April 27, 2010

Cheery Tomato Roasted Chicken


Sunday suppers tend to be an afterthought. Whether it was a day of chores, a day of streaming Weeds on Netflix or a day of festival attendance (my social life sincerely thanks Atlanta's festival season), it's got to be easy, healthy, homey and leave enough for leftovers for the week ahead.

That's one tall order. 

Roasted chicken was born for Sunday night. The process is so simple and the leftovers are so versatile, but how to liven up a staple of winter for the spring and summer? Replace the carrots and potatoes with garlicky herbed cherry tomatoes. So good, you can't resist feeling cheery even as Monday looms.

Cheery Tomato Roasted Chicken
Adapted form Bon Appetite Cookbook via The Wednesday Chef
Serves 4

24 ounces whole cherry tomatoes (about 4 cups)
1/4 cup olive oil
5 garlic cloves, minced
1 1/4 teaspoons dried crushed red pepper
1 tablespoon fresh rosemary
1 tablespoon fresh thyme
4 bone-in chicken breasts (10 to 12 ounces each)
Salt and freshly ground pepper

1. Heat the oven to 450°. Combine olive oil, garlic, crushed red pepper, rosemary and thyme in a medium bowl.


2. Place the chicken in a baking dish and loosen the attached skin. Rub most of the olive oil mixture over the four chicken pieces, taking care to stuff it underneath the skin.

3. Add tomatoes to the remaining olive oil mixture and stir to coat. Pour coated tomatoes into the baking dish, arranging them snugly around the chicken. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper.

4. Roast until the chicken is cooked through and the tomatoes are blistered, about 35 minutes. Transfer the chicken to plates. Spoon the tomatoes and juices over the chicken.

April 26, 2010

Salted Caramel Brownies

Two weeks ago was the Share Our Strength Food Bloggers Bake Sale. And you ask, why do I care if it happened two weeks ago? Because hunger is an issue that never goes away, but we raised $1600 to help out.


Nic put together the sweetest stickers to hold our treat bags closed- the yellow circles with our blog logo on it. She of course claimed that it was easy and took next to no time, but this is the girl who designed (from scratch!) her own wedding invitations. And programs. And everything else. 
I'm not going to beat around the bush here with what I made- I hit it out of the park with these Salted Caramel brownies. They were gone in an hour. It probably didn't help that I ate a good portion with my friend K the night before, but it was all in the name of safety.  




Salted Caramel Brownies
Makes 16 bake sale-sized brownies

2 sticks butter
8 oz bittersweet chocolate
4 large eggs
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup all-puropse flour
Salted Caramel Sauce


1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a 13"x9" pan with foil (less clean up! no know scientific reason.)

2. In a heavy bottomed sauce pan, melt the butter and chocolate over medium low heat. When mostly melted with a few chunks remaining, pull it off the heat. Let it cool down.

3. Whisk eggs well in a large bowl, then whisk in salt, sugars, and vanilla. Mix well.

4. Stir in chocolate and butter, then add flour. Stir until incorporated.

5. Pour batter into prepared pan. Drizzle salted caramel sauce in a zig-zag or windy snake pattern. Drag a knife back and forth to create that pretty patter. Bake for 40-45 minutes. Don't overbake.

6. Once out of the oven, feel free to pour more salted caramel sauce in the wells you already created. Really fill up the pan. At this point, the brownies will be too hot and too liquidy to eat. So show some restraint, let them cool on the counter then refrigerate overnight.

April 24, 2010

Fish Tacos

I would like to announce that I have found The Perfect Fish Taco recipe. Fresh and crispy, with a hint of smoky chipotle. So good, in fact, that this is what we choose to eat three nights in a row during a doctor-ordered experiment to help my dear husband learn to count carbs.

Unfortunately, I'm never making them again.

On the last night, by the time I already had it up to HERE with corn tortillas [for serious, why can't they keep it together?], a bad piece of fish made it into the pan and boldly stated its presence throughout the house. For two weeks. A minor disaster, that you can avoid by sourcing your fish from a reliable shop. Ideally not one in a land-locked city.


Baja Style (Fried) Fish Tacos
Adpated from the NYTimes via Tiny Urban Kitchen

For the fish:
1/2 cup flour
1 1/2 teaspoons chili powder
1/2 cup milk
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 pound firm white-fleshed fish (cod or mahimahi worked well)

Recommended for tacos assembly:
tortillas
cilantro
chopped onion
shredded cabbage
spicy chili mayo
smoky tomato salsa

1. Slice fish against the grain into strips and soak in milk for at least 10 minutes. In a medium bowl, mix together the flour, chili powder and 1 1/2 teaspoons each of kosher salt and black pepper.

2. Pour 1/4 cup of the oil into a large frying pan over medium-high heat. Remove the fish pieces from the milk bath and dredge them lightly through the flour mixture, shaking to remove excess.

3. When the oil shimmers and is about to smoke, add several pieces of fish to the pan, without crowding, and cook until deep golden brown on one side, 3 to 4 minutes. Turn carefully and cook for 1 minute more. Remove to a warmed, paper-towel-lined plate and sprinkle with salt. Repeat with the remaining fish.

4. Wrap a few tortillas with a damp cloth, set on a plate and zap in the microwave for 30 seconds. Soft and steamy! Add fish and garnishes of your choosing.

April 21, 2010

Salty Cinnamon ChocoChip Cookies


The official public debut of my unnamed opus was the Atlanta Food Bloggers Bake Sale, a very serious anti-hunger rally. This was not your momma's bake sale, the blogger-ific event raised over $1600 for Share our Strength to fight childhood hunger. Let me tell you, there is no group more dedicated to stamping out hunger than the food bloggers.

My cookies sold out at the sale [though not as fast as Kate's Salty Carmel Brownies, but that's another story], with one set of recipe cards calling them 'Snicker Chips' and the other, 'ChocoChip Doodles'. Call it market research. Or a gross overestimation of how many other people enjoy the word 'doodle.'



For this recipe, I was granted a revelation better than all ten commandments combined: Thou shalt refrigerate thy dough overnight. This voice of god moment was brought to you by the New York Times and Jacques Torres' recipe. His recommended refrigeration of the dough really makes a difference. And seems to positively affect the health of those who binge on cookie dough, allowing a day of rest before hot and fresh cookies are present.



So here you have it, my opus, my official cookie recipe for ALL TIME. The recipe my offspring's offspring will be passed down. So much more an heirloom than that Crate & Barrel wedding 'china'. 



But what to call it? How do you capture the triple-flavor essence of sweet, warmly spiced, nutty heaven? There is definitely a choco choco chip base at work here, but it has matured into so much more. Make yourself a batch today, bake it tomorrow, and get back to me with your suggestions.

Speaking of naming this cookie, you can also help name a new flavor of Jake's Ice Cream in support of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta and A Taste of the Highlands. Vote now, and maybe we will have tomato ice cream in Atlanta this summer!

The Cookies That Might Possibly Never Be Named
Yield 2 dozen

1 cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup white sugar
2 eggs
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
3 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 rounded teaspoon salt
cinnamon to taste
1 cup ground pecans
16 oz chocolate chunks

1. Sift flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cinnamon into a bowl. Whir pecans in a food processor until ground to a semi-fine consistency.

2. Soften butter. Cream butter and sugars together until very light, about five minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in vanilla.

3. Reduce speed to low and mix in dry ingredients until just combined. Stir in ground pecans. Stir in chocolate chunks. If time (and hunger) permits, press plastic wrap against dough and refrigerate for 24-72 hours.

4. Preheat oven to 350°. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a non-stick baking mat. Drop dough balls onto baking sheet and sprinkle each ball with a pinch of sea salt. Bake 10 minutes.

April 13, 2010

Share Our Strength

Two months ago while I was training for the ING half marathon, I went out on a regular run. On my way back, I stopped at a light on N. Highland, whinning to myself about how i was tired and my foot hurt. I  must have had an awful look on my face; a man tapped me on the shoulder and asked if I was alright. Carl was incredibly nice, asked me if I could make it home alright, and told me he was a homeless veteran. He said he wasn't looking for anything, the light changed, and before he walked off he said, "I'm hungry." That was it, but the intensity in his face when he said has stuck with me ever since.

So when Tami from Running with Tweezers  asked for bloggers to participate in a Share Our Strength Bake Sale to raise funds for hunger, I signed on immediately. This weekend on Saturday April 17th is the first Georgia Food Bloggers Bake Sale, and will be at the Cabbagetown Market from 9AM-1PM. All of the proceeds will go towards the charity working to end hunger. Please come to support this cause, I'm making banana bread, scones and brownies for you.


As a warm up before baking loads for this weekend, I made a Guinness Stout Cake for St. Patrick's Day. This recipe is ripped pretty straight away from Nigella Lawson, as seen on The Kitchn. Its a serious, deeply dark chocolate cake that leans more savory with dark beer hints. Definitely on the not-too-sweet camp, it is topped with a tangy cream cheese frosting meant to mimick a real Guinness.





From the original recipe, I swapped sour cream with yogurt. I also used a 9 inch and 8 inch cake pans, because I don't own a springform. That made my timing change a bit, and I don't really recommend it, as it made me open the oven constantly. Don't be lazy like me, go get one. On the plus side, I have a whole other layer in the freezer.


Don't forget: this Saturday, April 17th at the Cabbagetown Market. 9AM-1PM. I'll be there, will you?
Chocolate Guinness Stout Cake
Serves 8-10

For the cake:
Butter for pan

1 cup Guinness stout

10 tablespoons (1 stick plus 2 tablespoons) unsalted butter

3/8 cup unsweetened cocoa

2 cups granulated sugar (I have used regular granulated sugar with no ill effects)

3/8 cup yogurt (Greek, full fat)

2 large eggs

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

2 cups all-purpose flour

2 1/2 teaspoons baking soda


1. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 9-inch springform pan or cake pan.

2. In a large saucepan, combine Guinness and butter. Place over medium-low heat until butter melts, then remove from heat. Add cocoa and superfine sugar, and whisk to blend.

3. In a small bowl, combine yogurt, eggs and vanilla; mix well. Add to Guinness mixture. Add flour and baking soda, and whisk again until smooth.

4. Pour into prepared pan, and bake, 45 minutes to one hour. Place pan on a wire rack and cool completely in pan.


Frosting:
1 1/4 cups confectioners' sugar
8 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature

1/2 cup heavy cream


1. Combine confectioner's sugar and cream cheese.

2. Add cream slowly, stirring to combine until it reaches a spreadable texture.

April 12, 2010

Basics: Multigrain Peasant Bread

Another installment of our (very) occasional series of basics, staple recipes every cook should have in their arsenal.  


Bread, the basic building block of life. Even the lowliest meals calls for a crust of bread. It's too bad that this most primal, human, food stuff was handed over to bakers for so many years. Instead of paying for pricey artisan loaves, I decided it's time to take it back.



Over the last few months I've gone through 15 pounds of various flours and many recipe options. A heavy whole wheat loaf complete with milk powder, kneaded on the stand mixer. The simple and tasty white no-knead, famous for introducing a run on Dutch ovens. Then, I was duped into the false allure of Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day; a big fat LIE. Oh, and don't forget about no-knead in a hurry. But I've finally come to a reliably tasty and healthy bread that fits into our lifestyle.

This recipe and method happens to work for me, but by all means, seek out your own. I'm partial to this combination of no-knead and Artisan Bread in Five techniques. Every other Saturday night before hitting the town, I mix up the dough. Then shape and bake one loaf on Sunday night, while reserving the remaining half the dough for another loaf up to 10 days later. Two loaves for the price of one 24 hour rise.

Multigrain Peasant Bread
Not adapted at all from TheKitchn.com

1 cup rye flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 to 1 cup cracked wheat, uncooked steel cut oats, sunflower seeds, or other textured grain, seeds, or nuts (I whir oats and flax seeds in the food processor)
4 cups white all-purpose flour (bread flour works too, it will just be a bit heavier)
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon yeast
3 1/4 cups (26 ounces) room temperature water

1. In a very large bowl, mix together all the flours, salt, and yeast. Stir in the water to form a thick, gloppy batter. (If your yeast needs to dissolve in water before being added, do this in a separate bowl before combining with the flours.)
2. Cover the bowl with a towel and let it sit at room temperature for at least 8 hours, ideally overnight. My dough forms a hard crust which looks unappetizing, but doesn't seem to affect the final product. Remove the crust if you prefer.
3. Sprinkle your work surface with a little flour and turn out half the dough onto it. Cover the other half with plastic wrap to refrigerate the dough for up to a week. Refrigerating for a few hours also helps make the dough easier to work with and improves the flavor.
4. Choose to shape your loaf into either a boule or a sandwich loaf (I like to do one of each).
Round: Sprinkle the dough with a little more flour and attempt to knead the shaggy wet dough a few times. If it's more like just folding, that's ok, the goal is just to stretch the gluten and develop surface tension to keep it from falling flat. Sprinkle a pizza peel or non-plastic cutting board with cornmeal and place the shaped loaf on it. Cover and let the loaf rise for about 1.5 - 2 hours at room temperature, until nearly doubled in bulk.
Sandwich: Lightly spray a loaf pan with oil. No need to knead, just dump the shaggy dough into the pan, cover and let rise for about 1.5 - 2 hours at room temperature, until nearly doubled in bulk.
5. A half hour before baking, preheat the oven to 450°. Put a pan in the bottom of the oven to preheat as well. If you're baking round loaves, set a baking stone on the middle rack while the oven is heating.
When the loaves have risen, quickly cut 1/2-inch slashes in the top with a serrated knife and set them in the oven. Pour a half cup of water into the pan at the bottom of the oven and close the oven door.
6. Bake for 30-35 minutes, until the loaves are dark brown, sound hollow when tapped on the bottom, and the interior registers 190° on an instant-read thermometer. Allow to cool fully on a rack before slicing and eating.

April 7, 2010

Roasted Cauliflower with Cilantro Lime Sauce

The last few days in Atlanta have felt more like summer time than spring. Which after a long, cruel winter is both welcome and not welcome. I'd like some spring, some transition time here. So in honor of the seasons that don't make sense, I made you something awesome that both components live in opposite seasons. 

Roasted Cauliflower with a Cilantro Lime sauce, salsa verde style. Adapted from Molly Wizenberg's A Homemade Life, which is an excellent book. And since cauliflower is a more winter thing, and cilantro is more summery, here's your mash up of seasons on one plate. We'll call it spring. 




Salsa Verde
1 medium jalepeno, ribbed and seeded, then finely chopped
1/3 cup finely chopped cilantro
2 medium cloves garlic, minced with a pinch of salt
3 T fresh lime juice
4 T olive oil

salt to taste

1. While the ingredients call for all this to be chopped separately, it is entirely possible to chop together. Especially the jalepeno and garlic.

2. Combine all ingredients in a bowl, and let sit for at least 30 minutes while cauliflower roasts. 

Roasted Cauliflower
Serves 1-2

1 head cauliflower
Olive oil to coat
Salt & Pepper

1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

2. Slice cauliflower into the same sized pieces or slices. 

3. Toss with a few tablespoons of oil to coat, then salt and pepper. 

4. Spread out in a single layer on sheet pan, and roast in the oven for 20-25 minutes or until a deep caramelly brown color appears. You can flip during this, but I didn't.

Drizzle sauce on top and enjoy!


April 6, 2010

Create a flavor! Win some tickets.

I gave it a valiant effort, but sadly have to file this under fail. After receiving the ice cream maker Kitchen Aid attachment with the wedding loot, I made it my mission to recreate the incredible olive oil, chocolate and sea salt gelato found at fine Atlanta restaurant Ecco.

Sadly, when I attempted to use this recipe, the flavor was decidedly off. [No blame to the recipe maker, you should definitely check out Desert Candy's extensive ice cream recipe listing! Avocado! Sour cream brown sugar! Innovation at it's finest.]

Perhaps my custard was overcooked? Proportions off? Eggs old? Though my dear husband is pointing his finger at the dreaded STORE BRAND OLIVE OIL. [insert dramatic chipmunk]

I should have used the good stuff we picked up at Star Provisions from our local cheese-mongerer. @timthecheeseman allows customers to sample oils from various regions and countries, and bring the bottle back in for reduced price refills. Delicious and sustainable!

Really, to make the olive oil and chocolate ice cream happen, I should have called on Jake for help. That's Jake of Jake's Ice Cream, local Atlanta ice cream kingpin, who is partnering with the annual A Taste of the Highlands benefit event to create a new ice cream flavor in honor of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta. You know, for the kids.

So, if you have any winning suggestions (HINT HINT, see suggestion above), please submit your ideas to the Create a Flavor contest by the end of the week. First, second and third prize ideas will win free tickets to the Taste of the Highlands event on May 15, 2010. Go forth and ideate!