Tuesday, March 16, 2010

#7: Weekend Cooking

Weekend Cooking
by Ricardo
© 2006 Whitecap Books

What is weekend cooking? I assumed it was the kind of cooking that takes a long time, since you have more time on the weekend, but produces something extra special and extra delicious. In fact, I tried two recipes on the same night from Ricardo's Weekend Cooking and was surprised how quick and easy both of them were. Maybe I am just getting better at this. In any case, I did not need to eat two whole dinners that evening but was on such a roll that I created a large collection of delicious leftovers in the fridge.

Recipe #1
Cream of Celery Soup with Walnuts and Blue Cheese

This was my first time ever cooking with leeks. In fact I had to ask the cashier at the market if what I was holding was indeed a leek. Leeks! Tasty. As was the apple and vermouth and spinach and rice -- all the ingredients that don't make it into the title of Celery Soup. Why does celery get all the glory?



Ingredients
1 leek, white part only, chopped
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 apple (I used Ambrosia), peeled, cored and chopped
1/4 cup white wine (I used vermouth, as per my cooking instructor's recommendation)
4 cups chicken stock (I used veggie stock, in case of a hungry vegetarian visitor)
1/4 cup long grain rice (I used Basmati)
1 cup spinach
1/2 cup sour cream
salt & pepper
walnuts
blue cheese, crumbled

Brown leeks in oil over medium heat for about 2 minutes.

Add celery and apple. Let cook a little while longer? (Recipe didn't really say...) Deglaze with wine/vermouth and reduce for 1 minute. Add stock and rice.


Cook uncovered for about 15 minutes; add spinach and cook for another 5 minutes.

At this point the recipe says to transfer to a blender for processing, but I just turned down the heat and used an immersion blender. It's so handy! Then I stirred in the sour cream.


Season with salt and pepper, and then garnish each serving with walnuts and blue cheese. DO NOT LEAVE THESE OUT! They are the best part. If you want to see more, check out this other food blogger's attempt at this recipe. She used buttermilk and pecans.

I was pretty happy with this soup, and pretty full. But still had some Saturday left to kill, so went ahead and started on recipe #2, which promised only 10 minutes prep time and 15 minutes cooking time. And it didn't disappoint! In no time I had a whole second meal:

Recipe #2
Pork Medallions with Raspberries

The German lady in line behind me at the supermarket was very excited about my pork tenderloin purchase; she said that it's her favourite cut, informed me I was getting a great deal and then gave me her recipe for Weiner Schnitzel.

Ingredients
2 pork tenderloins
flour
1 Tbsp olive oil (I forgot to use this and just used butter)
2 Tbsp butter
1 onion, finely chopped
1 garlic clove, finely chopped (I used 2 just to be cRaZy)
1 tsp honey
1 tsp raspberry vinegar
1/2 cup chicken stock
1 cup fresh raspberries
salt & pepper

Slice each tenderloin into 6 medallions; flour and flatten. Heat butter (and oil if you remember) in an ovenproof skillet.


Brown medallions over high heat, 1 minute per side. Season with salt & pepper and set aside.

Soften onion and garlic in the same skillet over medium heat. Add honey and cook for one minute. Deglaze with vinegar.


Add stock and half of raspberries, and cook for about 2 minutes.

Return medallions to skillet. Cook in oven at 350°F for 8—10 minutes; add remaining raspberries.


Cover medallions in sauce and serve on a bed of asparagus.

Delicious! I believe I exclaimed this several times while my vegetarian guest looked on over his bowl of celery soup. This looks and tastes way too good for the amount of time it took to make.

Monday, March 8, 2010

#6b: Grazing

Grazing: A Healthier Approach to Snacks and Finger Foods
by Julie Van Rosendaal
© 2005 Whitecap Books

Chicken, Black Bean & Mushroom Quesadillas

Ok, here is another recipe from Grazing. I wanted to try making the samosas with phyllo dough, but let's face it, I am way too lazy this week to take that on. Plus I wanted to use up these flour tortillas from last week's burritos, so, quesadillas it was. Is. Lots of leftovers. I can only eat so many cheesy triangles.


Filling: onions, garlic, black beans, mushrooms, cooked chicken (leftovers from a lunchtime Save-On rotisserie chicken), ground cumin. These are good. They taste pretty classic, as far as quesadillas go. Next time I make them though, I won't bother with the chicken.


Quesadillas vs Burritos: Same basic food stuffs, different shape. More tortilla. More cheese. Messier.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

#6: Grazing

Grazing: A Healthier Approach to Snacks and Finger Foods
by Julie Van Rosendaal
© 2005 Whitecap Books

Grazing is just as good for its recipes as it is for inspiration. I used it as a guide a couple weeks ago when I made my black bean & red pepper potato skins, and it has other great ideas for finger foods, quesadillas, skewers, and snacks that you can riff off of at will. Which I guess was the case with last night's creation.

Mini Toad-in-the-Hole

I must have read this recipe half a dozen times, but for some reason interpreted low-fat chicken sausage as chicken hot dog weiners, and so that's what went into these miniature toad-in-the-holes. They're like little hot dog cupcakes.



I think that because I used hot dogs, which I will assume have less fat than even the low-fat sausages, they got completely dried out in the first step.


It turned out that they didn't require any pre-baking before adding the batter; in the first batch the weiners were like dried out carbon vessels exuding a subtle whif of rendered chicken with every bite.


I tried another batch skipping the pre-baking; these turned out much better. Except I was full from eating almost all of the first batch, so I couldn't eat them.

I'll try to do another recipe from Grazing, as this doesn't really do the book justice. But I have to say, when I had the second batch as leftovers for lunch today, they were pretty tasty.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Show & Tell: Red Onion Soup with Brie


Mauve sent me some more photos of Cookbookyssey-inspired cooking. This time of Eric Akis's Red Onion Soup with Brie.
My changes: spelt bread, goat brie and vegetarian "beef" broth. So yummy! I used the Cat Amongst the Pigeons wine. I think I might prefer this soup to the other... but it might be because of the cheese. And yes, I'm sending you pics again.

Looks delicious! And nice choice for the wine. I should get back into the cookbook groove so I can inspire more cooking from Mauve.