27 June 2009
The first of many ice cream posts
Okay so maybe I need to look into getting some food photography skills. But I promise it was delicious. Thursday I made the custard and Friday I froze this delicious rhubarb crisp ice cream. Pretend mine looks like this much nicer photo. If I make this again I might leave out the 'crisp' part. I felt it kind of detracted from the flavour and distributed unevenly through the ice cream.
Home-made ice cream is so worth it in my opinion. For one, you can make whatever wacky flavours your heart desires. It's not that hard to make (even with our old-school beast of an ice cream machine) and I know it's frozen so this will maybe sound silly but: Fresh ice cream tastes so good. The flavours aren't muted, you get the full effect of the rich cream and you get to feel proud of yourself/impress others.
Next flavours on the list: Green Tea, Plum, Black Sesame and whatever seasonal fruits I can get my hands on.
Super easy pasta
This is barely worth a post but it's just so pretty! My parents brought this pasta back from Italy and it is so colourful and delicious. Cooking for one blows, which probably explains my pizza pocket habit, but this is so good with so little effort there is just no excuse. Boil water for pasta, salt it. Pasta goes in. Olive oil, minced garlic in skillet. Add herbs once the garlic has cooked (in my case fresh basil). Wait for your pasta to be done. Coat with the 'sauce' and top with parmesan. mmm.
23 June 2009
Dad's South Western Macaroni & Cheese
This is one of my favourite things to eat and one of the first things I ask for when I come home. You get macaroni & cheese AND nachos, all at once and I like it better cold for lunch the next day. Yes, there is a lot of chopping but the recipe is pretty easy to make. Tonight I decided to make it myself, using my dad's recipe. I've decided to transcribe his version verbatim both because the directions are clear and in my opinion adorable. He is clearly writing for an audience, and now he has (a small) one, as opposed to the recipe index card box K-Z. Bold signifies not extra important but extra dad-lol. My notes in italics.
Hrs Lead Req'd: 1 1/4 hr cook's time: 3/4 hr Final Cooking: 40 min
Makes 8 Servings
Use a large oven-proof skillet ( 12" (30 cm) cast iron is just sufficient).
Start a large pot of water for the pasta.
Clean (peel, stem, core, de-seed) and chop (coarse or fine to your preference - I go 'coarse') the peppers, and onions, and ham. Cut up the cheddar. Whisk the flour into the yogurt and mix in the milk.
Heat skillet over medium-high heat, add oil, and when its hot add the onions and all the peppers and ham, and cook, over medium-high heat, stirring from time to time until the vegetables are soft and some are barely beginning to brown. Pour in the yogurt-milk-flour mix, and stir until thickened. Taste, adding hot sauce (chipotle tobasco is our current choice (he used to pronounce chipotle hip-o-tl until his Spanish major daughter caught him)), salt and fresh-ground black pepper to your taste.
Turn on the broiler.
Sprinkle cheddar on top and mix it in. Remove from heat when the cheese is mostly melted.
Meanwhile, when the water boils, add the salt and macaroni, and cook until al dente (6 minutes or so). Drain the macaroni and keep hot.
Fold the macaroni gently and thouroughly into the sauce in the skillet. Spread a layer of nacho chips on top, and grate on a layer of mozzarella cheese.
Pop under the broiler (if you are using cast iron you may need your dad or someone else strong to do this step, no joke) for a minute or two, until the cheese melts and the chips just start to brown. Watch carefully, from browned to burnt is a moment's inattention.
Remove, and serve...
* The quantities of onions, peppers, ham, jalepenos and hot peppers and tobasco can be varied to suite taste or availability. We usually have a mix of red, yellow and orange sweet peppers, and often add a hot banana pepper. We normally use two-year old white cheddar and Black Forest style ham and blue corn organic nacho chips...
* This makes very good left-overs, but the nachos and cheese should be eaten on first serving: the nachos go limp in the fridge.
Hrs Lead Req'd: 1 1/4 hr cook's time: 3/4 hr Final Cooking: 40 min
Makes 8 Servings
- 300 g yellow onions, coarsely chopped
- 400 g sweet bell peppers, red, yellow, orange and/or green (don't use green, less pretty/tasty)
- 1 or 2 jalapeƱo peppers, minced (or 3 or 4)
- 0-2 other med./hot peppers, to taste, chopped
- 250 g ham, chopped
- 15 ml cooking oil (canola)
- 200 g sharp cheddar cheese, diced 10-12 mm/ 3/8 - 1/2"
- 250 ml plain yogurt (1 cup)
- 60 ml instant blend flour (1/4 cup) 30 g
- 250 ml milk (1 cup)
- 1-4 dashes tabasco or other hot sauce, to taste
- 300 g macaroni or other similar pasta (cavatappi)<--yes to the spiral macaroni
- 3 tsp salt
- 4 l. water
- nacho chips
- mozzarella cheese, grated
Use a large oven-proof skillet ( 12" (30 cm) cast iron is just sufficient).
Start a large pot of water for the pasta.
Clean (peel, stem, core, de-seed) and chop (coarse or fine to your preference - I go 'coarse') the peppers, and onions, and ham. Cut up the cheddar. Whisk the flour into the yogurt and mix in the milk.
Heat skillet over medium-high heat, add oil, and when its hot add the onions and all the peppers and ham, and cook, over medium-high heat, stirring from time to time until the vegetables are soft and some are barely beginning to brown. Pour in the yogurt-milk-flour mix, and stir until thickened. Taste, adding hot sauce (chipotle tobasco is our current choice (he used to pronounce chipotle hip-o-tl until his Spanish major daughter caught him)), salt and fresh-ground black pepper to your taste.
Turn on the broiler.
Sprinkle cheddar on top and mix it in. Remove from heat when the cheese is mostly melted.
Meanwhile, when the water boils, add the salt and macaroni, and cook until al dente (6 minutes or so). Drain the macaroni and keep hot.
Fold the macaroni gently and thouroughly into the sauce in the skillet. Spread a layer of nacho chips on top, and grate on a layer of mozzarella cheese.
Pop under the broiler (if you are using cast iron you may need your dad or someone else strong to do this step, no joke) for a minute or two, until the cheese melts and the chips just start to brown. Watch carefully, from browned to burnt is a moment's inattention.
Remove, and serve...
* The quantities of onions, peppers, ham, jalepenos and hot peppers and tobasco can be varied to suite taste or availability. We usually have a mix of red, yellow and orange sweet peppers, and often add a hot banana pepper. We normally use two-year old white cheddar and Black Forest style ham and blue corn organic nacho chips...
* This makes very good left-overs, but the nachos and cheese should be eaten on first serving: the nachos go limp in the fridge.
21 June 2009
Oatmeal-Walnut-Craisin-Chocolate Chunk Cookies
This is what resulted from looking for a more acceptable way to eat Craisins than by the handful, adapted from Cook's Illustrated.
Makes 16 large cookies
Ingredients
2. Mix flour, baking powder & soda and salt in medium bowl. In a second bowl, mix oats, nuts, Craisins and chocolate.
3. By hand or using electric mixer, cream butter & sugar. Add egg and vanilla.
4. Stir in flour mixture.
5. Stir in oat mixture.
6. Divide dough to form 16 balls roughly 2 inches in diameter. Divide between two cookie sheets lined with parchment paper, flatten to 1 inch thickness.
7. Bake 20 mins, rotating the sheets halfway through. Don't overbake, they will look slightly underdone at this point, edges should be browning but the centres should be soft. You want them to be chewy.
8. Cool on wire rack and enjoy.
Makes 16 large cookies
Ingredients
- 1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 3/4 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 1/4 rolled oats
- 1 cup walnuts, toasted & chopped
- 1 cup Craisins (dried sweetened cranberries), chopped
- 4 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped (or chocolate chips)
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter, softened
- 1 1/2 cups brown sugar
- 1 egg
- 1 tsp vanilla
2. Mix flour, baking powder & soda and salt in medium bowl. In a second bowl, mix oats, nuts, Craisins and chocolate.
3. By hand or using electric mixer, cream butter & sugar. Add egg and vanilla.
4. Stir in flour mixture.
5. Stir in oat mixture.
6. Divide dough to form 16 balls roughly 2 inches in diameter. Divide between two cookie sheets lined with parchment paper, flatten to 1 inch thickness.
7. Bake 20 mins, rotating the sheets halfway through. Don't overbake, they will look slightly underdone at this point, edges should be browning but the centres should be soft. You want them to be chewy.
8. Cool on wire rack and enjoy.
16 June 2009
Fool for rhubarb
Every May, the rhubarb patch in the garden gets transformed into glorious pies to accompany the rest of my birthday dinner (some combo of ribs/lobster, mashed potatoes and artichokes/green beans). Needless to say, I was crestfallen to be stuck in my dorm room in Quebec eating pb+honey+banana for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
So now that I'm home, I am attacking this overgrown vegetable with a vengeance. Yesterday's project came from La Tartine Gourmande, which counts as continuing my French immersion.
I would have better photos but in what I foresee to be a trend, my lovely father ate them all before I could get my hands on the camera. Tonight's dinner, Nigella's linguine with mushroom, lemon and thyme sadly befell the same fate. I grabbed a bit too much rhubarb and luckily had some extra puff-pastry and so made this quick mini-pie:
I've never been a strawberry-rhubarb believer. The whole point of rhubarb, to me, is the delicious almost sour tart-ness. Chomping on stalks dipped in sugar, or enjoying a nothing-but-rhubarb pie lets the true, delicious flavour shine through and strawberry combos only cover it up/are too sweet for my taste.
Rhubarb being rhubarb, this made but a dent which means once I get my hands on The Perfect Scoop from the library I'm planning to attempt Rhubarb Crisp Ice Cream along with family favourites like Szechuan Ginger and last year's delightfully boozy Margarita Ice Cream.
So now that I'm home, I am attacking this overgrown vegetable with a vengeance. Yesterday's project came from La Tartine Gourmande, which counts as continuing my French immersion.
I would have better photos but in what I foresee to be a trend, my lovely father ate them all before I could get my hands on the camera. Tonight's dinner, Nigella's linguine with mushroom, lemon and thyme sadly befell the same fate. I grabbed a bit too much rhubarb and luckily had some extra puff-pastry and so made this quick mini-pie:
I've never been a strawberry-rhubarb believer. The whole point of rhubarb, to me, is the delicious almost sour tart-ness. Chomping on stalks dipped in sugar, or enjoying a nothing-but-rhubarb pie lets the true, delicious flavour shine through and strawberry combos only cover it up/are too sweet for my taste.
Rhubarb being rhubarb, this made but a dent which means once I get my hands on The Perfect Scoop from the library I'm planning to attempt Rhubarb Crisp Ice Cream along with family favourites like Szechuan Ginger and last year's delightfully boozy Margarita Ice Cream.
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