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2009 September | Kitchen Guy

Archive for September, 2009

Video: Sweet and Sour Pork

Posted by Chef Jim on September 29, 2009  |  Comments Off

Easy Asian-Pacific style recipe for a classic sweet and sour main dish.

2 pounds lean pork, cubed
2 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1 20-oz. can pineapple chunks, juice reserved
1 1/4 cups ketchup
1 Tbsp. brown sugar
1 Tbsp. apple cider vinegar
1 large green bell pepper, diced
1 medium onion, chopped
3 medium carrots, sliced into coins

In a large skillet, saute cubed pork in oil over high heat — just like stir-frying. Brown the pork on all sides.

Drain pineapple chunks, pouring juice into a saucepan. Cook over medium heat, adding ketchup, brown sugar, and vinegar until hot and flavors have blended, about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat.

Add cut vegetables to sauce along with the browned pork cubes, mix well and pour into a 9×13 glass baking dish. Cover with foil and bake in 350 oven for an hour until the pork is very tender. Remove from the oven and add pineapple chunks.

Serve over rice.

Video: Shrimp Romescu

Posted by Chef Jim on September 22, 2009  |  Comments Off

Easy-to-make tapas style shrimp dish with a classic Romescu sauce.

Blog Topic: One Potato, Two Potato

Posted by Chef Jim on September 20, 2009  |  Comments Off

Whenever I’ve mentioned French fries in this blog, I’ve written mostly about the condiments to serve with them. Now it’s time to get specific about how to make the perfect French fry.

You really don’t need a deep fryer set-up like the ones you see in restaurants. You can do this in your home kitchen, but the one tool you will need if you don’t currently have one is a candy thermometer – one that is manufactured so that it can measure the temperature of the fat. These usually have a clip mechanism so that they can be attached to the side of a pot to keep the bulb immersed as it measures the temperature of the oil (or candy).

It’s also important to choose the right kind of potato for frying and in my book there is none better than the russet because it has a high starch content that will help you attain a crunchy exterior and a tender interior.

This next step applies to any kind of frying or sautéing: you need uniform pieces. This ensures even cooking and that all of those pieces of food finish cooking at the same time. So if you don’t have a French fry cutter, do your best to cut the potato evenly. For shoestring fries, it’s the technique of julienne. For regular size fries, it’s the technique of batonette.

Give your potatoes a couple of good rinses after letting them soak in water for a while. This step accomplishes two things: first, it helps take away some of the starch that can impart a gummy texture to your fries as well as remove a kind of barrier so that excess moisture can escape in the form of steam. And second, this will help the raw potatoes from turning brown.

Great French fries are fried twice. The first frying is at a low temperature – a sort of blanching process – at 300 degrees. You’ll want to see the potatoes turn a pale golden before removing them to a rack so that excess grease can drip away from the potatoes. I arrange a regular cooling rack on top of a paper towel lined baking tray. I do not dump the fries onto the paper towel either in the first fry or the second.

While the fries are draining from their first swim in the oil, raise the temperature on the stove so that the thermometer registers 350. It’s during this second frying session that the potatoes will turn a darker brown and crisp up.

Once again, do not drain them on paper towels or a brown paper bag. Use that rack on top of a paper towel lined tray again.

And while the fries are still hot, that’s when to season them with salt (and pepper if you choose). Seasoning will stick better to the fries because there is still a film of hot oil on them. Once they’ve drained and cooled some, the seasoning won’t hold.

Follow these instructions and I promise perfect French fries every time. But something’s still missing.

What do you do with the oil you used?

The fact is that oil can be used several times if it is filtered and stored correctly. This is especially true of oils that have higher smoke points, like peanut and saffron oil. Eventually (like maybe the third or fourth time), you’ll have to dispose of it.

To filter your frying oil, use a regular metal strainer (to catch any large pieces of food), then a coffee filter or piece of cheesecloth (triple thickness) that lines a funnel (for the smaller pieces that got through the strainer), and pour it through this multi-piece filter into a colored glass bottle (like an empty wine bottle) or a clean coffee can. Make sure that whatever vessel you use can be sealed. Oil doesn’t like light or air. The air can make it go rancid and the light can accelerate chemical decomposition.

When you go to reuse this oil, make sure you add some fresh oil to it.

Check with your municipal waste disposal authority for recommended disposal methods.

Video: Chicken Saltimbocca

Posted by Chef Jim on September 16, 2009  |  Comments Off

Easy-to-make Italian classic that’ll please the palates of everyone at your table!

4 6-oz. chicken breasts, skinless and boneless
1/4 cup flour
1/4 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. black pepper
3 Tbsp. unsalted butter
3 Tbsp. olive oil
1/2 lb. sliced mushrooms
1 garlic clove, minced
8 fresh sage leaves, 4 whole, 4 julienned for garnish
1/2 cup dry vermouth
1/2 cup chicken broth
4 prosciutto slices
4 Provolone cheese slices
3 Tbsp. shredded Parmesan cheese

Cut each chicken breast in half horizontally, stopping just before edge.

Season flour with salt and pepper in a shallow bowl. While heating large saute pan over medium high heat, dredge chicken breasts in seasoned flour. Saute on chicken is golden on both sides. Remove from pan.

Add the mushrooms to the same pan and saute until they release their liquid and the liquid evaporates, about 3 to 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook another minute and remove from the pan. Pour in the vermouth off the heat and scrape the brown bits from the bottom of the pan. Add chicken broth and bring the liquid to a boil.

Stuff each chicken breast with a slice of Provolone, then prosciutto, then a whole sage leaf. Return the stuffed chicken to the pan, lower the heat and simmer. Add mushrooms and finish in a 350 oven until the cheese has melted.

Blog Topic: Food Flight

Posted by Chef Jim on September 14, 2009  |  Comments Off

Did you know the essential difference between flying economy and first class on domestic airline routes is “seat pitch” and a “meal?” That’s really all there is and the price difference, in some cases, is ridiculous – both high and low.

Seat pitch refers to the amount of room between the tip of your nose and the back of the seat in front of you, which over the years has gotten tighter and tighter, especially when the person in front of you reclines that grand total of two and three-quarter inches that airlines allow their seats to go back. Seat pitch in economy has shrunk to such small dimensions now that the average person cannot open a laptop computer either on their lap or on the tray table.

But this is a column about food, so let’s talk about airline food in each cabin.

With few exceptions on domestic airlines flying domestic routes, real food is virtually non-existent in coach class unless you’re willing to pay for pre-packaged candy or other snack foods. If you flew before 2001, you know that most airlines served a meal in both cabins on flights in excess of two and a half or three hours. The quality of the food was great fodder for comedians as it seldom had any resemblance to real food.

There’s not a lot you can do with pre-cooked and flash-frozen food that has to be thawed and cooked in a microwave or convection device. And as any flight attendant is wont to tell you, “We are here for your safety,” and not – presumably – to be cooks.

You remember the drill: One cart came out with the food, followed by the drinks. It was usually chicken or pasta in unrecognizable preparations, wilted salads with artificially concocted dressings, a roll of some sort with an artificial spread, and an attempt at dessert. The Birds Eye TV Dinners of 1956 tasted better.

Later, the food service evolved (I use the term very loosely) into cardboard boxes with prepackaged sandwiches (stale is too kind a word) with prepackaged chips and prepackaged cookies.

On the other hand, if you sit in first class, your tray table is covered with a linen cloth and you drink from real glassware and china and there’s also a real cloth napkin. Breakfast is usually a choice of cold cereal or something like an omelet or waffle; fresh fruit; rolls and juice. There is real silverware, too, except for a time after 9/11 when the airlines switched to plastic knives.

First class travelers also have nearly unlimited alcoholic beverages at no additional charge, as opposed to coach class where current prices for beer and wine approach $5.00 to $7.00 and hard liquor is anywhere from $8.00 to $10.00. Some airlines now charge for soda pop and one tried to charge for water but that brought out enough negative press that they relented.

But let’s get down to the reality of this situation. Most airlines in this country continue to use a failed business model. For the most part, they believe they are in the business of flying aircraft from one point to another. They do not, despite their protestations to the contrary and/or their advertising, include anything about passenger comfort or care in their business plans. And why should they?

This flawed way of doing business is perpetuated by us poor saps who have to get to far flung places in as little time as possible. It takes four to five days to drive cross-country. If you’re lucky enough to live in a major airline hub city, you can do it in about five or six hours. Others that live in cities where connections are de rigueur, will spend upwards of 20 hours because of layovers and connections.

Food in coach has become something of an attempt by the airlines to create a new profit center in much the same way as charging to talk to a reservations agent or for carrying your baggage in the cargo hold.

Food in first class is, without doubt, the most expensive food you will ever eat.

I’ll give just one example: A coach ticket from New York to Los Angeles on most of the major legacy carriers runs about $450 or less, depending on the fare war that may be occurring on any given day. That’s pretty cheap, especially if you’re willing to put up with the overcrowding and the hurry-up-and-wait that is airline travel today.

That same ticket in first class costs anywhere from $1,400 to $2,250. And if you decide to trade in your frequent flier miles for a first class seat, it’s even more expensive, considering what you paid to earn those miles and how much the airlines have increased the number of miles you have to use.

I don’t know about you, but as much as I like legroom and enough space to open up my laptop, I don’t think there’s an omelet in this world that’s worth $1,000.

Video: Tomato Tarte Tatin

Posted by Chef Jim on September 9, 2009  |  Comments Off

The classic French dessert is turned into a savory first course in this recipe adapted from Top Chef chief judge Chef Tom Colicchio.

1 14 oz. puff pastry sheet, thawed
2 Tbsp. unsalted butter
3 medium red onions halved and slice thin
1/4 cup sugar, plus a pinch
1/2 tsp. sherry vinegar
1/4 cup Kalamata olives, pitted and chopped
1 1/2 pints cherry or grape tomatoes
1 Tbsp. fresh thyme or 1/2 Tbsp. dried
salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 425. Unfold puff pastry and cut into a 10-inch round. Chill, covered, until ready to use.

Melt butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onions and a pinch of sugar and cook, stirring, until onions are golden and caramelized, about 15 to 20 minutes. Add 2 tablespoons of water to deglaze pan, scraping brown bits from bottom of pan. Transfer to a bowl and reserve.

In a clean oven-proof 9-inch skilled combine 1/4 cup sugar and 3 tablespoons of water. Cook over medium heat, swirling gently (do not stir) until sugar melts and turns into an amber-colored caramel, about 5 to 7 minutes. Add vinegar carefully and swirl again. The caramel will seize, but will re-melt in the oven.

Sprinkle olives over caramel, then scatter tomatoes over olives. Sprinkle onions on top, then season with thyme, salt and pepper. Top with puff pastry circle, tucking edges into sides of pan. Cut several vents in top of pastry.

Bake until tart crust is puffed and golden, about 30 minutes. Let stand for 5 minutes, then run a knife around pastry to loosen it from pan and flip tart onto a pan lid and slide onto a serving platter. Cut into wedges and serve immediately.

Blog Topic: Sacre Bleu Part Deux

Posted by Chef Jim on September 5, 2009  |  Comments Off

Several weeks ago I reported in this space about a book that was making the best seller lists throughout Europe in which the author claimed that French dominance in the culinary world was beyond waning – that it was near death.

Now comes the counter-argument that claims French cuisine actually is evolving with the times. In fact, the respected chef, Eric Ripert, the genius in the kitchen at Le Bernardin in New York, lets us know that French cooking now uses far less butter and cream than ever.

Hubert Keller, who was a finalist in the Bravo TV competition “Top Chef Masters,” is another highly-regarded French chef whose recent fame centers on his healthier dishes. Daniel Boulud, Alain Ducasse, Jacques Torres and many other French chefs prove every day that they know how to modernize French cuisine.

So what is it about French cooking that, among non-foodies at least, continues to hold this lofty reputation for being fat-laden, difficult to cook, snooty, financially out-of-reach and so on?

Stereotypes.

The writers and producers of the wildly successful animated feature, “Ratatouille” gave us a peak into the classical French kitchen – hierarchical, thankless, tedious, low-paying, exacting, etc. It certainly was typical for French restaurant kitchens in the 19th and most of the 20th centuries, but that’s stereotypical now.

This is not to say that the traditions, techniques and mystique of the French culinary world have become passé. Au contraire.

All western culinary schools and many in other parts of the world, notably Japan, begin with knife skills developed by the French. All of the classical knife cuts have French names, such as batonette, julienne, chiffonade, and tourné, to name a few. Our cooking techniques have French names such as sauté, braise, and puree. The word restaurant is, in itself, French.

Others have tried, but no one really accomplished the cataloging and categorization and codifying of recipes and techniques the way Escoffier did more than 100 years ago. It’s still the go-to culinary bible, though other more modern reference works have been written and enjoy widespread use.

In any case, French cuisine may no longer be the dominant restaurant style, as it was for so many years. When the venerable Julia Child helped simplify French cooking for the average American cook and it became more accessible, it opened the way for other cuisines (there’s another French word) to be presented to all of us.

The notion that French food is all about fat – butter and cream for starters – is no longer true about modern French cooking. As American cuisine has evolved, thanks to the influx of scores of other cultures from around the world, so has French cuisine.

Nevertheless, when I teach a Beginners Course in cooking, I start with those knife skills that are absolutely critical if you’re going to be a serious cook. I also teach all of the various cooking techniques the French chefs perfected over the last two centuries. We dabble in other forms, too – Asian, South American, Indian, Middle Eastern – but I insist that my students master classical French technique before moving on to others.

Notice I said technique. I didn’t say ingredients. The French chefs of old achieved richness in their sauces and desserts by using butter and cream. We’ve since learned that, while butter and cream are important in many dishes, they are not critical to successful food.

When a cook learns about layering flavors, butter and cream usually become secondary, because the most important part about preparing and serving food is flavor. Not richness. Flavor. That was always the basis of French cuisine, as I understand it.

And to the French, we owe a debt of gratitude for setting that standard.

As for their politics – that’s a whole other story.

Video: Parisian Apple Cake

Posted by Chef Jim on September 1, 2009  |  Comments Off

My favorite apple cake recipe, adapted from Patricia Wells.

 

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