Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Pasta With Meat Sauce

Braising is such an amazing technique - not only you get most delicious and tender meat, but leftovers - that liquid with vegetables and herbs and drippings of fat and flavor from the meat - are amazing too! After braising chicken for tacos (read here), it is now turn to deal with that wonderful sauce. What I had left in the pan was white wine, chicken drippings and onions.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Simple Dinner - Chicken Tacos

Nothing fancy tonight - just tacos. Can't say that it is fast though. I am braising chicken and that takes time. But it certainly is simple. I have half a whole chicken breast (bones in). I slice half an onion and line a bottom of a small braising pan with it. Place seasoned (salt and pepper) chicken on top, and add white wine - just enough to cover the onions, but not the chicken.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Tuna Tartare and Lobster Tail

And to finish the weekend off, two seafood plates - one is from a cookbook from Melisse restaurant, In Pursuit Of Excellence - ahi tuna tartare (although I'm not sure the tuna I have is ahi tuna), and then a very simple lobster tail, just because we happened to pick it up in the grocery store today.

First up, an "official" recipe from the book.

Peppers Stuffed With Cod On Roasted Tomatoes

My best friend went back to school to get her MBA and then went off for a semester abroad to Barcelona, Spain. I am quite jealous of all the wonderful food she gets to experience there, and her common photo postings on facebook only feed my jealousy more. But is is also quite inspirational. And although some ingredients, such as jamon (prohibited in US) and caught-this-morning-fresh seafood, are out of my reach, others I can get my hands on and can recreate a similar dish. Today I will use her photo as an inspiration and cook something similar - I have only a photo and a brief description (peppers stuffed with cod) to work of - no exact list of ingredients or a recipe here.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

TAG U - Roasting

Today was a cooking class at TAG, subject - roasting. 3 delicious dishes to watch chefs make, 3 recipes provided to take home, mixology lesson at the bar with cocktails to sip, and a delicious lunch - that's TAG University.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Celebrating Ugadi

Today is actually a New Year. Yes, New Year. Celebrated in Karnataka as Ugadi, and also in Andhra and Maharashtra, today is a beginning of a new year for many Indians. As any other festive day, it must be a vegetarian day (see my previous post), but it is also a day to eat sweets. I am going back to the wonderful 1000 Indian recipes book for a new dessert recipe - Pistachio Burfee.

Shyam's Special Vegetable Pulao

I did write about how 1000 Indian Recipes book helped my Indian cooking a lot. It is a great book. Even Shyam consults it every now and then. But more as a guideline rather than following a recipe to a T. This post is about Shyam's own original recipe which was inspired by a vegetable pulao out of that book. But he changed the kind of vegetables, the spices, changed yogurt to coconut milk - it is entirely Shyam's specialty now. And while he is the one to usually cook this, since cricket season began and he is off to practice with his team, the honors of cooking it fall to me. Let's begin!

Parsnip Risotto

In search of an easy (relatively) meal idea, I browsed a few cookbooks, and something caught my eye in Mourad New Moroccan - Parsnip Risotto. What he suggests is absolutely brilliant - extract juice from parsnips and cook the rice in that juice. This way rice will absorbed the parsnip flavor but there will be no visible clues to any parsnip in the risotto. If only I had a juicer!

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Great Espresso and Cappuccino At Home

I have been eyeing a good espresso machine to buy for home use for a long time. Breville is my favorite appliance brand and I must have had Breville Barista Express BES860XL machine with grinder in my Amazon shopping cart's "saved for later" for a year (click here for listing). Finally price decreased last week to $539 - still pricey, but lower than before (at the time of writing this post, price is $599) and would still be well worth it. Both I and Shyam had a discussion about this purchase (it is a lot of money) and finally agreed to go for it. To our surprise, there was an additional $108 discount (ends up, Amazon is running this discount: "Through April 9, 2012, you can save 20% on select Kitchen & Dining products when you use your Amazon.com Store Card" - pretty darn neat!), and we got this baby for only $430, which is a great bargain for this machine. Few days later we had it delivered and today we finally had our first home-made espresso and cappuccino.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

TAG Brewery Dinner #3

Tonight was the third installment of brewery dinners at TAG featuring Great Divide brewery and M.T.H. Natural Lamb Farm. What a wonderful evening it was! We knew the menu prior to dinner, and it was supposed to be quite a dinner. Of course, there is always a risk of disappointment when expectations are high, but not this time. We expected it to be amazing, and amazing it was.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Shyam's Wonderful Saag Paneer

Saag paneer (creamy spinach cheese curry) is not an unusual Indian dish. I have tasted it enough times in various restaurants, and I can definitely say that Shyam cooks the best saag paneer by far!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Next Sushi Attempt

And to finish this weekend off - sushi! After the first attempt going rather well (read here), there is no reason not to try it again. Why do I call my sushi "cooking" attempts? Well, I am pretty sure that if a sushi chef, a true sushi chef, either reading this and previous posts or overseeing me in the kitchen will most certainly be outraged. What sushi chef does is like painting Mona Lisa, by comparison what I do is like drawing stick figures. But one only gets better with experience. So here we go.

To start easy, I prepared the same octopus dish as last time.

More Pork Belly - Another Delicious Yet Quick Dish

Recall the pork belly I braised earlier this week? Click here for my post. For a quick lunch today, I will be using a few pieces of that braised goodness. For this dish, jasmine rice is needed, so it helps to cook it ahead or time your rice-cooker to make some for lunch. I am also using a bit of preserve I cooked earlier for a dish from Jean-Georges VonGerichten's book - Asian Flavors of Jean-George. Preserve is made of ginger, shallots and garlic in honey. Something with a similar flavor profile can be used instead.

Sunday Morning - Rolled Omelet

Another lazy Sunday morning, another Sunday breakfast trick - rolled omelet pan.


This is a cute little pan by Nordic Ware, sold by Williams-Sonoma (click here for listing). Like other Nordic Ware pans I have (ebelskivers and waffle), this is an aluminum pan with non-stick coating and it has a specific shape for its task - there are two sections with a ridge in a middle that make rolling an omelet very easy.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Indian Sweets

Even though I have been cooking Indian savory dishes for several years now, it is only few months ago, for Diwali, that I tried to make my first-ever Indian dessert. We asked Shyam's mom for a recipe, and I prepared carrot halva. For no particular reason, I felt like making it again.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Homemade Meatballs

Meatballs! We used to buy them, but after I started making our own at home, store-bought ones just don't do it for us anymore. And meatballs are probably the simplest of the make-ahead foods you can do at home - very little effort, resources and ingredients compared to, for example, ravioli. I usually make enough to eat in the evening I make them, and then a few servings for later use. Frozen, they can store in the fridge for a long time.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Shyam Cooks French

This is an unexpected twist on our usual cooking arrangements. Shyam mostly cooks only Indian and quite often vegetarian. Not tonight! A new Food & Wine annual cookbook arrived yesterday, and he picked a French recipe to cook for dinner tonight, much to my surprise, a very pleasant surprise. For dinner tonight - chicken Dijon - click here for recipe.

More On Wine - Does Glass Shape Really Matter?

In our further exploration of wine, tonight we will be testing if the varietal-specific shape of the wine glass really makes a difference or not. I have long been intrigued by the many shapes that Riedel produces that are specific to a particular grape. I have always had two type for wine glasses and that is it - one for whites, another - for reds. Well, and then flutes for Champagne and other sparkling wines, but those are much different and I won't concern about them here.

Finally I took a plunge and bought a tasting set from Riedel (click here) - five varietal-specific glasses on a budget. These are from the "O" series, which is their collection of stemware without stems! I do love stems on my wine glasses, but at $50 for one tasting set, it is a bargain and a good way to discover whether grape-specific glasses really enhance the wine or it is just an elaborate marketing campaign to get people to spend more on fancy stemware.

Few More of Our Kitchen Favorites

I missed a perfect excuse to bake a pie yesterday (3/14) and share that with you, but to make up for that, I will share a few more of very useful items we have in our kitchen. These items aren't necessities in the kitchen, but they are certainly very helpful and convenient, and none of them are expensive.

Oil mister


I think I got this cute little gadget because it was on sale. But once I started using it, I actually purchased two more - these things are great! They are sold by Williams-Sonoma: click here for listing. This is the most natural way to spray a fine mist of oil as no aerosols are involved.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Pork Belly - Braising and Further Preparations

Ah, pork belly... how can you go wrong with it?! There are so many ways to cook with it, and all - so delicious! Hardly a healthy choice, we can however indulge in it today as we had a 4 mile run outside thanks to the summer weather we are having all this week. It helps to have a strong alcohol with pork belly to help break down the fats. Today I will braise a whole lot of it, then use some for dinner while saving the rest for later uses.

Monday, March 12, 2012

More On Truffles, and Quick Dinner Dish

I certainly knew that when I was buying Oregon black truffles (see my earlier post), I won't be getting the same variety as featured in most of my French and European cookbooks. From the description on the Earthy Delight's site (click here):

"Fresh Black Truffles (Leucangium carthusianum) from Oregon look somewhat similar in appearance to Black Summer Truffles from Europe, but the resemblance ends there. Chefs and adventurous cooks across the country prize Oregon Black Truffles as a uniquely American delicacy, but one that is just as delicious and intriguing as their better-known (and much pricier) European cousins.

Oregon black truffles have a pronounced pungent, fruity-musky aroma and a strong flavor. While fresh Oregon black truffles don't have quite the same intensity as fresh European truffles, they are far less expensive and offer their own uniquely distinctive truffle flavor."

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Sunday Morning - Waffles

I recently got another kitchen "toy" - a waffle pan, and this morning is the time to play with it.


I have been eyeing it for awhile in Williams-Sonoma catalog, and I finally placed and order and few days later a nice man in brown uniform arrived at the door with it. Here is the listing on Williams-Sonoma's website: click here. A basic recipe is included.

The Buckhorn Exchange Experience

We have long been hearing about a restaurant in Denver that serves exotic meats like rattle snake and alligator tail. Tonight we finally got to experience it. Restaurant is located at 1000 Osage St in Denver, website: http://www.buckhorn.com/ . Prior to going there, we have look at the menu and were excited about some options. We also have read the history on the website - this is Denver's oldest restaurant and also the holder of #1 liquor license in the state of Colorado. It is 119 years old and has been in the same location since the time it was established. Pretty impressive, right?

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Home-made vs Store-bought

Convenience, cost or quality?

There is no simple answer to which is better - home-made or store-bought food, although most people will likely think that home-made is a unanimous winner. But consider the complexity of the question - how do you define "better"? Although I take pride in making home-made pastas, sauces and other foods from scratch as much as possible, even though equivalents are readily available in a store, I would not claim that this is absolutely the only and best choice to eat well and is always superior to store-bought foods that one simply needs to heat up at home. There are many brands out there that are very good and nearly equal to home-made foods. On the other side of the spectrum are people who only buy ready-made foods in the store and rarely or never cook at home. And then there are people in between who buy some pre-made ingredients and use them in their cooking. For example, although I do make pasta at home, I take shortcuts and buy pasta in the store too. So why choose one over another?

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Indian Cuisine Improvisations By Shyam

Whenever somebody asks me "what is Russian food?", I have hard time answering it. It is whatever we cooked at home in Russia. Same goes for Shyam and Indian food. It is only as being an outsider to any country or region, one can fit a whole cuisine of that region/country into few specific dishes and blissfully ignore all the other dishes that can be produced with any number of ingredients from that region/country. One has to go beyond a few specific recipes to truly cook a dish from a different cuisine. One has to understand the local ingredients and methods and then a whole new world of possibilities opens up.

Monday, March 5, 2012

New Home-brew - Black IPA, and Blind Tasting

Yesterday we finally opened and tasted a bottle of our home-brew that we brewed a month or so ago. And out of the beers we brewed so far (we started with our first attempt in June 2011), this one is the best. So good, in fact, when we tasted it yesterday first, we thought it was on the level with the beers with buy in a liquor store. We finally made it! Then an idea came to me - to truly compare our beer with brews we get at a store, let's do a blind tasting. This time we brewed Black IPA, and not long ago we tasted a Black IPA from Tommyknocker right at the brewery from the tap, and a bit before that we had Pitch Black IPA from Widmer Brothers. So I thought of buying those two and then tasting it with ours. Liqour store was out of Widmer's this time, but instead we got Uinta Dubhe Imperial Black IPA and Tommyknocker Hop Strike Black IPA.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Comfort Food - My Special Chicken Soup

I haven't written anything in a couple of days, and even today's post will be short. I have a simple remedy for when misery strikes, be it cold or flu, being frozen to the bones after a long day out (skiing or otherwise) in wintry weather or even when we are sitting inside watching nasty weather rage outside and want some extra warmth and comfort. Chicken soup is that magic potion that makes a cold more bearable or thaws us out after skiing. I "indianized" a basic chicken soup just a bit, not only to add flavor, but also to tap into ayurvedic properties of certain spices, but it is still a very simple and fast dish to prepare.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

My Indian Cooking And Hyderabadi Chicken Curry For Dinner

My Indian Cooking

I am Russian, I grew up in Russia, and I grew up eating Russian food (whatever that is, don't ask me). When my family moved to US, I did get a chance to experience new cuisines - Italian, Chinese, Indian, etc. But prior to starting my relationship with Shyam, most Indian cooking I did was get some meat (chicken, usually), and cook it with some "Indian" sauce out of a can. At the time I thought that was some great tasting meal. Boy, was I wrong. Then I starting dating Shyam. So I tried harder to cook an authentic Indian meal. It took me several tries before I got it right. I needed proper resources. I was brought up to believe in power of knowledge in books, so I knew I needed to get some great reading on Indian cooking. I went on Amazon, and eventually I got to 1000 Indian recipes.