Thursday, December 31, 2020

Dateline: December 30, 2020 Brats and Cabbage

I ground and stuffed a bunch of brats on Tuesday, and they were ready to eat.  I decided to poach them in a liquid of a bottle of white wine, a handful of sliced onions, a couple of pepper corns, a crushed clove of garlic, water, 1.5 c turkey stock, and some salt.  I also threw in some of the preserved mandarins that I had made a couple of days ago.  They were still very sweet, and not too salty, time will heal that.

I had a head of cabbage that I cleaned up, split in half, and then cut one half into quarters.  I removed the core and thinly sliced the cabbage.  I cut 1/2 an onion into thin half moons, chopped up 2 cloves of garlic, 1/2 orange sweet pepper,  and the rest of the preserved mandarin.  I held .5 c of turkey stock in reserve if needed with the cabbage.

I swirled a bit of garlic oil in a flat bottomed wok and softened the onions and garlic.  When the onions were translucent, I add the cabbage, peppers, and mandarin.  I stirred that around a bit to distribute the wilting to the whole pan.  I added the .5 c stock and lidded the pan.

When the poaching sausages reached and internal temperature of 155-160°F, I added them to the cabbage and mixed everything together nicely.

A very satisfying meal for a chilly evening.  Bill said the texture was perfect for the sausages as was the flavor.  Yeah Me!

Here are the brats in the pan with the cabbage.  I liked the bright citrus blast that the mandarins gave, Bill not so much.  He picked them out of his plate.  Sigh.


Here is my plate with cabbage and brats.  Note the mandarin in the 10 spot on the plate.  I really liked it.  

We finished the meal with some mulled wine that a friend had given us for the holidays.  It was really tasty.  A perfect ending to a midweek meal.

At the end of the YouTube video of Joshua Weissman's Sausage Treatise, there are 3 recipes for sausages.  I made the brats and merguez.  Both recipes are quite good and as I scaled down the recipe, I used his 0.02% salt to total weight of meat and fat to determine the amount of salt I needed to use.  I was happy with how both turned out.  Go ahead, make some sausage!  You can purchase casings on line from The Sausage Maker or on Amazon.  You might also be able to buy some from a good butcher.  I have only worked with salt-packed casings.  They last forever in the fridge.  If you have a stand mixer with a grinder attachment, you are all set with respect to equipment....no more excuses, do it!  Remember, at the rate the vaccine is getting into arms, we will be in lock down for 10 years!

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Dateline: December 25, 2020 Christmas Dinner: Turkey and the whole megillah

 We had Thanksgiving at Dianne and Phil's, so  there were no turkey leftovers, the best part of the whole shebang.  I wanted turkey stock, turkey pot pie, left over stuffing, mashed potatoes and assorted winter root veggies.

For the turkey, I dry brined it overnight with a generous amount of salt and left it uncovered in the fridge overnight.  The next morning, I rubbed butter over and under the skin, stuffed the cavity with 2 garlic cloves, 4 onion ends from chopping onions for other dishes, 1 one orange, halved, sage sprigs rosemary sprigs, salt and pepper and a schmear of butter.  I mixed salt and pepper together along with 1/4 t baking powder to help crisp up the skin.  Before putting it in the oven, I injected the breast with homemade chicken stock in about 4 or 5 places on each side of the breast.

I put the bird on a rack in a roasting pan in which I had scattered chopped onions and celery along with a good glug or 2 of white wine and about 2 cups of homemade chicken stock.

I set the oven at 350° because it was an 11 lb turkey and set a timer for 1 hour, before rotating the turkey so that the other thigh pointed to the back of the oven, and set the timer for 1 hr.

After about 40 minutes, I checked and the turkey was very close to being done, I lowered the temp to 325°F and let it continue cooking for the remaining 20 minutes.

Naturally, I DID NOT photo the finished, beautifully bronzed bird, and I hadn't started drinking either!  You can get an idea of the color from the wing joint in the photo.  I made some cranberry sauce the day before, I usually make a chutney style sauce, but one of the people I promised Xmas dinner to can not deal with spice, so I went very straightforward with the cranberries this year.  Just sugar, water, pinch of salt until thick and syrupy.

Neither Bill nor I can have turkey without the Miles Standish Stuffing,  I do cut back on the butter, but pretty much follow the recipe, tweaking over the years.  This year, I used the called for breakfast sausage, and decided it was NOT going to used again, I prefer Italian sausage, either sweet or hot.  I used perlini mozzarella balls to save the cutting mozzarella up.  Next time I will use both containers I bought instead of just one, not gooey enough!

Behind the stuffing is a green bean, mushrooms, and pancetta amalgam that I thought would be tasty!  I sauteed 4 oz pancetta and then added the sliced king and oyster mushrooms and cooked through.  I steamed the green beans in the microwave for 4 minutes and then added them to the pan.  Seasoned, added some stock, and a little rice flour to thicken and tadah!







I love rutabagas.  I am alone in that devotion, but since I cook, well, we get them!  I steamed them first in the instant pot, then mashed into the pan that I had sauteed 4 oz of pancetta and 1/2 a chopped onion until rendered and crispy.  Perfect.





For the mashed potatoes, I steamed them in the instant pot and then riced them into another inner pot for the instant pot.  I added half and half, sour cream, salt, pepper, and butter and mixed well, tasting for salt, and checking consistency.  Adding half and half, butter and salt as needed.








The whole spread below.  I had the panettone that I made earlier for dessert, as well as a chai masala cake that Servet made.  We were very sated and ready for a rousing couple of games of Rummicube!


Dateline: December 24, 2020 Xmas Eve, Ribs and Broccoli Rabe

I rubbed the ribs with a quick dry rub of a mix to chili powder, ancho, chipotle, salt, sugar, paprika, dry mustard, allspice, black pepper, and thyme.  (I forgot to use onion and garlic powder, sue me!)

I roasted them in a hot oven 400° F for 20 min, then reduced temp to 325° for another 45 minutes to an hour.  When temp of ribs reaches over 185° F, they are good to go.  High temp will produce softer and less chewy meat.  Dealer's choice.   

The ribs came out juicy and pulled back from the bone ends.

An animal died, Bill was content!

Pre oven ribs, with an extra sprinkle of salt on top.














                                                     Post Oven, and cut into individual ribs


For the rabe, I sauteed garlic slices until golden brown in olive oil, and then removed.  I added the cleaned rabe, cut in half, to the hot pan and seared them for a little bit.  I added about 1/2 c of stock and cooked them down further.  Before serving, I added back the garlic chips and tossed.

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Dateline: December 23, 2020 Meatloaf, Sprouts, Cabbage, and Crispy Taters

I decided to try the FD meatloaf mix based on a recommendation from my friend Jen.  It comes seasoned and ready to load into a loaf pan.  I added a topping that I was hoping would be somewhat spicy, but it turned out to be on the sweetish side instead!  A bit surprising given that the ingredients were Worcestershire sauce, cocktail sauce, Italian hot peppers, ketchup, oyster sauce, and dry mustard.  Strange indeed.








I also made my friend Lyn's Brussel Sprouts with butter and Vegemite.  Bill hates sprouts.  I love them.  He said over dinner, "if you didn't tell me these were sprouts, I would never have known."   High praise for the recipe!  

Sprouts with Butter and Vegemite

Trim and halve sprouts
1 -2 T butter
2-3 t Vegemite or Marmite
water/stock/wine

1.  Heat pan and lightly char sprouts in a dry pan.  This can take a while to get them on both sides.

2.  Pan will get bits of brown in it, this is good.  Use about 2 oz of water, stock, wine to deglaze and steam sprouts for a bit.  When liquid have evaporated, add butter and vegemite/marmite and cook to coat the sprouts.  Add water or stock as necessary to soften the sprouts to your level of doneness.

Braised Napa Cabbage 

1 small head napa cabbage
1 small onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, smashed and chopped
water/stock/wine

1.  Cut the bottom 1 in off of the cabbage.  Make a cut in the base of the cabbage about 1-2 inches long, as if you were going to cut it in half lengthwise, but only go those 1-2 inches.  Grasp both halves and gentle pull the cabbage apart, tearing toward the tips of the leaves.  This splits the cabbage without lots of shredded leaves flying about.  Split each halve again the same way and perhaps again depending on the circumference of your head of cabbage.

2.  Cut the stem portions into about 1/2 inch slices and keep separate from the chopped leaves.  Cut the leaves into about 1/2 inch slices as well.

3.  Heat a pan, and add some olive oil.  When hot, add the onion and saute until softened, add in the garlic and some salt and pepper.  Saute until the garlic starts to soften.  Add the cabbage stem pieces and a sprinkle or two of salt and pepper, and saute until wilted a bit, then add the rest of the leaves.  

4.  Coat the contents of the pan with all of the onion and garlic mixture and allow the leaves to begin to get bright green.  Add about 2 oz of water/stock/wine and bring to a simmer.  Taste and adjust.  Reduce the liquid by 1/2.

Crispy Taters

8-10 new red potatoes, small ones, scrubbed 
salt and pepper
olive oil

1.  Coat a pan with cooking spray and add dried potatoes season with salt and pepper.  Put in a 350° F oven for about 30 minutes, or until taters are somewhat soft.

2.  Smash the taters with a fork so that they split open, add olive oil and put back in oven, but raise temp to 400° F for 15-20 minutes.  The should be crisped on the outside and fluffy on the inside.


Drank a lovely Barolo with dinner.  Happy, happy camper!

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Dateline: December 22, 2020 VEGAN MEAL, I know, I know.....Creamy Vegan Tofu Noodles

This is a keeper!  I had no idea that it would be this tasty.  It will stay in the rotation.

Creamy Vegan Tofu Noodles  this is a true winner.  The spicy sauce on top, just added that lil sumpin' xtra that made the dish sing.

What I really liked about the recipe is that there were suggestions for substitutions or variations that will totally work.  I will try this again taking it in the Italian direction, but keeping it vegan with the use of nutritional yeast and various herbs.  

The sauce is garlicky, and delightfully creamy, just what one wants on a cold winter's night when FD is late and you need to improvise dinner.

I give it more than 2 thumbs up.  You will need a blender to make the sauce get creamy, but other than that you don't need much more to make this, except tofu and noodles and bits and bobs that you probably have in your pantry.


The red sauce on top is the real star of the show.  I doubled the recipe as I knew it would be good given the list of ingredients!  It's spicy, but not too, luscious and a great foil for the creaminess of the noodles.  You can use any noodle here, spaghetti, ramen, make your own, etc.

I do agree with the comments that you need to watch the addition of water, too little and it's too thick, too much, and it's too thin... use your eyes to tell you when enough is enough!

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

December 21, 2020 Doro Wat

I came across a recipe for Doro Wat, (Ethiopian Spicy Chicken) and decided to give it a whirl.  Previously, I had made something akin to it, and it was an epic, inedible fail.  It was just too spicy and bitter for me; and I love spicy and bitter, generally.

Reading the comments, I decided to use mostly shallots rather than onions.  That decision was a good one.  I baked the chicken thighs for 20 minutes, removed to a bowl, and proceeded with the recipe of browning the onions before adding the spices.  I also used the last, sadly, of my brodo.


Here is the onion/shallot mixture draining a bit, as per a comment, and the onion/ginger/garlic juice that drained I poured over the thighs sitting in the bowl.


This is the berbere spice mixture.  I couldn't find my cayenne pepper, so I used some dried and ground habanero pepper.  Big no no!

The dish came together well, and had a good consistency and color.  When I tasted the sauce, OMG it was SPICY.  I'm a chili head, but this was over the top, hence the issue with the habanero pepper.  I added a good squirt of honey and it tamed it a bit.

The chicken thighs went back into the pool, got coated with the sauce, and I put it in the oven for about 30 more minutes.


The final dish, served over rice was ok, not bitter, but plenty spicy.  This was the first time, EVER, that the spice level bothered me and NOT BILL.  Normally, I am not wimping out on spice, but this was just at the edge for me, and not in an addictive way.

I think cayenne would have been the way to go and use less than suggested.  I had halved the recipe, but used almost 1 T of habanero pepper, instead of 1/2 T to start.  So the error is strictly mine, not the recipe.

Would I make this again, not sure, it was a nice change from the usual chicken thigh dishes I keep in rotation.  Bill really liked it, and went back for seconds, so perhaps it will make a return.


 

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Dateline: December 20, 2020 Slow Cooker Lamb Shoulder with Beans

In browsing through several different recipes for braised lamb, I decided to make an amalgam of several of them plus my own twists.

Ingredients

2 lbs lamb shoulder, either rolled, or in a single piece with or without bone
1 large carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
3 stalks of celery, roughly chopped
1 large onion, chopped
Gravy Master (optional)
1/2 c white wine
1 tin anchovies
3 cloves of garlic, peeled
1 14 oz can chopped tomatoes
1 - 2 pints of good stock, preferably homemade
1/2 lb dried small white beans, pea or navy beans work well
1/2 preserved lemon, chopped
1 t ground cumin
1 t smoked paprika

Method

1.  Baste the lamb with Gravy Master and season with black pepper only.  Sear well on all sides.  If you use the instant pot, set it to saute, medium heat.
2.  Remove meat after searing, and deglaze the pan with the white wine.  Add onions, carrots, celery, anchovies, and garlic to the liquid.  Stir to combine.  Reduce liquid by at least half.  Cancel and set instant pot on slow cook mode for 5-6 hours
3.  Rinse the dried beans and add to the pan and place the seared lamb on top of the beans.  Add the stock to the pan, to a level that covers the beans by 2 inches.  Add the preserved lemon.  As the meat cooks, taste the broth and if needed add some salt.  It is very likely you will not need any, especially as the preserved lemon is also salty.
4.  Add the can of tomatoes and gently mix things together, sprinkle in the cumin and paprika.  Cover and allow to cook until the lamb is easily pierced by a fork.  
5.  Remove lamb from the pot.  Using a slotted spoon skim out veggies and place into a sauce strainer or colander over a large bowl.  Try to remove as much of the fat as possible along with the veggies, but leave the beans in the pot.  Defat the liquid, reserving the veggies.  In a deep narrow container, place the veggies and the defatted broth from the pot.  Using an immersion blender, blitz the contents of the container to emulsify the veggies, and pour the contents back into the pot.
6.  Remove any strings or netting from the lamb.  Cut the lamb into chunks, removing as much of the fat as possible.  If the meat is very tender, it will shred rather than cut, that's fine, just remove the fat from the shreds.
7.  Add the lamb back into the sauce and cover until dinner is ready.  Serve with either rice or couscous.

Nota Bene:  After 4.6 hours, my lamb was not very tender, so I used pressure cook for 10 minutes with 15 minutes natural release and quick release the balance.  The lamb cooked in the slow cooker for another hour or so.  The preserved lemon added so much to the dish.  If you do not have preserved lemons on hand, you can use orange peel from any thin skinned orange fruits, such as mandarin, tangerine, etc.  The lemon added a heady aroma and a delightful citrus back to the earthiness of the lamb.

No photos, sorry, it was brown, with flecks of white beans floating around in a dark brown sauce.  Not much to see, but it tasted wonderful.  Bill gave it 2 thumbs up, mostly because an animal died for his meal.

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Dateline: December 18, 2020 Maple Baked Salmon

 I saw this recipe in the NYTCooking section, and decided after reading the comments, I would try it.  Maple Baked Salmon 

This is a really wonderful recipe for a marinade for the salmon.  I was afraid it would be too sweet, but it was perfect.  Even Bill liked it a little.  He hates mustard.  The maple helped on that front!

I had opened a bottle that just arrived from Last Bottle, a susumaniello.  This is a rare grape varietal that grows in Italy.  It is a lovely wine.  Last Bottle buys of lots of wines and then sells them via the internet. They are based in Napa, CA and have great deals on wine.  The difficulty is that once the lot is sold, you are out of luck.  Sometimes the wine comes around again, or another vintage shows up, but once they sell out, that is generally it.  I love them.  I have boxes and boxes of wine that I have ordered through them stashed around the house, as I am known to quip, "I don't have a drinking problem, I have a buying problem."

So the first glass of the wine led to another, which is why there are no photos of the meal, I only have a photo of the wine bottle!

Despite the wine consumption, the rest of the meal did get made.  We ate the lovely salmon with roasted corn with artichoke hearts and baked potatoes.  It was a two thumbs up from Bill.


Friday, December 18, 2020

Dateline: December 17, 2020 Greens and Beans

I had a fridge full of greens, collards, tuscan kale, and chard.  So I created a quick dish using the instant pot.

Ingredients

Collards
Tuscan kale
Swiss chard
Or any other leafy greens you have or like so that you have approximately 2.5 - 3 lbs all together
3 cloves garlic, smashed and chopped
1 onion, cut in half thru the root end and then sliced into half moons
1 leek, cleaned and sliced
1 jalapeno, seeds and ribs removed, diced 
1 c white wine or stock of your choice
2 cans beans of your choice, drained and rinsed, (I used pinto beans)
2 oz salt pork or bacon
1 preserved lemon
black pepper to taste

Method

1.  Dice up the salt pork or bacon and add to the heated instant pot on saute low temp.  Render as much fat as you can or want.
2.  After fat has rendered, add onions, leeks, and jalapeno to the instant pot.  Saute until softened, add the smashed and chopped garlic.  Be sure to get up any of the brown bits on the bottom of the pot.  Add the wine or stock to help in this endeavor.
3.  Chop up the preserved lemon and add to the pot.  Stir and add greens.  This amount of greens will fill a 6 qt pot.  Have no fear, stir it around as best you can, lid the pot and hit cancel.  Now choose pressure cook for 5 minutes.  Close the top.  When finished, quick release the pressure.  Hit cancel.
4.  Add the beans and stir to combine.  Taste and adjust seasoning.  Add black pepper if jalapeno is not that hot.  If more liquid is needed, add another glug of wine or stock.  Put pot on warm setting until you are ready for dinner.


As Bill and I were sitting down to eat, I noticed that he wasn't too thrilled, he said that given all the green, he was not sure he would be happy.  Turns out, he did like it.  Would have preferred some animal died, but he ate 2 bowls worth!

It occurred to me that beans, greens, and garlic are part of my top five things that I love.   Once again, I am sure that in a previous life I was Tuscan!

The preserved lemon added so much to the dish.  A brightness, and depth of flavor that if it were not included, the dish would be sorely lacking in flavor.  I did not add any salt as the lemon and salt pork provided all that was necessary.

This could certainly be made on the stove top, but the timing would be different, the greens would never cook in 5 minutes, more like 15-20, depending on how you like your greens!

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

December 14, 2020 Sous Vide Strip Steak, Potatoes, and Salad

Since I have been baking cookies like a possessed demon woman, I closed the dinner kitchen a couple of nights.  I had ordered steaks, and had seasoned them and bagged them for sous vide and put them in the freezer.  You can go directly from freezer to sous vide without any worries, so that is what I did.

I set up the Joule for 129°F and set the time to 2 hrs 15 min.  I had my torch at the ready and also had a cast iron fry pan on the stovetop already.  Instead of just torching the steaks when they are removed from the water, I thought I would try a two-pronged attack.  I would heat the fry pan to scorching and torch only the top half of the steak, thereby getting both sides done at once.

The sear on the steaks was excellent, but the heat from the fry pan kept the beautiful pinkness from going end to end.  Small price to pay!

These steaks were enormous, and we only ate one that night.  The other was eaten by Bill for various other meals over the next day or two.

My friend Jeri taught me a trick for microwaving potatoes!  Wash them, and dry them, prick with a fork, and put them in a paper bag in the microwave for 10 minutes.  They come out fluffy and perfectly cooked every time.  You can do sweet potatoes this way as well, but they take less time start with 6 minutes and up it as needed.

The meal was rounded out with the crunchy salad and all said, it was a great way to start the week!


With the steak I opened a bottle of Barbaresco.  OMG!  This is a delicious wine.  Had a bit of age on it and drank really smoothly with a lovely mouth feel and sufficient tannins to stand up to the steak!

I really do love sous vide for steaks, you can never overcook them, depending on the strength of your torch, you can get a decent crust on them and the entire steak is perfectly cooked from side to side and end to end.  No raw bit or leathery bit to worry about.  Clean up is a breeze and so is setup.  





 

Dateline: December 12, 2020 Indian Redux

 Our buddy, Servet, was coming over for dinner and tasting weird beers.  What goes with beer, Indian Food!  I made Achari Chicken, Aloo Gobi, and Baingan Bharta.  Recipes came from Urvashi Pitre.  

The Baingan Bharta is an eggplant stew that is cooked down until the eggplant has broken down completely and it is finished with a dash of cream.  I can't say that it was the best that I have ever eaten, but it certainly held its own.

The Aloo Gobi is a mixture of cauliflower and potatoes with indian spices and some tomatoes.  I was totally happy with how it turned out.

The Achari Chicken, is from Hydrabadwallah website and is an absolute favorite of mine.  A go to chicken dish that never fails to please.

Of course, as we were tasting interesting, and some not so interesting beers and hard seltzers, I only took a photo of the chicken dish.



Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Dateline: December 9l 2020 Soy Marinated Chicken Thighs and Assorted Stir Fried Vegetables

The inspiration for tonight's dinner came at lunch.  I was eating some doctored ramen, and I added mandarin orange peels.  Why, I'm not sure, but it tasted great!

Out came the chicken thighs and I marinated them.  Cooked them first, then cleaned the wok and stir fried the veggies.  Added what was left of the marinade and a cup of brodo.  Voila!  Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner!

Marinade

2 T dark soy sauce
1 T light soy sauce
1/2 t agave syrup
2 t cornstarch
1 t garlic powder
1 t sesame oil
1-2 T Shaoxing rice wine
2 drops orange flavoring
small handful of hot szechwan dried peppers
4 Skin On Chicken Thighs trimmed of excess fat.

Put all the ingredients except the chicken into a sealable plastic bag and squish it around to disperse the cornstarch.  Add thighs and massage the marinade into the meat side and seal the bag.  Marinate with flesh side down for 1-2 hours

Vegetables

2 carrots, peeled and thinly sliced
2 shallots, peeled and sliced through the roots end
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and sliced
a good handful of dried mandarin orange skins, broken up into small pieces
1-2 inch chunk of fresh ginger, peeled, sliced into planks, and then into shreds
1 bunch broccoli rabe, cut into manageable pieces, trim stalks, if need be
1/2 large bell pepper, cut into strips and then halved
12 oz. green beans (I used a bag of microwave beans that I liberated and cut the beans in half)
1 cup brodo
small handful of garlic chives, cut into 1 inch lengths, for garnish

Method

1.  Heat wok, with oil of your choice, and remove the chicken from the marinade and let drip back into the bag and put into wok skin side down when pan is hot.  When skin releases from the pan, flip the thighs over.  Test temperature with an instant read thermometer.  You want the thighs near the bone to be at least 160 - 165° before pulling out of the pan.  Hold on the side.  You may want to cover the wok and after turning the thighs over, add a splash of water or broth and recover until temp is reached.

2.  Clean out wok and wipe dry.  Add more oil.  When oil is hot, add ginger and cook until softened, about 1 -2 minutes, then add peels and garlic.  When peels are softened, add shallots and carrots.  After they have been coated in the flavored oil, add in the rabe, peppers, and beans.  Stir fry until cooked through.  Add brodo, if using, and any remaining marinade. Stir to combine and bring to a boil.   Put the thighs back into the wok and cover for a few minutes until reheated through.  Add garlic chives and serve.
Here is the dish before adding the chives


Dinner, with garnish!


Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Dateline: December 7, 2020 Beans, Greens, and Other Things

I was really jonesing for some beans.  I know, that is a very weird thing to be longing for, but I can't help it.  I think I was Tuscan in a former life.  

I had a left over rotisserie chicken, but didn't want to deprive Bill of his brekkies.  So I went sort of vegetarian.  I did use some of the brodo that I made over the weekend.

I chopped up a leek, the half of onion from the other night, a handful of collard leaves, a couple of bok choy, garlic, and 2 cans of cannellini beans.  I separated the leaves from the stems with the collards, and sliced into ribbons and halved those along the rib line, then I also separated the leaves from the stems of the bok choy, and sliced the leaves in ribbons and chunked up the stems for crunch in the "stew".  I chopped 3 cloves of garlic roughly.

Into a large shallow lidded casserole I sauted the leeks and onions until softened, added the garlic and salt and pepper.  After a few more minutes, I threw in the stems and more salt and pepper along with some herbes de Provence.  Here is where the stupid thing happened, I know you were waiting for this!  I grabbed a bottle of open wine from the counter, never looking, assuming it was the open white... but no, it was the open red.  Glug glug glug into the casserole, no going back now!  I got the brodo out of the fridge and added 3 cups.  Lidded the pan, and let it go for a bit.  I dumped the greens and the 2 cans of drained and rinsed beans in, mixed it all up and tasted for seasoning.  All was good.  I let it go until the collards turned dark green and that was dinner.

The look of disappointment on Bill's face, was, well, priceless.  He would eat it, but stated, "I want animals to die for my plate."  Turns out, the concoction was quite good.  We each were going back to the dish for more.

Above are the leeks and onions softening and at right, is the bok choy stems prior to the red wine mishap.




Here are the chopped bok choy stems waiting to go into the "pool"



 Likewise, to the right are the chopped leaves of the collards and bok choy cut into ribbons












Below, the finished product with the red wine disaster!  Oh, I had a few veggies left over from the rotisserie chicken and threw those in as well.


Dateline: December 4, 2020 Chili Verde with Pork over Rice

I had a big chunk of pork shoulder that I had cut into 1/3 - 2/3 pieces, I used the 1/3 piece in an instant pot recipe on Tuesday.

Today, we are having Chili Verde.  I love Chili Verde.  The silkiness of the pork, the lusciousness of the sauce, wonderful.


Chili Verde with Pork

3 lbs pork shoulder, cut into chunks and trimmed of most of the fat
2 ancho chilis, seeded, stemmed, and split
1 dried jalapeno, seeded, stemmed, and split
1 lb tomatillos, peeled and cut through the equator
1 large onion, cut in half through the root end
4 cloves of garlic, unpeeled
2 serrano chili peppers
1 lb tuscan kale, stripped and chopped into manageable pieces
1 qt good stock
salt and pepper to taste
1 T mexican oregano
1 T ground cumin
1 t ground coriander
1 t dried granulated shallot
1 chipotle pepper in adobo, chopped with accompanying sauce

Method

1.   Heat a cast iron comal or skillet, place anchos, jalapeno, and serranos on the comal.  Add the tomatillos cut side down, onion cut side down, and garlic cloves.  When peppers have become pliable and their color changes slightly, remove to a hot water soaking bath.  Use a cup or plate to totally submerge the toasted dried peppers.

2.  When the remaining vegetables have gotten some char, remove to the body of a blender and add soaked peppers, not soaking liquid.  Add 1 pint of broth and blitz until smooth; blender will break down garlic skins.  You may need to scrape down sides of blender and/or adjust the blades if things get hung up.  Pour contents of blender into a pan large enough to hold all the chunked up meat.  Add the kale, meat chunks, spices, chipotle pepper in adobo, salt and pepper.  I used an instant pot, you can do this in an instant pot, or in a dutch oven.

3.  Mix well and set instant pot to pressure cook, low pressure for 20 minutes.  After twenty minutes, use natural release and mix well.  Hit cancel.  

4.  Set instant pot to slow cook, 3.5 hours, low temp.  Leave lid of instant pot ajar to facilitate evaporation.

5.  Taste, adjust seasonings and reduce further if wanted using the saute function..

Friday, December 4, 2020

Dateline: December 3, 2020 Asian Fusion Mushroom Melange

I was in the Farmer's Market and saw these fabulous yellow oyster mushrooms at one of the stalls.  I bought a bag.  Yes, a paper bag filled with the mushrooms.  I now had to figure out what to do WITH those mushrooms as well as the 3 other kinds that were in the fridge at home!

I was going to attempt a moo sho mushroom recipe that I saw on NYTCooking site, but opted instead to free-hand it and put whatever I came up with over rice.

I had some dried cloud ear mushrooms, some sliced baby bellas, some gray oyster mushrooms, and some king mushrooms.  The cloud mushrooms got soaked and then sliced into thin strips, the king mushrooms got sliced lengthwise into 3 or 4 planks, and the oyster mushrooms were torn into bitesized chunks.  Add to the mix slivered ginger, crushed garlic, sliced serrano pepper, 1/2 onion, 1 leek, and leftover green beans.  The onions, garlic, ginger were first sauteed for a bit with a teaspoon of shrimp paste, then the mushrooms and serrano were added and mixed about, and finally a pint of mixed bone stock I made the day before.  (I labeled it Brodo!  It is really delicious and oh so gelatinous.)  I flavored it with some gochujang paste, some rice vinegar, green beans, and fish sauce.  An asian mishmash of flavors.  

It had a definite kick and both Bill and I were sniffling through dinner,  Thank goodness I made lots of rice!  The gochujang is sneaky, it starts out tasting sweetish, and then, wham, the heat hits full force.  Yum, pass the tissues, please.



The above photo is before the brodo went into the mix, and before gochujang.

Dinner ready and delicious.