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Category Archives: Classics

Salmon En Croûte

07 Saturday Feb 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Alaskan Salmon, Captain's Shack, Classic Sauces, Classics, Dinner With Robin, Ethnic Foods, French Foods, Green Peas, Hollandaise Sauce, Pastries, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Recipes, Recipes - Sauces, Salmon, Seafood, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

Boeuf en Croûte, Copper River Salmon fillets, en croûte, puff pastry, Salmon En Croûte


Table ambiance.

Table ambiance.

We saw this reccipe on a competition on the Foodnetwork. Decided we needed to make it. Think of it like a Beef Wellington, only made with salmon. We adjusted the recipe for the two of us. That is, I used 2-4 ounce Copper River Salmon fillets instead of a 2 pound side of salmon. Here is the basic recipe. Adjust it as necessary. Salmon En Croûte. Here are some photos of the cooking and prep process. Take your time and all will come out just right. Have fun with the recipe. The recipe for the Hollandaise sauce is in the recipe file on this blog. Here it is, too: Hollandaise Sauce. Cheers!

In the culinary arts, the term en croute (pronounced “on KROOT”) indicates a food that has been wrapped in pastry dough and then baked in the oven. Salmon en Croûte is a popular recipe. Pâté and brie cheese are also frequently prepared en croute.
One of the classic en croute recipes is Beef Wellington, or in French, Boeuf en Croûte.
Traditionally, the type of pastry used for making Pâté en Croûte is a simple straight pastry dough called pâte à pâté, or pâté pastry. But today, puff pastry is frequently used for most en croute recipes.[http://culinaryarts.about.com/od/glossary/g/En-Croute.htm]

The salmon packet is ready to go into the oven at 400 degrees F for about 25 minutes.

The salmon packet is ready to go into the oven at 400 degrees F for about 25 minutes.

The packet is cooling after baking.

The packet is cooling after baking.

The plated Salmon En Croute. Yum!

The plated Salmon En Croûte. Yum!

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Making Your Own Vinegar

03 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Farmers Market, Captain's Shack, Classics, Fruit, Pickles, Recipes, Special Information, Vinegars, What's For Dinner?

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apple cider vinegar, Braggs vinegar, herbal vinegar, homemade vinegar, vinegar, vinegar mother


Robin-Bob-In-Kitchen_Looking-RightOh yes. It is very possible and easy to do. We make our own wine vinegars, both red and white, from left over lees. Add some herbs, and you have an expensive herbal vinegar. Here is a great link for making the mother for the vinegar. Making a Vinegar Mother. But first – What is a vinegar mother? Wikipedia explains it this way,

[A vinegar mother] is a substance composed of a form of cellulose and acetic acid bacteria that develops on fermenting alcoholic liquids, which turns alcohol into acetic acid with the help of oxygen from the air. It is added to wine, cider, or other alcoholic liquids to produce vinegar.

And from Mossgrownstone, we learn that

The resulting vinegar tastes great- use as you would use store brought apple cider vinegar. It takes less than 5 minutes to make. I make about 2-3 batches a year- making about a half gallon at a time. Other than the initial cost of the bottle of Braggs vinegar with the mother my only cost is the apple juice. I cook and clean with the vinegar but I do not do my canning with it. In order to can with homemade vinegar it is important to get a hydrometer (anywhere with homebrew supplies should carry one) in order to insure the vinegar is acidic enough.

You can learn more about making your own vinegar from Making a Vinegar Mother. Have fun and explore the variations.

You can learn more about making your own vinegar from Making a Vinegar Mother. Have fun and explore the variations.

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W hat Is A “Turophile”?

22 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cheese, Chevre, Classics, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Locavore, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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cheese, cheese lover, cheese types, oenophile, turophile


06Nov2013_1d_Angels_Robin_GoodA what? A turophile. Did you know Robin is Certified in Cheese? In other words, she knows her cheese types and flavors and what cheese goes with what food and/or wine. Yup! She is a turophile: One who is knowledgeable in cheese. A cheese lover. And Velveeta just does not enter into the conversation very much. (However we have had some in our refrigerator in the past 30 years – some.) The information printed here came from one of her subscriptions, “Word of the Day”.

Turophile – (TOOR-uh-fyle)
Definition: noun; a connoisseur of cheese : a cheese fancier

Surely the turophiles at our table can recommend some good cheeses to pair with our wine selection.
“For this dish you need a special cheese from Switzerland called Raclette. It’s expensive and hard to find where I live, and it smells terrible—or, to turophiles like me, divine.” — Patty Kirk, Starting From Scratch: Memoirs of a Wandering Cook, 2008

Discussion: Are you stuck on Stilton or gaga for Gouda? Do you crave Camembert? If so, you just might be a turophile, the ultimate cheese lover. From an irregular formation of the Greek word for cheese, tyros, plus the English -phile, meaning “lover” (itself a descendant of the Greek -philos, meaning “loving”), turophile first named cheese aficionados as early as 1938. It was in the 1950s, however, that the term really caught the attention of the American public, when Clifton Fadiman (writer, editor, and radio host) introduced turophile to readers of his eloquent musings on the subject of cheese.

A turophile ranks right up there with an oenophile, “…Oenophilia (/ˌiːnɵˈfɪliə/ ee-no-fil-ee-ə; Greek for the love (philia) of wine (oinos)) is a love of wine. In the strictest sense, oenophilia describes a disciplined devotion to wine, accompanying strict traditions of consumption and appreciation. In a general sense however, oenophilia simply refers to the enjoyment of wine, often by laymen. Oenophiles are also known as wine aficionados or connoisseurs. They are people who appreciate or collect wine, particularly grape wines from certain regions, varietal types, or methods of manufacture. While most oenophiles are hobbyists, some may also be professionals like vintners, sommeliers, wine merchants, or one who tastes and grades wines for a living.”

So, if you have a question about cheese or wine, contact her through this blog and she will be more that happy to answer your question. She just beams with excitement when someone asks her a question on the subjects. Cheers! (Now for a grilled cheese!)

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Cinco de Mayo Enchiladas

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Beef, Beer and Food, Boise Farmers Market, Captain's Shack, Cinco de Mayo, Classics, Dinner With Robin, Enchiladas, Ethnic Foods, Local Markets, Mexican Food, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipes, Salads, What's For Dinner?

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casserole dish, diced onion, enchilada sauce, Whole Grain Tortilla


What a great use for some hamburger – Thanks Brook! Lightly fry the crumbled hamburg. Add diced onion, garlic and Ro-Tel and cook until heated. Place on one end of a 12″, Whole Grain Tortilla and roll up, folding in the ends. Place in a casserole dish and add enchilada sauce and cheese. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes at 350 degrees F. Serve with a green salad and slaw. You could serve with rice of black beans, too. Serve with Dos Equis. Then for dessert, fresh made Flan. Yum-O!

Beef Enchilada Diced Onion Slaw Fresh Tomatoes Fresh Greens Dos Equis

Beef Enchilada
Diced Onion
Slaw

with
fresh tomatoes and fresh salad greens

Dos Equis

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What is the Tuscan Cooking Style?

28 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Beef, Classic Cuisines, Classics, Cooking Styles, Interesting Information, Italian Food, Italian foods, Lamb, Main Dish, Recipe by: Robin and Bob Young, Tuscan Cuisine, What's For Dinner?, Wild Game, Wine and Food, Wines - Italian

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chianti, osso buco, Tuscan cuisine, wild game, Wine


(comonstock.com)

(comonstock.com)

I had an interesting question the other day as to what is the Tuscan Cooking Style. Quite simply – It is a very basic style of Italian cooking using the barest of food essentials. Fresh herb, pasta, wine, bread. Not particularly a heavy tomato sauce, although tomatoes are used. Only a light sauce, if any, and pasta with herbs and cheese. There is a wide variety of information on the Tuscan Style of cooking on the web. I offer only a small portion of that information here.
If you are looking for some Tuscan traditional recipes, here is one source: Tuscan Recipes. And if you want that well known 3″ thick Tuscan Porterhouse steak, aka Bistecca alla Fiorentina, here is that recipe: Tuscan Porterhouse. And the traditional Tuscan dish of Osso Buco – here is a recipe for Veal Osso Buco. Or maybe you prefer a Lamb Osso Buco. An Osso Buco is referred to in the article by Delallo (dot) com below.
Information from the Examiner,

Tuscany is the land of simple and honest flavors with cooking that might be heartier than much of the rest of the country. It features excellent ingredients including a fair variety of herbs such as basil, rosemary and sage, strongly flavored olive oils, meat dishes from cattle and wild game like wild boar, and seafood on the coasts. Soffritto, a mixture of chopped celery, onions, garlic, peppers and herbs sautéed in olive oil, similar to the French mirepoix, is used as a base for soups and sauces, might be more popular here than elsewhere. Beans have long been a big part of the diet, and spinach is the most popular green vegetable. Excepting the spinach and the few tomato dishes, much of the cooking is unattractively brown… Commonly found dishes include the hearty peasant bread soup, ribollita, pappa al pomodoro (bread and tomato soup), pappardelle sulla lepre (fresh pasta ribbons with wild hare), pappardelle con cinghiale (with wild boar), fritto misto (fried meats, offal and vegetables), tagliata (thinly sliced beef served with arugla), and the famous bistecca alla fiorentina (a thick steak traditionally from the prized and enormous Chiana cattle that used to clutter the Chianti hills, simply prepared and grilled over an wood-fired flame).

And here is some information fro EHow,

Tuscan-style cooking evolved from “la cucina povera,” or peasant cooking. The cuisine relies on home-grown ingredients, prepared fresh with nothing left to waste … Tuscan-style cooking employs a wealth of vegetables: artichokes, asparagus, green beans, fava beans, peas and all types of greens, including Swiss chard, spinach and escarole. Peaches and pears are popular fruits … The most famous Tuscan meat is the bistecca alla fiorentina, a large grilled porterhouse. Game meats, including wild boar, duck and rabbit are also important to Tuscan-style cooking … Wild porcini mushrooms and truffles add an exotic touch to Tuscan dishes. The porcini can be served raw, grilled, sauteed in olive oil and garlic. Truffles are added to pasta dishes or shaved over eggs or steak … The basis of many Tuscan dishes is soffritto, which means “under-fried” in Italian. Soffritto is made by lightly frying minced vegetables in olive oil. The soffritto goes into sauces, soups and other recipes.

And finally from Delallo (dot) com,

… The single most pervasive food image associated with Tuscany is likely that of the olive tree, which grows in a gnarled profusion throughout the region. But Tuscany’s climate also provides ideal soil for the grapes grown to create the region’s world-renowned Chianti wine. Cattle also weigh heavily in the region’s food production. Chianina cattle is one of the oldest breeds of cattle in the world, as well as one of the largest, producing prized Fiorentina beef for bistecca alla fiorentina (a T-bone steak brushed with olive oil and grilled perfectly rare).
Game meats and fowl, fish, pork, beans, figs, pomegranates, rice, chestnuts and cheese are earthy staples of the Tuscan table, and the coveted white truffle abounds in the region. Tuscan cooking is an interesting blend of dishes made from odds and ends for poor tables, as well as choosier fare created for the powerful noble house of Medici which once occupied and ruled from the Tuscany area. Osso bucco is a well-known favorite of the area, as are finocchiona (a rustic salami with fennel seeds), cacciucco (a delicate fish stew), pollo al mattone (chicken roasted under heated bricks), and biscotti di prato (hard almond cookies made for dipping in the local desert wine, vin santo). Barlotti beans, kidney-shaped and pink-speckled, provide a savory flavor to meatless dishes, and cannellinibeans form the basis for many a pot of slowly simmered soup. Breads are many and varied in Tuscan baking, with varieties including donzelle (a bread fried in olive oil), filone (an unsalted traditional Tuscan bread) and the sweetschiacciata con l’uva (a rolled dough with grapes and sugar on top). Pastas are not heavily relied upon in Tuscan cooking, and papparadelle (a wide egg noodle) is one of the region’s few traditional cuts. Pecorino Toscano cheese is native to Tuscany, as are semi-soft cow’s milk Tendaio and mixed sheep and cow’s milk Accasciato cheeses.
Soups, sauces and stews are the cornerstones of Tuscan cooking, many beginning with and relying upon the mastery of a perfect soffritto on which to build more complex flavors. A soffritto can be considered a sort-of Italian cookedmirepoix, and is a “pre-prep” combination of olive oil and minced browned vegetables (usually onion, carrot and celery) that creates a base for a variety of slow-cooked dishes. Herbs (sage and rosemary are used in many Tuscan dishes) and seasonings can be added to the soffritto as needed to bring out the unique flavors of each different recipe. Try the following Ribollita Toscana (Tuscan soup) recipe any time of year to transform your kitchen with the smells and flavors of the Tuscan countryside.

Wait a minute! What about the big, bold, deep red to purple wines of Tuscany? Have no fear. Here is some delightful information http://www.winecountry.it:

Wines of Tuscany – Tuscany’s winemaking industry counts on one of the most noble and ancient traditions that predates the universally known Chianti wine that often springs to mind when this region is discussed … Nowadays, the most grown variety is the noble Sangiovese, which is often combined with small amounts of locally grown Cabernet Sauvignon, Canaiolo, Ciliegiolo and other grapes into wonderful blends such as the Brunello di Montalcino, Morellino di Scansano, Carmignano and, of course, the signature Tuscan wines, the Chianti and Chianti Classico, which probably are the best known Italian wines in the world. Other grapes grown here are the Mammolo, Malvasia, Colorino, Raspirosso, Gamay, Grand Noir, Barbera, Moscatello, Aleatico and Vernaccia, among others.

Some interesting reading. But like I say, there is much, much more information available on the web about the Tuscan style of cooking. Indulge yourselves and look for more specific answers to your questions. Cheers!

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Easy Easter Egg Colors

14 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Buy Idaho, Captain's Shack, Classics, Easter Eggs, Eggs, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Meadowlark Farms, Photos By: Bob Young, What's For Dinner?

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brown eggs, Easter eggs, egg coloring, Food Color, Meadowlark Farms, White Vinegar


Awesome Easter Eggs this year. Thanks to Janie Burns, Meadowlark Farms, for the brown eggs. Recipe: 1 T White Vinegar, 20-24 drops of Food Color and 1/2 c Water at room temp. Mix and place eggs in the dye. They will dye up quickly. The ones pictured here are about 30 seconds. The colors are really intense and I like them. Enjoy!

14April2014_1_Captains-Shack_Natural-Easter-Egg-Colors

43.624890 -116.214093

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Fresh Made Chicken Pot Pies

10 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Carrots, Chicken, Classics, Comfort Food, Healthy Eating, Onion, Pastries, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, Vegetables, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

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Carrots, celery, Chicken Pot Pie, Frank Purdue, potato, tender chicken


09Mar2014_1_Captains-Shack_Chix-Pot-Pie_OvenOur $7.95 whole chicken, just gave us 7 meals. That’s $1.11 per meal. Or, if you figure per person for the chicken, that’s $0.56 per plate. Guess we can get our meds this month! The chicken was a little over 6 pounds. Not one of Frank Purdue’s chickens (“It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken”) but it was good. The final meal was these Chicken Pot Pies that Robin made. The pies are ready to be placed in the oven in this photo. We use both round and rectangular bowls to make the dinner. Add to this a good Tuscan wine, and we had a good dinner. Here are photos of the final dish. Enjoy!

Robin's Chicken Pot Pie

Robin’s Chicken Pot Pie


Chicken Pot Pie in a rectangular dish. Works any way you want to make them. Delicious!

Chicken Pot Pie in a rectangular dish. Works any way you want to make them. Delicious!

43.624890 -116.214093

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Guess Who’s Coming To Our Neighborhood?

09 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Carl's Jr, Classics, Comfort Food, Cooking Styles, Food Photos, Grilling, Hamburger, Local Markets, Party Time, Photos By: Bob Young, Sandwiches, Sliders, Special Events, What's For Dinner?

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Albertson, Burger King, burgers, burgers and such, carl's jr


Yup! You guessed it! Carl’s Jr at 17th and State where Burger King used to be. Ample parking and access in the Albertson’s parking lot. To open soon. Real soon, I hope! Stay tuned. Welcome to our neighborhood!
09Mar2014_1_Carls-Jr_17th-and-State

43.624890 -116.214093

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The 5 Basic Mother Sauces

14 Monday Oct 2013

Posted by Bob and Robin in Captain's Shack, Classic Sauces, Classics, Cookbooks, Cooking Styles, Food, Food Prep, Food Trivia, French Foods, Interesting Information, Mother Sauces, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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chicken stock, David Paul Larousse, Marcus Gavius Apicius, Mother Sauces, velouté sauce


(Google Photos)

(Google Photos)

I have had several questions in the past several weeks to please explain the 5 Mother Sauces. Mostly my reference is from The Sauce Bible – Guide to the Saucier’s Craft by David Paul Larousse. The book goes into some deep detail about the sauces – their origins and uses. It is well worth adding to your library, although it can be expensive. Other sources come from around the internet.
The history of the sauces starts back with the Greeks where Mithaecus in the 5th Century B.C. compiled the treatises the Art of Cooking. Little more survived a catastrophic fire that destroyed the library in Alexandria. Athenaeus of Naucratis, in the 3rd Century B.C., published his “… eating habits of different nations and his philosophies of gastronomy.” [The Sauce Bible]
80 B.C. the Romans enter the scene with Marcus Gavius Apicius. He was best known for extravagant meals, of which he spent enormous sums of money. The gastronomic Bible called The Book of Apicius – incidentally not written by Apicius, but rather by an unknown source – consisted of ten different volumes and influenced the cooking style of the European Chefs well into the 17th century.
Charlemagne (Charles the Great and Charles I), known as the Lord of the Table, brought some refinements to the cooking table. He added a variety of spices and some table manners to the history, but few gastronomic changes. He was the first to invite women to the table, providing they did not wear “…noxious perfumes”.
The word sauce, from the Latin salsus and the past participle of sallere meaning to salt, was used to refine a dish and to marinate foods.
Charlemagne introduced a thin slice of bread called a “trencher” to the table and it was supplied with the dinner to soak up the fats and juices. A dodine was a type of sauce used in medieval times. There were three classifications of this: (1) White dodine, milk boiled with ginger, egg yolks and sugar. (2) Red dodine, toasted bread soaked in red wine, rubbed through the sieve and then boiled with fried onions, bacon, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, sugar and salt. (3) Verjuice dodine, raw grape juice, egg yolks, crushed chicken livers, ginger, parsley and stock.
Three other well known people then developed and refined Charlemagne’s “sauces”. Catherine de Medici added an Italian influence, Francois Pierre La Varenne and Antoine Careme added the French influences. But probably the most influential person in the modern segment of this history was Auguste Escoffier.
Whereas Careme was the first to classify sauces into four groups, Espagnole, Allemande, Veloute and Bechamel, Escoffier named the following – and as pictured above – the foundation or mother sauces. Espagnole, Bechamel, Hollandaise, Veloute and Tomate.
In David Paul Larousse book, there are about 335 pages of sauces that are all derived from these fives basic sauces. If you master these five, you will be well on your way to making some interesting and fantastic meals for your table. Here is a link to The 5 French Mother Sauces and Their Uses. Here are the recipes for the 5 Mother Sauces. These are the traditional recipes, so don’t be surprised at the ingredients. Be sure to Left-Click the graphic above to see enlarged. There are some good companion entrees for these sauces there. Enjoy!

1. Bechamel
Ingredients
5 tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons all-purpose flour
4 cups milk
2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

Directions:
In a medium saucepan, heat the butter over medium-low heat until melted. Add the flour and stir until smooth. Over medium heat, cook until the mixture turns a light, golden sandy color, about 6 to 7 minutes.

Meanwhile, heat the milk in a separate pan until just about to boil. Add the hot milk to the butter mixture 1 cup at a time, whisking continuously until very smooth. Bring to a boil. Cook 10 minutes, stirring constantly, then remove from heat. Season with salt and nutmeg, and set aside until ready to use.

2. Espagnole Sauce (Brown Sauce)
Ingredients:
1 cup onions, diced
½ cup carrots, diced
½ cup celery, diced
2 Tbsp clarified butter
2 Tbsp all-purpose flour
6 cups brown stock
¼ cup tomato purée
——– For Sachet: ——–
1 bay leaf
½ tsp dried thyme
3-4 fresh parsley stems

Preparation:
In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, melt the butter over a medium heat until it becomes frothy.

Add the mirepoix and sauté for a few minutes until it’s lightly browned. Don’t let it burn, though.

With a wooden spoon, stir the flour into the mirepoix a little bit at a time, until it is fully incorporated and forms a thick paste or roux. Lower the heat and cook the roux for another five minutes or so, until it’s light brown. Don’t let it burn! The roux will have a slightly nutty aroma at this point.

Using a wire whisk, slowly add the stock and tomato purée to the roux, whisking vigorously to make sure it’s free of lumps.

Bring to a boil, lower heat, add the sachet and simmer for about 50 minutes or until the total volume has reduced by about one-third, stirring frequently to make sure the sauce doesn’t scorch at the bottom of the pan. Use a ladle to skim off any impurities that rise to the surface.

Remove the sauce from the heat and retrieve the sachet. For an extra smooth consistency, carefully pour the sauce through a wire mesh strainer lined with a piece of cheesecloth.

Serve hot. If not serving the sauce right away, keep it covered and warm until you’re ready to use it.
Makes about 1 quart of Espagnole sauce.

3. Veloute (White Sauce)
Ingredients:
6 cups chicken stock
2 Tbsp clarified butter
2 Tbsp all-purpose flour

Preparation:
Heat the chicken stock to a simmer in a medium saucepan, then lower the heat so that the stock just stays hot.

Meanwhile, in a separate heavy-bottomed saucepan, melt the clarified butter over a medium heat until it becomes frothy. Take care not to let the butter turn brown, though — that’ll affect the flavor.

With a wooden spoon, stir the flour into the melted butter a little bit at a time, until it is fully incorporated into the butter, giving you a pale-yellow-colored paste. This paste is called a roux. Heat the roux for another few minutes or so, until it has turned a light blond color. Don’t let it get too dark.

Using a wire whisk, slowly add the hot chicken stock to the roux, whisking vigorously to make sure it’s free of lumps.

Simmer for about 30 minutes or until the total volume has reduced by about one-third, stirring frequently to make sure the sauce doesn’t scorch at the bottom of the pan. Use a ladle to skim off any impurities that rise to the surface.

The resulting sauce should be smooth and velvety. If it’s too thick, whisk in a bit more hot stock until it’s just thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

Remove the sauce from the heat. For an extra smooth consistency, carefully pour the sauce through a wire mesh strainer lined with a piece of cheesecloth.

Keep the velouté covered until you’re ready to use it. Makes about 1 quart of chicken velouté sauce.

4. Hollandaise
Ingredients:
1 cup clarified butter (about 2½ sticks before clarifying)
4 egg yolks
2 Tbsp lemon juice (the juice from 1 small lemon)
1 Tbsp cold water
Kosher salt, to taste
Cayenne pepper (or a dash of Tabasco sauce), to taste

Preparation:
Heat an inch or two of water in a saucepan over a medium heat. Also, your clarified butter should be warm, but not hot.

Combine the egg yolks and the cold water in a glass or stainless steel bowl (not aluminum) whisk for a minute or two, until the mixture is light and foamy. Whisk in a couple of drops of lemon juice, too.

The water in the saucepan should have begun to simmer. Set the bowl directly atop the saucepan of simmering water. The water itself should not come in contact with the bottom of the bowl. Whisk the eggs for a minute or two, until they’re slightly thickened.

Remove the bowl from the heat and begin adding the melted butter slowly at first, a few drops at a time, while whisking constantly. If you add it too quickly, the emulsion will break.

Continue beating in the melted butter. As the sauce thickens, you can gradually increase the rate at which you add it, but at first, slower is better.

After you’ve added all the butter, whisk in the remaining lemon juice and season to taste with Kosher salt and cayenne pepper (or a dash of Tabasco sauce). The finished hollandaise sauce will have a smooth, firm consistency. If it’s too thick, you can adjust the consistency by whisking in a few drops of warm water.

It’s best to serve hollandaise right away. You can hold it for about an hour or so, provided you keep it warm. After two hours, though, you should toss it — both for quality and safety reasons. Makes 1 pint of Hollandaise sauce.

5. Tomate
Ingredients:
2 oz. salt pork, diced
2 cups onions, diced
1 cup carrots, diced
1 cup celery, diced
1 clove garlic, minced
2 28-oz. cans crushed tomatoes
1 quart veal or chicken stock
1 ham bone
Kosher salt, to taste
Sugar, to taste
——– For Sachet: ——–
1 bay leaf
½ tsp dried thyme
3-4 fresh parsley stems
8-10 black peppercorns, crushed

Preparation:
Preheat oven to 300°F.
Tie the sachet ingredients into a cheesecloth sack using a piece of kitchen twine.
In a heavy, oven-safe Dutch oven, render the salt pork over low heat until the fat liquefies.
Add the carrots, celery, onions and garlic and sauté for a few minutes until the onion is translucent but not brown.
Add the tomatoes, the ham bone, the stock and the sachet.
Bring to a boil, cover, and transfer the pot to the oven. Simmer in the oven, partially covered, for two hours.
Remove from oven. Remove sachet and ham bone and purée sauce in a blender or food processor until smooth, working in batches if necessary.

Season to taste with Kosher salt and a small amount of sugar — just enough to cut the acid edge of the tomatoes. Serve hot. If not serving the sauce right away, keep it covered and warm until you’re ready to use it.
Makes about 2 quarts of Tomate sauce.

For those of you who wanted to know, now you do. Enjoy!!!

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French Wines At The Buzz

11 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Adventures, Classics, Croissant, Dinner With Friends, French Foods, French Wines, Friends, Healthy Eating, Locavore, Party Time, Pasta, Photos By: Bob Young, Quiche Lorraine, Salads, Special Events, Traditional Food, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

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food, quiche lorraine, salad nicoise


10Sept2013_1_The-Buzz-Club_MaggieAnother in a series of good wine dinners at the Buzz last night. Some very interesting wines, presented blind, and good food. Our friend Maggie, pictured here, came along with us and it was great to see that she was feeling chipper enough to join us. We always like to have her join us in these adventures. I
This was a good meal. Not particularly the best I have had at the Buzz, but very good. I am very salt conscious, and there were two dishes that could have had a little more salt and/or pepper. I will list those dishes below. All in all ….. a fun night with good friends and good food. Glad to hear and see that Bailey is doing OK after her bike fall. Enjoy these photos of the dinner and the commentary. Cheers! Left-Click any of these photos to see them larger.

Robin is studying the wines and the dinner menu.

Robin is studying the wines and the dinner menu.

Quiche Lorraine 2009 Baron de Hoer Alsase Riesling 12.5% alc. went well with this appetizer, but light. [15] $14.00

Quiche Lorraine
2009 Baron de Hoer Alsase Riesling
12.5% alc. went well with this appetizer, but light.
[15] $14.00

Salad Nicoise (Could have used a little cracked pepper and olives. But still good.) 2012 Sable d'Azure 12.5% alc blend of grenache, mouvedre and petite syrah this went well with the salad

Salad Nicoise
(Could have used a little cracked pepper and olives. But still good.)
2012 Sable d’Azure
12.5% alc blend of grenache, mouvedre and petite syrah. this went well with the salad
[17] $13.00

Vegetable Trimbale (Needs a very light sprinkle of Sea Salt) 2011 Chat du Pape Cote de Rhone 14.5% alc. big wine but went well with the trimbale. [15]

Vegetable Trimbale
(Needs a very light sprinkle of Sea Salt)
2011 Chat du Pape Cote de Rhone
14.5% alc. big wine but went well with the trimbale.
[15] $13.00

Beef Bourgogne (This was the best part of the dinner. Full of flavor and seasoned perfectly!) 2010 Gigondas 14.5% alc. a big red that went very well with the beef and onions. [17] $22.00

Beef Bourgogne
(This was the best part of the dinner. Full of flavor and seasoned perfectly!)
2010 Gigondas
14.5% alc. a big red that went very well with the beef and onions.
[17] $22.00

Cream Puff and Apple Crepe (Good job on the cream puffs, Cristi! Veuve du Vernay Sparkling Chardonnay 11.0% alc. a great choice to pair with this dessert. [18] $12.00

Cream Puff and Apple Crepe
(Good job on the cream puffs, Cristi!)
Veuve du Vernay Sparkling Chardonnay
11.0% alc. a great choice to pair with this dessert.
[18] $12.00

This review may sound harsh to some. It is not. Cristi and I talked about some of these comments and I think she accepted them as positive. Like I stated at the start, I really try to watch our salt intake, even if the food seems to need additional salt. And I know Cristi tries very hard to limit the amount of salt in her dishes. This was just one of those times when a little more would have enhanced the dishes. It was still a good dinner. Hope to see you at the next one. Cheers!!!

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