Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Tomato Powder

This is an extraordinarily versatile product. It's basically dehydrated tomatoes ground to a powder.

It will last a very long time (even though it might clump in moist weather.) Certainly, in the freezer, it will last indefinitely.

Versatile, did the CC mention versatile?

Mix with hot water to get an instant tomato paste. Sprinkle over a salad for a hint of tomato.

Best use ever - toss with popcorn!

Only one downside. It's seriously pricey - at least in New York. (Maybe some readers could chime in?)

Monday, December 28, 2009

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Christmas Dinner

At a friend's place.





Friday, December 25, 2009

The Bread Child

パン = pan = bread (from the Portuguese)
子 = ko = child

パン粉 = panko = child of bread = breadcrumbs

Quite Christmas-sy, isn't it?

Thursday, December 24, 2009

The Pantry : Part 1

The CC is frequently asked how he manages to make all the stuff he does. Crucial to the entire scheme is a large pantry.

The CC has seen many people's pantries, and it's a very safe bet that the CC's is about 4-5X larger than most. Living in New York where space is at a premium!

How else is one to "effortlessly" whip up different kinds of salads night after night and/or other culinary wonders if one doesn't have the ingredients at hand?

This is definitely one of those "momentum" things. Having stocked it over time, it is one of the easiest things to just keep rolling.

There is shockingly little wastage too, and you don't need to grow your own food neither (Hello, Michael Pollan, daaaaaaah-ling!!!!!!!!)

These should be the staples of your pantry:
  • oils
  • vinegars
  • nuts
  • lentils
  • rices (sic)
  • wheat products
  • dried products (mushroom, fish, flowers)
  • flours
  • canned food.

A Sampling of Oils

Monday, December 21, 2009

Food in the Bay Area : Part 2

Lunch at an izakaya place.

Sansai Soba

Friday, December 18, 2009

Whole Wheat Pasta with Caramelized Onions, Brussel Sprouts & Hazelnuts

Yeah, it's exactly as sex-on-a-plate™ as it sounds.

Three tricks:

  • Fry the onions first and and brussel sprouts after that, slowly and properly (probably take you 15+ mins.)

  • Toasted breadcrumbs are sprinkled on top right before serving.

  • The hazelnuts are toasted and crushed before sprinkling.

  • Wednesday, December 16, 2009

    Food in the Bay Area : Part 1

    Yep, the CC has a new toy! The pictures are better.


    Seafood Paella

    Monday, December 7, 2009

    Poetic Linguistics

    Oyako don is a donburi (Japanese rice bowl dish) made with chicken, rice and a scrambled egg on top.

    oya = parent
    ko = child

    oyako = parent and child

    The chicken is the parent and the egg is the child.

    Thursday, December 3, 2009

    Monday, November 30, 2009

    Mizuna

    Newly "hip" salad green. Mildly peppery, somewhat bitter but less aggressive than arugula. Quite lovely actually, and excellent in stews as well. The Japanese seem to love it (why not? it's quite lovable.)

    Friday, November 27, 2009

    Poached Eggs in Tomato Broth

    The post that has caused the most controversy on this blog has been the one on poached eggs.

    Anyway, poaching is all fine and dandy but if you poach your eggs in some yummy broth, they will taste better. Kinda obvious.

    A classic is to poach it in tomato broth. Even if you just take tomato paste from a can, mix it with hot water, you will get great results.

    This is definitely a great meal in a pot. When you want a nice meal but you are not willing to spend a lot of time to make it.



    The recipe is kinda obvious. Fry some onions, add the broth, salt, lots of black pepper, crack two eggs and let them poach. Some fresh herbs are always welcome (oregano, rosemary, thyme - whatever you have at hand.)

    They were served over some stale bread (which you can't see because of the poaching liquid.)

    Poached Eggs in Tomato Broth

    Turkey Day

    Yesterday, the CC had turkey that didn't suck. In fact, it was delicious. It was free-range, had never been frozen, and was brined.

    Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus!

    Tuesday, November 24, 2009

    Dinner Party

    Greens with Beluga Lentils, Sprouted Almonds in Almond Oil-Vinaigrette

    Sautéed Scallops with Radish in an Anchovy & Rosemary Sauce

    Pasta with Bay Scallops & Cannellini Beans in a Garlic-Lemon-Rosemary Sauce

    Saturday, November 21, 2009

    Anchovy and Rosemary Sauce

    Forget what it's supposed to be slathered on (everything from grilled scallops to lamb), the CC could just eat the sauce all day long.

    Very addictive as a bread dip too.

    Ingredients

    6 fillets anchovies
    4 sprigs rosemary leaves
    4 tbsp lemon juice
    olive oil
    black pepper

    Recipe

    Mash in a mortar and pestle. Add a little white wine or water to thin to needed consistency.

    Don't add any salt. The anchovies have plenty otherwise you'll end up with a very salty sauce. Also, if the anchovies are packed in oil, cut back on the olive oil.

    Tuesday, November 17, 2009

    Red-hot Wisdom

    If you poop red, first ask yourself if you ate beets yesterday.

    Saturday, November 14, 2009

    Risotto with Borlotti Beans & Rosemary

    There is only one thing to say about this - creamy.

    Sex-on-a-plate!!! (and in the sack too if you make this right!)

    Ingredients

    2 cups (fresh) borlotti beans (see instructions below for dried)
    2 cups carnaroli rice
    1 large red onion
    6-8 cloves garlic (read instructions below)
    2 sprigs rosemary (finely chopped)
    1/2 cup white wine
    4 cups broth (homemade)
    1/4 cup chopped parsley
    2 tbsp butter

    sea salt
    lots of black pepper
    1/2 cup grated parmigiano-reggiano

    Recipe

    In a pot, combine the fresh borlotti beans, 4 cloves of garlic, some sea salt. Cover with water, and bring to a boil. Simmer at high for 4-5 minutes, then reduce the temperature and let it simmer at a low heat for 25 mins until borlotti are cooked but not soggy. You may need to add more water. (For dried borlotti, this will be closer to 45 minutes.)

    Do NOT use the pressure cooker. Yes, the CC is a fan of that instrument but you need the liquor (bean broth) made the ol'-fashioned way.

    Separate the beans and the liquor. Combine about 1/4 cup of the beans, the liquor and blend. Should yield about 1 1/2 cups of the bean puree.

    Dice the onions and garlic fine in the meanwhile.

    Heat the broth in a pot and bring to a low simmer.

    In another pot, heat some butter and fry the onions and garlic at a languid heat for 6-8 minutes. Add the rice and coat it all over with the fat. The rice will glisten. Cook for about 3 minutes. Add the white wine, the rosemary and the black pepper.

    Add the hot broth and the bean puree in alternation so that it doesn't cool substantially. Keep stirring. This disturbs the surface starch of the rice and gets it into the broth. That makes the risotto creamy.

    Towards the end, add the rest of the beans. Add the parm just after taking it off the heat.

    Serve with parsley and black pepper on top.

    PS :- After the carb-OD, you may be too pooped to make whoopie. Can't have everything!

    Monday, November 9, 2009

    Mussels in Mustard & Tarragon Sauce

    This is the kinda thing you throw together for a quick dinner when time is at a premium.

    Toss in a salad, the remaining half of the bottle of white wine, and some crusty bread and you just made a comfort dinner that's both quick and delicious.

    Ingredients

    2 lbs mussels

    4 shallots
    1 tbsp butter
    1 tbsp Dijon mustard (generous tbsp!)
    1 sprig tarragon leaves
    2 cups white wine

    salt (?)
    lots of black pepper

    Recipe

    Steam the mussels in a pot (with some water) for a few minutes until they open. Separate from the shells. Filter the mussel juice through a cheesecloth to remove any grit.

    Heat the butter, fry the shallots for 6-7 minutes at a low heat. Add the white wine and the mussel juice, mustard, tarragon and black pepper, and cook for a few minutes. Blend using a hand-blender, and reduce. Test for salt (the mussels are salty enough frequently.)

    Serve with some crusty bread. (The recipe works great with clams too!)

    Sunday, November 8, 2009

    Meta-dishes

    The Indians do it, the Chinese do it; even the propah-Viennese do it.

    The CC has featured meta-recipes before like this one but he should feature more. These are the lifeblood of the "I-need-good-food-but-I-have-a-crazy-job"-crowd.

    Y'all can all thank the CC later!*

    * not that you do, you lousy bastards!

    Wednesday, November 4, 2009

    English, Whither?

    Recently, an anonymous reader left the following note in the CC's email inbox:
    I have a super mutton recipe for it which my mom makes...and have been trying to get an english name for it since she is compiling her own recipe book....Please help!
    This was in reference to the entry on dagad phool on which the CC seems to be one of the very few comprehensive entries on the Web.

    Lady, if you'd left your address or at least read the comments, you would've noted that the CC posted all the names he knows. Fer cryin' out loud, woman, all you have to do is read the goddamn entry. The CC has already done the work for you!

    For the record, the highest number of hits the CC gets, consistently over time, have been on three entries: dagad phool, marati moggu, and naag kesar.

    You can't argue with results.

    One billion Indians gotta get their info somewhere!

    Tuesday, November 3, 2009

    Pasta with Cauliflower, Raisins & Breadcrumbs

    Quite simply this is a sensational dish. It takes a little more time than a simple dish but the tastes and textures are simply out of this world!

    Ingredients

    2 cups whole wheat pasta

    1 cauliflower (cut into florets)
    1/2 cup almonds
    1/4 cup raisins
    4 tbsp white wine vinegar
    1/4 cup breadcrumbs

    1 tbsp capers (chopped)
    4 tbsp parsley (chopped)
    1 tbsp tarragon (chopped)
    1 tbsp chives (chopped)

    olive oil
    sea salt
    black pepper

    Recipe

    Lots of steps but eminently parallelizable. Preheat the oven to 375°F.

    Mix the cauliflower with some olive oil and salt and plenty of black pepper and roast for 30-35 minutes until lightly browned.

    Meanwhile in a skillet, roast the almonds for about 8-10 minutes at medium heat. Set aside.

    Roast the breadcrumbs for just 15-30 seconds. Set aside.

    Mix the raisins with some hot water and the vinegar. Set on a low boil for 5 minutes. (Incidentally, this is one of the rare cases where the microwave excels!)

    Chop the almonds coarsely.

    Cook the pasta in heavily salted water under al dente. Mix all the ingredients (including the water of the raisins) except the breadcrumbs. Top each dish with the breadcrumbs.

    Saturday, October 31, 2009

    Spirit of Halloween Past

    These are from a past Halloween but they were all laced with "surprises" so you might just bite into something that is too salty, or too sour, or too spicy. You pays no money and yet you takes your chances.

    Needless to say, people didn't like the "surprises".

    These were the "normal" ones but the CC couldn't resist hiding a buncha "surprises" in this batch as well.

    Yeah, the CC is evil!

    Thursday, October 29, 2009

    Ravioli with Walnut-Garlic Pesto

    Years ago, the CC had made the walnut sauce from another cookbook (which he will not reveal) and he was all, like, "what's the fuss about? this sucks!"

    Turns out if you skip a few key steps, and a few key ingredients, the thing sucks. Well, who could've guessed that, right?

    Many many many moons later, the CC decided to revisit this Ligurian classic from a different recipe (which involves a teeny-tiny bit more work and features a lot more ingredients,) and he's in love!

    Ingredients

    1 cup walnuts
    2 cloves garlic (chopped)
    1 cup grated parmigiano-reggiano
    1/2 cup stale bread

    salt
    black pepper

    Recipe

    Pour boiling water over the walnuts. Yep, this is the key step actually. Soak for 30 minutes.

    Fish the walnuts out. Soak the bread in the walnut liquid until soft.

    Blend the walnuts, parm, garlic, bread, salt and pepper to a smooth sauce. You can add more of the walnut liquid to get the thing going.

    PS :- The dish about clearly has chopped parsley and black pepper but there's nothing more there. Full disclosure, folks, full disclosure!

    Tuesday, October 27, 2009

    Vinaigrette of the Gods

    Three simple things - fig vinegar, hazelnut oil, and kala namak (Indian black salt.)

    Yes, yes, you can thank the CC later!

    Monday, October 26, 2009

    Taste of India

    Some of the choices are questionable, and there are notable omissions but that is inevitable given the format. Not bad overall. Worth debating about.

    (Source: FoaFoaF = "friend of a friend of a friend". If somebody provides accurate attribution rights, the CC will be happy to.)

    Saturday, October 24, 2009

    Scrambled Eggs with Tarragon

    When hunger beckons, and speed is at a premium - eggs, tomato paste, tarragon, salt and pepper, scrambled, and served over sourdough toast.

    Tuesday, October 20, 2009

    Frozen Elegance

    Frozen Food (with String Beans) 1977.

    Irving Penn is better known for his fashion photography but never before has frozen food looked so elegant. It almost makes you want to eat it.

    Wednesday, October 14, 2009

    Pasta with Butternut Squash, Sage and Pine Nuts

    This utterly simple dish is dazzling array of textures and of tastes, and yet is so beguilingly easy that can easily be made at a moment's notice.

    Interestingly, as my dinner companion pointed out the dish follows all the aesthetic and culinary rules of Japanese washoku inspite of the fact that the dish is Italian, of course. The rules of go shiki (five colors) and go mi (five tastes) and go ho (five ways = different methods) are effortlessly satisfied.

    It's success is precisely that it's visually arresting (Toulouse-Lautrec might be jealous) and texturally and tastewise different with every bite.

    Ingredients

    1 large red onion
    2-3 cloves garlic (chopped into thin segments)
    4-5 dried red chillies
    1 butternut squash (diced into large-ish cubes)
    salt
    black pepper
    1/4 cup sage (chiffonaded)
    1/2 cup pine nuts
    olive oil

    2 cups pasta
    grated parmigiano-reggiano

    Recipe

    Toast the pine nuts in a skillet. Set aside.

    In a pot, heat some olive oil at a medium-low heat. Fry the onion, garlic and red chillies. Do not hurry this process. When the onions are limp but not caramelized, they will rerelease the oil they have absorbed. Add the butternut squash and fry languidly. Add the salt, and liberal amounts of black pepper.

    Add some water, and cover and let the squash soften. The mixture should be just slightly on the wet side.

    Cook some pasta al dente in heavily-salted water.

    When the pasta is done, add the sage to the squash mixture, and toss with the pasta.

    Add the parmigiano-reggiano and the toasted pine nuts as toppings.

    Monday, October 12, 2009

    Chilli Corn Toast

    Well, the CC's been getting a cornucopia (sic) of freshly-picked corn courtesy of a late summer blast.

    The CC decided to turn it into an old childhood favorite that his mom probably picked up from some magazine. It's a perfect dish for hors d'oeuvres or along with a salad and a glass of wine, a light dinner.

    Guaranteed to please children of all ages!

    Ingredients

    4 ears corn (shucked)
    1/2 cup milk
    4 tbsp corn flour
    butter
    6-8 Thai green chillies
    salt
    black pepper

    bread (for the toast)

    Recipe

    The idea is to make a béchamel using the corn flour instead of regular flour. Add the chillies and the corn. Let it cook. Crush the corn lightly.

    Toast some bread lightly; spread the mixture over it, and pop in the oven at 375°F for 20 mins or so.

    Friday, October 9, 2009

    Ragda Pattice

    Most people know Mumbai (or Bombay) in connection to either Finance or Bollywood. What is less known is the sheer plethora of completely scrumplicious street food on display. You could spend months there just eating those alone.

    This recipe here is one of those delights that make you want to slap your mom in sheer glee!

    Ragda Pattice (as traditionally spelt) clearly derived from Ragda Patties are fried mashed potato-disks (patties) topped with a lentil sauce (ragda) which you can then tailor to your taste by adding a variety of sauces - traditionally, at least three - a sweet-sour date-tamarind chutney, a cilantro chutney, and a fiery mint sauce. Also, the Indian love of raw onions mixed with lime and cilantro means these are added on top.

    There is nothing subtle about this recipe. Both the date-tamarind chutney and the mint one have one of those over-the-top "hit-me-again" tastes.

    The long list of ingredients and sauces may put you off but this is better suited to a party where the guests can mix-n-match whatever toppings they like for themselves.

    You might see minor variations of this recipe on the web but if you see a recipe that calls for yogurt, it is bogus!

    Clearly those people have never been to Mumbai. Yogurt in this dish is akin to mayonnaise in traditional Chinese food - an act of heresy which should be followed up by actually slapping that person's mom!

    † just an expression, folks!

    Ragda

    Ingredients

    2 cups vatana (dried peas)
    1 onion
    1 piece ginger
    3 green chillies
    1/2 tbsp ground coriander seeds
    1/2 tbsp ground cumin seeds
    1 tbsp garam masala
    2 tbsp amchur (ground mango powder)
    1 tsp ground red chilli powder
    1 tsp turmeric powder
    salt (to taste)

    Recipe

    Soak the dried peas overnight. Cook in a pressure cooker or in 6-8 cups water until tender but not mushy.

    Chop the onions, ginger, garlic in a food processor. Heat some oil, and fry the lot. Add the cooked dried peas along with the ground cumin-coriander mixture, and the chilli powder and the turmeric. Add some water if necessary. The mixture should just be slightly sloppy. Towards the end add the garam masala and the amchur.

    You can cook this ahead of time. It actually improves overnight.

    Patties

    Ingredients

    4 potatoes
    salt

    Recipe

    Boil the potatoes in salted water. Peel and mash. Mix with your hands to get a smooth-ish mixture. Do NOT add extra water. The mixture should be shapeable by hand.

    Make into disks and pan-fry. The CC has also had great success with brushing them with oil on both sides and baking them in a 450°F oven for 45 minutes, flipping them half-way. (The latter method is clearly the scalable one!)

    A modest advice to the baking-kind. Poke a few fork-pricks in the patties to release moisture. That's what frying does. Nobody will notice the pricks but the lot will cook faster. (Shocking how basic science manifests itself in food!)

    Date-Tamarind Chutney

    Ingredients

    6 tamarind pods (de-seeded)
    12-14 dates (coarsely chopped)
    1 tsp ground cumin
    1/2 tsp ground red chilli powder
    1 tsp black salt (kala namak)

    Recipe

    The black salt is absolutely indispensable. Without it, you will simply not get the tang that is this chutney!

    Blend all the stuff with water in a blender into a sauce which is easily pourable. Use less water initially; you can always dilute it later.

    This is also the only one of the three chutneys that can be successfully frozen to no detriment.

    Cilantro Chutney

    Ingredients

    2 bunches cilantro
    4 green chillies
    1/4 cup peanuts
    salt

    Recipe

    Blend in a blender.

    Mint Chutney

    Ingredients

    2 cups mint
    8 green chillies
    1/8 cup peanuts
    salt

    Recipe

    Blend in a blender. This chutney is noticeably thinner than the previous one. Also, packs a lot more fiery punch!

    Onion Mixture

    Ingredients

    1 red onion (finely diced)
    2 limes juiced
    1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
    salt

    Recipe

    Mix. What else?

    Wednesday, October 7, 2009

    The "other" L-O-V-E

    (Site: Willets-ramp entrance to Flushing Meadows.)

    Tuesday, October 6, 2009

    Sane Snail Advice

    From Jane Grigson's book Good Things:
    If you are likely to eat stuffed snails regularly, it's worth investing in snail tongs and forks (as well as in snail plates.) One can manage quite efficiently, though, with a pile of paper napkins, and a set of needles stuck into corks.
    Now that's the kinda practical advice that the CC loves rather than the modern purveyors of flim-flam devices!

    Sunday, October 4, 2009

    Yumurtali Ispanak

    This classic Turkish breakfast dish consists of spinach and eggs.

    The eggs are not quite fried, and not quite poached, and not quite baked sur le plat. It's somewhere between all three. However, it's really easy to make and was a sleeper hit at today's Sunday brunch.

    The CC served the dish over toasted sourdough (as seen below.)

    A note about the sumac. This dish is simply not the same without it!

    Borrowing an expression from The Big Lebowski, "it ties the dish together".

    Ingredients

    3-4 eggs
    1 red onion (finely diced)
    2 bunches spinach (chopped loosely)
    1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
    1/2 tsp cumin (ground)
    1/2 tsp whole black pepper (ground)
    1 tbsp tomato paste

    1 tsp ground sumac

    olive oil
    sea salt

    Recipe

    Fry the onions in olive oil at a low heat. Add the pepper flakes, cumin, black pepper and salt. Add the tomato paste and fry. Finally add the chopped spinach.

    The spinach will release water. Keep frying it till it is wilted and turns dark green. Separate out spaces to crack the eggs. Crack one egg in each space.

    Cover the pan and cook until done. The CC likes his eggs mollet which took 3 minutes.

    Sprinkle the ground sumac over the eggs when serving.

    Friday, October 2, 2009

    Mushroom Ravioli in Corn Sauce

    A year ago, the CC ate a corn agnolotti in a corn reduction at a fancy restaurant at the height of summer. The dish simply blew him away. The sauce had a silky-smooth mouth feel, and the essence of the concentrated corn flavor sang the song of summer.

    Clearly, this was a recipe worth emulating!

    So this summer, the CC finally got his hands on some excellent just-picked-that-morning corn (we've had a late summer here!) Naturally, reproducing the recipe was on the cards.

    Well, the CC wasn't going to attempt the corn agnolotti. One may experiment but one should have a full understanding of one's own limitations. So the mushroom ravioli came from Raffetto's.

    Oh, and how did the reproduction go?

    Well, gentle reader, if it had gone badly, the CC would hardly have blogged about it, would he?

    It's like the rules of a slasher movie where the heroine must be in danger, or a WWII movie with fighter planes going down in flames. There is just no escaping the conventions of the genre.

    Corn Sauce

    Ingredients

    8 ears corn
    1 large red onion (diced)
    2 cloves garlic (chopped coarsely)
    8 sprigs thyme

    corn flour
    sea salt
    black pepper (lots!)

    basil

    Recipe

    The recipe has multiple stages but they are pretty easy.

    Shuck the corn kernels but reserve the corn stalks. Split them into two or three pieces each.

    Fry the onions and garlic at medium low heat. When they are sufficiently limp but not colored, add the corn stalks and fry. Add 2/3-rds of the corn kernels, salt, lots and lots of black pepper, the thyme. Add about 6 cups of water.

    Bring to a boil. Simmer at low heat for 25-30 minutes. Fish out the thyme (it's easier if you tie the thyme in a bundle using kitchen twine.)

    Blend the mixture. Pass through a fine sieve (this is the hardest part but it's totally necessary to get that silky mouth feel.)

    Bring the mixture to a low boil. Add the rest of the corn kernels. Reduce for about 10 minutes. Towards the end, whisk in some corn flour to get a smooth unctuous sauce.

    Toss in the basil right before serving.

    Wednesday, September 30, 2009

    Slicing Sandwiches

    Everyone claims that sandwiches taste the same way whether cut in half or on the diagonal but anyone with taste knows the "truth" - that diagonal-cut ones taste better!

    To all that have struggled with this (and you know who you are!) you are not alone.

    The CC is with you!

    Tuesday, September 29, 2009

    Ratatouille

    Ratatouille over Couscous

    Saturday, September 26, 2009

    Haitian Meal

    The CC had been hankering for a Haitian meal and he received a ton of the right veggies courtesy of a friend's CSA so he decided to go all out and prepare a Haitian meal.

    He had some vegetarian friends over for dinner so the beef was substituted by tempeh (the only reasonable thing that can stand up to a long marinade, and long cooking times without falling apart.)

    Corn Fritters with Pikliz

    Rice & Beans
    Tempeh in Creole Sauce

    (Source: Fine Haitian Cuisine by Mona Cassion Ménager.)

    Beef in Creole Sauce

    Ingredients

    2 pounds beef (rump pot roast, sirloin tip or any beef cut suitable for braising)
    1 bitter orange, or 2 lemons + 1 orange
    1 1/2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
    1 habanero chile
    1/4 teaspoon black pepper
    pinch of ground cloves
    1 tbsp chopped chives
    1/2 tsp salt
    1 cup white onion shavings
    1/4 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf pasley
    1 sprig of thyme
    5 garlic cloves, peeled, and crushed
    1 tbsp tomato paste diluted in 1 cup boiled water
    4 cups boiled water
    1 sliced white onion (for sauce)
    1 sliced bell pepper (for sauce)

    Recipe

    Trim excess fat from beef. Cut meat crosswise into six fairly equal pieces. Rub meat with bitter orange. Rinse quickly with very hot water. Drain carefully. Put meat in a bowl and coat with orange juice, vinegar, chile, black pepper, cloves, chives, salt, onion, parsley, and thyme. Cover with plastic wrap, and marinate in a cool place for 30 minutes to 1 hour in the refrigerator or overnight.

    Heat 2 tablespoons oil in a heavy lidded 5-quart pan over high setting. Reserving marinade, add meat, and saute until beginning to brown, about 10 minutes. Add marinade, reduce heat to medium, cover, and cook until juice thickens, about 10 to 12 minutes.

    Meanwhile, heat remaining oil in a 3-quart heavy pan over medium high setting. Add garlic and sautee for 1 minute. Add diluted tomato paste and boil uncovered until all liquid evaporates, 15 to 20 minutes. Stir-fry for about 1 minute. Add 3 cups of boiled water to tomato paste, mix well, and pour it over meat. Cover and cook until all liquid evaporates, about 45 minutes. The sauce should be thick. Remove meat and chile from the sauce. Season sauce with additional salt and pepper if desired. Add 1 cup of boiled water to the sauce, and stir in. Add meat and reserved chile. Reduce, uncovered, over medium heat until sauce thickens, about 5 to 7 minutes. Add onion and bell pepper slices during the last minute. Discard chile. Serve hot.

    Rice and Beans

    Ingredients

    1/2 cup red kidney beans (soaked)
    1/4 heaped tsp ground black pepper
    1/4 tsp ground cloves
    3 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
    1 tbsp minced chives
    1/2 cup white onion (finely diced)
    1/2 cup shallots (finely diced)
    1 habanero chile
    1/4 cup red bell pepper (diced)
    2 bouillon cubes
    1/4 tsp ground cayenne pepper
    3 cups bean cooking liquid (read below)
    2-3 sprigs thyme
    1 sprig parsley
    2 cups long-grain rice

    Recipe

    Wash the beans, and bring to boil with 8 cups of water. Cover, and cook over medium heat with the lid ajar until the beans are cooked through, 45 minutes to 1 hour. The beans should hold their shape. Drain but reserve the cooking liquid.

    Heat 2 tsp oil in a heavy pan, over medium heat. Add the beans and sauté until the beans are crispy about 7 minutes. Add black pepper and the cloves at the last minute. Set aside.

    Heat 2 tsp oil in the same pan over medium heat. Add the garlic and sauté till slightly golden. Add the onion, shallots, chile, chives and diced red bell pepper and sauté for 3-5 minutes. Add the rice and fry to coat with the oil. Add the bouillon cubes, cayenne pepper, thyme, salt and parsley along with the 3 cups of cooking liquid and the reserved beans.

    Cook till the rice is done. (You may need to add additional cooking liquid or water.)

    Friday, September 25, 2009

    Roasted Summer Vegetables with Rosemary

    Served on a bed of Israeli couscous with a dash of tartness added by a splash of vinegar.

    Tuesday, September 22, 2009

    Friday, September 18, 2009

    Practical Lessons for Urban Herbs

    As the CC has mentioned, he acquired a ton of them.

    At the end of this summer, more than half have died. The survivors are mint, rosemary, basil and sage.

    Now, admittedly, this has been the worst summer on record in terms of sunlight but still...

    Clearly, the CC's skills do not extend to plants and their maintenance!

    We shall see how many make it through the winter. The CC is not optimistic.

    Still, there are lessons to be learnt and there's always next year. Here's what the CC has learnt so far:
    1. Replanting is a skill. You need to pack the dirt just tight enough to transmit water to the roots but not so tight as to inhibit them. (This was the CC's biggest mistake!)

    2. Don't buy plants at the farmers' market early in the season. Yes, the CC knows you are chomping at the bit but what is good in an open field simply isn't good enough in an apartment or even a terrace. Wait. Get robust herbs and you will get robust urban herbs.

    3. Houseplants in summer need a little more water than is expected. Whether it's the urban concrete jungle or what, the CC doesn't know but it's true. Conversely, they need a lot less water when it's cooler. So you need to turn into a lean, mean, weather machine.

    Wednesday, September 16, 2009

    Omnivore

    Something about growing plants and snipping parts off them appeals to both my inner carnivore and my inner vegetarian!

    Tuesday, September 15, 2009

    Habañero

    Not to be confused with habañera which is a Cuban musical genre.

    There is only one word for these babies - fire. Use with extreme caution. But they have a smoky, citrusy fiery taste that is both unmistakable and irrestible to the heat-lovers.

    Monday, September 14, 2009

    "Thai" Salad with Cucumbers & Peanuts

    There's nothing "Thai" about the salad but it's made by keeping Thai cooking principles firmly in mind.

    The dressing was made by blending galangal, Thai green chillies, some kaffir lime leaves and lemongrass in water and passing the result through a sieve. To that was added some nahm pla (fish sauce), lime juice and palm sugar, and turned into a vinaigrette. The resulting vinaigrette was complex - salty, sweet, sour, hot with just a little bit of a bitter edge. In short, "Thai".

    To top it all there were thinly sliced cucumbers sprinkled with fine sea salt and crushed peanuts.

    How you ask, gentle reader, did it taste?

    It fuckin' kicked ass is what it did!

    Sunday, September 13, 2009

    The Hamburger

    Book by Josh Ozersky about the cultural history of the hamburger. Needless to say, the artifact is a lot more complex than one would've assumed. Who knew that White Castle was the original chain but for very complex reasons (both franchise-related and financial) lost out to the McD?

    Great info on the reinvention of the burger in the 1970's as a 50's concept even though it was nowhere near as ubiquitous in the 50's. Rather, it was more of a 60's thing.

    To put it differently, the nostalgia for the burger 'n shakes in the 50's never existed. It's a 70's marketing campaign imposing a false structure on past memory that never was.

    And kudos to the author for compressing the entire narrative into a compact, well-edited, comprehensively-documented 133 pages!

    Saturday, September 12, 2009

    Pikliz

    This is a Haitian condiment/dipping sauce that packs a fiery punch.

    First, the vegetables and spices are layered (cabbage, peppers, cloves, peppercorns, thyme, onions, peas, habañeros, garlic, french beans, carrots) with sea salt thrown in every few layers.

    The dish cannot be made without habañeros so if you can't find any, don't bother to make it.

    Over this is poured boiling vinegar and the whole lot sealed. It can be refrigerated and will last a long time.

    (Oh, and the boiling vinegar stinks up the house but the pickle is worth it!)

    Wednesday, September 9, 2009

    Why doesn't the CC ever clam up?

    Linguini with Clams

    Tuesday, September 8, 2009

    Tomato Orgy

    A reader sent in their pictures of their canning tomato sauce for the summer.