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December 23, 2010

Merry Christmas!

I would like to wish a Merry Christmas to all and the best wishes for the coming year! See you with new recipes in January!

December 17, 2010

Saffron Pilaf with Rose Water

During the past days my spice box from the pantry has moved into the kitchen, although there are at least fifty glasses of different spices on the shelves. Sometimes forgotten spices surprise me such as fenugreek or sumac. Actually, I only planned to cook pasta with a mushroom sauce, but I didn't have enough fresh mushroom and the dried was out of shelf life, so I needed a new idea. I decided to prepare fish and not only because it is Friday. Strangely, this week it was the third time that fish got onto the plate. As I have found fresh ginger, lemongrass and half a box of coconut milk, I felt like cooking something Asian inspired. The fish was flavoured with garam masala salt and fried. I cooked a simple coconut milk sauce flavoured with onion, garlic, lemongrass, ginger, coriander seeds and cumin. I only needed an idea for the rice. I cooked a pilaf flavoured with saffron, rose water, cardamom and served with a nice portion of roasted almonds, macadamia nuts and pistachios.


Ingredients:

180 g long grain rice

300 ml chicken stock or water
2 ek oil or ghee
1/4 teaspoon cumin
2-3 curry leaves
1 small piece of fresh ginger
1/4 teaspoon saffron
1 tablespoon rose water
80 ml cream
1/4 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
1/4 teaspoon ground clove
1/4 teaspoon black pepper


Crush saffron and mix it with the rose water, add cinnamon, cardamom, clove, pepper and pour cream over it. Heat ghee, add cumin, curry leaves and grated ginger. Add rice after a few a minutes and let it brown while stirring. Pour stock over it, season and cook it uncovered. As soon as the liquid has absorbed, add the spicy cream, cover and let it stand on the switched of stove for 15-20 minuets. Stir in
roasted almond, macadamia nuts and pistachios before serving.

December 16, 2010

Chocolate Cake with Cranberries

So far I have only had dried cranberries and as I do not like raisins I was pretty sure that this is going to be the same with those too. However, I have to say, that some years ago they did a great job in a fish dish with lentils and that was a great surprise, but still dried cranberries are not my cup of tea. Since a while I was planing to buy some fresh ones, however I always postponed it to the next time. Finally, I managed to buy a bag and of course I planned to use some in a cake. That is how this cardamom spiced chocolate cake was born. The cake is prepared pretty fast and you do not even have to wait until it cooles completly. The only thing that is missing on top is a nice portion of beaten cream!


Ingredients:

4 eggs
150 g sugar
200 g chocolate (70% cocoa)
40 g flour
100 g ground hazelnut
150 g butter
150 g cranberry
1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom


Preheat the oven to 180°C. Beat egg yolks with sugar and cardamom until pale, add soft butter, hazelnut and molten chocolate. Stir in the flour, then fold in the beaten egg whites and the cranberries. Bake for 15-20 minutes.


December 15, 2010

Cod poached in red and port wine

This year I am not going to bake Christmas cookies, probably on the honey cookies and the beigli is going to be baked. Of course there will be other sweets during the holidays, like a chocolaty cake with toasted hazelnut, a couple of ice cream and other treats, but no cookies. The reason is pretty simply, the whole family likes beigli and the honey cookies most, and rest is usually left in the pantry until end of January. Besides, I am a lot behind with the preparations, because I had a tiny accident and broke my small toe and therefore I could not stand in the kitchen, and still can not. But today I had enough and no matter what I decided to cook something, as I miss it so much. I wanted to use holiday spices in my lunch, so I had the idea of poaching a nice fillet of cod in red wine. I also found a beautiful radicchio and some fresh porcini in the fridge.


As far as the porcini is concerned, well it ended up in a puree, without cream but with porcini liquid, as I also added some dried poricini to the puree. Besides I saved some of the liquid and cooked a mushroom sauce with veal stock. The whole thing was served among balsamic vinegar flavoured black lentil and some sauteed radicchio with parma ham.



Ingredients:
500 ml port wine
300 ml red wine
1 staranise
2 pods brown cardamom
1 teaspoon black peppercorns
1/2 tablespoon coriander seeds
1/4 stick cinnamon

Put all the ingredients into a pot big enough for the fish fillets. Let the liquid simmer over low heat for about half an hour until it is reduced by a quarter. Place fish fillets into the poaching liquid, that should be barley simmering and let the fish poach for 6-8 minutes. At the end feel free the reduce the poaching liquid and bind it with some cold butter, season and there you got your sauce.

December 10, 2010

Dark Chocolate Butter Caramels

Well, I could not get the chocolate butter caramels out of my mind, so I planned to search for some glucose during the weekend. Yesterday, while I was tidying the pantry, I have found a pack of fructose, so I have left everything as it is and went straight into my kitchen to start making the caramels. What a great decision it was! Soft, chocolaty and mmm...! The worst part of the preparation is the packing, because it is so time consuming, but at least there is a trick. Smear some oil on the knife before cutting, that way you are a lot more efficient with cutting. For the salted version you are supposed to prepare the salted butter a day before, however I did not want to wait because of that another day. Besides I can simply sprinkle some fleur de sel on top, or some roasted, salted almond would just be perfect on top of the caramels!

Ingredients:
100 g salted butter
3 g salt
50 g dark chocolate ( at least 70% cocoa, but you can even go for 99% cocoa)
20 ml water
100 g glucose
250 g sugar
200 ml cream


The day before mix salted butter and salt together and cut into pieces of 15 g and 85 g. In a heavy bottomed pot melt glucose with water, then add sugar and cook a light caramel. Remove it from the heat and stir in 15 g of butter and the slightly warmed cream. Bring caramel to cook again and stir in the leftover butter, as soon as it has reached
118°C remove it from the heat and stir in molten chocolate. Pour it into a baking pan covered with baking paper and let it set for 24 hours on room temperature.

December 9, 2010

Beetroot Sauce

Well, this is again one of those meals, that I have been planing to cook it for months, but I always ended up preparing something else, also because I had no clear idea what I actually want. It was only sure, that I want to use sunchokes, beetroot and fish, but besides knowning that I want to fry the fish, I did not know how to cook the vegetables. My first idea was a silky sunchoke sauce among caramelised beetroot, but somehow this seemed to be too "dry" for me. Yesterday, finally, I managed to make a decision: sunchoke puree, beetroot sauce and a beurre blanc in order to balance the heavy, spicy flavours of the beetroot sauce, that I flavoured with some fresh pomegrante juice as well. By the way, sunchoke, beetroot and fish has already met on the plate this year, in March when it was served among horseradish foam. Beetroot sauce is also not a new guest in my kitchen, however now it was prepared in a complete different way. As far as the fish is concernd, it was a gorgeous, huge organic Meagre or Stone Basse, that I cleaned outside and inside as well by myself. If I am not mistaking, this was the biggest fish ever that has seen my kitchen, and its taste is fantastic, I would say it even has the chance to beat the gorgeous Loup de mer.


Ingredients:
70 g beetroot
2 shallots
1 twig thyme
some caraway seeds
some fennel seeds
1-2 seeds of star anise
some black pepper corns
50 ml white wine
300 ml fish stock

2-3 kk pomegrante juice
4-5 chunks of cold butter
salt, pepper


Peel beetroot and cut in small cubes, then cook it together with the spices in the fish stock, then sieve to remove the spices. Melt some butter and sautee chopped shallots, add white wine and reduce by half. Add cooked beetroot and fish stock and cook until it is reduced by half. Puree and sieve. You can either serve the pureed beetroot with the fish, or dry it in the oven and use for example in a risotto, or when making fresh pasta or even in cakes. Bring the sauce to the boil and add pomegrante juice, season with salt and pepper. When it has the desired consistency stir in cold butter, season again if needed.


December 8, 2010

Glühwein Mousse

Herzlich willkommen hinter dem 8. Türchen des diesjährigen kulinarischen Adventskalenders! Zorra vom Kochtopf veranstaltet diesen schon zum sechsten Mal. Hinter dem heutigen Türchen versteckt sich ein luftiges Glühwein-Mousse, das gemeinsam mit einem leckeren Glühwein- Gelée im Glas serviert wird.

Der Vorläufer des heutigen Glühweins ist der
Conditum Paradoxum. Nach dem Kochbuch des Apicius wird hierfür Honig mit etwas Wein eingekocht. Dazu werden Gewürze,geröstete Dattelkerne und Datteln beigegeben. Zum Schluss wird die Mischung mit zusätzlichem Wein verdünnt. Jahrhunderte später wurde der kalt getrunkene Hypocras beliebt.




Zutaten:
(See the recipe in English as the first comment)

Glühwein

250 ml Rotwein
125 ml Wasser
2 Nelken
1 Stange Zimt
frische Zitronenschale
frische Orangenschale
2 EL Zucker

Das Wasser mit dem Zucker und den Gewürzen aufkochen und ein paar Minuten kochen lassen.
Den Rotwein dazugeben und erwärmen, aber nicht mehr kochen.

Glühwein-Gelée

70 ml Glühwein
50 ml Orangensaft
10 g Zucker
1 Blatt Gelatine

Den Orangensaft mit dem Zucker aufkochen, Glühwein dazugiessen. Anschliessend die
eingeweichte und gut ausgedrückte Gelatine dazugeben und in die Gläser füllen. 1-2 Stunden
kühl stellen.


Glühwein-Mousse

125 ml Orangensaft
1/4 Zimtstange
2 Nelken
3 Blatt Gelatine
50 ml Glühwein
3 Eigelb
60 g Zucker
20 ml Rum
250 ml Schlagsahne

Den Orangensaft mit den Gewürzen erhitzen und auf etwa 100 ml reduzieren. Glühwein, Eigelbe, Zucker und Orangensaft mischen und über einem heissen Wasserbad zu einer Schaumcreme schlagen. Die eingeweichte Gelatine gut ausdrücken und im erhitzten Rum auflösen, dann zur Creme geben und etwas auskühlen lassen. Geschlagene Sahne unterheben,
in die vorbereiteten Gläser füllen und mindestens 3 Stunden, besser aber über Nacht, kühl stellen.

December 7, 2010

Ossobuco alla milanese

Traditionally, ossobuco is preapred without tomatoes, however nowdays this version is pretty forgotten. The dish originates in the North-Italian Lombarida, where it was cooked without tomatoes and even without olive oil, as butter was more common in the north part of the country.



The ossobuco al pomodoro is prepared with peeled and deseeded tomato slices and a bit of tomato puree. The version prepared in the Toscana uses red wine instead of white. Last weekend I prepared ossobuco in bianco, the traditional white ossobuco, for lunch, that I served with its traditional side dish the risotto alla milanese with saffron and beef marrow.
According to some sources ossobuco in bianco is flavoured with bay leaf and cinnamon and of course the gremolata, that is mixed into the sauce some minutes before it is ready in order to aromatise it with the fresh flavours of lemon and parsley with a touch of garlic.



Ingredients:
4 slices cross-cut veal shanks
3 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon butter
150 g onion
150 g celery stalks
150 g carrot (not included in the traditional version)
200 ml white wine
400 ml veal stock
1 bay leaf
1 piece of cinnamon stick (optional)
salt, pepper
a bunch of fresh parsley
1 garlic clove
zest of a small lemon




Heat olive oil in a large iron pot and fry seasoned and with flour dusted veal shank slices from both sides until golden brown, then set aside. Add butter and sautee vegetables over low heat for 10-15 minutes. Pour white wine over it and reduce by half, then place meat on top, add bay leaf, cinnamon stick (if you use) and pour stock over it, then put it to the oven and braise for 2 hours on 160°C-on. Once in while turn the meat, so that it cooks evenly and you might need to add some stock as well. Some minutes before it is ready add the germolate. Simply chop parsley, garlic and lemon zest, give it a good stir and let it stand for 5 minutes. If you do not want to serve it rustical, then sieve the sauce and bind it with a few chunks of cold butter.


December 6, 2010

Butter Caramels

Actually, I wanted to prepare some chocolate caramels, but I had no glucose at home. Anyway, I thought, I still go for it and use sugar instead, as I have already replaced it in the past in other recipes. Though, I was pretty sure that it might not work out this time, but I still tried. The result was a delicious chocolate-caramel cream, that made an awesome spread on a slice of bread, but well, that was not what I wanted.


Of course, I did not give up and searched for another recipe, this time without glucose, but the result turned to be the complete opposite of the other. I ended up with hard chocolate-caramel like candy, that tastes good, but it is not the real stuff. So after that, I decided to make some normal butter caramels, this time not salted. These are so delicious! Be careful when wrapping, because these are addictive! In my case one ended up in a wrap, the other in my mouth...



Ingredients:
3 tablespoon butter
360 ml cream
225 g sugar
225 g honey
salt as desired


Cover a baking pan with baking paper or butter it. Mix butter, cream, sugar, honey and salt in a pot and let it melt over medium heat and cook until it reaches 120°C degrees, this is going to take about 30-40 minutes. Stir mixture once in a while, when it has reached the temperature pour it into the baking pan and let it cool for a few hours. As soon as it has the right consistency cut it in pieces and wrap in baking paper or anything else.

December 2, 2010

Soupe à l'Oignon

Well, certainly, I did not believe that the day is going to arrive, when I cook an onion soup. Not that it would be such a big deal, but since my childhood I can't stand cooked onion. In the past only a tiny piece of cooked onion in a dish, and it was over, I could not eat a single bite of it. Therefore my mom often had to prepare my part separetly, because in some way, I have always managed to find every single onion piece. Meanwhile this has changed, because I cook everything with grated onions, and I even learnt to love sauteed leek or oven fried onion slices on top of tarte flambée. But an onion soup?! That is something completly different! And today, I took a big step forward! On the other side I am totally mad about fresh onions! There is nothing tastier than a fresh slice of bread with duck lard and fresh onion! That is unbeatable!

Besides I am a complete onion freak. My absolute favourite one is the beautiful
Rosé de Roscoff, I often call it the Parma ham of the onions. Nothing can be compared to it! Though the Italian Tropea is also a hit, but will always remain the second best on my list.


Now, back to the soup! So today, I have finally cooked my first onion soup, that is originally comes from Lyon, though the Parisians still argue about this. The soup is usually prepared with roux, but some cook it without, and you can also add spices like thyme or bay leaf, it is up to you, however one thing is absolutely essential. If the onions are not caramlised properly or you feel you do not have hours to do so, well then forget it. No need to add sugar, just let the low heat and patience to do job.


This week not only cooked onion won the fight, but I also took some steps forward in baking bread. A friend of mine, who by the way has a gorgeous blog, Vera gave me a baking lesson, so the ice seem to melt in this regard as well. It was no question that the soup is going to be topped with the bread we baked together on Tuesday.



Ingredients:
500 g onion
70 g butter
1 tablespoon flour
50 ml white wine
1000 ml chicken stock or leftover meat broth
salt, pepper

Slice peeled onions thinly and melt butter in a pot. Soften onion in butter over low to medium heat. Be sure that the onion is well covered with the butter. Stir once in a while and add some salt as well. This process may take a few hours, but that is definitely worth it, because after all the caramelised onion is the heart of this soup. You can also add some spices or herbs like bay leaf or time, personally, I think it is not necessary at all. As soon as the onion is well caramelised pour white wine over it and reduce. Add flour, stir and pour stock or broth over it and simmer for 50-60 minutes over low heat. Season at the end with cognac or port wine and serve with toasted slices of bread with cheese such as
Comté or Gruyère. Simply top the soup with the cheese sprinkled bread slices and leave the rest of the work to your oven grill.

December 1, 2010

Old Fashioned Hot Chocolate

Well, today is definitely not my day! I have planned to complete a lot of things, yet I haven't even started any of them! Though I still have the chance to do so, but I hardly think that I will. During the morning hours my dog and me were playing outside as usual. She is completly mad about playing frisbee, that is actually her favourite thing to do. So this was not different today, when suddenly another dog came across the creek. Mine welcomed the other friendly, and turned away to go on with playing, when the other dog has attacked her. Luckily, I managed to separate the two, and then the owner of the other has also arrived, so we could calm the situation. My dog was lucky, because she survived the attack only with a small scratch, but still it was a shock for her, so we went home directly. To comfort myself I cooked a nice hot chocolate with kardamom flavoured beaten crean and gave my dog a portion of fresh paunch.


Ingredients:
125 g dark chocolate (65-70% cocoa)
500 ml water
50 g sugar
25 g cocoa


Chop chocolate and pour it into a bowl. Bring sugar and water to the boil, then stir in cocoa and bring it to the boil again and pour it over the chopped chocolate. Stir it with a wooden spoon until the chocolate has molten. Serve with kardamom or cinnamon or anything you desire flavoured beaten cream and sprinkle with cocoa.

November 29, 2010

Cream of Spinach Soup

On Saturday, I have found some beautiful fresh free range spinach at my greengrocer, it was no question that I had to buy a handful or two. Spring-summer spinach is great for a fresh salad, but the autumn-winter spinach must be cooked, but be careful not to blanche spinach longer than 2 minutes and do not sautee longer than 5 minutes, because then it loses all its nutritive substances.


I guess I couldn't have prepared anything better than a soup on that cold winter day. I wanted to inculde the beautiful white snow somehow on the plate so I decided to experiment a bit with the eggs. I have beaten the egg whites very stiff and then put some spoonful into a plastic bag, then I placed the yolk into the middle and covered it with some more egg white. It was "cooked" for 10-12 minutes in water that had about
65-70°C. That fluffy egg was just perfect together with the hot soup.


Ingredients:
300 g spinach
2 shallots

100 g potato (floury)
1 clove garlic
1 teaspoon butter
500 ml vegetable or chicken stock
100 ml cream
nutmeg
salt, pepper


Cut peeled potato, onion and garlic in cubes and remove the stalks of the spinach and rinse well. Heat butter and sautee onion, garlic until glassy, add potato and sautee for a few more minutes. Add stock and cream and cook over medium heat until the potato is cooked through. Add spinach in small portions and as soon as it is fallen together puree. Season with salt, pepper, nutmeg and some lemon juice if desired.

November 28, 2010

Császármorzsa

It was a wonderful snowy Friday afternoon, while I was carving for something sweet, so I decided to prepare something, that I haven't done before, and in this case haven't even eaten it until now. Yeah, strange or not, but this was the first time in my life that I have prepared this dessert and also the very first time that I ate it, though it is pretty popular. Császármorzsa or Kaiserschmarrn is one of the best known Austrian desserts, popular in the former Austria–Hungary as well as in Bavaria. In Hungary it is also known as smarni. The translation of Kaiserschmarrn has generated some etymological debate. While “Kaiser” is literally translatable (as Emperor), the same cannot be said for “Schmarrn”. “Schmarrn” has been translated as a mishmash, a mess, crumbs, a trifle, a nonsense, a fluff, or even as a mild expletive. (source:wikipedia)


Ingredients:
(recipe adapted from Johann Lafer)
200 ml milk
120 g flour
1 pinch of salt
1 tablespoon sour cream
4 egg whites
80 g sugar
4 egg yolks
2 eggs
50 g clarifed butter
15 g raisins
50 g butter
4 apples
2-3 tablespoons lemon juice
120 g sugar
40 g honey
150 ml white wine
150 ml apple juice
1 vanilla pod
1 cinnamon stick
2 star anise
zest of a half lemon


For the apple stew peel apples and cut one apple in small cubes, the rest in bigger chunks and sprinkle lemon juice on it. Caramelise sugar, add honey then pour white wine and apple juice into the pot (I have used cider instead). Add spices, lemon peel and apple and cook over medium heat until the liquid has absorbed and the apples are soft. Remove the spiced and stir in apple cubes. For the császármorzsa preheat the oven to
220°C. Whisk milk with the flour and salt until smooth, then stir in the sour cream. Beat egg whites with 30 g of sugar. Stir the eggs and the egg yólks to the milk mixutre, then fold in the beaten egg whites. Melt butter in a frying pan and pour batter into it, add raisins ( I would soak them in rum for some hours before cooking, but I haven't use any, because I do not like raisins.), cover and bake for about 15 minutes. Tear to pieces and caramelise it with 50 g sugar in the melted butter. Serve among the apple stew and with powder sugar.

November 26, 2010

Sea bass poached in fennel fumet

If I am not mistaking fumet is a double concentrated fish stock, cooked twice with fresh fish parts during the second cooking. Though fish stock is often called fumet de poisson. While emptying the freezer I have found some boxes of fish stock, that were just perfect for today's lunch. This dish is so easy to prepare, yet it has such a fantastic flavour in its simplicity. Usually, I buy fish as a whole, because it is so much fun to make your own fillets, besides no stock without fish bone and other rests. In this dish I simply poached the fillets of sea bass in the fumet and served it with it.


Ingredients:
250 g
fish bones (and/or other parts)
500 ml fish stock
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 onion
peel of a small lemon
3 small or 1 large fennel
1 clove garlic
1 bay leaf
salt, pepper


The fumet is going to be more clear if you blanche the fish parts in simmering water for 1 minute before cooking. While that heat olive oil add sliced onion and fennel and sautee for a few minutes. Now add fish parts, garlic, bay leaf and lemon peel and pour fish stock over it and cook over low heat for about 20 minutes. Season with salt, pepper (if you gonna serve it as it is, in case you gonna use it in another dish, then do not). Freeze it in small portions.

Pumpkin Gnocchi

Within two days I have used two pumpkins, yeah finally, they are gone, except one. Anyway, to yesterday's muddy weather the bright orange was a great match, however today we have a beautiful white blanket over the hills. Thanks to the snow now I am floating in Christmas feeling and looking forward to all the preparations and stuff. Now back to the gnocchi. I wanted to make a normal potato and also pumpkin gnocchi.

There was still a bag of purple potato in the pantry, and as they are quite floury, I decided to use them for the gnocchi. I have put them on the stove to cook, but then I realised that the pumpkin needs more time to be baked, so I immediately took it away from the stove and switched on the oven for the pumpkin.
I decided to form the gnocchi the same way like when I made the ones with ricotta, and then I had the sudden idea of preparing a double coloured gnocchi, so I filled both in the piping bag and so the gnocchi were born. I simply served it among some brown butter and fresh parmesan, though feel free to add some fresh sage as well.

Ingredients:
1000 g pumpkin
100 g flour
100 g parmesan
1 egg
nutmeg
salt, pepper


Preheat the oven to 200
°C and bake pumpkin for about 90 minutes, then let it cool for a few minutes. Half and deseed pumpkin and puree, then mix it together with the flour, freshly grated parmesan, egg and season with salt, peper and nutmeg. Pour mixture into a plastic bag or a piping bag. Bring salted water to boil, reduce hit so that it simmers. Pipe gnocchi in the simmering water and as soon as they swim on top they are ready to be served.