Showing posts with label Bacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bacon. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Celebrate Denny's Baconalia with Bacon Brownies with Bourbon Caramel Sauce

Bacon Brownies with Bourbon Caramel Sauce
There are few things I love more than bacon (just check out my posts about Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club).

So when I heard that Denny's recently launched Baconalia, their menu honoring all things bacon, I jumped at the chance to share my favorite bacon recipe. While I love using bacon in a variety of ways -- from throwing it into breakfast scrambles, to cooking it with corn and lima beans in a succotash, to sous vide cooking pork tenderloin in bacon fat -- my favorite is recipe is a dessert.

I love combining bacon, chocolate, and caramel (Denny's has a new Bacon Maple Sundae, so they're on the same wavelength).

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club: Sam Edwards' Dry-Cured Berkshire Bacon from Virginia (Bacon #5)

Sam Edwards' Dry-Cured Berkshire Bacon from Virginia

I'm back with more bacon porn for you bacon lovers!

This installment of Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club featured Sam Edwards' Dry-Cured Berkshire Bacon from Virginia (my home state, as it happens).

Like most of the bacon from the club, this one is produced by a family operation. Edwards still cures and smokes his bacon the same way that his father and grandfather did. He's also always experimenting with new ways to improve his product -- recently introducing peanut-finishing of hogs and going back to old breeds of pig like the Berkshire.


The Berkshire pigs used to produce this bacon are an heirloom variety that have been grazing fields in this country for centuries. They're renowned for their concentrated, porky flavor, which has mostly been bred out of white pigs. Many chefs revere these pigs for their fattier meat and superior flavor.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club: Allan Benton's Dry-Cured Bacon from Tennessee (Bacon #4)


For this installment of the "best wedding gift of all time" a/k/a Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club, we received Allan Benton's Dry-Cured Bacon from eastern Tennessee.

Owner of a down-home family operation, Benton is a self-taught baconeer (he also makes killer country hams). His bacon can be found gracing the tables of some of the top restaurants in the nation, like David Chang's Momofuku (a DD favorite) and Bobby Flay's Bar Americain, both in NYC.

If that's not endorsement enough, here's my two cents on his bacon.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club: Ozark Trails Hickory Smoked Peppered Bacon (Bacon #3)

Ozark Trails Peppered Bacon
This week, an early gift arrived from Santa. That's right, we received our third installment of Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club!

This time, the featured bacon was Ozark Trails Hickory Smoked Peppered Bacon. Now, I'm a big time spice lover, and pepper is one of my favorite things, especially when paired with meat in large quantities. I quickly concluded that this was a bacon for eating (rather then cooking) and roasted it up in the oven for breakfast (425 degrees for 11 minutes = perfectly crispy). I prefer oven cooking bacon, especially for larger quantities. It's faster and cooks evenly.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Sous Vide Pork Chops with Apple-Ginger Relish


There's nothing better than hitting up the farmers market and returning home with an armload of great product.

This week, I was lucky enough to procure milk-fed heritage pork chops from Healthy Family Farms, my local CSA. Their pork is so delicate and flavorful that doing anything other than cooking it sous vide felt like a crime. Enter my trusty Sous Vide Supreme and Vacuum Sealer (this is the must have holiday gift for any serious cook). Previously a technique limited to high end restaurants due to the exponential cost of immersion circulators and gastrovacs (though some brave home cooks have jerry-rigged their own devices), with the advent of the Sous Vide Supreme, home cooks can now rejoice and sous vide to their heart's delight.

Vacuum-Sealed Pork Chop with Bacon Fat
To cook the pork, I first cut out the bones to make them boneless pork chops (the bones are in my freezer, soon to be used to make stock). Then, I set my Sous Vide Supreme to 140 degrees. Meanwhile, I rubbed the meat with garlic powder, dried sage, dried thyme, salt and pepper. The final ingredient? A little rendered bacon fat that I'd squirreled away from Nueske's Applewood Smoked Bacon from the first installment of Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club.

Given the beautiful apples that are in season right now, I decided to make an Apple-Ginger Relish to serve with the pork chops. The dish turned out fabulous -- it tasted like the epitome of the season -- hearty, succulent, tangy, sweet. I served my Sous Vide Pork Chops with Apple-Ginger Relish over fresh shell beans (simmered in water with a bay leaf and olive oil) tossed with a little sauteed baby kale, however just about any whole grain or bean concoction would work great with this dish.

I loved this dish so much, I can't wait to make it again!

Sous Vide Pork Chops with Apple-Ginger Relish
Serves 2 people
Prep time: 15 minutes; Sous Vide Cooking Time: 2.5 hours
Print Recipe  

Ingredients
2 boneless pork chops (1 inch thick)
1/2 teaspoon dried sage
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
2 teaspoons rendered bacon fat, cooled in the refrigerator until solid (this will allow you to vacuum seal the bags -- liquid is sucked out)
salt and pepper
2 tablespoons grapeseed oil (for searing)

apple-ginger relish
1 Granny Smith apple, diced (I leave the skin on, but you can remove it)
1 teaspoon fresh ginger, minced
1 garlic clove, peeled and chopped
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup chicken stock
salt and pepper

Directions
Fill the Sous Vide Supreme with water and preheat to 140 degrees.

Meanwhile, rub the pork chops with the sage, thyme, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Place each pork chop into a separate plastic bag with 1 teaspoon of the bacon fat. Vacuum seal both bags.

Once the Sous Vide Supreme has reached 140 degrees (hint -- filling it up with hot water will help it heat up faster), place the pork chop bags into the water bath making sure that the meat is submerged and that the bags are not touching each other. Cook in the Sous Vide Supreme for two and a half hours (for one inch thick -- longer cooking time is needed for thicker cuts of meat -- see the temperature chart that comes with the Sous Vide Supreme).

Pork Chops Fresh Out of Sous Vide Supreme
When two and a half hours have passed, remove the pork chop bags from the Sous Vide Supreme and cut open them open to remove the pork chops. In a saute pan, heat the grapeseed oil over medium-high heat. Quickly, sear the pork chops on both sides until nicely caramelized (about 1 minute per side). Remove from the pan and allow to rest for 5 minutes before slicing.

Meanwhile, make the apple-ginger relish in the same pan where you seared the pork chops. Pour out all but 1 tablespoon of fat. Heat the pan over medium heat. Add the garlic and ginger and saute for 1 minute. Add the apples and saute until softened, about 4 minutes. Add the apple cider vinegar and cook for 1 more minute. Then, add the chicken stock and bring to a simmer, deglazing the pan with a wooden spoon. Simmer for a few minutes, or until reduced in half.

Sous Vide Pork Chops with Apple-Ginger Relish
To plate, slice the pork chops and lay out on a plate. Spoon the apple-ginger relish on top of the slices. Enjoy!

Source for Ingredients
milk-fed pork chops (Healthy Family Farms), organic garlic, and ginger from the Hollywood Farmers Market

organic Granny Smith apples from West Hollywood Farmers Market

organic apple cider vinegar, organic chicken broth, and grapeseed oil from Trader Joe's

organic dried sage, organic dried thyme, and organic garlic powder from Whole Foods

rendered bacon fat from Nueske's Applewood Smoked Bacon (received as part of Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club)

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club: Broadbent's Dry-Cured Hickory Smoked Bacon (Bacon #2)

Broadbent's Dry-Cured Kentucky Hickory Smoked Bacon
What's better on a Saturday morning than freshly cooked bacon?

Not much!

This week, I received an early holiday gift -- the delivery of my second bacon installment from Zingerman's. I received their Bacon of the Month Club as a fabulous wedding gift, and boy does this one keep on giving.

This month I received Broadbent's Dry-Cured Kentucky Hickory Smoked Bacon. Broadbent's is a small family run operation based in Kentucky. Their bacon recipe dates back to 1909, if you can believe it! Here's how they make their bacon in owner Ronny Drennan's own words (as told to Zingerman's):
"We hand rub each belly with salt, sugar and a bit of nitrate. Then we stack 'em on the shelves about 7 or 8 slabs high. We leave 'em for one week, then we wash all the salt off and hang 'em up on the bacon hooks. Then we let 'em sit overnight and a day to set. Then we smoke 'em for 3 or 4 days."
This bacon is dry cured, and not for the weak of heart. If it were a wine, it would be a big, aged Bordeaux, pungent and funky, bursting with flavor. If it were cheese, it would be Hook's 10 year aged cheddar. You get the point. We're talking some major bacon flavor here. Apparently, it's great in stews and places where you need big flavor, but for my first taste, I decided to go straight up so that I could taste the flavors without any dilution.

I set my oven to 450 degrees and baked slices of the bacon for about 10 minutes (I prefer oven cooking for perfect, super crispy bacon). Then, I served the bacon for breakfast with scrambled eggs with spinach and my vegan Apple-Walnut Corn Muffins. Wow, was this bacony bacon! Kuzak and I both loved the bold flavors, rich and chewy, deep and powerful. I can't wait to try cooking with it, maybe in a braised white bean stew? Hmm... that sounds promising! Stay tuned...

Read about the first installment of Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club here!

Friday, November 5, 2010

Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club: Nueske's Applewood Smoked Bacon! Plus Recipe for Sauteed Shrimp with Bacon Succotash!

Sauteed Shrimp with Bacon Succotash
Great food can enter our lives in many different ways.

Kuzak and I were recently graced with what might be the best wedding gift ever -- Zingerman's Bacon of the Month Club (thank you Gruhl family). Even Bobby Flay is quoted calling this is a "fantastic gift!"

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Zingerman's, a humble deli in Ann Arbor, Michigan, I consider them to be the epitome of great food. Their standards of excellence apply to everything they do, and that includes their bacon club.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Succotash With Baby Squash, Fava Beans, Sweet Corn & Pancetta


While I'm off in NYC, downing delicious culinary delights, I thought I'd leave you with this lovely spring succotash recipe.  Every time I type the word succotash, all that goes through my head is Sylvester the Cat's catchphrase, "Sufferin' Succotash!" For this sufferin' succotash, I cook up some pancetta lardons, and then saute an array of farmers market vegetable confections in their fat.  This succotash is great as a stand alone lunch, side dish to a wonderful dinner, or served under grilled fish or slices of pork tenderloin (which is how I served it the other night).

Succotash With Baby Squash, Fava Beans, Sweet Corn And Pancetta
Serves 4-6 people
Cooking time: 30 minutes

Ingredients
1/4 cup pancetta, chopped into lardons
1/2 cup red onion, peeled and chopped
1 jalapeno, seeded and chopped
1 cup corn kernels (about 2 cobs of corn, kernels removed)
2 cup baby squash, thinly quartered
1/4 cup fava beans, blanched and peeled
pinch of pimenton (smoked parprika)
salt & pepper to taste

Directions
Saute the pancetta over medium high heat until starting to brown.  Add the red onion and jalapeno, and saute until tender.  Then, add the corn and the squash, cooking until tender.  Finally, stir in the fava beans, pimenton and season to taste with salt and pepper.  Enjoy!

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Braised Pork Belly With Soft Polenta


Oh, the decadence!  Oh, the layers of fat and meat and more fat!  Oh, heavenly belly of pork!  

Alright, so maybe I'm not much of a poet, but if anything in the culinary universe inspires one to burst into spontaneous iambic pentameter or even just haiku, it's pork belly.  Yes, this is the cut of meat that is cured into bacon, which is how most Americans know pork belly.  Fresh pork belly, long popular in Asia and other regions of the world, hadn't made much of a dent on America's palate until recently.  David Chang of NYC noodle bar Momofuku who is famous in part for his pork belly buns even admits that a decade ago, he couldn't have called them "pork belly" and expected to sell them (by the way, I love the Momofuku cookbook and referred to it when constructing this dish).

Well, folks, that has all changed.  Bacon's popularity as a big culinary trend seems to have led people to discover pork belly itself.  Well, some people at least, like myself.  So, over the weekend, with visions of Animal's BBQ Pork Belly Sandwiches (see side picture) dancing through my head, I undertook my first attempt to braise the crap out of a fresh piece of pork belly.  Well, first I rubbed it with a mixture of salt, sugar, nutmeg and cardamom, wrapped it tightly and let it sit overnight.  Then, I braised the crap out of it in my brand new oven at 325 degrees for bordering on four hours.   During this time, I occasionally basted it in its own fat and braising juices.

Finally, after an excruciatingly long wait, I dished it up over a plateful of soft polenta.  Kuzak and I settled down before out plates and regarded our hunks of pork belly, nestled on their soft polenta pillows, topped with a piece of crispy sage.  "If it sucks, we can order pizza," I reassured him, knowing culinary experiments can go really well, or really poorly.  With that, we both tucked into our dishes and let out little noises of pleasure.  I'll sum it up this way.

Braised Pork Belly = A Little Piece Of Culinary Heaven

The luscious, velvety pork belly melted into the polenta, which it turns out is the perfect receptacle for pork belly juices.  This dish was an absolute winner, and I would make it again in a heartbeat (but not too often, if I'd like to avoid a heart attack).  And I even had two leftover chunks of braised pork belly.  No, I didn't give them to the Adorable Monster, though he did get to lick some plates.  Instead, I transformed them into pork belly ravioli the next night.   Now, that's a revelation.  Stay tuned for that recipe coming up next week!

Braised Pork Belly With Soft Polenta
Serves 4 people
Cooking time: 3-4 hours

Ingredients
1 pound fresh pork belly
1 tablespoon grapeseed or canola oil
2 cups chicken stock
1/4 cup tamari
1 cup water
1/2 cup polenta (grits)
2 cups filtered water
1/4 cup parmesan reggiano, grated
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 pieces of sage
1 tablespoon olive oil

Rub
1/4 cup Kosher salt
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cardamom 

Directions 

Mix together the rub ingredients and rub it all over the fresh pork belly.  Wrap tightly in plastic and allow to sit in the fridge for at least twelve hours but not longer than twenty-four hours (overnight).

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees.

Remove the pork belly from the fridge and pat it dry.  Cut it into four pieces of equal size.  Next, heat the grapeseed oil in a braising pan over medium-high heat.  Quickly, sear the pork belly pieces on all sides until golden brown.  Add the chicken stock, tamari and water to the pan.  Cover tightly and place in the oven.  Braise the pork belly for about three to four hours, occasionally basting the pieces and making sure they stay moist.  If needed, more water can be added.

Once the pork belly has taken on a pillowy texture and is fork tender, remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly.

Meanwhile, add the 2 cups of filtered water, polenta (grits) and about 1/2 teaspoon of salt to a pot and bring to a boil, stirring constantly.  Cover and reduce to a simmer.  Cook for 5 minutes or until they reach desired consistency.  Stir in the parmesan and season to taste with salt and pepper.  Finally, fry the sage leaves in the olive oil over medium-high heat and allow to drain on a paper towel.

To plate, spoon the soft polenta onto a plate in a circle.  Top with a piece of braised pork belly and place a crispy sage leaf on top.  Enjoy!

Source For Ingredients
fresh pork belly, tamari, grapeseed oil, organic olive oil, organic sage, organic grits, organic nutmeg, organic cardamom, Kosher salt and organic chicken broth from Whole Foods

parmesan reggiano from Surfas

Wine Pairing
We paired a bottle of Carlisle 2007 Zinfandel, Carlisle Vinyard, Russian River Valley with the braised pork belly ($40 off the mailing list/SOLD OUT).  Robert Parker rated this wine 93 points.  It's not entirely Zinfandel, but rather a blend of 92% Zinfandel and the rest Carignan, Petite Sirah, and a few other Mediterranean red grapes.  The wine is a deep, purple color with hints of pepper and dark fruit on the palate, perfect to stand up to the very rich, braised pork belly. A truly great wine from a great producer!

Click here to visit the Carlisle's website

And check out my new pages pages at the top of my blog, including my brand new Wine page!  Or, just click here!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Lobster "Bouillabaisse" with Poached Yukon Gold Potatoes & Bacon



Today I'm bringing you a very special dish - something I whipped up for The Wine Lover, The Original Diva and Kuzak on Christmas Eve! 

It's sort of my take on a Bouillabaisse, a traditional Provencal fish stew with a saffron broth. 

Sort of.  

Well, let me start at the beginning of my thought process here, something about which I often get asked.  I believe that creating and constructing new recipes is my biggest strength as a chef, especially considering that I have no formal training whatsoever.  So I'll let you in on the secret process.

It all began with lobster meat, which The Original Diva had lovingly procured from Indigo Farms, her rockin' local fish supplier.  We had this great protein - already shelled and ready to use - but how were we going to use it?  I'd already planned to make a homemade ravioli dish, but after careful consideration, I decided against a lobster ravioli.  The lobster just wasn't going to work with the other flavors I already had in mind (goat cheese, caramelized shallots, "bruleed" delicata squash, red kale, roasted pepitos).  Rather, it would have proven a pricey distraction. 

How did I decide that?

Before I ever set foot in the kitchen or hand on saute pan, I envision the complete dish and do a virtual taste test in my mind, something at which I prove rather adept.  So after I nixed the lobster ravioli idea, opting to make the goat cheese ravioli with whole grain spelt for a starter instead, I concentrated on a main course that would showcase the lobster as the star.


The Diva Making Goat Cheese Ravioli

After careful pondering, and many glances at the snow-filled landscape, I decided a rich soup would be perfect for that chilly day.  Rich, warm, comforting, decadent, sumptuous.  But what kind of soup?  The Original Diva can't eat cream or milk, and I prefer to limit my consumption, so after surveying the cupboard, I settled on making a homemade bouillabaisse-like fish stock as the base for the soup, using saffron, achoveys, herbs, tomatoes and a bunch of other flavors.  This is my original recipe.

With that settled, I finalized my components.  The lobster would be quickly poached in butter.  I had purchased some stunning Yukon gold fingerling potatoes.  I planned to poach those in the saffron-based stock, which would transform them into a gorgeous yellowy-orange-ish color. 


Ravioli Filling (Goat Cheese, Parmesan Reggiano & Caramelized Shallots)

The final major component?  Bacon!  Not only does bacon, like butter, make most things taste awesomer, but I loved the meaty, smoky, fatty, indulgent flavor it was going to bring to an otherwise rather austere dish.  I knew it would compliment my flavors, rather than overwhelm them, especially since I planned to crumble the bacon over top, adding punches of flavor rather than a whole chunk of meat.  Luckily, I had purchased a package of applewood smoked, center cut bacon (nitrate-free of course!) earlier in the week.


Goat Cheese Ravioli with "Bruleed" Delicata Squash, Red Kale & Pepitos 

All of this, and I hadn't even stepped into the kitchen yet.  This is how I work.  I let my ingredients guide me, rather than trying to force what's available into a preconceived mold.  I find that I turn out better, more creative food that way that conforms to the seasons, rather than the other way around.

I sort of hate being right all the time, but this was a spectacular dish!  I labored over my stock all day, simmering it, straining it, and further reducing it to a pure, rich broth (and this was sans dairy or thickening agents).  The plating, the flavors, everything came together into a restrained, comforting, tasty soup.

What's left but to give you the recipe? 

Lobster "Bouillabaisse" with Poached Yukon Gold Potatoes & Bacon
Serves 4 people

2 cups lobster meat, poached in butter, removed from shell and seasoned with salt & pepper
2 cups Yukon gold fingerling potatoes, quartered
4 slices thick cut bacon, chopped
2 tbsp parsley, chopped
1/2 lemon, juiced
salt & pepper

bouillabaisse stock:
1 shallot, chopped
1 carrot, chopped
2 garlic cloves, peeled
2 tbsp tomato paste or 2 fresh tomatoes, chopped
1/2 cup white wine
4 sprigs thyme
4 sprigs parsley
1 bay leaf
1/2 tsp black peppercorns
1/2 tsp saffron
3 anchovy fillets packed in olive oil, rinsed, patted dry & chopped
6 cups filtered water
2 tbsp olive oil
salt & pepper

Directions:

To make the bouillabaisse stock, add the olive oil to a pot and heat over medium-high heat.  Add the shallot and carrots and saute for a few minutes, until softened.  Add the garlic and anchovies and cook for another minute.  Push the mixture to the side and add the tomato paste or tomatoes, cooking it alone for a minute before stirring it into the mixture.  Cook for another minute.  Add the white wine and simmer for 5 minutes.  Add the herbs, saffron, peppercorns and filtered water and simmer uncovered over low heat for about ninety minutes (can cover and continue simmering longer).


"Bouillabaisse" Stock After Straining

Remove from heat and strain the stock.  Return to a sauce pan and continue to simmer until reduced to about 4 cups.  Season to taste with salt & pepper.

To poach the potatoes, simmer them in the stock until tender and cooked through, about ten minutes.  Using a slotted spoon, remove them from the stock and season to taste with salt and pepper.

To cook the bacon, quickly saute it over medium heat until crispy.  Drain on paper towels. 



To plate, arrage some of the potatoes in the center of a wide-bottomed bowl.  Top with a generous portion of butter-poached lobster.  Ladle the broth over top.  Finish with crumbled bacon, chopped parsley and fresh cracked pepper.

Enjoy!

Business mentioned in this post:

Indigo Farms
(540) 763-2323
indigo@swva.net

Serving the New River Valley since 1993, they're providers of fresh seafood and specialty meats.

CLICK HERE to visit their website and see their schedule!

Source for Ingredients:

lobster meat from Indigo Farms (Floyd, VA)

Yukon gold fingerling potatoes, thick-cut nitrate-free bacon, saffron and anchovies from Harvest Moon (Floyd, VA)

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Bacon Brownies with Bourbon Caramel Sauce


Happy Holidays!

The results from the Bacon Brownie poll are in, and the winner is, "For Shiz" with 64 percent of the vote, followed by "Just Make Me Some" getting 35 percent. So, as my holiday gift to you, I'm sharing my secret recipe for Bacon Brownies with Bourbon Caramel Sauce!

I created this dessert specially for the Eat My Blog charity bake sale, and the brownies sold out in under an hour.  It's a unique dessert, rich, meaty, firing on all palate cylinders, sweet and salty and buttery and chocolaty and bacony!  It combines all the best things in the world, from chocolate, to booze, to bacon, to butter, to sugar, all into one tidy little package.


Enjoy your holidays - and maybe some Bacon Brownies, too!

Note: for the sake of the sale, I baked the caramel sauce into the brownies, but if you're serving this as dessert for a dinner party, you can bake the brownies and then drizzle the caramel sauce over them right before serving.

Bacon Brownies with Bourbon Caramel Sauce
Makes 9 brownies

2 eggs
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup sugar
1/2 lb bittersweet chocolate
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup flour
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 cup thick cut bacon, chopped

bourbon caramel sauce:
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup bourbon
1/4 cup butter
1/4 cup heavy cream

Directions:

To make the bourbon caramel sauce, cook the sugar over medium-low heat for about 10 minutes or until golden brown and caremalized.  Add the bourbon and stir to combine.  Then, add the butter and cream and stir to combine.  Cook for another 10 minutes, or until the sauce comes together.

To make the bacon brownies, preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Cook the bacon in a saute pan over medium heat until crispy.  Remove from pan and drain on paper towels.

Whisk together the eggs, vanilla and sugar until smooth. In a double boiler, melt the chocolate and butter, stirring to combine. Add it to the eggs/vanilla/sugar mixture and stir to combine. Then, sift together the flour and cocoa powder, and fold into the wet mixture.  Fold in the bacon.


Spread the batter into a parchment-lined 8 inch square pan.  Drizzle the caramel sauce over the top.  Bake for 20-25 minutes.

Let cool in the pan.  Cut into 2 inch squares (should yield 9 brownies).

Source for Ingredients:

bourbon vanilla extract, Niman Ranch thick cut bacon, organic unsweetened cocoa powder, organic cane sugar, organic butter and Reserve Bourbon from Trader Joe's

organic flour, bittersweet chocolate and organic heavy cream from Whole Foods

organic eggs from Healthy Family Farms (Hollywood Farmers Market)

Friday, October 30, 2009

Apple-Glazed Organic Bone-In Pork Chops & Quinoa with Pancetta and Walnuts



Happy Friday, Divas!

Today is a bonus day - you're getting two recipes for the price of  one!

I made this dinner last weekend, and wow, did it turn out fabulous!  I used fresh-pressed apple juice that I made with my Omega Juicer to make my sauce, which really added great flavor. I served the Apple-Glazed pork over quinoa, studded with smokey La Quercia pancetta and toasted walnuts, which really gave the dish a great nutty, earthy component. For wine, we paired this dinner with the stellar 2007 Tablas Creek En Gobelet (CLICK HERE FOR ARTICLE), which may be the best wine I've had all year long.  It complimented the dish, and then some, making this one of the best meals I've made this fall.



Now onto more important matters before I share my recipes!  The Adorable Monster, who has been confined to the house for two weeks following his ball removal, is going back to the dog park today!  I know as soon as I utter the two words, "Dog Park!" that he'll leap with fanatical joy and throw himself at the door.  He'll also probably whine in my ear the whole way there, and then run around like a maniac once we arrive, sniffing other dogs' booties and peeing on everything in sight.  I'll report back on how it goes!

If you're curious what I'm cooking, tonight I'm making a chickpea and organic vegetable vindaloo, and tomorrow, a decadent risotto made with pancetta, red wine and radicchio (a recipe from Jamie Oliver, who makes amazing risottos is you ask me).  Next week, I'll be posting more great recipes, wine reviews and more!  So keep reading and cooking!

Apple-Glazed Organic Bone-In Pork Chops & Quinoa with Pancetta and Walnuts
Serves 2 people

2 organic bone-in pork chops 
1 cup apple juice or apple cider, preferably fresh-pressed
1 shallot, chopped
1 apple, diced
1 tsp sherry vinegar
3 sprigs thyme
2 tbsp grapeseed or canola oil
salt & pepper

quinoa:
1 cup quinoa, rinsed
3 slices pancetta, chopped
1/2 cup raw walnuts
2 tbsp flat-leaf parsley, plus more for garnishing
1 tbsp olive oil
1 shallot, chopped
2 cups filtered water
salt & pepper

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

To make the quinoa, place the olive oil in a pot and heat over medium-high heat.  Then, add the pancetta and saute until crispy and beginning to brown, about 5 minutes.  Add the shallot and cook for a few more minutes, until softened and translucent.   Add the quinoa, stir to combine, and cook for one minute.  Add the water, bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and cover.  Cook for approximately 15 minutes or until all the water has been absorbed.  Then remove from heat and allow to rest for 10 minutes. 

Meanwhile, spread the walnuts in an even layer in a pie pan or other oven proof dish.  Toast in the oven until golden, about 4 minutes.  Remove from the oven, allow to cool and chop.

Once the quinoa has rested, stir in the parsley and walnuts, fluffing as you combine.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.



To make the pork chops, salt and pepper the pork on both sides.  In a saute pan, heat the grapeseed or canola oil over medium high heat until almost smoking.  Add the pork chops to the pan and cook for a few minutes on each side, until golden brown and cooked through.  Remove and set aside to rest.



To make the apple glaze, add the shallot to the same pan where the pork chop was cooked.  Saute for two minutes.  Add the apple and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened and beginning to brown.  Add the apple juice, the thyme sprigs and sherry vinegar.  Bring to a simmer and cook until reduced by two-thirds (it should begin to take on a nice, slightly thicker consistency).  Once it's reduced, remove the thyme sprigs and season to taste with salt & pepper.



To plate, scoop some of the quinoa onto a plate. Top with a the pork chop.  Using a slotted spoon, transfer some of the apple pieces to the top of the pork chop.  Spoon the sauce over the pork.  Garnish with chopped parsley. Enjoy!

Source for Ingredients:

pancetta from La Quercia (via Whole Foods) 

organic bone-in pork chops, organic parsley, organic shallot, sherry vinegar from Whole Foods

organic apples and organic walnuts from Trader Joe's

organic thyme from Hollywood Farmers Market

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Roasted Tomato Soup with Thick Cut Bacon


One of my favorite times of the year is rolling around - Tomato Season! We all know that tomatoes taste a million times better when they're in season, and some people like my Top Chef Brother even consider it a crime to eat them out of season. Here's a lovely tomato soup I made while in Floyd with locally grown, organic tomatoes procured from Green's Garage. I roasted the tomatoes in the oven with thyme and then pureed them into a delicious soup. I served my soup with slices of thick cut bacon that I'd cooked up in a cast iron pan. The result was decadent and delicious!

When I served my parents, The Wine Lover took a sip and inquired what went into the soup. "Mostly just tomatoes," I said with a smile, "and love!" The soup was so rich and creamy that he expressed surprise that a tomato could yield such impressive results!


Domestic Diva's Roasted Tomato Soup with Thick Cut Bacon

10 tomatoes, quartered
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp fresh thyme
2 cups chicken or vegetable stock
salt & pepper

optional: 4 slices thick cut bacon, pan fried and drained

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place the tomatoes in a roasting pan. Drizzle with the olive oil, sprinkle with the thyme and season to taste with salt and pepper. Roast for 30 minutes, or until well cooked.

Remove from the oven and puree the mixture with 2 cups of stock until creamy. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

To serve, ladle the soup into bowls and lay a piece of bacon across the top of the bowl. Enjoy!