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Spicy Tuna Bowl

Spicy Tuna Bowl

This is a quick & easy one because I forgot today is Friday and this is all I have time to write up. Fun! Anyway, it still tastes real good to your mouth.

The kimchi furikake in the recipe is another version of the stuff I talked about last week. The kimchi stuff contains dried Chinese cabbage, chilis, shallots, onions, ginger, garlic, chives, carrots, radish, sesame seeds, turnip greens, wasabi, seaweed & etc. Lots of stuff going on there but it is nowhere near as complex, pungent or spicy as the real deal. Adds a nice contrasting element to the sweetness of the teriyaki-style glaze, though.
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Posted by on May 11, 2012 in lunch, quick, recipes

 

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Takeout Spicy Salmon

Takeout Spicy Salmon

When I started to seriously get into cooking, I mostly taught myself by recreating my favorite takeout dishes. It was a low risk, high reward way to figure things out. So other day when I had a craving for some White Boy Special (General Tso’s Chicken w/ pork fried rice) I decided to check what I had available and make it at home instead. After checking my fridge, I switched it up and did a General Tso’s/chili black bean/Sichuan-style thing.

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Posted by on April 27, 2012 in dinner, lunch, recipes, sautee, sear

 

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Pork and Beans

Pork and Beans

After my trip to London in October of 2011, I finally got to taste the famous Heinz beans in tomato sauce that everyone had raved to me about.  We settled in for a nice full english breakfast one day at the Regency Cafe in Westminster where besides spotting a mutant (yes they exist) I finally got to have these beans.  I imagine they are pretty prevalent across London unless the establishment is making their own.  Basically, I was hooked.  They are tangy, a little sweet and a perfect accompaniment to the eggs, meat and toast you’re eating (love the grilled tomato too)  Anyway, recently my friend Gale actually surprised me with these beans and I knew I had to feature them.  This recipe is really simple.  To make the beans, follow the directions on the back of the tin (which are written in a very British style) and then serve them.  Don’t mess with them at all.  The meat of this recipe lies in the pork chop preparation.  Basically, I believe that a sear and then a finish in liquid is one of the tastiest ways to cook pork.  I’ve never had it sous vide so perhaps my standards are a bit low but for now, in my kitchen, I’ll go with my sear-braise method.

 

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Posted by on February 29, 2012 in braise, dinner, recipes, sear

 

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Veggie Wontons

Veggie Wontons

This was an improvised vegetarian option when I found out I was catering an event at work. More Brussels sprouts because this site fucking loves Brussels sprouts or something, I mean really. I did not include a photo of the final item because I forgot to take one. Oh, and since I produced this in quantity and did not take notes, it is likely I scaled down the recipe slightly wrong. I am very good at blogging.

These were served with a simple dipping sauce: first, make a dashi from kombu and the mushroom stems; add equal parts sugar and soy sauce to the dashi; reduce by like 20%.
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Posted by on February 24, 2012 in appetizer, entertaining, recipes, sautee

 

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Winter Classic Noodle

Winter Classic Noodle

I guess this is a theme dish?

In my defense, I started out with only the most honest culinary intentions. After cooking the chicken liver, sage & rigatoni out of Marc Ventri‘s new cookbook exactly per directions–okay, I subbed pork liver pâté from Krakus Market for the chicken livers, red pepper flakes for the sage and added peas–it occurred to me that I could nudge the technique in the direction of something similar to Han Dynasty‘s dan dan mian. (Oh okay, I was making theme fusion food then. Fuck.)

I have pretty much abandoned the project of perfectly recreating Han’s noodles, but I really like the combination of pork, sesame, Sichuan peppercorns & noodles and will often riff on the dish.  Vetri’s technique seemed like a promising new approach, a cool trick to coat the noodles with dan dan goodness. With the idea to make dan dan in my head, I started looking at what I had available in my kitchen.

A friend had given me a package of black rice noodles and I already mentioned the pork liver pâté. I’ve been experimenting with fermenting different stuff lately, so I had a jar of Sichuan chili paste sitting in my refrigerator from a dan dan ramen I made the previous week; using it for pickles, I could offset some of the noodles’ heaviness. I learned while making the ramen that tahini separates under heat, so that could not be an option for including that flavor in the dish. A partial solution was garnishing with toasted white sesame (not uncommon in an Asian dish), but I was looking for something more intense. When I cook other noodle dishes, I’ll usually toss the noodles with oil to prevent them from sticking, so that problem was solved by toasted sesame oil.

After figuring out how to arrive at the flavor I wanted, the stupid idea to do it in Flyers colors struck. Since I was using black noodles, it would be easy enough to shred carrots for the pickles to complete the look. Soy sauce, already in the recipe for flavor, would do double-duty to darken other components to fit the color scheme. (But since the dish is named “Winter Classic Noodle,” shouldn’t the colors of the Flyers’ opponents in that game, the NY Rangers, also be represented? Well… shut up.)

My thinking here might be a little strange, but the flavor & aesthetics of the dish both turned out to be pretty much what I had envisioned.

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Posted by on December 30, 2011 in boil, Inspiration, lunch, recipes

 

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