Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Camaraderie Vineyard's Wine Maker's Dinner


Along with my fearless and valiant Sous, Roy and I presented Camaraderie Vineyard's guests with an 8 course Wine Maker's Dinner that we were both very proud of.
Camaraderie Vineyards Wine Maker’s Dinner
October 20, 2007

our menu

Lobster-Mango Spring Roll
Apricot Vinaigrette

Popcorn Tossed with Truffle Oil

Leek Trio
Leeks Mimosa with Hazelnuts
Parmesan-Leek Bread Pudding
Vichyssoise
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Chilled Asparagus
Timbale of Caviar, Crab, Avocado
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Salad - Three Ways
Celeriac Remoulade
Chickpea and Carrot
Roasted Beet, Red Onion and Chives
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Herb-Crusted Mahi Mahi
Oven-Roasted Fennel and Tomato
Balsamic Reduction
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Braised Lamb Shanks
Caramelized Onions and Shallots
Potato Puree
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Cheese Board
Wensley Dale Boroughs English Cheddar
Homboldt Fog Goat
Holland Smoked
Dried fruit
Walnut bread
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Late Harvest Riesling Sorbet
Fresh Berries
Chocolates


What a fun dinner and great group of folks to cook for. Almost all the courses/dishes I have cooked before, but a couple of them I’d either heard about or been given the ideas from chef friends I trust enough to go with offering them untried.

I have no idea where I first heard about Truffle popcorn, but it’s something I’ve been wanting to play with for quite a while. We had some company coming for dinner a week or so ahead of the wine maker’s dinner so decided to ‘test’ with them. We made three batches, one with kosher salt & truffle oil, one with truffle oil & truffle infused salt, and one with truffle oil, truffle salt and lemon zest. All agree the third was the very best! Earthy flavors with just a little zestiness to it.

TRUFFLE POPCORN
a Chef’s Journey recipe

1/2 cup popcorn
vegetable oil to coat the popcorn very lightly
1 1/2 T. truffle oil
truffle infused salt, to taste
2 Tablespoons lemon zest

Measure out popcorn in a heavy pot. Add just enough vegetable oil to lightly coat the kernels.
Pop the corn and remove from heat.
Immediately add the truffle oil, truffle salt and lemon zest and toss the popcorn until all is incorporated.
Serve immediately.

The popcorn and Lobster-Mango Spring Rolls were to be ‘walk around’ starters for greeting the guests. I had intended to use butter lettuce leaves for the rolls, but decided they would not be as easy to use as a one-bite amuse-bouche as they would be with rice paper. The rolls are made up of strips of lobster, mango and cucumber rolled in rice paper and served with an Apricot Vinaigrette, which is really more of a sauce than vinaigrette, imo.

LOBSTER-MANGO SPRING ROLL WITH APRICOT VINAIGRETTE
Rick Tramonto, Amuse-Bouche

1 cooked lobster tail from a 1 1/2 - 2-lb. lobster (for 3 5-oz. lobster tails, drop in boiling salted water for 6 minutes)
1/2 cucumber -- peeled
1 ripe mango
4 to 8-inch round dried rice paper sheets (or butter lettuce leaves)
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 T. Apricot Vinaigrette

Remove the lobster meat from the shell in one piece & cut the meat lengthwise into quarters.
Trim each piece so that it is about 4" long.
Pull out the digestive tract if it's present.

Remove the seeds from the cucumber with a small spoon.
Discard the seeds.
Cut 4 strips from the cucumber, each one about 1/3" thick and 4" long, so that they match the lobster strips.
Make the strips as even as possible. Save any extra cucumber for another use.

Peel skin from the mango w/peeler.
Slice the flesh to the pit, squaring it as much as you can.
Cut 4 strips from the mango to match the cucumber strips.
Make the strips as even as possible.
Save extra for another use.

Fill a large, shallow bowl with warm water and spread a lint-free dish towel on a work surface.

One at a time, drop the rice paper in the water till all are submerged.
Soak for 3 minutes or till they are completely softened and pliable.
Life the sheets out of the water and spread them out on the dish towel to drain, making sure they don't overlap.

Arrange a strip of each - lobster, cucumber, and mango across the bottom third of the wrapper. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Fold the wrapper over the filling and roll into a tight cylinder up to the halfway mark.
Fold in the two sides and continue to roll till sealed.
Place the roll on a flat plate, seam side down.
Repeat to make 3 more rolls. Allow to rest for a few minutes to seal completely.

To serve, cut the rolls on the bias into thirds. (For an 8 course dinner, I cut each roll into 5 pieces)
Spoon some vinaigrette. On a small plate and set a slice on top of the sauce, cut side down. Or, slice the spring rolls into smaller pieces and serve on small plates w/a small ramekin of vinaigrette for dipping.

Can make up to 3 hours ahead


Next course up was the Leeks 3 Ways - a wonderful dish to be presented on a rectangular dish – I served the Vichyssoise on the left in demitasse cups, the Leeks Mimosa with Hazelnuts in the center, and the Leek Bread Pudding, cut in squares and plated on point, on the right. This is a great dish, with one exception – the Leek Mimosa was not a standout and I think I will replace the third part of this dish with either a Bell Pepper & Leek Sauté or a Leek & Ginger Slaw. Will be a much better balanced plate (taste and presentation).


VICHYSSOISE
House & Garden, 9/62
Serving Size : 6

2 cups potatoes -- finely diced, raw
4 tablespoons butter
6 large leeks (opt. add 1-2 shallots with the leeks) -- cleaned & cut into 1" pcs
3 cups chicken bouillon
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1 dash nutmeg
2 cups sour cream -- or heavy cream. May need just 1 1/2 cups
chopped fresh chives

Cook potatoes in salted water to cover till just tender. Melt butter in skillet & cook the leeks gently, tossing them lightly, for a few minutes.
Add the chicken bouillon and bring to a boil. Lower heat & simmer the leeks till tender.

Add the potatoes to the leeks & the broth & season to taste w/salt, pepper & nutmeg.

Put this mixture in a blender (blend in two-four lots.) & blend for 1 min. or till smooth.

Chill. When ready to serve, mix in sour cream or heavy cream. Thin with chicken stock or milk if necessary. Garnish w/chopped chives.

Parmesan-Leek Bread Pudding

3 tablespoons butter
3 leeks\raw -- white part only
1 1/2 cups milk
1/2 cup light cream or half-and-half
4 eggs
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
2 cups grated Parmesan cheese
1 loaf Italian bread -- torn into 1 inch pieces

In a sauté pan over medium heat, gently soften the leeks in butter. After the leeks are tender, remove from heat. Preheat oven to 350°F.
In a large mixing bowl, combine milk, half-and-half, eggs, seasonings, and cheese. Stir in bread and leeks.
Pour mixture into a large baking dish and bake for 35-45 minutes.

Serves 8
I’ll have to do a little searching to find where this recipe came from.

Soup course is a family and catering favorite – Chilled Asparagus Soup with Timbale of Caviar, Crab and Avocado. You couldn’t ask for a prettier presentation soup, nor a better flavored.

CHILLED ASPARAGUS SOUP with TIMBALE OF CAVIAR, CRAB & AVOCADO
Serves 8

1/4 cup butter
3 small leeks -- white & pale green parts only, 4 cups approx.
2 lbs. asparagus -- ends trimmed, coarse chop
1 1/3 quarts chicken stock -- or canned low-salt broth (43 oz.)
1 quart chopped spinach leaves -- 4 oz.
1/2 cup flaked fresh crabmeat
2 2/3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 1/3 tablespoons minced shallot
1 cup diced peeled pitted avocado
2 2/3 tablespoons good-quality black caviar (such as oestra)

Melt butter in heavy large pan over med. heat. Add leeks & sauté till soft, about 5 min. Add asparagus and stock; bring to boll. Reduce heat to medium, cover & simmer till asparagus is tender, about 8 min. Add spinach, cover & simmer till wilted, about 4 min.

Working in batches, puree soup in blender till smooth. Transfer soup to large bowl; season to taste with salt & pepper. Cool, then cover & chill till cold, at least 2 hours and up to 1 day.

Mix crabmeat, 1 T. lemon juice & shallot in small bowl. Season to taste w/salt & pepper.

Mix avocado & remaining I T. lemon juice in another small bowl; mash coarsely. Season to taste w/salt & pepper.

Place tomato can, biscuit cutter or pvc pipe cut in 2-3” length in center of one soup bowl.
Spoon in 1 T. avocado mixture; smooth top.
Spoon in 1 T. crab mixture; press lightly to compact.
Spoon in 1 T. avocado mixture. Top with 1 tsp. caviar.

Carefully lift off can. Repeat in remaining soup bowls with remaining timbale Ingredients. Ladle soup around each timbale. Serve immediately.
Over the years, I now have pvc that I use rather than any metal rings - works much better.


Salad – three ways is a winner and I’ll certainly offer this again. It’s made up of three distinctive flavored salads. The colors are great together and look wonderful plated in a triangle with the point of the triangle being the beet salad and the back two ‘legs’ of the chickpea and celeriac.

The celeriac is dressed with one of the best tasting Remoulade I’ve tasted – if you’re a purist this does not have anchovy, but why not play with it. The two times I’ve made the salad, I’ve had leftover remoulade and found the best use for it. Grill some burger patties and thick onion slices brushed with butter and seasoned with salt & pepper. Brush Kaiser rolls with butter and as the patties and onion are done, lay on grill to brown. Spread lots of remolaude on both sides of the bun and top with the patty and onion slice. Oh what a wonderful burger this is!!


CELERIAC REMOULADE
“We serve this on its own as a salad, but it's also an excellent side dish or garnish, or with a roast pork sandwich or as a light meal with a piece of cold chicken.” A note by Thomas Keller in his book, “Bouchon”.

Remoulade:
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup crème fraiche
2 T. minced cornichons
2 T. minced rained nonpareil capers -- preferably Spanish
2 1/4 tsp. Dijon
1 T. cider vinegar -- (about)
2 tsp. minced Italian parsley
2 tsp. minced tarragon
2 tsp minced chervil
2 tsp. minced chives
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
-----
1 lb. celeriac (celery root) -- (1 large)
Fresh Lemon juice (optional)

For the remoulade: stir the mayo and crème fraiche together in a small bowl.
Squeeze any excess moisture from the cornichons and capers and stir them into the mixture.
Add the mustard, vinegar, and herbs. Season to taste with salt & pepper.

Refrigerate for at least 1 hour, or up to 3 days, to allow the flavors of the remoulade to develop.

For the celeriac: Cut off and discard the tops and bottoms of the celeriac; remove the skin.
Using a mandolin or knife, cut the celeriac into 1/8-inch-thick julienne. You should have about 4 cups.

Put the celeriac in a bowl and toss with enough remoulade to coat the pieces; reserve any remaining dressing. Taste & season the salad as necessary.
Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or up to 8 hours.

Just before serving, toss the celeriac with additional dressing, if desired, and adjust the seasonings a final time, adding a squeeze of lemon juice or more vinegar if needed.

Makes 3 cups; 4 to 6 servings.

Chef Keller's notes: Make the salad two to eight hours before serving it, the flavors develop, & the acid seems to tenderize the celeriac slightly. Don't overdress it - the salt in the dressing will pull moisture from it, resulting in more liquid than you want.

Chickpea and Carrot Salad
Thomas Keller recipe

1/2 cup chickpeas, quick-soaked (cover with water, bring to a boil, boil 1 minute, cover and remove from heat. Let sit for 1 hours then continue with the recipe.)
1 med. leek, white & light green parts only
Bourquet Garni (a mixture of 8 thyme sprigs, 2 parsley stems, 2 bay leaves & 1 tsp. black peppercorns)
1/2 onion, peeled
1 small carrot, peeled
Kosher salt
2 T. olive oil
2 bay leaves
2 garlic cloves, skin left on, smashed
2 thyme sprigs
1 cup finely julienne carrots
Freshly ground black pepper
1 T. chopped Italian parsley
1 ½ tsp. fresh lemon juice

Drain the chickpeas, put in a large saucepan, and add about 6 cups water, or enough to cover them by 2 inches.

Cut the leek lengthwise in half and rinse under cold water. Add one leek half to the pan, reserving the remaining half for another use. Add the bouquet garni, onion, and whole carrot to the pan and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for about 45 minutes, or until the chickpeas are tender.

Pour the chickpeas and their liquid into a large shallow container and let cool. Once they are cool, remove and discard the bouquet garni and vegetables and season with 1/2 teaspoon salt. (The chickpeas can be covered and refrigerated in their liquid for 2 to 3 days.)

When ready to assemble the salad, drain the chickpeas in a colander.

Combine the olive oil, bay leaves, garlic, & thyme in a large skillet and heat over medium heat until the oil is hot. Add the carrots and toss in the oil for about 1 minute to cook them slightly (I like them cooked longer until al dente)

Add the chickpeas and season to taste with salt and pepper. Toss the chickpeas for 1 to 2 minutes, then transfer to a bowl and let cool. (The salad can be refrigerated for up to a day.)

Just before serving, remove the bay leaves, garlic, and thyme from the chickpeas and stir in the parsley and lemon juice. Makes 2 cups


ROASTED BEET SALAD
Thomas Keller recipe

1 1/2 lbs. red beets -- (3 to 4 large)
3 T. olive oil
Kosher salt & freshly ground black pepper
1 T. red wine vinegar -- (about)
2 T. fresh orange juice
1/2 red onion -- peeled*
1 T. chopped tarragon
1 T. minced chives

Preheat the oven to 375°F.
Wash the beets and trim the stems, leaving about 1/4 inch attached. Place them on a large piece of aluminum foil and toss with 2 tablespoons of the oil, 2 tablespoons water, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/8 teaspoon pepper.

Lift up the edges of the foil and squeeze together to form a packet. Place in a small baking pan and roast for about 1 1/2 hours, or until the beets are tender, offering no resistance when pierced with a knife.

Carefully unwrap the beets and let stand just until cool enough to handle.

Rub each beet with a paper towel to remove the skin. Cut off
and discard the stems. Cut the beets into quarters, then cut the quarters crosswise into 1/4-inch-thick slices and place in a bowl.

Season with a light sprinkling of salt and pepper. Add red wine vinegar, orange juice, and the remaining 1 tablespoon oil. Toss and season to taste with additional salt and pepper.

Let the beets marinate for at least 30 minutes, or up to a day, in the refrigerator. Bring to room temperature before finishing the salad.

About 30 minutes before serving, cut three or four 1/8-inch-thick slices crosswise from the onion and separate the slices* (reserve the remaining onion for another use). Toss the beets with the onion, tarragon, and chives.

Just before serving, check the seasonings and add additional salt, pepper, and/or vinegar to taste.

Makes 4 servings

*I found I prefer cutting a whole red onion into 1/8-inch-thick slices and just use the inner smaller circles of the onion - much prettier presentation.


Our fifth course, the fish course, was a wonderfully herbed crusted Mahi Mahi on a bed of Fennel and drizzled with a Balsamic reduction – the flavors were just wonderful.

HERB-CRUSTED MAHI MAHI, ROASTED FENNEL AND TOMATO with Balsamic Reduction

Fennel:
2 large fennel bulbs -- tops trimmed; cut each bulb in half lengthwise, then cut into thin strips.
2 T. extra virgin olive oil
2 Bay leaves
2 sprigs thyme
2 red Thai chilies (or small serranos) I used serranos
1 T. sugar
2 T. rice vinegar
1 T. dry sherry
2 T. butter
2 tomatoes -- seeded and julienned
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Balsamic Reduction - see recipe

Preheat the oven to 400 F.
Place fennel, olive oil, bay leaves, thyme, and chilies in a roasting pan and roast uncovered for 15 minutes.

Remove from oven and reduce oven temperature to 325 F.

Add the sugar, vinegar, and butter, toss together until butter is melted.

Cover, return to oven and continue to roast for another 15 minutes longer, or until the fennel is caramelized and tender. Add the diced tomatoes and season with salt and freshly ground black pepper.


BALSAMIC REDUCTION
a Chef’s Journey recipe

1 cup balsamic vinegar
2 T. butter
Freshly ground black pepper

Reduce Balsamic vinegar in a small saucepan until reduce to ½ cup. Turn off heat and slowly add bits of butter whisking each addition thoroughly. Add the freshly ground pepper and whisk all together. Set aside.


Mahi Mahi

2 cups fresh bread crumbs
2 T. tarragon -- chopped
2 T. chives chopped
2 T. parsley -- chopped
1 T. thyme -- chopped
Salt & pepper
12 2 oz. mahi mahi fillets
1 T. unsalted butter
1 T. olive oil

In a food processor, add the bread and turn into a fine dust.
Add the herbs and pulse just to combine.

Season the fish side of the fish and dip into the herb-crumb mixture.

In a non-stick sauté pan, heat the butter and olive oil.
When the oil is hot, sear each fillet on both sides, crumb side down first, for about 2-3 minutes per side. Cook to a temperature of 140 F.

Remove filets to a warm platter and keep warm.

Then we finally reached the entrée – here was another wonderful surprise, after all this food, only one plate out of 10 came back to the kitchen with more than just a bone left on the plate! I can’t really blame them, this is probably my favorite lamb shank dish – I could eat it once a week! They were served over a simple mashed potato with sour cream, chives, thyme and parsley.

BRAISED LAMB SHANKS WITH CARAMELIZED ONIONS AND SHALLOTS


4 tablespoons olive oil
1 pound onions -- sliced
5 large shallots -- sliced (about 1 cup)
2 tablespoons chopped fresh rosemary or 2 teaspoons dried
6 3/4 lamb shanks -- ¥(6 3/4 to 1)
all purpose flour
2 1/2 cups dry red wine
2 1/2 cups canned beef broth
1 1/2 tablespoons tomato paste
2 bay leaves

Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in pot over medium-high heat. Add sliced onions & shallots; sauté until brown, about 20 minutes. Mix in rosemary. Remove from heat.

Sprinkle lamb shanks with s&p; coat lamb with flour. Heat remaining 2 T. olive oil in heavy large skillet over high heat. Work in batches, add lamb shanks to skillet and cook until brown on both sides, about 10 minutes per batch. Using tongs, transfer lamb shanks to plate.

Add 1 cup dry red wine to same skillet and bring to boil, scraping up any browned bits. Pour into Dutch oven with onion mixture. Add remaining 1 1/2 cups red wine, canned beef broth, tomato paste and 2 bay leaves to dutch oven. Bring to boil, stirring until tomato paste dissolves. Add lamb shanks, turning to coat with liquid.

Bring mixture to boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until lamb is almost tender, turning lamb shanks occasionally, about 1 ½ (I find closer to 3) hours. (Can be prepared 1 day ahead. Cover and refrigerate.)

Uncover Dutch oven and boil until liquid is reduced to sauce consistency, stirring and turning lamb shanks occasionally, about 45 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.

Spoon Potato puree onto plates. Top with lamb shanks and sauce. Sprinkle lamb shanks with additional chopped fresh rosemary and serve. Serves 6. Bon Appétit - January 1996


Cheese course came next – I was able to find a selection of three cheeses that ultimately worked our wonderfully well together.

Wendley Dale Boroughs English Cheddar (a cow’s milk cheddar)
Homboldt Fog Goat
Holland Smoked Gouda
Dried apricots
Honeycomb
Walnut bread

Nut Bread

2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup sugar
1 T. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1 egg, beaten
1 cup milk
1/4 cup cooking oil
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
1/3 cup chopped dried apricots or mangoes

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease the bottom and 1/2 inch up sides of an 8x4x2­inch loaf pan*; set aside. In a large bowl stir together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Make a well in center of flour mixture; set aside.
2. In a medium bowl combine the egg, milk, and oil. Add egg mixture all at once to flour mixture. Stir just until moistened (batter should be lumpy). Fold in nuts and apricots. Spoon batter into prepared pan.
3. Bake for 50 to 55 minutes or until a wooden toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Cool in pan on a wire rack for '10 minutes. Remove from pan. Cool completely on wire rack. Wrap and store overnight before slicing.
4. Makes 1 loaf (14 slices)

*I used mini-loaf pans for mini-loaves which are about 2”X4” – sliced about 3/8” makes a great tiny piece of toast to add to the cheese plate or platter.


And the finale of the evening was a beautiful, tasty sorbet from an old chef friend from Toronto, Chef Paul Silva, a chef who raises the level of cooking for everyone lucky enough to cook with him.

Late Harvest Riesling Sorbet with Fresh Berries
Chef Paul Silva, Toronto

1 2/3 cups late harvest Riesling
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup fresh squeezed lime juice

Heat all ingredients over medium heat until sugar dissolves.
Then bring to a boil for 30 or so seconds and cool for an hour or so in the fridge.

Use your ice cream maker to finish. (Took about 30 minutes in mine), then into the freezer.

Stir every half hour three times once it goes into the freezer to keep it light.

We served with a strawberry fan, blueberries and raspberries and a selection of chocolate chunks.

-- --- - - - - - - - - - -

I can’t thank the four wonderful folks at Comaraderie Vineyards for allowing me to again cook for their guests. Vicki, Don, Maryann and Gene are four of the nicest, most talented wine makers I’ve met in a very long time. And are they ever foodies!!

Monday, September 3, 2007

It Was a Goat's Cheese Week!!

I think I've bought more Goat's cheese this past month than I have in years. And I've certainly found some wonderful dishes to use it in.


We've had a couple of open house parties to go to this past month, so I've been wanting to 'stock' up on some entertaining ideas for the upcoming holidays.

A few months ago, I bought a jar of Garlic-Pineapple Salsa that we just love. Even mixed with Pesto, it has a delightful flavor. I've been playing with duplicating it and now have one that is close, but not quite there - will play with more. It's missing the fresh 'upfront' pineapple, so will work more with fresh and a couple other ideas.


Garlic-Pineapple Salsa


1 cup pineapple, crushed, drained, but keep juice
2 tsp. honey
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 T. crystalized ginger, minced

2 tsp. fresh squeezed lemon juice
1 T. onion, minced
1 jalapeno, minced (will replace with dried pepper flakes next time)
pinch cumin (will omit next time)
1 tsp. cider vinegar
1/2 tsp. sugar


Mix all the ingrdients together, thin with a little of the juice if necessary. Cover and let sit in refrigerator for a few hours before serving.


This is a work in progress - but, it's very good right now!
--------
Two other dips/spreads tried this past weekend were keepers also - one, from Southern Living's Christmas book is especially flavorful - it would also be great tossed with hot pasta! That's it in the foreground -




Peach & Pecan Tapenade with Goat Cheese


...except no one around here had dried peaches, so subbed about 2/3 dried mango and 1/3 dried apricots - this is so good!! I made half the recipe and it's a very nice amount for a crowd of ~20.

1 cup orange juice
2 cups dried peaches, chopped
1 cup pitted Kalamata olives, chopped
2 T. olive oil
1 T. honey
1 T. capers, drained
1/2 tsp. dried thyme (use fresh)
1/4 tsp. black pepper
1 cup chopped pecans, toasted
-------
12 oz. goat cheese
lovash or specialty crackers


Bring orange juice to a boil in a small saucepan over med. heat.Remove from heat and add chopped dried peaches.Cover and let stand 30 min.


Drain, if necessary.Combine olives and next 5 ingred. in a serving bowl. Stir in peaches and pecans.Place tapenade on a serving platter with goat cheese and crackers.

Spread cheese on crackers, and smear with tapenade.Makes 3 3/4 cups.

Do ahead - but don't add pecans until service. Will keep in frig 2 days.
--------

The second is a dip from Nigella Lawson's book, Feasts (more on this book later in this posting)

Basil and Goat's Cheese Dip
You can use feta in place of goat cheese.








1 cup walnut pieces, toasted
2 scallions, roughly chopped
1 1/2 cup basil leaves
1 packed cup soft goat's cheese
3 T. garlic-infused oil

Process the walnut pieces, scallions & basil leaves, then add the goat cheese and oil; process again to make a grainy paste.Transfer to a bowl.

This topping would also be great tossed with a little hot pasta and sprinkled with a little Parmigiano-Reggiano. Add a little rustic bread and dinner's ready.
--------

Another dish we tried and could not stop eating on is a take off from a Sandra Lee dish, Couscous with Goat Cheese (again with the goat cheese!) This was a clean the pantry/frig dish for me.

4 oz. fideo
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 cup pinenuts, toasted
1/3 cup dried apricots, chopped
1/3 cup currants
4 oz. goat cheese, crumbled
1/2 Kalamata olives, coarsely chopped
1/4 cup finely hopped parsley leaves

Cook the fideo and salt in water until just done; drain and pour into a serving bowl.


Add the rest of the ingredients and toss together. At this point, either serve the fideo, or cover and chill for a few hours. At serving time, put in microwave for just 1-2 minutes - just to take the chill off, but not hot. This will help melt the cheese and bring out all the flavors.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Grandma Shelledy's Lefse

My two grandmothers were two of the most diverse women that anyone could ever imagine - Grandma (always called 'Moremommie' for some unGodly reason) Fry was as high-falootin' and snobbish as you could imagine in our small town of Yakima, Washington. Ever the lady, short but seemingly tall and stately, she looked down her regal nose at just about everyone in that town. BUT, oh my, she was the most most loving, wonderful Grandmother any child, especially a girl could dream of having. She and her four sisters doted on my sister and me all of their lives.

Grandma 'Mom' Shelledy was the complete opposite in temperment and stature. She was short and plump with pure white hair always pulled back in a bun, held tight with little brown combs. As a young woman, she cooked for the ranch hands on the Columbia River, was a post mistress in her small town, was almost the sole parent of her seven children while my Grandfather was off being a sherriff and probably carousing the countryside. In her later years, she still cooked on her wood stove and the most wonderful foods came out of her kitchen. Lefse is probably my favorite of all she ever made.

It's a Norwegian bread, looks just like a tortilla except for the shape, my Grandma's were usually like triangles of dough she cooked on the wood stove. She made lefse for the family for all my life and probably years before that! I don't know how she kept up with us when the whole family was around her huge round kitchen table, soft butter and the sugar dish in front of us just waiting as the lefse came off her old wood stove. I know we must have eaten faster than she could cook them.

This recipe is how she dictated her it to my sister, Joan and me, many years ago. I made these again the other day (while I was cooking potatoes for Tourtiere Tarts, I thot why not go for it) - I also wanted to 'test' the way the recipe was written. I disovered the most amazing thing - all my life I thot Grandma cooked lefse in triangles, but now I realize what she did - there were always so many of us panting for more lefse that after she cooked these circles of dough, she would portion them out in pie shapes, therefore feeding 4 or 6 of us with one lefse!!!!! It only took me 67 years to figure that one out! she'd be so proud!

Mom Shelledy's Lefse
5 large white potatoes (the old & mushy type)
2 cups sweet cream -- half & half, or milk & water (but cream is the best!)
1 tsp. salt
3 T. butterFlour for rolling the lefse out (I made 1/2 this recipe and needed ~ 1 3/4 cups flour kneaded into the dough to make it workable)

1. Boil potatoes and mash until very fine.
2. Add cream, salt, and butter; beat until light.
3. Let cool (fairly)
4. Add flour until workable.
5. Roll out and bake on top of griddle (or wood burning stove)

More traditional instructions -Follow above through #4 - the dough will be fairly dry, but stay together to be rolled out.

Wrap in plastic wrap and chill for 1 hour.Roll the dough out into ropes and cut into 2" chunks.










Roll chunks into thin circles (or long ovals, or whatever) like tortillas.Heat a griddle to about 400 F.

Place a circle of lefse on the dry griddle and cook until brown spots appear on the heated surface. Flip and cook the same way on the other side.



Lay cooked lefse on cooling rack as you cook the rest.
To serve: Some folks like just butter, my family always smeared the softened butter over and topped with a sprinkling of granulated sugar.
Fold twice or roll into a cylinder. Eat and enjoy!!
Oh my, it's amazing the memories that come while making these - I'll have to post a picture of my Grandma, she is just the epitome of what a Grandma should always be.
And Grandma Fry, of the exquisite Chocolate Set and her sets of Fostoria and Limoges Haviland and all good things in life, was also the epitome of what a Grandma should be!!!

A Dinner of Hors D'oeuvre

No pictures of this wonderful little dinner, but my, what a fun dinner!

There are a couple of open house parties scheduled for the coming weeks and I wanted to play with some new hors. Every one turned out a keeper. Our dinner consisted of:

Salmon Spread - a mixture of -
smoked salmon
cream cheese
thinned with a little creme fraiche (or mayo)
capers
corn - roasted and cut from the cob would be best, or use frozen corn thawed
chives
lemon juice
pinch of cayenne

Very tasty on toasted bread rounds and surprisingly spread on hard-cooked eggs.
--------

PESTO-GOAT CHEESE SPREAD:

In a food processor, put all the ingredients:
11-oz. log goat cheese
8-oz. pkg. softened cream cheese
2 cups loosely packed basil leaves
1/2 c. toasted pine nuts
3 garlic cloves
2 T. balsamic vinegar

and process till smooth. Chill 2 hrs. before serving. Makes 3 cups.

Store in frig up to 1 week, or freeze up to 4 mos.
Serve w/toasted pita chips or sliced baguettes.

I think this would be very good tossed with some hot cooked pasta also.
-------

Grilled Apple Sausages and Pineapple
Hard Cooked eggs, which turned out to be wonderful with the Salmon Spread, will do a stuffed egg with this soon.

Fun dinner treat this was!

Using The Chocolate Set!








While I was growing up, my mother had a chocolate set given to her by her mother - it was a wedding present to my grandparents. I thought it was the most beautiful, fragile thing I'd ever seen. Over the years my mother did make use of the set and serve me hot chocolate once or twice, but mostly it sat in the china cupboard with the other Limoges Haviland, untouched. One day, when I was in my early thirties, she decided it should come to my house because I had loved it so much over the years and she also knew I would made use of it much more than she.
I have used it over the years, not as often as I wish I had, but a couple of weeks ago I saw a recipe for 'Alcoholic Hot Chocolate' by Nigella Lawson - while the name turned me off, the recipe sounded delightful. Since the resident bartender usually makes our weekend lavish drink experiments, Roy offered to make the renamed "Rummed Hot Chocolate" for us and I ran for the Chocolate Set.
We sat in the front courtyard on a Sunday morn drinking our chocolate in the style that my Grandmother would have been so proud!
Rummed Hot Chocolate
Nigella Lawson recipe

2 cups milk
3 1/2 ounces best-quality dark chocolate -- bittersweet or semisweet, as preferred
1 cinnamon stick
2 teaspoons honey
1 teaspoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 tablespoons dark rum -- or to taste

Put the milk into a saucepan and break the chocolate into pieces and add to the milk along with a cinnamon stick, honey, and sugar and heat gently until the chocolate is melted.

Add the vanilla and mix with a small hand whisk and still whisking, add a spoonful of the rum first and taste to see if you want more. Add more sugar if you want this sweeter, too. Take out the cinnamon stick and pour into 2 cappuccino or caffe latte cups.
-------
I'm promising myself we will use the Chocolate Set and this hot chocolate often this coming winter!!!




Friday, August 24, 2007

...And More Fun In The Kitchen

Just a P.S. to the Crab, Shrimp & Scallop Roulade posting - The goop from 'sieving' the onions from the sauce was too tasty to discard, so added back to some leftover sauce and made Mac & Cheese. I would do this again as the main recipe - it was just delicious.








and served with the roulades - great combination, altho one roulade would be plenty!

MORNAY SAUCED MAC & CHEESE

2 1/2 Tablespoons butter
3 1/2 Tablespoons flour
2 cups milk, 2% lowfat, heated
Salt & white pepper
couple grindings of nutmeg
1/2 cup gruyere cheese, grated
8 ounces onion, finely diced and simmered for 15 minutes in 2 T. butter and set aside
1/3 cup cracker crumbs or panko
2 Tablespoons butter, cut into small pieces

Melt butter in a saucepan; blend in the flour and stir with a wooden spoon to make a smooth paste. Stir over moderate heat for 2 minutes without coloring. Remove from heat.

After the bubbling subsides, add 1 3/4 cup of the hot milk and whisk briskly to make a smooth sauce and blend thoroughly. Put back over moderate heat and add the rest of the milk a few drops at a time to desired consistency. The sauce should be thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

Whisk in salt, pepper and nutmeg - tasting as you add the spices.
Remove from heat and let cool several minutes before adding the cheese.
When cooler, add the cheese and the onions; stirring until cheese is melted. At this point you can chill the sauce for later use, or freeze it, or add to pasta at this time.

Pour into a greased baking dish and top with a sprinkling of cracker crumbs or panko and dabs of butter
Bake in a 350 F. oven for 30-35 minutes.

Description:
"This dish was a by-product of making the Crab, Prawns & Scallop Roulades for Don Kaiser. It's wonderful."
---------

On top of all the cooking/testing/tasting Roy & I did on Wednesday - Neighbor Neery brot over two crabs (of the 16!!) she and the boys caught this day. Managed to clean them and threw in the frig for tomorrow - No more cooking today!

And so to Thursday and more fun. Wednesday, I received a C.D. from Lorraine, that was just a hoot. Two Toronto Chefs speakingFrench demonstrating recipes. The name of the CD is "Au pied de cochon" which my handy-dandy little translator says "with the foot of pig".......will have to find out more about this from Lorraine, plus the names of the two chefs who are an absolute hoot!

Willl have a lot of editing to do if I don't have this info correct - but, everything is in French and I barely got thru one year of Latin in high school.... The chefs are (apparently?) David Emmanual Fafard and Jean-Francois Boily and because they so inspired me, I only managed to get thru one recipe on the c.d. -
Le Saumon
dans le Papier Journal
Salmon wrapped in Newspaper


It looked so fun (and tasty), I headed for the freezer and neighbor Christine's salmon that she gave me months ago to 'do something' with! This is what I copied from the sub-titles -

Bake the salmon at 400 F. for 20 minutes per pound of salmon 'roast'

Sprinkle with sea salt and fill cavity with something - the boys used pesto.

Soak four sheets (with no color) in some water

Wrap the salmon up tightly and lay on a baking sheet

Place in the middle of the 400 F. oven for 1 hour (I cut my 'roast' to 3 lbs.); remove from oven and let rest before unwrapping.











I made this in the a.m. and did not make any kind of sauce to present this dish with, so it's not a really pretty presentation - but, it was delicious and Roy and I picked at it for nearly an hour!









While picking on the salmon, I had to do something with the crabmeat from yesterday -

Crab & Corn Fritters
Ray’s BoatHouse restaurant in Seattle

2-3 qts. canola oil for frying
1 cup a.p. flour
1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 tsp. ground white pepper
1/2 tsp. granulated garlic
1/2 tsp. cayenne pepper
1 1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 cup milk
2 large eggs, beaten
1 1/2 tsp. unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup crabmeat
1/2 cup each: corn kernels, diced red bell pepper & diced green onions

Heat oil to 350 F.

In mixing bowl, combine flour, salt, white pepper, granulated garlic, cayenne pepper and baking powder.

In a separate bowl, combine milk, eggs, butter, crabmeat, corn, bell pepper and green onion and mix well.

Add to dry ingredients and mix with a fork until just combined. Do not overmix.

Drop batter by heaping tablespoonfuls into hot oil Cook until fritters are golden brown and fully cooked on the inside, about 3 – 5 minutes. Drain on paper towels. Serve immediately with the dipping sauce.

Sweet Chili Dipping Sauce

1/4 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 tsp. minced garlic
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 tsp. sambal oelek
2 T. water
2 T. Thai fish sauce

In a small bowl, whisk together everything except the fish sauce. Then add fish sauce and stir just until combined.

I have to say after all the tasting we did between the salmon and the fritters, dinner was not looking too good, but I had sirloins thawed out for a couple of days and had to use them. So, went ahead and made the Gingered Tomato Chutney to go with the grilled steaks - instead of Roasted Dijon potatoes I had planned, we ate MORE of the fritters with the steak!


The chutney is from Cuisine at Home, issue #65 - I liked it very much, Roy could not stay out of it!
for one cup chutney:
1 1/2 ccups cherry tomatoes, halved, divided
1/4 cup red onion, diced
2 T. white wine vinegar
2 T. fresh ginger, minced
2 tsp. garlic, minced
3 T. fresh lime juice
2 tsp. tomato paste
2 tsp. jalapeno, seeded, minced
salt to taste
Simmer 1 cup of the tomatoes, onion, sugar, vinegar, ginger, and garlic in a saucepan over med-high heat, stirring often, 12 minutes.
Add lime juice and tomato paste, return to a boil, and simmer 3 minutes or till thickend to jam consistency.
Stir in remaining tomatoes, jalapeno, and salt. Set chutney aside. Grill the steaks and top them with the chutney. Roasted Dijon Potatoes are good to serve with this dish.
Today is Friday and now it's time to put the rest of the salmon in the oven for Marlene's Oven Smoked Salmon - it's been brining with brown sugar, kosher salt, and liquid smoke since last evening - but, this is the only cooking I'm doing today!!! Going to a movie and out to dinner tonight!!

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

CRAB, PRAWN & SCALLOP ROULADES

My good friend Don Kaiser called last nite to describe a dish that a friend (or brother?) of his had seen on TV – a filled piece of fish, stuffed with crab, prawns and scallops, and had a sauce that might have been a hollandaise sauce. I think that’s all Don knew about the dish and wanted to know how he should put it together.

So, this morning I got to play. Don is not crazy about hollandaise sauce, so that was out. From thinking about it in the middle of the damn night, I knew pretty much what I wanted the ‘stuffing’ to be. That just left the sauce to really play with.

This will be a very easy dish to make for company, because all the stages can be done ahead of time and chilled and/or even frozen.

Crab, Prawns and Scallop Roulades








The filling:
1/2 cup leeks, the white and the light green part, cleaned and minced (2 oz.)
1 clove garlic, minced
2 T. butter (clarified, if you have it)
1/4 cup bell pepper, minced
1/4 cup dry white wine or Noilly Prat
Salt and pepper
3 oz. crab meat
3 oz. prawns, coarsely chopped
3 oz. bay scallops, cut in half
1 1/2 T. capers, chopped
The white sauce:
2 1/2 T. butter
3 1/2 T. flour
2 cups milk
Salt and white pepper
Couple grinding of nutmeg
-----
1/2 cup gruyere cheese
8 oz. onion, finely diced
2 T. butter, again clarified if possible
4 filets of fish (cod, sole, halibut or a firm fleshed fish of your choice)
1/4 cup dry white wine or Noilly Prat
4 thin lemon slices

The filling:
Sauté leeks and garlic in butter until soft, but not browned, 3-4 minutes.
Add the bell pepper and wine; raise the heat and simmer until liquid is almost gone, about 3 min. Season lightly with salt & pepper.

Add the seafood and cook until the shrimp is just turning pink and the scallops are cooked. (If using cooked crab, do not add yet.)
Add the crab, if using cooked and the capers; just heat through. Remove from heat.








At this point, you can put in bowl and chill until ready to use. Can be done one day ahead.

The White Sauce:
Melt butter in a 2 1/2 qt. saucepan; blend in the flour and stir with a wooden spoon to make a smooth paste. Stir over moderate heat for 2 minutes without coloring. Remove from heat.

After the bubbling subsides add 1 3/4 cups of the milk and whisk briskly to make a smooth sauce and blend thoroughly. Put back over moderate heat and add the rest of the milk a few drops at a time. The sauce should be thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
Whisk in the salt, pepper and nutmeg – tasting as you add the spices. At this point you can chill the sauce for later use. You can even freeze it.

When ready to use, thaw or remove from the refrigerator and heat in a double boiler or over a bain-marie. You may have to thin a little with milk.

After the sauce has heated, remove the from the heat and let cool several minutes, then add the gruyere cheese, a little at a time, stirring well between additions.
Simmer the finely diced onion in the 2 T. of butter without browning for 15 minutes. Add to the sauce and combine well. Force through a sieve.








To complete the dish, lay out the 4 filets and sprinkle each with a little salt, then spoon 1/4 of the filling on each filet, roll up being careful to push the filling in as you go. Secure with toothpicks.



















Spray a baking dish with pam and pour the 1/4 cup white wine in the bottom of the dish. Lay the fish bundles seam side down, or stand up in the baking dish. Lay one thin slice of lemon over each roulade. Bake uncovered in at 350°F. oven for 30-35 minutes until the fish flakes when prodded with a paring knife.





To plate: spoon a little of the sauce on a plate and lay slices of the roulade on the sauce, adding a little more sauce to the top.







It was very, very good!! Now, I hope Don likes it also!!








P.S. Could not stand to throw the 'goop' from the sieve away - it had a great flavor, so cooked up some Campenelle, tossed with the goop and added a tad more of leftover sauce. Now, that's going to be good!!
I had intended to make a Mornay sauce, but I kept coming back to a Soubise sauce, so it's kind of a bastardized-Mornay/Soubise sauce. Whatever we call it, it is delicious.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Hangtown Fry....Finally!!

Since my twenties, my mother was fascinated with the Hangtown Fry, but for some reason she never made the dish. I probably didn't help the effort much because in those days, I was not a fan of oyters as I am today. Having just gotten her old recipe books (clipped recipes and handwritten treasures) and going thru them, my interest was piqued and this morning I made the dish for the first time. I did a little research first to try to get as close to the authenic recipe as possible and I think, I found it. Here's a little of the history and lore of Hangtown Fry from Placerville, CA
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Hangtown Fry History

Hangtown fry could possibly be the first California cuisine. It consists of fried breaded oysters, eggs, and fried bacon, cooked together like an omelet. In the gold-mining camps of the late 1800s, Hangtown Fry was a one-skillet meal for hungry miners who struck it rich and had plenty of gold to spend. Live oysters would be brought to the gold fields in barrels of sea water after being gathered in and around San Francisco Bay. Such a meal cost approximately $6.00, a fortune in those days.

However it came to be, ordering a Hangtown Fry became a mark of prosperity for gold-rich miners, the status symbol of the day. The recipe swept the entire Northwest Territory, from California to Seattle, in the mid-1800s. A few drinks and a Hangtown Fry were considered a gentleman's evening.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~


Start out the dish by frying two slices of bacon (for 2 servings), cut them in half and set aside keeping warm. Bread, eggwash, bread again 3-4 small oysters per person; fry these in clarified butter. Add two slices of bacon per omelet in the pan with the oysters, placing them like railroad tracks in the pan.


Mix together two eggs (per person again) with seasoning & a little milk and pour over the oysters and bacon. Cook slowly until eggs are set and lightly browned. During the cooking, lift the cooked eggs to let the uncooked part run underneath onto the hot pan.


To serve, fold in half and slip onto a hot platter. Serve French fried potatoes as an accompaniment. (Next time, I think I'll serve as a frittata, not folded, so I can get the effect of the beautiful fried oysters and the 'rail road' bacon strips.) This was wonderful and I so wish my mother was at a place she could have enjoyed this dish with us also. Hangtown Fry is a wonderful, historical dish.


This week also saw the first of the '07 rhubarb crop, thanks to our neighbor, Kemp! Within two hours of picking a cobbler with a puff pastry topping was in the oven - oh my, was it delicious. I just combined sugar, cornstarch and salt with the rhubarb and put in a pie dish and topped it.
I also tried a "Seared Seafood and Wasabi Salad" - Saturday night. Didn't really care for the completed dish, but the Wasabi Vinaigrette was wonderful and especially good brushed on the cod filets and portabellos that I grilled to top the salad. Will definitely repeat this. (this vinaigrette was very good tossed with the rice noodles also)
Wasabi Vinaigrette
1/4 c rice wine vinegar
1/4 c soy sauce
2 T. Wasabi paste
2 T. brown sugar
1 piece ginger root (1") - peeled and minced
1 large clove garlic, miced
1/4 c dark sesame oil
1/4 c corn oil
Combine rice wine vinegar and wasabi paste; stir till smooth.
Add soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, and ginger.
Combine the corn oil and sesame oil and in a slow steady stream, incorporate the oils into the other ingredients to form an emulsion. (a food processor can be used) This vinaigrette can be made up to 3 days ahead of using.
All in all, it was a nice week of cooking - Old-Fashioned Buttermilk Bread, Buttermilk-Brined Pork Chops, Home made Creme Fraiche and Chocolate Creme Fraiche Ice Cream - will try Grandma Fry's chocolate ice cream custard method next time trying to incorporate chocolate into an ice cream base.....
Also, made Three-Sster Stew from a packet I picked up at the Portland Farmer's Market - it's a Native American Blend and the stew was wonderful. Checked out the website and there was an Enchilada recipe using the same seasoning packet that looked very good!
Cynthia and I have pushed through an Ethiopian Dinner to be reviewed April 30th.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

A Weekend with the Burrs


Company coming means another batch of 18-hour bread!! Roy starts salivating as soon as the bread mixture begins fermenting and looking breadlike.



Our friends, Joyce & Bill Burr came to visit this weekend - Joyce is a realtor, still working and Bill has recently retired from a company who did business with Roy for years. We four have been friends for a number of years and always have a ball when we get together - especially because Bill is a wonderful cook, who never shys away from a good recipe or food. So, we are two peas in a pod.





Friday nite's dinner was done in the manner that I really prefer the last couple of years. Nothing is done at the same time. We have an appy, then we visit, then comes a soup or salad, then we visit, then the entree, then we...... Besides being so easy because no multiple dishes have to be correctly timed and completed at the same, it's just more fun do a dinner party this way. Sometime we have the appetizers in the living room around the fire, move into the kitchen around the island for soup or salad and finally to the dining room for the main course. I so loved Morris's Buttermilk Blue Cheese Creme Fraiche on the Sweet Potato & Pear Soup, I copied it for my Butternut Squash Soup and was that ever a hit! I love the combination - and the sprinkling of (fresh ;) ) bacon bits mixed with a little duck cracklin's - super! The Creme Fraiche is a method that June Jacob's gave me and it's so easy and tastey. I just added Roquefort cheese to taste and used it as a garnish for the soup.

CREME FRAICHE - HOW TO MAKE (June Jacobs)

2 cups whipping (heavy) cream preferably NOT ultra-pasteurized
1/4 cup buttermilk -- room temperature

1. Warm cream in heavy small saucepan to lukewarm (85 degrees F). Remove from heat and mix in buttermilk. Put the mixture into a clean glass jar (that has a tight-fitting lid), Leave the jar open and cover with a piece of waxed paper fastened with a rubber band. Let it stand in a warm draft-free area until slightly thickened, 24 to 48 hours, depending on temperature of room.

2. When the cream has "clotted," remove the paper and replace it with the lid. Refrigerate until ready to use.

Teacher's Tip Stored in this manner, the Crème Fraîche should keep until you've used it up (and made more!) Like fine cheese, it may develop a "skin", but you can remove it and use what's underneath.
---------------------
Well, murphy's law - my heavy cream WAS ultra-pastuerized and the only buttermilk on the shelves around here was/is reduced fat/1 1/2% milkfat/50%less fat than whole milk!!!
But, it works beautifully!

Decided to go with it and see what would result - oh my, it is delicious, creamy, beautiful creme fraiche. I left it 30 hours.

June’s notes: - it WHIPS!!! so when you want that great tang on a strawberry shortcake, you can have it fluffy!

As well, it doesn't break if it gets boiled the way sour cream does, so it's great for finishing sauces.
-----
June
06/03/05 08:00 PM
I regularly make crème fraiche with heavy cream and buttermilk, so I keep it in a quart jar. Here's the recipe:
makes about 2 cups.


The entree was penne sauced with Roasted Red Pepper Sauce (recipe from Kevin/UptownKevin, a friend from C2C - and this is the story of why we had the same thing two nights in a row...


Well, I must say I am so proud of myself - and what a fun time I had Thursday! I had dinner all planned - Three Sisters Stew (meatless), with a Native American Spice packet, that I tasted and picked up 2 packets of at the Portland Farmer's Market. It was delicious - but that's another story, for when I DO make it...

Roy was whining about a veggie dinner (see above... ) so thot I'd surprise him with a shrimp appy. I had a recipe for Roasted Red Pepper Cream Sauce that I’d been wanting to try, so we had - oven-roasted shrimp and drizzled this sauce over them - wonderful.

I also had just cleaned the above two ducks and was really wanting to do something with the scraps, etc. Had some of the cream sauce left over from the shrimp - so cooked up a little pasta.

Fried one slice of diced bacon and removed, added the small pcs. of duck scraps and seasoned floured pcs. of liver (just used about 6 slices, cause I HAVE NEVER CARED FOR LIVER) and fried those up.

On to plating - tossed the pasta with the cream sauce and put in bowls, topped with slices of the duck and liver and sprinkled with bacon and bits of the cracklins from rendering the duck fat. Oh My, was that wonderful!!! and for the first time in my life I loved the fried liver!!!!!

Now, I've scraped my entire menu, almost, for dinner Friday night with the Burrs. I'm going to do this all again, but I'll serve the pasta, sauce and liver slices with the sautéed duck breasts!!!

And, this story is a little bittersweet because my mother and I battled all my life about me not willing to eat liver...and now that I have enjoyed it, I want to tell her so much, but it won't really mean anything to her where her mind is now...damn.

Roasted Red Pepper Cream Sauce - with Shrimp or Duck

1 large shallot -- minced
4 cloves garlic -- minced
2 large red peppers -- roasted
1 ½ to 2 cups half & half or heavy cream (I naturally used heavy cream... )
Butter
Extra Virgin Olive oil
S&P
Cayenne pepper, just a pinch or to taste

Roast the red pepper, peel, de-seed and dice.

Coat a sauté pan with olive oil & butter, and sweat the shallot and diced red pepper on low heat.

After several minutes, add the garlic and season with kosher salt, freshly ground black pepper and cayenne.

Once garlic has been cooked, pour mixture into a blender, add heavy cream and puree. Pour the mixture back into the pan and add additional cream if needed. Let the sauce reduce for approximately 10 min. on low heat, stirring often.

Season again if needed.


Now, back to Friday nite - I made more sauce and tossed it with the penne and served it topped with duck cracklin's and fried duck liver slices. Served along side pan-seared duck breasts. Dessert was slices of Glazed Chocolate/Pumpkin Loaf.

Saturday, off to Port Townsend for eating, wine tasting and shopping! I picked up a lot of fun things at the Food Co-op:
- Teff Flour, for Cis's and my fledgling passions for Ethiopian foods.
- lots of chocolate for the pantry and some for Saturday's dessert.
- a new snack folks were raving about at the Co-op that I've never seen before - Sahale's Sing Buri (cashew, pineapple, peanut, lemongrass, chinese chili) and Sahale's Socorro Blend (macadamia, hazelnut, mango papya, chipolte). Haven't opened them yet.
- Sour Cherries to try out the wonderful Bittersweet chocolate braised rabbit and griottines (sour cherries) - another goodie from Morris' restaurant.

On the way home, we picked up clams, mussels, prawns, a crab and Asiago Potato bread in addition to a few bottles of wine from the Wine Sellar in P.T. Found some bargains and some old favorties - temperanillo! and a few others.

Sunday morning, I wanted to use some of the leftover crab and prawns, and while searching the Bed & Breakfast website, found a dish that sounded awfully good - from the Greenhouse Bed and Breakfast, "Guia's Crabmeat Au-Gratin - and it lived up to expectations, it's a keeper!



Served the Au-Gratin over toasted slices of 18-hour bread - wonderful!




Guia's Crabmeat Au-Gratin presented by Greenhouse Bed and Breakfast
Can be served over buttered toast or as a brunch casserole.
6 tbsp. butter

1 cup thinly sliced green onions
6 tbsp. chopped parsley
1/4 cup red sweet bell pepper diced small
2 tbsp. flour
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1 cup milk
8 oz. cream cheese, softened
1 tbsp. dry sherry
2 lbs. crabmeat (it certainly does not need this much! I used one pound - a combination of prawns and crabmeat)
1/2 cup parmesan cheese
1 tbsp. paprika
2 tsp cayenne (optional) (I just sprinkled some over)

Preheat oven to 350ºF. In a medium skillet melt butter and sauté the onions, pepper and parsley for about 4 minutes. Add the flour all at once and stir until combined. Season with salt and pepper.

Turn the heat to simmer. Add the softened cream cheese. Stir until combined. Gradually add the milk, stirring constantly until smooth.

Simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in the sherry.
Place the crabmeat in a large greased ovenproof casserole dish and pour the milk mixture over it. Fold gently to combine.


Sprinkle with parmesan, cayenne, and paprika. Bake for 20 minutes or until the sauce is bubbling.
Serves 8.


This was another wonderful time with Bill & Joyce. Next time will be at their house and Bill will be making Singapore Slings for us - says he has the best recipe ever for them......(to be continued.....)

Sunday, April 8, 2007

DINNER AT VESTA'S

Oh, what a night we had at Scottie's (aka Morris) new restaurant, Vesta's!!!


We started the evening early feeding the geese at Don's floating home, which is gorgeous with a kitchen to make any cook green-eyed envious! We also had a bottle of wine....


We arrived a little early for our 7 p.m. reservations...signed anxious.











Morris started us off in grand style with an Oyster Mignonette - absolutely wonderful flavor (he must have an oyster bed outside the back door). This was followed by two courses of a selection of cheeses we could have made a dinner of... Sotto Cenere (cow's milk cheese with truffle), a smoked sheep's milk cheese, and a Blue Valdeo cow & goat blend cheese. All three were wonderful. Nathan, our 'cheese guy' was so informative on the cheeses and patient with me as I tried to copy down all the info I possibly could.


This was to be our little nest for the evening - and Laura made sure all was well for us here. We were so proud to hear we were the first to be invited to the Chef's Table!! Bird's eye view of a fine tuned, orchestrated kitchen crew.


Pacific Diver Scallops, 4th course, Indian Spiced Lentil Sauce - I've never thought of scallops as 'comfort food', but this dish was just straight comfort and wonderful.



Foie Gras Torchon in Duck Consomme, 5th course, braised duck leg, duck breast Tataki style style, duck prosciutto - Foie Gras has been growing on me since I first tried tasting it in Phoenix a few years ago and I'm hooked now because of Morris' dish - all of us could have licked the plate!! The consomme, oh my!!
Mache Lettuce Salad - 6th course, Silver Falls Goat Cheese, English Cucumber, Grand Marnier Macerated Berries, Roasted Hazelnuts, Pinot Grigio Vinaigrette. Just delicious and what a set up for our next course, which I think, all of us decided was the hit of the night!


Bitter Chocolate Braised Rabbit - 7th course, Thyme Papardelle, Wild Mushroom Ragout, Griottines (stoned and graded bitter red cherries in a light syrup of alcohol). I can not do justice to this dish in words, the flavors were just outstanding!!





Chef Gwyn's Silver Medal Sweet Potato and Pear Soup - 8th course, Buttermilk Blue Cheese Creme Fraiche, Pepper Bacon, the flavors of this soup with the garnishes were wonderful and trying to get a little of everything in each spoonful, difficult!

AND THEN, and then....the entrees - I'm just sorry we weren't a party of eleven so we could taste each and every entree offered!!


My 9th course...Merlot and Plum Glazed Rack of Lamb - honey mustard roasted banana fingerling potatoes, caramelized Cippolini onions - fantastic!



Roy's 9th course...Forest Mushroom Stuffed Veal Chop - lemon thyme spatzle, celery root puree, stone fruit chutney, Amaretto huckleberry demi - fantastic!


Don's 9th course...Banyuls Glazed Braised Rolled Pork Roast - sweet potato mash, savoy cabbage with chestnuts - fantastic!
At this point we collectively decided we would have to wait to try the desserts another visit - there was absolutely no way we could eat one more morsel...but Morris had other plans -

Caramel pot de creme
chocolate sorbet, toasted marshmallow


Chocolate Amaretto Mousse with Vanilla Ice Cream
caramel bourbon sauce, caramelized banana
(Roy and I would have liked more of this one, but Don was rather selfish....the plate all but licked clean!
By the third dessert, I think my camera was over full also - the picture didn't take -
Layered Apple Spice Cake, Mulled Cider Ice-Cream Float
apple & caramel puree, honey cream cheese frosting, vanilla ice cream, apple chip. Wonderful! The float was just the perfect ending to a perfect evening with Morris!
Morris, I wish I had a better command of the English language to be able to do justice to the wonderful food you presented us with tonight!! 2nd Sous, Zack, here's a young chef who is like a mad scientist in his kitchen - don't think he'll be second much longer, he was a delight to watch in the kitchen! I would have loved to have spent more time with Chef de Cuisine Gwyn Manney, but she was working her tail off getting ready for Easter brunch!!! Morris, Gwyn, Zack, Laura, Nathan and and everyone else boh and foh - thank you all for one of the most delightful dinners and evenings we have ever experienced.
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I'm so full after just writing about this dinner, I'm surpised I can continue, but I just must - Morris has created a children's menu which is so creative and fun, I would grab a kid off the street and bring 'em in to try this menu out!! Just a couple of examples -
Burger Trio - "Three small burgers with all the fixins on the side so you can make them how you like." (we saw a number of these flying out of the kitchen - I wanted to order them!)
Peanut Butter Pizza - "A soft dough circle spread with peanut butter. Comes with raisins, bananas and jelly to decorate however you want." (would loved to have seen this one!)
Ocean Critter Sticks - "Rainbow Treasures fish shapes made of trout i fun ocean shapes with artichoke tartar sauce"
Does Morris have a winner here??? You bet - what a place and what a team!!

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

A WeekNite Dinner Review

These are all Cuisine at Home recipes and they are wonderful!

Seared Flank Steak w/Shallot-Mustard Sauce
Oven Fries with Lemon-Fennel Salt
Green Salad with Feta and Fresh Fruit

1 flank steak, about 1-1/2 lb.
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 Tbs. corn oil
6 Tbs. cold unsalted butter (4 Tbs. cut into 1/2-inch cubes)
3 Tbs. finely minced shallot
3 medium cloves garlic, minced
1/2 cup dry red wine
3/4 cup low-salt beef broth
1 tsp. chopped fresh thyme
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
1 Tbs. chopped fresh tarragon

Set a rack in the center of the oven and heat the oven to 400°F. Season the steak generously with salt and pepper. Heat an ovenproof 12-inch sauté pan over high heat until very hot. Add the oil to coat the pan and sear the steak on one side until well browned, about 1-1/2 minutes. Flip with tongs and cook until the second side is well browned, about another 2 minutes.

Put the pan in the oven and roast until the steak is cooked to your liking, 5 to 7 minutes for medium rare. Transfer the steak to a cutting board and let rest, lightly covered with foil, while you make the sauce.

Set the same skillet over medium heat and add 2 Tbs. of the butter. When the butter melts, add the shallot and garlic and cook until soft and translucent but not browned, about 2 minutes. Add the wine, increase the heat to medium high, and boil until syrupy, 2 to 4 minutes.

Add the broth and thyme and boil until about 1/3 cup of liquid remains, 6 to 8 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and whisk in the mustard. (Don’t let the sauce boil after the mustard is added.) Stir in the 4 Tbs. butter cubes, a few at a time.

Stir in half the tarragon and season the sauce to taste with salt and pepper.With a sharp knife, slice the steak thinly across the grain on the diagonal, drizzle with the sauce, and sprinkle with remaining tarragon.

We enjoyed the flavor of the steak with the Shallot-Mustard sauce. My Flank Steak was very large and 5 minutes in the oven brought it to the exact rare-to medium rare that we prefer. Leftover steak went into Fajitas wiht Pico de Gallo.

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Oven Fries

2 lg russet potatoes about 1 3/4 pounds peeled and cut lengthwise into 1/4 -1/2” sticks.
2 Tbs Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Lemon-Fennel Salt

Put the sliced potatoes in cold water to rinse off starch. Remove potatoes after about a minute and drain. Dump water and refill with enough to cover the potatoes by 1 1/2 inches and add some kosher salt.

Put a baking sheet in the middle of the oven and preheat oven to 450. Bring to a boil over high heat. As soon as it comes to a boil turn the heat down so they simmer for about 3 minutes. Gently drain and place on paper towels to dry. Place in a bowl and gently toss with the olive oil.

Remove pan from oven and arrange the potatoes quickly on the sheet pan leaving about 1/2 inch between slices. Roast for about 15 minutes, turn fries over and roast again for about 6-8 minutes and turn again till nicely brown. Total cook time is about 30 minutes. Finish with Lemon
Fennel Salt.

Lemon Fennel Salt –
1/2 tsp fennel seeds
1/2 tsp coriander seeds
1/4 heaping tsp. white peppercorns
1 tsp finely grated lemon zest
1/2 tsp kosher salt

Toast fennel, coriander and peppercorns in a small dry skillet over med. heat until fragrant, about 2 mins. Pour into a mortar or spice grinder and grind till a fine powder. In a small dish combine the lemon zest and salt with the spices.

The oven fries with their Lemon Fennel Salt was a real winner!! I kept the salt mixture and will use it on lots of dishes, but the fries will definitely be a repeat and soon!
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Green Salad
4 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 pinch white sugar
1 teaspoon chopped fresh parsley
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 avocados - peeled, pitted, and cubed
4 cups mixed salad greens
1/2 cup sliced almonds
2 ounces feta cheese, crumbled

In a large bowl, whisk together the olive oil, white wine vinegar, mustard, salt, pepper, sugar, parsley, lemon juice and garlic. Add the avocado, and stir to coat with the dressing.

Just before serving, add the salad greens, and toss to coat with dressing. Sprinkle sliced almonds and feta cheese over the top. You can add sliced pears or tangerines supremes.

The salad was nice, just nothing to write home about, but with toasted almonds and feta, it can't have been too bad!!
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and for dessert - this wonderful pie!

Lemon Buttermilk Pie with Strawberry Topping 1

For the Lemon Buttermilk Pie - Whisk Together:
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup buttermilk
1 T. all-purpose flour
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1/2 t. vanilla extract
Minced zest and juice of 1 lemon
1 Pinch salt

Pour into:
1 9-inch unbaked pie shell

For the Strawberry Topping - Heat -- Pour over:
1/4 cup honey
Juice of 1 lime
2 pints strawberries -- hulled, halved

Preheat oven to 350°.

Whisk pie ingredients together in a large bowl until blended.
Pour into pie shell and place on a baking sheet. Bake until filling is just set, yet still a bit jiggly, 40 - 50 minutes. Remove from oven and cool to room temperature; chill if not serving right away. (Let chilled pie stand at room temperature for 15 minutes before serving.)

Heat honey and lime juice for strawberry topping until melted. Pour over berries and let stand at least 5 minutes. Just before serving, arrange on pie with a slotted spoon.
Cuisine at home, April 2004, Issue 44, p. 49

When I served the strawberries, I spooned them to the side of the slice of pie so we could enjoy the wonderful flavor of the berries, honey and lime. What a wonderful combination of flavors.

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On to the 2nd Cod dish - from the cod from our little fisherman neighbor. This is an old Gourmet mag. recipe and I almost overlooked it because it just looked too bland, but I had everything for it, so I went ahead and made it. It turned out to be a wonderful comfort dish that is worth making and repeating!! The flavors are just perfect together. I had a bottle of L'Ecole No. 41, '05 "Walla Voila" Chenin Blanc to serve with it and it was an excellent match!!

COD, POTATO, AND FENNEL CASSEROLE

2 medium fennel bulbs (sometimes called anise; 1 1/2 lb total), stalks cut off and discarded, and fronds reserved for garnish if desired
1 1/2 lb large boiling potatoes
3 large garlic cloves, minced
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 lb skinless cod fillet (1 inch thick), cut into 6 portions

Garnish: chopped fennel fronds or fresh flat-leaf parsleyAccompaniment: lemon wedges

Preheat oven to 400°F.

Cut fennel bulbs crosswise into 1/16-inch-thick slices with slicer. Peel potatoes and cut crosswise into 1/16-inch-thick slices with slicer.

Transfer fennel and potatoes to baking dish and toss with garlic, salt, pepper, and 4 tablespoons oil. Spread vegetables evenly in dish and bake, covered with foil, in middle of oven until just tender, 25 to 30 minutes.

Season fish with salt and pepper and arrange on top of vegetables. Drizzle with remaining 2 tablespoons oil and bake, uncovered, until fish is just cooked through, 12 to 15 minutes.

My dish of potatoes/fennel was fairly deep, so it took a total of 45 minutes to cook thru. Served with roasted Asparagus with Balsami and Olive oil - Very nice!
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Very nice few days of cooking and eating - but, very lazy when it came to the camera - do better!!

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Corned Beef Hash & Other Rantings!



Corned Beef Sandwiches!!! Oh my, with the German cheese, they were so good!



It’s Sunday morning – the first Sunday brunch at home in six weeks and it’s nice to be home; gorgeous weather. This is a great dish and certainly a repeat – the ketchup can be used on so many dishes, meatloaf, salmon patties, sandwiches, on and on. It’s really delicious. The hash recipe came from Cuisine at Home magazine.



Corned Beef Hash With Eggs & Spicy Ketchup

FOR THE SPICY KETCHUP WHISK TOGETHER:
2/3 cup ketchup
2 T. whole grain mustard
1 T.honey
1 T. fresh minced parsley
1 jalapeno -- seeded, minced
2 t. Worcestershire sauce
2 t. Tabasco -- or to taste
FOR THE HASH, SIMMER AND DRAIN:
1 1/2 cups russet potato -- peeled, diced
1 1/2 cups sweet potato
peeled – diced
SAUTE IN 2 T. UNSALTED BUTTER -- ADD AND STIR IN:
1 cup onion -- diced
1 cup red bell pepper -- diced
1/4 tsp. red pepper flakes
Pinch of salt
2 cups cooked corned beef, chopped
2 T. Worcestershire sauce
2 T. balsamic vinegar
Cooked potatoes
1/3 cup heavy cream
PLACE IN HASH:
4 eggs
FINISH WITH -- SERVE OVER:
2 T. minced fresh parsley
Fresh cracked black pepper
4 English muffins -- split,
toasted -- and buttered Prepared Spicy Ketchup

Whisk together the ingredients for the ketchup in a bowl; set aside.

Simmer both potatoes for the hash in water to cover until tender, about 15 minutes. Drain and set aside.

Sauté onion, bell pepper, pepper flakes, and salt in butter in a sauté pan until tender about 5 minutes. Add the corned beef, Worcestershire, and vinegar; cook 2 minutes, stirring often. Stir in the cooked potatoes and the cream; cook until heated through, then season with salt.

Make 4 small 'wells' in the hash to hold the eggs.

Place 1 egg in each well. Reduce heat to medium, cover, and cook 3-4 minutes for 'easy' yolks; cook 1-2 minutes longer for firm yolks.

Finish hash with parsley and pepper. Serve hash and eggs over toasted English muffins - and don't forget the ketchup!
Makes 4 cups hash, 4 eggs
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Mini Crab Cake Sandwiches – another winner. We had these for a Sunday brunch in Pasco, WA, with a bottle of Prosecco. But, I can’t remember where this recipe came from. These are perfect for being on the road with all the convenient products used; but they could be ‘spiffed’ up using more homemade ingredients.





Mini Crab Cake Sandwiches

1 pound crab meat
1/4 cup green onion -- diced small
3 tablespoons soy sauce
1/3 cup panko crumbs -- Japanese bread crumbs available at most supermarkets
2 eggs, slightly beaten (Note: the eggs weren’t called for, but I added them because the cakes were a little difficult to hold together – this solved the problem!)
2 tablespoons Asian chili sauce
2 tubes (8 each) refrigerator buttermilk biscuits
8 oz. bag ready cole slaw (with the dressing included)


2 eggs, slightly beaten

Make biscuits and cole slaw according to package directions and set aside

Heat oven to 400 F.

Mix crab, onion, soy, panko and chili sauce well in a bowl and shape into 16 tight little patties and place on greased baking sheet

Bake cakes until crispy brown then carefully flip, should be about 10-15 minutes each side

Cut biscuits in half and place one crab cake on each bottom half, add some cole slaw then top with other biscuit half

Makes 16 little sandwiches, or 1 giant huge one
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Some misc. notes to finish up our swing thru the western states -

There is a great market here in Pasco, Yolks, and the wine mgr. is one knowledgeable gal - had her recommend some 'finds' for us - meaning 'cheap'.





One was Gnarly Head old Vine Zin from Lodi, '05 - $9.78 this was the best of the lot so far.





Barrelstone Columbia Valley, Barrelmaster's Red Wine, '03 - $4.99!!ran a close 2nd to the above and we WILL be buying a case today to take home. (label doesn't say what the blend is)





Bohemian Highway, Cab '04, St. Helena, CA - $6.59another repeat.





Yolks also has a great deli area and I picked up some cheese -Butterkase - "soft, buttery German-style snacking & cooking cheese. Melts well, perfect in sandwiches."Instead of Muenster on our l/o Brisket sandwiches tomorrow's brunch will be with the Butterkase.
(this cheese was wonderful on the sandwiches - picture at top)

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Good News!! I found the button to push to allow anyone to add a comment to my blog - so if anyone has any comments good, bad (well,not too bad please), bring 'em on.