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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Bacon Jam

Bacon Jam

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Recipe Type: Condiment, Breakfast
Author: Rebecca Lindamood
Prep time: 15 mins
Cook time: 60 mins
Total time: 1 hour 15 mins
Serves: 32
Salty, meaty, chewy, sweet, savoury, smoky, bacony goodness. Bacon is crisped and made into the ultimate breakfast spread with maple syrup, onions, coffee, brown sugar and pepper.
Ingredients
  • 3 pounds bacon
  • 4 large yellow onions, peeled and thinly sliced
  • 8 cloves garlic, smashed with the flat side of a knife or a pan and peeled
  • 1 cup cider vinegar
  • 1 cup packed light-brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup pure maple syrup
  • 1 1/2 cups very strong brewed black coffee
  • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Instructions
  1. Cut the bacon slices into one inch strips. Add the bacon to a Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Cook the bacon, stirring frequently, until the bacon is browned. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the bacon to a paper-towel lined plate. Drain all but 2 tablespoons of the bacon drippings into a heat-proof jar with a tight-fitting lid.*
  2. *Save the bacon drippings in the refrigerator. That’s too much flavor to trash!
  3. Place the Dutch oven back over the medium-high heat and add the onions and garlic. Stir well and reduce heat to medium. Continue to cook for about 8 minutes, or until the onions are mostly translucent. Add the remaining ingredients, stir well, and drop heat again, this time to low.
  4. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently, and boil hard for 2 minutes. After 2 minutes, stir the browned bacon into the onions and liquid.
  5. Simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally to make sure things aren’t sticking, adding 1/4 cup of water if it seems to be drying out. When the onions are meltingly soft and the liquid is thick and syrupy, remove the dutch oven from the heat and let stand for 5 minutes.
  6. Transfer the contents of the Dutch oven to the work bowl of a food processor that has been fitted with a blade. Fit the lid in place and pulse several times or until the Bacon Jam is a spreadable consistency. Scrape into a jar (or jars) or a container with a tight fitting lid. Store in the refrigerator for up to one month.
  7. Can be served cold, room temperature or warmed.
Notes

The bacon jam could take up to 3 hours to reduce to a syrupy consistency. Just stick with it!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Tartine Bakery's Savory Bread Pudding

Tartine Bakery's savory bread pudding is much like a soufflé, but it's nearly impossible to mess up. You can assemble the dish up to a day ahead and store it in the refrigerator, letting it come to room temperature before baking. Bake the pudding an hour before you want to serve it. For the mushrooms, pastry chef Elisabeth Prueitt and her husband, baker Chad Robertson, use a mixture of chanterelles and porcini.

Serves 4 to 6

1 tablespoon unsalted butter

2 leeks, white parts only, finely chopped

1/2 cup dry white wine

Olive oil

2 pounds assorted mushrooms, stems trimmed and caps halved

1 head Treviso or other radicchio, leaves separated

5 large eggs

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 cup heavy cream

1 cup whole milk

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground pepper

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg

2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves

2/3 cup plus 1/2 cup grated Gruyère or cheddar cheese

3 ounces smoked ham, chopped

2 slices day-old Basic Country Bread, torn into large chunks

1. Melt the butter in a skillet over medium heat. Add the leeks and sauté until soft, 6 to 8 minutes. Add the wine and cook, stirring occasionally, until most of wine evaporates, about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat.

2. Heat a large, heavy-bottomed skillet over high heat. Add enough olive oil to coat the bottom of the pan. When the oil is smoking, arrange the mushrooms cut-side down in the pan and cook without stirring until seared and caramelized, about 1 minute more. Stir the mushrooms, add the radicchio, and cook until wilted, about 1 minute. Remove from the heat.

3. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

4. To make the custard, in a bowl, whisk the eggs and salt until well-blended. Add the cream, milk, pepper, nutmeg, thyme, 2/3 cup cheese, and ham and whisk to combine.

5. Place the bread chunks in an 8-inch soufflé dish and add the leeks, mushrooms, and radicchio. Pour in the custard so that it comes all the way to the rim. Sprinkle evenly with the remaining 1/2 cup cheese. Let stand for 8 to 10 minutes until the custard saturates the bread.

6. Bake until the custard is no longer runny in the center, about 50 minutes. Let the pudding rest for 15 minutes before serving.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Caramelized Onion

    Herb Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Caramelized Onion

    Serves 4 to 6

    This recipe can be doubled and prepared in a Dutch oven, but the cooking time will need to be doubled as well.

    INGREDIENTS
    • 5tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into 5 pieces
    • 3tablespoons heavy cream
    • 1 1/4teaspoons sugar
    • 2pounds sweet potatoes (2 large or 3 medium), peeled, quartered lengthwise, and cut into 1/4-inch-thick slices
    • 1small onion, chopped
    • 1tablespoon sour cream
    INSTRUCTIONS
    • 1. Combine 4 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons cream, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1/4 teaspoon pepper, 1 teaspoon sugar, and sweet potatoes in large saucepan. Cook, covered, over low heat until potatoes are fall-apart tender, 35 to 40 minutes.

    • 2. While sweet potatoes are cooking, melt remaining tablespoon butter in small nonstick skillet and add onion, 1/4 teaspoon sugar, and 1/4 teaspoon of salt. Cook over low heat until onion is caramelized, about 15 minutes. Set aside until sweet potatoes are done cooking.
    • 3. Once sweet potatoes are done cooking, take pan off heat. Add remaining tablespoon cream, and mash sweet potatoes with potato masher. Stir in onion and sour cream. Serve.

    Sunday, August 28, 2011

    Oysters!

    Teaching Dave: A taste for oysters late in life



    Basic oyster protocol

    Fish's Barbecued Oysters. Styling by Sophie Brickman.

    IMAGES

    Fish's Barbecued Oysters. Styling by Sophie Brickman.Raw oysters with mignonette. Styling by Sophie Brickman.

    -- Buy oysters with tightly closed shells. If open oysters don't close after a slight tap, toss them out.

    -- Wash oysters under cold water before packing them over ice in the refrigerator. This will keep them at about the 45° recommended temperature for oyster storage. Eat them as soon as possible, although they can last for a few days, refrigerated over fresh ice.

    -- To shuck an oyster, use an oyster shucker, not a normal kitchen knife or - gasp - a screwdriver.

    -- To get a slurpable nugget of meat, cut through two adductor muscles, which keep the top and bottom shells closed. A ligament sits at the hinge. Find the "sweet spot" - where you can slide your knife inside at the hinge - then run the knife along the top shell to detach the top muscle. Wipe the shucker clean against a towel, then cut the bottom muscle by sliding the blade along the bottom shell.

    -- If you get shell or dirt inside the oyster, no worries. Just use the knife to clean it up.

    Mignonette With a Kick

    Makes 1/2 cup

    Classic mignonette is a mixture of shallots, cracked pepper and vinegar that brings out the flavor of raw oysters. Here, rice wine vinegar adds sweetness, and jalapeno gives a slight kick. Be sure to mince the jalapeno and shallots as finely as possible - no one wants a mouthful of either.

    • 1/8 cup champagne vinegar
    • 1/8 cup rice wine vinegar
    • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
    • 1 tablespoon minced shallot
    • 1 tablespoon seeded, minced jalapeno
    • 1/4 teaspoon cracked black pepper

    Instructions: Combine all ingredients and serve immediately with raw oysters.

    Fish's Barbecued Oysters

    Makes 2 dozen

    This recipe, adapted from Fish in Sausalito, can be prepared partially ahead - the sauce as much as a week in advance and the garlic butter up to three days in advance. You might not use all of the sauce or butter, but both go well on a hunk of sourdough.

    • 1 teaspoon neutral-tasting olive oil
    • 1/4 pound canned San Marzano tomatoes, drained
    • 3 tablespoons minced white onion
    • 5 garlic cloves
    • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
    • 2 tablespoons brown sugar
    • 2 tablespoons cider vinegar
    • 1/4 teaspoon Asian fish sauce
    • 1 squeeze sriracha sauce
    • 2 tablespoons freshly ground horseradish
    • 1/4 pound (1 stick) organic unsalted butter
    • 2 dozen fresh oysters (see note)
    • -- Sourdough bread

    For the tomato sauce: Combine the olive oil, tomatoes, onion, 1 garlic clove, salt and brown sugar in a saucepan. Bring to a simmer and cook, stirring occasionally, until you can smash the garlic clove against the pot with the back of a spoon, about 25 minutes. Remove from heat and pass through fine food mill, or puree in a blender.

    Return the sauce to the saucepan; add the vinegar, fish sauce and sriracha, bring to a simmer, and cook for about 30 minutes, or until thickened. You should have about 1 cup of sauce.

    Strain out the tomato seeds, then let cool. Stir in grated horseradish; set aside or refrigerate.

    For the garlic butter: Mince the remaining four cloves of garlic. Melt the butter, add the garlic, then refrigerate until solid.

    For the oysters: Shuck oysters over a bowl, following the accompanying instructions and being sure to preserve all the oyster liquor. Try to keep all the liquor in the shell with the oyster meat; otherwise you can add it back to the shells from the bowl after you put the oysters on the grill.

    To finish: Prepare and heat the grill to medium high. Carefully arrange the oysters on the grill to prevent loss of liquor and cook, uncovered, until done, about 2 minutes. If the grill slats are too wide, nestle the oysters into a bed of rock salt layered into a shallow pan, and set that on the grill; cover and cook for about 4 minutes, until done.

    Spoon a dollop of garlic butter onto each cooked oyster while still on grill; once the butter melts, add a dime-size "hat" of horseradish sauce. Plate carefully to prevent loss of liquid, over rock salt if need be. Serve with warm sourdough.

    Note: Fish recommends using Miyagi oysters, but any medium-size oyster with a deep "bowl" bottom shell will work. You want to prevent the garlic butter and tomato sauce from sloshing out of the shell once they heat.


    Dry Braised Stuffed Okra

    Dry-braised stuffed okra makes for a tender dish





    Stuffed Dry-Braised Okra. Styling by Marisa Lindquist.


    Stuffed Dry-Braised Okra

    Serves 4 to 6 as a starter

    Dry-braising okra does away with the mucilaginous texture frequently associated with this oft-maligned vegetable. Try to select similarly-sized pods, about the size of your finger, which will allow even cooking. Don't worry if the pods darken during cooking; they'll be fine.

    • 1 pound medium-size okra pods
    • 6 to 8 anchovy fillets, rinsed and minced
    • 1 teaspoon sweet paprika
    • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
    • -- Olive, corn or canola oil, as needed
    • -- Fine sea salt

    Instructions: Rinse okra, drain and dry well. You can place the rinsed pods into a towel-covered colander and refrigerate overnight, which also helps the drying process.

    Trim both ends of the okra, cutting the bottom end even with the cap to prevent exposing the seeds. Slash the pods lengthwise deeply enough to expose the seeds but avoid cutting through the other side.

    Combine the minced anchovy and the paprikas, then stuff into the slit. Use a butter knife to distribute the stuffing as best you can, but do not overstuff since the filling can fall out and into the pan and burn. Press the opening together to help seal in the stuffing. If needed, scrape or brush away any stuffing stuck to the outside of the pods. The okra can be stuffed a few hours ahead.

    When ready to cook, add enough oil to amply coat the bottom of a large skillet; set over medium-high heat. Working in batches as needed, add the okra without crowding the pan. Brown all sides, about 4-5 minutes. Do not be alarmed if the pod turns black. The okra will not taste burned.

    If cooked in batches, return all the okra to the pan. Reduce heat to low, cover the pan, and dry-braise until the okra is tender, about 5-7 minutes, depending on the size of the pods.

    Blot on paper towels, sprinkle with fine sea salt to taste and serve immediately.

    Note: Try other stuffing combos such as 1/4 cup chopped bonito flakes, 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds and 1 1/2 teaspoons shichimi togarashi for an Asian twist. You can also use packaged spice blends such as dukkah (an Egyptian blend of toasted nuts, seeds and spices) and zaatar (thyme, oregano, sesame seeds and sumac).

    Per serving: 50 calories, 3 g protein, 5 g carbohydrate, 3 g fat (g saturated), 3 mg cholesterol, 152 mg sodium, 2 g fiber.

    Wine pairing: Bubblies are perfect even for everyday, so pour the NV Gruet New Mexico Brut Rose or Blanc de Noirs Sparkling Wine ($15; 12% alcohol) or a light red such as the Domaine des Nugues Beaujolais Villages from Gerard Gelin.




    Thursday, August 25, 2011

    Bacon and Leek Risotto with Poached Egg

    Ingredients

    • 6 large eggs
    • 5 cups low-salt chicken broth
    • 1 tablespoon olive oil
    • 6 slices thick-cut bacon, cut crosswise into 1/2-inch pieces
    • 2 cups thinly sliced leeks (white and pale green parts only; about 2 large)
    • 1 1/2 cups arborio rice or medium-grain white rice (about 10 ounces)
    • 3/4 cup dry white wine
    • 3 tablespoons finely chopped fresh Italian parsley
    • 1 tablespoon butter
    • 2 tablespoons finely grated Parmesan cheese
    • Fresh Italian parsley leaves (for garnish)
    • Additional finely grated Parmesan cheese (for garnish)

    Preparation

    • Bring large skillet of water just to simmer over medium-low heat. Sprinkle water with salt. Working with 1 egg at a time, crack into small bowl and slide egg into simmering water. Cook eggs until whites are cooked through but yolks are still runny, 3 to 4 minutes. Using slotted spoon, carefully transfer poached eggs to medium bowl filled with ice water. DO AHEAD Eggs can be made up to 1 day ahead. Cover and refrigerate in same bowl of ice water.
    • Bring broth to simmer in medium saucepan; cover to keep warm. Heat oil in heavy large saucepan over medium heat. Add bacon and cook until crisp, stirring occasionally. Using slotted spoon, transfer bacon to paper towels to drain. Add leeks to drippings in pan; cook until soft but not brown, stirring often, 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer 2 generous tablespoonfuls leeks to small bowl; reserve for garnish. Add rice to pan; stir 1 to 2 minutes. Add wine; stir until absorbed, about 2 minutes. Add 1D2 cup warm broth to saucepan; stir until broth is absorbed. Repeat adding broth and stirring until rice is tender but still firm to bite and sauce is creamy, stirring almost constantly, about 23 minutes total. Add bacon, chopped parsley, butter, and 2 tablespoons cheese. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper.
    • Meanwhile, heat poached eggs in medium skillet of simmering water just until heated through, 1 to 2 minutes.
    • Divide risotto among 6 bowls. Top risotto in each bowl with poached egg. Sprinkle egg with salt and pepper. Sprinkle with parsley leaves, additional cheese, and reserved leeks.