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Video: Bruschetta – Two Ways

Posted by Chef Jim on July 28, 2010  |  No Comments

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One classic Italian appetizer and one not so traditional – both quite delicious and easy to make.
Recipe:

2 10 3/4 oz. cans cherry filling
1/2 cup red onion, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon basil, dried
1/2 teaspoon oregano, dried
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/4 cup olive oil
1 French bread, loaf, cut into 3/4-inch slices

In a medium saucepan, combine cherry filling, onion, basil and oregano; mix well. Cook, stirring constantly, over medium heat 5 minutes, or until mixture is bubbly and flavors are blended. Let cool to room temperature.

In a small bowl, combine garlic and olive oil. Brush both sides of each bread slice with oil mixture; place on an ungreased baking sheet. Broil, 4 to 5 inches from the heat, 1 to 2 minutes per side, or until golden brown.

Top each slice of bread with a generous tablespoon of cherry mixture. Serve immediately as an appetizer or first course.

Video: Ginger Shrimp with Zucchini and Red Peppers

Posted by Chef Jim on July 20, 2010  |  No Comments

Lots of ingredients, but really a very simple dish that’s reminiscent of Thai cuisine.
2 Tbsp. olive oil

1 red bell pepper, seeded and chopped
1 zucchini, cut into small dice
1 pound fresh shrimp, shelled and deveined
1 jalapeño, seeded and chopped fine
1 large shallot, finely diced
2 tsp. fresh ginger root, crushed
2 garlic cloves, crushed
1/3 cup dry white wine
1 ½ Tbsp. fresh lime juice
½ cup chicken broth
1 ½ Tbsp. sherry (or cream sherry)
1 ½ large tomatoes, seeded and chopped
2/3 tsp. cornstarch
1 Tbsp. water
2 Tbsp. green onions, sliced fine
2 tsp. cilantro, chopped
salt and pepper to taste
Heat ¼ of the oil in a non-stick pan over medium heat. Add the peppers and zucchini. Cook until barely tender, about 2 minutes. Transfer to a plate and set aside.

Add ½ of oil to skillet and increase the heat to high. When oil is hot, add the shrimp and jalapeño. Sauté until the shrimp are pink, about 2 minutes. Transfer to the plate with the zucchini.

Reduce the heat to medium and add the remaining oil. Add the shallots, garlic, and ginger. Sauté until soft but not browned. Pour in the chicken broth, wine, sherry and lime juice. Boil until reduced by half. Add the tomatoes. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Dissolve cornstarch in water. Whisk into the mixture and cook until sauce thickens. Add the green onions and cilantro. Mix in the reserved zucchini, peppers and shrimp.

Serve over rice.

Video: Buttermilk Herb Biscuits

Posted by Chef Jim on July 13, 2010  |  Comments Off

Take a slight departure from regular biscuits and add a little zip with some herbs and spices everyone has in the pantry.
Recipe:

2 cups bread flour
2 tsp. sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cumin
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. dried sage
1/2 tsp. dry mustard
1/3 cup vegetable shortening
2/3 cup buttermilk


Preheat oven to 450. Combine the dry ingredients, then cut in the shortening either with a pastry cutter or a fork. Cut in completely, then stir in most of the buttermilk, reserving about 1/8 cup in case the dough is not pliable.

Knead the dough lightly on a floured board 20 to 25 times. Roll out the dough until it is 1/2-inch thick.

Using a biscuit cutter, dipped in flour, cut out as many biscuits as you can, re-rolling dough gently to get additional biscuits. Place on an ungreased baking sheet and bake for 10 to 12 minutes, until golden brown. Let cool slightly on a rack before serving.

From the KG Blog: Burgers and Cupcakes

Posted by Chef Jim on July 9, 2010  |  Comments Off

ow much would you pay for a really good hamburger? By the same token, what’s a tasty cupcake worth to you?

It’s hard to believe that after all these years of promoting food and the finer points of the culinary profession on the Food Network, the Cooking Channel, Bravo, and many other outlets (even Fox), that the hottest trend wouldn’t be some fancy-schmancy preparation or an exotic cuisine.

No, the hottest culinary trend right now happens to be hamburgers and cupcakes. They’re all the rage in the culinary hotspots of the major cities around the U.S.

Several of the best competitors from past seasons of Top Chef have opened one or more gourmet hamburger joints in Atlanta and Washington D.C. And they’re now popping up all over the country, giving McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s a run for their money.

You want fast food burgers, meat origins unknown? Fine. Go to a fast food joint. You want a burger made from top grade beef, all origins known, then go to Top Chef favorite Spike Mendelsohn’s (the guy with the retro ‘50s hat) place in D.C. or Top Chef finalist Richard Blais’ (he’s the guy who did all that molecular gastronomy hocus-pocus) in Atlanta. They’re serving up all kinds of burger concoctions at premium prices, with fries and shakes (also at prices in the stratosphere).

And then there is this accompanying trend for bakers to dedicate shops only to cupcakes, some for $50 a dozen (or more!).

This trend surprises me. I’ve always cooked by the motto that simple is best, but burgers and cupcakes? That, to me, takes simplicity a bit far, especially when talented chefs forego the rigors of menu planning and cooking or baking up to their abilities and then attach filet mignon prices to hamburgers and wedding cake prices to cupcakes.

Don’t get me wrong. I love burgers and I love cupcakes. And I’ll bet most of you reading this do, too.

But I don’t get what the big deal is about taking ground beef and fancy-ing it up with shallots instead of onions; arugula instead of lettuce; papaya instead of tomato. By the same token, how much would you be willing to pay for cupcakes that contain Tahitian vanilla, as opposed to Mexican vanilla; organic raspberries rather than California strawberries?

I’m a fine dining aficionado, but I also like simple everyday foods. Most of my clients have hired me to cook for them because they like my concept of “Ethnic American.” It’s the way I brand my version of comfort food with my own twists thrown in.

Yet if I were to price my meatloaf, for instance, at $45.00 – even if I had used Wagyu or Kobe beef – I think I would be run out of town. Or at least out of business.

I suppose if some people are willing to pay a couple of bucks for a bottle of water that’s alleged to come from a special spring in France, or three or four bucks or more for a cup of fancy coffee, I also suppose there are plenty of folks willing to line up and throw money at a doo-dad burger or hoop-de-doo cupcake.

I don’t know about you, but on this subject, I’m with P.T. Barnum.

Follow me on Twitter @KitchenGuyMT or my blog at http://kitchenguybychefjim.blogspot.com

Video: Shredded Pork Burritos

Posted by Chef Jim on July 6, 2010  |  Comments Off

A Tex-Mex favorite, simplified for every home cook.
Recipe (serves 6 to 8 )

1/8 cup vegetable oil
1 small onion, diced
1 small jalapeno pepper, minced
2 lbs.boneless pork shoulder, cut into cubes
1/2 Tbsp. chili powder
1 tsp. cumin
1/4 tsp. oregano (Mexican if possible)

1/4 tsp. ground coriander
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
1/8 tsp. ground cloves
1/8 tsp. ground allspice
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 Tbsp. tomato paste
1 14 oz. can stewed tomatoes
1 cup beef broth
1 cup chicken broth
1 bay leaf
1/4 cup chopped cilantro
8 10-inch flour tortillas
6 oz. Jack cheese, shredded

Heat oil in Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add onion, jalapeno and cook until soft, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes.

Add pork and cook until browned on all sides. Mix in chili powder, cumin, oregano, coriander, thyme, cloves, and allspice. Cook another 2 minutes. Add garlic and tomato paste and cook another 3 minutes. Stir in stewed tomatoes, chicken and beef broth, and bay leaf. Reduce heat to low. Bring to a boil, then lower heat to a simmer, cover and cook for 1 hour, then uncover and continue simmering until pork is extra tender and shreds easily.

Remove pork from liquid, using slotted spoon. Set aside. Increase heat to medium and boil cooking liquid until reduced to 3/4 cup. Let cool.

Shred pork using two forks. Mix into sauce and add cilantro.

Divide pork between tortillas, cover with cheese and fold the tortillas to form burritos.

Video: Grilled Flank Steak Pinwheels

Posted by Chef Jim on June 29, 2010  |  Comments Off

The flavor of flank steak, stuffed with spinach and bacon, grilled to perfection!
Recipe:
6 to 8 bacon slices
1 1/2 lbs flank steak, trimmed
3/4 tsp. lemon pepper
2 garlic cloves, crushed
1/4 tsp. salt
1 10-oz. pkg. spinach, thawed and drained
3 Tbsp. breadcrumbs
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
Cook the bacon in a skillet or microwave just until done, but not crisp and set aside.
Pound the flank steak to about 1/4-inch thickness and try to shape the meat into a rectangle. Sprinkle 2/3 of the lemon pepper over the meat and the salt over one side of the steak. Lay the bacon strips across the meat. Mix the spinach with the breadcrumbs, thyme and remaining lemon pepper, garlic and a dash of salt. Spread the mixture evenly over the bacon strips.
Roll the meat staring at the end nearest you. Secure with toothpicks at 1-1/2 inch intervals. Threat 2 pinwheels onto metal skewers.
Grill for 6 to 7 minutes on each side until the steak is cooked to desired temperature.

From the KG Blog: Army Chow

Posted by Chef Jim on June 28, 2010  |  Comments Off

I was truly honored to be asked to cook dinner for 40 Army National Guardsmen (and women) last week.

As I pulled into their armory headquarters with a tow-behind huge honkin’ grill, the master sergeant who arranged for me to cook there greeted me as if I were five-star brass. And every single soldier, ranked or unranked, addressed me as “sir.”

A terrific evening, really, but I’ll save the best for last.

There are federal and state purchasing guidelines about how much can be spent per person for breakfast, lunch and dinner. My creativity was really put to the test because the request was for a steak dinner. This dinner, after all, was a reward to a hard-working company of men and women just back from training maneuvers.

So that “tow-behind huge honkin’ grill” was built from scratch by a friend of a friend and loaned to me for this occasion. If this Army wants steak, they’ll get steak. And we’ll make a show of it with a huge honkin’ grill and a scorching hot fire.

The last time I cooked so many steaks, I was the guest chef at a hotel in northern Montana. It was Valentine’s Day and rib-eyes were on the menu. I took charge of the grill that evening and much to my dismay, 58 of the 64 orders for steak were for medium well or well done. To my way of thinking, that’s a tragic waste of prime beef. And what usually happens in the restaurant world is that when an order for well done comes into the kitchen, the poorest cuts will be used because how will the diner know the difference?

If you like your beef medium well or well done, may I suggest that you order it medium? Taste it and if it’s not to your liking, send it back to be cooked more. At least you’ll get the advertised cut and not something the kitchen would like to dispose of.

Of the 40 young soldiers I cooked for, 25 asked for medium rare, 13 asked for medium, one asked for medium well and one asked for rare.

Now that’s my idea of the kind of steak eaters I like cooking for! How I wish that I could have provided them with larger portions. As I pointed out earlier, there are cost guidelines one must follow, so if steak is on a menu, then it’s going to be kind of thin. When I cut steaks, I like them about an inch to an inch and a quarter thick. At that thickness they can spend enough time on the grill for me to put grill marks on each side and cook each one specifically to order.

That’s the No. 1 question I usually get when beef is on the menu. How does a skilled grill cook or chef know when the meat is ready without using a meat thermometer?

Actually, it’s done by touch. As beef cooks, it shrinks – a natural reaction to heat from collagen and protein and fat. So here’s how a kitchen professional knows when a steak is medium rare, or medium, etc.:

If you hold your hand up with the fingers slightly apart (as if you were signaling “five” to someone), feel the muscle just below the thumb. It’s soft and pliable. That’s what rare beef feels like.

Touch the index finger to the tip of the thumb. Feel the muscle. That’s medium rare. Touch the middle finger to the tip of the thumb. That’s medium. The ring finger to the tip of the thumb is medium well and the pinkie is well done.

This really only works for beef. Other meats, especially poultry, require the use of an instant read thermometer.

Earlier, I promised to tell you what the “best” part of cooking for this group of Army Guardsmen was. After the meal was over, the master sergeant came to me and said he would put together a KP detail and they would wash and scrub all of my pans and utensils.

Thank you, Sarge, for that KP detail. What a treat. Thank you, National Guard. Thank you for calling me sir, for enjoying the food I prepared for you, and for what you do for our country.

Video: Salmon Ceviche

Posted by Chef Jim on June 24, 2010  |  Comments Off

Recipe:

3/4 cup lime juice, fresh, (about 6 limes)
1/2 cup orange juice, fresh, (1-2 oranges)
1 1/2 tablespoons chili garlic paste
1 small red bell pepper, seeded & diced
1 small green bell pepper, seeded & diced
1/4 red onion, diced

1/4 cup cilantro, chopped, lightly packed
1 1/2 pounds Salmon fillets, boneless and skinless
6 red cabbage leaves
3 tomatoes cut into wedges
1/2 cucumber, sliced

Stir together the lime juice, orange juice and chili paste until paste dissolves. Add peppers, onion and cilantro. Rinse fish and pat dry. Cut salmon into 1/2 to 3/4″ pieces.

Add to the bowl and gently stir the mixture until fish is completely coated with marinade. Cover and place in the refrigerator. Over the next 24 hours, the halibut will turn a solid white color throughout.

The acid in the marinade acts on the protein to “cold-cook” the salmon. Do not marinate for more than one day.

Video: Bleu Cheese Filet Mignon

Posted by Chef Jim on June 15, 2010  |  Comments Off

Perfect for Fathers Day – a perfectly grilled or broiled filet mignon with a luscious bleu cheese topping.
Recipe:
4 tenderloin or filet steaks, 1-inch thick
1 large garlic clove, halved
2 tsp. chopped parsley (for garnish)

Topping Mixture:
2 Tbsp. cream cheese, softened
4 tsp. Blue cheese, crumbled
4 tsp. plain yogurt
2 tsp. onions, minced
1 dash white pepper

In a small bowl, combine topping ingredients and reserve. Preheat broiler. Rub steaks with garlic and season with salt and pepper. Broil about 4 to 5 inches from the flame (or heating element) for about 5 minutes. Turn the steaks and continue to broil for 4 minutes for rare, 5 minutes for medium rare and 6 minutes for medium. Top each steak with topping mixture and broil for about another minute and a half to two minutes. Garnish with chopped parsley.

From the KG Blog: Send it Back!

Posted by Chef Jim on June 13, 2010  |  Comments Off

I grew up in the eastern part of the United States and, like many regions of this country, we had our own names for sandwiches and other kinds of food. For example, a submarine sandwich is called a grinder in New England, a hero in the Midwest, and so forth.

Where my mother grew up, a grilled cheese sandwich was often called a toasted cheese sandwich. So that’s what we called it at home. I remember asking her if there was a difference when my high school cafeteria posted grilled cheese on its menu. And she told me then that there was no difference.

Fast forward several decades to the present day to a restaurant that shall remain nameless because I would like to continue going there. Their lunch menu lists a sandwich as follows: “Grilled Cheese with Bacon and Tomato on your choice of breads.” So my mother, after perusing the bill of fare, closed the menu and ordered a “Toasted Cheese Sandwich with Bacon and Tomato.”

The waitress duly noted her order and placed it with the kitchen. About 10 or 12 minutes later, the waitress delivered a sandwich of unmelted cheese, bacon and tomato slices between two pieces of toasted bread.

As the mother of a culinary professional, she knows that if something comes out of a restaurant kitchen and it is not cooked correctly or to her liking, that it gets sent back. I actually have encouraged her – and everyone else who asks – to do this. If you don’t, my theory is, how will the kitchen staff know that they got your order wrong? And if you are displeased with what you got from the kitchen, you’ll probably tell friends and family of your negative experience which may influence whether or not they go to that restaurant.

The waitress took the sandwich back and in a few moments reappeared with the original ticket and showed it to my mother, in order to prove that she had communicated to the kitchen staff exactly what she ordered. Wrong move. A polite – ahem – disagreement ensued, with my mother asking for a copy of the menu and pointing out that this is what she had ordered; that it was not a special order; and it was a listed menu item.

You see where this is going, don’t you?

She eventually got the grilled cheese sandwich with actual melted cheese as well as the bacon and tomato, as advertised.

In every restaurant kitchen I’ve run, I always made it a point to look at the plates that came back to the dish washing station from tables that had just been cleared. If I saw a plate with more than half the food uneaten, I always made it a point to go to that table and ask if the food was not to their liking.

If the diner told me that the food was not what they ordered, expected, or liked, I would ask why they wouldn’t send it back to have it made to their liking. And I always offered to make it right, either with a new dish or a complimentary meal for a future visit.

More often than not, the person would say that they didn’t want to cause a scene or make trouble for anyone.

Every cook that I’ve trained and every waitperson I’ve hired gets the same lecture from me: Remember who the customer is. It’s not you. It’s not the kitchen. It’s the diner. And if you’ve made something or served something that they don’t like and you see that the plate has uneaten food, be proactive and offer to make it right.

As you might imagine, I eat out a lot. And I see too many plates of food going back to the kitchen uneaten. So by means of this column, I hereby give you permission to send back your food if it’s not right. How else will the chef and the kitchen staff know? Negative comments about restaurants far outnumber positive. Word of mouth cuts both ways. You don’t want the buzz to be negative.

Believe me, any chef worth his whites wants to know. We don’t want to serve food that you don’t want to eat. And why would you meekly pay for it if you didn’t like it?

And if you own or run a restaurant and you see my mother come in for lunch or dinner, fear not. Just give her what she orders. She’s a very lovely, entertaining woman. And she tips well, too.

Follow me on Twitter @KitchenGuyMT

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