Category: San Francisco

  • Bday Dinner: Prosciutto Pluot, Halibut on Truffled Corn, Apricot Ricotta Tart

    Bday Dinner: Prosciutto Pluot, Halibut on Truffled Corn, Apricot Ricotta Tart

    prosciutto wrapped pluot with balsamico and burrata

    halibut on truffled corn with microgreens and asparagus

    Apricot Nut Ricotta Tart

    Prosciutto wrapped Pluot

    Simple–great fruit, slices of it, wrapped in very thin prosciutto, paired with a soft cheese like burrata in this case, or seasoned ricotta (season with olive oil or flavored olive oil, salt, pepper), drizzled with aged balsamic vinegar.

    Halibut on Truffled Corn

    I’ve made this as an appetizer as well, and substituted asparagus shavings steamed lightly for the asparagus itself, and served smaller pieces of fish.

    For 4

    1.3 lb halibut fillet, skinned
    3-4 ears fresh corn
    1 pack rainbow microgreens
    12 asparagus spears (or 5 if you are shaving them)
    fresh thyme
    truffle oil
    hazelnut or walnut oil; if unavailable substitute mild, high heat oil – a few T
    toasted sesame oil – 1 tsp
    gomashi – ground salt and toasted sesame seeds
    salt & pepper

    You’ll need two skillets.

    Lightly peel the asparagus and place on parchment paper. Dress lightly with olive oil or flavored olive oil (lemon, clementine, etc; alternatively add lemon or other citrus zest). Wrap peeled asparagus in parchment paper to enclose, and place in oven at 350.

    Heat 1-2 T nut oil and toasted sesame oil in nonstick skillet or skillet with good sides for flipping at medium high heat. When hot, add corn. When corn begins to color, reduce heat to medium and add thyme. Continue flipping or stirring every 30 seconds to 1 min.

    Meanwhile, heat a few T of oil in a pan for the halibut at medium high/high heat. Use enough to easily coat the bottom of the pan. Dress halibut fillets in gomashi and a dash of fresh ground pepper. Top side down into the pan first when oil is hot. When 2/3rds cooked, flip.

    When corn is finished cooking, turn off heat and add 1-2 tsp truffle oil, mix. Season with salt and pepper.

    Remove asparagus from oven. Total cooking time for most asparagus will be about 15-20 minutes, but check it as ovens vary.

    Assemble as pictured on top of the corn; corn, halibut, microgreens, asparagus.

    Apricot Tart with Ricotta Marscapone Nut crust

    Apricot Ricotta Tart

    3-4 cups nuts of any combination or variety: blanched/blanched slivered almonds, raw cashews, macadamias
    5 dried apricots
    2 T melted butter
    6 fresh apricots
    1/2 cup granulated sugar
    1/2 cup water
    1 cup mascarpone cheese
    8 oz ricotta cheese (preferably sheep’s milk)
    orange blossom water
    honey
    benedictine or other brandy/liquor

    For the Crust: Chop finely the dried apricots. In a food processor, blend nuts and dried apricots until fine meal is formed. Add 2 T honey, 2 T melted butter and blend until sticky ball is formed. If too sticky, add more nuts. Should be able to hold together.

    In a 9 1/2 inch tart pan, press out the crust evenly and then place in freezer or refrigerator to set for at least 30 minutes.

    For the Filling: Mix the ricotta, marscapone, 1-2 tsp orange blossom water, 2T honey and 2-3T benedictine/brandy for the filling. Chill.

    For the Topping: Wash and quarter the apricots. Start a simple syrup of 1/2 C sugar and 1/2 C water in a large sautee pan. When made, add the apricot quarters and reduce heat to simmer, turning occasionally until fruit plumps but does not fall apart. Remove pieces onto a cool platter as they finish cooking. After fruit is removed, gently raise heat to create apricot caramel.

    Bake the tart crust at 350 for 15 minutes until coloring golden. Remove and let cool thoroughly or pop into freezer/oven to bring it down.

    Fill with ricotta mixture, top decoratively with apricot slices. If you want the topping to be glossy, melt some red currant jelly in a pan and brush on top. It will dry clear as pastries from a bakery.

  • Pici pasta with chard and sundried tomato pesto

    Pici pasta with chard and sundried tomato pesto

    Pici cooked, and simmered a few minutes in a sundried tomato & oil reduction/pesto, with a bit of fresh swiss chard (red chard).

  • Japanese eats lately

    Japanese eats lately

    Miso marinated salmon, crispy rice patties with mixed grains and leek-miso spread, heirloom carrots simmered in dashi, black sesame asparagus.

  • Green Tea Ice Cream (Matcha Ice Cream)

    Green Tea Ice Cream (Matcha Ice Cream)

    1 pint Strauss family creamery organic half & half
    1 pint Strauss family creamery organic whipping cream
    1 T mirin
    5 tsp matcha
    2/3 C sugar
    2/3 C water

    Combine sugar and water and heat over medium heat, bringing to a very light simmer. Allow to gain a very small amount of color, turn off heat, immediately add mirin & stir. Take 2-3 T of the sugar mixture and mix with the matcha well. Less liquid will allow it to be smoother so add slowly when mixing.

    Combine the sugar syrup and the cream/half & half into a larger non-reactive container, and chill thoroughly before using in your ice cream maker.

    Makes a very creamy, dense, delicious green tea ice cream served best on black.

  • Golden Monkey Ice Cream (Black Tea Ice Cream)

    Golden Monkey Ice Cream (Black Tea Ice Cream)

    Not too long ago I was visiting Peter at Red Blossom Tea Company–I was going on a little about the ice cream maker I had just purchased and not really had a chance to use yet. P’s sister, Alice, jumped in talking about some ice cream she had made with their Golden Monkey tea. Now, Alice has taste in food. So I shaped up and listened. And I got sent home with some tea to make the magic, along with some instructions which I’ve re-posted here.

    1 qt Strauss family creamery whole milk (or other good quality organic dairy)
    or
    1 pt whole milk 1 pt heavy whipping cream (for softer, creamier result)
    2/3 C sugar
    2/3 C water
    2 T mirin
    ~1 C (4-5 large tea bags) loose leaf high quality organic Golden Monkey or other organic black tea, stuffed into large tea bags (or prepare to have a messy straining process, that’s fine too)

    Bring 1-2 C of the milk or cream to a steeping temperature (about 195 degrees, not simmering yet) and add the tea bags. When milk begins to color, turn heat off and pour tea bags and steeped milk into container with the rest of the milk. Reserve for 2-4 days in the refrigerator, shaking/turning to mix once in a while. This part of the process is important to get the infusion process going.

    At the same time, heat the water and sugar together and bring to a light simmer, cooking until beginning to color a tea color. Add mirin and remove from heat immediately. Mix, and add to milk mixture.

    Use your ice cream maker as directed.

  • Sashimi

    Sashimi

    It’s nice to be able to get fish this quality already prepped for sashimi. On Saturdays, this has become a staple meal post-grocery trip. Some days, we find some great toro.

  • Pulled Pork

    Pulled Pork

    Let’s talk about comfort food. I took on my first porkroast after a pretty intense craving for some pulled pork mustered up a few days ago after having an extremely delicious pulled pork slider at the Alembic in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood near my house. Maybe it was the magic of the cocktails along with it (perhaps the best blood & sand I’ve ever had!), or the horseradish mayo on the sweet, soft bun, but I was left wanting more. Not surprisingly, this 6-hour roast became my project a few Sundays ago.

    3-3.5 lb pork shoulder/pork butt
    1T oregano
    1T paprika or smoked spanish paprika
    4T brown sugar
    1T cayenne/chili powder or more
    2 tsp salt
    2 tsp fresh cracked pepper
    2 tsp garlic powder or garlic salt
    BBQ sauce – vinegar based, spicy
    BBQ sauce – sweet with molasses

    Buns – I grabbed mine from the Japanese bakery

    Buy good quality meat; if it does not come deboned and tied up, use cooking twine to pull it back together. Mix the spices (if you don’t have all on hand and won’t reuse the individual spices if you were to buy them, Penzey’s makes a similar mixture that should suffice, perhaps with the addition of a little more chili heat and brown sugar, which you can add on your own. Be sure to get plenty though, as you want to be generous with the rub) and rub onto the meat, wrap up and let sit overnight in the fridge or up to 2 days.

    Heat oven to 300 degrees. Place pork into a ceramic or glass container that fits it but is not excessively large. Cook for 3 hours.

    After 3 hours, begin basting the pork every 20 minutes or so with bbq sauce (spicy for 2x more than molassas) and its own drippings for another 3- 3 1/2 hours.

    Cut off strings and pull with two forks into bits to save. When serving, mix in more warm bbq sauce of your choosing.

  • Burdock & Pork Miso Soup

    Burdock & Pork Miso Soup

    Burdock root, Japanese leek, thinly cut pork, tofu, mitsuba & mixed miso with kelp dashi

  • Breakfast on Sunday for Two: Pumpkin Seed omlette & Southern Biscuits

    Breakfast on Sunday for Two: Pumpkin Seed omlette & Southern Biscuits

    Southern Biscuits

    Make your biscuit dough and shape them and get them in the oven before starting the omlette, assuming you are not world’s slowest prep artist.

    4 eggs, whisked with salt & fresh cracked pepper

    1/4 small onion, sliced lengthwise thinly

    2 small French red fingerling potatoes, about 3-4 oz, diced/small cubes

    1/2 T butter

    1 inch block of gruyere or other cheese, grated into ribbons

    2-3 T raw pumpkin seeds, toasted over medium heat and set aside

    Sautee the onions in the butter. When starting to sweat, add the potatoes, about 1 min later. Add a light sprinkling of kosher salt. Cook until potatoes are gaining color, and put into bowl to reserve. Put the pan back on the heat and put to low heat.

    Cook the eggs. Let them set once, and then stir them and redistribute while enough uncooked egg remains to create a base layer. Cook another 1-2 minutes and add the potato and onion, and then the cheese.

    I also added a green salsa from a local Mexican restaurant at this point. It’s spicy and tangy with lime.

    Fold the egg miture over into a half circle and cover lightly with a lid, keeping at low heat to cook through without coloring the eggs or stiffening them.

    When done, top with salsa and pumpkin seeds and serve with biscuits and jam. We had apricot rose jam today from Arbo.