Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Jamming out

So since I work as a caterer I find myself with a lot of down time. Like today. Now it's the day before my favorite holliday, and I've found myself lost in a wonderful world of pickling, jamming, and rocking out to loud music. I ended up with more produce than I though immaginalbe for our little fridge for 5 people. Today I give you the best of my creations, the blood orange, strawberry whiskey marmalade!

THE FOOD

6 blood oranges, zested, peeled and sectioned
6 oz strawberries, sliced
1 c water
2 c sugar
1/2 c Bourbon Whiskey

equipment-
tongs
dry clean towel
canning jar
large deep pot

The jam itself was easy, merely addin all the ingredients to a pot and cooking on a medium low heat until thick and saucy, roughly 2 hours. Also incorperating a thc tincture would be easy, merely adding the desired ammount at the end. To make sure it lasts I am going to jar it. You do this by bringing water to a boil and submerging the canning jar, lid and rim in the water for at least 5 minutes. Then carefully remove the jar, being sure not to touch the inside or rim of the jar. Fill within a 1/2 inch of the top of the jar, screw on the lid as tightly as possible, then store in the fridge upside down. Wait until it is chilled then store at room temp.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

It feels like spring!

On such a lovely spring day like today I can only think of my favorite spring cuisine, Greek food! The light freshness of it, the salty bite, roasted meats! Everything about it screams spring! Here's a few recipies for the coming spring.

THE FOOD

Herb Spanakopita

1 package frozen Filo dough (40 sheets I think)
8 oz feta cheese
6 green onions, chopped
1 white onion, small dice
4 eggs
either 8 oz frozen spinach or 2 lbs fresh spinach, rough chopped, sauted
3 cloves garlic rough chop
1 bunch fresh parsley, fine chopped
1 lb butter

Using a strainer press out any liquid in the spinach. Mix the eggs, feta, and spinach in a large mixing bowl. Gently sauté the white onion and garlic until the onions are soft. Allow to cool and mix in with the feta along with the parsley and green onions. Melt the butter in a pan and set aside a pastry brush for it. Lay out the Filo sheets and get ready to start rolling fast! Filo doesn't hold well outside it's packaging and will start to crack if you don't work fast. You can make yours any shape you want, but I normally roll aboust a 8 oz portion into two pieces of dough. Put the mixture in the top center of the dough, paint butter everywhere that the cheese mixture isn't, fold the two sides in on themselves. Paint more butter on the dough, then roll it up into a vaguely burrito like shape.

Once all of them are rolled, coat them in more butter and bake at 350 until golden brown, roughly 15-20 min

Monday, April 4, 2011

Breakfast for dinner!

God I love Mondays! Not many people say that but I genuinely do. See working in kitchens tends to mean is that I have Mondays and tuesdays off. While there arecertain drawbacks(no one is ever free to hang out during the day, and hardly ever wants to hang out at night), but in the house I live at me and my roommates have a family dinner on Mondays. This means I can wake up at the crack of noon, smoke a little, and walk to the store at the best time of day, before they get clogged with families and old people! After that I get to spend the whole day making great food at my pace, making everything as perfect as I can. Now do you see why I might love Mondays?

Recently I've ended up with a lot of really great things from work that all seem to work perfectly for breakfast! Breakfast is by far the coolest meal out there, and for stoners like me I'm generally waaaay to lazy to make it myself. So instead I'm doing a rare family tradition of mine by doing breakfast of dinner, with my personal take on it. The other great thing about breakfast is how easy it is to infuse THC into it, seeing as if you have premade pot butter or oil you could substitute it for ANYTHING. And take it from the French on this one, everything is better with butter!

THE FOOD

So I'm making a lot of food, so here is the one recipe I have that I'll be doing a take on. I'll also be making butternut squash an potato hash, a duck confit gravy, poached eggs and a mushroom gravy for the vegi's out there! Oh and a salmon rillette and spinach eggs benedict.

Mary's Hollandaise
So eggs Benedict can be made with any toppings you want, with the real key to it being the hollandaise sauce. This sauce is the one I use when I'm cooking with pot butter, mainly because of it's strong flavors to cut out any possible burnt flavor from the butter.

8 egg yolks
1/4 c white wine
1/4 c lemon juice
Tabasco
Salt
1/4 c chopped fresh taragon
2 lbs butter, melted

Start by mixing the white wine and eggs into a stainless steel bowl that fits well in a medium sized pot (basicly making a double boiler). Fill the pot with a 1/2 inch of water an bring to a light boil. Place the bowl over the pot and whisk riggorously until they become thick and able to stand up on their own (a soft peak). Then slowly start whisking in the melted butter until all of it is incorperated. Add a few splashes of Tabasco, the taragon, and the lemon juice and salt to taste. At this point the sauce is ready, so keep tasting it and season it apropriately.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

A shout back to the Cyp

I had a rather bad case of home sickness recently, no real reason why but it happened. I think I mighta smoked a bit too much herb and had a wierd freak out. All of my troubles were fixed with this most recent recipe, a dish inspired by the first kitchen crew I worked with. Sometimes it's the little things that really help you feel better. Oh and beer helps.

THE FOOD

Lamb burger

1 lb ground lamb meat
4 cloves garlic, finely minced
2 t cayenne
1 T red chili flakes
1/4 c mint, fine chopped

Roasted garlic aoli
3 egg yolks
4 cloves garlic, whole with the ends chopped off
2 c canola oil
1 c ice water
1 lemon, juiced

The burger is simple, it's really just mixing those spices into the meat, then letting is sit for an hour or more, then grilled it. I served it on a potato roll with roasted red peppers, some lettuce and red onion. The aoli, that's more difficult. The trick to any mayo is it's one cup oil (canola oil only! Don't try and be classy making it with olive or something else ;P, though you can cut it at the end with a half cup or so to add flavor) to one egg yolk, plus one extra.
For this aoli, I used 3 yolks and two cups canola oil. I placed the oil in a small pot with the garlic and brought it to a very slight simmer. You want the garlic to be forming small bubbles but nothing else. I left it like this for 30 minutes or until the garlic was soft. This should be done in advance, cooking as much garlic, pot, or whatever finds it's way into the oil. It will not only give you tasty infused garlic oil but tasty garlic to munch on!
Once oil is room temperture place the egg yolks into a large bowl or into a food proccesser with the garlic and lemon juice. Mix these together until the yolks turn light in color, then slowly start whisking in the oil a little bit at a time. As the oil is added it will start to thicken but watch out for it becoming too oily too quickly. If it starts to seperate (the aoli will start to clump and oil will pool around it, it should be smooth and thick) merely add a little splash of ice water to shock it back to life and continue adding oil. Salt and pepper it to taste, and you have yourself homemade aoli!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The good things in life.

Let me start by saying I am a cynical optimist, that cannot be described adequetly in words but I'm sure you will see what I mean eventually. Secondly I belive that enjoyment can be found in anything given the proper motivation, drug, or some combination of the two.

I started this blog mostly to record recipe ideas I have so I plan on including in each post something I have either tried (with feedback) or want to try. Because I really like pot I'll generally include how to encorperate it into the food. However since one of my roommates and I brew beer I figured, what the hell.

THE BEER
Recently we (roommate remember?) have had some success with making some fairly tasty Ginger beer. My roommate has been brewing for quite a lot longer than me, but one of my best friends (You know who you are) has been brewing for years as well. Because of him I'd at least like to think I know what I'm talking about when it comes to brewing, and have become a beer snob. Also because of him. Not sure if it's a bad thing or not but that's just how it is.

Anyways, I got side tracked. The first one we did was about 1.7lbs of Ginger to 15 cups of sugar to yeild 5 gallons of Ginger beer (roughly 50 bottles). They were a bit on the sweet side and lacked the Ginger punch i was looking for, though the Ginger came out more in flavor the longer it sat (brown bottles, 60-70* F, 3 days till they were carbonnated and full in flavor by week 4). I think the carbonnaton helped bring out the flavor somehow, but I lack an explanation as to why.

Since then we have made a second batch with brown sugar and honey instead of white sugar, and I'll keep you all informed about it. Also a pale ale is in the works, though I didn't help brew that one.

THE FOOD
Right now I could write tales about food but I'll limit it to my most recent recipies.

Hell Mashers-
Super spicy mashed potatoes I made for myself. Butter in this could easily be substituted with pre-made pot butter

3 russet potatoes, peeled quartered
1/2lb butter
1/4 c lardons(this is what I used cause I had some, easily substituted with bacon or panccetta)
1/2 c fine diced white onion
3 large cloves garlic
2 T fresh chopped sage
2 habeneros, seeded, finely minced
1/2 c chedder cheese, shredded
1/2 c milk

I started by boiling the potatoes (standard for mashed potaoes, about 30 min in salted water on a low boil), while those were working I rendered the fat slightly in the lardons in a cast iron skillet. One most of the fat was rendered I added the onion and cooked until lightly browned and sweet. I then added the garlic and chilis, sauteing lightly then adding the butter to melt it then the sage. I left it on a low heat until the potatoes were done and whipped the potatoes in a mixer adding the milk in slowly, then the butter, and lastly the cheese. I topped it with some sour cream and chives.

The outcome?
Really fucking spicy potatoes. I have a thing for spicy food, but most people would have trouble eating these. They have a really great flavor and if they were just for me I might add either another chili or maybe a 1/2 t of cayenne. For those faint hearted, use jalepenos. They will probly add a bit more chili flavor and greatly reduce the heat.