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blue_dolphin

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Posts posted by blue_dolphin

  1. Back in this post, @Katie Meadow said the use of fish sauce in this NYT recipe for Citrus Salad With Peanuts and Avocado made her wobbly.  @Smithy's friend reported the fish sauce being a bit much.  With those advance inputs, I give you this Citrus Salad with Peanuts & Avocado:

    IMG_0608.thumb.jpg.c46684172b94a6211320b13413160768.jpg

    I used Red Boat fish sauce and it's quite salty so I reduced it by half.  Tasting the dressing before tossing, I bumped up the rice vinegar a bit and had to omit the cilantro because I am out.

    Citrus and avocado are all at their peak at the local farmers market and that may have contributed to my positive response, but I like the salad and the little hit of umami that the fish sauce adds. 

     

    • Like 10
    • Delicious 1
  2. Here are a few more photos of my fava purchase.  @ProfessionalHobbit/@SobaAddict70 mentioned them a few times in the past but I didn't find much other discussion. 

    The bunch:

    IMG_0598.thumb.jpg.9cd416bd381e232cf7e3ab31e127fa32.jpg

     

    Hollow stems:

    IMG_0599.thumb.jpg.4c2c6addf0fa9ddfd9072892481e110c.jpg

    As I mentioned, the woman selling them said these could be steamed and eaten.  

     

    Out of focus flowers.  These are edible.  They taste sort of nutty.

    IMG_0601.thumb.jpg.3e2a4cd6b84111fe6ec39127bae3b5c8.jpg

     

    The leaves, washed and ready to go:

    IMG_0604.thumb.jpg.d1d2ed9f27739a04723aa8d5388b585e.jpg

    I got about 5 oz of leaves from that bunch.  I'm reserving some for a salad and sautéing the rest.

    • Like 5
  3. 2 hours ago, Okanagancook said:

    What are fava shoots?

     

    They're just the ends and leaves of the fava bean plants. These have a few flowers on them, too.  The leaves taste kind of like a somewhat bean-y spinach.  I have never had them before but they were only $2 for a bunch so I figured I would get them to play around with. 

    Joshua McFadden mentioned them in Six Seasons and suggested using them in salads or sautéing them.  I found a few recipes using them to make pesto.  The woman selling them at the market said the stems could be steamed.  Not sure I will do that, but the first options are likely. 

  4. The recipe for this Spinach-and-Cilantro Soup With Tahini and Lemon appeared in the New York Times recently.

    IMG_0596.thumb.jpg.8bede46f108dcee1e7fc8985dacf984d.jpg

    Interesting.  There's a small amount of tahini in the soup as well as in the drizzle on top.  I added a little preserved lemon and would have liked more but even though I only used half the called for amount of salt, the soup is too salty for me and I didn't want to make it worse.

    On the upside, it reduced my refrigerator load by 2 bunches of spinach and 2 bunches of cilantro.   I'm debating whether the 1.5 quarts of soup should go in the freezer or directly down the sink.    Maybe I'll try one round of leftovers first....

     

    Updating a day later after breakfasting on a bowl of this soup.  It may be growing on me.  The leftovers have earned a reprieve. 

    • Like 7
  5. 1 hour ago, Okanagancook said:

    That is one HEARTY soup!  Almost looks like a stew.  All that said it looks good.

    The way the recipe is written, most of the broth gets absorbed by the lentils, then you add back as much liquid as you want.  I decided to leave it pretty stew-y!

    • Like 1
  6. 1 hour ago, IowaDee said:

    My brain has such a hard time with the word "forged".  My late father-in-law owned an old timey blacksmith shop and the word meant something so different.

    Plow shares and horse shoes, not doughnuts and salad greens.

     

    I think foraged (the food finding word) and forged (the blacksmithing word) are distinct and have different origins. 

     

    1 hour ago, IowaDee said:

    Gotta get my brain to move forward here.

    Edited to add that you probably don't need to get your brain to do anything, just straighten your glasses 🙃!

     

    • Like 3
    • Haha 1
  7. I was perusing The Zuni Café Cookbook towards lunch time when the phrase, "An easy, hearty soup that can be ready in half an hour," caught my eye.  It leads off the header notes for the Lentil-Sweet Red Pepper Soup with Cumin & Black Pepper on p 167. Thirty minutes was perhaps a stretch, mostly because I had vegetables that were not long for the crisper drawer and required some attentive butchery but also because even Rancho Gordo's Black Caviar Lentils don't quite cook through in 15 minutes flat.  But the timing was not off by a lot so I was shortly enjoying this bowl

    IMG_0591.thumb.jpg.4d34c04046731a58765e83d1773e393a.jpg

    which is garnished with some of the braised bacon (p 205) that I made earlier for a pasta dish. I wouldn't say this was a revelation but it made for a nice quick lunch and I enjoyed it.  

     

    An even quicker dessert from the book is this plate of Oranges with Rosemary Honey p 456.
    1797679384_IMG_0588(2).thumb.jpg.609754d4eabdf66095405b4d81f45b7d.jpg

    This is barely a recipe, just orange slices, drizzled with rosemary-infused honey but like the mandarin/stuffed date recipe I posted about yesterday, it's a simple, fresh fruit dessert that works well in the winter months. Since the orange slices are more sturdy, this one can easily be served on a big platter.
    I strained the pounded rosemary leaves out of the honey before serving because they can be unpleasantly pointy and added an easily-removed rosemary sprig to garnish.

     
     

     

     

    • Like 6
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  8. 9 hours ago, Smithy said:

    The other thing I'm noticing about the Piglet reviews is that it exposes me to writers I haven't necessarily encountered before. It's great fun. Thanks for pointing it out!

     

    The writing in the reviews has been the big draw of the Piglet for me.  I probably have a selective memory for some gems but I haven't seen quite the same sparkle this year.  

    Like Susan Orlean's 2011 review of The Frankies Spuntino Kitchen Companion & Cooking Manual vs Ottolenghi's Plenty, in which she says this about Plenty

    Quote

    First up, Chickpea, tomato and bread soup. Oh, yes, indeed! And then Egg, spinach and pecorino pizza! Carmelized endive with Gruyere! I am smitten. I’m also in love with the name of the writer -- Yotam Ottolenghi -- a mellifluous vowel parade which I am sure is an anagram for something.  I am scaring Husband with my sudden zeal for eggplants -- excuse me, aubergines -- and lentils. But really, I haven’t been this excited by a cookbook in quite a while. 

     

    The phrase, "Yotam Ottolenghi -- a mellifluous vowel parade which I'm sure is an anagram for something," delights me!
     

    And Gabrielle Hamilton's earlier round review in the same year where she frames the match up of Plenty vs Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table as a horse race and takes particular exception with the photography in Greenspan's book:

    Quote

    There's a shot of a cracker that's supposed to look like someone's just taken a bite out of it. No one has been near that cracker. In another, there are crumbs carefully arranged to look not carefully arranged....

    There is almost no sense in my trying to persuade you to my opinion about the photography and styling. This is distinctly an "a chacque un son gout" story. Dorie LOVES these photos, this styling, this strangely retro era of heavily-propped and aggressively-lit cookbook design. She effuses about it in her acknowledgements and said she burst into tears of joy when she learned she could work with this team on this book. Me, they killed the food. By the time they got it in the right tableau, the right crock, the just-so schmear and crumb and the light meter checked and the silver umbrella tilted another hair to the left, the food had long ago died. I wanted to cook exactly nothing from the book based on the photography.

     

    • Like 2
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  9. I took a peek at Bottom of the Pot at the library and will have to go back and borrow it one of these days.  

    Today's quarterfinal review made me want to purchase both Todd Richard's Soul and Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad's I Am a Filipino, which was already on my list.  

    I like books organized by ingredient as Soul is and while I initially thought it might repeat too much of what I have in other cookbooks, a look at the contents over on EYB makes me think there is still much of interest. 

    Since it's close to $30, I think I will request that the library purchase I Am a Filipino so I can get a look at it but those little buns that Kyle MacLachlan pretty much sold me!

    • Like 1
  10. 1 hour ago, BeeZee said:

    @blue_dolphin, that looks very appealing, and my first thought was also that I bet there is a way to make it in to a starter by including something savory...crisped prosciutto bits would be perfect!

    I agree! I've got some crisped prosciutto already made and was tempted to sprinkle it on yesterday but decided to just enjoy it as written but I will try that variation while I've still got everything handy. 

     

    13 minutes ago, eugenep said:

    @blue_dolphin it definitely looks like something I would see at a nice restaurant. thanks for the photos - really professional. Dinner guests would be really impressed I bet 

    Thanks!  The little mandarin slices are prone to falling apart so it's the kind of thing that's worth taking a few minutes to plate individually. 

  11. Mandarins & Dates Stuffed with Mascarpone, Pomegranates and Pistachios from The Zuni Café Cookbook p 457

    IMG_0581.thumb.jpg.27b13773a2d2520c48dfe2d0792f6aa5.jpg
    This dessert follows the pattern of the simple Zuni starters or salads that consist of a few perfect ingredients layered together and allow you to experience every combination of them as you choose with your fork - delicious! 
    A friend stopped by yesterday with a few Satsuma mandarins from her tree and I had some nice dates from the farmers market AND mascarpone leftover from the Zuni risotto so this was meant to be. I didn't want to waste any of their flesh or juice so instead of cutting off the peel with a knife, I peeled them and carefully scraped off as much of the pith as possible. I often find dates too sweet but they were perfect here. 
    I think one could turn this into a starter by adding some salty prosciutto but it's pretty perfect as is.

    • Like 6
  12. 49 minutes ago, Smithy said:

     

    This looks like a wonderful thing to do with tuna. I don't have tuna, but I have salmon. How do you think it would work with boneless sockeye?

     

    I do think salmon would be good this way.  I might consider bumping up the temp a few degrees for salmon, depending on what you'd like to do with it.  The tuna starts out pretty firm but 45°F salmon might be a little soft for some uses.

    • Thanks 1
  13. 17 minutes ago, Smithy said:

    @blue_dolphin, I can see that confit tuna has been taking you a long, long way. I'll have to try that when I can lay my hands on some good tuna.

     

    Well, I really shouldn't have made a full pound of it as I'm not sure how long it's good for and I'm not the world's biggest eater! Some recipes say 2-3 days, some a week or even 2 weeks.  It's absolutely lovely stuff and I don't want to waste it so I've been on a mission to use it up.  It's been a fun exercise.  

    I'll certainly make it again but will probably make 1/2 lb at a time. 

     

    25 minutes ago, Shelby said:

    Wow!  You did great!

    Thanks!  I was kind of messy at wrapping it up, but luckily it doesn't really show.  They make a great little breakfast, don't they?

    • Like 2
  14. Jumping on the onigirazu bandwagon with attempt # 1

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    Confit ahi tuna (mixed with a little mayo and yuzu hot sauce) and avocado.  I sprinkled a little furikake on top of the avocado. 

    Obviously, practice is needed!

    • Like 6
  15. Thus far, I am incapable of producing shatteringly crisp bacon in a skillet but I can pull it off in the oven, including with Wrights.  I put the bacon on a rack, on a sheet pan.

    In my hands, the thicker the bacon, the lower the temp I need to use to get it perfectly crisp. Not sure if I could carry that observation over from oven to skillet.

     

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  16. Today's tuna confit deviled eggs are closer to Kenji's as I mixed the yolks with some of the olive oil used to confit,  no mayo. 

    IMG_0548.thumb.jpg.f7ddeccd9dcd6f3f9c3077e510bd0515.jpg

    Same mix-ins as yesterday - capers, preserved lemon and red bell pepper.  Topped with pickled onions. 

    Kenji's recipe calls for 1 oz tuna/egg AND he adds extra egg yolks.  Not sure how one could get all that back in the eggs.  I skipped the extra yolks and still had enough extra to spread on a small slice of toast.

    • Like 9
  17. I went out to lunch today with a few ladies to a pub style place, White Harte Pub.  

    Two of us had the fish & chips and we both chose the salad as our optional side:

    IMG_0553.thumb.jpg.42acce7a19c90a8dcb618257cd423876.jpg

    I had a 21st Amendment Blood Orange IPA, which was neither red nor orange in color and didn't particularly taste of orange but was an excellent partner to the fish & chips.  My friend had a Harp Lager.

     

    The lady to my left ordered bangers & mash which came with a side of garden peas that didn't make it into the photo. She chose a Strongbow Hard Apple Cider.

    IMG_0555.thumb.jpg.515557800b5d0c9eb501f12fb68495a9.jpg

     

    The lady to my right ordered the 1/2 lb White Harte Burger with sweet potato fries, accompanied by a glass of Austerity Cellars Monterey Pinot Noir. She declared this the best burger she'd ever had.

    IMG_0556.thumb.jpg.a819060f6d1f5daa881f97931180911a.jpg

     

    The last member of our group ordered the Windsor Scramble from the breakfast side of the menu.  No photo but it included scrambled eggs with cheddar cheese, smoked ham, potatoes, toast and roasted tomatoes.  

    • Like 10
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