Chickpea noodles with turmeric Mix a couple teaspoons of turmeric into the Chickpea flour. Add a little bit of whole wheat white flour. Mix in enough water to form a texture like wet sand. Feed through the pasta extruder per the instructions. Boil a couple minutes in salted water. |
One Month at a Time
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Saturday, February 28, 2015
Mexican chicken sandwich
The sandwich this week is based on the recipe from Saveur for cemita poblana. We substituted what we had on hand. It was delicious. We have been a little crazy with chicken cooked like this. It is tough to beat! The actual recipe called for 8 chipotle chiles in adobo. This seemed crazy hot to us, so we made made chipotle mayo instead.
Cemita poblana
For four sandwiches:
Slice one white onion and soak in vinegar while preparing the other ingredients.
Make chipotle mayo: Cut up one chipotle in adobo and mix with 1/2 cup mayo. Add more or less to taste.
Put 1 cup flour, 4 beaten eggs and 1 cup bread crumbs into three different bowls. We could not find veal, so we pounded out 4 boneless, skinless chicken thighs. Dip in flour, then egg, then bread crumbs and fry in about 1/2-1 inch olive oil. Keep warm in oven on rack.
Slice four round rolls in half. Divide 12 oz mozzarella cheese on each bun and lightly oil the other side. Place on sheet pan. When the chicken is finished, remove from oven and place the buns under the broiler until toasted. Place chicken on bottom bun. Top with slice of tomato (we would have used avocado instead, but they were not ripe at the store), onion, chipotle mayo and some chopped cilantro. Serve with refried beans.
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Patty melt
Make the patties thin and cook them hot. |
Rye bread recipe from Michael Ruhlman |
Served with oven fries. |
I am not sure I have ever eaten a patty melt. They remind me of my mother, stopping in the diner in the Blue Ridge Mall (I think it was a counter at Woolworth's), it was her go to sandwich. Well I do like them. A lot. You could always buy the rye bread. I couldn't find any at Hyvee that didn't have high fructose corn syrup in them, so I made it instead. I will make this bread again.
Rye bread from Michael Ruhlman
340 grams bread flour
230 grams rye flour
340 grams water
1 tsp dry yeast
1 tbsp caraway seeds
2 tsp kosher salt
Let rise in covered bowl 2-4 hours (until doubled in size)
Punch it down and shape it into a rectangle about an inch thick. Cover and let rest 10 minutes.
Oil a loaf pan Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
Starting at top of rectangle, fold dough over on itself, folding and punch the dough down. You want a tight loaf. Roll it back and forth. Put in loaf pan.
Slice the top of the dough. Back 30 minutes. Turn oven down to 375 degrees and cook another 15-30 minutes (until internal temp is 200 degrees.)
Cool on rack.
Patty Melt
Slice the bread and butter the top and bottom. Place one slice of swiss cheese (or cheddar, seems there is some regional differences about what type of cheese to use.) on the unbuttered side of the bread. Place a hamburger patty on the cheese, cover with another slice of cheese and a slice of bread. Cook like you would a grilled cheese. (We cooked it in the same pan that we cooked the meat, just pouring out the fat first)
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Sunday night supper club/Superbowl/America
Meatloaf sliders by the Werths |
Beans by Dri |
Wings by Alex |
Mac and cheese by Lise |
Kurt and Sammy with the Frito Pie |
Supper club and Super Bowl |
Cobb Salad by Anne |
Supper bowl watching |
Wilsons and Andy in their awesome new kitchen |
Ok, this was a super bowl supper club. I failed on getting any recipes or very many pictures. I blame it on being out of practice. You can, and should, add your recipe in the comment section below. I particularly want the recipe for those slider rolls Katie. I didn't get a picture of the weiner winks by Laura. I was already on the couch. But, no super bowl would be complete without them.
Next supper club is March 15th at Tracy and Alex's house. Theme: Pakistan. Come armed with your recipes.
Panatela Borracha
This cake comes from Latin Grilling. It calls for a bundt cake pan, which I don't have, so I used an angel food pan instead. It worked just fine.
Butter Rum Cake with lime icing
Grease and flour pan. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Batter:
2 sticks butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 eggs
2 cups cake flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 package vanilla instant pudding mix
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup light rum
1 tsp vanilla
Cream butter and sugar. Continue beating, adding one egg at a time. Beat until light and fluffy. Combine flour, baking powder, salt and pudding mix and set aside. Mix milk, rum, and vanilla and set aside. Alternate adding flour mixture and milk mixture until all ingredients are well incorporated. Pour into prepared pan and bake for one hour.
Rum syrup
1/4 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup water
1/4 cup light rum
Simmer butter, sugar and water until slightly thickened (6-8 minutes) Stir occasionally. Add rum and stir well. Remove from heat. As soon as the cake comes out of the oven, take a skewer and poke holes all over it. Pour rum syrup all over the cake. (It seems like too much, but it's not). Let cool completely in pan.
Lime icing
1 tbsp lime juice
3/4 cup powdered sugar
Remove cake from pan. Mix lime juice and powdered sugar until dissolved. Drizzle over top of cake
Cuban Sandwich
We have decided that this is the year of the sandwich. I am usually not a big fan of sandwiches. If I do have a sandwich, then I prefer a hot sandwich. The only exceptions are an occasional peanut butter and jelly sandwich and those wonderful ham and cheese on a baguette that you get in gas stations in France. I love those sandwiches. The kids are happy about this new endeavor. I think their motivation lies with the idea that "sandwich night" will entail far fewer dishes. So far they are very wrong. We started sandwich night a couple of weeks ago. The first was made by Sanford. Of course, there is no recipe. He is not a fan of recipes. He likes to cook free-style, like his dancing. Basically I think he put a pork shoulder with onions, garlic, carrots, celery with some Italian herbs in the crockpot and let it cook all day. He pulled the meat out and put it on a baguette, then turned the vegetables and stock into a soup/au jus by adding some cooked kidney beans. It was really yummy, but we will never be able to repeat it... So now onto last week's sandwich. We started by having friends to dinner the night before for a Cuban cookout. We doubled the recipe for the pork, so we would have enough for the next night. The Cuban pork recipe if from "Latin Grilling" by Lourdes Castro.
Cuban Pork
(6-8 pounds pork shoulder butt)
Marinade:
2 2/3 cup lime juice
1 1/3 cup orange juice
1 tbsp ground cumin
2 tbsp dried oregano
2 heads of garlic, peeled and crushed
3 tbsp salt
1 tbsp black pepper
2 quartered onions
Mix marinade ingredients together. Stab the pork on all sides with a sharp knife. Put in marinade, rubbing the marinade into the pork . Marinate 1-24 hours, covered with plastic wrap.
Then, remove the pork from the marinade and bring to room temperature. Boil the marinade for a couple of minutes, then puree. This is now your basting liquid.
Heat grill to 550 degrees. Grill over indirect heat, starting with skin side up, turning and basting every 15 minutes or so. This is where the book tells you that it will be finished within 1-2 hours. This isn't true. It will take far longer than this. Because we didn't want to feed our dinner guests at midnight, we took one of the roasts and put it in the pressure cooker for 20 minutes, allowing it to release it pressure naturally. Now we had some tender meat. We left the other roast on the grill during dinner. It actually got a little too smoky for my taste. When doing this again, I would roast it in the oven, then finish it on the grill.
The next recipe if for the Cuban bread. Sanford wanted to buy it, but it is not easy to find it in mid Missouri. Of course, I like the challenge of making everything...The recipe is adapted from A taste of Cuba
Cuban Bread
3/4 tsp active dry yeast
1/3 cup warm water
1/3 cup bread or all-purpose flour
The day before, mix the yeast and water and let sit for a few minutes. Then add flour. Cover. Refrigerate for 24 hours.
1/3 cup bread or all-purpose flour
The day before, mix the yeast and water and let sit for a few minutes. Then add flour. Cover. Refrigerate for 24 hours.
4-1/2 tsp active dry yeast
1 Tbsp sugar
1-1/2 cups warm water
4 tbsp butter (or lard if you have it)
1/2 batch starter
1 tbsp salt
4 to 5 cups bread flour
Dissolve yeast and sugar in 3 tbsp warm water. Stir in butter, remaining water and 1/2 batch of starter.1-1/2 cups warm water
4 tbsp butter (or lard if you have it)
1/2 batch starter
1 tbsp salt
4 to 5 cups bread flour
Mix well. Stir in flour a cup at a time. Add salt. Mix in kitchen aid or knead by hand. Should be soft, not sticky.
Put in a lightly oiled bowl, cover and let rise 45 minutes.
Divide dough into 4 pieces. Roll each to form a 14 inch long tube with rounded ends. Put a piece of parchment paper on a cookie sheet and place the four dough rolls on it. Cover with a towel and let rise for another hour, til doubled.
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Dampen a piece of kitchen twine and lay on top of each loaf. Bake for 30 minutes. Cool slightly and remove strings. Cool on wire rack.
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Dampen a piece of kitchen twine and lay on top of each loaf. Bake for 30 minutes. Cool slightly and remove strings. Cool on wire rack.
Now for the sandwich recipe:
Cuban Sandwich
Slice the bread lengthwise. Smear one side with butter, the other side with yellow mustard. Place 1-2 layers of each: ham, sliced roasted pork, Swiss cheese. Heat a flattop or griddle. Butter the top of the bread and cook like a grilled cheese. Butter the top side and flip. We weighted the sandwich down with a cast iron skillet. When heated through, place 1 or 2 slices of pickle in the sandwich. (note: next time I would heat the leftover pork before putting in on my sandwich)
Monday, October 27, 2014
Arepas
These recipes are from The South American Table. I love these. These are made with cheese and are the Colombian version. I will also give the instructions for the Venezualen version, which is thicker and I assume will be better for splitting and filling.
Masa de Arepa
Stir together 1 cup arepa flour (do not use masa harina for this recipe. I used a brand named P.A.N. that I ordered on Amazon.) with 1/2 tsp salt and 1 1/2 cups hot water. Stir together and let sit, covered, for five minutes. Knead for 3 minutes. It should be the consistency of mashed potatoes.
Form into disks. I divided my dough into 12 golf ball size balls. Cut a sandwich baggie into 2 pieces, leaving one side connected. Place the ball between the baggie pieces, then press into a disk about 3-4 inches wide and 1/4 inch thick. (For the Venezualen version, make it 3/4 inch thick.) I used my tortilla press to very gently press the dough, not using the handle.
Cook the arepas. Heat and lightly oil a griddle. Cook on med heat, flipping a few times, until golden brown. This will take about 10 minutes. (For the thicker Venezualen arepas, at this point put them in a 350 degree oven for 15 minutes. They should sound hollow when you tap them.)
Split open and fill with butter, cream cheese or picadillo.
Arepas de Queso
Use the recipe for the masa de arepa and add 1 egg yolk, 2 tbsp softened butter, and 2 ounces shredded mozzarella cheese. Knead into the dough. Then cook as above.
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