Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Sausage and Lentil stew

This was ridiculously good and despite the meat content, didn't feel greasy at all. Fall perfect and worth a definite repeat. We followed this and this recipe among others but mostly for procedure since I used neither the type of lentils nor the type of sausages they recommended.

Ingredients

  • Smallest packet smoked pork belly, chopped or pancetta
  • 2 packets fresh and cheap sausages (high meat content), sausages cut into 1" pieces (We used salsiccia for this first attempt
  • 2 onions, chopped
  • 2 large carrot, chopped into small pieces
  • 8 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
  • 2 Tbsp dried rosemary 
  • 300g dried green/ brown lentils, soaked ~ 30 minutes. 
  • 850ml chicken stock
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 400g can diced tomatoes
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh or frozen flatleaf parsley or scallions

Method 

  1. Add the chopped pork belly/ pancetta to a heated dutch oven. Once some oil is released add the sausages and cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally until nicely browned. Transfer the sausages out on to a plate.
  2. Add the onions, carrot and garlic to the pancetta/pork belly and continue to cook for 10 minutes until the onions soften. 
  3. Return the sausages to the pan and add the rosemary, lentils, stock, vinegar and tomatoes. Season with salt and pepper. Bring to the boil and simmer rapidly for 5 minutes, then lower the heat, cover and simmer for 45 minutes, stirring every so often until the lentils are tender. 
  4. Check the seasoning, scatter over the parsley or scallions.

Chicken, Kale and Mushroom pot pie

This recipe is from here. It was unexpectedly brilliant and I think it is going to make it to our regular rotation of dishes. The main changes from the recipe that we made were that we made more for leftovers, we will add more cornstarch next time, since it was runny and that we will make it with more puff pastry on the top.

Ingredients

  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 large onion, finely chopped
  • 2 Tbsp dried or frozen thyme
  • 6 garlic cloves, crushed and finely chopped
  • 900g chicken breasts, cut into small chunks
  • 500g mushrooms (brown or white, but brown preferred for colour), sliced
  • 600ml chicken stock
  • 200g crème fraîche
  • 2 tbsp wholegrain mustard
  • 300g kale
  • 4.5 tsp cornflour, mixed with 2.5 tbsp cold water
  • 500g pack puff pastry, laid out in sheets and thawed
  • 1 egg yolk, to glaze

Method

  1. Heat oven to 200C. Heat oil at medium heat in a large vessel. Add the onion and cook for 5 mins until transparent and soft. Scatter over the thyme and garlic, and stir for a few minutes. 
  2. Turn up the heat and add the chicken, frying until golden but not fully cooked. 
  3. Add the mushrooms and the remaining oil and fry for a few minutes. 
  4. Add the stock, crème fraîche, mustard and kale, and season well. Add the cornflour mixture and stir until thickened a little. If this doesn't thicken, add more cornstarch, this is how runny the final pie filling will be. 
  5. Remove from the heat and transfer to a baking dish. Cover the top of the dish with the puff pastry lid, pressing into the sides of the dish. Bake for 40 mins until the pastry is puffed up and golden.

Monday, October 24, 2016

Brazilian Feijoada

I've made this recipe 3-4 times now and it is this rich, fatty stew that is perfect for cold fall or snow days. It is very flavourful but has very little spice. I followed a couple of different recipes for this over the years but this is a good basis. Major differences are that I usually use this recipe as a vehicle for goan sausage and I use canned black beans instead of fresh. We also love the braised kale/collard greens recipe that is traditionally served with this.

Ingredients

  • 3-4 cans of black beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 pack streaky smoked bacon, cut into slices or 1 pack of smoked pork belly, cut into chunks
  • 500g-1000g pork rib or pork shoulder or some other cheap, tough cut of pork
  • 3 chorizo cooking sausages/ 1 pack goan sausages/ 1 pack chorizo
  • 800g-1.5kg brined bone-in pork leg (rimmat fläsklägg), soaked in water for a few hours, skin removed, cut into a few large pieces
  • 3 onion, chopped
  • 8 garlic clove, smashed
  • Few pinches of chilli flakes
  • olive oil, for cooking
  • 4 bay leaf
  • 4 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • To serve: steamed rice, chopped parsley or spring onions and wedges of oranges

Method

  1. Heat a large heavy-based dutch oven and add the bacon/ pork belly and fry until crisp. Remove and keep the oil in the pan. In batches sear the brined pork, sausages and pork shoulder/ribs. Season with pepper, but because of the brined pork, do not salt until the very end. 
  2. Remove the meat and set aside. Add the onion, garlic and bay leaves to the dutch oven and fry for 8-12 mins or until soft. 
  3. Add the meat, bay leaves, white wine vinegar, chilli flakes and half the beans. Cover with just enough water to cover, about 1000ml. Bring to a boil and reduce the heat to a low simmer. Cover and cook for 2 hrs, or until the meat is tender. If there is too much liquid in the pot take the lid off in the last hr. Add the remaining beans for the last hour. 
  4. In the last 15 minutes, remove the meat pieces and shred them into large chunks and remove the bones and bay leaves. Spoon a few table spoons of th
    e beans into a bowl and smash with a fork or pulse in a blender and add back to the stew. 
  5. Taste and add salt as needed (I've never needed to add salt) 
  6. You can also use a slow cooker (4 hr) starting at the end of step 3.
Update 2023: I have now made this many times, most recently with sausage I picked up in Lisbon, fresh sausage, without rimmat fläsk, just fläsk karre. Also, apple cider vinegar instead of white wine. Made no difference, it was still delicious. 
 
I followed this recipe and we had yummy collard greens on the side with slices of orange.  

Monday, July 11, 2016

Slow cooker lamb Rogan Josh

Our grocery store had a sale on lamb and so I picked up a 1.6kg (3.5lb) chunk and didn't know what to do with it. My problem with lamb is that it can taste overwhelmingly of...lamb? wool? Not sure. It doesn't always taste strongly but when it does I'm not a huge fan. So, I decided to go with strong spices and the slow cooker. I combined two different recipes. Recipe 1 which did lots of things that sounded good and Recipe 2 which sounded really authentic. My combined recipe is below. It was super spicy, so I would reduce the number of dried red chillis when I make it again.

Ingredients

  • 1.6kg boneless lamb leg, cut into large chunks
  • 3 large potatoes (totally optional), cut into large chunks
  • 1-2 red onions, chopped
  • 1 cup Yogurt
  • Vinegar
  • Ginger chopped or paste
  • Garlic chopped or paste

Masala 

  • 1"-2" piece of cinnamon
  • 5 whole green cardamom pods
  • 3/4 teaspoon whole cloves
  • 3/4 teaspoon whole fennel seeds
  • 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns
  • 5 dried red chillies
  • 2 large or 3 small star anise
  • 1 black cardamom pod
  • 1 teaspoon paprika powder

Method

  1. Grind together ingredients for the masala
  2. Add the lamb chunks, the spice powder from above and salt to a bowl and shake around until the lamb chunks are coated well. This sat for about an hour and I guess it marinated, but that wasn't intentional. I was mostly chopping other stuff and being lazy.
  3. Fry the onions and once they are caramelized, add ginger and garlic chopped or paste and fry for 5 minutes on a low to medium heat. I added about 5 cloves of finely chopped garlic and a tablespoon of ginger paste. The ginger paste was probably about 2" worth.
  4. Add the lamb chunks and fry until some of the chunks get some surface. (This is to get some flavor out of the Mallaird reaction, but I wasn't thorough about browning all the lamb)
  5. Splash in some vinegar. I had some red wine vinegar. I'm fairly sure the type of vinegar won't matter.
  6. Add everything to the slow cooker and toss in the potato chunks and stir to coat and cook on high for 6 hours.
  7. An hour before completion, stir in the Yogurt.
I think 5 or 5.5 hours would have been better, not because it dried out, at all, but because the pieces were almost too falling apart. I ate it over rice with Yogurt because I needed Yogurt to cut the heat of the chilies. It was hot and yummy and kept us warm during the snow.

Update October 2016: We have now also made this with pork shoulder as well and it tasted excellent. So either protein is fine to use with this recipe. 

Slow cooked Beef Panang curry a la Madam Mam's

This started out as an attempt to recreate Madam Mam's slow cooked beef panang. It is the best thing ever and I've always wanted to try to replicate it. This was a pretty good attempt and it was seriously delicious. We ate it with quinoa, but it will definitely be awesome with white rice too. I used beef chuck for this attempt, but I suspect brisket would actually be a better cut for it. The last three ingredients are added to taste. The basil, especially, develops over time, so it will get stronger in the left overs, keep that in mind when you are adding the leaves.
This dish was a complete experiment and I'm pretty sure it would actually be ok even with just throwing everything into the slow cooker together, but I tried to replicate the beginning of thai curries in pots and used the slow cooker for the long low heat step.

Ingredients


beef chuck, sliced into thick slices
Panang curry paste (from the store, Mae ploy brand) (~3 Tbsp)
two onions, finely chopped
can of coconut milk
brown sugar
thai basil, fresh
fish sauce/salt

Method


1) Heat about a tablespoon of oil and fry a couple of table spoons of the panang curry paste in the hot oil (I had about a kilo of beef) for about two minutes (The smell of the paste will change from raw and thats when it is ready)
2) Add half the can of coconut milk to the paste and cook for a few minutes
3) Add the chopped onions to the sauce for a few minutes
4) Add the sliced beef in and coat in the sauce and add to the slow cooker and cook on high for 6 hours
5) After 5 hours add the rest of the coconut milk, fish sauce/salt, brown sugar, lime juice and sliced basil leaves till it tastes right.
6) After a little more bubbling we ate it served over rice. It was delicious.

Slow cooker Sichuan pork shoulder noodle soup

I saw this recipe and it looked awesome, so I just made it in the slow cooker. My recipe is adapted for my pantry and the slow cooker.
I used boston butt in mine (it was on sale), but I suspect it would work with other fattier, tougher cuts of pork as well.
It was very tasty and very spicy. If you're going to try this recipe and sichuanese food isn't your fave, I would cut wa-ay down on the chilli paste. My apartment smells like a chinese restaurant and it makes me really happy right now. Specially since its really cold and really grey and this is exactly what I would have wanted to go out for!
We cook a lot of chinese food so we already had toban jiang in the fridge, but its actually pretty commonly available at stores in the ethnic/asian section. If you have sambal olek that works really well too as a substitute, though I personally think sambal is a little spicier. We did not have black vinegar so I googled a substitute and balsamic+some other vinegar+sugar seems to do the trick. I also added a tablespoon of brown sugar instead of one of the tablespoons of white sugar. I have no idea if that helped. I first cooked it for 4 hours and the pork was very done, but not falling apart, so we let it go for another 45 minutes.
If I make this again, I would also dry roast and crush a few sichuan peppers and sprinkle them on the soup after it cooks.

Ingredients

2lbs pork shoulder-cut into 1" pieces
12 cloves garlic, chopped
3" fresh ginger piece, peeled and chopped
4 Tbsp Toban jiang
1/3 cup red vinegar+balsamic vinegar (or chinkiang)
4 Tbsp sugar
3 Tbsp soy sauce
3 Tbsp cornstarch
4 scallions

Method

1) Add a little oil to a pan and on high heat fry off the pork pieces. I waited till they were browned (5-6 minutes). Don't crowd the pan. I actually removed about a fourth of the pieces after they were seared and dumped them into the slow cooker and proceeded with the rest.
2) Toss in the ginger, garlic and chilli paste and toss the pork around to coat. Cook for about a minute, still at high heat.
3) Add in the soy sauce, vinegar and sugar and stir them around for 3-4 minutes until the sugar dissolves.
4) Add everything to the slow cooker along with 8 cups of water.
5) Cook on high for 4-6 hours.
6) Take out about half the liquid and boil it on the stove and add cornstarch dissolved in water until it thickens. Add it back to the rest of the soup.
6) Serve with noodles and chopped scallions.
7) If you prefer to remove some of the fat, let the soup cool either in the slow cooker or in the fridge and then skim off the fat from the top.

Slow cooker Moroccan chicken stew with butternut squash

This recipe isn't unique and a quick google search yields lots of variations, but this is how I make it, most of the time. It is moroccan themed and is warm and hearty. I probably shouldn't have added the raisins at the very beginning, but they were still yummy so thats an extra step cut out! I also added only a third of a cup of stock and the stew was quite thick, which is how I like it, but thats a personal preference. I used butternut squash in this but I suspect it would work just as well with pumpkin or acorn squash.

Ingredients:

1 Small butternut squash, peeled and cubed
1kg Chicken thighs (~8, bone-in, skinned)
2 small onions, diced
6 cloves of garlic, chopped
1" piece of ginger, chopped
1 can garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed
1/3 cup stock
squeeze of tomato puree
Raisins
Spices (garam masala, paprika, chilli flakes, cumin powder, nutmeg, cinnamon)

Method:

1) Brown the chopped onions, garlic and ginger in a little oil on high heat (~7 minutes)
2) Add everything to the slow cooker. The only thing I was careful about was that the chicken wasn't on the very bottom.
3) I added the spices by eye, but it was perhaps about a teaspoon of garam masala, salt, cumin powder and 1/2 and teaspoon of paprika and chilli flakes and a shake of nutmeg and cinnamon powder.
4) On high for 3.5-4 hours.
5) Garnish with chopped parsley and eat with crusty buttered bread. It also works really well with couscous. 

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Chorizo Apple Mustard Puffs

This recipe is from here. We modified it as follows but if I make this again (and I probably will make this again because it was yummacious), I will probably take the casing off the sausages, but won't separate the meat more than that. I enjoyed the pig in a blanket style of leaving the sausages whole but the skins were difficult to bite through.

Ingredients

Small pat of butter
1 apple, finely diced
8 small raw chorizo sausages
small handful parsley, chopped
400g pack puff pastry (4 plates cut in half)
1 egg, beaten
1tsp-ish Dijon mustard 

Method

  1. Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. 
  2. Put the butter and apple in a small pan and cook for 5 mins until the apple has softened, then cool. Then mash until its chunky but small chunks.
  3. Mix in finely chopped parsley and a tsp-ish (more is probably better) of dijon mustard.
  4. Thaw the puff pastry plates spread out individually until they are soft and pliable, but before they reach room temperature. Cut each one in half.
  5. Add a spoon-ish of the apple mix and a sausage into each plate and then pull the plates and seal the edges around the filling.
  6. Spray the baking tray down with butter, brush the tops with egg and then bake for 40 minutes. Around 15 minutes in, you should probably pull out the baking tray and remove the excess liquid and then pop them back in.