Sunday, January 24, 2010

Death By Dessert or a Sampling of Heaven

Sometimes as a chef, I get a little carried away. When the craving to cook and create strikes, who am I to ignore it?? Especially when there are guests over, who are looking for a little snack. And like any chef, the urge to impress, wow, and instill a sense of happiness in those we cook for is a powerful one.

Having been re-gifted a bottle of CEV Icewine, I set about trying to create a few mini-desserts that would match well with the wine. Here are the results:


Vidal Ice wine with slices of Meyer Lemon Tarts


Hudson Valley Local Fresh (unpasteurized or homogenized) milkshakes with orange-vanilla ice cream, dulce-de-leche wafers dipped in sweet Pedro-Ximenez reduction, and caramelized
ginger-sugar chips.

Chocolate dipped bananas with chocolate dipping sauce, cara-cara oranges, and a Kahlua-coffee shot.


The Petite Elvis - sauteed banana, peanut butter and bacon.


The CEV Vidal Icewine. No where nearly as delicious as the desserts unfortunately.


The meyer lemon tart in the oven.

Mise en place for the lemon tart. Not sure what that means?? See this link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mise_en_place


Blind baking the tart shell.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Cioppino



According to wikipedia, Cioppino is: a fish stew derived from the various regional fish soups and stews of Italian cuisine. Cioppino is traditionally made from the catch of the day, which in the dish's place of origin is typically a combination of dungeness crab, clams, shrimp, scallops, squid, mussels and fish with fresh tomatoes in a wine sauce, often served over spaghetti or other long pasta and toasted buttered bread, either sourdough or baguette. The dish is comparable to bouillabaisse, burrida, and bourride of the French Provence, suquet de peix from Catalan speaking regions of coastal Spain, and to cacciucco and brodetto from Italy .[1]


Ok...enough of that. To me, Cioppino is a kind of comfort food, a dish that serves well to an informal party of people that are coming over for dinner, with some good cold white wine such as a Seyval Blanc or Sauvignon Blanc. (Maybe a cold beer too!)


To me, a good Cioppino has just a little heat, a variation of seafood including a firm white flesh fish (sea bass, haddock, monkfish), clams, mussels, and even some shrimp. Scallops add a great variation and I would add them if I wasn't allergic to them. Next, a balanced broth of tomato, fennel, saffron, clam juice, and onion needs to tie it all together. Add some garlic bread or rouille (french garlic aiolli) and your in for a treat.

My recipe is below. I hope you enjoy it.





The final dish, Cioppino. Serve in a deep bowl and don't forget the garnish!


An assortment of clams and mussels, cleaned and covered with a damp towel to keep them fresh till cooking time.


Beautiful heirloom cherry tomatos, of various colors.

Iranian Saffron. Some of, if not the best.

Clam tomato vegetable broth. The base for the dish.



Cioppino recipe:


Ingredients -

1 Large Onion, Diced
1/2 Bulb Fennel, Diced
Fennel Fronds for garnish
Parsley for garnish
Saffron, 1 pinch
4 Cloves Garlic, Minced Finely
1 Bell Pepper, Diced
Olive Oil as needed
24oz Clam Juice
16oz Tomato Juice
1 Pint Cherry Tomatoes, Halved

Seafood - 1.5 lb white firm flesh fish, 1lb mussels (clean very well), 1/2lb clams, 1lb shrimp or 1lb scallops

Method

In large pot, add olive oil, then onion & garlic. Saute till tender, add fennel and bell pepper. Cook till soft. Add saffron, cook 1 minute till aromatic. Add the liquids, bring to a boil. Reduce heat, simmer for 30 minutes. Season.

Add the seafood, bring liquid to a simmer, cover till fish is cooked and all the shellfish open. Add in cherry tomatoes. Cook 1 minute. Serve in bowls, with garlic bread. Garnish with minced parsley and fennel fronds.


Enjoy!

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A look into culinary creativity and chaos.....one day at a time
2010