Monday, February 20, 2006

Lamb, Gnocchi and Eggs Rolls

Well, despite the fact that it may look like it's been a slow weeek for this blogger, I've actually been cooking up a storm.

Last Sunday night, Lou and I hosted six other folks for dinner before playing bridge. We made a gruyere and fontina fondue (with french bread, asparagus and cherry tomatoes for dipping), rack of lamb with a preserved lemon gremolata crust served over a bed of spicy chili nodles, and for dessert, our friend Joey, baked a delicious chocolate espresso cake.







The lamb recipe came from Donna Hay's "New Fast Food," and she lived up to our expectations of her spectacular recipes. We modified the recipe slightly by matching the lamb with the spicy noodles (basically we exchanged noodles for potatoes), and it turned out well.

Here's the modified recipe for the lamb:

Ingredients:

for the lamb:
sea salt
olive oil
1 lamb rack of 12 cutlets, trimmed of fat

for the preserved lemon gremolata:
2 cloves of garlic, crushed
2/3 cup flat-leaf parsley, chopped
1 1/2 tablespoons chopped preserved lemon
2 tablespoons olive oil

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

Place a frying pan over high heat. Add the lamb and cook for 3 minutes or until the meat is sealed. Remove from the pan and set aside.

To make the preserved lemon gremolata, combine the garlic, parslep, preserved lemon and oil. Spread the gremolata over the lamb and place in a baking dish. Bake for 12-15 minutes or until the lamb is cooked to your liking.

To serve, slice the rack into cutlets.



Hay suggests shielding the gremolata from the heat with tin foil, but I thought the gremolata might have looked better a little browned. Next time I may put the lamb under the broiler for a minute or two. I also wonder if browning the gremolata might help it better adhere to the lamb.

On Valentine's Day, Lou and I made spinach gnocchi. Here's the recipe:



Making gnocchi is a four step process in which you prepare the basic ingridients, combine them with flour to form a dough, drop the dough in boiling water and then bake it in butter and cheese.

I was thrilled about how they turned out. They were softer than I expected, and they tasted delicious.

Here you can see us mixing the dough and preparing them for the boiling water:






And lastly, on Friday night we cooked some beets (you can see the beets in the pot just before we pulled them out) and made egg rolls. Donna Hay again supplied us with the idea for egg rolls. It could not have been easier:

Egg Rolls

2 tablespoons sesame oil
4 green onions, chopped (we used part of a larger onion because we didn't have any green onions)
4 eggs (we used up the remaining quail eggs--about 12 in all)
fillings (Hay suggests smoked salmon, spinach ot tomatoes, but we used prosciutto)
thick, sweet soy sauce

Heat the seame oil in a large, non-stick pan over medium heat. Add the onions and cook for 2 minutes. Remove half the onions and set aside.

Beat the eggs lightly to combine them. Add half the egg to the pan and swirl to evenly coat the base. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until almost set. Slide the egg from the pan and place the fillings of your choice down one side. Roll up and serve with thick soy sauce. Return the remaining onions to the pan and make a second egg roll. Serves 2.

It had been years since I'd seen an egg rolls like these. My aunt and uncle lived in Japan for a year when I was a kid, and I remember my aunt making them for us when they got back to the US. I've grown accustom to the crispy egg rolls served in most chinese restaurants, and I had honestly forgotten that you can make an egg roll like thin omlette and roll it up with tasty fillings to your own liking. I thought ours turned out slightly too thick, so the next time I make them I want to try to make the egg layer as thin as possible. Here's a photo sequence of me rolling them up.













Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Chocolate Bar

Well, for those of you who know me, I usually swim somewhere between 3,000 and 4,500 yards at least three nights a week. That's a lot of time in the pool, and spending so much time swimming makes me generally ravenous.

Don't worry, faithful readers, I won't eat just anything as a result of my intense hunger and need to fuel the body. I only eat good food, and this is the story of the discovery a new good, and essential, food:

Tonight, after finishing off the leftover chili from Sunday, I was overcome by an intense craving for chocolate. Unlike some people I know, I do not horde chocolate for such occasions, so there was no chocolate in the house. I was forced to walk down the street to Bi-Rite to find some chocolate to satisfy the craving. Well, I found some chocolate made by a local chocolatier: Charles Chocolates of San Francisco . I had heard of Charles, but I had never before tasted any of their chocolates. After looking over the selection, I bought the bar with mocha java pieces in bittersweet chocolate. In the interest of full disclosure, there was little debate in my head about what flavor to choose--I am a fanatic about the combination of coffee and chocolate. Actually, almost any combination of those two flavors would qualify as dream dessert for me (for example, I am obsessed with the profiteroles with espresso gelato, chocolate sauce and candied almonds at Delfina (next to Bi-rite)). Anyway, this chocolate bar jumped out at me:



It was good--dark, bitter chocolate with the chopped coffee beans blended into the bar. The chocolate and coffee combination was well balanced, and I liked the crunch of the coffee bean.



All in all, Charles was a good find, and I can assure you that I'll buy another one some time soon. Try one yourself--you'll like it.

Monday, February 06, 2006

Lemons?

I pulled about fifty lemons off the tree in our back yard last week, and I've been stumped trying to figure out what to do with all of them. I've been putting lemon juice in and on everything I cook - vinaigrette, the Chicken Stew for Jackie and Beth and on vegetables - but I can't find a recipe that calls for using a lot of lemons. They look pretty in the bowl, but there must be something more I can do with them other than make lots of lemonade.



Anyone have any ideas? Please write with suggestions.

Leftover Cornbread

So, what do you do when Superbowl Sunday comes along and you just so happen to have some leftover cornbread from the day before?

Why, you make chili, of course!

Yes, I succumbed to a timeless tradition of making chili on Superbowl Sunday, even though I didn't watch the game and could have cared less how it turned out.

A few years ago someone - I think it may have been my roommate - gave me some chili mix that I stashed away for the right time. Well, that time was yesterday.

The recipe was really easy: 2 lbs of lean ground beef, one 28 oz. can of tomato sauce, 1 can each of black beans, kidney beans and pinto beans, and that's it; brown the beef, add the sauce and the powder from the packet (it's made up of chili pepper, salt, garlic, onion, paprika, cumin, oregano and "spices") and let it simmer for a half an hour, stirring occasionally; then add the beans and let it simmer for another half hour, stirring from time to time. That's it.

I couldn't believe it - the chili was delicious. It was both thick and surprisingly spicy. The paprika was the key ingredient in the mix.

I contemplated adding onions, but I decided against it, mostly because I didn't have any and I didn't want to walk down to Bi-Rite to buy some. It would have been great with some chopped green onion and some cheese on top, but the chili tasted fine by itself, especially when combined with the leftover cornbread.

So, faithful Foodphiles readers, you might be wondering why I'm not posting a picture of this surprisingly good chili. Well, the honest truth is that even though the chili tasted great, it looked horrible, and I don't want anyone getting the wrong idea about what I cook.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Baby...ur, family food!

My friends, Jackie and Beth, had their baby last week. Caroline Freeman-Cherry was born on Friday, January 27th at 9:04 pm. She's beautiful, and she has a full head of black hair. I don't have a picture of her yet, but I'll try to post one soon.

In order to try to help them get settled in back at home, a number of their friends, mostly friends from St. John's, have been taking them meals every night. Last night was my turn, and so that's what today's posting is all about.

For some time now I've been wanting to make some kind of chicken stew. I often times get these ideas in my head and mull them over for weeks or months before every getting around to making them. What I'd actually had in my head for some time was Brunswick Stew, which is a Southern mish-mash of meats and potatoes, corn and other vegetables. In the old days, good Brunswick Stew was often made chicken and squirrel, but most of the recipes I found called for a combination of chicken and beef (I suppose squirrel does not fit into the urban palate)). I've looked at a couple of recipes for Brunswick Stew over the last few months, but none them spoke to me. So, last week when I was asked to prepare foor for Jackie and Beth, my mind immediately settled on the idea of some kind of chicken stew. I gave up on the idea of Brunswick Stew and looked around for ideas for a simple chicken stew. No squirrel for me, thank you.

I found a excellent recipe on Epicurious.com for chicken and corn stew, flavored with thyme. It was perfect--thick, creamy, rich and delicious! Here's the recipe from Gourmet:

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/recipe_views/views/108728

And, here's a picture of the stew while it was still on the stove:



The best thing I could think of to accompany the stew was cornbread, so I dug out one of my favorite cornbread recipes from Edna Lewis's and Scott Peacock's The Gift of Southern Cooking. There's no sugar in this recipe, so it's not sweet. It's an old-fashioned southern cornbread, and the recipe calls for using sour milk (I used buttermilk as a substitute for the soured milk). As with all good cornbread, this recipe suggests using a cast iron pan or skillet, so I used Lou's cast iron pan.

Here's the recipe:

1 1/2 cup fine-ground cornmeal
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 3/4 cup soured milk or buttermilk
2 eggs, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons unsalted butter

Preheat Oven to 450 degrees

Mix the cornmeal, salt and baking powder together in a bowl. Stir the milk into beaten eggs, and pour over the dry ingredients in batches, stirring vigorously to make a smooth glossy batter.

Cut the butter into pieces and put it in a 10-inch cast iron skillet or baking pan. Put the skillet in the preheated oven, and heat until the butter is melted and foaming. Remove from the oven, and swirl the butter all around the skillet to coat the bottom and sides thoroughly. Pour remaining melted butter into the cornbread batter, and stir well until the butter is absorbed into the batter. Turn the batter into the heated skillet, and put it in the oven to bake for 30-40 minutes, until cornbread is golden brown and crusty on top and pulls away from the sides of the skillet.

Remove the skillet from the oven, and turn out the cornbread onto a plate. Allow to cool for 5 minutes before cutting into wedges. Serve cornbread while it is hot.

The cornbread turned out perfectly, and it was a hit with Jackie and Beth. Here's a picture of the cornbread shortly after I took it out of the oven (I had to taste a piece!):



And, to finish off the dinner, I made a simple salad with sweet gorgonzola cheese, toasted wlnuts and homemade thyme and fresh lemon juice vinaigrette (I pulled about 50 lemons of the tree in our back yard last weekend). And for dessert, I make brownies (pictures of me stirring the batter below) which I took to Jackie and Beth to eat with Dolce de Leche ice cream.






Babies sure a good reason to cook! I'm glad you're here Caroline.