12.6.13

Pappardelle con funghi

Ingredients:
Fresh or homemade pappardelle (similar to fettuccine but 2-3 cm wide)
Butter, 3 tbsp
Olive oil, 3 tbsp
Pancetta, 1/2 lb, thickly sliced (~1/4 inch) and coarsely chopped
Medium yellow onions, 2, coarsely chopped
Fresh mushrooms, 2 lb, ideally including shiitake, crimin, chanterelle and portabella, roughly chopped
Chicken stock, 1/2 cup
Sage, 2 tbsp, chopped
Garlic, 2-3 tbsp, crushed and finely chopped
Sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Pecorino or parmigiano-reggiano to taste, finely and freshly grated

Directions:
1. Prepare pappardelle according to the recipe here or purchase fresh pappardelle and cook.
2. Heat 1 tbsp of butter with 1 tbsp olive oil.
3. Lightly brown pancetta in butter and olive oil.
4. Add garlic and onions and sauté until tender and translucent, 5-10 minutes. Set aside.
5. Add the second tbsp of butter and olive oil and raise heat to high.
6. Add half of the mushrooms and sauté until they just begin to release liquid and soften. Set aside in bowl with pancetta, garlic and onion.
7. Repeat steps 5 and 6 with last tbsp of butter and olive oil and other half of mushrooms.
8. Heat the entire mushroom mixture over high heat, adding stock as needed to add moisture.
9. Stir in sage and season, then toss with pasta and serve.
10. Grate pecorino or parmigiano over the top if desired.

The story:
Mushroom sauces are among my favorite dishes - and are nearly impossible to mess up. (I'll be following this up with a slightly trickier mushroom risotto.) I also adore wide noodles - anything wider than spaghetti, really, and particularly tagliatelle and pappardelle, but the preference extends to non-Italian noodles (for instance, I prefer the wide rice noodles in pad see ew to pad thai noodles). Something about the texture is much more satisfying and very hearty.
Suboptimal cooking conditions

I rarely use cookbooks, but this recipe comes from one of my three favorites, the Williams-Sonoma Complete Entertaining Cookbook, which my parents, every practical, gave to me for Christmas during my first year away at university. Sadly, most of the recipes were not well-suited to a dorm room equipped with only a micro-fridge, but I bided my time and have been working my way through it every since.

What are my other two favorite cookbooks? I'll be sharing some recipes from them soon but here's a sneak peak:
- Ad Hoc At Home
Betty Crocker's International Cookbook

I have eclectic taste.

11.6.13

Salt-roasted turkey with lemon, thyme and oregano

Ingredients:
Salt rub
1/2 cup coarse sea salt (1/4 cup if just cooking the breast)
Lemon thyme, chopped, 2 tbsp
Fresh oregano, chopped, 2 tbsp (I treat these amounts as suggestions)
Lemon peel, finely grated, 3 tbsp
Garlic, crushed and finely chopped, 4 tbsp
Black pepper, freshly ground, 1 tbsp
Everything else
Turkey, 14-16 lb (if you are feeling ambitious, you can save the neck, heart and gizzard for making turkey stock; if you are feeling less ambitious - and have a smaller party in mind - a 6 lb breast and two 1 lb legs also cooks beautifully)
Lemons, coarsely chopped, 3
Celery stalks, chopped, 2 (feel free to leave out, I don't think celery adds any flavor)
Medium yellow onion, chopped, 1
Fresh oregano, chopped 2 tbsp
Fresh lemon thyme, chopped, 3 tbsp (can be difficult to find, but so fabulous that I suggest buying a small plant and freezing portions all year).
Black pepper, freshly ground, 1 tbsp
Coarse sea salt, 1 tbsp
Extra-virgin olive oil, divided, 1/2 cup
Fresh lemon juice, divided, 6 tbsp or 2 lemons
Chicken or turkey stock, divided, 3-5 cups
Turkey-size oven bag (optional)

Directions:
1. Mix all ingredients for salt rub in small bowl. Set aside for now.
2. Rinse turkey. 
3. Pull out metal insert that holds legs and remove fat pads from neck and main cavities. 
4. Sprinkle 4 tablespoons salt rub inside cavities. 
5. If using bag, slide bird into oven bag. 
6. Sprinkle remaining salt rub over bird. 
7. Place bag or bird alone on rimmed baking sheet and refrigerate for 24 hours.
8. The next day: Set rack at lowest position in oven and preheat to 350°F. 
9. Combine lemons, celery, onion, oregano, thyme, salt, pepper, 1/4 cup olive oil, and 3 tbsp lemon juice in large bowl. 
10. Spoon into main cavity. 
11. Whisk 1/4 cup olive oil and 3 tbsp lemon juice in small bowl. 
12. Place turkey on rack in roasting pan (when I made the breast alone, I didn't own a roasting pan with a rack yet; I used a Le Creuset Dutch oven and it turned out delicious, although the bottom will not crisp as nicely) and brush with oil mixture.
13. Pour 2 cups stock into roasting pan. Roast turkey 1 hour. 
14. Brush all over with remaining lemon oil. Roast turkey 45 minutes (30 minutes for breast alone). 
15. Pour 1 cup stock into pan. Roast 45 minutes (30 minutes for breast alone). If making just the breast and leg, skip to step 18.  
16. Add 1/2 cup or more of stock to pan to maintain liquid level. Turn pan around (not necessary for breast alone). 
17. Roast until thermometer inserted into thickest part of thigh registers 165°F, about 45 minutes longer. 
18. Transfer turkey to platter; reserve pan with juices. 
19. Tent turkey loosely with foil; let rest 30 to 45 minutes before serving. 

The story:
This recipe was adapted from the November 2010 Thanksgiving issue of Bon Appétit. For now at least, you can find the original recipe here. The most crucial change I've made is leaving the salt rub on throughout the entirety of the process (instead of rinsing it off). The salt rub is supposed to draw the moisture to the skin, giving a crisper skin and juicier meat; I think leaving the salt rub takes the crunch of the skin to the next level. 

The first time I made this recipe, I was going to be working over the Thanksgiving holiday, but my significant other at the time had his young daughter in town, and I didn't want her to miss out. Since I was working the entire week, each night, I came home at five or six and carefully prepared dishes (with painstaking, hand-written instructions) so that her father would be able to get everything in the oven on Thanksgiving Day and have it ready to it the moment I walked it the door. I made this turkey (the breast and leg variation), roasted cranberry sauce with lemon thyme (my favorite herb), Moroccan spiced carrots, sugar pumpkin and sweet potatoes, and apple-pancetta-fennel stuffing.

I had never cooked a turkey before, or made my own Thanksgiving dinner, for that matter. In fact, I would have said that, from a gastronomic standpoint, Thanksgiving was my least-favorite holiday and I didn't like turkey at all, truthfully...until this recipe. This is inarguably that best turkey recipe in the world. If you must have cranberry sauce, I highly recommend roasting cranberries, but truly, it does not need it. Crunchy, salty, savory, delicious... It does not get any better...or rather, it seems to get better each time we make it. I'm not exaggerating when I say that last winter, my mom and I roasted a whole turkey on three separate occasions that were not holidays. It is that good.

(Unfortunately, I can't really say the same for the carrots and sweet potatoes. The next day, I salvaged them via the immersion blender. They made a much tastier soup.)


8.6.13

A day in the life of the toddler palate no. 1

A new section on the intrigues of cooking (and sometimes "cooking") for a child who will eat ceviche and refuse dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets...

This morning (as we do every weekend), we walked to the farmer's market. My son eats his first breakfast when he first wakes up (today, banana and croissant) and then we nibble at the market. Before we left, I bought a maple-bacon doughnut and he had a root beer-flavored doughnut hole. 

A few hours later, he was taking a nap and I settled in to have my (amazing) doughnut with a cup of tea and the newspaper. To no one's great surprise, he woke up as I was taking my second-to-last bite. His bright little eyes widened and blinked, first with surprise, then with a look one could only describe as betrayal. 

He got the last bite. 

Feeling slightly guilty, I decided I should get together some lunch - quickly - for my doughnut-less boy. I had a package of quinoa, oatmeal and mashed fruit in the fridge and I popped a sweet potato cinnamon spelt pancake (ahhh, organic baby food) in the toaster. To try to supplement the calories, I spread almond butter on the pancake. The pancake was a hit, but the oatmeal medley was flat-out rejected with tightly sealed lips, so I added a tablespoon of peach noosa yogurt. Noosa is like eating frosting and will make anything better, at least in theory. In practice, those sweet baby lips pressed together until they almost disappeared. Then I noticed my son was licking the almond butter off the last bites of pancake and re-dipping into the jar (yes, so hygienic), so I dipped the oatmeal spoon instead. Apparently, a little almond butter was just what the quinoa, oatmeal, peach, pear, and yogurt medley needed to be palatable...but it was best spread on top of the sweet potato pancake.  

Weirdest lunch ever. 

23.5.13

Pan-fried tilapia with Sicilian lemon white balsamic vinegar

Ingredients:
Tilapia or other mild white fish
Vine-ripened tomatoes, 1, chopped
Basil, 4-5 leaves, torn or chopped
Sugar
Sea salt
Freshly ground pepper
Olive oil
Sicilian lemon white balsamic vinegar, 2-3 tbsp (I recommend buying the real thing...but alternatively, substitute white balsamic vinegar and juice of 1/2 lemon)

Directions:
1. Sprinkle fish with salt, pepper, and sugar.
2. Pan fry in a drizzle of olive oil until fish is opaque and flaking.
3. Place tomatoes, basil, butter and white balsamic vinegar. Heat until balsamic is just sizzling. Tomatoes should be warm but not cooked through.
4. Serve with generous sides, possibly crushed potatoes (I prefer lemon thyme to rosemary, though, or just salt and pepper) and oven-roasted Brussels sprouts, and a good chilled white wine.

The story:
Most weekends, I like to walk to our farmers' market and pick up a few things for the week. My son is an early riser: we are usually the first people there, so it's quiet, and the air is refreshingly cool and crisp. I usually try to stay away from the elaborate pastries, exotically floral jams, and imported olive oils - too easy to be tempted! - but this weekend, my son wanted to taste everything, and so we did. I love vinegars in general and balsamic specifically, but the Sicilian lemon white balsamic vinegar was above and beyond delicious. I could have sipped it from a cordial glass. I had to have it. Fortunately, it proved at least somewhat practical, in that it makes cooking outstanding fish extremely simple, as I think this dish proves.

22.5.13

Thai chicken with quinoa

Check out the original recipe here!

Ingredients:
Quinoa, 1/2 cup, rinsed
Chicken breast, 1, cooked and shredded
Carrots, 1/3 cup, chopped
Edamame, 1/3 cup, shelled
Spring onions, 1/3 cup, chopped
Peanuts, 1/4 cup, chopped
Cilantro, 1/4 cup, chopped
Sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
Sauce
Sweet chili sauce, 2 tbsp
Rice vinegar, 1 tbsp
Coconut milk, 1 tbsp
Brown sugar, 1/2 tbsp
Creamy peanut butter, 1 tsp, melted
Garlic clove, 1, chopped
Lime, 1/2, juiced
Ginger, 1/8 tsp, freshly grated

Directions:
1. Prepare quinoa according to directions, substituting chicken stock for water.
2, While quinoa is cooking, combine all of the sauce ingredients together in a bowl and whisk well.
3. Once quinoa has absorbed all of the liquid, stir in the sauce and toss well to coat. 
4. Stir in chicken, carrots, edamame and spring onions. 
5. Season with salt and pepper to taste. 
6. Toss in half of the peanuts and cilantro and pour into a large bowl for serving.
7. Sprinkle with remaining peanuts and cilantro.

The story:
This recipe comes courtesy of my sister and her recent healthy-eating kick (which has made her more adventurous than ever!), with a little help from Pinterest. It is extremely delicious, which earned it a spot in my blog. It is also very toddler-friendly!

The 6- and 5-year old future amazing chefs (my sister is on the right) at the National Zoo, c. 1988



14.5.13

Bruschetta

Ingredients:
Vine-ripened or plum tomatoes (best available), 2, diced in 1 cm pieces
Garlic cloves, 1-2, crushed and finely chopped
Olive oil, 1-2 tbsp
Basil, 1/4 cup, finely chopped
Sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Ciabatta, sliced in half lengthwise

Directions:
1. Toast ciabatta lightly in the oven, preheated to 350˚F.
2. Mix tomatoes, garlic, olive oil and basil.
3. Gently warm mixture in microwave for 1 minute.
4. Allow to sit for at least 30 minutes to bring out flavors.
5. Spoon tomato mixture over toasted bread and serve.

The story:
Civita: "I found ciabatta in Amy's refrigerator..."
Amy: "I had ciabatta in the refrigerator?"
Civita: "Yes, don't you remember? I bought it for you to make panini. Well, since it had a been a couple months, I thought it needed to be used."


Pesto genovese and crema di pesto

Ingredients:
Pesto sauce
Basil, 6 oz
Garlic cloves, 4
Pignoli (pine nuts), 2-4 oz, divided in half
Olive oil, 2 tbsp
Parmigiano-reggiano, finely grated, 1/2 cup

Crema di pesto
Butter, 2 tbsp
Heavy or double cream, 3/4 cup
Boursin Gournay garlic and herb cheese, 2 tbsp

Pasta of your choice (suggest artichoke "leaves" or foglie di carciofo from Maestri Pastai or tortelloni)
Prosciutto di Parma, thinly sliced (optional)

Directions:
1. Purée basil, garlic, pine nuts, and olive oil in a mini food processor.
2. Blend in parmigiano for classic pesto and season to taste. If making pesto alla crema, stir purée, parmigiano, butter, cream and garlic and herb cheese together over low heat.
3. Set aside sauce, keeping crema version warm while the pasta cooks.
4. Lightly toast remaining pine nuts (it really enhances their flavor; optionally, you can toast all the pine nuts at the beginning of the recipe) and stir into sauce.
5. Toss cooked pasta with sauce.
6. If desired, crisp prosciutto in a microwave or pan over medium-high heat and crumble over pasta.

The story:
Amy: "You really don't have a pesto story?"
Civita: "The story would be that I don't usually put pine nuts in pesto. But you do."
Amy: "Silence. I love pine nuts. Pine nuts are the best thing ever."