Showing posts with label Jamie Oliver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamie Oliver. Show all posts

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Not really red chicken curry

I am an avid collector of cookbooks.  I have well over 150 of them, but I have cooked out of most of them and one of my goals is to go back through them and cook more things out of each of them.  Sometimes they just get a random recipe or two made from them.  Sometimes, I really find a lot of recipes to love in them and I want to make many so cook from it for some time.  I was never all that interested in Jamie Oliver's cookbooks until a friend of mine sent me two of them for my wedding.  I sat down with one of them and read it nearly cover to cover.  These are the cookbooks that I remember what is in them and come back to them frequently.  The other one is where is recipe is based off of - Meals in Minutes.

One thing I like about this cookbook is that is doesn't give you just one recipe at a time, but three to five so you can coordinate a whole meal during one time and don't have to think about what to do next as it is all integrated.  I don't think any of my other cookbooks are like this.  Sometimes I still pick and choose, though I don't think I have ever made all the things from one of the recipes either as it is a lot of food.

This recipe is titled Thai Red Curry, but there is not any curry in the recipe hence my name no really red curry.  Curries generally have turmeric in them in addition to a lot of other spices.  This recipe has the lots of other spices hence the name curry, but it does not have turmeric.   The blend is delicious, and I encourage you to try it out.


Thai Red Curry Chicken
2 lemongrass stalks (or 1 -2 tablespoons lemongrass powder)
1 fresh serrano chile, seeds removed
3 cloves garlic, peeled
cilantro
2 roasted red peppers (I bought a jar and used the equivalent)
2 teaspoons tomato paste
1 tablespoon fish sauce (buy a good quality one)
2 tablespoons light soy sauce
1 teaspoon sesame oil
1 inch piece of ginger (peeled)
1 pound of chicken, cut into 1 1/2 inch sized pieces
about a handful sugar snap peas
5-6 stalks of asparagus, cut into 2 inch pieces
1 can (14oz.) coconut milk
olive oil
salt
pepper
2 limes for serving, cut into wedges
Serve with rice (cook while making the sauce)

In a food processor blend together the chile, lemongrass powder (or stalks), garlic cloves, the bunch of cilantro, roasted red peppers, tomato paste, fish sauce, soy sauce, sesame oil and ginger.  Mix until like a pate.  Put a frying pan over medium heat.   Add a few tablespoon olive oil and heat until shinny.  Season chicken with salt and pepper and fry over medium heat just until it is no longer pink.  Add 1 -2 tablespoons of the paste you just made.  Remove to a bowl and set aside.  Add more oil to the pan and add the asparagus and sugar snap peas.  Cook just for a minute and then add the rest of the spice mixture to the pan.  Cook for an additional minute and then add the coconut milk.  Once incorporated, turn the heat to medium low and simmer.   Add the chicken back to the pan and simmer until heated throughout.  Season as needed.  Serve over rice and with the lime wedges.


Friday, August 22, 2014

Quick Cucumber Salad

Cucumber salads are perfect for summer.  They grow easier in gardens and in pots.  I have a wonderful "patio snacker" variety in a pot on my deck this year and it is producing wonderful smaller sized cucumbers.  So now that the bounty is coming in the question is what to do with all those cucumbers.  This recipe is very quick and yet it uses the cucumbers all the way.  It is a version based on the recipe by Jaime Oliver from Meals in Minutes.

Cucumber Salad
1 English cucumber (hothouse and have no wax on the outside)
1 inch piece of ginger, peeled
1 tablespoon light soy sauce
1 teaspoon sesame oil
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 lime, juiced
small bunch of cilantro, chopped (separate the leave and stalks, use stalks only and reserve leaves for another recipe)
1/2 chile (I used a serrano), finely chopped

Grate the ginger onto your serving platter. (I used a low pasta/fruit bowl.)  Add the soy sauce, olive oil and sesame oil.  Add the lime juice and then taste for addition seasoning.  Peel the cucumber into strips.  Either discard the middle or cut into thin slices and add the the salad.  (I like to use everything as to eliminate waste.)  Add the cilantro stalks and the chile.  Toss just before serving.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Fish Cakes with fresh salsa

Who does love a good crab cake?  Some really good crab cakes are to be had in Annapolis, but what happens when you aren't there?  Or in my case, I am no where near the sea, but I still want something that is as good and can make at home.  So I decided to try these fish cakes from Jamie Oliver's Meals in Minutes.  (This recipe is based off the one in the book.)  I have referred to his cookbook before and this is yet another pretty quick recipe to make, especially once you have made it a couple of times.   It is also easy to half or double depending on how many are eating.  Plus the variations are endless depending on what fish looks the best or is the freshest when you go to buy it.  The salsa which is served under the fish is a combination of lots of good summer vegetables, so now is the perfect time to give it a try.

The nice part is you can choose how many types of fish you want to put in here.  I have tried it both with two fish and another time with three different types of fish.  As long as you pay attention to having the same amount of total weight for the fish, it will still serve four people.  Fish is good served with potatoes, so check out the potatoes I ate with these fish cakes.  They are a simple broiled potato with seasonings.



Fish Cakes with Salsa
Fish Cakes:
1/2 cup bread crumbs
1 1/2 pounds fish (any combo: salmon, haddock, tuna etc.)
1 lemon
parsley (one bunch or as much as you feel like using), stalks removed
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and smashed
salt and pepper

Salsa:
1 red chile (I usually use Anaheim), seeded and stalk removed
1 green chile (I use either a jalapeno or serrano depending on what I have), seeded and stalk removed
2 scallions, trimmed
2 tomatoes
red wine vinegar
1/2 English cucumber, cut into small pieces
1 yellow pepper (or red - whatever your prefer), finely chopped
1 lime
bunch of basil

In a bowl or on a piece of foil, pour the bread crumbs.  Put the fish in the food processor.  Then add the zest of the lemon, parsley, and a pinch of salt and pepper.  Pulse until coarsely mixed.  Pour the fish onto a platter and add about 1-2 tablespoons of bread crumbs.  Mix with your hands and then divide into four equal patties.  Put the patties on the remaining bread crumbs and cover with some of the bread crumbs.  Put a frying pan over medium heat and add a few tablespoons of olive oil (enough to fry the patties).  Add the two cloves of garlic to the pan.  When the oil is hot (and garlic frying) add the fish cakes to the pan.  Cook for about 7-8 minutes while you make the salsa.  Once golden flip and cook for about the same time on the other side.

Rinse out the food processor bowl. Add the chiles, scallions, tomatoes and a little salt and pepper.  Add about a tablespoon of the red wine vinegar and pulse until finely chopped.  Adjust flavors as needed.  Pour out onto a serving platter.  Mix the cucumber, yellow pepper and the juice of the lime with the salsa on the platter.  Roughly cut basil and add to the salsa.  Mix.

Once fish cakes are finished cooking, place on top of the salsa for serving.  Sprinkle extra baby basil leaves (if you desire for garnish).

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Zucchini Salad

Zucchini is in season!  What better time to figure out new ways to eat it, especially when it is freshed picked from the garden or farmer's market.  Unfortunately, I didn't have space to grow any this year, but it is something I want to put in the ground next year.  This is a simple salad based on a recipe from Meals in Minutes by Jamie Oliver.  It is very quick and has a very nice fresh flavor.  A twist on this would be to try it with the yellow squash which is the same sized and usually right next to the zucchini (at least in my grocery store).

Zucchini Salad
3 large sprigs of mint (I used sweet mint since it is growing in my garden.)
1 red Anaheim chile
1 small lemon
8 oz. zucchini (young and small are the better ones to use)
olive oil
salt and pepper


Pick the mint leave from the sprigs.  Add the red chile (seeds removed), lemon zest from 1/2 the lemon.  Chop these three things together until finely diced and nicely mixed.  Place this mixture in the middle of a serving bowl and add about 3 tablespoon of olive oil.  Squeeze the lemon juice and add to the mixture.  Add a little salt and pepper and then taste and adjust as necessary.  Peel the zucchini into ribbons over the dressing.   Toss just before serving.

Friday, August 15, 2014

Piri Piri Chicken

I tend to eat a lot of chicken because if cooked right, it can have a lot of flavor.  On the other hand if not cooked well it can be dry, tough and without much flavor.  This chicken has a lot of flavor which come from the piri piri sauce that the chicken is cooked in.  (This recipe is based off Piri Piri chicken from Jamie Oliver's Meals in Minutes.)  I also tend to use a lot of boneless, skinless chicken which makes it all the more important to have good flavor infused into the chicken.  This method uses a bit of cooking on the stove top as well as finishing in the oven so it gives you enough time to work on other things to serve with this chicken.

Piri Piri Chicken
1 1/2 pounds chicken breast
olive oil
1 red bell pepper, sliced or cubed
1 yellow bell pepper, sliced or cubed
6 sprigs of thyme
cilantro leaves
1 red onion, chopped
5 cloves garlic
1 serrano chile, stalk removed
1 jalapeno, stalk removed
2 tablespoon sweet paprika
2 lemons, zested (1 lemon also juiced)
1/4 white wine vinegar
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
fresh bunch of basil
salt and pepper

Preheat the oven to 400F.  Put a large pan on to heat (to cook the chicken).  Place the chicken on a cutting board and season it with olive oil, then season with salt and pepper.  Place the chicken into the preheat pan and cook until golden on each side.  (The first side should take about 5-6 minutes, then turn over.)

In the meantime, make the piri piri sauce.  Add the chopped red onion to a blender with the garlic, chiles, paprika, lemon zests, and juice from one lemon.  Add white wine, Worcestershire sauce, a pinch of salt and pepper, the bunch of basil and a little water.  Blend until smooth.

Add the red and yellow pepper to the chicken.  Turn the heat down to medium and stir the peppers.  Pour the piri piri sauce into a baking dish, add the peppers then the chicken (and any cooking sauce).  Next, add the sprigs of thyme and place in the oven on a middle rack.  Bake for about 15 minutes or until everything is baked through (and hot throughout).  Chicken will be cooked when it reaches an internal temperature of 160F.  Remove chicken from oven the serve with the cilantro leaves sprinkled on top.