Monthly Archives: February 2012

Asparagus Pesto on Pappardalle Pasta – Recipe and a Webseries

Jodie (my wife and the food photographer for this blog) and I needed to take some promotional shots for our upcoming webseries, Pairings, a few weeks ago.

The concept was to get across the message, “Cooks are sexier.”

To sell the idea, we shot me looking awkward (easy to do) and alone. Then, when I had a delicious looking plate of food, I would be surrounded by women.

So I needed to make a plate of food that would pop on camera and would look delicious at room temperature. (Also, we planned on feeding our volunteer help afterwards, so I wanted to make sure it tasted great too.) 

I immediately thought of Lemon Pepper Pappardalle. I’ve used it a few times in recipes for the blog and I’m always impressed with how it looks on camera. I wanted the Pappardalle to be featured. So I wanted a fairly simple sauce that complimented the look of the pasta. I liked the idea of pesto sauce, but wanted something that looked more gourmet and complex. That is when I remembered a pesto pasta salad I made for the Renal Support Network that got rave reviews. I used asparagus as a renal friendly vegetable to create the pesto.

If the concept of our webseries sounds like something you would like to watch, please pledge to our Kickstarter fundraising page. With all the fans we get reading this page, $5 per person will help us reach our goal. We only have 2 days left.

Also, please submit to the Pairings Recipe Contest to get your recipe featured on our show. We’ll post the recipe on our site, and promote your business, blog, or site to our fans. We anticipate views in the thousands per episode. (This is based off other webseries that other members of our team have created in the past.)

Asparagus Pesto

1 bunch of asparagus (10 to 20 asparagus)

¼ cup almonds or pine nuts (almonds are cheaper)

¼ cup grated parmesan cheese

½ cup olive oil

1 Tablespoon lemon juice

3 to 6 cloves of garlic, halved or quartered

salt and pepper

Your favorite pasta, prepared according to the package

Red pepper flakes (optional)

  1. Bring a pot of water to a boil. Drop asparagus into the pot and let cook for 30 seconds to minute just to blanche. Drain immediately.
  2. Cut the bottom three quarters from the asparagus and set the tops aside. Combine the bottom of the asparagus with the nuts, parmesan, olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, salt and pepper in a food processor and puree.
  3. Slice the tops of the asparagus diagonally very thinly. Toss the pasta, pesto and asparagus tips together. Sprinkle with red pepper flakes for a kick if desired.

Mardi Gras Dinner – Jambalaya

There are some people who, when they find out your profession, need to ask you the ‘favorite’ question. When I used to tell people I was an actor that question always was, “who’s your favorite actor?” Now that I more commonly answer that question by telling people I am chef I thought I had heard the last of the ‘favorite’ question. But, alas, I was wrong. One of the first times I identified myself as a cook instead of an actor, the almost immediate response was, “Really? What’s your favorite ingredient?”

It’s not that I am against favorites. Favorites are fine. They’re good even. But I was totally caught off guard by the ‘favorite ingredient’ question. Which why I was surprised that I had an answer.

I shrugged and I told him, “probably rice.”

He seemed shocked. “Rice? Not truffles or saffron or a particular hot sauce? Why rice?”

And I told him. I said that I loved rice’s versatility and affordability. Think about it. Every major culinary culture has their own signature rice dish. Italy makes risotto, China makes fried rice, Spain makes Paella, Thailand even makes mango sticky rice as a dessert! The list goes on and on and on… And, of course, New Orleans has jambalaya.

I make jambalaya throughout the year, but I always make a point to have it on Mardi Gras. Rice cooked in onions, garlic and bell pepper with shredded chicken, andoullie sausage, and shrimp is just plain decadent. And it is always a hit. I served this to my father in law once, and after inconspicuously finishing his third helping, simply told me, “yeah, you could make that again.”

I’ve always loved the Mardi Gras holiday. It is just such a cool idea for a holiday. I have yet to go to New Orleans on Mardi Gras, but I desperately want to some day.

This is a hard dish to pair with wine because it is a little spicy and has so much flavor. Perhaps a Riesling or a rose Syrah. I also think a good pale ale or IPA would pair nicely as well. Of course you could just go full out Mardi Gras and make yourself a couple of Hurricanes.

Follow it up with our Bread Pudding with a Rum Butter Sauce and you’ll be eating just like they will be in the Bayou.

Jambalaya

Since jambalaya is kind of a ‘leftovers’ meal, it can be made with a veriety of ingredients. I have tried to account for how to alter the recipe depending on what you find in your fridge or on sale at the grocery store.

4 boneless skinless chicken breasts (or bone-in thighs)

½ pound andouille sausage (chorizo, linguica, or other spicy sausage may be substituted)

salt and pepper to taste

5 Tbsp vegetable or olive oil

1 medium onion, chopped

1 red pepper, chopped

5 garlic cloves, minced or pressed

1 ½ cups white rice, uncooked

2 Tbsp tomato paste

2 fresh tomatoes, chopped

½ cup dry white wine

About 2 ½ cups chicken broth

1 pound shrimp, deveined and shelled

2 Tbsp fresh parsley (dried basil or parsley may be substituted)

red pepper flakes to taste, optional

  1. Heat 2 Tbsp of oil in a large deep pan or skillet over medium-high heat until just smoking.
  2. Lay the chicken breasts and/or thighs in the pan and cook until golden, about 4 minutes per side.
  3. If there is room add the sausage to the pan. Cook the sausage through if raw. If pre-cooked, lightly brown sausage. This may be done after cooking the chicken if there is not enough room in the pan or skillet.
  4. Remove the pan from the heat and transfer the chicken and sausage to a plate.  Cut sausages in half lengthwise and then into ¼ inch pieces.
  5. If needed, add the remaining 3 tbsp oil to the pan or skillet and return to medium heat until shimmering. Add the onion, bell pepper, garlic, and 1/2 tsp salt; cook, scraping the browned bits off the bottom of the skillet, until the onion is softened, about 5 minutes.  You may also add the optional red pepper flakes for a rounder taste
  6. Add the rice and cook until the edges turn translucent, about 3 minutes.
  7. Add wine and cook until absorbed.
  8. Stir in the tomatoes and tomato paste. Simmer for 1 minute for flavors to develop, stirring constantly.
  9. Add chicken broth; bring to a simmer. Nestle the chicken back into the rice. Cover, reduce the heat to low, and cook until the chicken is tender and cooked through, 30 to 35 minutes.
  10. Transfer the chicken to a plate and cover with foil to keep warm.
  11. Stir the shrimp and sausage into the rice and continue to cook, covered, over low heat for 2 more minutes. Add extra broth, if needed.
  12. Remove the skillet from the heat and let stand, covered, until the shrimp are fully cooked and the rice is tender, about 5 minutes.
  13. Meanwhile, shred the chicken using two forks. Stir the parsley and shredded chicken into the rice and season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve immediately.

Bread Pudding

Stale dense bread such as leftover bagels or beer bread works best but any bread will do. This is my go to dessert when I have a bunch of leftover bagels that are too stale to eat, the best are cinnamon raison bagels.

4-5 stale bagels or 6-7 slices of regular bread

3 eggs

4 cups milk

1 cup granulated sugar

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

2 tablespoons of cinnamon

1 stick butter

  1. Spray or butter up a 9×13 inch pan and pre-heat oven to 375 degrees. (Every thing for the bread pudding can be put together an refrigerated up to 12 hours before baking)
  2. Tear up bread in large pieces and place in greased baking dish. (you may need a knife if the bread is particularly stale)
  3. In a bowl, combine egg, milk, sugar, vanilla, and 1 tablespoon of cinnamon. Mix until eggs are beat and sugar has dissolved.
  4. Pour liquid mixture over bread pieces. If the bread is quite stale let the mixture sit for an hour or so to soften up the bread.
  5. Just before baking sprinkle 1 tablespoon (or more if you’d like) on the top of the soaked bread and cut the stick of butter into several pats, place the pats of butter all over the top.
  6. Bake for 1 hour.
  7. It should be huge and puffy when removed from oven. It will shrink immediately out of the oven. Let stand for 20 minutes.
  8. Cut, drizzle with butter rum sauce (recipe to follow) and serve.

Butter Rum Sauce

1 stick butter

1 1/2 cups powdered sugar

1 tablespoon rum

1/4 cup milk

  1. Melt butter in a small sauce pan.
  2. Add powdered sugar and rum, stir quickly with a whisk.
  3. When the sauce becomes thick add milk and stir some more.
  4. Let cook for 5 minutes, remove from heat and let sit before serving.


Stout Braised Lamb Shanks

I’m afraid I got so busy this week I almost forgot to post a new blog. Please enjoy one of my favorite past blogs. Weekly blog will be back next Thursday, Feb. 16th: Asparagus Lemon Pesto.

As I noticed recently while writing my weblog on Chicken Marsala, I have written 6 Italian recipes and 0 French recipes. While, I’ve tried defending myself by pointing out that this is a budget blog specializing in cooking meals for under 5 dollars a head, not all of French cuisine is foie gras and escargot. In fact, I think most of the really great French cuisine is elevated peasant food: Coq au Vin, Beef Bourguignon, ratatouille, and crepes.

So, it is a bit of a travesty that I have been blogging for a half a year now, and not posted one French dish. I mean, let’s face it, France really is the father of modern dining. With that in mind I have decided to post a French-inspired recipe of my favorite meat of all time: lamb. (Say it with me now, with your best Homer Simpson impression, mmm…Lamb.)

Lamb is a lovely meat. Depending on the cut it can be seared rare, roasted, or slow cooked. I love them all. It’s not the cheapest meat of all time, though unless you live in Australia (where it is cheaper than chicken, I swear.) The shanks (the leg meat) is affordable when you are lucky enough to find it. I am not sure why most grocery stores only carry it about half of the time, but whenever you do find it, is one of the cheapest cuts of lamb.

I remember the first time I bought lamb shanks, I had no idea what I was buying. I was living in Australia with Jodie at the time, and, like I said, lamb was dirt cheap. I had made lamb many ways while we were there. This was when I was very young and had very little experience cooking, mind you. So, I bought two lamb shanks took them home, and promptly seared them rare in a skillet. If you know anything about shank meat, it takes hours for the connective tissue to break down and become the tender amazing flesh we are used to having. Otherwise you are trying to chew on what amounts to gristle. Let’s just say that pizzas were ordered that night.

This is why the French invented braising. Braising is when you take a tough piece of meat full of fat and connective tissues and cook it long and slow until it melts into the meat and creates a tender, buttery sensation in your mouth that English doesn’t have proper words to describe. Peasants often used this method because these cuts of the meat were not considered as desirable to the upper class (who were clearly lazy and dumb.)

Now, if you have been reading my blog, I hope you have noticed that I like to take very traditional foods of any culture and give them my own modern  twist. The same is true with my lamb shank.

In France it is traditional to braise your shank with Burgandy wine. (That is there way of saying Pinot Noir, basically…more on that another time.) While I like cooking in wine…I love cooking in beer. So, I replaced the wine with a dark porter or stout. (Such as Guinness or Murphy’s.) Don’t worry, wine fanatics, the resulting shanks will still pair very well with a Pinot Noir. I would recommend Cambria if you can spring for it. Of course, it also pairs perfectly well with whatever beer you cooked it in. I like to serve it with the coarsely chopped vegetables I cooked the lamb in over cous cous. One of my favorite meals I know how to make. Divine. (While I travelled in Europe, my favorite food was Italian in general, but the best meal I had was in France. It is similar in my own kitchen. I prefer Italian, but some of my absolute favorite recipes are French.)

Stout Braised Lamb Shanks

1 Tbsp vegetable oil

4 lamb shanks

flour for dredging

2 leeks, halved lengthwise and chopped 1/4” thick

6 cloves garlic, halved or quartered

2 carrots, chopped ½“ thick

2 celery ribs, chopped coarsely

2 tbsp tomato paste

1 (12 fluid ounce) bottle stout (such as Guinness®) or porter

1 ¾ cup beef broth

8 to 10 mushrooms, halved or quartered

3 sprigs fresh thyme

1 bay leaf

1 sprig fresh rosemary

2 tbsp olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

  1. Dredge lamb shanks in flour.
  2. Heat oil in a dutch oven or large, wide pot over medium-high heat until shimmering. Sear the lamb shanks in the hot oil on all sides until well browned, about 10 minutes. This can be done 2 lamb shanks at a time, if all 4 do not fit in your pot at the same time.  After browning, remove lamb shanks and set aside.
  3. Pour the excess grease from the Dutch oven, if necessary, reduce heat to medium, and stir in the onions and garlic. Cook and stir until the onions have softened and turned translucent, about 5 minutes.
  4. Stir in the carrots, celery, and tomato paste; continue cooking 5 minutes more.
  5. Return the lamb shanks to the dutch oven, and pour in the stout beer and beef broth. Add thyme and bay leaf and bring to a simmer over high heat.
  6. Once the lamb shanks begin to simmer, reduce the heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until the lamb is very tender and nearly falling off of the bone, 2 to 3 hours. Stir the lamb occasionally as it cooks, and add water if needed to keep the cooking liquid from becoming too thick (I rarely find this needed.) You want the cooking liquid to have reduced into a nice sauce by the time the lamb shanks are done. Stir in the mushrooms, rosemary sprig, and salt and pepper to taste during the last 10 minutes of cooking. Remove rosemary, thyme sprigs and bay leaf before serving. Serve shanks and vegetables over cous cous or orzo pasta immediately, passing the remaining sauce.

Superbowl Nachos

You may have heard John Madden talk about how much guacamole Americans consume on Superbowl Sunday. It’s 8 million pounds. Think about that for a sec. 8 million pounds of one food in one day across America. It’s avocados made normally made any noise, Superbowl Sunday could also be know as The Silence of the Avocados.

And the great thing is that this weekend in every supermarket in America, Nachos WILL be on sale.

Now, you can’t just eat guacamole by itself. (Well, you could, I suppose, with a bowl and a spoon, but…eww.) You could just dip tortilla chips in the guacamole. But, if you want to have dinner in front of the television with friends or family, let’s elevate those chips to full fledged nachos. (I found Homeboy Tortilla Chips on sale for $2.99, which was a good deal. I also just like to help this local non-profit whose motto is, “Nothing stops a bullit like a job,” and they always have high quality products. Read more about them here.)

Now Nachos are made in every which way. It seems that just about any combination of cheese and tortilla chips qualifies as Nachos. I like to layer mine in a baking dish and roasting them in the oven for nice crispy chips and melted real cheese. I layer the chips with pulled chicken, refried back beans, and lots and lots of cheese. You can add your favorite ingredients too, though. Pickled jalepenos are delicious,  pinto instead of black beans, steak instead of chicken, or perhaps meatless ground beef from Trader Joe’s for the vegetarians.

And…of course…the guacamole.

There is a secret to great guacamole. There may be good guacamoles. There might even be guacamoles flirting with greatness. But no guac is right until you have added the secret ingredient:

Tequila.

Yup. The flavors of tequila with lime juice make the tequila sing. Now, don’t get crazy. You don’t want your guacamole getting anyone tipsy (that is the game day margarita’s job.) Just a capful will do. A tiny splash goes a long, long way.

If you do this, I promise, you will not make guacamole any other way.

So, invite over some friends, make sure your television is working, and may your team win the day. That is, of course, unless they are playing the 49ers.

Oven Baked Nachos

1 bag of your favorite tortilla chips

approx. 2 cups chicken broth

1 tsp. cumin, paprika, onion powder, cayenne pepper, chili powder etc. (Use as many of these that you have on hand. It is only to flavor the chicken while it poaches and you can add whatever sounds good to you.)

1 bay leaf

1 bundle of green onions, chopped on a bias (fancy word for diagonally)

1 can of refried black beans (or whatever your  bean preference may be)

approx 2 cups of shredded mexican cheese (you may substitute mexican queso, cheddar, or even velveeta if thst is your preference)

  1. Add chicken and broth to a boil. Cover and let simmer for 10 minutes or until chicken is cooked through. Remove the chicken and shred. (This can be done by using two forks and “pulling” the chicken in opposite directions. A good image of this can be seen on Four and Twenty Blackbirds site here.) Retain some broth.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Form a “crust” at the bottom of a large casserole dish by crushing tortilla chips finely. Layer the bottom of the pan with these tortilla crumbs. Finish the “crust” by pouring a small amount of the retained broth broth over the tortilla crumbs.
  4. Add a single layer of tortilla chips of the tortilla crumb crust.  Top that layer with cheese, 1/2 of the can of refried beans, pulled chicken, and more cheese. Then add another layer of tortilla chips and repeat the process.
  5. Bake the nachos at 400 degrees for 10 to 15 minutes until the cheese is melted and the top of the nachos is lightly browning. Serve with sour cream, limes, salsa, and guacamole.
Remember to be creative. Just like a lasagna, there are no hard and fast rule about what to add to nachos.

 Tequila Spiked Guacamole

3 or 4 Avocados

1 tomato, diced finely

several sprigs of cilantro, chopped finely

1 Tbsp. onion powder

1 Tbsp. lime juice

1 tsp. tequila

salt and pepper

  1. Using a butcher knife, cut all the way around the avocado. Twist the two halves and open the avocado. Spoon the avocado into a bowl, discarding the seed. With the last avocado, instead of spooning straight into the bowl, cut a cross-hatch pattern into the meat of the avocado, and then scoop it into the bowl. These larger chunks will create pockets of larger avocado chunks for a difference in consistency and texture.
  2. Add the tomato, cilantro, onion powder, lime juice, tequila, salt and pepper to the bowl and mix well. Taste and adjust the flavors to your liking.
Guacamole can be made a day in advance as long as it is kept covered tightly to prevent browning.

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