Monday, December 1, 2008

Monday Night Pizza


"00" pizza dough is the first and most important ingredient followed by a simple marinara sauce and fresh mozzarella cheese. Mushrooms, pepperoni, red and yellow peppers, homemade meatballs and roasted garlic round out the toppings.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Pathetic Turkey Pie


Aristocrat Turkey Pie. Comedy afficianados know the aristocrat joke. Well, people who appreciate a Chicken or Turkey Pot Pie should know that with the Aristocrat Pies from Upton, MA., the joke is on you.

The Turkey Pie is not Turkey Pie. It is a carrots and peas pie with some turkey scraps. The pie crust is the best part by far. $13 One cup of peas and one cup of carrots with 1/4 cup of turkey bits, some chicken stock, corn starch and pie crust. $13?

The Aristocrats!

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Pizza done right

Twenty or thirty seconds in the microwave removes much of the grease from pepperoni slices.
Thank you to Cook's Illustrated for the tip.


Dough from Capone Foods "00" pizza flour with sauce made from milled Roma tomatoes. A little salt and fresh oregano, basil, marjoram, thyme and rosemary or some Penzey's Italian Herb Mix adds authentic flavor. Rao's tomatoes are the best canned tomatoes. Fresh mozzarella is topped with a sautéd mixture of mushrooms, shallots and minced Small Farm garlic. Pepperoni and Canadian Bacon or ham are last to go on before the pizza goes into a hot oven.

A Birthday Request for Alton's Fried Chicken



GB&D

We stayed pretty close to Alton Brown's Fried Chicken recipe mixing paprika, garlic powder, cayenne pepper and salt with the flour to dredge the chicken before frying in organic non-hydrogenated all vegetable shortening at 325 degrees F.



Doesn't take long and it beats the heck out of KFC.

Use good chicken such as Bell & Evans.

Technique does not make up for using supermarket previously frozen chicken.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Beef Stir Fry


First of all, you do not need a wok for a stir-fry and unless you have a burner specifically engineered for use with a wok, a conventional stovetop will never heat a wok to proper temperatures for stir frying.

First in the sauté pan: cubed beef tenderloin into hot tea oil. Once browned, out of the heat and into a bowl with minced ginger in soy sauce. Set aside.

Into the sauté pan go the onions, bell peppers, carrots and scallions. Next, minced garlic followed quickly by bok choi, mushrooms and a cup of chicken broth.


Make a slurry from a tablespoon of cornstarch and a couple tablespoons of water and mix into stir-fry. Add some soy sauce and oyster sauce to taste. Both contain enough salt that the dish probably does not need any more seasoning.

Add the cooked beef in ginger and soy sauce back in to the mix. Some cubed chicken tenderloins went into this mixture as well(optional). The sauce should be thickened by now. Turn the heat off and add the scallion greens and crunchy bits.

Stir and serve over jasmine rice with steamed shu mai for a tasty dinner.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Eggless Onion Rings

Sweet Vidalia Onions dipped in milk and dredged in a mixture of AP flour, paprika, salt, and garlic powder. Fry in canola oil at 375 degrees F for just a couple of minutes until GB&D.
Cool on a rack for just a minute or two before serving.


Monday, October 6, 2008

A Birthday Request for Alton's Fried Chicken


GB&D

We stayed pretty close to Alton Brown's Fried Chicken recipe mixing paprika, garlic powder, cayenne pepper and salt with the flour to dredge the chicken before frying in organic non-hydrogenated all vegetable shortening at 325 degrees F.



Doesn't take long and it beats the heck out of KFC.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Happy Birthday Brookester!


Yes, there is cake too, but this is apple season and some Cortland apples found their way into a mixture of sugar and freshly ground nutmeg. Birthday Pie!

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Mussels Mariniere et Provencale


Mussels Mariniere with a Provencal twist, this dish starts with sliced scallions and minced (Small Farm) garlic sweated in butter with chopped parsely and basil. Stir in a little tomato sauce before turning the heat up and adding some dry white wine.
In goes a couple of pounds of cleaned, debearded mussels -a quick stir- and on goes the lid. Five minutes later, all but one of the mussels are open and opaque. The closed mussel is discarded and the rest are served with salad and toast points.

Delicious. The Super Stop & Shop in Hudson, MA has an interesting seafood department. Sometimes the display of seafood looks exactly like you would expect the seafood to look in a supermarket display case. Keep in mind that this is New England and the competition for fresh seafood is abundant. Seafood lovers who are used to the display at places like Captain Marden's
are not likely to be impressed by a supermarket seafood department.

Somehow, Stop & Shop is putting some exceptional seafood on the shelf. Not always. Not even regularly, but often enough to make the seafood department a regular stop when you make your way through the store. Since they expanded the Stop & Shop to a Super Stop & Shop, the likelihood of spotting a beautiful wild-caught salmon fillet or some fresh sea scallops has made it well worth looking. You might be disappointed, but you just might change the menu for tonight.

These mussels were very clean and fresh. The 2 pounds of shellfish contained not a single one with a broken shell and all but one opened during steaming. One or two mussels were a little gritty, but they were all firm, fresh and flavorful.

It would be preferable for customers not to have to carry around yet another plastic card in order to pay non-artificially inflated prices at Stop & Shop and preferable to not be "earning" Stop & Shop gas credits at a gas station 20 miles away. (That means paying more for milk and bread to "earn" so called credits that expire before there is any chance of redeeming them.)

The Stop & Shop marketing department is working hard to rip customers off for a little bit here and a little bit there, which is a lot of money when you have as many customers as Stop & Shop does. Actually, to be precise; Stop & Shop is a subsidiary of Royal Ahold. (They own Giant, Peapod and a number of grocery related businesses globally.) The marketing schemes might be Stop & Shop's work but it might just be Royal Ahold's.

The seafood department is worth a look.




Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Beef & Broccoli

If you are a reader of this blog then you know that I am an Idylwilde farms regular.

Lately, my usual tab at the checkout has been less than $50.

You know what that means don't you - daily visits. Well, not on Tuesdays.

Feeding people with food allergies means the prepared foods section of the market is usually a minefield rather than a time-saver. However, this minefield, and certainly this has been the case for me, can be a goldmine. Everything in the prepared foods section was prepared with ingredients available within 50 yards or so.

Two points to consider here: One is the story of the grocery store chicken and the other is the story of "it will only contain what you add" if food allergies are an issue.

Consider the organic grocery store chicken: It comes to the market almost whole and recently dispatched. If it doesn't sell whole, it is cut up, a little bit older, and a little bit more expensive. If it doesn't sell cut up, the chicken is marinated or cooked, a little bit older and more expensive.
Extrapolate at will.

Before I review the selections at the meat chiller, I check out the prepared foods. I do not want the prepared foods, because they do or may contain prohibited ingredients, but that does not mean they are without value. Indeed, the prepared foods are inspiring. I find myself checking the prepared foods before I look to the fresh proteins. Tonight was no exception. The Beef & Broccoli was inspiring.

Ginger, carrots, red bell pepper, carrots, scallions, baby bok choi, and out-of-frame beef tenderloin, all from Idylwilde. The garlic was, of course, from Small Farm in Stow.


First, cook the beef and set aside. (Butcher Block teriyaki sauce makes an excellent marinade.)

Minced ginger and garlic first followed quickly by peppers, carrots. bok choi, scallions, oyster sauce and chicken stock.

Stir in steamed broccoli and finish with green scallions, blanched snow pea pods
and maybe some wasabi crunchy salad toppings.

No unwanted ingredients, all fresh and organic ingredients.

See you at Idylwilde, but not on Tuesdays.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Slow roast chicken with Yukon potatoes and English peasY


Slow roasted chicken: There are dozens of variations on this recipe but they all end up with essentially the same formula. 350-375 for 1/2 hour, 200 for an hour and 400 for 1/2 hour. Don't stuff the bird or truss it. That's it-slow roasted chicken. Moist and tender and flavored however you flavor it.

A lover of 40 clove chicken and in particular, the bonus resulting roasted garlic makes this one a favorite.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

ChiChesSau

Chicken Cheese and Sauce


Start with washed chicken cutlets. Dip in milk and coat with panko.
Fry in a little Canola oil and transfer to foil covered cookie sheet. Top with your choice of cheese. We topped with crumbled blue cheese for the adult palate and milder cheddar cheese slices for younger palates. Warm in a preheated 225-250 degree oven for 10-15 minutes until cheese is melted.

Simmer D'Amico Brand or your favorite tomato sauce (D'Amico can ve difficult to find).


Plate chicken with jasmin rice and serve with fresh bread.

Add tomato sauce and garnish.


This dish pairs well with a Pinot Grigio.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Korean barbeque back ribs


Barbeque over indirect heat using Cowboy Charcoal.

Cowboy

Slow, indirect cooking over Cowboy charcoal and regularly basted with a mixture of soy sauce, minced onion and minced garlic, minced ginger, rice wine, corn starch, toasted sesame oil and lemon juice makes for some tasty ribs.

If you do not have time to make your own Korean BBQ sauce try


Annie Chun Korean Barbeque Sauce.



Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Pizza night

How long does pizza delivery take? This pizza takes 30-40 minutes.

And this pizza is spectacular.

Start with Capone Foods Neapolitan "00" Pizza Flour for your pizza dough. Also available already made into pizza dough and frozen. Just move it from the freezer to the refrigerator a day before you intend to use it, for perfect, high-gluten dough.

Form the dough and place on parchment paper on a peel.

Using a simple homemade tomato sauce made with homegrown or locally grown tomatoes will guarantee best results. Tonight's pizza is being sauced with D'Amico tomato sauce.

Fresh, local ingredients also include in-season Small Farm garlic.

Sauté Cremini mushrooms with Canadian bacon and minced garlic adding the garlic at the very end and turn the flame off.


Add a light layer of D'Amico tomato sauce with Penzey's Italian herb mix. Top with fresh mozzarella and grated mild and sharp cheddar cheeses.


Add garlic mushroom bacon toppings. Put pizza on your pizza stone in a preheated 450-475 degree oven for about 10 minutes.

When it looks like this in the oven, it is done. Take it out and let it rest for a couple of minutes before cutting.

Ready to cut and serve with a nice salad.

and a nice Chianti...no fava beens...tonight.


Wines labeled Cabernet Savignon or Merlot, for example, are named for the grape. European wines are often named for the region in which the grapes are grown. Champagne refers to wine from the region of the same name. Chianti is a wine from an area called "Chianti," which is inside of a region of Italy called Tuscany. Within Chianti is a smaller area called "Chianti Classico." The "Riserva" label applies to Chianti aged for at least two years and is generally the most expensive Chianti.

"Chianti" always, in accordance with Italian wine law, contains at least 80% of the native grape Sangiovese. This grape produces a wine that has a distinctive cherry character, high acidity, and medium to substantial tannins -- all elements that lead to a food-friendly wine. particularly well paired with pasta.

D'Amico Chianti 2007 has a light nose of fresh, ripe black cherries. Still young, bright flavors of black and red cherry greet the palate, smoothed together with ample acidity and medium tannins. The finish is sour cherry , with mouthwatering acidity and almost no trace of alcohol. The tart acidity and almost mild tannins make it a perfect match for pizza or any pasta with marinara sauce. The D'Amico label, noticeably absent from the bottle, would leave us wondering. Had we not spoken to the vintner, we would not have known to give this young bottle a little extra time to breathe. The similarly labeled D'Amico pasta sauce, with a fresh, bright tomato and basil presence, paired with this easygoing Chianti perfectly.

-no nuts no eggs no how no way

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Mussels




Mussels in a Spicy Vinaigrette

6 lbs live mussels in the shell

¼ cup EVOO

¼ cup Pomegranate Champagne Vinegar (or other high quality red wine vinegar)

1 tsp sweet paprika

1 tsp hot paprika

1 lemon sliced and quartered

2 cloves garlic, minced Small Farms garlic is best.

2 T rough chopped fresh parsley

salt

Clean mussels under cold water and remove beards. Discard beards, broken and open unresponsive mussels. Shellfish begin to decompose very rapidly when they expire. If they have expired prior to cooking, they should be discarded. When mussels expire during cooking they open. Mussels that do not open during the cooking process should be discarded.

Add all ingredients except the mussels to a lidded pan or stockpot and bring to a boil uncovered. Simmer for a minute, add mussels and cover to cook for 4-5 minutes until mussels open. Discard unopened mussels.

The original recipe for this dish in the Williams Sonoma Kitchen Library series Hors d’Oeuvres & Appetizers calls for cooling to room temperature and then refrigerating for 2-4 hours before serving.

Brooke says that they are better served warm, immediately after steaming. Brooke is correct. Hot or chilled, a squeeze of a fresh lemon wedge just before serving enhances the flavor of the fresh shellfish.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Tacos are always better with a nice guac. Well we have finally found one you don't have to make. Wholly Guacamole is on the shelf (in the produce section) at the grocery store.

Delicious. Made with Haas avocados and not a shred of the vile weed.


Monday, August 11, 2008

Quick and Delicious

Trader Joe's Jasmine Rice (when it is in the freezer) makes a 3-4 minute starch for your plate that cannot be beat. No disrespect to the 8 times washed first harvest jasmine rice in a fuzzy-logic cooker with a little saffron, sea salt and Columela EVOO. Sometimes dinner can be ready in an hour or so , and sometimes dinner needs to be ready right now.

Back to Trader Joe and this time for some frozen peas. A teaspoon of water in a small bowl under a few tablespoons of frozen peas with some perforated Saran wrap on top in a microwave for two minutes...so far, we are using 5 minutes of microwave.

During the microwave minutes we make a rue: equal amounts of fat(butter or oil) and flour in a skillet. Once browned to taste, remove from skillet and add thin sliced pork chops with a little more oil or butter. Brown on both sides and remove at temperature. Return rue to skillet and add 1 cup chicken stock. Whisk until it is working and return pork chops for a minute. Add chopped parsley. Toast points are good if time permits.

Plate and serve. This is a balanced meal and fast to the table with visual appear and flavors not usually found with fast-food.

Thursday, July 31, 2008


Capone's 00 flour is the magic in the dough for this pizza. Sauced with Pomi strained tomatoes and topped with mozzerella cheese, mushrooms, olives, Trader Joe's roasted peppers, and Boar's Head Deluxe Ham. If you visit Capone's in Somerville or Cambridge, get some Spiced Pitted Sicialian Olives. Never has there been a better componenent to a martini.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

BrookeOK Blue Cheese Dressing

Most Blue Cheese Dressings include eggs and a whole bunch of other stuff. Not this one.

And it is good. Try it with Buffalo Wings!


Start with your favorite blue cheese, crumbled.

Add some Brown Cow Cream Top Plain Yogurt.
www.browncowfarm.com

Add some SpectrumOrganics eggless vegan Light Canola Mayo.

Add a little Organic Worchestershire sauce, some garlic powder and some mustard powder.

Whisk and chill.