Monday, August 17, 2009
Foreign Correspondence
Sunday, August 2, 2009
The Kitchen Beet.
1) Boil beets until tender, remove skins
2) saute onion and garlic in tbl of olive oil for 4 mins
3) whisk together lemon juice and olive oil in small bowl
4) in food processor blend everything, slowly adding lemon juice and olive oil mixture
BEET PARTY!
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Quiche!
Sunday, June 28, 2009
It's a Pasty Night
We're Jamming.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
CousCous TuesTues: Vol. 1 - Stuffed Poblano Peppers
Sunday, June 21, 2009
horchata
i used to be addicted to this stuff from the SevenEleven across the street from jake's and my (grammar?) high school... but naturally it's more authentic from the giant carafes at the little Mexican joints that speckle LA, and more original if you make yer own. i kind of just throw things together and keep adding stuff by feel and taste, but i looked up the proportions so as not to get yall making sick ass cinamon water; however, add or subtract anything so that it pleases your pallate.
foodstuff: (4 servings)
- 4 c. H20
- 1/2 c. rice (i used jasmine brown, but any will do)
- 1/2 - 1 t. cinnamon or 1/2 - 1 cinnamon stick if you have one
- 1/2 t. vanilla
- 1/4 c. sweetner (*piloncillo, white/brown sugar or honey, agave, maple syrup, etc. to impart a more nuanced flavor)
how:
1. let rice soak overnight in the water
2. cook rice as you normally would and slowly integrate the cinnamon, vanilla, and sweetner
3. once the rice is kinda soupy let it cool for 5-10 mins
4. liquidify the rice in a blender and semi-finely strain the mixture
5. refridgerate the drainage (in a jug) and the mess you strained (in a bowl/tupperware) for:
- a cool cinnamony rice drink (best served with blended ice) &
- rice pudding (maybe add some soaked raisins/craisins/cranberries)
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Double Chocolate Bourbon Cake
1 3/4 cups strong coffee
1/4 cup bourbon
5 squares (5oz.) unsweetened chocolate
2 sticks (1/2 lb.) butter, cut up
2 cups sugar
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
preheat to 275. butter two 9 inch cake pans. Lay a 12 by 4 in. strip of waxed paper down in the center of each pan and up the sides, butter the waxed paper. Dust pans with unsweetened cocoa of flour, shake out excess. place coffee, bourbon, chocolate, and butter in a 2 1/2 quart saucepan. stir or whisk occasionally over med. heat until chocolate and butter are melted. add sugar. turn off heat and let cool for 10-15 min. stirring occasionally to dissolve sugar. sift flour, baking soda, and salt. add flour gradually to the chocolate mixture, beating with whisk or electric hand mixer on medium speed. beat in eggs, then vanilla. pour batter into prepared pans and rap the pans gently on the counter to break air bubbles. bake for 45-50 min. let cool completely before removing. easiest to frost when chilled. pull wax paper to loosen the cake and refrigerate until firm. transfer to a cake form or dish and fill and frost with cream cheese frosting.
I used a simple cream cheese frosting:
4oz cream cheese (softened)
4oz butter (not salted, softened)
2 cups confectioner's sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
beat the cream cheese and butter with an electric mixer, add the sugar slowly, beat until smooth, add vanilla.
I threw in another tsp. of bourbon just for flavor.
It will brighten your day, really.
Cooks Gone Wild
Sunday, June 14, 2009
SATAN. . . err SEITAN
I decided to make seitan for the following reasons, in no particular order:
1. It's my favorite meat substitute
2. I hadn't a clue what it was made of
3. It sounds like Satan; Hail Satan!
Seitan, sometimes referred to only as gluten, has it's roots in Japanese and Chinese culture, where it was first developed. Western cultures adapted seitan as a meat substitute mid-twentieth century, so it is relatively new to American culture.
I decided to go with a rather simple recipe; no spices added in. I'd like to try that eventually, but it's pretty easy to season after it's made so I decided to keep it simple, and it will be more versatile this way.
It turns out that it is much easier to make than it is to procure the necessary ingredients. Poor planning on my part led me to both the Willie Street Co-Op and Whole Foods in one day - a yuppie grocery shoppers dream!
Ingredients:
1 1/2 cups vital wheat gluten flour
1/4 cup nutritional yeast flakes
1 cup very cold water or vegetable broth
1/2 cup soy sauce
1 tablespoon tomato paste
2 cloves garlic, pressed or grated on a micro-plane grater
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
Simmering Broth
10 cups water or vegetable broth
1/2 cup soy sauce
You'll likely need to buy extra soy sauce; it ends up being quite a bit. Also, make sure you actually have vital wheat gluten flour; it's not the same as whole-wheat flour. Vital wheat gluten flour is essentially just the gluten part of wheat flour. It can be made with only whole-wheat flour, washing the flour dough until all of the starch dissolves. Vegan Internet blogs made this sound risky, so I decided to just buy the vital wheat gluten flour. Whole Foods had it, Bob's Red Mill brand. Nutritional Yeast Flakes were found at Willy Street Co-Op in bulk, which was nice and cheap. I used water, not vegetable broth. If you decided to use it let me know how it turns out! I decided all the soy sauce would be salty enough.
Directions:
To start, make sure you have the 1-cup water/10 cup water chilling. I mixed all two dry ingredients in one large bowl, and the moist to wet ones in another medium sized one. Mix the wet and dry ingredients and knead with a spatula. It's something like dough, but unlike any one I've dealt with in the past, very moist and rubbery.
Next, take your dough and roll it into a log, about 8 in long. Cut it into three pieces and set them in the pot. Bring water to a boil, and then let simmer for an hour. Cover the pot throughout the process, leaving it a crack open for steam. While simmering, turn the peaces with every 15 min or so.
Let the seitan cool for 30-45 min, or completely.
Finished! To store, keep in sealed container covered in simmering broth. Cut and fry, bake, or broil as you would normally.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
asparagus omelet
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Let's face it. Avocados are pretty damn queer.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Natty in the left, Za in the Right.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Thukpa
Let's be honest, I'll eat almost anything that's spicy, uses garam masala, and can be garnished with cilantro. I finally made this soup after months of daydreaming about it and oh, how it was delicious.
The first thing to do is to pick some vegetables. I used red cabbage (it gives the broth a really beautiful color), broccoli, mushrooms, yellow onion, and green onion.
other things to include: potatoes, tomato, carrot, chilies-- whatever you can get your hands on.
Using my ingredients:
1. cut all the vegetables however you want
2. sauté the green onion, yellow onion, and two cloves of garlic in either butter or oil for about a minute.
3. at the same time, dissolve two cubes of vegetable bouillon in about 4 cups of water
4. throw all your vegetables into the stock with some wide egg noodles and simmer for 8-10 minutes
5. while everything is simmering, add some spices! turmeric, garam masala, curry powder, chili powder, salt, pepper, or anything else you can think of. Add some lemon juice.
6. garnish with cilantro and a lemon wedge. eat.
It's just about the easiest soup ever. and who needs measuring cups and spoons? eyeball that shit.
Also, check out Himal Chuli's (on State Street) Thukpa. You'll get a similar soup, a choice of roti or rice, and dumplings for around 9 dollars.
Welcome.
You know what the midwest is? Yes Kanye, young and restless. Here in Madison, we are certainly young a restless. Young souls restlessly searching for perfect combination of flavors, textures, colors, and essence. May this blog serve as a bridge, an isthmus rather, connecting kitchens and farms around the world in a common struggle to understand the complexities of life through home-brewed beer, almond milk, rhubarb crumbles, asparagus risottos and moist banana bread. It's a strange world, but at least one thing makes sense--good food. Enjoy the queer harvest.