Monday, March 17, 2008

Sheesh


This our spice cabinet. The stove is underneath. Occasionally spice jars fall in the pots and pans.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Gulasch

Most of you might think that gulasch is an Hungarian recipe. You would be... mostly right. It's one of those dishes that all the folks in the general region make, like barbecue. You've got North Carolina barbecue, Kansas City barbecue, etc. So, in Europe, you've got German gulasch, Austrian gulasch, Hungarian gulasch, etc. I am German, and so I make German gulasch. The recipe that follows is at least two generations old. I got it from my mother, who got it from her mother.
This recipe is so good, especially if you're really in the mood for some meat. It is great as both a soup and an entree with gravy. Serve over egg noodles, or spaetzle, the German egg noodle that you may find in international foods stores. If you're feeling especially German, serve a fried egg on top of the noodle and gulasch.

Ingredients:

shortening or lard
2-2 1/2 lb. beef for braising
2 large onions, diced
1 clove garlic, diced
1 Tb. paprika
1 cup water
1 1/2 Tb. all purpose flour
2 cups beef bouillon
ketchup
nutmeg
curry powder
1/4 cup heavy or sour cream

Melt the shortening in a large pot. Saute the onions in it for about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until golden.
Sprinkle the onion and garlic with the paprika and mix about. Add the beef and cook partially.
Add the water and bring to a boil. Mix in the flour, then add the bouillon. Add the other seasonings and taste. Adjust flavoring and add the cream. Lower the heat and simmer for about 1 1/2 hours. Taste and adjust seasoning before serving with noodles and a salad.

Currently I'm without the camera or ability to upload photos, but as soon as I have the ability, I'll put the photos of the recipe up. It's easy enough, though.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Oatmeal Soda Bread

I am lucky. The first time I ate Irish soda bread was in Ireland. It was so good that the first loaf of bread I made after coming back was soda bread. Unfortunately, I misread the recipe and put in 1 tablespoon of baking soda instead of 1 teaspoon. Don't do that. The bread was consigned to be dog treats, and I didn't try making soda bread for two years. Yeast breads, after all, are delicious. I finally made this bread back in January after finding the recipe on All Recipes. I loved its taste, ease, and flexibility. At this point, I've changed the recipe a decent amount and call it my own.
The original recipe called for sour cream, but I often have leftover plain yogurt around and have found that it works just as well. I haven't tried buttermilk yet, but I've found that it's generally a good substitute. The sultanas and caraway seeds are more authentic, but dried currants or cranberries are tasty. Even plain, this is a good bread.
This bread is a great introduction to baking beyond chocolate chip cookies. I worked with at-risk pre-schoolers this last year and made this bread as a work-time activity. The three most behind kids in the class were my helpers, and they loved making it. Even with quite a bit of flour lost due to the flinging of mixing spoons, the bread tasted great.


Ingredients:

1 cup whole wheat flour 8 oz. sour cream or plain yogurt
2 1/2 cups AP flour 3/4 cup skim or lowfat milk
1/2 cup uncooked oatmeal 2 Tb. honey
1 tsp. baking powder 1 Tb. white sugar
1 tsp. baking soda 1/4 cup melted butter
1 tsp. salt 1/4-1/3 cup sultanas (golden raisins)
2 Tb. caraway seeds

1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees, remembering to place in your baking stone. Otherwise, butter two loaf pans. Mix together the flours, oatmeal, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a large bowl.


2. Mix the sour cream or yogurt, milk, honey, and sugar in a medium bowl.


3. Add the milk mixture to the flours and stir until just blended. Stir in the butter. The dough will be sticky.

4. Add the sultanas and caraway, mixing until evenly dispersed.

5. Sprinkle cornmeal on your hot baking stone and plop the dough on it, or divide the dough evenly between the two prepared loaf pans.
6. Bake for about 40 minutes. Allow to cool on a rack for at least 20 minutes before cutting.

Friday, March 9, 2007

Jalapeno Mac & Cheese

I love mac & cheese. It is the best dinner in the world, whether you're making homemade with a time-consuming white sauce as the base, or Food Lion brand from a box. It's tried many variations, looking for the perfect version for a hurried mid-week meal. I've found that any version that takes less than twenty minutes of active time and thirty minutes of baking is perfect. Mac & cheese (so far) is impossible to mess up.

I discovered this recipe for jalapeno mac & cheese in the Washington Post in 2002 or 2003. I remember it called for a mix of cheddar and queso fresco. Since at the time they didn't carry queso fresco in my nearest grocery store, I improvised. I've continued improvising over the years and even lost the recipe during a fit of cleaning. By this point, I consider the recipe my own, but inspired by that original one. Here it is:

3/4 lb. of small pasta shapes, I prefer spiral shapes, but had penne on hand for these photos
1 medium onion
1 15 oz. can of diced tomatoes
2-3 jalapeno peppers, can use canned or fresh but fresh will be hotter
2 cups shredded sharp cheddar
2 cups shredded Monterey jack
1 egg
1/2-1 cup milk
garlic
salt and pepper
hot sauce


While doing prep work, cook the pasta. Chop the onion and saute in olive oil with the tomatoes, garlic, and jalapenos for 5-10 minutes, until hot and juicy.

Mix the onions with 3/4 of your cheese. Reserve one cup of the mixed cheeses. When the pasta is done, drain and mix it with the cheese and spoon into a lightly greased baking dish.

Beat the egg into the milk, adding enough milk to get the whole dish wet. This will bind the mac & cheese. Add salt, pepper, and hot sauce to your taste. Pour the milk mixture all over the mac & cheese. Place in a pre-heated 350-degree oven for about 20-25 minutes.

Sprinkle the remaining cheese on the mac, then place back in the oven for about 5 minutes, until the cheese melts and forms a nice crust. Cheezalicious!

Sunday, February 11, 2007

A Quicky: Spinach Quiche

Tonight I'm incredibly excited. I made my first recipe ever from Julia Child's (et al) Mastering the Art of French Cooking. I've loved Julia Child since I became interested in cooking, but never had any of her cookbooks. Then Darren's school began renovations, and, as all schools do during renovations or relocations, threw away library books. Along with far too many novels, Darren brought home a 1966 of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, before there was even a Volume 2. Yay! So tonight I made a spinach quiche, or a quicky, as Darren likes to call them.
To make the quiche, I made a pate brisee (short crust) pp. 139-141, frozen spinach pp. 575-576, and the quiche itself, p. 153. I would have used fresh spinach, but you can't find fresh, non-bagged, non-baby spinach around here for love or money. Luckily, the book has great tips for using frozen vegetables.
I can't explain the whole quiche recipe here, because of copyright laws, but I definitely recommend the Art of French Cooking recipe. The only problem with using Mastering the Art of French Cooking, at least an older version, is that it is written for the tastes of at least thirty or forty years ago. That means everything will have more fat, more butter, and more salt than you would normally use. After eating two small pieces of quiche, Darren and I felt like bloated seals. Next time I make this, I'm going to cut down on butter and salt.
But putting first things first, you've got to make the crust. I made it in the food processor, then chilled in the freezer for an hour. Then I baked it blind, which does not involve handkerchiefs, but instead rice and aluminum foil. You pre-bake a crust weighted down with rice, beans, or actual pie weights, then let it cool slightly before filling.
Then comes the spinach. Julia et al. give a technique which I love, but Darren dislikes. Try is and see. Defrost your spinach (don't use chopped) slightly, then chop up the square of spinach. Then cook it up. If following Art's recipe, you'll cook it with lots of butter. By chopping the frozen spinach, it becomes chopped spinach but doesn't fall apart and cooks much more quickly than a big frozen chunk. Add salt, pepper, nutmeg, and anything else you think tastes good.

With your partially baked crust and butter spinach, you've almost got a quiche. According to the recipe, mix up cream or milk, eggs, and maybe some Swiss or Gruyere cheese. Mix together with the spinach and spoon into the crust. I like to use a tart pan with a removable bottom, as it's easier to put the quiche on a platter. Make sure to butter the pan well, or it will stick.
Often, your pie or tart pan will be too small to contain all the filling. In that dire situation, make timbales. We baked the spinach-egg mixture with a little more cheese and then reheated them the next morning for breakfast with a little crusty bread. Bon appetit!

Spicy Chocolate

When you get tired of hot cider, a wonderful, comforting substitute is hot chocolate. Even better than traditional hot chocolate is spiced chocolate. This recipe comes Bon Appetit via Kim O'Donnel's Washington Post food blog, which is a featured link on this site. Now, granted, this hot chocolate takes more time, effort, and ingredients than the typical powdered mix, but is worth it as a winter treat. I made it for the first time last weekend, and it was wonderful. My husband and I had been craving ice cream, and were on the verge of going out to get a pint. After drinking our spicy hot chocolate, we forgot about ice cream completely.


The longest step is simmering all the spices together with the milk, and trying to keep a skim from forming. I used 2% milk instead of whole, and found the hot chocolate didn't feel thin at all.
After adding the cocoa and sugar, nothing was left to do but drink the chocolate. Unfortunately, we didn't actually feel like it a few nights ago. So I strained it and put it in the fridge. On Sunday morning, Darren and I reheated the chocolate, adding a little more milk to get any chocolate out which had coagulated on the bottom of the bowl.
The hot chocolate took only a short time to reheat, and still tasted great. The hot pepper flavor was a little more pronounced, so I recommend cutting down on that if you plan to save the hot chocolate for later. Altogether the tastes of cinnamon, star anise, and cardamom make a wonderful hot beverage that is perfect for customizing to your own preferences.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

The Problems of Blogging and Cooking

Beginning to blog is pretty difficult for me. I think it's because of the cooking issue. Since my last posting, I've made a few cool things that would be great to post. I've made my first recipe from The Joy of Cooking, yummy panko crusted pork chops with a tomato sauce my husband made, and the best ever hot chocolate last night. It's a recipe for spiced hot chocolate that I found on the Washington Post's site and have been wanting to make for about a month. Darren and I were craving ice cream, and the hot chocolate totally sated that desire, and gave us both a lot of calcium. But I can't post an entry about them. Why? I keep forgetting to take pictures. The camera is in the kitchen, but I just cook and lose track of the blogging necessities. I'll try tonight.