Thursday, January 14, 2010

Rarebit season

My mom (hi, Mom!) is fond of a dish called Welsh rarebit, which is basically a cheese sauce over bread, bacon, and tomatoes. Being a very talented cook with a captive audience, she inducted me into the cult of rarebit fandom while I was growing up. I love Welsh rarebit. However, not all members of my household are as entranced by this meal as I am. Apparently, some people don't find cheese and bread quite sufficient for dinner. (?!?)
But the sauce is really good, either when used in Welsh rarebit or when smothered over vegetables or pasta. It's also fast and easy to make - I made a batch to go over steamed broccoli tonight, and the sauce was ready before the water had even come to a boil for the broccoli (bad timing on my part). So, without further ado:

Cheese sauce
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour or cornstarch
1 cup cheddar cheese (reduced fat cheese works fine)
1/4 cup stout or other dark beer (or more for a thinner sauce)
black or white pepper

- In a small saucepan, melt butter over low heat
- Stir in flour/cornstarch until mixture is smooth
- Add in cheese and beer, alternating between the two. Stir, stir, and stir some more. The sauce should be glossy and smooth when it's ready.
- Add black or white pepper to taste

- Serve over vegetables, potatoes, pasta, or any combination of the above. Alternatively, serve over toasted hunks of bread, slices of tomatoes, and bacon crumbles for Welsh rarebit.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Autumn fondue

This one is based on an idea from the wonderful cheese shop near our house, Venissimo, which mentioned in a recent newsletter that cheese fondue can be cooked up inside a pumpkin or other squash. It sounded so good that we had to give it a try. As it turns out, the pumpkin releases a lot of juice as it cooks, so while we used our normal fondue recipe for the dinner in the photo above, I modified it a little in the recipe below to reduce the wine and make it thicker.

Autumn Fondue
1 sugar pumpkin, about 7 inches in diameter
2 cups Emmental cheese, shredded
2 cups Gruyere cheese, shredded
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon of dry white wine or sherry
3 tablespoons kirschwasser
pinch of salt
pinch of freshly ground pepper
approximately 2 tablespoons olive oil

- Preheat oven to 350 F.
- Wash pumpkin and cut a hole in the top, jack-o-lantern-style. Do not discard top. Clean out the pumpkin inside to remove seeds and stringy parts.
- Rub olive oil all over the outside of the pumpkin.
- Toss cheeses in cornstarch until coated evenly (this is easiest in a plastic bag).
- Put all ingredients inside pumpkin. Replace lid on pumpkin.
- Put pumpkin on a cookie sheet and bake in oven for about 1 hour, until cheese is melted and pumpkin is tender. Stir the fondue until it is smooth (this may take a few minutes).
- Serve with bread, apples, cooked potatoes, or your favorite fondue dippers.

Monday, December 7, 2009

guacamole

Here's my guacamole recipe again, cross posted here for reference.

(The recipe is down at the bottom because I want you to have to scroll past my pontification to get to it.)

Avocado Selection
Avocado selection is important and non-obvious. Ripe avocados are black and soft, but not mushy. Perfect guacamole avocados are not quite ripe. They are slightly firmer than avocados that you might select for eating out of the shell, or in a salad, for example. You can get away with this because the first thing you're going to do is mash them up. The reason to pick less-ripe avocados is that they have less of the oxidized brown parts. (Don't try to make guacamole with green or hard avocados: your avocados should still be soft when you slice into them.)


5 small avocados from our local mecixan market - serves 4

After you've opened your avocados, spoon them into your mashing bowl. I like to pick out the obvious brown parts and discard them, but you don't have to be too vigilant, it will generally all come out in the wash (i.e. mash). On occasion though, I will discard an entire avocado if it's too brown and mushy when I open it up.

On Spices
All spices are to taste, but the spice balance is really what makes or breaks the guac in my opinion. My greatest lesson, and the most important piece of advice I can bestow upon you, is that you need more salt than you think you do. And more garlic. A lot more garlic. The first step after opening the avocados is to salt them. You should salt the guacamole until just before it tastes like salt. Don't be afraid of overshooting; go slow and get it right. If you go too far, that's why you have tomatoes and garlic on hand. Garlic is fantastic for balancing salt: adding a lot of garlic will allow you to add more salt, and you should do so.

The other spices I use are black pepper and cayenne. The cayenne especially adds a little bit of a slow burn to your guacamole that will give it a subtly addictive quality. It should be noticeable on reflection, but you don't have to make it hot for it to have an effect. If your guests are spice-intolerant (ahem), you may omit. Do not bother with Paprika or Chili Powder, you will not taste it and it will turn your green brown.


This is what I use.

Lime Juice
Acid prevents avocados from browning too soon (it works on apples too.) Lime juice is delicious in guacamole, and I feel that it's really necessary for a truly sanctioned mix, but of course sometimes we have to make sacrifices.

For mine I only used half a lime.

Optional Ingredients
Tomatoes
Include tomatoes if you have them on hand, and especially for large party bowls. They taste good, add some festive color, and they're a lot cheaper than avocados. Select ripe, red tomatoes and dice them fine enough that they blend in. Do not add them until after you get your spice mix just about right, as too much mixing will cause them to disintegrate.

Cilantro
If I have cilantro on hand for some other part of the meal I will often include it. Chop it very fine so it doesn't interfere with your texture. It's optional.

Controversy
Some people are wrong.

Garlic or Garlic Salt?
Real garlic is too sharp and screws up your texture. Garlic powder dissolves beautifully and gives you an even texture and taste. Sometimes easier is also better. Garlic Salt is trash and I hate it. There I said it.

Onions?
Don't like 'em. Their taste overpowers the avocados, and their texture gets in the way too. They're great on tacos or whatever but with guacamole they're a bull in a china shop.

Sour Cream?
It really affects the texture and color. I've had some good guacamole that was made this way but I won't do it myself... It just doesn't seem necessary since the avocados give you plenty of creamy goodness already.

Cutting the Guac
If I'm making a large batch for a party, I will use about one (small roma) tomato per (large haas) avocado. It's just cheaper. Nobody ever complains about it. It means that people who are late might actually get some.

Recipe
The reference batch was made used 5 rather small avocados for 4 people, but I wrote up the recipe for what I estimate to be an equivalent number of the large avocados that you usually find at supermarkets. If you try out the recipe let me know how it came out.

Nate's Guacamole


it will vanish

3 large avocados (or equivalent)
1 tomato
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon garlic
2 dashes of cayenne (to taste)
half a lime or 2 squirts from or a bottle of lime juice
1 bag tortilla chips (salted, non-flavored)


Open up 3 ripe-but-firm avocados and spoon them into a bowl, discarding any dark brown portions. Add salt and mash. Test salt level and add more if it doesn't taste too salty yet. Add garlic, pepper, and cayenne, and mix. Taste. Continue to tweak, mix, and taste until it is delicious and a bit salty. Dice tomato and add. Add lime juice. Mix, taste, adjust, serve with tortilla chips.

~~~
enjoy!

improvised bean dip

On Sunday we made dinner for Todd and Tory. It was a relatively simple thing, we have an agreement that these bi-weekly dinners need to stay low-pressure. We made enchiladas, bean dip, and spanish rice. For the bean dip, I called up Douglas and asked him what to do, but I didn't have his main ingredients, so here's what I did instead. It seems to have worked.

1 can refried beans (vegetarian in this case)
4oz (approx) sour cream
1/4 lb cheese (queso fresco this time)
1 smallest can diced jalapeƱos, or to taste.
1/2 jar medium salsa
1/2 (regular) can black olives, chopped coarse (or 1 small can)
salt to taste - probably at least 1 tsp, maybe more like 2 but be careful.
1 Tbsp garlic powder
---optional---
2 tsp cumin
green onions, chopped
2 tsp paprika for color.

Heat in a pot until cheese is melted.

If I did it over, I might try finely diced onions instead of green onions. My brother uses chili beans and cream cheese instead of refried and sour cream, that also sounds delicious.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Sirloin Tips over Rice

Sirloin Tips Over Rice

Recipe basically feeds 5-6 people. I have never really made it the same way twice, so consider modifications to suite your own tastes and preferences.

Rice

1 Cup to 1 & ½ cups of rice (dry). Steam / prepare according to directions.

Sirloin Steak

1&1/2 to 2 pounds (if lean)

Two ways to prepare the sirloin, but basically you want to remove any gristle, excess fat or membrane.

Normal Preparation: Cut into small cubes or pieces that will not choke someone. If children, best to cut into smaller pieces, but will not be as tender.

Alternative Preparation: Cut into strips about ¾ to inch in width. This allows the outside to be cooked more consistently in less time, which adds flavor and is possibly tenderer. (I am still experimenting with this method.) It is more work because after the meat is grilled or seared, it still needs to be cut.

Other Ingredients

These ingredients are pretty flexible depending on personal preferences.

Olive oil (1&1/2 – 2 tablespoons)

2 teaspoon of dry sage or about ¼ cup of fresh sage (chopped)

½ teaspoon of oregano or dried basil

black pepper to taste

½ teaspoon of salt

2 teaspoons quality beef base concentrate (not bouillon)

tablespoon of Worcester sauce.

1 – 2 stalks of celery, diced or chopped

½ medium onion, diced or chopped

3 cloves of chopped garlic

1 cup of fresh mushrooms, washed and sliced.

½ cup of water

½ to 1 cup of full bodied red wine. (I use Cabernet Sauvignon most of the time.)

2 tablespoons of cornstarch

Putting It Together

  1. Start the rice.
  2. Heat frying pan using medium-high heat with olive oil.
  3. If sirloin is in strips, place in hot pan and sear each side for about 1 minute and then remove and cut into cubes.
  4. If sirloin is cubed, place in hot pan and stir occasionally until all external surfaces appear slightly brown.
  5. Reduce heat to medium. Add celery and onion to pan and stir occasionally for about 5 minutes.
  6. Add sage, oregano or basil, garlic and beef base stir.
  7. Add wine, Worcester sauce, and black pepper.
  8. Add ½ cup water and bring mixture to a simmer.
  9. Simmer for about five minutes over medium – low heat.
  10. Meanwhile, mix cornstarch with about a 1/3 of a cup of water until smooth, milky liquid and set aside.
  11. Add salt to taste.
    1. Worcester sauce and beef base both contain salt so you may want to taste before adding.
    2. Avoid adding too much.
    3. Also: salt pulls moisture out of meat and vegetables so add last.
  12. Slowly add cornstarch liquid to simmering pan while stirring.
    1. Pause periodically and see how thick the sauce is getting.
    2. Add more cornstarch until consistency is similar to gravy.
    3. Will also thicken a little as it cools.
    4. If too thick, a little water may be added.
  13. Stir mushrooms into pan.
  14. Turn-off heat and let stand for 2-4 minutes.

Serve Over Rice

Saturday, December 5, 2009

introduction

This is a blog to collect recipes and food stories, from and for friends and family. Modern and traditional, vegetarian and meatitarian, whatever you're making and eating.

If you want to post a recipe and you're not an author, email me the recipe and I'll put it up for you, and I'll probably make you an author too.

Share and enjoy!