Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Worth a Try
Trader Joe's has a wide variety of tasty cookies. Their graham crackers are unlike any i've had before and their peppermint Joe Joe's tasted great when I coated them in chocolate this Christmas. My most recent favorite is their Inside Out Carrot Cake Cookie. Once again I was skeptical when C bought a container but I was wrong! These are amazing!!! There are several websites circulating online to make a homemade version, I definately will have to try it!
Monday, April 27, 2009
One step closer to the President
What Did I think of the cookie?
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Food Planet Tour
Ashkenaz Deli
Sampled a thick potato pancake with sour cream and apple sauce. (I previously tried potato pancakes at Walker Brothers pancake house and wasn't impressed, I had no idea how wonderful they could be until I tried the ones at Ashkenaz) definately want to try recreating the recipe.
Tea Gschwendner
I found out that all varieties of tea: black, white, and green come from the same tea plant. I sampled a cup of hot Rooibos tea. Rooibos varieties are the future of tea. Even though they are called tea, this variety comes from an African plant, not the tea bush. Rooibos has more anti oxidants than green tea and unlike green tea, is caffeine free.
The Spice House
The Spice House is America's authority on spices. All spices were ground within the last 5-6 weeks where as spices on the shelf of your local grocery store may be up to 6-8 months old at the time of purchase. Spices lose potency overtime so it is important to buy as fresh as possible. Prices at this shop are also cheaper than those at the grocery store. You can also buy spices in small amounts if you only want enough for one recipe. We learned about various types of cinnamon. Cinnamon is European and has a chalky taste, what we know as cinnamon is actually cassia. There are several types with potency varying depending on the amount of oil in each piece of cassia bark. The saigon "cinnamon" cassia was my favorite, it had a flavor cinnamon to Big Red gum.
Old Town Oil
Sample balsamic vinegars and extra virgin olive oils. The White Peach Balsamic Vinegar mixed with Blood Orange olive oil was my favorite combo. Perfect drizzled on chicken, fish, or a salad.
The Fudge Pot
Sampled Chocolate covered toffee served up by the owner. At the end of the tour we were asked to name our favorite place we visited, overwhelmingly people liked the fudge pot best.
Catering and Chocolate
This place caters large events for political figures such as former President Clinton. We sampled cheese and crostini served up by the owner himself. Their smore cupcakes looked amazing. They also sold fresh butter with the claim that it would "blow your mind." I've tasted some very fresh European butter that my Grandma used to buy and wondered it the butter here was even better than that.
Bacino's Pizza
Samples America's 1st heart healthy pizza served up by one of the Bacino sons. Their deep dish isn't greasy like Uno's. Bacino's is my new favorite deep dish. I definately want to take C here sometime to sample their pizza.
Pan-Seared Sesame-Crusted Tuna Steaks with Avocado-Orange Salsa
I would recommend this recipe to someone who loves sushi and likes the idea of eating rare fish with a pink center. The center should be very pink. If you try this recipe and cut the tuna steak open to find an all white center then I feel sorry for you, as you mine as well serve the orange salsa over a can of tuna as it will taste the same.
I own several cookbooks but this recipe comes from my go-to book, The America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook (pg 265.) My copy of the book is seasoned with remains from past recipes i've made, it's really gotten it's use. As I try recipes I put a check mark by them in the book and leave notes in the side margins rating the recipe (all of the recipes i've tried from this book have been winners) and tips to try when making the recipes a second time.
Avocado-Orange Salsa-
1 large orange, peeled and pith removed, segmented and diced into 1/2 inch pieces
1 ripe avocado, diced medium
2 tbsp minced red onion
4 tsp fresh lime juice
1 small jalapeno, stemmed, seeded and minced.
2 tbsp minced fresh cilantro leaves
Salt, to taste (be generous, it brings out the flavor)
Combine all ingredients in small bowl.
Pan-seared Sesame Tuna-
4 tuna steaks, 8 oz each and about 1″ thick (2 large yellow tail tuna fillets are approx. $5 at Trader Joe's, this is the best price i've seen)
2 tbsp vegetable oil
Salt and ground black pepper
1. Spread sesame seeds in shallow baking dish or pie plate. Pat tuna steaks dry with paper towel; use 1 tbsp oil to rub both sides of steaks, then sprinkle with salt and pepper. Press both sides of each steak in sesame seeds to coat.
2. Heat remaining 1 tbsp oil in 12 inch nonstick skillet over high heat until just beginning to smoke; swirl to coat pan. Add tuna steaks and cook 30 seconds without moving. Reduce heat to medium-high; continue to cook until seeds are golden brown, about 1 1/2 minutes. Using tongs, carefully flip tuna steaks; cook, without moving steaks, until golden brown on second side, about 1 1/2 minutes for rare (opaque at perimeters and translucent red and cool at the center) or 3 minutes for medium-rare (opaque at perimeters and reddish-pink at center). Serve immediately (there is no making the salsa in advance or reheating the fish, it will ruin the recipe) with orange salsa on the side.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Milwaukee Public Market
C and I took a trip to Milwaukee over the weekend. We ate at the most famous German Restaurant in the U.S., Mader's and I had an inventive Gingersnap cocktail at the Branded bar in the Iron Horse hotel. Our best Culinary stop was the Milwaukee Public Market.
I discovered the market walking around Milwaukee during a business trip several years ago. I had a Gingersnap cookie that was so good I promised myself I'd go back again someday. The market is comprised of gourmet food stations including a fresh juice bar, seafood counter, sushi station, florist, meat counter, cheese counter, Middle Eastern food area, Panini shop, and Wine area to name a few.
The highlight of the market is C. Adams Bakery. I've been jaded by bakeries that have deceivingly good looking pastries that are cheaply made with bland taste as the baked items are nothing more than flour, sugar, and margarine disguised by food coloring.
C. Adams bakery isn't your typical old timer coffeecake place. It has primarily inventive grab and go items such as the Wisconsin cookie, homemade graham crackers, German chocolate cupcakes, Red velvet cake bon bons, Mini silk pies, pavlovas, Giant cheesecakes, and bar cookies with names like "Seventh heaven."
We drew quite a bit of attention due to our excitement over being at the market and due to the number of photos we took, one woman asked C if he was a professional food photographer. Seeing our excitement, one knowledgeable customer at the bakery stopped us to tell us she's tried every item at C. Adams bakery and recommended a few items to us. She knew the French and German names of some of the pastries which made us think perhaps she had gone to culinary school so we headed her advice and tried some of the items she recommended.
Here are the items C and I couldn't resist that we had to bring back with us: A Cowboy cookie (spiced cookie with pecans, chocolate chips, and coconut flakes,) homemade Oreo, homemade Nutter Butter, Butter Cookie Sandwich with Raspberry jam filling, Chocolate covered peanut butter cookie, a huge macaroon, and the most amazing cheese danish that i'm certain will be served in heaven ;)
While we'll be sampling the baked goods for the next few weeks I already have alot of great ideas for items I could make at home such as making my own Oreos or Nutter Butter cookies as seen at the bakery.
I also left the market with some soft Manchego cheese and some flaked coconut the size of white flower petals that I will use to decorate Coconut cupcakes in the future.
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
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.)
Lemon Sandwich Cookies
I picked up a microplane grater and a 2" round cookie cutter at Sur La Table to zest lemons and to cut the dough into miniature circles.
These cookies are worth it but very time consuming; I wouldn't suggest this recipe to a baking novice.
A few years ago if I tried this recipe I would've struggled with rolling out the dough, given up and settled by rolling the dough into balls before baking. Not before giving the recipe a poor online rating. Knowing what I now know from my baking experiences, I knew some tricks to make the recipe work: chilling the dough to prevent sticky, fragile dough; letting the refrigerated dough slightly warm back up outside of the refrigerator before rolling it out to prevent crumbling; to ensure dough didn't stick to the rolling pin I rolled out the dough between sheets of parchment paper; picking up the cut dough circulars using a metal spatula to place on the cookie sheets; placing parchment paper on the cookie sheets to prevent sticking to the cookie sheets and overly browned bottoms; and finally taking the cookies out of the oven when they still look blonde and slightly doughy to prevent overly crispy cookies.
Parchment paper is a baker's best friend, it prevents so many potential baking mishaps! It saved this recipe. Parchment paper is not to be confused with wax paper. While wax paper looks similar and is cheaper, wax paper burns in the oven and there will be a waxy residue left on your baked goods. Spend the money on a roll of parchment, it will save your cookies and will make clean up easy!
Each batch didn't make many cookies (claims to make 3 dozen but since they are bite sized cookies, 3 dozen doesn't go a long way) so I doubled the recipe. I bought a large bag of 5-6 lemons from Trader Joe's but still needed more zest so I improvised. I made a batch of dough without lemon zest and instead of adding lemon flavor to the cream filling I added strawberry jam. A funny thing happened to the strawberry sandwich cookies, they flattened out in the oven (see two stacked cookies outside of the bag shown to the right in the picture.) They tasted heavenly but I was surprised that such a small tweak to the recipe such as excluding lemon zest could change the composition of the dough. And who said baking wasn't a science? I'd love to experiment with the dough in the future and make the strawberry sandwich cookies my own signature recipe.
Lemon Cookie Recipe can be found on Martha Stewart's website.
Makes 3 dozen
- 16 tablespoons (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 1 cup confectioners' sugar
- 1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest (I used 2 lemons to get 1 T. zest)
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2 cups all-purpose flour (spooned and leveled), plus more for rolling
- 2 tablespoons granulated sugar, for sprinkling
- Creamy Lemon Filling
- 1 package (4 ounces) cream cheese, room temperature
- 1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest (I used 2 lemons to get 1 T. zest)
- 1 to 1 1/2 cups confectioners' sugar
Creamy Lemon Filling Directions
- In a small bowl, mix cream cheese and zest until smooth. Gradually add 1 cup confectioners' sugar, mixing until smooth. Mix in remaining sugar as necessary to create a firm but spreadable filling.
Lemon Sandwich Cookie Directions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl using an electric mixer on high speed, beat butter, confectioners' sugar, lemon zest, and salt until combined. With mixer on low, add flour (dough will still be stiff); finish mixing with a wooden spoon.
- Turn dough out onto a piece of plastic wrap, pat into a disk about 1/2 inch thick. Wrap, and chill until firm, about 1 hour (and up to 3 days).
- Unwrap dough; place on a lightly floured piece of parchment or waxed paper. With a lightly floured rolling pin, roll dough about 1/8 inch thick (if dough cracks, let it warm up slightly).
- Cut out cookies with a 1 1/2-inch round cutter (reroll scraps once, chilling of too soft). Place 1 inch apart on two baking sheets; sprinkle with granulated sugar. Bake until barely beginning to brown, 15 to 20 minutes; transfer to wire racks to cool completely.
- Form sandwiches: Place about 1 teaspoon Creamy Lemon Filling between two cookies, sugared sides facing out; squeeze gently.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Chunky Guacamole
2 large tomatoes, chopped
Handful of cilantro, shredded
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 large sweet onion, chopped (If you don't like intense onion flavor, soak chopped onion in water for about 30 minutes to subtle the flavor)
1-2 limes, juiced
Kosher or Sea Salt, to taste about 1 tsp.
Red pepper flakes or 1/4-1/2 jalapeno, to taste
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Keep it Simple
Today my family got together to celebrate my Mom's birthday. My big sister prepared a Mediterranean meal inspired by the cuisine she encountered living in Istanbul: cucumber, tomato, and onion salad, eggplant stuffed with feta and lamb, and Turkish rice.
I was bringing dessert. I needed to make something quick because I was going to be spending my day helping Christopher paint his living room before the celebration.
One of my Mom's favorite life philosophies is "keep it simple." She truly feels many of the best things in life are the simplest and she lives by these words. Given the time crunch I was under, I borrowed this concept when choosing a dessert.
If there are two desserts that are almost as simple as making a boxed cake mix they are cheesecake and flourless chocolate cake. Labor intensive sweet treats are no competition for either of these one bowl classics. Trust me i've tried, and these classics always win. Flourless chocolate cake is the all time most requested recipe on Bon Appetit magazine's website and is one step easier than cheesecake since there's no graham cracker crust to be made. The recipe is only 4 ingredients long, one of which is optional which makes this recipe easy on the wallet which is something everyone is conscious of these days.
If don't know your way around the kitchen and want to bring something to a party that everyone will rave about, flourless chocolate cake is the recipe for you. If you only learn to make one dessert, this should be the one. In fact it's so easy I memorized the recipe, there's nothing to it.
The following recipe is for America's test Kitchen Ultimate Flourless Chocolate cake (I forgot to take a picture but I borrowed one from another site.)
1 pound semi sweet chocolate
2 sticks unsalted butter
1/4 c. strongly brewed coffee
8 eggs
-Preheat oven, to 325 degrees. Adjust rack to lower middle position.
-Crack 8 eggs and place them in a electric mixer. Mix at medium speed for 5 minutes until mixture becomes very frothy.
-Take two 8 oz boxes of semi sweet (sweetened) chocolate, unwrap the squares and break them apart and put them into a microwaveable bowl. Microwave the squares in 20 second increments stirring in between until almost melted. Add two sticks of butter cut into 1" pieces and continue microwaving process until melted. Add 1/4 c. strongly brewed coffee (I have instant granules in my pantry so I can quickly add coffee to recipes,) stir. Coffee is an optional ingredient but adds depth to the chocolaty taste in most recipes. Slowly fold in egg mixture until throughly combined.
-Put mixture into an 8" springform pan that has been sprayed with cooking spray and has parchment paper lining the bottom. Cover the entire outside of the pan with foil and place 8" pan into a larger leak proof pan.
-Microwave about 2 cups of water until boiling and pour into the sides of the larger pan half way up the sides (exactly half way is key!) being careful not to get the 8" cake pan filled with batter wet.
-Bake 22-25 minutes until the middle of the cake registers at 140 degrees and the edges of the cake have a brownie like consistency (middle will look undercooked but will firm up during cooling process.)
-Let cake cool. For best results refrigerate overnight. Unmold cake, sprinkle with cocoa powder or powdered sugar. Serve with whipped cream and fresh fruit garnish.
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Iron Chef Secret Ingredient: Yogurt
On Friday Christopher and I got together with some friends to cook an Eastern Indian feast and to watch Slum Dog Millionaire for the first time. We made two types of Naan, Samosas, Chicken Tikka Masala, Indian Spiced Rice Pilaf with Dates and Parsley, and Mango Lassis. I used recipes from the Spring Entertaining edition of Cook's Illustrated Magazine.
The flavors were fantastic but the food was Americanized in many ways. For example the Samosas had a beef filling. Due to the sacred status of cows to many Hindus, a more traditional filling would've been lamb or potato and peas. Also Cook's Illustrated noted that Tikka Masala is the most popular Indian dish at Indian restaurants in America (the spaghetti of Indian food if you will) but is not traditionally served in India.
Every recipe, except the rice, contained yogurt; a common ingredient in Indian dishes.
With the rise of Eastern Indians moving to the U.S., I wonder if Indian cuisine will ever catch on and be adapted to the American palate as much as Mexican food has been. In the International Foods aisle at Meijer food stores there is a "Hispanic" section filled with authentic items and a "Mexican" section filled with Taco Bell and Old El Paso items. Who knows, in the next few years perhaps Pillsbury will sell canned Naan next to canned croissants and Stouffer's will sell a frozen family sized Tikka Masala next to lasagna. The verdict is still out as to whether or not that would be a good or bad thing: sacrificing quality and flavor to bring a less exotic cuisine version of this cuisine to the palate of the American masses.
To be honest, I've only eaten Indian food a handful of times and this was my first time making Indian food from scratch. Feel free to leave a comment naming your favorite dish to order at an Indian restaurant. You don't need to create an account to leave a comment either, that's the great thing about blogger.com!