Monday, November 29, 2010

CHILI RECIPES wanted !!!

Chili is something I can eat like crazy, anytime, anywhere, any recipe. Over the years, like my tomato sauce, I have made chili over and over again, and never has the outcome been the same as any made before. I think the reason behind this continuously changing chili is because whenever I make it, it is created spontaneously, on a whim, as my mood suits. If I feel like adding ground chicken, boom; tabasco, boom; ketchup,ok; and so on. I get away with these constantly varied preparations because I am the only one in our home who eats the result.

I recently made vegetarian only chili. It was good, not superb, but good. I ate it all over a period of about a month. However, I prefer meat in my chili. I think my chili may be have been prepared incorrectly all the times I have made it because I do not use cumin, an ingredient which I now feel may be absolutely essential to a good chili. So now my search for a good chili recipe begins, a recipe, tested, tasted, prepared and served.


Please send your chili recipe with your commentary included. I will begin my testing next month, after I have finished my cookie making. Send recipe to     szpin@sympatico.ca   Thank you!


I will try every recipe and post my critiques, criticisms and compliments along with the recipes which I liked the most.

Visit back !
 

Thursday, November 25, 2010

OK...made the choice ... Bosch wins !

I looked at the two best  selling stand up mixers, Kitchenaid and Cuisinart, and compared them with the Bosch.

Bosch won out for the following reasons in order of importance to me:

1. Ease of cleaning: Bosch disassembles easily and everything except the metal parts, is dishwasher safe. Mind you, I have used it twice already, making a cake and shortbreads, and both times I washed by hand, easily and quickly.

2. Crucial drives, gears in the Bosch are all metal while they are plastic in the competitors. This means that heavy mixing puts a real strain on the gears and transmission. Metal is better than plastic or nylon. I can doubly confirm that from motorcycling for Suzuki is a good bike that had parts problems because they used to nylon and plastic. So, I chose German metal engineering. We shall see. Kitchenaid users have told me their machines have lasted for years but daily use was not in their cards.

3. I like that the Bosch is squat with a wide, wide rim allowing for easy filling of ingredients for mixing. The competitors either have tilt back heads or crank up bowls. Bosch sits low, squat and ready to go.

4. Accessories are easily changed on the Bosch. I cannot say much hear, at least not from experience, for I only have one accessory, the blender. But the demo videos at a Bosch web site, sure made accessory attachment look easy and practical.

One complaint, which may be applicable to the other mixers too, is that accessories are costly. I want to make my own pasta. For that I must be the meat grinder attachment at about $200 and then the pasta attachments for nearly another $200. I thought motorcycling was expensive. This baking business might break me!

ITALIAN FOCCACIA CAKE
I am not to post the recipe for this cake yet as it was my first run with the mixer. Also, remember please that I am not a baker; I am a cook! I dont measure or work with lots of patience. A baker does!

So my first effort came out but I think I should have folded  in the egg whited instead of mixing them in. Also, maybe tad less flour so it remains a bit more moist. Sure helped having scotch with the cake!!!

Now I begin my Christmas cookie blitz.

Each year my "sous chef" and I make at least a half dozen different kinds of cookies. This year we have the mixer. So it should be an easier job.

Find out by revisiting soon.

Visit back again !

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

And the winner of the stand up mixer comparison is....BOSCH

The standup mixers were a difficult choice because 2 are well known brands and quite popular. 
 
KITCHENAID
 
Kitchenaid has been around longer than I have and there are many users who have inherited their appliances from parents. However, based on their incorporation of plastics into the current model's construction, I have rejected their machine. I fear their appliance may not withstand heavy use. I also dislike their warranty which is only one year. I think almost any electronic appliance will last a year. It is beyond that time that worries me. This machine was also the most expensive.

CUISINART
Cuisinart has an excellent warranty and the price is very competitive. I am tempted to make it my number one choice based on those two factors, price and warranty. But I still do not like the tilting head as explained above. Furthermore, the machine seems overly large, standing very tall. I like something smaller and less obtrusive.
 
 
BOSCH
However, after viewing the video demo of the BOSCH, I finally chose it for a number of reasons. It looked like it was easy to use, load and operate. It has metal parts and a sealed transmission. Its power was applied directly to the center spindle, rather than being redirected through a tilting head where torque is lost. It is almost totally dishwasher cleanable. And finally, I ride a BMW motorcycle which seems to be very sound mechanically. So I side with German engineering. Stay tuned to see what happens once I put the thing into operation in our kitchen.
Hopefully, Christmas cookie making will be easy as pie this year...dont you just love it!!! LOL
 
Visit back again ! 

Solution to COOKING CROSSWORD 1...

Hope all of you found this crossword easy and entertaining !

I ask for feedback and if you enjoyed the puzzle, I will create more !

Glad to hear from you readers...special hello to Kenza and Bill...nice to see you both and great hearing that you read the cooking blog.

Regards to Vancouver Island readers and appreciations for the blackberry jam...made a great baste for roast bbq chicken breast...simply delicious !

I always like sweet/heat bastes for the bbq on any crispy meat.

Looking for some feedback on another matter....

WHAT STANDUP MIXER DO YOU USE?
I am considering buying a standup mixer as I want to try my hand at making pastries and pies. Maybe even take a shot at making some breads...dont know...but I have narrowed my shopping down to three machines. Here they are in my order of preference:


BOSCH:
German engineering, all vital parts are made of metal, not plastic, ease of cleaning, ease of use with very practical splash guard, minimal buttons, quieter than others.

I like:
  looks like a small kitchen appliance but it is more
  compact and not overbearing in appearance
  looks like it belongs in a home kitchen
  great warranty
I dont like:
   not sure if it is a bit noisey...like who is sleeping?



KITCHENAID:

good reputation, good availability, sales for accessories are commonly found
 
I like:
   reputation
   availability

I don't like:
   plastic parts can overheat with heavy loads
   tilt back head means counter clearance is needed
   overall size...it is huge








CUISINART:
well known, good reputation, good availability.

I like:
   availability of timer...would be convenient
   fold button for starting of some mixes
I dont like:
   machine is very large and cumbersome
   tilting head means counter clearance is essential
   it just looks it should be in a commercial kitchen rather than in a home kitchen.



I really liked the features on the Bosch. All of its parts easily come apart for dishwasher cleaning. That's right up my alley. I also liked that in the demo, it showed making egg whites with just ONE egg...quite amazing I thought. Plus those engineers recognize that pastry, pie dough needs less air than other blends/mixes. I liked that. A bonus right now given by the Canadian distributor is that a blender accessory is included. It would mean one less piece of equipment on the counter in the kitchen.

Please let me know what you use and what you like/dislike about the machine you have. Send your responses to szpin@sympatico.ca

Thanks and a big hello to those who follow me on a regular basis.

Visit back !

Saturday, November 13, 2010

MY FIRST COOKING CROSSWORD ...hope it works !

You may have to print out this page in order to write on the paper and solve the puzzle.






















Across

2.     The 'royal' meat used for making a roast.
7.     This is part of the process used in the making of brandy.
8.     To a Pole, this means a stew.
10.   A favourite Italian cheese eaten throughout the Western world.
11.   An Italian liqueur based on distillation of grape must.
12.   Liquid gold to a scotsman.
14.   First name of a famous Irish libation.
15.   The young version of the the roast meat.
16.   This veggie would be well suited at a funeral.

Down

 
1.     Refers to the wheat used for making the best of Italian pasta.
3.     This garnish has a standard one and an Italian one and is used for flavour as well as decoration.
4.     A favourite way of serving potatoes for dinner.
5.     The cheese most often associated with dieting.
6.     "Mexican parsley"
7.     It is how Italians prefer to have their pasta cooked.
9.     These cookies are literally baked twice.
10.   The Irish eat them daily but Poles might compete well with the Irish.
12.   This process used to remove the fat from milk.
13.   Coupled with "au," it means prepare with cheese.
16.   Coopers would often use this material.


I have never tried this before. So for you readers who cannot solve the crossword, I say, "Get help!" or else write me for the solution. I hope I dont get innundated with solution requests.

Visit back !

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

My COOKING / FOOD sites and my computer paranoia !

It's time to let my readers know what I think about my blogging and internet use in relation to giving credit where credit is due.

As a freelance writer, I know the challenges and difficulties that come with this territory:

                   need for inspirition
                   motivation
                   writing, re-writing, editing, and
                   rewriting
                   finding information
                                                                         being original and much more

And then you need to keep your ego intact after being criticized and lambasted for how you wrote something.

However there are rewards: satisfaction that you are creating something yourself, an original piece of writing, and perhaps something that will entertain and inform others. But very importantly, to me is getting positive feedback and I am grateful to all of you who have made comments and written me feedback.

My paranoia is that I fear "stealing" someone's work. I do not intend that ever. I give credit everywhere I can, everywhere where I remember to do so. If I omit someone, it is an oversight likely to forgetting. I apologize to any I may have omitted. I still strive and will continue to try to give all the credit that others deserve.

Here is a list of my FOOD RELATED SITES which I have collected and use
www.foodtimeline.org  A great history of food site, editor Lynne Olver
www.diannej.com/blog  Just a fun site for a freelance writer, though there are notes relating to food
www.cherylsternmanrule.com A food writer who lives in my favourite city in Calif, Santa Barbara
www.lifemadedelicious.ca  Nice recipes, easy navigation and terrific photographs
www.wikihow.com         This is great "how to" site. I struggle with "how to" do things but I get some things done thanks to my brother-in-law or thanks to this web site
www.easy-chicken-recipe-ideas.com   This site is authored by a Pole, Monika Fraczek, a fellow Pole, my people, and her chicken recipes inspire me into cooking chicken and creating my own variations to her great original recipes.


Those are the sites I use most often right now. As my list changes again, significantly, I will update this note.

I thank the editors and authors behind those web sites for all the hard work they do and for the ideas they give me.

Hope you find this note of value and use to you in your cooking and internet exploring in relation to food.

Visit back!

Monday, November 8, 2010

ROASTED RED PEPPERS APPETIZER.....simple and deeeelicious !


DID YOU KNOW…

Christopher Columbus tried to start a sweet red peppers import business in the Mediterranean Sea countries? The biz failed because sweet peppers grew easily almost everywhere in his marketing region
.
Though Columbus may have discovered and imported the first peppers to Europe, it was the Spanish and Portuguese who are credited with spreading it throughout the world into their wide ranging colonies.
Sweet red peppers, sometimes called bell peppers, come in a variety of colours: red, orange, yellow, brown and purple but all start off green?
The sweetest peppers are red, orange and yellow and they become even sweeter when they are braised?


SELECTING PEPPERS AT YOUR GROCERS

The peppers should be smooth, rich in colour with no wrinkles or soft  spots. Though available almost year round, the best tasting ones are harvested in late summer. Peppers keep well. Just dry them and store them in a plastic bag in your refrigerator.

NUTRITIONAL VALUE

Peppers are high in vitamins A and C as well as fibre and folic acid which helps reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease.


ROASTED PEPPERS APPETIZER

serves 6-8 persons
can be frozen for future use

6-8 whole red peppers (yellow and orange can also be used)
1 finely chopped medium sized garlic bud
1 tbls drained capers
1 tbls finely chopped parsley
2-3 tbls virgin olive oil
salt & pepper to taste

ROASTING THE PEPPERS

I have found the barbecue to be my most practical way to char my peppers. It also seems to give the best flavor. But the peppers can be done DIRECTLY on your stove elements, on open flame, in a frying pan, or under the broiler on a pizza pan. The only requirement is that the heat must be very intense in order to burn the skin of the peppers. Experiment to find the method that works best for you. My barbecue method allows you lots of control, least cleaning up.
 
1.  Set barbecue to highest heat and allow the barbecue to heat up fully.
2. When bbq is at its highest temp, place the peppers directly on the grill and close the lid.
3.       3. Roast for about 1 – 1 ½ minutes, rotate the peppers a half turn if they are skin is blackened well. If they are not charred enough, bbq longer. The skin should look burnt black. Then do the half rotation, close the lid and repeat the cooking time. Repeat this process enough times so that the peppers are charred on all sides.
4.     
4. 
Place fully charred peppers into a sturdy brown bag and fold the bag closed. This allows the peppers to “pop” their skins loose for easier removal.
5.     
 


5.
Take the bag of charred peppers into your kitchen to a work area and work one pepper at a time
6. Remove a pepper from the bag and using a sharp knife, scrape away the skin from the pepper.

7. After all the peppers have been cleaned, work one pepper at a time again. Cut the pepper from stem to base and gently fold it open. Remove the seeds, and the whitish spines from the inner part of the pepper.
Cut away the stem. Cut the pepper into strips each about approximately ½ inch widths.
 
7.
If you are storing for future use, place the strips into clear baggies for the freezer. If you are going to use the peppers within a day, place them on a plate aside.



 
8. Repeat the internal cleaning and slicing into strips for the rest of the peppers. These should be put away
    into the freezer.

SERVING THE PEPPERS


        1.  Arrange the pepper strips into a floral pattern on to a white plate.
         2. Drizzle 2-3 tbls virgin olive oil over the strips.
 3.  
Sprinkle the parsley and finely chopped garlic over the peppers.
       4.   Sprinkle the capers over the peppers. 
 5. 
Salt and pepper to taste and cover with plastic so allow the flavours to   develop and blend.

          If you are not serving for a few hours, refrigerate the peppers.

Serve the peppers with toasted, crusty Italian bread slices.

Buon appetito!

Visit back!

Friday, November 5, 2010

RISOTTO...eat like a king, pay like a pauper

Rice is part of the main meal, if not the main dish itself, for more than 2/3 of the world’s population. For a rather inexpensive staple, rice has tremendous nutritional value and it is eaten throughout much of the world, from all of Asia to the Latin and South Americas. Only corn is grown more as maize production feeds livestock while rice feeds people.

Rice is grown in high rainfall regions where labour cost is low. The rice grain bundles grow at the ends of 5-6 ft. stalks and are harvested annually. The most practical and economic way to grow rice is in flooded fields as the flooding discourages vermin, weeds and pest plants which do not grow well under water.

Most cooks who make risotto prefer Carnaroli, Arborio or Vialone Nano rice. These varieties of rice have the necessary properties to make a good risotto: high starch content and good capacity for absorption of liquids. The starch is what makes the rice so creamy as it is cooked. Some cooks claim that Vialone Nano is the very best rice for risotto because it is nearly impossible to overcook. Don’t bet on it !

My Risotto chef
My wife is my risotto chef and her risotto can compete with that of the best professional chefs in the world. She makes it simply, easily and it never fails. I like to think her risotto is heavenly because every grain seems like an ‘angel's kiss on the tongue,’ with each flavour packed mouthful gently, gradually ascending you to dining paradise!

Here is her

RISOTTO RECIPE for royalty
For 2 royal persons

Use CARNAROLI or ARBORIO rice. Try Vialone Nano if you ever find it.

Basic ingredients
1 diced small onion
2-3 tbs butter
1/2 cup of rice
2-4 cups chicken stock
½ cup dry white wine
2 tbs Parmiggiano grated

Optional ingredients
1 cup diced of whichever ingredient you prefer:
cooked chicken
cooked or raw squash
                                                                                    raw cauliflower
                                                                                    fresh mushrooms
                                                                                    fresh or frozen green peas
                                                                                    fresh or frozen asparagus OR
                                                                                    cooked crab, shrimp, or lobster)
                                                                   You can use any ingredient you like, but if it is raw, chop it well.

PREPARATION
1.    1. Fry the onions in olive oil and butter until the kernels start becoming translucent on their edges.
   For the diet conscious, “fry” the onions in a bit of the stock instead of the oil and butter. My wife’s recipe is the “lighter” version as she is looking out for my waistline...LOL.
2. 
2. 
Add the rice to the frying onions and stir the mixture frequently.

      3.  Add the white wine and your dry ingredients (mushrooms, veggies, seafood, whatever you are using). Continue stirring. Risotto preparation requires the cook’s full and continuous attention to avoid burning the risotto.

4.
Add hot chicken stock to the mixture in small amounts, a couple of tablespoons at a time.
    Continue stirring and add more stock as the rice absorbs the previously added liquid.
    Use as much stock as needed. You want the mixture to remain creamy but not too runny.
    Most likely you will use all 4 cups of stock.

5. About 15 minutes after starting the cooking, taste the rice periodically to see if it is cooked,.
    Do not overcook the rice. The Italian phrase ‘al dente’ is how it should be done. It kind of "resists" easy 
          biting. The rice is “just” cooked, not mushy.

6.
Remove the risotto from the stove. Stir in 1 tbs of grated parmiggiano and 1/2 tbs of butter.

7. 
Serve immediately and call me to come over to taste it with you. I'll bring the wine!

Serve risotto in heated bowls with grated parmiggiano on the side for those who like their risotto nippier.

Risotto with braised sweet red peppers

Let me know how you like your own preparation!





















Visit back !

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

A series: The BEST CHEFS in the Canadian West and a haunted hotel

I promised to begin more chicken recipes, but I thought readers would enjoy reading some bios of professionals in the field. In 2009, I did a motorcycle tour out west, all the way to Tofino on Vancouver Island, one long tour! As I traveled west, I stayed at top notch hotels, the Deltas, the Fairmonts, the best in the west. In Saskatoon, yes, they have an outstanding hotel with a great chef and a very sharp manager. The hotel was the Bessborough, locally referred to as "The Bess." (bez).

The DELTA Bess
Let me begin this series with a blurb about The Bess.

The Bess was the Crown in the hotel chain of the Canadian National Railway. The Canadian Pacific had the Royal York in Toronto and CN needed something of the same. Designed by Archibald Schofield, a Montrealer,  whose insipiration for the hotel's design was a Bavarian castle. Incredibly, the hotel was built during the Depression era with construction started in 1930 in February, the coldest time of the year, dead of winter, in Saskatoon, no less. Using equipment modified to work in the extreme cold and with property tax exemptions granted by the city to encourage the hotel's construction, Overcoming numerous hurdles besides the weather and the economic times, the hotel construction was completed in 1935 and it was dedicated to Sir  Vere Ponsonby, 9th Earl of Bessborough and the 14th Governor General of Canada.

Through the 1970's - 1990's, ownership of the hotel and CN Railroad changed hands and hotel management changed also. Today, the Bess is a DELTA hotel, accommodating guests in its 225 rooms, catering weddings and banquets in its beautiful historic dining halls, and hosting rock festivals and garden parties in its beautifully landscaped setting behind the hotel on the shores of the Saskatchewan River. When I was there, I saw a wedding and attended a rock festival. The rock festival was more fun, though the groom at the wedding likely would disagree.

The Bess is a haunted hotel, Albert, a butler type hotel employee, stalks the hotel sporadically after the midnight hour. I was too tired my nights there to stay up and look for him though some staff assured me, he was very visible if you stayed up long enough and knew where his apparition would appear. I was too full of other spirits to stay up long enough to encounater Albert !

Chef Ryan Marquis is the Executive Chef of the Bess, and I was very lucky to not just dine on his food, but to be his personal guest at one dinner and a downtown tour of another hotel, and the local city market. But that will be another blog!

Visit back !