A cake I've long pined for, now solidly in my arsenal of treats. It took me a while to attempt this cake (for no good reason), I hesitated to tackle its structure and chemistry. Suffice it to say, there are few things as delightful as a cake soaked in milk.
It's glorious to shovel a spoonful of corn kernels into your mouth and delight in popping them as you chew. The juice from fresh summer corn is, perhaps, what gold tastes like (when left out in the sun to heat for a while). And, as usual, I love pairing something sweet with some heat. Roasted poblano peppers are smoky and hot, a proud match for summer corn.
I love the interplay of sweet and spicy in this condiment. The luscious flesh of the mango pairs perfectly with the crisp body of a jalapeño. Make a giant batch of this and serve it all week with fish, on chips, in tacos. It fits your every need!
INGREDIENTS
Two Mangos, peeled and cut into small cubes
Juice of one Lime
1 Jalapeño, diced
1/4 cup chopped Cilantro
Salt to taste
BUSINESS
Chop everything, toss in a bowl, then enjoy! It gets better if you let it sit together in the fridge.
This is the sort of recipe you keep up your sleeve for those busiest weeks in the year. Make a tray of these bars and stick them in the fridge, when you get up in the morning breakfast accomplished!
Gefilte fish produces such strong reactions that I decided to use the far more demure French word for this sea-born dish. Quenelles are easy to make and you can use whatever fish you prefer. For this round I used salmon and a heavy dose of fresh peas. Blend in the aromatics that look fresh when you arrive at the market, no need to adhere strictly to this recipe. When serving, add a dollop of something tangy (yogurt sauce, horseradish, sour cream, tamarind paste), it will offset the luxurious fish and send fireworks through your palate.
Ingredients
1 Yellow Onion, shredded and squeezed to remove excess liquid (reserve the liquid)
2 carrots, shredded
1 cup Fresh or Frozen Green Peas
Handful Parsley Leaves
4 Salmon Fillets
1 Egg
1 tablespoon Whole Grain Mustard
1 teaspoon Black Pepper
Salt to taste
Business
Prepare your veggies, take care of all shredding and squeezing before working with the fish.
Remove the skin from salmon fillets and cut the flesh into large pieces.
Add skin and reserved onion juice to sauce pot with 4-6 cups water.
Bring liquid to boil, then drop to simmer.
In a food processor add all vegetables and salmon pieces. Process until smooth.
Add egg, mustard, salt, and pepper and continue to process until smooth and shiny.
Scoop out quenelles of the fish dough and drop them (a few at a time) into the simmering water for 5-7 minutes, until they hold together in one piece and are cooked in the center.
Drain quenelles on rack.
If not serving immediately, add quenelles to jars or containers and pour poaching liquid over them to cover and keep moist.
Dinnergeddon is a truly magnificent event and Andrew Hyde is a dinner party hero. This is the seventh incarnation, by far our largest gathering. Thank you to the guests who make this a true joy. As usual the menu was entirely Paleo friendly: tamarind-citrus chicken, mashed plantains, and cilantro-jicama slaw. This will be my last dinnergeddon in Boulder for a while and I'll miss it. Love all around.
Taking cue from the effortless Hasselback Potato, I decided to fill a casserole dish with sliced red skinned potatoes and scatter their in-betweens with a confetti of leek. With a generous pour of olive oil on top the dish crisps up in your oven and transfers to the table perfectly for an easy side dish.
INGREDIENTS
5 medium Red Skinned of Yukon Potatoes, sliced very thinly
1 large leek (~1 pound), sliced into slim ribbons
1/4 cup Olive Oil
Generous sprinkling Salt and Pepper
GET BUSY
Heat your oven to 350 degrees.
Fill a 9x13 casserole dish with the sliced potatoes, standing in line from front to back (not stacked on top of each other).
Scatter the ribboned leek everywhere and push it down in between the potatoes.
Pour olive oil on top of everything, then sprinkle liberally with salt and pepper.
Bake the dish for 45-60 minutes, until the potatoes are tender.
Heat your oven to 500 degrees, or turn on your broiler. Slide the dish under the high heat for 15 minutes, or until the potatoes are crisp on top.
Red and dripping with juice, a plateful of strawberry shortcake is the quickest way to a smile-filled afternoon. Make quick drop biscuits in place of the shortcake and your dessert will be ready even faster.
Breakfast desserts are a wonderful venue for experimentation. With this treat I took some morning time favorites and reframed them with an eye toward the tart/pie family. The crust is an oatmeal crumble, the body a tremble of yogurt set with gelatin, and the top is crowned in fruit. A joy eaten in the morning and a secret eaten at night, this tart will become a staple in your repertoire once you've tried it. Any fruit on top will do, I swap it out as the seasons shift. My new favorite? Fillets of mango spiraled around the yogurt.
INGREDIENTS
Crust
1 cup GF Oats
½ cup Brown Sugar
⅓ cup Millet Flour
¼ cup Almond Meal
½ tsp Salt
3 ounces Coconut Oil
Peaches
3 large Peaches
3 tablespoons Maple Syrup
1 tsp Ground Cardamom
Panna Cotta
1 packet Powdered Gelatin
3 tbs Water
2 cups Yoghurt (any variety will do)
2 tbs Honey
Juice of ½ Lemon
1 tsp Vanilla
½ tsp Salt
BUSINESS
Heat your oven to 350 degrees. Line a 9-inch pie dish with a circle of parchment paper.
In a small bowl mix the ingredients for the crust with your hands. Squeeze and massage the mixture until there are no visible clumps.
Press the crust into your pie dish and up the sides. Bake the crust for 15-20 minutes or until it is just starting to brown around the edges. Remove it from the oven and let it cool.
While the crust is baking slice the peaches into small wedges. Stir them with the maple syrup and cardamom, then spill them into a roasting pan.
Roast the peaches in your already warm oven for 20-25 minutes, until they’re just showing some color and slightly withered. Remove them from the oven and allow them to cool.
While the crust and peaches are cooling, pour the gelatin over the water in a shallow bowl and let it sit for 5-10 minutes.
In a large saucepan whisk the yoghurt, lemon, vanilla, salt and honey over medium heat. When it is quite warm to the touch, turn off the heat.
Pour the gelatin into the yoghurt mixture and whisk until it is completely dissolved.
Pour the yoghurt mixture into the pie dish, into the crust.
Arrange the peaches on top however you like (scattered or spiralled).
Put the dish in your refrigerator at least 3 hours, or overnight, to set.
Don't want to cook dinner in the oven tonight? Grab a wok and work the stovetop, it's quick, easy, and will keep the heat down in your kitchen this summer.
My pursuits of the perfect Saag have taken me far and wide. I’ve tried many a recipe in my kitchen, some my own, some belonging to those far more well-versed in Indian cooking. My pursuits have brought forth this dish, reminiscent of the saag at my favorite Indian restaurant, but tweaked for my Brooklyn kitchen. Instead of spinach I used rainbow chard because it was local, fresh and calling to me with jewel-toned legs amidst the shrubbery of the produce aisle. Two bunches may look like a lot when you stick it in your cart, but chard (like every leafy green) cooks down to nothing. Ergo, buy more than you think you need.
PARTY
2 bunches Rainbow Chard
2 tablespoons Olive Oil
1 inch Ginger, peeled and minced
1 tablespoon Mustard Seed
½ tablespoon Amchur (or the pit of one mango)
3-5 Cardomom Pods (depending on your affinity for the scent)
1 teaspoon Salt
1 teaspoon Black Pepper
½ cup Coconut Milk
BUSINESS
Strip the leaves of chard from their jewel-toned stems. Reserve the stems for making veggie stock, we will not be using them in this recipe. Stack the leaves of chard and roll them into a fat, tight cigar. Slicing across the roll, cut the chard into strips. Set the ribbons aside.
In a large stock pot or wok heat the oil over medium-high heat until rippling.
Add the ginger and saute for 3-5 minutes, or until it is golden brown.
Add the mustard seeds and amchur (or the mango pit) and immediately put a lid on the pot. The seeds will start to pop and without a lid your kitchen will be covered in tiny little black spots. I repeat, put a lid on it.
When the popping dies down (after about a minute or two), open the lid and stuff the chard into the pot.
Add the cardomom pods, salt and pepper and stir everything to combine.
Continue to stir as the chard wilts and pour in the coconut milk.
Put the lid back on the pot, drop the heat to low and simmer for 15-20 minutes.
Remove the lid and continue to simmer for another 5 minutes, or until the leaves are tender and the milk has thickened slightly.
I'm not a fan of the hotel fruit salad, a jubilee of unseasonal and underripe cubes with little or no thought to structure and shape. And so when I set out to make a fruit salad it must have perspective, maturity, and reason. You'll never find a tumble of melons, citrus, berries, and grapes on my table. Our brunch was in close enough proximity to Passover that my brain subtly injected this reference to Charoset. Chopped apples, dates, and cashews, dressed with lemon and tamarind. It's a Southeast Asian take on my Jewish roots, and I'm eagerly awaiting a repeat performance.
Ingredients
3 Honeycrisp Apples
1 1/2 cups Raw Cashews, chopped
1 1/2 cups Dates, pitted and chopped
1/4 cup Tamarind Paste
Juice of one Lemon
1/2 teaspoon Fresh Ground Black Pepper
1/4 teaspoon Ground Cardamom
1/4 teaspoon Salt
Business
Peel and chop the apples into small cubes.
In a large bowl mix the apples, chopped cashews, and chopped dates until evenly distributed.
In a separate bowl whisk together the remaining ingredients. If the sauce is too thick, add water one tablespoon at a time until it is easily whiskable.
Pour the sauce over the fruit and nut mix, toss to combine.
Beginning with an Indian inspiration I tore the insides from mental samosas and packed them into a casserole dish. The result is a tray of scoopable, spiced, tender, and crusty potatoes, perfect as the bed for some fried eggs. I add a lot of peas to my potato mixture, feel free to adjust the proportion should you be pea-averse.
INGREDIENTS
4 large Yukon Gold Potatoes (~2 lbs)
1 tablespoon White Vineger
1/3 cup Olive Oil
2 Serrano Chilies, minced (~2 tbs)
5 cloves Garlic, minced (~1 1/2 tbs)
3 inches Ginger, chopped (~3 tbs)
1 tablespoon Black Mustard Seed
1 tablespoon Amchur
2 1/2 teaspoons Whole Cumin Seeds
1/2 teaspoon Ground Coriander
1/2 teaspoon Ground Cardamom
1/2 teaspoon Fennel Powder
2 cups frozen Green Peas
BUSINESS
Chop the potatoes into roughly 2 inch pieces.
Place them in a large saute pan and cover with two cups of water. Add the vinegar.
Cover the pan and bring to a simmer, cook at a medium temp for 15-20 minutes, until potatoes are fork tender but have not lost their shape completely.
Drain the potatoes and partially mash in a large bowl.
Heat the oil in a large wok or saute pan.
When the oil is hot, toss in the serrano chilies, garlic, ginger, cumin seeds and black mustard seeds. Saute till light brown.
Throw in all the remaining spices.
Add the semi-mashed potatoes, stir everything to distribute the spices.
Add the frozen peas.
Spoon potato mixture into casserole dish and drizzle olive oil on top. Slide into the oven at 375 for 10-15 minutes to crisp up the top.
A delight of layers, this cake has enough personality to please every texture nerd. I line the pan with caramelized walnuts, then pour the batter on top for baking. Once the cake is out of the oven and cool, I plaster the top with an easy chocolate mousse. Though it may look complicated, fret not- this is a cake you can throw together with minutes on the clock and look like a winner when the buzzer sounds.
CAKE INGREDIENTS
2 cups Crushed/Chopped Walnuts
1/4 cup Brown Sugar
1/4 cup Bourbon
1/2 cup Brown Rice Flour
1/3 cup Tapioca Starch
1/3 cup White RIce Flour
2 teaspoons Baking Powder
3/4 teaspoon Salt
3/4 teaspoon Xanthan Gum
3 Eggs
3/4 cup Sugar
3/4 cup Coconut Milk
3/4 cup Safflower Oil
Zest of two Oranges
BUSINESS
In a large saute pan, heat the walnuts with brown sugar and bourbon over medium flame. When everything is sticky and melted, remove from the stove and pour into the bottom of a lined 9-inch springform cake pan.
Heat your oven to 350 degrees.
In a small bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients (everything up until Eggs on the list).
In a medium bowl, whisk the eggs with the sugar until slightly thickened and lighter in color. Whisk in the oil, milk, and orange zest.
Add the dry ingredients to the wet, mixing to combine.
Pour the batter into the cake pan, over the caramelized walnuts.
Bake the cake for 40-50 minutes, until browned on top and springy to the touch.
Allow the cake to cool completely before frosting.
FROSTING BUSINESS
I swear by this genius chocolate mousse posted on Food52, originated by Hervé This. Make a batch with orange juice from your remaining skinned oranges, and slather it on top of the cake before serving.
It wasn't until I was in college that my family (all living gluten free at that moment) discovered the wonder of this Brazilian bread. No yeast, no complicated blend of gluten free flours, this batter comes together in a few minutes with a small list of ingredients. You can make it with or without cheese. Adding handfuls of something sharp will amp up the flavor, though I must admit an addiction to this simple, dairy free, version. Traditionally, the batter is baked into small muffins, small rolls, but I've taken this opportunity to present you with my favorite alternative: the grill. Pour the batter directly onto a cast iron grill/griddle and you'll be rewarded with an alchemical transformation.
INGREDIENTS
1 Egg
1/3 cup Olive Oil
2/3 cup Coconut Milk (or regular milk)
1 1/2 cups Tapioca Flour
Salt and Pepper to taste
Optional: 1/2 cup Grated Cheese
BUSINESS
Heat a cast iron grill pan over medium-high flame.
In a large bowl, whisk all ingredients fiercely, until the batter is smooth and shiny.
When the grill is hot, pour the batter directly onto the iron. If it resists spreading, you can give it a nudge with a spatula, though gravity will most likely take care of the job.
Let the bread grill until it curls up at the ends, about 10-15 minutes. Check the bottom for good color, then flip it over and grill the nude side for another 10-15 minutes (or until sufficiently toasted).
Yes, I'm making a lot of cabbage this winter. Truth be told, I'm trying my best to cook from local ingredients and at my market this is the only vegetable I can find that is grown even remotely close to NYC. But, necessity is the mother of invention and I've been keeping my tummy full with delicious variations on this hearty vegetable. Tonight's presentation is tarted up with lemon rind and given a kick in the tongue with some dried chilies. Golden garlic rounds out the flavor wheel, making the dish a new staple in your repertoire.
Ingredients
1 1/2 pounds Green Cabbage
1 head Garlic Cloves, sliced thinly
Rind of 2 Lemons, cut in large strips
2 Dried Chilies
3-4 tablespoons Olive Oil
Salt and Pepper to taste
Business
Cut the cabbage into thin shreds, set aside.
In the bottom of a wok or large stockpot, heat the oil. When hot, add the garlic and fry until golden. Then add the lemon peel and dried chilies. Toast everything.
Add cabbage to pot, stir to combine, drop heat to medium-low and cook until tender (about 30 minutes), stirring infrequently.
Don't wait for the summer to start grilling. Invest in a cast iron griddle/grill pan and you'll be set through the colder months of the year. I brined the pork loin in whole grain mustard and garlic to infuse it with flavor before slapping it on the hot grill. The final product is perfectly seasoned, charred on the outside, and juicy in the middle (just where it counts).
INGREDIENTS
1/4 cup Water
1/4 cup Apple Cider Vinegar
1 tablespoon Whole Grain Mustard
1/2 tablespoon Salt
1/2 tablespoon Honey
3 smashed Garlic Cloves
1 to 1.5 pounds Pork Loin
BUSINESS
In a small bowl combine all ingredients, except for the pork. Whisk together until everything is combined.
Trim the silver skin from the pork loin, then place it in a sealable plastic bag.
Pour the brine into the bag with the pork, then seal it and put it in the refrigerator. Leave it for at least a few hours, and not more than 36 hours (the brine can make it too salty).
Let the pork come to room temperature before grilling. Heat a cast iron grill over medium-high flames.
Grill the pork for 8-10 minutes per side, covering it with a larger roasting pan or domed lid while it cooks on the cast iron. Don't move it around while it grills on each side, let the pork get nice charred grill marks. Cook the loin until a meat thermometer inserted into the center reads ~145 degrees, about 40-50 minutes.
Remove the pork from the grill and let it rest for 5 minutes before slicing.
SAUCE
While the pork is grilling, make use of the leftover brine by incorporating it into a sauce for the finished dish.
1 quart Chopped tomatoes
1 Yellow Onion, sliced thinly
1/2 cup Brine from above (after the pork is on the grill)
All Garlic Cloves from above Brine
1/4 cup Balsamic Vinegar
In a small sauté pan, combine all ingredients.
Simmer for at least 30 minutes, until the onions are tender and the sauce is slightly thickened.
A briny whip to start the evening, this mousse is wonderful with a glass of something cold and crisp (be that white wine, or beer). It's deceptively hearty and creamy with the addition of walnuts, great for spreading on toasts or crackers. Make a double batch and keep half in the freezer, you'll be all set for your next party with no planning necessary.
INGREDIENTS
4 cans Sardines packed in Olive Oil
Juice of 2 Lemons
3 cups Toasted Walnuts
1 cup Torn Parsley Leaves
Salt and Pepper to taste (beware, the sardines are already salted)
BUSINESS
Add all ingredients to a food processor (including the olive oil remaining in the sardine tins).
Buzz and whir the mixture until it is your desired consistency. The mousse can be smooth or chunky, it's delicious either way.
It's downright irresponsible to have a late breakfast without some sort of vegetable on the table. Though it may run counter to your upbringing, the breakfasts of my young adulthood have always featured something green to accompany my meats and starches. But I'll cut you some slack here, it is the morning after, after all. Have a bunch of kale in your fridge? Is it starting to wilt? Yes, of course it is. Well strip the leaves from the stems and let them crisp up in the oven. Everybody loves a good chip.
INGREDIENTS
1 bunch Kale (curly leaf)
3-4 tablespoons Olive Oil
Salt and Pepper (don't be shy here)
BUSINESS
Heat your oven to 325 degrees.
Strip the leaves from the stems of your kale, add them to your largest roasting tray/pan. If they are too bunched in the pan (i.e. on top of each other), bake them in batches.
Drizzle olive oil, and sprinkle salt and pepper over the kale, then toss with your hands until evenly distributed.
Bake for 30-40 minutes, shaking the pan intermittently, until crisp and dry.