October 21, 2010

Chocolate Almond Butter

Problem:


Almonds and chocolate chips packed along as trail mix, on a hike to Amicalola Falls. It promptly melted in the heat. It was an optimistic fall hike. 

Solution:


Dump the whole thing in my food processor, and whirl away until it became Chocolate Almond Butter. And you thought we were fancy.

Chocolate Almond Butter

2 cups almonds
1/4 cup chocolate chips- can use cocoa powder
Canola oil
Salt

1. Ideally, roast the almonds. Then dump in a food processor with chocolate chips or cocoa powder.

2. Process- it will go from small gravel to powder to paste- keep going. Add a bit of canola oil to ease the process. It also helps to keep it spreadable.

3. Eat with pears, apples, fruits; spread on toast, use like regular almond butter.

October 19, 2010

Pan-Roasted Brussel Sprouts and Apples

I have found the first dish I am putting on my future restaurant menu.


Pan-Roasted Brussel Sprouts and Apples with Dijon.

I am not a fan of people apologizing for leaving their blogs to lie fallow for a while, it just points out how long they really were gone. At the same time, there have been good reasons that have kept us away- one of us got a brand spankin new job, that is not only exciting but incredibly time consuming (which I fully support). We also both began training in serious for the Thanksgiving Half Marathon, which functions as the best excuse ever to go crazy on Thanksgiving, and also very time consuming. Thirdly, I haven't been cooking as often, as a result of lots of social and work events, and therefore in a type of writer's block.

Forgive my terrible picture, but it was hot and I was hungry; also please ignore the trout with brown butter and capers. The sweet apples and the caramelly brussel sprouts with the tang of Dijon and some shallot for balance; I could make an entire meal of it. Nic and I are huge fans of brussel sprouts; roasted only please. As fall hits Atlanta (please drop below 75), expect more brussels, along with lots of leeks, butternut squash, roasted meats and pumpkin. This recipe is another method, rather than set amounts- give yourself equal parts of brussels and apples to feed as many people as you have, then add shallots and Dijon accordingly.


Pan-Roasted Brussel Sprouts and Apples
Makes as many as you like- adjust as needed

Shallots
Brussel Sprouts
Apples
Dijon

1.   For this recipe, you can't really go wrong with proportions. Start with the number of people you're feeding. I shredded equal amounts of brussel sprouts and apples, just cut into roughly 1/4 in matchsticks.

2. Then I finely diced about a quarter of the amount of shallots- you can up this to about 1/3, or even use regular onion but be sure to cook a bit more.

3. Heat some olive oil over medium high heat. Add the shallot, sautee for about 30 sec to a min, until it smells delicious.

4. Still over medium high heat, add apples and brussel sprouts. Its basically a stir-fry, you want the ingredients to caramelize and brown well. Move things about with a spatula, it took me about 5 minutes.

5. Stir in a small spoonful of Dijon when everything is cooked through. Just enough to meld the flavors.
 

October 5, 2010

Vanilla-Black Pepper Ice Cream

I have always wanted to make ice cream. Ever since we did that 'experiement' in elementary school where every kid got a bag of ice cream mix in a bigger bag of ice, and was instructed to throw it around, I have wanted to make ice cream for real. Congrats teachers on a brilliant way to get kids to bring you ice cream at school.


Nic and I decided to do a mutual ice cream making project. We tossed around idea after idea, Olive-Oil Gelato, courtesy of our friend at Ecco, Rosemary/Herb ice cream, White Nectarine sorbet, all kinds of chocolate. Then it came down to division of labor, and while Nic handled the hard part (freezing the maker) I got to make the base. Who's got two thumbs and is in charge of flavor decisions? This guy! 

What better way to start with a classic, than vanilla ice cream? Never mind I'm never one to go with a straight recipe the first try. I must tinker with it, which is why I've never made good soup. This is another topic for another day however. Vanilla-Black Pepper ice cream was This was originally intended to go with the Chocolate Cocoa Nib cookies I posted  a while ago.

I stood directly in front of the ice cream churn for the entire 30-45 minutes it took, watching. Waiting. Nose about 3 inches from the bowl. Its a fascinating process. And totally worth it, when I finally took a spoonful of sweet, creamy with a floral overtone that was crazy good, with a bit of heat at the end. Yum.


Vanilla Black Pepper Ice Cream
Makes about a quart

1 cup whole milk
2 cups heavy cream
1/2 cup sugar
pinch of salt
6 large egg yolks
1 tsp vanilla paste (or extract)
1 1/2 tsp finely ground black pepper- use this to taste. ie add less, taste then keep adding as necessary.

1. In a medium saucepan, combine milk, 1 cup of cream, sugar and salt. Heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally until hot and steaming- barely hot to touch. Stick your finger in it- should be slightly warmer than body temperature.

2. Prepare an ice bath: dumps lots of ice cubes into a huge bowl, and add water. Pour the remaining cup of cream into a different, separate, large bowl. Set a fine sieve over the top and place the whole contraption in the ice bath bowl- be careful not to submerge the bowl with cream! I used a wok as my huge bowl with ice water. 

3. In a medium bowl, whisk egg yolks throughly. (save the whites!)

4. By now, your milk, cream and sugar mixture should be hot and ready. Take off the stove, let sit for 30 seconds. 

5. Start whisking egg yolks vigorously, then slowly stream in about half of the milk mixture. Then pour the egg mixture back with the rest of the milk and replace on the stove. Don't panic during this step- go slowly, and remember if it seizes or curdles, whiz it in a blender until smooth. Also- small chunks are to be expected, that's what the sieve over the rest of the cream is for.

6. Cook, stirring constantly, over medium low heat. You want the custard to lightly coat the back of a spoon- drag your finger down the middle of it and the lines should stay separate. This took me about 6 minutes. 

7. Pour the custard through the sieve into the rest of the cream, and stir to combine. Now let it cool down in the ice bath. Lay plastic wrap across the top directly on the custard and refrigerate overnight. 

8. Prepare your ice cream machine according to manufacturer's instructions. When you're ready to churn, stir in the vanilla and black pepper- TASTE it make sure its good. 

9. Churn according to manufacturer's instructions, and once done freeze in a lidded container for about 2 hours.