Back Home

To quote Simon and Garfunkle: Gee, but it's great to be back home.  Home is where I want to be.

Yep.  So true.

The wedding was a blast.  We had a great time with the family, meeting Jessica's new in-laws, finally meeting my nephew Jacob's wife, Rachael.  And little Phoebe Rose - the sixth to carry the name Phoebe in our family.  I wish we lived closer.

The downside of travel - other than the airports and airplanes which totally and completely disgustingly suck - is not having my own kitchen.  Restaurants are great - but not for every meal every day. Fortunately, we had a local restaurant - not a cookie-cutter chain - by the hotel that had some pretty decent food.  Fresh chilies in my omelette, fresh chilies on a burger... It was great to be back in Civilized California!

So to start counter-acting all of that restaurant food, it's salad-time around here!

Today I made three different salads.  A lentil, a rice, and a pasta.  I'm working on portion control, so I didn't make my normal feed-the-entire-neighborhood-and-the-school-down-the-street batches.  Nope.  Small, reasonable batches.  Enough for dinner and tomorrow's lunch.  I'm workin' on it...

The pasta salad was first.

I cooked up about six ounces of mini cheese-filled ravioli.  I added 3 stalks of blanched asparagus, sliced, a minced green onion, 6 sliced pepperoncini, oil cured kalamata olives, and about a half-cup of red pepper and onion relish and about a half-cup of fig and caramelized onion sauce.  Clean out that refrigerator!

The Lentil Salad started off with about a cup of French green lentils.  I cooked them up and added some golden raisins, currants, walnuts, celery, diced red onion, green onion, herbs d'Provence, salt, pepper, red wine vinegar and olive oil.

For the rice salad, I cooked up a half-cup of whole-grain brown rice.  To it, I added some walnuts, celery, diced carrots, peas, dill, salt, pepper, and white wine vinegar and olive oil.

They all went into the fridge.

For the salads, I plated some iceberg lettuce and baby romaine, topped it with the three salads and some grilled beef tips.  I made a quick 1000 Island dressing with mayonnaise, chili sauce, and pickle relish.

It's great to be back in the kitchen!


Burgers and Fauxllinis

It's about 80 degrees outside.  Wind is blowing at 25+ mph.  Windows open.  Perfect weather to light up the grill!  And to mix up a fauxllini.

What's a fauxllini, you ask?!?  Pureed peaches and seltzer, of course!  Over ice.  Perfectly refreshing.  What I didn't know was where the Bellini got its name...

This drink was created 1943 at Harry's Bar in Venice, Italy in honor of the painter Geovani Bellini. Giuseppi Cipriani was the inventor. The original recipe was made with fresh pureed white peaches with a bit of raspberry or cherry juice to give the drink a pink glow.

How 'bout that.

Yesterday - sans Bellinis - we ended up turning on the air conditioning.  I don't care what the calendar says - when the thermometer inside says 89°, the date is immaterial.  All the real Bellinis in the world wouldn't have made it any cooler.  (Okay, maybe I wouldn't have cared what the temperature was, but it wouldn't have made it cooler!)  But I digress...

I had a hankerin' for a burger on the barbie all day long.  And I got me one.

Charred to perfection with mayo, mustard, catsup, pickles, onions, tomatoes, avocado, and cheese.  On a whole wheat bun, of course.  With fries.

It was a mess to eat.  Even cutting it in half didn't help.  Everything was just sliding everywhere.  I used half-a-dozen napkins.  The perfect burger.

It's supposed to rain like hell tonight and then be a mere 40 degrees cooler tomorrow.

Practically casserole weather!  I think I'll make salads, anyway.

Gotta love it.


Out of Africa

It's no secret that I love flavorful-hot and spicy foods.  Schezuan, hot Indian or Thai curries, Ethiopian berberé (a woman I worked with at UCSF made it fresh for me!), hot and spicy Mexican chilis, boonie peppers from Guam (thanks, Jay!), and piri-piri from Mozambique, to name but a few.

They're all different.  All unique.

Tonight's meal started with some beef tips I had cut, marinated in the Mozambique piri-piri, vacuum-packed, and froze.  I picked up the piri-piri (which, literally means "chilly-chilly" in Swahili) at Cost Plus last time we were home.  (I also got lots of berberé that trip because Mewded is not around to make it for me, anymore.)  It has a nice kick.  Traditional recipes for the spice blend (piri-piri can either be the pepper itself or a spice blend or condiment) vary, but the addition of lemon is very common.

Homemade Piri-Piri Sauce

  • 10 red hot chiles (birds eye-type are best)
  • 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
  • 2 T. finely chopped cilantro
  • 1 T. chopped parsley
  • 5 chopped garlic cloves
  • 1/2 t. salt
  • 1/2 cup peanut oil

Mash everything but oil in a food processor.  Slowly drizzle in oil.

It should keep - refrigerated - for a goodly amount of time.

So...  with spicy beef cubes as the main plate, and leftover chilled asparagus from yesterday, I decided we needed an accompanying rice.  Wishing to stay on the African continent, I typed in "Mozambique Rice" and didn't find much.  I started searching a little deeper and found Zanzibar Pilau.  Zanzibar is just north of Mozambique, so, at least I was in the right part of the world.

Unfortunately, the recipe was for a whole meal - and I really just wanted rice.

I improvised.

Here's the recipe I started with:

Zanzibar Pilau

The word pilau comes from the Persian word pilav or pilaw, which is also the origin of pilaf, as in "rice pilaf". The pilav rice cooking technique is found throughout the Middle East and West Asia (i.e., Turkey, India, Pakistan). It has been spread across Africa by the Arabs, and was brought by enslaved Africans to the Americas. It is especially common in the Caribbean and Southern United States. In West Africa and the Americas the name has become pearlu, perloo, perlau, plaw, et cetera. Whatever the name, it is rice, vegetables, and meat cooked in a seasoned broth. Here is the Swahili way to make this omnipresent rice dish. See also: Biriani.
women in the comoros

What you need

  • one-half teaspoon cumin seeds
  • one-half teaspoon whole black peppercorns
  • several whole cloves ("cloves" not "cloves of garlic")
  • one cinnamon stick (or a few pinches ground cinnamon)
  • a few cardamom pods (or a few pinches ground cardamom)
  • oil for frying
  • several cloves of garlic
  • two teaspoons fresh ginger
  • three cups of rice (uncooked)
  • two to four onions, chopped
  • one to two pounds of meat (beef, chicken, mutton, fish, shrimp, or prawns), cut into bite-sized pieces
  • two to four tomatoes, chopped (or canned tomatoes)
  • two to four potatoes, peeled and cut into quarters
  • one apple, peeled and cut into slices (optional)
  • one cup raisins or sultanas (optional)

What you do

* Combine cumin, peppercorns, cloves, cinnamon and cardamom in a teacup, cover with warm water, stir, and set aside. (Cooking tip: The spices can be tied up in a small sack, like a tea bag, or can be put into a tea infuser before being placed in the warm water. This avoids having whole spices in the dish when it is served.)
* Pound the garlic and ginger together and set aside. Wash the rice, drain, and set aside.
* Heat oil in deep pot. Fry onions until clear. Stir. Add garlic and ginger. Continue stirring and frying until the flavors have mixed -- it should develop a nice aroma.
* Add the meat, stir and cook over high heat until meat is browned on the outside. Reduce heat and simmer for a few minutes. Remove the meat and most of the onions, and set them aside. Add the rice and stir it thoroughly to coat each grain of rice with the oil. Add the spices and water. Stir. Wait five minutes. Add the tomatoes. Cover and simmer for a few minutes. Stir occasionally.
* Check every few minutes to see if more water is needed and add water (or broth) as necessary. Stir as liquid is added. After ten minutes add the potatoes (and/or the optional apples or raisins) and the meat and onions. Keep covered, keep checking, add water if bottom of pot is dry. Continue cooking over low heat for ten more minutes.
* Remove pot from stove, keep covered. Place entire pot in warm oven for an additional ten to twenty minutes. All moisture should be absorbed by rice and potatoes should be tender. Serve hot.

I had seen several recipes out there including one that had coconut and mango, so I just combined them.

The Quick Version

I sliced a small onion and sauteed it in a pat of butter.  I then added about a half-teaspoon each of cumin, cloves, cinnamon, ginger, and cardamom to the pot and cooked it all until it was really fragrant.  I then added 1 cup of whole grain brown rice  and coated it with the spices and onions.  Next went 2 cups of beef broth (since I was cooking beef) about 8 sliced sun-dried tomatoes, about a cup of cubed mango and a half-cup of shredded coconut.

Bring to boil, cover, reduce heat and simmer for 45 minutes.

I know it worked well because Victor cleaned his plate!

We saved the leftovers and I am going to rework it into a rice salad tomorrow.

Yum.


Steaks with Strawberry BBQ Sauce

Whaddaya do when you have a 4-pound container of Strawberries?!?  Why...  ya make Strawberry BBQ Sauce, that's what ya do!

I came up with a recipe for Strawberry BBQ Sauce a while back (I did a Root Beer BBQ Sauce, too!)  and decided it was time to make it, again.  It's super easy.

Im think that this summer I'm going to experiment with different fruits.  I'll bet peaches would work really well with a different vinegar.

Strawberry BBQ Sauce

  • 2 pounds strawberries, hulled and roughly sliced
  • 1 small bell pepper, diced
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 2 8oz can tomato sauce
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup lingonberry vinegar
  • 1/4 cup molasses
  • 2 tsp liquid smoke
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp chipotle powder
  • salt and pepper

Add strawberries, onion,  and bell pepper to saucepan and cook until strawberries release theiur juices and peppers and onions soften.  Add spices and cook well.

Add  brown sugar and then lingonberry vinegar.  Add tomato sauce and remaining ingredients.

Bring to boil and then simmer.

Blend everything with an immersion blender until smooth.

Continue simmering until thickened.

And the no-knead bread dough makes great dinner rolls, too.

But while this was all yummy and good, I have a feeling I'm going to be paying another buck tomorrow.....

Time for some serious salads.


Beannachtaí na Féile Pádraig oraibh!

I've cooked more than my share of corned beef, cabbage, and Irish sausages for this year.  I decided that tonight we were going to have steaks.  Grilled on the barbie.  Irish-style.

The Irish-Style tonight was Goodall's Irish Steak Sauce! If you've never had, go out and get.  This ain't your typical A-1 Sauce.  This stuff has flavor (And no high-fructose corn syrup!)

Lots of broccoli and oven-roasted potatoes.  And lots of caramelized onions.

So... Beannachtaí na Féile Pádraig oraibh!

And May your home always be too small to hold all your friends.


Salads and Cheesy Bread

Did my weigh-in at work.  I lost 2 pounds this past week.  I'm happy.  That's not a bad achievement considering we have dessert virtually every night.  But it also shows that if one takes the time to cook real food and not fill up on processed crap all day, you can have your cake and eat it, too.  It's all about balance - and real calories that will do me some good versus crap calories that are nothing more than crap calories.

We're fully into salad mode, now.  It's cold and raining, but I grilled a couple of thin-sliced round steaks to add to salads, and I made a loaf of bread to go along with it.  Cheesy bread.

I cubed up some sharp provolone and mixed it in before forming the dough into a ball.

And if a couple of slices of provolone bread with roasted garlic butter wasn't celebration enough for losing a couple more pounds, I'm making a yellow cake for dessert!  Real cake - not a mix.  It's in the oven right now.

I'm thinking chocolate icing.....


Steaks and Bread

Charcoal grilling is just the best!  It may not be as convenient as a gas grill, but there's just no comparing the flavor!  And with the thermometer actually hitting 60° today, grilling was definitely called for.

On my Monday grocery shopping trek today, I picked up 8 - yes, eight - bone-in New York strip steaks for a mere $24.00.  I love an in-store special!  Six of them were vacuum-packed for the freezer, and two became dinner tonight.  Grilled perfectly rare and topped first with a bit of Boursin cheese, and then slathered with caramelized onions.  Lots and lots of onions.

Baked sweet potatoes and peas rounded out the plate.

But that wasn't all we had!

I also made Whole Wheat Sun-Dried Tomato Bread!  I took the no-knead recipe and tweaked it a bit and for this loaf, added some chopped sun-dried tomatoes in oil.  It was a little messy mixing them in, but the final result was worth it!

Whole Wheat No-Knead Bread

  • 3 cups lukewarm water
  • 2 pkg yeast
  • 1 1/2 tbsp salt
  • 4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 1/2 cups whole wheat flour

Stir ingredients together and let rise 3 hours.  Follow instructions for basic no-knead artisan bread.

For sun-dried tomato bread, chop tomatoes and mix into 1lb piece of dough, form into ball and follow instructions for rising and baking.

I really like the whole wheat version better.  It has a better crumb - not as chewy as the white, but the crust is still excellent.

And to add just another layer of decadency, Victor made roasted garlic butter to slather on the bread.  It's quite simple.

Take a whole head of garlic and slice off the tips to expose the garlic cloves.  Drizzle with olive oil and place in a hot oven (450-ish) for about 45 minutes.  Let cool, then squeeze out the garlic and mix with softened butter.  Use on anything and everything.

And there's flourless chocolate cake later on.....


Salad Weather!

It's no secret that I love the snow.  Multiple back-to-back snowfalls is my idea of winter heaven.  But if I had to choose warm or cold, warm would win every time.  If I'm going to live where it snows in the winter, I want to see LOTS of snow in the winter.  But then I want it to get warm.  Like today.  And then I want to stop eating soups and stews and casseroles and start eating salads.  Like today.

There may still be snow on the ground, but I was craving a salad today.  Mixed greens, micro greens, avocado, tomato, cucumber, hard-cooked eggs, and sauteed beef and mushrroms with a red wine vinaigrette that Victor whipped up.    I cleaned my plate!

And for some strange reason, I had a hankerin' for something I haven't made in years - microwave caramel corn!

I really don't know the last time I made this - we may have still been living in San Francisco.  It's been a long time.

It may be one of the eassiest and most fun things to do!

Microwave Caramel Corn

  • 4 qts popped corn
  • 1 stick butter
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup corn syrup
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1 tsp baking soda

Pop corn and place in brown paper grocery bag.

Place butter, brown sugar, corn syrup, and vanilla in a glass bowl and  bring to a boil in microwave.   Remove from microwave and carefully stir in baking soda.  Mixture will thicken and lighten in color.

Pour over popcorn in bag, roll closed, and shake very well to mix.

Place bag in microwave and heat for 90 seconds.  Shake very well to mix and return to microwave and cook for another 90 seconds.

Shake, again, rip open bag, and enjoy!

Warning:  It's addictive.


Beef Stew and Biscuits

I didn't bake bread today.  I made biscuits, instead!

It seems as if winter is actually starting to leave.  The snow is melting, we can see patches of lawn (and fence repairs that need to be made) and it's actually been above freezing.  It's almost time to trade in the stews for salads.  Almost.

I took the easy way out tonight.  I  made a simple beef stew and topped it with cheesy baking mix biscuits.  I semi-follow the recipe on the box except I don't measure, I add an egg, and I splash in the milk a little at a time until it looks right.  Tonight, I also added some shredded provolone cheese.

The secret to light - and fully-cooked - drop biscuits in a stew is to start with really hot stew.

Get your stew to boiling, and drop small amounts of biscuit dough onto the hot surface.  I use a small ice cream scoop.  Leave enough room for them to expand.  Then put it into a 425° oven for about 45 minutes.

The hot stew steams the biscuit from the inside while the hot oven cooks it from the outside.

Guaranteed perfect every time!


Steaks on the Barbie

 

It's been quite a while since I fired up the grill.

Back in our propane days, I'd pop outside regardless of the weather and throw something on the fire.  The switch to charcoal has slowed me down a bit.  It's just not as convenient.  Better tasting, but not as convenient.

Regardless, I'm going to stay with better tasting for a while.

A while back I bought a couple of full tenderloins, cut them into steaks and roasts, vacuum-packed them, and put them in the freezer.  I've been staring at one particular package for a while now.  This morning I took action and pulled it out to thaw.

I seasoned them with salt and pepper and got fancy-schmancy - I wrapped them in bacon.  After grilling them to a perfect rare, I added a slice of Boursin cheese.

The potatoes were Boursin-mashed potatoes.  Potatoes, salt, pepper, a splash of milk, and a slab of Boursin.  Mash and eat.

Steamed broccoli and cauliflower finished off the plate.

And...  I baked another loaf of bread!

I forgot to take a picture, but it came out better than yesterdays.  A bit easier to handle.  40 minutes to rise and 25 minutes in the oven.

With time like this, we could have fresh bread every night with dinner!


Steaks

The snow has stopped and the driveway is shoveled. (The front walk is going to stay snow-covered until it melts.  The Lord giveth, the Lord can taketh away.)  If I didn't have to get the car out, eventually, I would leave the driveway, as well.

All that shoveling worked up an appetite.  Almost as much as when I'm sitting on my duff in front of the computer.

So after a big bowl of oatmeal this morning, and pizza for lunch, a filet with bearnaise was just the ticket for dinner.  And gorgonzola mashed potatoes.  And arugula with onions and bacon.

I pan-seared the steaks and then put them into a 425° oven for about 6 minutes.  The potatoes were merely regular mashed spuds with some gorgonzola crumbled in.

For the arugula, I diced up a slice of bacon and cooked it with a bit of diced onion.  When it was cooked pretty well, I added the arugula and salt and pepper.  Nothing else.  Very simple and very flavorful.

I have made blender hollandaise for years - it's really quite easy- so I adapted it for a bearnaise.  Not exactly the classic recipe, but it works.

Blender Bearnaise

  • 2 egg yolks
  • 2 tsp heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup hot melted butter
  • 2 tsp white wine vinegar
  • 1/2 tsp tarragon
  • pinch chervil
  • 1 tsp minced shallot
  • pinch salt and pepper

Add egg yolks, heavy cream, shallots, and spices to blender.  Mix really well.  With blender running, add half the hot butter.  Add the vinegar, and then finish adding the remaining butter.  Blend until smooth.

That's it.  And simple enough for a weeknight meal.

Later tonight we will have dessert - more cake from last night.

This has been a really fun snow-day.


Inexpensive Steaks and a Rich Sauce Béarnaise

 

It's just amazing how good a cheap round steak can taste with a béarnaise sauce on top!  Truly amazing.

Victor wanted to cook dinner last night.  It was his distraction from packing for a business trip to Dallas this morning.  I never have to be asked twice if someone else wants to cook.  I love cooking - but I love eating other people's cooking, too!

He made pan-fried steaks with béarnaise sauce, and oven-roasted potatoes and carrots.  Classic simplicity.

He made a slight variation on a classic béarnaise.  The classic is  egg yolks, butter, white wine vinegar, tarragon, shallots, and chervil.  Many (many, many, many) years ago I worked in a  restaurant in San Francisco called The Red Chimney.  It was a classic 1950's upscale Dinner House with great food.  Every night, the owner came into the kitchen to taste the béarnaise.  It had to be perfect.  It usually was - but there were times when it was thrown out and remade.    Sadly, the restaurant was torn down to make way for the Stonestown Galleria.  That kind of detail doesn't always exist anymore.

But I digress..

 

.

Victor's Béarnaise

  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 2 tsp white wine vinegar
  • 1/2 tsp tarragon
  • pinch salt
  • pinch pepper

Place half the butter, egg yolks, and vinegar in a double boiler over hot (not boiling) water.  Stir constatly until butter is melted.

Add remaining butter and stir until butter is melted and sauce thickens.  Add tarragon, S&P.  Serve immediately.

It was rich, creamy, and so not on our diets.  And we sopped it up with homemade bread.

Since it's just me and the dog for the next three nights, the gastronomical choices are going to be pretty limited.  I have found over the years that I really don't enjoy cooking just for myself.  I see a few hot dogs in my future.....