Ancho Chocolate Short Ribs

I made this for dinner last night.  Quite labour intensive, but delicious!

1.  First, put 5lbs of short ribs, 1 tablespoon of peppercorns, 1 tablespoon of salt, 1 bay leaf, 10 smashed garlic cloves, and 1 of the quartered onions into a large pot.  Cover with water, and simmer for 2 hours. 

2.  Put 2 tomatoes and 1 quartered onion on a sheet pan, and drizzle with olive oil.  Chop the top off a head of garlic, wrap it in tinfoil, and toss it on the sheet pan.  Put it in the oven for 1 hour at 400 F. 

3.  Seed and de-stem 15 dried ancho chiles.  Tear the chiles into pieces.  Wear gloves.  Seriously. 

4.  Once the tomatoes, onion and garlic done, toss the tomatoes, onion and garlic in the blender (squeeze the head of garlic, and all the goop will come out).  Puree.  You may need to add a splash of water to make it come together.  Also, don’t bother to clean the blender after this step.  You’ll use it again for the same sauce.   

5.  When the meat is done, remove it from the pot and put aside.  Strain the cooking liquid and discard the rest of the stuff from the pot. 

6.  Add 3 cups of the cooking liquid to the chiles and let sit for 15 minutes. 

7.  Put the mixture in the blender and puree.  

8.  Add 2 tablespoons of olive oil to a large pot on medium heat.  Add the chile puree and stir until heated through.  Add the tomato puree and 3 cups of the cooking liquid.  Bring to a simmer, then put the meat back to the pot.  Simmer on low-medium heat for 2 hours or until the meat is very tender.

9.  Add one 110 gram bar of Mexican chocolate, finely chopped, to the sauce at the very end.  Stir until melted.  Voila! 

I served it with sweet potato mash.  No recipe.  Just boil chopped sweet potato until soft, mash, add butter, salt, pepper and milk to taste. 

Chile Rellenos

Tyler Florence makes it look so easy.  It was not. 

1.  Broil 6 poblano peppers in the oven (or roast over an open flame) until blistered. 

2.  Put peppers in a bowl and cover tightly with plastic wrap for a couple of minutes.  Rub the skins off very gently. 

3.  Make one long slit down the length of the peppers.  Open up the peppers very carefully to de-seed and remove the ribs.  This is really hard, so do it slowly.  I even made extra peppers because I assumed that I would mess this up. 

4.  Fill the peppers with crumbled queso fresco.  Stick a toothpick through the peppers to close the seam. 

5.  Dredge the peppers in flour. 

6.  Beat 6 egg whites until stiff peaks form, then dip the peppers into the mixture. 

7.  Heat a pan with 1/4 inch of oil at the bottom on medium/high heat (depending on your stove – mine is really hot).  Fry the peppers until golden, then put on paper towels. 

8.  Put the peppers in a 350 F oven for 10 minutes to heat the cheese through. 

Voila! 

Yum!

About leftover risotto

November 8, 2009

May I suggest stuffing leftover risotto in a hollowed-out tomato, topping it with a mixture of bread-crumbs and herbs, then baking in the oven for 30 minutes? No?
How about I suggest forming the risotto into balls, rolling in egg-wash, dredging in bread crumbs then frying until golden brown? No again? Well forget you. You can just throw your leftover risotto in the garbage then.

I saw this recipe in the Globe and Mail a couple of weeks ago, and the author was Massimo Capra from one of my favourite fancy restaurants, Mistura.  Naturally, I had to try it, but first, I needed to make some stock as I had recently run out.  Lucky for me, I had a turkey carcass leftover from the turkey we smoked over the summer.   Check out this bad boy!

Oh yeah!

Homemade Smoked Turkey Broth

1 Turkey carcass, cut up in chunks

1 Onion, skin left on, quartered

2 Carrots and 2 ribs of Celery, cut up in chunks

Pour a little olive oil in a big pot (or two, if you, like me, don’t have a stock pot), and sweat the veggies for a couple of minutes.  Add the turkey pieces, and brown a little.  Toss in a splash of white wine, and let it evaporate.  Then cover with water and simmer until your whole house and wardrobe smells like soup. 

Risotto

  • ½ cup medium onion, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons of oil
  • 2 cups butternut squash, diced ½-inch size or smaller
  • 1 pound of carnaroli rice
  • 1 glass of white wine
  • 8 cups of stock
  • 2 tablespoons of butter or 1 tablespoon of butter + 1 tablespoon of truffle butter if you don’t have truffle cream (Schefflers in St. Lawrence Market sells truffle butter for $10 – all the truffle flavour without the truffle )
  • 2 tablespoons of truffle paste (I bought mine at Alex Farms for $25 – not cheap, but it lasts forever) 
  • Method

    Sweat the onion in the oil until golden, using a heavy-bottom pot, add the squash and cook for a minute, add the rice and let toast a few minutes, then add the wine, let evaporate well and add enough stock to cover the rice by an inch.

    Simmer gently, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking.  Add more stock as needed.  I didn’t use the full 8 cups. 

    When the rice is cooked, turn the fire off and add some butter and the truffle paste.

    For the fonduta

  • 2 ounces whole milk
  • 6 ounces Robiolo cheese
  • 1 teaspoon of flour
  • 1 tablespoon of butter
  • In a saucepan at medium heat melt the butter and then add the flour, stirring well to eliminate lumps. Add the milk and continue heating until it reaches the boiling point. Remove from heat and add the cheese. Whip it well to melt the cheese. Keep warm and do not overheat.

    Place a scoop of fonduta on the bottom of a flat plate and spread to the edge of the bowl. Place the risotto in the middle on top and voila!  You’re big pimpin’.

    Oh yeah!

    I’m getting some from Phil! He’s ordering another box, and we’re going in on it with him. I’ll save you a pack of two, my friend!

    Lamb Chops of God

    October 14, 2009

    Earlier this year, we held a party at my house entitled Meat Fest: a Festival of Meats, and a friend of my fellow’s, Phil, brought me the most wonderful hostess gift – lamb chops (Phil is a meat supplier to restaurants).  Now these were no ordinary lamb chops; these babies were 2.5 inches thick beauties from Colorado, a single chop being almost big enough for one person.   So when Phil and Melissa called us up a couple of weeks ago to ask if we wanted to make a meal out of the last few chops they had in their freezer, I jumped at the chance.  We made them last night, using a recipe from Bobby Flay’s Grill it! 

    Menu
    Leek and Potato Soup
    Mustard Glazed Lamp Chops with French Fried Green Beans
    Vanilla Peach Cobbler with ice cream

    Leek and Potato Soup
    Cut up a bunch of leeks (3-5 leeks, depending on the size) into thin rounds.  Submerge in a bowl of water to get the grit out, then strain them in a colander.  Go ahead and squeeze out the water too. 

    Peel and dice 3 large potatoes.  Cut up two slices of bacon into lardons. 

    Add some butter to a big pot, then toss in the bacon.  Once it renders down, throw in the potatoes, then the leeks.  Cook with the lid at the lower end of medium, stirring occasionally, until the outside of the potatoes are soft and the leeks have sweated out all their goodness. 

    Pour in enough chicken stock to cover by an inch.  Not to get all Ina Garten on you all, but homemade really is best.  When I smoked that turkey breast over the summer, I kept the carcasses and made smoked turkey stock (I used it in my turkey braised with apple recipe too).  If you don’t have enough (like me), just topped it off with water.  Cook at medium heat until the potatoes are soft. 

    Use an inversion blender to puree the whole thing.  Season to taste, and voila!  My fellow thought it was a little too bacon-y, coupled with the smoked turkey stock to boot… Perhaps it wasn’t leeky/potato-ey enough, but it sure was good. 

    Mustard Glazed Lamp Chops with French Fried Green Beans
    First step is to light your BBQ.  If you have functioning taste buds, you should be using a charcoal grill, which will take some time to light.  We’ve got it down to about 20 minutes. 

    Glaze
    1/4 cup of grainy mustard (I used a mix of espelette pepper and mesquite grainy mustards, from my extensive collection of mustards)

    2 tablespoons of Dijon mustard
    1 tablespoon of honey
    1 tablespoon of Soya sauce
    1 tablespoon of olive oil
    1 tablespoon of red wine vinegar
    3 finely chopped cloves of garlic
    1 tablespoon of freshly chopped thyme
    2 teaspoons of Spanish paprika (I used that La Chinata stuff – it’s the bomb!)
    Some freshly cracked pepper

    Mix all those ingredients up and split the glaze into two bowls.  I tried it just on its own, and I think it would make a wonderful steak sauce, too.  Make one bowl bigger than the other, and use that one for when the chops are cooked. 

    Sprinkle salt on the chops, then brush glaze on one side (smaller bowl of glaze).  No need to marinate, just go for it. 

    Put the chops glaze-side down on the BBQ, direct medium-high heat, for 5 – 7 minutes per side if you’re lucky enough to have these giant chops.  Otherwise, 2 – 3 minutes should be enough for the little guys.  Before you flip the chops over, put glaze on the non-glazed side. 

    Take the lamp chops off the grill and put glaze on them from the uncontaminated bowl, then tent them with foil for a good 10 minutes.  Resting is the most important part.  Cut in too soon, and you’ll have a virtual massacre on your plate.  Check it out below:

     First time with fancy lambI love lamb

    Last step is to thank your friends Phil and Melissa for being so awesome!  An aside – this is also not the first time that Phil and Melissa have brought meat in advance of a dinner.  Check out these pictures of the racks beef ribs he brought over last time.  They are the only dinner guests I’ve ever had who brings their own meat. 

     

    Phil and Melissa are the best!

    Phil and Melissa are the best!

    French Fried Green Beans
    A friend of mine once told me about French fried green beans, and I’ve tried to come up with a recipe for it.  The only thing I know for sure is that they are supposed to be oven fried. My boyfriend loves these, but I just don’t get it.  They never seem to come out right, no matter what I try.  Last night, I tried par-boiling the beans first and heating the oil in the oven for a good ten minutes.  Sadly, they still came out kind of greasy and soggy.  Any suggestions? 

    Vanilla Peach Cobbler
    I was always a crisp person, until I tried Tyler Florence’s bourbon peach cobbler.  This recipe is from his latest book, Dinner at my Place, which reads like a love letter to his new wife.  Recipes for Tolan’s birthday dinner.  A special carbonnara he came up with for Tolan when she was pregnant.  Baby food for his new baby with Tolan.  Less Tolan, more food.   And less flagrant promotion of your new vanity winery and gourmet food store.  Also, less Sammi Hagar and flagrant promotion of Sammi’s premium brand tequila.  I will say this, though.  I’ve never made a recipe from one of Tyler’s books that turned out bad.  They’re good every time.  

    I halved the recipe and used single serving ramekins, so I cut the cooking time by 10 minutes.  I omitted the bourbon last night and just used vanilla extract.  Did you know that extract is alcohol?  I bought this mickey of it a couple of years back, and the shop owner told me that when it was done, just fill it back up with brandy (there’s a bunch of vanilla beans in there, so I guess that’s how it regenerates). 

    Here’s the link. 
     
    http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/tyler-florence/bourbon-peach-cobbler-recipe/index.html

    When we smoked a turkey breast this summer, our butcher talked us into buying the whole turkey instead since it would cost about the same thing. He kindly vac-packed the thighs, drumsticks and wings, and they have been sitting in the freezer ever since. So when Thanksgiving came around, I figured it would be the perfect time to use it.

    Everyday Food Magazine recently had a feature on cheap braises, including a recipe for braised turkey thighs with apples. So I gave it a try yesterday, and the results were… okay. Unlike the roasted apples pictured in the magazine, my apples became apple sauce. But on the whole… Fairly tasty.

    Braised Turkey with Apples
    1. Season the turkey pieces with salt and pepper.
    2. Set the oven to 350F.
    3. Add some olive oil to a pan, and brown the pieces, working in batches if necessary. Remove from the pan.
    4. Throw in lardons from 3 slices of bacon, then render down.  Toss in the 2 diced shallots until translucent, then 4 peeled and quartered apples (if I could do it all over again, I’d go for cortland, but the recipe calls for granny smith).
    5. Pour in 2 cups of apple cider and 1 3/4 cups of chicken stock.
    6. Toss the turkey back in, and bring the pot up to a boil.
    7. Put the pot in the oven, covered, for 1.5 hours.
    8. Take the lid off, and cook for 30 minutes more.
    9. Take out the turkey to rest. If your apples didn’t turn into sauce, take them out too. Reduce the gravy while you let it rest.
    10. Serve with squash (I had buttercup) and steamed veggies.

    Tonight, monstrous lamb chops.

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