine was a little dried out, so you could use 1 head, but you'll need at least that much.)
1/4 c flour
1/2 c heavy cream

Directions

  1. Make (or buy) your pie dough ahead and refrigerate.
  2. Boil the whole chicken breast in the broth for 8-10 min. Remove chicken to cool. Reserve broth. (I did 8 and it wasn't quite cooked through. Also did this a day ahead because the chicken needed to be cooked.)
  3. After chicken has cooled, shred it with two forks. Discard skin and bone.
  4. In a skillet, melt 2T butter. Add shredded chicken and tarragon. Mix thoroughly and saute on med-low heat for 2-3 minutes. Leave in pan until needed later. (If you boil chicken ahead, do this later when you're making the rest.)

    Preheat oven to 400.
  5. In a medium pot, boil the diced potato for about 3 minutes. Drain and reserve.
  6. In a large heavy pot, heat onions in oil on high heat until they soften. Reduce heat to med-low and add carrots, garlic, and thyme. Heat through. Add celery. Let cook on low for 5-6 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  7. Make a well through to the bottom of the pot. Add the flour there and stir a bit until it heats. Add the 4T of butter to that and mix in to make paste. Now be patient, letting it heat through and start to turn light brown and smell nutty. Stir occasionally. When it starts to get the wonderful nutty smell (that's a roux!) then stir into all the veggies and heat through for another minute or so.
  8. Gradually add the chicken broth, stirring through each time (maybe a 1/4 cup at a time) until it's mixed through and not lumpy at all from the flour. Bring it to a boil. Reduce heat.
  9. Add heavy cream and the boiled diced potato. Add salt and pepper to taste. Let simmer on low heat for about ten minutes. It needs to reduce to a pretty thick consistency as this will be the pie filling with the chicken added.
  10. While the filling is simmering, roll out your pie dough and line the bottom of the pie dish. (Once in the dish, you may want to put it in the oven for 4-5 min. to set a little. I did this as my bottom dough was too wet--a frozen one I totally messed up getting in the dish, but it came out fine. I used my own dough for the top--and it was better.)
  11. Roll out or prepare top dough layer.
  12. Add the chicken to the pot and heat/mix through.
  13. Ladle the filling into the pie dish until full. (I had about 3/4 cup left--really tasty appetizer eaten with a spoon!)
  14. Cover with top crust. Seal edge, and but a few fork holes in the top to let out steam.
  15. Place in oven with a baking tray underneath (next shelf down) to catch drips.
  16. Bake for 20-25 min. or until top is nicely brown. Remove and let stand for ten or fifteen minutes before serving. It will still be plenty hot!
This pie is a good meal all by itself with maybe a green salad on the side. Good leftovers with a quick reheat in the microwave (no more than 20 sec. for a piece) or put the whole pie dish in the oven at 350 for ten minutes or less.