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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Rigatone with Cinghiale


Hey dudes, how's it hangin'? Sorry I've been lax about posting, but it's quality - not quantity. Or something. Anyhoosers - this cinghiale sauce is something special. Traditionally it is made with wild boar, but since Trader Joe's was fresh out of boar, we used ground pork and beef. This is a Rachael Ray recipe, which is surprising because I'm usually not a huge fan of her recipes - especially for SND (too many shortcuts). This one is fantastic, though, so thanks Rach!

Start by heating a three count of olive oil in a large sauce pan, then add 3/4 pound ground pork and 3/4 pound of ground beef with a good pinch of salt and pepper. Break it all up and get it nice and browned, then add a finely chopped medium onion. Sweat the onion for a few minutes, then add one grated carrot and 4 chopped cloves of garlic. Stir all the veggies around , then add 3 or 4 sprigs of fresh thyme (take the leaves off, doy), one bay leaf, two nice pinches of all spice, and one tablespoon of unsweetened cocoa powder. I know, right? Cocoa in a pasta sauce? It's so surprisingly delicious - mixed with the all spice, your sauce becomes so warm and comforting. So mix in your spices, and cook everything together for five minutes or so.

Meanwhile, heat a large pot of water for your rigatoni. Salt the water well when it's boiling, then add a one pound box of rigatoni. Cook just to al dente, then drain.

Back to the sauce! Stir in 1/4 cup tomato paste (use a heaping 1/4 cup - I found that just 1/4 was not quite enough). Get that all mixed in and add 1/2 cup of dry white wine, 2 cups of chicken stock, and 1/2 cup milk. I used reduced fat milk - she calls for whole milk. Reduced fat worked just fine. Lower your heat and simmer for ten minutes - the sauce will thicken and get all delicious. Don't worry if your sauce isn't super thick - you're going to add the pasta to the pan and that will help thicken.

Discard the bay leaf and add the drained pasta to the sauce along with around one cup of grated parmesan. Mix everything together, taste for seasonings and enjoy!

I'm a huge fan of this recipe, the all spice and cocoa really gave an amazing twist to your traditional pasta sauce. Go do it now!

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Guest Blog! Pumpkin, Barley, and Sage Soup

Well folks, I finally got her to do it.... here is a guest blog by my one and only momma! Enjoy:
Hi everyone, Dana's mom, Lynn, here. I guess I am a designated guest writer of Sunday Night Dinners, and have I got one delicious and savory fall soup for you, which happens to be very simple, also! I initially made it for myself a couple of weekends ago, when the boys were golfing in Northern Minnesota. (One of the perfectly warm, fantastically sunny weekends we have had in October in Minnesota this year.) I love the house to myself once in a while, I work at my projects, watch my TV shows (NO SPORTS! HGTV, Food Network, Cooking Channel) and always make myself a little gourmet meal to enjoy with a glass of wine and the quiet (hopefully with a nice sunset!). So, even though I was having a very busy day, I took the time to make this little soup, and ate it at 9pm! We Ostermans eat late.... Pumpkin, Barley and Sage Soup--Better Homes and Gardens, Everyday Easy 8 oz. smoked sausage links, chopped, or small dice ( recipe calls for andouille, which would add some heat. I used kielbasa)1 small onion, chopped1 tbsp snipped fresh sage1 tbsp olive oil1 cup quick cooking barley1 tsp chicken bullion granules( I use the Better than Bullion brand, and use a couple of spoonfuls to taste)4 cups water1 15 oz can pumpkin (I have not used pumpkin, first go around I used a sweet dumpling squash I baked in the microwave, and the next time, I used a small butternut squash, baked,)2 tbsp real maple syrup1 tbsp apple cider vinegar In a large saucepan, or Dutch oven, cook sausage, onion and sage in hot oil over medium heat for 3-5 minutes, stirring often. Add barley, water and bullion. Bring to boil and simmer, covered, for 12 minutes or so, stirring occasionally. Stir in pumpkin(squash), maple syrup, and vinegar, heat through. Season to taste with salt and fresh ground pepper. Serve in a warm bowl with 2 or three very thin slices of a Minnesota Honeycrisp apple (or any crispy apple in your area!), and enjoy! Makes four servings. So there you have it, very simple and so tasty! Give it a try some cool evening soon. For my dear daughter in NYC with a gluten allergy, and anyone else who eats gluten free, substitutes for the barley would be millett, quinoa, buckwheat (crazy name for gluten free wheat), or a can of cooked wild rice would be delish and very quick! Lesser known substitutes are amaranth and teff; celiacs would know these names! Lynn signing out--love you daughter, and all your recipes!! (I'd like to think that I had some tiny bit of influence on my daughter's love of cooking and good food!)**
**Blogger's Note: Yes you did, momma. You are an inspiration :)Well folks, I finally got her to do it.... here is a guest blog

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Grilled Chicken and Radicchio w/Roasted Garlic Vinaigrette


Hello friends. It's been a while, I have some backlogged SNDers to report, but let's go with the most recent, shall we? Sometimes I get lazy, what do you want from me.

Okay! No cranky blogging.

This grilled chicken is fantastic, and is courtesy of Mr. Tyler Florence. Side note: Tyler - you looked and sounded out of your element on Food Truck Road Trip. Please shoot more Tyler's Ultimate episodes. That is all.

So Tyler does this awesome grilled chicken with a whole cut up (bone in, skin on) chicken. Adam and I used some great, huge organic (bone in, skin on) chicken legs. Start by tossing the chicken in some olive oil and salt and pepper, then refrigerate while you prepare everything else. Now let's roast some garlic! Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Cut a bulb of garlic in half horizontally, and set the halves on a square of aluminum foil. Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle on some salt, a tablespoon or two of water, and add two sprigs of fresh thyme. Fold the aluminum up around the garlic like a packet and place in the oven for thirty minutes or so. Your kitchen will smell wonderful! The garlic should be nice and soft. Let it cool, then squeeze it out of the peels into a food processor. Add a handful of chopped parsley, the leaves from six or seven sprigs of fresh thyme, 1/2 cup of olive oil, and the juice of 2 1/2 lemons. Whir until you get a vinaigrette - it will be on the thicker side. Add salt and pepper to taste. YUM.

Cut a head of radicchio into quarters, and place into a bowl. Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper, and set aside for the grillin'.

You should have preheated your grill. I always forget to tell you that. Go do it, I'll wait.

/Sips glass of white wine.

Okay good. Now that your grill is magically preheated, let's get to it! Spray some nonstick spray on the grate, and cook the radicchio for two minutes a side so you get some nice grill marks. Remove the radicchio into a bowl and cover with plastic wrap so it can steam and finish cooking.

Place your chicken pieces skin side down on the grill. Cook for twenty minutes, turning once. After twenty minutes have passed, baste all of the chicken with half of the roasted garlic and lemon vinaigrette, making sure to rotate so that the vinaigrette caramelizes. That will take ten or so more minutes. Dude, it's awesome. While the caramelization process is happening, cut a couple of lemons in half, and set them flesh side down on the grill for a few moments. When everything is ready, peel the leaves of the radicchio quarters apart and distribute them in a bowl with the chicken pieces. Squeeze the grilled lemon on everything and drizzle the rest of the roasted garlic vinaigrette and toss. YUUUUUUM. Seriously yum. So easy and fresh tasting. You must try it.

I made some mashed taters with this, but you could have roasted taters or sweet po-tay-toes or rice or whatevs. Go nuts! Try it!

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Sunday Night Football Sunday Night Dinner


Hello Friends! I don't know about you, but I am PUMPED about the football season. Football and hockey are my favorite sports. To commemorate the beginning of the NFL season, I went with a football friendly menu: Meatball subs! The Mister and I are trying to be reasonably healthy, so instead of fries or other bad for you starch, we had an arugula salad with the subs, which was pretty nice because the peppery arugula cut through the heavy main dish.

Aiight start with your tomato sauce. The longer you simmer a tomato sauce, the better it gets.
Mince a yellow onion, and toss it into a preheated saucepan with a four count of olive oil. Sweat the
onions over medium heat for about ten minutes. I added a good pinch of red pepper flake at this
point, but use your discretion. If you don't want any heat don't add it. Next add four cloves of chopped
garlic and cook for one more minute, then add 1/2 cup or so of your favorite red wine - a chianti
would be nice. If you don't have any red wine, white will work too - try not to use a riesling or really
sweet wine because it will make this sauce too sweet. Cook the wine down for 3 minutes or so, then
add two fifteen ounce cans of tomato puree. You can use crushed tomatoes if you want more texture
in your sauce, but I prefer a smooth tomato sauce. Taste for seasonings and add salt and pepper
accordingly, as well as a teaspoon of dried oregano. Turn your heat down to medium low and simmer
the sauce whilst you make the meatballs, stirring occasionally. Cover if you wish so your stove doesn't
get covered in tomato splatters. Add some chopped fresh basil at this point too - 10 leaves I'd say.

Now for the meatballs! Mince a medium-small yellow onion and brown in in an oven safe frying pan over medium heat
with a handful of chopped parsley. Once the onion is browned, scrape it out of the pan into a mixing bowl
to cool. Once cooled, add 1/2 pound of ground pork, 1/2 pound ground beef (85/15 people - it's SND), one egg,
a little less than 1/2 cup of dried bread crumbs (I use Panko), and a good amount of salt and ground
pepper. Time to get dirty (with clean hands)! Combine all of the ingredients using your hands, but don't
over work the meat (heh). Once the ingredients are combined, start forming your meatballs and set
aside on a plate. Make them however big or small you'd like. I went with medium-ish to fit in
the sammiches. Preheat the same pan you cooked the onions in with a two count of olive oil over
medium heat, then start browning the meatballs. Don't over-crowd the pan, if they don't all fit,
you can cook them in batches. You want them to get nice and browned on all sides, and don't
worry that they are not cooked through. They are going in the oven! Oooh that reminds me, preheat
your oven to 350 degrees. Gah, I'm the worst at that, sorry.

So once your meatballs are all browned, turn the heat off, put them all back in the pan and ladle some
of your tomato sauce (which you've continued to stir over low heat this whole time, tasting for
seasoning of course). You don't want to smother the meatballs with sauce, just ladle some around the
meatballs so that the bottom of the pan is covered. Now it gets really good: Cut some slices of
fresh bufalo mozzarella to about the same size of your meatballs and place the slices on top of the
meatballs. Dude. I know. Put the pan into the oven and cook for ten to fifteen minutes. The meatballs
will cook through and the mozzarella will melt and get bubbly and delicious. DUDE.

Prepare your bread whilst the meatballs are in the oven. We went with little ciabatta loaves, but use
whatever you like. French bread would work well too. Just don't use sliced bread, that doesn't make
any sense. Cut open your rolls, but don't slice all the way through. Put some of your tomato sauce
into the roll, then meatballs to fit. If you're like me, you'll add a little more mozzarella on top
as well as some Parmesan. Yup. I did it.

Side note: Adam put some black olives and chopped pepperoncinis on his meatball sandwich, and loved it.
Give that a try if you'd like!

Put your rolls on a sheet pan and throw them into the oven for another five to ten minutes -
melt the new cheese and get the rolls nice and toasty.

And you're ready to enjoy! Serve with your choice of sides - go for the fries or have some spaghetti
with more of your tomato sauce if you'd like. Like I said, I really liked the arugula salad, but ya'll
should Sunday Night Dinner it up as you see best.

Kisses!

D


PS Clearly I need to figure out this new fangled blogging thing. I apologize for the weird format, I don't know why
it did that and I can't figure out how to fix it. C'est la vie!

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Tortilla Soup Deliciousness


Hello again sports fans! It's time once again to make some SND! This week I made tortilla soup (inspired by Ina's mexican chicken soup) and as you can see, it was a rousing success! Let's get into it!

Start by mincing a large yellow onion. I wish I had a secret for tearless onion chopping, but I don't. Waterproof mascara is good for not looking like a nightmare when you're done, but for the life of me I can't make the tears stop when I am chopping those onions. Can you?

Anyhooooo, chop the onion and quit whining. Throw it into a heated stock pot that has a five count of olive oil and sweat those puppies for five minutes or so. Chop four carrots and add them to the onions with some S & P. Cook the onions and carrots together for another ten minutes over medium heat, then add 4 chopped cloves of garlic. Stir, add a few glugs of white wine, and let that cook down for a few minutes. Next add 2 quarts of chicken stock, two 15 ounce cans of tomato puree, two to four (depending on how much heat you can handle, I used two) seeded and minced jalepeno peppers, 1 1/2 teaspoons of cumin, and 1 teaspoon of crushed coriander seed. Salt and pepper to taste here, it just depends on how salty the chicken stock is that you're using is. I also added a pinch of cayenne pepper, but use your own discretion on this. Stir everything together, then add a nice handful of chopped cilantro and the thing that gives this soup it's name: the tortillas! Slice 6 or so six inch fresh flour or corn tortillas in half, then crosswise into 1/2 inch strips and toss those into the soup. Don't worry - they're going to break down, thicken the soup, and give it some great texture. Bring the soup to a boil, then simmer for a half hour.

Whilst your concoction is simmering, shred your chicken. What chicken you say? Well you can cheat like I did and get a rotisserie chicken (ya'll know I love it - time and dish saver, plus you can snacky on the legs!) or you can roast the chicken yourself. I am all for not cutting corners on SND, but I just find rotisserie chickens to be really tender. If you want to roast the chicken, get three bone in skin on chicken breasts, rub them with olive oil and S & P, and throw them in a 350 degree oven (on a cookie sheet) for thirty five minutes. Let cool, then de-skin and de-bone. Same for the rotisserie chicken, de-skin and de-bone.

Okay, so throw your shredded chicken into the soup as well as a can of black beans that you've drained and rinsed, and another big ol' handful of chopped cilantro. Simmer for another fifteen minutes and you're ready to serve! Slice up some ripe avocado and have tortilla chips, sour cream, and your favorite shredded cheese at the ready for toppings. Hot damn! Go try it!

XO
d

Friday, August 27, 2010

Adventures in Catering


Hi pals - sorry for my tardiness in posting this week. I've been busy blah blah blah. I have something different for ya'll though! Last Saturday night John, Adam and I catered a birthday party for some good friends of John's. The birthday girl loves appetizers, so our menu consisted of small bites. She also said she loves seafood and is big on cheese. Can do! The picture for this post is of the cheese plate I constructed, and it was pretty fabulous if I do say so myself. Here was our menu for the evening:

Homemade parmesan and thyme short bread crackers
Homemade hummus
Store bought pita chips
Pan fried onion dip with homemade potato chips (made in our deep fryer!)
Grilled asparagus with pancetta and citrus vinaigrette
Scallop ceviche
Crab salad served in endive leaves
Smoked salmon cucumber sandwiches
Carnitas tacos with avocado and mango salsa
Best Cheese Plate Ever with grapes, dried figs and apricots, marcona almonds, and crackers
Chocolate covered strawberries
Lemon sorbet in frozen lemon cups with vodka

Dude. I know, right? Sounds like a lot! There were 20 or so peeps at the party, and we wanted to have a really nice variety of bites for people. The fantastic host (Kevin, the party was for his lovely wife) was mixing margaritas and mojitos, and pouring bourbon and wine all night. I was worried about getting everything together, but it all came out beautifully! We worked as a great team, starting to prep at 3pm after shopping at Bristol Farms. We had the first items on the table for the guests at 7.30pm and continued serving as things were ready throughout the evening.

I'll start with the cheese plate - it included a 2 year white cheddah, rosemary crusted manchengo, cave aged gruyere, maytag blue cheese, triple creme brie, and goat cheese. It was a really nice mix of hard and soft cheeses, and the birthday girl was thrilled. I put out bowls of dried figs, dried apricots and marcona almonds, as well as some tiny grapes on the plate. Turned out pretty nice, if I do say so myself!

Okay, carnitas. I used Rick Bayless' epic recipe. I bought a 3 pound piece of boneless pork shoulder and cut it into three even pieces, then marinated it in 1/2 cup of fresh lime juice and some salt for an hour. Meanwhile I melted 2 pounds of lard (yes, lard - use it) over medium heat in a large pot. Once the lard was melted I added the pork and its marinade to the pot. The lard came to a slow, lazy boil - that's what you want. I kept it at medium heat and monitored the bubbles, because you just want to slowly cook this for now. The pork cooked this way for 2 hours, then I turned the heat up to medium high for a half hour - the bubbles came fast and furious then! This gives your pork an amazing crunchy outside with a melty soft inside. Guhhh it was so amazing. We served the pork with slices of avocado, cilantro leaves, and a delish mango salsa that John made. You'll have to ask him for the recipe.

Speaking of John: Oh hai Guest Blog! I wanted John to tell you in his own words how to make his oh so delicious crab salad. Take it away, Johnny!

"My take on the Crab Salad is inspired from a Swedish “recipe” taught
to me first-hand by a real live Swede.

Get yourself (and check yourself) a big bowl. One sturdy enough to
withstand a flailing drunken limb. Insert into the bowl already cooked
bay shrimp. If you didn’t know that you could purchase shrimp that
way, please stop reading now. Now insert real, cooked, crabmeat. I
find claw meat usually less expensive, unless you oft procure seafood
from the black market, which I strongly encourage. Salt and pepper the
protein. I am told that in Sweden you don’t need to perform this step.
Which step? Yeah…that one… In Sweden Land, they often use imitation
crab.

Dice sweet onion, and insert it into the bowl. Cut fresh dill over the
bowl, and you won’t need to do any inserting. Now add mayonnaise. This
is where you need to be careful…add much less than you think you need,
then blend the ingredients to see if you have the right consistency.
If you need to add more mayonnaise, go ahead and add a little bit
more. Be careful. Too much can be an expensive mistake.

After you’ve done a solid amount of gentle blending, cover it,
refrigerate it, and forget about it for an hour or two. Remember to
taste this sucker at obvious stages throughout. If you need to know
why, please stop reading this now.

Remove the mixture from the fridge and serve in halved avocados (or
endive leaves if a finger food appetizer). Cut the bottoms of the
halved avocados in order to stabilize them on the plate. Use the
removed sliver as garnish, accenting it with fresh dill, salt, and
cracked pepper. Salt and pepper the avocados as needed. Garnish with
lemon wedge. Tell your guests to squeeze the lemon to taste. Chill the
plates in the freezer.

Leftovers are great on crusty bread or crackers the next morning.


Ingredients for 6 (Approximate)

- 1/2 lb. cooked bay shrimp
- 1/2 lb. cooked crab meat
- ½ medium sweet onion
- Fresh dill (use your judgment)
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 1 Lemon"

Thanks John! I hope everyone tries this super recipe!

Okay, one more recipe and then I'll wrap up this uber long post. Thanks to those who are still with us. DUDE. The pan fried onion dip was the SHIZ. I thinly sliced up two large yellow onions and put them in a frying pan with 2 tablespoons of delicious irish butter and a two count of olive oil. I caramelized those suckers well - adding some white wine here and there so they didn't burn, and the sugar in the wine helps the caramelization. Be sure to salt and pepper to taste, kids! I also added two nice pinches of cayenne for a good kick. Once the onions were done I shut of the pan and let them cool. In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment I added 4 ounces of room temperature cream cheese, a 1/2 cup of creme fraiche, and 1/2 cup of mayo. I mixed those together until smooth, then added the onions, mixed some more and my oh my. It is the most out of this world onion dip you'll ever have. We made the potato chips by thinly slicing russet potatoes on a mandolin (be so careful! extremely sharp, as one of my fingers found out) into a bowl of water. They were dried thouroghly and thrown into peanut oil heated in our deep fryer. I insist you purchase one and make this dip NOW.

All right all right, I've blatherd on long enough. It was a really great experience, and I must say the guests loved the food. I would do this again, but I think the key is to stick with small bites. Let me know if you'd like any of the other recipes listed above.

See you next week!

xo
d

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Greek Lasagna...Oopah!





Sup kids. You're probably wondering why I make so many heavy dishes during the summer months. My reasons are three-fold: 1 - I like making this kind of food. They are dishes that take time and care - the essence of a SND. 2 - My area of Southern California is having the most boring summer ever: barely gets above 75 degrees on a good day. I'm sure that if it was 90 degrees outside I'd be making lighter dishes. 3 - Calories don't count on Sundays!

Okay, that's out of the way - thought I had some 'splainin' to do. On to today's recipe: Pastisio! I watched my dear friend Ina's show on Saturday last, and she made this amazing Greek lasagna dish for her adorable husband Jeffrey. It looked delicious and the ingredients seems wack-a-doo to me, so of course I had to try it! Adam okay-ed it after I promised I would make the crazy salad that Ina made as well: arugula with feta cheese and WATERMELON. /Shudder. I'm not a fan of any melon. But I'm a good sport too, so we had an accord.

First things first: make the meat sauce. Finely chop a medium to large yellow onion and throw it into a pot that's been heated over medium heat with a three to four count of olive oil. Sweat those onions out for five minutes or so - you want them to soften but not brown. Next add one pound of ground beef and one pound of ground lamb. Cook that down for 10 minutes or so, and break it up until it crumbles with a wooden spoon. Try to get a little color on the meat. After all that work, the meat and onions need a drink! Add 3/4 cup of red wine (I used rose because that's what I was drinking), and stir well to get any delicious bits stuck on the bottom of the pan up. Next up: add four cloves of minced garlic, one teaspoon of dried oregano, one and a half teaspoons of fresh thyme, two pinches of cayenne pepper, and here comes the wack-a-doo part. One TABLESPOON of cinnamon. Cinnamon??!? I know, nuts right? I was nervous about it because I didn't want to eat dessert meat (who does?) but I was brave, and you need to be too. Mix all of your spices in with the meat and wine well. It will smell very cinnamony, but don't fret. It will be delicious. After cooking for about five minutes, add one 28 ounce can of crushed tomatoes in puree, along with two teaspoons of salt and one teaspoon of pepper. Mix well, then simmer that lovely sauce for 40-45 minutes. Stir occasionally, and do not cover. The sauce will be quite thick. Be sure to taste for seasonings.

Once the sauce is close to done, start making your béchamel. A béchamel is a white sauce (a "mother" sauce) that can be flavored a million different ways. In a small pot heat 1 1/2 cups of whole milk and 1 cup of heavy cream over medium low heat until simmering. Side note: I used lactose free milk and half/half and it worked out just fine - and was less lactosey for my man friend. Win! As your milk is warming, heat four tablespoons of butter in a saucepan over medium heat until melted. Add 1/4 cup of flour and whisk until it is totally mixed with the butter. Cook for about two minutes, then add your warm milk/cream, whisking whisking to avoid lumps. Simmer this for another five minutes until it is thick and smooth. Turn the heat down to low, then add a pinch of grated nutmeg, one teaspoon of salt and one teaspoon of pepper. Whisk again, then add a few ladlefuls of your meat sauce and 3/4 cup of grated parmesan cheese and stir well. Sneak a few tastes.....hot damn is that sauce gooood! Turn the heat off and let the béchamel cool for 10 minutes, then add a few more wacky (but delicious!) ingredients: 2 eggs (beaten together beforehand) and 2/3 cup of Greek yogurt. I was delighted by these additions - not only was the sauce really amazing, but after it's time in the oven the white sauce took on the texture of ricotta cheese and was totally outstanding.

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees, and get out a large cake pan. Whilst you are making your béchamel, cook one pound of shell shaped pasted just to al dente. You really want it to have some bite, as it will continue to cook in the oven. Drain and add to your meat sauce and mix well. Pour your meat sauce and noodles in the bottom of your cake pan, then spread the white sauce on top evenly with your spoon. Add 3/4 of grated parmesan on top - shake it all over to make a yummy brown crust.

Bake that bad boy for one hour. Towards the end of the hour, keep a weather eye on your Pastisio - mine was nice and browned by forty five minutes. Pull it on out of the oven and let it cool/set while you make your salad.

I made a simple lemon vinaigrette for the salad - the juice of one lemon, a small squirt of dijon mustard, a splash of my wine, pinch of S/P, and a five count of olive oil. Whisk and done. Pour that over your arugula, crumbled feta (get the good stuff that comes in water), and cubed fresh watermelon. Adam loved the watermelon in the salad, and I thought it was pretty darned good without.

Serve up your out of this world greek lasagna after it's cooled a bit and go to town, guys! It has amazing flavor - the cinnamon and cayenne give it such a warm, happy taste. Probably would be great mid-winter but what the hell. Make what you want, when you want. That's my motto.

Heart,
D


Thursday, August 12, 2010

Adam's Summer Artichokes - Guest Blog!


I have never myspaced, friendstered, twittered, or facebooked. And I have certainly never blogged before. Usually my role in Sunday Night Dinner is twofold; I eat and I clean. But this week, we made a spontaneous stop at a farmers market in West LA that we had never visited before and we came across one of my favorite summer treats-- the artichoke.

I love artichokes! And I like them prepared any which way. I like them grilled, gratineed, stuffed, steamed, and fried. I'll take them fresh, frozen or canned. Fresh is best thought they are a PAIN IN THE ASS to prepare. But it's always worth it and this night was no different.

We only got one artichoke knowing that the pot pie would be plentiful. There are many ways to clean or "turn" an artichoke. I'm going to try and explain but google it if you need pictures.

Fill a medium to large bowl with water and squeeze the shit out of a couple of lemons into the water. Grate the zest into the water and add the lemon husks.

Take a sharp paring knife and trim the stem down to a couple of inches (if you have a long stem artichoke, save the stem and steam it with the rest of the artichokes for a marrow-like treat). Remove any small leaves near the step with the paring knife.

The next step is to take your chef's knife or scalloped-edge knife (bread knife) and cut the top of the artichoke so that you remove most of the sharp tips. With your kitchen shears, snip off the remaining thorny-tips.

Now cut the artichoke in half from top to stem. If you'd like (as we did) you can cut them again into quarters. You'll notice that there are fuzzy fibers and small pink leaves that are very sharp at the points. You want to remove all of this. I take the paring knife to cut out what I can, then use a spoon to scrape out the rest. Give the artichoke a rinse under the faucet and drop the artichokes into the lemon water so they don't turn brown. I kept them in this bath, turning occasionally, for about 30 minutes before moving on.

In a large pot, heat some olive oil over medium then add a handful of chopped fresh parsley, a few sprigs ofthyme, one crushed bay leaf, four cloves of smashed garlic and a pinch of red pepper flake. You can really use any fresh herbs you'd like. add the entire bowl-- artichokes, water, lemon and all in with the herbs. Add more water if necessary to cover the artichokes. You can weigh them down by using a lid that's smaller than the lid for the pot you are using. Bring the water to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for about 20 minutes. Strain the artichokes and allow them to cool.

You're just a few minutes away from the well-deserved reward now! Heat some olive oil over medium-high heat. Add the artichokes cut side down and drizzle a good amount of balsamic vinegar over it all. Let them cook for a few minute then move them around, get the backside. You can also do this on a grill for excellent results. It may look like you've burned the artichokes... but you haven't! That's the caramelized balsamic. Transfer to a platter and enjoy. Juicy isn't a word normally used to describe artichokes, but these were the juiciest, best artichokes I've ever had!


All the best,
Adam




Chicken Pot Pie with Biscuit Topping



Hi kids! Oooooooh this one's a good'un. But Dana, you say, pot pie in the summer? Hell to the yes. Pot Pie is delicious during all seasons, and also West LA has not been having much of a warm summer, so the pot pie was just the thing I needed.

The mister and I started this fab SND off with some AMAZING artichokes for an appetizer, and the mister is going to guest blog the recipe in a separate post. Ya'll are going to love it and never eat an artichoke any other way. Yeah I said it.

But back to pot pie. This one is a little fiss-fussy, so that makes it perfect for SND. The recipe that inspired me calls for pearl onions in the stew, and Adam had the brilliant idea to make the onions a la Julia: brown braised. I made them in my Beouf Bourgignon post, but here are the instructions again:

You'll need two thirds of a bag of frozen pearl onions, defrosted. Melt 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of butter in a three count of olive oil. I'd say over medium heat, and use a frying pan that has a cover. Drop in your baby onions with a little salt and pepper, and roll those guys around until they brown. As Julia says, "You cannot expect them to brown uniformly". That cracks me up, I don't know why. Anyhoo, after you've browned your onions lightly, add 1/2 cup of beef stock and (this is a Dana addition) 1/3 cup red or white wine (I used white cause that's what I drink). Cover the pan and lightly simmer those beauties for thirty for forty minutes until most of the liquid has evaporated. Remove from the heat and set aside.

Do the onions first, because you'll want them ready for the stew - you can start the stew after the onions have been cooking for 15-20 minutes if you'd like. You'll need a pan (cast iron is best, but it needs to be oven safe) that is at least nine inches in diameter and four inches thick. Now you'll want to preheat your oven to 450 degrees. Heat four tablespoons of butter over medium heat. Add one celery stalk (cut into 1/2 inch pieces), three medium carrots (1/2 inch pieces), and 7-8 quartered crimini or button mushrooms. If you want to brown the mushrooms more, add them first for a few minutes, then throw in the carrots and celery. Add a little S/P and and stir stir for about five minutes. Add your brown braised mushrooms and any leftover juices in that pan, and then add a heaping 1/3 cup of flour to your veggies. Stir everything together and cook for one minute more to get the flour cooked down a little. Now add four cups of chicken stock, bring everything to a boil, stirring your life away. Simmer until the stew thickens, 3-5 minutes or so. I added a couple of glugs of beef stock to the pot for a little depth of flavor when my stew was looking too thick. Try it if you have some on hand, otherwise if you think your stew is too thick you can add a little chicken stock or white wine.

Now it's time to add the chicken. If you'd like, poach a couple of chicken breasts in some stock with herbs (thyme/bay) but that's more work that I'd prefer, and I'm not a fan of poached chicken. Boring, dry. I go with the rotisserie chicken from the market, de-skinned, de-boned and shredded. Easy peasy. Plus Ella loses her mind when we get a rotisserie chicken, so she gets to have a few treats. That cat thinks she's people, and loves roasted chicken. But I digress.

So put your shredded rotisserie chicken into your simmering stew. I'd say we used about 2/3 of the meat from the chicken, but use your own judgment. Stir in the chicken, then add a handful of chopped parsley, minced chives, and some asparagus that you've cut into bite sized lengths. I used half of a bunch of asparagus, but put in as much as you like. Stir everything together, taste for seasoning, then turn off the heat and set aside whilst you make the biscuit dough.

Biscuit dough on a pot pie! I know right - sounds nuts! IT'S NOT. It's so freaking good. In a large bowl, whisk together 2 cups of flour, one tablespoon of baking powder, one teaspoon of sugar, and one teaspoon of salt until well combined. Rub 2 tablespoons of cold butter into the flour with your fingertips until it is completely absorbed into the flour mixture. Add five more tablespoons of cold butter (I cut it up into cubes) into the flour in the same manner, until the butter is combined and in pieces the size of a pea. In a separate bowl combine 3/4 cup of milk with the zest of half of a lemon and a handful of minced chives. Gently stir the milk, lemon and chives into the flour mixture to make a loose sort of dough.

Dust your clean work surface with a handful of flour and turn your dough out onto it. Pat the dough with your hands into a 1/2 inch thick rectangle, then fold it into thirds like you would a buisness letter. Now pat that bad boy into a 10 inch in diameter circle. Bring your stew back up to a low boil, and gently place your biscuit circle on top. Word of sage, experienced advice: do this with a rolling pin or a bottle of similar shape. I've made this recipe a few times before, and never used a rolling pin until the other night. No rolling pin = epic fail. Rolling pin = clean execution. Roll the dough onto the pin without any smushing, and re roll it back onto your stew. Lovely. Also please note, you do NOT need to hang the dough over the sides of the pan like you would with a regular pot pie. Note my picture above, and just try to get the dough to the edges of the pan as best you can. Use a sharp paring knife to slice a small hole in the middle and shove that pan into the oven for around 20 minutes. You want your biscuit dough to get nice and golden brown.

Remove your pot pie masterpiece from the oven and let cool for ten minutes and enjoy! You'll never go back to regular pot pie, I'm tellin' ya! Make it and report back to me, BFFs!

Word.
D

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

The Perfect Roast Chicken


I really can't believe I haven't written about the perfect roast chicken yet - it's the Mister and I's go-to Sunday Night Dinner. In fact, I think it was the first SND that I made for us. I really can't think of anything better than a roast chicken - amazing, tender, and juicy. It's a little fussy, but when it comes out right OH MAN is it tasty. I'd love to hear your versions of this classic dish, but for now here's what I think you should do. My version is inspired by the great Ina Garten, and I will NOT tell you what Robb calls her because it's super mean and I love her. So there.

Pre-heat your oven to 350 degrees. Start with a 4 - 5 pound whole chicken - try to go for organic/free range if you can. It makes quite the difference in flavor, and it's way better for you. Both Trader Joe's and Whole Foods have great options. Remove the giblet package (you can freeze this and use later if you make your own chicken stock) and then give that chicken a rinse inside and out. Be sure to pat dry thoroughly with paper towels and set aside.

Slice up two large onions - white, yellow, or red are all fine - or a mix would be nice. Scatter those in the bottom of your roasting pan with 5 carrots that you've peeled and chopped into pretty diagonally sliced chunks. Don't make them too small or they'll cook too quickly, but you want them to be bite sized. Another don't - don't salt and pepper your veggies at this point, when you S/P the chicken, plenty of that seasoning will fall off into your onions and carrots.

Now back to your chicken - salt and pepper the cavity, then add one half of a large orange, a big ol' handful of fresh thyme, a halved lemon, a halved clementine (you can skip this citrus if you don't have, just add another halved lemon if you'd like), a bulb of garlic halved crosswise, and finish with the other half of your orange, if you can fit. You want the skin of the orange to be showing through the top of the cavity - it will hold everything in if you do this. Tie the legs of the chicken together firmly with some butcher's twine (any butcher will give you a length of this if you bat your eyes, but it's also readily available at kitchen supply stores). Soften two tablespoons of butter - don't melt it completely, just soften it. Time to give that chicken a butter massage! Set the chicken in the rack of the roasting pan breast side up over your veggies and rub that butter all over the skin. Liberally salt and pepper (AFTER you've buttered, it sticks that way - also some of the seasoning will fall down on your veggies) and you'll get a delicious salty crust when you roast.

Pour 1/2 cup of white wine and 1/2 cup of chicken stock over the veggies, and then slide the roasting pan into the oven - make sure the rack is in the middle of the oven. Roast the chicken and the vegetables for ninety minutes. Make sure that there is always some liquid covering the onions and carrots - they will burn otherwise. Add more wine or chicken stock accordingly. When there is about thirty minutes left, take the chicken out of the oven and quickly turn it over so that the underside can brown as well. Turn the chicken back breast side up for the last ten or so minutes of cooking. You want your guy to be 160 degrees - I really recommend a digital thermometer that has an oven safe cord, they're amazing. Mine lets off a little alarm when the desired temperature has been reached. Once your chicken reaches 160 degrees, take it out the oven and transfer it to a wooden cutting board (preferably one with a groove running around the border of the board to catch the delicious juices). Tent that guy with some aluminum foil and let it rest at least twenty minutes before you carve - you'll scald your fingers if you don't wait.

Remove the onions and carrots from the roasting pan with a slotted spoon and cover with foil to keep warm for later when you're ready to eat. Strain the pan drippings into a saucepan and spoon off any fat that has risen to the top (or you can use a handy dandy fat separator - it's the greatest invention ever and available at Crate and Barrel). Add any juice that has collected around the chicken on the cutting board and a splash or two more of the white wine you used before as well as bit more chicken stock. Just eyeball it - you want to have a cup and a half or so of liquid in the sauce pan. As you're simmering that, whisk three tablespoons of cornstarch with a quarter cup of chicken stock in a separate bowl, then whisk that into your saucepan. The gravy should start to thicken right away. Keep whisking, and if it's too thick, add some more chicken stock - too thin, mix a little more cornstarch with some chicken stock and add to the gravy. Taste for seasoning and you should have some spectacular gravy!

You can serve this amazing chicken with the onion, carrots, kick-ass gravy, and some mashed taters or crusty bread. When I made this the other night, I served it with the artichoke gratin that I've featured in an earlier post. Check it out, it makes a really nice accompaniment.

And there you have it! Fairly simple - once you've gotten the chicken in the oven you've got plenty of time to relax with a glass of wine and some port salut.

XO,
D

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Swedish Meatballs!


Oh hai everyone! Sorry I missed last week, I was celebrating our country's independence by setting off some totally legal fireworks. For this week, I decided to make a SND from my heritage: Swedish Meatballs! Also, the Mr. loves him some meatballs and has wanted me to try this for a while.

It was a really delicious experiment, but I'd love to hear from ya'll to see if/how your recipe differs, but this is what I humbly suggest via Alton Brown, Marcus Samuelsson, and my own head.

Okay first of all what is with grocery stores not carrying ground pork?? Super irritating. Sometimes they have it, sometimes they don't. Well, Whole Foods always has it, but after I had gone to Trader Joe's and Ralph's I had had it! So when you, my little darlings, try this at home go for half ground pork and half ground beef. I used all ground beef (80/20 fat content heh) and they were tasty, but everything is better with a little pork fat, ya hrrd?

Anyhoo, you want a pound and a half of ground meat - half pork/half beef. If you were politically incorrect you could use some ground veal in there too, or lamb. Delicious. Mix your ground beef in a bowl with 2 eggs, 1/2 cup of panko bread crumbs, 1 1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt, 1/2 teaspoon black pepper, 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice, and 1/2 cup (about one half of a medium large) finely chopped red onion. Before you add the onion to the mix, soften it in a pan over medium heat with a two count of olive oil and S/P. Mix everyone together using your hands - it's the best way to get the best mix! After you've mixed, form little meatballs and set aside on a plate or sheet pan. Don't make them big, you want them to be around bite sized (and you need them to cook all the way through), I'd say around 1/2 or 3/4 inch.

Now it's time to cook those suckers! Using the same pan you cooked your chopped onion in, heat two tablespoons of butter and a three count of olive oil over medium-high heat. Brown your delectable meatballs on all sides. Be careful not to burn - you want them to brown evenly but not burn and still cook all the way through, so keep a weather eye on your heat and adjust accordingly. You may have to cook your meatballs in shifts, and when they are done set them aside - you can keep them warm in an oven set to low. Time to make the Swedish Sauce!

Turn the heat down to low in your pan and add a heaping 1/4 cup of flour to the accumulated fat. Whisk that around until you've cooked and browned the flour slightly, it should take two minutes or so. Next add three cups of warmed beef broth - whisk it in a cup or so at a time to thicken your sauce. Okay here comes a weird addition: add 3 tablespoons of pickle juice. No don't argue, just do it! It adds a little somethin' somethin' in the background of the sauce. Whisk that in, then add 1/2 cup of sour cream. Whisk whisk whisk and taste for seasonings, you'll probably need to add some S/P. Whisk over low heat until the sauce is at your desired thickness.

As you cook the sauce, cook some egg noodles or baby red potatoes. Serve your amazing Swedish Meatballs over the noodles or potatoes and ladle your kick ass sauce over the lot. Have some raspberry (or lingonberry) preserves at the ready for those who want, sprinkle some fresh parsley and enjoy! Hooray for the Swedes!

'Til next time...

D

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Brooklyn SND - Pulled Pork/Chicken, Coleslaw and Goat Cheese Polenta

Hullo friends! I spent a fab weekend in NYC with my sisie for her birthday, so I now present to you Brooklyn Sunday Night Dinner! Sis wanted pulled pork for her birthday SND, so I came up with a kick ass marinade....which I proceeded to pour some beer into 'cause it would be delicious. Fail. For those of you that don't know, Sisie is allergic to all wheat and gluten. Ah, balls.

But wait! It all turned out okay - I made the gluten soaked pulled pork BUT ALSO some kick ass pulled chicken! Huzzah! Here's how I did it all:

For the pulled pork, I did an all night marinade. I used a three pound bit of pork shoulder that had a lovely fat cap on it. In a large glass bowl I whisked together 3 tablespoons of salt (kosher, people!), 1 tablespoon of cracked black pepper, 1 and 1/4 cup brown sugar, 1/4 cup red wine vinegar, 3 smashed cloves of garlic, 1.5 to 2 tablespoons of cayenne pepper (yup! make it as spicy or not spicy as you want though - but don't be wussy) and the leaves from three sprigs of fresh thyme. Next add half to three quarters of a bottle of your favorite beer - I recommend a summer brew or a hefewiezen to counter act the cayenne; I used Honeymoon by the makers of Blue Moon. Dude, it's delish! Whisk everything together and put your pork shoulder in. Make sure the pork is covered with this delightful mixture, then cover with saran wrap and refrigerate overnight. If you can't do overnight, I'd recommend at least three hours so the flavors can penetrate (heh) the meat.

Okay, fast forward to the next day, time to cook! I heated a three count of olive oil in a heavy bottomed frying pan (Sisie's Le Creuset risotto pan to be specific) and browned that gorgeously marinated piece of pork shoulder. After I got a good sear on all sides, I put the meat along with the liquid marinade into a handy dandy crock pot and covered. I went with the high setting for three hours, then set it down to low until we were ready to eat. The liquid was poured out and discarded (thank you delicious gluteny marinade!) Take two forks and shred that meat - it will fall apart and you'll be taking taste after taste because you won't be able to resist! After the meat was shredded, I poured some BBQ sauce over it and it was AMAZING. Use your favorite flavor of sauce - Sweet Baby Rays would be good, especially with the cayenne pepper that you used. Serve on some buns and you're in pulled pork heaven.

Hold on! If you are allergic to wheat and gluten, here's what I made for sis! I bought three leg/thighs combos from the butcher - bone in skin on. Gotta go dark meat here, sports fans, if you want the falling apart consistency. Prepare the chicken by giving it a good ol' spice rub. Use your favorite BBQ spice rub, or make one up! I used chili powder - probably a tablespoon total and just massaged it all over the meat. Next, take one leek and thoroughly clean that sucka. Dirt loves to hide between those leaves. Slice up the leek and and throw it in a frying pan that has a cover with a three count of olive oil. Saute the leek for three minutes (add some S and P), then add two sliced carrots. Cook for a few minutes more, then make some room and add the chicken skin side down. Once the chicken is properly browned, add enough rose wine (NOT white zinfandel, shudder) to deglaze and simmer the chicken in. There should be about a half inch of wine covering the bottom of the pan - I eyeballed it, probably a third of a bottle. You could also use white or red wine, or your favorite beer. Cover the pan and turn the heat down to low and simmer for about an hour. You'll know when it's ready - the meat will be fall off the bone, just poke at it with a fork. Once it's ready, turn off the heat and let it cool a bit so you can debone and deskin the chicken. After you've removed the skin and bones shred the chicken back in the pan with the veggies and mix with your favorite sauce! For Sisie's chicken I used a spicier sauce because the chicken was cooked with sweet carrots and the wine. We served her sammich on a delicious gluten free roll and she was in birthday heaven!

I also made a yummy cole slaw. I threw ingredients together into a bowl until it tasted right. It was mayo based, so all you mayo haters out there just need to GET OVER IT. Mayo is freaking delicious. Use one cup of mayo, and whisk in in the bottom of a salad bowl with a 1/4 cup of white or red wine vinegar, two tablespoons of Dijon mustard, a squeeze of honey or maple syrup, a pinch of cayenne or chili powder and some S and P to taste. Whisk and taste, whisk and taste until it's right. A squeeze or two of lemon would be great too. Add some shredded cabbage and carrots on top of your dressing (we used shredded broccoli too, yum) and toss. Now, if you're super cool, you'll put coleslaw on top of your pulled pork or chicken and eat the sammich like a pro.

Serve this all up with some goat cheese polenta and you've got a Brooklyn SND for the ages!

-D

PS I realize I've written this post in several different voices/tenses. Deal with it. It's Sunday Night Dinners not Sunday Night Grammar. Boosh.


Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Stroganoff Shmoganoff!

Sup duders. I feel like I have fond memories of Mom's beef stroganoff. Ma, did you make that a lot for us? I don't remember, but when I stumbled upon Tyler's Ultimate stroganoff the other day I got super excited. I must make this! So I did, and it was totally yummy, but I was left a little underwhelmed. I'll tell ya'll how I made it and let me know how you would alter? Thanks, BFF!

The absolute best part of this recipe is the beef - Tyler's Ultimate Stroganaff recommends you use beef short ribs cooked lowww and slow. It takes a couple of hours, but it was sooooo worth it. The meat fell apart and was like buttah.

Start with three pounds of beef short ribs. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Now you're going to make a yummy yummy herb paste for those suckers. Chop up five cloves of garlic - you don't need to mince here. Throw those into a bowl with a good dose of salt and pepper - use your judgment here. I probably used a half tablespoon and it made a delicious salty crust. Tear the leaves off of a couple of sprigs of rosemary and thyme, and roughly chop up a small handful of parsley. Add the herbs to the garlic and s/p, then add enough olive oil to make a sort of paste. Use your fingers to mix here, this is the time to get good and dirty. Place the ribs bone side down on a cookie sheet (a sheet of aluminum foil to catch the drippings is a good idear). Rub your herb/salt paste all over the top of all the ribs and toss those guys into the oven for two to two and a half hours until that meat is buttery and falling apart. When the meat is done, let it rest for ten to fifteen minutes and it will be easier to slice. Cut that yumminess off of the bone and then slice into servings to put on top of your noodles and sauce.

Sauce! Start with one pound of crimini mushrooms and one pound shitake mushrooms. Slice them up and throw into a large frying pan over medium heat with a five count of olive oil in it. Salt and pepper those 'shrooms and cook until the they brown. Add a 1/3 cup of minced shallot and two cloves of minced garlic and stir to combine (or do the fun pan toss). Cook that for a few more minutes (but don't burn that garlic!) then add a 1/4 cup of cognac. Be super careful when adding the cognac so you don't catch on fire! Maybe take the pan off of the heat when you add the cognac if it makes you nervous. De glaze with the cognac for a few minutes, then add the silky deliciousness of two cups of heavy whipping cream. Awww damn. I said it. Remember - this is SND! You can splurge! Calories don't count on Sundays, I swears on the precious. Turn your heat down a bit and simmer until the cream is reduced by about half. Add one tablespoon and a half of Dijon mustard and a 1/2 cup of sour cream. Turn off the heat and stir well to combine - be sure to be tasting your sauce for seasoning and adjust as necessary. Remember, your short ribs have a salty crust on them, and your sauce should be silky and a little sweet from the cream to counter act that. Toss on some freshly chopped parsley and you're done!

Serve by cooking some egg noodles and tossing those guys with butter, then top with your beautiful mushroom sauce, and your salty amazing short ribs on top. A nice crisp salad on the side or some fresh peas would be a nice accompaniment.

And go! Make this up this Sunday and let me know: what would you change to pump this up? Or was it just right?

Kisses,
D




Monday, June 14, 2010

Julia Sunday Night Dinner!


Hello again friends. The subject of this post has already been blogged about by other people, but that doesn't mean I can't follow suit! This is the first Julia (but not the last ohhhh no) recipe that I've done for SND. Mr. B. gave me Volumes I and II of Julia et al's masterpiece a while ago, and I've been waiting for the perfect time to make..... Boeuf Bourguignon. Guhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh it was sooooo gooooooooood. I INSIST you make this right now. It really is the Ultimate SND. Start to finish it took me a good four hours and me oh my was it worth it.

So, BB. This is a multi step process. I'm going to tell you how I did it, and it probably wouldn't hurt you to look up Julia's recipe if you're going to make it as I'm writing this from memory.

First things first - you gotta boil some bacon. What what what, you say! I know. Bizarro. But Julia knows what she's talking about people. If you don't boil the bacon, the smokiness will overtake the flavor, and this dish is a symphony of flavors not to be overpowered by one (albeit delicious). So chop up half a packet of bacon (6 ounces) into lardons around an inch wide. Simmer the bacon for ten minutes and then drain.

Ooh! Pre-heat the oven to 425 degrees! Now!

You need to use a oven and stove-top proof pan for the majority of the cooking. I used a smaller dutch oven, but anything that will hold 5 or so cups of liquid plus the meat and veggies will do. It needs to have a lot of surface area for browning, so no saucepans/kettles. Pour in a three count of olive oil and fry your boiled bacon for around five minutes - render some of that fat and get it lightly browned. Take the bacon out of the pan with a slotted spoon and drain on some paper towels.

Next you need the main attraction: the beef! Use three pounds of 'stewing' beef. I got mine at Costco, and it was already cubed into 2" cubes. Thanks Costco! You're the bestest. Before you toss the beef into the hot pan, pat each piece dry with a paper towel - it won't brown if it's damp. Brown the beef in the bacon fat in shifts until you have some nice color on all sides. I was sorely tempted to salt and pepper these, but that comes later - I promise. Trust me and Jules. Remove the beef from the pan and set aside.

Again using the same fat, brown one sliced onion and one sliced carrot. This took about seven minutes or so over medium heat. If there is a ton of excess oil, drain that from the pan and return the beef and bacon to the pan. Toss everything with one teaspoon of salt and a quarter teaspoon of pepper (I used a pinch more of both). Sprinkle on two tablespoons of flour and toss again. Set your pan on the middle rack of your pre-heated oven and roast for four minutes. Use a timer, my dear friends. That is a hot oven and you do NOT want to burn. After four minutes take the pan out and carefully give it shakey shake and put it back in the oven for four more minutes.

Remove the pan and turn the oven down to 325 degrees. Add three cups of Chianti (insert Silence of the Lambs reference here), and around two cups of beef stock. Pour the wine in first, and then pour the beef stock in until the meat is juuuuuuuuuuust covered. Then add one tablespoon of tomato paste (I added a bit extra, prolly a tblsp and a half, sorry Jules), 2 minced cloves of gahlic, 2 teaspoons of thyme (I took it off of the stems and roughly chopped) and a crumbled bay leaf. Bring this pot o'delicousness to a simmer, cover, and put in the oven. The rack should be in the lower third of the oven this time. This should cook in the oven for 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Be sure to check on it often - you want the liquid to simmer NOT boil. If it's boiling turn the oven down until you reach a nice simmer.

Whew! That's a lotta work, right? Well friends you are about halfway done. You can take a breather at this point and enjoy a glass of wine and some nibblies. Don't rest too long though because you've got braised onions and sauteed mushrooms to make!!

Okay, so watch your timer. The braised onions take about thirty to forty minutes, so plan accordingly. Lovely Julia says to use 18-24 pearl onions. I used 24 and fervently wished for more later. They are soooooo delicious that I'll probably use forty or so next time. You can use fresh pearl onions if you so desire, but they are kind of a pain in the ass to peel (drop into boiling water for 2-3 minutes; drain; cut of the tops and peel). I used frozen pearl onions that are already peeled! Hurrah! I just took them out of the freezer as I began to prep, and they were thawed by the time I was ready for them.

Back on track: melt 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of butter in a three count of olive oil. I'd say over medium heat, and use a frying pan that has a cover. Drop in your baby onions with a little salt and pepper, and roll those guys around until they brown. As Julia says, "You cannot expect them to brown uniformly". That cracks me up, I don't know why. Anyhoo, after you've browned your onions lightly, add 1/2 cup of beef stock and (this is a Dana addition) 1/3 cup red or white wine (I used white cause that's what I drink). Cover the pan and lightly simmer those beauties for thirty for forty minutes until most of the liquid has evaporated. Remove from the pan and set aside.

Mushroom time! These take no time at all, so cook them when the meat has ten or fifteen minutes left. You need 16 ounces of mushrooms for this - I used porcinis but you could go with shiitake as well. Clean them by wiping the tops lightly with a damp towel and quarter. Melt two tablespoons of butter in a three count of olive oil in a frying pan over medium heat. Don't let the butter burn, but get it nice and bubbly. Add your mushrooms with some salt and pepper and toss in the pan to get everyone nice and coated with delicious butter. Use a wooden spoon if you don't have the frying pan food toss down yet (it took me a little while and some spilled food, but it sure is fun!). Keep the mushrooms moving so they don't burn, but do get some good color on them - this will take ten or so minutes. Finely mince one shallot and throw in the pan for the last minute of cooking. Remove everything from the pan and set aside with the braised onions for later.

All righty....we're getting there!! After about two hours in the oven, test your meat with a fork - it should pierce the beef easily. If it's not tender enough, back in the oven it goes. If it is....you're so close to done! Strain the contents of the pot into a saucepan, then put the meat and vegetables back into the pan. Add the braised onions and mushrooms on top of the meat. Skim the fat off of the top of the sauce (or use the handy dandy fat separator gadget from Crate and Barrel!). You should have around two and a half cups of sauce, and it should coat the back of a spoon. If it's too thin, you can boil it down a bit - but I'm too impatient for that. I put around a third of a cup of beef stock in a bowl with a heaping tablespoon of cornstarch and whisked it together, then added it to my simmering sauce. It tightened right up. If your sauce is too thick, add some more stock. Taste for seasoning, then pour the sauce back over the meat and vegetables. Top with some chopped parsely and whoaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa you're done! Eating time! Oh man I promise all this work is worth it.

I served this amazing-ness with some boiled potatoes - just some new potatoes boiled until soft, drained, then tossed with a little butter (ha, more butter) and salt. I put the potatoes down first in a bowl, then smothered with the meat/veggies/sauce. And enjoy!

Srsly, please try this. Yes, there are a lot of steps - but the end product is so satisfying and happy making. Even more so since it took lots of hard work to make. As always kittens, let me know how it turned out and if you added/changed anything.

BFF,
D


Monday, June 7, 2010

(Pretty) Easy Lemon Chicken

Oh hai everyone! Listen I don't want to hear it. It's been a while but c'mon. Planning a wedding is a LOT of work! Now I'm a married old lady, and Sunday Night Dinners are back bitches.

Okay, so Lemon Chicken. This is an Emeril Lagasse recipe that I've jacked just a little bit. His recipe calls for just white meat but I'm a big fan of dark meat too, so I've added that and made it a bit saucier.

First thing: full disclosure. I hate making rice with the fire of 1000 suns. Hate it. Maybe because I'm super bad at it. I always mess it up. So I have Adam make it. Since you guys don't have Adam, you should make it in a rice maker. Or just be better than me at making it. But make it first, mmkay? Just keep it warm without overcooking. Good luck with that.

All right, so then you should make the lemon sauce, it'll save you time later. Mix 1/2 cup of lemon juice with 4 tablespoons (plus a pinch more cause I like it) of soy sauce, 2 tablespoons of brown sugar, 2/3 cup chicken stock, and the zest of one lemon. Wisk it up and set aside for the right moment.

Finely chop up four teaspoons each of fresh garlic and fresh garlic, as well as 1/2 cup of green onions. Set aside FOR LATER. Trust me.

Okie now, take one package of chicken breast tenders and one package of chicken thighs. The tenders are the right shape and size that you need, so slice the thighs into thinnish strips to match the tenders. Next, put 1/2 cup of cornstarch in a shallow dish, and beat two eggs into another. Dip each strip of breast and thighs into the cornstarch, egg, then cornstarch again. Your hands will get all gooey but get over it. It washes off. Set those aside to set up for about five minutes after you're done.

Ooh! One more thing to do as prep! Mix three teaspoons of cornstarch with one tablespoon of water. Wisky wisk that and then set aside. It's totally worth it later to do the prep work first. And clean as you go, right Mom?

Take a large frying pan or wok and heat up 1/4 to 1/3 cup or so of canola or peanut oil until almost smoking over medium high heat. Fry the chicken strips for three minutes on each side. They should get browned but not super dark. Set aside to blot on paper towels. Pour out most of the oil, and put the pan back over medium heat. Toss in the green onions and fry for one minute. Add the garlic and ginger and fry with the onions for thirty additional seconds. Next you're going to add that delectable lemon sauce mix. Give it another wisk then put it in the sauce pan with the ginger, garlic and green onions. Bring the sauce to a boil and then add your cornstarch/water mix and wisk in. The sauce should thicken immediately. Add the chicken back to the pot, cover all the chicken with the sauce well, and turn the heat down to low.

Serve this deliciousness with some veggies if you'd like. I like to buy a fresh "stir fry" ** packet at the market - it's carrots, snow peas, and broccoli all cut up and cleaned neat and proper like. I just heat up a bit more canola or peanut oil in a separate pan with some red pepper flake and more chopped ginger, garlic and green onion. Sautee those veggies for a bit to soften but make sure they still have some crunch. ** Be sure to buy the fresh vegs, not frozen. I purchased the frozen packet once it was an epic fail.

Serve your fantastic meal with over your properly made rice, and enjoy!

It's good to be back! Let's continue this super ride, and hit me back and let me know if you made this or any of my other dinners. I'll take Sunday Night Suggestions, too!

Kisses!

-Mrs. B.