Friday, September 15, 2017

Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad #FishFridayFoodies

Not the traditional French recipe from Nice, this Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad is going to be a favorite for folks who aren’t crazy about canned tuna. Lightly grilled fresh tuna brings a lovely freshness to the plate which includes potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, artichokes, olives and mixed greens.

Food Lust People Love: Not the traditional French recipe from Nice, this Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad is going to be a favorite for folks who aren’t crazy about canned tuna. Lightly grilled fresh tuna brings a lovely freshness to the plate which includes potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, artichokes, olives and mixed greens.

This month my Fish Friday Foodies group is creating recipes with grilled seafood but, frankly, it’s still pretty hot here in Dubai to stand over a scorching charcoal grill. Fortunately, when I asked our organizer and this month's host, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm if something cooked on a grill pan would be okay, she responded positively.

This is another one of those salads that makes a whole meal. It will easily served three to four people as a main course, perhaps with warm bread or dessert to fill out the meal, or six to eight as a starter.

Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad

Ingredients
For the salad:
8-10 quail eggs, boiled, peeled and chilled (This can be done the day before.)
7 oz or 200g fine green beans, stems removed
450g or 1 lb baby potatoes
1 jar small artichokes, well drained (5 2/3 oz or 160g, drained weight)
8.5 oz or 240g fresh tuna steak
1 tablespoon lime juice
Drizzle olive oil
Sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup or 80g kalamata olives, unpitted
Mixed greens (I used baby cos and arugula.)
5 oz or 140g mixed cherry tomatoes

For the mustard vinaigrette: (Makes just under a 1/2 cup or 115ml)
3 tablespoons white wine vinegar
5 tablespoons good quality olive oil
1 teaspoon strong Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon whole grain mustard
1/4 teaspoon salt
a few grinds of fresh black pepper

Method
Put a large pot of water on to boil with a teaspoon or two of the sea salt. Fill a medium sized bowl with ice and water and set aside.

When the pot of water comes to the boil, put the green beans in for 2 minutes. Fish them out with a slotted spoon and put them directly into the bowl of ice water.


Carefully add the potatoes to the boiling water (you do not want to splash yourself!) and cook till just tender, about 15-20 minutes.

Meanwhile make the vinaigrette by adding all of the ingredients into a clean jar and shaking good till they are combined.


Drain the potatoes and put them in a small bowl. Use a sharp knife to cut them into halves, then pour half of the vinaigrette over then, and stir to coat. Set aside to cool.


After you drain the small artichokes, set them upside down on paper towels to absorb even more of the excess water.

As you prepare the rest of the salad, return to the potatoes occasionally and give them another gentle stir. This helps them cool faster as well as making sure that the dressing is being absorbed.

Dry the tuna off with paper towels, then rub it with the lime juice. Drizzle on a little olive oil then season it with a healthy sprinkle of sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.


Heat your grill pan over a high heat for a few minutes. It’s ready when a drop of water instantly vaporizes.

Grill the tuna steak for 1 1/2 minutes each side, then just 20 more seconds on the first side. Set it to cool on a clean cutting board.


Use the side of a knife to smash the olives so you can remove the pits.


On a large platter, begin assembling the salad. Start with the greens, then slowly build up.


Try to distribute all the ingredients, except the tuna and quail eggs, evenly around the platter.


Use a very sharp knife to cut the tuna into slices and lay them on the salad.


Use a spoon to drizzle on more of the salad dressing.

Food Lust People Love: Not the traditional French recipe from Nice, this Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad is going to be a favorite for folks who aren’t crazy about canned tuna. Lightly grilled fresh tuna brings a lovely freshness to the plate which includes potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, artichokes, olives and mixed greens.

Finally, half the quail eggs with a sharp knife and add them to the top. We like our egg yolks runny so I gave these pretty much the same treatment as the green beans with just 2 minutes in boiling water, then an ice water bath to stop the cooking.

Food Lust People Love: Not the traditional French recipe from Nice, this Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad is going to be a favorite for folks who aren’t crazy about canned tuna. Lightly grilled fresh tuna brings a lovely freshness to the plate which includes potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, artichokes, olives and mixed greens.

Enjoy!

Check out all the other lovely grilled seafood dishes we have for you today!



Pin it! 

Food Lust People Love: Not the traditional French recipe from Nice, this Grilled Tuna Niçoise Salad is going to be a favorite for folks who aren’t crazy about canned tuna. Lightly grilled fresh tuna brings a lovely freshness to the plate which includes potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, artichokes, olives and mixed greens.
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Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Four Alarm Texas Chili #FoodBloggers4TX

Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.

Food Lust People Love: Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.

Here’s a little story about Texas chili.

The year was circa 2002 on a hot and humid Houston summer evening. My sister had come over for a visit with a pot of chili with beans in tow. You see, she didn’t want to leave it simmering home alone, so she popped it on my stove and turned the heat to low. Those durn beans still weren’t cooked when it was nearing time for bed, so I cooled the pot off and put it in the refrigerator for the night.

The next morning, I put the chili to simmering again. It was summer so our pace was slower than normal but suddenly I realized it was almost time for tennis camp. Our youngest was spending the morning practicing her tennis stroke and serve with friends at a local club.

We scurried around, gathering equipment, lacing up shoes, applying sun cream and dashed off in the car.

Leaving the chili behind on the stove. Still simmering.

Fast forward an hour or so later to a frantic call from my sister who is the first contact when our home fire alarm goes off at the central station.

“Come home! Your alarm is alarming and the firemen are on the way. I’ll meet you there!”

She lives just half a mile from the house so both she and the firemen beat me home by at least 15 minutes. She unlocked the door to billowing smoke. The first fireman then carried the smoking pot out of the house and into the backyard. (The rest of the house was fine. Thank God.)

As the smoke cleared, he peered into the pot. “What was your sister cooking?” he asked.

“Chili,” she replied, never hinting that it was actually her own pot.

“WITH BEANS?!” he responded at great volume, his eyebrows shooting up to his hairline.

And, she later informed me in a peal of laughter, that together they both tsk-tsked my absent self. After all, I grew up in Houston. I really should know better.  The nerve.

Food Lust People Love: Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.

As I say in my About Me, on this very blog:
“Houston, Texas is my hometown by virtue of sheer years of presence and family still living there: Texas is big and bold and independent and proud. It teaches never give up, never give up, never give up. If you grow up in Houston, Texas, you can go anywhere with confidence.”
As I watch the community efforts and stoic resilience in Houston and all of the affected areas after Hurricane Harvey, I believe that lesson was taught to, and taken to heart by, everyone in Texas.

Today a group of food bloggers is getting together to share Texas recipes, along with a list of possible places to donate time and/or money to help the recovery after Hurricane Harvey. These particular organizations have high scores (85-100 out of a possible 100) on Charity Navigator, which means most of the donations go to helpful services, instead of overhead or soliciting more funds. Or, by all means, give to the charity of your choice! Just check them out on Charity Navigator first.


Even more are listed in this NPR article: Looking to Help Those Affected by Harvey.

I've made traditional Texas chili - of course, completely beanless, for the occasion.

Four Alarm Texas Chili


Original Texas chili not only does not have beans, it doesn’t have tomatoes either. Yep, that’s right, no tomatoes either. It’s made with chunks of beef, simmered in blend of hot peppers, until tender. Another essential, at least as far as I am concerned, is cumin. I like to use whole cumin near the beginning, then add some ground cumin nearer the end. I call this four alarm Texas chili because it’s got four kinds of peppers, not because it’ll bring the firemen out. (Just don’t leave it home on the stove alone.) We like things spicy! I don’t even remove the seeds, but you surely can if you want to.

Ingredients
2 dried morita chilies, stems removed
2 small hot dried chilies like Arbol or Cascabel, stems removed
2 whole rich fruity dried chilies like Ancho, Mulatto, Negro, or Pasilla, seeds removed
2 whole Chipotle chilies canned in adobo sauce, plus 2 tablespoons sauce, seeds removed
1 kg or 2.2 lbs pounds beef chuck, trimmed of excess gristle and fat (reserve the fat and cut into small pieces)
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons butter (or more as needed)
1 large onion, finely diced
1 tablespoon whole cumin seeds
1 tablespoon ground cumin
2 tablespoons corn masa - this is the fine precooked corn meal that is used to make tortillas and tamales

To serve: grated cheese, minced onion, saltine crackers

Method
Crush the dried chilies up a little with your hands and put them in a measuring jug. Add boiling water up to the 1 cup or 240ml mark. Cover and set aside to soak.

Cut the beef into bite-sized pieces and season with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Small pile of chopped fat to the left. 


In a large pot, add the butter and the reserved, chopped fat. Render the fat over a low fire, until it starts frying and turns into liquid plus little crispy bits. Remove the crispy bits with a slotted spoon. (If you are feeling particularly devil-may-care about your heart health, sprinkle them with a little salt and eat them.)

Fry the beef in the rendered fat in at least three batches, until it is well browned on one side. Remove to a deep plate with the slotted spoon.

Sauté the chopped onion until softened in the fat, adding a little more butter if needed. Add in the whole cumin seeds and cook, stirring until they release their fragrance. Ah, smell that? Now we are cooking chili.


Add the chipotle peppers to the measuring jug and use a hand blender to puree all of the peppers into a smooth sauce. (Or put it all in a proper blender, if you don’t have a hand blender.)

Gorgeous color, right? 

Pour the pepper sauce into the onion pot and stir. Cook for a few minutes then add the meat back in. Stir well to coat the meat with the sauce.

Add 1 cup or 240ml water to the pot and bring it to a simmer.

Food Lust People Love: Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.

Cover and simmer for 2 hours, checking the water level and stirring occasionally. You do not want it to dry out. Add more water, if necessary.

Sprinkle in the cumin powder, stir and simmer for another 30 minutes or so, still covered.

To thicken the chili, whisk your two tablespoons of masa into about 1/4 cup or 60ml cold water in a small bowl. Use a ladle to add about 3/4 cup or 180ml thin chili gravy (leave the meat behind) to the bowl, whisking as each ladle is added.

After two small ladles. 


Pour the masa mixture into the chili pot. Cook over a medium low heat until the chili thickens, about 5 minutes.  Season with salt to taste and serve.

Food Lust People Love: Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.

Enjoy!

And let me also say, this was organized before Hurricane Irma swept in to devastate as she did. Another similar event is being planned to bring attention to those needs and the organizations that are trying hard to meet them.



Check out all of the great Texas recipes we are sharing today!




Pin it! 

Food Lust People Love: Lots of chilies, cumin and chunks of beef, cooked till tender - that's all you need for the most delicious four alarm Texas chili. A bowl of red and you'll taste the fiery spirit of Texas.
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Yemeni Kubaneh - Buttery Rolls #BreadBakers

A traditional bread, made from dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.

There appear to be as many recipes for Yemeni kubaneh as there are Yemeni mamas and grandmas.

When our international bread theme was chosen for this month’s Bread Bakers, I immediately started to research for an unfamiliar bread to test and bake. We were supposed to choose a bread from a country that is not our own but I decided to take that one step further and choose a recipe I'd never heard of before. In my search, I came across kubaneh first on Food52, and it was beautiful. Seriously, go have a look. Theirs is much prettier than mine.

The instructions, however, seemed a bit challenging to follow without step-by-step photos or a video. So down the rabbit hole of YouTube I went. So many recipes and so many methods! And different spellings: Kubane, kubaneh, kubana, kubani, kubneh. What they all seem to have in common is using lots of butter or margarine to create layers of thinly rolled or hand stretched dough before baking.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.


Although I didn’t follow the instructions or measurements exactly, this YouTube video (in Italian – the presenter - and Hebrew – the baker) was my best guide. You might find it helpful to watch as well. I gathered, from my faulty Italian (which is really just a mix of Portuguese and Spanish, since truth be told, I don't speak Italian) is that Yemeni kubaneh was originally part of the main family meal, which in Yemen is served in the middle of the day, rather than in the evening.

According to references, including Wikipedia, kubaneh is a Yemenite Jewish bread, found in many varieties throughout Yemen. And if the YouTube video and website ItaliaEbraica are any indication, Italy as well. I'm going to hazard a guess to say you'll probably find it being baked anywhere people of Jewish Yemeni heritage are living. Kubaneh was traditionally baked long and slow, in the embers of the evening fire, to be eaten the next day on the Sabbath. Nowadays, in all the YouTube videos I watched, it seems normal ovens are used.

Yemeni Kubaneh

This traditional Yemeni bread can be slightly sweetened by a sugar glaze, as this version is, or can be served with a tomato sauce.

Ingredients
For the bread dough:
1 1/4 cups or 300ml warm water
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons quick yeast
4 cups or 500g flour
1 tablespoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 eggs
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/3 cup or 75g butter, softened, plus some for the baking pan

For the sugar syrup:
2 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup or 60ml warm water

For garnish (and flavor):
1 teaspoon sesame seeds and/or 1 teaspoon nigella seeds (I used both.)

Method
In the bowl of your stand mixer or a large bowl, combine the sugar, yeast and warm water. Leave to proof for a few minutes.


When the foam and bubbles form, sift in the flour, baking soda and salt. According to the video, this eliminates the bugs and foreign objects.


Add in 1 whole egg and 1 egg yolk, reserving the second egg yolk. Mix till well combined and then knead until you have a stretchy bouncy dough.

Drizzle in 1 tablespoon of olive oil and form the dough into a ball, turning it to coat with the oil.



Cover with a cloth and set in a warm place to rise for 40 minutes.



Oil your clean work surface with the rest of the olive oil and turn the dough out onto it. Wet your hands and use them to divide the dough into 8 equal pieces.


Set your softened butter by your clean work surface. Use your hands to spread one of the dough pieces into a thin square. Top this with bits of butter, spreading it around. Don’t be shy with the butter. The dough may tear a little. Just pat it together again.

Repeat with a second piece of dough.


Then gently lift the second dough square and put it on top of the first one. Press them both out even larger.


Roll the dough up into a log, starting from end farthest from you. Set the log aside and continue the process with the other six pieces of dough.



You should now have four dough logs. Line a baking pan with baking parchment which you have rubbed with softened butter.

Using a sharp knife, cut the dough logs into 8 pieces each and fit these into the prepared pan, cut side up.


Drizzle a few drops of water into the reserved egg yolk and whisk to combine. Use a pastry brush to coat the dough with egg yolk. Sprinkle with the sesame and nigella seeds.


Cover with cling film and leave to rise in a warm place while you preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C.


Bake in the oven for 38-42 minutes, covering the pan with foil if the bread starts to brown too quickly.

Meanwhile, make the sugar syrup by dissolving the 2 tablespoons of sugar in 1/4 cup or 60ml hot water.

Remove the Yemeni kubaneh from the oven. Use a spoon to drip the sugar syrup glaze all over the bread.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.


Pop the pan back in the oven for another 5-6 minutes, watching it carefully so it doesn’t burn. Turn it midway through if your oven doesn’t heat evenly.

Allow to cool a bit before serving because apparently, the best way is to let everyone help themselves and pull a piece (or three) off.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.


Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.

Many thanks to our host today, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm for this great theme, and for all of her behind-the-scenes work. I am always delighted at the opportunity to learn something new and this Yemeni kubaneh was definitely that!

Check out all the other international breads we are sharing today:

BreadBakers
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. You can see all our of lovely bread by following our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated after each event on the #BreadBakers home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

Pin it!

Food Lust People Love: A traditional bread, made from yeast dough spread liberally with butter or margarine, Yemeni kubaneh bakes up light and fluffy. It’s perfect with your morning coffee or an afternoon cup of tea.
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