Author Archives: athaidek

Nutty Coconut Cardamom Granola

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I didn’t quite believe thefauxmartha when she dubbed this recipe “The Last Granola Recipe” but I think this woman’s on to something. I am not at the stage yet where I’ve totally found my staples and to be honest, it feels a little dramatic to say this is THE ABSOLUTE LAST granola recipe I should ever try. But you know I’m really LEARNING a lot these days.

Cardamom. Usually sneaks itself into chai spice, but here it’s really only with cinnamon. The shining star, it counters the sweetness of the maple syrup and mixes well with the coconut and nuts. I’m a fan of you cardamom! I ate this granola atop yogurt, mixed with another cereal in milk, and actually used them to make these Magical Marvelous cookies from Food52. Thanks for being reliable, granola. You’re there for my mornings, my extra-secret-magical-cookie ingredient, and those mid-day snacks when I want to pick out some dried fruit or the nuts.

What are you loving these days besides your favorite granola recipe? I’m loving NeedtoBreathe, a certain special chapel, new skinny jeans, and wearing my Grandpa’s old scarf everywhere as if he’s with me.

Let’s begin…I made half of the recipe FYI.

Here goes cardamom, oats, salt, and cinnamon. Give it a lil swish with the whisk.

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Olive oil, maple syrup, and vanilla mixin it up together

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Mix up the oats and the sweet coating, reserving a few tablespoons of the oil mixture. Spread everything out on a parchment-paper lined baking sheet.

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I like my granola more like cereal so I try and spread it out as flat as possible, but if you like it clumpy, keep it a bit more tightly packed. Into the oven! 350 for 20 mins

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Meanwhile, I chop up whatever nuts I’ve got on hand! Literally every kind, cashews, peanuts, walnuts, and pecans

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Mix them together with some leftover syrup-oil mix and the dried coconut. I have the thin strips not those thick flakes here.

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After 20 minutes mix in the nuts etc into your granola and bake off for another 5-7 minutos.

2014-01-14 15.43.14When I serve mine I like some dried fruit so I added chopped apricots and raisins after the granola cooled!

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Roast Chicken Strikes Again – with Grapes, Olives & Rosemary

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Roast chicken is on my “perfect it” list. I can’t get over all of these wintry roasted, braised, wine-y, juicey, flavorful roast chicken recipes. This one is no exception! After making the stove-top Mediterrean chicken and rice, I wanted to try out the pan-searing then roasting in the oven technique. I thought this was called braising but apparently that’s for like one-pot meal kind of things.

I adjusted the recipe by 1.5 to make it suitable for 6 people and thus had to shift from baking in a skillet to a roasting pan. It worked out fine though because I still made the gravy/sauce in the skillet since it had the seared chicken juices in the pan. Both serious eats and amateurgourmet have tried the recipe for this chicken.

So, like JoytheBaker suggests, still working on “mise en place” this year aka PREPARE BEFOREHAND! Aka our trusty 3×5 cards to prep us for a seamless transition from pan to oven. Bone-in skin-on chicken, you are in fact somewhat difficult to work with.  Deb suggests you use any mix of bone-in skin-on cuts, but I have to say it’s hard to get breasts to cook at the same tenderness as thighs and drumsticks. The breasts cooked up faster and I was still waiting on the dark meat. I know that if you’re having guests (which I was) you really need to have both white and dark meat, but please, if you are going to make this and like dark meat, I’d stick to drumsticks and thighs. Much juicier!

To start, I focus on the bird. Cutting off excess fat and drying the chicken, then sprinkling each piece with kosher salt and pepper. Since the chicken will take a little bit of time in the pan, it was okay to worry about the accoutrements after I got the chicken in the pan. Then, go ahead and heat up your pan, add a very tiny bit of oil and sear away on the skin-side first!

2014-01-06 18.25.55After washing my hands and being chicken free, I sliced shallots very thinly and measured out 1.5 cups each of grapes and olives. I decided to serve with a side of lemony garlic asparagus, so I also washed and prepped those. Set out your white wine and chicken broth for later.

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After searing my two batches of chicken and gaining a thin film of chicken fat on my shirt, I nestled the chicken into a roasting pan and mixed these guys over top. I thought it would need some salt or flavoring or something, but turns out the blend of sweet grapes and really salty olives kept it flavorful.

2014-01-06 18.39.17When the chicken emerged from the oven after around 23 minutes, I scraped the juices back into the skillet to make the white wine and chicken broth sauce. Pour over top and garnish with fresh rosemary. I served this with crusty french bread and steamed asparagus yummmm.

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Stuffed Acorn Squash and other Christmas dishes

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It’s back to business, 2014-ers. I DON’T need to sample another gingerbread cookie, have two pieces of pecan pie, or make peppermint bark. But I do need to share with you my Christmas favorites this year 🙂

First of all, I am very in favor of having either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day low-key meals. It’s good to go all out for one meal, but I mean we don’t need to have the Tums bottle out all day. That being said, the afternoon nap is a must for both occasions!! Also, I have yet to experience the Christmas morning sweets breakfast as my family is more of a savory breakfast bunch. Get ready to experience an East Indian Christmas tradition!

We nixed lamb chops this year due to too many fatty lamb chops in years past. I made that fabulous Chicken with Caramelized Onions and Cardamom rice that we’ve had before instead of worrying about trying a roast chicken recipe. For the sides, I made these delicious Stuffed Acorn Squashes! Watch and learn. For dessert, it was a take on JoytheBaker’s dark chocolate ganache tart with sweet cream and mixed berries, made in individual ramekins. SOLIDDD.

Christmas day, we had fugias which are an East Indian tradition and what we eat every Christmas morning. Basically, fried puffy dough balls. Sides included scrambled eggs, berries, leftover stuffed squash, bacon, and we saved room for an easy lasagna.

Here’s how I made my stuffed squash! A very non-recipe kind of a dish – I’m still working on making a documented recipe for this one, but this was the first time I tried! And it came out great.

Start by setting the oven to 425 degrees. Cut your acorn squash in half length-wise, scoop out the seeds and scrape out all the inside stringy part. Use a regular spoon for this part. Then rub olive oil on both sides of the squash halves and sprinkle liberally with kosher salt and pepper. Roast face down in the oven in a roasting pan or other 9×13 pan for about 25-30 minutes until the inside is pierced easily with a knife.

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Meanwhile, heat half a stick of butter in a saute pan, add 1 chopped onion and 3-4 cloves of minced garlic until the onions are soft. Add in about 4 ounces of chopped mushrooms and let them soften as well. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and add in chopped thyme from about 10 sprigs, red pepper flakes, a bag of stuffing mix, and a few cups of chicken broth. Then drop in a few handfuls of kale until all the stuffing has absorbed the liquid.

After your squash is ready, remove from the oven and stuff the cavity with your stuffing mix. It’s even better if you let it overflow! Drop a few dobs of butter on top and some parmesan cheese if you’d like after adding the stuffing. Bake for about 20 minutes until the tops are golden brown. Serve immediately.

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Here are some pics of my tarts and the fugias!

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Mini-tarts yum!

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ReelBeets: Blue cheese gougeres and a video!

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Le first video post, my friends! Dear Smitten Kitchen, thank you again for following through on this delicious recipe. Blue cheese and black pepper light and fluffy appetizer puffs? Please and thank you. This was filmed in my friend Cessie’s kitchen, and filmed by our fabulous videographer friend Walle.

Are you ready for fancy, ooey, gooey, yummy, cheesy, sassy puffs? Dig in and join the holiday party! Merry merry Christmas dear friends. Also, get all gussied up and wear your holiday ribbons in your hair, k?

It’s an iPhone video, bear with us 🙂

 

 

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Samosas Round 2: Lamb, Sweet Potato, and Pea Samosas

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So I ate a REALLY GOOD lamb samosa from a package yesterday and was so curious about how I could re-create the hearty spice of a lamb samosa mixed with the richness of a sweet potato. I’ve seen a few sweet potato + lamb recipes before, but really, I adapted a strictly lamb-based samosa to create these as my parsnip samosas came out a little too sweet for my liking last time.

Keep your eyes peeled for the first video post in the works! This is my first try so stay patient with me here. Ok I love these samosas because they are very forgiving. I started with happyyolk’s referenced Saveur recipe for the dough after trying a healthier one last time. For a baked samosa, you’re not going to get much better than this. The dough is not super flakey like a galette kind of dough, but it has just enough butter to give it enough flake to have a crunch to it. If you’re not frying these babies, then that’s the closest you’re gonna get.

There’s a methodology to this madness guys. Don’t put yourself in a cook vs. baker category. We can do both here. Get the dough right and you’ll be much more confident experimenting with the filling. Besides, I told you already, there’s butter in this dough, so if you are lacking a little flavor in the filling, you still got the butter going for ya.

Are you one of those people that wants a filling-ish appetizer? I am. I need one of these meat and potato pockets to keep myself going until dinner-time. Whatever time you eat these, they are a good afternoon snack or appetizer.

Here’s how we start. First, prep your dough. Follow Saveur’s recipe to make the dough. They suggest using around 6 tablespoons of water, but mine came out to about 8. And if you have a food processor, by all means use it here. Wrap up your dough and let it refrigerate while we make the filling.

Ingredients:

1 sweet potato, cooked in the microwave until mostly soft, about 6-8 minutes

1/4 lb ground lamb

2/3 cup frozen peas

1 onion, chopped

2 big or 3 small garlic cloves

2 TBS olive oil

1/2 tsp tumeric

1 tsp curry powder

1/2 tsp coriander

3/4 tsp cumin

a pinch of whole mustard and whole cumin seeds (and fenugreek if you have it)

1/2 tsp salt

1/4-1/2 tsp red pepper flakes

1/2 cup low-sodium chicken stock, plus more in case

Start by toasting your whole mustard and cumin seeds to bloom the spices. If you don’t have these, don’t worry about it. Honestly I was just experimenting with using whole seeds :). Once fragrant, empty into a small bowl and set aside.

Heat olive oil on medium heat, add your chopped onion and let soften until translucent, about 5 minutes. Then add garlic for one more minute. Add in the curry powder, cumin, salt, coriander, tumeric, and coat the onion and garlic with them.

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Add the lamb and break it up into small crumbles. Peel your soft sweet potato and cut into small chunks while the lamb starts to brown. Once it browns, add in your sweet potato. Now add in your hot pepper flakes and the whole toasted seeds. At this point, the oil will be mostly taken by the lamb, so add in your chicken stock and add the frozen peas.

Let it simmer on medium heat, slowly breaking up the sweet potato as it softens. Continue to add chicken stock if it looks dry. Once the peas have lost their frost, turn the heat down to very low, put a cover on the skillet, and let the filling absorb the stock and spices. The point here is to make sure you’ve got a thick enough filling.

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There’s no worry on this step, timing and look of the filling is entirely up to you and your eyes only. Just think about what texture you want when you bite into a spicy pillow with a little crunch on the outside. Now we’re in a happy place! One it looks about ready, turn off the heat, cover, and lets get those pillows ready.

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Take the dough out of the fridge and prep your oven to 450 degrees F. Break off your dough into ten even pieces and roll them into little balls. I cut the dough in half and made each half into 5 pieces. Cover the balls you are not using with a towel. Starting with the first ball, roll it into a flat circle. Add a spoonful of filling on one half, making sure there is room at the edge for crimping. Swiftly fold over the other side into a half moon and press the top and bottom layer together lightly to close. Some of your filling might puff out, that’s okay! It’s rustic remember.

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Starting at one end, fold the edge together toward the filling, snuggling in the pocket. Continue to fold the edges over one another, crimping the open edge inward so it again, “snuggles” the filling in tightly! It’s okay if it doesn’t work out the first time, you’ll get the hang of it. The key is to just keep going in the same direction so there are no air pockets in the seam. Place the samosa on a greased cookie sheet and continue with the others, until you have 10 samosas.

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Bake for 15 minutes at 450 on the middle rack, then turn the samosas over and cook for another 3-5 minutes until both sides are speckly golden brown. Let cool for about 5-10 minutes. Enjoy with some chutney, Indian pickle, or by itself!

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