Friday, April 2, 2010
Red Bean Treats
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Arepas
Arepas are bread made out of corn originating from South America. It's flat and unleavened made out of cornmeal that is grilled, baked, fried, or a combo of those three. The first time I ever had one was in NYC at Caracas, an amazing little restaurant on 7th St just east of First Ave. It's on my list of favorite places to eat. Once you make the Arepa, you can stuff it with practically anything. This was my first attempt at making arepas, and it actually turned out very well. For my next round, I think I'm going to do some pulled pork. For this recipe, I chose to finish off the chorizo sausages I bought at Despana in NYC (unfortunately not from Spain. Boo to you USDA), avocado, cotija cheese, which is a hard cow's milk cheese, and chipotle mayo. To be ultra-traditional, I suppose you should grind your own corn meal, etc, but really, my 80 hr work week sort of prohibits that part. I bought precooked white corn meal (P.A.N. brand), but any brand will do.
Arepas:
Preheat oven to 400
2 cups cornmeal (makes about 6 arepas)
2.5 cups boiling water
Vegetable oil
Assembly:
Chorizo, sliced
1 Avocado sliced
Cotija sliced
chipotle mayo (recipe below)
1. Mix the boiling water into the cornmeal well with a spoon (too hot to do by hand), and cover with plastic and let it sit for 15 min, or cool enough to handle.
2. Wet your hands. Pick up a small amount and roll into a ball (little smaller than a tennis ball) and flatten to about 3/4" thick. If it starts to crack on the edges, just add some water and smooth it out (kinda like ceramics class).
3. Coat the bottom of a frying pan with oil and fry both sides until golden brown.
4. Put into oven for about 15 min until it sounds hollow when you tap it with a wooden spoon.
5. Cut the arepas open and fill with any ingredients you can think of!
Chipotle Mayo:
+/-4 dried chipotles (chipotles are just smoke dried aged jalapenos) as these are slightly spicy. Also, my "mildly" spicy can often be someone else's very spicy.
1 cup mayo
zest of 1/2 lime
1 tsp lime juice
boiling water (about 3/4 cup)
Few cranks of a pepper mill
1. Reconstitute the chipotles in boiling water.
2. Throw everything into a blender (minus the water that the chipotles were sitting in)
3. Blend until well combined
Friday, December 4, 2009
Banana Bread
1 stick (1/2 cup) butter softened
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp baking soda
1 ½ cups flour
pinch of salt
3 ripe bananas
(optional: ½ cup nuts or about 1cup semi-sweet chocolate chips)
Directions:
Preheat Oven to 350 degrees.
Grease a loaf pan with butter.
Cream butter and sugar together with an electric mixer.
Add eggs to butter and sugar mixture.
In a separate bowl, combine flour and salt.
In another bowl cream bananas and baking soda with an electric mixer.
Alternating, add mixed bananas and flour/salt mixture into the butter, sugar and eggs.
(Stir in nuts or chips)
Pour into the greased loaf pan.
Bake at 350 until a toothpick inserted is clean when pulled out (about 40min)
Let cool before removing from pan and cutting.
Enjoy!
Alternately, you can fill muffin cups and sprinkle with coarse sugar (you know, that sugar in the raw stuff. I admit I may have bought coffee at Starbucks once or twice just to grab some extra packets for making muffins) on top.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Vodka Sauce
Stuffed Peppers, et al.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Butternut Squash Soup
Monday, October 19, 2009
Steamed Blue Claw Crabs
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Pomegranates!
Early fall ( or maybe winter since we already had snow in Boston) heralds the arrival of pomegranates into our supermarkets. Fresh pomegranates are full of concentrated flavor, and their seeds give that extra crunch. Pomegranates are full of vitamin C, B5, potassium, and antioxidant rich polyphenols that are the subject of numerous ongoing studies about potential health benefits, such as decreasing proliferation of breast cancer cells, reducing heart disease risk factors, and lowering blood blood pressure. But taking apart a pomegranate can be messy and difficult. One trick I learned from my former roommate, Derek, in medical school is to score the outside of the pomegranate and then soak it in a bowl of water. The outside leathery skin soaks up some of the water and is much easier to break apart. I left mine to soak overnight and took it apart just now.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Lemon-Poppy Buttermilk cake
I had leftover buttermilk after making a rich chocolate cake on Monday and went on a recipe hunt on allrecipes.com of course, and came across a buttermilk cake recipe. I modified it slightly, because what I really was in the mood for was a lemon poppyseed cake and just needed a solid cake base that uses buttermilk. This cake is fairly dense, but lighter than a pound cake. With the addition of fresh lemon juice, the cake tastes even lighter. I also like this recipe because it's not too sweet in the end. I opted to not make a glaze for it, but I think a nice tart lemony glaze will be the perfect finish. It also is a good basic yellow cake if you take out the lemon parts and poppy seeds.