Monday, December 28, 2009

Slacking

I've been seriously slacking on posting new recipes, stories and photos for the past few months, I blame the holiday season - but I've been cooking up a storm with my lovely wife, so we've got lots of new material to share. We've tried out a bunch of new dishes, some turned out great, some so so, its all about experimenting with flavors and seeing what works... and what doesn't.

I've been working on the photos and recipes, I'll be posting a bunch in 2010 - stay tuned

In the meanwhile, here's my new favorite website for really good simple easy to make recipes www.thepioneerwoman.com and in addition to the recipes, the gal who runs the site does a great job of posting stories and photos, she's pretty good actually - check out the site.

Cheers!
Dave

Friday, October 23, 2009

Cooking with Spices

Spices for taste

Spices are what make food better tasting and the mixtures and results are the science portion of culinary art. There are so many flavors, sweet and salty, the mixtures and concoctions of blends are endless.

Wikipedia has a nice description of spices:

A spice is a dried seed, fruit, root, bark, leaf, or vegetative substance used in nutritionally insignificant quantities as a food additive for the purpose of flavour, colour, or as a preservative that kills harmful bacteria or prevents their growth.[1]

Many of these substances are also used for other purposes, such as medicine, religious rituals, cosmetics, perfumery or eating as vegetables. For example, turmeric is also used as a preservative; liquorice as a medicine; garlic as a vegetable. In some cases they are referred to by different terms.

In the kitchen, spices are distinguished from herbs, which are leafy, green plant parts used for flavouring purposes. Herbs, such as basil or oregano, may be used fresh, and are commonly chopped into smaller pieces. Spices, however, are dried and often ground or grated into a powder. Small seeds, such as fennel and mustard seeds, are used both whole and in powder form.

Tonite on Today's Menu was Sri Lankan Beef Curry. The blends of the spices coriander, cumin, fennel, tumeric, black pepper and salt made for a savory beef with a nice texture and heat added with the coconut milk and minced jalapeno's.

Recipe from
myrecipes.com

Yield

8 servings (serving size: about 2/3 cup beef mixture and 3/4 cup rice)

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon ground coriander
  • 2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon ground fennel
  • 1 teaspoon ground turmeric
  • 4 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 2 1/2 pounds boneless sirloin steak, trimmed and cut into 1 1/2-inch cubes
  • Cooking spray
  • 3 cups chopped onion (about 2 medium)
  • 2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 red jalapeño peppers, minced
  • 3 cups light coconut milk
  • 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
  • 2 (1 x 3-inch) lemon rind strips
  • 6 cups hot cooked basmati rice

Preparation

Cook coriander, cumin, fennel, and turmeric in a small saucepan over medium-low heat 7 minutes or until toasted, stirring occasionally.

Combine toasted spices, black pepper, salt, and beef in a large bowl. Cover and marinate in refrigerator 1 hour.

Heat a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Coat pan with cooking spray. Add onion, ginger, garlic, and jalapeños; sauté 3 minutes or until onions are tender. Remove onion mixture from pan. Recoat the pan with cooking spray. Add half of beef; cook 6 minutes, browning on all sides. Remove beef from pan. Repeat procedure with remaining beef. Return onion mixture and beef to pan; stir in milk, vinegar, and rind, scraping pan to loosen browned bits. Bring to a boil. Cover, reduce heat, and simmer for 2 hours or until beef is very tender. Discard rind. Serve over rice.

Enjoy!

Comfort Food


Comfort food comes in many forms

This night it was Meat Loaf, Mashed Potatoes and Steamed Broccoli

Always good for the family

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Soup's On

Fall Weather, Time for Soup

On Today's Menu (last night) we made homemade Oriental Hot and Sour Soup that was cooked in the Crock Pot all day for 8 hours. It's simple to make and very delicious.

4 cups Chicken Broth
1 8oz can Bamboo Shoots (drained)
1 8oz can sliced Water Chestnuts (drained)
1 6oz can sliced Mushrooms (drained)
3 Tbsps quick-cooking Tapioca
3 Tbsps rice wine vinegar or vinegar
1 Tbsp soy sauce
1 Tsp sugar
1/2 Tsp pepper
1 8oz package frozen peeled and deveined shrimp
4oz tofu cubed
1 beaten egg

In a 4 quart Crock Pot combine broth, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, mushrooms, tapioca, vinegar, soy sauce, sugar and pepper. Cover, cook on low heat setting for 8-9 hours or set on high heat setting for 3-4 hours. Add shrimp and tofu cook for 50 minutes more. Pour egg slowly into cooker, stir til egg cooks and shreds. Makes 8 appetizer servings.


To go with the soup I also made Chicken and Lemon Pot Stickers with Soy-Scallion Dipping Sauce. Here's the description of the ingredients: Ground chicken, bok choy, and Asian aromatics nestle in pleated wonton wrappers.

Make the filling and sauce a day ahead, but assemble the pot stickers just before cooking. They're just as good at room temperature as they are when warm. Sprinkle the baking sheet with cornstarch to keep the bottoms of the pot stickers crisp.

The pot sticker recipe can be found HERE

Ingredients

Ingredients

Meats, herbs, spices, sauces, broths, oils and more are what make up the every day meals we eat.

The above ingredients were for a recipe for Oven-Roasted Sea Bass with Couscous and Warm Tomato Vinaigrette. (missing from the photo is the bass)

It's amazing how many things go into a food creations

Monday, October 19, 2009

Purple Place Burger

The Purple Place

Went to the Purple Place last week to try their burger that has won a few "best of" contests.

I'd been here years ago, but since then its changed ownership and the entire place upgraded. There's a really nice menu now that consists not only of bar food basics such as hot wings and nacho's but they also serve seared sea scallops, pot stickers and more. For their entree's they range from scallop risotto (which I can't wait to try!), prawns, new york steak, ribs, tacos and a line up of burgers, sandwiches & panini's.


I tried the cheeseburger with cheddar with the works along with garlic fries. It all was very tasty and I look forward to going back to The Purple Place to try some of the other items on the menu.

Located at 363 Green Valley Road, El Dorado Hills
http://www.purpleplacebarandgrill.com

Party-Que

BBQ'ing for a Party

I was asked to serve as chef at a friend's 60th birthday party on Saturday, so being the wanna-be-chef that I am, I said heck yes! It was a party for about 50-70 people, the hostess I think planned for more because she prep'd a lot of stuff - I cooked enough food for an army (we could have easily served 100).

I cooked up a dozen kielbasa and a variety of other sausages on one grill that I had going (see photo above), and on the main grill I cooked over 100 skewers that had; chicken, pineapple, zucchini and mushrooms that I basted with Mr. Yoshida's teriyaki marinade (which is very good). Ideally the chicken should have been marinated the night before and some seasoning's added but I didn't know what I was cooking until I got there, otherwise I would have brought some good seasonings to add.

That was the first time I've cooked for that many people and I found it wasn't as hard as I thought it would be to cook in quantity, the most important part was just making sure everything was done properly (especially the chicken), but not over done (can't stand burnt, hard, over cooked meats or soggy vegetables).

We also put together a bunch of side dishes, desert and more, there was food of all kinds and lots of it.

I must have done something right because everyone kept thanking me for the good food and at the end of the night the hostess informed me that 75 out of 100 skewers had been consumed, that was pretty good considering all the other kinds of food that was also available.

That was the best kind of payment I could have ever wanted.

Happy 60th Birthday Chris!



Sunday, October 18, 2009

Urban Dog and Sausage

Urban Dog & Sausage

Located at 424 E. Bidwell in Folsom, this restaurant specializes in hot dogs, sausages, burgers and beef.

This place has got a festive industrial meets neighborhood ambiance with plenty of tables and a very friendly staff. You select your dog off the chalk board, place your order at the counter and select your table and wait for one of the most tasty hot dogs you've ever had. Beer and wine is also available, including one of my favorites on tap: Shocktop

Below are a few selections from the menu, many of these are very creative concoctions. All dogs are the best brand on the planet - Vienna Beef.

The Chicago Dog $3.39
Frankfurter, yellow mustard, onions, neon relish, tomatoes, pickle, sport pepper, poppyseed bun, and celery salt

The Coney Dog $3.69
Frankfurter, meat sauce, yellow mustard, onions, poppyseed bun

Da Capone $3.79
Frankfurter, pastrami, yellow mustard, pickle, poppyseed bun

Barbie Dog $3.49
Frankfurter, barbeque sauce, smoked bacon, fried onion strands

Folsom Bulldog $3.39
Frankfurter, mustard, grilled onions, tomato, jalapeno-lime aioli, cilantro

Royale with Cheese $4.09
Juicy stuffed double stuffed burger, grilled onions, lettuce, tomato, yellow mustard

Maxwell Street Spicy Polish $4.19
Hickory smoked beef sausage, yellow mustard, grilled onions, sport Peppers, poppyseed bun

The Govna $4.19
Beer bratwurst, Dussledorf brown mustard, grilled onions or sauerkraut, Steamed roll

The Balboa $4.19
Mild Italian pork sausage, marinara, fresh mozzarella, steamed roll


424 E. Bidwell St. Folsom
(916) 984-1003
http://www.urbandogandsausage.com/

Chicago Donuts

Chicago Food
Part 3


I haven't been to a donut shop in years, seriously, but while in Chicago, I took the kids out one morning for a stop at the local Dunkin' Donuts.

We ordered some coffees and a few donuts and we all enjoyed the sweet sugar bomb treats for breakfast. Gotta love a fresh made glazed donut

Breakfast of Champions

Chicago Pizza

Chicago Food
Part 2

The very first thing my son asked for after being in boot camp for two months, was Chicago Deep Dish Pizza.

I did some research on Chicago pizza a few weeks before going there, and this placed named Gino's kept coming up (coincidentally, it was also recommended by a couple of friends). So for dinner we had to check it out and drove to nearby Libertyville and went to Gino's East.

The restaurant was nice, it had a good neighborhood/friendly ambiance, and it was packed. We were seated in a booth and after reading the menu, we ordered; Fettuccine Alfredo, House Salad and a Deep Dish Pizza with pepperoni, olive, mushrooms and sausage (the kid's favorite toppings).

The
salad was really good and huge and full of fresh green lettuce, tomatoes, onions, olives and more , it was the kind of salad you sincerely enjoy. It also came with a really good house Italian dressing. Cassie liked her fettuccine and ate as much as she could until she was full.. and still had a lot left over, their servings were very good.

The pizza was your typical deep dish style, it had a decent crust and the toppings were good, but I have to admit, the version we have available locally here in Folsom at Chicago Fire Pizza... actually tastes better then the "original" we tried out there. Coincidentally that's the last restaurant my son went to before shipping off to boot camp, the tale of two pizza's has come full circle now.

Chicago Italian Beef and Dogs

Chicago Food

Earlier this month, we flew to Chicago for our son's graduation from Navy boot camp. It was a very nice ceremony and he got some time off so we headed into Chicago to check it out. There were a lot of great sites to see and we got my Uncle JD, who lives there, to show us around. We went to Millennium Park, The John Hancock Tower, Lake Shore Drive, The Aquarium and more.


But my favorite part was going to one of my uncle's favorite old lunch joints in the Italian district in Chicago where he took us to a place called Al's #1 Italian Beef.


The place was small, no tables, no seats, just walk in the door to the counter to order your food and take it home or eat at a shelf by the windows where there was room to set your food down and eat while standing.

The kitchen was right behind the counter and included a charcoal pit for roasting sausages. The menu was small and simple and to the point, everything on it looked good (see photo above). It was very interesting to see and read the walls covered with memorabilia all the way from Jimmy Durante, to Anthony Bourdain and there were lots of signed dollar bills pinned to the walls. There was a lot of interesting old history in this place.

We had the Vienna Hot Dogs done up Chicago style with the works, an Italian beef sandwich and I had to try the packaged tamales...gastronomical nightmares but oh so good going down.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Manderes

Manderes
One of my favorite beer joints / restaurants in Folsom is a small pub and grill at 402 E. Bidwell called Manderes. They have a motto that says "No Crap on Tap" and they mean it. This place is just like Cheers. Brent (pictured above) and Dave, the owners, along with Avalon, Lindsay, Tim and the rest are super friendly and always make you feel welcomed in their "home"

Manderes only serves the best of the best beers and wines, and their food is very good.

Some of their great beers include my favorites: Alagash, Leinenkugel, Anderson Valley, Deschutes, Lagunitas and at least 100 more choices between on tap and bottled.

I've had a lot of fun going to this place over the past 1.5 years since they opened and once a month they host a really fun beer tasting event that always packs the house. They usually showcase a brand or style of beer each time that includes a tasting of the best selections along with an entree' for $18. It's held on the 2nd Wedensday of every month

If you're ever in the Folsom area, I highly recommend you all check out this restaurant and bar.

They have daily food specials consisting of grilled salmon, pork chops, and more, and their regular menu consists of such tasty dishes as Chimay Glazed Chicken, Korean Bulgogi (which you know I like) and they do up a really great steak, ribs, shrimp and more.

Be sure to try their cheesecake blintz dessert sometime too!

Another thing to note about this great little place, they've won many awards since opening: They're in the list of Draft magazines Top 200 bars in the NATION, they were ranked in Sacramento Magazine as one of the best things to do in the Sacramento area. They won KCRA 13's Best Beer Selection in Sacramento, and they have won several times for Best Bar in MyFolsom.com's Best of Folsom selection.

Check out Manderes at:
http://manderes.com/

402 E. Bidwell Street
Folsom, CA. 95630
(916) 986-9655

Time for some updates

Life's been very busy this past month and I haven't had time to update this site but I have been taking notes and photos and have lots of material to post - stay tuned for some new posts soon!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Korean BBQ

Korean Style Bulgogi

Tonight on the menu was Korean-Style Bulgogi with ginger dipping sauce, Sesame Rice Vermicelli and Spicy Pickled Vegetables. In Korea, bulgogi (bul-GOH-gee), or "fire meat" is one of Korea's most popular dishes.

Ingredients (simmer; whisk in)
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup rice vinegar
2 Tbsp soy sauce

2 Tbsp fresh ginger minced

1 Tbsp garlic minced
2 tsp toasted sesame oil

2 tsp sambal (asian hot sauce)
1 Tbsp water

1 tsp corn starch


Season and grill; garnish with;
3/4 lb. ribeye steak, cut into 1/4 thick strips
salt and pepper

sliced scallions
toasted sesame seeds

Simmer sugar, vineg
ar, soy sauce, ginger, garlic, sesame oil, and sambal together in small saucepan over high heat. Combine water and corn starch in a small bowl then whisk into sauce. Return mixture to boil and simmer 1 minute, remove from heat and set aside.

Season ribeye strips with salt and pepper; grill 2 minutes per side, then toss in dipping sauce. Arrange strips on plates and garnish with scallions and sesame seeds.

Sesame Rice Vermicelli
4 oz. dried rice vermicelli
2 Tbsp scallions, thinly sliced

1 Tbsp toasted sesame oil

1 Tbsp sesame seeds, toasted

Prepare vermicelli according to package and cool. Toss with remaining ingredients.

Spicy Pickled Vegetables

(I'll update this part later)



Sunday Appetizers

Enjoyable Appetizers

Today's menu started off with a few appetizers to go with some Sunday football games on the big screen.

We began with a Jalapeno Pepper Spread which was very good - I wish you could smell the photos..(if only the screen was scratch and sniff). This combination of cream cheese, green chili's, jalapeño peppers and Parmesan cheese was truly excellent, every bite was an incredible rush of flavors. I must also warn you, this is one of those foods that takes a lot of will power to stop eating because it tastes so darn good. I recommend eating the dip with tortilla chips or bread, but many different foods would go good with this spread/dip; vegetables, pita bread, doritos chips and more.

Ingredients
2 (8 ounce) packages cream cheese, softened
1 cup mayonnaise
1 (4 ounce) can chopped green chilies, drained
2 ounces canned diced jalapeno peppers, drained
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Directions
Stir together cream cheese and mayonnaise in a large bowl until smooth. Stir in green chiles and jalapeno peppers. Pour mixture into a microwave safe serving dish, and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
Microwave on High until hot, about 3 minutes - or -
If you would like to brown the cheese, bake at 375 degrees F (190 degrees C) for about 30 minutes.


Next up on the menu was Bruschetta with White Beans and Walnuts.
This recipe had a surprising mixture of tastes and textures with the toasted walnuts, garlic, olive oil and sourdough, those flavors went together very well with the pureed white beans.

Ingredie
nts
1/3 cup walnuts
a 15- to 16-ounce can white beans

2 garlic cloves
1 1/2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

six 1/4-inch-thick slices rustic Italian bread

Garnish: chopped fresh flat-leafed parsley leaves

Preheat oven to 350°F.

Directions
In a shallow baking pan toast nuts in middle of oven until fragrant, about 10 minutes, and when cool coarsely chop. Rinse and drain beans. In a food processor mince garlic and purée with beans, lemon juice, and 1 tablespoon oil until smooth.

Toast bread and drizzle with 2 tablespoons oil. Divide purée among toasts and top with nuts. Drizzle remaining tablespoon oil over bruschetta and garnish with parsley.

Enjoy!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Saturday Breakfast Out

Sutter Street Grill Review

We woke up this morning to a very nice sunrise and good weather and decided to hop on the motorcycle to go get some breakfast on Sutter Street in old town Folsom. We went to an old favorite of ours - The Sutter Street Grill which is located at 811 Sutter St. Folsom, CA (916) 985-4323

As described on the web, Sutter Street Grill is a shabby chic country–style diner where the waitress calls you “honey,” silverware is mismatched and breakfast is the main course. The Folsom favorite has an overwhelming breakfast menu with thick slabs of banana walnut French toast, blueberry flapjacks buried in whip cream or the jailhouse (six pieces of bacon, two sausage links, biscuits and gravy). On weekend mornings and summer days, expect a busy crowd with locals, bicyclist and tourists.


Today Ronda and I split the special which was a sausage, tomato and mushroom omelet that we had them add cheddar cheese too. It was fantastic and even a split plate was a lot to eat - the servings here are outstanding and everything tastes really fresh and really good.

To
go with the omelet we had one of their fresh baked cranberry orange muffins, home potatoes, hash browns and an english muffin. They also serve some really good coffee by Pete's Cofffees.

All that food for two (including leftovers and endless coffee refills) cost less then $20 dollars, you can't find a better deal - this is one breakfast place I will always highly recommend - two thumbs up

Go try them out someday soon

Friday Night Out

Mexican Restaurant Review

Friday night we went skipped the home menu and went out to dine at a place we've never been. This is my review of a nice Mexican restaurant in Roseville called "Mas". Located at 1563 Eureka Rd, Roseville (916) 773-3778 - www.masmexicanfood.com

When we arrived, I noticed that I had been to this building before when it was another restaurant, but after walking in, I could see they really improved the place. The ambiance was very nice and they even had a bar and huge outside covered patio area. We sat out on the patio with our good friends Larry and Suzanne and enjoyed a pitcher of very good Margarita's with some fantastic homemade tortilla chips and home made guacamole that was excellent. For dinner I ordered the mole enchilada's which were tasty and Ronda had some tostados. Suzanne had the same as Ronda and Larry tried the carnita's tacos.

The food was very good, the drinks great and the service excellent. But my favori
te part of the evening was the outstanding mariachi band that was playing and roaming around the restaurant. When they came out to our area they played a few songs, the singer was excellent and the players were spot on perfect. I think there were about 8 players in this band. Suzanne gave them a tip and they came over to our table and played a song just for us. The music was fantastic, I really enjoy Latin music (one of my favorites is the Buena Vista Social Club).


We capped off this nice evening out with a stop at Larry and Suzanne's house where Larry busted out a super fine wine from his vast collection (over 500 bottles)

It was a 1977 Fonseca Port and it was pure bliss! It's not often that we get to taste a 32 year old vino. This was on
e of the best wine's I've ever had and as a serious port wine connoisseur, out of a 1 to 10 rating, I give this one an 11!

Cheers!

Friday, September 18, 2009

Cleaning out the fridge for a nice lunch

Po' Boy Sandwich

On Today's Menu is a spur of the moment concoction of ingredients that came to mind while cleaning out our refrigerator. I hate it when food expires and goes to waste, that's good money down the drain. I really try to stay on top of items that are aging to make sure they get used up before they go bad. Today I found a few left overs from our previous dinners and we had a couple of hoagie rolls that were still fairly fresh, so I figured I'd try making my version of a shrimp po' boy sandwich for lunch today.

Here's the list of ingredients I used and how I made this spur of the moment lunch.
Hoagie roll; lightly butter the inside of the bun and lay it flat in a pre-heated pan on medium-high heat and just brown the bread (about 1-2 minutes depending on the heat of the pan). I used my panini pan for this, the trick is making sure the pan is hot enough and do
n't use too much butter.

I generously applied Ronda's home made roasted red pepper sauce to the roll and heated up a pan to medium-high heat with 1 tsp garlic oil and re-heated the shrimp and bacon. I laid that all down on top of a slice of swiss on the roll, let it melt and added some romaine lettuce to the top and voila, my po' boy sandwich. This was the first time I've made one of these and I rather liked it - good stuff!

Ingredients: Hoagie Roll, Cooked shrimp with garlic, Bacon, Swiss Cheese, Sauce (options: aoili, mayo, tobasco, mustard), Lettuce/Tomatos (optional)



Have a great weekend everyone!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Jumbalaya Wraps Revisited

Fantastic Jambalaya

On Today's Menu we had Jumbalaya wraps. These tasty burrito's of sorts are fairly easy to make, just a bit of chopping prep then enjoy the aromas as you cook everything together - its real
ly really good, and good for you. Plus its a nice way to clean out the fridge heh

Ingredients

Makes 2-3 servings (actually it makes almost 3-4 if you throw in a few more shrimp)
Total Time 40 minutes (there is a lot of slicing and dicing)

1/4 cup dry converted rice
1/2 cup hot water
3 oz. andouille or kielbasa sausage, sliced thinly on the bias (this is good to do)
2 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
1/3 cup diced onion
1/3 cup diced celery
1/3 cup diced green bell pepper
8 large shrimp, peeled and deveined (add more if you like shrimp, I suggest cutting them in half - make 'em easier to eat in the burrito)
2 tsp. chopped garlic (or more if you're a garlic maniac like me)
1/2 cup shredded cooked chicken (boil the chicken, then shred with a fork)
1/3 cup quartered cherry tomatos (these taste great, we also have used heirlooms)
2 Tbsp. chopped fresh parsley
1 tsp Tabasco sauce
kosher salt to taste
2 burrito-size flour tortillas (10 inch)

Cook rice in hot water according to method on package, keep rice warm
Brown andouille sausage in oil in a medium saute pan over medium-high heat about 3 minutes
Stir In onion, celery, and bell pepper; saute about 5 minutes. Add shrimp and garlic; cook, stirring constantly until shrimp turns opaque, about 3 minutes.
Add chicken, tomatoes, and rice; cook just to heat through, about 3 minutes. Stir in parsely and Tabasco; season to taste.
Divide jambalaya evenly between tortillas; roll to wrap

Tonite Ronda created a special sauce that we added that was really good: Blend in a food processor: Sour Cream, Cream Cheese, Cream Fraiche, Sun dried Tomatoes, Roasted Red Bell Pepper, and a few other things (I gotta ask her what she put in it again so I can list everything and add quantities)