Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2011

Another Classic - Pork Chops with Apples

What's a chop? What's a steak?

A bone in beef rib-eye is a steak. A pork loin cut is a chop.  A beef T-bone is a steak, a lamb T-bone is a chop. Huh?

The pork in this recipe is a sirloin chop. Or steak. Who knows. It depends on what the butcher thinks he can get more money for.

Another great, fast, inexpensive meal
Here we have a great lunch, spicy pork chops with apple and yellow beet salad.

The pork is seasoned simply with olive oil, chipotle powder, garlic powder and salt and pepper then grilled in a cast iron pan.

The salad is dressed with walnut oil and this great French cider vinegar. Each of these is expensive but the amounts used  on this plate costs pennies.

The bread is a ciabatta toasted over a gas burner. It stays soft in the middle but the outside gets crusty and smokey.

The beets are raw yellow beets that I sliced so thin you can see through them.

The pork is easy to make if you have a heavy bottomed frying pan. You can use a non-stick pan too if the bottom is not too thin.

You want to take the pork chops out of the fridge at least ten minutes before you cook them. If you take them right from the fridge they won't be as tender.  Cook them over medium heat so they brown and take them out just as they firm up. Let them rest for a couple of minutes before you eat them.

A hunk of meat, crusty bread and a flavor salad in about 15 minutes. Total cost for the meal: about two bucks!

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Family Favorite - Orange Chicken

We have this huge Valencia orange tree in our backyard, which means lots of free food to a cheapskate like me.

We juice them. we eat them, we use the zest. I throw them into sautes and the things I brown on the stove then finish in the oven.

This is not a difficult dish to make although it might take some practice to get the timing down.

Orange chicken, brown rice risotto and dry fried asparagus
I put some of my spice rub in a big mixing bowl and added a couple of tablespoons of the old extra virgin. I had bone in, skin on chicken breasts. You can use boneless and skinless if you want.

The chicken pieces were large so I cut them in half with a big knife. Then I used one of them to mix up the spice rub and olive oil. I got my big cast iron pan hot on the stove and turned the oven on to 350°.



I rubbed all the chicken in the spice mix then laid the pieces skin side down in the pan.

After they had browned a few minutes I tossed a couple of oranges in the spice oil and threw them in the pan.

While the chicken was cooking I made dry fried asparagus. Dry frying is using a hot cast iron pan with no oil, butter or fats to cook vegetables. They cook in a few minutes, steaming in their own juice.

As soon as they are just done they are seasoned with salt, pepper and (optional) a tiny bit of butter.

Dry frying works great with many vegetables like green beans, squash, carrots, etc. It imparts a slightly smoky flavor.

Along with the chicken and asparagus I had leftover brown rice risotto and one of the cooked oranges, which I squoze over the chicken and rice.

Low in fat (especially if you remove the chicken skin) high in nutrition and cost about $2.50 for the whole shebang.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Easy, Fast, Tasty Pea Soup

Scarf!
This is a great soup, easy and CHEAP to make. It's half an onion, half a carrot, a bag of frozen peas and some garnishes. It takes about ten minutes to make. The color is bright, bright green. It's low in fat, high in fiber and vitamins and is filling enough for lunch. Get the recipe here.

Pea soup. Ten minutes to make. Tastes great!
Off to the theater to play a matinee. This is a perfect lunch before a concert. Not too heavy but a lot of slow release energy. It can be completely vegan, though I did put a dot of butter in it to finish.

The garnishes I used here are bits of home cured ham (yes, I do throw that on just about everything), walnuts and chunks of Meyer lemon.

Ravioli in the Garage

Teaching, practicing, playing Brahms and going to the dog park doesn't leave a lot of time to make lunch. I ate in the garage today taking bites in between doing other stuff.

Apples and walnuts with walnut oil, ravioli with home smoked pork and peas
I had a box of locally made ravioli so I poached them and in another pan I sauteed some onions and tomatoes in olive oil, threw in some peas, rosemary from the garden and some thin slices of home cured and smoked pork. The salad is just apple and walnuts with a little walnut oil and lemon juice and black pepper. Dash of salt on the salad but the ravioli didn't need it.

My wife loved it. I scarfed it. Cost per serving: about four bucks, mostly for the ravioli.  Time to make it: about 20 minutes.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

If I am so Frugal why do I use Truffles?

I am frugal; I like to think I got to retire from high tech because I was cheap, not because I was rich. But I also think life is too short to eat bland food.

I have a nice little collection of fine ingredients that I use on a regular basis. Truffles, nut oil, salt packed capers, Greek olives, fine cheeses and expensive vinegars frequently find their way onto my plate.

A fourteen dollar bottle of walnut oil might seem like an extravagance but if it enhances fifty meals out of it it works out to 28 cents per meal. And it tastes great.

I love condiments made out of boiled down grapes, from the balsamico we know to unusual items like must, which is simply boiled down grape juice. A drop of that on a plate packs a lot of flavor. I love putting just barely a drop on a piece of apple or cheese or a slice of beef. Sweet and sour with a lot of depth it's really worth looking for.

Truffles are the sign of a special meal here. They have the cachet of being rare and expensive but if you use them right they can be a very cost effective way of packing some powerful flavors. I buy jars of truffles or peelings to make sauces for beef or chicken or vegetables. Just a dollars worth sauteed in a little butter in a pan where a steak had cooked will make your whole house smell like truffles and with a few drops of cream you have as good a sauce as can be made.

One area I don't suggest spending a lot of money on is fancy salts. I have tried grey salts, pink salts, sea salts from all over and cheap salts. Use a good brand of kosher salt for most things or everything and you'll do well. There are some fun salts like Maldon, which are little crystal pyramids and crunch when you eat them, but is that worth the bundle of money it costs? Maybe, but it's hardly frugal and doesn't pack a flavor punch.

So if you don't know what to get or how to use it I suggest you start with a single item like a good nut oil or maybe an aged balsamic vinegar. Spend ten or twelve bucks. Then taste what you have been missing!

Thursday, March 24, 2011

It's Sushi Day

(Note: I wrote this onstage in the middle of Brahms' German Requiem, waiting for my cue. Right in front of a large, strong, well rehearsed choir and a fine, large orchestra. Not bad place to be.)

If you think you need years to learn how to make sushi you are dead wrong. In Japan sushi is restaurant and home food. It was originally a way of preserving food for lunches. Think of it as their version of a PBJ.

Simple ingredients. Great food.

 I was lucky enough to have friends of Japanese ancestry when I was growing up and I ate plenty of raw fish back when most Americans thought it was poison.

In 1980 I got to go to Japan with an orchestra. I was the only one who who was used to Japanese food. After a few days whenever they served us something they weren't used to they would all offer it to me. Awesome!


 I remember when we got served huge, incredibly fresh prawns. Oh man oh man.

If you have never eaten octopus you are missing out. You buy it already boiled and tender at the Japanese market but my favorite way to make it is getting it raw and grilling it for a long time in olive oil. Some other time..  

Like so many Americans now my kids grew up eating and loving sushi.

Making it home is easy, fun and way cheaper than eating out. I spent 20 bucks on fish for this lunch and it made a lot of sushi for 4 people and yes, we have leftover ingredients like rice wine vinegar and nori.
Notice the knife blade is almost parallel to the cutting board.



Aside from the fish you need some short grain rice, a bit of rice vinegar, sugar and the Japanese ingredients, none of which cost more than 2 bucks, and there is plenty left over.  To make the seasoning for the sushi rice, we put a little water in a bowl and add the sugar and rice vinegar in small amounts and keep adding until it tastes right.  I know it's not traditional but I like to put a little fresh lemon juice in the solution.



Spreading the vinegar mixture over the rice.
The rice takes 20 minutes to cook, 10 minutes to rest and a few minutes to cool off. Traditionally the chef cuts the rice and sprinkles it with the vinegar mixture while the apprentice fans it to cool it quickly.

Today my son Phil helped out, waving the Gordon Jacob horn concerto frantically at it while I cut the rice and mixed in the solution.

I'm sure my critics would say that's how I play the Gordon Jacob concerto.



With rice and condiments, here is lunch for 4.
Here is a finished serving plate. It really doesn't take much time as aside from making the rice all you have to do is slice stuff up.

The fish we have here is hamachi, octopus, scallops with the roe and innards and marinated mackerel. To make them more interesting I floured and lightly fried the scallops.

Along with the fish we have shiso leaves,  nori seaweed sheets that I waved over a flame and shredded, sliced cucumber, wasabe, pickled ginger, and takuan, which is daikon pickled with rice bran.


On this plate, starting at the top is the fried scallops on top of shiso leaves, then on the left is takuan and on the right is cucumber and below the scallops are octopus, yellowtail and vinegared mackerel.





Today we served sushi Chirashi or 'scattered' style. Instead of making rolls or lumps we simply put the rice in the bottom of a bowl and topped it with the fish and stuff.

This was Phil's bowl. Not a bad lunch.





I have a hot tip for you today. We use Kikkoman Organic Soy Sauce. Not because it's organic, but because it tastes awesome. A really fine flavor unlike the usual dull soy sauces.  It smells and tastes great.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

A Thrown Together Lunch - 30 Minute Spaghetti and Meatballs

Charlie on his first day with us.
It's going to be one of those crazy busy weeks. I taught this morning until 1, played with Charlie, our lab, smoked a batch of bacon, and drove my daughter to ballet and back then went to rehearsal. I hadn't really planned on what to have for lunch and my time was limited.
.
I had some ground chuck so I decided to make spaghetti and meat balls. I sauteed up some onions with some onions and peppers. I threw in some ground cumin and some celery seeds and a cup of cheap red wine.


Pretty darn tasty for something thrown together.
I toasted a couple of slices of sourdough and whirled them in the food processor. I mixed those crumbs with the chuck, more cumin, salt and pepper and some juice from the can of tomatoes I was using for the sauce.

I chopped a handful of parsley. I added the chopped stems to the sauce and the leaves to the meat balls.

There were three things cooking at once (pasta, sauce, meatballs) but they all take about the same amount of time.


Total cost for today's lunch: About 3 bucks.

Slabs of pork sides. It's like really meaty and smokey bacon
I also had the smoker going today and here is the result. I used to call this bacon but it's side pork which is like bacon but there is a lot more meat than bacon. Bacon comes from the bottom of the belly of the pig, side pork is from the side.

I lightly cure it then smoke it pretty heavily so the texture is not too dry and the smoke flavor is strong.

We like to use it as a garnish for soups and salads and sauteed vegetables. I made some onions and Brussel sprouts with bits of the smoked pork and even my kids liked it!

Now if you don't care about things like your aorta, you can cut the rind off the pork and cook it in a heavy bottomed frying pan with a light weight (like another pan) on it. You'll render out a lot of the fat and get crisp smoked pork rinds. So bad for you but sooooo tasty.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

The Cure for Bland Food

Today I was inspired as I set slabs of bacon to cure in my fridge. I actually took my son out for Japanese food for lunch today. More on that later.

I know what a lot of you are thinking - there's a lot of sodium in them thar foods. It's true of you ate nothing but cured food you'd be in salt overload but that's not how I eat. These foods are condiments or sides designed to make other food taste good.

Well known cured foods include ham and salami and lox.

Some of my favorite cured foods

 

Curing is the rubbing or soaking food in substances that remove moisture from the cells of the food and through osmosis replaces the moisture with a solution that is downright inhospitable to bacteria. Usually it's sugary or salty. It's a method that has been used for thousands of years to preserve and improve food.




Pickled foods are almost always cured. Pickling is the action of acetic acid (vinegar) on foods. Some pickles don't list vinegar as an ingredient. In that case the vinegar comes as a result of the action of beneficial bacteria created in the salty environment.

My mom used to make great pickles in a ceramic crock in the garage. She's British and the spiciest thing I ever saw her eat is ketchup - except for those pickles, which she cured with jalepeños. 

Here we have some of my favorites including my ubiquitous peppers and onions, boquerones, salt-cured capers,  Trappey's pickled tobasco peppers and my mother's recipe for quick cucumber and onion pickles.

Salt cured fish are wonderful. Not only do they have a wonderful flavor but the enhance the taste of other food.  These boquerones aren't too fishy, like some anchovies or oilier fish like herring or mackerel. 

These fish also bring umami to your food. Umami is the mouth-watering flavor that seems to have the effect of bringing out the savory qualities of other food. It's found in many seafoods including oily fish, clams, seaweed, etc.

Trappey's pickled tobasco peppers are a nice treat. They are spicy but not really frightening. The liquid they come with is a handy seasoning, a little bit spicy and sour from the vinegar. I love to eat them with fried chicken or well cooked meats.

Capers are a fun food, at once flowery and salty. They are the unripe bud of a small bush. I planted two of these in my backyard last month. It will be years before I get any buds.  The ones in the picture are salt-cured, just packed in salt with no water or vineger. They taste more flowery than the ones packed in water or vinegar.

Of course you see one of my favorite cured foods, onions and peppers.

The cucumbers on the plates here were pickled overnight in a solution of salt and sugar. I make it like my mom did, simply slicing the cucumbers and onions and adding salt and sugar to the water until it tastes right. I've never measured it but you can tell when you taste it if is right. There was almost always a bowl of these in the fridge when I grew up.


Slabs of my home cured, hot almond smoked bacon

Note: For lunch my wife and son and I went to one of our favorite local restaurants, a place serving Silicon Valley for many years. Tomisushi has the usual Japanese menu items but the qualtity is there in everything.

It's the kind of place where everybody at the table says 'you have to try this' when the food arrives. Even the miso soup is delicious. Chicken teryaki tastes smoky and not too sweet. The sushi is always high quality and the fried foods come out greaseless and crunchy.

Friday, March 18, 2011

One of the World's Best $2.50 Lunches

Beautiful, cheap and delicious. Just like me!
Oh yes, here it is. The chicken is really high quality fresh chicken I bought at my favorite Chinese Market.


I poured some olive oil in a bowl and mixed in some of my spice rub. I rolled the chicken around in it and rubbed it into the skin. I put it on a foil lined tray and into a 425° oven for five minutes, then I turned the heat off.


When they just firm and done all the way through I took them out. Simple and delicious.

Cost: at $.89 a pound they were a real bargain. The two cost about $.60. Let's add a tablespoon of olive oil and some spices and call it $.70.

Lettuce is really expensive right now and quality is difficult to find. But I found these little gem lettuces for $1.59 each. It's dressed with hazelnut oil and a 10 year old balsamic vinegar. Not trendy right now but very tasty. On top for a quirky garnish is some enoki mushrooms and below is a few sliced almonds to add some depth.

Cost including the few drops of expensive oil and expensive vinegar and the mushrooms and almonds: about $.85

The sourdough was toasted over a flame and topped with onions and peppers and boquerones, those fishy little fish from Spain.

Cost: about $1.

Yum factor is very high for this meal. Cost is really low. I made a big pile of this chicken since the whole family is here all of a sudden. While the chicken was in the oven I made the onions and peppers.  When the chicken was done I cooked the Branzino I had for lunch yesterday. There were a lot of good textures in this meal too. The chicken skin was cruncy and flesh nice and moist. The bread was really crunchy and had a flame-toasted flavor. The lettuce was cruncy too and the little bit of hazelnut oil on it make the almonds taste really nutty.

Good stuff all around. Glad I got to eat it.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Good food is back back back!

I love the Asian markets!
I went by my favorite Chinese market today because I had been cooking for one and today my wife came home from playing concerts in Dresden and Prague and tomorrow my son comes home from college. Better fill the fridge!

Today I picked up two delicacies, a branzino and a pound of live shrimp. The branzino was flown in from Greece. I don’t know where the shrimp came from but it is unusual to find them live here.

I made a classic court-boullion to cook the shrimp. I got a pot of water boiling and added a bay leaf, a couple of crushed garlic cloves, some aromatics, a few peppercorns and some lemon juice. I boiled it for a few minutes then dumped the shrimp in. They cooked just for a minute and I took them out and let them cool in a mix of the court-boullion and water.

The branzino I simply rubbed with  olive oil, sprinkled with salt and put it under a broiler for a few minutes.

I also made a snow pea salad dressed with walnut oil, red wine vinegar, salt and pepper and lemon juice. I had a couple of slices of wine, wheat walnut bread to fill it out.

This was an expensive lunch for me. The branzino is not a cheap fish. Altogether I spent about 6 bucks.

Lamb Flank Steaks!

Hi everyone! Today I had a real actual meal; the first one I've had since last Tuesday. Lamb flank steaks, potatoes, onions and parsnips and a raw asparagus and red pepper salad.


If you're market doesn't carry them you might have to have your butcher order lamb flank steaks.  There is practically no waste and they can be elegent and served on fancy menus or used for a quick sandwich.
They cook in a minute and are very lean.


The asparagus and red pepper salad  was dressed with toasted sesame oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper. So simple. So delicious!


I love to mix two starches like the potatoes and parsnips. They and the onions were sauteed in olive oil and seasoned with a little of my spice rub mixture, which is mainly paprika, smoked peppers and cumin.

Total cost of this meal: about $3.25. There are only 11 total ingredients in all of this: asparagus, red pepper, a potato, half a parsnip, a small onion, lamb, olive oil, sesame oil, lemon juice and salt and pepper and some of my spice mix.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Thank (whatever you pray to) for artichokes!

Soon my pretty friend will be overloaded with thistles!
I grew up a 45 minute drive from Castroville, a picturesque farm town of rolling hills covered with artichokes. Driving along Highway 1 towards Monterey you see miles and miles of artichokes between the highway and the sea.


I heard Alton Brown on the Food Network say that 100 percent of artichokes grown in the US are from Castroville. Not quite; our two plants may not equal one percent of the nation's product but it seems like it.

By the way the first Castroville Artichoke Queen was a young actress named Norma Jean Mortenson, soon to be known as Marilyn Monroe.

Artichokes are amazing plants. Once the season is over you cut them back to practically nothing. The first time my wife did it I was sure she killed them but they come back vigorously.

Artichokes are nutritional powerhouses! One large artichoke has 25 calories, 6 grams of fiber (more than a cup of prunes) and lots of nutrients.

I was shocked the first time I saw a cook on TV describe how to deal with artichokes. He cut off the outer leaves, chopped the top off, peeled the base and wound up with the heart, some stem and a bit of the leaves. Heresy!

In my house growing up you cooked artichokes by dropping them whole into boiling acidulated water. The leaves were the best part! For a kid what better food could there be than something you picked up with you hands, dipped in butter and lemon juice then scrape the meat off the leaves with your teeth. You get to the bottom and easily scrape out the choke and eat the heart and as much of the stem as you can smoosh with your teeth.

How to cook artichokes
1) Get the freshest, best artichokes you can. If you pick it up and squeeze on it should squeak. Now they sell 'frost kissed' artichokes and claim they are the best ones. Nice try, artichoke marketing people. Look for nice firm green heads.

2) Start a big pot of water boiling. When it is boiling squeeze the juice of a lemon in there but do not drop the whole lemon into the pot which makes the artichokes bitter.

3) Sometimes artichokes house insects. While the water is heating up get a big bowl of cold water and add a handful of salt. Put the artichokes in and weight them down for 5 minutes. Take them out, rinse them well and check between the leaves for insects.

4) Have a cut lemon ready and wipe it against any surface that you cut. Cut off the end of the stem to get rid of the brown part. If you want take a large serrated knife and cut the top off to get rid of the spines. If I am cooking for myself I don't bother.

5) Drop the artichokes into the boiling water and cover. The cooking time will vary but it's not hard to tell when they are done. As soon as you can easily pull one of the leaves out it is done. Don't over cook them or they will be soft and tasteless.

If  you are going to eat them later cool them immediately in an ice bath or cold running water.

We like to eat them with lemon juice or melted butter. I like a good vinaigrette with them.

You know you have done it right if everybody produces a big pile of leaves.

If you get the tiny artichokes that grow lower down on the plant they are good stuffed. The choke hasn't developed and if you cut the tops off frequently you can eat them whole. I used to stuff them with bread crumbs, garlic (we are close to Gilroy, too), mushrooms and pine nuts.

And I leave this for last, the bad news. They are so much better right off the plant and cooked right away it is like a different food. And I mean right away. Cooked ten minutes later they don't taste the same and the texture is not as good. We are so spoiled...

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Oh man oh man oh man

Looks so simple. Tastes fantastic. Costs pennies.
I took my squeeze to the airport late this morning as she went to concertize in Prague and Dresden. I had to teach soon after but I managed to squeeze a pretty tasty lunch in there. Simple and delicious.

The chicken is stuffed under the skin with home-made hot almond wood smoked bacon and dipped into olive oil laced with my spice rub. Then it's cooked in a cast iron pan to brown and roasted in a hot oven for a short while. The lemons were also tossed in the oil and roasted along with the chicken.

Some of the juice in the lemons carmelizes so after cooking it's sweet and sour. I squeezed them right over the chicken. The skin is crisp and the bacon adds a smoky flavor. The sweet and sour lemon really brings it all together and makes it taste clean.  If I had been a good boy I would have removed the skin but, well, I guess I'll confess. I made two of them. I have no leftovers. I picked them clean.

Along with the chicken I had one of those weird generational foods I grew up with. My dad likes mashed potatoes with peas and so do I. Today I cooked a couple of parsnips with the potatoes and whipped them.

It took 45 minutes for me to make this lunch but a lot of it was spent waiting so I got other things done like practicing and playing with the dog.

If you enjoyed the recipe or have any comments I'd love to hear them.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Lamb and clams!

It was a busy day, with teaching in the morning, a trip to the dog park and general running around. Still I managed to produce a pretty tasty lunch.

I cooked up a batch of red pepper and onion oil. The peppers and onions get really sweet and I used them on a flame toasted piece of bread.

The meat is a lamb sirloin steak, tied in a circle. I let it rest, coated it with olive oil and seasoned it with salt then browned it in a cast iron pan. I finished it in the oven and served it with my intense sour cream dressing.

While the lamb was resting I quickly cooked the green beans in the same pan. They were fantastic.

I also made Clams with Celery and Vermouth.

In case you can't tell from the picture, it was fabulous! All of it.

Friday, March 4, 2011

When tri-tip roast is on sale

I make steaks. Not as tender as a rib eye or NY,  but a lot of flavor and nice to eat. Today I rubbed it with my spice rub, cooked it in a hot cast iron pan on top of the stove and while it was resting grilled some veggies in the pan. I took them out and made coffee gravy in the pan and poured it over the steaks.

The sweetness of corn, the beefiness of beef...

Thursday, March 3, 2011

You thought pasta salad was boring, didn't you?

I got to eat this!



Today's blog (smack) is about (nom nom nom) pasta (gorge) salad. On days when I have a rehearsal or concert in the evening I frequently skip dinner so I like to have a good lunch. I've got a rehearsal at Stanford Chamber Choir this evening in Memorial Church. This is a 12" serving bowl and there are about three cups of pasta salad. Those are four large, juicy shrimp.

I started making this salad when my kids were small and I wanted a way to get green things in their tummies. This worked!

The shrimp were coated with olive oil and curry powder then grilled in a hot cast iron skillet. I deglazed the pan with orange juice (from the tree) and kept that aside. Hmm, got one shrimp left. Must..type..

The pasta is acini di pepe (pickle seeds!) shaped like little pencil erasers. I added olive oil and red wine vinegar, a bunch of cilantro, most of an English cucumber cut into dice, the zests of two oranges and a lemon and the juice from all three, celery seeds, ground cumin, black pepper and salt.  I have garnished it with the shrimp, some peeled cherry tomatoes and Kalamata olives. I poured the deglazing liquid over the shrimp.

Total cost for my meal today including the shrimp is about $3.25. And I have about a gallon of pasta salad left over.  No more shrimpies though. Sigh.

Since pasta is bland and the basic recipe is just pasta, oil and vinegar you can do just about anything with this. Maybe next time I'll make it with cider vinegar and chopped green apples.  Maybe ham and pineapple.

Can't..type..must eat..pasta salad..

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Grow your own garlic, bay leaves and rosemary!!

So many things we can grow and enjoy. Edible plants look beautiful and taste glorious.

We love to grow our own garlic. Once you have used it right out of the garden you'll realize what you have been missing  We love to use immature plants that have not developed a bulb yet. They look like scallions but are a little tougher and have a mildly garlickly flavor. They are great pureed into a black bean dip or soup.


Just break the cloves apart
 If you harvest them after they have developed a bulb but are not quite mature they will have a water chestnut type of texture and a mild garlic flavor. They will not have the dry papery cover they develop later.

It's easy to grow.  You can use store bought garlic to get started as long as it hasn't been irradiated or totally dried out.


Just take the cloves, paper and all and plant 1/4" deep. Just push them in the ground. Push the flat end into the soil and leave the pointy end up, just below the surface.


We use old plastic containers.




You just fill the container with fairly rich soil and plunk the cloves in there. The green tops are tougher than scallions but they have a nice light garlicky flavor.



Mediterranean bay leaves have a wonderful fragrance



We like real Mediterranean bay leaves which are not the same as the bay laurel we get from California.

The California laurel has a eucalyptus aroma but the Mediterranean ones are mild and flowery.




Rosemary is really pretty when the little blue flowers show up!



Trip to Gayle's

I played two concerts in Watsonville this morning and convinced my carpool to let me stop in Capitola to get some food from Gayle's Bakery. I got an oak-roasted chicken, a beet and endive salad, Kalamata olives and boquerones, those fishly little fish from Spain.

Simple and delicious


I tore up some olives and added them to the salad with some shredded orange peel and juice, a splash of cider vinegar and some boquerones.

Some dry toasted rye bread, fresh fruit and pickled tobasco peppers filled out the meal.






How many things are there that are wrong with this presentation? Ow, quite a few. Notice that there is just too much food for this plate. Also the lack of a real shape makes it difficult to look at.


It looks difficult to eat. Plates should look inviting!

Monday, February 28, 2011

An elegant little appetizer

I like to use a big sharp knife!
Today's blog is about presentation. If you know a few rules you can make plates that would make a 3 star restaurant proud.

First here is how to cut cucumbers so thin you can see through them, without losing any fingers!

Notice how the knife rests against my fingers. 
Using a big sharp knife means all you have to do is guide the knife. The weight of the knife and the sharp blade do the cutting for you. Since you don't have to press you have more control.



If you are more comfortable with a smaller knife use it. In any case try to make the cut in one sweep of the knife to get a clean cut. Going back and forth creates an uneven surface.

One rule to remember in knife work is that no sharp part of the knife, the tip or the blade, should ever be pointed at a part of your body! If you keep that in mind you will never get cut.






Here we have a very simple geometric pattern.  It will showcase whatever we put in the middle.










This is a zester, which removes the zest or outer layer of a citrus fruit. The side you see has sharp ridges and the other side is smooth.

I like this kind of zester because it makes strips and I can cut them into the size and shape I want.




Here I have cut up a single Kalamata olive and put some long shreds of orange peel on top. You see how you hardly notice the cucumber or the plate now? They frame the olive.










Major faux pas here, enough to get you detention in cooking school. When your food extends beyond the rim it looks sloppy and casual.









 Here is the finished dish. You can add whatever goodies you have, from a little chunk of left over steak or pork or chicken to a fine cheese or an oyster. All I have here is a tiny chunk of orange, an almond roasted in walnut oil, a small piece of mozzarella and a piece of Italian sausage. The olive and orange mixture has a touch of olive oil and the specks you see are black pepper. Good eating, nice looking and it probably cost a quarter for all the food.