Monday, December 15, 2008

Catching Up...

This is the time of year when holiday parties take over evenings and weekends, making the quiet night at home a rarity until next year sometime. When not out making merry, we have both been putting in the hours in the lab to bring things to a good stopping point before leaving for New Zealand for the holidays.

Nonetheless, there are a few dishes to catch up on. First there's the inevitable Thanksgiving leftovers: Melissa made a great turkey sandwich that we didn't get photographed, but it was on thin artisan bread, oiled and oven toasted to a hefty crisp with shredded turkey, avocado and saffron-butter gravy from the Big Day. The best use of leftover turkey, however, was in the turkey pie she made a couple of days later. A nice thin pie baked in a springform pan, Melissa filled it with a stew of turkey, peas, carrots, celery and caramelized onions and topped it with a thick layer of pastry dough. Served up with a spoonful of her cranberry sauce and a glass of chardonnay, it kept me going back so many times that we only left a sliver of it for another day...



A couple of weeks ago Melissa tried something she's never done before -- stuffed pork loin. A pork loin is not easy to stuff since the meat is rather dense, but she sliced into them like pita pockets and jammed in a mixture of avocado, salsa and crumbled peccorino cheese (it's what we had in the fridge). They were held closed with bamboo skewers and lightly coated with bread crumbs seasoned with salt and pepper. In order to maintain the shape and breading, Melissa cooked them suspended in the rack of a roasting pan. My food photographs are not as good as Melissa's (it's usually pretty obvious who took them), but the dish came out really well. The pork was tender and juicy, the cheese savory, and the salsa added a nice, clean bit of fresh spice. Served up with some extra sliced avo. Next time we'll add a nice garnish for better presentation.




To use up the extra angel food cake we had leftover from Thanksgiving Day dessert (mixed berry and Amontillado trifle), Melissa generously buttered some thick slices and pan fried them to a delicate crisp, then stuffed them with a simple mixture of sliced bananas and fresh whipped cream. Yes, it was every bit as good as it looks. The amount of butter and heavy cream in this dish might disturb the more health-conscious among our readers, but then that's why I tend to have coffee for breakfast and steamed broccoli or yogurt for lunch. My colleagues at work must think I'm on some silly diet, but those who have joined us for dinner at home understand that I'm just saving my caloric intake for Melissa's concoctions.




Finally, on a recent night last week Melissa asked me to pick up cat food and something green on the way home from work. I was pretty sure who the cat food was for, but I knew that what I chose from the produce aisle would play a large part in determining what we had for dinner. I decided to try something I had never seen before: Chinese long beans. Once they were chopped up in the beef stir fry Melissa made for four (Evan and Amanda came around for drinks, so Melissa fed us all), they looked fairly innocuous, but they resembled a squirming handful of huge, green night-crawlers when I removed them from the bag and brandished them for Melissa's inspection.



The garlic and curried beef stir fry was a huge hit, and the now-abbreviated long beans were a clean, herby complement with a denser consistency than regular green beans. Exotic produce is always great fun...

Notes on the Beef Curry:

This was a fairly simple recipe but came out wonderfully.

1/2 can of coconut cream
1 tbs of Red John West Thai Curry Paste
1 stalk of lemon grass
1 onion - chopped in half rings
olive oil
250gms of Eye Fillet (Beef Tenderloin) - Sirloin or Rump is also good, but boy is eye fillet tender
1/2 cup of almonds ground in blender to the consistency of bread crumbs
~300gms of Chinese Long Beans - chopped into 2 inch lengths
1 tsp of chicken stock paste

In a large pot fry the onion in olive oil until tender. Add lemon grass and continue to fry for a minute or so. Add the curry paste and thinly sliced beef and toss quickly until the beef is lightly browned. Add the coconut cream, almonds, chicken stock paste and Chinese long beans. Bring to the boil and put a tight fitting lid on the pot. After ~5 minutes the beans should be steamed and the dish ready to serve with rice.

Frozen green beans really can't compete with the Chinese long beans for consistency and flavour, but you could get away with fresh green beans if you can't find these beans at your local supermarket.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yardlong_bean

Friday, November 28, 2008

Fifth Annual Blackwood Street Thanksgiving

I've always had really good memories associated with Thanksgiving: long walks and bonfires in Tarpley, Texas (population: us), with my father's side of the family; formal dinner and frisbee marathons in Houston, Texas, with my mother's side of the family. Food galore and the comfort of friends and family -- nothing is better.

But now that we live so far away and it's not practical to travel for both Thanksgiving and Christmas, Melissa and I have developed our own tradition here in Boston. For the past five years, we have gathered together an evolving group of Americans who can't be with family, and non-Americans who may have never celebrated the holiday before, for a full day of food, wine and good company. It's an all-day extravaganza of eating and drinking that some of our dedicated guests look forward to each year almost as much as we do.



Like a kid on Christmas morning, Melissa woke up at 5:30 am and couldn't get back to sleep, because this is her favorite day of the year. I went to 7-11 to get some ice to chill the bubbly, then cleaned up the place while Melissa made the stuffing and prepped the turkey before any guests arrived. We always start with a champagne breakfast around 10 am, and some of our friends come by for the early meal before going to dinner with family.

This year we had 14 for breakfast, and Melissa's stuffed croissants were snapped up as soon as each batch came out of the kitchen. The filling of black forest ham, peccorino cheese, avocado, tomatoes and ground pepper was met with unanimous approval. The shortcut: croissants from a can. They smell absolutely heavenly in the oven, which is always a great way to greet early guests, and make for a quick and easy preparation at the beginning of a long day of cooking. The few who arrived after the croissants were all gone had to settle for the lemon crepes Melissa whipped up as a backup plan. We had orange juice and pomegranate to make mimosas with Lindauer Brut (non-vintage, New Zealand), a half-case of which was consumed well before dinner was served...



We were expecting a largely non-overlapping second wave of about ten guests for the big feast, and those who stayed through or arrived (as recommended) with plenty of time for relaxing and wine drinking before dinner were met with a reward of Wellfleet oysters I bought live the day before. The comfortable lull between breakfast and dinner was thus filled with oyster shucking and satisfied slurping -- all accompanied by New Zealand (Lindauer) and Italian (Prosecco) sparkling wines.



As soon as the breakfast preparations were finished, the turkey went into the oven. Melissa roasted the 13-pound organic turkey with a saffron-butter glaze and her pistachio and olive stuffing. After some experimentation in recent years, she has settled on this recipe, and the consensus is that it's a truly fantastic concoction. The saffron butter is the first aroma that makes it to the nose, well before the smell of roasting turkey wafts out of the kitchen, and the pistachios and green olives in the stuffing provide a great texture and flavor.



The trimmings for the turkey and stuffing included gravy that really held onto that saffron-butter flavor, a homemade cranberry sauce, blanched snap-peas and chipotle mashed sweet potatoes. The spicy potatoes are something we experienced a few years ago at East Coast Grill in Somerville, MA, and we thought it was such a great idea that we had to incorporate it into our Thanksgiving dinner as a variation on the traditional candied yams or sweet potatoes. Five large sweet potatoes were roasted whole in the oven until very soft, then peeled and mashed with one stick of butter, a splash of cream, a sprinkling of sea salt and three finely chopped smoked chipotle peppers, which come in a small can drowned in adobo sauce. The smokey flavor is divine, and there is just enough spice to sneak up on you after a few bites -- puts a nice kick into the plate.

We had a hodgepodge of wines open for the big feast: a couple of chardonnays, of which the Louis Latour 2006 Grand Ardeche was the star, a couple of pinot noirs, among which I really liked the Blason de Bourgogne 2007 Burgundy, and another bottle of the 2006 Paul Jaboulet Parallele 45 Cotes du Rhone we had with our midnight breakfast last Saturday. After that it was a free-for-all, and we had Aussie shiraz, Spanish tempranillo, German riesling and New Zealand sauvignon blanc, among others, as the night progressed.



For dessert Melissa made a trifle -- actually, twelve of them. The concoctions of mixed berries, angel food cake, dutch custard, whipped cream, Amontillado sherry and slivered almonds were assembled early that morning and placed in boxes outside in the cold to settle in and soak up the sherry. We know it's good when Amanda goes back for a second dessert...




When the feasting was all done (around 6 pm) it was already dark outside, but the night was young. With our bellies (and our glasses) full, we settled in for a rousing game of "Who Am I?" (See Etienne and Angelique trying to divine the names on their foreheads, below), followed by a few rounds of the more sinister game "Mafia". Turns out I'm not a very convincing Mafioso. Melissa, on the other hand...



Thanks to everyone who helped make the day a really great time, and we wish everyone a very happy Thanksgiving.

__________________________________________________________________________

Recipes

Actually, for this post there are very few recipes for me to write. The "croissants" where Pilsbury cresent rolls, baked according to the instructions and filled with shaved cheese, ham, tomato and avocado when still piping hot.

The turkey was made from a recipe I saw in a cuisine magazine. It can be found here. The only alterations I'd make to the recipe is to continue topping up the liquid in the pan with water as the cooking proceeds and I preferred chicken broth here rather than wine. The liquids made a beautiful gravy at the end by just adding a tablespoon of cornstarch (corn flour) mixed in a little water and heating it through to thicken.

The cranberry sauce was simply 1 bag of fresh cranberries boiled with a small amount of water (just enough to cover the bottom of a pot) and 1/2 cup of sugar with a pinch of cloves and nutmeg. It takes about 5 minutes for the cranberries to pop and turn to mush.

For the trifle I simply layered the ingredients listed above in glasses. This is the first time I've made a trifle, but next time I think I'll cut the sherry with simple syrup, or maybe even melted peach jam to soak into the sponge (angelfood) cake and berries.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Midnight Breakfast; Roast Chicken Thigh with Roast Vegetable Gravy

Actually it was more like 2 am: Last Saturday we went out with an eclectic group of friends for Evan's birthday. We started at the Top of the Hub, a bar and restaurant on the 52nd floor of the Prudential Tower, a mere three-minute walk from our apartment. On such a cold, crystal-clear night, the view of the city was awesome. After a bunch of drinks there, we froze our asses off scouting the area for another bar and ended up at Azure at the Lenox Hotel on Boylston Street. We then had a bunch of drinks there, and when the bar was ready to close we decided to bring handful of the more dedicated revelers back to our place for a late-night breakfast.



We stopped by our local 24-hour grocery store (I love the city) to pick up some eggs and bacon, and then we let out our secret for the world's most ridiculously fantastic eggs ever made. Melissa taught me this recipe, and it's usually pulled out late at night when scrambled eggs are the only thing we are competent to cook and eat safely. Beat eggs in a bowl wth a splash of milk or cream, a generous dose of grated Parmesan cheese, a few cranks from the pepper grinder, a small spoonful of chicken stock paste or powder, and a dash of Thai fish sauce. Yes, fish sauce. To be more exact, it's anchovy juice. You would never know it's there, it just adds a salty, savory flavor that your body craves after a big night out. Scramble in a skillet on medium heat and serve nice and slimy. We added bacon, baguette and a bottle of Paul Jaboulet Parallele 45 Cotes du Rhone (2006; grenache/syrah) to round out a great night out. Happy Birthday, Evan!

The following day, I whisked away Amanda (and her car) to go wine shopping at Trader Joe's. Gotta stock up for Thanksgiving and all the holiday parties coming up. After fighting the ridiculous pre-Thanksgiving Sunday evening crowds to buy a couple of cases of vino, we forced Amanda to join us for dinner and a True Blood catch-up session (our new favorite HBO series about vampires).



Melissa made oven-roasted chicken thighs with a roasted vegetable gravy that had us all chewing the bone and licking the bowls clean. She first seasoned the chicken thighs (bone-in, skin-on) with chicken stock powder and pan-seared them to cook out some of the fat. Then she roasted them in a large roasting pan (which is about to get a real workout on Thanksgiving) along with some chopped carrots, celery, onions and cubed potatoes. When the chicken was finished, she removed the meat and most of the vegetables, then made a pan-gravy by adding some chicken broth to deglaze the roasting pan, leaving in some of the roasted vegetables, and warming through on the stovetop. The final result was liquified with a hand blender to thicken and served under the chicken and vegetables in large soup bowls. Perfect for a cold night at home and some good TV.

We had both a Mondavi Private Selection 2007 chardonnay (Central Coast, CA) and a Matua Valley 2007 sauvignon blanc (Marlborough, New Zealand) open for this meal. The chardonnay was a much better match to the meal, but not everyone likes California chardonnay, and New Zealand sauvignon blanc is so good that we'll drink it with just about anything.

We're having a large Thanksgiving gathering tomorrow, so there'll be more to come very soon...

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Chicken with Pomegranate Tartlets; Steam-baked Tilapia with Ribboned Zucchini

As colder weather sets in there is less fresh, in-season produce to get excited about, but Melissa manages to find inspiration nonetheless. A recent dish inspired by a leftover fruit from the pomegranate martinis we made for my birthday cocktail party featured marscapone and pomegranate tartlets as accompaniment to chicken thighs with Lima beans and green peas. Grilled boneless chicken thighs were seasoned with simple chicken stock paste and ground pepper. Melissa sauteed some chopped onions with coarsely chopped bacon to add to the soaked, boiled Lima beans and briefly boiled green peas.

The tartlets were a real treat. Not being very experienced with eating pomegranate, I've only sort of chewed the flesh off and spit out the seed. In this dish the seeds and flesh were together in the tart on top of a generous cushion of marscapone cheese. The result was a light crunch from the filo shell, a rich creamy base from the marscapone, a jolt of tart from the pomegranate fruit, and a coarse crunch from the seeds. A panoply of textures and flavors. Melissa baked these for about 12 minutes at 400F in a mini-tart pan.

We had a Sbragia 2004 Home Ranch Merlot (Sonoma, CA) that we already had open with this meal. Someone brought this wine around on my birthday (who are you?), and it was fantastic. What a rich, fruit-driven, velvety-smooth wine. Backed up by vanilla and oak, it was really nice with the tart and savory mix in this dish.



On another recent evening we stopped by the store on the way home to forage for some dinner ideas. Before even reaching the store we discovered we were both thinking fish. And since we were also thinking inexpensive, we brought home some tilapia fillets and Melissa made an old stand-by of ours: tilapia fillets (it works equally well with whole cleaned trout) are seasoned with sea salt and ground pepper, then wrapped up in foil pouches with lemon, garlic and tomato slices and a generous pat of butter. We often cook these on the grill (which is how I learned it while trout fishing in the Rocky Mountains), but it also works in the oven. Melissa served the fish with ribboned zucchini (cooked covered in the microwave for three minutes and seasoned with a sprinkle of chicken stock powder), and some fresh sliced grape tomatoes, the last remnants from our garden this season.



We had a bottle of Guy Saget 2007 Vouvray (France) with the fish. We were hoping for a nice dry chenin blanc here, but this wine is off-dry to sweet. It's a little frustrating that the bottle doesn't give any indication that it's "demi-sec," but I still have good impressions of Vouvray whites from the handful that we've tried of late.

I recently read that Australia makes some fantastic ultra-dry semillon, so I think we will soon be on a mission to try those out...

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A quick note on another great budget red we found at Trader Joe's a couple of weeks ago: Epicuro Beneventano Aglianico (2006) from Italy. A deep ruby-red wine; the nose was deceptively similar to gamay (think Nouveau Beaujolais with its light, red Jello aromas), but the flavors in this wine were all rich blackberries and black cherries, with a decent backbone of tannin and bit of pepper and earth to back it up. This was surprisingly good for a $6 bottle. Seriously -- I think I'll buy a case of it soon. It would probably even improve a little by sitting on the shelf for a year or three; not that it'll last that long at our place...

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Halloween Party

The last three weeks have been a bit crazy, with two scientific meetings (and presentations to prepare for both), pretty heavy workloads in the lab, and a great costume/cocktail party for my birthday last weekend.



We had 22 people show up, mostly in costume, for a great party in our small apartment on Halloween. We had pomegranate martinis, strawberry daquiris, lots of wine and some great food. Melissa made her beef stew with polenta (previously posted), sausage rolls, homemade pate and bloody fingers (hot dogs with almond sliver fingernails).


Jawdat and Zee brought some great cupcakes which stood in as birthday cake, and a good time was had by all.



We were too busy playing hosts to take photos, so thanks to Jawdat, Zee and Uhn-Soo for keeping their cameras handy.


We'll soon get back to posting some new dishes now that things have settled down a bit for now...


Monday, October 20, 2008

Chicken Salad; Beef and Polenta Stew; Pork with Polenta and Pomegranate Reduction

Since our last post we have hosted my parents for a week-long visit to enjoy the New England autumn colors, and both of us experienced a considerable up-tick in the work to be done in the lab. Fortunately the cause is positive -- Melissa just submitted her latest manuscript for review and I am diving headlong into data analysis from some very important experiments. However it does cut down on the time we have for serious eating...

These are some pics we took in Franconia Notch State Park in New Hampshire -- two from my dad (single leaves) and one of mine (canopy shot). Evan also got some really nice photos near Franconia Notch recently, as well as on a day trip he took with Melissa and me with my parents to Newburyport, MA.






We had a beautiful day for that trip, and our lunchtime picnic fare consisted of roast chicken, fresh ciabatta, cheeses and some local apples. These was all store-bought, but the next evening, Melissa made a light dinner of the leftover chicken and her own arugula and pecan pesto. She served the chicken salad on a bed of fresh arugula with rosemary au gratin potatoes and a bottle of 2008 Bogle Chardonnay (CA). Yum.




This past week Melissa has been experimenting some more with polenta. The first dish she made was a beef stew on soft polenta. The stew was made with browned chuck steak, potatoes, onions, fennel, garlic, whole black peppercorns and a red jalapeno from our garden, all in a chicken stock base. The soft polenta was a cornmeal base with Parmesan cheese and some New Zealand butter Melissa recently discovered at the grocery store. It was topped off with reduced grape tomatoes and a fennel-frond garnish. That polenta was amazing -- rich and creamy with plenty of flavors bleeding in from the stew. And the reduced tomatoes provided a sweet and tart counterpoint to the beef, garlic and onions. Between the whole peppercorns and the jalapeno pepper it packed a punch, but the heat wasn't overpowering and added a nice extra dimension to the dish. We had the stew with a 2006 Ku de Ta Malbec (Medoza Valley, Argentina), which was big enough to stand up to the dish, but was a little too young and tannic for us.




The second dish was pan-fried pork loin with a garlicky pomegranate reduction, fresh arugula, reduced grape tomatoes and a thicker polenta with lots of roasted garlic. The pomegranate reduction was the same one used for the lamb and eggplant dish Melissa served for a recent dinner party, and it's so good I think I would eat it on cardboard. Fortunately I don't have to, since Melissa is a real expert with pork loin. The line between cooked through and overdone is diminishingly thin with pork, but Melissa always gets it right on the nose.


Monday, October 6, 2008

Classic Spaghetti; Pork and Eggplant Stir-Fry; Hot Chicken Pockets

After the great fun of hosting a large dinner party on Friday (Sept 26), we had a weekend of cleanup and recovery. Two broken wine glasses (one by me), a few Cabernet stains on the carpet (don't just clean it -- OXYCLEAN IT!), and one curtain rod torn from the wall kept me busy on Saturday. A couple of four-inch wood screws and a little drywall repair got the curtains back up well enough to last another year or two of rental, and the rest of the rainy weekend was spent resting up and doing a bit of routine cloning in the lab. Molecular biology can be surprisingly relaxing...

Monday night Melissa pulled out a classic spaghetti with tomato meat sauce. We had about four boxes of angel hair pasta left over from the dinner party (better too much than not enough), and it will all be put to good use eventually. In this dish Melissa used a base of canned diced tomatoes with garlic, onions and a whole lot of fresh basil from the garden. Chuck steak minced in the food processor added a fine meat base that melded into the sauce without being too omnipresent. A 2005 Villa Cerrina Montepulciano d'Abruzzo (Abruzzi, Italy) was really nice with this pasta dish. This wine is one of Trader Joe's best sellers when it's available -- a great budget Italian red at $5 for the bottle.



Tuesday we supped on Beth's famous buffalo chicken dip and warm chocolate chip cookies at our regular game night with some HMS graduate students. While Melissa and I kicked ass at Trivial Pursuit that night, I have to say it is generally surprising how bad a bunch of Harvard-trained scientists can be at this game.

Wednesday dinner was a great dish to use up the leftover eggplant from last Friday while also powering through the arugula and grape tomatoes that will otherwise soon rot in the garden as colder weather sets in. On a thick bed of said arugula, Melissa served up a pork loin stir fry seasoned with sea salt and liquid smoke and accompanied by a roasted garlic, eggplant and grape tomato puree. The smoky pork, sweet caramelized garlic and tart tomato flavors filled out the eggplant base and complemented the spicy arugula just perfectly. Melissa will attempt to reproduce this recipe upon request, but she says it's been too long since she made it to remember exactly what was done. Clearly a not-so-subtle suggestion that I get the blog posts up in a more timely fashion...




By far the most tastebud-jolting dish to come out of the kitchen last week was Melissa's spicy chicken pita pockets. Chicken thigh meat was marinated for a couple of hours with a Mexican chili powder mix, dried chili flakes, crushed garlic cloves and lemon juice, then pan fried and stuffed into halved pita bread with a fresh salsa made of tomatoes, basil and jalapeno peppers (all from our garden) with a bit of lemon juice and some tasty Australian olive oil. The jalapeno peppers we grew were hotter than we expected, and the whole thing snuck up on us like a mouthful of blowtorch. When the 2007 Villa Maria Riesling (Marlborough, NZ) we had with dinner failed to cool us down, we resorted to a glass of whole milk. The flavor was Texalicious and the pepper-storm was, well, cathartic.




When our tongues were sufficiently cooled and the last tears were wiped from our eyes, we went back for more...

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Dinner for Sixteen

Last Friday we held a going away dinner for a friend and colleague of ours who will soon take up a new post as assistant professor of biochemistry at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. On a rainy night starting at about 7 pm, we packed sixteen people into our 400 sq ft apartment for a three-course dinner and a copious outpouring of wine and good wishes. Five hours and sixteen bottles of wine later, the last guests left well-fed and in good cheer.

Of course Melissa's careful planning and brilliant execution made the night a great success, and our only misdeed may have been sending off the guest of honor a little later (and possibly a little rougher around the edges) than he meant to be leaving town on the following day...

Here is Melissa's account:

Always up for a challenge I agreed to Matt's idea of hosting a farewell dinner for one of our friends who moved to Atlanta this weekend. That challenge was that Matt was inviting the entire floor in the building where he works - and their partners. In the end we had a guest list of 14 plus ourselves but it could have ended up much bigger.

So how do you cook a three course dinner for 16 people out of a 400 square foot apartment while a storm rages outside, blocking access to the only dining table? It's all in the planning:

Menu

Nibbles on arrival

Pita chips with curried hummus and tabouleh
Olives, artichoke hearts and pickled onions

First Course: Eggplant stuffed with spiced lamb on roasted capsicum with pomegranate dressing



Second Course: Angel hair pasta with a chicken and mushroom cream sauce



Dessert: Mixed berry and apple crumble.



Recipes

Both the Hummus and Tabouleh recipes have already been posted on Foodie Calls.

I made the hummus the night before and refrigerated it in the ramekins I planned to serve it in. The bulgar wheat was also cooked the night before, but the rest of the tabouleh ingredients were assembled a couple of hours before everyone arrived.

Pita Chips

Buy whole pita breads and split in half by gently running a knife between the two layers. Brush rough side with olive oil and crushed garlic. Bake in a 420oF oven for ~5 to 10 minutes until lightly browned. Let cool a little and then cut into wedges. This needs to be started around 15 minutes before people are due to arrive so the chips are a little warm and there is a wonderful toasted garlic aroma in the air to tickle their tastebuds.

Eggplant and lamb

This is a recipe from Cuisine Magazine that I'd made before. I exchanged the chickpeas for minced/ground lamb and added a few fennel seeds. If you can't get pomegranate molasses for the dressing just buy pure pomegranate juice and simmer it in a pan to reduce it to a syrup. It retains all of its tart flavours. I made 2.5x the recipe.

I made the lamb filling, pomegranate dressing and roasted the bell pepper/capsicum the night before. The eggplant slices need to be cooked on the day, but as I needed 16 slices grilled on each side, and I could only fit around 6 in the oven at a time I started cooking them on one side a couple of hours before everyone arrived. I cooked the eggplant on sheets of aluminium foil and once a batch was done flipped the eggplant to the uncooked side and lifted the foil with the eggplant on it and stacked it right on top of the last lot. This held in a lot of the heat and continued cooking so that around 1/2 hour after everyone had arrived and was comfortable all I had to do was transfer each foil layer back to the grill for around 5 minutes to brown the other side of the eggplant.

The roasted peppers and filling I reheated by nuking in the microwave (covered to keep all the moisture in). It took around 5 minutes to assemble each plate with a roast pepper half on bottom, eggplant wrapped around filling on top, finished with a dollop of Greek yogurt and a drizzle of pomegranate reduction. Amanda did the honours of passing out the plates, and by the time she'd finished with the first six, another six were on their way.

Pasta

3 lbs Mixed mushrooms - I used baby bello, portobello and oyster mushrooms
1 lb Skinless and boneless chicken thigh
1/2 lb Butter
1 cup light cream
1 tbsp Chicken stock paste
1 tbsp Dried tarragon
3 tbsp Dijon mustard
2 Sliced red onions
1 lb Arugula/Rocket leaves
32 oz Angel hair pasta
2 tbsp Cornstarch/cornflour to thicken

The night before, I sliced the mushrooms and the red onions and defrosted the chicken so they were ready to go. To cook I first filled a stock pot with warm water and put on the heat to boil the water. This is by far the most time consuming part of the recipe, as it can take up to 30 minutes for a large pot of water to reach a rolling boil. Then I crammed as many mushrooms as I could into a covered pot with a couple of sticks of butter (200 g) roughly chopped, and cooked over a low to medium heat. Every 5 minutes I'd check the mushrooms and try to get the uncooked ones to the top, and vice versa.

The mushrooms release a lot of moisture, and after ~15 minutes of cooking I added 1 tbsp of chicken stock paste and the tarragon to the mushrooms. While the mushrooms were cooking, I sliced the chicken into small thin pieces and got the onions cooking. In a large pan I fried the onions in a little olive oil till they were translucent, and then removed them from the pan. Next I added the chicken a fried till it was cooked through, then added back the onions and added the Dijon mustard. At this point if I had a pot or pan big enough, I would have mixed everything together and added the cream. Instead, I transferred some of the mushrooms to the pan with the chicken and onions and added cream to both the mushrooms in the pot and chicken in the pan, and simmered for a couple of minutes.

With the sauce almost done it was time to cook the pasta. This pasta is so thin it takes around 3-4 minutes to cook al dente. In fact, I was more worried about overcooking it to mush than it not being ready in time, so I left it to the very last minute to cook. Back to the chicken and mushrooms, I thickened the sauce with a paste of cornflour and a little cream. Add a little at a time, since it takes around 30 seconds for the sauce to thicken after addition to a simmering sauce. Stop adding cornflour when you have the consistency you desire. I then combined both the pot of mushrooms and the pan of sauce which just fit in the pan. Drain the pasta as soon as its al dente.

To serve I placed a small handful of arugula at the bottom of each dish, topped with a tong full of pasta and spooned the mushroom, chicken mixture on top.

Berry, apple crumble

Fruit filling
8 granny smith apples
1 lb of frozen mixed berries
1/2 cup of sugar
1 tbsp of ground cinnamon
Topping
2 cups of rolled oats
1 cup of dark brown sugar
1/2 lb of butter
2 tbsp of ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp of ground allspice
1/2 tsp of ground nutmeg
To serve
Greek yogurt
Mint sprigs

The previous night I peeled and diced the apples into large chunks and placed in a ziplock bag with a little lemon juice to stop the pieces going brown. Before everyone arrived I scattered the mixed berries, apple, sugar and cinnamon into two casserole dishes with lids and set aside. I also put all the topping ingredients into the kitchen aid mixer so the butter could soften and it was ready to mix just before I needed it. Just before I started preparing the chicken, I put the covered dishes with fruit in the oven at 380oF to let the fruit stew in its own juices. Around 10 minutes before everyone was ready for dessert I started the mixer to combine the butter and oats etc and removed the fruit from the oven. I topped the stewed fruit with a layer of topping and put back in to the oven uncovered to get the topping nicely toasted (~10 minutes). To serve I topped each portion with a dollop of Greek yogurt and a small mint sprig.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

A Pastry Experiment; Lamb Shank with Asparagus; Moussaka of Leftovers

So last Friday Melissa's lab hosted the DFCI Dana 14 happy hour. Never one to pass up an opportunity to feed people, Melissa made homemade cheese puffs for the event. She has been wanting to try this for some time, and after a bit of research she set out to try the recipe she liked best...




They came out just beautifully, light and fluffy with the soft flavor of Gruyere cheese. Melissa stuffed the ones we had at home Thursday night with a salmon cream cheese sauce, chopped asparagus and fennel leaf. I see great things on the horizon with her pastry-type experiments. It took everything I had not to get up in the middle of the night and gorge on the cheese puffs meant for the happy hour.




Saturday was a big day out: food and wine shopping in the morning, a quick stop in the lab to tend to our cell cultures, then a light lunch at home. Some soba noodles with caramelized onions, bacon (mmmmmm... bacon...) and chopped asparagus.





We had little time to dawdle over lunch since we were due at Jillian's for bowling with about a dozen other people in celebration of a birthday. After a nice dinner at Eastern Standard in Kenmore Square we went down to the Roxy for what turned out to be a great night of music and open bar. My sister-in-law Casey's younger sister Kelly was in town with her company Rock Star Karaoke NYC (that's karaoke with a live band and backup singers) to play a private event at the club. This thing was enormous. A German biotech company rented out all three floors of the city's biggest dance club and threw open the bar(s) for what had to have been well over a thousand people. Although it was a private event, we got in as guests of the band and partied with them after the show. Sweet. See Evan's post from the day for some pics.


I ended up having quite a late day at the lab Sunday while Melissa recovered from Saturday's shenanigans in front of the television. Somewhere between movies inspiration struck, and by the time I got home she had made a roast lamb shank with red wine, tomato and onion sauce, blanched asparagus and lima beans.




The lamb was so tender it fell off the bone at the mere sight of a fork, and the meat just melted in your mouth. You have to cook it long and slow and turn it with love (see Melissa's recipes and notes below). We had a Trader Joe's La Boca cabernet with this dish (it was also in the lamb) that turned out to be really nice for $4 (seriously, $4). Not too shabby.




Finally, Monday's moussaka. We had been given some baby eggplants from a local farm recently, so Melissa made a nice moussaka using the eggplants, some pepper jack cheese we had in the freezer and the leftovers from the lamb shank dinner.



You can't go wrong with those ingredients, really. It was a rich and tasty dish with subtle reminders of the previous night's dinner lamb shank. Gotta love the continuity...


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Melissa's Recipes and Notes

Lamb Shanks

1 large or 2 small lamb shanks
1 can of diced tomatoes
1 head of garlic
1 tbsp of dijon mustard
1/2 cup of red wine
1 red onion
1 tsp of salt
1 tbsp of whole black peppercorns
1/2 cup of water
A couple of sprigs of rosemary
4 dried bayleaves

Place lambshanks into large casserole dish. Pulse tomatoes in a blender to chop tomatoes finely. Slice onion into half rings. Peel all the cloves in a head of garlic. Combine all ingredients and pour over lambshanks. Make sure the liquid is around half way up the side of the casserole dish. Bake covered at 380oF for 3 hours or more while turning shanks every hour or so. Around an hour before you intend to serve uncover the shanks to allow the liquid in the dish to evaporate to leave a thick sauce. Remove bayleaves before serving.

Lima beans - previously described

Asparagus

Break off stems that are woody at the bottom of the spears and place in a casserole dish. Blanch by pouring enough boiling water over the asparagus spears to fill the casserole dish. Cover and let sit for around 10 minutes. Drain and coat with parmesan cheese and freshly ground pepper.

Moussaka


There were quite a bit of leftovers from the lamb dish and I was secretly hoping Matt might have another late night in the lab and I could have a second meal out of them. What was left was really only enough for one, so when Matt came home at a normal hour I came up with a quick and easy moussaka-like recipe to finish them off. Howell and Melinda had given Matt some small eggplants and we had some pepperjack cheese left over from a Dana14 Happy Hour. Add in a few grape tomatoes, some basil leaves and a pepper from the plants outside and we had a meal on our hands.

3 baby eggplants
Salt
Olive oil
~1/2 to 3/4 cup of cooked lima beans
~10 large basil leaves
~6 asparagus spears - cooked
~6 grape tomatoes
1 small mild pepper
~1/2 cup of sauce and lamb pieces from lamb shanks
1/2 cup of pepperjack cheese cubes

Slice baby eggplants longways, salt and drizzle with olive oil. Grill/Broil in oven and flip when each side is golden brown. When eggplants are nicely brown and all the sponginess is gone they're ready. Make layers of ingredients in a small casserole dish. Here's the order I laid down the ingredients Cover the bottom of a small casserole dish with lima beans. Then add ~5 whole basil leaves. Make a layer of eggplant slices using half of the eggplant. Cover with sauce from lamb shanks. Chop asparagus spears and pepper together and sprinkle over sauce. Half grape tomatoes and put on top of asparagus. Cover with rest of basil leaves. Throw in cheese cubes and cover with the rest of the eggplant slices. Put lid on dish and microwave for 5 minutes. Remove cover and sprinkle with a little parmesan cheese and put in 400oF oven uncovered until parmesan cheese is melted and a little crispy (~5 minutes)

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Cabbage Lovers Rejoice...

... or: "Fun With Cabbage".

Two weeks since our last post... Rest assured we have been eating, but with a long weekend trip to Texas to see the Call family (enchiladas and margaritas galore) and lots of nights out here in Boston, we haven't had much to put up.

Speaking of family, check out these photos my folks snapped of us with the newest member of the Call family, Betsy Ruth Call (2 mo) with her older brother Beckett (3 yr) and the proud parents Brian and Casey Call.




Now to the food:

Three recent meals reflect Melissa's versatility with a simple and humble ingredient: cabbage. Now I was never a huge fan of cabbage, although I have consumed my fair share of coleslaw growing up in the south. And what the Germans do to cabbage borders on offensive. But since knowing Melissa I have met quite a few cabbage-based dishes that went down quite well -- cabbage stir fry, spicy Asian-inspired cabbage soup, it's even been used in omelets. These are not vegetarian dishes, but the methods for preparing the cabbage can easily be adapted to meatless ingredients. (By the way, all three dishes were made using just one head of cabbage.)

First, a great example of the Asian style cabbage dish: chopped cabbage and soba (Japanese buckwheat noodles) stir fried with pork tenderloin and sambal oelek chili paste. Not fancy, just really tasty and full of whole grain goodness; topped off with a smattering of uncooked cabbage for a bit of crunch. As usual, a gewurztraminer is our choice with spicy Asian-style foods. Cono Sur "Vision" gewurz (2007, Casablanca Valley, Chile) is our current favorite for under $20.



The second dish was an inspired combination that came out fantastically well: cabbage and lima beans with bacon, caramelized onions and red capsicum (bell pepper). Cabbage and lima beans are both ingredients that strike fear into the hearts many a finicky American child, but my biases were jettisoned a long time ago when it came to trusting Melissa's culinary judgement. The flavors in this dish were beautifully melded, largely because of the way Melissa cooked it all. The lima beans take around and hour or more to cook, so they were boiling away long before the rest of the dish was prepared. Around 30 minutes prior to the lima beans being finished the onions were caramelized in a slather of olive oil. The bacon went in next and slow cooked until done, and slices of capsicum were added just prior to serving. The cabbage was wilted by steaming over the lima beans just as they were finishing. Layer upon layer to serve and washed down with a Sam Adams Light. Yum.



As good as that dish was, the last one was really the coup de grace. A simple beef stir fry made with sambal oelek and red onions, with fresh arugula from the garden (it grew like mad while we were gone), accompanied Melissa's roasted cabbage. She sliced up the remaining cabbage in thick (about 1 inch) slices and roasted them in a roasting pan with olive oil and a bit of sea salt. The cabbage softened to a perfect consistency and the caramelized edges were smoky and just a little sweet. And it's visually stunning. Wow. Cabbage -- who knew? A 2007 Mondavi Private Selection chardonnay (CA) did the trick with this dish. Crisp and fruity with very subtle oak.





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A quick note on a nice wine we had while comfortably accommodated at Brian and Casey's beautiful new home in Fort Worth, Texas. I have met a number of inexpensive red blends from California that I have really enjoyed (think Red Truck). This Bordeaux-style blend from Napa Valley was really nice: Bangin' Red from Crescendo Hills Winery. Not sure what year it was, but I did read the label and I remember it had cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc, merlot, malbec, zinfandel and probably some petit verdot. (Aside from not being made in Bordeaux, the inclusion of zinfandel grapes keeps it from being a true Bordeaux blend). Nice ripe berries, vanilla and spices on the nose and in the mouth; not particularly complex, but a great red for about $10.


Try it out if you spot it in your bottle store...

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Melissa's recipes

Stir fried noodles with pork and cabbage

250g Pork tenderloin
1/4 cup of soy sauce
1 tsp of sambal oelek (or other chilli paste)
1 tbsp of sesame seed oil
Soba noodles
1/4 large cabbage
1/4 cup of rice wine vinegar
1/4 cup of water

Slice pork into thin strips
Marinate in Soy Sauce, Sambal Oelek and sesame seed oil.
Boil Soba noodles together with cabbage in a pot of water
Stir fry Pork in hot pan with a little olive oil (saving the marinade juices for later)
Drain noodles and cabbage and add to frying pan
Add in marinade, rice wine vinegar and water to the hot fry pan so it coats the noodles, cabbage and soba. Let it boil off some steam for around a minute to reduce the liquid and make sure any pork juices are cooked.


Cabbage and lima beans with bacon

1 cup of lima beans
1/2 red onion
4 rashers of bacon
1/4 cabbage
1 red capsicum (bell pepper)


The lima beans take around and hour or more to cook unless you soak them overnight in cold water or soak them in hot water for an hour or two before cooking. I can never plan that far in advance so I boil them for around an hour at 20 minutes. While the lima beans are cooking, slice the onion into half rings and slow saute in olive oil until they're soft and add chopped bacon to the pan. Continue to cook on low to medium heat until the onions are fully caramelized and the bacon rendered and chewy. Add the sliced red capsicum to the frying pan a minute or two before serving and toss with the onions and bacon. Steam the cabbage over the lima beans in a bamboo steamer for 5 minutes. (alternatively boil in a little water for ~10 minutes). Serve the cabbage on the bottom, then lima beans, topped with the onion/bacon/capsicum mixture.

Sliced flank steak with roasted cabbage

500g of flank steak
1/4 cup of soy sauce
1 tsp of sambal oelek (or other chilli paste)
1 tsp of sesame seed oil
1/2 red onion
couple of handfuls of arugula (rocket)
1/2 a cabbage
Olive oil

Slice cabbage in 1 inch thick slices leaving stem intact. The stem keeps all the leave together so you can roast pieces of cabbage rather than "leaves" of cabbage. Brush with olive oil and season with salt. Roast in a 400oF oven for around an hour. Turn during cooking when each side is a nice dark brown. The dark brown parts are not bitter but instead become wonderfully sweet and chewy like roasted onions. Slice the flank steak thinly and marinate in the soy sauce, sambal oelek and sesame seed oil for ~20 minutes. In a hot/medium fry pan saute sliced onions until almost translucent. Turn up the heat and add sliced beef (draining off excess marinade before adding meat to pan). Quickly stir fry until meat is seared all over. Serve on a bed of arugula with roasted cabbage.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Filet Mignon with Broccolini; Crepes Flambe

Despite the Monday holiday Melissa and I both worked a full day in the lab -- we both need to keep things moving ahead right now, and we were happy to do it. In the evening we settled in to a dinner of filet mignon with a medley of mushrooms in a white wine and dijon mustard sauce, and steamed broccolini (often sold as broccoli rabe). Melissa's filet mignon is always incredible. The beef tenderloin we get from BJs wholesale club is high quality, and we get a great price by buying a whole tenderloin and carving it up and freezing it at home. Just as important as the quality of the meat, though, is the way Melissa cooks it. After seasoning with sea salt and lots of coarse cracked peppercorns, she uses a very hot cast-iron griddle pan to sear the meat and seal in the juices, then serves it up very rare. And the mushrooms -- yumm... White wine and dijon mustard form the base of the sauce, with tarragon and a little chicken stock powder for seasoning. A 2006 Yellowtail Reserve Shiraz (AU) accompanied this dish.




Amanda showed up halfway through dinner to drop off some Gourmet magazines she thought we might want, and she got to share in the mushroom bounty. Even more exciting were the crepes Melissa decided to make for dessert. We had taken some great pics and videos of Melissa making these before, but somehow I managed to lose the files after deleting them from the camera disk. So I'm taking this opportunity to post some fresh photos. The basic crepe batter is one egg with 3/4 cup of flour and milk until the right consistency is reached. It should still be very liquid but viscous. She usually flavors the batter with a little sugar and vanilla. One ladle goes into this small non-stick pan on medium-high heat -- the flip requires a bit of finesse, but as long as the pan was well buttered it won't stick.




The really cool part is the flambe. We like a mixture of Apple Jack apple brandy with sugar that was pre-dissolved with a little water in the microwave. Abot 1/4 cup goes into the pan with a generous pat of butter, and light it up. It usually requires multiple lights to burn off most of the alcohol, but what is left behind is a syrupy, buttery, candied-brandy flavor that makes an awesome dessert.




Some marry into money, but I married into a much tastier kind of riches...

Pork and Papaya Stir Fry; Grilled Snapper; Shrimp Quesadilla

As I wrote up the last post, Melissa was closing the deal on the mystery ingredients Evan brought the previous Saturday. She used the butternut squash that night, but the papayas weren't ripe yet. So last Wednesday she whipped together the most interesting stir fry she has made yet. Sliced pork tenderloin was seasoned with soy sauce, cracked pepper and a drop of liquid smoke, then pan fried and served with chopped papaya and arugula over rice. The fruit provided a great contrast to the savory pork, and the ground up papaya seeds were used as a garnish -- the slightly spicy flavor of the seeds nicely connected the fresh fruit with the pepper in the pork. It all went very well with a bottle of 2007 Ku De Ta Sauvignon Blanc (Casablanca Valley, Chile).




Thursday we went to an open house at the Sam Adams Brewery here in Boston. They brought out the Oktoberfest beers and served sausages and sauerkraut. It was a full-on Oktoberfest event -- Bavarian-looking oompa band and all -- and a very nice night.

Saturday we had a few people around for a nice summer dinner at our place, and Melissa combined some of her best recent ideas to make a fresh and delicious dish. Wild red snapper fillets were grilled with sea salt, pepper and butter, and served with peach salsa, grilled polenta and arugula. We had a 2006 Xplorador Chardonnay (Central Valley, Chile) and some fantastic weather with our dinner out on the patio.




I had picked up some huge shrimp when I bought the snapper for Saturday dinner, but the snapper fillets were so large that Melissa didn't use them that night. So they made their appearance for Sunday dinner -- pan fried with butter and garlic and served with cheese quesadillas. That salsa contains the first jalapeno peppers to come off our pepper plant in the garden; a little late in the summer, but very spicy nonetheless.



It was a tasty week...