Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Thursday, December 07, 2006

helpful Kifli advice

Please dear friends--do not dance to Shakira's "hips don't lie"-when you are sifting flour! I was having so much fun dancing (keeping the top half still while sifting and shaking the bottom half and of course singing at the top of my lungs) that I only put in half the amount of flour. Spaced out totally. Chilled the inadequate dough (still singing and dancing) rolled out the velvety (I did notice it was awfully smooooth) pastry into a circle. Then I cut out the little triangles and filled them with Raspberry. Baked them--they smelled awesome--took them out and saw that I had--well... um-- they didn't look like this.

In fact they kinda looked like a big melted carmel raspberry sneeze. After laughing at myself and in order to prevent the total waste of ingredients-- I lined the bottom of a round dish with the raspberry tiles--then made a custard to soak the whole thing into a bread pudding kinda concept.
It was pretty good. Calder's milk makes for a kick ass custard.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

KIFLI!

Well,gentle reader today is the day. The turkey leftovers are gone (praise Allah).Thus, we have entered The HOLLYDAZE-- and we are getting the tree on Saturday; which means we need to have cookies and cocoa when we get home. And what kind of cookies do we need mes chéris? That's right we need KIFLI!! mmmm, I swear the best thing to come out of Hungary EVER! The most nummy little cookies. Little crescents of buttery love, filled with nuts or jams or poppyseed--oh yummy. Pete's Grandma Olah made sure I had the right recipe and it easily took three years before I could roll them properly. But, now..I am KIFLI QUEEN!! Let the cookies begin!

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Cuppycake Lady



Oh freaky darlings--
There is a new shoppe in KerryTown. Up a bit from the bookstore and Dogma/Catmandoo. She makes cuppycakes--strawbery lemonade cuppycakes,chocolate cuppycakes, carmel cuppycakes...I did about choke at the $12 for six-- but ya know what..they were completely worth it. And she has the coolest freaking purple couch I have ever seen. It is all swoopy and art deco. Posh--that's the word I need--the most posh purple sofa! I want it!

Friday, December 01, 2006

Festive Fun For Free


Oh how absolutely cool! The culinary arts students at Schoolcraft College in Livonia produced a wonderful little village of happy candy houses. They were very creative, pez candies as bricks, golden grahams cereal make great shingles--I was esp. enamoured with the vertical stacks of star cut out cookies to make a fir tree--veddy nice; The whole gingerbread village was really enchanting. It was really quite impressive when you realized that even the streets were slivered almonds. I was surprised at the steady stream of people visiting. We also got to walk down the wing of classrooms where the students were busy at work, they all looked so chipper and cheerful--very unlike Anthony Bourdain's books. Isabel of course was ecstatic pointing out all the little details like flowers in the flower shop window and tiny little cupcakes in the bakery. Zoli had a blast identifying the types of candy. They both would proclaim that "This" was the house they were gonna live in if they ever became tiny little confections--until they saw the next structure. At the risk of sounding banal--It was cute. Damn cute--Go! Be festive!-- it won't hurt.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

The Turkey Derrick


After the Punkin Day false start—we had to veto that adventure on the grounds that: (fire+propane) x alcohol +high winds=BAD IDEA --we finally got to deep fry a turkey in our brand new deep fryer ensemble! We have accomplished fried bird on previous occasions but we always used Jim & Gwen’s fryer kit. Now we have our own! BEAMING w/Pride.

Pete also decided he needed to construct AB’s turkey derrick. Other than realizing that we need a taller ladder and having a little premature turkey ejaculation-- The bird took about 30 minutes to cook fully… not the 20 AB suggested. I had the same problem with the brisket on Punkin Day. It seems that air temperature has more of an influence on outdoor cooking than I would care to admit. At least non-actual fire cooking. Electric smoker took longer, propane burner took longer. I have never had a weather related problem with actual fire—hmmm Science…It’s what’s for dinner.

We also noticed that skipping the center top o'the ladder pulley was perhaps an error on our part. We just ran the rope through a manufactured hole in the top rung (the part where it says DO NOT STEP) which then resulted in a slightly alarming list during the lowering procedure. All in all well worth the fuss.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Izzy's "first" pie



I helped Izzy make her first pie. We used the Queeze to make butter crust. She dropped the butter into the chute. We peeled apples and she gauged how much spice to use. We cooked the apples and brown sugar, I helped her fill it and I actually placed it in the oven as that makes her VERY nervous. She once burned her wrist removing some choc. chip cookies. Despite this very rational hesitation by the oven I would say she did a good 75-80% of this on her own. She was quite proud and it was delish.

Monday, November 20, 2006

sweet tater pancakes

When Gretch & I were down south I tried a new thing--Sweet potato Pancakes. They were fluffy and quite yum-- but being the little foodsnot that I am I couldn't wait to tweak the recipe (which constant reader--you should note--I did not have). The first thing that had to go was the Log Cabin syrup flavored Maple Syrup. I of course needed MICHIGAN PURE Grade A Maple syrup and I thought maybe a little pecan action might be nice. My base recipe for panic cakes and waffles is the back of the bisquick box (course now I often add a little whole wheat flour or just flip over to KRUSTEAZE (tm) whole wheat--but as usual...I digress) My instincts said to take out some moist from the recipe to cover for the sweet tater puree so I left out an egg. Now what was produced was edible, (in fact Zoli edibled three of them)--but the batter was VERY heavy and difficult to flip. Next time I am gonna start from scratch and up the gluten & b.powder quotients--see if we can get fluffier. Does anybody have a tried and true recipe to share??

Friday, November 17, 2006

bloody unitasker



I know Alton says not to buy a gadget that only does one thing. BUT I love cast iron and the concept of cute little corn shaped cornbreads was just too irresistable. SO freaky darlings-- I have this thing. I have used it twice. The first time was a miserable failure. "Self" I said to myself, "Obviously we didn't season this properly." Attempt two went down last night..a little better but the corny muffins still did not just JUMP outta the pan. In an effort to follow my mentor's advice--I preheated the oiled pan in a 425F oven...just like Alton. The results were better but still not camera worthy. Does anybody have one of these things? How do they work? I want to twist it like a ice cube tray, but seems how my femininimum Wonder woman bracelets are at the cleaners--I am kinda at a loss. I need help!

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

I will never pan fry pork chops again

Slow Cooker Pepper Pork Chops
Recipe courtesy Alton Brown, 2006
See this recipe on air Wednesday Nov. 15 at 7:00 PM ET/PT.
Show: Good Eats
Episode: Major Pepper


2 cups vegetable broth
1/2 cup kosher salt
1/2 cup light brown sugar
2 tablespoons black peppercorns, slightly crushed
1 pound ice
4 (1 to 1 1/2-inch thick) bone-in pork chops
2 teaspoons kosher salt
3 ounces dried apple slices
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large onion, julienned
1 1/2 cups chicken broth
1 tablespoon coarsely ground black pepper
1 teaspoon dried thyme
Combine the vegetable broth, 1/2 cup kosher salt, brown sugar and peppercorns in a medium saucepan and set over medium-high heat. Cook just until the salt and sugar dissolve, then remove from the heat and add the ice. Place the pork chops into a 2-gallon zip-top bag along with the mixture and seal. Place in a plastic container and refrigerate overnight.
Remove the chops from the brine, rinse, and pat dry. Season on both sides with the kosher salt and set aside

Place the apples in the slow cooker.

Heat 1 1/2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a 12-inch stainless steel saute pan over medium-high heat. Saute the pork chops on both sides until golden brown, approximately 5 to 6 minutes per side. Once browned, place the pork chops into the slow cooker atop the apples.

Add the remaining 1/2 tablespoon of olive oil to the pan followed by the onions and saute until they begin to brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the chicken broth to the pan to deglaze. Add the black pepper and thyme and stir to combine. Transfer this to the slow cooker, set to high, cover and cook for 1 1/2 hours. Decrease the heat to low and continue cooking for another 4 hours and 30 minutes or until the pork is tender and falling away from the bone.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Turnips & Lutes or return of the bomb

Sometimes things tell me directly--a moment will occur and I will understand that this is a bloggable thing. It maybe an obsessive reaction to a book, a film or a news article. Maybe a new band entered my realm of consciousness and i NEED to SHARE!! Or maybe, a brilliant friend--(a certain Queen of Milwaukee) will mention that she enjoyed a new album... and then as fate would have it another friend stretches to change the background music at her garb workshop and lo and behold I need to be downloading some music! It seems one of my favorite "stingers" has done it again. Songs from the Labyrinth Which should not be confused with David Bowie's wonderful film The Labyrinth which does have a great soundtrack but I digress--of course--isn't that why we are here? Oh freakey darling imagine my knees turning to jelly (I know not a difficult task) when Sting's ubervelvet voice slides around my spine... I do humbly beseech you... SIGH
Okay the new Sting album explains the lutes but I'll bet somebody is wondering why I mentioned turnips--consider a bleu cheese gratin. NEW RECIPE ALERT!! Creamy smooth and tangy all at the same time! I had never eaten turnips before, at least not knowingly, and I had certainly never prepared them; but in honor of clan sisters who actively seek out new veggies I tried this odd little root. It smelled like radishes. I expected it to cook like a tater--hmm not so much-- 1 hour 45 at 375F and they were still crisp. The mouth feel was kinda like jicama. The kids ate them tho Izzy did pronounce them "terrible". Pete loved it but he will eat anything that is accompanied by bleu cheese. yes..you little smutmongers..anything...