Posts from the ‘Food’ category

Sunday in the kitchen

Actually, Saturday afternoon as well … all those fresh vegetables from the market!

This is the first weekend in a month that I haven’t worked, studied work issues or watched videos related to learning about the new tools for work. I happen to enjoy my work very much, but I also enjoy some time away from it to refresh and regroup.

This weekend mostly happened in the kitchen.

Pickled Peppers! … pickled jalapeno peppers. I enjoy them as a garnish on many things. The vinegar-sugar brine brings out their sweet-hot flavor.

A new venture: sauerkraut. I made it once before in just a water and salt solution but was not enamored of the flavor. I always have a jar of sauerkraut in the refrigerator and like the jalapenos, add a little of it to many things.

This new homemade batch is a recipe from Donna Schwenk’s Cultured Food Life . The recipe calls for some apple and jicama and also the addition of a culture starter to add to the good bacteria during the fermenting process.

Bread of course! And I processed a very small batch (13 ounces) of plums into a tiny jar of plum jam. I have become a huge fan of small batch preserves. I know that many people do large batches because they have a lot of fresh fruit that must be preserved, but I like making a jar or two as needed with whatever is in season.

And speaking of a lot to be preserved – I have all of those vegetables from the market! So another bit of the weekend was spent doing a bit of planning – what needed to be used first and what to do about any extra.

I typically plan meals very loosely around what I have and the freezer is my friend!

A recent acquisition to help with the freezing kind of preserving is a vacuum sealer. I had been dithering about which one and which features when Mel, of Mel’s Kitchen Cafe featured this one which is a very basic model. Since it works for her and her family of 7, I decided it would no doubt work for just me. It is very easy to use – it seals as well as vacuum-seals. Any of the vegetables that look like they MUST be used that I am unable to use will get pureed, vacuum-sealed and frozen for later use.

Two varieties of beans, two whole chickens … neither very photogenic – were cooked and divided up for meals and the freezer. A pumpkin and a batch of rice are also ready for this week’s eating.

It is to be a cool and rainy week and there is plenty on hand for a variety of soups and stews.

And I am ending the weekend as relaxed as Bear and Auggie look.

Corn: on and off the cob

I have no business saying that it has gotten “hot” again … 80’s daytime, 50’s overnight and while not as dry as the southwest, there is little humidity here. As parts east and south are REALLY hot with high humidity, I should be grateful for 80’s. And I am! But in “all’s relative world”, it feels hot.

It is sweet corn season and usually I would boil or bake corn. Enter another use for the electric pressure cooker (see Pasta in the Pressure Cooker ) which adds no heat to the kitchen, cooks things tout suite and is easy to clean up.

Yes, I made one lonely ear of corn.

When I went to the grocery, it was late afternoon and there were 4 ears of corn left on the big table that holds the sweet corn. This was the only one of the 4 that looked like it might be ok.

It was more than ok: 1 cup water, 2 minutes at pressure, quick release and it was perfect.

Yesterday, after the sweet corn supply was replenished – 3 ears: 1 cup of water per cob, 2 minutes at pressure, quick release. My cobs had partial husk as in the husk had been trimmed up so you could see several rows of corn and the heavy silk at the end was removed. The remaining husk and silk fell off the corn – no muss, no fuss!

I had 1/2 an ear of corn for my lunch and cut off the kernels from the remaining cobs for a supper recipe which I highly recommend : Smitten Kitchen’s Corn, Bacon and Parmesan Pasta

Next up: corn broth.

I put the kernel-less cobs back in the cooking water, added more water and cooked 20 minutes at low pressure, natural release and then strained…

Beautiful, beautiful corn broth! Corn broth has a slightly sweet, corn-y taste that makes a wonderful soup base. Most of this I’ll freeze for another time, but I just might make one bowl of some sort of soup for tonight’s supper.

Stay cool wherever you are and Happy Wednesday!

Too hot for us

So far we are staying a few degrees less than the forecast high, but today hit 90F about 4:30. That is about 20 degrees higher than normal and higher than Bear, Auggie and I like.

Early morning is the time to be outside and shortly after 5:00 a.m., I had sprinklers going.

Then a morning walk at 6:00 a.m. – sunrise is just after 5:30 a.m. and there is light in the sky at 4:30.

Short nights as we approach the Summer Equinox are part of the problem with hot weather now. Sunset is after 9:30 with light in the sky until nearly 11:00 p.m. There is plenty of time for things to heat up in the daytime and not so much time for cooling overnight. We started this morning at 58F.

So … yes, the behemoth A/C unit. It is to be in the low 70’s and even as cool as the upper 60’s by the weekend but we have another 3 days of 90 or near 90 so it was worth the setup.

Mid-winter I bought an Instant Pot electric pressure cooker: Not my Grandma’s pressure cooker. After using it several times and seeing how things went, I got to thinking that I would really appreciate it when it got hot. With the exception of a little steam as it is coming to pressure and a bit of residual heat when cooking is done, there is not a lot of heat generated into the kitchen. This morning, it was already getting warm when I thought about cooking some pasta for pasta salad. I dithered a bit thinking that the pasta would just be mush in the pressure cooker, but finally gave it a try: 1 part pasta, 2 parts salty water, 7 minutes and quick release. The macaroni was perfect: taste and texture. I had a refreshing pasta salad for lunch!

Afternoon outside time – everyone in the shade – too HOT!

Raspberry-Lemon Brioche Sweet Roll

Although, I made the sweet roll on Thursday morning, I saved half for this morning.

And as this Friday morning, the last work day before a three day weekend, started rainy and gray, I was very glad to have a bit of scrumptious sweet to start my day.

I keep portions of brioche dough in the freezer for this kind of sweet roll emergency! Many folks like puff pastry for this kind of roll, but I am not a fan of puff pastry: I like the flavor, but find that puff pastry is SO flaky that I always feel like I end up with more on me than in me.

The brioche dough bakes up with a flaky crumb that holds together. This particular batch is 1/2 white whole wheat plus a bit of pumpkin in the dough for tenderness and some extra nutritional value. The filling is goat cheese, lemon juice, lemon zest and sugar with some raspberries on top of the filling but under the dough, making for yummy bites of goodness that is not too, too messy!

Raspberry-Lemon Brioche Sweet Roll on a rainy morning.

Cream to butter to ghee and a few tasty by-products

So, butter first.

Butter is cream whipped until it separates into butter and buttermilk. It takes little effort. You can do a bit of it in a mason jar and shake by hand. This is a great “science” experiment with kids. Put some cream in a mason jar, put the lid on (tight!!), pass the jar with everyone shaking and pretty soon you have butter swimming in a bit of buttermilk.

I take the 21st century automated approach and use a food processor. It is not that the grocery does not have good butter, but we are fortunate to have a wonderful local dairy that supplies the grocery and since butter (and ghee) is so easy and the dairy does not make either of those, I’ve been making butter and ghee from the local stuff.

And it is fun!

There is actually one step before the cream goes into the food processor. I culture the cream which entails stirring 2 tablespoons of yogurt into the cream and letting it sit in a warm spot for 12-24 hours. The dairy does not make butter but they DO make yogurt – yea!

The food processor process is hands off for butter making: pour the cream in, fire it up and let it run. The cream first becomes “whipped cream” and then a few minutes more and the solid (butter) starts separating from the liquid (buttermilk). You don’t even have to be right there to know it is happening. The sound suddenly changes from a smooth mixing sound to a noisy thwap-thwap-thwap. Those splashes are from the buttermilk.

Pour off the buttermilk…

… and save it!

Next step is “wash the butter”. There is still some buttermilk in the butter, but 4-6 rinses with ice water and…

… Butter!

I let the butter sleep in the frig and make ghee in the morning because the small amount of solids left from making the ghee are wonderful on hot oatmeal.

The ghee making process is simple ( David Lebovitz’s ‘How to make clarified butter’ post ) and not all that photogenic.

But, the ghee – the ghee IS photogenic: beautiful golden ghee. Ghee is clarified butter cooked a bit longer for a deeper flavor and color. Both ghee and clarified butter are naturally shelf stable and they have a much higher smoke point than regular butter.

A quart of cream (32 fluid ounces or 95 ml) yields 1 cup of buttermilk, 8 ounces of ghee and a couple of spoonfuls of butter solids.

So, in my cupboard, is a fresh jar of ghee and with the buttermilk, I made:

Smitten Kitchen’s Carrot-Tahini muffin recipe made into a loaf (1/2 recipe) and also including raisins and walnuts.

Mel’s Kitchen Café Scone recipe . I didn’t have cinnamon chips so subbed orange zest and almond extract with some orange zest in the sugar-butter-topping.

Bear was out for the count and entirely unimpressed with all of this productivity.

Auggie thought we should come outside since the sun was out…

I had another cup of coffee and a scone!

From my kitchen

I’ve been getting acupuncture and massage work about once a month since the beginning of the year. Monte, master acupuncturist and body worker extraordinaire plus a font of knowledge based in Chinese and Eastern practices, encouraged me to try meditation at home. He didn’t actually call it that, he suggested sitting quietly and paying attention to my breath for 5 to 10 minutes. For many years – 20 plus, I have started my day with some quiet time: prayer, stillness, scripture, music – but it is a time of quiet and stillness. So the thought of a meditation focused on my breath was not strange and in fact this is what Monte asks me to do when I rest with the acupuncture. I have been finding the practice to be of value to me in many ways and Monte tells me that my pulse and body are quieter, even when I first arrive after a 40 mile drive!

Walking in the woods with Bear and Auggie is another time of quietness. At least in recent years, I take a moment before heading out the door and consciously leave everything in the house and turn my mind to Bear, Auggie and the feel, sound and look of the woods. My mind sometimes wanders to a coding problem or this or that, but Auggie and Bear and the woods help yank it back to them. I come back to the house refreshed.

I find the same refreshment of mind and body in cooking and working in the kitchen. The nature of using sharp utensils, hot pans and just thinking about what I’m working with becomes a meditation of sorts, or at least tasks that require mindfulness – my full attention. Thoughts of work and life issues are left for the time I spend in the kitchen. I’ve also been thoughtful of how my kitchen looks and works so that it is a joy to me to be there whether it is looking out the window, gathering what is needed for my task or cleaning up. And, like walking in the woods, I am moving. Moving, after a time of sitting – it feels good!

Making bread or crackers or anything involved with working with a dough is especially restful and enjoyable to me … not to mention the anticipation of devouring the fresh made result! About a month ago, I saw information on a bread cookbook that looked interesting:

The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook: Artisanal Baking from around the World . I love this book: beautiful photos, interesting stories of the breads and the people who came together to make and teach about each bread and new recipes to try.

The words below, an excerpt from an author review blurb on Amazon, sum up my feelings about the book in beautiful prose by Peter Reinhart:

“…The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook is more than just a book of great recipes—it is an inspirational collection of life lessons and stories about people who, every day, make a difference while making beautiful bread and great food.” —Peter Reinhart, author of Bread Revolution

The first recipe I tried is the cover recipe for Nan-e Barbari, a crispy Persian bread. This recipe is basically a 100% hydration dough as I typically make, but the uniqueness comes from both the shape and a wash of roomal which is a flour-water-sugar-oil paste. The roomal is an ancient technique which makes for a crisp crust without steam. Modern bakery ovens are steam ovens and create crisp crusts with steam. My own oven is not sealed well enough for steam and typically requires baking in a cast iron dutch oven to achieve the very crisp crust. I have come to really love this technique with roomal and a flat dough AND I’m able to bake it on a cast iron platter in my toaster oven. Total success!

Making the roomal. The flour-water-sugar-oil mix is heated until it becomes thick. And while we are here – THAT is an induction burner. As my current electric range/double oven combo limps along, I’ve been giving thought to what to do if/when it fails. I learned about induction and wanted to give it a try, hence the induction burner. It is like cooking on gas without the flame as the heat is able to be set high or low or off immediately. All works much faster and supposedly with less energy consumption than an electric cooktop. I am sold! (Induction Cooking)

To prepare the dough for baking, I grab a small handful of dough … bigger than a golf ball, smaller than a baseball – and spread it with damp hands on a piece of parchment. Next, spread the roomal over the surface of the dough and sprinkle with seeds – I’ve been using a King Arthur Flour “artisan bread topping” mix of seeds.

Meanwhile, I set my small cast iron platter in the toaster oven and let them preheat to 450F.

The bread bakes on the parchment, on the platter for 12-15 minutes.

Puffy, crispy crust …

An airy crumb – Perfect! I use it cut into crispy “soldiers” alongside salad, soup or anything with a broth to sop up. I also split it lengthwise for a thin, crispy sandwich. It has become my favorite way to bake a bit of bread for my day. With my refrigerator dough, the roomal wash and the fast heating toaster oven, I can go from thinking about this bread to enjoying it in about 30 minutes. 30 minutes of quiet time in the kitchen.

And now …

… it is time for a walk in the woods, with the patiently waiting Bear and Auggie.