Showing posts with label soup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soup. Show all posts

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Week in Review

Here is a breakdown of everything i've created this week:

BBQ Smoked Pulled Pork

Smoked outside for hours and then finished up in the oven until meat is falling off the bone. I love the smell of the air when the meat is smoking on the grill. Tastes so good you have to shut your eyes while eating. Hickory wood chips created the ultimate smokey flavor. Here is the basic rub recipe from Test Kitchen. This was a joint effort with C. I rubbed it, he smoked it. Here's the basic rub recipe we used.

Basic BBQ Rub:
1/2 c. chili powder
1/4 c brown sugar
1/4 c salt
2T ground pepper
2t cayenne pepper


Chocolate Chewies
Fat free, and under 100 calories per cookie, intense chocolatey taste, very chewy texture. Had to use up the left over egg whites from the cheesecakes, these cookies fit the bill. Recipe Complements of Cara's Cravings. Visit the link to her site to see the full recipe.



Beer
Bottled some Belgian Witbier and brewed some German Oktoberfest. M invited C and I over for our first brewing experience. Even the flat beer, before the yeast had time to produce carbon dioxide in the bottle, tasted amazing, a very labor intensive process but the flavor tastes so much better than your average store-bought varieties. I can't wait to try the final product once it is complete. M has also made homemade hard cider, wine, and mead.


Sanitizing the bottles and getting ready to cool the wort.


Steeping caramel grains and warming the malt extract (so it's easier to pour).

New York Style Cheesecake

Perfectly blonde, smooth consistency throughout, everything a cheesecake should be. Another Test Kitchen success story.

New York Cheesecake
America's Test Kitchen

Ingredients:
5 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted, plus 1 Tbsp melted unsalted butter
for greasing the pan
8 whole graham crackers (4 oz), broken into rough pieces and processed in a food
processor to fine, even crumbs
1 Tbsp sugar

2 1/2 lbs. (five 8-oz packages) cream cheese, cut into rough 1-inch chunks, at room temperature
1/8 tsp salt
1 1/2 c. (10 1/2 ounces) sugar
1/3 c. sour cream
2 tsp juice from 1 lemon
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 lrg egg yolks plus 6 lrg eggs, at room temperature

Directions:
-For the crust: Adjust an oven rack to the lower-middle position and heat the oven to 325 degrees.
-Brush the bottom and sides of a 9-inch springform pan with 1/2 Tbsp of the melted butter.
-Combine the graham cracker crumbs and sugar in a medium bowl; add 5 Tbsp of the melted butter and toss with a fork until evenly moistened.
-Empty the crumbs into the springform pan and, using the bottom of a ramekin, 1 c. measuring cup, or drinking glass, press evenly into the pan bottom, using a tsp to press the crumbs neatly into the corner of the pan.
-Bake until fragrant and beginning to brown around the edges, about 13 mins.
-Cool on a wire rack while making the filling.
-For the cheesecake filling: Increase the oven temperature to 500 degrees.
-In the bowl of a standing mixer, beat the cream cheese at medium-low speed to break up and soften it slightly, about 1 min.
-Scrape the beater and the bottom and sides of the bowl well with a rubber spatula; add the salt and about half of the sugar and beat at medium-low speed until combined, about 1 min.
-Scrape the bowl; beat in the remaining sugar until combined, about 1 min.
-Scrape the bowl; add the sour cream, lemon juice, and vanilla, and beat at low speed until combined, about 1 min.
-Scrape the bowl; add the egg yolks and beat at medium-low speed until thoroughly combined, about 1 min.
-Scrape the bowl; add the remaining eggs 2 at a time, beating until thoroughly combined, about 1 min, scraping the bowl between additions.
-Brush the sides of the springform pan with the remaining 1/2 Tbsp melted butter.
-Set the springform pan on a rimmed baking sheet (to catch any spills if the pan leaks).
-Pour the filling into the cooled crust and bake 10 mins; without opening the oven door, reduce the oven temperature to 200 degrees and continue to bake until the cheesecake reads about 150 degrees on an instant-read thermometer inserted in the center, about 1 1 1/2 hours.
-Transfer the cake to a wire rack and cool until barely warm, 2 1/2 to 3 hours.
-Run a paring knife between the cake and the springform pan sides.
-Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate until cold, at least 3 hours. (The cheesecake can be refrigerated up to 4 days.)
-To unmold the cheesecake, remove the sides of the pan.
-Slide a thin metal spatula between the crust and the bottom of the pan to loosen, then slide the cake onto a serving plate.
-Let the cheesecake stand at room temperature about 30 mins, then cut into wedges (see note) and serve with Fresh Strawberry Topping, if desired.

Chocolate Marbled Cheesecake
Beautiful, made for a co-worker's birthday. Cracked quit a bit because I doubted the cheesecake was done since I didn't have a thermometer to check the temperature, oops.


Raspberry and Cream Jelly Roll Cake
Fun to make. First recipe i've made from my Martha Stewart Cooking School cookbook so far. I added orange zest to the raspberry preserves for an added flavor. Made for a Tuesday night get together. I chose the recipe because Jelly Rolls take about 8 minutes to bake in the oven since the cake is baked in such a shallow dish. Due to this, I was able to bake and assemble the entire cake after work in under 1.5 hours. While jelly rolls have a whimsical final product, the cake is spongey and rather low fat so this isn't the sort of cake crowds rave never forget like they would about a cheesecake or brownies.



Chicken Broth
Made and froze some homemade broth that I plan on using this week for Chicken Tortilla Soup.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

A Study in Italian Cooking


I'm off work this week and i've spent some of my free time experimenting with Italian foods. It all started the day before Easter standing in a long check out line at the produce market. An old Italian man behind me in line commented on how many people "were buying out the whole store." He pointed out some Feng Shui brand rice crackers and recalled a random story with me about how a prospective buyer wouldn't buy a house he was selling because it didn't have the proper Feng Shui. He was buying two cans of Escarole soup and a ball of cheese. Could canned soup be good enough to stand in such a long line? I had to find out. Needless to say, I made a pot of escarole soup today.

I love making soup, I love how you can not use a recipe and just go with your senses and it usually works. My escarole soup was basically a head of leafy escarole, one potato, some chicken thighs and the other typical brothy soup ingredients: bay leaves, water, garlic, onion, salt, pepper, parsley. I boiled the heck out of it and the broth was a rich brown color and fantastic!

My next Italian food was some pasta sauce. At the produce store I found some tomatoes in the discount bin: 10 luscious reds for $1.26. I added some hot pancetta, fresh basil, jalapeno, onion, and garlic to make some chunky Arrabiatta sauce. A few years ago my friend M and I went to a cooking class at Pina's Culinary Experience in Roselle. M later went to a sauces class offered there and had a pasta party making this recipe. It's a great sauce that i've made several times since. Served over Pina's favorite noodle: Buccatini (very thick spaghetti noodle with a whole running vertically through the middle) delish! I'll freeze the sauce to save it for a quick weekday meal.

The star of my Italian cooking experiences this week has been the Panini Sandwiches! All the comfort of a grilled cheese sandwich but with more sophisticated flavors. I tried to make some Rustic white bread...didn't turn out so well. My breads never turn out quite right (does anyone have any suggestions?) so I settled for store bought Turano bread which is a tried and true panini basic. Here are some combos I tried:
  • Brie, honey, pecans, raisins, and apple slices
  • Gruyere cheese, arrabiatta sauce, basil leaves, and hot pancetta
  • Cheddar, turkey, pecans, and cranberry sauce
  • Brie, dark chocolate, and basil leaves
Giada, of Food Network fame, made chocolate, brie., and basil panini's on the Oprah show over the holidays. I was reminded of the recipe when I stumbled upon it once again while searching for panini combination ideas on the food network website.

There is something sexy about this odd combination that received a 5 star online rating. Cheese and chocolate are sexy foods, Giada is a sexy lady, just had to try it. C and I agreed it was fantastico! Rich flavors of the brie cheese and Lindt Semi sweet chocolate blended well while the fresh taste of the basil cut the sweetness of the chocolate.

I have to admit, by the end of today I reached my cooking limit, I washed enough dishes today, tomorrow I think i'll take a break.

(Picture of Panini with Chocolate and Basil complements of foodtv.com I've been trying to use more pictures of foods I actually made but C didn't have his camera with him today and I lost mine but regardless hopefully you'll bee seeing more authentic pictures from here on out.)