Thursday, May 26, 2011
Cider-Cured Pork Chops
I'm getting a little nervous..... I cooked the last two packets of pork chops from my pig to make this recipe, and for Easter had the next to the last of the hams. I have a few more packages of smoked hocks and some of the sausages I've been making (and inhaling since I went on the Atkins diet) left, but it's looking a bit grim. Looks like it's time to sign up for another pig from my rancher friend, Mary Pettis Sarley (barngoddess@dishmail.net)
This recipe, from the now defunct 42 Degrees Restaurant in San Francisco, is a super fine way to cook a pork chop. Brining, which brings flavor deep inside the cells of the meat, also keeps the meat very moist during cooking. This cooking technique became very popular in the 1990's, as farmers bred pigs to be very lean in an effort to continue to keep pork popular as the anti-animal fat diet movement ramped up. Brining ensured that this super lean meat didn't turn into a piece of cardboard in the frying pan. Mind you, moistness and fat are not an issue in the super-delicious Duroc breed of pigs I buy from Mary. However, this recipe delivers such deep, rich flavor, a caramelized surface, and of course, guaranteed moistness, that it's worth using it even when you have top quality meat. Oh, baby. A fine way to honor the last offerings of a delicious pig!
42 DEGREES CIDER-CURED PORK CHOPS
Ingredients:
4 Center cut pork loin chops, 1 1/4-1/1/2 inches thick (bone in or not)
Olive Oil
Brine:
4 cups water
2 cups hard cider
1/2 cup salt
1/2 cup brown sugar
10 whole peppercorns
4 bay leaves
1/2 bunch fresh thyme
1 yellow onion, chopped
1 carrot, peeled and chopped
1 celery rib, chopped
1 apple, peeled and chopped
To make the brine: Combine all the brine ingredients in a large saucepan. Bring to a full boil over high heat, then remove from heat and let cool. When cool, refrigerate until cold. (If you put meat in warm brine, they will absorb too much of the salt.)
In a large glass or stainless steel container with a lid, add the pork chops to the cold brine. Weigh down the meat with a plate if necessary to keep the chops completely submerged. Refrigerate for at least one, up to two days.
To cook: Remove the chops from the brine and pat them dry, and allow them to come to room temperature. Discard the brine. Heat 2 heavy skillets (preferably cast iron) over moderately high heat. Add just enough oil to coat the bottom of the skillets. When the skillets are hot, add the chops and reduce heat to moderately low. Cook for about 10 minutes (meat should show caramelization), then turn and cook until the chops are no longer very pink at the bone, about 10 more minutes. Turn again as needed. If you have a digital meat thermometer, test the meat in several spots, especially near the bone. An internal temperature of 150 degrees Fahrenheit is ideal. Remove from heat, and enjoy!
To drink: delicious with the rest of the hard cider, a bottle of Prosecco, or a nice Riesling.
Side dishes: oven baked sweet potato fries would be mighty fine!
Friday, May 13, 2011
Roasted Asparagus
We're now deep into Spring here, and you know what that means, right? As much asparagus as we can stuff into ourselves! Ever since I read about roasting asparagus a few years ago, it has become pretty much the only way I cook it, because the roasting concentrates the delicious sweetness of the stalk. Added bonuses about this method are: no nutrients or flavors are lost to the cooking water, it's harder to overcook to that unappealing khaki green stage, and your stovetop is free to make the main course while the vegetable cooks. But wait, there's more - if you fry a couple of eggs and put them on top, you have a main course, too!
Roasted Asparagus
As much asparagus as you want to eat (choose the freshest, firmest stalks you can find)
Olive oil
Coarse sea salt
Fresh ground pepper
optional: fresh eggs
Preheat the oven to 450 F.
Wash and dry the asparagus, and, holding the center of the stalk in one hand and the cut end in the other, bend the cut end until it snaps off. (Save the ends for the Total Cheapskate's Cream of Asparagus Soup recipe in the next post!)
Heap the asparagus on a rimmed baking sheet, and drizzle olive oil all over it. Using your hands, make sure that each spear is coated with the olive oil. Spread the asparagus out on the baking pan in a single layer (use an additional pan as needed). Sprinkle generously with the sea salt - don't be shy, most of it will fall off during cooking, as well as a generous grind of black pepper.
Put the baking dish in the center of the oven, and roast until just tender; if a fork easily pierces the stalks, it is done. This takes about 15-20 minutes, depending on how fat and/or cold the asparagus is.
If you are making a main course of this, fry two eggs per person. Season them well with salt and pepper, and cook until the whites are set and some portion of the yolk is still liquid. The yolks make a nice sauce which coats the stalks. If you like, you can sprinkle some freshly grated parmesan on as well.
Notes from Christine: "Why am I snapping the ends of the stalks instead of using my chef's knife?" Your goal is eliminate the tough, fibrous, inedible parts of the stalk, while not wasting any of the tender parts. Each stalk has an invisible line that separates tough from tender; it is in a different spot on each stalk. When you snap it, it naturally breaks in exactly the right spot.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Total Cheapskate Asparagus Soup
My step-grandmother, Edda, was the ch - oops, excuse me, the most frugal person I've ever met in my life - and that is saying plenty. (I come from a long line of Yankees and Germans, so I know what I'm talking about!) When she died and we went through her cupboards, we found that she had the largest collection of used tin foil, saran wrap, rubber bands, jars, cans, and waxed paper known in the civilized world. God, I miss her.
So one of the things she turned me on to was how to use the cast-off ends of the asparagus spears to make a lovely soup. You know how you have to bend them at the base until the tough parts snap off? Doesn't it just kill you to throw away all of that "perfectly good asparagus?" It does me! So, here you are, about to roast four pounds of organic, early season local asparagus. Even at bargain prices you'd be pitching over $5 worth of asparagus into the compost heap.
Fortunately, you saved the snapped off tips when you made the roasted asparagus, as I recommended, yes? So here's what to do with them: (and you can do this while the asparagus roasts, and then bag the results aside in the fridge to make the soup for tomorrow's lunch, btw).... but, back to the matter at hand:
Using the sharpest chef's knife you have, slice off the least bit of the old, cut end that you can easily cut through; the goal is to eliminate what is too tough to eat, but to save as much of the stalk as possible for the soup. If it's too tough to cut fairly easily, move your knife up the piece and try again until you can. One of the clues you will get is how much of the stalk has turned purplish-white; the more it trends towards that color, the more likely it is to be very tough. A few pieces will be so tough that they go straight into the compost, along with the cast-off trimmings.
Take the remaining piece of stalk, and using a vegetable peeler, peel off the skin very thinly all the way around. Yes, this all takes a little while, but if you are frugal, and it's nice asparagus, it's worth it, right?
Once you have finished your trimming and peeling, chop up what you have left crosswise into lengths of about 1/4 - 1/2" inches.
Now, put the proceeds into a saucepan big enough to hold it with room to spare, and fill it just to cover with chicken or vegetable broth. (I like to use Better Than Bouillon Organic; very tasty and very convenient. It comes in a jar, and you use a teaspoon per cup of water. I use a generous teaspoonful for this.)
Put the pan over medium heat and boil the asparagus until it is just tender. Then, using either an immersion blender (my favorite - it's this wand thingie that you use to blend right in the pan) or a regular blender or food processor, whirl it up until it's pureed; it's okay if there are a few chunks left for texture. Now, add just enough heavy cream to make it all come together in luxury, and season it to taste with freshly ground pepper (and salt, if you need more) and whirl it up until it's all blended. Check and adjust the seasoning, as needed.
Voila! Total Cheapskate's Asparagus Soup. (Frankly, I will often make a batch while everyone is out of the house, and eat the whole thing for my lunch. Yum.)
Monday, May 2, 2011
Flourless Chocolate Cake
It's Teacher Appreciation Week at Johanna's school. Naturally, I agonized; the new peanut butter cookies I'm developing, (next post!) mini - breakfast cheesecakes? I've been eying this flourless chocolate cake recipe in Gourmet Cookbook for a while, after my friend Kate brought it to my attention. The recipe calls for making it in a springform pan, but since I'm baking for 30+ teachers, aides, staff, librarians and such, it had the potential for a big messy scene, where 10 people got a piece and 20 didn't. So, I thought I'd try little muffin cups and pray it wasn't a disaster. Hurray! It worked perfectly; 41 cute lil' bites, instead of one big cake. (p.s. Top Secret tip: this is spectacularly delicious, but incredibly easy. This is a perfect "company" cake, or to bring to a party!)
Flourless Chocolate Cake
from The Gourmet Cookbook
serves 10-12 in full-sized slices, makes about 40 mini-cupcake bites
8 oz good quality bittersweet chocolate (not unsweetened) coarsely chopped
1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
6 large eggs
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder, plus additional for dusting
Special Equipment: a 10" (26 centimeter) springform pan, or paper muffin cups and 2 muffin pans
1. Put a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 350 F. If using the springform, butter it, lie with parchment paper, and butter the paper. If using muffin cups, place them in your muffin tins. You can cook in batches if you have more batter than muffin tins.
2. Melt chocolate with butter in a medium metal bowl set over a saucepan of barely simmering water, stirring until smooth.
3. Remove bowl from heat, and whisk in sugar.
4. Add eggs one at a time, whisking well after each addition.
5. Sift the cocoa powder over the chocolate mixture and whisk until just combined.
6. Pour the batter into the pan, or spoon into the muffin cups.
7. Bake until top has formed a thin crust and a wooden pick or skewer inserted in the center comes out with moist crumbs adhering to it, 30-40 minutes for the big cake. Mini-muffins took about 15 minutes, so larger muffins would probably take 20-25.
8. Cool cake in the pan on a rack for 10 minutes, then remove the side of the pan. Invert the cake onto a plate and reinvert onto rack to cool completely. Dust cake with cocoa powder just before serving.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
(Sugar-Free, Low-Carb) Breakfast Cheesecake
My friend Mimi is also doing the low-carb thing, which is really great because it gives me someone to talk to about diet stuff, which frankly is the most boring subject on the planet. Seriously; the only thing more tedious than being on a diet is listening to someone else talk about it. And I KNOW you know what I'm talking about, right? Okay, here's an example:
I was at a friend's birthday party in a nice little restaurant. A large number of us were gathered around the table, trying to decide how many charcuterie plates to order. One member of the party started describing all of the crazy diets she'd been on over the years, including one where you ate one food exclusively all day, every day for like a week before switching. She was invited out to dinner to a very, VERY nice restaurant that specialized in duck. Trouble was, it was grape week on her diet, and she was a hardcore dieter; she was not making any exceptions for this meal. She brought along a bunch of grapes, and asked the waiter to plate them for her. I, naturally, asked her if they had charged her a "grapeage" fee.
This yummy breakfast cheesecake is full of protein and calcium, and completely delicious even for those of you not setting limits these days. Naturally, they are not just good for breakfast; there's lunch, snackage, and dessert. There really is only one problem with these at our house: Johanna loves them so much, it's not easy to get one for myself in the morning!
Mimi R., this one's for you.
Breakfast Cheesecake
2 cups full fat cottage cheese or ricotta
8 ounces soft/whipped full fat or low fat creamcheese, at room temperature
1/2 cup whole milk greek yogurt
1/3 cup erythritol
4 tiny scoops stevia
2 TB xylitol
1 generous pinch salt
2 tsp vanilla OR 1/2 tsp almond extract
zest of 1 orange or 1 lemon
3 large eggs
If you don't have erythritol, substitute 1/3 cup xylitol in TOTAL. If you don't worry about sugar, substitute 1/2 a cup of white sugar for all of the sweeteners.
Preheat oven to 325 F
1. Set 6-8 6 ounce ramekins or custard cups in a high sided baking pan (at least 2")
2. Pour the cottage cheese into the bowl of your food processor and whirl until smooth.
3. Add the cream cheese and process until smooth, scraping down the sides of the bowl occasionally.
4. Add the yoghurt, sweeteners, salt and extracts and whirl until smooth.
5. Add the eggs and zest and whirl until just incorporated.
6. Pour the batter into the cups. Then carefully pour hot water into the pan around the cups, until it comes halfway up their sides.
7. Bake the cakes for about 40-45 minutes, until the sides are firm and the centers are just barely firm at the center.