Monday, November 28, 2011

Recipe: Bourbon-Spiked Chocolate Chip Pecan Pie with Salted Caramel Sauce

For the past three or four years, my parents have had Thanksgiving at our house, with just my grandmothers, my brother, and me (long story short, it's easier this way, and we do a larger family gathering for Christmas). This year was my first Thanksgiving as a college grad, and because I'm living at home and only employed part time, I was more available to help with dinner preparations than I have been in the past (oh, and my entire family figured that, since I love to cook and I have culinary class experience, I could probably just do the whole meal myself—I'm not quite that good though, haha). We had all of our traditional dishes—stuffing (or rather, dressing, because we cook it outside of the turkey), this Grand Marnier-spiked cranberry relish my mother makes (I find this dish amusing, because she hates cranberries but gets compliments on this dish all the time), turkey, mashed potatoes (though not as many as the good ol' days, when my cousins, Katie and Jess, and I would wolf them down like we'd never get a chance to eat them again), and a brown sugar-and-pecan-topped sweet potato mash, plus a few other sides. My mother and I did a lot of preparation on that Wednesday before the holiday so we wouldn't be overwhelmed on the day of, and my grandmothers each took turns washing dishes and helping us put things away. While I had a hand in a number of dishes, I wanted to make something on my own, and, since we already had so many dinner dishes, I thought I'd go for dessert. We always have pumpkin pie (this year was no different) and the occasional fruit pie, and sometimes cookies or some sort of cake, but I got hooked on the idea of making a chocolate chip pecan pie. I found this highly rated recipe from Emeril Lagasse on Food Network's website, tweaked it a little to get it exactly how I wanted it, and it turned out beautifully. The pie was sweet and rich, but not overwhelming, and the salted caramel sauce and some freshly whipped cream were perfect on top. The pie is best served the day of or the next day, and it's delicious served warm, cold, or room temperature. I highly recommend making the crust from scratch, but you could use a pre-made crust if desired—just make sure you use a deep pie dish, otherwise you may have issues with the pie filling overflowing while the pie bakes.


Yields: 1, 9 inch pie; approx. 1 cup caramel sauce
Prep. time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 1 hour, plus approx. 10 minutes for the caramel sauce
Difficulty: Moderate

Ingredients
For the pie filling
  • 1 & 1/2 cups pecans (I used a mix of chopped and whole pecans)
  • 1 cup semi sweet chocolate chips (I use Ghirardelli brand; you may want to use a little less)
  • 1 unbaked 9-inch pie shell (my mother makes homemade crusts and I highly recommend making your own)
  • 4 eggs, beaten
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup packed brown sugar (I used dark, but light or dark would work)
  • 1/2 cup corn syrup
  • 1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
  • Approx. 1/8 tsp. salt 
  • 1 tbsp. bourbon (any brand will work)

For the salted caramel sauce
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 tbsp. water
  • 1/2 tsp. lemon juice
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 2 to 4 tbsp. 2% or whole milk (I used a little over 2 tbsp.)
  • 1 tsp. bourbon
  • Good quality salt, to taste (I highly recommend sea salt, or some sort of high quality coarse salt; just add a small pinch at a time, and taste the sauce as you go to make sure you don't over salt it)
  • 1-3 tbsp. butter (salted or unsalted; if you use salted, don't add as much salt) 
(It's really important to taste this sauce at the end, when you're adding in the final ingredients. You want it to be sweet, with a buttery, salty background and just a hint of bourbon)


Directions
For the pie: Preheat the oven to 350* F. Spread the pecans and chocolate chips evenly on the bottom of the pie shell. In a mixer or just in a bowl, whisk together the ingredients for the pie filling until well blended, then pour the filling over the pecan and chocolate chip mixture in the pie shell (the pecans and chocolate chips will rise up into the filling so that the filling is "mixed"). If you want a pretty design on top of the pie, arrange whole pecans on top in the desired pattern. Bake the pie until the filling sets, about 50 to 60 minutes. Remove from the oven and cool for 30 minutes before slicing.

For the caramel sauce: In a medium, heavy sauce pan/pot, combine the sugar, water, and lemon juice and cook over medium-high heat, stirring, until the sugar dissolves. Let boil without stirring until the mixture becomes a deep amber color (watch it carefully to make sure it doesn't burn). Slowly add the cream, whisking to combine, and remove from the heat. Add 2 tablespoons of the milk, adding more (I didn't add any more to mine) until the desired consistency is reached. Stir in the bourbon and butter until the butter has melted into the mixture. Sprinkle in salt, to taste. Let cool before serving (the sauce will thicken as it cools). Gently reheat before serving atop the pie.

 
This pie is perfect for Thanksgiving or Christmas (I feel like a lot of people make plain ol' pecan pies for the holidays, so this fits right in), but it could easily be served any other time of the year. Many pecan pies call for ungodly amounts of sugars and syrups that make them cloyingly sweet, but I think this pie has just the right amount of sweetness. Semi sweet chocolate chips add a richness and the warm caramel sauce adds a buttery, salty flavor to the pie that perfectly blends with the pie's sweet filling. This dish was a huge success with my family (even my brother, who rarely eats sweets), and I'll definitely be making it for Christmas.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Robert Irvine told me I had a great smile, and other stories from the Fabulous Food Show

So, the Sunday before last (the 13th), my dad and I spent the day in Cleveland, OH at the Fabulous Food Show, and, well, we had a fabulous time! The event is held at the I-X Center, a huge exposition center with, I bet, enough room to fit several airplanes, so there was plenty of room to move around and space for a lot of stands, stages, and displays. We were pleasantly surprised by the By Hand artisan expo set up at the front of the center, a sort of bonus show on top of the main event. This annual expo features a slew of artisans selling their handmade works—glasswork, photography, clothing, jewelry, woodwork, pottery—and just about everything we saw was beautiful and unique (except all of the hippie clothes...tie-dye tee shirts are nothing special or original, people!). My dad got this really unique wine barrel tray (the artisan takes wine crates, cuts the logo side out and fashions it into a serving tray) and these beautiful woodcraft Christmas tree ornaments. I found some beautiful earrings made with handmade polymer clay beads (they are so intricate and beautiful) and we found some gifts for my mother. Perhaps my favorite purchases were some beautiful cherry wood kitchen tools and accessories from Jonathan's Wild Cherry Spoons—the craftsman had these absolutely perfect wooden spoons/spatulas that I was so happy to find. Unlike traditional wooden spoons/spatulas, which are typically straight and a little hard to work with, these have the perfect weight and feel and they are slightly curved, which makes them so much easier to work with. We have one at home that my mom bought a few years ago, but we haven't seen anything like it since then, so I was incredibly excited when I saw these in the craftman's booth (I bought 3!). Seeing all of these artists showing off and selling their works and seeing how much they loved what they did was great to see, and, obviously, I'm very happy with our purchases (all of which are being "forgotten" about and saved for Christmas ;D ).

Now, the food show area featured various small stage areas, where shows were going on throughout the day—everything from lectures about food to cooking demos to kitchen tool demos—and a majority of the rest of the space was filled with rows of stands, some selling food, others selling knives or kitchen cabinetry, and still others selling farm goods and bath products made with all-natural ingredients. There was a wine-tasting area and wine store, a restaurant, a cookbook store, and a decorated cake display, and all of this was off to the side of a huge curtained area, containing the main stage, where five celebrity chefs (Bobby Flay, Guy Fieri, Duff Goldman, Robert Irvine, and Michael Symon) held shows throughout the weekend (this is an annual 3-day event in the fall, and there's another show in the spring). My dad offered me two (yes two—I am a lucky, lucky girl!) VIP tickets for whichever celebrity chef shows I wanted to see (I have a post about this here), and, because of other commitments going on this weekend, we chose to go to the shows on Sunday, which was just fine by me, because I got to see and meet Robert Irvine (Dinner: Impossible, Worst Cooks in America Season 2, Restaurant: Impossible) and Michael Symon (ABC's The Chew, Iron Chef America, and far too many more to name) and it was absolutely amazing.

The main stage

Robert Irvine's show was up first and he was so much fun to watch and even better to meet! He's always so intense—yelling, ordering people around, smashing things—on his shows (I'm mostly thinking about Restaurant: Impossible, which I watch all the time), but on stage here, he was sarcastic, witty, passionate, and so fun to watch. His show was very casual, but still informative—he had an audience member help him on stage (she was pretty funny and did a good job) and he did a Q&A at the end (which included a girl asking for a hug and another girl asking to feel his muscles, haha). He made a mixed drink featured in this month's Thanksgiving Food Network magazine and this delicious-smelling ruben burger and he was more than happy to talk about the restaurants he helps on his show and give some thoughts on his recent loss on The Next Iron Chef (he was definitely bummed out, but still joking, especially since Michael Symon was right there backstage—the two of them are good friends and had some fun during Symon's show joking about The Next Iron Chef). After the show, we were taken backstage to a little room set up with dining tables and a light lunch and Robert Irvine showed up a few minutes later. We had plenty of time to talk to him, get autographs, and take pictures. I had him sign his cookbook (the VIP package included a free cookbook) and my apron—I joked with him about whether or not my chef instructor would let me into class with autographs all over my nice white apron, so he wrote a little note in my cookbook telling chef that he was to allow me to where it to class. :D Very funny. We chatted about how my boyfriend, John, and I watch Restaurant: Impossible each week as a sort of "date night" and he thought that was pretty cool. All in all, he was a great guy!—Very funny, sarcastic, and down to earth. So happy to have met him (oh, and as the title of the post says, he told me I have a great smile :D )!

"How much Crown Royal should we add? Oh, the whole bottle? Yeah, let's do that."
Me and Robert Irvine :D

Michael Symon's show was up next and it was a completely different, but still very cool, experience. His show was more structured and ran more like a cooking show or class. He answered questions throughout the show and had some culinary students up on stage with him to observe his cooking. He made a braised pork shank with brussel sprouts and gave some great advice about when and how to brine meats and how to make a vinaigrette, all while lamenting that fact that the Cleveland Browns were losing their game, which was going on during his show. At one point during the show, a plate was sent out with something like "What about the peanuts?" written on it with some sort of sauce—it was from Robert Irvine, a joke about his peanut dish that ended up getting him sent home from The Next Iron Chef. He came out on stage to joke around with Michael Symon and the two of them started talking about muscles and how, even though Robert Irvine has a built upper body, his calves are skinny, so they stood side by side and compared legs—so funny! After the show, we went back to the same room with dining tables and more food and Michael Symon came in and spent a little time with each table of people. When he made his way over to us, we talked a little bit about my culinary classes and favorite sports teams, got a picture and some autographs, and then we were done. He was really calm, cool, and collected—you can tell he's spent a lot of time in the public eye, doing interviews and working with fans. He's a really nice guy and he's so passionate about what he does!

He loves meat. A lot. He said so.

Me, Michael Symon, and my dad

After Michael Symon's show, we were free to roam around and our first stop was the wine tasting section. We had some great whites and reds, from various parts of the world, but I think my favorite was a French white wine called Lillet—it's very sweet, kind of like Canadian ice wine, but it has a beautiful flavor. It's highly recommended as an addition to a mixed drink—something as simple as seltzer water with a splash of lime—and I'd love to play around with it in drinks. After the tasting, we headed over to a gourmet chocolate stand and sampled everything from chocolate-covered bacon to key lime chocolate truffles. My favorite?—Chocolate-covered cheese doodles (or cheesy poofs, as I like to call them). It's weird, because I really don't like cheesy poofs that much, but they reminded me of chocolate-covered pretzels, with that mix of salt and sweet, and they were so good! After that, we just strolled up and down the aisles, tasting an assortment of dips, soups, sweets, and cheeses and ooo-ing and aww-ing over various kitchen knife displays and a cake show.

Mmm....food.
Honest Abe


After we finished up at the show, we drove over to the town of Hinckley, where we lived for 2 years when I was in elementary school, to see our old neighborhood and downtown. We stopped for dinner at the Winking Lizard, a restaurant with amazing wings and a great beer selection, that we used to go to all the time when we lived there. After three different plates of wings (Caribbean, Spicy BBQ, and Spicy Asian Sesame—so good!), loaded cheese fries, beer, and the Oreo Oblivion dessert, we were stuffed and ready to head home. It was an amazing day and I'm so glad I got the opportunity to meet two amazing chefs and spend a day surrounded by all things food.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Recipe: Spaghetti and Mozzarella-Stuffed Meatballs

I'm slowly but surely working my way through the recipes in my newest Giada De Laurentiis cookbook, and a recipe for spaghetti and meatballs—with a bit of a twist—was up for dinner on Wednesday night. It seems like every family has their own version of this classic dish—some people use spaghetti, others use a different type of pasta; some use marinara while others make a meat sauce; and everyone has their own opinion on what makes the best meatball (Fresh or dry breadcrumbs? Use a mix of meat or stick to one kind?). My grandmother's recipe included spaghetti with a marinara sauce and these small, tender meatballs that my cousin, Katie, and I have always wanted the recipe for but still haven't gotten. My dad's father's family was Italian and used to make up huge bowls of bucatini (a spaghetti-like pasta with a hole through the middle) with tender meatballs made with a mix of veal, pork, and beef. My mom makes her dish with a tomato sauce with meat, all-beef meatballs, and angel hair pasta. The recipe here, altered slightly, includes a simple tomato sauce with pancetta and a little dried red pepper flakes for a kick, and meatballs made with both veal and beef, stuffed with a tiny cube of mozzarella—it's absolutely delicious. The meatballs are incredibly tender and flavorful, and I absolutely loved cutting into them and seeing the warm, creamy mozzarella ooze out onto my fork. The sauce is simple and it's a nice change from a typical marinara or meat sauce. A sprinkle of Parmesan or Pecorino Romano brings the whole dish together, and it's wonderful paired with a dry red wine.


Serves: 4-6
Prep. time: 15-20 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
  • 8-16 oz. angel hair, spaghetti, or other long pasta
For the sauce:
  • 2 tbsp. olive oil
  • 6 oz. pancetta, diced (prosciutto can work in a pinch, but pancetta really should be used)
  • 1 small onion, finely chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1, 14 oz. can crushed tomatoes
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Crushed red pepper flakes, to taste
For the meatballs:
  • 1 small onion, grated (I used a cheese grater, and it worked quite well)
  • 1/2 cup chopped fresh Italian flat-leaf parsley
  • 2/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese (I used shredded and simply cut it up finer with a knife)
  • 1/3 cup Italian-style seasoned dry breadcrumbs
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 tbsp. ketchup
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1/4 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
  • About 1 tsp. each salt and pepper
  • 8 oz. ground beef
  • 8 oz. ground veal
  • 2 oz. mozzarella cheese, cut into 1/2 inch cubes (if you can find smoked mozzarella, use that instead)

Directions
Preheat the oven to 400*F and place one of the oven racks in the lower third of the oven. In a large bowl, combine all of the ingredients for the meatballs except the meat, then lightly mix. Add the beef and veal and, using your hands, gently "knead" and mix the ingredients together until well-blended. Shape the meat into 1&1/2 inch round balls and place on a baking sheet covered with a piece of parchment paper (or, if you don't have parchment paper, spray the cooking sheet with cooking spray)—you should be able to make at least 16 meatballs (I ended up with 21). Make a small depression in each meatball and place a cube of mozzarella inside, then re-roll the meatball so that the mozzarella is completely encased inside. Bake the meatballs for about 15 minutes (put them on that lower oven rack), until cooked through and fork-tender (meaning they can be cut easily with a fork). Meanwhile, in a large skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the pancetta and cook until slightly golden brown (about 5-7 minutes), then, using a slotted spoon, remove the pancetta from the pan and set aside. Add the onion to the skillet and cook for about 5 minutes, then add the garlic and red pepper flakes and cook for another 30 seconds or so. Add the tomatoes, salt and pepper, and pancetta and simmer over medium-low heat, uncovered, for about 15 minutes. While the sauce is cooking, bring a medium-to-large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook according to package instructions (about 4-5 minutes). Drain the pasta, return to the pot, and toss with a little olive oil to keep the strands from sticking together.
Serve the pasta with a spoonful or more of sauce on top (or mix the sauce in with all of the pasta in the pot and serve), and place a few meatballs on top. Garnish with Italian cheese, like Parmesan or Pecorino-Romano, if desired.

This is a great version of "spaghetti-and-meatballs" that's well-worth trying. It's incredibly easy to make, packed with flavor, and, like any good pasta dish, both the sauce and meatballs can be frozen and thawed out later for an easy weeknight meal. I know many people take issue with eating veal, and though it is the major reason these meatballs are so tender, if you're totally against using it in the meatballs, try using a mix of beef and pork. Using more than one meat in the meatball adds flavor and enhances the texture of the meatballs.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Recipe: Angel Hair Pasta with Steak, Basil, and Almonds

My cousin, Jess, got me a Barnes & Noble gift card for my birthday and gave me the great idea to get a new cookbook with it, and that's just what I did. As many of you could probably guess, I got a recently published Giada De Laurentiis cookbook, Giada at Home (I promise I looked at cookbooks by other chefs, but there were just too many good recipes in this one that I couldn't pass up). I've already marked a handful of recipes I want to try, and tonight was my first try at one of them, a pasta dish with a fresh salsa-style sauce, crunchy almonds, and perfectly-seasoned steak. Just a word of caution...be sure you get beef tenderloin steaks and not some other cut. I accidentally picked up the wrong cut, seeing "tenderloin" written on the package, but not noticing the "chuck" also written on it, a.k.a. I got a much less tender and much cheaper piece of meat that was not nearly as tender as the real deal would have been. The dish was still good, but to get it right, you really need the proper beef tenderloin steaks.


Serves: 4-6
Prep. time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Difficulty: Easy
Special equipment: Food processor

Ingredients
  • 1 lb. beef tender loin steaks
  • Salt and pepper, for seasoning
  • 2 tsp. herbes de Provence
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling on the steaks
  • 8-16 oz. angel hair, spaghetti, or other long, thin pasta
  • 1, 14.5 oz. can diced tomatoes and their juice
  • Approx. 2 cups (I used two, 2 oz. packs of prepackaged) basil
  • 1 garlic clove, chopped
  • 1 tsp. lemon zest
  • 2 tsp. fresh lemon juice
  • 3/4 cup smoked almonds (if you're like me and you can't find smoked almonds in your local grocery store, buy regular sliced or slivered almonds and toast them in the oven for just a few minutes at 350*F)
  • Italian cheese, like Parmiggiano-Reggiano or Pecorino-Romano, to taste

Directions
Move an oven rack in the upper third of the oven and preheat the oven to 450*F. Place the steaks on a rimmed baking sheet and season both sides with salt, pepper, and herbes de Provence, then drizzle with olive oil. Roast for 10-12 minutes to get steaks to medium doneness (less time for medium rare, more for medium well). Remove the steaks from the oven and let them rest on a cutting board for 10 minutes. In the meantime, bring a medium to large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the pasta to the water and cook according to package instructions (about 4-5 minutes). Drain and return to pot, drizzle with a little olive oil to keep it from sticking, then place the lid on the pot to keep the pasta warm. In a food processor, combine the dice tomatoes and their juice, garlic, lemon zest and juice, basil, and 1/4 cup olive oil. Blend until coarsely chopped. Pour the sauce over the warm pasta and toss to combine. Add the almonds (be sure they are either sliced, slivered, or crunched up into pieces) and toss to combine. Either serve the steaks whole, alongside the pasta, or slice the steaks into 1/4-inch pieces and toss with the pasta, then serve. Serve topped with Italian cheese if desired.

This dish is the sort of dish that can easily transition from a summer meal to a winter meal. The fresh, uncooked sauce (warmed through by the hot pasta), packed with crisp basil and bright tomatoes, adds a summery feel to the dish, but the smoked or toasted almonds add a warmth and nuttiness that makes it perfect for colder weather. The steak is the perfect compliment to this pasta, but chicken breasts, seasoned the same way, would work just as well in the dish.

Recipe: Sour Cream Garlic Sauce with Chives

This creamy sauce, made with a little chicken broth, sour cream, garlic, chives, and a handful of other ingredients, is meant to go with the potato and cheese pierogi with kielbasa, but it could easily be served over potatoes, as a pasta sauce, or as a dip for chicken. It's really easy to pull together and it's incredibly flavorful.


Yields: About 2 cups
Prep. time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 10-15 minutes
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
  • 3 tbsp. butter
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tbsp. flour
  • 1 and 3/4 cup chicken broth
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • 1/4 tsp. white pepper
  • 1/4 tsp. black pepper
  • 1/4 cup sour cream
  • 1/3 cup chives, fresh or dried

Directions
Heat the butter in a large pan over medium heat. Add the garlic and cook, stirring occasionally and watching to make sure it doesn't brown. When fragrant and slightly soft, add the flour and continue to stir until it is well-incorporated into the butter and the mixture is golden yellow and no longer has a floury taste. Gradually whisk in the chicken broth, whisking the mixture until it is well-blended, creamy, and slightly thick. Add the salt and pepper, then whisk in the sour cream until well-blended. Add in the chives, then serve.

This sauce is salty, buttery, and creamy, and almost has a slight bacon taste to it (not sure why though, but it's good!). It was absolutely perfect on the pierogi and kielbasa and it could easily be used as a sort of alfredo sauce alternative on pasta or as a creamy gravy for potatoes or rice.

Recipe: Potato and Cheese Pierogi with Kielbasa

So, this post is definitely late in getting here, but in the days after I made the recipe I'm sharing here, I had work, class, more recipes to try, and a long weekend out of town (more on that—in particular, my culinary school visits—later), and thus no time to type it up and post it. But it's here now—a recipe for some of the most amazing pierogi I've ever eaten—and I highly recommend you try it out. It's worth the work and time it takes to put them together.

Pierogi are a Polish food—semi-circular dumplings (similar to ravioli), traditionally stuffed with potato, ground meat, cheese, or other fillings, that can be boiled, baked, fried, or sauteed (after boiling). Pittsburgh has a strong Polish background and it's here that I first had pierogi—Mrs. T's brand from the freezer aisle at Giant Eagle. Since then, I've had various types of pierogi at a handful of restaurants in the Pittsburgh area—the best being from The Church Brew Works—but I always get nostalgic when I see a box of Mrs. T's. The recipe I'm sharing today immediately caught my eye when I saw it online because...well...it's all homemade and I'd just never really thought about making them from scratch (especially since Mrs. T's are always so good). I know making pasta can be a chore and even making dough for pizzas or certain baked goods can be a pain in the butt, so I was concerned this could be difficult, but the instructions made it seem very reasonable and I'm so glad I tried it out. The mashed potato filling was soft and buttery, mixed with garlic, thyme, and queso blanco (in place of farmer's cheese) for a rich flavor. The dough, made with sour cream, flour, and a few other ingredients, was thick but tender and it sauteed beautifully. I made the recommended sauce for the dish, which was so good, I'm tempted to use it for a pasta sauce, and you can find that recipe here.


Yields: About 3 dozen
Prep. and cooking time: 1 & 1/2 to 2 hours
Difficulty: Easy-to-moderate
Special equipment: Electric mixer

Ingredients and Directions
For the dough:
  • 3 & 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus a little extra for rolling and shaping the dough
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 tbsp. sour cream
  • Approx. 3/4 cup water (add 1/4 cup more if needed)
In a large bowl for a mixer, combine the flour, eggs, sour cream, and about a 1/2 cup of the water. On medium-low to medium speed, beat the mixture in the mixer until blended, adding the remaining water in as you go. The dough will be sticky and thick. Remove the dough from the bowl and place on a well-floured surface. Knead it gently (over-kneading will make the dough tough), using the drop technique (pick the dough up off the surface, then drop back onto the surface, turning it over each time you do it). Knead just until the ingredients are well-blended and the dough is smooth and sticky (about 3-5 minutes). Wrap the dough ball in plastic wrap and let it rest for at least 20-30 minutes while you prepare the filling.

For the filling:
  • 1 & 1/2 lb. baking potatoes (about 2 large potatoes), peeled and cut into 1 inch chunks
  • 2 tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 1 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 small onion, chopped (I used a yellow onion, but an sort of sweet onion would work well)
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1/4 tsp. dried thyme
  • 1 cup grated dry farmer's cheese or queso blanco
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
Put the cut potatoes in a medium pot of cold, salted water (enough to just cover the potatoes) and bring the water to a boil. Cook the potatoes until soft and easily pierced or cut through with a fork or knife (about 20 minutes). While the potatoes are cooking, add the oil and melt the butter in a small or medium skillet over medium heat. Add the onion, garlic, and thyme, cooking until the onion is slightly soft and translucent (about 3 minutes). Lower the heat just a bit and continue to cook until the onions are slightly caramelized (about 20 minutes). Add more butter if the mixture starts to look dry (be careful not to burn any of the ingredients). Add a little salt and pepper when the mixture is finished cooking, then set aside to cool. When the potatoes are done cooking, drain them return them to the pot they were cooked in, then mash just a little bit to break the potatoes up. Add the onion mixture and cheese to the potatoes and mash them until they are well-blended and no longer lumpy. Season with a little salt and pepper, stir around with a large spoon, and set aside to cool while you roll out the dough.

For the finished dish:
  • Unsalted butter, for sauteing the boiled pierogi (I just cut off small pats, about 1 tbsp. each, at a time and added more during cooking, as needed)
  • 1 onion, chopped, for sauteing in the butter with the pierogi
  • 1 recipe Sour Cream Garlic Sauce with Chives
  • 1 package kielbasa, prepared according to the included instructions (we boiled ours for a set amount of time, then sliced it into dimes and served)
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. In the meantime, place the dough on a lightly flour surface. Dust your hands with flour, then pull off tablespoon-sized chunks of dough and roll them into balls about 1-&-1/2 inches round (you'll get about 3 dozen total). On a well-floured surface, roll out each ball with a rolling pin until about 1/8-inch thick and 3-&-1/2 inches round, then move underneath a piece of plastic wrap or wet paper towels to keep them from drying out. (You can just roll out the whole piece of dough and cut circular pieces out of it, but all of the re-rolling and cutting will make the dough tough—rolling out small balls of dough ensures that each pierogi is tender). Once all of the balls have been rolled out, place about 1 tbsp. of the potato mixture in the center of each pierogi, then fold the dough in half and pinch the edges together, creating a half circle. Drop about 6-9 pierogi in the pot of water you brought to a boil earlier. Once they float to the surface, let them cook for another 2-4 minutes (the dough should be tender, but not chewy, when done). Remove the pierogi with a slotted spoon and allow them to drain on a paper towel. To finish the pierogi, heat a little butter in a medium to large pan over medium heat and sauté with some slices of onion, being sure to turn them over, until both sides are lightly golden-brown and crispy. Serve with slices of the cooked kielbasa and top with the Sour Cream Garlic Sauce with Chives.

These pierogi are tender and packed with flavor! The creamy potato filling, mixed with garlic, thyme, and cheese, is so soft and light and complimented perfectly by the salty kielbasa and creamy sauce. This is an incredibly filling dish and absolutely perfect for cold weather.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Recipe: "Almond Joy" Pie

My mom just celebrated her birthday on Thursday and I really wanted to surprise her with some sort of birthday dessert. I came across a recipe online for "Almond Joy" pie a little while ago and I'd saved it on my "Recipes to Try" pinboard on Pinterest, thinking my parents would enjoy it someday—both are big fans of coconut, and they both enjoy Mounds and Almond Joy candy bars. We have two birthday dessert traditions in our house, Buster Bar ice cream cake (Oreo cookie crust topped with vanilla ice cream, homemade fudgy chocolate topping, and peanuts) and Double Fudge Fancy Fill (a chocolate cake with a layer of sweetened cream cheese in the middle, topped with homemade chocolate icing), but my mom always makes those, so I thought I'd try something new, and birthday pie sounded like a good idea. The pie is essentially a coconut cream pie, but a chocolate cookie crust, whipped cream topping, thick drizzles of hot fudge, and sliced almonds transform it into an "Almond Joy" pie that is to-die-for. I'm not a huge fan of coconut, but I absolutely loved this pie and, happily, so did my parents (and yes, my mom was quite surprised and loved that I made the effort to make something from scratch). The coconut cream filling is luscious and creamy, and the coconut flavor is soft and sweet (I was concerned it would be overpowering, but the flavor is just right). You'll end up with extra hot fudge, which is great, because it's perfect for ice cream sundaes, something sweet to dip fruit in, and other desserts. The recipe is easy to follow and it actually gets pulled together pretty quickly, so you'll be enjoying "Almond Joy" pie in no time!


Yields: 1, 9-inch pie
Prep. and cooking time: Approx. 15-20 minutes for the coconut cream filling, approx.  10-15 minutes for the hot fudge, Approx. 10-15 minutes (unless you use a premade crust, in which case, it's ready to go)
Difficulty: Easy
Special equipment: Electric mixer or handheld/immersion blender

Ingredients & Directions
Chocolate crumb crust
  • 1 & 1/2 cups Nabisco chocolate wafers, crushed
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 6 tbsp. butter, melted 
Preheat the oven to 375*F. In a medium bowl, combine the chocolate wafers, sugar, and melted butter and stir until well-mixed and until the mixture looks slightly wet and darker. Pour the mixture in a 9-inch pie pan and press it into the bottoms and sides, creating a crust. Bake until firm, for approx. 8-10 minutes. Cool completely, then add the cream pie filling.
I couldn't find Nabisco chocolate wafers or any other sort of hard, crunchy chocolate cookie, so I used a premade Keebler brand chocolate cookie crumb crust and it was very good.


Coconut cream pie filling
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup corn starch
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 2 cups milk
  • 3/4 cup cream of coconut
  • 3 egg yolks, beaten
  • 2 tbsp. margarine or butter (I used salted butter) 
  • 2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • 1 cup flaked/shredded, sweetened coconut
In a medium pot, combine the sugar, salt, and cornstarch, then stir in the milk and cream of coconut. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the mixture is thick and bubbly, then continue cooking for approx. 2 minutes more. Temper the egg yolks by very slowly and gradually adding a little bit of the hot cream of coconut mixture to them, being sure to stir the egg yolk and cream of coconut mixture constantly (you need to temper it properly—if you do this too quickly or mix too much at a time, the eggs will scramble. Here's a helpful link to explain the process of tempering). Pour this mixture in the pot with the rest of the cream of coconut mixture and cook over medium heat until it starts to bubble, then continue to cook for a minute or too. Remove from heat and add the vanilla and butter, stirring until the butter is melted, then add the shredded coconut, stirring to combine. Pour the mixture over the chocolate crumb crust and and chill, covered or uncovered) for 3-6 hours before adding the whipped cream, chocolate sauce, and almond topping.


Hot fudge topping
  • 1/4 cup cocoa powder (I used Hershey's brand cocoa powder)
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup light corn syrup
  • 1/4 cup evaporated milk
  • 1/8 tsp. salt
  • 1 & 1/2 tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • (1 small bag sliced almonds to sprinkle on at the very end, once the whipped cream and chocolate has been put on)
Stir together the cocoa powder, sugar, corn syrup, evaporated milk, salt, and butter in a small-to-medium pot and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture comes to a boil. Let the mixture boil for about 3 minutes, stirring occasionally, then remove from the heat, stir in the vanilla, and let the mixture cool. Store in an airtight, microwave-safe container (it can be stored for up to 1 week in the fridge). To reheat (you need to do this in order to get it to pouring consistency for drizzling on the pie, or any other sweet treats), heat in short bursts (20 seconds at a time) in the microwave in the container it's in or in a small bowl, until it is warm and thinned-out enough to pour.


Whipped cream
  • 4 tsp. cold water
  • 1/2 tsp. unflavored gelatin
  • 1 cup whipping cream
  • 2 tbsp. granulated sugar
  • Pure vanilla extract, to taste (I added about a tbsp., maybe a little more)
In a small heatproof dish (I used a little porcelain dish, but a small glass bowl could work too), combine the cold water and gelatin, and let it sit for about 2 minutes, until firm. Bring a small pot of water, filled up to about 2 inches, to a boil, then place the bowl of gelatin in the saucepan and stir it until it dissolves (it will be clear and not cloudy when done). Whip the whipping cream and sugar in a mixer or use a handheld/immersion blender to whip it. Slowly drizzle in the dissolved gelatin as you whip the cream, then add in the vanilla. The whipped cream is done when soft peaks form when you dip a spoon in then pull it up and out. (The reason you add gelatin to this mixture is to stabilize the mixture so it keeps its shape on the pie and stays that way for a few days).


To make the finished product
Spread the whipped cream topping over the chilled coconut cream pie, then drizzle with the hot fudge and sprinkle sliced almonds all over the top. 

This pie is rich, creamy, and has an absolutely perfect combination of flavors and textures. Creamy, sweet coconut filling; fluffy whipped cream; warm, rich chocolate sauce; and a crunchy chocolate crust and sliced almonds on top make a delicious, candy bar-inspired pie that would be great served any time of year, for a variety of events. I highly recommend drizzling extra chocolate topping on after you serve yourself a slice and don't worry if you have to buy a pre-made crust, because it'll work out just fine. Be sure to thoroughly chill the pie before serving, because chilling firms it up and makes it a little less messy when serving.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Recipe: Baked Chicken with Blue Cheese, Pears, and Wilted Spinach

I came across this recipe while looking for dinner ideas for earlier this week and loved the flavor palate it featured. Sweet pears and tangy blue cheese are a fantastic combination and perfect for the fall, and combined with lightly seasoned chicken breasts and wilted spinach, they make for a light, filling meal. This meal is very easy to pull together and topped with some lightly toasted walnuts, for added texture and crunch, it's absolutely delicious.

The dish, sans walnuts, because, to be honest, it wasn't until I sat down with the dish in front of me that I realized that walnuts were just what the dish needed to be just right.

Serves: 4-6
Prep. time: 10-15 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
  • 2-4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, pounded to 1/4 - 1/2 inch thickness (I serve each person 1/2 chicken breast and that's more than enough)
  • Salt and pepper, for seasoning
  • Olive oil (enough to coat the bottom of a few pans)
  • 1/2 cup red onion, diced
  • 4-6 cups (1 large bunch) loosely packed spinach (stems removed) or 3-5 cups baby spinach, washed and dried (I used regular spinach, but baby spinach would also work and it's a lot easier to clean and handle)
  • 2 ripe D'Anjou pears, peeled, cored, and cut into 1/2 - 1 inch thick slices (I just cut the peeled pear in half, then cut slices/wedges out of each half and cut off the bit of core on each piece)
  • 2 tbsp. apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tbsp. fresh parsley, coarsely chopped
  • 3/4 cup blue cheese crumbles (I bought a small container, garnished each plate with a spoonful or two, and put the rest on the table so more could be added if desired)
  • 3/4 cup toasted walnuts (spread walnuts out on a baking sheet and bake for just a few minutes at 350*F in the oven, until fragrant and slightly golden-brown)

Directions
Preheat the oven to 350*F. In a medium, oven-safe skillet/pan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Season both sides of the chicken breasts with salt and pepper and add them to the skillet, cooking just enough to brown each side. Remove the skillet from the heat and place it in the oven, then bake the chicken for 15 minutes, or until cooked through. While the chicken is baking, heat a little olive oil in a large pan and add the red onion, cooking until the pieces are slightly tender. Toss the spinach in and cook until it wilts (it should darken in color and "shrink" up)—if you're using regular spinach, make sure to thoroughly wash the leaves before cooking them because they tend to have a lot of sand and dirt on them and that's no fun to bite into. Once the spinach is wilted, plate it on dinner plates and set aside. Wipe out the pan and add in 1 tbsp. olive oil and the apple cider vinegar and heat over medium or medium-low heat. Toss the pears in and cook until they are heated through and slightly browned on both sides. Add the parsley in and toss to coat, then remove from heat. Plate the chicken breasts atop the spinach, place a few pieces of pear over and around the chicken, and sprinkle the dish with blue cheese crumbles and toasted walnuts.

This dish is wonderful for an autumn meal and can easily be served casually or plated formally and served at a dinner party, as the flavors of the blue cheese and pears add a certain degree of elegance to the dish. The various components of the dish all tie into each other wonderfully, creating a well-balanced and well-flavored dish.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Recipe: Five Herb Pesto

I was left with mostly full packages of fresh chervil, basil, chives, sage, and Italian flat-leaf parsley after making my herbed spaghetti squash side on Sunday night and I was a little concerned about how I was going to use them all before they started wilting and melting into slimy brown puddles in the fridge. It's not often that I make a dish that requires that variety of fresh herbs, so I decided the easiest way to use them up would be to make a pesto. A few handfuls of toasted pine nuts, some shredded Parmigiano-Reggiano and Pecorino-Romano, extra virgin olive oil, and a clove or two of garlic, plus the mix of herbs creates a complexly flavored pesto, all at once bitter, spicy, nutty, salty, and "green." While I wouldn't recommend eating it straight from a spoon—its light scent may trick you into believing its flavor is also light—it's delicious spread on a crusty piece of Italian bread, smeared on a sandwich, or even tossed with pasta, and it's especially good after it's had a day or two to sit in the fridge. I really just kind of winged it when it came to measuring out the herbs—I had used a bit of each for my spaghetti squash, so I used just about all of the remaining herbs in the pesto (each container held about 2/3 oz. fresh herbs)—so I encourage you to play around with the amounts of each herb that you use. The more basil, the better. The less sage, also probably the better (it has a very distinct smell and taste). The chives will add a slightly salty, onion-y flavor, while the parsley will add its distinct "green" flavor. Chervil has a very very slight smell of fennel or anise, but you can use a pretty good amount of it because the flavor is fairly delicate. Do not go overboard on the garlic cloves—because they are not cooked, they have a spicy quality to them that stands out in the pesto and can easily overwhelm it. Add one to start, and add just one more after you've tasted it and if you've decided the pesto can handle it.


Yields: 1 to 2 cups
Prep. time: 10-15 minutes
Cooking time: Just a few minutes to toast the pine nuts
Difficulty: Easy
Special equipment: Food processor

Ingredients
  • A few tbsp. fresh chervil, coarsely chopped
  • A few tbsp. fresh basil, chiffonade cut (roll up the leaves then cut the roll, creating skinny, long slices of leaf)
  • A few tbsp. fresh chives, coarsely chopped
  • A few tbsp. fresh Italian flat-leaf parsley, coarsely chopped
  • A few tbsp. fresh sage, coarsely chopped
  • 1-2 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped
  • 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 1/2 - 1 cup shredded Italian cheese (Parmigiano-Reggiano or Pecorino-Romano are the best)
  • A little over 1/3 cup pine nuts, toasted (preheat the oven to 350*F and toast the nuts on a small pan for just a few minutes, checking frequently. Toast until they are fragrant and just barely golden-brown, but not burnt. Really, it only takes about 3-5 minutes.)
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Directions
Combine the five herbs, garlic, cheese, pine nuts, and some of the olive oil, plus a little salt and pepper, in the food processor and blend until well-combined. Add in the rest of the olive oil and blend until the mixture is well-blended, with no chunks of garlic or pine nuts and no large pieces of herbs mixed in. The mixture will be thick—it should be more like a spread than a liquid sauce.


This pesto is incredibly flavorful and definitely gets better with age. The blend of herbs adds bitter, salty, spicy, "green," and nutty tastes to the mixture and it's absolutely perfect spread on a slice of Italian bread. It could easily be used as a pasta sauce or a condiment for a sandwich, and I'm betting it would be great as a substitute for tomato sauce on a pizza or you could mix it with mozzarella cheese and use the mixture to stuff chicken breasts. Versatile, flavorful, and a great way to use up some leftover herbs.

Recipe: Hot Sausage and Plum Tomato Pasta

I've had a rare few days off—no classes, no work, and just a few errands to run—which has left me three full evenings to cook to my heart's content. Sunday night's chicken and spaghetti squash meal was fun and different—the kind of meal that called for some solid recipes to build off of—but this past night's meal was one of those that sort of came from a recipe, but mostly just consisted of me tossing random things in a pan and seasoning them willy-nilly with a variety of dried herbs to achieve what tasted like a well-thought out and recipe-driven meal (i.e. it was a delicious success): a pasta dish with hot Italian sausage, canned plum tomatoes and their juice, and splashes of dry red wine and half-and-half for a little depth of flavor. My dad is a fan of hearty tomato sauce-based pastas and he loves a little heat in his dinner dishes—my mother, not so much, but she's game to try anything I make, as long as I forewarn her about the spice level or the presence of bell peppers (she absolutely hates them). Because you cook the sausage in the pan before adding tomatoes and seasonings to that same pan, the spicy juices from the cooked sausage blend with the tomato juice, creating a subtle heat that coats your entire mouth from the very first bite. A generous sprinkling of dried basil, Italian seasoning, and salt and pepper add a deeper flavor to the dish, while a half cup of half-and-half adds a very light creaminess to the sauce formed from the cooked tomatoes and sausage. It's an incredibly simple, easy dish—in fact, some of my past recipes featured on the blog are vaguely reminiscent of this recipe (the meat+sauce+pasta combo. is definitely a winner)—and it's the kind of warm, hearty dish that really fills you up on a cold day.


Serves: 4-6
Prep. time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
  • 8-10 oz. (a little over half a box) medium pasta shells
  • 1 pkg. (about 5 links) hot Italian sausage, casings removed, meat pulled/crumbled into bite-sized pieces
  • 1-2 tbsp. butter or margarine
  • 2 tbsp. olive oil (or enough to evenly coat the bottom of a pan)
  • 1 & 1/2, 28 oz. cans whole, peeled plum tomatoes, with their juice; coarsely chopped
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup half-and-half
  • 1/4 cup dry red wine (I use cooking wine), or to taste
  • Dried basil, Italian seasoning, and salt and pepper, to taste
  • Italian cheese, if desired

Directions
In a large pot, bring lightly salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook according to package instructions until done (about 11-13 minutes). Drain, return to the pot, and put the lid on to keep it warm. In the meantime, heat the butter and olive oil in a large pan (I used a deep pan, similar to a wok, but a large skillet/pan would work or even a large, low pot). Add the crumbled sausage pieces to the pan and cook until they are browned and cooked through. Add the garlic, tomatoes, and red wine, cooking until the mixture is heated through and a thin sauce forms. Add the half-and-half and stir to blend, then continue to cook. Add desired dried herbs and seasonings and cook until the mixture is fragrant and well-mixed (total cooking time is about 15-20 minutes). Toss the tomato and sausage mixture with the pasta and serve, topped with Italian cheese and herbs if desired. For those with mouths sensitive to heat, I recommend serving a few slices of good Italian bread on the side to help soak up that heat. We sliced up some fresh ciabatta bread and served it with an herb pesto spread.

This dish is incredibly quick and easy to pull together and it's so delicious! The spice from the sausage blends with the tomatoes and their juice to add a kick of heat to the whole mixture, but the half-and-half smooths out the heat and adds a delicate and very subtle creaminess to the sauce. A mixture of dried herbs and Italian cheese add a punch of flavor to the dish and the pasta shells are the perfect medium to hold it all together.