Sunday, October 2, 2011

Birthday Empanadas

Warren, Vanessa, Me, Paul, Josh and Harrison at my Birthday Party

I have blogged about empanadas in the past (Empanadas: My Ultimate Comfort Food).  I usually make a batch of beef empanadas about once a month, and every once in a blue moon, I'll attempt them with some other filling.  What can I say?  I love empanadas!  For this reason, I've decided to write about them again.

Sarah Making Empanadas
For my 25th birthday I invited a small group of friends over for a little party, and naturally, there was food.  I did not want to have a sit-down meal, as people would be coming at at all hours, so I prepared a lot of finger food.  There were chips and dips, veggies, cheese and crackers, and of course, there were empanadas.  With Sarah's help, I made 60 empanadas, setting a personal empanada baking record. 

While most of the tastiest empanada recipes call for frying, I prefer to make mine slightly healthier.  Granted, I'm not doing it for health reasons, but it's not a bad thing.  I bake my empanadas because when I studied abroad in Buenos Aires, this is how I had them, and I got hooked.  My Buenos Aires-style empanadas de carne consist of sauteed ground beef, diced onion, garlic, diced tomato, some minced chilies, raisins, a few green olives, cumin, oregano, salt and pepper.  This is cooked until the juices evaporate.  When the mixture cools, it is spooned onto the wrappers with a slice of hard boiled egg.  The shell is sealed with water, crimped, brushed with olive oil and baked.  I do not puncture any holes in the shells, allowing them to puff up.

Empanadas about to be Folded and Crimped
Empanadas are a fun food to make with willing a housemate, or, I imagine, with kids.  I do the cooking prepwork by myself, but the assembly is a group effort.

Because I was making so many of them, I decided this was a good opportunity to try a new filling.  In Argentina, my favorite traditional filling after beef was choclo, or corn.  I have attempted versions of this dish in the past, but it never satisfied my nostalgic cravings.  This time, I got it right.  Good corn empanadas are really just creamed corn and some cheese. 

Party Guests
My creamed corn (a first for me) roughly followed this Alton Brown recipe, which I recommend for its use of rosemary (totally not Argentine).  I then mixed in some feta cheese, a few dollops of ricotta, some parsley and paprika and a little extra cream.  I buy the Goya empanada wrappers; I don't know what the difference is, but I used the white wrappers for the choclo and the orange ones for the carne.  The results were both attractive and tasty, and they were a big hit at the party.  I brought the leftovers to my parents, where lots of other folks got to partake.

It was nice to finally find a good corn empanada recipe.  I will certainly make these again.  Also, I think from now on when making empanadas, I am always going to make larger quantities.  It's not much more work, and they are good to eat whenever.

I will end this post with the real culinary highlight of the evening, which was not my empanadas but Vanessa's homemade chocolate birthday cake.

My Birthday Cake
Devil's Food Cake with Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting and Chocolate Chips

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Manic Cooking

There is a bitter irony about summer cooking.  On the one hand, it is the best time of year to cook.  Trees are bearing fruit, vegetables and herbs are sprouting, farmers are milking their goats and cows, market stalls everywhere are literally overflowing with fresh produce and cooking ingredients.  On the other hand, summer at its worst can be oppressively hot - and if, like me, you do not have an air conditioner and your apartment has terrible circulation, then summer is irrefutably the worst time of year to cook. 

Now sure, there are plenty of nice summer time meals that one can prepare that involve minimal heat, and I have certainly made a few of them in the past couple of months.  But it was not a lack of ideas that kept me from making elaborate salads or cold entrees.  It was a lack of motivation.  Sitting in the soup, which for the early part of August was my apartment, sucked the will to do anything from every crevice of the body. 

Consequently, there was a good two to three weeks when I barely cooked a thing.  I certainly had not cooked anything approaching the type food that one frequently sees on this blog.  I was out of it.  I did manage a few nice salads like this caprese below, which I prepared for dinner multiple nights.  But on the whole, I'd been just making due with whatever I could find around the house, and trying to get out as much as possible.

Caprese Salad
Brandywine Heirloom Tomato, Buffalo Mozzarella, Fresh Basil,
Aged Balsamic Vinegar, Greek Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Hawaiian Volcanic Salt, Crushed Black Pepper, Chive

Then one weekend, disgusted by my apathy, I determined that I needed to start cooking again.  I went to the store and loaded up.  It was still hot.  It was still sticky.  But at least the apartment was in the 80s and not the 90s!  Possessed, and compensating for lost time, I morphed from a lazy, idling degenerate into a manic, gourmet chef.  Here is how the girls and I ate for one week:

Pan-Fried Tilapia
Fresh Corn, Black Bean, Mango and Chive Relish with Lime Butter Sauce


The tilapia was flowered and pan-fried to a perfect crispness.  It was rich in flavor and tender beneath the crust.  The relish was inspired from the menu of one of my favorite restaurants, Basso Cafe, whose chef and owner used to live in the apartment next door.  I've never had his version, and I assume it is much better than what I made, but I really like the idea of corn, black beans and mango together, so I played with it.  This meal was just for Vanessa and me, and we had leftovers for the following night.

Cheese Tortellini Primavera with Cream
Brocolini, Red and Purple Peppers, Onion, Yellow Heirloom Tomato, Garlic


Sarah was home two nights later, and I made a big pasta dinner for us all.  The tortellini was freshly made by this nice pasta company called Nuvo - I think it had Parmesan and mozzarella inside.  I topped the whole dish with a little grated mozzarella and fresh herbs and paprika.

Chicken Stir Fry
Broccoli, Leeks, Water Chestnuts, Onion, Garlic, Crispy Noodles


Sarah contributed this dinner, and it was also very tasty.  She does not usually get to cook dinner as she works late most of the year, and was gone for all of July.  In the summer though she works earlier hours and so she has cooked a few meals.

Duck a l'Orange
Garlic Mashed Potatoes and Broccoli

At the time, it seemed that my duck a l'orange would be the pièce de résistance for the week.  Vanessa and I enjoyed it for two nights.  I could not resist trying this French classic when I saw the duck legs on sale for about $2.20 a leg.  I rubbed the meat in dry-roasted and ground coriander, cumin, black pepper and some kosher salt.  I slow-cooked it stove-top on a bed of carrots, onion, celery, orange chunks, fresh thyme, and marjoram.  After a little while I added wine, veal stock, and orange juice concentrate.  Meanwhile, I melted sugar into a dark caramel syrup, and added orange juice, cider vinegar and salt.  When the duck was sufficiently tender, I removed the aromatics, strained the pan juices, and seared the duck skin on a high heat in olive oil.  I combined the pan juices with the orange syrup and some fresh orange zest.

This dinner was positively fabulous, but it was actually topped the following night, when the girls and I were joined by our friend Harrison.  As is customary when guests come over for dinner, I kick it up a notch and make multiple dishes.  In this instance, the meal was an Indian feast, and if I do say so myself, the tastiest one I have made.  I made a chicken mahkani, a chana masala, basmati rice, and we had some garlic naan and sweet mango chutney.  To drink, Sarah and Harrison made some mango lassis.  When Harrison asked what he could bring to contribute to the dinner, we gave him the unexpected response, "a tub of yogurt."  He did not suspect that we would be drinking the yogurt (mixed with mango pulp and sugar), and so he also brought a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon. 

Clockwise from Top: Garlic Naan, Basmati Rice, Cilantro,
Chicken Mahkani, Chana Masala, Sweet Mango Chutney


Mango Lassi
I have had a troublesome time at making a good Chana Masala in the past.  The recipes that I have used were all overly complex, with multiple pots, pans, a blender, and a big mess.  This time I made and wrote down my own recipe, which was so much easier, so much cleaner, and just about as tasty.  Sarah said that she enjoyed it more than my previous incarnations, so... it's the new recipe.  I'd be happy to e-mail a copy to anyone who'd like it.  Though it is simpler than before, it is still too much to write in the blog.  Anyway, yummy chickpeas.

Chana Masala

For the chicken dish I had a little help.  There is a nice Indian woman at the Westport Farmer's Market who makes and sells a variety of sauces.  Her Mahkni Simmer Sauce is an absolutely outstanding tomato based sauce.  Very flavorful and mildly spiced.  I sauteed some chicken chunks, deglazed the pan with a fair amount of rice wine and vinegar, and then browned some chunks of vidalia onion.  Later I added the simmer sauce to the mix, which was already a tasty chicken dish.

Chicken Makhani

This was the table for the Indian feast.


This summer was very busy for me, and while I avoided cooking in late July and early August, things did eventually pick up in the kitchen.  Mostly, I just did not do a lot of blogging.  Hopefully, I'm back now will be writing more frequently.  Stay tuned.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Fresh Blueberry Pie


July is a wonderful time of year for foodies.  Most produce is in season, and the market stalls and farm stands abound with succulent, juicy and fresh ingredients.  Summer provides the opportunity for the more inclined bakers and cooks to take to the garden and to the fields to pick their own ingredients.  July, in particular, is the time to go blueberry picking.

At the nature preserve where I go hiking, Trout Brook Valley, there is an orchard open to the public for free blueberry picking.  The orchard is not advertised, and remains largely unpicked.  The bountiful fields are only accessible, to those in the know, through a twenty to thirty minute hike in the woods.  This deterrent to some is a pleasure for others, and Vanessa and I are in the latter camp.

It was a bright and sunny Sunday in the early afternoon when Vanessa and I found ourselves in this orchard.  There were boundless berries to be found, and a couple parties out to find them.   It was a beautiful day, and we had a fun time at foraging for food.  Unfortunately, the berries on the whole were under-ripe and too tart.  We were collecting berries for Vanessa to bake a pie, and so sweetness was essential.  The pinkish blueberries alone would not make a great pie, so we agreed to purchase some ripe berries from a store to supplement the quart that we had gathered.  Even though our fruit was not the sweetest, we had a great time outside, picking and snacking.  
























The farm stand where we stopped next was a great little store in Easton called the Apple Barn.  This specialty food store sells local fruits, flowers, plants, and an assortment of homemade jams, and jarred goods.  Most are made by the Aspetuck Orchard Farm, in whose fields we had just been picking.  We stocked up on some tastiness, including two cartons of blueberries from a farm a few towns to the north.  These berries were perfectly ripe, beautiful, and delicious.

That night, I made pork chops for dinner with corn on the cob and some leftover pasta with pesto (not homemade), and with Vanessa’s help, a salad.  The pork chops had marinated since the morning in soy sauce, brown sugar, and sesame oil, with a little bit of rice vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, Mongolian fire oil, Indian chili powder, crushed black pepper, and garlic powder.  I reduced the marinade into a sauce while I cooked the meat on a griddle.

Pork Chops
with Corn on the Cob and Pasta with Pesto

For the salad, we took basil and green leaf lettuce from our garden, and mixed in some beets, red onion, Manchego cheese, and the first heirloom tomato of the season.  The dressing was a simple balsamic Dijon vinaigrette.

Summer Salad

After dinner, Vanessa took over the kitchen.  It was baking time.  In this blog, I have often alluded to Vanessa's prowess as a baker, but I have not until now showcased her ability.  Since I was not involved with making her blueberry pie, I will let the pictures do the story telling.














The pie was absolutely delicious, and I enjoyed it for a few days as both breakfast and dessert.  This was Vanessa's first time baking a blueberry pie as well as her first time making a lattice pie top.  She did a great job, and I can't wait to taste the next treat she bakes.



Sunday, July 17, 2011

As Tasty As They Are Pretty

Today's post is something special.  I have written previously on how Bill, my older brother, influenced my cooking and my general attitude about food.  Well, in our years of eating together, a reciprocity developed, and it is safe to say that he too has been influenced by my cooking and restaurant ordering. 

Bill posted a picture on Facebook of his garden zucchinis, grown at an alarming rate, which only a Los Angeles climate could allow.  Following this, he and I went back and forth about what could and should be done with the flowers of the zucchini plant.  For a couple weeks I heard nothing.  Then I arrived at work one Monday to find the following e-mail.  It seemed to fit in perfectly with David's Plate, so I could not resist sharing.  Enjoy:


"Brother,

The deed is done.  Here is how it went down.  Wife was away tonight at book club, a night I usually like to cook something nice for myself of the "wife doesn't like" or "wife won't eat" variety.  As our zucchini plants are currently full of flowers and my wife is currently on a dairy-free Weight Watchers diet, I figured this was a good night to experiment with the fried, cheese-filled squash blossoms.  My main course for the night was to be leftover turkey meatloaf, not the most flashy of entrees, so this was yet another good reason to jazz up the side dishes.

I decided to fry up three blossoms and (because why not) the three baby zucchini that were attached.  I chopped up some rosemary (along with a bit of lemon thyme and parsley) from my garden, and mixed these herbs with small chunks of brie.  I then opened the squash blossoms to stuff them.  Blossom #3 gave me a little surprise.  As I opened it to remove the stamen and pistel, I was greeted by a bee who flew out into my kitchen.  He is still in my kitchen somewhere.  I have noticed that when a blossom is fully open (usually in the morning), it usually has at least one bee just hanging out inside.  Clearly, this little chap had been so enamored of this particular blossom that he forgot to leave and it closed up around him in the afternoon.  So, a note of caution if you ever cook this dish: watch out for bees.

I twisted the blossoms closed, dipped them (and the zucchini) in some egg and then some flour (with seasoning mixed in).  Then I fried everything in olive oil, along with a slice of turkey bacon (because I don't cook regular bacon) and a rosemary sprig.  While frying these bad boys, I made a quick sauce (for the meatloaf and blossoms) consisting of a port wine reduction, fig jam, and the leftover herbs from the stuffing.  Yumm!







You can see the finished product above.  The blossoms were melt in your mouth amazing.  Fantastic.  The brie worked really well.  The fried zucchini was good, but probably not worth repeating (as it tastes much better grilled or broiled or raw, all of which are healthier).  The turkey bacon and fig port sauce were delicious and nicely complimented everything.  I'll definitely have to experiment with this again (and in a version more friendly to my wife).  I want to try combining the cheese and turkey bacon in the stuffing so that it can be more like my first experience with this dish, the amazing creation I devoured at Cafe Positano on the Amalfi coast (photo also attached).

Thanks for pushing me to do this, Dave, and thanks for being my culinary inspiration.  Happy eating!

until soon,
Brother Bill"











Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Camping Trip

For Fourth of July weekend, Vanessa and I set out on an adventure.  We stuffed the car with clothing, towels, snacks, sleeping bags, and a tent, and we made off for the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York.  We had gone to college together in Saratoga Springs, and Vanessa is originally from Hoosick, NY, so we have a lot of ties to the area.  

We left Friday afternoon, after skipping out of work a little early.  Our first stop was for dinner in Albany.  We were meeting up with a friend of mine, actually my former boss from my college job at the student library.  David (yes, he is a David too) runs the visual resources department at Skidmore College, and he is an artist.  His lovely wife Vaneeta is an English Professor at The College of Saint Rose.  She is originally from India, and is a magnificent cook.

I'm sorry that I did not take any photos aside from the one above of the three of us, but I will say that we had a lovely home cooked meal of slow-cooked pork curry with sides of fresh mango, carrots, steamed rice cakes (really cool!), and a delicious cabbage and mustard seed slaw.  The pork was tender and richly flavored.  It was seasoned with, among many other things, a unique vinegar made from a kokum fruit, which Vaneeta can only get in India.  We had some wonderful chocolate tart for desert served with homemade raspberry preserves and mint from their garden, which is beautiful, immense, and largely edible!  Above we are posing together with some silly cookbooks and some black pepper corns they gifted to me from their friend's home in Coorg, India, allegedly the region with the best black pepper in the world.  They also gave me some New Mexico Female Green Chili powder, from their recent vacation there.  It smells really interesting, and of course, just sounds so ridiculous that I can't wait to try it.

After Albany, it was off to Saratoga to hang out and stay with some friend in town.  We had breakfast the next morning with Vanessa's mom and stepdad, who were in the area.  We stocked up on supplies and gifts, and were off for the mountains.  Our first full day was pretty low key.  We swam at our favorite spot on Great Sacandaga Lake, took some scenic drives through the mountains, over dirt roads, and along assorted rivers.  To the left, Vanessa stands in front of the rapids of the Sacandaga River in Hadley.  After some relaxing, some exploring, and a fair amount of driving, we reached the Village of Lake George, where we sauntered and succumbed to the tourist paraphernalia that abounded.  Between shops, we relaxed on a patio overlooking the lake vista and enjoyed some crispy fried clams and french fries.  We did not linger too long, eager to return to the wilderness, and we soon found ourselves checking into a camp site in Warrensburg along the Schroon River.  We pitched our tent, galvanized some wood into a fire, and set about the task of making a campfire supper.

To say that we were ill-equipped  to cook outside would be generous.  We brought next to nothing.  We had wooden shish kebab skewers, aluminum foil, a pocket knife, and duct tape.  The duct tape brings to mind the old Sesame Street game, "one of these things is not like the other."  Indeed, we had grabbed this item at the last minute, thinking, you never know: patching a leaky tent, mending whosics and whatnots.  In some unforeseen way, it would probably come in handy.  In any case, that was what we had.  That was what we were working with.  To eat, we had picked up some beef at a grocery in Warrensburg.  The selection was limited, and what we ended up with were beef short ribs.  We also had some mushrooms, a bell pepper, an onion, two red potatoes, salt and pepper packets, and thankfully some good bread and wine from Saratoga.  I say "thankfully," because we didn't have to do anything to those ingredients; they tasted delicious without any effort on our part.

Dinner was a challenge.  In my mind I had this idyllic recollection of a horseback expedition I took in the Argentine countryside.  A friend and I rode for hours with two gauchos (Argentina's answer to the North American cowboys), through valleys and over meadows and mountain tops.  We stopped midday in a thicket of trees.  I dismounted my horse, Calafate, and secured him to a tree.  One of the gauchos threw open his saddlebag, and out of nowhere emerged a large steak and three sausage links.  Within minutes, a fire was blazing, and an iron griddle had been staked in the ground.  The meat juices dripped and the fire let off the most tantalizing smoke - smoke that seeped in your nose, and went straight to your stomach, to give it fair warning of what was to come.  When it did, it did not disappoint.

My Fantasy Gaucho Lunch

Outside Bariloche, Argentina in 2008


My campfire experience was nothing like the gaucho meatsploitation of my memory.  To begin with, starting the fire was a real pain in the ass.  I've made camp fires before, but it had been a few years, and I was rusty.  It took a number of matches and few reconfigurations of the firewood, but eventually, very eventually, the fire was safely ablaze. 

Vanessa served as wilderness sous chef while I tended the fire, and cooked the food.  She wrapped the red potatoes in foil, and I threw them in among the hot coals.  She cleaned and chopped the vegetables, arranged them on the shish kebab skewers and I gingerly leaned them against the burning logs.  The real show-stopper was the meat, and this is where the duct tape came in handy.  The four short ribs were in total over a pound, so we had to use two skewers to support the weight. On each set of skewers we put two chunks of beef.  The skewers were then, yes, that's right, duct taped to larger sticks, leaned over the fire ring, and anchored by yet heavier sticks.

"The Stove"


The design was less than flawless, and a few problems did arise.  Two of the meat skewers started to bow under the heat of the fire and the weight of the meat.  The duct tape that secured them soon heated to a point where is began to melt.  Luckily, I saw the problem as it was happening and removed the meat from the skewers.  They had a nice char on one side, but I was either going to have to configure a new contraption or just wrap them in foil and throw them in to finish with the potatoes.  I chose the latter.  So half of the beef was cooked over an open flame, and the other half was seared and then baked.  Below is the open flame meat, right before done.

Open Flame Grilled Short Ribs

The next problem arose as the second set of ribs began to dip lower into the pit.  Vanessa and I had sat down to take a breather, and by the time I noticed the sticks tilting ever down and down, it was too late.  I did not leap up in time to catch the meat before it plummeted into ash.  I grabbed two sticks and feverishly tried to clamp and lift the now blackened beef out of their pit of doom.  All the while muttering under my breath things of which I am not too proud.


I won't say that the meat was ruined.  It was still succulent and tasty, underneath a crunchy, flaky coating of burnt char.  It was, at the very least, not what I was going for, but it was still edible, and I found it borderline enjoyable.  There was plenty of food, and the other batch of beef came out fine.  Here are some more photos of the action.

Extracting the Baked Potatoes From the Fire

Fire, Wine, and Food Wrapped in Foil

Short Ribs with Veggie-Kebab, Baked Potato and Garlic-Basil Bread

A Salamander
 
Sunday was a rainy morning, but there was enough of a respite for us to squeeze in a hike.  We climbed Crane Mountain, which was supposed to be a short hike.  The trail was indeed short, but it also happened to be near vertical.  The photo below is very telling.  The trail was a rock scramble up, a climb more than a hike.  But it was billed as a day hike.  It was in fact the longest half mile that either Vanessa or I had ever "hiked." 



That was actually the path for one grueling, steep half mile.  It was challenging, but the view was worth it.


Vanessa and I Resting on the Mountain
The descent was treacherous, as was the ensuing dirt road, which my car should receive a medal of valor for surviving.  The mountain drained us of energy, so we cooled off with some ice cream by Schroon Lake.  Back at camp, we cleaned up and showered, and made the not-too-difficult decision, that we would go out to dinner that night.  We drove to the town of Bolton Landing, on the west bank of Lake George. 

Bolton is the unsuspecting home of one of the greatest German restaurants in the United States, Pumpernickel's.  Vanessa discovered this place in college, when her German language class trekked up north for German-American Day.  We have been returning there about once or twice every year.  For dinner we enjoyed a great salad bar, with beets, pickled slaw, and all sorts of vegetables and beans.  I had some beef and barley soup, which was also enjoyable.  To drink, I had a glass of Spaten Lager, which was precisely the size beer one would expect of a German restaurant, and Vanessa drank a glass of Liebfraumilch, a German white wine.  Then for the main course we both ordered Rahmschnitzel, which is to say that be both had a sauteed veal cutlet, cooked with fresh mushrooms in a creamy, sherry wine sauce.  To sop up this delicious sauce we each had a generous pile of spaetzle, and we shared a side of pickled red cabbage, which, at Pumpernickel's, is the best cabbage I have ever eaten. 

Because we are disgusting pigs, we then shared an obscenely Germanic-sized slice of cake, which I believe was called "Slice of Heaven for Two," or something vain and self-aggrandizing like that.  It was the size of an infant child.  A hearty slice of cheesecake was, for better or worse, forced to bear the weight of a dark chocolate cake, twice it girth, which sat atop it.  The whole Teutonic ogre of a cake was glued together with dark chocolate frosting and was finished with a cloak of mini-chocolate chips.  The size of the chips would have been ironic if their numbers had been anything less than the population of a small city.  But alas, this was not the case, and the chips did abound and encase the monstrosity.  Beside the cake was a tower of whipped cream that could have fed a small nation, like Luxembourg or Liechtenstein.  The entire plate seemed a testament to the strength and ingenuity of the German people.  It was like their Eiffel Tower or their Colosseum.  It was a monster!  It was delicious.

We ate half, which would have been a decent performance following a normal sized meal, nevermind soup, salad and a Rahmschnitzel.  And oh!  Did I mention there was fresh hot pumpernickel bread?  It was a meal to remember.

Following a rather uncomfortable night sleep in the tent, we arose the next morning, packed up among a plague of mosquitoes, which sent me swatting, dancing and skipping as if performing some primitive, conjuring form of worship, and we set out.  We stopped again at Great Lake Sacandaga for a swim, as well as at a waterfall in the town of Lake Luzerne, where I indulged in a poptart breakfast.
For lunch that day, we were meeting my old music professor and thesis advisor in Saratoga Springs.  One of our favorite restaurants from our college days had recently expanded and moved locations.  The restaurant is called Maestro's, and they advertise themselves as "A Fine American Bistro."  My professor ordered a speck sandwich, served on a buttered baguette with roasted red peppers, arugula and lemon olive oil.  I had a grilled duck confit sandwich on peasant bread with brie, fig paste and apple butter; it was served with a zucchini salad.  Vanessa took the prize for best order at lunch with her lamb burger on an onion roll with feta cheese, pickled onions, wilted spinach and black pepper aioli; this came with three long handmade tator tots, which defied all expectations of the cafeteria classic.

And that was the trip.  We said our goodbyes, took one last stroll around the downtown, and drove the three hours south to our home in Connecticut.  We were tired as all hell, but we were happy as could be.  We grabbed a cheese pizza in our neighborhood to take back home, and had it with some salad that Vanessa whipped up.  That night we slept back in our soft, comfortable bed, free of mosquitoes.  We slept very, very well.