What's cooking? part 4

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nam pla/lime juice/coriander/chilli?

Matt, Sunday, 18 May 2008 19:13 (eighteen years ago)

If you can find 'kecap manis'--indonesian sweet soy sauce--a 3:1 mix of that with lime juice, with some sliced chilis in it, is the divine dipping sauce from the Oseland book.

G00blar, Sunday, 18 May 2008 20:44 (eighteen years ago)

Would use nam pla, but want to keep it vegetarian. I found this recipe for kecap manis - might try that with lime and chilis (dried or chili oil though, we've already made one shopping run today!)

Jaq, Sunday, 18 May 2008 21:52 (eighteen years ago)

Wow, the kecap manis is cooling now - does it ever smell fantastic! I substituted ginger for galangal, bay leaves for salam leaves and reduced the proportions, because I only had a 15 oz bottle of dark soy. Here's a tip though - carmelized sugar is freaking HOT, and when you pour room temp soy into it, it wants to splatter and foam all over the place. Make sure you use a pan that is plenty deep. Also, do not turn your back on a pan of sugar when it's on the fire, it can turn from crystals to burnt black char quicker than you think.

Jaq, Sunday, 18 May 2008 23:15 (eighteen years ago)

Wow indeed, that sounds exciting! I am, as usual, super-impressed by your resourcefulness.

G00blar, Monday, 19 May 2008 00:07 (eighteen years ago)

ooh, I have a small hunk of galangal in the fridge that I was wondering what to do with.

Rock Hardy, Monday, 19 May 2008 01:58 (eighteen years ago)

Okay, final sauce was 3/4 c of kecap manis, 1/4 c of lime juice (+ some pulp from lime squeezing) and 1/2 tsp of sambal bajak which made for extra-spicy sauce goodness, a perfect foil for the light crispy sweetness of the carrot/jicama/asparagus fresh rolls. A++ will eat again (do need to remember that assembly time is approx. 8 min/roll though, and not try to make up a huge batch 45 minutes before the party is supposed to start!)

Jaq, Monday, 19 May 2008 05:29 (eighteen years ago)

i want to eat at jaq's house!

oh wait--i have! and it was awesome!

geeta, Monday, 19 May 2008 06:06 (eighteen years ago)

I never did make those berry tarts.

Casuistry, Monday, 19 May 2008 06:31 (eighteen years ago)

hot-smoked bluefish. we caught a 7-pounder over the weekend!

lauren, Monday, 19 May 2008 14:59 (eighteen years ago)

^^^would devour

Inspired by Ed's drum-grilling on the WDYLL thread, am marinating cubes of lamb in olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, coriander, cumin, oregano, and mint. Will grill tonight, but unfortunately on a grill pan on the stove. Would trade left arm for a charcoal grill.

G00blar, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:35 (eighteen years ago)

geeta!!!! Come visit again; I will cook for you any time - that was a very fun evening.

Jaq, Monday, 19 May 2008 19:27 (eighteen years ago)

Lamb was better than great; should make this once a week all summer.

G00blar, Tuesday, 20 May 2008 11:04 (eighteen years ago)

things i am making this weekend:
salmon & asparagus
japanese curry w/ beef
kale, chorizo and white bean soup
strawberry shortcake on biscuits

i can't believe how many groceries i just bought!

bell_labs, Friday, 23 May 2008 21:31 (eighteen years ago)

does anyone have any advice with what to do with the salmon? i was planning to broil w/ cajunny spices and then put maple syrup on for the last minute, but i forgot to get maple syrup. maybe i will try it with honey instead? it's pretty thin so maybe i should pan roast it?

bell_labs, Saturday, 24 May 2008 01:08 (eighteen years ago)

If you've got some brown sugar, you could sprinkle that on at the last minute then run it under the broiler - the darker, caramel-ier flavor of that would go better than honey, I think. I'm still kind of tenuous about cooking fish, but high temp roasting (450 deg F) in a hot cast iron skillet for 10 min/inch of fillet thickness has been doing me pretty well lately, even for less oily fish like halibut.

Jaq, Saturday, 24 May 2008 02:02 (eighteen years ago)

mm i need a cast iron skillet. i will definitely do it with brown sugar instead oh honey, that is a fantastic idea.

bell_labs, Saturday, 24 May 2008 02:05 (eighteen years ago)

They are sooo cheap! Heavy as hell though, they will build your muscles up - I have to use 2 hands on my 14" one (great for bacon and steaks). The 10" one is my go-to pan for pretty much everything else (cornbread, hamburgers, dutch babies, potato rosti). I've also got a 6" saute pan (mostly used for eggs), a huge pizza pan/griddle (also great for baking round loaves of bread on, or biscuits) and a special one that makes triangular wedges (scones I guess, or cornbread in theory - it's too specialized and fussy so I don't use it much).

Jaq, Saturday, 24 May 2008 02:51 (eighteen years ago)

i need themmmm. i made a brown sugar mixture with sriracha and lemon for the salmon b/c i am bored.

bell_labs, Saturday, 24 May 2008 02:59 (eighteen years ago)

I'm doing Leek Fritters. The recipe is by Yotam Ottolenghi (and here incidentally). I don't know if they're in his new book, which looks lovely and interesting, but I've done other things by him and they all turned out good.

Ned Trifle II, Saturday, 24 May 2008 18:49 (eighteen years ago)

yum. all of this sounds so yum. i have to think up something to take to a party on monday. i was thinking of tabouleh but someone already mentioned a cous cous salad and i think w/ the bulgar, it might end up too similar.

tehresa, Saturday, 24 May 2008 18:51 (eighteen years ago)

The fresh rolls I took last weekend were a big hit, and also vegan. Labor-intensive though.

Jaq, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:01 (eighteen years ago)

yeah i don't feel like anything too labor-intensive right now... i'll have to brainstorm today.

tehresa, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:02 (eighteen years ago)

Ned, those leek fritters sound yummy - what is a banana shallot?

Jaq, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:02 (eighteen years ago)

tza, a big pile of larb nuea (thai spiced ground beef) and a bunch of lettuce or cabbage leaves? Non-veg though. I'm still working on my veg repetoire.

Jaq, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:05 (eighteen years ago)

i think there will be plenty of grilled meats, so i was thinking a side dish or dessert item would be best. or, i can just grab a bottle of wine.

tehresa, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:30 (eighteen years ago)

i'm making a japanese beef curry tonight. mmm i want it now.

bell_labs, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:38 (eighteen years ago)

me too! hah

tehresa, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:43 (eighteen years ago)

oh and the salmon turned out really well. thanks jaq for the brown sugar idea. the glaze was perfect!

bell_labs, Saturday, 24 May 2008 19:45 (eighteen years ago)

Yay for summer fish cooking! It was nice out today, overcast and cool, so we walked up to the market, had lunch and then made some groceries: milk, butter, and cream per usual, apples for Mr. Jaq's lunch, nectarines for me, an eggplant, rhubarb to make into a crisp w/the remaining strawberries from last week, 6 huge scallops and a 1.5" thick ahi steak. For dinner, I coated the ahi with olive oil, then pressed it in a mixture of white and black sesame seeds while the cast iron pan sat on a medium flame warming up (about 15 minutes, I wanted it good and hot). Seared for 5 minutes on each side (perfectly rare) and served with the kecap manis dipping sauce (3:1 w/ lime juice and sambal to taste). A simple salad of red leaf lettuce - made a nice light summer meal and didn't heat the place up too much.

Jaq, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 02:45 (eighteen years ago)

oh my god i want scallops. probably my favorite fruit of the sea. today we made hamburgers and hot dogs on a little grill on ian's fire escape. well, ian did all of the grilling but i made margaritas at least.

bell_labs, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 03:03 (eighteen years ago)

i had scallops over the weekend, proper local ones. so good! some went into a bouillabaisse - pictures on ITP?.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 14:50 (eighteen years ago)

lauren, that bouillabaisse looks incredibly good!

Jaq, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 16:07 (eighteen years ago)

thanks! it was delicious. i'm very happy to be cooking with fresh seafood. clams in chili-coconut broth and tons of grilled squid next weekend, i think.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:45 (eighteen years ago)

Are you cleaning the squid yourself? I keep looking at the whole ones in the asian market, but haven't tackled one yet.

Jaq, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:48 (eighteen years ago)

oh wow that looks amazing!

tehresa, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:49 (eighteen years ago)

i do clean it myself, yes. the market i like doesn't do it for you. it's actually not difficult. there are pretty clear directions available online and in seafood cookbooks. the four basic steps are remove head from body, remove beak/head from tentacles, remove cartiledge/guts from body, and remove skin (which comes off very easily). it's a little ooky, but no more so than dealing with any kind of flesh. i think it's much easier than carving a chicken, for instance.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:54 (eighteen years ago)

Thanks lauren, that's encouraging.

Jaq, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 19:12 (eighteen years ago)

link to the bouillabaisse pix?

bell_labs, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 22:31 (eighteen years ago)

http://isthatpie.wordpress.com/2008/05/27/seafood-lust/

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 03:14 (eighteen years ago)

Seared scallops tonight, after a quick marinade in olive oil, minced garlic, ginger, lime juice, thai chili pepper (birdseye?). Finished with chopped mint and cilantro. So so good.

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 03:15 (eighteen years ago)

yum! i need to buy some fresh seafood apparently!

i made salad with romaine, edamame, tomato, cucumber, orange sections, and a ginger dressing.

tehresa, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 03:21 (eighteen years ago)

yeah those scallops sound great, will try it w/a milder chili for the timid palates in my household.

m coleman, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 09:55 (eighteen years ago)

It was a good riff on your olive oil/lemon/garlic/parsley prep, m, which I've been using since you posted it.

I've got to make up that rhubarb/strawberry crisp today or the strawberries will be too far gone. But it's also warmed up again, so feels far too hot to cook. Dilemma. I am thinking this honey-flavored greek yoghurt will be excellent with it though.

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 14:50 (eighteen years ago)

so much rhubarb in the greenmarket this week. i'd like to try a crisp, but i'm very lazy when it comes to baking.

lauren, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 14:59 (eighteen years ago)

Jaq, does anyone in Seattle have air conditioning?

Rock Hardy, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:01 (eighteen years ago)

Crisps are the easiest baked fruit thing I know how to do. Chop fruit (or if berries, just pick over and rinse), layer in casserole, sprinkle with sugar (maybe some lemon juice if fruit is over-ripe), maybe dot with some butter (totally optional), make a streusel topping of some sort (1.5 cup of some mix of flours/semolina/rolled oats/other grains, 1 cup of white/brown sugar, 1-2 tsp of cinnamon/clove/allspice/nutmeg/other sweet spice, 1/2 tsp salt, all blended together; cut in 1-2 sticks of butter), sprinkle topping over the fruit layer, bake @ 350 F for 30-45 min. Eat hot, warm, or cold, plain or with cream/yoghurt/ice cream, for breakfast, lunch, or dinner.

It's very rare here Rock. Our gym has it, thankfully. I've yet to live in an apartment or house here that has it though (out of 8 places we've lived around the city).

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:11 (eighteen years ago)

And to be fair, this is the first place we've lived where we really couldn't catch a breeze through the place. There have been few days when we felt desperate for cool in our other places.

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:13 (eighteen years ago)

thanks, jaq! btw, one of my best friends just moved back to portland after several years in austin, tx and is complaining of being cold!

lauren, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:50 (eighteen years ago)

Ha lauren, your friend's blood needs a week or so to thicken back up :) We're getting some thunderstorms this afternoon, so it cooled off some. I jumped at the chance to reduce a gallon of stock I'd had in the fridge (down to a nice solid cup) and make up the strawberry rhubarb crisp - 3 big stalks of rhubarb, about 2 cups of strawberries, made into 2 4-quart ramekins with streusel topping (rolled oats, white flour, whole wheat flour, white and brown sugar, salt, cinnamon, allspice, mace, 1.5 sticks of butter). Smells really delicious right now!

Jaq, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 22:39 (eighteen years ago)


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