Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
Recipe Index can be found here.
**********
We have managed to wring as much fun as possible out of this last full week of summer! Turns out that playdates with special friends, Dinosaur Camp and the Leavenworth County fair are a great way to wrap up the season before the drudge of school starts. Still, I am going to miss our easy days and even more, I am going to miss my kids, so I was glad that we were able to relax a bit this week.
One of the best parts about the end of summer is the influx of fresh produce. Although I live deep in the heart of the soul-sucking suburbs, a local farm sets up a stand just down the road from me. Additionally, my friend Christy (yes, the same Christy of Bourbon Slushie and Kansas Beef fame) has had a bumper crop in her garden and more importantly, she watched her fair share of Sesame Street growing up and loves to share. At one point, I was so inundated with tomatoes and cucumbers, I was running out of ideas until one evening, out of desperation, I chopped, diced and mixed myself into a salad of mouth-watering perfection and finished with Trader's Joe salad dressing. (I did experiment with Ranch dressing and have included an alternative for that. I don't like recipes that are dependent upon an ingredient that might be hard to find if you do not happen to have a particular store in your area.)
This salad is alive with zest and texture. I love how the arugula gives this salad a distinctive burst of flavor. Although, if you don't like arugula, spinach would do just as nicely. Also, chop the cukes however you like. In this case, size actually does not matter. Sure, I prefer smaller pieces, but the food police are not going to show up if you use bigger pieces. And tomatoes? I've used everything -- big, watery beefsteaks and small, halved cherry tomatoes (Bonus Points? Use a mix of tomatoes.) And the Trader Joe's dressing? Is to die for. No really. I have already started some reconnaissance on how to make a similar cilantro dressing from scratch and if I figure it out, trust me, I will share it with you, Gentle Reader.
After all, I grew up on Sesame Street, too.
Enjoy!
Arugula, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad
Ingredients
2 cups chopped cucumber (any size!)
2 cups chopped tomatoes (any tomato!)
2 cups finely chopped arugula
3 tbs Trader Joe's Cilantro Dressing
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
Preparation
Mix ingredients and serve!
Alternatives
Not a fan of arugula? Use spinach! Don't have a Trader Joe's? Use a Ranch dressing instead and omit the sugar and salt.
Showing posts with label rancid recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rancid recipes. Show all posts
August 10, 2012
April 20, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
This Ain't Your Mama's Guacamole
(Well, unless your mama is from Colombia)
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
Recipe Index can be found here.
**********
Guacamole. It's like a religion and folks can become fanatical. Sure, I love making guacamole and more importantly, EATING IT. But I think some of the rules are stupid.
One thing that has always puzzled me about guacamole is how often folks make it complicated. Or they impose strict rules "A proper guacamole shall be chunky" or "A proper guacamole shall not have tomatoes. " And I am always amazed at the fancy tools that can be used when preparing the avocados. I just use a knife!

Then, I simple peel the skin.
I use a potato masher to mash everything up and a spoon to stir in some ingredients. And that's it! Yes, it's messy, but what a space saver since you really don't need a stable of fancy tools littering up your kitchen drawer.
I am posting the recipe I use - it is something that I came up with by simply dumping in the ingredients that I like to see in my guacamole. I think what sets it apart from other guacamole recipes is the use of cumin. But the best part of this recipe? Is that you can easily make it YOURS. Not a fan of cilantro? Decrease the amount. Not crazy about tomatoes in your guacamole? Leave them out.
The last time I made guacamole, Next Door Neighbor Ken suggested adding hard-boiled eggs. His brother-in-law is from Colombia and that is a common addition there. Next Door Neighbor Ken also realized that hard-boiled egg is what made the guacamole super special at The Aztec Inn in Lawrence -- a Mexican restaurant that Ken and I both grew up with. I added the eggs and they did add a little special extra something. Creaminess? Texture? Hard to put a finger on it -- try it! You will not regret it.
Are you a guacamole fan? Have an special ingredients you want to share with me? This is always a work in progress.
Kelli's Simple Guacamole
Ingredients:
4 avocados
1 tsp salt
1 tsp cumin
The juice from 1 lime
1 medium tomato
1/2 white onion, chopped finely
1/4 - 1/2 cup of cilantro
1-2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped (Optional)
Preparation:
1. Peel and loosely chop the avocados. Add to a large mixing bowl, along with the salt, cumin, lime juice (and eggs, if you've gone that route). Using a potato masher, mash the mixture up until it is to the consistency you like.
2. Fold in the tomatoes, onions and cilantro. Serve with tortilla chips or spoon directly into your gaping foodhole while no one is looking (be quick!)
Note: This can be prepared a little bit ahead of time (1-2 hours). In this case, smooth the top of the guacamole and place the plastic wrap on the surface. Press gently the plastic wrap down to ensure no air is between the surface of the guacamole and the plastic wrap.
Recipe Index can be found here.
**********
Guacamole. It's like a religion and folks can become fanatical. Sure, I love making guacamole and more importantly, EATING IT. But I think some of the rules are stupid.
One thing that has always puzzled me about guacamole is how often folks make it complicated. Or they impose strict rules "A proper guacamole shall be chunky" or "A proper guacamole shall not have tomatoes. " And I am always amazed at the fancy tools that can be used when preparing the avocados. I just use a knife!
First, I cut the avocado in half. Then, I use my fingers to remove the pit.
Then, I simple peel the skin.
I use a potato masher to mash everything up and a spoon to stir in some ingredients. And that's it! Yes, it's messy, but what a space saver since you really don't need a stable of fancy tools littering up your kitchen drawer.
I am posting the recipe I use - it is something that I came up with by simply dumping in the ingredients that I like to see in my guacamole. I think what sets it apart from other guacamole recipes is the use of cumin. But the best part of this recipe? Is that you can easily make it YOURS. Not a fan of cilantro? Decrease the amount. Not crazy about tomatoes in your guacamole? Leave them out.
The last time I made guacamole, Next Door Neighbor Ken suggested adding hard-boiled eggs. His brother-in-law is from Colombia and that is a common addition there. Next Door Neighbor Ken also realized that hard-boiled egg is what made the guacamole super special at The Aztec Inn in Lawrence -- a Mexican restaurant that Ken and I both grew up with. I added the eggs and they did add a little special extra something. Creaminess? Texture? Hard to put a finger on it -- try it! You will not regret it.
Are you a guacamole fan? Have an special ingredients you want to share with me? This is always a work in progress.
Kelli's Simple Guacamole
Ingredients:
4 avocados
1 tsp salt
1 tsp cumin
The juice from 1 lime
1 medium tomato
1/2 white onion, chopped finely
1/4 - 1/2 cup of cilantro
1-2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped (Optional)
Preparation:
1. Peel and loosely chop the avocados. Add to a large mixing bowl, along with the salt, cumin, lime juice (and eggs, if you've gone that route). Using a potato masher, mash the mixture up until it is to the consistency you like.
2. Fold in the tomatoes, onions and cilantro. Serve with tortilla chips or spoon directly into your gaping foodhole while no one is looking (be quick!)
Note: This can be prepared a little bit ahead of time (1-2 hours). In this case, smooth the top of the guacamole and place the plastic wrap on the surface. Press gently the plastic wrap down to ensure no air is between the surface of the guacamole and the plastic wrap.
April 6, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
An Egg Curry Eggstravaganza
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
Recipe Index can be found here.
********
Brain Bytes: This article on natural food dyes for Easter eggs was interesting! I still use the fake stuff, but since we are not eating the egg shells, I try not to sweat it too much. And yes, holidays are very frustrating for those of us trying to avoid artificial food colors. sigh.
One of the best bits about being a parent is dying Easter eggs. I LOVE dying Easter eggs. However, like everyone else, I find myself in a bit of a bind as to what to do with All Those Freaking Eggs. If you have been reading this blog for any length of time, you will have noticed that we are not a Egg Salad Family. The solution to our ovoid quandary?
EGG CURRY.
Yes! In our house, Easter means egg curry will be served on the dinner table over the weeks following the holiday. A lot. Which is a treat since I don't get to make egg curry very often. Manoj has sworn off eggs because of some media nonsense declaring that eggs will kill you. However, the media has done a 180 and decreed that eggs are now good for you. Since I have noticed Manoj whipping up batches of Indian scrambled eggs far more frequently these days, I hope these means that I will also get to make egg curry more often. Manoj really enjoys this dish -- it is a quick and easy to make while still being very flavorful. I suppose you could take out the yolks to make them a tad healthier, but I would not recommend that.
After all, the unfertilized baby bird bit is the best part. YUM.
2 tablespoons ground coriander
1 medium-sized yellow onion, chopped
2 tbs oil
2 tsp garlic, chopped
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 cup tomatoes, chopped
1/2 tsp fennel seeds, coarsely ground
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup of water
1/2 cup coconut milk
Spice Mix:
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/8 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp ground cloves
Preparation
1. Toast the ground coriander in a small frying pan without oil for a few minutes. When the coriander becomes aromatic, remove from heat and set aside.
2. Heat oil in a large frying pan and add onions. Fry until the onions become soft. Add the garlic and ginger, fry for 1 minute.
3. Add the toasted coriander, tomatoes, fennel seeds, salt and the spice mix. Add 1/4 cup of water and cook until the consistency is thick and paste-like.
4. Stir in the coconut milk and 1/2 cup of water. Cook until sauce becomes thick (add more water if you would like a thinner sauce)
5. Place the eggs, yolk-side up in the pan. Spoon some sauce over the eggs and let simmer for a 10 minutes. Serve with white rice or parathas.
Recipe Index can be found here.
********
Brain Bytes: This article on natural food dyes for Easter eggs was interesting! I still use the fake stuff, but since we are not eating the egg shells, I try not to sweat it too much. And yes, holidays are very frustrating for those of us trying to avoid artificial food colors. sigh.
One of the best bits about being a parent is dying Easter eggs. I LOVE dying Easter eggs. However, like everyone else, I find myself in a bit of a bind as to what to do with All Those Freaking Eggs. If you have been reading this blog for any length of time, you will have noticed that we are not a Egg Salad Family. The solution to our ovoid quandary?
EGG CURRY.
Yes! In our house, Easter means egg curry will be served on the dinner table over the weeks following the holiday. A lot. Which is a treat since I don't get to make egg curry very often. Manoj has sworn off eggs because of some media nonsense declaring that eggs will kill you. However, the media has done a 180 and decreed that eggs are now good for you. Since I have noticed Manoj whipping up batches of Indian scrambled eggs far more frequently these days, I hope these means that I will also get to make egg curry more often. Manoj really enjoys this dish -- it is a quick and easy to make while still being very flavorful. I suppose you could take out the yolks to make them a tad healthier, but I would not recommend that.
After all, the unfertilized baby bird bit is the best part. YUM.
Egg Curry
Ingredients
8 hard-boiled eggs2 tablespoons ground coriander
1 medium-sized yellow onion, chopped
2 tbs oil
2 tsp garlic, chopped
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 cup tomatoes, chopped
1/2 tsp fennel seeds, coarsely ground
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup of water
1/2 cup coconut milk
Spice Mix:
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/8 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp ground cloves
Preparation
1. Toast the ground coriander in a small frying pan without oil for a few minutes. When the coriander becomes aromatic, remove from heat and set aside.
2. Heat oil in a large frying pan and add onions. Fry until the onions become soft. Add the garlic and ginger, fry for 1 minute.
3. Add the toasted coriander, tomatoes, fennel seeds, salt and the spice mix. Add 1/4 cup of water and cook until the consistency is thick and paste-like.
4. Stir in the coconut milk and 1/2 cup of water. Cook until sauce becomes thick (add more water if you would like a thinner sauce)
5. Place the eggs, yolk-side up in the pan. Spoon some sauce over the eggs and let simmer for a 10 minutes. Serve with white rice or parathas.
March 30, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
Penne Pincher
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
Recipe Index can be found here.
***********
Brainbyte: I love, love this post on 7 Reasons I Hate Artificial Food Dyes. Wherever I can, I avoid them. I discovered when Arun was a toddler that artificial food coloring makes him impulsive, emotional and highly-distracted. The same kid who can eat a bowl of ice cream late at night and go straight to bed is a hot mess when he has artificial food colors.
Yesterday, I invited my friend Emily over for lunch (remember Emily? The same friend I invited over for Black-Eyed Peas Curry? The same night that I divvied up Hostessing and Horking Duties? Yes, she came back! Can you believe it?) I wanted our lunch to be something easy because Emily has a new! baby! and I knew that I would not want to fiddle with cooking. Indeed, I was going to want some cuddles from her little demi-desi of deliciousness. Since I am done with birthin' babies, I have to take my newborn snuggles where I can get them.
I decided to make Pasta alla Carbonara. The recipe is originally from a Big Time Food Star, but frankly, her recipe was a little pricey because it included Italian pancetta. However, I discovered that regular bacon is an acceptable and wallet-friendly substitution one time when my grocery store did not have pancetta . Also, Big Time Food Star's recipe called for rigatoni pasta and romano cheese, but I did not have those things on hand. However, I always have penne pasta and parmigiano-reggiano on hand. Furthermore, buying a special cheese for ONE dish does not make financial sense for me. I know that Serious Foodies would scoff at my Costco-sized bucket of dry-aged, grated cheese, but I meet their Scoff and raise them a Shrug. At least it is not in a green can, right? And by using regular bacon, pasta and the type of cheese that I already have hand, this dish is now affordable for me.
Anyway! I love, love this dish. It is so quick to whip up but is rich and satisfying with nice texture. It feels fancy and is so darned pretty with the garnish of fresh parsley and a scattering of grated cheese.
Also, Big Time Food Star claims you can make this dish in 30 minutes or less. Ahem.
Ingredients
1 pound penne pasta
2 tbs olive oil (or more, if needed, to keep everything from sticking!)
1/4 pound bacon, chopped
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
6 cloves garlic, chopped
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 large egg yolks
1/4 to 1/2 cup parmigiano-reggiano cheese
Salt and ground black pepper to taste
1/4 cup fresh flat-leaf Italian parsley, finely chopped
Preparation
1. Bring a large saucepot of water to boil. Add a tsp salt and the pasta. Cook to al dente.
2. Meanwhile, heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add the olive oil and bacon. Brown the bacon 2 minutes. Add red pepper flakes and garlic and cook 2 to 3 minutes more. Add wine and stir well.
3. In a separate bowl, beat yolks, then add a 1/2 cup of the pasta water. (This tempers the eggs so you don't end up with scrambled eggs when you add them to the pasta!)
4. Drain pasta well and add it directly to the skillet with bacon and oil. Pour the egg mixture over the pasta. Mix rapidly to coat the pasta without scrambling the egg.
5. Remove pan from heat and add a big handful of cheese, lots of pepper, and a little salt. Continue to toss and turn the pasta until it soaks up egg mixture and thickens, 1 to 2 minutes. Garnish with parsley and extra grated Romano.
Recipe Index can be found here.
***********
Brainbyte: I love, love this post on 7 Reasons I Hate Artificial Food Dyes. Wherever I can, I avoid them. I discovered when Arun was a toddler that artificial food coloring makes him impulsive, emotional and highly-distracted. The same kid who can eat a bowl of ice cream late at night and go straight to bed is a hot mess when he has artificial food colors.
Yesterday, I invited my friend Emily over for lunch (remember Emily? The same friend I invited over for Black-Eyed Peas Curry? The same night that I divvied up Hostessing and Horking Duties? Yes, she came back! Can you believe it?) I wanted our lunch to be something easy because Emily has a new! baby! and I knew that I would not want to fiddle with cooking. Indeed, I was going to want some cuddles from her little demi-desi of deliciousness. Since I am done with birthin' babies, I have to take my newborn snuggles where I can get them.
I decided to make Pasta alla Carbonara. The recipe is originally from a Big Time Food Star, but frankly, her recipe was a little pricey because it included Italian pancetta. However, I discovered that regular bacon is an acceptable and wallet-friendly substitution one time when my grocery store did not have pancetta . Also, Big Time Food Star's recipe called for rigatoni pasta and romano cheese, but I did not have those things on hand. However, I always have penne pasta and parmigiano-reggiano on hand. Furthermore, buying a special cheese for ONE dish does not make financial sense for me. I know that Serious Foodies would scoff at my Costco-sized bucket of dry-aged, grated cheese, but I meet their Scoff and raise them a Shrug. At least it is not in a green can, right? And by using regular bacon, pasta and the type of cheese that I already have hand, this dish is now affordable for me.
Anyway! I love, love this dish. It is so quick to whip up but is rich and satisfying with nice texture. It feels fancy and is so darned pretty with the garnish of fresh parsley and a scattering of grated cheese.
Also, Big Time Food Star claims you can make this dish in 30 minutes or less. Ahem.
Pasta alla Carbonara
1 pound penne pasta
2 tbs olive oil (or more, if needed, to keep everything from sticking!)
1/4 pound bacon, chopped
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
6 cloves garlic, chopped
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 large egg yolks
1/4 to 1/2 cup parmigiano-reggiano cheese
Salt and ground black pepper to taste
1/4 cup fresh flat-leaf Italian parsley, finely chopped
Preparation
1. Bring a large saucepot of water to boil. Add a tsp salt and the pasta. Cook to al dente.
2. Meanwhile, heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add the olive oil and bacon. Brown the bacon 2 minutes. Add red pepper flakes and garlic and cook 2 to 3 minutes more. Add wine and stir well.
3. In a separate bowl, beat yolks, then add a 1/2 cup of the pasta water. (This tempers the eggs so you don't end up with scrambled eggs when you add them to the pasta!)
4. Drain pasta well and add it directly to the skillet with bacon and oil. Pour the egg mixture over the pasta. Mix rapidly to coat the pasta without scrambling the egg.
5. Remove pan from heat and add a big handful of cheese, lots of pepper, and a little salt. Continue to toss and turn the pasta until it soaks up egg mixture and thickens, 1 to 2 minutes. Garnish with parsley and extra grated Romano.
March 16, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
American Girl Dhal
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
Recipe Index can be found here.
***********
A mainstay of Indian cooking is dhal (also spelled "daal" or "dal". Welcome to the wonderful, wild world of transliteration!) When the term "dhal" is used, it is commonly referring to lentils or split-peas. They come in many varieties and some of the more common ones are channa (light yellow), masoor (pinkish red), thoor (golden), urad (creamy white) or mung (not a split pea - it is round and yellow).
Mostly, I am not a huge fan of dhal. In college, I hung out with two different groups of Sri Lankans and they all made a dhal that I really enjoyed. I never figured out if it was a Sri Lankan Thing or just that my friends had amazing recipes. Sadly, I failed to actually GET their recipes. I tried over the years to make dhal and eventually gave up. When I discovered Maya Kaimal's cookbooks (Curried Favors and Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala), I decided to give dhal another try. I used the recipe from Curried Favors and quite simply, learned How to Stop Worrying and Love the Dhal.
Over the years, I slightly modified Kaimal's recipe. For one, her original recipe required two pots. When I am cooking for guests, I simply do not have enough burners to dedicate to making a dhal. Also, I know many folks swear by pressure cookers, but I have never had a problem making this without a pressure cooker. In fact, I do not even own a pressure cooker -- in 1992 while making the beef base for biryani in a pressure cooker, the safety valve blew out. That event scarred me for life when it comes to pressure cookers. *shudder*
This dish is full of flavor and is so satisfying. Also, it sits well so it can be made ahead of time. Even better, it freezes well for reheating (Manoj is eating leftovers from last Saturday for his dinner tonight since we are out of town. And he is not complaining, either.) If you wanted to go White People on this and make a soup out of it, water it down and make it go even further!
Spicy Tomato Dhal
Ingredients
1/4 tsp cumin seeds
1/4 tsp mustard seeds
1/4 tsp crushed red pepper
2 tbs vegetable oil
1 cup chopped onion
1 tbs minced garlic
1 cup chopped tomatoes
1 cup masoor dhal
2.5 cups water
1/4 tsp ground turmeric
1 tsp salt
2 tbs cilantro
Preparation
1. Heat oil in saucepan over medium-high heat. Add cumin seeds, mustard seeds and crushed red pepper. When the seeds begin to pop, add the onions and garlic. Fry for 5 minutes until the onion is soft.
2. Add the tomatoes and cook until they are soft.
3. Add the dhal, turmeric and water. Let it come to a boil, and then let it simmer for 30 minutes. If it begins to stick, just add a bit of water here and there, if needed.
4. Mash the dhal a bit with a potato masher or back of a spoon. Garnish with cilantro and serve!
Recipe Index can be found here.
***********
A mainstay of Indian cooking is dhal (also spelled "daal" or "dal". Welcome to the wonderful, wild world of transliteration!) When the term "dhal" is used, it is commonly referring to lentils or split-peas. They come in many varieties and some of the more common ones are channa (light yellow), masoor (pinkish red), thoor (golden), urad (creamy white) or mung (not a split pea - it is round and yellow).
Mostly, I am not a huge fan of dhal. In college, I hung out with two different groups of Sri Lankans and they all made a dhal that I really enjoyed. I never figured out if it was a Sri Lankan Thing or just that my friends had amazing recipes. Sadly, I failed to actually GET their recipes. I tried over the years to make dhal and eventually gave up. When I discovered Maya Kaimal's cookbooks (Curried Favors and Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala), I decided to give dhal another try. I used the recipe from Curried Favors and quite simply, learned How to Stop Worrying and Love the Dhal.
Over the years, I slightly modified Kaimal's recipe. For one, her original recipe required two pots. When I am cooking for guests, I simply do not have enough burners to dedicate to making a dhal. Also, I know many folks swear by pressure cookers, but I have never had a problem making this without a pressure cooker. In fact, I do not even own a pressure cooker -- in 1992 while making the beef base for biryani in a pressure cooker, the safety valve blew out. That event scarred me for life when it comes to pressure cookers. *shudder*
This dish is full of flavor and is so satisfying. Also, it sits well so it can be made ahead of time. Even better, it freezes well for reheating (Manoj is eating leftovers from last Saturday for his dinner tonight since we are out of town. And he is not complaining, either.) If you wanted to go White People on this and make a soup out of it, water it down and make it go even further!
Spicy Tomato Dhal
Ingredients
1/4 tsp cumin seeds
1/4 tsp mustard seeds
1/4 tsp crushed red pepper
2 tbs vegetable oil
1 cup chopped onion
1 tbs minced garlic
1 cup chopped tomatoes
1 cup masoor dhal
2.5 cups water
1/4 tsp ground turmeric
1 tsp salt
2 tbs cilantro
Preparation
1. Heat oil in saucepan over medium-high heat. Add cumin seeds, mustard seeds and crushed red pepper. When the seeds begin to pop, add the onions and garlic. Fry for 5 minutes until the onion is soft.
2. Add the tomatoes and cook until they are soft.
3. Add the dhal, turmeric and water. Let it come to a boil, and then let it simmer for 30 minutes. If it begins to stick, just add a bit of water here and there, if needed.
4. Mash the dhal a bit with a potato masher or back of a spoon. Garnish with cilantro and serve!
March 15, 2012
Intestinal Fortitude:
The Recipes Index
I have been blogging since 2004 and it only took me 7.5 years to realize "Hey, Cagey! You should totally organize your recipes."
Totally!
Despite what this index may indicate, I swear upon my mother's uterus that I am actually a White Girl of White heritage with White People DNA and all that other White Gobbledegook required for a White Person to be considered White.
I just like to eat well. Sue me.
The Prologue
Raita (Yogurt dip for the kabobs)
Chai-Inspired Spiced Iced Tea
Creamy Mexicorn Dip
Feta Cheese Dip
Guacamole
Garlic Seasoning Mix (my riff on Tastefully Simple's Garlic Garlic)
Honey Limeade
Vera's Bourbon Slushie
The Main Chapters
Andrea's Slow-Cooker Thai Chicken
Avocado Chicken Salad
Black-Eyed Peas Curry With Coconut and Spinach
Chicken, Butternut Squash and Sweet Potato Bake
Egg Curry
Filipino Braised Chicken With Coconut and Spinach
Indian Kidney Bean Soup (Rajma soup)
Indian-Style Scallops
Pakistani Beef Kabobs (Chapli, Seekh and Boti)
Pakistani Stir-fried Chicken (Karahi Chicken)
Pancake Muffins
Pasta alla Carbonara
Pumpkin Curry (Pumpkin Erisheri)
Sri Lankan Mushroom Curry
Thai Chicken with Red Chili Sauce (Pad Prik Kai)
Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken (Kai Kratium )
The Holiday Appendix
Ghosts in the Graveyard
Graham Cracker Christmas Crack
Great-Aunt Joan's Weird, Whipped Cream Cranberry Salad
Romanian Kifli (a rolled Christmas cookie made)
Totally!
Despite what this index may indicate, I swear upon my mother's uterus that I am actually a White Girl of White heritage with White People DNA and all that other White Gobbledegook required for a White Person to be considered White.
I just like to eat well. Sue me.
The Prologue
Raita (Yogurt dip for the kabobs)
Chai-Inspired Spiced Iced Tea
Creamy Mexicorn Dip
Feta Cheese Dip
Guacamole
Garlic Seasoning Mix (my riff on Tastefully Simple's Garlic Garlic)
Honey Limeade
Vera's Bourbon Slushie
The Main Chapters
Andrea's Slow-Cooker Thai Chicken
Avocado Chicken Salad
Black-Eyed Peas Curry With Coconut and Spinach
Chicken, Butternut Squash and Sweet Potato Bake
Egg Curry
Filipino Braised Chicken With Coconut and Spinach
Indian Kidney Bean Soup (Rajma soup)
Indian-Style Scallops
Pakistani Beef Kabobs (Chapli, Seekh and Boti)
Pakistani Stir-fried Chicken (Karahi Chicken)
Pancake Muffins
Pasta alla Carbonara
Pumpkin Curry (Pumpkin Erisheri)
Sri Lankan Mushroom Curry
Thai Chicken with Red Chili Sauce (Pad Prik Kai)
Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken (Kai Kratium )
The Holiday Appendix
Ghosts in the Graveyard
Graham Cracker Christmas Crack
Great-Aunt Joan's Weird, Whipped Cream Cranberry Salad
Romanian Kifli (a rolled Christmas cookie made)
February 3, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
White Girl Tested, Brown Boy Approved
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I am not an expert, but I do enjoy talking about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*****************
So, remember that post about my working and potentially using our slow cooker? I received SO many awesome ideas from that post - via email, Facebook and the comments section. Frankly, I am still sifting through them. We got hung up after a few false starts where we found out in that uniquely soul-crushing way that using the high setting for long periods of time tends to result in Gobi Desert Worthy Chicken. I am surprised tumbleweeds did not come flying out of the damned pot. Now that we have figured out using the low setting is a vastly more palatable of an option, our slow cooking attempts have resulted in some divine dishes lately!
One of those culinary champions was a dish from my friend Andrea of Caucasian Curry. The best part about getting a recipe from a fellow Gori In Arms who is also in a Mixed Pickle Marriage, is that generally speaking, the recipes will be a slam-dunk when selling them to Manoj since the dish will have already been deemed Desi Worthy. It's a common misconception that Manoj only prefers spicy food -- actually, he prefers food with strong, complex flavors. Through careful research, I have managed to find nice substitutes for some of my old favorites. For example, Manoj will eat this Peruvian Chicken Soup, which features limes, cilantro and hard-boiled eggs. Certainly, this is not your grandma's chicken soup. (Unless you are Peruvian, natch.) But still, I often struggle when I really want something in the way of comfort food.
Thanks to Andrea and her Slow Cooker Thai Chicken, I have something to turn to now.
Andrea's Slow Cooker Thai Chicken
Ingredients
1 14 oz can light coconut milk
2 heaping tablespoons creamy peanut butter
2 tsp curry powder
2 tbs red chili sauce
1 tsp ground ginger
1 1/2 pounds boneless chicken (I used 2 to 2 1/2 lbs bone-in)
2 red bell peppers, sliced
1 large onion, sliced
3 cloves rough chopped garlic
5 green chilies
1/2 cup rough chopped roasted peanuts
salt/pepper
Optional:
1/2 cup fresh cilantro and lime for garnish
Note: Instead of curry powder and red chili sauce, Andrea uses 1 tablespoon red curry paste (Patak's Hot) Also, Andrea has added things such as carrots to this. Honestly, I believe this dish might have Kitchen Sink potential and I will certainly be viewing other veggies with a closer eye the next time I make this. YUM.
Preparation
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*****************
So, remember that post about my working and potentially using our slow cooker? I received SO many awesome ideas from that post - via email, Facebook and the comments section. Frankly, I am still sifting through them. We got hung up after a few false starts where we found out in that uniquely soul-crushing way that using the high setting for long periods of time tends to result in Gobi Desert Worthy Chicken. I am surprised tumbleweeds did not come flying out of the damned pot. Now that we have figured out using the low setting is a vastly more palatable of an option, our slow cooking attempts have resulted in some divine dishes lately!
One of those culinary champions was a dish from my friend Andrea of Caucasian Curry. The best part about getting a recipe from a fellow Gori In Arms who is also in a Mixed Pickle Marriage, is that generally speaking, the recipes will be a slam-dunk when selling them to Manoj since the dish will have already been deemed Desi Worthy. It's a common misconception that Manoj only prefers spicy food -- actually, he prefers food with strong, complex flavors. Through careful research, I have managed to find nice substitutes for some of my old favorites. For example, Manoj will eat this Peruvian Chicken Soup, which features limes, cilantro and hard-boiled eggs. Certainly, this is not your grandma's chicken soup. (Unless you are Peruvian, natch.) But still, I often struggle when I really want something in the way of comfort food.
Thanks to Andrea and her Slow Cooker Thai Chicken, I have something to turn to now.
Andrea's Slow Cooker Thai Chicken
Ingredients
1 14 oz can light coconut milk
2 heaping tablespoons creamy peanut butter
2 tsp curry powder
2 tbs red chili sauce
1 tsp ground ginger
1 1/2 pounds boneless chicken (I used 2 to 2 1/2 lbs bone-in)
2 red bell peppers, sliced
1 large onion, sliced
3 cloves rough chopped garlic
5 green chilies
1/2 cup rough chopped roasted peanuts
salt/pepper
Optional:
1/2 cup fresh cilantro and lime for garnish
Note: Instead of curry powder and red chili sauce, Andrea uses 1 tablespoon red curry paste (Patak's Hot) Also, Andrea has added things such as carrots to this. Honestly, I believe this dish might have Kitchen Sink potential and I will certainly be viewing other veggies with a closer eye the next time I make this. YUM.
Preparation
- In a 5- to 6-qt slow cooker, combine the coconut milk, peanut butter, curry paste and ginger. Mix well (I let the cooker heat up a bit to help melt the peanut butter)
- Add the chicken, peppers and onion. Stir thoroughly.
- Cook, covered, until chicken is cooked through, on low for 5 to 6 hours or on high for 3 to 4 hours.
- Spoon the chicken, vegetables and sauce over the rice or noodles and sprinkle with the cilantro; serve with the lime wedges, if desired.
January 27, 2012
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
Look Who's Coming for Dinner
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*****************
I love having people over for dinner - Manoj stopped complimenting my cooking years ago and the kidlets are not appreciative anyway. Therefore, I like to invite people over and then force my captive audience to ply me with compliments. Genius, no?
In particular, I enjoy planning a menu for guests and trying to come up with a menu that is fun and different for my guests to try. As I mentioned earlier this week, I invited "Emily" and "Victor" over for dinner. When I invite folks over for the first time, I like to do a general inquiry as to taste, allergies and aversion. Nothing worse than trying to serve fish to a person who can't stand the sight of it, right? However, when I asked "Emily" if they had any allergies or food preferences, her reply stumped me a bit:
Normally, when I cook for Indians, I prefer to make Average Jane's Baked Ziti with Roasted Vegetables. It is a dish that has a beautiful presentation and it can easily be modified to suit most taste preferences (meat, no-meat, spicy, no spicy, less pasta for low-carb options, etc.). However, I already knew about "Emily's" low-carb needs and I had started to toy with serving Chicken Marsala. But then, the semi-vegan bit threw that out the window. What initially gave me pause is that I would need to do TWO main dishes, one vegetarian and one with meat. And that meant that I was going to have to go with Indian because it is the only cuisine where I have a broad enough skill set to come with such a variety of dishes. It also meant that I was going to have pull out the big guns (er... Santoku knife?) and make a Super Speshul Indian Meal since"Emily" and "Victor" know their Indian food.
Fortunately, Emily's and my fellow Gori In Arms, The Big, Bad, Blonde Bahu, had recently linked to this black-eyed peas recipe which was To Die For. I made it on New Year's Day and as I was cooking it, Anjali and I were constantly stealing bites from it. So! There it was... the all-important veggie main dish I needed. In the end, for the main dishes, I went with the black-eyed peas curry with coconut and spinach and a Malayalee-style chicken curry with coconut and cashews. For the sides, I served a green bean thoren and a spicy tomato dhal along with parathas and basmati rice.
For record, both Emily AND Manoj were like "Um, maybe we should go out?" and I was all "Um, no. This is FUN!!"
So, thank you, Emily, for that culinary gauntlet.
I did make a few small modifications to the original recipe. Also, I prefer my recipes to be simply stated in steps, so I retyped it and thought I should share it here. This is seriously one of the BEST new dishes I have made in a long time and it will definitely become part of our rotation. Even though it is a vegetarian dish, it is rich with flavor and very satisfying. Yum.
Ingredients:
2 cans of black-eyed peas,drained rinsed
1 medium onion, finely chopped
5 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1 large tomato, finely chopped
1 bundle of fresh spinach, finely chopped
1 can of coconut milk
2-3 tbsp oil (vegetable or canola)
freshly chopped cilantro leaves for garnish
Ground Spice Mixture:
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp garam masala
1 tsp red chili powder, to taste
2 tsp ground cumin powder
1 tsp ground coriander powder
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper, to taste
Preparation:
1. In a large pot on medium high heat, add the oil. When hot, add the onions and fry until softened and brown. Then add the garlic and ginger - fry for 1-2 minutes.
2. Add the ground spice mixture and stir for 2-3 minutes until the mixture is fragrant. Add the tomatoes and the black-eyed peas.
3. Stir well and add in the coconut milk. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to low. Cover and simmer gently for 20-30 minutes.
4. Add the chopped spinach and mix well. Simmer for an additional 5-6 minutes.
5. Garnish with freshly the chopped cilantro and serve with rice.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*****************
I love having people over for dinner - Manoj stopped complimenting my cooking years ago and the kidlets are not appreciative anyway. Therefore, I like to invite people over and then force my captive audience to ply me with compliments. Genius, no?
In particular, I enjoy planning a menu for guests and trying to come up with a menu that is fun and different for my guests to try. As I mentioned earlier this week, I invited "Emily" and "Victor" over for dinner. When I invite folks over for the first time, I like to do a general inquiry as to taste, allergies and aversion. Nothing worse than trying to serve fish to a person who can't stand the sight of it, right? However, when I asked "Emily" if they had any allergies or food preferences, her reply stumped me a bit:
"Our dietary requirements are kind of strange, so please feel free to say, "WTF?" and tell me that we need to go out instead. I failed to really consider this when we set things up. Right now, Victor is a vegetarian that also does not eat chocolate, eggs or cheese. Oy. I, on the other hand, am supposed to eat meat or eggs at every meal and typically stay away from rice and pasta at night because they cause my blood sugar to shoot up. Awesome, right?"Whoa, Nellie.
Normally, when I cook for Indians, I prefer to make Average Jane's Baked Ziti with Roasted Vegetables. It is a dish that has a beautiful presentation and it can easily be modified to suit most taste preferences (meat, no-meat, spicy, no spicy, less pasta for low-carb options, etc.). However, I already knew about "Emily's" low-carb needs and I had started to toy with serving Chicken Marsala. But then, the semi-vegan bit threw that out the window. What initially gave me pause is that I would need to do TWO main dishes, one vegetarian and one with meat. And that meant that I was going to have to go with Indian because it is the only cuisine where I have a broad enough skill set to come with such a variety of dishes. It also meant that I was going to have pull out the big guns (er... Santoku knife?) and make a Super Speshul Indian Meal since"Emily" and "Victor" know their Indian food.
Fortunately, Emily's and my fellow Gori In Arms, The Big, Bad, Blonde Bahu, had recently linked to this black-eyed peas recipe which was To Die For. I made it on New Year's Day and as I was cooking it, Anjali and I were constantly stealing bites from it. So! There it was... the all-important veggie main dish I needed. In the end, for the main dishes, I went with the black-eyed peas curry with coconut and spinach and a Malayalee-style chicken curry with coconut and cashews. For the sides, I served a green bean thoren and a spicy tomato dhal along with parathas and basmati rice.
For record, both Emily AND Manoj were like "Um, maybe we should go out?" and I was all "Um, no. This is FUN!!"
So, thank you, Emily, for that culinary gauntlet.
I did make a few small modifications to the original recipe. Also, I prefer my recipes to be simply stated in steps, so I retyped it and thought I should share it here. This is seriously one of the BEST new dishes I have made in a long time and it will definitely become part of our rotation. Even though it is a vegetarian dish, it is rich with flavor and very satisfying. Yum.
Black-Eyed Peas With Spinach and Coconut Curry
Ingredients:
2 cans of black-eyed peas,drained rinsed
1 medium onion, finely chopped
5 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1 large tomato, finely chopped
1 bundle of fresh spinach, finely chopped
1 can of coconut milk
2-3 tbsp oil (vegetable or canola)
freshly chopped cilantro leaves for garnish
Ground Spice Mixture:
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp garam masala
1 tsp red chili powder, to taste
2 tsp ground cumin powder
1 tsp ground coriander powder
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper, to taste
Preparation:
1. In a large pot on medium high heat, add the oil. When hot, add the onions and fry until softened and brown. Then add the garlic and ginger - fry for 1-2 minutes.
2. Add the ground spice mixture and stir for 2-3 minutes until the mixture is fragrant. Add the tomatoes and the black-eyed peas.
3. Stir well and add in the coconut milk. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to low. Cover and simmer gently for 20-30 minutes.
4. Add the chopped spinach and mix well. Simmer for an additional 5-6 minutes.
5. Garnish with freshly the chopped cilantro and serve with rice.
December 23, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
Cheat Treat
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*********
My last food post involved cookies that took me two days to prep. This post involves a treat that takes about 2 minutes to prep. You're welcome.
Years and years ago (1999, specifically) my manager at the time brought in a treat plate from his wife. One of the treats was something called Christmas Crackers and I was completely smitten. I got the recipe from her and all these years thought I had this little gem of a treat that was totally speshual and uneek. I made this treat over the weekend and thought I was sharing the secret of my Speshul and Uneek Cheat Treat with my sister (shhh! It's a secret!) only to find out a saltines version of this is floating all over the Pinterest Universe.
So, despite my sagging balloon, I am going to share this recipe anyway -- primarily because I needed to type it out anyway since I am putting together a holiday recipe book for myself on Paper Coterie (non-sponsored, I will be paying for my recipe book my very own self.)
Seriously, this is a sweet treat even a tweaker could make without burning down the house.
Graham Cracker Christmas Crack
Ingredients
1 cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
12 oz bag mini chocolate chips
15-17 graham cracker sheets(the full sheets, not broken)
1 cup chopped pecans
Preparation
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*********
My last food post involved cookies that took me two days to prep. This post involves a treat that takes about 2 minutes to prep. You're welcome.
Years and years ago (1999, specifically) my manager at the time brought in a treat plate from his wife. One of the treats was something called Christmas Crackers and I was completely smitten. I got the recipe from her and all these years thought I had this little gem of a treat that was totally speshual and uneek. I made this treat over the weekend and thought I was sharing the secret of my Speshul and Uneek Cheat Treat with my sister (shhh! It's a secret!) only to find out a saltines version of this is floating all over the Pinterest Universe.
So, despite my sagging balloon, I am going to share this recipe anyway -- primarily because I needed to type it out anyway since I am putting together a holiday recipe book for myself on Paper Coterie (non-sponsored, I will be paying for my recipe book my very own self.)
Seriously, this is a sweet treat even a tweaker could make without burning down the house.

Graham Cracker Christmas Crack
Ingredients
1 cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
12 oz bag mini chocolate chips
15-17 graham cracker sheets(the full sheets, not broken)
1 cup chopped pecans
Preparation
- Pre-heat oven to 400.
- Melt the butter and sugar on the stovetop. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently.
- Line jelly roll pans with aluminum foil. Lay the graham crackers as closely together as possible.
- Pour the butter/sugar mixture over the graham crackers. I use a large spatula to smooth the mixture evenly over the crackers.
- Bake in the oven for about 5 minutes. Watch closely! I like it to be bubbly and gooey (no worries, it will harden later!)
- Pull the cookie sheet out of the oven. Sprinkle the pecans first, then sprinkle the mini-chocolate chips. Again, I use the spatula to spread things around.
- Chill sheets until hardened. Then, break the crackers up and dump them into your gaping maw of a piehole. Alternately, you can staple them to your thighs, although this method results in less enjoyment.
December 18, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
The Late Edition
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly(ish) feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*********
Last year, I wrote about the Story of the Kifli, which included a bit of my baking history and my hopes for my friend Jolene as she fought pancreatic cancer. That post is still hard for me to read because a year later? My friend is gone.
Also, inexplicably, I now bake -- even when it is not Christmas. It started off with cookie dough from Papa Murphy's. Then, I tried out some Amish Friendship bread. Even the over-ripe bananas on the counter are getting nervous, folks.
These past few weeks, I've had the pastry mat out more times than I can count for baking gingerbread cookies (again, via a tub of dough, Although, I have grand plans for next year and have been researching gingerbread recipes. Yes, ME. The Non-baker.) Anyway with practice, I've gotten to know my oven better and have learned that one of the tricks with baking is that the item continues to bake a bit AFTER being pulled from the oven. I have definitely gotten better at gauging that precise moment when things should be pulled.
The original recipe that I've linked to in the past never quite worked. For one, the measurements were WAY off and I was left with a ridiculous amount of the nut filling. This year, I took careful notes so that from now on, I will not have to dig into my addled memory to figure out what I should be doing. After all, I'm not getting younger.
Romanian/Hungarian Kifli Recipe
Ingredients for 1 Batch of Kifli Dough
(I make 4 batches of dough for 1 batch of filling)
8 ounces cream cheese
1 cup butter
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 pinch salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
(Note: I make each of the 4 batches of dough separately with a hand mixer using dough hooks. If you have a fancy mixer, you may be able to make all 4 batches at the same time. This dough is super sticky and at the end, is VERY hard to mix. Trust me, you want dough hooks and NOT beaters for this bad boy.)
Ingredients for 1 Batch of Kifli Filling
3 egg whites
2 cups ground pecans
1 cup white sugar
(Note: Walnuts and almonds can be substituted for the pecans)
Also:
2-3 cups confectioners' sugar for rolling and decoration
Preparation for the Dough
Preparation for the Nut Filling
Baking
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Bake the cookies for 9 to 12 minutes, until lightly browned. Roll in confectioners' sugar when cool. This recipe makes approximately 300 cookies.
And now, for the pictures!
The kifli production line. I only get out each section of dough one at a time. As they warm up to room temperature, they get even stickier
I roll out a bunch of 1 inch balls at once and line them up. Then, using a pastry roller, I roll each ball into 2x3 inch ovals to about a 1/4 to 1/8 inch thickness. Instead of flour, I use powdered sugar for rolling to keep the stickiness under control.
I add a 1/2 teaspoon of filling, then I fold it over and pinch the sides. Then I continue rolling it over, then I pinch the ends.
Little soldiers, all lined up to march into the oven.
The finished product, all dolled up in confectioner's sugar. Ready for a hot date with my mouth.
Wait a second, that sounded dirtier than intended.
Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
*********
Last year, I wrote about the Story of the Kifli, which included a bit of my baking history and my hopes for my friend Jolene as she fought pancreatic cancer. That post is still hard for me to read because a year later? My friend is gone.
Also, inexplicably, I now bake -- even when it is not Christmas. It started off with cookie dough from Papa Murphy's. Then, I tried out some Amish Friendship bread. Even the over-ripe bananas on the counter are getting nervous, folks.
These past few weeks, I've had the pastry mat out more times than I can count for baking gingerbread cookies (again, via a tub of dough, Although, I have grand plans for next year and have been researching gingerbread recipes. Yes, ME. The Non-baker.) Anyway with practice, I've gotten to know my oven better and have learned that one of the tricks with baking is that the item continues to bake a bit AFTER being pulled from the oven. I have definitely gotten better at gauging that precise moment when things should be pulled.
The original recipe that I've linked to in the past never quite worked. For one, the measurements were WAY off and I was left with a ridiculous amount of the nut filling. This year, I took careful notes so that from now on, I will not have to dig into my addled memory to figure out what I should be doing. After all, I'm not getting younger.
Romanian/Hungarian Kifli Recipe
Ingredients for 1 Batch of Kifli Dough
(I make 4 batches of dough for 1 batch of filling)
8 ounces cream cheese
1 cup butter
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 pinch salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
(Note: I make each of the 4 batches of dough separately with a hand mixer using dough hooks. If you have a fancy mixer, you may be able to make all 4 batches at the same time. This dough is super sticky and at the end, is VERY hard to mix. Trust me, you want dough hooks and NOT beaters for this bad boy.)
Ingredients for 1 Batch of Kifli Filling
3 egg whites
2 cups ground pecans
1 cup white sugar
(Note: Walnuts and almonds can be substituted for the pecans)
Also:
2-3 cups confectioners' sugar for rolling and decoration
Preparation for the Dough
- In a tall-ish mixing bowl with high sides, cream the butter and cream cheese. Stir in the egg yolks, vanilla, baking powder and salt.
- Gradually add in flour mixture a little bit at a time until everything is mixed well.
- Divide dough into 5 parts, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate overnight (Keep in mind that you will have 20 of these dough thingies, since you are making 4 batches of the dough.)
Preparation for the Nut Filling
- Beat egg whites to soft peaks and add sugar a little at a time. Continue to beat the eggs into stiff peaks.
- Fold in the ground pecans, and set aside.
Baking
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Bake the cookies for 9 to 12 minutes, until lightly browned. Roll in confectioners' sugar when cool. This recipe makes approximately 300 cookies.
And now, for the pictures!
The kifli production line. I only get out each section of dough one at a time. As they warm up to room temperature, they get even stickier
I roll out a bunch of 1 inch balls at once and line them up. Then, using a pastry roller, I roll each ball into 2x3 inch ovals to about a 1/4 to 1/8 inch thickness. Instead of flour, I use powdered sugar for rolling to keep the stickiness under control.

Little soldiers, all lined up to march into the oven.
The finished product, all dolled up in confectioner's sugar. Ready for a hot date with my mouth.
Wait a second, that sounded dirtier than intended.
September 30, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
What's yours, is mine. And vice versa.
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
***********
Things are pretty busy now, but in a good way. I am keeping up with the food blogging, but hope to get back to my usual blathering about my sad little life here in the soul-sucking suburban prairie.
In the meantime, let us discuss the concept of ownership as it applies to recipes. The topic came up last week on my meal-planning post when Emily of Pantalones del Fuego pointed out that one of the recipes in my book had originated with her, and not the person to whom I had attributed it. It wasn't a big deal, as Emily and I are friends. And I apologized. Sort of.
The thing is, I attribute recipes to the person from whom I actually received it.
It is Celeste's Baked Ziti....it is Caroline's Chicken Divan. Even though I know both of the recipes were not created, per se, by them.
My understanding of recipe copyright and how I go about personally sharing recipes here is based upon the following tenants:
1) you can put a recipe on your site if you change the preparation instructions and credit the original source. You can't just print word for word.
2) once you change 3 ingredients, the recipe technically becomes "yours"
It turns out, I was a bit too strict. Per ResearchCopyright.com, an ingredient list alone is not copyrightable, although instructions are:
I have always felt that I should refer to the cookbook author from whom I have gotten recipes. At a minimum, it is the polite thing to do, no? However, this clarification makes me feel better that I am not breaking any sort of law. Furthermore, I have two cookbooks in particular where I HATE their method of writing instructions For example, my recipes for Pad Prik Kai (Thai Chicken in Red Chili Sauce) and Kai Kratium (Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken) came from these cookbooks. The original instructions were simply awful, but the end product is awesome and a part of my regular rotation for meals. I got tired of digging through confusing steps and re-wrote their recipes for simplicity, for my own use. And then I shared them with you, Gentle Reader
Because I love you like that.
Today, I am sharing a pumpkin erisheri recipe that was inspired by Maya Kaimal's Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala. I've changed the instructions and fiddled with a few ingredients. Namely, I substituted pinto beans for the mung beans - I just didn't feel all the work involved resulted in much difference in taste or texture. And Manoj agreed.
Anyway! This is essentially a pumpkin curry and I love that this is a recipe from my husband's state of Kerala in India. This is a dish that his own mother would have cooked and it makes me happy that my own kids will have cozy memories of this dish from their own childhood. My mother-in-law died when Manoj and I had only been dating for a few months. I never got to meet her and it still makes me sad that my children will never know her.
Pumpkin Curry (Pumpkin Erisheri)
Ingredients:
15 oz can of pinto beans, rinsed and drained
4 cups of fresh pumpkin cut into 3/4 inch cubes
1/4 cup grated unsweeetened coconut
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/4 tsp cayenne
1 and 1/4 tsp salt
2 tbs vegetable oil
1 tsp mustard seeds
2 dried red chilies
Coconut Paste:
3/4 cup of grated, unsweetened coconut
1 tbs chopped garlic
1/2 tsp cayenne
1/4 tsp turmeric
Preparation:
1. For the coconut paste, place ingredients in a blender or food processor. Add 1/2 cup water or more and blend to the consistency of thick pesto. Set aside.
2. In a wide deep pan place the pumpkin, turmeric, cayenne, salt, and 1 and 1/2 cups water. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer, covered for 10 minutes.
3.Add the pinto beans. Continue cooking until the pumpkin is tender and a fork easily slides through (10-15 minutes.)
4. Add the coconut paste and stir to combine. Bring to a boil, then remove from the heat.
5. In a frying pan, heat the vegetable oil over medium-high heat. Add the mustard seeds and cover. When the mustard seeds begin to pop, toss in the dried red chilies and fry for a few seconds. Add the remaining 1/4 cup of coconut and stir constantly over medium-high heat until the coconut turns cinnamon brown and no white remains. Stir this into the cooked pumpkin and beans and heat the mixture until warmed through (add more water if it begins to dry out.)
6. Remove from the heat and check the salt. The curry should appear as chunks of pumpkin with a thick sauce. Serve with white rice.
Note: This recipe can also be made with sweet potato and butternut squash. I like to mix the two because with the sweet potato, otherwise it is a little too sweet.
***********
Things are pretty busy now, but in a good way. I am keeping up with the food blogging, but hope to get back to my usual blathering about my sad little life here in the soul-sucking suburban prairie.
In the meantime, let us discuss the concept of ownership as it applies to recipes. The topic came up last week on my meal-planning post when Emily of Pantalones del Fuego pointed out that one of the recipes in my book had originated with her, and not the person to whom I had attributed it. It wasn't a big deal, as Emily and I are friends. And I apologized. Sort of.
The thing is, I attribute recipes to the person from whom I actually received it.
It is Celeste's Baked Ziti....it is Caroline's Chicken Divan. Even though I know both of the recipes were not created, per se, by them.
My understanding of recipe copyright and how I go about personally sharing recipes here is based upon the following tenants:
1) you can put a recipe on your site if you change the preparation instructions and credit the original source. You can't just print word for word.
2) once you change 3 ingredients, the recipe technically becomes "yours"
It turns out, I was a bit too strict. Per ResearchCopyright.com, an ingredient list alone is not copyrightable, although instructions are:
If you take the list of ingredients (say for egg and olive salad) and write up, in your own words, how to make it, then, by law, you have an original recipe.Oh, and all of those Pioneer Woman Haters will now have to find new reasons for their venom since it is obvious she is not breaking any laws. You can now sleep at night, Ree. You're welcome.
..... your list of ingredients cannot be copyrighted. The directions and other information can. Practically speaking, this allows every food writer in the world to publish traditional recipes, home cooking favorites and simple recipes.
I have always felt that I should refer to the cookbook author from whom I have gotten recipes. At a minimum, it is the polite thing to do, no? However, this clarification makes me feel better that I am not breaking any sort of law. Furthermore, I have two cookbooks in particular where I HATE their method of writing instructions For example, my recipes for Pad Prik Kai (Thai Chicken in Red Chili Sauce) and Kai Kratium (Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken) came from these cookbooks. The original instructions were simply awful, but the end product is awesome and a part of my regular rotation for meals. I got tired of digging through confusing steps and re-wrote their recipes for simplicity, for my own use. And then I shared them with you, Gentle Reader
Because I love you like that.
Today, I am sharing a pumpkin erisheri recipe that was inspired by Maya Kaimal's Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala. I've changed the instructions and fiddled with a few ingredients. Namely, I substituted pinto beans for the mung beans - I just didn't feel all the work involved resulted in much difference in taste or texture. And Manoj agreed.
Anyway! This is essentially a pumpkin curry and I love that this is a recipe from my husband's state of Kerala in India. This is a dish that his own mother would have cooked and it makes me happy that my own kids will have cozy memories of this dish from their own childhood. My mother-in-law died when Manoj and I had only been dating for a few months. I never got to meet her and it still makes me sad that my children will never know her.
Pumpkin Curry (Pumpkin Erisheri)
Ingredients:
15 oz can of pinto beans, rinsed and drained
4 cups of fresh pumpkin cut into 3/4 inch cubes
1/4 cup grated unsweeetened coconut
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/4 tsp cayenne
1 and 1/4 tsp salt
2 tbs vegetable oil
1 tsp mustard seeds
2 dried red chilies
Coconut Paste:
3/4 cup of grated, unsweetened coconut
1 tbs chopped garlic
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp cayenne
1/4 tsp turmeric
Preparation:
1. For the coconut paste, place ingredients in a blender or food processor. Add 1/2 cup water or more and blend to the consistency of thick pesto. Set aside.
2. In a wide deep pan place the pumpkin, turmeric, cayenne, salt, and 1 and 1/2 cups water. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer, covered for 10 minutes.
3.Add the pinto beans. Continue cooking until the pumpkin is tender and a fork easily slides through (10-15 minutes.)
4. Add the coconut paste and stir to combine. Bring to a boil, then remove from the heat.
5. In a frying pan, heat the vegetable oil over medium-high heat. Add the mustard seeds and cover. When the mustard seeds begin to pop, toss in the dried red chilies and fry for a few seconds. Add the remaining 1/4 cup of coconut and stir constantly over medium-high heat until the coconut turns cinnamon brown and no white remains. Stir this into the cooked pumpkin and beans and heat the mixture until warmed through (add more water if it begins to dry out.)
6. Remove from the heat and check the salt. The curry should appear as chunks of pumpkin with a thick sauce. Serve with white rice.
Note: This recipe can also be made with sweet potato and butternut squash. I like to mix the two because with the sweet potato, otherwise it is a little too sweet.
August 19, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
The Food Paparazzi
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. After all, this is not meant to be an homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
***********
While at BlogHer, I attended a Food Styling and Photography workshop offered by Hillshire Farms. This post is not sponsored by them nor am I being compensated for this post by anyone else. I am writing this post simply because hands down, this was one of my absolute favorite sessions this year at BlogHer. It was interesting, engaging and believe it or not, involved a lot of laughing. Who knew that food photography could be so entertaining and fascinating??
The speakers for the session were Sara Remington (a food photographer), William Smith (a food stylist) and Helen Rosner (a web editor for Saveur.com).
The key points that resonated with me from the Food Styling portion were the following:
Don’t overcrowd the plate
• Keep it simple, only plating what is needed
• Use a serving size that is just right – not too much, not too little
• Use a bigger plate to make the plate not too crowded
Garnish the food
• Don’t overdo the garnishing
• You can also use powders to garnish, like powdered coffee, spices, or colored salt
• Garnishing almost always adds dimension to your food presentation, when kept to a minimum
Positioning
• There is talk of a virtual clock where meat (and sandwiches) is at 2 o’clock, starch at 10 and veggies at 6
Plates
• White or off-white plates make the food stand out more
Focus
• The main part of the dish, usually the meat (or sandwich) should be put most in focus (for example, a little elevated)
The following tips helped me with the Food Photography portion:
Lighting
• Treat the food you’re photographing as you would any other still life subject and ensure that it is well lit
• One of the best places to photograph food is by a window where there is plenty of natural light – perhaps
supported with flash bounced off a ceiling or wall to give more balanced lighting that cuts out the shadows.
This daylight helps to keep the food looking much more natural
Props & background
• Pay attention not only to the arrangement of the food itself but to the context that you put it in including the
plate or bowl and any table settings around it
• Don’t clutter the photo with a full table setting but consider one or two extra elements such as a glass, fork, flower or napkin. These elements can often be placed in secondary positions in the foreground or background of your shot
• Pay attention to backgrounds and clear out any elements you don’t want in the final shot
Be quick
• Food doesn’t keep its appetizing looks for long so as a photographer you’ll need to be well prepared and able to shoot quickly after it’s been cooked before it melts, collapses, wilts and/or changes color
• One strategy that some use is to have the shot completely set up with props before the food is ready and then to substitute a stand-in plate to get your exposure right. Then when the food is ready you just switch the stand-in plate with the real thing and you’re ready to start shooting
Source: A handout from the Hillshire Farms workshop.
Helen, the web editor from Saveur.com was also very helpful (there was no handout provided for this section, so I'm done with fancy, concise lists now) What I took away from Helen's presentation is this:
1) keep posts clean and to the point
2) don't include a zillion, superfluous pictures.
She actually used the Pioneer Woman as an example of how to NOT do recipe posts. In the post presented, PW had included such snaps as ladling sauces. As Helen pointed out, we all probably know how to ladle a sauce at this point. The shot was artistically pretty, but not particularly useful. Helen used a particular PW post that had over 20 pictures. No, this was not a slam on PW - she has a Following that doesn't mind if she uses 1 picture or 20. The rest of us, however, are NOT The Pioneer Women and we do not have Followings.
Oh, and at this point, I am going to completely violate the "concise" rule for posting because I am already getting too "wordy".
And I am not nearly done here, folks.
One key piece to the entire presentation?? Not once was the suggestion offered to use "non-food" ingredients (need to thicken a sauce? Use cornstarch.) Leave the wood glue and varnish in the garage, I guess.
So, after all of that? It was time for me to start playing around. I whipped up some pad prik kai (the recipe is at the end of the post) and got to work photographing. Time was of the essence because the sunlight wasn't going to last - neither was the food, for that matter.
I realized quickly that my yellowish Franciscan Appleware photographs horribly, so I pulled out a plate that was my great-grandma Courtney's (who coincidentally hails from the Land of Pioneer Woman. Bartlesville, Represent! Woot! Dewey!). Anyway! Her china is simple, white and slightly elegant without being distracting. My dining room faces the west and gets awesome natural light. I cleared out a space and started shooting.
All of these photos are SOOC (straight out of camera).
This was my favorite photo:

However, it was a little too dark. I probably could play around with it in editing, though.
Obviously, I still have a LONG way to go in learning how to photograph food and style it. And more importantly, how to work my camera! However, this workshop really helped me to evaluate how and where I can improve my shots. I don't see myself stealing jobs from under Sara's feet (as if!), but I would like to include more food photography in my posts here. I worry that I am putting out these weird, unusual recipes and by not including a snap of how the dish should look, this may be putting people off from actually attempting to cook them.
And now, it's recipe time.
*********
The following recipe was inspired by something I discovered while digging through my Simply Thai cookbook that I've had forever. I love this recipe because it uses ingredients that I almost always have on hand. This is a pretty light dish, but has great, spicy flavors with crunchy veggies that add fun texture. It originally called for pork tenderloin (which um, I have not cooked with before and never will. Ever.) and also included bamboo shoots (which I HATE). Instead, I subbed in chicken and water chestnuts (and I haven't looked back!) A red curry paste could be subbed for the chili paste/curry powder combo, as well. I prefer mixing my own because I always have those two items on hand anyway and didn't want to spend money on yet another paste. I prep everything ahead of time, then quickly throw it together as I am cooking to ensure nothing gets burned.
Pad Prik Kai
(Chicken with Red Chili Sauce)
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast (thinly sliced, bite-sized pieces)
1 red pepper (thin strips, 2 inches long)
5 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tbsp garlic, chopped
2 tbsp chili paste
2 tsp curry powder
1 cup water
2 tbsp fish sauce
1 tbsp sugar
1 cup sliced water chestnuts
20 basil leaves, chopped
Preparation:
1. Mix the chili sauce and curry powder into a paste.
2. Heat oil on medium high, until it is just about to smoke. Lower heat. Add the garlic and chili/curry paste. Stir-fry quickly for 45 seconds.
3. Immediately add water and raise the heat to High. Stir frequently for 1 minute and add the fish sauce and sugar. Stir fry for 2 minutes, until the sauce is bubbly.
4. Add the sliced chicken, cook for 2 minutes.
5. Add the red peppers and water chestnuts. Stir-fry for 4-5 minutes, until everything is cooked and to the texture you prefer.
6. Add 3/4 of the basil leaves and remove from the stove.
7. Garnish with the remaining basil leaves and serve with white rice.
***********
While at BlogHer, I attended a Food Styling and Photography workshop offered by Hillshire Farms. This post is not sponsored by them nor am I being compensated for this post by anyone else. I am writing this post simply because hands down, this was one of my absolute favorite sessions this year at BlogHer. It was interesting, engaging and believe it or not, involved a lot of laughing. Who knew that food photography could be so entertaining and fascinating??
The speakers for the session were Sara Remington (a food photographer), William Smith (a food stylist) and Helen Rosner (a web editor for Saveur.com).
The key points that resonated with me from the Food Styling portion were the following:
Don’t overcrowd the plate
• Keep it simple, only plating what is needed
• Use a serving size that is just right – not too much, not too little
• Use a bigger plate to make the plate not too crowded
Garnish the food
• Don’t overdo the garnishing
• You can also use powders to garnish, like powdered coffee, spices, or colored salt
• Garnishing almost always adds dimension to your food presentation, when kept to a minimum
Positioning
• There is talk of a virtual clock where meat (and sandwiches) is at 2 o’clock, starch at 10 and veggies at 6
Plates
• White or off-white plates make the food stand out more
Focus
• The main part of the dish, usually the meat (or sandwich) should be put most in focus (for example, a little elevated)
The following tips helped me with the Food Photography portion:
Lighting
• Treat the food you’re photographing as you would any other still life subject and ensure that it is well lit
• One of the best places to photograph food is by a window where there is plenty of natural light – perhaps
supported with flash bounced off a ceiling or wall to give more balanced lighting that cuts out the shadows.
This daylight helps to keep the food looking much more natural
Props & background
• Pay attention not only to the arrangement of the food itself but to the context that you put it in including the
plate or bowl and any table settings around it
• Don’t clutter the photo with a full table setting but consider one or two extra elements such as a glass, fork, flower or napkin. These elements can often be placed in secondary positions in the foreground or background of your shot
• Pay attention to backgrounds and clear out any elements you don’t want in the final shot
Be quick
• Food doesn’t keep its appetizing looks for long so as a photographer you’ll need to be well prepared and able to shoot quickly after it’s been cooked before it melts, collapses, wilts and/or changes color
• One strategy that some use is to have the shot completely set up with props before the food is ready and then to substitute a stand-in plate to get your exposure right. Then when the food is ready you just switch the stand-in plate with the real thing and you’re ready to start shooting
Source: A handout from the Hillshire Farms workshop.
Helen, the web editor from Saveur.com was also very helpful (there was no handout provided for this section, so I'm done with fancy, concise lists now) What I took away from Helen's presentation is this:
1) keep posts clean and to the point
2) don't include a zillion, superfluous pictures.
She actually used the Pioneer Woman as an example of how to NOT do recipe posts. In the post presented, PW had included such snaps as ladling sauces. As Helen pointed out, we all probably know how to ladle a sauce at this point. The shot was artistically pretty, but not particularly useful. Helen used a particular PW post that had over 20 pictures. No, this was not a slam on PW - she has a Following that doesn't mind if she uses 1 picture or 20. The rest of us, however, are NOT The Pioneer Women and we do not have Followings.
Oh, and at this point, I am going to completely violate the "concise" rule for posting because I am already getting too "wordy".
And I am not nearly done here, folks.
One key piece to the entire presentation?? Not once was the suggestion offered to use "non-food" ingredients (need to thicken a sauce? Use cornstarch.) Leave the wood glue and varnish in the garage, I guess.
So, after all of that? It was time for me to start playing around. I whipped up some pad prik kai (the recipe is at the end of the post) and got to work photographing. Time was of the essence because the sunlight wasn't going to last - neither was the food, for that matter.
I realized quickly that my yellowish Franciscan Appleware photographs horribly, so I pulled out a plate that was my great-grandma Courtney's (who coincidentally hails from the Land of Pioneer Woman. Bartlesville, Represent! Woot! Dewey!). Anyway! Her china is simple, white and slightly elegant without being distracting. My dining room faces the west and gets awesome natural light. I cleared out a space and started shooting.
All of these photos are SOOC (straight out of camera).
This was my favorite photo:

However, it was a little too dark. I probably could play around with it in editing, though.
I liked the presentation on this one, but the lighting still wasn't quite "there". The food is a little too dark, the rice looks washed out:
Although not my favorite photo, this photo probably represents the dish the best - all of the important elements are presented. The rice, the basil, the peppers and the chicken.
And now, it's recipe time.
*********
The following recipe was inspired by something I discovered while digging through my Simply Thai cookbook that I've had forever. I love this recipe because it uses ingredients that I almost always have on hand. This is a pretty light dish, but has great, spicy flavors with crunchy veggies that add fun texture. It originally called for pork tenderloin (which um, I have not cooked with before and never will. Ever.) and also included bamboo shoots (which I HATE). Instead, I subbed in chicken and water chestnuts (and I haven't looked back!) A red curry paste could be subbed for the chili paste/curry powder combo, as well. I prefer mixing my own because I always have those two items on hand anyway and didn't want to spend money on yet another paste. I prep everything ahead of time, then quickly throw it together as I am cooking to ensure nothing gets burned.
Pad Prik Kai
(Chicken with Red Chili Sauce)
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast (thinly sliced, bite-sized pieces)
1 red pepper (thin strips, 2 inches long)
5 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tbsp garlic, chopped
2 tbsp chili paste
2 tsp curry powder
1 cup water
2 tbsp fish sauce
1 tbsp sugar
1 cup sliced water chestnuts
20 basil leaves, chopped
Preparation:
1. Mix the chili sauce and curry powder into a paste.
2. Heat oil on medium high, until it is just about to smoke. Lower heat. Add the garlic and chili/curry paste. Stir-fry quickly for 45 seconds.
3. Immediately add water and raise the heat to High. Stir frequently for 1 minute and add the fish sauce and sugar. Stir fry for 2 minutes, until the sauce is bubbly.
4. Add the sliced chicken, cook for 2 minutes.
5. Add the red peppers and water chestnuts. Stir-fry for 4-5 minutes, until everything is cooked and to the texture you prefer.
6. Add 3/4 of the basil leaves and remove from the stove.
7. Garnish with the remaining basil leaves and serve with white rice.
July 8, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
The Belle of Tinkering
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. This is not meant to be some homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
***********
We were invited to a cookout last week - I attempted to make tandoori chicken which went dreadfully, awfully wrong. For some reason, Manoj has a magic touch for making tandoori chicken - it is in his DNA, perhaps? However, he had to work on Monday so it was up to me to prepare it. And I failed. Spectacularly. Fortunately, I had made a Creamy Mexicorn Dip so we were not arriving at our friend's house empty-handed.
My sister had passed along this Creamy Mexicorn Dip recipe to me and immediately, I began to think of ways to mess around with it. I cannot resist adding something "of my own". I have included the recipe that I ended up making - basically, I added the cumin and substituted 1.5 cups of Greek yogurt for original 8 oz of sour cream. I also increased the "dash" of sugar to 1 teaspoon's worth (to account for the sourness of the Greek yogurt.) Personally, I love Greek yogurt as a substitute for sour cream - I always have Greek yogurt on hand, which reduces running to the grocery store and I like how Greek yogurt has such a high protein content.
When my sister passed the recipe to me, she told me she uses Miracle Whip instead of mayonnaise. It must run in the family, this tinkering business.
Do you tinker with recipes?
Creamy Mexicorn Dip
***********
We were invited to a cookout last week - I attempted to make tandoori chicken which went dreadfully, awfully wrong. For some reason, Manoj has a magic touch for making tandoori chicken - it is in his DNA, perhaps? However, he had to work on Monday so it was up to me to prepare it. And I failed. Spectacularly. Fortunately, I had made a Creamy Mexicorn Dip so we were not arriving at our friend's house empty-handed.
My sister had passed along this Creamy Mexicorn Dip recipe to me and immediately, I began to think of ways to mess around with it. I cannot resist adding something "of my own". I have included the recipe that I ended up making - basically, I added the cumin and substituted 1.5 cups of Greek yogurt for original 8 oz of sour cream. I also increased the "dash" of sugar to 1 teaspoon's worth (to account for the sourness of the Greek yogurt.) Personally, I love Greek yogurt as a substitute for sour cream - I always have Greek yogurt on hand, which reduces running to the grocery store and I like how Greek yogurt has such a high protein content.
When my sister passed the recipe to me, she told me she uses Miracle Whip instead of mayonnaise. It must run in the family, this tinkering business.
Do you tinker with recipes?
Creamy Mexicorn Dip
2- 14.5 oz. cans Mexicorn (drained)
1 10oz can Rotel (drained)
1 bunch green onions, chopped
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1/2 to 1 tsp of sugar
1.5 cups Greek yogurt
1 cup Mayonnaise
Mix together and serve with tortilla chips.
Note: This recipes gets even better as it sits, thus making it a perfect dish to prepare early in the morning or the night before!
June 24, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
For the Love of Garlic
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. This is not meant to be some homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
***********
Man, I love me some garlic. LOVE ME SOME GARLIC. In the past, I simply used the jarred garlic (by the gallon) but over the years, I ratcheted my love affair with garlic up a few notches.
Doing fresh garlic does take some time - just under 4 minutes. I timed the process - from grabbing the bulb of garlic from my Franciscan Apple garlic keeper, to taking off the skins, to the chopping, to the rinsing of the peeler thingie (which yes, is a Unitasker, but one that I use nearly every day). I do chop the garlic by hand - I have a mincer, but the knife is just as easy and since I am already using the knife for other things, that translates into one less thing to clean up.
YUM. The smell of garlic hitting a pan of hot oil is out of this world.
Next, I am reconsidering my use of powdered ginger.
So, what is Your Thing when it comes to cooking? Something that you go the extra step to prepare because it is important to you.
*****
Today's recipe is the result of a Labor of Love. Kai Kratiam (Garlic Pepper Chicken) is one of my husband's favorite dishes at our favorite Thai restaurant here in Kansas City - the Thai Place. I searched long and hard for a recipe, but just couldn't find one that replicated the restaurant's version. Then, I had a Lightbulb moment while going through some Rick Bayless recipes - he mentioned that chicken breast is a great substitute for pork and I realized that I needed to re-examine ALL of my cookbooks (Frankly, my eyes immediately glaze over when pork is mentioned in a cookbook since the extent of our pork consumption is the occasional slice of bacon and pepperoni on our pizza.) So, there it was all along in my copy of Simply Thai Cooking- Moo Kratium, the pork version of the the dish I'd been looking for. I still had to modify it a bit - adding cabbage at the end and some fish sauce in the beginning. But it is about as close as I can get to The Thai Place's version, I guess.
Also, this recipe calls for 2 tablespoons of chopped garlic, but I have to admit I put in half a bulb of garlic.
Mmmmm.... GARLIC.
Kai Kratiam (Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken)
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast, thinly sliced strips, 2 inches long
1 tsp fish sauce
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp black pepper
2 tbsp chopped garlic
1/2 head cabbage, thinly sliced strips
5 tbsp vegetable oil
Optional Garnishes:
Lettuce leaves
Strips of red bell pepper
Fresh coriander leaves
Sweet and Sour sauce
Preparation:
1. In a bowl, marinate the chicken, fish sauce, soy sauce, black pepper and garlic for 5 minutes (up to 30 minutes is fine).
2. On medium-high, heat oil in a wok or large frying pan. Add the chicken mixture and spread it out evenly. Fry the chicken until it is brown on one side, about 3-5 minutes. Turn the chicken over and add the sliced cabbage. Fry the other side of the chicken another 3-5 minutes while letting the cabbage sit on top.
3. Either serve this with white rice or serve it on top of a bed of lettuce. No, really!
***********
Man, I love me some garlic. LOVE ME SOME GARLIC. In the past, I simply used the jarred garlic (by the gallon) but over the years, I ratcheted my love affair with garlic up a few notches.
Doing fresh garlic does take some time - just under 4 minutes. I timed the process - from grabbing the bulb of garlic from my Franciscan Apple garlic keeper, to taking off the skins, to the chopping, to the rinsing of the peeler thingie (which yes, is a Unitasker, but one that I use nearly every day). I do chop the garlic by hand - I have a mincer, but the knife is just as easy and since I am already using the knife for other things, that translates into one less thing to clean up.
YUM. The smell of garlic hitting a pan of hot oil is out of this world.
Next, I am reconsidering my use of powdered ginger.
So, what is Your Thing when it comes to cooking? Something that you go the extra step to prepare because it is important to you.
*****
Today's recipe is the result of a Labor of Love. Kai Kratiam (Garlic Pepper Chicken) is one of my husband's favorite dishes at our favorite Thai restaurant here in Kansas City - the Thai Place. I searched long and hard for a recipe, but just couldn't find one that replicated the restaurant's version. Then, I had a Lightbulb moment while going through some Rick Bayless recipes - he mentioned that chicken breast is a great substitute for pork and I realized that I needed to re-examine ALL of my cookbooks (Frankly, my eyes immediately glaze over when pork is mentioned in a cookbook since the extent of our pork consumption is the occasional slice of bacon and pepperoni on our pizza.) So, there it was all along in my copy of Simply Thai Cooking- Moo Kratium, the pork version of the the dish I'd been looking for. I still had to modify it a bit - adding cabbage at the end and some fish sauce in the beginning. But it is about as close as I can get to The Thai Place's version, I guess.
Also, this recipe calls for 2 tablespoons of chopped garlic, but I have to admit I put in half a bulb of garlic.
Mmmmm.... GARLIC.
Kai Kratiam (Thai Garlic Pepper Chicken)
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast, thinly sliced strips, 2 inches long
1 tsp fish sauce
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp black pepper
2 tbsp chopped garlic
1/2 head cabbage, thinly sliced strips
5 tbsp vegetable oil
Optional Garnishes:
Lettuce leaves
Strips of red bell pepper
Fresh coriander leaves
Sweet and Sour sauce
Preparation:
1. In a bowl, marinate the chicken, fish sauce, soy sauce, black pepper and garlic for 5 minutes (up to 30 minutes is fine).
2. On medium-high, heat oil in a wok or large frying pan. Add the chicken mixture and spread it out evenly. Fry the chicken until it is brown on one side, about 3-5 minutes. Turn the chicken over and add the sliced cabbage. Fry the other side of the chicken another 3-5 minutes while letting the cabbage sit on top.
3. Either serve this with white rice or serve it on top of a bed of lettuce. No, really!
June 17, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
Stirring Things Up
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. This is not meant to be some homage to 9 1/2 Weeks.
***********
I believe that every cook needs a handful of stir fry recipes to go on those busy days when you just need to whip up something fast for lunch or dinner. I have four recipes that I rotate in and out so that we don't get tired of them -- a South Indian (Keralite?) chicken stir-fry called piralen, a garlic pepper chicken Thai stir fry called kai kratium (recipe for next week!), PF Chang's Kung Pao chicken recipe and a Pakistani stir-fry called karahi chicken. A karahi is a wok-like pan and I don't actually own one - I just use a regular frying pan.
I jokingly call karahi chicken a "backwards" curry - most curries follow a predictable pattern - caramelize the onions, add the garlic/ginger, add the spices for a quick "bhunifying", then finish with meat, veggies and tomatoes/yogurt. Karahi chicken completely mixes up all the usual steps and the results are quite tasty.
This recipe was given to me by a lovely Pakistani lady who damned near became my mother-in-law. While I am perfectly happy with who eventually became my husband, it still makes me sad that I missed out on what would been the best in-laws EVER. Seriously, they were such lovely, truly nice people, I would have been proud to call them my Baba and Ami.
Ah well, at least I ended up with some kickass recipes. Oh, if you have a karahi chicken recipe or another stir fry recipe that you would like to share, and/or if you have suggestions on how I can improve this karahi chicken recipe, please feel free to link to your own post in the comments. I am always on the hunt for new recipes.
Karahi Chicken
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast, cut into bite-sized pieces
1 tsp cayenne pepper (or less if you prefer mild)
salt to taste (about 1 tsp)
1/2 cup cilantro, chopped
2 tsp cumin powder
2 tsp coriander powder
Preparation:
1. Coat the bottom of a frying pan or wok with cooking oil and heat on medium-high. Brown the chicken, stirring frequently. After about 7 minutes, add the garlic and ginger.
2. When the chicken is pretty much done, add the salt, cayenne pepper, tomatoes and onions. Fry for about 5 minutes or so, until the tomatoes break apart.
3. In another small frying pan, coat the bottom with a very small amount of cooking oil and heat on medium-high. Add the cumin and coriander, stir constantly (add a teaspoon of water if it becomes sticky). Cook for about 3 minutes, until the spices become aromatic.
4. Add the cumin/coriander mixture to the chicken and stir thoroughly. Taste for salt, garnish with a handful of chopped cilantro.
***********
I believe that every cook needs a handful of stir fry recipes to go on those busy days when you just need to whip up something fast for lunch or dinner. I have four recipes that I rotate in and out so that we don't get tired of them -- a South Indian (Keralite?) chicken stir-fry called piralen, a garlic pepper chicken Thai stir fry called kai kratium (recipe for next week!), PF Chang's Kung Pao chicken recipe and a Pakistani stir-fry called karahi chicken. A karahi is a wok-like pan and I don't actually own one - I just use a regular frying pan.
I jokingly call karahi chicken a "backwards" curry - most curries follow a predictable pattern - caramelize the onions, add the garlic/ginger, add the spices for a quick "bhunifying", then finish with meat, veggies and tomatoes/yogurt. Karahi chicken completely mixes up all the usual steps and the results are quite tasty.
This recipe was given to me by a lovely Pakistani lady who damned near became my mother-in-law. While I am perfectly happy with who eventually became my husband, it still makes me sad that I missed out on what would been the best in-laws EVER. Seriously, they were such lovely, truly nice people, I would have been proud to call them my Baba and Ami.
Ah well, at least I ended up with some kickass recipes. Oh, if you have a karahi chicken recipe or another stir fry recipe that you would like to share, and/or if you have suggestions on how I can improve this karahi chicken recipe, please feel free to link to your own post in the comments. I am always on the hunt for new recipes.
Karahi Chicken
Ingredients:
1 lb chicken breast, cut into bite-sized pieces
1 tbsp garlic, chopped
2 tsp ground ginger
1 onion,. thinly sliced
2 cups diced tomato1 tsp cayenne pepper (or less if you prefer mild)
salt to taste (about 1 tsp)
1/2 cup cilantro, chopped
2 tsp cumin powder
2 tsp coriander powder
Preparation:
1. Coat the bottom of a frying pan or wok with cooking oil and heat on medium-high. Brown the chicken, stirring frequently. After about 7 minutes, add the garlic and ginger.
2. When the chicken is pretty much done, add the salt, cayenne pepper, tomatoes and onions. Fry for about 5 minutes or so, until the tomatoes break apart.
3. In another small frying pan, coat the bottom with a very small amount of cooking oil and heat on medium-high. Add the cumin and coriander, stir constantly (add a teaspoon of water if it becomes sticky). Cook for about 3 minutes, until the spices become aromatic.
4. Add the cumin/coriander mixture to the chicken and stir thoroughly. Taste for salt, garnish with a handful of chopped cilantro.
May 27, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude: The Kabob Edition
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. This is not meant to be some homage to 91/2 Weeks.
***********
In America, we honor our servicemen by grilling hunks, skewers and slabs of meat on an open flame and then cracking open a tall, cold one.
Or something like that.
In last week's Intestinal Fortitude post, I wrote about how I don't get to do beef much any longer - the comments of that post got me to thinking about moral choices when it comes to food. I am still twisting my brain around that and will have a follow-up post at some point. But not today. Instead, this week, I thought it would be fun to share two of my favorite kabob recipes. These recipes are from an auntie long, long ago. Also, all of these are awesome served with the cumin-based raita recipe I've included at the end -- I've been making the raita for so long that at this point, I have no idea to whom I should credit!
Man, I really miss beef, sometimes.
What's your favorite grilling or kabob recipe? Feel free to share recipes/tips/hints in the comments or link to your own post. If anything I have learned over the years is that there is rarely ONE way to make anything.
Besides, I am always looking for new ideas. Aren't we all??
Boti Kabob
Ingredients
2 lbs. undercut beef
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp ground green chilis
2 cups plain yogurt (I use Greek)
1 tsp minced garlic
Salt to taste
Preparation
Cut the beef into small cubes. Add the spices to the yogurt and marinate the meat cubes in the mixture for 3-4 hours (I put everything into a gallon-sized Ziploc bag.) Pierce the cubes on a skewer and grill until golden brown. Serve with wedges of lemon. (Note: you could also include veggies on the skewers with the meat. I LOVE roma tomatoes with these.)
_______________
Seekh Kabob
Ingredients
1 lb ground beef
2 tbsp yogurt
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp ground black pepper
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
Salt to taste
A pinch of cinnamon
Preparation
Mix all ingredients well. Grease skewers and mold the meat mixture into sausage shapes around the skewers and broil until brown. Serve with sliced tomatoes and rings of onions.
_____________
My Favorite Raita Recipe
Ingredients
2 cups of yogurt
2 tablespoon finely minced onion
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
Preparation
Mix ingredients together and let sit for at least 30 minutes.
***********
In America, we honor our servicemen by grilling hunks, skewers and slabs of meat on an open flame and then cracking open a tall, cold one.
Or something like that.
In last week's Intestinal Fortitude post, I wrote about how I don't get to do beef much any longer - the comments of that post got me to thinking about moral choices when it comes to food. I am still twisting my brain around that and will have a follow-up post at some point. But not today. Instead, this week, I thought it would be fun to share two of my favorite kabob recipes. These recipes are from an auntie long, long ago. Also, all of these are awesome served with the cumin-based raita recipe I've included at the end -- I've been making the raita for so long that at this point, I have no idea to whom I should credit!
Man, I really miss beef, sometimes.
What's your favorite grilling or kabob recipe? Feel free to share recipes/tips/hints in the comments or link to your own post. If anything I have learned over the years is that there is rarely ONE way to make anything.
Besides, I am always looking for new ideas. Aren't we all??
Boti Kabob
Ingredients
2 lbs. undercut beef
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp ground green chilis
2 cups plain yogurt (I use Greek)
1 tsp minced garlic
Salt to taste
Preparation
Cut the beef into small cubes. Add the spices to the yogurt and marinate the meat cubes in the mixture for 3-4 hours (I put everything into a gallon-sized Ziploc bag.) Pierce the cubes on a skewer and grill until golden brown. Serve with wedges of lemon. (Note: you could also include veggies on the skewers with the meat. I LOVE roma tomatoes with these.)
_______________
Seekh Kabob
Ingredients
1 lb ground beef
2 tbsp yogurt
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp ground black pepper
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
Salt to taste
A pinch of cinnamon
Preparation
Mix all ingredients well. Grease skewers and mold the meat mixture into sausage shapes around the skewers and broil until brown. Serve with sliced tomatoes and rings of onions.
_____________
My Favorite Raita Recipe
Ingredients
2 cups of yogurt
2 tablespoon finely minced onion
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
Preparation
Mix ingredients together and let sit for at least 30 minutes.
May 20, 2011
Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude:
The Way to a Man's Heart
Note: Fridays of Intestinal Fortitude is a weekly feature about food, food and more FOOD. No, I do not necessarily want to be a food blogger, but I do LOVE to talk about food prep, cooking food, eating food and making sweet love to food. Okay, maybe not the "sweet love" part. This is not meant to be some homage to 91/2 Weeks.
_______________
I’ll bet what motivated the British to colonize so much of the world is that they were just looking for a decent meal.
- Martha Harrison
December 1989: I begin to learn about the Pakistani and North Indian styles of cooking - prior to that, I had lived on packages of Lipton Rice because I had no idea how to cook ANYTHING. The boyfriend du jour was Pakistani and eventually, in my social circle, I would add a North Indian roommate, later a Vietnamese roommate along with a mix of friends from Egypt, Nigeria, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. It all made sense back then, although it's a little tricky to explain today.
November 2000: I'm no longer dating the Pakistani, my friends are scattered to the far ends of the Earth - I had mostly lost touch with them after college. I happen to meet a nice Catholic, South Indian boy from Kerala. He asked me to dinner and I told him I knew of a place that actually served dosas, a South Indian specialty. He was doubtful because South Indian food is such a rarity here in Kansas City. We met there for dinner and he was quite surprised. On our first date, the event where you display your Mate-Worthy Wares, I told him that I could cook Indian and of course, he was politely doubtful. However, the first time I did cook for him, he couldn't suppress his surprise and said "You really can cook." I took that as a compliment. Early in our relationship, I hunted for a cookbook on Kerala and came upon Maya Kaimal's "Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala". I got to work on learning how to cook with curry leaves, mustard seed, coconut milk and kudampuli. This Kansas girl even learned how to pick a damned good piece of fish. You see, I am nobody's fool. I really, really liked this boy and could see how much he loved food.
We've been together for over 10 years now.
For me, it was completely natural to do all of that - I love to cook and learning new recipes are the height of excitement when it comes to cooking. After all, We Who Love To Cook LIVE for sifting through cookbooks, hunting the Internet and pestering friends for recipes. However, since I learned how to cook primarily from foreigners, I am still weak when it comes to White People Food - I can do chili, ribeye steak, chicken n' dumplings and baked ziti. This has not been too much of an issue since Manoj only likes the baked ziti.
Wait. Actually, it has been an issue.
As much as I love Brown People Food, I am still very much 100% White Meat and it stings that Manoj has nixed two of my childhood favorites, two dishes I absolutely CRAVE on a wintery, snowy day.
Chili or Chicken n' Dumplings
Or, how about a hot, sultry day when a steak slapped on a grill served with a cool, arugula salad and side of fresh-cut cantaloupe is all my gullet requires?
Cue the Greek Chorus, folks.
To make matters worse, he has even blackballed a few of my favorite IndoPak dishes - vindaloo, haleem, nihari and chapli kabobs and chana. Christ on toast! What sort of Indian doesn't like vindaloo? Or chana? Okay...okay... I understand the beef issue. Manoj is anti-beef solely for health reasons - since he is from a Syrian Christian ethnic group, it's not for religious reasons. He's just trying to be healthy and save his beef consumption for the likes of Five Guys.
However, I did not give up so easily and over the years, I have scrounged around to find substitutes. I make this Peruvian Chicken Soup from Saveur and that fills my chicken n' dumpling void (sort of.) And he certainly does not mind slapping chicken tandoori on the grill, so sometimes, I will sneak a salad on the side. Occasionally, I will tell him that I must have chili or I WILL DIE and that he is going to have to Take One for the Team. At least I make it with turkey, he should be grateful. After all, I am sullying my Great-Grandma Daisy's chili with turkey, all in the name of Marital Compromise. And I do make keema with turkey, it still feels like a travesty, but at least I am getting my keema fix.
The one saving grace to all of this is that although Manoj has nixed some important food groups, he is still quite adventurous when it comes to eating. Since we have been together, I have added to our mix Mexican, Mediterranean, Thai and some American-style Chinese (despite my last post, I am okay with home-cooked Amercian style Chinese because I cut the sugar and greasy-fried parts WAY down) Oh! I can even sneak in White People Food (Curried Chicken Divan, anyone?)
Recently, I discovered a Filipino recipe for Chicken Braised in Coconut Sauce with Spinach. I found the recipe in the out-of-print The Asian Bistro Cookbook. Honestly, the recipe was horribly written, so I have cleaned it up here, which works quite neatly in keeping with copyright restrictions. This recipe hits a lot of notes - it is slightly rich because of the coconut milk, but the anchovies add a hint of sour. Also, I just LOVE the cloves in this - they really pique the tastebuds. This is a great cold weather dish because it is so savory and satisfying, but it is not so heavy that it can't be made in the middle of July. .
It is finding recipes like these that keep me going - knowing that I have years to look forward to in trying new things and having fun with cooking. Manoj may not eat vindaloo, beef or much White People Food, but at least he is open to my experimentations.
Although, I'm still a little resentful about the vindaloo.
Okay, is this a White People vs. Brown People thing? Those of you in Monochromatic Matches, have you encountered this? Are we the only couple in the history of coupledom to have to compromise when it comes to the kitchen?
Filipino Braised Chicken in Coconut Sauce With Spinach
Ingredients:
1 1/4 lb chicken breast, cut into bite-sized chunks
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
3/4 tsp salt
12 oz fresh spinach, roughly chopped
6-8 green onions (separate green and white parts, then finely chop)
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tbsp finely chopped celery with leaves
2 tsp ginger powder
2 tsp garlic
2 tbsp finely chopped Italian flat parsley
1 tsp chopped anchovies
1 cup chicken stock
1 can coconut milk (14 oz) (lite or regular will work. I use lite)
Preparation:
1. Rub chicken pieces with the black pepper, cloves, cayenne and 1/4 tsp of the salt. Heat the oil over medium-high heat in a saucepan large enough to hold all the chicken. When the pieces are browned, remove them from the pan, leaving the oil behind in the pan.
2. Add the celery, ginger, garlic and the white portion of the chopped green onions to the pan. Cook until fragrant, a minute or so (if it sticks, add a tablespoon of water or two).
3. Stir in 1 tbsp of the parsley, the anchovies. Cook 30 seconds. (Again, if it sticks, just add a bit of water.)
4. Stir in the chicken stock and remaining salt (1/2 tsp); bring to a boil and cook until reduced by half. Slowly stir in coconut milk.
5. Add the chicken pieces and chopped spinach to the saucepan (don't worry if the spinach is overflowing a bit and seems too much for the pan - it will shrink drastically!) Reduce the heat to low, cover, and cook for 30 minutes.
6. Stir in the green portion of the chopped green onions and the remaining 1 tbsp of parsley. Serve with white rice.
Serves 4
Food-prep time: 30 minutes
Cooking time: 45 minutes
Notes: Don't skip the anchovies! I realize they are not popular, but they add a bit of sourness to this that is essential to offsetting the richness of the coconut milk. I love anchovies, so I either eat the rest of the tin or freeze the excess in a sandwich baggie for the next batch of this dish. Also, the original recipe calls for 2-4 tsp of finely chopped green chilis in Step 2. I leave this out for now because of our kids - however, I think this would be even more awesome spiced up. Also! I have yet to make this dish perfectly - I always mess up the addition of the green onions and add the wrong part at the wrong time. Guess what? It has always come out delicious anyway. Pretty much, this is fail-proof. One final note: This dish is even BETTER re-heated. This would make an excellent Sunday night dish with leftovers saved for later in the week on a busy night.
_______________
I’ll bet what motivated the British to colonize so much of the world is that they were just looking for a decent meal.
- Martha Harrison
December 1989: I begin to learn about the Pakistani and North Indian styles of cooking - prior to that, I had lived on packages of Lipton Rice because I had no idea how to cook ANYTHING. The boyfriend du jour was Pakistani and eventually, in my social circle, I would add a North Indian roommate, later a Vietnamese roommate along with a mix of friends from Egypt, Nigeria, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. It all made sense back then, although it's a little tricky to explain today.
November 2000: I'm no longer dating the Pakistani, my friends are scattered to the far ends of the Earth - I had mostly lost touch with them after college. I happen to meet a nice Catholic, South Indian boy from Kerala. He asked me to dinner and I told him I knew of a place that actually served dosas, a South Indian specialty. He was doubtful because South Indian food is such a rarity here in Kansas City. We met there for dinner and he was quite surprised. On our first date, the event where you display your Mate-Worthy Wares, I told him that I could cook Indian and of course, he was politely doubtful. However, the first time I did cook for him, he couldn't suppress his surprise and said "You really can cook." I took that as a compliment. Early in our relationship, I hunted for a cookbook on Kerala and came upon Maya Kaimal's "Savoring the Spice Coast of India: Fresh Flavors from Kerala". I got to work on learning how to cook with curry leaves, mustard seed, coconut milk and kudampuli. This Kansas girl even learned how to pick a damned good piece of fish. You see, I am nobody's fool. I really, really liked this boy and could see how much he loved food.
We've been together for over 10 years now.
For me, it was completely natural to do all of that - I love to cook and learning new recipes are the height of excitement when it comes to cooking. After all, We Who Love To Cook LIVE for sifting through cookbooks, hunting the Internet and pestering friends for recipes. However, since I learned how to cook primarily from foreigners, I am still weak when it comes to White People Food - I can do chili, ribeye steak, chicken n' dumplings and baked ziti. This has not been too much of an issue since Manoj only likes the baked ziti.
Wait. Actually, it has been an issue.
As much as I love Brown People Food, I am still very much 100% White Meat and it stings that Manoj has nixed two of my childhood favorites, two dishes I absolutely CRAVE on a wintery, snowy day.
Chili or Chicken n' Dumplings
Or, how about a hot, sultry day when a steak slapped on a grill served with a cool, arugula salad and side of fresh-cut cantaloupe is all my gullet requires?
Cue the Greek Chorus, folks.
To make matters worse, he has even blackballed a few of my favorite IndoPak dishes - vindaloo, haleem, nihari and chapli kabobs and chana. Christ on toast! What sort of Indian doesn't like vindaloo? Or chana? Okay...okay... I understand the beef issue. Manoj is anti-beef solely for health reasons - since he is from a Syrian Christian ethnic group, it's not for religious reasons. He's just trying to be healthy and save his beef consumption for the likes of Five Guys.
However, I did not give up so easily and over the years, I have scrounged around to find substitutes. I make this Peruvian Chicken Soup from Saveur and that fills my chicken n' dumpling void (sort of.) And he certainly does not mind slapping chicken tandoori on the grill, so sometimes, I will sneak a salad on the side. Occasionally, I will tell him that I must have chili or I WILL DIE and that he is going to have to Take One for the Team. At least I make it with turkey, he should be grateful. After all, I am sullying my Great-Grandma Daisy's chili with turkey, all in the name of Marital Compromise. And I do make keema with turkey, it still feels like a travesty, but at least I am getting my keema fix.
The one saving grace to all of this is that although Manoj has nixed some important food groups, he is still quite adventurous when it comes to eating. Since we have been together, I have added to our mix Mexican, Mediterranean, Thai and some American-style Chinese (despite my last post, I am okay with home-cooked Amercian style Chinese because I cut the sugar and greasy-fried parts WAY down) Oh! I can even sneak in White People Food (Curried Chicken Divan, anyone?)
Recently, I discovered a Filipino recipe for Chicken Braised in Coconut Sauce with Spinach. I found the recipe in the out-of-print The Asian Bistro Cookbook. Honestly, the recipe was horribly written, so I have cleaned it up here, which works quite neatly in keeping with copyright restrictions. This recipe hits a lot of notes - it is slightly rich because of the coconut milk, but the anchovies add a hint of sour. Also, I just LOVE the cloves in this - they really pique the tastebuds. This is a great cold weather dish because it is so savory and satisfying, but it is not so heavy that it can't be made in the middle of July. .
It is finding recipes like these that keep me going - knowing that I have years to look forward to in trying new things and having fun with cooking. Manoj may not eat vindaloo, beef or much White People Food, but at least he is open to my experimentations.
Although, I'm still a little resentful about the vindaloo.
Okay, is this a White People vs. Brown People thing? Those of you in Monochromatic Matches, have you encountered this? Are we the only couple in the history of coupledom to have to compromise when it comes to the kitchen?
Filipino Braised Chicken in Coconut Sauce With Spinach
Ingredients:
1 1/4 lb chicken breast, cut into bite-sized chunks
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
3/4 tsp salt
12 oz fresh spinach, roughly chopped
6-8 green onions (separate green and white parts, then finely chop)
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tbsp finely chopped celery with leaves
2 tsp ginger powder
2 tsp garlic
2 tbsp finely chopped Italian flat parsley
1 tsp chopped anchovies
1 cup chicken stock
1 can coconut milk (14 oz) (lite or regular will work. I use lite)
Preparation:
1. Rub chicken pieces with the black pepper, cloves, cayenne and 1/4 tsp of the salt. Heat the oil over medium-high heat in a saucepan large enough to hold all the chicken. When the pieces are browned, remove them from the pan, leaving the oil behind in the pan.
2. Add the celery, ginger, garlic and the white portion of the chopped green onions to the pan. Cook until fragrant, a minute or so (if it sticks, add a tablespoon of water or two).
3. Stir in 1 tbsp of the parsley, the anchovies. Cook 30 seconds. (Again, if it sticks, just add a bit of water.)
4. Stir in the chicken stock and remaining salt (1/2 tsp); bring to a boil and cook until reduced by half. Slowly stir in coconut milk.
5. Add the chicken pieces and chopped spinach to the saucepan (don't worry if the spinach is overflowing a bit and seems too much for the pan - it will shrink drastically!) Reduce the heat to low, cover, and cook for 30 minutes.
6. Stir in the green portion of the chopped green onions and the remaining 1 tbsp of parsley. Serve with white rice.
Serves 4
Food-prep time: 30 minutes
Cooking time: 45 minutes
Notes: Don't skip the anchovies! I realize they are not popular, but they add a bit of sourness to this that is essential to offsetting the richness of the coconut milk. I love anchovies, so I either eat the rest of the tin or freeze the excess in a sandwich baggie for the next batch of this dish. Also, the original recipe calls for 2-4 tsp of finely chopped green chilis in Step 2. I leave this out for now because of our kids - however, I think this would be even more awesome spiced up. Also! I have yet to make this dish perfectly - I always mess up the addition of the green onions and add the wrong part at the wrong time. Guess what? It has always come out delicious anyway. Pretty much, this is fail-proof. One final note: This dish is even BETTER re-heated. This would make an excellent Sunday night dish with leftovers saved for later in the week on a busy night.
March 16, 2010
What's cookin', good lookin'?
I love Spring Break - I look forward to having Team Chaos all to myself for an entire week. I have small things planned for us each day. Nothing mind-blowing, but just some fun activities that we will enjoy doing together.
In the category of Good News, it seems I have lost 20 lbs since last summer, when I began a consistent exercise routine. The weight loss cannot be contributed solely to exercise, but rather to some small lifestyle changes that were made at the same time I began exercising - namely, the diminished consumption of pinot noir, Coke, parathas and eating out in general. Sure, I still have the occasional pinot noir, Coke or paratha, but they are treats now. And we do still eat out, but again, it is a treat and I have made specific reductions in my portions.
In the category of Bad News, it seems the Week of Guinness and Irish Soda Bread is upon us. I suspect I will be cutting into that 20 lb weight loss this week. At least until St. Patrick's Day is over. Oof.
__________________________
I did not learn how to cook from my mother or grandmother. At the precious age of 18, I learned how to cook from my first serious boyfriend. And he taught me what he had learned from his mother. With his being Pakistani, my entrance into the world of cooking was probably a little different than most impressionable freshman girls at the University of Kansas that the winter of 1990.
It struck me the other day, that I have been cooking this way for 20 years now. 20 years. Most folks assume that I cook Indian/Pakistani because of Manoj. And I usually let folks believe that fallacy because it is simpler and does not require explanation. But truly, the cuisines of the sub-continent of Asia had longed burrowed their way into my heart and kitchen, long before I met Manoj in the fall of 2000. Shortly after beginning to date Manoj, I bought a book on the cuisine from Kerala, which has nicely rounded things out to my usual North Indian take on things. It also allowed myself further into Manoj's heart via his stomach because I am nobody's fool. Date a Malayalee, learn his food and you are Golden. And ladies, before you know it, you could also be birthin' yourself a little demi-desi.
Anyway!
What is particularly awesome about Manoj is that he is a foodie. Period. And he is willing to try all sorts of cuisine. I love buying cookbooks and trying new recipes on him. Despite the stance of no beef or pork in our house, surprisingly, we can still mix it up in our house a bit.
I do not know if my children will grow up hating chicken caponata and chicken saag as much as I hate pork chops and spaghetti. But I do hope I teach them to taste anything once and to be fearless in their cooking efforts. Because that's what is so damned enjoyable about cooking - being fearless. Trying a dish more than once, even if you screw it up the first few times. Hunting grocery stores for odd ingredients. Having not one, but two packed cupboards with spices for endless culinary opportunity. Tweaking recipes for fun and to give them your own touch.
I am not a great cook, nothing masterful. But I do enjoy cooking and without a doubt, it is far healthier for us to have control over the ingredients and preparation. And that is one of the greatest gifts I would like to pass to my children.
_____________________________
This is one of my favorite raita recipes. It is a cilantro/cumin based one, so it is a bit different than what you will find in most Indian buffets. I have no idea where I got this, but I have been making it for as long as I can remember. When I made it last night, I took careful notes of measurements so that I could share it here. This would pair nicely with a variety of White People Foods - for example, this would make an excellent side dish for just about anything you would serve off a grill.
My Favorite Raita Recipe
2 cups of yogurt
2 tablespoon finely minced onion
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
Mix ingredients together and let sit for at least 30 minutes.
In the category of Good News, it seems I have lost 20 lbs since last summer, when I began a consistent exercise routine. The weight loss cannot be contributed solely to exercise, but rather to some small lifestyle changes that were made at the same time I began exercising - namely, the diminished consumption of pinot noir, Coke, parathas and eating out in general. Sure, I still have the occasional pinot noir, Coke or paratha, but they are treats now. And we do still eat out, but again, it is a treat and I have made specific reductions in my portions.
In the category of Bad News, it seems the Week of Guinness and Irish Soda Bread is upon us. I suspect I will be cutting into that 20 lb weight loss this week. At least until St. Patrick's Day is over. Oof.
__________________________
I did not learn how to cook from my mother or grandmother. At the precious age of 18, I learned how to cook from my first serious boyfriend. And he taught me what he had learned from his mother. With his being Pakistani, my entrance into the world of cooking was probably a little different than most impressionable freshman girls at the University of Kansas that the winter of 1990.
It struck me the other day, that I have been cooking this way for 20 years now. 20 years. Most folks assume that I cook Indian/Pakistani because of Manoj. And I usually let folks believe that fallacy because it is simpler and does not require explanation. But truly, the cuisines of the sub-continent of Asia had longed burrowed their way into my heart and kitchen, long before I met Manoj in the fall of 2000. Shortly after beginning to date Manoj, I bought a book on the cuisine from Kerala, which has nicely rounded things out to my usual North Indian take on things. It also allowed myself further into Manoj's heart via his stomach because I am nobody's fool. Date a Malayalee, learn his food and you are Golden. And ladies, before you know it, you could also be birthin' yourself a little demi-desi.
Anyway!
What is particularly awesome about Manoj is that he is a foodie. Period. And he is willing to try all sorts of cuisine. I love buying cookbooks and trying new recipes on him. Despite the stance of no beef or pork in our house, surprisingly, we can still mix it up in our house a bit.
I do not know if my children will grow up hating chicken caponata and chicken saag as much as I hate pork chops and spaghetti. But I do hope I teach them to taste anything once and to be fearless in their cooking efforts. Because that's what is so damned enjoyable about cooking - being fearless. Trying a dish more than once, even if you screw it up the first few times. Hunting grocery stores for odd ingredients. Having not one, but two packed cupboards with spices for endless culinary opportunity. Tweaking recipes for fun and to give them your own touch.
I am not a great cook, nothing masterful. But I do enjoy cooking and without a doubt, it is far healthier for us to have control over the ingredients and preparation. And that is one of the greatest gifts I would like to pass to my children.
_____________________________
This is one of my favorite raita recipes. It is a cilantro/cumin based one, so it is a bit different than what you will find in most Indian buffets. I have no idea where I got this, but I have been making it for as long as I can remember. When I made it last night, I took careful notes of measurements so that I could share it here. This would pair nicely with a variety of White People Foods - for example, this would make an excellent side dish for just about anything you would serve off a grill.
My Favorite Raita Recipe
2 cups of yogurt
2 tablespoon finely minced onion
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
Mix ingredients together and let sit for at least 30 minutes.
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