Archive for June, 2010

Cooking Class / Paella Mixta

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

I really enjoy teaching at the Kitchen Engine in the Spokane Flour Mill. This family run kitchen store is chock full of an impressive array of everything for cooking anything! The class / teaching area is a well stocked kitchen with overhead monitors for easy viewing. In our last class we cooked a perfect paella, rich with the indescribable flavor of saffron and homemade chicken broth. This one-pan meal is great for a crowd and learning a few important techniques ensures great results.

A Cook With Us.com recipe
Paella Mixta
Seafood paella, a fragrant mixture of seafood, meat and rice originated along the Mediterranean coast of Valencia, Spain. Essentially a shepherd’s or fisherman’s pot luck meal, the carefully tended paellera set over an outdoor fire beckoned workers to a delicious meal graced with local ingredients seasonally available in the countryside.

1 pinch or ½ tsp. saffron threads
¼ cup olive oil
½ lb. or more Spanish style chorizo* sausage links, cut into rounds
1 chicken cut into 2” pieces with skin intact, leave legs whole
1 med. white onion, diced
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 cup dry white wine
6 cups rich chicken broth
1 Tbl. Bittersweet Spanish paprika
½ tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
¼ cup chopped fresh parsley
½ tsp dried rosemary
½ tsp dried thyme
3 cups short grained Spanish rice*
1 – 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
1 lb. mussels, scrubbed clean
20 large shrimp, peeled and deveined
¼ cup fresh or frozen peas
1 lemon, sliced into eighths for garnish
chopped chives or scallion for garnish

Add saffron to a half cup of warm water and allow to” bloom”. Bring chicken stock to a simmer.

Heat olive oil in the paella pan or a wide bottom skillet over med. high heat. Dry the chicken pieces and season liberally with salt and pepper. Brown the chicken well in the hot oil and remove to a platter. Brown the chorizo in the same manner and remove from pan. Add the onion to the pan and sauté until wilted, add the garlic and continue to cook and stir until soft. Take care not to burn the garlic as it will taste bitter. Add the wine and simmer until most is reduced.

Stir in the simmering chicken stock, ½ cup of saffron water, paprika, parsley, rosemary, thyme and salt. Bring to a gentle boil. Add the rice, (traditionally in the shape of a cross) fresh rosemary sprig, and peas, reduce heat to low, cook uncovered for about 10 minutes without stirring. Bury the chicken and sausage into the partially cooked rice and continue to cook uncovered for another ten minutes. ( Extra broth may be added if the rice is still hard and most of the liquid has been absorbed.) Next add the shrimp and mussels in the rice and continue to cook over low heat until the shrimp are pink and the rice is tender and the broth absorbed.
If extra liquid is needed to finish the cooking process, add only very hot water or broth as needed. When the cooking process is complete, remove pan from heat, cover, and let rest for a few minutes.

Serve paella right from the pan. Garnish with lemon slices placed in a ring around the pan and sprinkle with chopped chives or scallions.
Homemade aiole, ( garlic sauce ) is a typical accompaniment, usually served on the side.

Serves 8 – 10

* Spanish chorizo sausage can be ordered on line at La Tienda, but that option is expensive. I found a good chorizo at Pilgrims in Coeur d’ Alene, it wasn’t too highly flavored with Mexican spices and the texture was soft but slice-able. Other options could be a mild Italian or linguica sausage

* Spanish short grain rice, Bomba or Calaspara is most preferred because it is firm and absorbent and will soak up all the lovely juices of the paella. It is available online and in specialty markets. However, medium grain rice is a good substitute as it has a similar plump tender texture and is easy to find in American supermarkets. Long grain rice is a bit too hard and Asian varieties are too glutinous and gooey. Italian Arborio rice used in risotto is a good substitute also.

Socarrat is the crispy golden rice that sticks to the base and sides of the pan and is so prized by paella aficionados. Turn up the heat at the end of cooking to obtain socarrat.

In Spain paella is traditionally cooked by the men over an open fire. It can be prepared completely on the stove or baked in an oven after bubbles rising from the pan look thick and most of the rice appears at the surface.

There are a variety of ingredients that may be cooked in a paella. Tomatoes, red or green peppers, Italian beans, rabbit, squid, calamari, whatever is fresh local and in season.
Serve with a pitcher of icy Sangria

Sangria
Sangria is the perfect summer party drink. Served in a icy glass pitcher, it invites with it’s sparkling ruby color and delightful citrusy fragrance.

2 oranges, sliced
1 lime sliced
1 can pineapple chunks with juice
1 cup fruit in season, choose berries, grapes, peaches etc.
1 bottle red wine (Merlot or Cabernet ) approx. 4 cups
2 cups orange juice
1 bottle sparking apple cider ( Martinelli’s)*
Ice

In a large glass pitcher place all the fruit, wine and orange juice. Let beverage sit for an hour or more to infuse the fruit flavors. Add the sparkling apple cider and ice, stir and serve each glass with a garnish of fresh mint or a wedge of lime.

*The Martinellis may be substituted with one cup of apple juice and 2 cups of club soda.

Some like a sweeter drink, optional sugar may be added to the fruit mixture.

Serves 8

Peras con Piloncillo, Tequila y Chocolate | Pears with raw Sugar, Tequila and Chocolate

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Featured in the Cook With Us / Love Starts In The Kitchen segment on HFNTV

Peras con Piloncillo, Tequila y Chocolate /
Pears with raw Sugar, Tequila and Chocolate

An impressive dessert, easy to prepare, very light and scrumptious!

• 2 ½ C. water
• 1 T grated lime peel
• 1 stick cinnamon
• 1 cone piloncillo in chunks or 1/3 C. brown sugar
• 1/3 C. white tequila
• 6 firm pears, peeled with core removed and stem intact
• 6 oz. Mexican chocolate
• 1 can crema or creme fraiche
• 1/2 C. toasted almond slices

Place the water, lime peel, cinnamon and piloncillo in a saucepan and boil until sugar dissolves. Add the tequila and pears, cover and simmer gently until the pears soften. Do not let pears get mushy.

While pears are cooking melt chocolate in a small saucepan over low heat. Add a little hot water to chocolate if it does not seem to be melting smoothly.

Carefully remove pears from pot with slotted spoon. On dessert plates or platter, ladle cream in a circular pattern. Trim bottom of the pears evenly so they will stand upright on the serving platter and place them onto the cream. Drizzle melted chocolate on pears and garnish with sliced almonds.

Serves 6

Ensalada de Jicama y Naranjas | Jicama and Orange salad

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Featured in the Cook With Us / Love Starts In The Kitchen on HFNTV

Ensalada de Jicama y Naranjas / Jicama and Orange salad
This fruity crunchy salad complements spicy dishes perfectly

• 1 small jicama, peeled and diced
• ½ cucumber, scored and thinly sliced
• 3 oranges, peeled, sliced and quartered
• Oil and vinegar dressing
• Green leaf lettuce

Mix together the jicama, cucumber and oranges. Toss with dressing and chill until ready to serve.
Line a platter or individual plates with the lettuce leaves and arrange salad on top.

Dressing:
• 2 cloves garlic, crushed
• ¼ cup white wine vinegar
• ½ tsp. salt
• ¼ tsp pepper
• 1 tsp. dry mustard
• ¾ cup olive oil, or mixture of vegetable and olive oil

Combine all ingredients except oil in a closed container, shake well to combine. Slowly pour in the oil and whisk until blended.

Makes approx. one cup

Arroz a la Mexicana | Mexican Rice

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Featured in the Cook With Us / Love Starts In The Kitchen on HFNTV.

Arroz a la Mexicana / Mexican Rice
“A la Mexicana” means, prepared with onions and tomatoes. This popular rice dish is often served as one of many courses in a typical “comida” or main meal.

• 2 C. long grain white rice
• 4 T. vegetable oil
• 2 roma tomatoes, seeded and chopped
• 1 white onion, diced
• 3 garlic cloves, minced
• 2- 3 whole serrano chiles
• 4 C. chicken stock*
• 1/2 C. carrot, diced in small uniform pieces
• 1/3 C. green peas fresh or frozen
• 1 T. chopped cilantro or parsley

Soak rice for 5 minutes, rinse, and drain well. Heat oil in a large skillet over low heat; add the garlic, onion, and chiles and sauté for 2 minutes.

Add rice and stir until all the grains are coated with oil, sauté and stir until the rice looks translucent and the grains separate.

Add tomatoes, stock, carrot, and peas, season with salt and pepper. Turn heat to high and bring to boil, reduce heat to a low simmer; cook uncovered for 25 min. or until all liquid is absorbed. Stir the rice occasionally as it cooks, add more water if needed to continue the cooking process until all the liquid is absorbed and the rice is tender.

Serves 6

* The most flavorful Mexican rice is made with the best chicken stock, which is of course, homemade. But, prepared bouillon cubes or boxed chicken broth work fine also.

Makes 3 cups

Easy Mole Poblano

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Featured in the Cook With Us / Love Starts In The Kitchen on HFNTV.

Easy Mole Poblano / Mole Poblano Facil
Our version of mole sauce is a busy cooks secret.

• 4 dried ancho chiles
• 4 dried guajillo chiles
• 3 dried pasilla chiles
• 2 chipotle chiles
• 3 large roma tomatoes
• 5 cloves garlic, skin removed
• 1 med. white onion, quartered
• 2 cup chicken broth
• 1/3 cup creamy peanut butter
• 1 tsp. salt
• 2 Tbl. vegetable oil
• 1 Tbl. anise seed
• 1 Tbl. coriander seed
• 1 Tbl. black peppercorns
• 1 tsp Mexican oregano
• ½ tsp. Mexican cinnamon, ground
• ½ tsp. cumin
• ½ disc Mexican chocolate
• 1/8 cup grated piloncillo* or dark brown sugar
• 2 Tbl. toasted sesame seeds

Cover dried chiles with water in a saucepan. Simmer for 15-20 minutes until softened. Remove from water and let cool. Open the chiles and remove seeds, place in a blender. Add the onion, garlic, peanut butter, one cup of broth and salt to the blender. Puree until the mixture is smooth.

Heat the oil in a heavy skillet. Strain the contents of the blender into the hot oil. Stir and cook over low heat for 5-10 minutes until the mixture darkens and thickens somewhat. Add another cup of broth and let simmer.

Finely grind the anise, coriander, and black pepper in a molcajete or spice grinder. Add 1Tbl.of the spices to the sauce. (More seasoning may be added later if needed) Add the oregano, cinnamon and cumin next. Add half a disc of Mexican chocolate and the piloncillo; stir the sauce continuously until chocolate melts completely. Continue to simmer until the sauce thickens to the consistency of a med. thick tomato sauce, approx. 15 – 20 minutes. Adjust salt and seasonings if needed.

Serve mole sauce over baked chicken or turkey breasts garnished with sesame seeds.

*Piloncillo is Mexican raw sugar sold in very small to very large cones.