cooking, eating, feeding…and finding some other fun along the way.

Archive for the ‘interwebs’ Category

Whole Wheat Strawberry Pancakes and the Spiciest Fried Rice in History

5 Comments »

March 16th, 2009 Posted 8:19 pm

strawberrypancakes8

On Saturday, Santana actually let us sleep in a little bit (after she went outside and got breakfast by 7, of course!), so instead of having breakfast, we had a mid-morning brunch-type meal that ultimately messed up our entire eating schedule for the day and resulted in a super-late dinner!

Another healthy thing to mention first: Emily at the health nut has a great Green Tote giveaway going on through Friday!  I like to think healthy and green when I can, even though our lifestyle might be a bit indulgent at times…great healthy blogs give me lots of ideas about how to incorporate more and more healthiness without even thinking about it!

We had gotten a gorgeous package of organic strawberries (not local, obviously, but still delish) through our CSA box on Thursday, so I chopped those up to make into pancakes! I am not always a huge fan of pancakes, because they are sometimes way too fluffy for me. I lean towards the super-thin crepes over the pumped-up fluffy pancakes. Matt loves pancakes though, and if I make them at home I can control the texture and usually enjoy them a lot.

I started with a recipe from Alton Brown’s I’m Just Here For More Food, which is the cookbook that follows I’m Just Here for the Food: Food + Heat = Cooking. The second book focuses on baked goods and for his pancakes he uses “The Muffin Method”. I love these books for the same reason I love watching Good Eats and anything Alton Brown really…he actually explains the science behind what’s going on with the food. Gives you a formula, a method for doing something and a few recipes that follow that formula.  Since you know the formula, you can change the recipe to suit your own desires! Sometimes it’s a little on the corny side and makes you want to roll your eyes, but at the end of the episode/page/rambling you understand why the meat turns brown, why the batter rises when you cook it, why you don’t want to use too much flour when you’re breading chicken. Plus, in I’m Just Here for the Food there are these awesome diagrams of a cow and a pig, outlining where all the cuts of meat come from…this makes me happier than I can describe. I use his books less often for the recipes, and more often for the techniques, tips, and general ability to understand what’s going on when I cook. I absolutely recommend them for anyone who wants to cook on a regular basis without recipes—after enough AB, you can do a lot of basic things without even thinking about it, because you know the science! Alton Brown is my geeky food crush…let’s just take a minute to come to terms with that.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Ok, enough of that…here’s the recipe, with pictures of my oddly shaped pancakes along the way.

Alton Brown had 2 recipes: Buttermilk and Whole Wheat Pancakes.  I added the strawberries because we had them, and I went with the whole wheat because we had whole wheat flour in the cupboard and it’s just tasty!

What you need:

  1. Whole Wheat Flour (2 cups)
  2. Baking Powder (1 tsp)
  3. Baking Soda (1/2 tsp)
  4. Salt (1tsp)
  5. Sugar (3 Tb)
  6. Eggs (2 large)
  7. Buttermilk (2 cups at room temperature) **I didn’t have buttermilk so I used regular milk with a couple tablespoons of lemon juice added while it came to room temp**
  8. Unsalted butter (4 Tb, melted and slightly cooled)
  9. STRAWBERRIES! (I used a whole small container)

The Muffin Method, as described in the book, is pretty basic and easy.  The dry stuff (flour through sugar) get mixed together quickly, then the wet stuff gets mixed together separately (eggs through butter).  The wet goes into the dry and they get stirred together just until combined, not until smooth.  For The Muffin Method to work, you cannot overmix! Super important…Alton Brown puts it in big bold letters several times: DO NOT OVERMIX!  The Muffin Method creates a cross section that looks like, well…a muffin: different sized air pockets, creating an uneven and course, crumbly texture.  This is distinguished from a cake mixture (or “cake masquerading as a muffin—better known as a cupcake”), where air is creamed into the batter and creates even air pockets throughout and a more tender texture. Very different! Alton Brown says “Yes, Virginia, pancakes are muffins—flat, griddle-cooked muffins.”

Heat your pan or griddle to 350 degrees while you put everything together with The Muffin Method and let the batter rest for 5 minutes.  I added the strawberries after the batter set.  You can tell if the pan is hot enough if a sprinkle of water dances across the surface! A little bit of butter or a spray of cooking spray preps the pan and then you’re ready to ladle the pancakes out!

I think because of the strawberries, my pancakes refused to form a circle! So frustrating! So we had oddly-shaped breakfast. I’m really fine with that. If you compare the two pictures of the batter in the pan, you can see how much the batter puffs up while the first side cooks…that’s the muffin method at work!

When I make pancakes, the first one is always a dud that we use to test the flavor…does it need more sweet?  Maybe some cinnamon? What kind of toppings should we get ready for them? And we pick at this first one as we cook the rest.  You can tell the pancakes are ready to flip when bubbles break on the surface and you can see the edges drying out a bit.  Use a spatula to peek under and if the pancake is brown enough, flip as carefully as possible!  I usually make small pancakes so there is less risk of pancakes breaking in half during this flipping process. I tend to make a mess either way, so I went with huge pancakes this time.

We topped them with powdered sugar and froze a few extras to heat up in the toaster oven for breakfast later this week!

 strawberrypancakes1 strawberrypancakes2 strawberrypancakes3 strawberrypancakes4 strawberrypancakes5 strawberrypancakes6 strawberrypancakes7

(these are our tiny plates, not our full-sized dinner plates…they weren’t THAT huge!)

Because we had a really late breakfast/early lunch, we were feeling snacky in the middle of the afternoon and splurged on some nachos, leaving us full until pretty late in the evening.  I usually don’t like to eat a late dinner because I get grumpier and grumpier as I get tired and hungry, so cooking is not a great option as the evening wears on. 

Our super-late dinner was a Thai Fried Rice recipe I found online. I’m not going to link to it because it was SUPER spicy. As I tweak it, I’ll try to post a better fried rice variation. Normally I just wing it with a blend of veggies, an egg, a little hoisin, chicken broth, and soy. Usually we have some leftover meat from earlier in the week that I throw in, or we make pot stickers for the side. I do the same variation with noodles every once in a while to make a lo mein type dish that is really really satisfying.

I was craving Thai Fried Rice, though. Our weekly Thai Tuesday location has been out of commission for quite a while because they’re remodeling the entire thing. This has led to lots of yummy International Tuesday adventures, but I like the reliability of our regular place. So I found this recipe and just went with it…I had less rice than the recipe called for, but a lot more veggies, so I figured it would even out.

I don’t have any pictures of this, because I was completely blown away by the spicy level. On a 1 to 5 star scale, this was at least a 7. As I was dishing it up, I got a little sauce on my finger and licked it off…I needed a glass of water just to cool down from that little bit! I managed to eat almost a whole bowl, and Matt liked it quite a bit. I tried it as leftovers with lunch today and put it over a green salad with a light ranch dressing…it helped a bit, but still SO spicy. My standard throw-everything-in-the-wok-without-a-recipe method is still my favorite, but as I play with Thai recipes, maybe another one will come out on top and I’ll provide some details if that ever happens!

Posted in Fun, interwebs, Matthew, Yum

Scallops & Asparagus from the market, Flagship cheese from Beecher’s (last Sunday’s Dinner)

2 Comments »

March 14th, 2009 Posted 1:28 pm

After Sunday morning racquetball, we wandered in the strangely warm, snowing afternoon through Pike Place Market and designed a dinner for the night.  This is one of the most relaxing and rewarding kinds of afternoons for me. 

First, a piroshky from Piroshky, Piroshky…DELICIOUS.  I had potato, onion, cheese.  Matt had beef and cheese I think.  They were both delish, but the potato is still our favorite.  It is really dangerous having this right down the street from the gym…we’ll have to start trying other walking lunches from the market one of these days.

We decided we wanted to try cooking scallops, since all we had done before was bay scallops in fried rice.  We are relatively new fans of scallops, so I did some internet searching for a basic recipe.  I found this one, which I used as inspiration. Mushrooms are not on either of our favorites lists, so we decided to go with the basic scallop method and make the rest more suitable for us.  I have made a delicious side of peas in the past, with diced onions and a bit of cream, so we planned for that, but then we saw some gorgeous, thin-stalked asparagus from a market vendor.  It had been a while since either of us had asparagus, so we went for it.  We wandered over to one of the fish vendors and picked up 4 average-sized sea scallops for just over $6 and we also got some Flagship cheese from Beecher’s Handmade Cheese on our way to the car. Beechers asparagus

This really could only end well.

Matt made a side, using the Beecher’s and some grits we had on hand, along with a little thyme.

I had a handful of shallots left from our last CSA box, so I sliced them thinly in place of onions, knowing they would be super sweet and mild cooked down. They cooked down in a bit of olive oil until they were nice and soft, but not caramelized.  I spread them along the pan and placed my washed, trimmed asparagus tips on top (I didn’t want them to be directly in the bottom of the pan). I added water to the pan just to cover the bottom and covered the pan…this kept the steam in to cook the asparagus, but because they were on top of the layer of shallots, they didn’t get overcooked.  This stayed on low heat while I cooked the scallops. 

I used the recipe linked above, using minced garlic that I had on hand and dried thyme.  They didn’t turn out quite as pretty as his, but the apartment smelled AMAZING while they basted with the butter, garlic and thyme. 

As the scallops were finishing, I added a tablespoon or so of cream to the asparagus and shallots, removing the cover and letting it cook down. 

scallops2 scallops1

The grits and the sauce on the vegetables worked together really nicely with their complementary creaminess. The sweet, smooth scallops and the little bite of the garlic in their sauce complemented the sides really well.  Since there was an abundance of shallots in relation to the number of asparagus in the pan, for lunch on Monday I had a side salad with the leftover grits and creamy onions on top.  Sitting in their little Pyrex bowl all day, waiting for lunch, the cream sauce and the cheese grits came together into this amazingly satisfying, creamy indulgent accompaniment to my healthy salad!

If you happen to be someone looking for ways to cook asparagus tips, you could do this the same way, leave out the shallots or onions if you want and just sauté the fresh asparagus for just a few seconds, add a bit of broth or water to steam by covering and cooking for a few minutes, then adding a splash of cream to cook down and coat them, letting them cook until they are as soft as you want them! You could also do this without the cream and just let the broth cook down.  A touch of garlic or other herbs/spices would bump up the flavor a bit if you wanted! 

Posted in Fun, interwebs, Life, Matthew, Yum

Schvester interview!

7 Comments »

March 5th, 2009 Posted 4:41 pm

Yay for boyfriends with fun sisters!  Dori interviewed me for a bloggy thing! She also interviewed Santana…I suggest you read that one…it’s very insightful into the mind of an adorable puppy.  Here are Dori’s questions to me:

  • You’re trapped on the same island as me and my three foods, but you’re on the other side, where food is abundant. However, it’s boring. Luckily, you were allowed to take 3 books with you. What books would you take?

1. Audrey Niffenegger, The Time Traveler’s Wife. Did you see this one coming?? I initially read this because my aunt had it and I was stuck at her house for a couple weeks…I read it in one day. It is unbelievable. I don’t think I’ve ever talked to anyone who has read this and not loved it. The storyline plays to my romantic side and the idea of fated love versus constructed love and the consequences of believing in either is something that really appeals to me. The characters that Niffenegger creates, especially in Henry and Clare, are not particularly “good” people in the sense that fictional characters sometimes embody…they have major flaws, participate in not-so-nice activities, and are extremely rough around the edges, to say the least. And yet, you love them. The first time I read it, I was absolutely absorbed. The second time, I knew where it was going and that only made it better…I could more fully appreciate details, dialogue and confusing scenarios of Henry’s time traveling, and cried just as much towards the end of the novel. Amazing.

time_travelers_wife

2. William Shakespeare, Hamlet. My absolute favorite Shakespeare (probably because my favorite high school teacher loved it). I’ve read it many times, have several copies, and memorized a sonnet or two in high school (only bits remain). If I could bring it as a set and only count it as one book, I’d also bring John Updike’s Gertrude and Claudius, also recommended to me by Mrs. Miller, my AP English teacher. A prequel of sorts to Hamlet, this is Updike’s imagining of the love affair of Hamlet’s mother and uncle…I love stuff like this and I really enjoyed the combination of these two together. So we’ll just pretend that’s one book 🙂

hamlet

3. Billy Collins, Picnic, Lightning. I would need a book of poetry, and I decided on this one simply because it has this poem, my favorite:

Taking Off Emily Dickinson’s Clothes

(I would include the text here, but wordpress is annoying and I don’t have my computer with Live Writer on it)

 collins
  • On this island, you are allowed to bring one photograph. What picture would you bring and why?

This one:

skate

It makes me smile. A lot.

  • You escaped from the island and are back in the Seattles. It is the last day of the world and you can go to any restaurant in Seattle. Where would you go and what would you order (it must be an item currently on their menu)?

Sooo tough. I think I’d have to say Red Mill‘s Double Bacon Deluxe with Cheese. There are probably a TON of places I could go and get an expensive fancy meal or something, but Red Mill is so amazing that they sometimes run out of beef because people love it so much!! When you order, you can see the grill in the back, and a stack of bacon ready to go on burgers, at least two feet tall. I’ve tried some other sandwiches there, but the burgers that come with the special Red Mill sauce are the best…Matt likes the Bleu Cheese burger (blech). I’d also need fries, onion rings, and a root beer!

burgers

(I stole this picture from their website…here is where I give them whatever credit they need to get for that to be OK)

  • What is your favorite meal to cook? What is your least favorite?

After lots and lots of thought about this, I decided my most favorite to cook (right now, anyway) is Stir Fry! We do this at least every other week and I love it for a few reasons: a) I can use veggies from our CSA or others we find at the grocery store and I really enjoy the chopping and combining of vegetables. One of the most satisfying things for me is a nice pile of almost perfectly sliced or diced produce! b) It gives me a reason to order extra rice when we go out to dinner…leftover rice makes better fried rice…it has a little more starch and cold rice will have a nicer texture when it’s fried. c) I can play with the ingredients and make a completely different dish from one week to the next (one of my favorite things about cooking)– different veggies, add some peanuts (or a little peanut butter to change the sauce!), switch out the rice for noodles and make lo mein…so many possibilities. d) I get a huge amount of satisfaction from lining all my ingredients up, chopped, mixed, ready to go in the sizzling hot pan (I need a new wok!!)…and once everything is chopped the entire meal will come together in less than 15 minutes!

I’ve also been thinking lots about my least favorite meal to cook…I don’t think I have one. If I don’t like to cook something, I don’t make it. Period. If I am craving something I don’t enjoy cooking (or don’t feel like cooking right then), we make something else or go out. Cooking for me is really about enjoying the act of it. Ironically, considering my most favorite meal to cook, I do HATE cooking rice itself. I need a rice cooker…desperately. We’ve taken to using boil-in-a-bag four minute rice…I follow recipes, instructions on packages, cook books, the internet, everything I can find…my rice either overcooks, burns, turns to mush, doesn’t absorb any water and stays completely uncooked…something inevitably goes wrong and the rice is practically inedible. This is the case mostly for the times when I am just making plain, basic, straightforward rice. If it’s in a casserole or something like that, I can make it work usually. It’s horrible…it frustrates me to no end, and I just can’t figure out. So I’ve sort of given up on it for now. Once we have a kitchen with room for a rice-cooker, that is definitely on my kitchen list!

  • What is your favorite ingredient? What makes it so special?

Matt and I had to have a conversation about what actually counts as an ingredient.

Matt took “ingredient” to mean something more specific: spices, seasonings, flour, etc. If this is the case, I’d say cumin. My favorite spice by far. Strong and smoky, but it blends nicely with other flavors. I use it a lot….probably way too much.

I took a very broad view and said, of course, BACON! Bacon has been getting a lot of hype lately with bacon-flavored salt, bacon lollipops, and other crazy novelties. Bacon is amazing. I don’t need to put bacon salt on everything or have it in every meal or anything like that. I do have two cookbooks, both gifts from my friend Bob, that focus on bacon (the fact that he has given me these is really indicative of the roots of our friendship). Everything Tastes Better With Bacon (if you like bacon, you should buy this cookbook simply for the photographs) and Seduced by Bacon. Amazing. I know that when I’m cooking a dish that includes bacon, I can count on that bacon to bring an amazing, rounded, satisfying flavor to the party. If I’m making bacon as a side, I know that I need to hide it from Matt. V and I used to talk about which dishes were becoming my “signatures”…ones that I could make practically in my sleep and that were my fail-safe, go-to dishes for a potluck or a last-minute dinner get together. One of the first on this list was Green Beans with Bacon, which started with a generous amount of bacon, chopped and cooked down to crispy bits, leaving some grease in which to caramelize some sweet onions. The onions met up with garlic and fresh green beans and a bit of broth to simmer until the green beans were cooked through. With a little salt and black pepper at the end and the crunchy bacon thrown back on top, this is simple and delicious. The first time I put it together, it was spur of the moment and without a recipe…I was ridiculously pleased. I’ve also made it for vegetarians, cooking the bacon separately from the onions and green beans (cooked in veggie stock of course). Bacon fans topped theirs with bacon. Given the choice, I use the bacon drippings to cook the onions because it just brings way more flavor to the overall dish, but green beans, onion and garlic have a lot going on by themselves, so it works either way.

everythingbaconseducedbacon

  • What is your idea of a perfect weekend afternoon when you have NOTHING that needs to get done and are free to spend it however you like?

Easy: Matt + Puppy + Couch + Chinese + Pajamas + NY Times Crossword/Netflix 🙂

cuddle2

______________________________________________________

The rules:

1. Leave me a comment saying, “Interview me.” If a few people want interviews, I will randomly pick one.

2. I will respond by emailing you five questions. (I get to pick the questions).
3. You will update your blog with the answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and an offer to interview others in the same post.
5. When others comment asking to be interviewed, you will ask them five questions.

…..
I had planned to include some food pictures from dinner last night, but those will have to wait because we’re off to the gym to get a tour (even though Matt is already a member) and switch over to a joint membership so we can play racquetball and other fun things on a regular basis together!! My hope is to get into a routine of going to the gym and wandering around Pike Place every weekend (especially once the weather actually starts to get nice for real).  Ideally, the 2nd day of the weekend would include taking Santana to the off-leash park and walking around Green Lake! Fun! I can’t wait for Spring/Summer!

Family. Pork. Falling Behind.

3 Comments »

February 21st, 2009 Posted 10:01 pm

I have some catching up to do…with crazy amounts of local and out-of-state recruiting along with application review starting up at work, Matt‘s family visiting from NY, nice weather starting to roll in, and other general business, I have gotten way behind in posting yummy food, random news/things from Jezebel that excite me, adorable puppy things and other bits of things.  I am also working from an interim laptop until I get a new one (long story which will probably result in a blog post ranting about the importance of customer service sometime soon), and this machine happens to have Linux on it…it’s all fine for email, Facebook, random interndet needs, but it doesn’t have all the fun blog software I had in Windows.  Once I have a shiny new computer to work on, blogging will become a more regular thing…that might be the 3rd or 4th time I’ve made that claim, so we’ll see.

Moving along…

Matt’s mom and sister were in town for a weekend and it was spectacular! A long weekend full of running around and busy excitement, but we had a great time, were super excited to see them, and I was really glad that they got to spend some quality time bonding with Santana (as if she needed the attention).  She was EXHAUSTED after they left.  I’m sure she’ll blog about it sometime soon. In the meantime, you can see a recap of the weekend, along with some adorable pictures on Dori’s Shiny Blog.

I’m going to try and get caught up with some delicious meals we’ve been experimenting with lately.  Rather than post one massive entry with all of them, I’ll do one at a time, and eventually we’ll be up to speed.

First up, in no particular order, Maple-Glazed Pork with Apples and Roasted Winter Vegetables.  Although I used the pork/apples from this recipe and the veggies from this one, we didn’t completely follow the recipes because we had a random assortment of vegetables (from our CSA!) and couldn’t find apple cider at our Safeway that week.

Carrots, Garnet (or jewel?) Yams, Onions, Beets (all from our CSA box)!! This was my first time making beets and Matt’s first time eating them.  As a kid I always had canned beets as a side with dinner, but I don’t remember being crazy about them.  At Bastyr, they are always available on the salad bar, so I’m getting used to them…they stain everything if you’re not careful…you can see my pink-stained hand after touching the beets just briefly!  I peeled them under running water and cut them quickly and we didn’t have any lasting damage.  I am usually amazed by the bright vibrant colors of fruits and vegetables…look at all the nutrients!!

porkandbeets1porkandbeets2porkandbeets3porkandbeets4

We bought a new peeler the other day…it has serrated edges and says that it works well on soft fruits and veggies (I think they specifically mention tomatoes).  I haven’t tried it on anything quite that soft yet, but on these veggies and on the apples, the serrated peeler was spectacular! I totally recommend it! It did not work so well on carrots (I use my regular peeler to peel long, thick-ish strips that I cut in half when we make fried rice).

Here are all the veggies ready to be roasted! You can see that the beets have turned everything a little pink along the edges:

porkandbeets5

Now the pork!! Lightly coated in breadcrumbs (just enough for a crust, no egg wash or anything messy needed), and pan fried over high heat to get the crust brown. Yum!  These were pre-cut thin pork medallions…straight from the store package, they didn’t need any prep work. This is my dream.  I love fresh meat, and I’m really satisfied if I can break down a whole chicken or something, but this made the pork portion of the meal sooo easy.  Plus, they were on sale!

porkandbeets7porkandbeets8

Now the apples! These also came via Full Circle Farm, and we’d had them on hand for a couple weeks, so this was a great opportunity to use them, since they probably weren’t a great choice for eating out of hand.  I have this nifty apple corer/slicer that works much better when the apple is peeled (it doesn’t have the sharpest of edges, which is probably best, considering I end up with a bandaid on at least one of my fingers every week).  So my serrated peeler came in really handy and I made quick work of the apples, getting them right into the pan with browned pork…

porkandbeets6porkandbeets9

This whole meal was really easy, and probably the hardest part was getting all the vegetables peeled and cut (Matt was a big help here!).  This was one of the easiest pork recipes I’ve ever made, and because I had my meat thermometer, I stopped the pork as soon as the thermometer registered it at medium.  It rested while I let the apples cook down and was SO tender and delicious when we ate it.  Matt was stunned.  The maple, mustardy, apple-y, glaze-type sauce that came from the pan was absolutely full of flavor, and it went really well with the roasted veggies.  If I made this again, I’d probably ditch the yams and save those for some other dish.  They got really soft and mushy (the nature of yams), and compared to the beets and carrots it was too much of a contrast for me.  Regular potatoes would have worked nicely, or any other root veg…I think the original recipe uses turnips? We also had a mini salad with some lettuce from our CSA and just some shredded cheese.  Needless to say, we felt super healthy after this meal and it always makes us happy when we can get so much use out of local and/or organic produce that we get specially delivered for us!

porkandbeets10

More to come soon!

To celebrate Obama, puppies (old and young), hope, progress, love, the luck of still having jobs, and life in general…

3 Comments »

January 14th, 2009 Posted 1:27 pm

Let’s try to get back to blogging regularly!