Appetizers for the Holidays


We are quickly approaching the Party Time of the Year – that time of the year between Thanksgiving and Christmas. So let’s look at some different appetizers. These are all from different sources. Enjoy!

Polenta Bites with Caramelized Mushrooms

Recipe Adapted From: Michael Chiarello

Ingredients – For the polenta:
3 c Heavy Cream
2 c Chicken Stock
1 t Sea Salt, fine grind
½ t Nutmeg, fresh ground
1 c Polenta
1 c Parmesan, fresh grated plus more for garnish

For the mushrooms:
3 t Extra-Virgin Olive oil
½ lbs Cremini mushrooms cut into quarters
Sea Salt, fine
Black Pepper, fresh ground
2 T Butter
1 T Garlic, diced fine
1 t Thyme leaves, finely chopped fresh
2 T Lemon juice, fresh squeezed
¾ c Dry White Wine
2 T Italian Parsley leaves, finely chopped

Directions:
Cook the polenta:

1). In a medium, heavy pot over high heat bring the cream, stock, salt, and nutmeg to a boil. Add the polenta gradually, whisking constantly. When the mixture thickens, switch to a wooden spoon and adjust the heat to maintain a bare simmer. Cook, stirring often, until thick, smooth, and creamy, about 15 minutes. Add the Parmesan and stir. Keep the polenta warm over low heat, stirring occasionally. If the polenta gets dry as it sits, stir in about ¼ cup of warm stock or cream.

Sauté the mushrooms:
1). In a medium skillet over high heat, heat the olive oil. When the oil is hot, sprinkle in the mushrooms in a single layer. Don’t stir them! Let them sizzle until they have caramelized on the bottom, about 2 minutes. When the bottoms are caramelized, toss them once and season with salt and pepper, to taste. Continue to cook without stirring for about 5 minutes.

2). Season mushrooms with salt and pepper. Add the butter and cook until it begins to brown, then add the garlic. Continue to cook until the garlic begins to brown.

3). Add the thyme and cook for about 10 seconds. Add the lemon juice and cook until the liquid evaporates. Add the wine, and simmer until the mushrooms are glazed with the sauce. Add the parsley. Then stir and remove the pan from the heat.

4). Place or pipe about 1 tablespoon of warm polenta onto a spoon, like a Chinese Soup spoon. Place about ½ teaspoon of the mushroom on top of the polenta. Garnish with grated Parmesan. Serve immediately.

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Roasted Trout Bruschetta with Spicy Wine Vinaigrette

Ingredients:
1 loaf Country-Style bread
Extra-virgin olive oil, for brushing the bread
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the Trout:
¼ c Sea Salt
8 trout fillets, skin on
¼ c Olive Oil
¾ c Wondra Flour
12 oz roasted Red Peppers, sliced into bite-size pieces
16 oil-cured Black Olives, halved and pitted
¼ c Italian flat-leaf parsley, fresh and finely chopped

For the Vinaigrette:
3 T Garlic, minced
⅛ t Chili oil
1 c Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
¾ c Sherry Vinegar
1 t Chili Powder
1 t Sea Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
2/3 c Italian flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped and fresh

Directions:
1). Preheat the oven to 375˚ F

2). Slice the bread into 1/4-inch thick slices. Cut those slices in half on a diagonal. Lay the slices on baking sheets in a single layer and brush the bread with extra-virgin olive oil. Season with salt and pepper. Place on a baking sheet and bake until crisp outside but still soft within, about 5 to 6 minutes.

3). On a baking sheet covered with foil, sprinkle salt over the foil. Lay the trout fillets skin side down and sprinkle the tops of the fillets liberally with more salt. Set aside in refrigerator for 10 minutes.

4). Blend the Vinaigrette: In a small bowl, whisk together the garlic, chili oil, olive oil, sherry vinegar, chili powder, salt, pepper and parsley.

5). Rinse the trout fillets and pat dry. Sprinkle some pepper on the fillets. In a shallow dish filled with the flour, dredge the fillets with the flour, shaking off the excess.
Heat the ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil in a large skillet over moderately high heat. When hot, add the fish, skinned side up, and cook until crisp, about 1 minute. Turn with an offset spatula and cook on the skinned side until done, about 1 minute. Transfer to paper towels to drain.

6). To serve, cut the trout into bite size pieces. Top each toast with a slice of roasted pepper and a piece of trout. Spoon some of the vinaigrette over the trout. Scatter a few olives around each portion, and dust the fish with the remaining parsley. Serve immediately.

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So there you go. Ready for at least Thanksgiving – in the US – party and maybe also for the party season. Might even be good for New Years Eve. Cheers!

Skewered and Grilled Indian Lamb Curry


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.

Lamb Curry


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.

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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.

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

Bacon Nation


Again, a “blog blip” on an upcoming Bacon Nation event via the web.

The Bacon Nation

Aaron Tucker has invited you to the event ‘BACON LIVE!’ on The Bacon Nation! Have you been watching Bacon Live?

Time: October 21, 2009 from 6pm to 7pm
Location: The Bacon Situation Room
Organized By: Jason Mosley and Sean Brett

Event Description:
Bacon Live is an online show hosted by Jason Mosley (Mr Baconpants) and Sean “The Baconator” Brett every Wednesday at 7PM Eastern (4 Pacific, 6 Central).

Weekly topics include bacon discoveries, reviews of bacon-related products, lots of bacon humor and even non-bacon bacon news! It’s six hours of fun packed into one!

See more details and RSVP on The Bacon Nation: The Bacon Nation

About The Bacon Nation
Welcome to the Bacon Nation where every day is a celebration of the Best Meat Ever.
283 members
31 discussions
11 Events
35 blog posts

Cheers! There is also a link to The Bacon Nation in the sidebar ====>

Man vs Food : Flying Pie


I just received this in an email for those of you who are interested. I was there at the filming of the Flying Pie episode.

Hi Robin and Bob,
Since you live in Boise, I thought you might be interested in tomorrow’s episode of Travel Channel’s Man v. Food. Adam Richman (the host) hits up Big Jud’s for the Double Big Jud burger; tries the triple habanero pizza at Flying Pie; and visits Rockies Diner to take on the Johnny B. Goode burger. I would love your help spreading the word about this episode either on your blog or Twitter. If you’re interested, I can send you a Man v. Food t-shirt for posting about this episode! Here’s more information.

What is Travel Channel’s Man v. Food?
Host Adam Richman sets out to travel the country in search of the best places to do some serious indulging. Adam’s quest brings him to some of the greatest traditional food the nation can serve up, and he takes on some epic food challenges along the way. Watch the series to find out who wins when Man takes on Food.

Boise Episode Details
Adam’s first stop is Big Jud’s, home of the massive Double Big Jud, a burger featuring two Frisbee-sized patties. Next, he visits Flying Pie, a staple in Boise since 1978 known for their unique pizza concoctions. But one of their most original, and definitely the spiciest, is the triple habanero pie. Each pizza is topped with eighteen insanely hot peppers, to assure that every bite is a mouth melting adventure. Just downing one triple habanero pie is a challenge, but an even bigger challenge awaits Adam at Rockies Diner. He’s taking on their Johnny B. Goode: three burger patties topped with pastrami, a hot dog, cheese, and chili, plus a huge order of chili cheese fries and a sixteen-ounce milkshake. If Adam can finish in thirty minutes, he wins a brand new guitar. Will Adam rock out with a victory, or will the Johnny B. Goode leave him singing the blues?

Tune-in Wednesday at 10 E/P to find out. I’ve attached some behind-the-scenes photos from this episode for you.

Community
To get updates on Travel Channel’s Man v. Food and look at pictures of Adam on the road, become a fan of Travel Channel’s Man v. Food Facebook Page or follow us on Twitter. Also, we are putting together a weekly updates list to keep fans “in the know”. Please let me know if you are interested in being on this list. On a more personal note, I hope you do not find this email offensive. I try to reach out to people who would be interested to know that Man V. Food is coming!

Happy eating,
Wendy Hofstetter
Room 214, Inc. on behalf of the Travel Channel
www.room214.com
www.travelchannel.com
http://www.travelchannel.com/TV_Shows/Man_v_Food

Chocolate Stout Layer Cake


OK. So here is the recipe for the Chocolate Stout Layer Cake that Marnie and Mac made yesterday for her birthday dinner. They got the original recipe from Bon Appetit. Enjoy this one … We did!

Chocolate Stout Layer Cake with Chocolate Frosting

Cake:
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped
2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
14 tablespoons (1 3/4 sticks) salted butter, room temperature
1 1/4 cups plus 3 tablespoons sugar
3 large eggs, separated
3/4 cup chocolate stout, regular stout, or porter
2/3 cup freshly brewed strong coffee

Frosting:
1 pound bittersweet chocolate (54% to 60% cacao), chopped
2 cups heavy whipping cream
1 teaspoon instant espresso powder

For cake:
Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 350°F. Butter and flour two 9-inch-diameter cake pans with 1 1/2-inch-high sides. Line bottom of each cake pan with parchment paper round; butter and flour parchment. Place chopped chocolate in medium metal bowl. Set bowl over saucepan of barely simmering water and stir until chocolate is melted and smooth. Remove bowl from over water and set aside.

Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in medium bowl to blend. Using electric mixer, beat butter and 11/4 cups sugar in large bowl until fluffy and pale yellow, about 2 minutes. Add egg yolks 1 at a time, beating until well blended after each addition. Beat in lukewarm melted chocolate, then stout and coffee. Beat flour mixture into chocolate mixture in 2 additions just until incorporated.

Using clean dry beaters, beat egg whites and remaining 3 tablespoons sugar in another medium bowl until stiff but not dry. Fold 1/3 of egg whites into cake batter to lighten, then fold in remaining egg whites in 2 additions. Divide batter between prepared cake pans (about 3 cups for each); smooth tops.

Bake cakes until tester inserted into centers comes out clean, about 30 minutes. Transfer cakes to racks and cool in pans 20 minutes. Invert cakes onto racks; remove parchment paper and cool completely. DO AHEAD: Can be made 1 day ahead. Cover and store at room temperature.

For frosting:
Place chopped chocolate in medium heatproof bowl. Combine whipping cream and espresso powder in medium saucepan. Bring cream mixture to simmer over medium-high heat, whisking occasionally. Pour cream mixture over chopped chocolate; let stand 1 minute, then whisk until chocolate is melted and mixture is smooth. Chill chocolate frosting until slightly thickened and spreadable, stirring occasionally, about 2 hours (or for quick chilling, place frosting in freezer until thickened and spreadable, stirring occasionally, about 30 minutes).

Using serrated knife, trim rounded tops from both cake layers so that tops are flat. Place 1 cake layer, trimmed side up, on 9-inch-diameter tart pan bottom or cardboard round, then place on rack set over baking sheet. Drop 1 1/4 cups frosting by large spoonfuls over top of cake layer; spread frosting evenly to edges with offset spatula or butter knife. Top with second cake layer, trimmed side down. Spread remaining frosting evenly over top and sides of cake.
DO AHEAD: Can be made up to 1 day ahead. Cover with cake dome and refrigerate. Let cake stand at room temperature at least 1 hour and up to 3 hours before serving.

Ingredient tip:
If you can find it, use a chocolate stout (Brooklyn Brewery and Oregon’s Rogue Brewery make it) in the cake batter. The chocolaty flavors in the beer come from dark-roasting the malts. Some brewers even add a little chocolate to the beer as well. If you can’t find chocolate stout, use another stout, such as Guinness. Sierra Nevada Porter and Samuel Adams Honey Porter would also work well in this recipe.

Chocohaulics Week!


Yes, October 12-17, 2009 is National Chocolate Week! So, in honor of National Chocolate Week and Marnie’s birthday, I offer just the photo of the cake she and Mac made, a Chocolate Decadence Cake. YUM-O!!!

“Chocolate Week is a time of pure indulgence involving the country’s best chocolatiers and chocolate shops holding events all over the UK.

One of the major highlights of Chocolate Week 09, is the first ever consumer show dedicated exclusively to this delicious subject. This two day event, Chocolate Unwrapped, will be held on 10th and 11th October, at the exclusive May Fair Hotel in the heart of London.

Nectar Of The Gods: The Cultural History Of Chocolate

Written by J. Raimund Pfarrkirchner

Once reserved only for Aztec royalty, the origin of chocolate weaves a mysterious (and delicious) web throughout history. “Black gold,” as chocolate has been called, has a control over a majority of Westerners.

It’s always in the back of one’s mind, or in the front of one’s mind when obtaining some becomes more acute. Everyone has a specific craving, whether it be pure, refined, mixed, primed, or blended, but we all have experiences of one kind or another with the stuff.

I, for one, enjoy my chocolate mixed with nuts or berries, and I’m more partial to dark than milk, but I can’t recall ever refusing chocolate. Given my enjoyment, I was surprised to learn that chocolate’s current form is far removed from its origins as a drink of the gods, a nectar in the literal sense, of the Aztecs called xoxocatl.

Award-winning professor Michael D. Coe of Yale University writes in his book, The True History of Chocolate that the first tangible evidence of chocolate consumption originates in mid-fifth century CE. Yet emerging linguistic evidence suggests that the Olmec, a Central American civilization that predates the Aztec and the Maya before them, were not unaccustomed to the plant and its possibility for creating a beverage.

Food of the Gods

The origin of chocolate, according to Aztec legend, states that Quetzalcoatl brought the plant to Earth from heaven, not unlike Promentheus bringing fire to man, after man and woman, in a sacred garden not unlike Eden, attempted to steal the knowledge and power of the gods. Because Quetzalcoatl considered their banishment from the garden too harsh a punishment, he gifted them chocolate.

Carl Linnaeus, founder of the modern classification system of all living things (taxonomy), clearly had this legend in mind when he named the plant Theobroma cacao, meaning ‘food of the gods’. As is so often the case with something reported to have come from the gods, royalty was interested in its consumption. Aztec king Montezuma was reported to have drank the beverage from golden goblets that were only holy enough for chocolate to be used once. The fact is opulent enough, but it was reported that for him to drink more than twenty-five glasses per diem was not uncommon.

Aztecs often used cocoa beans as a currency. During a 1514 voyage to the New World Hernando de Oviedo y Valdez, a member of Pedro Arias Dávila massive 1500-men expedition, wrote in his journal claiming that four beans could buy a rabbit dinner, ten was standard price for a night with a prostitute, and he himself bought a slave for the price of one hundred cocoa beans.

Arrival In The West

From the Age of Exploration, chocolate entered into Western culture. While exact etymology is moot, it is clear that Europeans first came into contact with chocolate, or rather the cacao bean, via the Spanish, via the Mexico, via the Aztec, at the dawn of the sixteenth century.

Chocolate was again the drink the of elite, the delight of the plebeians, the bitterest of potables, the most saccharine of sweets, the iconic symbol of Mesoamerica. Chocolate was again the drink the of elite, the delight of the plebeians, the bitterest of potables, the most saccharine of sweets, the iconic symbol of Mesoamerica. In A Tale of Two Cities Dicken’s shows the transitional period of chocolate, between Mesoamerican luxury to the European commoners’ pleasure, when he explains with great detail Monseigneur’s elaborate consumption of chocolate in his Paris hotel room. In Europe—during the time of the novel, and even before—the price of chocolate was a luxury because it had to be brought across the Atlantic ocean before it could be consumed.

The ceremonial aspect of the drink was, in some convoluted way, preserved when it entered into the Catholic Church. Whilst electing a new Pope, the College of Cardinals meeting in Concalve used to sip the beverage. And European royalty enjoyed the beverage as Aztec royalty had before them.

A New Renaissance

It was not until 1828 when chocolate changed from a sacred drink to a solid bar we know today, through the addition of cocoa butter. Not only did chemist Coenraad Johannes van Houten of the Netherlands create the process of manufacturing cocoa butter, but he also discovered how to treat chocolate with alkalis to remove the bitter taste that had until that point been characteristic of chocolate. While the addition of chilli had long since been dropped from the recipes by Europeans, vanilla was often retained, along with milk and sugar, the latter being unavailable to the Aztecs.

Thus, chocolate as we know and love came into existence after several thousand years of being consumed in liquid form with a pungent, bitter taste. It’s interesting to note that producers of chocolate are experimenting even further, by adding not just sugar and milk but chilli, lavender, mint, and other flavours. Some producers are even selling it with bitterness intact, giving all who love chocolate something to look forward to: new forms, new uses, new tastes, all continually inspired by its divine origins.”

So there you have, The rest of the story about chocolate. Enjoy and cheers! Find a good port, as in 1968 Taylor Fladgate Reserve Porto, Late Bottled Vintage!

Miss Marnie’s Birtday Is Today!


Today is Marnie’s second anniversary of her 39th Birthday!! It is also the 27th anniversary of my brother’s 39th Birthday! Such a day! Looks like we’d best have a party. And now we will reveal, in no particular order, the wines to be serverd at tonight’s dinner! Oh, and all of these wines come from our cellar!

L-R: A 1968 Beaulieu Vineyard Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon ($110) and a 1968 Gemello Filice Winery Cabernet Sauvignon ($46)

L-R: A 1968 Giuseppe Mascarello e Figlio Barolo ($37) and a 1968 Taylor Fladgate Reserve Porto, Late Bottled Vintage ($198)

So now you ask, “Why a 1968 vintage?” Well, it’s not my brother’s birth year, but rather Marnies. Salute!! But wait! What’s cookin”? Try a Fall Root Soup, Lamb Roast with Mustard and Rosemary, Cauliflower with Brown Butter, Fresh Homemade Bread, Green salad and Chocolate Decadence Cake! What more could we ask for.
Cheers!

Oktoberfest Dinner


Well, it really was a good dinner. Our friends, Debra and Geno, joined us and it was delightful. If you missed the previous post, here is the menu –

Fall Root Soup

Sauerbratten with Cabbage and Special Sauce

Hot German Potato Salad
Fresh Baked New York Rye Bread

Lemon Bars

2008 St Regulus Reserve Riesling (Weiser, ID)

And here is the dinner plated. From left to right – Cabbage in Apple Cider and Clove, Hot Potato Salad, Fresh Baked New York Rye Bread and the Sauerbratten with Special Sauce. Loads of fun to prepare and especially to share with friends. Cheers!

Saturday Dinner


Here’s a good one.

Fall Root Soup

Sauerbratten with Cabbage and Special Sauce
Hot German Potato Salad
Lemon Bars

2008 St Regulus Reserve Riesling (Weiser, ID)

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So that’s it. It’ll be fun. The sauerbratten has been getting happy since Wednesday. Cheers!