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Category Archives: Food

Jerri’s Old Fashioned Pie Shop and Bakery

05 Thursday Nov 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Dessert, Food, Local Markets, Party Time, Things To Do

≈ 1 Comment


I am a very firm believer in supporting local businesses – resorts, ranches, hotels, pizza stores, restaurants, bakers, etc. Here is another local business trying to make a “go of it”. Please support Jerri’s Old Fashioned Pie Shop and Bakery. Wouldn’t a fresh Pecan Pie or a fresh Pumpkin Pie go great at Thanksgiving?

Jerri’s Old Fashioned Pie Shop & Bakery
208-863-4768
jerri-nelson@hotmail.com

Custom order bake goods. Are you looking for that something special for your holiday gathering but don’t have the time to make it yourself? Give me a call and see if we can make that special event more memorable!

Sugar and spice and baked so nice…

PIES
$14.
Huckleberry-Apple
Cranberry-Apple
Huckleberry-Peach
Lemon Meringue
Washington Walnut
Pecan
Jerri-Berry w/Strawberries, Blackberries, Raspberries & Blueberries

$12.
Apple or Dutch Apple

Boysenberry
Peach or Dutch Peach
Cherry
Pumpkin
Black Bottom Banana Split
(dark chocolate ganache, banana cream, topped with a Jerri-berry glaze)

$9
German Chocolate

Coconut
Chocolate
Banana Cream

Do you have a favorite pie that is not listed above? Please ask if I can make it.

Rolls
White or Wheat Rolls $5 per dozen

——————————

So there you have it. We have had these goodies before and they are awesome!! Try several – You won’t go wrong! Cheers!

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Sweetwater’s Tropic Zone

04 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Restaurant Reviews

≈ 4 Comments


I would not think that this is the best economic time to be starting a new restaurant. But here in Boise, the Sweetwater’s Tropic Zone may be the exception. At any rate, we certainly hope so! This is one awesome culturally diverse restaurant that opened about 3 months ago. And the best part? They are local!!! and they use local, Idaho products – beef and alligator for some. Here is Our Review.

Sweetwater’s Tropic Zone

Ambiance

An open, “happy” restaurant that is full of color and natural light, but is not overbearing. Soft, island music in the background. There probably could be more steel drum, Bob Marley music.

Presentation

Food presentation is good and pleasant. The Curried Avocado Salad is presented quite well and in an Island style. Whereas the Pulled Pork Sandwich has a pretty standard presentation. Food quality is excellent and prepared fresh. There is a very wide variety available – Indonesian Krupuk (Shrimp Chips), Collard Greens and Black-Eyed Peas, Grilled Jamaican Jerk Chicken, Pulled Pork, Cuban Style Steak and Trinidadian Curry Goat.

Service

Service is good. Again, as with some other restaurants, it is good to see the owner talking to the clients and making sure that everything is good.

Cost

The cost ranges from $11.00 – $15.95 for dinners, $7.75 – $11.00 for an awesome sandwiches,$2.25 – $5.75 for side dishes. They also serve Alligator and Conch, which, if you have never done so, you really should try. The beef and alligator are Idaho raised and they do try very hard to use local products. Try their Homemade Ginger Beer, it is awesome. They also have a variety of Caribbean drinks, including beer.

Quality

The quality and the variety of the foods served, requires a 4-Star rating. Take your friends here for a delightful Island inspired meal. We will definitely return to Sweetwater’s Tropical Zone. See you there! Let the owners know that you saw this review on the Boise Foodie Guild blog. Cheers!

It is also good to see that they are local owners and this is not a chain. We do hope that you stop in to see them and to try a meal, lunch or dinner. Cheers!

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Chicken Romertopf

01 Sunday Nov 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Food Prep, Herbs, Main Dish, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young

≈ Leave a comment


No, no sour cream in this one! The Romertopf is a clay cooking pot that does chicken like nothing else! In it’s own steam and juices. Not particularly slow, at 375 degrees F for 2 1/2 hours will do it. Here we see the 7 pound chicken resting on a bead of onion, potato, garlic and white wine.

After cooking for 2 1/2 hours at 375 degrees F, this is what the chicken will look like. Well done and falling apart. Lightly browned on top. And the aroma of the garlic, rosemary and sage. It is awesome!

And here the dinner is plated. Notice that the plate is Fresh Beet Greens, Romertopf Vegetable Blend and the Romertopf Chicken. Think of this with a nice 2005 Eagle Knoll Winery Chardonnay. OK, so here is the recipe:

——————————

Romertopf Chicken

1 – 7 lbs Whole Chicken
2 lg Carrots, cut into 1″ rounds
1 lg White Onion, cut in half and then each half cut into thirds
1 lg Potato, cut into 1 ” rounds and each round cut into thirds
5 lg Button Mushrooms cut into quarters
2 Sticks of Rosemary, fresh and chopped
8 fresh Sage leaves, chopped
8 lg Cloves of Garlic, diced
1 c White Wine
Salt and Pepper to taste

Pre-Heat oven to 375 degrees F. Clean the chicken.
Place the cut vegetables in the bottom of the Romertopf, one layer thick. Place the chicken on the vegetables and fill around the chicken with the rest of the vegetables.
Fill the cavity with the diced garlic and the herbs. Save some of the herbs and garlic and sprinkle lightly over the bird. Salt and pepper the bird.
Place lid on the Romertopf and cook in the oven for 2 1/2 hours. Remove the lid and cook for an additional 1/2 hour.

——————————

So there you have it. Not exactly an Old Persons’ Sunday Chicken Dinner, but just as good! And while I was at the local grocery store, my favorite checker was there and she asked if my list was dinner for tonight. So Mary, the recipe is for you. And yes, it really was good, with some left over. That makes a an inexpensive dinner. Cheers!

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Worcestershire Sauce

01 Sunday Nov 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Condiments, Food, Food Trivia, Herbs, Interesting Information, Things To Do

≈ 1 Comment


Looks like it might have been a slow day in Boise. Not really! They were having a big debate on the Food Network today on the origin and uses of Worcestershire Sauce. Here, from Wikipedia, is some information. Some of this is not cited and may need citation.

Worcestershire Sauce

From Wikipedia,
Worcestershire sauce (pronounced WOOS-tər-sheer saws), is a fermented liquid condiment used for flavouring many cooked and uncooked dishes, especially with grilled or barbecued meats. It is also used as an ingredient in the preparation of cocktails and drinks.

First made at 68 Broad Street, Worcester, England, by two dispensing chemists, John Wheeley Lea and William Henry Perrins, the Lea & Perrins brand was commercialised in 1837 and has been produced in the current Midlands Road factory in Worcester since 16 October 1897. In 1930 the business was sold to HP Foods and was subsequently acquired by the Groupe Danone. It was purchased by H.J. Heinz Company in 2005 who continue to manufacture and market “The Original Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce”, under the name Lea & Perrins, Inc. Other companies manufacture similar products, often also called Worcester Sauce, and marketed under different brands.

Origins
A fermented fish sauce called garum was a staple of Greco-Roman cuisine and of the Mediterranean economy of the Roman Empire, and the use of some similar fermented anchovy sauces in Europe can be traced back to the 17th century. The Worcestershire variety became popular in the 1840s and is one of the many legacies of the British rule of the Indian sub continent. Several disputed theories exist concerning its exact discovery or invention by John Lea and William Perrins.

History
A widely reported legend has it that “Lord Marcus Sandys, ex-Governor of Bengal” (a figure unknown to history outside this tale) encountered it while in India under the Honourable East India Company in the 1830s, missed it on his return and commissioned the local apothecaries to recreate it. However, author Brian Keogh concluded in his privately published history of the Lea & Perrins firm on the 100th anniversary of the Midland Road plant, that “No Lord Sandys was ever governor of Bengal, or as far as any records show, ever in India.”

The Lord in question, whose identity was being discreetly veiled by Messrs Lea and Perrins (who used to aver on the bottle’s paper wrapping that the sauce came “from the recipe of a nobleman in the county”) was Arthur Moyses William Sandys, 2nd Baron Sandys (1792–1860) of Ombersley Court, Worcestershire, Lieutenant-General and politician, a member of the House of Commons at the time of the legend, whose given name is being confused in the tale with that of his brother and heir, Arthur Marcus Cecil Sandys, 3rd Baron Sandys (1798–1863), who did not succeed to the title, however, until 1860, when the sauce was already established on the British market. The barony in the Sandys family (pronounced “sands”) had been revived in 1802 for the second baron’s mother, Mary Sandys Hill, so at the date of the legend, in the 1830s, “Lord” Sandys was actually a Lady. No identifiable reference to her could possibly appear on a commercially bottled sauce without a serious breach of decorum. It is likely her heir agreed to sell the recipe.

A more accurate version that was published by Thomas Smith: We quote the following history of the well-known Worcester Sauce, as given in the World. The label shows it is prepared “from the recipe of a nobleman in the county.” The nobleman may be Lord Sandys. Many years ago, Mrs. Grey, author of The Gambler’s Wife and other novels, was on a visit at Ombersley Court, when Lady Sandys chanced to remark that she wished she could get some very good curry powder, which elicited from Mrs. Grey that she had in her desk an excellent recipe, which her uncle, Sir Charles, Chief Justice of India, had brought thence, and given her. Lady Sandys said that there were some clever chemists in Worcester, who perhaps might be able to make up the powder. Messrs. Lea and Perrins looked at the recipe, doubted if they could procure all the ingredients, but said they would do their best, and in due time forwarded a packet of the powder. Subsequently the happy thought struck someone in the business that the powder might, in solution, make a good sauce. The profits now amount to thousands of pounds a year.

Upon completing the necessary steps, however, the resulting product was found to be so strong that it was considered inedible, and a barrel of the sauce was exiled to the basement of Lea & Perrins’ premises. Looking to make space in the storage area a few years later, the chemists decided to try it once again, only to discover that the sauce had fermented and mellowed and was now quite palatable. In 1838 the first bottles of “Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce” were released to the general public.

An alternative story was published by historian and Herald for Wales, Major Francis Jones, 1908-1993, who attributed the introduction of the recipe to Captain Henry Lewis Edwardes 1788-1866. Edwardes, originally of Rhyd-y-gors, Carmarthenshire, was a veteran of the Napoleonic wars and held the position of Deputy-Lieutenant of Carmarthenshire. He is believed to have brought the recipe home after travels in India. The article does not say how the recipe found its way to Messrs Lea and Perrins. Messrs Lea and Perrins, being John Wheeley Lea (research and product development) and William Perrins (finance), from their building in Broad Street, Worcester, ran by far the most important and successful chemist and druggist business in the county. They made their fortunes from manufacturing and selling the sauce. They built a new factory with railway access in Midland Road, Worcester and made various charitable donations to the city such as Perrins Hall in a Worcester School.

Lea & Perrins Original Recipe
The ingredients of a traditional bottle of Worcestershire sauce sold in the United Kingdom under the name “The Original & Genuine Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce” are listed as malt vinegar (from barley), spirit vinegar, molasses, sugar, salt, anchovies, tamarind extract, onions, garlic, spice, and flavouring. Apart from distribution for its home market, Lea & Perrins also supplies this recipe in concentrate form to be bottled abroad.

Japanese Worcestershire sauce, often simply known as sōsu (“sauce”), or Usutā sōsu (“Worcester sauce”) is made from purees of fruits and vegetables such as apples and tomatoes, matured with sugar, salt, spices, starch and caramel. Despite this appellation, it bears only moderate resemblance to Western Worcestershire sauce. Sōsu comes in a variety of thickness, with the thicker sauces looking and tasting like a cross between the original Worcestershire sauce and HP sauce. There are many variations according to flavour and thickness, and are often named after the foods they are designed to go with, such as okonomiyaki sauce and tonkatsu sauce. These sauces, however, and others that are Worcestershire relatives are much closer in taste to American barbecue sauce. These variants have become a staple table sauce in Japan, particularly in homes and canteens, since the 1950s. It is used for dishes such as tonkatsu (breaded pork cutlets), okonomiyaki (savoury pancakes), takoyaki, yakisoba, yaki udon, sōsu katsudon and korokke.

Holbrooks worcestershire sauce from 1902
In Sheffield, England, Henderson’s Relish, very similar to Worcester sauce, is made and sold locally. This sauce is sold in the same size and shape of bottle as Lea and Perrins Worcester sauce and also has an orange label, which calls it ‘The Spicy Yorkshire Sauce’; it does not contain anchovies.

Lionel Brand (Australia) worcestershire sauce
In Australia the best-selling brand of Worcestershire sauce is Holbrooks , holding over half the market share in black sauce. Historically there were several different manufacturers of Worcestershire sauce in Australia, e.g. Lionel Brand from Taringa in Brisbane.

Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce in the USA differs slightly from the original British recipe. Its ingredients are listed as: vinegar, molasses, high fructose corn syrup, anchovies, water, onions, salt, garlic, tamarind concentrate, cloves, natural flavorings and chili pepper extract. The original British recipe uses malt vinegar while the American version uses distilled white vinegar, giving the British version a slightly deeper flavour. Also, the American version uses high fructose corn syrup while the original British recipe still uses sugar, giving the American version a somewhat sweeter and less spicy taste.

Vegetarian and gluten free alternatives are available and some Worcestershire sauce powders are marketed as suitable for vegetarians. The vegetarian variety omits the anchovies (notably Henderson’s Relish, which is similar, although not considered a variety of Worcestershire Sauce). ‘Life’ Worcester sauce, produced by MH Foods (Morehands Ltd), is also vegetarian. Both this and Lea & Perrins’ sauce are suitable for coeliacs. The actual ingredients may vary between countries, for example the Canadian version of Lea & Perrins’ sauce contains gluten in the form of malt vinegar from barley. Angostura also offers a fish-free sauce, but does not advertise it as “vegetarian”. The deluxe Worcestershire Sauce Powder produced by Nikken Foods contains no anchovies. Orthodox Jews refrain from eating fish and meat in the same dish, causing Worcestershire to be problematic, as many people are unaware that it contains anchovies. Certain brands that are certified to contain less than 1/60th of the fish product can be used with meat.

Dishes using Worcestershire sauce
Worcestershire sauce is often an ingredient of Caesar Salad and can be used as steak sauce.
Welsh rarebit is a combination of Caerphilly cheese, English mustard, Worcestershire sauce, and other ingredients, frequently eaten with bread, toast or crackers. A simpler version uses Worcestershire sauce with cheese on toast, with the sauce added to the plain version during the grilling process. Worcestershire sauce also plays a key role in the flavour of original recipe Chex Mix. In the U.K., advertising by Lea & Perrins has made Worcestershire Sauce popular for use on spaghetti bolognese, beans on toast, cheese on toast, chips (French fries), gravy and sausages. It is also frequently used in chili con carne, Bloody Mary cocktails, and in a cocktail known mostly to Canadians called a Caesar.

Worcestershire sauce, known as salsa inglesa (English sauce) in Spanish, is an essential ingredient of the popular Mexican beer cocktail, the Michelada. It is also used to flavour cheeseburgers and in Mexico, it is often used on pizza. The sauce it is nearly universally available as a condiment in steakhouses throughout North America, and is also sometimes used as a condiment for bacon and eggs, hamburgers, pork chops, chicken, and certain other meats and fish. Certain brands of crisps (potato chips), such as Walker’s (U.K.) sell Worcestershire sauce flavoured crisps.

Worcestershire sauce plays a significant part in the cuisine of Asian regions which have seen significant exposure to Western cuisine. In Cantonese cuisine, Worcestershire sauce was introduced in the 19th century via Hong Kong and is today used in dim sum items such as steamed beef meatballs and spring rolls. The Cantonese name for this sauce is “gip-jap” (Chinese; pinyin: jiézhī; Cantonese Yale: gip jāp). It is also used in a variety of Hong Kong-style Chinese and “Western” dishes.

In Shanghainese cuisine, the use of Worcestershire sauce spread from European-style restaurants in the 19th and 20th century to its use as an ingredient in ubiquitous, Eastern European-inspired dishes such as Shanghai-style borscht, and as a dipping sauce in Western fusion foods such as Shanghai-style breaded pork cutlets. It is also commonly used for Chinese foods such as the shengjian mantou, which are small, pan-fried pork buns. In Shanghai, Worcestershire sauce is called “la jiangyou” (Chinese: pinyin: làjiàngyóu; literally “spicy soy sauce”). After imported Worcestershire sauce became scarce in Shanghai after 1949, a variety of local brands appeared. These are now in turn exported around the world for use in Shanghai-style dishes. Lea & Perrins has in recent years established a plant in Guangdong, China, thus increasing availability of the original variety in China. However, it does not have a dominant market share compared to the native-grown varieties. In Thailand, the Lea & Perrins Original Worcestershire sauce on sale is, according to its label, imported directly from England.

Well there is some information that you were really waiting for! Cheers!

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Halloween Eve!

31 Saturday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Classic Sauces, Food, Things To Do, Vegetables, Wine Dinners

≈ Leave a comment


I can almost see Miss Itchy Witchy flying on her whisk broom. You know, for short hops! But really, its time for dinner. Try this salmon. It’s great!

Salmon in Beurre Rouge Sauce

Fresh Asparagus

Twice Baked Idaho Potato

Homemade Biscuits

2007 Cinder Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot Blend

And it was very good! Had to have this tonight because tomorrow Boise State University has a football game and that might insist that there be “football junk food”! Pizza, Nachos, Brats, Hot Dogs, Beer. Who knows! Hope you enjoy the photos. Guess we need “Smell-A-Vision” or something. Cheers! Go Broncos!!!

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New Products, Great Comments!

25 Sunday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Classics, Condiments, Food, Local Markets, Oils

≈ 5 Comments


In this mornings email – after I finally figured out that some of our clocks are on the “George Bush Time Manipulation Scheme” – I received this note from Rudy’s. We do appreciate the kind words:

Hi Bob & Robin,
I just found your blog and noticed your mention of Rudy’s.
Thanks! I’ve also put a link in our email newsletter about you.
Cheers!

Susan Ettesvold, CEPC

If you look in the sidebar, you will find a link to Rudy’s and, if you are ever in Twin Falls, please do stop in and say “Hello” to them and tell them you found their information on this blog. No, we don’t get a monetary “prize” for listing them, or any of the locations listed for that matter!

And since I am on this particular train of thought, Robin and I went to the Boise COOP – that could be trouble – yesterday to look for raw vinegar to start some White Wine Vinegar. And we came upon Extravaganzo Gourmet
Foods
sample table. Oh my! Some really awesome infused olive oil/grapeseed oil blends. You can check out their web site by clicking Here and find some really interesting products and locations, other than via the web, where their products are sold. The owner, Tom Stephens, who we met at the COOP, is pleasant and very helpful

The first of two products that we sampled and are excited about is pictured here, a Blood Orange Infused Oil that would be great with chicken or seafood. Or maybe in some Chinese or Japanese foods. A delightfully intense essence of orange permeates throughout the oil. A little oil will go a long way!

And, if you really know us, you know if it has garlic in it, we’ll probably try some – ice cream, fried, oil infused – and this Garlic Infused Oil is terrific! But again, a little will go a long way. And I’m thinking pasta, lamb or paella.

We do encourage you to try these oils. Being a “Foodie”, you owe it to the mindset. Go to their web page and check them out. Cheers!

43.624890 -116.214093

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A Super Day In The Life Of ……

23 Friday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Celebrations, Classic Sauces, Food, Party Time, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Things To Do

≈ 1 Comment


Today really was a super day for us. We had an audition for teaching a dance program at Arts West School in Eagle, Idaho, a private school dedicated to the arts. They evidently liked our abilities and dance/teaching skills, because there will be a contract issued next week. The contract will run from January 2010 through May 2010. But then there was dinner. Wanted to celebrate in some small way. Thought about taking Robin out for Halibut Beurre Blanc,
but Andrae’s closed about a year ago, so I’m not sure anyone in Boise can make it now. Except ………ME!! And if you look left, you can see the results. (Just should have let it thicken a little more) But it really was good and the vegetable medley went well with it. The Chardonnay we had to go with it was “over the hill”, a 1998 Ravenswood. It is now in the vinegar jar. (We have a wine vinegar going) Oh well, can’t have everything. Cheers! Oh, But wait! Here is the recipe for the Beurre Blanc, Jerri. It’s really one of the classic sauces and one you should have. But just remember, this classic sauce is not for the “faint of heart” to prepare, it does take some practice. Temperatures are extremely important. Just keep that in mind.

——————————

Beurre Blanc

Yield: ~1 cup
Recipe Source: Bob and Robin Young

Ingredients:
½ c White wine
½ c White wine vinegar
1 lg Shallot diced
4 Cloves, whole
1 Garlic clove, chopped
4 T French Tarragon, fresh and coarsely chopped
3 T Cream
¼ lbs Butter, cold

Procedure:
1). In a heavy 2-quart saucepan, combine vinegar, wine, shallots, cloves, garlic and tarragon leaves to make an infusion. Simmer over medium heat until the mixture is reduced to about ½ cup.
2). Add the cream and continue to simmer until reduced again to about ½ cup. Cream is added to make the sauce more stable and less likely to separate.
3). Strain to remove large pieces of the herbs. Reduce the heat to low. Whisk in the chunks of butter in small batches. The butter should melt without the sauce getting too hot, producing a creamy emulsified sauce. Do not let the sauce go over 130°F, where it will separate. If the sauce starts to break, remove from heat, add 2 ice cubes and whisk until it cools down and comes back together.
4).Season with salt and pepper. Serve immediately. Keep covered in a warm place for a few hours, if needed.

Serve warm with fish or vegetables, halibut and asparagus goes great with a Beurre Blanc.

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Filet Mignon Dinner Treat

20 Tuesday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Main Dish, Party Time, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do

≈ Leave a comment


Last week, Robin said she wanted to got to the Outback Steak House for a steak and some fresh root vegetables. Normally, that would be a real treat. But it has been a while since I have done a steak dinner. So, not to be out
done by our friends to the west, I went to our local butcher and had him cut me two nice, fresh Filet Mignon steaks, about 1″ thick. Nice! Then I found some pretty good fresh vegetables – summer squash, Chinese peas, broccoli, carrots and onion. Just a simple matter of cutting the veggies into pieces and steaming them over a bath of Herbs de Provence (our own blend) and salt and pepper until tender. The beef was bacon wrapped and grilled over low heat on the stove. A simple salad of shredded lettuce and applesauce. It has been rainy and somewhat cool here in Boise today – a little gloomy. So this dinner seemed to be a “comfort” meal that drove the blahs away. If nothing else, the plate tends to have some nice color in it that aids in the presentation. We eat with our eyes first. It was fun to make. Cheers!

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Skewered and Grilled Indian Lamb Curry

18 Sunday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Food Prep, Herbs, Lamb, Main Dish, Things To Do

≈ 1 Comment


So here is yet another lamb curry recipe. However, this one is skewered and grilled. The grilling gives the lamb another dimension and worth trying. Yes, you really can grill all year – rain or shine; snow, sleet or sunny.

Skewered and Grilled Indian Lamb Curry

Ingredients:
¼ c Coriander seeds
2 T Cumin seeds
2 t Brown Mustard seeds
1 t Whole Black Peppercorns
2 t Bombay Indian Curry powder
2 t Turmeric
3 cloves Garlic, finely chopped
1-inch piece fresh ginger, finely grated
¼ c Canola oil
¼ White Wine Vinegar
1½ lbs Boneless Lamb Shoulder, cut into 1-inch dice
6-inch wooden skewers, soaked in cold water for 20 minutes
Kosher salt
Olive oil, for drizzling

Procedure:
1). Heat the grill to high. Combine the coriander, cumin, mustard seeds and black peppercorns in a small skillet on the grates of the grill and grill until lightly toasted, about 1½ minutes, stirring a few times; transfer to a coffee grinder and process until finely ground and place in a bowl. Add the ancho, turmeric, garlic, ginger, ¼ cup canola oil and vinegar and whisk until it forms a paste. If the mixture is too dry, add a few tablespoons of water to loosen it to a paste.

2). Place lamb in a large bowl, add the curry paste and toss to coat each piece of lamb. You can grill immediately or cover and refrigerate for up to 4 hours to allow the flavors to intensify.

3). Skewer 2 pieces of lamb onto 2 skewers so that the meat lays flat on the grill. Season both sides of the lamb with salt and grill until golden brown and slightly charred on both sides and cooked to medium-rare doneness, 2 to 3 minutes per side. Drizzle with olive oil and serve with Basamati steamed rice.

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Lamb Curry

18 Sunday Oct 2009

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Food Prep, Main Dish, Recipe By: Bob Young

≈ Leave a comment


I have had several requests for Indian Curry. Since we do love lamb, I have found two. (1) Lamb Curry and (2) South Indian Curry. Be careful. These can be very spicy. Instead of lamb, you can go very nontraditional and use beef. These were gathered from the RecipeLion.

Lamb Curry

Ingredients
3 lbs Boneless Leg of Lamb (no fat), cut in 1-inch cubes
¼ c Butter
2 lg Red Onions, chopped
1 T Curry Powder
1 t Salt
¼ t Red Pepper, to taste!!
1 c Plain Yogurt
1 t Turmeric
2 T Fresh Garlic diced fine
1 T Ginger, fresh and diced fine

Instructions
Pat lamb dry with paper towels. Brown thoroughly in corn oil in large pot with chopped onions until brown.

Add all spices, curry powder, salt, red pepper (depend on how hot you want it), turmeric, garlic, ginger and any of your favorite spices as you wish. Simmer slowly for 15 minutes; then add yogurt, blend into lamb. Cook until flavor comes out. Taste the gravy; add more salt and hot pepper, if you need to.

Serve with hot rice. Makes 5 to 6 servings.

——————————

South Indian Curry

Ingredients
For the dry spice mixture:

1 T Coriander seeds
1 T Black peppercorns
1 T Fennel seeds
5 dried hot chilies (the small ones) – add a little at a time!

For the spice paste:
2 T Vegetable oil
2 med Onions, peeled and chopped
6 Garlic cloves, peeled and chopped
½ in piece of Fresh Ginger, peeled and chopped
4-5 fresh Green Chilies (small Indian ones – or one and a half jalapeno), coarsely chopped
1 c Coconut, freshly grated or 2/3 cup desiccated coconut left for one hour barely covered in warm water

Instructions
You also need: 4 tbs. vegetable oil 1 inch cinnamon stick 1 large onion, sliced into very fine half-rings, 2 lb. boned lamb from the shoulder, cut into 1 inch cubes, 2 large tomatoes, chopped and 1½ t salt.

Set a small, cast-iron frying pan over medium heat. When hot, put in all the ingredients for the dry -spice mixture. Stir and fry for 2-3 minutes or until they turn a few shades darker and smell roasted. Cool a bit and then grind in a clean coffee grinder.

Heat the 2 T oil for the spice paste in a large, preferably non-stick, frying pan over medium-high heat. When hot, put in the onions, garlic, ginger and green chilies. Stir and fry until the onions brown a bit. Put in the coconut. Continue to stir and fry until the coconut browns as well. Empty the contents of the pan into the container of a food processor. Add ½ cup water and blend to a paste. Set aside.

Heat the 4 Tbs. oil in a large, preferably non-stick pan over medium-high heat. When hot, put in the cinnamon. Stir once and put in the large onion cut into half-rings. Stir and fry until the onion is browned. Add the meat. Stir and fry for 10 minutes. Add the tomatoes, the dry spice mixture, the spice paste and the salt. Stir and cook for five minutes. Add 2 cups water and bring to the boil. Cover, turn the heat down to low and simmer gently for 60-70 minutes or until the lamb is tender. Uncover and boil away most of the liquid over high heat. The sauce should cling to the meat.

Serve with plain or seasoned rice.

——————————

So there you have the curries. Let me repeat – These Can Be Very Spicy, but very good. Enjoy. Cheers!

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