Monday, April 16, 2012

100 Foodies

If you know anything about me, you'd know that my absence is due to the studio and my senior year. I have one more semester but this is my last semester in the major so I'm dedicating all my time to the studio (not like I don't usually do anyway).

So... quick thoughts; a list of 100 things you should eat before you die.


1. Abalone
2. Absinthe
3. Alligator
4. Baba Ghanoush
5. Bagel & Lox
6. Baklava
7. BBQ Ribs
8. Bellini
9. Birds Nest Soup
10. Biscuits & Gravy
11. Black Pudding
12. Black Truffle
13. Borscht
14. Calamari
15. Carp
16. Caviar
17. Cheese Fondue
18. Chicken & Waffles
19. Chicken Tikka Masala
20. Chile Relleno
21. Chitlins
22. Churros
23. Clam Chowder
24. Cognac
25. Crab Cakes
26. Crickets
27. Currywurst
28. Dandelion Wine
29. Dulce De Leche
30. Durian
31. Eel
32. Eggs Benedict
33. Fish Tacos
34. Foie Gras

35. Fresh Spring Rolls
36. Fried Catfish
37. Fried Green Tomatoes
38. Fried Plantain
39. Frito Pie
40. Frogs' Legs
41. Fugu
42. Funnel Cake
43. Gazpacho
44. Goat
45. Goat's Milk
46. Goulash
47. Gumbo
48. Haggis
49. Head Cheese
50. Heirloom Tomatoes
51. Honeycomb
52. Hostess Fruit Pie
53. Huevos Rancheros
54. Jerk Chicken
55. Kangaroo
56. Key Lime Pie

57. Kobe Beef
58. Lassi
59. Lobster

60. Mimosa
61. Moon Pie
62. Morel Mushrooms
63. Nettle Tea
64. Octopus
65. Oxtail Soup
66. Paella
67. Paneer

68. Pastrami on Rye
69. Pavlova
70. Phaal
71. Philly Cheese Steak (right in Philly of course)

72. Pho
73. Pineapple & Cottage Cheese
74. Pistachio Ice Cream
75. Po' Boy
76. Pocky

77. Polenta
78. Prickly Pear
79. Rabbit Stew
80. Raw Oysters
81. Root Beer Float

82. S'mores

83. Sauerkraut
84. Sea Urchin
85. Shark
86. Snail
87. Snake
88. Soft Shell Crab
89. Som Tam
90. Spaetzle
91. Spam
92. Squirrel
93. Steak Tartare
94. Sweet Potato Fries
95. Sweetbreads
96. Tom Yum
97. Umeboshi
98. Venison
99. Wasabi Peas
100. Zucchini Flowers

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Green ravioli stuffed with vegetables and tomato sauce

This recipe was actually from my cooking class in Italy a year ago (March). It's a VERY basic recipe but still delish, and the green pasta dough you can get is absolutely BEAUTIFUl especially in contrast with the red sauce. It's light and delish!

Thank you Tomasso! :)


Ravioli Verdi Di Verdure Con Salsa Di Pomodoro

(Green ravioli stuffed with vegetables and tomato sauce)

Serves 8

Green Pasta:

400 gr flour

4 eggs

300 gr cooked spinach

To cook spinach:

  1. Cook and cover with a minimal amount of water under medium heat for about two minutes.
  2. Drain, rinse with fresh cold water to stop the heat. Squeeze out water to avoid extra moisture and having pasta fall apart later. Purée.

To make pasta:

  1. Make a well with the flour, break the eggs into the center. Add the puréed spinach to the eggs and blend with fork.
  2. Then beat egg mixture while slowly incorporating flour. Knead dough to obtain a consistent green color and homogeneous texture.
  3. Wrap/cover dough and let it rest.
  4. After rest, cover with semolina or flour. Little by litte, roll out through the pasta machine.

Filling:

2 leeks fresh basil leaves

2 zucchini 100 gr grated parmesan cheese

1 carrot extra virgin olive oil

1 celery stalk salt & pepper to taste

  1. Finely chop vegetables and lightly sauté until a little crispy and transparent with oil. Season with salt and pepper.
  2. Add finely chopped basil leaves and a spoonful of grated parmesan cheese.
  3. Place small amount of filling on top of pasta sheets.
  4. Cover with another past sheet, seal edges around filling with water and press out the air. Cut edges.

Dressing:

1 eggplant 2 minced garlic cloves

500 gr fresh tomatoes salt to taste

extra virgin olive oil grated parmesan cheese

fresh basil leaves

  1. Blanch fresh tomatoes, peeling and deseeding. (Or use chopped chunks of tomatoes with canned tomato sauce.)
  2. Purée the tomato pulp with a vegetable mill and add already-sautéed garlic cloves.
  3. Add salt to taste and cook for only 15-20 minutes. Add fresh basil leaves before serving.

Boil the ravioli in salted water; drain and serve with sauce.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Apple Rose Tarts

To begin this recipe, have your tarts prepared. Tart dough recipe

Custard Ingredients:
2 Braeburn apples – or apple of your choice. 
100g sugar 
120ml extra thick double cream 
1tbsp lemon juice 
1/2 rind lemon 
1 large egg 
2 large egg yolks 
1-2 tbs cornflour 

Preheat the oven to 400° F. 
Mix the sugar, cream, egg, yolks, lemon rind & juice. Peel, core and grate the apples finely over a sieve to drain off excess juice. (Save this for later) Stir into the egg/cream mixture. Gradually incorporate the cornflour. Spoon into tarts.

 
Decorative Apple Rose Ingredients:
4 red-skinned eating apples – as red as you can find for a rosier-colored rose 1/2 litre apple juice 250g caster sugar I didn't have apple juice but I did have delicious teas from Teavanna (Jasmine Dragon and Rooibos Tropica). Stir the juice and sugar together over medium heat until dissolved. Cut apples in half. Remove the core and slice into semi-circles. Simmer in juice and sugar until tender, but not so much that it falls apart. Pour it into a strainer and let it cool. Line up the slices- I found that 8 is a good amount. However for my tarts today, I had to go with 4-5 because I was low on apples. Roll them up from left to right and carefully place into the custard-filled tart crusts. To avoid burning (which I couldn't figure out until awhile after), cover the pan with aluminum foil for the first 10 minutes or so.

  Bake 10 minutes, turn the pan around and bake for another 10. Or until it looks like the custard has set. Using that excess juice from the first steps, add 250gr of sugar over heat until you get a syrupy substance. Brush over the roses and dust with sugared powder. There was another dozen... that was destroyed by me and my dad :) (I still had some leftover sugar pearls so I tossed those in)

Tips:
1. After you've cooked the apple slices, you can let them soak in their juice overnight so that the red from the skin bleeds more.
2. The skin from the apple can be a bit of a nuisance to eat sometimes. I slice them thinner and that seems to lessen the problem. 

The year is ~2020~. It is 8 years later and I've found an alternative custard recipe I used recently. I can't say I'd throw out the one I posted originally because I haven't tried it in a long time, but here it is anyway:

Ingredients:
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 egg yolks
1 whole egg
1 1/4 cups whipping cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Instructions:
1. Preheat the oven to 320° F.
2. Place the sugar in the carafe of a high speed blender. Process on high until the sugar has turned into a white powder.
3. Add the egg yolks, whole egg, whipping cream, and vanilla to the sugar in the blender. Blend until smooth.
4. Bake for 30-35 minutes until the custards are firm. Serve warm.

-My note on the sugar is, I used powdered sugar. I also tend to cut the sugar down in most recipes (unless it will do something structurally detrimental to the food).

Ricotta Pear Tart


I found this recipe online searching for tart recipes using ricotta because my ricotta was days from expiring. And it turned out great!

So you make your tarts...

There's a little trick to this one- the cutter is smaller than I think it should be so you have to use the tamper to press down and up against the sides of the mold to fill it out. Otherwise you're getting the tiniest of tarts.

Poke holes otherwise they're much more likely to puff up (if you pre-bake them before filling) like the following picture:




Making tarts is simple. It's just kind of tedious.

8 oz whole milk ricotta
3 oz cream cheese
2 tbsp honey, divided
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
2 pears, sliced and pressed between paper towels to remove some moisture

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

The recipe calls to pre-bake the crust for 10 minutes but that was for the large 8-serving tart pan. So I don't think it's necessary to do that here. I modified the rest of the recipe to accommodate that.

Blend together the ricotta, cream cheese, 3 tbsp of the honey, the egg, and the vanilla extract until well combined. Pour the mixture into the tart pan and smooth the top.

Lay the pear slices across the top of the ricotta mixture, and drizzle with the final tbsp of honey.
Bake for 15 minutes or until the tart only jiggles slightly and is starting to brown at the edges.
Let sit for 1 hour before slicing and serving.

I was running out of pears so I changed up how I cut the pears. Not really sure of how to make it look nice on such a small scale hah.

Using the measurements above, I made almost 3 dozen mini tarts.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Pie Crust (Buttery and Flaky!)

For Christmas, Cecilia sent me love and a Williams-Sonoma giftcard from Taiwan. (P.S. She also has a food blog. Clearly, we're sisters.)

After much deliberation between a ravioli mold and a mini-tart baking set, I decided on the latter.


The most basic but also most important step of pastries and pies is knowing how to make the perfect pie crust. It's just a little harder than it sounds, trust me.

1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspon salt
1/2 cup butter, chilled and diced
1/4 cup ice water

The 2 tricks to keep in mind throughout this 1, keep the butter chilled as often as possible and 2, DO NOT overwork it. You should still have bits of butter intact by the time you roll out the dough.

Dice the butter. Like I said, right after I diced them I put them in the freezer just for extra measure.

I sifted the flour (with my Williams-Sonoma flour sifter Cecilia sent me for my 21st birthday). Honestly, I don't know if that really makes a huge difference with pie crusts but I figure it wouldn't hurt anyway.

Then I mixed the butter cubes and flour and pulsed it in the food processor. Only until it looks like the coarse crumbs above. DO NOT over process. Do not over process. Do. Not.

Transfer to a larger bowl.

Then, with a tablespoon at a time, add water in and mix it with a fork. DO NOT OVERWORK IT.
You'll be terribly tempted to use your hands to mash it all together but don't. Put it all on a sheet of cling wrap and condense it into a disc as follows.

It will still look crumbly. But no worries.

Wrap tightly and refrigerate for 2 hours (and up to 2 days). Don't skimp out, it has to be this long.

When you roll. it out, the first roll will be crumbly. Re-condense it and roll it out again. It should be that perfect familiar consistency.