Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Braised Aubergine with pork, 鱼香茄子

This recipe fits with the current zeitgeist, since burned cars kinda reminds us of braised aubergines. 
The view from our window last night. mmm burned rubber? Smells like eggplant grilling!
This recipe is from Yan-Kit So's "Chinese" book(let). 

Ingredients

675g or 1.5lb; we usually use 2 medium sized eggplants
2-3 garlic cloves, chopped roughly
4 spring onions cut into 2" sections, white and green parts separated
250g minced pork
1 tbsp Shaoxing wine or medium-dry sherry
1/2 tsp cornflour
1 tbsp dark soy sauce
1/2 tsp sugar
1/2 cup chicken stock

Steps

  1. Cut the aubergines into 2" long and 1" wide sections and put into a colander. Sprinkle salt liberally over the pieces and let them rest for an hour. Then wash the pieces and dry.
  2. In a saucepan, heat a couple of table spoons of oil and, on medium heat, fry the eggplant pieces in batches, adding more oil as needed.
  3. Add some more oil to the pan and add the chopped garlic and the white scallion portion. Fry for about 10 seconds.
  4. Add the pork. Working quickly with your cooking spoon, separate the mince evenly so that it doesn't cook in large chunks. Stir around quickly. When the pork is cooked it will be opaque (around 4-5 minutes)
  5. Splash in the rice wine and add the cornflour and stir to coat the meat.
  6. Reduce the heat slightly and then add in the soy sauce, sugar and the stock. We usually add more stock, almost double. 
  7. Add the eggplant back into the pan. Lower the heat and cover the pan and cook for 10-15 minutes or until, as Yan Kit-So puts it, the eggplant is "meltingly tender".
  8. Garnish with the scallion green portions.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Anda ki sabzi

Ingredients

  • 10 eggs
  • cumin seeds
  • cream
  • 1 bell pepper
  • 3 onions
  • 2-3 tomatoes
  • turmeric
  • coriander powder
  • corn starch
  • garam masala powder

Method

  1. Boil and peel the eggs.
  2. Slice the onions and the capsica in slices of about equal length.
  3. Add oil and cumin seeds to the pan and heat until the cumin smells good.
  4. Add onions and fry on medium heat until they start looking soft (but not brown). Then add the capsicum. Continue frying until the capsicum starts looking a bit soft.
  5. Add tomatoes, a little turmeric and coriander powder. Fry for a bit.
  6. Add the eggs, cut in wedges.
  7. Just before serving, add cream and corn starch. Bring it to bubbling so the sauce thickens.
  8. Sprinkle with garam masala. Serve with rice.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Mapo doufu

I long ago lost track of how many times we've cooked this. It's one of our absolute favourites, for sure. A classic Chinese dish, that's just so so good.

Ingredients

  • 1.5 lbs soft of firm doufu, drained
  • 1/2 lb ground pork or beef
  • 2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
  • 1.5 tbs Shaoxing rice wine
  • 1/2 ts roasted sesame oil
  • 2 teaspoons Sichuan pepper corns
  • 1 tbs oil
  • 2 scallions
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 2 ts ginger, finely chopped
  • 1 tbs chile bean paste (we actually use sambal oelek instead)
  • 1 cup stock
  • 1.5 ts corn starch
  • 1 scallion, shredded on top

Method

Cut bean curd in cubes. Marinade the meat in 2 ts soy sauce, 2 ts rice wine and the sesame oil.
Toast the Sichuan peppers lightly in a dry pan.
Heat oil in pan until very hot. Stir-fry the meat until browned. Remove with wire strainer, and let the water sputter off. Add scallions, garlic, ginger, stir-fry a little. Then add chile paste, stir-fry for 5 seconds.
Add the stock and the remaining soy and rice wine to the pot, and bring it to a boil. Then add back the meat and the bean curd. Reduce the heat to medium and cook it for 5 minutes. Then add in the corn starch, and let the sauce thicken.
Sprinkle Sichuan peppers and the shredded scallions on top.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Mangal Kolgrill, Kista Galleria



We seem to have finally identified our favourite place to eat at Kista Galleria. It is called Mangal Kolgrill and the first dish we ate there inspired us to make a tabbouleh at home. We have gone back a couple of times and their pide (turkish pizza) is fantastic. We can speak knowledgeably having had eaten genuine pide in istanbul (one whole time, at the airport while on a layover, so we're real connoisseurs, see).

This time we tried their Mangal sampler with the bulgur salad.

They had a piece of chicken breast (very moist), two pieces of chop (probably lamb), two koftas and two other pieces that we think were beef, but honestly, everything was so delicious and well cooked that happy oblivion is fine with us. The bulgur salad was amazing, light and fresh as before. The side of bernaise sauce went unexpectedly well with all the meat. The dips in the bowl at the top were tzatziki, baba ganoush, hummus and some kind of red pepper yummy-ness. The grilled green pepper on the plate was absolutely delicious and frankly neither of us paid much attention to the bread because everything else was so good. And, of course, we finished with Ayran, which is refreshing and delicious.
Sorry, we actually forgot to take a picture before we dug in, so the plate looks a little chewed on already.

The food takes a little longer to come out than it does at other places in the food court, but from our vantage point it looked like each dish was being cooked to order and I guess this explains why their food is head and shoulders above the rest!

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Banana Bread




We had four horribly over ripe bananas that we were loathe to throw away. So we made banana bread.

We mostly followed the recipe outlined here, but we initially started on another recipe and so the order of addition of ingredients is slightly different from the recipe in the link.

Ingredients

1/2 cup (110 g) butter
1 cup (210 g) white sugar
2 eggs
4 ripe bananas (original recipe called for 3)
2 cups (220 g) All-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda (We didn't have any, so skipped)
1 teaspoon baking powder (used double to accomodate missing soda)
1/2 teaspoon salt
Dribble (maybe 1/2 teaspoon) vanilla essence

We didn't have any walnuts so we skipped that too.

Procedure

  1. Preheat oven to 175 C.
  2. (What we did) Melt the butter in the microwave and mash in the bananas. Add the eggs, one at a time and stir. Then mix in the sugar. The original recipe: In a large bowl, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Stir in the eggs one at a time, beating well with each addition, stir in the mashed bananas.
  3. In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. 
  4. Mix together the banana mixture and the flour mixture till just combined. 
  5. Butter the inside of the baking dish and add the batter to the dish. The batter seemed much too runny but given the end result I'm going to assume this is a good thing.
  6. Bake for 60 minutes. Test with knife before taking out of oven. You might want to bake it slightly shorter if you use coarser flour, like whole wheat or something. Check at 50 minutes.
Runny cake batter



Thursday, April 18, 2013

Zocalo, Stockholm Sweden




I was pretty excited to see this sign at Kungsträdgården a couple of days ago.  The tacos in the ad looked delicious and we have really been missing good tex-mex here in Stockholm. Our one attempt to make carnitas here was a complete disaster and when we eventually get the recipe right we will definitely immortalize it on the blog.

We were wandering through the food court in the Kista gallerian this evening and noticed that a Zocalo had opened up there. The menu looked good, promising carnitas, barbacoa and even agua fresca. We ordered the barbacoa and carnitas tacos and asked if they had horchata. Unfortunately, they were out of carnitas and didn't have the agua frescas in yet. So we went with the barbacoa tacos and the street tacos with barbacoa (can you tell we missed barbacoa?).

So, it was pretty obvious this place was spanking new. The lady at the counter was looking at each recipe for how to assemble the dishes and she had to cut our tacos out of bigger tortillas with a small cookie-cutter.

Now on to details of the food.

The high-points:

1) The lady at the counter was absolutely lovely for it being (what seemed like) her first day. When she noticed that the cilantro was sort of tired looking, she replaced it with fresh cilantro from the back of the store. She really took a lot of time and effort with assembling every taco, she didn't throw food on the plate. This may sound silly, but each of the tacos had each ingredient equally. (Yeah, maybe this means a lot more to me than it does to other people. I also like my bread evenly buttered to the very edges otherwise I get a nervous tic.)

2) The menu looked good. This is an excellent indication of what Zocalo wants to be. Lots of stuff that screams tex-mex to us. And we don't mean to brag, but we're pretty discerning about our tex-mex. They had shiny-sexy-buzzwords like jarritos and agua fresca and barbacoa and carnitas and habanero and so on. Mental food porn.

3) The texture of the barbacoa was fantastic. Speaking as a couple that routinely subjects large cuts of meat to slow, low temperature cooking for many hours,  for fun, this is half the battle won. If the texture isn't right, it will never taste good. This is particularly astonishing because the nice lady pulled it out of a freezer and nuked it in a microwave before arranging it on our tacos.

4) The food looked really good. See these pictures! Quite a lot of food for the price (especially by Stockholm standards!)

The street barbacoa tacos
The Barbacoa tacos

The low points:

1) Nothing had any taste. Well, the red onions (vinegar onions, seen on top of the street tacos) and the fresh cilantro in the street tacos were the only things that had any flavor. This is a tragic counter-point to pt 4 of the high points. Even the barbacoa, which had amazeballs texture, had absolutely no flavor. Hell, even the damned sauces were tasteless! *cue heartbreak*
Here is a word of advice to anyone who wants to open a tex-mex place...or even a Pho place...just squeeze lemon on it. It doesn't matter what it is, it will taste better. 

2) The tacos had wa-ay too much stuffed in them. Tons of lettuce and coleslaw. This may have diluted the subtle (read: weak) flavor that might have been present. It certainly made them hella difficult to pick up and eat... which is how god intended us to eat tacos!

3) It was clear from watching the lady assemble the tacos and when we ate them that she probably had never eaten a taco. The proportions were all wrong. Perhaps Zocalo needs to have a party for their staff where all the staff does is eat tex-mex and get familiar with how stuff is supposed to taste, how much of what goes in a dish and so on. 

4) There were a couple of things we were completely mystified by. In what appeared to be a corn salsa in the barbacoa tacos, for some reason, there were copious amounts of ...edemame?!  WTF?

And the street tacos contained a LOT of coleslaw which for some reason had these huge chunks of cabbage stems in them. You know, the stuff you can't actually eat because its impossible to chew?

Here is one of the sauces. I suspect it was supposed to be a sour cream type sauce? The lady called it cilantro sauce. But it didn't taste like cilantro either. It tasted like bad mayo.
I also suspect (from looking at the pictures) that the sauces are supposed to be drizzled over the top instead of put into a bowl as a dipping sauce.

Conclusions:

Zocalo didn't seem overpriced (85sek and 95sek for the tacos and I recall the agua fresca being 15 sek. There was lots of stuff on the menu under 150sek). The food looked really good but had no flavor. Nada. Ingen smak. This experience made the Martian Blinghs redouble their efforts to make a killer carnitas in their own kitchen. 

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Moroccan lambstew with tabbouleh

Apricot chickpea lamb stew
This is based on a recipe from Oprah, here. We modified it for the pressure cooker.

Ingredients

  • 3 pounds cubed lamb stew meat
  • 2 tsp. ground coriander
  • 2 tsp. ground cumin
  • 1 tsp. ground ginger
  • 3 tsp. salt , plus more to taste
  • 1/2 tsp. freshly ground pepper , plus more to taste
  • 4 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 large thinly sliced yellow onion
  • 1 Tbsp. tomato paste
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1 cup canned chickpeas , rinsed and drained
  • 1 cup dried, pitted prunes or apricots (or a mixture of both)
  • 4 medium carrots , halved lengthwise and cut into 1-inch chunks
  • 1 package (12 ounces) couscous

Directions

Note: You can adjust the stew to your taste. Prunes make it sweet; apricots add tartness. If possible, toast and grind your own coriander and cumin seeds for the best flavor.
Preheat oven to 175 °C. Spread lamb on a large sheet tray and pat dry. In a small bowl, stir together coriander, cumin, ginger, 2 teaspoons salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper, then sprinkle over lamb and toss well to coat.
Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large ovenproof Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Arrange 1/3 of lamb in pot in a single layer and cook, stirring occasionally, until deep golden brown, 6 to 8 minutes. Transfer lamb to a large bowl; set aside. Repeat with rest of lamb, adding 1 tablespoon olive oil for each batch.
Add onions to pot, reduce heat to medium, and cook, stirring often, until softened and golden brown, about 10 minutes. Add tomato paste and cook, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes. Stir in broth, scraping up any browned bits. Transfer everything to the pressure cooker, add back lamb and juices. Add 2 cups water, cinnamon, and 1 teaspoon salt; stir well. Let the pressure cooker reach full pressure (one whistle), reduce heat to stabilize pressure and cook until almost done, about 20 minutes.
Transfer back into dutch oven; stir in chickpeas, dried fruit, and carrots. Cover pot; continue to cook in the oven until lamb is very tender, about 45 minutes. If desired, uncover pot and cook until thickened, 20 to 25 minutes more. About 15 minutes before serving, prepare tabbouleh.

Tabbouleh

The tabbouleh recipe we got here. We used much more bulgur, which turned out very nice too.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup water
  • 1/2 cup bulgur
  • 1/4 cup lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • Freshly ground pepper, to taste
  • 2 cups finely chopped flat-leaf parsley, (about 2 bunches)
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh mint
  • 2 tomatoes, diced
  • 1 small cucumber, peeled, seeded and diced
  • 4 scallions, thinly sliced

Directions

Combine water and bulgur in a small saucepan. Bring to a full boil, remove from heat, cover and let stand until the water is absorbed and the bulgur is tender, 25 minutes or according to package directions. If any water remains, drain bulgur in a fine-mesh sieve. Transfer to a large bowl and let cool for 15 minutes.
Combine lemon juice, oil, garlic, salt and pepper in a small bowl. Add parsley, mint, tomatoes, cucumber and scallions to the bulgur. Add the dressing and toss. Serve at room temperature or chill for at least 1 hour to serve cold.