Sunday, May 23, 2010

Gulab Jaman


Recipe coming soon!

Crock Pot Ribs


My husband isn't a picky eater... most of the time. The only time he is picky is when we are eating ribs. He likes his ribs cooked to the point where they are falling off the bone. He used to rave about ribs that his friend's wife made one time for dinner when he was a bachelor. Lucky for me I got the recipe. I like the recipe. It is easy. Throw everything in a crockpot and 3 - 4 hours later... Voila! The only thing that I found missing was a nice glaze over the ribs so I adjusted the recipe according to my tastes. I like to reduce the liquid in the crockpot to make a glaze, brush it on the ribs and then bake it in the oven for 30 minutes. The results are amazing. This is one of those dishes that people constantly ask me for the recipe. Here it is for everyone to enjoy!
Ingredients:
3/4 Cup Brown Sugar
1/2 Cup Soy Sauce
1/2 Cup Ketchup
1/4 Cup Honey
2 TBSP White Wine Vinegar
3-6 Cloves Minced Garlic
1 tsp Ground Ginger
1 tsp salt
dash of Crushed Red Pepper
5 LBS Baby Back Ribs
1 Medium Onion Sliced
2 TBSP Toasted Sesame Seeds
2 TBSP Chopped Green Onions
For glaze:
1 Cup Brown Sugar
1/4 Cup Soy Sauce
Directions:
Combine first 9 ingredients. Add ribs and turn and coat. Put in Crock with onion. Cook 3 hours (1 hour on high) 2 hours on low or until 160-170 degrees.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Remove ribs from crockpot and place in a single layer on an aluminum foil covered cooking tray. Spray some cooking spray so ribs don't stick to aluminum foil.
In a saucepan, add 1 cup of liquid from crockpot,1 cup brown sugar and 1/4 cup soy sauce. Cook over medium heat. Once sauce has thickened, brush over ribs. Put in oven for 30 minutes until a nice glaze forms over ribs. Garnish with Sesame Seeds and Green Onions.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Spicy Edamame



In Manhattan, there used to be a Japanese restaurant that I loved to frequent because of their spicy edamame. I never tasted spicy edamame like theirs until I went to Roy's Restaurant in Texas. Now, at Roys they give it to you for FREE! How great is that! Not only do they give it to you for free but they posted the recipe on their website! I have changed the ratio of spices because you do not need to make that large quantity of Roy's seasoning and I like mine a little more salty than spicy. Here is Roy's recipe for spicy edamame adjusted to my tastes:

INGREDIENTS:
Roy's Edamame Seasoning:
3 oz. kosher salt
1 oz. shichimi (Japanese red pepper seasoning) or you can use 1/2 oz. red chili powder and 1 tsp toasted sesame seeds
a pinch of granulated sugar
Edamame
1/2 lb. edamame beans, in pods
1 tbsp. of Roy’s Edamame Seasoning

PREPARATION:
Boil 7 cups of water in a large pan. Wash edamame bean pods well. Add edamame to boiling water, and let boil for 5–10 minutes. Drain the edamame and pat dry. Sprinkle well-blended Roy's Edamame Seasoning over them. You can serve edamame warm or cool.

Crème Brûlée


When I was in my twenties, my girlfriend and I decided that we would go to Europe to have some fun. We decided to go to Italy and France. My favorite dessert at the time was tiramisu and her favorite dessert was creme brulee. Of course, traveling to Italy and France, we got to taste the best tiramisu and creme brulee. Fast forward to my thirties and I am married living in New Hampshire. Now, I love New Hampshire. Nicest people I have ever met live in New Hampshire BUT they have the worst food for my snobby tastes. I remember going to restaurant after restaurant ordering creme brulee and it would be the worst creme brulee I had ever tasted. One restaurant would serve it WARM!! Who wants to eat warm custard. That is just gross. In my quest to find good creme brulee, Cooks Illustrated sent me a free issue of their magazine. Of course on their front cover was a recipe for perfecting the perfect creme brulee. It was like they read my mind (No! There was no spyware on my computer. I believe it was pure coincidence). I decided to make it. It couldn't be worse than the restaurants around me. Well, it was the best creme brulee I had tasted. Just like in France! Now, whenever I go to a dinner party, I am asked to make creme brulee. Hence, my new favorite dessert is... creme brulee. Here is the recipe:

Ingredients:
4 cups chilled heavy cream (I like to use organic. Tastes better to me)
2/3 cup of sugar
a pinch of salt
1 vanilla bean
12 egg yolks
8-12 tsp turbinado sugar (It is easier to distribute evenly over the custards. You can use regular granulated sugar.)

Directions:
1. Combine 2 cups of cream, sugar, and salt in saucepan. Cut vanilla bean in half and scrape the seeds from the vanilla bean into the pan along with the pod. Bring mixture to a boil and stir occasionally making sure that sugar dissolves. Make sure you keep an eye on the mixture. You don't want it to overboil and spill all over your stove. Take the pan off the heat and steep for 15 minutes so the flavors infuse.
2. Preheat over to 300 degrees. Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position of oven.
3. Place a kitchen towel in a large baking dish or roasting pan and place eight 4-5 ounce ramekins on top of towel. Make sure the towel does not hang over the sides of the pan or you will have a mess in your oven. Add water to a kettle or large saucepan and boil water over high heat. You will be creating a bain marie or a hot water bath. This helps to keep your custard creamy instead of curdled.
4. By this time, your 15 minutes should be up. Now, add the rest of the 2 cups of CHILLED cream to your vanilla bean/cream mixture. This helps to bring down the temperature.
5. Whisk yolks in a large bowl until combined. Add 1 cup of vanilla bean/cream mixture to yolks slowly while whisking with your other hand. You want to temper the eggs. If you don't do this, you will have scrambled eggs in your cream. Repeat with another cup. Add remaining cream and whisk until blended.
6. Strain through a fine mesh strainer into a 2 quart bowl/measuring cup. Discard solids. Ladle or pour mixture into ramekins until ramekins are 3/4 full making sure to divide evenly amongst ramekins. Make sure you divide evenly, because I am not kidding... your guests will be upset if someone else gets more than they did.
7. Carefully place baking dish with ramekins on oven rack. Pour boiling water into dish (make sure you do not spill water into ramekins) so that water reaches 2/3 height of the ramekins.
8. Bake for approx. 30-35 minutes. Check ramekins 25 minutes into baking. You do not want to overcook the custard. Bake until the custards are barely set and are no longer sloshy. You can use a digital instant read thermometer to know when they are done when the center registers 170-175 degrees.
9. Remove from oven and let cool on wire racks for approximately two hours. Then cover with plastic wrap and chill in fridge for at least 4 hours. They can be left in the fridge for up to 4 days.
10. Uncover ramekins and sprinkle each with 1 -1 1/2 tsp turbinado sugar. Tap ramekin to evenly cover custard with sugar. Using a torch, caramelize sugar from the outside working toward the middle. Re-chill for 30-45 minutes. Do not leave in fridge longer than 2 hours or your caramelized sugar will turn soft. If you do not have a torch, you can place under a broiler but I do not recommend this as the sugar doesn't caramelize evenly.