Sunday, June 21, 2015

Roasted red pepper boursin spread


Every sojourn in a cabin is better if you go armed with a secret weapon or two -- something that will do double duty at least and elevate the most mundane ingredients. This year's new entrant in that category is a spread that helps make a killer sandwich, works as a dip for veggies and stirred into some pasta topped with grilled veggies and sausage, made a nice sauce. Perfect thing for kicking back and watching the late-evening color spread across the lake.


Roasted red pepper and Boursin spread
Adapted from "Lee Bailey's Portable Food." Hard to go wrong with a Lee Bailey recipe, and you throw in portable (aka picnic fare) and I'm all over it. Lots of good choices of spreads in here to get any sandwich off to a good start.

Ingredients
1 roasted red bell pepper, peeled, seeded and drained
1 (5.2-ounce) box Boursin cheese (I used the herbed garlic variety)
2 tablespoons minced shallots
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper

Method
Combine pepper and cheese in food processor until well combined. Stir in shallots and add salt and pepper to taste. Made enough to fill a jelly jar of potential goodness.

The other requisite for a well-stocked cabin is some souvenir food (as well as a growler of what Dave calls souvenbeer). This year included andouille sausage, below, and dilled smoked salmon from Northern Waters Smokehaus in Duluth.






Luckily, the cabin comes equipped with this gorgeous bowl to toss all the goodness together.


Sunday, June 14, 2015

Picnic fodder: roast beef sandwiches, lemon Parmesan dip, carrot parsley salad







Sometimes simple is better, and often that’s the case with picnic food. My requirements for a nice picnic are a pleasant, reasonably private setting, clement weather and a properly stuffed picnic hamper of goodies. Some small savory element, like last year’s homemade gherkins, must be snuck into a crevice somewhere. Bonus points if there’s leftover blueberry pie, but that’s for the perfect picnic, and don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

Our most recent picnic qualified as a perfectly nice outing. Schaar’s Bluff, where you have a panoramic vista of the river and where eagles soar at eye height along the bluff, provided the setting. Nature provided the weather. I naturally provided the goodies: roast beef sandwiches with honey-mustard dressing, a carrot-cranberry-parsley salad (I substitute cilantro for half the parsley), mixed fruit and lemon Parmesan dip with veggies.


Roast beef sandwiches with honey-mustard sauce
Adapted from “Winnie-the-Pooh’s Picnic Cookbook,” inspired by A.A. Milne and with “decorations” by Ernest Shepard. As Christopher Robin and crew know something about rambling about and the need for proper sustenance after such rambling, it’s fitting that someone assembled a book of picnic recipes, interspersed with Shepard illustrations and Milne quotes. They’re all very straightforward, so the younger set can likely help prepare most of them. As an adorer of both picnics and Pooh stories, naturally I own it.

Ingredients
¼ cup Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon dry mustard
3 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
½ cup canola or light olive oil
6 kaiser rolls
1 pound sliced roast beef
6 lettuce leaves
2 sliced tomatoes, in season, or substitute two roasted red peppers, sliced

Method
Mix mustards, honey and vinegar in a jar. Whisk in olive oil until it emulsifies. This will make about a half cup, so you can be thinking of what you might like to do with the leftovers.

Split Kaiser rolls in half. Spread both halves with a bit of the dressing. Top with roast beef slices, lettuce and either tomatoes or roasted peppers, then Kaiser roll lid. Slice in half and wrap tightly with plastic wrap for ease of transport.

Rating: Simple but perfectly sustaining after rambling about. The dressing pairs well with beef, but its highest and best use is tossed with greens as a dressing.


Lemon Parmesan dip

Ingredients
1½ cups mayonnaise
¾ cup grated Parmesan cheese
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 clove garlic, mashed into a paste
Zest of 1 lemon

Method
Combine all ingredients. Salt and pepper to taste.

Rating: Nice and lemony fresh. Fine as a dip. Leftovers also worked well as a sandwich spread.

Sarah’s carrot parsley salad
This recipe ran in the Star Tribune Taste section some years back, but I can’t find it to link to. No idea who the Sarah referred to is, at this point, but she made a tasty salad that travels well, so it’s good picnic fodder.

Ingredients
3½ cups grated carrots (I substituted the precut matchstick carrots this time; a variety of colors of carrots makes for a prettier salad)
1 cup chopped parsley
½ cup chopped cilantro
1/3 cup dried cranberries
1 large garlic clove, pressed
¼ cup fresh lime juice
2 to 3 tablespoons olive oil
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground cumin

Method
Combine carrots, herbs and cranberries in a large bowl. Whisk together remaining ingredients and toss over carrot mixture. It's best if it has at least an hour to sit, so about however long it takes to get to your picnic spot will do.

Oh, and one more picnic requirement: proper table setting. Paper plates have no role outside of the overly large family gathering, which rarely qualifies as a good picnic. Given their propensity to become airborne when empty, they’re the enemy of food enjoyment. And plastic forks are a desperation measure, not a civilized means of consuming food. That’s not snobbery talking, that’s practicality. Although I’ll cut you some slack if you’ve perpetrated small children.

In the case of true picnic snobbery, you’d have to resort to this:

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Chicken with goat cheese, proscuitto and anise liqueur


This recipe was apparently printed on the side of the liquor bottle in the 1960s. Unlike the paisley, tie-dyed bell-bottoms I wore, this didn't go out of style. And honestly I'm not sure if those pants really ever were a thing.



Chicken Galliano

Ingredients
6 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
12 tablespoons herbed goat cheese, softened
6 slices prosciutto
6 tablespoons butter, divided
10 ounces sliced cremini mushrooms
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons canola  oil
1½ cup chicken stock
¼ cup Galliano liqueur (or substitute Sambuca and 1 teaspoon vanilla)
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley for garnish

Method
Salt and pepper chicken breasts. Spread one side of each breast with about 2 tablespoons of goat cheese. Top with thin slice of prosciutto.  Starting at narrow end, roll up tightly, encasing the prosciutto and cheese. Tie up with chicken string.

Melt 3 tablespoons butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Cook mushrooms until browned and softened. Remove from skillet and set aside.

Put flour on a plate or pie dish and dredge chicken rolls. Heat 2 tablespoons butter and oil in the same skillet over medium-high heat.  Add chicken and cook on both sides until well browned. Add stock and liqueur and cook until chicken is cooked through, about 15 minutes. Remove chicken to serving platter. 

Raise heat under skillet and cook liquid until it starts to sauce. Add remaining 1 tablespoon butter and mushrooms Spoon sauce over chicken and top with parsley.

Rating: Nice. I had to substitute for the Galliano because it turns out I didn't have any after all. It was tasty as it was, but I want to try it again with the called for liqueur.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Cornflake baked chicken




My mother made a cornflake-coated baked chicken recipe that I remember liking as a child. Since I don’t know where in her welter of recipe clippings that might be hiding, or worse yet locked up in her fading memory, I thought I’d give this one a try.

Crispy-Coated Baked Chicken

Ingredients
1 cup plain low-fat yogurt
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
4 pieces bone-in chicken breast (or 8 thighs)
4 cups corn flakes
1½ teaspoon paprika
¾ teaspoon garlic powder
¼ teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground pepper

Method
Whisk together yogurt and mustard in a lidded dish. Add the chicken and turn to evenly coat. Marinate in the refrigerator for 1 to 4 hours.

In a food processor, combine corn flakes, paprika, garlic powder, salt and pepper until you reach the coarse crumb stage. Transfer half the mixture to a shallow dish. (You're likely to end up with leftover crumbs and you can save them for future use if they haven't been in the dipping bowl with the raw chicken.)

Press chicken pieces into crumb mixture. Place on nonstick baking pan (or grease a regular roasting pan with olive oil).

Bake for 45 (for thighs) to 55 (for breasts) minutes in a preheated 350 degree oven until chicken registers 165 degrees.

Rating: If you’ve got a go-to recipe for oven-fried chicken, keep making it. If you don’t, this is a perfectly fine place to start. The mustard in the marinade helps give it extra flavor. Perfectly moist inside and crispy outside. The recipe as printed called for spritzing the chicken with olive oil before baking, but a co-worker who also tried this recipe reported that made it soggy, so I don’t recommend doing so.

For the record, this is less greasy than Mom’s, although I don’t remember exactly what the procedure was that resulted in it being greasy. And like fried chicken, this made excellent cold leftovers.

Monday, May 18, 2015

Pesto-stuffed grilled chicken




Pesto-rubbed chicken
From “Saveur: The New Classics Cookbook,” an instant classic if there ever was one. From the first appetizer recipe for baked feta to the last, there are enough prospects in this one to keep me busy for quite some time. I let my subscription lapse a few years ago amid the need to cut back, but I do like me a good Saveur recipe now and again.

Ingredients
2 bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts
5 tablespoons pesto, divided

Method
Loosen skin on one side of each breast. Spread 1½ tablespoons pesto under the skin of each half. Sprinkle all sides with salt and pepper. Place on a hot grill, skin-side down. Grill, covered, for about 25 minutes or until done, flipping once. Spread a tablespoon of remaining pesto over each breast and cook for another 5 minutes.

Rating: Super simple, but super tasty. The pesto keeps the chicken breasts moist.

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Braised kale with Parmesan and crushed red pepper


Cacio e pepe-style braised kale
From Food & Wine, Dec. 2014
This is supposed to be a take on the cheese and pepper pasta flavors only coming to the rescue of kale.

Ingredients
1 pound kale leaves, torn into bite-size pieces
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons oil
2 cups chicken broth
crushed red pepper
1/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Method
Melt butter and oil in a large deep pot. Add kale in batches, stirring until wilted. Add broth and bring to a simmer. Cook until kale is tender and broth is mostly absorbed, about 20 minutes. Season to taste with salt and crushed red pepper flakes. Top with cheese.

Rating: Fine enough. Could work with other sturdy greens as well.

And a place where you will never see kale on the menu just won a James Beard award in the America's Classics category: Archie’s Waeside, Le Mars, Iowa, was a running joke when I was growing up. Hasn't changed, apparently, although they now have their menu online, where you can see one of the a la carte selections is listed as simply "Jello." The America's Classics winners are selected for being a classic of their type and reflecting their region. Ouch.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Roast chicken with grapes, olives and rosemary




Harvest roast chicken with grapes, olives and rosemary
From “Smitten Kitchen Cookbook” by Deb Perelman

Ingredients
Eight pieces of chicken, bone-in and skin on
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 cup seedless grapes
1 cup pitted Kalamata olives
2 small shallots, thinly sliced
½ cup white wine
½ cup chicken broth
1 tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary

Method
Preheat oven to 450. In a stove-burner safe roasting pan (or oven-safe skillet), heat oil over medium high heat. Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper and cook until nicely golden brown, skin side down, before flipping over to brown the other side. Add grapes, olives and shallots. Cook in oven for about 20 minutes until done.

Remove chicken to serving platter. Put pan back on stove top. Add wine, broth and rosemary and cook over high heat until it’s reduced into a slightly thickened sauce.

Rating: Quite reasonably tasty, and the grape-olive combination works. I don’t give it a CR (company rating) because it’s not really particularly attractive and the sauce is a tad oily, but otherwise it’s repeatable. It’s quite similar to a recipe I’ve made previously from Martha Stewart Living Everyday Food  using cut up chicken instead of Cornish hens. That version is slightly prettier and lacks the olives. Both are a pretty good way to use up grapes that come in rather overly large packages for small families. So this appeals to my non-food-wasting sensibilities. 

Or if you're in the market for really low-brow food, there's this option.