Archive for the ‘Yum’ Category

So much easier than I figured it’d be

Friday, November 7th, 2008

I really do love the cooler weather.  I enjoy snuggly sweaters and scarves and pants that cover my chubba-chubby thighs.   I like boots and hats and the shorter days, snuggling up with the kiddies and the kitties, and warm blankets.  And I really like soup.

I like to cook but a lot of what I cook goes unappreciated by the picky little boy that lives in my house and demands to be fed chips and waffles.  Anja will eat most of what I cook, as long as it doesn’t involve a lot of meat, but doesn’t really get excited about anything I make.  But there is one thing that always gets very literal jumps for joy:  chicken noodle soup.

One of the first really cool days here, I made some chicken noodle soup and boy, did it hit the spot.  I made it from scratch, simmering chicken, celery, onions, carrots, fresh parsley all day in my lovely Lodge pot.  As I stirred in my favorite egg noodles, and it made me reminisce about my own mother’s homemade chicken soup, and I started to think about another meal I had looked forward to in my own childhood: chicken and dumplings.

I had never made chicken and dumplings as an adult and when I looked for a recipe, I was surprised to see it was basically just chicken soup with biscuits cooked into it instead of noodles.  So I thought I’d attempt it and see how it all turned out.

In an effort to save time - there is always a shortage of time at home when it comes to making dinner - I decided to try some store-bought broth instead of making it allll the way from scratch.  I was surprised how nicely everything turned out, and it really was easy and quick to make this way.

The ingredients were simple and - score! - cheap:

2 boxes of chicken broth
1 bag of frozen boneless/skinless chicken breasts
3 carrots
2 stalks of celery
1 medium onion
a 4-pack of Pilsbury buttermilk biscuits (the kind that come in a can - they were the cheapest kind)
Milk - or, if you’ve recently passed a physical fitness test, heavy cream

This chicken soup-making phase has made me appreciate my large knife - it’s usually crappy but for chopping carrots and onions and chicken, it’s great!  Please, do not use a small kitchen knife even if it is a great small kitchen knife - your hands will fatigue very quickly.  And use a nice, heavy pot.  I don’t know why it makes such a difference, but it really does.

Boil the chicken until cooked and then drain it and chop it up.
Chop up the carrots, celery and onion.
Bring the broth to a simmer and add the carrots, celery and onion.  Let simmer for about 15 minutes.  Add in the chicken.  Bring the soup to a full boil.

Next comes the fun part: Pinch the biscuits apart into three pieces each.  Drop them into the boiling soup.  Cover your heavy pot with the heavy pot lid and let it boil away for about 5-7 minutes.  When you open the lid, magic!  The biscuits will be all big and poofy.  Start stirring it; the now-dumplings are firmed up enough that you can stir it without everything getting mushy and nasty.

Turn down the heat and let it simmer for another 10 minutes or so, and then stir in some milk.  I don’t know how much - I added probably about 1/2 cup.

The starch from the biscuits helps thicken up the broth a little bit and the cream makes it a really nice texture.  Keep some tongs handy to snip at the little fingers trying to fish extra dumplings out of the pot, and enjoy!

Fish soft tacos

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Yummy!  Oooh, the self-restraint it took to take the pictures…

I wasn’t sure how these were going to go over - we don’t make a lot of fish because I’m pretty picky about it.  Having a fisherman husband from Iceland spoils you.  Between the char he’d catch in the ice-cold Þingvallavatn to the unbeliveably fresh halibut we ate for 6 months after he went to Alaska, I’m just picky.  And I’m OK with that.  You would be picky, too.

At any rate, I recently bought some frozen fish filets - flounder, I think? I laid them across wire racks and then sprinkled on chipotle pepper and garlic powder on them and let them thaw while the rub settled in.

Meanwhile, I made a simple pico de gallo from 4 red tomatoes, 2 yellow tomatoes, an onion, a bunch of garlic, some cilantro, kosher salt, and some lime juice.  I love lime.

After I baked the fish, I shredded it in a bowl and added a little more lime juice, and then assembled the tacos.  I softened the tortillas with the cheese on them to melt it, and then stuffed them nice and full of the fish, a little sour cream, pico de gallo, and some Boston lettuce.

Fish tacos

The pico de gallo was so pretty and so tasty! I loved what the yellow tomatoes did to the appearance.

Pico de gallo

Egg and chorizo tacos

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

I will preface this by saying I am decidedly NOT a food photographer.  While I would like to be one, I cannot take the time to take a photo because if it looks good enough to take a picture, I can’t wait long enough to stage a good one.  So I snap and eat and upload and share and here you have tonight’s dinner: Egg and chorizo tacos!

This is so easy, relatively quick, and did I mention it is goooood?

The ingredients: 2 chorizo sausages, 3 eggs scrambled with some milk, and some frozen pepper and onion stir-fry blend.  Corn tortillas to facilitate getting the inside into your mouth, and cheese and sour cream to rocket this from “yummy” to “even-this-is-better-with-all-this-cheese-and-sour-cream-even-though-it-kicked-ass-before.”

I took the casings off the chorizo and chopped it and browned it in a hot pan.  Add the eggs and scramble into the chorizo.  Add some of the pepper and onion mix - I added about 2/3 of a cup, but I don’t do measuring unless I’m baking.

Next, fry your tortillas - CORN tortillas!  Heat up some oil in a small pan until it’s really hot.  I don’t know how to tell you how to tell if it’s hot enough, but I wait until it looks really hot and then wait another minute.  Then put the tortilla into the hot oil.  I press down lightly in the middle or else it bubbles up and doesn’t cook crispy enough.

Flip over when it starts feeling just a little bit firm.  It should be lightly brown at the edges.

Once both sides are done, drain the oil as much as you can, and then place on a paper towel and fold over.  I put the tongs on it to make it keep its shape.

Once it’s cooled enough just so that you can handle it, start stuffing it full of the chorizoey goodness and top generously with shredded cheese and sour cream.  It’s light sour cream, because that makes everything all better.

This photo does not do my dinner justice.  I know.  And I just don’t care.  Because it was goooood.  As you can tell, I had already eaten one before I got around to taking the picture, and still I couldn’t take the time to put together a nice picture because I needed to get it in my mouth.  Now.

Please don’t ask me how South Beach is going.

Portugal!

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

I was very excited for our trip this weekend - after nearly 3 years here, we still had not made it over to Portugal. This weekend being a long weekend - Columbus day, celebrating the Portuguese guy who sailed from Spain to re-re-discover America that had already been re-discovered by an Icelander.  (How do you like that?!)

Now before I go into my plans for Portugal, you should know that I’m generally not much of a planner - I like to make loose plans and just do whatever, but knowing we were on limited time and had a few things we wanted to do, our itinerary was as follows:

Leave around 1:00pm Friday afternoon for the Algarve coast and get to Portimão around 4pm and hang out doing whatever for the rest of the afternoon. Saturday morning, the plan was to leave in the morning for shopping for pottery in Porches, and then off to Lagos (la-GOOSH!) for a boating excursion that would take us to the beautiful grottos along the Algarve coast.  Then we’d head up to Lisbon in the early evening, staying in our hotel in the city overnight.  On Sunday, we’d venture up to Sintra in the morning and spend the late afternoon and evening exploring Lisbon, and then on Monday we’d hit the road early, stopping in Evora to admire a chapel of bones and some Roman ruins.

In reality, though, this is our how our trip went:

Got off work late, finally out of the house about 4pm.  Got to Portimão late Friday night, got lost finding our hotel, missed dinner.  We were so tired by the time we got in, plus it being late and dark and hard to navigate under such circumstances, we just hit the sack as soon as we got in.  Well, not as soon as we got in - first was dealing with the fact that I’d made the wrong reservations for our hotel in Lisbon, something I’d rather not discuss right now.  At any rate…

Saturday, woke up delightfully early and hit Porches for our pottery shopping.  We walked around town a bit, admiring the quaintness, the fun doors and decayed walls, and eventually made our way to a pottery shop.

Porches pottery

I loved this shop, where the owner was painting in the back and selling his wares in the front.  He graciously allowed me to take pictures, and I walked out with a beautiful vase and a great, polka-dotted coffee mug.

Next we headed to Lagos where we were going to take our boat tour out to the grottoes.  Of course “the seas were angry,” and our very anticipated boat trip turned into sitting in a restaurant on the pier trying to figure out what to do next.  It was still early, so we didn’t eat but rather decided on a detour to Sagres; more specifically, to Cape St. Vincent, which was once believed to be the end of the world.  A great place to visit on Columbus Day weekend, the scenery was impressive and my mood improved from my earlier grumpiness about missing the boat trip I’d been looking forward to for weeks.

The end of the world - outside Sagres, Portugal

The boot at the end of the world

We explored an old fort and a castle in the area and admired the beautiful coastline before making our way back to Sagres for lunch - except that we missed lunch and everything was closed.  Still no Portuguese food, and by now I was really starting to want some Chicken Piri Piri that I kept seeing signs for.

We made our way up to Lisbon Saturday evening and attempted to un-cluster-f*#*) the very expensive cluster-f*#*)$@ I got myself into. The expensive part didn’t change much, but we were fortunate to be able to stay at the same hotel as our friends instead of all the way across town in a who-knows-what kind of neighborhood.  We set out for some Portuguese food but found only a seafood restaurant where I had bass, presented to me head and all.  It was…not what I expected in Portuguese food.  I’d been told how fabulous the food in Portugal was, especially coming from Spain where there isn’t a whole lot of flavor involved in cooking where we live.  The bass was simple, what I’d expect from any restaurant anywhere when it comes to a whole fish being made for my dinner.  The kids were unimpressed, as were our friends who got “vegetable” soup that looked like grass in a bowl of semi-creamy broth, but hey, at least the wine was good.

Sunday morning, another bright and early start to our day.  I was going to get my Piri Piri today, I was sure of it!  We decided to go up first thing to Sintra by train, which was, along with our plan to visit the grottoes along the Algarve coast, the other big to-do item on our list.  I have to say: Sintra did not disappoint.  At all.  In fact, I fell in love with it.  I wish I could move there and live in one of the old, beautiful homes nestled in the hills. Particularly, this one - the one turning colors:

Residential Sintra

Hiking and bussing our way up to one of the palaces, I was constantly in awe of this incredible town.

Sintra

We stopped for lunch at a restaurant where I hoped to order my long awaited Piri-Piri, but instead had some unimpressive bacalhau.  While the food was not so great, the location was more eye candy:

Lunch in Sintra

This building, like many others, was decorated with ceramic tile.

A further bus ride up a very narrow, twisting road led us to the Palácio Nacional da Pena, where there is no way to describe how majestic and surreal this palace - this castle - really was.

The Castle in Sintra

Sintra Castle

After a very long time spent admiring both the outside and the inside (sorry, no pictures allowed!), we made our way down through the surrounding gardens.

Dreamy forest in Sintra

The swan

By the time we were done, it was already 5pm.  We decided to forfeit the expensive already-paid-for tour of another palace (are you sensing yet how expensive this trip got for us?) and instead head back to Lisbon so we could get that nice, elusive Portuguese dinner.

But alas, it was not meant to be.  Due to some issues beyond our control, we ended up eating dinner at. a. mall.  Not quite how I expected our last dinner to be, but hey, at least now our kids could find something they liked.  With several restaurants to choose from, the kids had no problem finding what they wanted: pasta.  Boy, do our kids have adventurous taste buds.  (Note to self: next trip, Italy.) For me, piri piri?  No - no piri piri.  None to be found.  Instead, it was Israeli food cooked in Portugal by a Nepalese immigrant.  *sigh*.  At least there was still one more chance, Monday’s lunch.

Isak wolfed down his food - after all, he didn’t eat lunch because he wasn’t very pleased with the food he ordered in Sintra - but Anja just picked at hers, eating only a couple of bites.  After attempting dinner negotiations for quite some time, I finally conceded that she wasn’t going to take one more bite, as she was now complaining of a tummy ache.  I thought it was her way of avoiding eating something she regretted ordering, but an hour later when her bed was covered with puke, I realized her body was telling her that this food just wasn’t right.

After a very late trip to the pharmacy to talk to the Portuguese pharmacist that didn’t speak a lick of English followed by waking with her at midnight, 1:30am, 3am, and 5am while her body fiercely rejected every ounce of food, stomach acid and bile, and finding out that our friends’ son was going through the same thing 3 floors below us, we changed our plans to avoid Evora, preferring the fast route down the freeway and back into Spain where they could puke in the familiarity of home instead.

Despite the many changes of plans (and the lack of piri piri), we had a great time, took many pictures, and are already planning on going back another weekend soon, next time armed with Immodium AD and a restaurant guide that will guarantee me my elusive chicken piri piri.

Are you freakin’ kidding me??

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

$2,700 for THIS??  I’m trying to figure out how to justify needing this one….

On Icelandic Food

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

This post started out as a simple tuna salad recipe but evolved into musings about the food I miss so much from Iceland. We’ve been gone from there now for 6 years and one of the things I miss so much is the food. Partly because it’s so good (don’t believe Gordan Ramsay or Anthony Bourdain), and partly because the food brings back the warm and welcoming memories of B’s mom’s and grandmother’s kitchens. It took me over 3 hours to post this and kept me up until 2am; this is probably my longest post ever and in order to read it, you’ll need to call your doctor for a prescription of Lipitor.

Butter: I was going to put this somewhere in the middle of this entry but realized you’ll need to know right now about butter in Iceland. Watch out Wisconsin, Iceland is moving in for the kill when it comes to dairy. The butter there is so perfectly perfect, and so is just about every other dairy product I can think of. Except maybe that G-Mjölk, the stuff that sits on the shelf until the Second Coming at which time Jesus will be able to pour himself a nice glass of room temperature milk and contemplate maybe a Third Coming just so he can try the butter next time.

Lamb: Pay attention now: If you can ever find a grocery store that sells real Icelandic lamb, do yourself a favor and take out a second mortgage and buy the store out. I’d never been a big fan of lamb, not that I’d eaten much of it before living there because my dad had lambophobia, and ever since I’ve left I’ve never met a lamb I liked anywhere near as much as the ones I met on my dinner plate in Iceland. Lamb soup? Smoked lamb? Lamb marinated in wine and herbs? Mary, bring me my dinner please. And while you’re at it, make me a sweater.

Tuna salad: This is where this post originally began. The tuna salad in Iceland is different. Better. Better than any tuna salad I’d ever had in my life. Ever since learning how to make it right a few weeks ago, my kids now actually like me. Although my very tactful son still won’t give in to my repeated bribes to say “Your tuna salad is as good as Amma’s.”

Dried fish: My sweet grandmother-in-law sent an entire grocery bag full of harðfiskur to us from Iceland when B’s mom and dad came to visit recently. It’s a funny little treat, because one would think that dried fish (haddock) would be pretty, well, gross, but in reality it’s a salty, chewy treat that has so far been unequivocally loved by every child that we’ve given it to. Even the kids that don’t like fish. Now, the smell of it is, to the untrained adult nose, admittedly not the most pleasant aroma, and some may advise not eating a large piece of it before transporting heavily pregnant women in tiny, hot cars, but I’ll just say that it’s one of my favorite treats from Iceland. And my cat’s, too. I know this because he told me right after I found him at 6am on the kitchen floor with the grocery bag that he pulled out of the cabinet over the microwave, opened, pulled out one of the sealed bags inside, opened that, and pulled out a piece of fish to eat. He’s currently on probation and has a restraining order out against B who attempted felinicide.

Icelandic chocolate: Especially the little Gullmolar golden-wrapped delights. I surprised myself when I declared the rum-filled ones to be the best. The chocolate from Iceland is different from all the other chocolate I’ve ever had, and while it probably isn’t the absolute best chocolate on earth, it is definitely one of my favorite treats.

Icelandic pancakes with rhubarb jam: One of the best investments we made before leaving Iceland was a pönnukokur pan. At about $80, it wasn’t cheap but it is the most used piece of equipment in my kitchen. I’m not allowed to go to potlucks or barbeques without a foot-high stack of the paper-thin crepe-like pancakes. They’re often accompanied by B’s rhubarb jam, which is no more than chopped rhubarb cooked down with a whole lotta sugar. A smear of that, a puff of whipped cream, and everyone is happy.

Fresh-caught arctic char: When I was pregnant with Anja, B occasionally got the opportunity to go on an overnight fishing expedition to Þingvellir where he would catch arctic char in the crystal clear, ice-cold water, and then he would come home, clean them up, and pan fry them for me with some potatoes and a generous amount of melted butter over the entire plate. I would like to go on the record at this time to blame Iceland as the cause of my high cholesterol. I’m still surprised I made it out of there with my arteries intact.

Skyr: Everyone who lives near a Whole Foods, I am ordering you right now to minimize your browser, get in your car, and drive there. Fork over the obscene amount of money to buy yourself a little container of Skyr (OK, $2.79 isn’t obscene but for the size and compared to the price of that much yogurt it is!). Come home, add a little milk to thin it out to a yogurt-like consistency, and perhaps a bit of sugar to sweeten it up a little bit, and then you can leave me a comment elaborating your deep, amaranthine love for me for sharing this little secret with you. Skyr is sky-high in protein, with almost no fat, and just may be the world’s most perfect food. It helps that it tastes like a cross between yogurt and strained sour cream, and really, can you go wrong when sour cream is involved?

Graflax and graflaxsosa: I can’t tell you how excited I was the first time I visited Ikea in the U.S. They sell cured salmon and a lovely mustard-dill sauce for it that is nearly identical to what I ate in Iceland that I loved so much.

Caramel potatoes: “Caramel? With potatoes? But Karyn, that’s just gross!” Au contraire, my friends: The most perfect side dish ever to lamb, and more on that later, is small white potatoes glazed with a generous amount of simple caramel - browned sugar and butter. While the goal is to have a perfectly smooth glaze to coat the potatoes, I secretly hope it turns out lumpy whenever B makes it because the little chunks that sneak through are one of my favorite parts of dinner. Sugar during the main course? So daring! So delicious! So stop whining about caramel and potatoes not going together already!

Fish balls: Sorry, no testicles here. In fact, while I’m at it, you’ll notice that any mention of the “traditional” foods that you may have heard of are not on this list. No rotten shark here, no jellied sheep’s head either. But fish balls, so simply made with white fish, onion, egg, flour and milk, and then shaped and pan fried (in what else? Lots and lots of BUTTER!), are definitely a comfort food…I’d make them if only I could find some fish worthy of actually eating here.

Rugbrauð: A different kind of bread. Dense, wet-ish, and dark, it’s best topped with guess, guess what it’s best topped with because I bet you’d never guess I’m about to say butter. The general rule of thumb in our house was that you had to put a layer of butter on the bread that was at least as thick as the slice of bread itself. Really.

Hangikjöt, flatbread, and hangikjöt sandwiches from the supermarket: Hangikjöt is smoked lamb that’s usually only eaten during the holidays, except that the grocery stores sell pre-made sandwiches and one of them contains hangikjöt with remoulade, peas, and fried onions. The fried onions really deserve their own description, but I’ll just say that if you live anywhere close to an Ikea, they sell them there and you must buy a small bag of them and then put them on anything else you ever make in your life. The flatbread is unlike anything I’ve had before, a thin, flat bread that I haven’t quite figured out how to describe; you spread on a layer of butter and then top with some thinly sliced cold hangikjöt and then call your doctor for a refill on your cholesterol medication.

Puffin: I’m mean. But it’s good. It’s really good. And I still feel like shit whenever I see a cute little puffin and can’t stop thinking about grilling it for dinner.

And last of all, I’d like to talk about 4 restaurants that anyone who ever visits Iceland should go to:

B and I met at Bæjarins Bestu on a cold and typically blustery winter night. I never actually got to eat a hot dog until weeks? months? later, but let me just say, they really are the best in the city. The steamy buns, the perfect smoked lamb dogs, the wonderful brown mustard, definitely un-Heinz ketchup, remolaði, and the crispy fried onions make Bæjarins Bestu one of my favorite places in Reykjavik.

Perlan - the Pearl - is overpriced. But the food was great, and the view is unforgettable. The restaurant is a huge glass dome that sits atop five hot water storage tanks and slowly revolves, giving you views of downtown Reykjavik, the ocean, and the Moon-like stretch of the Reykjanes peninsula. In the winter, if you’re lucky enough to have a clear night, the northern lights dance above your head.

Fjöruborðið: The menu is tiny but really, who needs more than the lobster bisque? This tiny restaurant is where I ate for my 30th birthday dinner and was so good that my mouth still waters whenever I think about it. I posted about our dinner here and posted pictures of my dinner here, here, and here, and I just hope that the next time we go visit Iceland we can make it back out to Stokkseyri so I can have another unforgettably delicious dinner.

Hlölla Bátur: One of my biggest regrets was not discovering this sandwich shop until just before we moved away. I think the first time I went there was the day Anja took her first steps. She needed a Sýslumannsbátur, STAT! At “only” about $15 for a sandwich and a Coke, it’s a near bargain for downtown Reykjavik. The sandwiches are hot and juicy and fresh and are perfect food to sustain yourself while you stumble around in the cold looking for a cab to take you home from the bar.

I’m tired from all of this reminiscing. I think I’ll go eat a stick of butter now.

I actually made something healthy.

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

I have a thing against healthy food. It’s not conscious, really, it’s just that unhealthy food tastes so much better.

But I saw something the other day about black bean soup and thought it was about time I make a pot of soup, and something different than what I usually make.

beansoup.jpg

While shopping for beans, I thought WOW, that bag really isn’t going to go very far, so let me buy two. And yes, I do understand that beans must be soaked and will expand, yes, yes, I know. I understood that before I bought them, too, but they still seemed just so itty bitty, and with my big, beautiful pot, I felt confident that it would be just fine. And they did! Just with a little bit of a big mess all around the stove burner.

Anyway, it was delicious. And vegetarian! And I don’t have a recipe. At least not a specific one. My kind of recipe is a bit of this and some more of that, and in this case there was:

2 bags of black beans
Some dried onion - I was feeling very lazy and not wanting to cry again after last night’s very moving pico de gallo preparation
Some garlic powder (not garlic salt)
Salt and pepper
Some Chipotle pepper

2 cans of corn
A large can of yams, chopped

I soaked the beans overnight and then boiled them for 2 hours, and then added in the spices and let it simmer all day. When I got home, I added 2 cans of corn, and then took out half of the soup and put it in the food processor which was too small for half of the soup. That was enjoyable.

Once I’d pureed some of the bean soup/corn, I added it back to the whole beans and added some lime juice. Then I made the garlic which was:

Plain yogurt
1/2 cucumber, chopped
More lime juice
Chopped cilantro

It was awesome. And it was healthy, so yay, now I can go eat a quart of ice cream!

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