Tag Archives: Ginger

BRT – Dinner at Adrian’s

EPISODE 1: DINNER AT ADRIAN’S

httpvhd://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwVRs7bhyks

Hey, foodies:

I’m guest editing this week (though I am sure Helenka will be keeping a watchful eye on what I do). ::looks around for the evil editor:: [Evil editor does not disappoint as she puts her sticky virtual fingerprints all over this blog entry! I call it my revenge, after my operation and two-night stay in a hospital one week ago where the first 24 hours featured guzzling cold water. As a variation, I got to crunch on ice cubes. The editor was SO not amused. But … back to Brian’s adventures….]

In this episode, I took my camera on a road trip to visit my friend Adrian who is from Singapore (but luckily I didn’t have to go ALL the way there to eat terrific food). He thought it would be a good idea to have a dinner party: he was right. I got to film it and it was fun! We spared the guests from being on camera though one kept trying to sneak on. 😉

I had a great time making dishes from other countries (and eating them was even better). In fact, Adrian went back to Singapore and brought back a cookbook which was the source of a subsequent road trip.

We made several dishes for this party and I have two of the recipes (the mains) represented here.

More adventures to come!

Until next time, have yourselves a great week and don’t forget to have fun with your food, too!

Enjoy!
B&H =;)

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Hainanese Chicken Rice (a variation of what we had) from FoodNetwork
You can read more about this dish here
Chile Sauce:

* 2 to 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
* 2 tablespoons chopped fresh red chilies
* 5 cloves garlic, chopped
* Salt

Chicken and Rice:

* 1 (2-pound) chicken
* 1 scallion, cut into 1-inch pieces
* 4 slices fresh, peeled ginger
* 6 tablespoon vegetable oil or olive oil
* 6 to 8 cloves garlic, finely chopped
* 4 cups long-grain uncooked rice
* 1 teaspoon fine salt

Directions

Make the Chile Sauce: Combine all the ingredients in a bowl, mix well, and season with salt, to taste. Set aside

Make the Chicken and Rice: Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil (enough water to immerse the chicken). Stuff the cavity of the chicken with the scallion and ginger. Add the chicken to the boiling water, breast side-down. Lower the heat to a simmer just under boiling point and cook, covered, until just cooked through, about 40 minutes.

Transfer the chicken to an ice water bath for about 5 to 6 minutes. (This is to arrest the cooking and will make the chicken skin crisp.) Drain. De-bone the chicken and cut into bite-sized pieces. Reserve the chicken stock, and keep hot.

Heat the oil in a wok or saucepan over high heat. Add the garlic and stir-fry until fragrant. Add the rice and stir-fry for 1 to 2 minutes. Add enough of the hot reserved chicken soup to reach 1/2- inch above the top of the rice. Bring to the boil, add the salt, and lower the heat to low. When steam holes form in the rice, cover the wok, and steam until cooked, about 30 minutes.

Whisk 1/4 cup of the hot chicken stock into the chile sauce.

Arrange the rice and poached chicken on a platter and drizzle with the chile sauce.

Curried Coconut Chicken recipe from allrecipes.com

Ingredients

* 2 pounds boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into 1/2-inch chunks
* 1 teaspoon salt and pepper, or to taste
* 1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil
* 2 tablespoons curry powder
* 1/2 onion, thinly sliced
* 2 cloves garlic, crushed
* 1 (14 ounce) can coconut milk
* 1 (14.5 ounce) can stewed, diced tomatoes
* 1 (8 ounce) can tomato sauce
* 3 tablespoons sugar

Directions

Season chicken pieces with salt and pepper.
Heat oil and curry powder in a large skillet over medium-high heat for two minutes. Stir in onions and garlic, and cook 1 minute more. Add chicken, tossing lightly to coat with curry oil. Reduce heat to medium, and cook for 7 to 10 minutes, or until chicken is no longer pink in centre and juices run clear.
Pour coconut milk, tomatoes, tomato sauce, and sugar into the pan, and stir to combine. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, approximately 30 to 40 minutes.

FriendsFoodFun! Christmas Special 2010

httpvhp://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=DBA6612F073488CA

Christmas Celebrations, Past and Present

For me, while growing up in Newfoundland as one of a pretty big family (seven including my parents), Christmas was always something of a huge event for us. Usually it started with Mom grocery shopping which, to feed a family of this size, was an event all on its own. Upon her return home, all five kids would have traipsed to the car several times to retrieve the many bags she had brought back. Still, those almost never-ending multitudes of bags of food would not last long and barely made it past New Year’s.

Over the years, I also remember friends of my parents coming to visit, dressed as “Mummers” – people who would disguise themselves with old articles of clothing. I remember some pretty weird costumes they made, using whatever they could find to cover their faces to keep their identities hidden. It would be a game to “discover” just who those costumed folks were; being from a small community helped tremendously. 🙂 I think alcohol may have been involved, but you didn’t hear that from me.

My paternal Grandparents who lived just next door would come over on Christmas Eve to spend time with us. My Dad and my Grandfather would sit talking over some fine whiskey. I am sure the rest of us, being a noisy bunch, entertained everyone. Oh … getting us to bed was another chore, though we finally would settle in.

The next day, we would open our presents (at the crack of dawn no less) and Mom would busy herself preparing the turkey for cooking or checking on it if she was having a lunch as it would have been cooked overnight. A traditional Newfoundland Christmas dinner consisted of turkey, potatoes, peas porridge, carrots, turnips, salt beef and doughboys. Except for the turkey, it would all be boiled together for what seemed like hours (and the best meal you were sure to have).

This was a traditional Newfoundland boiled dinner (sometimes called Jiggs Dinner) and also served during Thanksgiving and Easter as well (at least it was in our family). Occasionally, there would be a ham thrown in (not boiled). When I was a teenager returning home from boarding school, Mom would always ask what I wanted her to make for Christmas and my response was always bread pudding with raspberries. It was divine. Mental note: “MOM, can you make it again this year … please???” Trying to describe it would probably not do it any justice and using Google led me to many recipes for it (of course, there IS Mom’s version, too).

Helenka and I have added our own traditions when it comes to Christmas and this year was no exception. [Well, there was one: I filmed it all!] It all started many years ago as we used to celebrate what we considered pretty fine dining by choosing something from that year’s President’s Choice Insider’s Report (Winter issue). Then, one year, when it didn’t inspire us, we set out to cook for each other (this is the shortened version of a long story). Part of that deal was that we would host each other and decorate our respective places: I’d do it usually before Christmas and she in the New Year. [Devious editor snickers. Pretty smart of me, eh?]

I always loved going overboard and, as I lived in a very small place, that was quite easy to do. I always had Christmas lights attached around the perimeter of my apartment (like a Christmas disco). [The still-stunned editor reminds Brian that he’s forgetting to mention that the lights were at the really high ceiling!] One year, I decorated my fridge with wrapping paper and a huge bow, then plunked a 4-foot Christmas tree on top of it … and off we went.

Another year, I wanted to pretend I had a fireplace; so I took my desk and put my Commodore 64 monitor (my TV back then) under it and, along with a plastic brick tablecloth with a hole cut out for the monitor, created my own version of a fireplace complete with stuff one normally puts on a mantle. But it didn’t just have to look right, it had to sound real. And it did, with Fireplace in a Box (VHS tape of a real fire) and surround sound. [Very impressed editor adds, “With all those speakers, I heard every crisp snap and crackle.”]

Nowadays, I have my own fireplace and mantle which I got to decorate in our Christmas Special. My friend Mary from work started me off, over a year ago, for my first party in my new place. It was fantastic plus everything I was hoping for. Mary left me with all the decorations you see here so that I could recreate it myself (and this was my first time doing it all on my own).

One thing I set out to do for our Special was to present some tried and true recipes we have used over the years and occasionally adapted (the roasted chicken for example was originally substituted with Cornish hens – yummy!). The Brussels with bacon is a new dish and inspired by the cookbook “Cook This Not That” while the stuffed tomatoes were invented on the spot from our own creative minds (though based upon the dish I made many years ago for Helenka).

I would also like to take this opportunity to thank all our loyal viewers as we complete this fantastic year of celebrating great friendships, fantastic food and, of course, we cannot forget the fun!

Presented here is the special journey that Helenka and I take you on in our Friends Food Fun! Christmas Special. And we’re so proud to share our recipes with you.

Happy Holidays,

Peace and Long Life,

See you in the New Year!

Cheers!

B&H =:)

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Recipes are below Helenka’s post 

Helenka, on finding the true meaning of Christmas, even if it took me a while

I believe that my approach to (and recognition of) Christmas is unique. And I’m not just saying that for effect, either.

When I was growing up, there was absolutely no religious connotation to December 25th at home. In fact, there was no celebration of any kind at home that day. Instead, we piled into a car and drove to a family friend’s house where long tables were set up in the basement for dozens of people in the Polish community to gather and enjoy a huge meal. Everybody knew everybody else. Included was the daughter of the house, one of my childhood girlfriends to whom I wasn’t that close … simply because she lived too far away for us to have any regular interaction. [OTOH, she was Sharif Ali to my El Aurens (Laurence of Arabia) when we were riding our pretend camels to the well in the desert … um, okay … on her uncle’s raspberry/strawberry farm. And we did get to go real trail riding nearby (on real horsies) once. When I say I have a really good memory, you’d better believe me … because those particular ones are over 40 years old!]

Instead, the traditional Christmas celebration took place on Christmas Eve at home, with the table set in a specific manner (straw underneath the tablecloth to represent hay in the manger and an empty chair just in case Jesus stopped by … or an unexpected guest), as well as a completely meatless 12-course dinner. My fave courses were the pickled herring with sliced onions and carrots with rye bread and the tiny piroszki (miniature pierogi) with a dried Polish mushroom/cabbage filling served in a meatless beet soup. So, it was a balancing act, going from a semi-religious celebration to an ethnic one overnight. However, one of the unique bonuses of not celebrating Christmas Day itself was that I got to open presents legally ::giggles:: a day earlier!

However, all of that changed when my father died before I turned 16. No more Christmas. I couldn’t do anything about it because I was just a kid and an only child at that. So it wasn’t until I moved out on my own at 23 (after getting my university degree) that I was able to start to assemble my own Christmas traditions.

Over the decades, I’ve participated in several types of Christmas Eve/Christmas Day celebrations:

  • casual aka running off in bone-chilling cold with a friend’s boyfriend (?!?) who was away from his home and family, to catch the umpteenth viewing of Star Wars IV (as we had an unofficial competition going on), then returning to my place to warm up with hot tea, seedless green grapes, cookies and to play Scrabble.
  • work-related, with a colleague inviting me to spend it with her daughter and herself (and gifting me with an exquisite black satin caftan which I accepted with glee) before driving me to the subway station at the end of the line where I managed to miss the final train and had the unique experience of taking the night bus across town.
  • with a variety of close friends over the years with whom I spent very satisfying Christmas Days and usually prepared some festive or extravagant dishes (can you say lobster?).
  • after deciding that there was something missing in my life in 1990, I attended my first Christmas Eve church service ever and discovered a church home and acquired a chosen family to which I’ve been adding (and, sadly, subtracting from as well) for the last 20 years.
  • interestingly enough, spending a happy Christmas Day alone after that church service when I did a lot of equally happy crying. All I had to do was glance through the order of service, remember the way I felt surrounded by thousands of people and feel warm all over. So it’s important to realize that one can have the capacity to celebrate even when alone … if such are the circumstances.
  • continuing a church tradition of offering a warm and inviting place in our Social Hall for Christmas Day dinner, decorations (including my menagerie of pigs – because they insisted on being included), music and games to people who had no place else to go (and hosting it for more than a decade). In fact, last Sunday I approached Mum (of Mum & Dad renown, as they were a couple who accepted all of us without hesitation – we who were biological, situational or emotional orphans from our families, to the extent that we were proud to call them our “Mum & Dad”) to reminisce about the year when her own aunt died (a charming yet feisty, down-to-earth lady in our congregation) and they didn’t feel up to doing their own Christmas dinner, so asked if they could join us. What a question! It was my honour to have them be with us. Not only did they come and relax, they brought lots of little gifts for me to add to the raffle draw (because all I could usually afford from a few monetary donations was to get everybody a fancy Christmas cracker – and I always thought we all looked quite grand in our tissue-paper crowns).
  • bringing close friends even closer into my chosen family, most of them drawn from my church and giving them official designations (I had lots of uncles, brothers and sisters, as well as fairy godmothers).
  • falling in love (more than once, lol) and having intimate, romantic Christmas dinners that I cooked from scratch, even if the menu wasn’t exactly traditional. There may have also been a Christmas pizza … once or twice.

The only thing I never did was to volunteer at a Mission, serving Christmas dinner to the homeless, though I do have one close church friend who’d done that year after year, but first stopped in at the church to share ours before heading out and I always felt both grateful and humbled that she got to have Christmas while being of service to those in need.

In years past (though not forgotten), I managed to combine the Christmas Eve service, Christmas Day dinner at church and then stagger home to prepare my own romantic Christmas dinner. Is it any wonder I needed to sleep for a week after that? Or didn’t even want to think about food?

But, you know, whatever the form of your Christmas (or other religious or non-denominational) celebration, the food and decor aren’t the important things: it’s the willingness to reach out, to share even with those to whom you have no family ties at all. Hey, I created my own chosen family and so can you.

Brian’s mentioned some of the highlights of hosting me at Christmas, in terms of decor and food. I was so awed by his creativity, I tried to match it. When he had the fake fireplace arrangement, I responded with Aquarium in a Box and transformed my place into an outer space underwater research station. I met him at the door carrying a pewter lantern, as the light levels had to be diminished so as not to disturb the fish ! Whenever he created something spectacular, I was inspired (resulting one memorable time in my three-hour masterpiece of velvety cream of asparagus soup). The year he made the original stuffed tomatoes, I countered with a tomato/bread/onion pudding as well as quail legs. Another year, I made my own mushroom butter as well as Tequila-marinated shrimp. Even when something threatened to be a disaster (crème brulée refused to firm up). I poured it into my ice cream maker and turned it into exquisitely rich ice cream. Another planned and far more healthy dessert that did turn out was mango sorbet with a scoop of mango purée in the same cut-glass bowl. As for trees, I think one year I outdid even myself when I put 800 lights on my tree, had the programmable multi-coloured lights wound around my 19-foot long balcony railing and even around the base of my glass and black steel coffee table. Hey, I did say Brian inspired me!

The way we’ve played off each other has been one of the cornerstones of our nearly two-decade long friendship that blossomed even though we had so many differences even beyond our ages (he came from a large family and had living grandparents; I was an only child who never knew my grandparents). It just makes it even more precious to me.

In celebration of togetherness, I lift my glass. And dedicate this blog entry to “Mum”. “Dad” will have to excuse himself for a moment from his pals amid heavenly surroundings to know that he’s being equally honoured. Cheers, “Dad”!

And, oh, I guess I should say something about food, so I will admit that we may have gone a titch overboard with the red pepper flakes in the Brussels sprouts. Just a tad. So I took special editorial liberty to adjust the amount stated in the recipe. And, even then, you should use a gentle hand.

I hope everyone will enjoy a serene holiday season and a joyous New Year. See you when the calendar page is flipped over!

Recipe: Roasted Chicken in a Fig and Clementine Glaze

Ingredients

Main Ingredients:

  • 1 whole roasting chicken
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 small cooking onion, finely sliced
  • 1 oz Brandy or orange liqueur (we used Cointreau)
  • 6 dried figs, halved with stems removed
  • 6 clementines, peeled and segmented

Marinade:

  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 2 tbsp Spanish paprika (or regular paprika)
  • 1 tbsp course black pepper
  • ¼ cup chopped fresh thyme and oregano, combined
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped garlic
  • ¼ cup lemon juice
  • salt, to taste
Orange Glaze:
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • 1 cup orange juice, good quality (like Tropicana Grovestand)
  • ¼ cup sugar (or Splenda)

Directions

  1. To prepare marinade, whisk together all ingredients. Pour over chicken and marinate 4 hours, or overnight, in refrigerator.
  2. Preheat oven to 400 degrees (for crispy skin). Roast chicken, about 90 minutes (depending on size of chicken).
  3. Meanwhile, prepare orange glaze. In medium saucepan, over medium heat, combine all ingredients, cooking slowly, about 5 to 8 minutes, or until reduced by half.
  4. In large skillet, over medium heat, sauter onion in 1 tbsp of olive oil about 3 to 5 minutes, or until brown. Add Brandy or Cointreau and deglaze skillet. Add orange glaze and dried figs and continue to cook until slightly reduced and thickened, about 5 minutes. Add clementines until just heated through. Cut chicken into pieces, arrange on plate or platter, then pour glaze over chicken.

Variations

For a more spicy orange sauce, try some of these variations:
Fresh ginger slivers, chopped cilantro, crushed garlic, dried hot peppers.

Recipe: Stuffed Tomatoes

Ingredients

  • 4 medium to large tomatoes
  • 2 tbsp freshly grated Parmesan cheese
  • ½ cup Panko breadcrumbs (increase up to 1 cup for larger tomatoes)
  • ⅓ cup fresh Italian flat leaf parsley
  • ¼ tsp dried basil (fresh is better, if available)
  • 1 tbsp chopped garlic
  • salt and pepper to taste

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 F
    Cut tops off tomatoes; scoop out pulp and seeds and reserve. In a bowl, mix Parmesan cheese, Panko breadcrumbs, parsley, basil, garlic, salt and pepper and reserved pulp and seeds.
    Spoon mixture into each tomato, then place on a baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes. Depending on size, time may have to be adjusted.

Recipe:  Rosemary Roasted Potatoes

Ingredients

  • 12 small red potatoes, quartered
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • ¼ tsp sea salt
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • 1-½ tbsp dried rosemary
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. In a large bowl, toss all ingredients together until potatoes are lightly coated with olive oil. Place potatoes on a baking pan, and roast for 25 – 35 minutes until lightly golden.

Recipe: Brussels with Bacon

Ingredients

  • 4 strips precooked bacon
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp chopped garlic
  • ½ tsp red pepper flakes (adjust to taste according to desired amount of heat)
  • 1 pound Brussels sprouts, bottoms trimmed and cut in half
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • 2 tbsp chopped walnuts

Directions

  1. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat, add garlic, pepper flakes, Brussels sprouts and a pinch of salt; sauter until sprouts are lightly browned on the outside and tender but still firm 10 – 12 minutes. Add the walnuts and sauter for another minute or two. Season with salt and pepper.

Recipe: Cookies’n’Cream

Ingredients

  • Whipping Cream:
    1. Begin with thoroughly chilled cream.
    2. Chill mixing bowl and beaters beforehand.
    3. Whip the cream on medium speed.
    4. Add sugar (2 tablespoons to 1/4 cup granulated) and any flavourings like Framboise, Rum, etc. I used Butter Ripple flavoured liqueur (Schnapps).
    5. Cream is whipped when soft peaks form.
    6. For vanilla-flavoured whipped cream, add 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract

Directions

  1. For this recipe, you can use either canned whipped cream (which can be fun and fancy – sprayed in swirling patterns) or make your own (see above). Use a good-quality favourite cookie (once again, store-bought or home-made), studding them around the perimeter of the dessert dish and then artfully arrange some fresh fruit over the top in the centre. Voilà: an instant dessert using your own variations and imagination.

Ep – 17 Butternut Squash Soup

httpvhd://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCRFavg1FFc
When the video starts to play click on the triangle to make a video quality change depending on your Internet speed (360P, 480P, 720P HD or now 1080P HD — our default is 720P HD).

I love soups so we thought, after the French Onion Soup recipe which we tried previously, it was time to try another one (I had to give these guys another chance or two on soups). I was really interested in making this one as, back in April, I attended a friend’s birthday celebration at Fressen, a vegetarian restaurant here in Toronto. They had the most amazing Butternut Squash Soup, so I just had to learn how to make it myself. The recipe we were following is not vegetarian by any stretch of the imagination as it calls for chicken broth as the base. BTW I used an organic low sodium broth which I found to be the best if you are looking for a good low sodium option. Yes, that means more label reading and comparing the various brands. Memory is a funny thing because I know exactly where to go in the store to find it but not the name. [Helenka pipes in ever so helpfully: I thought it was PC Biologics.][Brian’s note – hmm no unfortunately the PC brand still had a high quantity of sodium] Another ingredient added to this lovely soup was bacon (so definitely not vegetarian). I should not be surprised any longer at what goes into various dishes these days to result in some terrific flavour combinations. Speaking of flavours, I used Helenka as a Guinea Pig before filming the show. We were playing around with some hot sauces (Sidebar Note: I think we need to to do a show just on spicy stuff). She explains a bit more what we were up to below.

Well, enjoy the soup because we certainly did (though it’s not quite like the Fressen one as they are famous for theirs, so I guess I will have to make another trip there). [Evil editor’s sardonic comment: “Oh what a hardship.”] [Brian’s comment : Well its a tough job but someone’s gotta do it 😉 ]

Have yourself a great week and let us know if you tried to recreate something you liked watching and/or reading!

Enjoy!
B&H =:)

 

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Please note: We try and review the recipes in the cookbook; however, in an effort to respect copyright, we are not able to reproduce the actual printed recipes here. If you do have the book, please follow along with us!

Review: Butternut Squash Soup

Notes from the Chef’s Sidekick (Helenka)

Before our filming, Brian had already baked the butternut squash along with an extremely generous sprinkling of nutmeg as well as a titch of salt and pepper. He then sautéed some bacon, chopped onion and chopped apple. The onion, apple and ginger were added to the organic soup stock and squash before being puréed. When he plated it (bowled it???), he added the following garnishes: a drizzle of whipping cream (as we didn’t have The Book’s suggested non-fat sour cream), a dusting of cayenne and a spoonful of crunchy, crispy bacon in the centre. Go ahead. I dare you to ask me how good this was!

Mind you, I was suffering from blue!lips because I’d taste-tested three different hot sauces (chipotle, habanero and hot mango) before we began filming. And, then, I still preferred the cayenne, as per the suggestion from The Book. In any case, this was an exceptional comfort food for a day that wasn’t as warm as the previous day had been. The final lingering note on the palate was that of nutmeg. And I can’t imagine the soup having quite the same impact if Brian had not included the ginger. He made an excellent call for the inclusion of both as well as their proportions.

Brian made another wise choice to deviate from The Book (yes, we say we’re cooking and reviewing, folks, and we take the reviewing portion seriously). First of all, Brian saved himself the chore of transferring some; of the stock together with the squash, onion and apple into a blender because he merely added these three ingredients <u>into</u> the cooking pot and used an immersion blender. These gadgets are such a time-saver. But that wasn’t the only thing. Because Brian did the entire pot of soup, we ended up with a mixture that was almost completely blended. If we’d done it The Book’s way, there would have been a top layer of clear broth and we thought that would have been unappealing, both visually and to the taste.

By accident, we found that some of the diced apple had not been fully blended; so we thought that, the next time we make this soup, we should only blend half the apple and add the other half as a chopped garnish. Finally, Brian’s bold gesture with the nutmeg paid off. Otherwise, we feel the soup would have been a bit … timid. And, as we’ve already learned the hard way (see our review of French Onion Soup ), timid does not equal delicious food.

Variations

The Book gave several options for creating other puréed soups, adding the following ingredients to a chicken broth base:
white beans, chopped fresh rosemary;
canned tomatoes, half-and-half, chopped fresh basil;
sautéed mushrooms, half-and-half;
black beans, fresh lime juice, cumin and cayenne.
I find the last one especially exciting and vibrant because of the inclusion of lime juice. [::yells offscreen:: “Oh, Brian, can we make that one soon?”][::B yells back:: “Ok sure no problem lets set it up!”]

Although all of the soups above are intended to be heated, I can see the tomato and the black bean ones as refreshing chilled alternatives on a hot summer’s day.

Personally, I believe I have made some exceptional puréed soups over the last thirty-five years. Three (oops, make that four) in particular stand out. The first was a cream of chicken and vegetable soup without a hint of cream in it. I used to poach a whole chicken and traditional veggies in stock. After cooling and defatting the stock, I’d add the meat from the chicken and the veggies to it, then blend. It was a wonderful soup to have in the winter. Definitely comfort food. I used to keep quite a quantity of it in the freezer, in individual bowls.

The second soup (also chicken, but in a completely different presentation) included an ingredient that wasn’t ripe enough the first time I made it. I combined cooked chicken with chopped avocado and whipping cream before blending. The only problem was that my avocado was still hard. Was that enough to deter me? Why, of course not! I was determined to bend that avocado to my will. I just cooked it until it softened enough so that I could chop and blend it. This was a luscious, cold soup. A little rich because of the whipping cream, but definitely a taste of luxury!

The third soup was wild cream of mushroom with the mushrooms being gathered during the walks my friends (of the spur-of-the-moment pizza experience) and I used to take in the Annex. Of course, they were amateur mycologists (mushroom experts). And, hey, I’m still here! I’ve made the soup many times over the decades, though I’ve only used store-bought ‘shrooms.

The fourth is not technically a puréed soup, but I figure there are enough ingredients that do get smushed up (hee, unprofessional but very descriptive cooking terminology) that I’m counting is as one. When I purchased my Oster Kitchen Centre in the mid 1970s, it came along with a terrific cookbook and the recipe for Gazpacho in it is the best I’ve ever had. Why? Because the recipe calls for the inclusion of not only red wine vinegar, but also red wine. And, of course, all of the other yummy chopped vegetables, along with black olives (the California kind). Nothing better on a horribly hot day.

And I can’t believe I nearly forgot the most sensational puréed soup I’ve ever made in my life. It was for one of Brian’s and my “Holiday Extravaganzas”. I believe this meal included Lobster Américaine (whose sauce was made of equal parts sherry, brandy, whisky and cream – but that’s another extraordinary tale). The soup was cream of asparagus. After cooking the asparagus until tender in water, I snapped off the tough ends (I’d kept them on during the cooking process for additional flavour), then forced the stalks through a sieve with a spoon. It took me Three Hours of manual labour but it was so worth it. In fact, I judged my soup to be superior to the one I’ve had at Opus Restaurant on Prince Arthur. Mine tasted like cold, silken velvet. Of course, the fact that I’d garnished it with a dollop of crème fraïche and caviar merely enhanced its already divine status.

So, you’ve read what The Book suggests and some of the soups I’ve made. Don’t be afraid to take a chance on ingredients and seasonings. You may just end up amazing yourself and your guests!

Returning to the squash soup, just to end this post, I believe this was an incredible way to enjoy squash. Between the ginger and nutmeg, along with the onion and apple, The Book’s authors get two thumbs up (or else scraping the bottom of the pot to get the very last drop), but only because of our variations!

And one final addition. Since writing the review, I’ve found it simply too unbearably hot to shop or cook or eat or…. So I’ve been tackling my small mountain of canned food (mmmm, spicy peanut sauce on tuna or on scrambled eggs or….). One of the cans was Wolfgang Puck’s Cream of Butternut Squash Soup. What a coincidence. Or not. Well, it’s safe to say that I judge our soup to be much better as the overwhelming taste of Mr. Puck’s commercial contribution was more of chicken than squash.

Cooking time (duration): 120

Number of servings (yield): 4

Meal type: lunch

Culinary tradition: USA (General)

My rating:4 stars: ★★★★☆

Microformatting by hRecipe.

EP – 14 Helenka’s Christmas Dinner!

httpvhd://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33wHvn_Pjv8

Ho, Ho, Ho, it’s Christmas … wha?
Well, not quite, cause you see I missed out on Christmas dinner back in December with Helenka but, not wanting something like *facts* get in the way of life, we decided why not do it anyway!

I must say I really enjoyed being surprised at what she brought. We really had a great time together and even the kitchen pixies helped with the whipped cream for dessert.

I do love editing these videos and have a lot of fun doing them, and I think you’ll see we did get a bit creative. We did film this episode originally in April 2010, although it will be June by the time you see it (yup, we have production values, and try to have as many videos in the can as it does take quite a bit of time to edit them down to 10 minutes; hmmm, I think I got my workflow down to a fine art now).

I’m leaving my notes this week on the short side so that you can fully appreciate the details Helenka has written about her dinner.

Have yourself a GREAT week!
Enjoy!
B&H =:)

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Helenka’s Notes:

Brian and I did not spend Christmas together in 2009 because he ::sniffs:: went away (out of town). Yes, yes, I’ve gotten over it. I think. So, instead, I entertained at home, inviting my chosen sister and my other chosen brother for two separate Christmas dinners. As you may have gathered already, my fingers don’t work as well as they once did, so I adapt things to suit my ability and comfort levels accordingly.

Before Christmas, I had wanted to roast a turkey. Well, not a humongous, traditional one, but certainly I’d looked with longing at the President’s Choice frozen Turkey-in-a-Box that comprised a boneless cavity filled with stuffing along with the attached pairs of legs and wings. I believe the weight was 1.4 kg. But the price was prohibitive (around $40). Still, I couldn’t help but be captivated by its sheer bonelessness. When I used to organize and host Christmas day dinners at my church (the first source for my chosen family) in the 1990s, a butcher nearby used to donate a large frozen turkey every year. One year, he decided the quality wasn’t adequate and donated two smaller fresh turkeys. The volunteer I’d asked to roast the birds did something spectacular. Yes, he boned them. Himself. And surprised all of us at the dinner with the most succulent turkey I’d ever had. Because, personal sekrit revealed, I don’t even like turkey. So you can see why I was tempted. But, to spend many hours roasting the thing seemed to be foolish, especially as there would be only two dinners with two people at each. I’d also prepared a turkey breast in the past, either plain or stuffed. But that still seemed like too much work. And I tire very easily these days, no matter how much Brian nags me about mind over matter.

Luckily, when I went food shopping in early December, I found two vacuum-packed pouches of Cooked, Seasoned, Sliced Turkey Breast from Lilydale. I’d already bought this product previously and had been quite impressed by the quality, taste, texture, etc. Please keep in mind that I still don’t like turkey which makes my reaction even more impressive. So I snatched up the pouches and froze them to retain their freshness.

Okay, so I had turkey. What else was I going to serve? There had to be gravy. So I picked up a couple of cans of mushroom gravy, as well as two packages of regular sliced, white mushrooms. I’m always surprised that the pre-sliced ‘shrooms are whiter, fresher and cleaner than the whole ones in general.

I also had two cans of whole berry cranberry sauce. I planned to add a splash of Grand Marnier (orange liqueur) prior to heating.

Of course, I was going to have stuffing, so I used two commercial brands. One was the traditional type, while the second had dried cranberries in it.

When it came time for me to make each dinner, this is how I did it. I sautéed one package of mushrooms before adding to the mushroom gravy and cooking in the microwave until very hot (two minutes on high). Then I added 6 slices of the defrosted, sliced turkey and continued to heat for 30 seconds only. A cover went on the dish and it was placed on my shiny heated serving tray (the first time I’d ever used it: woo-hoo).

I prepared the stuffing mix, once again in the microwave according to package directions. It, too, was covered and placed on the tray.

I heated up frozen President’s Choice petits pois (baby peas) in the microwave, according to directions (a couple minutes on high), added a pat of butter, covered the bowl and it joined its companions on the tray. [Helenka’s apology: Oh, Brian, I forgot ALL about the peas – and you know how much I love this brand. Will you forgive me?]

Finally, I emptied the can of cranberry sauce into another matching bowl, added the splash of liqueur, stirred and heated it in the microwave for a couple of minutes on medium heat. And, yes, it joined the other dishes on the tray.

I could hear the liquids bubbling away and was very, very, very pleased to know that all the foods would remain piping hot while I placed several cut-glass bowls on the table filled with cherry tomatoes, black olives and other little taste sensations. For dinner with my chosen sister, I’d bought a bottle of Strawberry Zinfandel (because she’d specifically asked for strawberry wine coolers) and, yes, it was quite strawberryish.

As the serving tray was less than two feet away from my left elbow when I was seated, it was very easy to serve and to offer seconds. So I loved the fact that I could entertain without having to keep running into the kitchen constantly (and that had been my express intention for purchasing the serving tray).

Desserts were purchased baked goods (mini brownies and mincemeat tarts with whipped cream) and clementines, a traditional Christmas fruit.

The only change with the second dinner was that I roasted the sliced ‘shrooms drizzled with olive oil for 20 minutes in a 400 degree oven because I was simply too exhausted to stand over the stove to sauter them. In retrospect, I should have given them 30 minutes. And I goofed with the turkey, heating it together with the gravy for two minutes on high. But John, my other chosen brother, said it tasted fine. I served an organic Merlot which was very mellow. And, as we were both stuffed (and tired from the days around Christmas), we didn’t even feel like eating clementines for dessert.

The only dishes I didn’t include in either dinner (though it had been on the menu originally) was ham that I’d baked earlier during December in the oven with rye whisky, that Brian then sliced and I’d frozen in small batches. I’d intended to make a rye-sugar sauce but never got around to it. And I’d also thought of making scalloped ‘taters. But, seriously, there was more than enough food to satisfy all three of us. And the serving tray could hold only so much.

In any case, I’m very proud of the fact that I could make and serve a very nice dinner without any assistance. Because, oh, I should tell you about the special combined Titanic/Buckingham Palace dinner party where I had both my chosen brothers in the kitchen in 2007 trying to pick up the slack when I’d run out of gas. But ::giggles:: that’s a story for another day.

Recreating Christmas in April:
Well, as I had a younger and sturdier chef to cook while I was perched on my throne being all imperious and giving instructions (though Brian certainly has his opinions on not cooking in microwave ovens, so I let him do his thing). I’d provided him with a few sorry stragglers of sautéed mushrooms I’d done earlier and he heated them up in a saucepan together with the can of ‘shroom gravy. He also added dried thyme which enhanced the flavour. I’d also prepared the commercial stuffing mix in the microwave just before he picked me up. So it went into a warm oven with a spoon or two of water to keep it moist while he cooked. The cranberry sauce went into yet another saucepan along with the Grand Marnier.

He’d chopped up the ingredients for the salad before taping, so he then combined half a medium thinly sliced red onion, a few vinestalks of cherry tomatoes, three sliced green onions, a chopped, small, very firm red pepper and several crisp leaves of heart of romaine. I decided he should make a salad dressing, using olive oil, balsamic vinegar and honey dijon mustard. He’d decided that the turkey didn’t need any additional heating up, as it was already defrosted.

As this was supposed to be a family dinner, I wanted him to showcase all of the food on a large platter. He arranged the 6 slices of turkey in the middle (and I still can’t believe that 1 portion or 3 slices = only 70 calories), poured mushroom gravy over them, placed scoops of dressing in the corners covered with the rest of the gravy, and decorated with a bit of cranberry sauce and cherry tomatoes. I carried the rest of the cranberry sauce to the table as well as the salad that was in a huge glass bowl.

He served me a plate covered in yummy, traditional goodness onto which I drizzled cranberry sauce all over. And I’m saying that with much glee! I served myself some salad. And we had our drinks (a little rye whisky, Forty Creek Double Barrel Reserve from John T. Hall, the owner of Kittling Ridge Winery, and ginger ale). Here’s what Wiki has to say about this whisky.

QUOTE:
Forty Creek Barrel Select is a blended Canadian whisky, 40% alcohol (ethanol) by volume, 80 proof. It is made with rye, barley and Indian corn (maize). Each grain is fermented, distilled, and aged separately to produce a “méritage” of single grain whiskies. After distillation using a small-batch, copper pot still, the whiskies are aged separately 6-10 years in small cask 40-gallon white oak barrels of varying toasting levels. Vintage sherry casks round off some of the aged whiskies after they are blended, for an additional six months.
UNQUOTE

I purchased this on the recommendation of a very helpful (come on, Brian, I want an echo from you, because you were there at the time) LCBO clerk in December, 2008. He said that this was a very smooth tasting whisky and contained a higher ratio of rye as opposed to corn which is a cheaper grain. The clerk also sold us Creme de Banane and said that, if we mixed it with Sprite, it would taste like an alcoholic Creamsicle dwinkie. Thank you, very nice and helpful clerk.

Finally, even though we were pleasantly stuffed (from what else but stuffing), Brian brought out our desserts. Whole strawberries, stems still attached, with lots of freshly whipped cream to which Brian had added Grand Marnier (gee, we really got some good use out of that tonight) and sugar, topped with his surprise, brownies he’d baked. Okay, time out for mmmm-mmmmmm-mmmmmmmm. Walnuts and chocolate and brownieliscious goodness. Certainly a terrific ending to a meal. And, of course, I left him with his wee loot bag (okay, so it was Halloween themed) that contained a bar of Hershey dark chocolate, a bag of plain M&Ms, a Tootsie Roll and a tangerine.

I’m just thrilled that we got to celebrate Christmas together, because it’s the togetherness that’s the most important thing and not the actual date on the calendar. Oh, and the shocking fact: we didn’t even use any salt from the Salt Chest. But we did grind some pepper onto our dinner plates.

 

Pictures Below Courtesy of Helenka

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