Monday, July 20, 2015

EASIEST BLENDER VICHYSOISSE



Photo By Carol Guilford
 I wrote: “Vichysoisse is mainly known as an appetizer soup, but I also like it as a main course—a dinner to serve on unbearably hot summer days when all you really want to do is sit in a tub of ice water and sip a gin and tonic. “


Satisfying paired with a fresh fruit salad.

4 servings
Utensils: blender, small saucepan and lid

1 ½  cups raw potatoes, peeled and diced (about 1 large baking potato)
½ cup sliced leeks (white part only)
        or
½ cup sliced green onions (white part only)
2 cups chicken broth
       Go organic, sold in quart-size
¼ teaspoon curry powder
1 cup heavy cream
½ cup milk, or add milk to consistency you like
fresh chives, chopped *

1.      Wash, peel and dice the potato(s).  Cut off the whiskers and peel off the thin onion skin of the leeks or green onions.  Slice the bulbs thinly.

2.      Put the potatoes, leeks and chicken soup into a small saucepan.  Use medium heat to  bring the liquid to a boil, then cover the saucepan and adjust the heat so that the liquid will gently boil.  Cook until the potatoes are tender, about 15 minutes.

3.      While still hot, pour everything in the saucepan into the blender container.  Add the curry powder. Cover the container and blend for 30 seconds. Pour the cream into the blender. Mix with a wooden spoon. Add the milk.  Take a taste and add salt, to taste.

4.      Refrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight.  I don’t even pour the soup into a container; I just put the blender into the fridge. Mix well before serving.  Top individual bowls with chives. 

* My neighbor, Catherine gave me a great tip about chives that will turn brown in a New York minute.  She cuts them and freezes them--then they are ready and fresh for use, such as on a baked potato with sour cream and chives.

Monday, July 6, 2015

EASIEST SARDINAS EN CAZUELA (Sardines in Casserole)





Adapted from The Art of Spanish Cooking, (Doubleday, 1963) by Betty Wason (1912-2001.

Wason, notably,  was a war correspondent for CBS during World War 11, a time when discrimination against women reporters was common.  

She authored 24 books, including Bride in the Kitchen and Cooking Without Cans.

If I wrote ‘cute,’ the title of this recipe would be “Day Before Payday Dinner.”

You need a small casserole.  The picture of the dish below is in my ancient ceramic Corningware deal. I went on line to see if Corningware was even around today (it is) but it is made in China, not in Corning, NY. Very inexpensive. I was amazed by the reviews.  I never even had a lid; evidently, now there are plastic lids and the complaints were beaucoup. I don’t use this small 15-ounce (5X7) to cook a casserole that needs covering or to store anything, so... An 8X8 glass Pyrex works too. 

2 tins sardines  
Sardines can be stinky, even the expensive ones. I used Beach Cliff  in water, made by Bumble Bee that vouches for their sustainability.
½ cup olive oil
1 cup sweet onions, chopped fine
1 (4-ounce) can  Dromedary pimentos or Trader Joe's fire- roasted red peppers, sliced small. 
kosher salt

1.      To prep, rinse the sardines (in tin) quickly, and drain.  Drain the pimentos and pat dry. Chop the onion.

2.      Put ¼ cup oil into the bottom of the casserole.  Spread out the chopped onions over the oil. 

3.      Arrange the sardines over the onions, then arrange the pimientos over the sardines.  Cover with ¼ cup olive oil.  Sprinkle lightly with salt.

4.      Bake, uncovered in a 350 degree oven for 30 minutes.
 

Wason writes: “Serve hot from the casserole with forks and crusty bread to sop up the sauce. Astonishingly good.  I hesitate to give servings for this, for once I ate half the casserole all by myself. As an appetizer, it should serve 4 to six.”

Photos by Carol Guilford

Monday, June 29, 2015

EASIEST (10-MINUTE) CHICKEN OR FISH CURRY




In The Gourmet’s Recession Cookbook  in which I promised no dinner would cost more than a small pizza, I wrote about chicken tenders, “I’m not giving them up!”
 
  The chicken tender is a strip of pectoral muscle that runs along the inside of the breast, closest to the bone.  If there is a membrane left, a little white strip, cut it out carefully with a paring knife.  

  Allow 3 tenders per person.  If you are a single chef, it is an ultra-special treat.  James Beard wrote in his memoir, Delights & Prejudices, “Somehow I have never minded dining alone. Instead, I have always made it something of a ceremony.” He means, I think, in cooking for oneself, one is not only the cook but the shopper/meal planner, sommelier and diner.     


    3 chicken tenders per person
    1 cup coconut milk
    1 tablespoon curry powder
     ½ teaspoon kosher salt

1.      Quickly rinse the tenders in cold water.  Pat dry.

2.      In the skillet, mix the coconut milk, curry powder and salt. 

3.      Use low heat to bring to the point where bubbles start to appear. Slip the chicken in, cover the skillet and poach for 2 minutes. Turn and cook for about 3 more minutes. “Tender” means delicate and they need babysitting. The result should have a “silky” texture.

  For an Indian-style dinner, use quick-cooking couscous. The directions on the box are pretty good.  Boil one cup water, with  2 tablespoons olive oil and ½ teaspoon salt in a 1-quart saucepan.  Take the pot off the heat, cover it and steam for 5 minutes.  Fluff up with a fork.  I like to add 2 tablespoons lemon juice.  Makes about 2 cups couscous.
 




  If you’re up to it and have leftover couscous, make a salad by cutting a seeded tomato into small pieces and patted dry with paper towels, 2 tablespoons washed, dried and minced parsley or cilantro (I use scissors to do this,) Mix and add more oil and lemon juice to moisten the salad.  Add 1-2 green onions, sliced, the white part and the tender part of the green.  Re-salt to taste. 

For any left-over curry sauce, throw in about 4 or 5 sliced Crimini mushrooms, cover,  cook for about 5-minutes and serve on toast.






Photos by Carol Guilford

Excerpt from my "The Easiest Cookbook", hard cover, for curried fish.

  The Bluehaven Hotel was painted cotton-candy pink, bordered by turquoise sea and white sugar-spun sand, and set on a Caribbean island with zero restaurants.  One ate at ones hotel, or didn’t eat. We listened to the hot rhythms of the steel band and stared at our plates of lukewarm slices of roast pork, the thin gravy slowly  heading for the applesauce.  The catering, we found out, was in tune with the tastes of the guests, most of whom were British.
   Every now and then, during the next dreamlike days, shell searching along the shore or wandering back to our room at night, we caught a whiff of curry on the air—a mirage of scent, it seemed, since nothing resembling a spice had appeared on the hotel’s dining table.
   “The British like spices,” I whined.  The British East India Company practically owned Bombay in the seventeenth century.  Queen Victoria was crowned Empress of India in eighteen hundred seventy something...
    On our last afternoon, as we waited for the sunset, the smell of curry was unmistakably wafted along with the sea breeze.
     Determined to discover the source, we followed our noses toward a far side of the hotel, to a separate building hidden behind a green splash of thick foliage.  It was the kitchen where food was prepared for the hotel’s  help. 
     An Alice in Wonderland door opened, and we saw Tomas, his tall, starched white chef’s hat launched firmly on his black head.
     “Have you got the curry?” I asked, not meaning to sound frantic.
      “Ah, we are cooking de big fish my brother William caught on his boat.”
      That evening, our last, while the hotel’s other guests sipped consommé and cut into well-done roast lamb, a platter of curried fish was set before us.
       The room was suddenly scented with coriander and tumeric.  Heads turned, noses lifted toward the pungent smell.
      The steel band played.  We ate. When we profusely thanked Tomas, he said, “We are proud of our native cooking.”
        The next year we read of strife on the island.  The hotel was closed.
     
For “de fish curry” follow the recipe for chicken tenders, but instead slip in fish such as two thick fish fillets of cod or mahi-mahi or whatever looks good at the fish counter. Shrimp works, too.  If you use thin filet of sole or any other thin filets, cook only 2 minutes, turning the fish after 1 minute.

I like a cucumber salad with this.  Allow one peeled and diagonally sliced persian cucumber per person, 1 tablespoon vinegar, and a sprinkling of sugar, about ¼ teaspoon. Mix in a bowl large enough to hold and marinate the cukes.  Add salt to taste just before eating, as salt draws out the water and the cukes will seem to shrink before your eyes.  
       

  




































Monday, June 8, 2015

EASIEST FRIED GREEN TOMATOES





Thanks to the University Press of Kentucky, "Out of Kentucky Kitchens", by Marion Flexner (1899-1992) has not disappeared into cookbook heaven. In re-
reading Flexner’s work, I see her influence on my food writing—personal and precise. Fried Green Tomatoes is a treasure.



I have mainly left intact Marion’s recipe, so you will have a feel for how she wrote.



"Slice ¼ inch thick the large firm, green, unpeeled tomatoes (green throughout)—discard end and stem slices.  Sprinkle with salt, pepper and sugar.  Dip in corn meal and fry in a skillet containing enough melted butter* to be ¼ inch deep in the skillet. Have the fat hot when the tomatoes are added, then reduce the flamed and brown on one side. Turn with a pancake turner and brown on the other.  These are delicious with roasts, fried chicken, sausage or what you will."











All photos by Carol Guilford






* Cgnote: I use organic Arrowhead Mills yellow cornmeal.

Monday, June 1, 2015

EASIEST CHINESE NOODLE COOKIES



Chinese noodle cookies Haystacks
Photo by Carol Guilford

Also called “Haystacks.” I searched for the origin of these cookies with no luck.  One would think that perhaps a noodle-seller such as La Choy made them up or Hershey  (websites both have recipes but not a date of origin or claim.)  No recipe in the oldie cookbooks either, such as The Joy of Cooking or The Settlement Cookbook. My guess of ancestry is maybe? the 1950’s. If anybody has a clue, write to me at guilfordcarol@gmail.com.

The EASIEST thing about these cookies is that they require no baking. A children friendly recipe.  I got the recipe from an aunt for The Easiest Cookbook, published in 1982.

12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup Chinese noodles
   Available in markets, but I usually employ the ones that arrive with Chinese takeout.
½ cup chopped pecans
½  teaspoon vanilla

1.      Melt the chocolate in the microwave (a double boiler works well, too) Takes about 4 minutes, but stop and stir after each 1 minute period.

2.      Stir together the melted chocolate and noodles until they are well mixed.  Stir in the nuts and vanilla.

3.      Drop heaping teaspoons of cookie mixture onto foil or waxed paper.  Cool until firm.  If the cookies don’t seem firm enough (they should be) refrigerate for 15 minutes.


Cgnote: Cookies may be made with butterscotch-flavored chips.