Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Ham and Lentils



It was another beautiful spring night in Silverlake. We had left over ham from the large piece we had purchased at McCall's Meat and Fish. We found this recipe for Ham Hocks with Red Lentil in the book Nature by Alain Ducasse. We weren't fond of this recipe, I doubt we will make it again. However, if the ingredients appeal to you, give it a shot. The wine was great.

Ham Hocks with Red Lentil
Nature
by Alain Ducasse

Serves 4

·  Put 1 half-salted ham hock in a basin of water and leave to de-salt for 2 hours, several changes of water.
·  Transfer to a flameproof casserole dish, not too large coyer with water, and bring to a boil. Skim until the stock is clear, then add 1 bay leaf.
·   In the meantime, peel and wash 3 carrots, 3 stalks of celery, and 4 spring onions with stalks.  Slice them thinly, set aside, and add the trimmings (carrot and celery ends, the onion stalks) to the casserole dish with the ham. Simmer gently, just below a boil, for 2 hours.
·  Then take out the vegetable trimmings. Rinse 1 cup of red lentils and add to casserole dish.
·  Cook for an additional 10 minutes or so, until the lentils are soft.
·  In the meantime, in a saute pan with a drop of olive oil, sweat the sliced vegetables with a pinch of salt for 4 minutes, with a lid on the pan.
·  Chop the leaves of 3 sprigs of parsley and 1 sprig of tarragon.
·  Take out the ham hock and keep it warm on a serving dish.
·  Drain the lentils in a sieve over a bowl and add them to the saute pan of vegetables.
·   Add 3/4 cup of the cooking stock, 2 tablespoons of Dijon mustard, the chopped herbs, and stir well.
·   Add a twist of freshly ground black pepper and arrange the lentils around the ham.

·  Serve immediately.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Califlower and Ham Pasta




We were shopping at McCall's Meat and Fish and they were selling delicious looking hams. We decided to buy one to make a wonderful dish.  Rigatoni Modo Mio (Pasta with Cauliflower and Ham) from Craig Claiborne’s The New York Times Cookbook. If you have never thought of a pasta made with cauliflower and ham this is the one for you! It is extremely satisfying. Summer like weather allowed us to eat outside on the back deck overlooking LA. You can get the recipe from our blog of: May 07, 2014. Click the date to get the recipe.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Halibut - Hold the Fear


The New York Times had an excellent article on cooking fish. It is worth a read. We went to McCall's Meat and Fish and bought Halibut. We cooked it as they suggested and served the fish with re-heated Potatoes and a simple Salad. It was an excellent dinner.

Conquering the Fear of Cooking Fish
New York Times

Recipe Lab: Pan-Roasted Fish Fillets

Julia Moskin pan-roasts fish with fresh herbs and butter.
By Andrew Scrivani and Jason Lee on Publish Date April 20, 2015.

Fear of fish can afflict even the most confident cook.
Fewer and fewer fish have crossed my stove in recent years. This is partly out of guilt, because wild species are so often out of season or endangered, and farmed fish are so often unappealing. It is partly because in my apartment, to cook fish for dinner is to live with its smell for a day and a half. And it is partly because I ate so much fancy fish in restaurants to make up for my failings as a home cook that I had forgotten how delicious a simple buttery pan-fried fillet can be.
The modern fashion in restaurants is to serve fillets swimming in a broth, juice or nage (as if returning to water is somehow natural for cooked fish). Other chefs like oil-poaching, which involves a slow simmer in gallons of top-quality oil; expensive and impractical for Tuesday-night dinner at home.

And others recommend that home cooks start with en papillote: folding up individual fillets in parchment paper with butter and herbs, which steams the fish and produces a kind of thin broth. This is not a thrilling outcome.
For weeknight home cooking, I wanted a way to cook a fish fillet the way I cook all my favorite proteins (steaks, shrimp, lamb chops): quickly, simply and over high-enough heat to bring on the browning that makes food crisp, appetizing and fragrant. (Food science nerds call them Maillard reactions.) But a simple sear in oil isn’t the answer for fish: overcooked and flavorless fillets are the result.

I brought the quandary to Mark Usewicz, a former chef and current co-owner of Mermaid’s Garden in Brooklyn, where he teaches classes for home cooks, like “How to Cook Fish in a New York City Apartment.”

His solution (of course) involved butter.
The best way to cook a fish fillet, he said, is on top of the stove in a heavy skillet, with constant attention — not a tall order, as the whole process takes less than five minutes from start to finish. The short cooking time seriously reduces the chance of lingering smells.

The initial sear should be in oil that will not burn over high heat: grapeseed, canola or even extra-virgin olive oil. (Although experts advise us not to waste extra-virgin oil on sautéing, using a few teaspoons here and there is well worth it for convenience and taste.)

To finish the cooking, add a nut of butter to the pan, flip the fillet and baste furiously. The melting butter will keep the flesh tender, help form a tasty crust and finally brown lightly to become a sauce for the finished dish. A few fresh herb sprigs tossed in at the same time perfume the whole thing nicely.
“It’s a variation on the most basic restaurant recipe, the first one you learn at the fish station,” he said. In most restaurant kitchens, the cooking starts on top of the stove but is finished in a hot oven, to make room for the next table’s order. For home cooks, heating the oven to 400 degrees for five minutes of cooking time is an unnecessary step.

Renee Erickson, a Seattle chef who specializes in seafood at her restaurants, the Whale Wins, the Walrus and the Carpenter, Boat Street Café and Barnacle, also relies on butter-basting as the best basic way to cook fillets, from fatty salmon to slender flounder. “There are more delicate ways to cook fish, I suppose,” she said, but not tastier ones.
“If you order a pan-fried fillet from one of our kitchens, it comes out seriously browned,” she said. If the pan and contents get too hot during the cooking and threaten to scorch, she advised, add a bit more cold butter or squeeze in the juice of half a lemon.

The method works for small whole fish, too, she said, as well as skinless and skin-on fillets. You can score the skin with the tip of a sharp knife to prevent the fillet from curling as it cooks or (even easier) just press down on it lightly for the first minute or so of cooking.
What kind of fish to buy for this dish? Assuming your fish is in good shape, and the right thickness — not less than a half-inch thick or more than an inch — almost any fillet can be cooked this way, from brook trout to Arctic char. Black cod, rockfish and halibut are excellent choices from the Pacific; from the Atlantic, sea bass, grouper and snappers; red drum from the Gulf of Mexico.

Mr. Usewicz said that selecting the right fish for a particular recipe is prominent among the anxieties people bring into his shop.

“It is amazing how afraid people are of fish,” he said. “Afraid of cooking it, afraid of buying it, afraid of keeping it.” Most of his customers, for example, firmly believe that fish can’t even be kept overnight in the refrigerator without spoiling. “Fish is like any other kind of protein,” he said. “It’s perishable.” But that doesn’t mean it’s on the verge of spoilage.

“A really nice piece of fish lasts a few days in the fridge, and it doesn’t smell up your house any more than steak does,” he said, as long as it’s been treated properly from the moment of catch. That usually means eviscerated on deck, frozen or flown to market within hours and kept cold at all points on the way to the case.


“People get all caught up in choosing exactly the right kind of fish,” he said. “But really, the most important thing that will affect your dish is how it’s handled before you ever see it.”

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Salmon Cakes

Cakes ready to be fried
Getting Crispy

Wolfgang Puck Lyonaise Potatoes
Perfection!
We hit the jackpot with our Salmon Patties. One more use of our left-over Smoked Salmon. You can find the recipe for the Salmon and Dill Fish Cakes from The Kitchen Diaries by Nigel Slater on our blog of: June 4, 2012. Click the date to get the recipe. We served the patties over a Salad topped with Lyonnaise Potatoes from Wolfgang Puck's Modern FrenchCooking for the American Kitchen. The recipe can be found on our blog of: June 23, 2012. Click the date to get the recipe.


Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Scrambled Eggs Donburi


One of the best parts of making a large Smoked Salmon is using the leftover salmon in other dishes.


What is better than a Salmon Bowl? We used a recipe for Nobu's Scrambled Eggs Donburi. We always have liked Donburi and Nobu’s restaurant Matsuhisa, is one of our favorites. You can find the recipe for this delicious dish on our blog of: April 29, 2014. Click the date to get the recipe. It is EASY and worth it. Doesn’t it look delicious? It is!

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Smoked Salmon

Salmon before the Smoking
Salmon in the Smoker

Smoked Salmon
Salmon, Cabbage and Bacon, Rice
We smoked a salmon in the egg. We got a beautiful Copper River Salmon filet from McCall’s Meat and Fish. We used the recipe for Honey-Cured, Smoked Salmon from Cooking with Fire and Smoke by Phillip Stephen Schulz. You can find the recipe in our blog of: Jan 15, 2009. Click the date to get the recipe. This requires the salmon to be cooked low and slow in the egg.

With the Smoked Salmon we served: Slow-Roasted Salmon With Cabbage, Bacon, And Dill from It’s About Time by Michael Schlow. We also made Rice.


The Salmon was delicious and we had lots of leftovers.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Asparagus Pasta







Spring is here! Heirloom tomatoes are in our grocery store so we made our first Tomato Salad of the year. Three colors of tomato (Yellow, Red, Purple) and lots of fresh basil.


To continue with the Spring theme of our cooking, we made Asparagus Pasta. This is another in a line of Spring Pastas we make: Asparagus, Fava Bean and Pea. We used the last of the delicious Parmesan Cheese that Guillermo brought to us. God it was good. You can find the recipe for the pasta on our blog of: April 17, 2007. Click the date to get the recipe.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Fava Bean Pasta


Hungry Cat Salad


A sure sign of spring for us is when we see fava beans in the market. They of course need to be double peeled. For 4 pounds it takes us about an hour to peel the beans out of the pod. It is a mindless exercise that goes fast if you play good music. The 2nd peeling later in the day after they are par-boiled is much faster.

We love this Fava Bean Pasta. Fava beans, sage, onion, bacon what could be better? You can find the recipe on our blog of: April 30, 2008. Click the date to get the recipe.

We started with our favorite: Hungry Cat Salad. You can read about why it is called The Hungry Cat Salad on our blog post of: November 21, 2009. Click the date to get the recipe.


Monday, April 06, 2015

Chicken Provencal



We saw this recipe for Roasted Chicken Provençal in the New York Times and decided to make it. This recipe is a keeper! It was delicious, it was easy, it gave us leftovers and it called for good bread to mop up the sauce. We LOVED it! Try this one for sure!

Roasted Chicken Provençal
Sam Sifton
New York Times


This is a recipe I picked up from Steven Stolman, a clothing and interior designer whose “Confessions of a Serial Entertainer” is a useful guide to the business and culture of dinner parties and general hospitality. It is a perfect dinner-party meal: chicken thighs or legs dusted in flour and roasted with shallots, lemons and garlic in a bath of vermouth and under a shower of herbes de Provence. They go crisp in the heat above the fat, while the shallots and garlic melt into sweetness below. You could serve with rice, but I prefer a green salad and a lot of baguette to mop up the sauce.

INGREDIENTS

4   chicken legs or 8 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
2   teaspoons kosher salt
1   teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2-3/4   cup all-purpose flour
3   tablespoons olive oil
2   tablespoons herbes de Provence
1   lemon, quartered
8-10   cloves garlic, peeled
4-6   medium-size shallots, peeled and halved
   cup dry vermouth
4   sprigs of thyme, for serving

PREPARATION

Preheat oven to 400. Season the chicken with salt and pepper. Put the flour in a shallow pan, and lightly dredge the chicken in it, shaking the pieces to remove excess flour.

Swirl the oil in a large roasting pan, and place the floured chicken in it. Season the chicken with the herbes de Provence. Arrange the lemons, garlic cloves and shallots around the chicken, and then add the vermouth to the pan.

Put the pan in the oven, and roast for 25 to 30 minutes, then baste it with the pan juices. Continue roasting for an additional 25 to 30 minutes, or until the chicken is very crisp and the meat cooked through.


Serve in the pan or on a warmed platter, garnished with the thyme.