Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Pizza on the Egg






Billy has been talking about making Pizza on our Egg. I finally went out and bought a Pizza Stone that fits in the egg and a Pizza Peel to remove the cooked Pizza.

We went to Mozza2Go and bought the flour that Nancy uses. Billy made the dough he also made dough using regular flour. He brought the dough and homemade sauce over to our house. I went to Barbrix and purchased some of their custom made Wild Boar Sausage to go on top of some of the Pizza’s.

We started with Pappa al Pomodoro Soup. This is a thick Italian Tomato soup we love to make in the summer when tomatoes are at their best. We use the recipe from the Italian Country Cookbook by Rogers and Gray.

The Egg can get very hot. We heated it up to almost 1000 degrees. The Pizza cooked in about 3 minutes. The bottom of the Pizza was burnt, the top was great. We learned that we were greatly overheating the Egg. In fact the felt gasket burnt off. I must not have been the first person to do that, because they sell replacement gaskets. Live in learn. We then let the Egg cool down and made 4 more Pizza’s at lower temperatures. They kept improving in quality.

For dessert we served Ginger Cookies from The Cheese Store of Silverlake.

We subsequently told our T’ai Chi instructor Michael about our experience. He is a Pizza devote. He directed us towards a web site that is the ultimate site for finding out about Pizza. If you like to make Pizza or are interested in Pizza check this out: Jeff Varasano's Famous New York Pizza Recipe. Billy is inspired by this site and is going to try again!

Repetition makes for perfection!

Pappa al Pomodoro
From: Rogers and Gray: Italian Country Cookbook

Serves 10 (but leftovers are so good, serves 2 - 5 times)

4 garlic cloves, peeled and cut into slivers
¼ cup Olive Oil
9 pounds ripe sweep tomatoes, peeled and seeded, or 4 ½ pounds canned plum tomatoes, drained of most of their juices
Sea Salt and freshly ground black pepper
4 loaves stale bread, we use La Brea loaves
1 large bunch fresh basil
extra-virgin olive oil

Put the garlic and olive oil into a heavy saucepan and cook gently for a few minutes. Just before the garlic turns brown, add the tomatoes. Simmer for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally until the tomatoes become concentrated. Season with salt and pepper, then add 2 ½ cups water and bring to a boil.

Day before, cut most of the crust off of the bread and break or cube in large chunks to allow it to get stale.

When soup is ready, Put the bread into the tomatoes mixture and stir until the bread absorbs most of the liquid, adding more boiling water if the soup is too thick. Remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly. If the basil leaves are large, tear into pieces. Stir into the soup with ½ to ¾ cups of extra virgin olive oil. Let the soup sit before serving to allow the bread to absorb the flavor of the basil and oil.

Serve in bowls and add a dollop of Extra Virgin Olive Oil on top.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Expatriate Chicken




We made Expatriate Roast Chicken with Lemon and Olives from The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen by Paula Wolfert. This is a very easy chicken to cook and the Moroccan flavors are exceptional. You need Preserved Lemons which you can either buy or preserve yourself. I love the taste of the olives and the preserved lemons.

With the chicken we made Cous-Cous, the traditional side for this dish. It absorbs all of the great sauce that the Chicken recipe creates. The recipe is on our blog of: Aug 2, 2008. Click the date to get the recipe.

We made a Caesar Salad. We always use the recipe from The Zuni Café Cookbook. The best part is that you don’t break up the large Romaine Lettuce leaves. Instead of using a fork you use your fingers! The Caesar Salad recipe is in our blog of: July 25, 2009. Click the date to get the recipe.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Multicultural Meals





We had some Vicolo Frozen Corn Meal Pizza Shells, they are the best. We coated the crust with mustard and then placed Aged Gruyere Cheese. We had some fantastic French Ham we picked up at The Cheese Store of Silverlake and shaved it upon the cheese. We then took some Heirloom Tomatoes and sliced then thinly and topped the ham. Finally with dusted with grated Parmesan Cheese. The Pizzas were fantastic. Not only did we enjoy them but Billy and Kevin stopped by and had a slice.

We then put together a meal from leftovers and other things we had on hand. Bea joined us and brought two great bottles of wine.

We started with Cavion Melon. I splashed them with fresh lime juice and covered with Prosciutto. We had some extra Persian Mulberries and I added them. It was a delicious and refreshing treat.

We then made Pork Fried Rice using a trick we picked up in Hong Kong on our recent trip. The Fried Rice we had there was always very light and there were large chunks of egg in it. What we found out was they cook the fried rice and the egg separately. When the fried rice is almost done, they add the cooked egg and mix them together. It makes the rice much lighter then adding the raw egg directly to the rice.

We ended the dinner with cookies from Mozza2Go. Bea loved them. She couldn’t stop eating them!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Pork with Egg Two Ways





We had some left over lobster (not a bad thing to have as a leftover). We started with prosciutto and melon with lobster. It was great. We found a recipe for Carolina's Tenderloin of Pork in Cooking with Fire and Smoke. We wound up eating the pork the first night with my favorite eggplant / tomato gratin. It is called Baked Eggplant and Tomatoes with Bread Crumbs and Basil. It is from the Chez Panisse Cooking cookbook by Alice Waters and Paul Bertolli. This is a delicious dish, and it reheats well.

Matthew Poley, of Heirloom LA has a line of Lasagna Frozen Cupcakes in a single serving looking like a cupcake. The lasagna comes in several flavors. We picked up a few of them from him at Silverlake Wine. Matt often is a guest cook there.

We had the beet lasagna cupcake as a side with the eggplant. It was great. It is a treat to have a selection in the freezer just waiting for the right time to be eaten!

CAROLINA'S TENDERLOIN OF PORK
COOKING WITH FIRE AND SMOKE
BY PHILLIP STEPHEN SCHULZ
The best thing about tenderloin of pork is that it takes only half the time to smoker-cook as a larger, rolled roast. This version, with its mustardy basting sauce, is a specialty of the redoubtable Carolina restaurant in New York City.

2 pork tenderloins, about 3/4 pound each
2 teaspoons Hungarian sweet paprika
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
½ cup Dijon mustard
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
1. Pat the tenderloins dry with paper towels. Combine the pa¬prika, salt, and pepper in a bowl. Rub this mixture into the meat.

2. Preheat a water smoker. (Charcoal smokers will require a
full pan of briquets.)


3. Meanwhile, combine the mustard, vinegar, and butter in a
small saucepan. Heat to boiling; remove from heat.

4. Add presoaked wood chips or chunks to the heat source. Put
the water pan in place and add water to fill the pan. Brush the tenderloins with the mustard mixture and place on the highest food grid.


5. Cover and smoker-cook, keeping the temperature in the 180-degree range, basting twice more during cooking, until the juicesrun clear when pricked with a fork, 3 to 4 hours (internal tempera¬ture: 170 degrees). Serve hot or cold, thinly sliced.
Serves 4 to 6.

Baked Eggplants and Tomatoes with Bread Crumbs and Basil
Chez Panisse Cooking

For 8

At the restaurant, where large numbers of people are served at definite times, the success of any dinner, from the standpoint of the kitchen, depends upon how well prepared we are. Timing is critical, and accordingly, many dishes that would be impossible to assemble and cook to order are designed so that they can easily be finished and served. This logic and organization is valuable at home as well and can often help to simplify the work of the cook, particularly just before mealtime, when many tasks need to be attended to simultaneously. This eggplant dish may be prepared well in advance of being served.
I have never liked to cook eggplant in oil as it acts like a sponge and becomes heavy and indigestible. So before even assembling the ingredients for this dish, the eggplant is salted and peppered and baked in a little water. Precooking the eggplant also releases its brown, sometimes bitter juice and insures that the raw tomatoes, which will later be layered with the cooked eggplant, will finish cook¬ing at the same time. The bread crumbs are also precooked for proper texture. An important part of this recipe is the reduction that occurs in the final mo¬ments. As the vegetables cook they release their juices, which mingle with the vinaigrette, basil, and garlic. Serve this dish with grilled meats, lamb, in partic¬ular. It is also excellent with grilled chicken, salmon, sea bass, or cod.

3 globe eggplants (2 pounds)
Salt and pepper
3 large beefsteak tomatoes (2 pounds)
12 ounces sourdough bread, to yield 2 1/2 cups bread crumbs
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan cheese

For the vinaigrette:
2 large cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon plus 1/2 teaspoon red wine vinegar
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
4 tablespoons chopped fresh basil

Preheat the oven to 4oo°F. Put a pot of water large enough to hold the tomatoes on to boil.

Peel the eggplants with a sharp knife. Slice the eggplant into 1/2-inch rounds, discarding the hard end piece near the stem. Lay the eggplant out on a cutting board and salt and pepper one side. Then turn them over and arrange them, slightly overlapping, in a non-corroding baking dish approximately 16 by 10 inches. Pour over enough water (about 1/8 inch) to come barely up the sides of the eggplant. Lightly salt and pepper the other side of the eggplant. Cover the dish and bake about 1hour, until the eggplant is soft but not mushy.

Core the tomatoes and drop them into the pot of boiling water for 15 seconds. Remove from the water. When cool, remove the skins and cut the tomatoes into 1/2-inch slices.

Cut the crust off of the bread, break the bread up into small chunks, and grind into coarse crumbs in a food processor. (If you have no processor, pull the bread apart and break it up by hand.)

Melt the butter, add to the bread crumbs, and mix well so that all pieces are coated. Spread the crumbs on a baking sheet. Put into the oven with the eggplant and bake for about 15 minutes. Or until golden brown. Turn the bread crumbs over with a spatula every so often, so they will brown evenly.

Prepare the vinaigrette: Whisk the garlic, vinegar, salt and pepper together until the salt is well dissolved. Add the olive oil and 2 tablespoon of the basil and whisk until blended.

When the eggplants are ready, remove from the oven^ transfer to a plate to cool, and discard any juices remaining in the pan.

Cut the eggplant and tomato slices in half, making half-moon shapes. Layer them, by alternating and overlapping them in the same pan used for baking the eggplant. Fit any extra pieces into the cracks. Stir the vinaigrette again and spoon it over the slices, distributing the basil and garlic evenly. Lightly salt and, pepper. At this point, the vegetables can be covered and held 3 hours being baked.

To finish: Scatter the Parmesan evenly over the top. Put the dish in the oven, reduce to 35o°F, and bake for 30 minutes. Sprinkle the bread crumbs over the top and bake 15 minutes more. Let cool slightly, garnish with the re tablespoons basil, and serve.

Friday, August 14, 2009

A Turkish - Moroccan Dinner

Billy and Roger had given us some tomatoes and we continued to make use of them. It is really nice having neighbors that share their bountiful harvests! We made a Turkish Salad. It is very unusual in that all of the ingredients are chopped to a similar size and then yogurt and browned butter are poured over the salad. The recipe is from Casa Moro The Second Cookbook. You can find the recipe for the salad in our blog of: Aug 12, 2008. Click the date to get the recipe.

For the main course we had Expatriate Roast Chicken with Lemon and Olives from The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen by Paula Wolfert. It is one of my very favorite ways to roast a chicken. You can find the recipe in our blog of Aug. 2, 2008. You can find the recipe by clicking the date.

We also had Roasted Potatoes. Cathy modified a recipe from the The River Café in London. Basically cube potatoes, cube onions to a similar size combine with balsamic, salt and pepper and roast till brown at 350 degrees. The balsamic really adds to the flavor of the potatoes!

This is one of those dinners that give lots of leftovers! Yea!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Fantastic Birthday Leftovers!







We ate the leftovers from our birthday dinners all week long! We made a stock with all of the leftover lobster shells. The broth tasted like the sea (if there were lots of lobsters in it). We then made Risotto using the lobster broth and placed leftover lobster meat on top. Later in the week, we created Fried Risotto Cakes. We fried the risotto in butter untill they cakes were crispy and then put lobster on top. Both presentations were great. The first time I ever had risotto cakes was at Campanile. They usually are on the menu there.

We stretched the risotto into one more fantastic meal. We were at the Hollywood Farmer’s Market and they had the very first Chanterelle Mushrooms of the season. Unlike most foods, chanterelles are best early in the season. So these first picked chanterelles are the best of the year. We sautéed them and spooned over the reheated risotto.

Palate
had given us some Suckling Pig from the birthday dinner to take home. Cathy found a recipe for a Gratin of Flageolet Beans in Chez Panisse Cooking cookbook. We went to The Santa Monica Farmers Market and ran into Jason from Palate who told us where we could find fresh Flageolet Beans. They were beautiful. We then made the Gratin with the beans using the leftover pig. It was outrageously good! I actually took some to Jason at Palate. Guess you would call it: Take In.

Andrea stopped by and joined us for dinner on the patio. It was a warm night and we ate out on the deck.

We started with a delicious Tomato Salad with Burrata.


Gratin of Flageolet Beans
From Chez Panisse Cooking – Paul Bertolli and Alice Waters

For 4

1 1/4 cups flageolet beans, washed, soaked in cold water overnight
2 tablespoons pure olive oil
1 small carrot (2 ounces), finely diced
1/2 large stalk of celery (2 ounces), finely diced
1 small yellow onion (5 ounces), finely diced
6 cloves garlic, peeled
2 leafy sprigs thyme
4 tomatoes (14 ounces), peeled, seeded, diced
Piece of prosciutto hock with rind attached (j ounces)
5 cups beef broth or water
1 teaspoon salt
4 1/2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
1 1/2 A cups bread crumbs
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons grated fresh Parmesan

Warm the olive oil in a 6-quart noncorroding pot. Add the carrot, celery, onion, and garlic and cook over medium heat for 5 minutes, until the vegetables soften slightly and release their perfume. Add the thyme, tomatoes, prosciutto hock, and beans. Cover with the broth and stir in the salt. Bring the beans to a simmer, cover, and cook for 1 1/2 hours. Remove the cover after i hour, raise the heat slightly so that the liquid bubbles all over its surface, and allow the liquid to reduce during the last 30 minutes so that it is at the same level as the beans. When stirred, the beans should appear saucy.

Preheat the oven to 35o°F.

Remove the prosciutto hock and the thyme sprigs. Cut the meat and rind from the prosciutto, chop it into coarse bits, and add it to the beans. Stir in 2 1/2 tablespoons of the parsley.

Pour the beans into a baking dish (10 by 8 by 2 inches). Mix the crumbs with the remaining 2 tablespoons parsley, extra virgin oil, and Parmesan and spread them over the beans in an even layer. Bake the beans in the oven for 40 minutes, or until the edges bubble and the crumbs are evenly browned.

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Cliff Turns 65!

We had a fabulous birthday party at Palate Food + Wine in Glendale. It was really fun for Cathy and me and the guests. Special kudos go to Joy and Brenda who drove down from Napa. They joined us for 4 days of dining!

Billy and Kevin invited us over for Dungenesse Crabs cooked on his outdoor wok. I went downtown to Chinatown and personally picked out the live crabs. They were some of the best I have ever had! Lots of great wine from Kevin's seemingly unlimited supply.

The next night we went to Barbrix our favorite local restaurant in Silverlake. We ate outdoors (always a treat in LA) and had a wonderful dinner. Yea Don!

Monday night we went to Osteria Mozza. I had asked them grill some Lobsters as an appetizer. They went overboard and planned a whole dinner for us. Chris served us a Burrata sampler plate, then the Lobster with a Fantastic Salad. They then served Lobster Pasta two ways, one with tomatoes one without. An assortment of delicious desserts capped off the evening. It was mind-blowing!

I have NEVER had lobster that came out of the shell so easy. Grilled Lobster is definitely my favorite way to have it prepared. Cathy had the fantastic idea to bring home all of the leftover lobster shells and lobster meat, so that we could make a lobster stock and lobster risotto. I will never leave lobster shells again at a restaurant. It was an inspired idea!

For the party on the day of my birthday, we invited our Silverlake neighbors and some close friends and family. Palate outdid them selves. Of course we planned a meal around Suckling Pig! The food was exceptional everyone commented on how great it was. A Tomato Salad with Watermelon in it was a great hit. You thought you were biting into a red tomato and you got a piece of sweet watermelon. It was a very cleaver idea. Then then served Scallops with Truffles. What more can I say? The Suckling Pig was the best ever, it had been confied in duck fat, making the skin really crispy. It was served with an incredible Potato and Corn Succotash. For dessert: a Rosemary Bread-pudding to die for. In addition the setting in the library at Palate and drinks outdoors on the patio only added to the joy. I have attached a link to some pictures from the party. It was truly memorable.
Thanks to Octavio / Jason and Steve (for the great wines). It was a memorable night!
See pictures of the party here.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Gaspacho, Steak, Corn and Potatoes!





Wine:

Muralhas de Moncao Vinho Verde Branco 2008
Chateau St Jean 2000 Cabernet Sauvignon
Macvin du Jura Domaine Rabet Dessert Wine

Bea joined us for dinner. The weather has been drive with your top down, enjoy wine on patio overlooking the city weather. We started the evening outside. We decided to grill some steaks. This could only mean DRY AGED Porterhouse from Harvey Guss Meats!

Summer also means tomatoes every way you can make them. The recipe for Yellow Tomato Gazpacho from The Sunday Supper at Lucques Cook Book is my very favorite. We have made it many times.

Summer grilling steaks demand Corn on the Cob – Grilled.

With the corn and steak we made a favorite: Potatoes with Onion and Balsamic recipe that Cathy invented.

We finished with Chocolate Cupcakes.

Cathy Potatoes
============
3 pounds potatoes ¾ inch cube skin on
2 medium red onions or 12 cippolini onions chopped
Salt and pepper
6 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
4 - 6 Tbl melted butter

Mix all ingredients well back uncovered at 350 till crispy!

Yellow Tomato Gazpacho
====================
From Sunday Suppers at Lucques

2 1/2 pounds ripe yellow tomatoes
3 Persian cucumbers, or 1 hot-house cucumber
1/2 jalapeno, seeded and cut in half
4 sprigs cilantro, plus 12 cilantroleaves
2 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons diced red or orange sweet pepper
3 tablespoons diced red onion
18 small cherry tomatoes, cut in half
Super-good extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

This recipe was developed by Julie Robles, longtime Lucques cook, then sous-chef, then chef de cuisine. It's one of those magical recipes in which you combine a few simple ingredients and end up with an unexpectedly dramatic result. It's a foolproof recipe, but, tasting it, you'd never know how easy it is to make. As long as you have a blender (it doesn't work as well in a food processor) and really great tomatoes, this refresh ing gazpacho is a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.

Blanch the yellow tomatoes in boiling water for 30 seconds. Cool the toma¬toes in a bowl of ice water a few minutes, and then use your fingers to slip off their skins. Remove the cores, and chop the tomatoes coarsely, saving all the juice. Reserve the ice water.

Seed and dice three tablespoons' worth of unpeeled cucumber, as prettily as you can manage, for the garnish. Set aside. Peel and coarsely chop the remaining cucumbers.

You will need to make the soup in batches. Place half the yellow tomatoes, coarsely chopped cucumber, jalapeno, cilantro sprigs, garlic, vinegar, and olive oil in a blender with i% teaspoons salt and some pepper. Process at the lowest speed until broken down. Turn the speed up to high, and puree until the soup is com¬pletely smooth. If the soup is too thick, add a little of the reserved ice water. Strain the soup and taste for seasoning. Repeat with the rest of the soup ingredients. Chill the soup in the refrigerator; it should be served very cold.

Toss the diced pepper, diced onion, and diced cucumber together in a small
bowl.

Pour the gazpacho into six chilled soup bowls, and scatter the pepper mix¬ture over the soup. Season the cherry tomatoes with salt and pepper and place three cherry tomato halves and two cilantro leaves at the center of each bowl. Fin¬ish each soup with a drizzle of super-good olive oil. To serve family-style, place the soup in a chilled tureen or pretty pitcher and garnish with the tomato halves and cilantro; pass the diced vegetables on the side.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Black Truffles from Italy!






Palate Food + Wine was selling beautiful Black Truffles from Italy. We purchased a truffle that was 1 ½ oz. You can see from the quarter next to it that is fairly large.

We decided to make a Truffle Risotto. We went to The Cheese Store of Silverlake and picked up some Parmigiano Romano to blend into the risotto. We also got Vermont Cultured Butter. It is an excellent butter for cooking!

We made a standard risotto recipe and then used our truffle cutter to slice extremely thin slices on top of the risotto. It was delicious!

We started with a Caesar Salad, using The Zuni Café recipe from The Zuni Cafe Cookbook. It was especially good this time. I think it was due to the fact that I used a little more garlic than usual. One of the joys of the salad is that you don’t break up the romaine lettuce and you eat it with your hands! The recipe is long, the time to make it is easy. We cheated and used store bought crutons!

It was a nice night and we ate outside once again on our deck. We plan to make fried risotto cakes with the leftover risotto. They are a staple at Campanile often on the menu. I always like them.

zuni caesar salad

Nothing strikes such a resonant note among Zuni Kitchen Alumni and current staff so much as memories of working the salad station, often referred to as "Caesar's Palace." The Caesar outsells every other salad, indeed every other dish, every day by a factor of three, and after three or four hours, the ritual of cracking, whisking, tasting, tweaking, tasting again, and so on takes its toll on the sturdiest palate.

There is nothing clever, original, or mysterious about this Caesar salad. The main "trick" we rely on is top-notch ingredients, freshly prepared. If you use a lesser cheese, or grate it too soon, you will get a different salad. If you squeeze the lemon juice ahead of time, it will have little or no fragrance. If the eggs are not particularly fresh, or you beat them into the dressing too far in advance, the dressing will not have body. Old or harsh-tasting garlic will dominate every other component and spoil the dressing. Likewise, fresh croutons are exciting; stale ones are dull. And look for salt-packed anchovies; more delicate and nutty than oil-packed fillets, they give the Zuni dressing its distinctive flavor. (But if you can't find salt-packed fish, and must use oil-packed ones, make sure you rinse them in warm water and press between clean towels to extract as much of that oil as possible. Even fillets packed in "good" olive oil can have a vaguely rancid taste or smell straight from the can or jar.) Finally, make the effort to use very fresh romaine; after a few days in the refrigerator, or on the shelves in the produce department, its sweetness fades and it can become muddy, metallic, or bitter.

As you assemble your impeccable ingredients, bear in mind that most vary from day to day and place to place. Red wine vinegar varies in flavor and acidity, as do olive oils. Lemons vary widely in size, juiciness, fragrance, and acidity. Romaine varies in sweetness, "amount of heart," and the texture of the leaf- smooth or crinkly. [The latter needs a lot more dressing per leaf.} And garlic varies in pungency. All this notwithstanding, the proportions below are good guidelines, if making tens of thousands of salads means anything. Start with them, then smell and taste each component each time you make the salad, adjust¬ing for your palate, and remember what you like and how you got there. If you know you love garlic, or anchovy, prepare extra, to make the adjusting easy,

I will be forever thankful to Paula Blotsky, who distilled our daily tweakings into these basic guidelines. Her name is on the greasy, dog-eared recipe card I wrote out fifteen years ago and still refer to.

FOR 4 TO 6 SERVINGS:

For the croutons:

A 4- to 5-ounce chunk or slice ofday-old levain or sourdough bread or
other chewy, peasant-style bread

To finish the salad:

1 to 3 heads romaine lettuce (to yield about 1-1/2 pounds usable leaves)
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
2/3 cup mild-tasting olive oil
About 1-1/2 tablespoons chopped salt-packed anchovy fillets (6 to 9 Fillets)
About 2 teaspoons chopped garlic

2 to 3 tablespoons mild-tasting olive oil

Salt
2 large cold eggs
About 3 ounces Parmigiano-Reggiano, grated (1-1/2 cups very lightlypacked)
Freshly cracked black pepper
About 1-1/2 lemons (to yield about 3 tablespoons juice)

Preheat the oven to 350°.

Cut the bread into 1/2- to 3/4-inch cubes, toss with oil to coat evenly, salt lightly, toss again, and spread on a sheet pan. Roast, rotating the pan as needed, until golden all over, about 8 to 12 minuses. Taste a crouton; it should be well sea¬soned and slightly tender in the center. Leave to cool on the sheet pan.

Discard the leathery outer leaves of the romaine, then cut off the base of each head and wash and dry the leaves. Go through the leaves, trimming them of dis- ' colored, leathery, bruised, or wilted parts, but leave them whole. You need about 1-1/2 pounds of prepared leaves. Layer the leaves with towels if necessary to wick off every drop of water-wet lettuce will make an insipid salad. Refrigerate until ,5 just before dressing the salad.

Whisk together the vinegar, oil, anchovies, and garlic in a small mixing bowl. Add the eggs, a few sprinkles of the cheese, and lots of black pepper. Whisk to emulsify. Add the lemon juice, squeezing it through a strainer to catch the seeds. Whisk again, just to emulsify. Taste the dressing, first by itself and then on a leaf of lettuce, and adjust any of the seasonings to taste. If the romaine is very sweet, the dressing may already taste balanced and excellent ~ if it is mineraly, extra lemon or garlic may improve the flavor. If you like more anchovy, add it. (You should have about 1-1/2 cups of dressing.)

Place the romaine in a wide salad bowl. Add most of the dressing and fold and toss very thoroughly, taking care to separate the leaves and coat each surface with dressing, adding more as needed. Dust with most of the remaining cheese, add the croutons, and toss again. Taste and adjust as before. In general, the tastier the romaine, the less you will need to emphasize other flavors.

Pick out first the large, then the medium-sized, and then the smallest leaves and arrange on cold plates. Add a last drizzle of dressing to the bowl to moisten the croutons if they are at all dry and stir them around in the bowl to capture dressing on each of their faces and in their hollows. Distribute the croutons among the salads and finish each serving with a final dusting of cheese and more pepper.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Delicious Pasta!




Now that tomatoes are at their peak we have been trying to include them in lots of our dinners. Stone fruit is also delicious right now. The Hollywood Farmers Market is a treat right now!

We started with a Nectarine Salad, Lettuce, Almonds, Saba and Prosciutto from The Cheese Store of Silverlake. We really like salads with stone fruit! Saba makes a great dressing for a salad.

For the pasta we made one of our very favorite tomato based pastas. Penne with Tomato and Balsamic Vinegar from: Rogers and Gray: Italian Country Cookbook.
We purchased a very unusual pasta from The Cheese Store of Silverlake: Cannolicchi. We never have eaten a pasta like this. It unravels when cooked into string like pasta. You can find the recipe in our blog of: Oct 26, 2008. Simply click the date to get the recipe.

For dessert we had fresh Grapes. They have finally arrived in the market and are very good.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Grilled Lobster






Surprisingly to us, we had never made lobster. I purchased 4 lobster tails and we decided to Grill the Lobsters. Apparently lobster tails arrive frozen. We kept them on ice until we were ready to cook.

This is a simple task! Heat the grill. Place lobster on grill shell side down. Grill for 5 minutes or so. Apply melted butter to lobster and flip. Grill to lobster is shell is red.

We started with a salad from Mozza2Go. Mozza Restaurant has opened a takeout facility. I purchased several items including Nancy’s Chopped Salad that we ALWAYS order at the restaurant. It was delicious. The only difference was that we got to eat it on our deck overlooking a beautiful Silverlake Sunset!

We only ate two of the lobster tails. We kept the other two and made a Lobster Salad from them. Tomatoes are at their summer peak. We really enjoy eating outside now that the weather is so nice!

Monday, July 13, 2009

A Rice Find!





Tomatoes are finally at their peak at the Hollywood Farmer’s Market! We started with a Salad that we topped with sliced tomatoes, Burrata Cheese, Chives and Basil. We get the fresh Burrata at The Cheese Store of Silverlake.

I then grilled a salmon filet that we had purchased at the fish monger at the Hollywood Farmer’s Market. We of course used the Egg to smoke the salmon, low and slow! We have used this recipe before and think it is excellent. The recipe is called Honey-Cured, Smoked Salmon and it is from Cooking with Fire and Smoke by Phillip Stephen Schulz. You can find the recipe in our Blog of Jan 15 2009. Simply click the date to get the recipe.

Cathy found a recipe for a Squash or Pumpkin dish called: Jewelled Pumpkin Rice in the Moro East Cookbook. This was a first time making it, and it definitely is joining the repertoire of rice dishes that we will make again. It is delicious. We also found out it re-heats! This is a great one, and not very difficult. Give it a try!

Jewelled Pumpkin Rice
From Moro East by Sam & Sam Clark

This pilav is areal winner. For those who need convincing about pumpkin or squash,
this is the dish to try.
Serves 4-6

1 pound peeled and seeded butternut squash (from 1 ½ lb squash), cut into 1/3 in dice
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
2 tablespoons olive oil
a big pinch (about 50 strands) of saffron
3 ½ oz unsalted butter
2 ½ in piece of cinnamon stick
4 allspice berries, crushed
1 large or 2 medium onions, thinly sliced across the grain
½ oz dried barberries (or currants)
2 oz shelled unsalted pistachios
1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
2/3 lb basmati rice, soaked in tepid, salted water for 1 hour
16 ounces vegetable stock

Preheat the oven to 400

Toss the diced butternut squash with half of the salt and the olive oil. Spread it in a single layer in a baking tray and roast for 30 minutes or until tender. Mix the saffron with 3 tablespoons of boiling water and add1 ounce of the butter, which should melt. Set aside.

Heat the remaining butter in a medium saucepan with the cinnamon and allspice until it foams, then add the onion and the remaining 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Fry over a medium heat for 10-15 minutes, stirring occasionally until the onion is soft and starting to color.

Add the barberries, pistachios and cardamom and cook for 10 minutes more, until the onion is golden and sweet. Now drain the rice and add to the pan, stirring for a minute or two to coat, then pour in the stock. Taste for seasoning then scatter with the roast squash. Cover with a circle of greaseproof paper and a tight-fitting lid and cook over a high heat for 5 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for a final 5 min¬utes.

Remove the lid and the greaseproof paper and drizzle with the buttery saffron water. Replace the lid and leave to rest, off the heat, for 5-10 minutes.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Dinner with Tim





Wine:
Vinja Barde Vitovska 2006
Le Telquel
Valpolicella 2007

We decided to invite Tim over for dinner. We really like him, but had not had a chance to spend time talking to him in depth. He has let a very interesting life growing up in Shanghai China before coming to the States. We enjoyed the stories.

It was a warm night and we started out on the deck with drinks and some re-heated Tarte Flambe from Church & State. Church & State is an exceptional restaurant serving very authentic French Bistro Food. It is in Downtown Los Angeles in an area that is being converted to lofts. The restaurant can be very loud at times but it is excellent!

We then had Tomato Soup with Cumin and Figs from Moro East by Sam & Sam Clark. We make this every summer when tomatoes and figs are both in season. It sounds unusual but it is great! We really recommend it. You can the recipe from our blog of Aug 20, 2008. Just click the date to get the recipe.

We made Spice-Crusted Pork Tenderloins with Banana-Date Chutney from a recipe in License to Grill. We had never made this recipe before and liked it a lot. The joy of having the Egg!

Cathy made Fregula Sarda (a thick Sardinian Cous-Cous). It has lots of flavor and makes a great side.

Tim brought a Cheese Cake for dessert. Yum!

Spice-Crusted Pork Tenderloins with Banana-Date Chutney
From License to Grill


SERVES 4

Most people think of pork as high in fat, but a pork tenderloin actually has no more fat per ounce than a boneless, skinless chicken breast. Because of its weight and thick¬ness, the best grill treatment for this cut of meat is to sear it over a hot fire until it looks good (golden brown) on the outside, then pull it to a cooler section of the grill and let it finish cooking from radiant heat, as opposed to direct heat.
Here we rub the tenderloin with spices before cooking, then serve it with an intense chutney. The dates in the chutney make it very rich, so you don't need to use a lot—a couple of tablespoons per serving should do it.

3 12-to 14-ounce pork tenderloins
Salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons minced garlic
3 tablespoons fennel seeds
3 tablespoons cumin seeds
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

Banana-Date Chutney (recipe follows)

1. Sprinkle the pork tenderloins generously with salt and pepper.
2. In a small bowl, combine the olive oil, garlic, fennel seeds, cumin seeds, and cinnamon and mix well. Coat the tenderloins generously with this mixture, then grill over a hot fire, turning once or twice, for about 5 minutes, long enough to develop a nice brown, crusty sear on the outside. Once the tenderloins are well seared, move them to the side of the grill, where the heat is low, and cook, turning occasionally, for 10 to 12 minutes. To check fordoneness: Cut into one of the tenderloins at its thickest part; it should be just light pink at the center.
3. Remove the pork from the grill and let it rest for 5 minutes. Slice the pork on the bias and serve with a generous spoonful of Banana-Date Chutney.
BANANA DATE CHUTNEY

2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 medium red onion, peeled and diced small
2 tablespoons minced ginger
1/2 cup roughly chopped pitted dates (about 10 medium dates)
2 ripe but firm bananas, peeled, halved lengthwise, and sliced into half-circles about 1/2 inch thick
2 teaspoons red pepper flakes
1/2 cup molasses
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice (about 2 lemons)
¼ cup roughly chopped fresh mint
Salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste

Heat the oil in a small saucepan over medium heat until hot but not smoking. Add the onions and saute, stirring occasionally, until soft, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the gin¬ger and dates and saute, stirring a couple of times, for 1 minute more. Add the bananas, red pepper flakes, molasses, and lemon juice, bring to a boil, and sim¬mer until most of the liquid has evaporated, 7 to 10 minutes. Remove from the heat, stir in the mint, and season to taste with salt and pepper. This chutney will keep, covered and refrigerated, for about a week.

Monday, July 06, 2009

Melon and Corn




Two of the best treats of summer are fresh melons and corn. We had both!

We started with a very simple dish of Melon with Lime Juice, Almonds and Prosciutto. This was our first melon of the season. We purchased it at the Hollywood Farmer’s Market. It was delicious. The prosciutto of course was from The Cheese Store of Silver Lake.

We then made Pasta with Corn, Pancetta, Butter, and Sage. It is a very easy pasta to make and delicious. You can read the recipe from our blog of Aug 12, 2008. Click the date to get the recipe.

For dessert we had a Chocolate Cup Cake that we picked up at The Cheese Store of Silver Lake. It was great!

Thursday, July 02, 2009

The Egg and I





Wine:
Bugey Cerdon Method Ancestrale Bernard Rondeau
Bugey Cerdon Method Ancestrale Cave du Mont July
Le Galantin Bandol Rose
La Caudrina Moscato D’Asti Romano Dogliotti
Charles Mitchell Reserve Zinfandel 2005
Le Telquel Red Table Wine

Billy and Kevin joined Michael and Tamara and us for dinner. We wanted to cook on the Egg so that M and T would see it in use. We decided to make the
Herb-Crusted Pork Loin Roast From License to Grill. It is both easy and delicious! You can get the recipe from our blog of July 2, 2008. Just click the date to get the recipe. (Interestingly we made this dish exactly 1 year to the day a year ago).

We started on the deck with lots of wine, cheese and salami from The Cheese Store of Silver Lake. It was a beautiful night. June gloom is over and LA has been beautiful.

We then had a Salad with Nectarines, Almonds, Prosciutto dressed with Balsamic Vinegar and Virgin Olive Oil.

We made Sticky Rice to go with the pork. We use our Computerized Sanyo Rice Cooker and add the Rice, Shitake Mushrooms, Chopped Scallions, Soy Sauce and Oyster Sauce and Chopped Chinese Sausage to the rice we use chicken broth as the liquid. You need to wash the rice multiple times the night before you cook the rice and when the water finally is clear, cover the rice in water overnight. When ready to cook drain the rice and mix all ingredients to taste and cook in the rice cooker. If you like rice and don’t have a rice cooker you really should buy one! It makes it a no brainer!

For dessert we made a Fig Upside Down Cake. It is a great cake and not very difficult. (Isn’t that the aim: great food easy to prepare?). You can find the recipe in our blog of Aug 4 2007. Just click the date to get the recipe.

We talked far into the night. Because Tamara and Kevin are both from Canada, I found out why houses in cold climates have basements (it is all about the foundation for the house being below the freezing line of the earth – otherwise the house would shift with the expansion of the frozen earth). I also found out they didn’t bury dead people in winter, before the invention of the backhoe (the ground was to hard to dig in). Apparently they stored bodies above ground until the earth was soft enough. Ah for enlightening dinner discussions.