What's cooking? part 4

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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)

That crisp was deeelicious with a little scoop of rich greek yoghurt. Nice thick rolled oats (Snoqualmie brand, if you're in the PNW) gave a crunch and toasty nuttiness and the fruit turned a shocking pink color.

Jaq, Thursday, 29 May 2008 14:16 (eighteen years ago)

i think i'm going to make a rhubarb relish over the weekend. since i'm not much of a dessert person, trying a savory recipe seems like a better bet.

lauren, Thursday, 29 May 2008 15:07 (eighteen years ago)

That could be fun - it can be so puckeringly sour! I remember eating stalks of it from the neighbor's patch with salt when I was a kid.

Jaq, Thursday, 29 May 2008 17:47 (eighteen years ago)

my gf last night made an open faced sandwich of sorts involving bread lightly brushed in garlic w/asparagus and an egg sunnyside up. i contributed arugula with a strawberry vinaigrette i made.

also made macadamia crusted mahi mahi w/a mango cream sauce.

omar little, Thursday, 29 May 2008 17:49 (eighteen years ago)

Cold eggplant salad (a riff on Bittman's and another use for the ever-so-tasty kecap manis)

Jaq, Sunday, 1 June 2008 22:03 (eighteen years ago)

i did jaq's scallop variation w/sesame oil instead of olive, a big hit.

hoping this will be a gateway dish to more asian influences, get me out of the italian-american rut.

m coleman, Monday, 2 June 2008 01:04 (eighteen years ago)

Stopped at the butcher's today for sausages, and they had fresh chicken livers for $1.99/pound. I made up a bourbon chicken liver pate, seasoned with garlic, thyme, and black pepper. It's cooling in the fridge under its coat of clarified butter now, but early tastes indicate success.

Jaq, Friday, 6 June 2008 22:13 (eighteen years ago)

That turned out really well:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3264/2559224394_bbe8168b89.jpg

Jaq, Saturday, 7 June 2008 19:50 (eighteen years ago)

wau!

tehresa, Saturday, 7 June 2008 19:52 (eighteen years ago)

Pretty cheap too - $2 for livers, $2 for butter, maybe $2 for seasonings+bourbon?

Jaq, Saturday, 7 June 2008 19:56 (eighteen years ago)

i made some tilapia with lemon and an herbed crust the other night. served with green beans, onion, garlic, tomato, artichoke hearts, and olive sauteed with some olive oil, and a splash of lemon and white wine. it was very yummy. the leftover vegetable sautee was really great cold over lettuce for dinner last night.

my camera broke. phone pics suck :( but it was really pretty.
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3122/2559362818_507ec03e2d.jpg

tehresa, Saturday, 7 June 2008 19:59 (eighteen years ago)

Man that sounds really good - I have got to start doing more with fish.

We are just now eating more of the pate, with a cold couple of pours of gewurtz (Bargetto 2005 I got from Wine Woot awhile ago). Hello Saturday afternoon!

Jaq, Saturday, 7 June 2008 22:07 (eighteen years ago)

I have been in some kind of cooking frenzy today - I made popovers for the first time:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3062/2559217323_bb63e14563_o.jpg

and also a batch of chicken stock. Popovers are just one more thing to add to the list of yummy stuff made with basically just eggs, milk, and flour (crepes, Yorkshire pudding, baked pancakes aka dutch babies, waffles - to name a few of the others).

Jaq, Sunday, 8 June 2008 01:32 (eighteen years ago)

whoa HUEG! Like, almost life-sized!

Jaq, Sunday, 8 June 2008 01:33 (eighteen years ago)

This has given me an idea for a really really long Is That...Pie? post.

Jaq, Sunday, 8 June 2008 17:22 (eighteen years ago)

Re; yr pate, jaq, I made opne recently with ox liver, beer and caramelised onion, the liver cost 50p!

God I love pate.

Matt, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 20:10 (eighteen years ago)

I am definitely making the next pate with dark rum - I think that will be awesome. I don't know I've ever seen ox anything over here, except oxtail but that is just from regular beef cattle. My butcher is from some Slavic country and was so pleased when I bought the chicken livers - I'm going to see if he carries tongue and some other exotica (for the US); it's difficult to get things like trotters and beef cheeks and skin-on pork belly most places.

Jaq, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 21:13 (eighteen years ago)

i have decided i want to make cioppino. any tips? it seems daunting.

tehresa, Thursday, 12 June 2008 15:41 (eighteen years ago)

Mr. Jaq used to make it all the time! But we haven't had it for an age. It seemed pretty straightforward - I'll ask him when he gets back from the gym.

Jaq, Thursday, 12 June 2008 16:13 (eighteen years ago)

do you have a recipe?

lauren, Thursday, 12 June 2008 17:10 (eighteen years ago)

if you're okay with bouillabaisse instead of cioppino, then i'd recommend mark bittman's recipe. it's a long list of ingredients, but it's actually very straightforward.

lauren, Thursday, 12 June 2008 17:14 (eighteen years ago)

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE2DD163CF936A35751C1A9679C8B63

lauren, Thursday, 12 June 2008 17:17 (eighteen years ago)

Alas, Mr. Jaq doesn't remember a) how to make it or b) where he found the recipe. No wonder we haven't had it since forever.

Jaq, Thursday, 12 June 2008 17:37 (eighteen years ago)

you can totally play with the amount and types of shellfish involved, btw. last time i made it, for example, i didn't include a flaky, white-fleshed fish - just the monkfish. also, i cut down the amount of shellfish and added a pound of squid. i like strong flavors, though, so i was pretty liberal with the seasoning measurements (including saffron, which i don't consider to be optional).

lauren, Thursday, 12 June 2008 17:45 (eighteen years ago)

yeah, it seems like something you can play around with a lot and still have it turn out yum. i have just been browsing recipes... some of them call for making your own fish stock to use in it, and i don't know if i have that in me! (now all those years of being pissed that my dad's tupperware container's labled 'fish stock' were crowding up the freezer like giant chunks of wasted space are coming back to haunt me!)

tehresa, Thursday, 12 June 2008 19:06 (eighteen years ago)

i like bittman's take on the issue of stock:

Though some will argue that bouillabaisse must contain fish stock, any time you add a few pounds of fish to a simmering stew there is enough fish essence to make stock superfluous. If additional liquid is needed, water will do just fine.

that said, if you're going to put shrimp into the dish then you can improvise a stock using the shells pretty easily and quickly.

lauren, Thursday, 12 June 2008 19:29 (eighteen years ago)

it's difficult to get things like trotters and beef cheeks and skin-on pork belly most places.

I'm in a state of shock over this. Come to the Old Country and we'll cook parts of the animal it never even knew it had.

Matt, Thursday, 12 June 2008 20:48 (eighteen years ago)

I made the best korokke I've made ever yesterday. For bento lunches.

Ai Lien, Monday, 16 June 2008 14:51 (eighteen years ago)

one of my local greengrocers sells bags of shiitake mushrooms the size of my head, for a pittance, so every day for about the past week I've been eating them fried up in a kind of rudimentary teriyaki sauce -- equal amounts cooking sake, mirin and soy sauce, plus some sugar, a pinch of salt, and a dash of ginger. It's sliiimy but so good.

permanent resolution, Monday, 16 June 2008 15:45 (eighteen years ago)

I made some excellent rockfish last night based on this:
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/food5_rockfish.html#herb

Except I used v. little mustard, added milk to the batter, and we didn't have regular potato chips, just Salt & Vinegar kettle chips, and I like everything blackened so I used a lot of pepper and some paprika and etc.

one day I am going to have my standardized seasoning blends so I don't have to go scrabbling through the spice cupboard every time I break out a frying pan

served on orzo with hearts of palm salad (TY GF) it ruled except for the one bone I swallowed

El Tomboto, Monday, 23 June 2008 20:17 (eighteen years ago)

Last night I improvised a whole bunch of hearty, Sunday dinner AWESOME.

Crockpot required, approximate cooking time 6 hours on low.

Chicken rub:
Paprika, kosher salt, pepper, lemon pepper

Sauce:
Can of condensed Cream of mushroom soup, 1/2 cup sour cream, 1/2 cup chicken stock, hot dry mustard, generous squirts of Sriracha hot sauce.

1. Rub chicken breasts all over, place in bottom of crock pot.
2. Slice the five remaining mushrooms about to rot in the crisper, put on top of chicken.
3. Mix together sauces, pour in.
4. An hour or so before the end, add frozen cooked new potatoes.
5. Fifteen minutes before the end, add frozen peas, turn to HIGH.
6. Serve with veggies and enjoy!

The broth was delicious. While I was waiting for my boyfriend to get home I totally "buttered" a piece of bread with it. Nom nom.

Finefinemusic, Monday, 23 June 2008 21:00 (eighteen years ago)

I made pesto for the first time on Saturday! It was delicious! I can't believe I didn't try it years ago but I think I used to be nervous about basil (food issues). Does anyone have pesto suggestions etc to refine my next attempt?

Laurel, Monday, 7 July 2008 17:39 (eighteen years ago)

HOT TIP from Montenegro, where I'm not really cooking at all, due to the fact that we're staying with my in-laws: my mother-in-law made chicken liver tonight, and it was excellent, not least because of the unusual yet totally right-on addition of fresh DILL. No joke, it totally works!

G00blar, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 17:09 (eighteen years ago)

speaking of dill -- lemon-dill potato salad, you are a treat.

My dad is picking a 5-gallon bucket of green beans every other day and my mother is forcing me to take some off their hands, so in self-defense I stir-fried a bunch with a ton of garlic and a little soy sauce and sesame oil, to get away from the standard southern method. SO GOOD. Need to go buy more garlic now.

Rock Hardy, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 18:29 (eighteen years ago)

Funny you should say, I am IN LOVE with sesame oil right now. I'm saving $$ by eating Ramen noodles, but with steamed green beans and sliced scallions and sesame oil on everything, it doesn't taste like I'm skimping at all.

Laurel, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 20:08 (eighteen years ago)

omg i want all the green beans!!!!!!!!!! they were like $3.49/lb in my veggie stand the other day :(

tehresa, Friday, 11 July 2008 01:13 (eighteen years ago)

so after a week of fresh (and not to mention extremely affordable) ahi tuna sashimi and marlin ceviche, i am really not happy with the frozen seafood mix from trader joe's i sauteed to throw on salad for dinner. u_u

where in nyc can one find quality fish that is not like $20/lb?

tehresa, Friday, 11 July 2008 01:17 (eighteen years ago)

blue moon at the union square greenmarket or pure vida at the mccarren park market. the gramercy fish market is very nice, but on the pricier side and (i assume) not convenient for you. i used to buy fish in chinatown, but you have to spend some time looking around for a store that you're comfortable with.

lauren, Friday, 11 July 2008 13:52 (eighteen years ago)

i started reading shark's fin and sichuan pepper over the weekend. it's very informative and interesting, although dunlop can get a bit "cheery englishwoman" at times for my taste. a nice selection of recipes are included. what's cooking? tomorrow night, it's going to be fish-fragrant aubergines.

lauren, Monday, 14 July 2008 16:44 (eighteen years ago)

Last night I made arepas (yellow corn) with smoked gouda, shredded chicken (leftover from lunch) and sofrito (leftover from something else I made a few days ago) and man was it good. They were little towers of taste:

sofrito
chicken
gouda
arepa
chicken
gouda
arepa

sauteed green beans on the side

yumz

La Lechera, Monday, 14 July 2008 16:55 (eighteen years ago)


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