Friday, May 15, 2009

Eating Out!!

Destination: El Tapatio North Kingstown, RI
Food Type: Mexican
Price $ (out of 5)
Rating: 12345

This Restaurant is a terrific small to medium sized place.
The atmosphere and menu there is very authentic .
Upon being seated you are given a basket of homemade nachos and a bowl of house salsa.
These alone could be a meal with a cold beer, but then you would miss out completely.

There menu is extensive including favorites as well as some dishes that may be new to many.
Tonight's visit included

Chili Relleno - This is a Poblano pepper which has been roasted, slit open, stuffed with cheese, floured and deep fried. It is served on top of a special spicy red sauce.

Chimichangas - These were stuffed with shredded chicken and cheese and covered in shredded lettuce and tomato, with sour cream and guacamole.

Black bean Burrito - whole black beans with cheese.

Enchiladas - Soft corn tortilla filled with shredded chicken and topped with melted cheese.

Refried beans and rice - The beans are covered with melted cheese and the rice is cooked with red taco sauce.

The service was fast and attentive. The price for all this was under $40.
I will add more after next time.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Croutons

Every once in a while I will grab a baguette at the market with ideas of making a killer sandwich. Most times the sandwich is pretty big and the loaf gets used up fast. Other times the loaf will get devoured before I can make a sandwich, on rare occasions the loaf will sit all day waiting for me. When the baguette gets too tough for my taste I will opt to make my wife her favorite croutons. When these get made, I am always surrounded by family eager to 'sample' them for me. They are very helpful in that department.

Making the croutons is pretty straight forward. The list of things I keep on hand are as follows.
1. One large Baguette
2. One stick of butter
3. Dried Italian seasonings
4. Garlic powder
5. Pecarino Romano Cheese
6. Salt & Pepper
7. A bowl for the mixture
8. A large bowl for the croutons
9. A sheetpan
10. Electric knife
11. Preheated oven to 300 degrees

Cut the baguette with the electric knife, making long strips.
I cut three strips length wise, then each strip I cut into three long pieces.
Taking the long pieces all lined up, I cut cubes from them.
I then take the plain cubes and lie them onto the sheetpan.
I toast them for about 10 minutes, or until they are crunchy on the outside and chewy on the inside.

In a microwave soften the butter but not melt it.
Add seasonings to butter and mix thoroughly.

Take half of the mixture and spoon it into the large bowl.
With my hand I lightly coat the inside of the bowl with the mixture.
The coolness of the bowl will solidify the butter mixture to the sides.
The reason I do this is because once the hot croutons hit the bowl, the butter will disperse evenly.

Once the croutons are out of the oven, dump them into the bowl and toss until all of the mixture is off the bowl and onto the croutons.
If the mixture is coated evenly, dump them onto the pan again and coat lightly with the grated cheese. Return to the oven.

Repeat the bowl coating with the other half of the mixture.
After the croutons have cooked for additional 5 minutes (until the cheese has melted), toss in bowl again.
Return the croutons to the sheetpan one last time. Coat them again with grated cheese and also the salt and pepper to taste.
Allow them to cool then transfer them to a sealable bowl.

These will keep for about a week. They never last that long so you be the judge.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Fresh Cheese Ravioli


Back in December I posted about making ricotta cheese and how I made ravioli with it.
Today I did it again. Since my focus last time was on the cheese itself, I figured this time I could post about the ravioli.

I spent the day today making the dough, the cheese, and also the meatballs. I cheated and used sauce from a jar. I did puree the sauce into a more thin consistency as we don't care for the chunky stuff so much. I also made Pecorino-Romano garlic bread. Making that is kind of self explanatory so I wont bother putting it up here.

Before beginning the dough, put a large stock pot of water on the fire. You want boiling water on hand for when you are ready to cook your ravioli. Trust me you do not want to start boiling after you are done because it seems like forever to boil that much water. Add some olive oil and a fist of salt to the water. If you have a large amount of water on hand you wont have to worry about crowding or cooling the water down.

The pasta dough is very simple, all you need is some flour, egg yolks, salt, and if desired, garlic powder. On a large cutting board make a small mountain of flour. If you don't feel like sifting it first, don't sweat it, but don't forget to add a small bit of salt for flavor. The compactness of the flour actually helps you here. Stick your finger into the center and make small circles until there is a well in the center.



Inside the well add some egg yolks. You can start with three or four and see how it goes. On the last yolk I added the white as well as the yolk. I wanted to see if it made a difference. It did extend the moisture, but it did nothing else in my opinion. With a fork whisk the yolks while expanding the well. This will slowly draw the flour into the mix. This means that you control the mixture. When you have a loose dough, you can switch off and now use your hands. I work the dough until it is pretty solid, but not dry. It should be pretty sticky if you try to knead it in your hands. At this point you want it to rest so make it into a somewhat flat patty and dust it with flour. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and allow to chill for an hour.

Once the dough has had a chance to rest, it is time to roll it out. If you have a pasta machine set it to #1. If you are rolling by hand, you will have to do a bit of work. Cut off a piece of dough about the size of a golf ball. Keep the remaining dough covered in plastic wrap. Initially the dough will be very sticky, you just keep sprinkling flour onto it as needed. I have a habit of rolling it out and then folding the two ends back onto itself. I do this a few times to make the dough elastic like. Once the dough has become stretchy and not sticky you are ready to start making it thinner. On the machine I work the dough two or three times per setting until I get to #4 setting. The thickness will be about 1/8 to 1/16 of an inch. Once this achieved, I lie it aside under the plastic wrap to rest and start again on another ball of dough. I repeat this until all the dough is rolled out.


If you have not already, season your ricotta. I use basil, garlic powder, and a bunch of pecorino-Romano cheese as a binder. Ricotta can be loose and the cheese does well to pull it all together. You do not want to have too much moisture inside the ravioli. It will steam, expand and burst your ravioli. Now back to the dough.

Take a strip of dough out and lie it out. With a small glass make light ring impressions onto the dough. This will tell you how far to space out the cheese portions. Now spoon the cheese into the center of the rings. Use enough to fill the circle about 50%. Once the strip is portioned with cheese, lie a second strip of dough over the first. After lining the two strips up, lightly press the dough all around the cheese lumps. This will push out most of the air from the ravioli. Now take the same glass and press the dough out with the cheese centered. With a firm press and a twist the ravioli disc should be now free. After completing a full strip cover the scrap dough and collect it as you go. This will be for the next batch to be filled. These discs will now need crimping. I use a small fork and lightly press all around the disc. Take care not to press too hard where you kill the top. Just crimp enough to seal.

Taking the left over dough you will repeat the rolling process again. If you keep it covered as you go, you will be able to reduce waste to a small marble of dough. I keep making ravioli until there is no more dough.

Now you are done, aren't you glad that you listened to me and had boiled the water?
At this point you can cook them. They cook fast so stay nearby. Once the 'learn to swim' (float) you can lift them out and serve. I usually have an audience by this point and have to serve them as they come out. The last ones are mine as the others are probably already eaten by the time the last one has been fished out.

I promise that once you make these, it will ruin it for any future ravioli you may have to eat. They are that good.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Justin Wilson the Cajun cook

Before everyone on tv was a CHEF, there were cooks.
Titles were not needed for great food.
Before the food groupies (shudders by the very word foodies) there were normal folk looking for good food. Justin Wilson was the crazy old guy who introduced me to cajun cooking. He and Paul Prudhomme were my inspiration to try complicated meals.
Justin had a way about him. You could barely understand him, but he managed to get his point across. By today's standard he would never be an Iron Chef or strut around like Bobby Flay, but he would still be worthy of watching.
I am glad that he was there to inspire me.

http://www.justinwilson.com












Saturday, February 28, 2009

Boned Rolled & Tied


Many times when presented with a solid chunk of meat, I will dress it buy using the technique called BONED-ROLLED-TIED. This will allow you to remove the bone and season a huge surface of the meat. By doing this you can control the seasonings throughout the meat and also extend the portions by stuffing the meat before tying it up.

Boning the meat is pretty self explanatory, but there are tips to help make the meat more uniform. Make the first cut length wise along the side of the bone. Once the bone is exposed, use a smaller knife and follow around the bone until it is free. Lying the meat out flat you will notice that the meat is not an even thickness. This is where you need to plan before you cut. Using the boning knife make a cut from the inside fold the full length of the meat. By doing this you will be able to open the cut away from the middle to make the thickness of the meat more uniform. Repeat this on the opposite side and it will look like two open books attached to each other. When done you will have a large flat piece of meat resembling a big steak. By pressing the meat you will see if there are any more uneven places. If so you can mallet the area and fix it. Also if there is a hole from where the bone was sticking out, you can arrange the meat to close the hole.




I bought this at JobLot for 77 cents and it rocks. I bought 4 more just in case.



This orange-honey glaze is the BEST sauce I have ever bought.
Normally I make my own, this stuff is the best second choice.
Look for it.


Having the meat flat will give you the opportunity to season the whole piece. Depending on the meat, you can also stuff it by spooning filling onto the meat and flattening it out. Once that part is done, roll it tight keeping the ends even. Here is where you will determine the shape of the finished product.

Tying the meat is the fun part. This is where the talent comes in. Many people do not know how to do this, but once tried, you will be able to do it with any cut. To tie the meat, the first step is to get a piece of heavy string that is roughly six times the length of the meat. Place the meat so that it extends away from you and tie a knot around the base. Make it a tight knot that will hold the shape but not squeeze out the middle.

Have the knot at the top of the meat and pull some string from the knot to an inch out. With your right hand pinch the string at that point. With your left hand, wrap the string around the meat again. Push the end of the string through the loop (from right to left) that the right hand pinched. Cinch the string tight by pulling the slack to the left then back to the right. Once you do this, keep the line taught and lie the tied string along the long axis of the meat. Repeat by pinching the string one inch from the last loop in your right hand again. Wrap the string around the meat and again push the end of the string through the loop and keep spacing the loops an inch apart until you are an inch from the top of the meat. This last loop will be knotted after it is cinched tight. Now flip the meat over and pull the two ends of string together to be tied. This long axis knot will pull the ends into alignment.
Make sure that it is not so tight that the meat lifts at the ends. It should look like a series of loops of string with another line connecting them. On the bottom, it will look similar but the string going top to bottom will not be looped (unless you want to loop them).




After the meat has been dressed, wrap the meat in plastic wrap and allow it to rest.

The BONE-ROLL-TIE method really is easy.
It looks just like a butcher did it with little practice.

Cooking the meat is open to many methods.
For this example I actually used three methods.
Stove top first, then the smoker, and then the oven to finish.
Before any cooking I went outside and turned on the smoker.

I pan seared the meat on a very hot iron skillet.
After a side is seared, I lift the meat off to allow the pan to heat back up before searing another side. I repeated this until all sides were done and then I finished by searing the ends.



Once the meat was seared, I walked it out to the smoker.
It was very hot. Perhaps too hot as the glaze I chose was honey based and it started to burn.
After leaving the lid off for a while, the heat came back down to where I wanted it.
I went back inside and turned the oven on to 300 degrees to preheat.

I then stayed out there to keep turning and basting the meat to keep it from burning.
The glaze darkened the meat and became very sticky. Once I ran out of glaze and it was sticky again, I brought it into the house.




The center temp was about 120 degrees after a half hour on the grill. I put the meat onto a glass tray and put it into the oven until it reached 160 degrees. After that I allowed it to rest on the cutting board for 15 minutes before cutting with a serrated knife.



Monday, February 23, 2009

My Smoker

About 15 years ago I bought my first (of a few) smokers.
Up until then I was using my gas grill to do the job. It wasn't as easy in the grill, but it was a learning experience all the same. I decided to grab an electric smoker so I could cook year round in my garage and also I can remove the heating element to cook with wood or coal. I picked out a nice vertical smoker with two shelves and a little door to peek inside.

This is my smoker. It has many miles on it and I have replaced many things on it to keep it running. I use it as much as my stove in my kitchen. I have smoked just about every type of meat that I can get my hands on. The usual is ribs, chicken and pork. For special occasions I have done pit hams, salmon, and whole turkeys. I have even done a batch of smokey whiskey beans once to accompany my ribs and corn bread.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Roasted Peppers



This is so simple, but I had to add it as it was something I had made today.
Place the peppers on the gas burner and rotate them as they blacken. Once they are completely blackened, place them into a paper bag and allow them to rest. Oh yeah, expect your kitchen to smell a bit. Personally, I like the smell. Once the peppers have rested about 5 minutes, they are ready to be peeled. Under cold running water work the peppers in your hands to rub the skins off.

With a sharp paring knife cut peppers in half and free up the top section.
Run some water over the peppers to remove the seeds.
Slice into strips while also slicing off the ribs.
Now they are ready for dressing.

I use a combination olive oil, vinegar, mustard powder, dill, kosher salt, and pepper.
You can substitute the vinegar for citrus, like lemon or lime juice.


Polenta with pork tomato sauce






















Every year my wife's family has a polenta dinner. There were different types of tomato sauce to go with the polenta, something for everyone. I enjoyed the stirring of the corn meal. It was almost meditative. Today I started tomorrow's dinner. I am letting the polenta set over night so that I can grill it before dinner.

The sauce was also prepared today. I boiled the pork in water with garlic and onion powder and some vinegar to help break the fibers down. After the pork has been boiling for a few hours, I removed the meat and cleaned the fat off of it. I then pulled the pork into shreds and added it to the tomato sauce. I also added some roasted peppers to the sauce.

Once the sauce is done and the polenta has been grilled, I would assemble them and grate some romano cheese on top. I recommend a red wine to go with this dish.

ENCHILADAS




I have been on a Mexican food kick lately. It started with me buying a bag of limes.
I was putting lime on everything. As an ode to lime and Mexican cuisine, I made a spread from avocados, lime, sour cream and dill. It was rocking.


The enchiladas were chicken and came out awesome.

Here's a short list.
Avocado
Sour Cream
Dry Dill
Garlic Powder
Onion Powder
Cumin
Lime (yay)
Chicken Breasts
Onion
Peppers
Shredded Cheese
A large can of Tomato Puree (#10)
Hot Sauce


Here is how I did them.
I simmered chicken breasts in tomato puree with hot sauce, cumin, garlic powder, and onion powder. When the chicken is done remove the it and save the sauce. Shred the chicken and put into a bowl. Add a can of beans, I use either kidney or white, to the bowl. Add some shredded cheese and chopped onion to bowl. Now add some of the sauce from the chicken and mix together.
On a tortilla I put the avocado spread down, then I spoon the mixture on as well. Roll and place in a casserole dish. Pour remaining sauce over the enchiladas and sprinkle some cheese on top. Serve with lime wedges, avocado spread, and sour cream.