If I knew you were coming, I'd have baked a cake...



It's almost 1 pm and I am still in my jammies. hey, gimme a break, I rarely get the chance to relax so I decided today was a relax day...at least for 30 more minutes. I wanted to try something different the other day so I took my crabcake recipe and substituted tuna canned in olive oil for the crabmeat. It was actually really good. Wife wanted to have "tuna melt burgers" (her idea that I was supposed to figure out how to make) so this is what I came up with. I just combined them with bread crumbs, onion, red pepper, jalps, s &p,and an egg. I then shallow fried them in olive oil and melted jack cheese on them in the broiler (on a butter bun from the bakery). Pretty tasty. I think a mini version would make a great snack for a cocktail party. The soup is a veggie soup with beans made for wife's sister. her and her squeeze were passing through and we made this for a speedy veg-tastic dinner. The salad was lunch yesterday that we had before mom and dad dish left. I used a brown sugar rub on the chicken and combined it with greens and sunflower shoots from shadowbrook farms. Also had made some croutons from the seeded pain de campagne that we started making at the bakery. Pick some up, sesame and flax seeds toasted to nirvana creating a crunchy, nutty crust on an intensely flavorful country bread...yes please!
Also, went to the market for the first time this year. I hadn't been in 2 years, It's getting huge! I couldn't believe the number of new booths that were there. If you live lincoln, you have to go check it out. I am thinking about making another trip next week since my lettuce has finally quit (time to plant again!)

Alms...Alms for the pork.


Nothing gets me more excited than the thought of slow cooking a bunch of pork. Well, ok, maybe slow cooking a bunch of pork that is marinated overnight and then wrapped in banana leaves does get me more excited, but come on! who wouldn't be? I know that I have posted this before, but that was a while ago and I had really been craving it lately. I usually only make this when I find pork butt on sale. I'm talking mega-sale here...like 98 cents a pound. That's also when I load up on sausage-making supplies. I usually find it about 4 times a year at super saver on 48th. ok, back to the meat...Does this dish take a little bit of time to prep? yes. Does it require a special trip to a mexican grocery? probably. But listen, it's worth it. It's a very different combination of spices that leads to a really complex flavor. I usually serve it with some rice and beans, tortillas, but you would be totally fine just serving it with some tortillas and eating it taco style (uhhh...i don't remember dressing up like a taco?!?). It's very versatile, I've even used the meat in mole (not the yard-ruining rodent) sauce. give this one a try on a weekend night.
Other newsicals: For the past month, wifeshow has been studying for the leed commercial interiors exam. basically, she has worked more than full time hours and has then come home and spent hours upon hours studying for this thing. it paid off, she passed with high marks (only missing 9 out of 200 questions!) and we are all breathing a little easier around here. Mom and Dad dish were in town and we went out to celebrate at a local restaurant called, Dish. Since this place shares my name, I wish I could say that I had a glorious experience and was wowed by the complex food and outstanding service. Not to say that the food was bad, it was above average, but one thing that was a huge turn-off was the bread. Usually, Dish serves bread from LeQ, but they had run out and we ended up with some crappy sysco wonder bread loaf thing. It was awful beyond awful. My Mom wasn't afraid to tell them it was crap. It was really hard to rebound from there. I left feeling underwhelmed and wished I had just made dinner myself. I definitely had a better time being there and spending time with family than I had eating the food. Not trying to be a downer, just being honest... I expect a little bit more (not portion size, quality) when my food gets above the 15 dollar range.
DISH recommends:
pickled brussels sprouts! ok, stop right there. quit making that face...I mean it. I picked these up yesterday at the store out of curiosity and I am hooked. I can't imagine a more tasty, piquant snack. They have a lot more crunch than I thought that they would and they would be a great addition to an olive plate or something of the sort. Can't wait to try and can my own.
Puerco Pibil:
5 lbs pork butt, cubed into 2 inch pieces
5tbs annato seeds (also called achiote seeds)*
1 tbs cumin seed
1 tbs coriander seed
1 tbs peppercorns
10 allspice berries
1/2 tsp cloves
2 habanero chiles, de-veined, de-seeded
1/2 c orange juice
1/2 cup white vinegar
2 tbs kosher salt
8 cloves garlic
juice of 5 lemons
splash of good quality tequila (don't skimp!)
1 pkg banana leaves*
large ziploc bags
Prep your pork butt, and place into two large ziplocs. I use gallon size. Add the achiote seeds, cumin seeds, coriander seeds, peppercorns, allspice berries, and cloves into a spice grinder and pulverize them into oblivion. set aside. In a blender, combine the habaneros, garlic, orange juice, vinegar, lemon juice, and tequila. add your spice mixture and salt and blend for about 30 seconds or until incorporated. Pour into ziploc bags, distributing evenly as possible. Let marinate in fridge overnight. Preheat oven to 300F. In a large casserole, place your banana leaves so they hang over the edges quite a bit. you'll probably have to use two and overlap them (It'll look like your pan has wings!). Pour in the pork mixture, marinade and all, and fold the excess banana leaves over to enclose the pork. Cover the top with foil very tightly, and then put in the oven for four hours. Serve with rice and beans, or just tortillas, or just eat it with your hands, The possibilities abound!
* Items available at a mexican specialty foods store (in L-town, they are at La Mexicana)
ps. Don't try this with other cuts of pork, they don't work out. You need the fat because of the long roasting time. And don't trim much of the fat off, it melts into the meat. gurgle... gurgle...


Went to a garden party...



I'm usually wicked tired on fridays and don't feel like cooking before I have to go back in to work, so I try and keep it simple. this friday, I made some noodles and just sauteed some garden veg to go in there with them. I steeped some aromatics in chicken stock, and then cooked the noodles in that broth before I combined everything. Brocolli, sugar snaps, snow peas, onions, and carrots (not garden). Pretty tasty...pretty easy.
The baguette picture is from the farmer's market bake. I lowered the temperature of the water that I used in the white-yeasted dough, and it made for an excellent end-product. The "ears" of the baguette really popped up and we had some amazing bread that day. Of course, I must credit Marth's baguette-shaping skills, those definitely helped. Anyway, just thought I would share a pic of what I do, hope you all are getting to the market and getting some great bread, if not, you really need to. Better yet, stop in at the bakery and pick some up. Super fresh, super tasty. If you stop in early, say hi to the dish (nerdy guy, dark glasses, covered in flour) There is no excuse to eat crappy bread.
other photo is of some banana nut muffins we made yesterday. It was wifeshow's mama's recipe. they are really, really good. Would love to share the recipe with you cats, but don't know if it's a family only thing, have to ask. Or you could marry the last reitz girl...but she has a boyfriend, so the odds aren't in your favor.

I like to think that I use every part of the mammoth



Tomato soup sounds like it should be the easiest thing in the world to make. However, like many other things, I find that it is one thing that is very hard to make well. Usually, I hate tomato soup, for the main reason that it hardly ever really tastes like tomatoes. Some versions are so acidic that they taste like you are sucking on a handful of duracells, other versions have so much cream in them that you lose the tomato taste.
I stumbled on a recipe for tomato soup a while ago that used bread to give it the illusion of creaminess. I thought that it sounded like a good idea, but kind of filed it away under the category of "maybe I'll try that later", which, if you are anything like me, sometimes turns into the category of "maybe I'll try that never." Well, by some stroke of fate/luck, I finally decided to make this and was pretty pleased with the results. I tweaked it a little here and there, adding vermouth where it called for brandy and substituting pain de campagne for white sandwich bread. It really does taste (and even looks like) like there was some sort of dairy added to it, but not in an obnoxious way. The clear flavor of tomatoes is really pronounced without being acidic, and the creaminess is a nice compliment without being heavy or stodgy.
Also made some shrimp and salmon with a brown sugar/paprika rub. Marth gave me some beet tops from her momma's garden that I sauteed with some broccoli stems and caramelized onion. If you haven't tried beet tops, you really need to. We've been eating them on pizza at the bakery...kind of like spinach , but with more flavor. I heart them.
The last pic is some rosemary/lemonzest/garlic pork paillards with some honey glazed roasted carrots. cutting the meat into thin medallions is a great way to save cooking time and also to fool your stomach into thinking that you are eating more than you actually are.
DISH recommends:
34 Degree flatcrisp crackers. OH...JACKPOT! For those of you who have a crispy/crunchy/cracker tooth, welcome to nirvana. Had some of these over at iske's a couple of weeks ago and I can't get enough of them. Super thin. the texture is what gets me...I love crunchy. Great for dips or spready cheese. I picked mine up at leons.

"creamy" tomato soup: (serves about 4, or three hungrys)
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 medium onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 bay leaf
1 can 28 0z tomatoes, whole in juice (tomato juice that is!)
1 tbs brown sugar
3 large slices quality country bread (like pain de campagne or sourdough), crusts reserved
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes, or more if you're a spicy
2 cups chicken stock (or vegetable if you want to make it vegetarian)
2 tbs vermouth
salt and peps
scallions or chives and cherry tomatoes/crust croutons to garnish
heat 2 tbs of the oil in a dutch oven, or heavy pot over med heat and then add onion, garlic, red pepper, and bay leaf. stir and cook for about 4-5 minutes. put in the tomates, juice and all and smash them up with a wooden spoon or potato masher until they are pretty smashy, no big pieces left. Stir in the sugar and bread, bring to a boil and then turn down to med-low and cook until bread starts to break down, another 4 or so minutes. remove from heat and throw out bay leaf. Working in batches (about 2 batches), transfer the soup to a blender. cover with a towel and pulse until smooth. Once it is smooth and the threat of hot exploding soup has subsided, turn it on and slowly drizzle in one of the remaining tablespoons of olive oil. transfer soup to large bowl. Repeat with other half of the soup. Rinse out the pot and add all of soup back to pot. Stir in your chicken broth and vermouth. season with salt and peps. Garnish with some minced scallions, small dice cherry tomatoes, and croutons you made out of the bread crusts.
Brown sugar rub:
2 packed tbs brown sugar
1 rounded tbs paprika
1 tsp blk pepper
1/2 tsp salt
put everything in a bowl and stir it up until incorporated. I like to use this on whole roasted chickens and also on seafood. piece

Some more garden pics...



Just a few more pics that wouldn't fit on my last post. looks like it's going to be a hot week, might have to turn on the ac. well, gotta run, much to do and all. piece.