Friday, August 12, 2011

Jamaican Allspice Canary Beans





Had a fabulous time with this one today... the aroma in the kitchen was absolutely luscious. Another for the extract book. Needs "tweaking" but I have a great guinea pig ;-) Marinating salmon for the BBQ tonight to go along with it -- basic marinade, tamari, brown sugar, lemon extract, pepper flakes, white wine, rice vinegar, capers with juice, salt, pepper (treating it like lox)....



Jamaican Allspice Canary Beans

Preheat oven to 350°F

Place in Dutch oven:

1 C Canary Beans
2 C Filtered Water (Beans do not like hard water)
1 C Chicken or Vegetable Broth
1/2 C White Wine
1 Tbsp Jamaican Allspice
1 tsp Coriander seeds
2 Tbsp Unsalted Butter
1 Tbsp Olive Oil
1 Tbsp Lemon Extract
1/2 tsp Clove Extract
1/2 tsp Cayenne (heat to taste, this yields medium)
1 tsp Course Sea Salt
1 tsp Ground Peppercorns
1 tsp Granulated Honey
2 Shallots (peeled, halved)
1/2 banana (whole)
1 tsp Grated Fresh Ginger
1 tsp Rice Vinegar
1 tsp Tamari

Heat for 2 hours and check tenderness. If a cold salad is desired, make sure to check al dente and cool. If a mash is desired, cook 3 hours. Add optional curry and coconut milk if a curry over rice sounds appetizing. However, a playful road is....

If desired, after 1 hour add:
1 tsp Mustard Seed
1 C Long Grain Brown Rice
1 Jalapeño (whole)
5 Large Shitake Mushrooms (or Fungi of choice)
1 inch Chunk of Fresh Ginger (with skin)

After half hour more, add:
1/2 C Broth
Lemon Rounds coated with Brown Sugar and Pepper Flakes



Reduce to 300 and cook for another hour or so.

Used a Sauvignon Blanc in the preparation, but I think I will serve with a Chardonnay -- a Cakebread would nestle so well if I had one on hand!

Cheers!

Monday, July 11, 2011

Three Extract Banana Bread

Working on recipes for Extract book. Section 1 -- Extracts, Research and Basics, Section 2 -- Recipes.... It will work itself out :-) Need a sexy name.....





4 overripe bananas (previously frozen, and thawed)
1/4 C melted butter
1/4 C yogurt
1/2 C light brown sugar
1/4 C granulated honey
1 egg, beaten
1/2 tsp each vanilla, cinnamon, clove extracts
1 C wheat flour
1/3 C sweet potato flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 C pecan pieces


This is a bread, moist with texture and character, that takes minutes to prepare and throw in the oven in the morning to wake up the house with sweet and spicy. Blend all ingredients, first wet then add dry. No need to over mix -- actually better if you take the rustic approach. Bake in a loaf pan at 350° F for about 1 hour.

Good for tea time, or if after dinner a spot of coffee liquor (I prefer a snifter of cognac).

Cheers!

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Germany in June...

Birgit and I cooked up a storm. She invented her version of a Monte Cristo, with grapefruit, sun dried tomatoes, and lemon thyme. Served with a duo of Tuscan wines (from my private reserve in her cellar that we obtained on our road trip to Italy), our tongues were exalted playing Sherlock Holmes in locating which taste buds to access in the identification process....

Birgit made fresh pasta dough, and we assembled fresh parma ham ravioli with a crisp sage and butter sauce. So simple, so rustic, so absolutely wonderful.





The gold writing on the plate with the ultimate apple tart from an organic farm in Stuttgart means "Hip Gold."

And of course I had to try their sausage and sauerkraut....

More pics to come from an incredible Bayrische meal in Munchen.

Prost! Stevie

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Braised Curried Lamb with Garden Garlic and Mushrooms

Last night I had the simplest, but most ambrosial dinner for one....

Curried lamb shoulder arm chop, seared then braised at 350 for a half hour (small cut) in red and white wine, chicken stock, olive oil, butter... with just pulled out of the ground garlic (used bulb and stalk), mushrooms, lemon, safron, and cayenne. The aroma alone was heavenly. Served with toasted pumpernickel, Greek yogurt, cucumber, on a bed of sprouts. Of course I reduced the braising liquid and plated with it -- the pumpernickel had a pregnable job to do....




I paired it with a 2007 Australian Cabernet Shiraz. Simply delightful.

Off to attend to my brining pork shoulder... pulled pork coming... to be continued....

Cheers! Always find pleasure in true contentment, never guilt.

Monday, May 2, 2011

The BBQ is meritorious of much more than meat....




I have started to inhabit the most comforting place in the world again... the kitchen. However, just outside the door is an amazing grill, with a meister that accepts what I hand him wrapped in foil, sometimes in odd little shapes....

Tonight, in addition to cayenne lime chicken and peppered steak, were kale in citrus, cognac, sauvignon blanc and honey... rosemary cognac potatoes... and the most delectable artichokes, grill bathed in olive oil, clove extract (vodka and cloves that sat for a week), olive oil, butter, fresh ground nutmeg, sea salt and pepper. I served it with a blue cheese, lemon, soy, fresh sage and olive oil dip. We were in ecstasy.

Believe it or not, I had a 20 year old port, and he had a Mondavi Cabernet.

It feels good to feel good again :-)

Cheers! Stevie

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Easter Ham


Nothing like toothpicking orange slices to a pork shank. I braised it for 3 hours in broth, citrus juice, olive oil and port, slathered in local honey, sitting on a bed of fresh rosemary, with a court of celery, carrots, and onions.... It was a happy shank, and absolutely lustrous lip specking.

I paired it with two types of wine. A white for me -- 2006 DEWN Riesling to Live (Méthode Champenoise, and I normally don't do Rieslings, unless they are early harvest). A red for Michael -- 2008 Van Ruiten Vineyards Pinot Noir. Delectable. Cheers!