Friday, November 17, 2017

Sriracha fish tacos

We based these off a shrimp taco recipe at Delish, but took as many shortcuts as we dared to. Also, breaded rödspetta instead of shrimps.

Ingredients

Coleslaw

  • 1/2 tsp. sesame oil
  • 1 tsp. honey
  • 2 limes
  • kosher salt
  • 2 c. shredded purple cabbage
  • 1/4 c. fresh chopped cilantro

 The fish

  • Frozen rödspetta
  • Panko, potato chips, egg, flour
  • Sriracha mayo

Method

  1. Zest the lime, and add the zest and lime juice to the sesame oil and honey. Season with half a teaspoon of salt. Mix with the shredded cabbage and cilantro. Set aside.
  2. Batter fry the fish. Tasty Japan normally does egg, flour, panko, egg, panko.
  3. Slice the fish and eat with sriracha mayo, corn tortillas, and coleslaw.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Kerala pork curry

This is more of a Kerala inspired pork curry recipe than an actual one. We had a bunch of left over dosa batter and a piece of karré that needed using and et voila. I googled around and matched recipes with the ingredients that I had. Since I was basically making up the recipe I chose not to grind the spices but the pressure cooker was unavoidable else this would have been a 3-4 hour long cook time as opposed to the one hour in toto that this was.

Ingredients

  • 1.5 kg karré (or boston butt or picnicbog or pork shoulder etc)
  • 3.5 tsp ginger garlic paste
  • 2 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 3 Tbsp light soy sauce
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 250g shallots sliced, not too finely
  • 2 large onions sliced, not too finely
  • 2 large tomatoes, chopped
  • 2 large or 4 small potatoes, chopped
  • 1.5 tsp mustard seeds
  • 0.5 tsp fenugreek seeds
  • 0.5 tsp coriander seeds
  • 0.5-1 tsp fennel seeds
  • 0.5-1 tsp peppercorns
  • 2 sprigs curry leaves
  • 3-4 green chillis, chopped
  • 3.5 tsp ginger garlic paste
  • 2 Tbps coriander powder
  • 2-3 Tbsps meat masala powder (I used goan mutton masala)
  • Salt

Method

  1. Cut the pork into 1" ish chunks and marinate with about two teaspoons of salt, one teaspoon of turmeric, 1.5 tsp of ginger garlic paste and the vinegar and the soy sauce. Mix well and leave at room temperature for a bit or in the fridge if longer than an hour.
  2. Heat a teaspoon of oil in a pressure cooker and add the marinated pork. No need to fry the pieces. Add two cups of water and pressure cook the meat. (For this amount and this type of meat I pressure cooked for 20 minutes after the first whistle on medium heat)
  3. In a pan heat up oil and add a teaspoon and a half of mustard seeds followed by half a teaspoon of fenugreek seeds, half a teaspoon of coriander seeds, 3/4 teaspoon fennel seeds and about 20 peppercorns. 
  4. Now add a handful of curry leaves. Since I was using frozen curry leaves, this is a total guesstimate. 
  5. Now add the onions and a dash of salt and fry until golden brown.
  6. Add the chopped green chillis and ginger garlic paste when the onions are light brown and cook until the raw smell disappears and the onions and golden brown.
  7. Next, add the masala powders and cook for a few minutes, then the potatoes and then the tomatoes and the tomato paste, stirring and cooking for a few minutes after each addition.
  8. Cover and cook for about 10 minutes on a medium-low heat until the tomatoes and squishy and the masala is beginning to look cohesive
  9. Add the pork along with the water and cook for 15 minutes on medium heat to thicken and reduce the liquid if need be. If the meat doesn't feel tender enough, cook covered for longer or pressure cook the meat again for a few more whistles
  10. Mash a few pieces of the potato to thicken the gravy and cook a few more minutes
  11. Serve with dosa or idli or appams or rice or roti. It's all good. 

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Slow cooker Dal Makhani

This recipe satisfied two wishes for me. One was to make more desi food in the slow cooker and the second was to make more vegetarian food in the slow cooker. Since dal makhani is slow cooked to begin with, the transition to the slow cooker seems like the natural evolution. For this recipe I looked at this, this and this for inspiration. I'm not sure if the kashmiri red chillis actually do anything, but I have them and I like using them. The one criticism I had of my finished daal was that it didn't have a smokey flavour. If I do this again I will add a dash of smoked paprika to add this. This is reflected in the recipe below.

Ingredients

First Step:
  • 1.5 cups whole black urad daal
  • 3 tbsp channa dal
  • 3 tbsp ghee 
  • 2.5 tsp ginger garlic paste
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 6 cups water
  • 2 whole Kashmiri red chillis
Second Step:
  • 2 cans red kidney beans
  • 1 can pureed tomatoes
  • 1/2 tsp nutmeg powder
  • 3/4 tsp garam masala
  • 1.5 tsp roasted cumin powder
  • 2.5 tbsp kasuri methi 
  • 1/2 tsp red chilli powder
  • 1 tsp kashmiri red chilli powder
  • 1/2 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp amchoor powder 
  • 3-4 tbsp butter
  • 1/2 tsp black salt 
  • 1.5 tsp ground coriander
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
Before serving:
  • 1 cup cream
  • cilantro- fresh or frozen

Instructions

  1. Wash the daals and add them to the slow cooker with all the ingredients in step 1. 
  2. Cook on low overnight. For me this amounted to about 9 hours.
  3. Mash the daal a bit with the back of the spoon and then add all the ingredients in step 2.
  4. Cook on low for a further 4-6 hours.
  5. The dal is now ready. I usually add the cream right before I serve.


Thursday, July 20, 2017

Japanese Chinese-style fried chicken

This recipe is from Buzzfeed Japan's video, on youtube here. It is fantastically good and unlike a lot of their other yummy recipes does not involve deep frying. I've written it down so that I don't have to go to their video and play and pause it repeatedly every single time I want to make this! I only have access to bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs so I learned how to debone them from here.





Ingredients

Chicken Marinade:

  • 8 Skin-on, boneless chicken thighs
  • 4 tsp Minced ginger
  • 4 tsp Minced Garlic
  • 3 tsp salt
  • 8 tbsp rice wine vinegar or Sake

Sauce:

  • 8 tbsp light soy sauce
  • 8 tbsp vinegar (I've used everything from rice wine to apple cider)
  • 4 tbsp sesame oil
  • 4 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tsp minced ginger
  • 1 tsp minced garlic
  • 4-5 scallions, finely diced
  • 2-3 red peppers finely sliced
Potato flour
Frying oil

Method

  1. Debone the chicken and cut off excess skin and fat. Cut small gashes through the skin and meat.
  2. Marinate the chicken with the other ingredients under marinade for ~30 minutes. I marinate covered in the fridge if its going to be longer
  3. Mix the ingredients under sauce together to make the sauce
  4. Coat the chicken thighs in potato flour. 
  5. Add a couple of table spoons oil to a frying pan and heat.
  6.  Fry the thighs on medium heat, first skin side down for 5-7 minutes and then flip for 5-7 minutes.
  7. Cut into slices and serve on rice with the sauce on the side or on top.

Curry chicken salad

This is one of the yummiest non-salad salad recipes I know. It makes a good, cool albeit filling lunch on hot days. This recipe is variously inspired by this, this and a Waldorf Salad. We don't add celery to our salad since one of us is a celery supertaster but celery is perfect in this if you aren't similarly hindered. Most recipes I've seen online use chicken breast that they cook but I've always used rotisserie chicken-- its just way more convenient. The grapes can be replaced by apples and its still delish.

Ingredients


  • 250 g seedless grapes
  • 1 cucumber
  • 1-2 tomatoes
  • 1/2-1 red onion
  • 1-2 limes, juiced
  • 1, 1 kg Rotisserie chicken
  • 2 handfulls walnuts
  • 1 jar Hellmans Mayonaise (this is to taste) 
  • Ginger powder (optional)
  • Curry Powder
  • Pepper

Method


  1. Dice the cucumber, tomatoes and onion finely and add to a large bowl
  2. Quarter the grapes and add to the bowl
  3. Toast, cool and chop the walnuts and add to the mixing bowl
  4. Remove the chicken meat from the bones (skin is up to taste, we usually remove) , chop and add to the bowl
  5. Add lime juice, half the mayo, a half tsp curry power, a pinch or two ginger powder and pepper and mix all the ingredients together
  6. Adjust seasonings according to taste. Add extra mayo if need be. The texture should be smooth and creamy. You can, of course, use low fat mayo, but really, you only live once. 

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Sausage and Bean stew

This recipe is a variation of this recipe. We used Salsiccia sausages and stora vita bönor, which we substituted for lima beans. I don't know if these are the same or different.

Ingredients:

  • Cooking oil
  • 900g-1kg Raw salsiccia sausage
  • 1 pack bacon
  • 4 onions, sliced
  • 6 garlic cloves, sliced
  • 2 tsp hot chilli powder or smoked paprika
  • 2, 400g crushed canned tomatoes
  • 300ml chicken stock
  • 4 tbsp tomato purée
  • 3 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 4 tbsp dark brown muscovado sugar
  • 3 tsp dried mixed herbs
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 3–4 tsp frozen thyme
  • 200ml water
  • 3, 400g big white bean cans
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper

Method

  1. Cook the sausages for 10 minutes on medium high heat until brown on all sides and set aside.
  2. Fry the bacon pieces in the frying pan until they begin to brown
  3. Place the onions in the frying pan and fry over a medium heat for until they start to soften.
  4. Add the garlic and cook for 2–3 minutes more until the onions turn pale golden-brown.
  5. Sprinkle over the chilli powder or smoked paprika and cook together for a few more minutes.
  6. Stir in the tomatoes, chicken stock, tomato purée, Worcestershire sauce, brown sugar and herbs.
  7. Pour over the water and bring to a simmer.
  8. Use a pair of kitchen scissors to cut the sausages into thick discs and add the sliced sausages and bacon to the stew. Let it cook on low heat for 20 minutes.
  9. Drain the beans and rinse. Stir the beans into the casserole, and continue to cook for 10 more minutes or on very low heat until the sauce is thick. 
  10. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper

Karnataka-style slow cooker pork curry

This recipe is inspired by this recipe. I wanted a genuine, spicy indian pork curry that I could make in the slow cooker. This recipe worked really well! I've made it twice now, once with picnic bog and once with Karre and the karre worked much better. These are both swedish cuts of pork. If you're in the states, boston butt or any pork shoulder cut with adequate fat that works in the slow cooker should work. My variation uses only one pan for the initial step.

Ingredients:

Spice Blend:


  • 3 teaspoons cumin seeds
  • 3 teaspoons coriander seeds (or two teaspoons coriander powder)
  • 6 cloves
  • 2" cinnamon stick
  • 2 teaspoon fennel seeds
  • 20 black peppercorns
  • 2tsp brown mustard seeds

Curry: 


  • 2" peeled and roughly chopped root ginger
  • 10 garlic cloves
  • 2 tomatoes, quartered
  • cooking oil
  • 1 tsp brown mustard seeds
  • 2 sprigs curry leaves
  • 4 onions, finely chopped
  • 3 green chillies, stalks removed, pierced with a knife
  • 1 teaspoon ground turmeric
  • 2 dried red chillis
  • salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon kashmiri chilli powder, (optional)
  • 1-1.5kg pork shoulder, cut into cubes, with some fat
  • 0.5 cup vinegar (I've used both apple cider and white, no real preference)
  • 1 can coconut milk

Method:


  1. Cut the pork into large chunks and salt and pepper the meat.
  2. Fry the pork chunks for about 6-7 minutes on each side on medium heat
  3. Turn off the heat. In the remaining hot oil, add all the spices under spice blend. After about 5 minutes, scrape the spices into the spice blender and blend. Add vinegar to make the spice blend liquid.
  4. Turn the heat back on. Add mustard seeds to the hot oil and when it sputters, add dried red chillis and then the curry leaves. Fry for a few minutes
  5. Add the onions and fry until well browned. 
  6. Now add in the kashmiri red chilli powder and fry for a minute or two and then add in the spice mix. 
  7. In the spice blender throw in the ginger, tomatoes, garlic and red chillis and blend
  8. Toss the blended mix into the curry as well
  9. Fry this on medium-high heat until the mix begins to thicken and release oil
  10. Add this masala and the pork pieces to the slow cooker 
  11. Cook on high for 3-4 hours. Test at 2 hours for doneness. 
  12. When done, add the can of coconut milk and let the curry cook in the slow cooker without a lid for about 30 minutes.


Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Lasagna Bolognese

This is the standard lasagna I always make, written down so I no longer have to depend on Barilla's packaging for the proportions. The recipe is very simple, just make a Bolognese sauce and a Bechamel, and layer Bolognese, lasagna plate, Bechamel and cheese until you can't fit any more.

Meat sauce

Ingredients

  • Mince meat (usually beef/pork mix when we make it), 500g
  • Canned tomatos, 2 cans
  • Two onions
  • Garlic
  • Fennel seeds
  • Herbs - oregano, rosemary, bay leaf, etc.

Method

  1. Chop onions and garlic.
  2. Fry meat on high so it browns.
  3. Remove meat. Add fennel seeds and bay leaf to the oil and let them fry a bit.
  4. Add onions and fry until translucent. Add garlic after a bit.
  5. Add back meat, add tomatoes.
  6. Add herbs, salt and pepper.
  7. Let bubble for maybe 40 minutes.

Bechamel

Ingredients

  • Flour, 50g
  • Butter, 50g
  • Milk, 0.9 liters
  • Salt
  • Nutmeg

Method

  1. Melt the butter in a thick-bottomed pan.
  2. Add in the flour. Mix and stir it around until you have a really nice and dark roux.
  3. Meanwhile, heat the milk. Add in the milk while whisking. Add salt and nutmeg.
  4. Bring to a boil while stirring, until the sauce thickens.

Lasagna

Methods

  1. Set the oven for 220 'C.
  2. Grease a big pan.
  3. Add bechamel and meat sauce. Cover with lasagna sheets. Repeat (and add cheese) until dish is full. Put lots of cheese and bechamel on the final layer.
  4. Bake in oven for 20 minutes.

Monday, May 1, 2017

Ottolenghi's Chicken Pilaf

This is from Ottolengi and Tamimi's book Jerusalem which we bought a few years ago but didn't actually like until we found this recipe recently! For modifications on the recipe I looked at this and other pages but ultimately came up with my own proportions.

The recipe calls for bone-in, skin-on chicken but I've used boneless skinless chicken thighs both times I've made this and its worked very well. I suspect bone-in would work better. I don't like chicken skin. The original recipe calls for about 2 cups of rice and 1.8 times the amount of water cooked for 30 minutes on low, but I've found I've needed to add a little more water and cook for a little longer, averaging 45 minutes both times.

Ingredients


  • 75g Cranberries
  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 onions, finely sliced 
  • 4 cloves garlic, sliced
  • 1.5 kg chicken thighs
  • 14 cardamom pods
  • 0.5 tsp whole cloves
  • 2 long cinnamon sticks, broken in two
  • 2.5 cups basmati rice
  • 5 cups boiling water
  • 5 tbsp parsley, chopped
  • 5 tbsp  dill, chopped
  • 5 tbsp coriander, chopped
  • 100g Greek yoghurt, mixed with 2 tbsp olive oil (optional)
  • 1/2 cucumber grated and drained
  • Salt and black pepper

Method

  1. Marinate the chicken with the cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, a tsp of salt and 1.5tsp of pepper and the olive oil
  2. Fry the chicken in a dutch oven or large cooking dish for about 5-7 minutes on each side until you get a nice brown crust and the meat is about half cooked (Medium-high heat 7).
  3. Remove the chicken leaving behind the oil and most of the spices.
  4. Add the onions to the oil and fry for about 10 minutes, adding the garlic about halfway through (medium heat 5)
  5. Now add in the cranberries and rice and fry around for a few minutes. 
  6. Now add in the hot water and the chicken and about 2.5 tsp salt.
  7. Push the chicken into the rice, cover the pot and lower the heat (3) and leave for ~ 30 minutes
  8. Check a few grains of rice and if needed add a few tbsps more of water and cover and cook for another 15 minutes.
  9. Once done, quickly place a clean dish cloth over the top of the pot and recover with the lid and leave for 10 minutes
  10. Add the dill, parsley and coriander and turn the rice and meat over gently to incorporate evenly
  11. Add the cucmber and a dash of olive oil to the yogurt and each on the side