Sunday, July 22, 2012

Week 29: Color (Orange, White, Green) - Saag Paneer

  

I was baffled by what to do for Color week. So I started some stream of consciousness. My wife is due on Friday and you always hear to eat spicy food to get things kick started (not that I'm trying to kick start anything, but it popped into my mind)... She loves saag paneer... Saag Paneer is Indian... The Indian flag is Orange, White, and Green... Those are colors... Hey, we have a winner!

I want to state up front that I am a pasty white guy from Cincinnati and I do not claim that this is authentic. It is not the same consistency as what you get at the Indian restaurants down the street (we have four within walking distance), but it still tastes really good.

When I make curry, I compare about 4 recipes in order to come up with what I want. I use my Indian cookbook, www.ecurry.com, and general internet searches. I will walk you through what I did.

You'll need the following:
 


4 cloves of garlic, sliced
1" piece of ginger, julienned or minced

1.5 Tbsp cumin seed (whole)
1 Tbsp coriander seed (whole)
1 Tsp mustard seed (whole)
1.5 Tsp Fenugreek seed (whole)
Seeds from 4 Cardamom pods

1.5 Tbsp Garam Masala

3 Tbsp Ghee (clarified butter)

1 onion, diced
hot peppers, minced (I used 1 Jalapeno (seeded) and 1 Serrano (with seeds))

16 - 20 oz fresh spinach

14 oz paneer, cut into 1/2 inch cubes

1 14.5 oz can of diced tomatos
2 c chicken broth / stock / water
1 tsp Kasoori Methi (fenugreek)


1. Toast the whole seeds in a dry saute pan. Be careful not to burn, as they can turn quickly.
2. Grind the toasted seeds up in a spice grinder. Set aside.


3. Bring a pot of water to a boil. Add spinach in batches. Blanche until the color turns vibrant, no more than 30 seconds. Remove to a colander set over a pot to catch drippings (you don't want to make a mess do you?)
4. Once the spinach is done, run under cold water to stop the cooking. Spread the spinach around the colander and let drain as you continue cooking.


I usually just use chicken stock, but the water I used to cook the spinach was green and smelled of spinach, so I reserved about 3/4 c to use instead of stock for the added flavor.


5. Heat 3 Tbsp of ghee in a deep heavy pot over medium high heat.


6. Fry the cubes of paneer on both sides until golden, brown, and delicious. Don't crowd the bottom. Do this in batches. Remove to a plate with a paper towel and reserve.


7. While the cheese is frying, add the garlic, ginger, and a small amount of diced onion to a small blender and blend into a paste. (Of course, if you want to do this before frying, then you won't have to worry about burning something)

I have heard from Indian friends that there are special blenders for this in India that work on much higher settings than what we have here. I have found that this is the best tool for making this paste. I use the flat blade not the blender blade. I use some onion in order to get enough liquid to to get things blending.


8. Add the garlic paste to the remaining hot oil and cook until fragrant. Add in the spice mixture and Garam Masala. Stir and cook the spices for 1 minute.



9. Add onions and peppers and saute until the translucent.


10. Add in the tomato, chicken stock, and Kasoori Methi. Stir. Cover and simmer for 20 minutes.


 11. Squeeze the spinach to release any excess water. You really want to squeeze, because there is a lot of water caught up in there. Roughly chop the squeezed out remains.

12. After the 10 minutes is up, uncover and simmer for another 20 minutes. This is a good time to put on the rice.

13. Stir in the spinach and paneer. Cook long enough to heat through.

14. Serve over rice.


Like I said, my wife is pregnant, and although she likes spicy foods, she can't really eat them right now. To help cool this down for her, I made a quick side.

Slice some onion and sautee in olive oil. Drain and rinse a can of chickpeas. Microwave the chickpeas for 1:33. Add them to the sautee pan. Chop some cilantro, stems included, about 1 tbsp. Add Stems to the pan. Mix 1/2 c yogurt with the cilantro. After the onions and chickpeas are cooked through, mix into the yogurt.

This quick side helped cook things down for her, and added some more protein.

Week 28: Citrus - Lime Yogurt Cake with Raspberry Sauce


For our citrus week, I thought that I would pull a recipe from our beloved smittenkitchen.com. This cake is easy enough that even the non-bakers out there can pull it off without worry.

Not only is it easy; it is (almost) healthy!

My wife is not a fan of blackberries for some reason. She prefers raspberries. But that's OK, because this cake is really a great canvass for you to mix and match whatever flavors you like. I will probably go with lemon next time, since it goes perfectly with raspberries.

The recipe for this Lime Yogurt Cake with Blackberry Sauce is available from the source.

I used 2% Greek yogurt.

Zest and juice your lime

Whisk together the "wet" ingredients

Add in the eggs

I love this sieve! Got it from IKEA for like $4

Sift the dry ingredients into the wet

Stir everything together

Drop it all in the pan and put it in the oven

Sauces don't get much easier

Best product ever advertised on late night TV

There's that sieve again

Let cool and then remove the springform


Week 27: BBQ - Thanksgiving Burgers


This is me catching up.
I took the topic a little liberally and went with the general backyard American interpretation of BBQ is grilling. I know it isn't but, it was fricking hot on July 4th and I was moving like a slug.

This was great. It was two holidays in one. We had Thanksgiving all wrapped up in a bun on the 4th of July.

These turkey burgers are standbys in our house. They are phenomenal, and super easy.

These are Rachel Ray burgers. If we have learned one thing from making Rachel Ray, it is that her recipes don't work great unless you modify them. For these, don't put the cheese in the mix, just put it on top.

Ingredients:
  • 1 package ground turkey breast
  • 2 rounded tablespoons prepared horseradish
  • 1/3 pound sharp white cheddar cheese, diced or crumbled into 1/4 inch pieces
  • 2 scallions, finely chopped
  • 1 rounded palmful grill seasoning, such as McCormick's Montreal Steak Seasoning
  • Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), for drizzling
  • Spicy brown mustard
  • 4 poppy seed Kaiser rolls, split
  • 1 tub or can of good-quality whole-berry cranberry sauce
  • Romaine lettuce leaves, for topping burgers
Serves 4
 
Heat a nonstick skillet over medium-high heat.

In a medium bowl, mix together the meat, horseradish, cheddar pieces, scallions and grill seasoning. Form 4 patties and drizzle them with EVOO. Cook the burgers for 5-6 minutes on each side. Spread mustard on the bun bottoms and cranberry sauce on the bun tops. Place the burgers on the bun bottoms, top with romaine leaves, and set the bun tops in place. Serve fancy chips alongside.
 
We grilled them instead of doing them on the stove.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Week 26: Pizza - Grilled Cuban Pizza

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I know that I have already posted a Cuban sandwich, but I couldn't resist posting a pizza with pickles on it. So here I present a grilled Cubano pizza.


The recipe for the dough is available here.
Dough's ready.

Slicing the grilled pork.

Oh yeah this pizza has pickles

Par cooking the dough

No tomato sauce for this pizza, straight dijon mustard.

Add the ham.

Add the grilled pork.

Provolone!


Can't have a Cubano without pickles. (Trust me on this)

This was inspired by our local Cincinnati pizza place who had the creativity to try it. And it was just as good. Yum!

Week 25: Regional - Cincinnati Chili

This is what we are making. We aren't using this can, that's for my brother in Afghanistan. We are going to do old-style. From scratch.
Still catching up. Forgive me...please.

When you talk about regional Cincinnati "cuisine," you are talking about two real options: goetta and Cincinnati-style chili. While I did make a goetta, egg muffin sandwich for breakfast, I decided to go with homemade Cincinnati-style chili. (no brand names here, although those of us from Cincinnati know that there is only one kind of Cincinnati chili.)

Cincinnati-style chili is not chili like you think. It is an obnoxious, thin, soupy sauce that has "ground beef" but nothing else in it really. It is served over a a short hot dog or spaghetti with more cheese than anyone could possibly ever need in one serving. Skyline, I mean Cincinnati chili is really an exercise in walking the line. The line? Oh that is whether or not you will have a heart attack today. Of course you may be eating it because you need an enema and don't want to shove something up your ass. I hope I don't need to explain more.

Brown some ground beef. Try to break it up as much as possible.

I pulsed the onions in the processor. Basically you want your friend who hates onions to not know they are there.

Bubble bubble boil and trouble

Spice mix

You can smell it now.

The start of a glorious five-way
What's a five-way you ask? Is it a weird Cincinnati food-sex thing? NO!

Here's the scoop, so if you are ever in Cincinnat and a semi-attractive girl asks if you want a three-way, you know what you are getting into:

The three way is the base of all Cincinnat chili. It is spaghetti (usually overcooked and starchy), covered in chili, topped with enough shredded cheddar cheese to stop up the giant from Jack and the Beanstalk.

A four way is a three way with either onions or kidney beans, your choice, under the cheese.

A five way is a three way with both onions and kidney beans under the cheese.

If you are a real Cincinnatian, than you are most likely to order a three way. If you are like me, and not from Cincinnati, you might order a four way. Once you realize that you are actually a Cincinnatian now, you will order a five way because you still believe that if you want to call it chili, then it needs beans.

Not anywhere near enough cheese, but they buy it by the pound and I buy it by the ounce.



Week 24: Berries - Raspberry Peach Pie


I am just now catching up. It;s been super busy around here with all the nesting and all. Sorry for the irresponsibility. I guarantee that this was made in the week it was supposed to be made. Promise.

This is a recipe from <cough><cough> Martha Stewart <cough>. The recipe is available here.


Peel and slice the peaches.

Add the raspberries

Gotta have a gin and tonic with  baking right?

Is there a better word than maceration?

Butter anyone?

OK. My wife helped. She loves me.

Guess we needed some pectin or something. Too bad we didn't use Cooks Illustrated.

Yum.