For my birthday, Bill promised me that he would make me a meal. Today was the day!
I supervised, but he chopped onions, garlic, salad fixings, stirred the sauce and everything. The meal was really great. So great, that we ate all of it!
Sauce
For my birthday, Bill promised me that he would make me a meal. Today was the day!
I supervised, but he chopped onions, garlic, salad fixings, stirred the sauce and everything. The meal was really great. So great, that we ate all of it!
Sauce
Our pseudo-son, Servet, came over for dinner last night. He brought with him some fabulous treats! A whole box of goodies from Murray's. So there was duck prosciutto, some bacon, some duck pate, some salamis, nudja, and too many more to remember.
We started our dinner with some of the treats, duck mousse pate, salami, nduja, brie, and crackers. We easily could have made a dinner of that, but there was the marinating beef strips....
I used Sam Sifton's Orange Beef recipe, of course with a few tweaks. As I knew I was going to add in some half steamed broccoli, I did not reduce the sauce much. I also used my secret orange weapon, ground dried mandarin orange peels that I save up as I eat the mandarins every winter when they are in season and on sale! And then I grind them up as needed. I used about 1/4 c of the ground powder. Instead of the jalapeno, I had some hot red finger peppers, so I chopped up one of those. I increased the liquid measure by using 1/3 c instead of 1/4 c for all specified liquids because I was 1) using more beef than called for in recipe, 2) was going to be adding in some broccoli.
Another tweak was not using the egg, but using baking soda with the cornstarch for the beef strips. I marinated them over night and they were velvety and oh so tender, even though it was chuck strips for fajitas!
After noshing mightily on the delicious treats, we hastily sat down to eat, voila!
I had ordered from FD some Shrimp and Mussels, and was trying to figure out what to do with them when it hit me.....Gong Hei Fat Choy!
Another Lunar New Year Food Celebration
I used the Ma La Shrimp recipe and another Fuchsia Dunlop recipe for Clams in Black Bean Sauce.
I had the left over lotus root from yesterday, so that went into the Ma La Shrimp!
Fuchsia Dunlop's Clams In Black Bean Sauce
Bill and I went to Industry City yesterday to wander around the various stores that were there. We went into Japanese Village and I saw some thinly sliced meats for shabu shabu and decided to do chinese hot pot for dinner. I picked up some thinly sliced beef, round and rib eye, and also some thinly sliced Kurobuta pork loin as well. I then searched the veggies and grabbed some lotus root, pre sliced, and some Enoki mushrooms. I had other vegetation at home as well as the necessary spice for the hot pot flavoring.
I used Fuchsia Dunlop's recipe for hot pot broths. One is based in a beef broth, the other in a chicken, but I made it vegetable broth.
Dipping Sauces |
Meats, beef above, pork below The carrots and peas are at the top and the cabbage and root veggies at the bottom |
Vegetation |
Broths: top is spicy and below is not |
I had 5 lbs of wild boar in the freezer, how to use it? Super Bowl Chili! Make ahead, and serve next day.
Wild Boar Chili
Ingredients
After a discussion with friends Alan and Lyn, I decided to make some Mapo Tofu. I was rooting around in the pantry and found a package of tofu skins and thought, great, I'll make some bean curd skin rolls and we can enjoy a spicy dish and a not spicy dish.
I quickly got to work, found a recipe, and started chopping things madly. Soaked the tree ear mushrooms, gave up looking for my dried shitake mushrooms and decided to chop other veg instead. For the rolls I quickly prepared some slivered carrots, cabbage and cucumbers. To the meat, I used beef, I added the requisite minced tree ears, garlic, ginger, cornstarch, sesame oil, shao xing wine, and soy sauce. Stir like mad to combine and voila! meat filling.
Next, I opened the package of bean curd or tofu skins and realized that this was going to be a nightmare scenario. The sheets were folded up onto themselves so that each "page" was multiple layers thick. I dunked them in the warm water, fiddled with them, and tried to pry the layers apart. This was not going to work at all. So I had to go to plan B with this. I decided to soak 2 pages and then just chop up the result and saute everything in the wok.
Mapo, I have written about many times. Last night, I was pressed for time, AND hungry, so I went with the easiest method possible. Stir fried the meat and ginger, added in 2 T of doujiabang sauce and then splashed on some soy, shaoxing, rice vinegar, and anything else I felt like throwing in.
Since I had some soaked tree ear mushrooms I threw them in and, well, that was a mistake. I should have cut them into smaller pieces, instead I just hacked a large piece into quarters or sixths, and they were just too damn big and chewy.
Mapo Tofu |
Deconstructed Tofu Skin Rolls |
The combo was quite tasty, Bill was going back for more. I was pretty happy with the deconstructed rolls, and would probably tweak that a bit more going forward, like, buying fresher bean curd skins and actually making the rolls! But as an invented dinner save, it was pretty damn good.
I had a bunch of broccoli, some shisito peppers, 1/2 a butternut squash and some carrots.....plus some chicken thighs. What to do?
Option 1 - Tajine
Option 2 - Sheetpan
Feeling lazy, I took option 2. I piled the chopped veggies into a sheet pan along with a sliced onion and mixed it with some olive oil and salt and pepper. Added the chicken thighs on top and drizzled them with oil and salt and pepper, and popped it in the oven, 350°F for 30 minutes, rotated the pan, and set the timer for 15 more minutes. Chicken was cooked, and veggies were nicely browned.
Yum!
Pre Cooking |
Ah, risotto |
A beautiful Chablis |
I had a ton of veg that needed to be used in some creative way. I decided that I would attempt a sheetpan dinner using some homemade brats and the vegetation that was in the fridge.
Veg and Brats
Ingredients
Pre sausage veggies |