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Aliya LeeKong
  • Home
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    • Recipes
    • Spices + Ingredients
    • Lifestyle, etc.
    • Travel
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  • The App
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Link Love: Step Up Your Easter Cooking

LINK LOVE: STEP UP YOUR EASTER COOKING

Easter is such a fun holiday to cook for! With the beginning of Spring, the meal just signifies all the good, fresh food to come!  So, with this in mind, I wanted to share some of the recipes that have been inspiring me this year (because I'm honestly still on the fence for my menu)!  Enjoy!

 

SLOW ROASTED LAMB PAPPARDELLE WITH GARDEN PEAS & MINT

Photo: What Katie Ate

Photo: What Katie Ate

 

GRILLED LAMB WITH HARICOT VERT AND COCONUT MILK BROTH

Photo: Brooklyn Supper

Photo: Brooklyn Supper

 

FRESH HAM WITH HONEY & CLOVES

Photo: Saveur

Photo: Saveur

 

CACIO E PEPE POTATOES

Photo: Bon Appetit

Photo: Bon Appetit

 

POTATO LEEK AU GRATIN

Photo: Food52

Photo: Food52

 

SIMPLY SAUTEED GARLICKY PEA SHOOTS

Photo: A Little Yumminess

Photo: A Little Yumminess

 

FARRO & ASPARAGUS SALAD WITH SESAME-MISO DRESSING

Photo: Two Red Bowls

Photo: Two Red Bowls

 

SKY HIGH LEMON MERINGUE PIE

Photo: A Beautiful Mess

Photo: A Beautiful Mess

 

MOLTEN HALVA LAVA CAKES

 

KOMBUCHA HOLIDAY PUNCH

Photo: 101 Cookbooks

Photo: 101 Cookbooks

tags: Easter recipes, holiday recipes, what to make for Easter, link love
categories: all 3, appetizers 1, blog, drinks & cocktails, holiday, lifestyle-1, main dishes, man-friendly, recipes, traditions
Wednesday 03.23.16
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Thanksgiving Ideas

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Thanksgiving Ideas

Thanksgiving has to be my favorite holiday!  I love the gathering of friends and family, that crisp fall weather, and, of course, the serious spread of food…I admit I get a little insane for the few days leading up to it with a master recipe list and plan of attack for prepping for the 3 days before (last year it was 14 pages long.  I know, crazy.).  And although I go a bit traditional for the turkey, I like to use the sides, apps and desserts to be creative and incorporate all of the delicious exotic flavors you guys have been reading about here.  SO I thought I’d give everyone some ideas today on how to spice up your Thanksgiving…

Let’s start with appetizers.  I love a big, beautiful cheese plate dressed with some membrillo, a great variety of honey, a rich balsamic vinegar to accompany the blue cheese, and perhaps some concord grapes.  I’m doing that this year along with a bit of Indian street food called pani puri that I’ll have to post soon!  Pani puri are little crispy puffs stuffed with a mixture of chickpeas, red onion, tamarind, yoghurt and cilantro-mint chutney.  I wanted to keep the apps light this year because of how much food I’m making for the main meal, but if you’re going for hot apps, pao de quiejo is always a winner; you really can’t go wrong with Brazilian cheese bread, chewy cheesy goodness.  I also love these harissa cheese-stuffed fried olives, this mushroom pissaladière and lamb meatballs with quince and black olives.

This year I’m doing red wine-braised short ribs to accompany my heritage turkey.  For the sides, I love love macaroni pie, a West Indian version of mac ‘n cheese that has onions, garlic, and habanero and is baked in the oven– you can stick to the traditional one or try the porcini version (which is what I’m making…).  My brain goes straight to casseroles when I think Thanksgiving sides, so smoky spicy corn pudding is always on my list as is South African shepherd’s pie or bobotie as it’s called there, a layered dish with spicy-sweet ground beef or lamb cooked down and topped with a velvety egg custard.  The recipe I have shows how to make individual ones, but you can easily transfer it all to a gratin or casserole dish and just adjust baking time.  I’m also planning for simple roasted, market vegetables and a rice dish.  This pilau makes a beautiful accompaniment.

Ah, and now for dessert.  Definitely, apple pie with star anise brown butter that I’m going to serve with vanilla ice cream and some homemade dulce de leche and some of the Greek-inspired madeleines. This recipe for cape malva pudding, another South African treasure that features a moist cake drenched in a bit of brandy cream works really well and is something I’ve served at previous Thanksgivings OR, if you’re going a bit more elegant, these Arabic coffee panna cottas are also silky and gorgeous.  The easiest by far though would be these amarena cherry and dark chocolate clafoutis – yum…

Whatever you choose to do, I hope everyone has a warm, fun-food-family-friends-filled Thanksgiving!

tags: Thanksgiving ideas, Thanksgiving recipes, spicing up Thanksgiving, entertaining a crowd, holiday recipes
categories: all-2, holiday, lifestyle
Monday 11.21.11
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Harissa-Cheese Stuffed Fried Olives

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Harissa-Cheese Stuffed Fried Olives

When I opened up the menu at Balaboosta a few weeks back, the words Fried Olives jumped off the page and into my imagination.  I tasted them mentally before they even got to the table, and then when they did…let’s just say it only reinforced the fact that I’m trying these goodies way too late in life.  Why are they NOT more popular?  The world (or at least you lovely readers) should know about this delicacy…

I did a bit more research, and it seems like fried olives may have originated in the Le Marche region of eastern Italy.  There, they take pancetta, ground meats, cheese, herbs and spices and stuff large green olives, breading them and then deep-frying them to a golden crisp.  Olive all’Ascolana is the name of the dish.

I felt a slightly North African take on this tradition would be delicious.  I stuffed them with a spicy, harissa cream cheese before rolling them in breadcrumbs laced with freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano.  A bit of tang from the cream cheese, some fiery heat from harissa, a touch of sweetness from honey – the briny olives become even more complex and with a deeply satisfying, deep-fried crunch.  If you have never tried fried olives, now is your chance.  They are incredibly easy to make and work for everything from a movie night to an elegant hors d’oeuvres for a dinner party.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Yields 50 fried olives

2 tbsps ricotta cheese, room temperature

2 tbsps cream cheese, room temperature

2 tbsps harissa*

2 tsps honey

50 large pitted green olives, rinsed and dried**

½ cup panko or plain breadcrumbs

¼ cup parmesan

¼ cup flour

1 egg, beaten

Oil for frying

fleur de sel (optional)

Procedure

In a bowl, mix together ricotta, cream cheese, harissa, and honey until uniform.  Transfer to a pastry bag fitted with the smallest pastry tip you have.  You can also use a Ziploc bag to do this, and use scissors to cut off a small piece of the corner of the bag.  Pipe filling into all of the olives.

Set up a dredging station.  Mix together the breadcrumbs and parmesan in one bowl.    Place the flour in another and the beaten egg in between.  Roll the olives in the flour and dust off any excess.  Dip into the egg and then roll in the parm-breadcrumb mixture until all are coated.

In a dutch oven or pot, heat 3 to 4 inches of oil to 360° F.  Carefully, drop olives into the oil, working in batches depending on the size of your vessel.  Fry until a deep golden brown and remove to a paper towel-lined plate.  If the olives are not too salty, sprinkle with a little fleur de sel.

Let cool slightly before serving / eating.

* For harissa you can use my version here or use the store-bought kind.  Feel free to adjust the amount to your heat tolerance depending on the type of harissa you end up using.

**For the olives, I like to use the ones that are oil-cured, rinsing them of any herbs and spices and then drying them thoroughly.  Water and hot oil don’t do well together, so I would avoid using olives soaked in a water-based brine that may have absorbed some of the liquid.

 

 

tags: stuffed olives, harissa, fried olives, hors d'oeuvers, holiday recipes
categories: all-4, appetizers, recipes, vegetarian
Monday 04.25.11
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Valentine’s Day & Fig Sundaes

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Valentine’s Day & Fig Sundaes

Valentine’s Day.  It signifies different things to different people, and, for many, it’s completely meaningless.  I think of it as a day to celebrate someone or people you love – partner, girlfriend, boyfriend, family, or friends.  Since it’s coming up next week, I started to think about a menu from recipes on the site that would work well if you happen to be cooking for someone or even for a group.  I also came up with a delicious dessert, vanilla sundaes topped with sweet wine-poached figs and toasted almonds – it’s light-hearted enough for an early paramour, fun for a family (sans wine for kids!), and all about love for that someone special.

I think a great Valentine’s menu would start with spiced sunchoke soup.  Sunchokes are still in season, and this dish is an easy do-ahead one for an elegant starter.  For the main course, I’d go with berbere-spiced lamb chops and freekeh with summer squash and brown butter (using winter squash, of course).  The lamb is super easy.  I like to sear ahead and then finish in the oven while everyone’s eating the starter.  Also, the vegetables for the freekeh can be roasted a day ahead and reheated once thrown into the freekeh.

This dessert was very much an accident.  I had eaten some beautiful sweet cheese-stuffed Turkish apricots that inspired me to do something similar with dried figs.  I thought it would turn out artful and pretty, but my version sort of looked stuffy to me.  The figs are cooked in a sweet white or dessert wine until glazed, and you end up with this honey-wine-fig-infused syrup.  Drizzled over vanilla ice cream with the poached figs and a sprinkling of some toasted, nutty almond slices – heaven!  If you ask me, a sundae as a Valentine’s Day dessert wins in my book.  Oh, and figs and almonds also happen to be aphrodisiacs…  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4

1 ½ cups Sauternes, Riesling, or any dessert/sweet white wine you like

½ cup water

2 tbsps sugar

2 tbsps honey

¼ tsp lemon zest

½ lb (8 to 10) dried figs (I used Calimyrna figs but Black Missions are also great)

1/3 cup sliced almonds, toasted

vanilla ice cream

Procedure

In a saucepan, bring the wine, water, sugar, honey, and lemon zest to a boil.  Boil for 5 minutes uncovered.  Add the figs, cover and boil for another 10 minutes to plump up (they will significantly).  Remove the cover and boil for another 10-15 minutes until the liquid reduces to a syrup consistency.

Top ice cream with figs, a drizzle of syrup, and a sprinkle of the toasted sliced almonds.

tags: fig sundaes, holiday recipes, Valentine's Day, fig recipes
categories: all-4, recipes, desserts-1
Wednesday 02.09.11
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Spiced Sunchoke Soup

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Spiced Sunchoke Soup

I am still in the aftermath of my holiday party, and this is yet another dish I served that people seemed to really enjoy.  Yes, soup can be a fantastic hors d’oeuvres – I served this in little demitasse cups with some chopped cilantro and homemade croutons.  It looks elegant, and you can make it in advance and keep it warm, which for me is ideal when other items require more maintenance…

Sunchokes are root vegetables and look a lot like ginger, though taste nothing like it.  They have been popping up all over menus in NYC and Brooklyn.  My husband and I hit this adorable new place in Fort Greene called Roman’s (amazing, chocolate sorbet to die for), and he was shocked to see sunchoke soup on the menu.  He acted like they were biting my style (I almost cried laughing)…and I had to explain that they are seasonal and delicious and that’s why they are everywhere.

You might also see sunchokes labeled as Jerusalem artichokes, and their flavor does resemble the artichoke heart though they are not related at all.  I picked mine up from the Union Square Greenmarket, and they were perfectly sweet and creamy.  This soup incorporates some key spices – cumin, coriander, and turmeric – that really bring warmth to the dish but still allow the signature sunchoke flavor to shine through.  The coconut milk bumps up the sweetness and gives it a beautiful, creamy mouth-feel, and the shot of lemon juice brightens up all of the flavors.  This is easy enough as a go-to weeknight soup but refined enough for a dinner or holiday party.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4 to 6 / Yields approximately 5 ½ cups

3 tbsps unsalted butter

1 onion, finely diced

½ tsp ginger, minced

1 small green chili, finely chopped (preferably thai or serrano, to your heat preference)

¾ tsp ground cumin

1 tsp ground coriander

¼ tsp turmeric

pinch of cayenne

3 or 4 cloves garlic, minced

7 medium-sized (12 oz) sunchokes, scrubbed, peeled, and thinly sliced*

1 bay leaf

2 ½ cups chicken or vegetable stock

1 can coconut milk

a few squeezes of fresh lemon juice

salt to taste

chopped cilantro or parsley

Procedure

Heat a dutch oven or other heavy-bottomed pot over medium-low heat and add butter.  When foam subsides, add onion and a bit of salt to draw out the moisture.  Let sweat for a minute or so.  Add ginger, green chili, cumin, coriander, turmeric and cayenne.  Cook for 5 to 7 minutes until onions are translucent and super soft.  Add garlic and cook for 1 minute until fragrant.

Add sunchokes and stir to combine.  Let cook for about 2 minutes until sunchokes begin to soften.  Add bay leaf and stock, bring up to a boil, and lower to a simmer.  Simmer covered for 20 to 25 minutes.  You want the sunchokes to easily break apart with your wooden spoon, which will really depend on how thinly you sliced them.

Remove bay leaf, and, in a blender or using a hand blender, puree until smooth.  Add coconut milk, lemon juice, and adjust seasoning to taste.  Serve hot with a little fresh chopped cilantro on top.

*After peeling the sunchokes, keep them submerged in cold water until ready to use.  Thinly slice right before throwing into the pot.

tags: soups for winter, sunchoke soup, sunchoke recipes, Jerusalem artichokes, weeknight meals, holiday recipes
categories: all-5, soups & salads, recipes, vegetarian, main dishes-1
Wednesday 12.22.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Mango Cheesecake

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Mango Cheesecake

I love this recipe.  This is surprisingly easy and straight forward to make, and mango cheesecake is one of those sleeper hits.  People who “don’t like cheesecake” will even love it.  And what I love is that it’s a fantastic do-ahead dessert for parties.  It’s always better to make this the night before, so it has a full 8 hours to cool.

I actually made it for my holiday party on Friday night but shrunk it down to miniature version.  It was the perfect poppable dessert – a creamy mango cheesecake in 1.5” pastry shell with a bit of glaze and a sweet raspberry on top.  These were inhaled – always estimate a 3-4x multiple of the number of party attendees!

The graham cracker crust is crisp and buttery, and the cheesecake comes out with a beautiful, silky, creamy texture, bright with sweet mango flavor.  I love the extra flavor and texture of this super simple glaze too.  I used alphonso mango puree because these mangoes, to me, have a truly rich, signature mango flavor.  If you are doing the tiny version, they only take 15 minutes in the oven and don’t need the water bath.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Yields 1 9-inch springform pan

Crust:

2 cups graham cracker crumbs

1 ½ sticks of butter, melted

Filling:

2 (8-ounce) packages cream cheese, room temperature

1 cup whole milk ricotta cheese, room temperature

¾ cup sugar

4 eggs, room temperature

2 ¼ cups mango puree, preferably Ratna (from the ethnic grocer; alphonso mangoes)

Glaze:

Another ½ cup or so of mango puree

Sugar

lemon

Procedure

Preheat oven to 350° F

Wrap the springform pan tightly in foil all the way around.  You want to create a seal since we’re going to submerge it in water for cooking.  Generously grease all of the inside surfaces of the pan.

In a food processor, process crumbs with melted butter until sand-like texture.  Press firmly into the bottom of the pan and bake for 15 minutes.  Cool completely.

Blend cream cheese and ricotta with sugar until smooth and then add mango puree and eggs.  Pour mixture over cooled crust and place in a roasting pan.  We’re going to bake this in a water bath.  Add boiling water to the roasting pan until it reaches halfway up the sides of the cake pan.  Bake for an hour and 30 minutes or until slightly jiggles but starts to pull from the sides.  Cool at least 8 hours before serving.

Take remainder mango puree and add a little water in a saucepan.  Reduce by half and add sugar and lemon to taste.  The glaze should coat a spoon.  Cool completely and pour over cheesecake before serving.

tags: mango recipes, cheesecake recipes, easy desserts, holiday baking, holiday recipes
categories: all-5, breads & cakes, recipes, desserts-1
Monday 12.20.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Berbere-Spiced Lamb Chops

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Berbere-Spiced Lamb Chops

So I made this recipe (1) because it tastes ridiculously good, (2) because I’m also doing these for my holiday party this week so thought I would kill 2 birds with 1 stone and (3) because I thought I might be able to come up with an adequate substitute for berbere for those with limited access to ethnic food stores.  #3 is giving me a really hard time.

Berbere is a key ingredient in Ethiopian cooking.  It gives their stews that blood-red color and signature spiced flavor.  Berbere comes in a ground form that’s a complex blend of dried chilies, garlic, ginger and red onion with such spices as fenugreek, ajwain, cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, cumin, nutmeg, black pepper, turmeric…Sometimes it’s mixed with red wine to form a paste.  Like masala, it’s a subjective blend, and I am still perfecting mine…

Berbere as a dry rub on lamb chops is just heavenly.  This dish is truly elegant and sinfully easy to make, particularly for a party.  The chops come out a bit charred with a smoky, red pepper flavor, a bit garlicky with hints of the spice blend.  I gave a quick and dirty substitute (without measurements) below, but I would advise going and tasting the real thing.  Either pick up a packet of the spice at a local ethnic store or online or even walk into an Ethiopian restaurant and ask for a bit to try.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4

2 tsps berbere*

½ tsp ground mustard

¼ tsp finely ground black pepper

½ tsp garlic powder

kosher salt

1 rack of lamb, frenched and cut into single or double chops

olive oil

Procedure

Preheat oven to 400° F.

Combine berbere, ground mustard, pepper, and garlic powder.  Rub onto chops.  Season both sides with salt as desired.  Let chops sit for about a half hour until they come up to room temperature.

Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat.  Add enough olive oil to thinly coat the bottom of the pan.  Place chops in pan and cook 4 minutes each side for double chops and 2 to 3 minutes each side for single chops for medium rare.

Finish in the oven to desired level of doneness.

*To approximate, start with dried New Mexican chilies, which are a great base for the blend.  I would seed and rib and then blend to a powder.  Mix with a touch of paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, fenugreek, cumin, coriander, cardamom, black pepper, and ajwain if you have it.  Good luck!

tags: Berbere, Ethiopian cooking, lamb chops, dry rub, Ethiopian spices, holiday recipes
categories: all-5, main dishes, recipes
Wednesday 12.15.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Double Chocolate Mint Cookies

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Double Chocolate Mint Cookies

So my obsession with the holidays has me thinking of more and more ways to celebrate and put my own spin on the traditions we all know and love.  I’m also in the midst of trying to plan for my holiday party this week, and I love to give my guests a little of the familiar and a little of the unexpected.  That (and a deep craving for mint and chocolate!) was the inspiration for this recipe.

To be completely truthful, this recipe, like others I’m doing for this party, is a sneaky way to save time and be efficient.  I can make this dough at the beginning of the week, freeze it in long skinny cylinders, and then cut them into little rounds.  During the party, I can throw them into the oven towards the end of the night for 5 to 10 minutes, and voila!  Everyone gets fresh-baked, mini cookies, and my apartment smells like heaven…

I wanted to create pillowy, moist, brownie-rich, chocolate chip cookies scented with peppermint.   Who doesn’t love that?  The ingredient that adds a bit of the unfamiliar is ground cardamom; the spice has a menthol-like quality that works beautifully with the mint.  I’m a dark chocolate girl myself, but I threw in some white chocolate chips for the creaminess – it helps offset the bitterness of the dark chocolate and blends seamlessly with the mint.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Yields approximately 2 dozen cookies (size-dependent)

1 cup all-purpose flour

½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder

½ tsp baking soda

¼ tsp baking powder

½ tsp ground cardamom

½ tsp salt

1 stick unsalted butter, room temperature

½ cup white sugar

1/3  cup light brown sugar

1 egg, room temperature

1 tsp peppermint extract

1 tsp vanilla extract

½ cup dark chocolate chunks or chips

½ cup white chocolate chunks or chips

Procedure

Preheat oven to 350° F.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

In a bowl, sift together flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, cardamom and salt.

In the bowl of a stand mixer or with a hand mixer using a paddle attachment, cream together butter and both sugars.  Add the egg and peppermint and vanilla extracts.   Add flour mixture and mix until almost completely incorporated.  It should mostly be sticking to the paddle at this point.  Scrape down, add in chips and mix for another 15 to 20 seconds until uniform.

At this point, I like to turn the cookie dough out onto plastic wrap, form into a cylinder, and freeze for about 10 minutes.  This makes it easier to cut into even sized, round cookies.  Also, at this point, you can freeze the dough for later use – overnight or longer.  Conversely, you can just drop rounded spoonfuls a few inches apart onto prepared baking sheets.

Bake for 9 to 11 minutes depending on how chewy or crunchy or what size you made the cookies.  Remember to add a few more minutes if you froze the cookies ahead of time and are putting them straight in.  Cool on the baking sheets for 5 minutes and then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.

tags: chocolate desserts, chocolate mint cookies, cookies, holiday baking, chocolate cookies, mint cookies, holiday recipes
categories: all-5, desserts, recipes
Monday 12.13.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Pork Chops with Red Onion & Apple Chutney

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Pork Chops with Red Onion & Apple Chutney

I worked at a restaurant where we used to make “marmalades”, one of which was a tomato based one.  The process called for red onions to be cooked down first, and it always amazed me what a subtle flavor it provided against the sweet backdrop.  I had to try the combination with apples just to see and what better way for the season than to prepare them as a chutney with golden, crusty pork chops.

I’m big on brining, particularly when it comes to pork chops and chicken.  I’m trying to figure out the mechanics of brining the massive turkey we’re going to prepare for Thanksgiving, but I haven’t – how we’re going to fit it all in the fridge is beyond me.  But anyway, here, the brine imparts incredible moisture to the chops.  It’s important to dry them fully before searing to achieve that beautiful caramelized exterior, the most flavorful part!

This apple chutney is a delicious addition to any pork dish really.  The sweet red onions melt into the background.  The fennel and cumin work perfectly with the pork, and the warm, mellow apples bring it all together.  I used fuji apples here because they hold their shape, but feel free to use whatever you have on hand.  This dish is incredibly versatile – it goes from simple weeknight supper to deserving holiday meal.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4

4 pork loin or rib chops, 1” thick

olive oil

butter

Brine:

8 cups water

½ cup sea salt

¼ cup + 2 tbsps sugar

1 tsp dried thyme

½ tsp coriander seeds, crushed

½ tsp whole black peppercorns, crushed

1 bay leaf

Red Onion & Apple Chutney:

2 tbsps olive oil

1 tbsp unsalted butter

1 tsp fennel seed

½ tsp cumin seed

¼ cup red onion, finely minced

3 ½ cups apples, peeled, cored, and cut into a ½“ dice

½ tsp salt

2 tsps sugar

¼ to ½ tsp crushed red pepper

3 tbsps rice vinegar

Procedure

Brining really helps the pork chops stay juicy during the cooking process.  In a medium saucepan, heat 2 cups of water.   Add salt, sugar and brining spices and stir until all of the salt and sugar has dissolved.  Add this mixture to the remaining 6 cups of cold water.  In a baking dish, lay pork chops flat and pour brine over them.  Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for anywhere from 3 to 24 hours, turning chops regularly.  When ready to cook, take out from brine removing any whole spices that are stuck to the chops and dry thoroughly.  If you don’t have time to brine, feel free to skip this step altogether.  Results will still be delicious.  Make sure that chops are room temperature before cooking.

For the chutney, heat a skillet over medium heat.  Add oil and butter.  When foam subsides, add fennel seed and cumin seed.  Cook for about 1 minute until the spices are fragrant.  Add the red onion and cook for another 2 to 3 minutes until translucent.  Add apples, salt, sugar, and crushed red pepper and cook for another 3 to 4 minutes.  Add vinegar, reduce heat to low and let simmer 15 minutes, stirring frequently.  Remove from heat and adjust seasoning if necessary.

For the pork chops, preheat oven to 350° F.  Season chops lightly with salt and pepper if brined, more generously if not.  Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat.  Add oil to just coat the bottom of the skillet and a pat of butter, if desired.  When oil shimmers, add chops and cook for 2 to 3 minutes on each side.  Finish for 7 to 10 minutes in the oven depending on how well done you like your chops.  I did 2 minutes per side plus 7 in the oven for medium temperature.

Serve chops topped with chutney.

tags: pork chops, red onion & apple chutney, apple chutney, recipes for fall, holiday recipes, brined pork
categories: all-5, recipes, main dishes-1
Wednesday 11.03.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Champurrado

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Champurrado

Seriously, I feel like I’ve been missing something.  Mexican chocolate.  I mean I’ve had a Mexican hot chocolate before but have never experienced the pure form of it.  The deliciously sugary, cinnamony thick tablets of sweet dark chocolate.  It’s a serious love affair, and I’m going to find more and more reasons to sneak these into desserts…or my morning coffee.  You’ve been warned – forgoing the recipe in favor of just eating the chocolate did not seem like an outlandish option after the first bite.

Atoles are a group of masa-based Mexican and Central American hot drinks with champurrado a specifically chocolate one.  The drink consists of water or milk with masa, spices like cinnamon and/or anise, and chocolate in the case of champurrado.  The masa acts as a thickening agent to create a drink that can range in thickness from a pudding-like consistency to a thinner liquid.

As the weather continues to cool, the thought of a warm, spicy chocolate drink crept into my mind, and I thought I would explore this version over the traditional Mexican hot chocolate.  Champurrado is actually a Christmas drink, though it’s also had for breakfast, often with churros.  That’s the breakfast of champions if I ever knew one….would not mind it myself.

I happened to find this luscious Ibarra Mexican chocolate at Whole Foods along with the masa harina I used to thicken it.  Although the chocolate is sweetened and has cinnamon, I added a touch more of both along with some vanilla bean for good measure.  The result is thick, rich, warmly spiced deep hot chocolate with a hint of that sweet corn flavor.  Totally addictive.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4

4 cups milk

2 tablets Mexican chocolate, chopped into little pieces

1/3 cup masa harina

¼ cup light brown sugar

½ tsp salt

1 cinnamon stick (optional)

½ vanilla bean, split and scraped or ¼ tsp vanilla powder (optional)

Procedure

In a saucepan, warm 1 cup of milk on low (want it warm enough to melt the chocolate).  Pour into blender and add chocolate pieces and masa harina.  Blend on high for 30 seconds, and strain back into the saucepan.

Add remaining milk and ingredients and heat on medium-low.  You want to slowly bring the mixture up.   Once the mixture begins to bubble, reduce heat to low and let simmer 10 minutes until it thickens and the cinnamon and vanilla have infused.

Serve immediately!

FYI – It’s natural for a skin to form as you’re cooking.  Feel free to remove before pouring.

tags: Mexican chocolate, hot chocolate, chocolate recipes, holiday recipes
categories: drinks & cocktails, breakfast, recipes, all-6
Tuesday 11.02.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Sumptuous Beef & Rice Casserole w/ Raw Mango Salad

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Sumptuous Beef & Rice Casserole w/ Raw Mango Salad

The first time my mom made my husband pilau we were having a party at my place in NYC.  There were around 25 people over, celebrating, drinking wine and eating standing up because I didn’t have enough chairs for everyone.  The layout of my apartment is pretty open with the kitchen, dining, and living rooms all visible.  No joke, at the end of his 4th helping of the dish, my husband stood up abruptly, pronounced my mom had purposefully “roofied” him…and promptly went to sleep on the couch in front of the other 20-some-odd people!

In the spirit of dishes that work well for the holidays, I thought I would put this recipe out since it’s a delicious communal or even potluck dish.  Hanging with my parents this weekend meant my mom and I were seriously throwing down in the kitchen, and pilau was definitely on the menu.  Typically, there’s so much “a little of this, a little of that” that it’s pretty close to impossible to get a solid recipe out of the whole affair.   But I managed to pry this one out.  And even with this dish, it takes a bit of intuition and a little praying to get the beef and the rice to be cooked perfectly at the same time.  But it is so worth it.  For me, it’s old school comfort food, a taste memory that dates back to my early childhood.

I did a little research, and pilau = pilaf which is actually Turkish!  And this is extraordinarily exciting for me because I am planning a trip to Turkey later this year.  Cannot wait to cook their version…Much like another rice casserole I’ve mentioned, biryani, this dish originated in Persia and can be found throughout the world, taking its individual form in different cultures.   Afghani palau has carrots, raisins, and nuts; in parts of East Africa, coconut milk is included.  And West Indian pelau is closer to their peas and rice with the inclusion of chicken or another protein.

This version is a true combination of my mom and I.  The ingredients are largely hers, but I changed the technique to try to create the best textures and flavors possible.  I made a raw mango salad to go along with it, which provides the perfect cool and acidic balance to the warmly spiced rice and beef that melts in your mouth.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Yields 6 to 8 servings

Pilau:

2 lbs beef chuck, cut into 1 ½ inch cubes

5 tbsps canola oil

1 stick of cinnamon

3 whole cloves

3 whole black peppercorns

3 whole cardamom pods, cracked open

1 ½ tsps cumin seeds

2 tsps black mustard seeds

1 large yellow onion, finely chopped

1-3 green chilies, finely chopped

½ tsp grated ginger

½ tsp of ground cumin

¼ tsp of ground coriander

4 cloves of garlic, minced

1 ½ bunches of fresh cilantro, chopped (including stems)

1 marrow bone (totally optional, I added it for extra flavor)

4 ½ cups light beef stock or beef stock + water

3 ½ cups of basmati rice

Salt and pepper to taste

Raw Mango Salad:

juice of 1 lime

2 ½ tsps rice wine vinegar

½ tsp salt

¼ tsp cayenne

1 raw mango, peeled, seeded and diced

1 cucumber, peeled, seeded and diced

1 apple, peeled, seeded and diced

½ red onion, minced

2 small sweet red peppers, minced

4 to 6 mint leaves, chiffonade

small handful of cilantro, finely chopped

Procedure

For the Pilau:

Preheat the oven to 325° F.

Thoroughly wash the basmati rice until the water runs clear.  You want to remove as much starch as possible.  Set aside.

Heat a large Dutch oven over high heat.  Liberally season the cubed beef.  Add oil to the pot and sauté beef for 2 to 3 minutes in batches.  You don’t want to overcrowd the pot or the meat won’t brown.  Also, you don’t want to cook the beef all the way through – just enough to brown the outside.  Using a slotted spoon, spoon beef onto an unlined plate and set aside.

Turn the heat down slightly to a medium heat and add all of the whole spices.  When they start to pop, add onions, chilies, ginger, ground cumin and ground coriander and cook for 6 to 8 minutes.  Lower the heat if necessary – you want the onions to turn translucent but not brown.   Add the garlic and ½ of the chopped cilantro and cook for another minute.  Add beef back to the pot along with any juices that have accumulated on the plate and the marrow bone if using.

This is where it gets slightly tricky.  Pre-measure the 4 ½ cups of liquid – you can use a light stock, water or some combination of the two.  You want to keep track of how much liquid you’ve added because the rice will become sticky if you end up adding too much and will be dry if not enough is used.  Add liquid to the pot to just cover the meat.  Place the lid on the pot, and turn the heat up.  When the temperature comes up and it’s about to boil, place covered pot in the oven and cook for about 1 ½ hours or until the meat is fork tender.

Once meat is cooked, add rice and the remaining liquid to get to 4 ½ cups.  Re-season if necessary and place back in the oven for another 30 to 35 minutes until rice is cooked and fluffy.  Rice may take a little less or more time depending on the type of rice you are using, type of pot in which you are cooking, etc., so I would advise checking it at intervals.

When serving, use the other half of the chopped cilantro to garnish the top.

For the Raw Mango Salad:

Combine lime juice, rice wine vinegar, cayenne and salt in a small bowl to create a dressing.

In a separate bowl, toss together raw mango, cucumber, apple, red onion, sweet red pepper, mint and cilantro.  Add dressing and adjust seasoning if necessary.

tags: casserole, pilau, beef and rice casserole, comfort food, holiday recipes
categories: recipes, all-6, soups & salads, main dishes-1, man-friendly
Monday 10.18.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong