Farmers markets are a wonderful thing if you happen to have one in your city. To live in a city that has one (And usually more) a day is fantastic. The nice thing is, is that you can get farm fresh products that are in season. Not only is that good for the local farms, it's good for you to push yourself into cooking new things with the seasonal ingredients - instead of relegating your cooking to the same 'ole thing.
Now, I went to Webb Park a few weeks ago and it was in disarray. Now, for what it's worth, it was the first week it was taken over by the new managers (and vendors) Claire and Richard. They've had an extreme uphill battle, but things are setting into place and looking really good. The selection of different foods was really good. It's nice to see a place where I can easily pick up duck and quail eggs along with sea urchin.
Aside from the normal vegi fare, they also had Linda from Two If By Seasfoods flash-frozen directly on the ship Alaskan salmon and Mark & Mark from Poppa's Fresh Fish Company. Poppa's offers eat-there dishes and fish to take home. All sorts of great products were available like yellowtail, ahi, salmon, oysters and sea urchin. I'm sure I missed a thing or two, but that's what I saw. Their two most popular dishes to eat there are the salmon burger and the chili relleno stuffed with goat cheese and shrimp. A little easy on the spices, but all around great! Very impressive for something made fresh under a tent!
If you have time to make it out to any farmers market, you should do it. You can create new dishes or get ideas from the vendors themselves. There are a number of non-food vendors that create really unique products that are really neat. If you are in the Rancho Bernardo/Mira Mesa area and want a close farmers market, this one is quickly becoming THE place to pick up your local farm - or ocean - fresh items!
Facebook (For up to the minute updates): http://www.facebook.com/#!/WPCFM
Website: http://www.webbparkfarmersmarket.com/
Tuesdays 11am-6pm
16826 Bernardo Center Drive, in Rancho Bernardo (Approximately) - Park directly across the street but please be mindful of the reserved spots.
Follow Brian as he comes up with new recipes and modifies other recipes to create great meals!
The fun of making it and eating it too!
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Flavor.
One thing that I have noticed, since my cooking kick started, is how good food tastes when it's home made. I'm not talking about a burger or a steak, I'm talking about all the way down to the main ingredients. Today I really tore up the kitchen getting ready for our camping trip. I made some coleslaw, guacamole, peanut butter, mayonnaise and fresh burgers out of top sirloin.
I mean, I'm sure most people have made guac before, so that's not a huge deal. But have you made your own mayonnaise? It's really good and you can select what kind of mayo you want. Want a herb infused blend? Easy. Want some wasabi mayo? Easy. Does it allow for a long shelf life? Heck no. Why? Because you're taking out all the preservatives and other crap that keeps it good for long periods of time.
The peanut butter I made today is pretty good, although I have some room for improvement on the recipe. I added some locally produced honey that was made with bees who fed off local avocado trees, which added a nice flavor to it.
Have you ever had a freshly ground burger? I mean, I never know what is in the raw hamburger when I buy it. But by doing it this way, you can control what cuts you use and how much fat you allow to be in it. A NY Strip burger is especially tasty. The KitchenAid meat grinder works very well for this. I'm sure I could use my Cuisinart, like I do on a lot of other things, but this is one of those instances where I like the consistency that the KitchenAid produces.
Anyway, I challenge YOU to make a fresh meal out of nothing processed. Like my fettuccine from a post ago. Is it going to take you longer? Yup, sure is. But you add so much more pride, not to mention flavor, when you do it this way. Good luck!
I mean, I'm sure most people have made guac before, so that's not a huge deal. But have you made your own mayonnaise? It's really good and you can select what kind of mayo you want. Want a herb infused blend? Easy. Want some wasabi mayo? Easy. Does it allow for a long shelf life? Heck no. Why? Because you're taking out all the preservatives and other crap that keeps it good for long periods of time.
The peanut butter I made today is pretty good, although I have some room for improvement on the recipe. I added some locally produced honey that was made with bees who fed off local avocado trees, which added a nice flavor to it.
Have you ever had a freshly ground burger? I mean, I never know what is in the raw hamburger when I buy it. But by doing it this way, you can control what cuts you use and how much fat you allow to be in it. A NY Strip burger is especially tasty. The KitchenAid meat grinder works very well for this. I'm sure I could use my Cuisinart, like I do on a lot of other things, but this is one of those instances where I like the consistency that the KitchenAid produces.
Anyway, I challenge YOU to make a fresh meal out of nothing processed. Like my fettuccine from a post ago. Is it going to take you longer? Yup, sure is. But you add so much more pride, not to mention flavor, when you do it this way. Good luck!
Labels:
coleslaw,
cuisinart,
falvor,
guacamole,
hamburger,
homecooked,
kitchenaid,
mayonnaise,
peanut butter
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Roasted Red Pepper Fettuccine
Well, I figure it's been a waayy too long, so it's time for an update. I got a new tool (And by tool, I mean kitchen toy!) today. A Cuisinart Elite 16 Cup Die-Cast Food Processor. Now I know what you're all saying: "Oh Brian, you've already got more than adequate knives.." or "Brian, you've got a blender and a KitchenAid, what more do you need?" Well, here's what I have to say to that: This thing rocks. This thing is a pure workhorse. A rock star for a kitchen tool. So, after getting it home, I couldn't just let it sit there until I decided to cook something, so I had at it.
Roasted Red Pepper fettuccine w/ Fresh Tomato Roasted Pepper Cheese Sauce
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Roasted Red Pepper fettuccine w/ Fresh Tomato Roasted Pepper Cheese Sauce
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Pasta Dough
-
2 Cups All-Purpose Flour
1/2 Cup Wheat All-Purpose Flour
1 Tbsp Salt
2 Large Eggs
1 Egg Yolk
3 Small/Medium Red Peppers
1-2 Tbsp Olive Oil
First, you're going to want to make your red pepper puree. Preheat your oven on to 425°. Next, using a brush, coat your peppers with the olive oil. Put some down on the baking sheet, too. Put the peppers in the oven and let them roast for about 15 minutes. Rotate them to the next side. Repeat that until nice and blistery. When complete, remove the peppers from the oven and place in a bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let the peppers sweat for about ten minutes. Strip the peppers of their skin, seeds and tops. Puree them in a food processor or blender.
Next, (Now, I'm going to explain how I did it with the Cuisinart. You can accomplish the same goals here by making a nice mound with the flour and making a well in it and mixing it all together) put all the dry ingredients into the mixer with the dough blade in. Pulse the mixture a few times to make sure it gets evenly devided. Put the top on and open the feed spouts. Mix the eggs, yolk and about 2/3rds of your pureed red peppers together. Start the mixer on the dough setting and slowly pour in the wet ingredients. You will see it start to form into a ball. Stop the machine and see how sticky the ball is and if it is too sticky add a bit more flour. Once it is to the consistancy you like, (I like mine with a little bit of sticky, but not too crazy) pull it out, place it in a bowl and cover it with a damp towel. In about thirty minutes you can flatten it and cut it.
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Tomato Roasted Pepper Cheese Sauce
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4lbs of Fresh FIRM Tomatoes
3-4 Fresh Sprigs Oregano
8-12 Basil Leafs
5-10 Garlic Cloves (At least five.. I like more)
1 Large White Onion
1 1/2 Tbsp Olive Oil
1 Cup Parmesan Cheese
Salt & Pepper to Taste
Start off by peeling the tomatoes. You could always steam them, but I don't like cooking them twice. You don't need to get every little piece of skin off, but if you're OCD like me, you will. Remove the stems, too. Place them aside. Mince your garlice, basil and oregano. Lightly puree your tomatoes. I like to leave some chunks. Put a fine chop on your onion. In a pan, on medium-high heat, pour in your olive oil. Next, put in your garlic and onions and let them soften up a bit. Once they are to that point, pour in your tomato puree and the remaining roasted red peppers along with your herbs. Let this cook for a bit, test it and add salt and pepper to taste. Let this simmer for about an hour then add your cheese. Let the cheese melt in then enjoy it over some of your freshly made fettuccine. Garnish with some additional cheese and oregano.
I loved it. A lot. Lena and Madeline did too. I hope that you enjoy it as much as we did!
Pasta Dough
-
2 Cups All-Purpose Flour
1/2 Cup Wheat All-Purpose Flour
1 Tbsp Salt
2 Large Eggs
1 Egg Yolk
3 Small/Medium Red Peppers
1-2 Tbsp Olive Oil
First, you're going to want to make your red pepper puree. Preheat your oven on to 425°. Next, using a brush, coat your peppers with the olive oil. Put some down on the baking sheet, too. Put the peppers in the oven and let them roast for about 15 minutes. Rotate them to the next side. Repeat that until nice and blistery. When complete, remove the peppers from the oven and place in a bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let the peppers sweat for about ten minutes. Strip the peppers of their skin, seeds and tops. Puree them in a food processor or blender.
Next, (Now, I'm going to explain how I did it with the Cuisinart. You can accomplish the same goals here by making a nice mound with the flour and making a well in it and mixing it all together) put all the dry ingredients into the mixer with the dough blade in. Pulse the mixture a few times to make sure it gets evenly devided. Put the top on and open the feed spouts. Mix the eggs, yolk and about 2/3rds of your pureed red peppers together. Start the mixer on the dough setting and slowly pour in the wet ingredients. You will see it start to form into a ball. Stop the machine and see how sticky the ball is and if it is too sticky add a bit more flour. Once it is to the consistancy you like, (I like mine with a little bit of sticky, but not too crazy) pull it out, place it in a bowl and cover it with a damp towel. In about thirty minutes you can flatten it and cut it.
-
Tomato Roasted Pepper Cheese Sauce
-
4lbs of Fresh FIRM Tomatoes
3-4 Fresh Sprigs Oregano
8-12 Basil Leafs
5-10 Garlic Cloves (At least five.. I like more)
1 Large White Onion
1 1/2 Tbsp Olive Oil
1 Cup Parmesan Cheese
Salt & Pepper to Taste
Start off by peeling the tomatoes. You could always steam them, but I don't like cooking them twice. You don't need to get every little piece of skin off, but if you're OCD like me, you will. Remove the stems, too. Place them aside. Mince your garlice, basil and oregano. Lightly puree your tomatoes. I like to leave some chunks. Put a fine chop on your onion. In a pan, on medium-high heat, pour in your olive oil. Next, put in your garlic and onions and let them soften up a bit. Once they are to that point, pour in your tomato puree and the remaining roasted red peppers along with your herbs. Let this cook for a bit, test it and add salt and pepper to taste. Let this simmer for about an hour then add your cheese. Let the cheese melt in then enjoy it over some of your freshly made fettuccine. Garnish with some additional cheese and oregano.
I loved it. A lot. Lena and Madeline did too. I hope that you enjoy it as much as we did!
Labels:
Cuisanart,
dough,
Fettuccine,
Pasta,
sauce,
tomato,
Willams-Sonoma
Imperia Pasta Maker
Well, another tool (Said: Toy) for my kitchen: An Imperia Pasta Maker from Williams Sonoma. I love this little bugger! Yes, I could have gotten the fancy one that attached onto my KitchenAid stand mixer, but there was just no way in hell I was paying twice the price for the same thing. I already paid for the motor, why should I get nailed again? I like doing it by hand anyway, so that I can control the speed. I have fond memories of this pasta maker as my dad used to have one.
Anyways, making pasta isn't hard. ESPECIALLY if you have a KitchenAid or a Cuisinart. It's almost too easy. For a simple recipe, you can use 2 cups of all-purpose flour, a tablespoon of salt and three eggs. It doesn't get any simpler than that, really. It tastes SO much better than the store-bought stuff. Making sauce isn't much harder. Anyways, if you're interested in pasta, these little machines cost a whopping $69.95 and will be your new best friend. You can make lasagna noodles, spaghetti, angel hair and fettuccine.
Labels:
angel hair,
Cuisanart,
dough,
Fettuccine,
Imperia,
kitchenaid,
Lasagna,
noodles,
Pasta,
spaghetti,
Willams-Sonoma
Sunday, January 17, 2010
A Different Spin On An Old Thing
So it was my mom's birthday and she was all about tasting risotto after seeing it on Hell's Kitchen. I honestly believe that Gordon Ramsay has brought out this new dish a bit through his television show. So, anyways, she wanted it, I did it. So I didn't want to do the EXACT same thing I did this past time, so I changed it up. Here's your list of things to get to have this fabulously tasting dish in your own home. I'd use the same truffle butter recipe from my last truffle risotto, but I added a bit more of the truffle oil than last time.
1 Leek
1 Yellow Onion
3-5 Scallions
2 Large Slices of Red Onions
5 Cloves of Garlic
2 Pounds of Well-Marbled Aged NY Strip
2 Cups Aborio Rice
4 Tablespoons of Olive Oil
8 Cups of Beef Stock
1.5 Cups of Cheap White Wine
.5 Pound of Freshly Grated Parmesan Reggiano
2-3 Black Truffles
Salt & Pepper to Taste
Once again I started off by bringing the broth (This time beef, since I was tying this dish together with beef) to a nice hot simmer - but not a boil in a separate pot. In my Ruffoni copper risotto pan I brought up the gas heat up to a low-medium level. I added my olive oil and let it warm up. I added the aromatics (All the onions) and let them cook up for a few minutes to where the kitchen smelled wonderful while mixing them around. After that I added the garlic, spread it around and let it cook for about two minutes. It doesn't take long for the garlic to cook. One to three minutes, tops before it burns.
At this point I added my rice and cooked it until it was translucent. I added the white wine and let it reduce a bit before ladling in a couple of ladles broth. I add the white wine here because if you add it too late in the process it'll have too strong of a white wine flavor in my opinion. The one big thing at this point is making sure that you're continuously stirring your mixture. At this point I added about a teaspoon of truffle oil into the pan and kept mixing. One of the big things is once you have added the broth is keeping it on a medium high but not so much on the high. You want a nice simmer, but no boil. You also need to make sure you're stirring constantly that way you don't have uneven cooking. Crunchy risotto is never a good thing.
Keep repeating this process, ladle by ladle, until your risotto is soft enough. You really want to keep the broth level slightly above the level of everything else. Once it is soft enough, let the broth reduce out. Add in a nice serving of your cheese. It'll help bring that creamy look in the risotto out.
About the time your risotto starts moving from the crunchy to soft, you want to start your steak. I like my steak medium-rare and if you're eating my cooking at my house: Deal with it or pass the meat. Anyways, pan fry your steak and prep it for getting ready. Once your meat is ready let it sit as one normally would because by this point it's time cut your truffles up and put the finishing touches on the risotto part of the dish. You'll want to mix in your truffle butter mixture well. Afterward, add plate it top it with some more cheese and put your black truffles on top. The meat should be ready to cut now. Put four pieces on each side of your dish and cook and serve.
I really liked this risotto over my last one. A lot of it, I think, had to do with the steak and the fact I used more aromatics. It wasn't as 'basic' as the last one. I had also got a wonderfully marbled NY strip steak from Whole Foods that was insanely expensive but totally worth it. The one thing about Risotto is that it's like pizza. There are a number of different ways one could go about making it. I'm going to try something non-truffle on the next one - maybe another seafood one like I did prior to the start of this lil shindig.
If you have any questions - please feel free to email, Facebook or call me (For those who know my number) and I'll do my best to help you out. This stuff is great! I really hope that if you try this recipe that you enjoy it as much we did!
Labels:
All-Clad,
black truffle,
easy,
home,
new york strip,
parmesan,
risotto,
ruffoni,
stay at home,
steak,
truffle,
truffles,
white truffle oil
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Fun Plans
Well, tomorrow I plan a small dinner with my mom and a friend. We shall see how it ends up. It's going to be another truffle risotto but with a small caveat. I've decided to butterfly a really nice aged New York strip with almost perfect marbling for the top. There will also be some other things I throw into this to show for some fun. I absolutely love the flavor leeks bring out in risottos. I'm either going to have to split the steak in half or sear it and throw it in the oven to finish it off. We shall see. Either way, I think it'll turn out great. I will post photos and the recipe I wind up using here in the next couple of days.
Do to some unforseen issues, this has been put off for a little bit. Not too much longer, though!!
Do to some unforseen issues, this has been put off for a little bit. Not too much longer, though!!
Labels:
black truffle,
leeks,
new york strip,
reduction,
risotto,
simple,
stay at home,
steak,
white truffle,
white truffle oil
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