Author: Caroline

  • Saffron Shrimp Shallot Risotto

    Saffron Shrimp Shallot Risotto

    Carnaroli Rice (eyeball to cover sautee pan bottom for 2)
    olive oil
    1 shallot
    4 C home made chicken stock
    1/2 C dry white wine
    10 good looking salt water shrimp, peeled and deveined
    Heavy pinch Saffron
    Salt & Pepper

    Sautee the minced shallot and the rice in hot oil until the rice becomes golden, adding salt & pepper. Add 1/4-1/2 C white wine, let liquid reduce, and then use HEATED home made chicken stock, to which you have added saffron, to slowly cook the rice by maintaining a low liquid level and neither boiling nor searing the rice. When it’s almost done and the rice is about soft, add the shrimp.

  • Summer Grilling

    Summer Grilling

    Our grill is in full swing these days and on lazy weeknights we often throw on a few mixed squash, a bell pepper, an onion, and sometimes a peice of meat. I cover the vegetables immediately before grilling in olive oil, salt, and pepper (all generously), and marinate the steak in soy sauce and olive or sesame oil for at least 30 minutes before grilling.  For the gorgeous, affordable sock-eye salmon we’ve got available this year, use soy sauce and maple syrup.

    We like to eat it up with some wonderful whole-great hippy bread from La Brea Bakery.

  • Faux Cuban Pork Sandwich

    Faux Cuban Pork Sandwich

    So to avoid making the Cuban style pork (read: I am sometimes lazy), but to make it taste like a Cuban Pork Sandwich, I’ve taken a few liberties.

    Organic Roast Pork Loin
    Cornichons, diced
    Sweet onion, diced
    Deli-style seed-included mustard
    Cilantro (fresh)
    Sharp white cheddar
    Bread of your choosing cut in 1/2 inch slices

    Sautee in olive oil the diced cornichons and onions, along with salt and pepper. Once soft and hot, add mustard to make it a wet concoction. Do yourself a favor and don’t taste this on its own.

    Assemble like so: Bread, cheese, cilantro, pork, cornichon & onion mixture, bread. Throw it in the panini machine. If you don’t have one, wrap it in foil, put your oven at 350, and put it in there with an oven-safe skillet over it to push it down.

    I served it with pan-fried plantains.

  • No Ordinary Ham & Cheese Sandwich

    No Ordinary Ham & Cheese Sandwich

    Wheat Bread
    Organic Roast Pork Loin slices
    Raw Pumpkin Seeds
    Mixed “Rainbow” Microgreens
    Swiss Cheese slices
    Deli-style mustard
    Green Fig Jam (in this case, from Liguria)

    Throw it together, stick it in the panini machinie.

  • Fluffy, Moist Week-day American Pancakes for Two

    Fluffy, Moist Week-day American Pancakes for Two

    [buymeapie-recipe id=’1′]Blueberry-Lemon American Fluffy Pancakes

    Recently I have been making pancakes a lot (by request of a certain man). Here’s the best pancake recipe for two people or three large pancakes that I have discovered/altered/come up with.

    DRY:
    1 C flour
    1 T baking powder
    3 T sugar
    1 tsp salt

    WET:
    1 egg
    2/3 C milk
    zest of 1 lemon
    1 1/2 tsp cider or sherry vinegar
    1-2 T sparkling water (plain or citrus flavor) or ALE/BEER
    1 T sour cream, creme fraiche, or heavy whipping cream (sour preferred)

    Whisk dry ingredients together, whisk wet ones seperately. I use rough measurements using my eye and/or an actual large table spoon. This recipe is pretty forgiving. Combine the wet and the dry, adding the sparkling water last. Cook on medium to medium low heat to get a nice even color. Flip when sides have firmed up away from the pan and there are bubbles/holes in the batter on the skillet.

    I sometimes add fresh blueberries; the best time to do this is immediately after you put the batter on the hot skillet. They are delicious in this and make the pancake require very little syrup if any at all.

    There is also now a buckwheat flour and almond milk version of these pancakes.

    Also, I made Tonno Carpaccio con Yuzu again as summer is upon us, and took a new, much more appealing photo which is now posted on the entry.

  • Heirloom Tomato Salad & Summer Minestrone Soup

    Heirloom Tomato Salad & Summer Minestrone Soup

    Heirloom Tomato Salad

    There is an amazing market down the street from where I’m living in San Francisco these days. Their produce can be viewed as “on its way out” or “perfectly prime.” I choose to focus on the latter and take advantage of rock bottom prices–a few days ago I found organic raspberries for $1.59, and they were gorgeous, tasty, and not freakishly large. They regularly have zucchini at such a low price that for one, I end up paying about 13 cents. They have whole packs of baby spinach twice the size of the ones at the regular grocery for $1.25. I am obsessed with the possibilities.

    Lately, they have had beautiful, beautiful heirloom tomatoes. I picked the best of them and made a simple salad, even slices of the different colors with Himalayan pink salt (flaked variety), fresh cracked pepper, good olive oil, a dash of good balsamic vinegar, and fresh basil julienned on top.

    Summer Minestrone Soup

    Then, I realized I had a tupperware full of  home made chicken stock left from the last time I made chicken & dumplings. I threw it in a big pot to melt, added some rinsed white beans from a can (it was last minute, or I’d have soaked dry ones), and started chopping into equal, small pieces a carrot, small zucchini, round yellow squash, half a Vidalia onion straight from Vidalia, Georgia (my grandma sends us these every year), some gorgeous green beans, and finally, removed the kernals from a fresh stock of white corn. If I recall, I also chopped up the remaining bits of tomatoes from the heirloom salad into small pieces and added them as well. I threw it all in some toasty olive oil and sauteed it with salt and pepper until it was soft but not squishy.  I reserved it to add to the soup when it was fully heated with the beans.

    Mixed Summer Vegetables for Minestrone

    What really made the soup delicious and different, though, aside from having such cheap, tasty, gorgeous produce from my neighborhood corner store, was that I took a hint from San Luis Obispo’s Buona Tavola Ristorante that I’ve known of for years: add a lump of pesto to the center of the bowl.

    I make a batch of pesto just about every week these days (the BF likes to eat it for lunch when I’m at work), and this time I had some that contained basil, olive oil, salt, pepper, fresh garlic, and almonds. It was perfect and brought the whole soup together into tasty, tasty deliciousness.

  • Spaghetti with Ligurian Pesto & Pan-Seared Rockfish

    Spaghetti with Ligurian Pesto & Pan-Seared Rockfish

    Spaghetti with Ligurian Pesto & Pan-Seared Rockfish

    For Two:
    140 grams spaghetti
    1 large bunch basil
    olive oil
    1/3rd cup pine nuts
    8 cloves garlic
    1 lemon
    1/2 lb Rockfish Fillet (or substitute sea bass or red snapper)
    salt
    pepper

    Start a large pot of water boiling, meanwhile using your food processor to combine washed basil, pine nuts, juice of one lemon, several tablespoons of olive oil and salt & pepper to taste to make the Ligurian-style pesto (basil grows like a weed in Liguria, and the Italian Riveria region is the origin of this now popular tapanade).

    When the water is ready for the spaghetti, add 2 T salt to the water. Add spaghetti, cook AL DENTE. The pasta should retail some stiffness when it is finished (when you roll it into a ball on a spoon, the last inch of the noodle should stick out defiantly).

    After adding the spaghetti to the pan, heat your non stick skillet to medium high, add olive oil, and then your lightly salt & peppered fish fillet. Cook most of the way with the top side down, then flip to finish.

    Drain the pasta, put back in the saucepot and add several tablespoons of your fresh pesto, mixing well. Serve in a ball (use a serving two-prong fork to roll it into one) in a soup or pasta bowl. Cut the fish fillet in half and serve on top with lemon slices.

    Wine: Vermentino from Liguria (hard to find! Will say “Cinque Terre” most likely), Sardegna, or Tuscany (in that order of preference), or a nice Sauvignon blanc or Pinot Grigio-Tocai blend.

  • Pork Tenderloin with Kumquats, Fresh Fava Beans & Polenta

    Pork Tenderloin with Kumquats, Fresh Fava Beans & Polenta

    For Two:
    1-1.5 cups kumquats, washed and halved from stem to bottom
    1 small pork tenderloin (~.7 lb)
    pine nuts
    1/3rd cup polenta (dry, bulk)
    1/3rd=1/2 lb fresh fava beans (weight before shelling)
    olive oil
    butter
    parmasean reggiano
    salt
    pepper

    Boil 3 cups water for the 1/3rd cup polenta. When simmering, add polenta and whisk frequently for 8-10 minutes ensuring it does not stick to the bottom. Alternatively, use chicken stock or other stock for more flavor.

    Heat a small sauce pan with water and bring to a boil; add 1 T salt and blanch the fresh fava beans for 2 minutes, remove from heat and add to ice water bath, use fingers to remove the outer membrane, and set aside the beans. They should be slightly firm and bright green.

    Meanwhile, heat large skillet on high, add olive oil and sear the pork tenderloin on all sides after seasoning it with salt & pepper. Set Aside to rest.

    Add kumquats and several tablespoons of pine nuts to the pan. Season with salt and a little pepper. Let kumquats become mostly soft or gain some color on medium heat. Cut the tenderloin into 1/2-3/4inch slices and return to pan to finish cooking. When the pork is about finished, you could add some minced tarragon or some whole sorrel leaves to wilt.

    Add 1-2 T butter and 1-2 T grated parmasean to the polenta, and stir to mix. Serve pork mixture on top of polenta, with fava beans around the sides.

  • Plantains with Wilted Spinach

    Plantains with Wilted Spinach

    Plantains with Wilted Spinach and Pancetta

    Plantains with Wilted Spinach and Pancetta

    For two:
    1/4lb pancetta, cubed
    1 plantain, ripe
    3 cups loose fresh spinach
    butter
    salt
    pepper

    In a skillet on high heat, fry the pancetta until mostly crisp. Add diagnoally sliced plantains and reduce heat to medium high, adding a tablespoon or so of butter. Add salt & pepper. Flip plantains after they’ve colored on one side. When they’re done, put the spinach on top and throw a lid of any size at least as big as the pan over the top, and turn off the heat. Let it sit about a minute, then toss all of it together and serve.

    We ate it up with some granola with milk and fresh strawberries, and delicious Blue Bottle coffee.

  • Belated B-day Dinner: Pescatarian (& Bacon)

    Belated B-day Dinner: Pescatarian (& Bacon)

    On a budget of $120 for four people, a good friend and “astro-twin” who claims herself as a vegetarian but eats seafood and strangely, bacon, asked me to make a belated birthday dinner for her friend (my acquaintance). Because of the graces the bay area allows us in grocery shopping, and with many thanks to cheap, beautiful produce at Tokyo Fish Market in Albany, CA (plus some gorgeous seafood), and the amazingness that is Masse’s Pastries here in my neighborhood, we made a lovely dinner materialize complete with wine right here in the kitchen.

    Monster Fresh Bay Scallop on Vanilla-Orange Risotto with Mint (Failed to take a picture of this, but we ate it up with Gloria Ferrer sparkling wine from Northern California, very reasonable ~ $14)

    Start the risotto with half a medium shallot, diced, olive oil, and the pulp of one vanilla bean. Add the vanilla bean shell to your vegetable or fish stock–in this case I used a watered down vegetable stock so that the risotto did not take on too strong a flavor to avoid overpowering the scallop. Once the shallot begins to gain color, add the risotto rice, and a touch of salt & pepper. Once the rice is toasted, begin adding liquid, keeping the quantity such that the rice does not boil, and does not fry. This will take 25-40 minutes depending on the quantity of rice, in order to cook through. In the final minutes of cooking, when the rice is near tender, add the zest of one orange. Once tender, keep cooking until liquid has reduced a bit more, turn off heat. Add 1.5 T of butter, and one mineola segmented & cut in cubes. Add julienned mint at the end.

    The scallop should sit in milk for about 1 hour before cooking. Heat a skillet to very high heat with olive oil, and sear the scallop, turning once golden or brown on the edges and achieving the same on the other side, keeping the inside rare. Serve on top of the risotto.

    Sesame Seared Maguro on Yuzu Mixed Greens

    This dish depends completely on the quality of the fish. Blocked tuna works best, in this case I used tuna from two different parts of the fish–thus the difference in color between each slice. Simply pat the fish dry and roll it in sesame seeds. In a hot skillet add olive oil and while holding the fish with your hands or tongs sear it on each side about 20 seconds, let it rest off the heat for 30 seconds and then slice and serve. The greens were dressed with a mixture of yuzu juice, olive oil, shallot, salt & pepper.

    Spinach Salad with Bacon, Fried Chevre, Grapefruit

    Ahead of time, slice the chevre into medallions, coat in egg and then bread crumbs and set back in refrigerator to firm (makes them fry more easily). I like to use Capricho Di Cabra goat cheese from Spain, but any fresh chevre will work, the moister the texture the better.

    Cut 7 or so slices of bacon into smaller pieces and add to a hot, dry skillet, let fry until crispy, drain on paper towels and add 1-2 T of bacon fat to a bowl to make salad dressing.

    For the greens, add to the bacon fat 1-2 T of olive oil, juice of 1/2 lemon, salt, pepper, and a small amount of minced shallot or garlic. Dress the spinach and portion the salad out.

    Segment one grapefruit by cutting the top and bottom off, then using a large knife remove the pith and skin from around, then follow the interior membranes to segment the grapefruit, leaving the membrane as waste.

    In a hot non-stick skillet, add olive oil to high heat. Be careful not to pass the smoking point, as olive oil burns very close to its frying heat. Add the cold, breaded cheve medallions to the oil, letting them color on each side, serving hot on top of the spinach along with some of the bacon and several segments of grapefruit.

    We ate the 2nd & 3rd courses with a Rhone red and a lighter Rioja, both in the $10-15 range.

    We had some Australian port with the miniature cakes ($4/each–an incredible bargain saiting 2 people per cake) from Masse’s pastries–we had chocolate-rapsberry, bloodorange-chocolate, and mango. They were out of the amazing caramel mousse with poached pear! :( Even still, delicious.