Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Scallop Ceviche
Since I discovered ceviche and the freshest of scallops during my trip to Peru in July, I've counted them among my favorite foods. I finally dared mix my own ceviche and it turned out well! The only thing really lacking is a coastline in Dallas to pull this stuff to my table fresher.
The scallops in this recipe may be replaced with any cubed raw fish or seafood. In Peru, the dish might be served with thinly sliced fish after a few minutes of marination. This is fine for sushi grade seafood you would be comfortable eating raw. Otherwise, count on 4 hours of marination time to fully cook the seafood in citric acids.
Without access to the Peruvian ingredients I would have liked, such as aji amarillo and the precise purple shallot popular in Peruvian ceviche, I made some decent substitutions.
1/2 lb medium scallops, halved
2 roasted garlic cloves, mashed into a paste
Juice of 4 limes
Red and green jalepeno, diced
Cilantro
Small red onion or shallot to taste
Marinate scallops, garlic and lime juice with jalepeno for at least 4 hours. Drain excessive liquid, add cilantro, small red onion or shallot and a fresh squeeze of lime juice. Serve.
Peruvian Food and Ingredients
Photos taken in July, 2009.
Causa: an elegantly fashioned appetizer prepared with yellow potato, fish or seafood, roasted onion, avocado and various sauces.
Conchas (Scallops), in their native shell with the "coral." This part may be eaten but is tasteless or slightly bitter.
Ceviche, as prepared by a fisherman on the beach with a small sardine-like fish.
Aji Amarillo (Yellow Chile)
Causa: an elegantly fashioned appetizer prepared with yellow potato, fish or seafood, roasted onion, avocado and various sauces.
Conchas (Scallops), in their native shell with the "coral." This part may be eaten but is tasteless or slightly bitter.
Ceviche, as prepared by a fisherman on the beach with a small sardine-like fish.
Aji Amarillo (Yellow Chile)
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Zucchini and Goat Cheese
The recipe I read used toasted pine nuts. I preferred to carelessly burn instead of toast all the expensive pine nuts I bought. So I substituted some salted green pumpkin seeds I found in my cupboard. Voila! A lovely and seasonal sidedish for a fall day.
3-5 large zucchini
2 pieces of garlic, sliced
Goat cheese
Toasted pumpkin seeds or pine nuts
Olive oil
Salt and freshly ground pepper
Cut the zucchini in large diagonal slices. In a large bottomed pan, heat a small quantity on olive oil on medium heat. Add the garlic and saute to flavor the oil. Add the zucchini in a single layer. After 2 minutes, turn once and heat the other side for another minute. If desired, remove to a paper towel to reduce oils, before setting aside in a heated serving dish. Repeat with remaining zucchini.
Top with crumbled goat cheese, salt, pepper and seeds or nuts to serve.
3-5 large zucchini
2 pieces of garlic, sliced
Goat cheese
Toasted pumpkin seeds or pine nuts
Olive oil
Salt and freshly ground pepper
Cut the zucchini in large diagonal slices. In a large bottomed pan, heat a small quantity on olive oil on medium heat. Add the garlic and saute to flavor the oil. Add the zucchini in a single layer. After 2 minutes, turn once and heat the other side for another minute. If desired, remove to a paper towel to reduce oils, before setting aside in a heated serving dish. Repeat with remaining zucchini.
Top with crumbled goat cheese, salt, pepper and seeds or nuts to serve.
Carrot Beet Soup
This beautiful and delicious Mexican-fusion vegetable soup is plain sweet! My mother, my roommate Jessica and friends Sonya and Mike all compliment my good beet soup. Do not neglect the final toppings of crumbled goat cheese, cilantro, lime, salt and black pepper, which perfectly enrich and finish this mild soup.
2 medium-sized roasted beets
8 medium-large carrots
1 large leek, white part only
1 yellow onion
5 cups vegetable broth
Lime juice
Olive oil
Serve with goat cheese, cilantro, coarsely ground salt and pepper and a slice of lime.
Roast the beets until soft throughout.
Meanwhile, peel and coarsely chop the carrots. Coarsely chop the leek and onion. In a large soup pot on medium heat, heat the olive oil. Add the carrot, leek and onion. Coat with olive oil and cover to sweat for 10 minutes, tossing once or twice.
Continue to cook on medium heat. Add the vegetable broth and bring to a slow boil for 20 minutes or until carrots are well softened.
Add carrot mixture and beets to food processor. (My food processor is small, so I have to do multiple, multicolored batches; hence the pretty picture above.) Puree until smooth and return to stovetop. Add juice of half a lime and reheat before serving.
Top with crumbled goat cheese, cilantro and coarsely ground salt and pepper. Serve with a slice of lime.
Roasted Beets
I love preparing roasted beets with olive oil and coarsely ground salt and pepper. They are a great side dish to a black pepper marinated pork or served cold in a salad with spinach, goat cheese and pomegrante. When I prepare my Carrot Beet Soup, I bake extra beets for a yummy cold sidedish for lunch.
Select beets of equal size for even baking. Medium sized beets may take over an hour to soften in a 400 degree oven. Halve or quarter the beets for a shorter cooking time, although this tends to reduce the sweet juiciness of the end result.
Remove the tops and coat the beets in olive oil, coarsely ground salt and pepper. Roast in 400 degree oven, turning occasionally until soft in center. I generally cut them in half towards the end of baking to easily test the centers.
Select beets of equal size for even baking. Medium sized beets may take over an hour to soften in a 400 degree oven. Halve or quarter the beets for a shorter cooking time, although this tends to reduce the sweet juiciness of the end result.
Remove the tops and coat the beets in olive oil, coarsely ground salt and pepper. Roast in 400 degree oven, turning occasionally until soft in center. I generally cut them in half towards the end of baking to easily test the centers.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Spicy Tacos
So its been awhile, but I should really pick this up again. And I recently saw Julie and Julia and am inspired to accomplish something outside my workday.
Today I made my favorite beef taco recipe. The spicy ground meat improves reheated after a day (or a few) in the fridge, so I typically make a huge batch and eat it for a week!
Although Ive never comparatively tested the results, I vary my ingredients hoping for a complex flavor. For example, I use three kinds of sweetning (white sugar, brown sugar and honey), two kinds of onion and two kinds of spice (jalepeno and dried chili). If you dont have every variation, just skip it! Use one sweetner, whatever onion and jalepeno is a must. I use canned tomato because its far cheaper (and easier) than fresh tomato, and I highly recommend Cento Italian Peeled tomatos.
Guestimating this recipe makes about 24 small tacos. (Serves 6, or 1 all week long...)
5 jalepenos
3/4 garlic clove
1 medium yellow onion
1 shallot
Heat saucepan to high/medium. Quarter the onion and half the shallot. Leave the skins on the onion, shallot and garlic. Separate the garlic cloves. Leave the jalepeno whole. Roast ingredients 5-10 minutes, skins may be burnt. Pieces should be softened throughout.
When sufficiently cool, remove garlic and onion skins and remove tough stem and root parts. Remove jalepeno stem. Add to food processor with following ingredients:
1 bunch cilantro
Small handful fresh oregano
Dried chilis (may be softened in hot water)
1 cup chicken or vegetable broth
24 oz can Cento Italian Peeled Tomatos
Juice of 2 large limes
2 tsp white sugar
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 tbsp honey
2 tsp salt
Process to make a nice salsa texture and place in large saucepan on medium/low heat. The salsa should simmer for at least 15 minutes.
3 lbs ground chuck
In large pot, brown the beef on medium heat. When brown, strain out the juice and return to pot. Spoon in the salsa mixture. The mix should be mostly meat without too much sauce (its not spaghetti, its taco meat!) If you have extra sauce, cool it and eat with chips!
The meat should simmer for at least an additional 10 minutes. The mixture will improve, loosing liquid, thickening and gaining flavor, with longer simmering.
At this stage the meat may be refrigerated for a later meal.
Serve with:
Small yellow corn tortillas
Shredded "Mexican" cheese
Small diced jalepeno
Cilantro
Lime
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Works in Progress
From Blogger Pictures |
I have a new cookbook called "Chilis." Its a beauty! This weekend I will try my first recipes: Chicken Enchiladas and Sweet Corn and Chili Chowder. Im also going to try to make Yam Enchiladas like the fantastic ones I ate at Boundary Bay Brewery in Bellingham, WA. In the meantime...
Today I experimented with a black bean "dip", using my Christmas-new "Magic Bullet!" I pureed unmeasured quantities of leftover canned black beans, onion, fresh poblano chili, lime, oil, cinnamon and brown sugar. It was delicious and I was eating spoonfuls of it! I did not care for the color, a light grey rather than a handsome black. Then I decided to broil it in a flour tortilla like a cheeseless quesadilla (cheeseless like my fridge happened to be...) I added some fresh onions and cilantro for texture... and yuck. The fresh onion overwhelmed the mild sweet and spicy flavor of the puree.
Next time Ill use reconstituted black beans instead of canned- I think this will darken the color and even improve the flavor. I might try the next puree rolled into a corn tortilla... or skip the tortilla and serve alongside salsa with chips!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)