Category Archives: Holidays

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

Please enjoy this Rosh Hashana blog from last year. One of my favorite recipes. I make for clients regularly. If you want to tone down the spice, use a bit less chili powder.

———–

For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

July 4th: Recipes for Independence Day

So, if you’ve been a reader for the last year, you should know what I think you should have for July 4th: 5 Days of Pulled Pork!

If you haven’t been a reader that long (which, let’s face it, most of you haven’t based on my number of views then, and my number of views now) then you should follow this link, so you can enjoy recipes that look like this.

(Ooh, ahhh…)

“But, Ed,” I hear you saying, “you left out dessert. What should we stuff our faces with after all that delicious pulled pork?”

Well, I have your answer! And since you will probably be very full and tired from dinner, this recipe is a light jell-o recipe

that won’t weigh you down, AND it you can make it ahead, so all you have to do after dinner is remove it from the fridge, garnish, and eat!

Independence Day Jell-O

This is a traditional July 4th dessert treat that is often made in a flag mold. Whatever you do, do NOT buy a flag mold. Over thirty dollars for a cheap plastic mold you might be able to use twice is not worth it. Just use your rectangular brownie pan or casserole dish. A little bit of clever decoration will get it looking like a flag in no time. Don’t be afraid of all the steps. They are really just the same steps, repeated. Once you get the hang of it, it goes fast. Just be sure to start at least an five hours before serving for the proper amount of refrigeration time!

You can also make individual portions in cups, bowls, or martini glasses! Just as tasty without the fuss!

1 small package of blueberries

2 six ounce packages of red jell-o (any flavor) 

2 six ounce packages of blue jell-o (any flavor)


1 six ounce package lemon jell-o

1 sixteen ounce tub of non-dairy whipped topping (such as cool-whip,) thawed

3 ¾ cups pineapple juice, refrigerated
 (This adds more than just your average jell-o flavor to the dish. You could also substitute half of this pineapple juice for rum for a more adult dessert.)

7 ½ cups boiling water 
 

  1. Spray 13” x 9” pan with non-stick spray. If you have one, you may also use a flag mold for an even greater flag-like appearance.
  2. Make the red jell-o. In a large bowl, stir 3 cups of boiling water into red gelatin until dissolved. About 2 minutes
  3. Once dissolved, stir in 1 ½ cups cold pineapple juice. Pour into the 13” x 9” pan or flag mold.
  4. Refrigerate pan for 1 hour. (The red jell-o is made first, because it will be at the top after unmolding.)

  5. Make the lemon jell-o. Wash the large bowl or use a new bowl to make the next batch of gelatin. You don’t want the colors to mix. In this bowl, stir 1 ½ cups boiling water into the lemon jell-o.
  6. Once dissolved, stir in ¾ cup cold pineapple juice. Refrigerate the lemon jell-o in the bowl for 30 minutes. This should thicken the jell-o, but not set it completely. The lemon jell-o should be the consistency of egg whites.
  7. Fold in 8 ounces (about half the tub) of cool whip to the bowl with the thickened lemon jell-o. This will make the jell-o white as well as give it a nice flavor and texture. Pour the mixture over the set red jell-o.
  8. Refrigerate for another 30 minutes.
  9. Make the blue jell-o. Stir 3 cups of boiling water into blue jell-o until dissolved.
  10. Once dissolved, stir in 1 ½ cups cold pineapple juice. Pour over hardened jell-o in the pan.
  11. Refrigerate for 3 hours or overnight.
  12. Remove the jell-o from the pan by sliding a butter knife around the edges. Carefully flip the gelatin onto a serving platter.
  13. To get a more defined, flag-like appearance, trim the edges of the jell-o with a sharp long knife.
  14. Decorate the top left corner with blueberries in a square pattern (you may have to trim the bottoms of the blueberries to get them to stay.) Then, create the white stripes. Fill a pastry bag (or a large Ziploc bag with a hole cut in one corner) with non-dairy whipped topping and create flag-like stripes across the jell-o flag.

This recipe may also be halved and put into cocktail glasses or ice cream dishes and topped with fruit for a simpler Independence Day treat.

Tip for getting that darn jell-o out of the pan in one piece: Dip jell-o mold in warm water for about 15 seconds. Gently pull gelatin from around edges with moist finger. Place moistened platter on top of jell-o mold. Invert mold and platter quickly. Holding mold and platter together, shake slightly to loosen. Gently remove mold; center gelatin on platter.


Memorial Day Leftovers – Unique Uses for your Favorite Spice Rub

So it’s Memorial Day. Or the week after. As per my advice, you went out and bought yourself a ton of Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub, or perhaps you mixed up a ton of your own BBQ spice rub to use for your grilling needs on Memorial Day. You’ve used on your burgers and beer can chickens, or ribs, but you still have more spice rub left than you know what to do with.

Well, here are some fun and interesting ideas on what to do with all that leftover spice rub. I used Johnny Tush in the pictures, but feel free to use whatever BBQ rub you happen to have laying around.

Make yourself a Johnny Tush Magical Wonder Breakfast. Simply add a pinch of spice rub to your eggs, potatoes or hash browns. You can also add it to bacon! Simply follow this recipe for  Cosmic Bacon on the Johnny Tush website.

Cure you Memorial Day hangover the following morning with a BBQ Spice Rub Bloody Mary. Simply add a teaspoon of your spice rub to your favorite Bloody Mary mix recipe. Rim a glass with your spice rub. This is easily done, by rubbing a lemon or lime wedge around the rim of the glass and then dipping it into the spice rub laid onto a small plate. Garnish the Bloody Mary with your favorite treats, like celery, olives, or even a spice rubbed shrimp. (Perhaps leftover from Cheesy Grits and Shrimp?)

Add it to popcorn. This really does work with any spice rub. Spice Rub Popcorn really takes the flavor of whatever rub you add. Simply prepare the popcorn with your favorite method and then toss with the rub after you add butter!

Add some of your rub to mixed nuts for a unique BBQ Spice Rub Trail Mix.

There is no longer any excuse for all these spice rubs to pile up in your spice rack. It’s time to get them down and finish them off! Please post below any other unique ways you use your extra spice rub!


Memorial Day Recipes with Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub

Not quite a year ago, a friend of ours, Gary Karp, called us up to ask a favor. He had developed a spice rub that he wanted to start selling and he needed some marketing photos. The spice rub is called Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub.

We met and brainstormed ideas together for creative ways to use the rub. Then, after a day of shopping and applying rub, Jodie, Gary, and I met up for a long day’s photo shoot that culminated in a party with many friends to promote the rub and eat all of the food we’d been cooking all day.

The Johnny Tush website just recently went live and they are having their Grand Opening Sale as we speak. The Magical Wonder Rub is currently 20% off the regular price!

With Memorial Day right around the corner, I thought I’d share some of these grilling ideas with you.

(Next week, I’ll share other creative ways to use your favorite spice rub!)

Use the rub to grill up burgers, wings, shrimp & cheesy grits, or even rub it on your corn on the cob!

All American Burger

½ pound ground beef per burger (80% lean makes the best tasting burger)

1 Tablespoon of your favorite grilling spice rub per burger (I obviously recommend Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub)

1 bun per burger

burger fixings, such as sliced tomato, lettuce, onion, ketchup, mustard and whatever else you want on your burger

  1. Preheat the grill 15 minutes in advance. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  2. Form burger patties by rolling 1/2 pound of ground beef into a ball in your hands. It is important to “knead” the meat. (Meaning continue to roll, smack, and toss the meat after it has been rolled into a ball.) You want to make sure that the patties don’t form cracks in their sides as you flatten the balls of meat. After “kneading” the meat “dough,” flatten the ground beef into patties. Press the center of the patties lower than the outsidecreating a convex burger.  This way as the center of the burger expands, you will have a uniform burger.
  3. Season generously with spice rub.
  4. Grill the burgers 3 to 4 minutes per side or until desired internal temperature. (At least 145 degrees.) Top with cheese during the last minute, if desired.
  5. Serve the burgers on a bun topped with yourfavorite burger fixings.

Spice Rubbed Shrimp over Cheesy Grits

½ pound raw shrimp

4 to 6 skewers (if using wood, soak for 10 minutes to prevent burning)

1 Tablespoon of your favorite grilling spice rub (Again, I recommend Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub)

1 cup quick grits (can also use cornmeal)

4 cups chicken broth

1 cup shredded sharp cheddar

  1. Preheat the grill. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  2. Season the shrimp generously with spice rub. Skewer the shrimp.
  3. Meanwhile, make the cheesy grits. Bring chicken broth to a boil. Once boiling, add grits while whisking heavily.
  4. Cover, reduce heat to low and cook for 5 minutes. Add cheese and stir well. Remove from heat and keep covered until ready to serve
  5. Grill the shrimp 2 to 3 minutes per side until the shrimp has turned pink. Serve on the cheesy grits.

Grilled Wings

1 pound raw chicken wings

¼ cup of your favorite grilling spice rub per burger (Do I really need to say which rub I recommend?)

  1. Season the wings generously with spice rub. Store the rubbed wings overnight or up to 24 hours.
  2. Preheat the grill. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  3. Grill the wings 10 to 15 minutes per side or until cooked to a temperature of 160 degrees.
  4. Remove from heat and serve with bleu cheese.

St. Patrick’s Day – Bangers & Mash with a Scotch Ale Onion Gravy

Bangers and Mash
I want to be clear. I love Corned Beef and Cabbage, but you probably have you Corned Beef recipe by now if you celebrate St. Patty’s often. But, if you  want something different this year, or, if you’re like me and you throw a huge St. Patty’s party and want more than one option for your guests, or maybe you’re going to a potluck, my Bangers and Mash recipe is one of my favorites. I make it year round.

Bangers are a style of British or Irish peasant sausage that is made with rusk. And since that explains everything nicely, I’ll move on to the recipe.

Bangers & Ma- what’s that? You have know idea what rusk is? Why that would make it a peasant sausage or what that has to do with the name ‘banger’? Oh, I’m sorry, I am shocked that it wasn’t clear.

Well, rusk is basically bread. Specifically a wheat product used in the stuffing of the sausage to help the meat go farther. More rusk, more sausage. Hence, why it was good and cheap for the peasants. Rusk has the tendency to expand while cooking, causing the casing to pop very suddenly, creating a banging sound. To avoid this you should pierce each sausage with a fork several times to let the juices escape a little and keep the sausage from splitting (this is not a good practice for sausages without rusk. The rusk soaks up the juices of the meat, keeping the sausage moist, where piercing a regular sausage would dry it out.)

See, that was simple really. You would have figured it out on your own, right? Right.

Serve your bangers over mashed potatoes (the ‘mash’) and top with a gravy made from beer and carmelized onions. The onions take 50 minutes to an hour to carmelize and cannot be rushed, so while this recipe is not hard, leave yourself a good hour and a half to cook.

Bangers & Mash with a Scotch Ale Onion Gravy

2 Tablespoons olive oil

½ stick (1/4 cup) butter

6 to 12 bangers

4 to 6 onions, sliced pole to pole

2 sage sprigs, leaves removed and coarsely chopped

1 cup scotch ale (Scotch ale is a type of pale ale, but with dark roasted nutty overtones. Often called Wee Heavy or Kilt Lifter)

½ cup chicken stock

salt and pepper to taste

  1. Brown the sausages over medium high heat in the olive oil, 3 to 5 minutes per side. After flipping the sausage, pierce the cooked side of the sausage several times with a fork to keep the rusk in the banger from splitting the casing.
  2. Remove the sausage from the pan and turn heat to low. Add the butter. After the butter is mostly melted, add the sliced onions and a sash of salt (to help them cook faster.) Turn the heat to medium and cook the onions, uncovered, stirring occasionally for 50 minutes to an hour until a rich golden brown. The long you roast the onions, the richer the flavor.
  3. Deglaze (this is a fancy word that means, add liquid and scrape up any brown bits at the bottom of the pan) with scotch ale and chicken broth.  Add sage and then nestle the half cooked sausages back into the pan. Raise the heat to high and bring to a simmer. Simmer uncovered for 10 minutes or until the gravy is reduced by half.
  4. Serve sausages over mashed potatoes and top with gravy. Pair with beer or even a very flavorful white wine.

The Younse Family Culinary Christmas Tree Tradition – Brie, Pate and Champagne on a Budget

Every year around this time the Younses (Jodie’s family. If you don’t remember, Jodie takes the photos) would drive out to the Christmas tree farm, saw down a Douglas Fir, and get it back to their house. We all know what comes next, of course. The tree goes into it’s stand (watered with Jodie’s father’s special tree mix of water, 7 up, and aspirin,) out come all of the holiday decorations, tree ornaments, and the up they go. (This is no small thing if you live in Willow Glen, like they do. If you live in San Jose, then you know that Willow Glen is the place you go to look at the best Christmas lights in the Bay Area. Every house has it’s own matching mini-tree outside that a neighbor is in charge of every year. One block even has four houses that put out huge lit flying reindeer followed by a flying Santa in a sleigh.) All this is done, of course, while listening to their favorite Christmas albums.

What you might expect less, is that after the decorations are done, every year, the fancy cheeses, pate, champagne (or sparkling apple cider for the kids,) port, and chocolate truffles are brought out and dined upon. This is how their family begins the holiday feeling.

I wish I could say this was a long-standing family tradition that hails from deep cultural ties, but, alas, that is not the case. It is a tradition simply started by Jodie’s parents, Joe and Judy, because they like fine foods, and wanted something special to eat while they stared at their newly decorated Christmas tree and house.  It is possible Judy was inspired by her mother who used to serve high tea sandwiches and devilled eggs the day they put the tree up. But traditions have to start somewhere, and it is definitely one Jodie and I have chosen to continue and hope to pass on to our children.

This year, I wanted to see if this usual splurge could be made to fit my under five dollar per person format. Where do you think I went on this quest? (If you’ve even read one of my other blogs, you probably know the answer is…) Trader Joe’s! I found Chicken Truffle Mousse Pate for $4.99, that I knew from past experience was one of my favorite pates. I grabbed a $6.99 bottle of Zonin Proseco (okay, it’s not Champagne, but this particular Italian Proseco is better than the cheaper Champagnes at a fraction of the price.) I also found “The Tale of Two Cheeses: Blue & Brie,” which is two wedges of cheese, one bleu and one brie, that comes on their own small wooden serving platter, complete with wooden knife. (As pictured.) I also got 99 cents worth of crackers. This brought me to a few cents under $20 to serve Jodie and I as well as my brother and his wife. (I also raided my fridge for anything else that might go well. Hence the marinated mushrooms and olives pictured.)

The traditional holiday splurge managed! And without the “splurge.”

We celebrated Five Dollar Feast style, but if you want to get the complete Younse Holiday Tree experience, you can add sliced apples, French bread, and port paired with hand-picked truffles from See’s Candy.

My family had plenty of holiday culinary traditions, but never a Christmas tree tradition. (I’m not even sure you could say we had a Christmas dinner tradition. It was often turkey, but it changed every year. We definitely had a New Year’s tradition, but we’ll get to that.)

I would like to know is about your holiday culinary traditions.  Does anybody else out there have a Holiday tree tradition? Or tree trimming tradition? What do you do for Christmas dinner? Or tell me about your Chanukah culinary traditions. I would love it if you would leave these all below in the comments section.

Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays!


Traveling Thanksgiving Leftovers: Turkey, Cream Cheese and Cranberry Sandwiches

It’s a couple days after Thanksgiving. You’ve had a great time with your family and it is time to get on that plane, in that car, or whatever mode of transportation you are using to get back home. Your family or friends are pushing leftover turkey (hopefully Grilled Bourbon Turkey) on you, but you just don’t have a place to pack it.

I’m here to tell you, not to turn down that leftover turkey!

You need to eat on the plane, car, or just simply when you get back home, so make sure you accept at least enough turkey to make yourself this wonderful sandwich for the road. All you need is some cream cheese, lettuce, and some of the leftover cranberry sauce from Turkey Day.

This is the perfect post-holiday sandwich, but don’t feel like you always have to wait for the days after Thanksgiving for this treat, you can make this sandwich any time of the year. Just grab some deli turkey from you local deli counter. (That’s actually what’s pictured.)

Turkey, Cream Cheese, and Cranberry Sandwiches

1/3 pound turkey (either leftover from a roast turkey or deli sliced turkey will do)

Whipped Cream Cheese (you can use regular cream cheese too, but be sure to soften it. I prefer the whipped cream because it’s not too dense)

Cranberry sauce (homemade or canned will do)

1 leaf of lettuce

1 croissant, halved or 2 slices of bread

  1. Spread cream cheese on the bottom side of a croissant or one piece of bread, and cranberry sauce on the top side or slice.
  2. Layer the turkey on top of the cream cheese, top with lettuce, and finally with the top of the croissant or the other slice of bread that has been slathered with cranberry sauce. Eat and enjoy!

Thanksgiving in Warm Weather- Grilled Bourbon Turkey with Bourbon Gravy, Green Bean Casserole, Stuffed Pumpkin, and Bourbon Pumpkin Tarts

When I was planning the compulsory Food Blog Thanksgiving post, I originally thought that I would just post recipes for a bunch of delicious side dish choices. I mean, I figured everyone would already have their turkey technique decided over years of tradition. But I found a way to cook your bird that is incredible. If you’re open to it, I have found a way to cook your bird that gets the best of both the roasting world and the smoking world, and if you try it, I don’t think you’ll go back to your old method again.

I had recently heard about two friends who were going to brine their bird in Bourbon and then smoke it, which sounded amazing. I mean what better flavor to infuse your bird with than Bourbon for Thanksgiving? I can’t think of another popular liquor that was invented in America other than Bourbon. Sure, we do wine well, but Europe was doing that long before us; beer was invented by Franciscan monks in what is now Belgium; obviously scotch, tequila, and vodka were invented elsewhere. Bourbon, however, is ours. It was invented in Old Bourbon in Kentucky, and that area of America is still where most of the Bourbon in the world is made. And what better holiday to feature American’s spirit than the day we celebrate the Spirit of the New World: Thanksgiving?

There was one problem with recreating my friends’ Thanksgiving Day Turkey idea: I don’t have a smoker. I do have a grill, I thought to myself. There must be some way to grill a turkey, right? And, if there is, what a great way for those of us who live in warm weather cities to celebrate the holiday? If you live in any Southern or Tropical American climates, or if you are celebrating Christmas in Australia, there is no better way to make a Turkey. (Of course any warm weather climate will do. I am just making the silly assumption that I don’t have many South America, African, Asian or Middle Eastern readers, as my blog is not widely translated, but I suppose I could be wrong.)

There are a few guidelines to ensure a perfectly grilled bird, however:

1. Use a roasting pan with a rack. This will allow the hot air to get all the way around the bird, but still leave you pan dripping for a delicious Bourbon gravy. (If you don’t own one, Smart & Final sells cheap disposable roasting pans with racks.)

2. Brine the bird. Basting the bird on the grill will be too disruptive of the heat, and will not get you the delicious crisp skin you want.

3. Cover the top of the wings and the end of the legs with tin foil for the first hour of cooking to keep them from burning.

4. Do NOT start the bird breast down as can be en vogue these days. It cooks just fine breast up, and you will just ruin your turkey’s skin.

5. Do NOT tuck the wings back or truss the bird. This just messes with the cooking on the grill. The wings will over cook and the drumsticks will under cook.

6. Do NOT stuff the bird. (To me, this is the only drawback of a grilled bird. I like a stuffing flavored by the bird. This is why I recommend Stuffed Pumpkins for a side, to get a pumpkin flavored stuffing instead.)

7. Do NOT cover the bird in foil as it sits for the final 15 minutes before serving. The bird will stay plenty warm, and all you are doing is trapping moisture in the skin you took all that care crisping.

8. Pour a little Bourbon (or water) in the bottom of the roasting pan at the beginning of cooking to keep the bird moist.

9. Use soaked wood chips in a pie tin on the grill for a delicious smoke flavor.

10. Rub herbs and oil UNDER the skin as well as over the skin to make it penetrate the meat.

If you follow these 10 rules you are on your way to a very impressive Thanksgiving. And, trust me, guests will be ooo-ing and aah-ing seeing your bird on the grill. Grilling the bird works best for a smaller bird. Mine was 12 pounds. If you need to make a 20 pound monster to feed a crowd, grilling may not be the best method for you.

I also have great recipe for a Green Bean Casserole. I think Green Bean Casserole has a bad connotation now, because it brings to mind soggycasseroles of mushy canned beans in a mushy canned soup paste. If you use fresh Green Beans, shallots, and mushrooms, you can still use some cream of mushroom soup and some fried onion topping for a delicious side that pairs well with the Bourbon flavors.

I made a Stuffed Pumpkin as well. Just follow the link to my Halloween blog, but use one medium sized pumpkin and cook it for 2 hours rather than the small pumpkins cooked for 90 minutes. (I made the rice stuffed pumpkin this time, but use what you like. This can also be a good vegetarian option. Just eliminate any meat products. Or you can add soyrizo or any other vegetarian sausage.)

Jodie made little Pumpkin Tarts in a filo dough cups (that we got on sale at Fresh and Easy.) She topped them with a home-made Bourbon Whipped Cream and a little candied ginger. These flavors worked so well together, we had guests tell us that they loved them even though they didn’t normally like pumpkin or candied ginger. This is a great alternative to pumpkin pie.

Last but not least, shop around for your bird. All of your local stores will have their Turkey sales listed on their weekly ads. Just search the internet for the store’s name and find the weekly ad page link on their home page. This year, I found Vons (Pavillions / Safeway) selling 12 pound frozen birds for eight dollars. I also saw Ralph’s selling birds 2 for 1, which is great if you can find a friend to buy their bird with you, but doesn’t seem likely. Frozen birds are often cheaper, and I  don’t find any significant difference in flavor. Just allow it 2 days to defrost in your brine.

Grilled Bourbon Turkey

1 10 to 16 pound Turkey (I recommend about 12 pounds.)

1 onion, quartered

4-6 garlic cloves

½ cup Bourbon

1 bag wood chips (hickory, mesquite, etc.)

tin foil

Brine:

1 cup Bourbon

1 cup Maple Syrup

¾ cup whole crystal sea salt or 1 ½ cups table salt

1 quart water

Wet Rub:

1 Tablespoon dried thyme (or your other favorite herb)

1 Tablespoon dried parsley

½ cup olive oil

  1. Mix the brine ingredients together in your largest pot or Dutch oven. Unwrap your Turkey and submerge in the brine. If your bird is frozen, brine for 36 to 48 hours, if fresh, brine for 12 to 24 hours. Remove the bird at least 1 hour before ready to cook to allow it to come to room temperature. (If your turkey doesn’t totally submerge, flip the bird every 12 hours.)
  2. Prepare the grill. You need to cook the Turkey over indirect heat. Make sure you have plenty of propane. Begin by preheating your grill by turning the burners to high and covering the grill. Then set up your grill for indirect grilling. Hopefully, you have burners that will allow heat from 2 sides of the Turkey. If so leave the middle burners off, and the side burners at medium. If you have only 2 burners, leave one burner off, and turn the other to high. If you are using a 2 burner grill, be aware you will have to turn you roasting pan every hour for equal roasting. If using charcoal, you are a brave soul, and make sure your coals and wood chips are spread to two sides, with no coals directly in the center.
  3. Soak wood chips for ½ hour. (Unless using charcoals, then add the chips directly to the coals.)
  4. Mix the herbs in the oil to create the wet rub. Let this sit while you prepare the turkey, to let the flavors meld together. Do not use any salt, the turkey is salted enough from the brine.
  5. Remove the giblets from the center of the turkey and rinse the bird. It is important to rinse the salty brine off of your turkey. Pat dry thoroughly with paper towels.
  6. Using your fingers loosen the skin of the turkey from the flesh. You fingers will have to poke through some membranous tissue, but be careful not to poke through the actual skin. Rub the bird with the wet rub over and under the skin. Poke the skin with a fork or bamboo skewer 5 to 6 times to help the oils escape during cooking to crisp the skin.
  7. Place the onion quarters and garlic in the cavity of the turkey. These should fit in loosely as aromatics, not as a stuffing. A few sprigs of fresh herbs can be added here as well.
  8. Place the turkey in a roasting pan with a V-shaped rack, breast side up. Pour ½ cup of bourbon in the roasting pan. Cover the tops of the wings (do NOT tuck these back) with foil, as well as the extremities of the drumsticks to prevent burning.
  9. Place the turkey on indirect heat on the grill and the half of the wood chips in a pie tin over the direct heat.
  10. Roast the turkey for 15 to 20 minutes per pound. (My 12 pound bird took 2 and ¾ hours.)
  11. Check on the bird every half hour very briefly. (Do not keep the grill open too long to let the heat escape.) During the first hour add more bourbon or water to the bottom of the roasting pan if necessary. After an hour, remove foil from the wings and legs. After the first hour, keep an eye on the wood chips. You’ll need to replace them with the second half of the soaking cips when they get too blackened. You do not want your turkey to taste of burnt wood.
  12. When the bird reads an internal temperature of 165 (NOT 180!) in several places, the juices are running clear, and the wings and legs move freely when wiggled, the turkey is done. Remove it from the grill and let it sit for 15 minutes before carving (use this time to finish you sides, make gravy and get everything to the table.) Do NOT tent the bird with foil.
  13. Carve and serve, passing Bourbon gravy (Directions below)

Bourbon Gravy

Pan Drippings from Grilled or Roasted Turkey

1 cup flour (approximately)

4 cups Turkey or Chicken Broth (approximately)

4 Tablespoons butter

½ cup Bourbon

  1. If possible place your roasting pan directly on your stove’s burners. Otherwise scrape the pan drippings into a large pan. Over low heat, add flour and butter to the pan dripping to make a roux. The roux should be thick and not watery, but the flour should be completely dissolved.
  2. Once the flour is once mixed thoroughly with the fats of the turkey drippings and butter, Turn the heat to high, and pour the bourbon and half the broth into the pan while whisking vigorously. (This is the tricky part. If a friend is available, have them pour the whiskey and broth, while you whisk your heart out for the roux to dissolve.)
  3. When the gravy thickens, add more broth. Continue to do this until the gravy is at your desired consistency while also at a rolling boil. (If you do not boil the gravy, it will retain a floury taste.) Let it boil for a few minutes, then remove and serve immediately.

Green Bean Casserole

2 cups (16 ounces) fresh green beans, rinsed and the ends removed

3 to 4 shallots, minced

6 to 8 white button mushrooms, sliced

1 Tablespoon olive oil

2 cups cream of mushroom soup (I prefer Trader Joe’s Cream of Portabello mushroom soup)

½ cup shredded cheddar or swiss cheese

2 cups crispy onion topping

  1. Preheat the oven to 350.
  2. Parboil the green beans, by cooking them 5 to 6 minutes in boiling water, and then immediately drain them and rinse with cold water. Transfer the beans to a casserole dish.
  3. Saute the shallots in the olive oil. Once softened, brown the mushrooms in the shallots and oil until shimmering.
  4. Mix the shallot mushroom mixture with the mushroom soup, and green beans in the casserole dish.
  5. Top the mixed beans with cheese. Then top the cheese with a thick layer of crispy onions.
  6. Bake at 350 for 15 to 20 minutes. Serve immediately.

Pumpkin Tarts 

12 mini filo dough tart cups

1 16oz package of cream cheese, softened

1 can of pumpkin

1 cup sour cream

1 cup brown sugar

1 tablespoon pumpkin pie spice (cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves or allspice, ginger)

Candied ginger, cut into small pieces

  1. Using an electric mixer, combine sour cream, cream cheese, and brown sugar until smooth.
  2. Add pumpkin and spices, beat until smooth.
  3. It is a little slow but you can use a turkey baster to suck up the pudding and squeeze into the filo cups, or spoon a cup or two into a freezer bag and cut a small piece of one of the corners off and squeeze like a pastry bag.
  4. Refrigerate for 30 minutes or up to 24 hours.
  5. Remove from refrigerator, top with Bourbon Whipped Cream (below) and a small piece of candied ginger.

Bourbon Whipped Cream

1 small (1/2 pint) carton heavy whipping cream

2 Tablespoons powdered sugar

1 ½ Tablespoons Bourbon

1 Tablespoon Vanilla Extract

  1. Combine ingredients and the beat, using an electric mixer, on high heat with whisk attachments until the cream has stiff peaks.

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

What to Grill on Labor Day: Ribs, Burgers and more.

Labor Day is the unofficial end of summer, September begins and kids go back to school. Because of the great weather and the three day weekend, it is also a day to relax with friends and family and firing up the barbecue. But there are so many things that are great on the grill from Carne Asada to Bratwurst.

My advice: look at your local stores Weekly Ads and find something on sale that looks good.  Weekly Ads no longer have to be those annoying paper clippings that come in the mail that you ignore. Look up your local stores online. Ralph’s, Safeway, Albertsons, Fresh and Easy, and your local market have Weekly Ads on their websites. Simply go their site, click Weekly Ads and type in your zipcode to view your local supermarket’s holiday specials. Every year for Labor Day there will be tons of sales for things to grill over labor day weekend.

This year, a sale on beef ribs on sake at my local Vons appealed to me. Not Beef shortribs wich you can braise or grill Hawaiian style, but good ‘ol huge, long, beef ribs, often called “dinosaur bones.”  I say huge, because they look huge, but in fact there is not a ton of meat on each bone, so a half of a rack still feeds one person.

I decided to grill up some “dinosaur bones” for my brother and his family this year. I found 2 giant slabs for $8.46!  When I added sides of cornbread and salad it still only comes to $4.00 per person including a 6 pack of beer brewed by Craft brewery North Coast Brewing Company for Trader Joe’s at $5.99. (It’s called Black Hart, and is a hoppy stout that pairs deliciously with beef ribs. You can also serve a spicy Zinfandel, if you’re not a beer drinker.)

We had a great time.

However, over the past four months that I have been writing this blog, it has been summer in Los Angeles, and I have posted a lot of grilling recipes. Below is my recipe for Beef Ribs as well as some of my other favorites from this summer:

Beef Long Ribs

2 racks of long beef ribs

¼ cup of your favorite BBQ spice rub (I used Johnny Tush’s spice rub, as I had a ton lying around, but more on that later. You can also use my usual BBQ dry rub, found here.)

1 bottle of your favorite BBQ sauce

Olive Oil

  1. Using kitchen shears, cut the ribs into ½ racks. Rub theribs with dry rub and a little olive oil. Let stand for one hour.
  2. Preheat the oven to 250 degrees if possible. (Some ovens start at 300 degrees, which is fine as well.)
  3. Place the ribs in a roasting pan and cover tightly with foil. Roast for three to four hours. (For 2 racks, 2 roasting pans will likely be needed.)
  4. Preheat the grill. Remove the ribs from the oven and place on the grill starting with the meaty side down. Brush with BBQ sauce. Cook for ten minutes on low heat, flip, brush with more BBQ sauce, and cook for ten more minutes. This is mostly to get the ribs that cooked-on-the-fire taste.  Alternatively, you could preheat the broiler and finish the ribs off similarly that way.

 Serve with your favorite packaged corn bread (I like Trader Joe’s Cornbread) or cornbread recipe. Throw in a Tablespoon of your dry rub to give it a Labor Day BBQ flavor.

Grilled Pork Chops

Teriyaki Burgers

Steaks 

Whole Salmon

Hawaiian Spaereribs

Cedar Plank Trout

Brats

Lamb Burgers

Tri-Tip

Alright, NOW you are ready to go to the store. I am sure you can find what you need for ONE of the recipes cheaply.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 132 other followers

%d bloggers like this: