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    Entries in planning schmanning (10)

    Tuesday
    Jun192012

    he found the pictures!

    A couple years ago when I was visiting my sister and some friends in LA, I went to an awesome Mexican restaurant for a late night drunken after the art show dinner and this awesome stuffed poblano pepper covered with some kind of creamy walnut sauce...

    When I told the story to Recipe Guy, he immediately knew I was talking about Chiles en Nogada and showed me how to make it. 

    Then I got home and somehow managed to lose the picutes I took of the process.

    Of course Recipe Guy has now shown me how to do a search by file type that looks everywhere on my computer. (really, it's a small laptop, things shouldn't be hard to find in it)

    This post is dedicated to Recipe Guy. He's fucking awesome.

    Chiles en Nogada

    It looks fancy as all hell, but it's actually pretty easy. It can take a bit of pre-planning if you want to do it old school, but if you make a couple compromises, you could easily do this in about 45 minutes. If you want to impress someone, this is the way to do it.

    The Chiles:

    • 8 poblano chiles

    We were planning on feeding 6, but it's best to do a couple extra in case you mess one up, and because someone always wants seconds.

    The Filling (aka Picadillo):

    • 1 lb ground pork
    • 1 lb ground beef
    • 1 onion
    • 1 peach
    • 2 apples
    • 1/2 c currants (or raisins if you prefer, but if you do, you're weird)
    • 1/2 c chopped dates
    • 4 cloves garlic
    • 1 tsp cinnamon
    • 1/2 tsp black pepper
    • 1/2 tsp allspice
    • 1/2 tsp oregano
    • 1/2 tsp thyme
    • salt

    The Sauce:

    • 1 c walnuts (plus milk to cover them)
    • 4 oz cream cheese
    • salt
    • 2 c Mexican crema (this is the same as french creme fraiche)

    or

    • 1 c sour cream
    • 1 c milk

    To Make it Look Almost as Awesome as Recipe Guy is:

    • 1 pomegranate
    • cilantro

    Old School Steps:

    If you want the fast version skip forward to "What you gotta do."

    If you want to go all the way and make your own Mexican crema (aka creme fraiche) heat 2 c of heavy whipping cream in the microwave to between 90 and 100 degree F.

    Add 2 tbsp buttermilk.

    Shake.

    Cover and leave on the counter (yes the counter) for 24 hours. You might want to warn your cohabitants what you're doing. People have a tendency to refidgerate dairy products that they find on the counter.

    Basically, you're culturing and souring milk here. Which is why you could also use a sour cream and milk combo as a time saving, planning-schmanning alternative.

    The next old school thing you can do is roast the walnuts in a 350 degree oven for 10 minutes and then rub their skins off.

    Tell me how it goes if you do because there's no way in hell I have the patience to remove skin from walnuts. They come shelled and that's good enough for me.

    Since we were planning ahead with the crema, we also planned ahead with the nuts. You can soak the walnuts in milk overnight if you want to, but it's not necessary. If you do though, I totally recommend using the nutty milk in a savoury bread pudding. Best one I ever made was with the walnut milk.

    Now that we've got the shortcuts out of the way, we can start cooking.

    What you gotta do:

    Grill the chiles over a medium high flame until the skin is blistering and blackening.

    Dump them into a plastic bag and let them steam for a few minutes.

    If you chop the onion, apples, peach, dates, and garlic while they steam, they'll be just cool enough to handle.

    After steaming in a bag for a while, the skins will slide right off the chiles.

    You'll probably have a few stubborn strips that hang on for dear life. You're free to beat them to death, or let them live, depending on what you have patience for (one guess at how much patience I had for them). Once you've got them all done, just set them aside while you make the filling.

    The filling should take no more than 20 minutes if you chopped the fruits and veggies while the chiles were steaming.

    In a large pan brown the beef and pork with the onion, and then add the spices

    and then add the fruits.

     

    Recipe Guy is fond of his mortar and pestle, and will grind whole spices into powder whenever he gets the chance. I know you're just going to use the pre-ground stuff and that's fine.

    Cover the filling, turn the heat down to low, and you're done with it. It will probably need a stir from time to time, but really, that's all it is.

    While it hangs out in the pan you can make the sauce.

    Spoon the walnuts out of the milk and into the food processor. If yours haven't been soaking, just dump them in.

    Add the cream cheese and the crema (or sour cream and milk) and the salt. This really needs salt or it comes off as kinda dessert-y. If you're using sour cream and milk, warm them to room temperature in the microwave, or take them out of the fridge before you start cooking. This sauce doesn't get cooked, but it shouldn't be cold either.

    Turn on the food processor.

    I find it's impossible to get this perfectly smooth, but once it looks about like this

    I'm willing to call it done.

    So, there you go. All of your components are ready to go. Well, except the garnish. You need to bust some arils out of the pomegranate.

    Do this underwater in a large bowl and the arils will sink while the rest of the pomegranate floats. It also helps prevent pomegranate juice from getting everywhere.

    Okay, now we're ready to go.

    See, it's really not that bad when you think about it. Each of the components is pretty simple, and doesn't take too long to prepare. I mean, browning the meat probably took more time than everything else combined. If you're really into the planning thing, you could even roast the chiles the day before. They keep quite well in the fridge and will warm them to room temp on the counter while you do everything else.

    To stuff the chiles, cut a slit down the side and remove the seeds.

    (It goes a little faster if you remove all the seeds and then stuff all the chiles)

    Let the chile rest in your palm and the slit will fall open.

    Spoon in picadillo until it's nice and stuffed. Then, set it cut side down on a plate.

    Don't worry if a few crumbs fall out. You're going to be covering this with sauce anyway. Even torn chiles can make it to the dinner table looking fancy if they're covered with enough sauce.

    Spoon the sauce over the poblano

    until it has a lovely white blanket covering it.

    and then sprinkle with pomegranate arils and cilantro leaves.

    Holy hell do they look impressive when they're done.

    And if you work it right, you can do this all in less than an hour. If you preplan and do a few things the day before, you could probably even make this on a weeknight. But really, this is way too impressive to waste on a Wednesday.

    What simple thing impresses you?

     

    Monday
    May212012

    Extreme DIY

    I'm not cooking.

    Well, I am. Last night we grilled crooknecks, reduced some wine, added butter, and tossed it all with pasta, chicken breast, basil, and cheese. Tonight, pork filling for tacos. I do like pork in tacos.

    I also made date muffins again (turns out the recipe actually works and wasn't a total fluke), and sauteed chard to go into biscuit pastry for lunchy spanikopita-type things.

    But I didn't take a single picture.

    But I did take pics of food. It's just that it's food in a somewhat less familiar format.

    The garden.

    Yes, food comes from dirt.

    And while Taneasha and I are fans of DIY cooking, Recipe Guy has gone one step further and is DIYing his own food.

    I've had gardens in the past, but right now I'm trapped in my student apartment without even a balcony on which to grill things. Man, I love food cooked on fire.

    So, as I said, we grilled crooknecks last night. But first we had to harvest them. Squashes are fuzzy, and the fuzz is sharp and sticks in your fingers like fibreglass.

    Tasty things always have ways of protecting themselves. Note that the broccoli has no thorns, no fuzz, no dangerous parts to navigate around. That's because it's not edible. Contrary to what his housemates seem to think.

    Behind the broccoli is the remnants of the iceburg lettuces. There was romaine too. There's red leaf on the way. There's also chard.

    A lot of chard. I'd already taken 2-4 leaves off each of those plants. That got me about 4 grocery store sized bundles of chard. Sautee that shit in bacon fat with a bit of browned onion... goes perfectly with fried chicken. Holy yum.

    I need to make fried chicken.

    Some would recommend frying these little green tomatoes,

    but I think I'll wait until the sun turns them red (better them than me) and then eat them warm off the vine.

    TIP: As soon as your tomato plant starts fruiting, defoliate it. Pervert, it means take the leaves off. If you remove the leaves around the fruits, the sun will ripen them faster and the plant will put more energy into fruiting since it no longer has leaves to feed.

    And, if you let your cilantro go to seed, you'll attract all kinds of flying insects that will help pollinate the rest of the garden,

    and those little green burrs in the bottom left are actually corriander seed, a component of garum masala. Let them dry, harvest them by putting a paper bag over the seed head, turn it upside down and shake; all the seeds fall into the bag. This works for dill seed too.

    If you're lucky, you'll have a neighbour with honey bees

    (can you see the bee butt in the flower?) who shares the hibiscus scented honey that results from his bees spending all their time in your bushes.

    Of course, if you have a garden you need a compost heap.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04Zz-GRPAzA

    (still don't know how to embed vids)

    Now, you may not end up with a blues-singing, advice-giving heap, but what you might get are a few volunteers. I don't think I've ever seen a compost heap that didn't have things growing in it.

    We're pretty sure this is a butternut squash.

    There are onions just to the left out of the frame too. Which is good because Mowing Man keeps mowing down the wild onions in the horse pature.

    Speaking of wild things, remember the wild beans that appeared last year during the drought? Well, if you let wild beans go to seed in your garden, they will happily come back and demand trellises the next year.

    How does your garden grow?