Dinner! 2002
#151
Posted 16 May 2002 - 12:47 PM
Just a question about the sprouts. Being English, my instinct is to boil sprouts into a state of non-being, making the entire apartment smell like a hospital ward. I understand that this time I am sauteeing them. That's it, no parboiling/blanching, right? And when you say the sprouts are chopped, do you mean just quartered, or finely chopped?
Many thanks in advance.
#152
Posted 16 May 2002 - 01:18 PM
When prepping the sprouts, half each sprout and slice off a little portion of the base. You're going to de-leaf each and every sprout so that you'll end up with approximately 2 cups of sprout leaves and finely minced cores per 1 container of brussel sprouts. By "cores", I mean the pithy center core of each sprout, which you'll mince or chop finely.
Since the mass of sprouts will have been reduced to leaves and bits of core, no blanching or parboiling is needed. Just brown the onions and garlic, add the red pepper flakes (and anchovy if you like, wait for the anchovy to disintegrate before adding the sprouts); then add the leaves and cores. Saute over medium-high heat for a few minutes, then cover and turn the heat down to medium-low, cook until the leaves are bright green and the cores are softened slightly. Trust me, your house won't smell like cabbage when you're through.
Finish with salt and pepper to taste, and a drizzle (or as much as you like) of EVOO.
#153
Posted 17 May 2002 - 11:12 AM
Priscilla
Priscilla
OCFoodNation.com
Taste of Orange County, Orange Coast Magazine
In the Daily Gullet: Vegetables, in a Soup
#154
Posted 17 May 2002 - 01:29 PM
Tonight I'm finally test driving Boiled Beef Slices in a Firey Sauce (or Shui Zhu Niu Rou, for you Chinese speakers out there). Bascially: a big, steamy bowl of finely sliced beef steak in a rich broth fragrant with chile bean paste and spring onions, topped off with a drizzle of sizzling oil enriched with finely chopped, fried facing heaven chiles and very numbing Sichuan peppercorns. And a wee bowl of rice on the side to calm my mouth down every few minutes.
Bliss. The endorphins are AMAZING up here...
Miss J
#155
Posted 17 May 2002 - 01:37 PM
I am relieved, for your sake, that that's all it means!And we all know what that means - Miss J can have a flaming chile fest!
More seriously - I think - can you enlarge on the "facing heaven" chilis? Or is that a sort of poetic description of just reglar old chilis.
Anyway - enjoy. I may be dining on small pretzels at a Manhattan gin palace known as "Jimmy's".
#156
Posted 17 May 2002 - 02:05 PM
Wilfrid, facing heaven chiles are a type of chile recommended for Sichuan cookery. You can find a pic of them here.I am relieved, for your sake, that that's all it means!And we all know what that means - Miss J can have a flaming chile fest!
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More seriously - I think - can you enlarge on the "facing heaven" chilis? Or is that a sort of poetic description of just reglar old chilis.
Anyway - enjoy. I may be dining on small pretzels at a Manhattan gin palace known as "Jimmy's".
Being a girl whose bloke is not fond of chile, and is especially not fond of chiles in soup, any time he's going to be away for dinner has become known in our flat as a "spicy soup and foreign films night." Tonight the film is Amelie.
Pretzels are my favourite snack, by the way. So your night on the booze is actually quite appealing.
Miss J
#157
Posted 17 May 2002 - 02:26 PM
Saturday (plans subject to change but I have a hankering for this): stir-fried ground pork with scallions, Chinese black mushrooms, ginger, and hoisin sauce; broccoli and snow peas with mushroom soy; Szechuan pickled turnips; steamed rice.
(Note from Soba: you can get the pickled turnips from an Asian specialty food market. A really good one is Kam Man, the giant Chinese superstore in NYC's Chinatown, located on Canal Street (I think its near Mott Street, but can't remember exactly where, although you can't miss it).
I have friends coming over for brunch on Sunday. Yeah, yeah I know its not dinner, but I'm not gonna be home since I'll have to be in the office later that evening, so sue me.
Brunch: French toast, served with a Calvados spiked apple compote; omelettes with chorizo, avocado, and roasted cherry tomatoes; home fries; chipotle, citrus, and roasted tomato salsa (on the side). I'll make the compote and the salsa on Saturday, to let the flavors in both dishes meld; everything else is pretty straightforward. The batter for the French toast will have a teensy bit of Calvados, just for kicks.
#158
Posted 20 May 2002 - 07:33 AM
#159
Posted 20 May 2002 - 07:48 AM
Last night, I cooked a lump of protein with a nice sauce. Filet mignon simply seared with a butter and salt crust. A few morels, cooked with chopped shallot and garlic; poured in some tawny port, reduced and finished with a knob of butter. The morels drank up plenty of port and were sweet and delicious.
#160
Posted 20 May 2002 - 08:51 AM
Dinner last night: brined organic chicken for a few hours; then rubbed it all over with foie gras butter and roasted it with root vegetables. Served with parsnip puree drizzled with parsley juice.
#161
Posted 20 May 2002 - 09:07 AM
The pasta with sprouts and fried bread crumbs will be my contribution to the e-gullet dinner. You'll get some e-feedback for sure...woot woot.
#162
Posted 20 May 2002 - 09:17 AM
Arugula salad with mustard-shallot dressing and a poached duck egg
Herbes de Provence goat cheese croustades
Homemade spinach-ricotta ravioli in a sage-butter sauce with fresh peas
And my friend brought a blueberry lemon tart. Very spring-y.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#163
Posted 20 May 2002 - 09:28 AM
#164
Posted 20 May 2002 - 09:36 AM
#165
Posted 20 May 2002 - 10:24 AM
Very nice Alsatian pinot gris to start, and a 2000 Coturri Zinfandel (don't drink this standing up) with the lamb.
#166
Posted 20 May 2002 - 12:28 PM
I added tarragon to my usual scampi recipe and mixed the butter w/sauteed garlic and seasonings (read this somewhere or another) and found it made a huge difference over just butter, oil and raw garlic. I'll be making it this way from now on.
There were green olives, capers and carmalized lemon slices, along with the usual garlic, shallot, oil combo with the scallopini (I used chicken instead of veal).
I separated the two items on the plate with sauteed yellow and red swiss chard.
My husband was a very happy man.
#167
Posted 21 May 2002 - 02:51 AM
#168
Posted 22 May 2002 - 10:11 AM
Technically, (I think) scampi is italian for a small lobster like crustasean (sp). In the US, we cook shrimp "in the scampi style" meaning, butter, garlic, oil and herbs. This is according to Lidia of Felida's as well as other italian cooks I know. Many people refer to it as "shrimp scampi".
So I guess the answer to your question is the former rather than the latter description. I myself have never heard that scampi means spicy in the US, but then again, my experience pales in comparison to the rest of the members.
#169
Posted 22 May 2002 - 10:25 AM
Tuesday: Baked chicken thighs (marinated in yogurt, turmeric, garlic, chopped onion, cumin, fennel seeds and ginger); sauteed kale; coconut rice pilaf; vanilla ice cream with leftover Calvados apple compote from Sunday's brunch.
#170
Posted 22 May 2002 - 10:25 AM
#171
Posted 22 May 2002 - 04:59 PM
And Sauerkraut, but that's just for me.
#172
Posted 23 May 2002 - 07:51 AM
Then, of course, you can pile all the ham and foie gras on top!
#173
Posted 23 May 2002 - 10:07 AM
However, last evening roasted a lamb loin, nice textural contrast between the loin and the tenderloin sides. Deglazement enriched with compound butter. Green-corn (differentiated from dry corn; mine was fresh white corn) pudding as Fritz makes it for Nero Wolfe, with the addition of diced roasted red bell pepper which if I have I put in this dish, glazed roasted beets. Bread.
Priscilla
Priscilla
OCFoodNation.com
Taste of Orange County, Orange Coast Magazine
In the Daily Gullet: Vegetables, in a Soup
#174
Posted 23 May 2002 - 10:53 AM
I can also make my own pickles.
I'm ever-so resourceful.
#175
Posted 23 May 2002 - 10:57 AM
#176
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:53 AM
Tender, sticky, wonderful. I resolve to cook more tripe.
#177
Posted 24 May 2002 - 11:50 AM
#178
Posted 24 May 2002 - 11:59 AM
#179
Posted 24 May 2002 - 02:41 PM
I was the lucky recipient of some of my mother's final Swiss chard harvest, which had to be used today since I'll be away from home for several days. I made a vat of soup with it, with onions, garlic, cannellini beans and chick peas, a little tomato, and a little cumin, coriander, and chili to spice it up. I've frozen a lot of it, which will be nice for a cool and rainy day.
Tonight, I'm going to do an Indian-style drizzle to add to it using onion, ginger and garlic cooked until brown in a little butter with cumin seeds, coriander, and probably garam masala, which I'll stir in on serving.
I'll also do it in a more Italian style in later meals, probably ladling it over well-toasted Italian bread and adding grated Parmesan or Pecorino.
I love Swiss chard!
#180
Posted 28 May 2002 - 07:47 AM
Meaty Memorial Day weekend. A rib-eye steak rubbed thoroughly with Dean & Deluca's ready-made South Wetsern rub (mildly spicy, plenty of cumin), and seared in butter. Mashed potatoes with chopped ramps, and ramp greens. Sutton Hill Zinfandel.
Yesterday - they said it couldn't be done! But I dragged duck a l'orange out of the history books successfully. A magret only, in fact, but a very happy sauce made from bitter oranges, a little veal stock, raspberry vinegar and a teaspoon of sugar. Fried potatoes. Ch Moulin du Bourg, Listrac-Medoc. Cheese. Port and cookies.
Cheese of the weekend - a leaf-wrapped Robiola from Dean & Deluca of such pungency as one might achieve by leaving a Durian fruit in an old laundry bag. A fantastic cheese, about $19 for a four or five inch round. Recommended.




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