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a “heads up”

I want to provide you with a bit of a “heads up” about not only this particular post, but the coming weekend as well.

I’ve wanted to post this recipe for a couple of weeks but the picture taken, when I made the dish in a cooking class, is so out of focus that I’ve been putting it off. 

Putting it off until I could make the meal again and take a decent photo.  I now just have to admit to myself, and to you, that is not going to happen.

So, please squint your eyes when you are viewing said picture and try to get it to come into focus on your own. (Oh, and good luck with that!)

As for the upcoming Saturday and Sunday… just letting you know now, there will be no posts. No way, no how!  So don’t even waste your time coming back to see if I slipped one in, it won’t be happening! Sorry, hoping for a better week beginning on Monday!  Have a beautiful weekend.  xoxo

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March 25, 2011   1 Comment

Phoenix Cooks

On Saturday, September 4th I will be doing a demonstration at Phoenix Cooks with Tram Mai. The segment will be filmed and shown on Channel 12 Valley Dish that Wednesday.  Tram and I will then cook a stuffed salmon to go along with this healthy side. The salmon recipe will follow tomorrow. In the meantime, if you want to come out to the JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort & Spa and help support Phoenix Children’s Hospital, you can purchase tickets HERE. I’d love to see you there!

Of course, you’ve heard of and most likely eaten couscous before, but what about Israeli couscous? If not, use this recipe and give it a go. You can find Israeli, or pearl, couscous at Trader Joe’s in an 8-ounce package.

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August 11, 2010   7 Comments

chimichurri = Irish

Chimichurri is a thick vinegar and oil herb sauce made with garlic, parsley, and oregano, and served with grilled meat in Argentina. As for its origins, the story goes that it comes from an Irishman named Jimmy McCurry, who first prepared the sauce. He was marching with the troops of General Jasson Ospina in the 19th century, sympathetic to the cause of Argentine independence. The sauce was popular with the Argentine people and the recipe was passed on. However, ‘Jimmy McCurry’ was difficult for the native people to say. Some sources claim the name of Jimmy’s sauce was altered to ‘chimichurri’, while others say it was changed in his honor.

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July 25, 2010   1 Comment

peas

This is the typical sort of dinner you’ll get at our house on a day when I don’t want to venture out in the 110 degree suffocating heat just to get groceries! I will do anything to avoid leaving the air-conditioned loveliness that is my house!

First I look in the refrigerator – not much there. More smoked pork, but we’ve had that 2 days in a row, so that will not fly with my guys. Produce drawers – bell peppers, wilting green onions, romaine that has about 24 hours before decisions must be made, and a surprisingly good-looking bunch of cilantro.

Next stop – garden – ugg! Everything is looking sad, drought-ridden, and parched! Snip off the last bit of tarragon and get back into the A/C!

What about the pantry – nothing at all inspiring. There is pasta, but that’s always sitting there…. Why in God’s name do these people need to eat every darn day – don’t they know how hot it is?!?!  OK, compose yourself.

Last stop the freezer – oh the glorious coldness that flows from the freeze finally gives me the inspiration I have been so very desperate for! What miracles do I find there? Nothing all that much really – shrimp, edamame, and peas – but it is enough.

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July 20, 2010   5 Comments

oven drying herbs

Gardens are weird! You would think they would be reliable from season to season, but…no! For as many years back as I can remember, it was the sage that overtook my space. This year… the sage is barely there and the oregano has gone to town. Sending out runners, invading the other plants’ space, growing as tall as the artichoke plant (well, as you can see, almost that tall), and flowering on a daily basis. I’m constantly cutting that stuff and throwing it in the compost bin. Today, I’m taking a new approach. After running out of dried oregano, which sometimes – in certain recipes is better to use than fresh, I’ve decided to dry my own. Crazy that this thought hadn’t crossed my mind before. Well, maybe it had, but I wasn’t desperate enough to do it before. I’ve given it a try, do a taste-test with the store-bought dried and mine and although the store-bought is a brighter green than mine, it tastes the same. Yeah, I win! Here are the steps I took to quickly and efficiently dry my oregano.

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May 13, 2010   No Comments

thank you boys!

For Mother’s Day, Dave and my adorable son, Connor, made me not only breakfast but dinner as well! So when our Phoenix Suns swept the Spurs to advance in the playoffs, it was as if I hit the jackpot yesterday!

Breakfast was thick-cut bacon, mimosas, and cinnamon-pecan waffles with fresh strawberries, bananas, and whipped cream! And for dinner, they made lamb, chicken, and beef kabobs (picked up at Whole Foods), our favorite parmesan asparagus, toasted garlic-olive bread, and sea salt roasted fingerling potatoes with whole fresh herbs.

Since the asparagus has been featured here a couple of times already, we’ll share the very easy potato recipe. You can use the fingerlings as the recipe calls for, or if fingerlings are hard to find or too costly, just use russet or Yukon gold potatoes cut into wedges. Both choices are pictured below.


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May 10, 2010   4 Comments

egg on top

If you’ve been looking at restaurant menus for the past year or so, you’ve noticed that chefs are putting eggs on top of just about everything. Poached or fried eggs on top of pasta, salads, and pizzas. The egg is the world’s most perfect food, it is economical and a great way to add protein and richness to just about anything. So take a crack at this current trend at the most natural time of day, for breakfast or brunch, but with an unconventional twist, breakfast pizza!

Small eggs work best if you’re making large pizzas to slice into wedges. The challenge – small eggs can be difficult to find. Try your local Asian market because most mainstream grocery stores only carry extra-large, large, and if you’re lucky, medium eggs. If you go with the medium eggs, remove about half of the whites before placing them on the pizza, or the eggs will overflow and make a mess of the oven.  Or, divide the dough into 8 portions and make individual pizzas, then you can use the entire medium egg. You won’t get the same bang for your buck though, since you’ll get two large pizzas, or 16 servings if you follow the recipe as written. And the look of the large pizza is much more impressive than the individual, as you can see for yourself in these photos.

Side note: Almost forgot to mention – watch me at 4:30 PM on Channel 12 (NBC) Valley Dish tomorrow with Tram Mai.

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April 29, 2010   No Comments

microwave madness

For the “end of spring break” brunch yesterday we had home fries, also known as breakfast potatoes, along with our frittata. I generally add diced red bell pepper to my potatoes, but since those were already prominent in the frittata, I left them out this time. Feel free to use 1 diced pepper in your potatoes though, you’ll just add and sauté it along with the onion.

Most recipes for home fries, such as these, call for the potatoes to be boiled first. I’ve found that this leaves the potatoes too waterlogged and they do not brown as well when later sautéed, so instead, I use the microwave to steam them… a far better end result! How long to steam them all depends on your own microwave, and you know it best, so use your judgment.

My microwave is, by far, the worst tool in my entire kitchen… as my kids say, “it sucks!”  Every single time they come home, they are shocked to see that it is still here. I do not know why I am so resistant to just go get a new one. I’ve had to purchase several in the last few years for the kids’ dorms and apartments, so why not just get a new one for myself? Maybe I feel I need to have just one thing in my kitchen that isn’t “all that.”  I mean, I am so fortunate to have all the latest and greatest and, in many cases, (because of the cooking school) more than just one of each of those latest and greatest…  Three KitchenAid standing mixers (all the big model); four Cuisinarts, including the new super-duper one; a Vita-Mix and two Waring blenders; more than two dozen silicone spatulas in every shape, size, and color; a dozen whisks… you get the picture. So if I have to suffer from an inferior microwave that literally takes twice the time to cook something, so be it!  I honestly don’t use it that much for actual cooking, more often than not, it is used to melt chocolate and butter or to soften something. Although it did take a full 17 minutes to get these potatoes tender! But if you have a “good” microwave, it may only take 6 or 7 minutes.

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March 22, 2010   4 Comments

crab cakes

I have a dozen or so crab cake recipes but I chose this particular one for Peggy’s birthday because it is extra light. What makes it so, is separating the egg and folding it in the whipped egg white just before cooking. The presentation with the herbed salad and aïoli is especially lovely, but the cakes are delicious on their own, so make it “easy-breezy” and leave those elements out, if you wish. I know I’ve mentioned before the fabulous real crab sold at Costco, but it is worth talking about again.

The brand they used to sell was Phillips, now they carry Blue Star, both are exceptional quality and totally fabulous. What makes them so? Real lump crab that has been pasteurized with a “use by” date on the bottom of the container that is generally about 9 months to a year out. So there is no excuse to not have crab on-hand anytime you need it. For this particular recipe, only about half of the container is used, so you can either double the amounts or be sure and use the remaining half container within a day or two.

To that end, I shall post another crab recipe tomorrow to finish it off. Another thing I have talked about before is the fact that the food processor has a special feature especially for making mayonnaise and aioli. If you need a refresher, click here to go back to that post. Finally, as always, if you don’t have Meyer lemons, no problem, just substitute regular lemons.

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February 24, 2010   2 Comments

sriracha (rooster) sauce

sriracha

In my January 9, 2010 blog post, I spoke of the wonders of sriracha sauce and provided a link to a Bon Appétit article. If you haven’t had a chance to read the article yet, please go back to that post and do so. Chef Stuart Brioza provided a recipe for chicken lettuce wraps with the article. We had them over the weekend and… WOW!  I made a couple of very minor changes; for instance – like everyone I know, I love the P.F. Chang’s lettuce wraps with crispy-crunchy iceberg lettuce, so I used iceberg instead of the romaine called for by Chef Brioza. One thing I would not dream of changing is the sauce, in fact, I am going to keep this sauce on hand, and have it with everything I eat! Really, it’s just that good!
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January 20, 2010   3 Comments