Posts Tagged ‘cooking’

Servery Challenge: Fall Edition

Exciting news! At a recent THE 434 reunion, we had a servery challenge!! And for the first time ever, the presentations were filmed!!

Rules: Participants had 15 minutes to cook their “fall” themed dish and think of a name. Voting is done by secret ballot to try to keep Rob from gaming the system, although even this is not fool-proof.

Entries
Rob

Dish Name: Fall Surprise
Ingredients: Pastry shell, chocolate raspberry cranberry mousse, pumpkin granola.

It turns out chocolate-raspberry-cranberry isn't a popular combo for a reason

It turns out chocolate-raspberry-cranberry isn’t a popular combo for a reason

Rachel

Dish Name: Falliage Soup
Ingredients: Pumpkin spice latte, Harris Teeter-brand maple cookies, decorative pumpkin and leaves

Points for presentation

Points for presentation


Cynthia

Dish Name: Fall Appetizer
Ingredients: Indian corn, pimento cheese, crackers

This one would be good IF you like pimento cheese (I do not)

This one would be good IF you like pimento cheese (I do not)

Patricia

Dish Name: Leaves on a Log
Ingredients: Honey crisp apple, peanut butter, Reese’s Pieces

Colorful!!!

Colorful!!!

Matt

Dish Name: Pumpking of Heaven
Ingredients: Pumpkin beer, chocolate almonds, “holy” water

Most interactive!

Most interactive!

Here is the exciting results video!!!!!

Previously: North Carolina Edition
Art museum scavenger hunt

How to Soup

Hi everybody! Patricia Ladd’s one-time favorite Wiess freshman here, ready to teach you a thing or two about making soup. Of course you want to make soup. It’s filling, inexpensive, and delicious. If you don’t cook much but want to get comfortable in the kitchen, the soup pot is a forgiving teacher. Also, even though making soup takes a few hours, most of that time is hands-off.

1. Stock

You can make perfectly good soup with water, but making stock is easy and using it gives soup a deeper, fuller flavor. Bones and gristle from meat and scraps from most vegetables have lots of flavor to offer, so hold onto them as you cook! Collect these treasures, along with vegetables that are starting to look iffy, in something airtight in your freezer, like a big Ziploc bag or Tupperware container.

Start with: onion, celery, and carrot form a trio called “Mirepoix” that acts as the backbone of vegetable stock. You should probably also use a bay leaf and peppercorns (or black pepper), but if you’re missing any of this stuff, don’t let it stop you from making stock.

  • Throw in: whatever vegetables going into your soup have a home in your stock. Garlic, lentils, corn cobs, pepper cores, zucchini and squash tips, parsley stems, potato skins, tomato cores, mushroom stems, bean tips, apple cores, and green onion ends are all great choices. My secret ingredient is the top inch of a jalapeño, which gives the whole pot a satisfying kick.
  • Go easy on the: celery and Brassica vegetables (cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts) will dominate the flavor if you’re not careful. One stalk’s worth of celery is plenty. Any of the other ingredients should fit in the palm of your hand. My cookbooks are split on whether eggplant lends a meaty or bitter flavor to stock. You decide!
  • Avoid: citrus rind, banana peels, spinach, anything downright rotten, beets unless you’re ok with deeply dyed soup.

I use whatever has filled my ziploc bag, with little regard to the soup’s ingredients. And my soup is great. Don’t sweat it.

Dump at least 4 cups of scraps into a pot, cover with water, add a pinch of salt, and bring to simmer. If you’re using animal parts and you’re not in a hurry, give them a few hours’ head start. The vegetables should simmer for about an hour and a half. Strain out the solids, and you have yourself a pot of stock. Nice!

2. Stuff

Maybe you’re cooking from a recipe, and if so follow it and be strong. If, however, you fancy yourself a renegade, you should try making up a soup as you go. Shoot for variety in ingredients, and don’t be shy. Do pay attention to each ingredient’s cooking times, giving denser or larger pieces a head start.

  • Meat: if you eat it, adding chunks of meat takes you halfway to a decent soup
  • Aromatics: onion, celery, carrot, garlic, bell pepper
  • Starch: chunky pasta, root vegetables (potato, turnip, parsnip, beet if you’re ok with deeply dyed soup), pumpkin, butternut squash, hominy
  • Texture: beans, corn, zucchini, mushroom, peas, summer squash, cabbage
  • Acid: tomato, tomatillo, lemon juice. If you’re using a lot of acidic ingredients and the soup tastes funny, try adding sugar.
  • Spice: parsley, rosemary, sage, basil, thyme, oregano, marjoram

Soups cook best right at a simmer, and heavy-bottomed pots make hitting this sweet spot a breeze. But any big pot can make soup. Check in periodically to prevent overcooking, but if the soup gets away from you just run it all through the blender.

3. Finishing touch

If you want to take your soup to the next level,

  • Purée some or all of it. Run some or all of your soup through a blender or food processor for a full-bodied broth or totally smooth soup, respectively. Purée in small batches and take care to avoid steam burns.
  • Swirl a spoonful plain yogurt into each bowl without stirring it in all the way, if the soup is already somewhat thick.
  • Top with crackers, cheese, pumpkin seeds, or chives.

That’s all there is to it! Enjoy your soup. If it came out lackluster, try adding a little salt. If that doesn’t help, serve it in a bread boulle. Everything tastes good in a bread boulle.

 

Birthday Week Part 3: Bellagio Cooking Class

As a birthday present to Steven, I got us a cooking class in Las Vegas at the Bellagio hotel!! They do it once a month, taught by the executive chef and his culinary team. It was really cool, and felt like being on a reality tv show!

Complete with other people to set up your station for you, just like on tv

Complete with other people to set up your station for you, just like on tv

First was the salad course, where we got some professional chopping lessons down, as well as how to cook couscous quick, make a yogurt dressing, and artfully arrange everything:

Steven's artfully arranged salad

Steven’s artfully arranged salad

Then we learned how to tie and roast a whole chicken!! We didn’t do that part individually, though we did get to eat it:

Hello, beautiful chicken

Hello, beautiful chicken

We got back into it for the dessert course, a passionfruit mousse. Here’s a look at Steven and my station:

Sadly we did not make the actual mousse

Sadly we did not make the actual mousse

We did make a fancy sauce for it, though, and artfully decorated with chocolate curls and piped cream.

A dessert work of art!

A dessert work of art!

My priorities were more about getting as much chocolate as possible on there

My priorities were more about getting as much chocolate as possible on there

We met some really cool people in the class, including Las Vegas locals and a guy vacationing from Brazil! It was my favorite thing we did on this trip, so I would definitely recommend it!

Yay!!!

Yay!!!

Next: Birthday Week Part 4: Fancy food
Previously: Birthday Week Part 2: Selfies

Oranges All Over Everything

As often happens when my parents visit me, I’m left with a giant sack of oranges and grapefruit. They are delicious, but numerous, so Steven and I have to conscientiously try to eat them all before they go bad. To that end, we once again had a ORANGE CHALLENGE SURPRISE dinner on Sunday. It’s kind of like Iron Chef, and the secret ingredient was orange. I’m not sure which of us won this one. Here’s what I made:

I'm not giving you the recipe, because it sucked

I’m not giving you the recipe, because it sucked

On the plus side, it used up three oranges and one grapefruit, so it beat Steven’s on that score. If only it had used them well. It was supposed to be a kind of orzo pasta salad with citrus, red onion, mint, and basil. Yeah… Mint and basil are a super weird combo, and I’m not sure which was the main flavor problem or if it was somehow both of them. Also, red onion always tastes unpleasantly like acid to me, no matter how finely chopped, so each bite basically just tasted like eating raw onion. Bleh.

Luckily, Steven’s was more successful:

He made homemade truffles, like a fancy person

He made homemade truffles, like a fancy person

Usually when Steven tackles these fancy, difficult projects, they end up kind of weird if they end up as anything at all. So you can imagine my shock when it was my easy, sensible recipe that failed hardcore, and his that was a delicious success. He made two kinds: the ones pictured, an orange liqueur truffle, and some orange ginger ones. The process was long, and fraught with peril and messiness, but they are incredibly delicious. Almost too delicious, like I can barely eat a whole one, they’re so rich. This project only took one orange, but it used it wisely.

Back to eating them for breakfast and snacks for me!

Cookbook update: Six Down

4 months in to my New Year Plan to make one recipe out of each of my cookbooks, and I’m not doing as good as I thought I would be. Time to step it up.

Hello, Cupcake! by Karen Tack and Alan Richardson

Hello, Cupcake! by Karen Tack and Alan Richardson

You may remember this book from that time I tried make fake spaghetti and meatball cupcakes (incidentally, to find that link I went through every blogpost tagged “cupcake”. It was a delicious odyssey through my past.) This book is awesome, but often sets the bar way too high. I’m terrible at art things in general, and feel very accomplished if I can frost something better than a five-year-old. The technique explanations in the front are helpful, but I think I would need a lot more practice to do most of the suggestions in here. Others look really cool, but might not taste very good, like the fake corn on the cob cupcakes made out of yellow and white jellybeans. Anyway, it took me awhile to choose a recipe that I thought looked easy enough for me to accomplish and also good enough for me to eat:

You've seen these guys before

You’ve seen these guys before

The hardest part was separating out the Oreos so that all the frosting was on one side. Recipe at the end.

Also, the slightly less dramatic:

The Everything Pressure Cooker Cookbook by Pamela Rice Hahn

The Everything Pressure Cooker Cookbook by Pamela Rice Hahn

This one may be less flashy than cupcakes, but there’s no denying it’s super useful. We got it as a wedding present from the Wiess masters (well, I guess the ex-Wiess masters by then) along with a magical pressure cooker/slow cooker/rice cooker device. It is easily the best kitchen thing I own. Seriously, you should get one if you like cooking at all. We use it at least two or three times a week, whether to cook rice or chicken fast or to slow cook a whole meal. I decided to try something I’ve always wanted to make:

Pear butter

Pear butter!

The recipe was really easy (as you can see after the cut), but it didn’t turn out like I was expecting. In the end, it was more like an applesauce consistency than a butter. Still delicious on a toasted English muffin though!

Recipes: Read the rest of this entry »

13 Adventures: #11 Peanut Butter Blossoms

Peanut butter blossoms are, hands down, my favorite Christmas cookie, and have been for as long as I remember. Since I’m not going home for Christmas, I decided to make my own today! My favorite part, besides eating them, is taking all the Hershey’s Kisses out of their foil wrappings. It’s like unwrapping a bunch of tiny presents!

I put them in this box so I could pour them over Steven later and shout "It's snowing shininess!"

Putting the kisses on top after they’re right out of the oven is also really fun! They turned out great:

Beautiful!!

13 Adventures: #6 Red Velvet Whoopie Pies

It seems like red velvet has been a big deal lately; more people I know are baking it in different iterations so I was pretty pleased about a month ago when I found this recipe for Red Velvet Sandwich Cookies. Finally I would jump on this bandwagon! I made them, and they turned out awesome. They were exactly the right consistency–cakey, but not gooey–and the frosting tasted great. I was in love, and vowed to make them again around Christmas time, maybe dyeing the frosting green to be festive.

So, because the YA Book Club Holiday party is today at my house (I always volunteer so that I can stay in pajamas till the last possible moment) I thought it was the perfect time to try!

Unfortunately, I was wrong. This recipe seemed so easy the first time I made it! I have no idea why this time was filled with mistakes. Probably I should have made them a day ahead so that I would not also be trying to vacuum/dust/sweep at the same time. But I haven’t given up on this recipe yet! It produced some passable cookies that I will still be putting out tonight. Okay, so some of them are a little bit crispy… okay, maybe a little bit blackened on the bottoms, and yeah I ran out of powdered sugar so the frosting isn’t as sweet and is a weirder consistency. But I bet no one will notice the difference.
Read the rest of this entry »

13 Adventures: #3 Servery Challenge: Orange Edition

When my parents came up for Thanksgiving, they brought two giant sacks filled with oranges and grapefruit. Even though I feel like I’ve been eating delicious Florida citrus with every meal, we still have so much left. Which is why today’s adventure was a Servery Challenge: Orange Edition in which each dish had to use up oranges.

As might be expected, I just messed around with the basics, and Steven tried to find the fanciest recipe possible. Sure, his took twice as long as mine, but it was also twice as spicy.

Since I am all about pineapple on pizza (although sadly I find Canadian bacon gross), I thought it would be interesting to try orange on pizza! I wasn’t able to find any examples of this online to make sure I wasn’t crazy, but this was an adventure(!) so I was not to be dissuaded. Besides, I know how to make pizza already, so whatever.
The easiest recipe I know is one for this pizza crust/flatbread that I got out of a teen cooking book. I love teen cookbooks because they try to be accommodating, not pretentious, and usually have awesome pictures. I like this recipe because you don’t even have to let the dough rise:

2 cups flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 cup olive oil
3/4 cup milk

Mix together until a dough! Then spread on a flat pan! Top with things! Bake at 425 degrees for 15-22 minutes until done! Cook length will depend on dough’s thinness.

I don’t remember if the original recipe was written in entirely exclamation marks like that, but it should have been. I chose to top my pizza with: two oranges and 1/4 of a red onion, cut up, feta cheese, walnuts, and spinach. It looked like this:

Next time I would probably put the spinach on top after cooking

Steven made a fancy Persian rice dish whose recipe I can’t remember because it was extremely complicated. However, it had a lot of tasty spices, including ginger and curry, and two kinds of nuts: almonds and pistachios. It used up at least 3 oranges! Yay!

The orange peel ended up being almost candied and way tasty!

Competitive cooking is the best kind of cooking!!

Site and contents are © 2009-2024 Patricia Ladd, all rights reserved. | Admin Login | Design by Steven Wiggins.