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Monday, November 30, 2009

Chantrelle's Thanksgiving Day

We head up to Mendocino every Thanksgiving. We've been going up for about 10 years. The purpose of the trip is to crawl through the woods looking for fungus. Some years it's quite successful. Other years, not so much.

This year we were a bit late for the porcinis. we found a few to grill, and a few to dry, but the real star of this trip was the chanterelle. Day one brought us a basket full along with a couple of coccoras (a mushroom that still makes me nervous to eat!).


I selected a handful of the chanterelles, cleaned and prepped them for wild mushroom stuffing. The recipe I used is based on this Bon Appétit recipe but I've modified it a bit. Firstly, it called for 1 pound of shiitake's and 1 pound of button mushrooms... I had pounds of chanterelles in my fridge! I used about 2-3 pounds of the chanterelles. I put them in the skillet with a stick of butter. I let them cook for quite a while because they had a lot of moisture. I cooked almost all of that moisture away.


Next I added the chopped leek and garlic and let that cook through for about five minutes.

Once the leek was softened I added 2 cups of good white wine, a huge handful of rehydrated porcinis (from last year's hunt) and about 1/4 cup of chopped thyme and marjoram from the garden. At this point I don't think there's much I cook without thyme and marjoram in it! The plants are out of control!!

Once most of the wine had cooked off, I stirred the whole mixture into a 1lb package of bread cubes (unseasoned). I added the liquid I used to rehydrate the porcinis and then some extra chicken stock because it still seemed a little dry. I put the whole bit into a baking dish and baked it at 350° for about 45 minutes until the edges had some yummy crunchy bits.

Meanwhile, I said we found some porcini right? We can't forget about those! We sliced up the stalk, brushed it with some olive oil and grilled it on the Weber with mesquite wood.


Meanwhile meanwhile... I roasted a whole chicken in lieu of a turkey since 1: I'm allergic to turkey and 2: there were only three of us. It's a foolproof excellent way to roast a chicken by the way. Take six pats of butter and wiggle them under the skin of the chicken breasts (three for each side). Then take chopped herbs... guess what I used? Yes, marjoram and thyme! Work those under the skin with the butter. Sprinkle the entire bird with salt and rub the entire outside with olive oil. Roasted at 400° for about 40 minutes until the internal temperature is 160°. I love my digital thermometer for this. I just put it in the chicken when I first put it in the oven, and set the alarm to beep when it hits 155° so I know I have a couple minutes left to finish the rest of the dinner prep.


It was a very successful Thanksgiving endeavor. The final meal: roast chicken, wild mushroom stuffing, grilled porcini, Caesar salad and cranberry relish.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

And The Winner Is.......

Way back in June, FoodPorn.com turned 10 years old and I held a recipe contest to celebrate. It took me way too long to cook the recipes but I now have a winner (unanimous among the family too I might add!):

ADRI!! You can choose anything you'd like from the FoodPorn store.

This was so good! Simple, fresh, lovely and tasty. The only thing I had a problem with was remembering to marinade in advance but I finally got it going early and I'm glad I did. YUM! And paired with it was the only potato salad I've ever liked (although it's not a specific recipe she sent, I used her ideas and it was great). I substituted basil for dill in the salad though. I could do that since it wasn't part of the official entry ;-)

Winning Recipe:

This is a super easy, summery chicken recipe that looks /great/ on the plate and is very flavorful. I like to serve it with a vinegar-y cucumber-potato salad (chunked cukes, chunked potatoes pan fried or broiled until crispy on the outsides, slivers of red onion, tossed with vinegar and dill).

Herbed Chicken Skewers

Ingredients

1/2 c low-fat plain yoghurt
4 cloves garlic, crushed
2 tsp ginger, grated
2 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1 jalapeno, finely chopped (omit and replace with chipotle powder to taste and 2 tsp lime zest, if desired)
large handful freshly chopped cilantro leaves
small handful freshly chopped mint leaves
juice of 2 limes
salt to taste
2 pounds boneless/skinless chicken breast, cut into bite-sized pieces

Method

Blend first 10 ingredients together in mixer or blender until smooth

Toss chicken with spice/herb mixture & marinate in fridge 4-6 hours as time permits

When ready to cook, thread chicken onto skewers and grill 8-10 minutes, turning twice, until lightly browned. (I use an indoor grill/broiler for this, but it would be fabulous on a wood-burning grill; just be mindful not to go too hot or the herbs will burn)


Honorable Mention:

This one unfortunately gets no prize but pride in being mentioned (yes, be proud). And it earns this prestige because I didn't think I was going to like it at all! There were no ingredients that I hate in it but it didn't sound exciting to me. I was pleasantly surprised when each bite was a mouthful of rich, fresh, flavors. I did use fresh ingredients as she suggested except the lima beans which I could only find frozen. I served it over israeli couscous.

This goes to OneSockShort for:

Tomatican

In the summer, I've made this with all fresh vegetables, instead of frozen and canned, which is even better. But this is a nice winter treat if you live here in the frozen north. I've added okra before, which I love, but I know few others do. I think it would also be good with small white beans instead of limas, but haven't tried that yet. The thing that makes it is the cumin, so if that's not a flavor you like, pass on this.

2 c chopped onion
1/2 t cayenne
2 T oil
2 t ground cumin
2 c frozen lima beans
3 c canned diced tomatoes
2 c frozen cut corn
1/4 c fresh chopped cilantro

Saute onions and cayenne in oil 5 min or till onions soften.
Add cumin and lima beans and saute 2 min.
Add tomatoes, corn, and cilantro and simmer covered 10-15 min or till vegetable are tender.
Serve over pasta, rice, polenta, or other grain.


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Thanks to everyone who entered!!

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