Thursday, February 12, 2015

White Bolognese Sauce

Sausage and ground beef, dried mushrooms and Portabellas, white wine, onion and carrots and fennel, with a hint of spice from some chili flakes, and finally, cream. None of these ingredients are remarkable but together as "white Bolognese sauce", and I’m not kidding, they are magic. Stand guard over the pot or it will be gone before dinner is served, one “just tasting” spoonful at a time.



I love Tamar Adler’s wonderful book, An Everlasting Meal, Cooking with Economy and Grace, as much for the conversational, evocative writing as for the delicious recipes. Tamar (Dare I call her Tamar? I feel like we are such old friends after spending so much time together.) weaves stories and musings about ingredients and cooking and love and family into a narrative you can get lost in, bookmarking pages of methods to try, and recipes, until when you finally reach the end, you want to start back at the beginning and read the whole thing again, so rich is the prose.

I’d say An Everlasting Meal it is a way of life, not just a recipe book, if I didn’t think that would scare some of you off. But I will say this, it is a writer’s cookbook. And, from me, there is no higher praise.

No-Tomato Bolognese?
I wish this dish had a better name because White Bolognese doesn’t even begin to describe the rich, hearty, mushroomy, succulent deliciousness that is this meaty sauce. I had already packed up some leftover cottage pie for my husband’s lunch the day after I served this. Cottage pie is one of his favorite things so I had saved it for him especially. He said he’d rather take this!

Adapted from An Everlasting Meal, Cooking with Economy and Grace by Tamar Adler

Ingredients
1 medium onion
1 medium carrot
1 stalk celery
Olive oil
1 lb 5 oz or 600g pork sausage, removed from its casings
1 lb or 450g ground beef
1 teaspoon fennel seeds, lightly broken with a mortar and pestle
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper
1 1/2 cups or 360ml white wine
2 cups or 480ml chicken stock
3 large Portabella mushrooms
3/4 oz or 20g dried porcini mushrooms, rehydrated in 2 cups or 480ml hot water
1/3 cup or 80ml heavy cream
Salt to taste

To serve:
1 lb or 450g dried pasta, cooked according to package instructions
Parmesan cheese
Few sprigs parsley

Method
Chop your onion, carrot and celery in small dice. Cut the hard end of the stems off and chop the mushrooms roughly.



Drizzle a little olive oil in a pan that will be large enough to hold all the sausage and meat, with room to stir, and add in just the vegetables.



Sauté until they are soft and the onions are translucent.

Add in the sausage and meat, along with the fennel and crushed red chilies. Break the sausage and meat into smaller pieces and cooked until well browned.



Add the wine and simmer until the pan is almost dry.



Now add the stock and cook until the pan is almost dry again.



Add in the chopped mushrooms, stir well, and let them cook a few minutes to release their liquid.



Chop the rehydrated mushrooms into small pieces and - This step is very important! - strain the liquid through a coffee filter to remove all the dirt and impurities.

Add the rehydrated mushrooms and the filtered mushroom liquid to the pan. Those porcini mushrooms make the most divine liquid. It almost smells smoked.



Simmer until the sauce reaches your desired thickness. Taste it and add more salt, if necessary.

Add in the cream, stir well and remove the pan from the heat.

Sprinkle with parsley. 


Serve over cooked pasta of your choice and top with freshly grated Parmesan or Pecorino Romano cheese.


Enjoy!


Disclaimer: The book being reviewed here, An Everlasting Meal, Cooking with Economy and Grace was bought by yours truly. Links to the book are affiliate links.



Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Paloma Naranjada Cocktail #BloggerCLUE

This refreshing cocktail is made with sparkling orange soda, tequila and fresh lime juice, served over ice. Add a rim of salt crystals and an extra slice of lime and it’s party time. 

It’s funny what you find out you have in common with folks when you just meet them through the internet – and no, I’m not talking about the dating sites – but through blogging and social networking. If you’ve been reading this space for a while, you know that my friend, Heather, of girlichef is fond of garlic. I mean, really, really fond of garlic. We cohosted the National Garlic Day celebration last year and gave away a few sweet (and smelly) prizes. We have bonded over raising multicultural children as well, discussing the challenges we face trying to make sure that they know where they come from, on both sides of the family. And, we love cocktails! When she posted this Paloma Cocktail,  I was determined to make it because I love grapefruit but I struggled to find grapefruit soda. I finally decided that for Blogger C.L.U.E. this month, I was going to use orange soda and drink these babies as I watched the glamorous folks saunter down the red carpet at the Grammys. So I did. You should make them for Oscar Night! Or because it’s Wednesday.

Ingredients 
2 oz or 60ml tequila
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lime juice
6 oz or 180ml real juice orange soda (I used San Pellegrino Aranciata.)

Optional: For the rim and garnish
Coarse salt
Slice of lime or wedge



Method
Wet the rim of the glass with lime juice and press it into some coarse salt spread on a small saucer then fill your glass with ice.

Mix tequila and lime juice together and pour into the glass.



Top off with orange soda.


Garnish with a slice or wedge of lime.


Enjoy!

Check out all the other Blogger C.LU.E. participants this month!

If you'd like to stalk - I meant meet -  Heather on the internet too, check out these links:

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Red-Hot Currant-Glazed Pork Chops #BloggerCLUE

These tender bone-in pork chops are marinated with sweet and spicy red currant sauce, then cooked to juicy perfection. These are seriously good! Make sure you have two or four diners because three will fight over the last chop and ruin the whole evening. 

I am a notorious procrastinator. Well, perhaps that is a bit strong because notoriety would imply that a wide number of folks know of my procrastination when it’s probably just close friends and family. Because, so far, I have always managed to slip in under the deadline wire. When I was in school, my best 20-page papers were written in fewer than 24 hours - of course, I had (mostly) done my research but just hadn’t started putting pen to paper- and my best essays and stories got their final -30-, journalistic shorthand for The End, at about 3 a.m., mere hours before they were due. I tell myself I write best under pressure when time constraints don’t allow a bunch of faffing about. As an old professor of mine once said, “Tell ‘em what you are gonna tell ‘em, tell ‘em, then tell ‘em what you told ‘em.” Introduction, body, conclusion.

Which brings me to this post, which, true to form, I am writing on the day I need to publish it. (Yay for time zones that give me “extra” time.) BUT: Way back in December, just a couple of days after I was given my assignment for February’s Blogger C.L.U.E. Society, where we poke around in someone else’s blog for a recipe that fits our clue or theme – in this case RED – I found THE recipe I wanted to make. And I wanted to make it and eat it so much that I jumped in my car and ran to the store for supplies. These gorgeous pork chops, from Christiane of Taking On Magazines were dinner that very night! The sauce is sweet and spicy and, if there hadn’t been pork chops, I could have eaten it with a spoon. So now you know how to motivate me to move more quickly.

If you haven’t met Christiane yet, you need to pop over and have a browse through her site. It’s full of great recipes that she has tested from a variety of food magazines and cookbooks, so you’ll know what works and what doesn’t, in a normal kitchen, as she says, with “kids underfoot, animals prowling the room, husbands peering over shoulders and all the interruptions that the regular Mom Chef has to face.” Since 2009, she’s shared which recipes worked for her and what she’d change if she made them again, as well as favorites from her multicultural family. And she does it all with a great sense of humor.

The red-hot currant-glazed pork chop original recipe came from Cooking Light Magazine, October 2014, and included a side dish of carrots that I have omitted. Here’s the link to Christiane’s post.

Ingredients
1/2 cup or 160g red currant jelly
1 teaspoon soy sauce
1 teaspoon hot sauce
1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper
4 (6-ounce) bone-in center-cut loin pork chops (Together mine weighed almost half a pound more or 1kg total.)
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Parsley, optional for serving

Method
Combine the first four ingredients in a small bowl and stir well.



Place your pork chops on a large plate and spoon about a quarter of the jelly mixture over them, spread it around with the back of the spoon and turn them over halfway through to put marinade on both sides. Cover with cling film and marinate in refrigerator for one hour. (Mine marinated for about three hours, till I was ready to cook dinner.) Reserve remaining jelly mixture in the refrigerator.



Christiane’s – or possibly Cooking Light’s – instructions say to broil the chops but my broiler is a sad, sad thing that doesn’t give off much heat so I preheated my oven to 400°F or 200°C.

And continued thus:

If any liquid has accumulated in the bottom of your plate, pour it off and discard. Dry the chops lightly with paper towel.

Heat your grill pan to scorching hot and lay the pork chops in on one side for 4 minutes.



Turn them over and pop in the preheated oven for 10 minutes.



Remove from oven and allow to rest on a warmed plate for about five minutes. Season the chops with the salt and pepper.

Spoon remaining fresh marinade over chops. Sprinkle with a little parsley, if desired.



Enjoy!



In the interest of full disclosure, I have to tell her that Christiane’s Cherry Port Glazed Pork Loin Roast, Avocado Salad with Spicy Cilantro and Red Chili Salsa, Bistro Steak with Red Wine Sauce and Red Wine Braised Short Ribs were all strong contenders to fit our Red February theme. But the pork chops won!

Many thanks to the organizers of the Blogger C.L.U.E. Society challenge each month, Christiane from Taking on Magazines, Liz from That Skinny Chick Can Bake and Kate from Kate’s Kitchen.

If you are planning a special meal for Valentine’s Day or perhaps for one of the upcoming red carpet television-watching events, look no further for inspiration. Today, seeing RED is a good thing:

If you'd like to stalk Christiane online, you can find her here:

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