Saturday, October 18, 2014

The Food - Picadillo


Picadillo - This happens to be gluten free

I think this might have originally been in the New York Times, but I think I saw it being prepared on the Today show - but I'm not sure. 
It is easy to make and delicious.
When I saw it being made on TV it reminded me of some wonderful tamales we had in Roatan, an island off of Honduras, several years ago.  I think these spices were what the tamales were seasoned with - but the meat in the tamales was chicken. 
I used garlic stuffed green olives and canned, crushed tomatoes.  I used 1/2 lb. of regular chorizo from our local grocery store.  I did not use capers.
"Picadillo is one of the great dishes of the Cuban diaspora: a soft, fragrant stew of ground beef and tomatoes, with raisins added for sweetness and olives for salt. Versions of it exist across the Caribbean and into Latin America. This one combines ground beef with intensely seasoned dried Spanish chorizo in a sofrito of onions, garlic and tomatoes, and scents it with red-wine vinegar, cinnamon and cumin, along with bay leaves and pinches of ground cloves and nutmeg. For the olives you may experiment with fancy and plain, but rigorous testing here suggests the use of pimento-stuffed green olives is the best practice. A scattering of capers would be welcome as well."


4 5
Ingredients

·         2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

·         2 medium-size yellow onions, peeled and chopped

·         2 ounces dried chorizo, diced

·         4 cloves garlic, peeled and minced

·         1 ½ pounds ground beef

·         Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

·         4 ripe tomatoes, chopped, or one 28-ounce can whole tomatoes, drained and crushed

·         2 tablespoons red-wine vinegar

·         1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

·         2 teaspoons ground cumin

·         2 bay leaves

·         Pinch of ground cloves

·         Pinch of nutmeg

·         cup raisins

·         cup pitted stuffed olives.

Preparation

1.     Put the olive oil in a large, heavy pan set over a medium-high flame, and heat until it begins to shimmer. Add onions, chorizo and garlic, stir to combine and cook until the onions have started to soften, approximately 10 minutes.

2.     Add the ground beef, and allow it to brown, crumbling the meat with a fork as it does. Season to taste with salt and black pepper.

3.     Add tomatoes, vinegar, cinnamon, cumin, bay leaves, cloves and nutmeg and stir to combine. Lower the heat, and let the stew simmer, covered, for approximately 30 minutes.

4.     Uncover the pan, and add the raisins and the olives. Allow the stew to cook for another 15 minutes or so, then serve, accompanied by white rice.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

The Food - Two New Noodly Dishes For Fall

Spaghetti with Mushroom and Tomato Sauce

Serves 4
Use a spoon to scrape the dark brown gills from the portobellos.

Ingredients

1 ounce dried mixed Italian mushrooms, rinsed well

  • 1 cup water 

  • 8  ounces pancetta, cut into 1/2-inch pieces

  • 1/2 pound portobello mushrooms (2 large), stems and gills removed and discarded, caps cut into 1/2-inch pieces (about 1 1/2 cups) (see note)

  • 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

  • 4 medium garlic cloves, peeled and sliced thin

  • 1 tablespoon tomato paste

  • 2 teaspoons minced fresh rosemary leaves 

  • 5 whole vine-ripened tomatoes, cut into chunks 

  • Table salt and ground black pepper

  • 1 pound spaghetti

  • Grated Romano, for serving  


Instruction

  1.  Place porcini and water in small heat-safe bowl; cover with 1 cup boiling water.   Let stand until mushrooms soften, about 10 minutes. Lift mushrooms from water with fork and finely chop. Strain water through fine-mesh strainer lined with large coffee filter into medium bowl. Set aside mushrooms and water.
    2. Heat pancetta in 12-inch skillet over medium heat; cook, stirring occasionally, until rendered and crisp, 7 to 10 minutes. Add portobellos, chopped porcini, olive oil, garlic, tomato paste, and rosemary; cook, stirring occasionally, until all liquid has evaporated and tomato paste starts to brown, 5 to 7 minutes. Add reserved mushroom water, crushed tomatoes, and their juices; increase heat to high and bring to simmer. Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer until thickened, 15 to 20 minutes. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
    3. While sauce simmers, bring 4 quarts water to boil in large Dutch oven. Add 1 tablespoon salt and pasta; cook until al dente. Drain pasta, reserving ½ cup cooking water, and return to pot. Add sauce to pasta and toss to combine. Adjust consistency with reserved pasta water and season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve, passing Pecorino separately.


The above recipe came from America's Test Kitchen, but I made a few minor changes to accommodate my ingredients and methods.  It is absolutely delicious!  It is a great way to showcase great fresh tomatoes as well as fall mushrooms. 




Thai-Style Stir-Fried Noodles with Pork and Broccolini

Serves 4

The flat pad thai–style rice noodles that are used in this recipe can be found in the Asian foods section of most supermarkets. If you can’t find broccolini, you can substitute an equal amount of conventional broccoli, but be sure to trim and peel the stalks before cutting.

Ingredients

  • Chile Vinegar
  • 1/3 cup rice vinegar
  • 1 serrano chile, stemmed and sliced into thin rings
  • Stir-Fry
  • 2 (6-ounce) boneless pork chops 
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 8 ounces (1/4-inch-wide) rice noodles
  • 1/4 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/4 cup oyster sauce
  • 1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 tablespoon white vinegar
  • 2  teaspoon molasses
  • 1 teaspoon fish sauce
  • 3 garlic cloves, sliced thin
  • 3 large eggs
  • 10 ounces broccolini, florets cut into 1-inch pieces, stalks cut on bias into 1/2-inch pieces (5 cups)

Instructions

  1. FOR THE CHILE VINEGAR: Combine vinegar and serrano in bowl. Let stand at room temperature for at least 15 minutes.2. FOR THE STIR-FRY: Combine chicken with 2 tablespoons water and baking soda in bowl. Let sit at room temperature for 15 minutes. Rinse chicken in cold water and drain well.
    3. Bring 6 cups water to boil. Place noodles in large bowl. Pour boiling water over noodles. Stir, then soak until noodles are almost tender, about 8 minutes, stirring once halfway through soak. Drain and rinse with cold water. Drain well and toss with 2 teaspoons oil.
    4. Whisk oyster sauce, soy sauce, sugar, vinegar, molasses, and fish sauce together in bowl.
    5. Heat 2 teaspoons oil and garlic in 12-inch nonstick skillet over high heat, stirring occasionally, until garlic is deep golden brown, 1 to 2 minutes. Add chicken and 2 tablespoons sauce mixture, toss to coat, and spread chicken into even layer. Cook, without stirring, until chicken begins to brown, 1 to 1½ minutes. Using tongs, flip chicken and cook, without stirring, until second side begins to brown, 1 to 1½ minutes. Push chicken to 1 side of skillet. Add 2 teaspoons oil to cleared side of skillet. Add eggs to clearing. Using rubber spatula, stir eggs gently and cook until set but still wet. Stir eggs into chicken and continue to cook, breaking up large pieces of egg, until eggs are fully cooked, 30 to 60 seconds. Transfer chicken mixture to bowl.
    6. Heat 2 teaspoons oil in now-empty skillet until smoking. Add broccolini and 2 tablespoons sauce and toss to coat. Cover skillet and cook for 2 minutes, stirring once halfway through cooking. Remove lid and continue to cook until broccolini is crisp and very brown in spots, 2 to 3 minutes, stirring once halfway through cooking. Transfer broccolini to bowl with chicken mixture.
    7. Heat 2 teaspoons oil in now-empty skillet until smoking. Add half of noodles and 2 tablespoons sauce and toss to coat. Cook until noodles are starting to brown in spots, about 2 minutes, stirring halfway through cooking. Transfer noodles to bowl with chicken mixture. Repeat with remaining 2 teaspoons oil, noodles, and sauce. When second batch of noodles is cooked, add contents of bowl back to skillet and toss to combine. Cook, without stirring, until everything is warmed through, 1 to 1½ minutes. Transfer to platter and serve immediately, passing chile vinegar separately.

This recipe is also from America's Test Kitchen, and is a super way to use fresh broccolini from the garden.  I changed a couple of ingredients to use what I had on hand. 



 

Sunday, September 28, 2014

The Food - Breakfast Today

Mexican Crustless Quiche with Tomatillos and Fire-Roasted Chilies: chipotle sausages and applesauce

The Quiche

Ingredients

olive oil
1/2 cup diced red onion
3/4 cup diced tomatillos
1 fire-roasted medium chili
5 duck eggs (6 chicken large eggs will work)
1/4 cup top goat milk (cows milk half and half will work)
grated Mexican cheese mixture (optional)
salt to taste

Sauté the onion in several tablespoons of olive oil until it begins to wilt.
Add the diced tomatillos. 
Add salt to taste and continue to sauté on low heat until the onions are golden and the tomatillos have softened.
Add the chili and toss over low heat until warmed through.
Set aside.
Whisk the eggs and the milk in a deep dish Pyrex pie pan.
Salt to taste.
Stir in the vegetable mixture.
Microwave on high for 2 minutes.
Stir.
Continue microwaving on high for 3 more minutes.
Add grated cheeses (optional).
Microwave for an additional minute or until the cheese has melted.
Slice as you would a pie and serve.

You can also do the cheese part under the broiler if you want browned, melted cheeses.  That is my favorite, but some members of the family do not like melted cheese, so we do it by the slice at our house. 

The Sausages

Ingredients

ground pork
chipotle seasoning
ground sage
salt

For every pound of ground pork add a teaspoon each of salt, chipotle seasoning and sage. 
Mix with your hands until well blended.
Form into patties.
Fry until done: 20 - 30 minutes depending on your altitude.

The Applesauce

Ingredients

Jonathan Apples, cored, peeled, and cut into 1/8ths
Water

Put the apples in a saucepan with enough water to keep from scorching.
 (This will vary with your climate and altitude.  I need the pan about half full of water after the apples are in the pan.)
Simmer until the desired consistency
(We like ours firm and chunky, which at our altitude takes about a half an hour)

We had the quiche and the sausages hot and the applesauce cold, this morning, which seemed a nice blend.

Sorry I forgot to take a picture ...




Thursday, August 21, 2014

The Art/Writing - More Skies

 

More Skies

 
 
 
 
 
 
Approaching Storm
 
 
 

Storm Moving East
 
 

Summer Sunrise
 
 

Clearing After a Storm
 
 

Sunset Through the Trees
 
 

Sunset Looking West
 
 

Sunset Over Lake Lillabondgard
 
 

Sun Setting Behind a Tree

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

The Art/Writing - Sky Scapes

Sky Scapes

These are still unaltered - as the computer generated them. I never tire of looking at the sky out here. 
 
 
Big Sky 1
 
 
 

Big Sky 2
 
 

Big Sky 3
 
 
 
 

Big Sky 4
 
 
 
 

Storm
 
 
 
 

Storm Coming 1
 
 
 
 

Storm Coming 2
 
 
 
 

Sunset in the West

The Art/Writing: Watercolor Beginnings

Watercolor Beginnings


I have been searching for a way to start painting again. I still need to clear out the studio to make it truly functional. But that has been less of a stumbling block than my not knowing where to start with the work.  My dear friend, Linda, who has nudged and cajoled me into this blog and into a writers group, also told me about a free app for my iPad that turns photographs into images that look like watercolors. I was skeptical - very skeptical. 

But it turns out that most of the photographs I take are the beginnings of watercolors, anyway.  It's the way my brain works and my eye sees.  And this app, while generalizing and inflexible compared to actual watercolors, is fast, and it lets me lay the ground work for thinking about the watercolors without actually having to take all the considerable time of laying them in by  hand.

Below are the first landscapes.  I am experimenting with printing them on different papers so that I can work back in to them with real watercolor, gouache, and/or colored pencil. 


Moonrise Over the Bijou

Sunrise
 

Sunrise 2



Sunrise Over the Bijou

Sunday, February 9, 2014

The Animals - Jasper's Mice and Other Diversions

Jasper's Mice and Other Diversions


 .
Jasper has had a mid-life crisis of some kind.  For one thing, early last fall, he stopped eating all of the mice he caught.  Well, he ate some of all of them, but he no longer ate all of all of them.  I think he decided we were taking him for granted, that we didn't know how many mice he caught each night; how much he was helping us out.  And he was right.  We didn't know.

I got some idea a few years back when I had a bout of stomach flu and took up sleeping in the guest room because it was near the bathroom.  I was so sick I didn't know if I was coming or going, so to speak.   Jasper was keeping an eye on me, though.  When I had been sleeping fitfully for a few hours and got up to run to the bathroom once again... I looked down on the rug next to the bed for my slippers and there, lined up like little dead soldiers, were three fat little mice ready for me to have to settle my tummy.  I thanked him weakly and took them and flushed them.  I always hoped he didn't see me.  But if he could come up with three mice in the space of as many hours for me, how many must he be wolfing down on his own every month?
About the same time as his taste in mice changed, he started yowling to go outside.  YOWLING!  And this from a cat who for the past five years (all of his life with us) was afraid to look outside if the door was opened.  So we let him out.  At first he would crawl on his belly like a snake and circumnavigate the house close to the foundation.  He would go out the back door and then want to come right back in the front door.  This went on for a few days, maybe a week.  And then he got braver.  He started venturing further from the house.  He began exploring - everywhere.  He made friends with the barn cats (all guys).   He started hanging out with them and eating, just a little, of their food when we fed them at night.  Just to show he was one of the guys, I guess. 
Now he lives in both worlds.  He didn't go  out in the extreme cold, but most days he patrols outside and inside.  It was very interesting watching him confront his fears and overcome them, one  by one.  I have new respect for him.  And he hasn't left a mouse for me to clean up for months.  He must have gotten his appetite back!



(For now my blogger won't let me post his picture ... maybe later)