Archive for December, 2009

Game hen with a red wine and onion sauce

Friday, December 11th, 2009

It is officially cold! When the sunlight hits the snow, there is nothing more beautiful. Today, the ice on the lake is sky blue with patches of snow strewn about. It’s breathtaking. I anticipate the days when the trees transform into crystal. Sometimes, when I drive through New Ulm, I feel like we live in a Swiss village.  The architecture, the monuments, and the snow make me think there will be ski lifts just around the bend. The best part about all of this snow is the joy it brings to our children’s hearts.

I like to look at the frozen lake while wearing my slippers, sipping coffee next to the fire place.  I take pictures of those crystallized winter trees through my car window. I may even roll the window down for fifteen seconds if I can get a better shot. Not children, children want to feel the snow. They want to live it. They want to roll in the snow, make forts and snowmen. Kids want to touch the snow in their glove covered fingers. They want to stay in the cold until their cheeks become bright red, their nose starts to drip and their toes ache.

Sometimes I wonder, should I just bundle up and try it? Is this as fun as they say it is? Then, reality sets in, and I realize I don’t really like to be cold or wet. I don’t like having a runny nose and bright red cheeks. Instead, I revel in the joy I see in their faces as they trudge through the front door throwing off their boots and gloves all the while shouting about the amazing snow man they just created and whether or not we have cherry tomatoes for the eyes.

It brings so much pleasure to me to see delight in them. This week, my son Jack ran up to me in the market carrying a game hen. He thought it was a baby chicken and really wanted me to buy it. I followed him back to where he found it and tossed three of those little guys into the basket. Jack was thrilled. It took me a couple of days before I finally made them. Every night Jack asked, “When will we have those tiny chickens? Are you making them tonight?”

Cornish game hen

Cornish game hen

The night I made them, I brought Jack into the kitchen to help. We cut the hens out of the package and washed them. We danced them around on the counter a little bit. As I dried them off, I pretended they were wearing a shawl or a toga.

 Click here for a slideshow

 

 

 

I have made game hens several times in the past. However, until I made the hens with a child, I had no idea how much fun they can be. We draped them in herbs, olive oil and bacon.  Those whimsical hens looked adorable in the roasting dish nestled in with onions and garlic.

game hen wrapped in ham

game hen wrapped in ham

I loved that Jack was excited to eat something other than a cheese burger. He helped me make a sauce by deglazing the roasting pan with red wine. Once the hen was on his plate along with a baked potato, he dug right in.

 

 

 

 

First, he grabbed a hold of the tiny leg and ate it like a drumstick. We all laughed.

Jack eating the hen leg

Jack eating the hen leg

These hens are great to get your children excited about dinner. They are affordable and one hen easily feeds two people. Make some sauce and throw in a baked potato and you are finished. It is a great holiday meal for kids and adults alike. Imagine if you made a turkey for the grown up table and gave the kids game hens? They would get a kick out of that. The best thing is, when the children are filled with joy, you become even happier.

You can see a video of Claud, Jack and I making the game hen here:

Game hen with a red wine and onion sauce and a baked potato

Prep time: 15 minutes

Cook time: 1 hour 20 minutes

Serves: 6

3 game hens

2 large onions, chopped thick

2 cloves garlic, chopped

1 Tbsp thyme

2 Tbsp Dijon mustard, dilute with a splash of red wine

Dash of salt and pepper

6 slices of parma ham, prosciutto  or bacon

1/2 C. olive oil, divided

6 potatoes

3 Tbsp kosher salt

1 bottle of dry red wine (cabernet), divided

½ C. chicken stock

Pour yourself a glass of the Cabernet. You have to use it for the dish anyway. Wash and dry the game hens. Place them in a roasting dish breast side up. Place the chopped onions and garlic in the dish as well. Drizzle ¼ C. of the olive oil over the hens. Spread on the Dijon mustard with a basting brush. Add the salt and pepper and sprinkle on the thyme. Layer the bacon on the hens. Place in a 350 degree oven for one hour. After one hour, check to see if they are done. You may need to keep them in for another twenty minutes.

Poke holes in the potatoes with a fork. Rub the remaining olive oil on the potatoes and smother them in the salt. Wrap them in aluminum foil and place in the oven with the hens. They should be finished in an hour.

Once everything comes out of the oven, remove the hens and place the roasting dish on the stove top. Take the onions out, cut off the root and chop them up a bit more. Pour ½ C. of the red wine into the pan and deglaze. Stir up the bottom of the dish to get all of the flavors up and into the sauce. Add the stock. Let this simmer for about ten minutes.

Pour the onion and wine sauce into the bottom of the plate, place half of the hen on top and add a baked potato filled with sour cream and butter. Enjoy.

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game hen with red wine and onion sauce and baked potato

game hen with red wine and onion sauce and baked potato

 

Game hen in shawl

Game hen in shawl

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Fish Pie:the secret is in the sauce

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

I thought I knew lasagna. I believed my mom’s lasagna could not be improved upon. She always made it so cheesy and flavorful. She made her own homemade sauce with tons of vegetables. She would even keep a little sauce on the side to pour over the lasagna after it was cooked. This was a genius idea.

 

Then, Claud made lasagna and I couldn’t believe how delicious it tasted. I wouldn’t say it was better than mom’s, just different and equally delicious. There were other ways to make this masterpiece dish. It was completely different from my mom’s recipe. My mom’s was vegetarian and Claud’s was very meaty.  His Bolognese sauce needed to cook for a whole day and contained a bottle of red wine. But, the real secret, the part of this lasagna which really made it beyond my wildest taste fantasies was the béchamel sauce. This creamy white sauce made my taste buds sing.

 

I had never heard of a béchamel sauce before. I quickly learned all about it and how to make it myself. Bechamel is a white sauce made with milk and thickened with a white roux. In the 19th Century, Chef Antonin Careme of France came up with a list of the four mother sauces from which all great sauces are derived. Bechamel is one of these mother sauces, along with: espagnole, veloute, and allemande.

 

The bechamel sauce Claud used in the lasagna is combined with tons of cheese. It’s not advisable, but I believe I could just eat this sauce with a spoon…on its own…as a soup. No, I’d probably get a pretty bad stomach ache if I tried this. The thing I learned from Claud’s lasagna is how sauces make any dish beyond fantastic. His lasagna would have still been great with his Bolognese and some melted cheese. But, the creamy cheesy bechamel brought it up a notch.

 

Sauces are the secret to making food into extraordinary works of culinary art. For example, yesterday I went to Turner Hall for dinner. My friend Charlie ordered the ribs and everyone at the table agreed that it was their special sauce that really made those ribs incredible. Sure, a poached egg on a buttered English muffin with a dash of salt and pepper would be a fine breakfast…but, add the hollandaise sauce and things change. Each bite is followed by a moan and a smile. Well, at least, I do this. What would mashed potatoes and turkey be without the gravy? Who would want pasta without a delicious alfredo or marinara sauce (unless you are five years old)?

 

Not long after my introduction to Claud’s lasagna, his mom made me something I had never tried. She announced, “tonight I am making fish pie.” “Ewwww,” I thought, “fish pie?” I believed that would be gross. I had never heard of it nor had any interest in making something called fish pie. It sounded like punishment for children in an old fairy tale.

 

fish pie ingredients

fish pie ingredients

 

Claud told me his mom made this at least once a month for the family when they were growing up. I thought, “How sad for those children.” I envisioned a pie tin filled with gooey fish and topped with a pastry crust. Well, turns out, I couldn’t have been further from the truth. She sat the huge dish of fish pie on the table, next to a bowl of buttered peas.

 

fish poaching in milk, onions and parsley

fish poaching in milk, onions and parsley

 

The top of the “pie” was smothered in creamy mashed potatoes. Claud served me a portion of the pie along with some peas. I took a bite and smiled. I tasted flaky white fish, herbs, mashed potatoes and….bechamel sauce. It was absolutely delicious. Every bite brought the smile and the, “mmmm.”

 

making bechamel sauce

making bechamel sauce

 

This week, I made it for the first time and it was as delicious as I remembered. No doubt, the béchamel sauce is the secret to this dish. It blends so well with the fish and potatoes. I realize those Monro children were quite lucky to have this dish once a month.

 

enjoying fish pie

enjoying fish pie

 

I made a video teaching you how to make this dish.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fish Pie

Prep: 30 minutes

Cook time: 30 minutes

Serves: 6

 

2 lbs cod (you can use salmon or other fish of your choice)

6 medium potatoes, pealed, chopped and boiled

6 eggs, hard boiled, peeled, shelled and coarsely chopped

14 Tbsp butter, divided

3½ C. milk, divided

 2 tsp salt

2 tsp pepper

2 onions, sliced

1 large bunch of parsley, chopped

1 bay leaf

1 C. water

½ C. flour

1 Tbsp. anchovy, mashed up

 

Drain the potatoes, mash them, and add ½ C. milk, 6 Tbsp. butter, salt and pepper. Mix up and set the mashed potatoes aside.

 

Pour the remaining 3 C. milk, ½ of the parsley, the bay leaf, and water into a skillet or sauce pan. Bring to boil. Then, turn heat down to bring the liquid to a simmer. Add the fish and allow it to poach in this liquid for ten minutes. Take the poached fish out of the pan and place in an oven safe dish. Cut the fish into pieces in the dish.

 

Pour the remaining liquid through a sieve into a bowl. In a sauce pan, on medium heat, melt the remaining 8 Tbsp. butter. Add the 3 C. milk. Slowly stir in the flour to form a thick pasty sauce. Slowly stir in the sauce which you sieved from poaching the fish. Add this liquid until the sauce becomes like a thick cream. Add the anchovy, eggs, and the remaining parsley. Mix. Pour this sauce over the fish in the oven safe dish.

 

Layer the mashed potatoes over the top. Place in a 400 degree preheated oven for 30 minutes. The potatoes should come out browned on top. You can add an egg wash to facilitate the browning. Serve with buttered peas.

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Fall and hearty stews…beef bourguignon

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

I’m in awe of the crunch the leaves emit beneath the weight of my feet and how they blanket my lawn as if preparing it for a cold winter to come. I cannot bring myself to rake. I feel as if the earth needs this protective layer. Come springtime, I promise, they will be gone. But, for now, I must be grateful for their beauty and warmth. Don’t get me wrong, I think it is commendable how many people diligently rid their lawn of leaves once the trees are bare. It is just a difference of opinion and another perspective of aesthetics. Neither is right or wrong. Both are beautiful.

beef bourguignon

beef bourguignon

 

I eagerly anticipate the inevitable colder days to come, much colder days. Yes, even the negative twenty days in winter are thrilling. The wind chill factor and how jeans don’t protect you from it. The pain in your face from a subtle breeze in the air and how you have to wrap a scarf around everything except your eyes sometimes just to walk into the grocery store. I think growing up in Southern California made me appreciate these extreme changes in weather. But wait, I am getting ahead of myself, its fall and this season needs the attention it deserves. We can’t think of it as merely a prelude to freezing days to come.

Living most of my life in a climate where the weather remains at clear skies and seventy plus degrees gets old. I like variety. Minnesota has the most perfect seasons: each one exactly as it should be.  We are very lucky indeed. As if overnight, everything went from green to red and yellow to brown. Bald eagles soar over highway 13, deer peer out from behind garages in New Ulm, and ripples of waves caress Lake Hanska from the increasing strength of the breeze.

I enjoy the misty mornings on my way to take the kids to the bus and the crackle of walking on the frosty grass. It’s great to pull out your boots and sweaters, hats and scarves, and get chances to wear them. With each new season comes inspiration for meals that suit the climate. We, Minnesotans, are lucky to have so much encouragement from Mother Nature to make a variety of delectable dishes. For fall, I think we are in need of some hearty comfort food. We should make food that will warm and nourish us from the inside out. Beef bourguignon does the trick. How could beef, garlic, spices and tons of red wine not taste delectable? It has to be fantastic. To make it even better, after you work on the initial preparation for about twenty minutes, you just leave it to work its magic for hours as you do what you want to do. Also, once you have a bit for dinner that first evening and put the rest in the fridge…it’s even tastier the next day, once all of the herbs and spices have had a good chance to truly get acquainted.

Apparently, the French used to make this dish as a way to make cheap and tough cuts of meat palatable by simmering it in wine for hours. However, beef bourguignon has become a staple in haute cuisine. This is because, although it is simple and inexpensive to make (this recipe cost me about ten dollars in ingredients), it is so delicious. You can make it in a Dutch oven or stock pot and allow it to simmer for hours while your home becomes bathed in the scents of a French cafe. You can make it in a crock pot and allow it to cook longer than two hours if you will be away from home. When you return to the smells of your kitchen, you will think you hired a French chef. Either way, your home will smell amazing while this stew cooks. You and whomever you are feeding will not believe your taste buds. Bon Appetite.


 

Beef bourguignon:

Time: 2 ½ hours

Serves: 6

2 ½ lbs. beef roast

¼ C. olive oil

1 1/2 C. flour

½ tsp. salt

½ tsp pepper

3 large potatoes, peeled and sliced thick

3 large carrots, sliced thick

6 cloves of garlic, sliced thick

2 C. button mushrooms, slice and sauté in 1 tsp. butter

4 bay leaves

2 Tbsp mustard seed

1 Tbsp dry thyme

1 Tbsp dry rosemary

1 bottle burgundy wine

2 ½ C beef broth

¼ C. sugar

Salt and pepper to taste

Cut beef into 1 ½ inch cubes. Pat the beef dry with a paper towel. Mix flour with salt and pepper. Roll the cubes of beef into the flour. Pour olive oil into a pot and place on medium high heat. Once the oil is hot, but not smoking, place the cubes of beef into the oil. You want to brown each side of the cube. Do not let the meat touch each other. You may have to brown it in stages. Once the cubes are browned on all sides, place on a paper napkin. Pour the rosemary, garlic, mustard seed, and thyme into the oil. Add the onion and carrots. Let these sauté for about five minutes. Pour in the wine to deglaze the pot. Add the broth and the sautéed mushrooms. Sprinkle the remaining flour (bout ½ C.) over the potatoes. Add the beef cubes and potatoes to the pot. Make sure everything is covered in liquid. If not, add more wine and broth to cover stew. Bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer with lid on for two hours. Take the lid off and skim off the oil which has accumulated on the top. Add sugar. Simmer uncovered for thirty minutes. Add salt and pepper to taste.

TJGKACMJWGEP

 

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