Tuesday, August 30, 2011
These prosciutto-inspired recipes both came from a cooking episode Giada did on the Today show. I watched it on mute since I work from home, but went to the website for the full recipe. Prosciutto is wonderful stuff if you want all the flavor of bacon without the fat. Its a little hard to work with because its always sliced thin. Its best to take it immediately from the refrigerator and try to work with it cold. Its cured so you can eat it right out of the package or it can be chopped and added to any dish. I love the method Giada mentions on the show - baked until crispy and used as a topping in soup, salads, or pasta dishes.
Recipe Riff:
Use large scallops and they can be frozen prior but thawed before cooking. Don't use the tiny quarter-sized scallops for this recipe.
With a knife, slice the prosciutto down the center length-wise. A whole piece overwhelms even a large scallop. Otherwise, follow the recipe as written. 15 min. in the oven is enough even for large scallops.
Capellini al Forno (Baked Angel Hair Pasta with Prosciutto & Smoked Mozzarella)
This was my favorite of the episode...Italian comfort food like mama used to make. Cheesy goodness with no redeeming nutritional value. I would recommend this as a side dish to a lovely GREEN salad instead of the main course. It does have some "wow factor" but is a caloric splurge. Don't skip the marinara sauce on the side, it cuts the richness of the cheese.
Recipe Riff:
I used 3/4 box of angel hair pasta and broke it in half before cooking so I could manage it better. I only did two layers of ingredients starting with bread crumbs then pasta, prosciutto, cheese and then another layer of pasta, prosciutto, and cheese. I topped with more breadcrumbs mixed with Parmesan and dolloped some butter around the top.
I baked mine in a spring-form pan as the recipe indicates, but you'll want to cover the bottom in foil since the butter drips onto the oven floor and burns there smoking and smelling awful. Lesson learned.
This recipe would be so much fun for appetizers and could easily be done in one of those mini-muffin tins with just one layer of ingredients topped with breadcrumbs. I would break the pasta in smaller pieces before cooking. Someone try this and tell how it worked!
Monday, August 22, 2011
Beef Tenderloin Roast with Horseradish Cream
Your cooking evolves over time and things you never thought you'd try last year, suddenly become inspiration for dinner tonight. This one came from and old issue of Food & Wine from August 2010. I'd never tried beef tenderloin but thought it must be like any other roast and easy to find. Perusing Central Market I found every cut of meat except the large tenderloin roast this recipe called for. Central Market has a great meat / seafood department with knowledgeable staff who are willing to cut, skin, de-bone, or recommend a cooking method for anything they sell. Often they'll ask me what I'm making and give me the best gift - validation! If you have a great butcher, or a store with an exceptional meat department, ask their advice especially when it comes to possible substitutions. It turns out that a beef tenderloin roast isn't part of the displayed offerings, but it is one of their standard cuts and they can have it ready for you in just a few minutes. Be prepared for the sticker shock and only get what you really think you'll eat. This amount of meat could easily feed 6 - 8 people.
The recipe can't be found online so here are the directions with my own modifications:
Beef Tenderloin Roast
One 2-3 lb. beef tenderloin roast
1/4 cup very coarsely ground black pepper
salt
vegetable oil
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cut the tenderloin in half crosswise. Rub each piece generously (sides and ends) with pepper to create a good crust. Season with salt and rub with vegetable oil. Sear the roasts in a cast iron pan over high head for 8 minutes turning so you sear each side including the cut ends. Transfer the pan and roasts to the oven and insert a thermometer. Roast 30-40 min. or until the thermometer reads 120 for rare or 130 for a medium rare roast. The key to tenderness on this roast is allowing for some good pink in the middle so don't over cook. Once they've come to desired temperature, remove from the oven and lloosely cover the pan with foil to allow the roasts to rest for 30 min. Slice in thin rounds. This roast can be eaten warm but its even better served cold with horseradish cream.
Horseradish Cream
1 cup sour cream
3 tablespoons prepared horseradish
3 tablespoons mayonnaise
a few drops of red wine vinegar to taste
salt to taste
The recipe can't be found online so here are the directions with my own modifications:
Beef Tenderloin Roast
One 2-3 lb. beef tenderloin roast
1/4 cup very coarsely ground black pepper
salt
vegetable oil
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cut the tenderloin in half crosswise. Rub each piece generously (sides and ends) with pepper to create a good crust. Season with salt and rub with vegetable oil. Sear the roasts in a cast iron pan over high head for 8 minutes turning so you sear each side including the cut ends. Transfer the pan and roasts to the oven and insert a thermometer. Roast 30-40 min. or until the thermometer reads 120 for rare or 130 for a medium rare roast. The key to tenderness on this roast is allowing for some good pink in the middle so don't over cook. Once they've come to desired temperature, remove from the oven and lloosely cover the pan with foil to allow the roasts to rest for 30 min. Slice in thin rounds. This roast can be eaten warm but its even better served cold with horseradish cream.
Horseradish Cream
1 cup sour cream
3 tablespoons prepared horseradish
3 tablespoons mayonnaise
a few drops of red wine vinegar to taste
salt to taste
Monday, August 8, 2011
Well Traveled Finger Food
Spoiler Alert: concert buddies read at your own risk!
I went crazy this weekend trying recipes for an up-coming concert-in-the-park evening with friends. I was looking for recipes that could be eaten cold or at room temperature straight off the skewer. While these recipes came from my own cookbook collection – all can be found online proving once again that COOKBOOKS ARE OBSOLETE and a great recipe can come from any source! Chances are, even your favorite family recipe can be found online. If not, it’s time to share it with the world! I hit 3 out of 4 in this marathon culinary event.
There are a million ways to make pesto this one calls for green chilies in place of the basil. They add a great tanginess perfect for shrimp. The finished shrimp are fabulous hot but great even cold the next day. My photo shows them cold since the theme is finger food that travels. I put these on small bamboo skewers but you could use toothpicks or place 2-3 on a longer skewer as a single serving.
These need to be made either right before your picnic or reheated before traveling so they can be served warm or at room temperature. The almond sauce is creamy goodness so serve these with crusty bread.
Recipe Riffs:
Meat – the recipe calls for beef or lamb but I used ground pork which worked equally well
Bread – I used 3 slices of a medium sized French loaf. I toasted them lightly and only dunked them in water instead of soaking for 5 min. Rip the bread into tiny pieces with your fingers
Spanish olive oil can be replaced by any good olive oil
Dry white wine can be replaced by 2/3 cup additional vegetable broth and another squeeze of lemon juice while cooking
Freshly grated nutmeg is the best but you can use the bottled version
Salmon in Mojo Sauce
I’m not done yet! The mojo sauce in this recipe is just charmoula in disguise (see July). I had run out of cumin so I used Mexican chili powder which contains a little cumin. The sauce turned very RED and mixed with oil this can be a deadly combination! Provide long skewers and watch your clothing…
Recipe Riffs:
Ground Cumin – I used Mexican chili powder in a pinch and it turned out great
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


