Monday, December 31, 2012

Ending the year with food

The end of a year often signals several important developments: cold weather, holidays, and the tail end of football season. These seemingly unrelated things often collide to one activity in my household: cooking. So I figured; what better way to end the year, than to show some of the recent dishes/confections that have been brewing in the kitchen?

Fajita night! Sauteed steak with accompaniments (qtips not included!)


Assembled fajita. It was tasty.


Stir-fried Shanghai noodles, with chicken, shitake mushrooms,
and bean sprouts. Hm. Should have added something green, huh?


Instead of buying gifts for Christmas, I ended up making edible gifts for some friends. I had an idea to make a chocolate truffle lollipop; I was an old hand at making truffles, and thought it would be adorable if I put it on a stick. No problem, right? Then I had the bright idea of having a caramel center. Gooey, delicious, what could be better? At least... that was the idea. My caramel centers were certainly gooey... and had the darndest time staying on that stick. I ended up having to put the caramel in the freezer to harden up, and even then ended up with quite a few un-giftable results.

Caramel centers, chilling in the freezer


Pool of ganache


Growing lollipops


End product. Yayyy, they're so pretty!


On the other end of the spectrum, one the coolest gifts I received this year was also technically home-made. One of my friends in New York is involved with urban farming and actually had a couple beehives this year. I was thrilled and impressed when I got this:

New York honey from my friend Michael's
very own bees!


 Sometimes, I'm too lazy to cook. And it's so easy to bring this to a party!

My contribution to Christmas dinner. 24-month old prosciutto,
bresaola, and a nice hunk of parmesean.


Finally, I've been cooking up a storm lately, thanks to my parents gift: a Whole Foods gift card. Yay, groceries!

Two pieces of richly marbled ribeye steak


Sweet potatoes, being glazed in a skillet


Dinner is served!


Dinner #2. Pork tenderloin is seared over the stove before being
put in the oven for about 20 minutes


Tenderloin, sliced and served over a bed of couscous with
sauteed garlic spinach.


A mad scientist approach to brunch: layers of crispy pan fried potato
cubes, spinach, and sausage... topped with fried eggs and cheese. It
all went into the broiler for a few minutes to get melty.


Not the healthiest meal, but so very yummy.



Thursday, December 27, 2012

Empanadas!

Wow, I have been completely neglecting this blog! Will try to be more diligent about posting.

Anyway, a friend and I spent yesterday assembling and making some really tasty treats. It was raining/sleeting/snowing outside with terrible gusty winds, so it was an absolute treat to be indoors cooking. There's really not much better than the smell of caramelizing onions on the stove, the feel of slippery tomatoes being chopped, and the comfort of good conversation!

We diced up potatoes, peppers, onions, garlic, and cilantro to cook up with some ground beef, and wrapped it all in a soft, masa (corn flour) based dough. Pop into some oil for about 4 minutes, and we have these lovely beauties!

Golden Brown and delicious

The corn dough had a crunchy/textured consistency that tasted more complex than the flour-based empanadas I usually have. The outer shell wasn't greasy at all, and the innards combo of potato and ground beef provided a hearty warmth.

Pretty presentation, along with vinegar-based dipping sauce


I'm pretty excited to have learned how to make this, and am already thinking up ways to tweak the fillings and flavors for my own purposes!