If you are lucky enough to have a smoked turkey carcass lying around (or in our case friends who had one and didn't know what to do with it), you can make a terrific green pea soup with it. Just make sure that there is some meat on the carcass too.
Monday, December 27, 2021
Smoked turkey and green pea soup
Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Avocado ginger coconut soup
This is a recipe based on this month's Fine Cooking magazine. The result was very good, but I used too much lime juice, so it got the "We can serve this to people if you reduce the lime juice" accolade from Madame. The texture is very thick and creamy. It is best served cold - after being in the fridge overnight.
We had it for dinner one evening, and then I had it for lunch the next day - where I tweaked it to tne down the lime juice. The tweaks will be in the description at the end, not in the main recipe
Ingredients
Method
The Promised Tweaks
Thursday, February 11, 2021
Gougere Sandwiches
These are 2 words that don't often go together. We had a Covid-19 post vaccination celebration recently. The eppaetiver dish were small gougeres (about 2" in diameter). Gougeres are choux paste, cheesey puffs that are a dish from Burgundy. And, by the way, they go really well with white wines from the region.
I had made around 20 of these little delights, so of course there were left overs. Knowing that they go stale quickly, it became quite a dilemma as to what to do. And then it occurred to me, that they would make great sandwiches - small bites, obviously. But nonetheless, open them up, put some filling in them, reheat in the microwave for 15 seconds (if you want them warm), and voila, delicious sandwiches. - albeit small, so one has to eat a few.
Ingredients - Gougere
Method - Gougere
Sandwiches
Monday, February 1, 2021
Sous-Vide-Que
I didn't make up this term. It really is a thing. I figured it would be fun to try. I really like BBQ, especially the king if Texas BBQ, brisket. I am used to starting briskets late at night, leaving them in the smoker for 12-15 hours depending on size, thickness, etc. I am able to keep te smoking going because I use a Primo, the US brand of kamado style "grill". So proper BBQ pitmasters will look down their noses at a charcoal based, wood enhanced smoking apparatus, I can produce pretty decent BBQ quite consistently - without having yet another piece of equipment.
But I digree.
The Sous-Vide-Que technique changes the norms considerably. First off, the initial cooking is done low and slow sous-vide in a water bath.
the fat seam is not fully rendeerd. Cleary 150f was too low a temperature. Next time I will multi-temp the circulator. 115 for the first 12 hours and 165 for the remaining 12 hours. Shorter time, higher temperature. The lower temperature is the tenderizing temperature; the higher temperature is the "cooking" temperature.
The other downside for me is that I can't do a whole brisket. So I have to do it it in 2 passes. First the flat and then the point. Surprisingly the flat came out better - but that was, I suspect, because it has less fat in seams inside, so didn't need as much rendering.
Is this recognisable as Texas BBQ? No, not really. Is it good? Yes, but could be a lot better.
Ingredients
Method - Part 1, Sous Vide
Method - Part 2, Smoking
Tuesday, November 24, 2020
Arnabeet (Lebanese "Fried" Cauliflower)
We had this at a Lebanese themed dinner last week. It was so good that we just had to recreate it. Instead of frying it, we did it in the oven - a rocking hot oven at that.
The home version was (almost) as good as the version we had out. In this posting, I am going to describe what we did, and where we might make an adjustment.
Ingredients
Method
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Leftover Chuck
In this previous post, I described cooking a piece of beef chuck sous vide. We of course ended up with more than we could eat at a single sitting. So what to do next? I could consigne it to freezer bags, freeze it so that it could be dumped three years later, or better still could find creative uses for it.
It became a voyage of discovery with a really good outcome. The other key idea is that if you have hot potatoes, you can dress withem with a flavorfull vinaigrette style dressing, the potatoes absorb the dressing and become really flavorfull. So why not do it with carrots too?
Ingredients
Method
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Beef Chuck Sous Vide
Our local meat market had a terrific deal on beef chuck again. This time I wanted to do something a bit different, so decided to use the circulator and cook it sous vide. Whenn cooked for long enough it becomes really tender, and because it has such good, beefy flavor, it ends up delicious. Served with a slightly sweet pan sauce, redolent with shallots and mushrooms, we had a major hit on our hands. The surprise ingredient here was creme de cassis - the French liqueur that is added to white wine to make a kir.
Ingredients
Method
Serving
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
Potstickers
This started innocently enough. I had dinner at a Chinese dumpling house with my friend Dave Gilbert instead of watching the "Presidential" debate. I was left with a hankering for some more. I like them so much. And my favorites are steam fried
As it happened, Madame had found an amazing deal on pork chops - we had some pan fried with an onion/apple side, another time we had some with a smoked paprika dusting - again pan fried but with apple, green beans, almonds garlic on the side. And still we had some left over - about 12 oz as it turned out.
I had also made a very hearty beef stew for a friend who is very ill. So had a chunk of salt pork too. Now all I needed were the wonton (gyoza) skins, kaffir lime, lemon grass, Napa cabbage, hot peppers, soy sauce, sesame oil, sake, ginger, and scallions As it happens all that I had to buy were the skins, scallions and the Napa cabbage. Everything else either grows in the garden or is a pantry staple.
Now I am generally lazy, so I was looking for a way to get everything to the size I wanted. The meat grinder (mincer) attachment to my stand mixer did the trick. Who knew that you could put the various ingredients in, and let it do the work?
Ingredients
Method
Ingredients - Dipping Sauce
Method - Dipping Sauce
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Ginger Glazed Carrots
This is a kind of hybrid dish. Glazed carrots can be pretty good (as long as they aren't overly sweet). Ginger goes well with carrots too. So why not use crystallized ginger as the sweetening base for glazed carrots? So we did.
Ingredients
Method
Chicken Sheet Pan Dinner
We have been doing a lot of virtual wine tastings of late. Each of them takes about an hour, so our standard format is to have some nibbles while the virtual tasting is underway, and leave something unattended in the oven during the tasting itself. Because the duration of the tasting can vary - they are usually an hour, but they have been known to overrun, we want to make sure that the main dish can tolerate a bit longer in the oven than would be ideal.
Also, we don't want a mountain of dishes. It's bad enough having 4 wineglasses per person. Often the tasting will have at least one white or rose wine, and some reds. So, the dish must be versatile enough for that too. Enter chicken legs (thighs and drumsticks).
Ingredients
Method
Monday, September 7, 2020
Provencal onion tart
For a virtual wine event a week or so ago, I made several Provencal inspired dishes. The first was the tapenade that I referenced in previous post. This one is for an onion tart - made with an insane amount of onions. It ends up being a bit focaccia like.
Ingredients (The Dough)
Ingredients (Onion Mixture, and Assembly))
Method (The dough)
Method (Onion Mixture)
Method (Assembly and Cooking)
Monday, August 31, 2020
Tapenade
Classic tapenade isn't just about the olives. Capers play a major role too. The name comes from the Provencal word for capers (tapenas). In the version that I make, the capers get equal billing with the olives. That makes for a tarter version than we often see. But it works pretty well.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Gazpacho
Ingredients - these don't need to be terribly precise
Serving
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Pineapple and Ancho marinade and sauce
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, May 10, 2020
When in Texas Make Salsa
I have clearly become acclimatised to Texas - my first thought was a salsa - perhaps to go on corn chips. After all we had some pasilla and ancho chili pepeppers lying around. They are both dries peppers, so needed to be toasted and then rehydrated. Some chipotle, cumin, garlic and the loquats and we might be onto something.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, May 3, 2020
FauxFu
We were watching a cooking show and she idly said, what else could we use in this porl/miso soup - instead of the dreaded tofu. Well, we had some edd whites lying around, so I thought put them in icecibe trays and microwave them. So I did, and FauxFu was born.
She loved them.
Ingredients
Method
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Tomato and Mozz Skewers
Ingredients
Method
Friday, April 24, 2020
Sourdough and Buttermilk biscuits.
Looking at the discard, it is about the texture of buttermilk. And it has some tanginess to it too. So, why not try a little substitution. We did, and it got the "we can serve this to people: accolade from Madame, so I knew we were onto something here.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, April 12, 2020
Sourdough Crackers
In the land of sourdough bread baking, we often find ourselves with excess starter. Because as we feed our starters, they increase in bulk. If we kep doing it proportionally we would end up with a starter that would take over the neighborhood. So the vexing question of what to do with the excess came up. This is a baking case where measuring by volume is perfectly OK. So it is really quick and easy to do.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Coronagroni
Ingredients
Sunday, March 1, 2020
OTBN 2020
We have a pretty standardized format, although the attendees vary from year to year. Last night there were 11 of us in total. And there were 8 different wines.The lineup can be seen at this link OTBN 2020 Wine Line Up.
Our format is simple. Each "party" - solo or couple brings a wine that is special to them, and a dish to pair with it. We sequence the dishes so that we drink the wines in the right order. We also start with bubbles (this year the cremant de Bourgogne whose bottles are on the ends of the picture. With that we had some cheese straws, prosciutto wrapped asparagus, and goat cheese stuffed piquillos.
Once the event gets under way, we request that guest(s) who brought the next wine in sequence tells us about the wine and the dish. Then we try it, talk about it and generally carry-on. Thus for the 8 wines, there were 7 different dishes (some over achievers brought more than 1 dish.)
First Tasting
Second Tasting
Third Tasting
Fourth Tasting
Fifth Tasting
Sixth Tasting
Seventh (and final) Tasting
Sunday, February 9, 2020
Tonic water
Ingredients
Method
Cheese Straws
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, February 2, 2020
The easiest cheese souffle
Ingredients
Method
Thank you M. Pepin for all you do.
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Blood Orange Cake
To further cement the choice, we were at a local business walkabout last Saturday and came across an olive oil store called 1899. It's in Deep Ellum, in Dallas. There they had a blood orange infused olive oil. So all the auguries were in the right place for an experiment. Fortunately these are good friends and experimentation is encouraged.
Madame pronounced that "we can serve this to people", so we know that it was good!
Ingredients
Method - Cake
Method - Sauce
Method - Serving
Sunday, December 1, 2019
Buttermilk pie
This year, we were with some other friends and again, I took a buttermilk pie, and again it was very well received. So, with thanks to Stella Parks (aka Bravetart) and Debbie Lang-Caldwell here's what I did.
Of course, I made the crust - but I could have bought one. I so like the easy crust that Bravetart has in her book and here. I strongly recommend that you go the serious eats site and follow her recipe and technique.
I also did something a little unconventional - I didn't fully blind bake the crust. I gave it a start, but knowing how long the pie would bake, I didn't want to risk the edges of the crust burning. The filling recipe (below) calls for an unbaked crust, but that did leave a bit of a soggy bottom. And we all know that soggy bottoms are quite undesirable. So I compromised and blind baked the crust for 20 minutes.
And most approaches don't call for browned butter, but I have recently found that browning the butter first adds some extra flavor depth.
Ingredients - Filling
Method
Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Trying Eggs in the Circulator
This dish was intended to show off the technique, and to make the eggs an integral part of a light supper.
Ingredients (For 2 people)
Method
Sunday, September 29, 2019
pita
Note, there is no reason to use active dry yeast in particular. It's what I use because I use a lot and can buy it by the jar. Of course if you are using active dry yeast, make sure to wake it up in water with a little sugar.
The sugar in this recipe is indepenent of the yeast. It helps browning a bit and brings out the nuttiness in the wholewheat dough.
Ingredients (6 pitas)
400 g AP Flour100 g whole wheat flour
8 g salt (1.6% - bakers percentage)
12 g white granulated sugar (2.4% - bakers percentage)
333 g warmish water (about 90F) (66.6% - bakers percentage)
5 g active dry yeast (1% - baker's percentage)
30g extra virgin olive oil (6% - baker's percentage).
Method
Wednesday, September 25, 2019
Killer Brownies - Thanks Bravetart
Since then I have tweaked a couple of things - I almost can't cook without our "secret ingredient" aka vodka infused with hot peppers. So of course some of that went into the mixture. Because the recipes are so precise, I was worried about the liquid balance. But no need to worry.
The most recent batch was a command performance from Madame. She wanted to reward her amazing students for all of their hard work. We also took a batch to the dentist - perhaps for the dental team to drum up business? And finally I took some into work for an early meeting. Bottom line, all recipients gobbled them up.
Anyhow, to the business end of this recipe.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Chicken with grapes, garlic, vermouth and tarragon
- Small number of ingredients
- 1 pot
- oven does most of the work so no need to monitor closely
For 4 people I cook 6 chicken pieces. The downside os that you need a very large saute pan or skillet. And the pan must be ovenproof.
Ingredients
Method
Saturday, September 14, 2019
Tomatoes, mushrooms, charred romaine - oh my!
Ingredients
Method
Monday, July 15, 2019
Testing creativity
Looking in the fridge, I found some pepitas, shallots, sesame oil, soy sauce. And then there was sherry in the wine cellar. So it was off the stove.
Madame pronounced it, "We can serve this to people", so I guess it turned out OK.
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, April 21, 2019
Spring time pea soup - chilled
I had never seen the technique of simmering the lemon peel in water a couple of times to remove some bitterness.
The soup itself was silky smooth and delicious. Yes it did get the "We can serve this to people" accolade. Just as well because we did!
Ingredients
Method
Serving
Update April 8, 2023
Monday, March 18, 2019
Confit tomatoes
Ingredients
Method
Sunday, February 24, 2019
12 minutes 5 ingredients one pot
I needed a dish that would cook quickly and easily for a dinner event at home. I wanted something that paired with a very nice Condrieu (the L'Enfer that we bought at Veritas in Dallas).
Condrieu is a Northern Rhone wine made entirely from Viognier. It pairs nicely with fish, but has enough body to stand up to bold flavors too. The recipe is adapted from a Jamie Oliver recipe that uses firm white fish. We used scallops instead - sourced from the always excellent TJ's Fish Market in Dallas.
Ingredients (US measures)
Method
Monday, February 11, 2019
Candied bacon
It started innocently enough. We had been at a party on Saturday evening where someone had made this amazing candied bacon. I had never had candied bacon, so became intrigued. Wondering how to make something so delicious.
It didn't take much fiddling to hit upon a tasty recipe. It could have used a bit more heat (it had a little habanero chili vodka in it - it could have used more. It clearly needed a little acid too, so I used rice wine vinegar, but I suspect that apple cider vinegar might have been nice too.
It was pronounced good by those who tried it, so I must have done something right.











