Sweet and Spicy

Apricot Glazed Pork with Chipotle Sweet Potatoes

I’ve been doing more cooking that writing lately, the holidays will do that to you.  So I’ve got several recipes to post.  While I would prefer to write something witty and special for each of them, I’d rather get them up before next Christmas.  The recipes will just have to speak for themselves.

Apricot Glazed Pork Tenderloins

  • 2 whole pork tenderloins
  • 4 ounces apricot jam
  • Salt
  • Pepper

Heat oven to 350 degrees.

Dry pork with paper towels and season with salt and pepper.  Tie the tenderloins together with kitchen string for easier handling.

Heat an oven safe frying pan or grill pan over medium heat and lightly coat with vegetable oil.  Add pork and sear on all sides.  Remove from heat and spread apricot jam over the top of the pork with a spoon.

Cook for 30 to 45 minutes or until the pork registers 160 degrees on an instant read thermometer.  Tent loosely with foil and let the pork rest for 10 minutes before slicing.

{printable recipe}

Chipotle Mashed Sweet Potatoes

BAH Note:  If you like things spicy, go ahead and chop up some of the chipotle peppers and add to the mashed potatoes.

  • 4 sweet potatoes
  • 4 teaspoons honey
  • 3 tablespoons butter, softened
  • 2 teaspoons adobo sauce (from one can chipotles in adobo sauce)

Peel the sweet potatoes and cut into large chunks.  Fill a large sauce pan with about an inch of water, place a steamer basket in the pot, and fill the basket with the sweet potatoes.  Cover, bring the water to a good simmer over medium heat, and cook for 30 to 40 minutes until the potatoes are fork tender.

Carefully remove the steamer basket and mash the potatoes with a ricer.  Add the butter, honey, and adobo sauce and stir to combine.  Season to taste with salt.

{printable recipe}

Modern Art

basquiat-untitled_1981_jpg
Jean-Michel Basquiat

There’s no picture of this dish because all the Picnik or Photoshop in the world couldn’t turn what I photographed into something pretty. Kind of like how I don’t see the “beauty” in modern art.  If you say it’s there, then I’m sure it is.  But I just don’t understand how splatters and lines and chaos on a canvas can be called a masterpiece.  I look at the Basquiat image above and have no reaction other than confusion.

I think this dish could be a food interpretation of modern art.  It involved a lot of splatters and some chaos and somewhere under all the mushrooms and Marsala is hidden beauty.  It has to be.  You just have to look hard.  Oh, that’s right, I didn’t post a photo. So I’ll let you draw your own picture.  Continue reading “Modern Art”

Foolproof

Maple Glazed Salmon with Asian Slaw

I don’t utter that phrase often.  It’s  like a loaded gun waiting to go off.  I might think something is foolproof but since I’m not in the kitchen with you, I can’t know if ingredients get substituted or the recipe is somehow changed.   And I don’t want to be responsible for kitchen drama.  I cause enough of it at my own house.  That’s why I try and use words like “nearly” or “darn near” anywhere close to the phrase foolproof.  But sometimes I slip up. Continue reading “Foolproof”

Chicken Curry In A Hurry

Chicken Curry In A Hurry

Dear Bon Appetit,

Please advise who tests your recipes before they go to print?  After making the Chicken Curry In A Hurry from the October 2009 magazine, I’m wondering if you actually read your own recipes.  Here’s why:

#1 – You don’t specify whether the chicken should be skin on or skinless.  Not seeing a directive to remove the skin, I kept in on.  And I had a thick layer of grease staring up at me from the pot when I went to serve.  Ick, nast.

#2 – You specify 3 to 3 1/2 pounds of chicken to be browned in one batch in a large skillet.  Assuming that 12″ counts as a large skillet, please advise how this is possible.  I used all thighs and three pounds worth equaled 8.  If I were to try and brown all eight pieces at once, I’d steam the chicken before I browned it.  Dividing the chicken into two batches makes much more sense.  Especially since the curry paste likes to scorch and the pan needed to be wiped clean.

#3 – Did you really fit 3 pounds of chicken, 14.5 ounces of diced tomatoes (and juice) and 3 cups of onion into a skillet?  Seriously?  I found that I needed to switch over to a 5 quart pot after the chicken was browned off.  You must have magic skillets.

#4 – Did you verify that 25 minutes on a low simmer was all that the chicken needed to cook completely?  Sorry but I really didn’t trust that and tacked on some additional time.  Chicken Curry In A Hurry is a nice idea but Chicken Curry In A Hurry And A Visit To The Emergency Room is not.

#5 – If you’re going to tell me to use a spice that I have to specifically go out and buy, does it have to be $15 per half ounce or whatever the grocery store was charging for cardamom.  Would it have been so hard to suggest alternate spices to use in place of cardamom?  And now that I have an entire container, minus 1 1/2 teaspoons, what the heck do I do with the rest of it?

#6 – I notice a complete absence of any reference to adding yogurt to the final sauce.  For those of us who want to cut the heat of a curry, a tablespoon of plain yogurt mixed into our serving plate is a simple solution that I didn’t see mentioned in the recipe.

#7 – How, in spite of all the above noted items, does it end up that this recipe worked so well?  Must be the magic skillets.

Best Regards,

Wendi @ BAH

Chicken Curry In A Hurry

Bon Appetit September 2009

  • 1/2 cup milk Indian curry paste (such as Patek’s)
  • 1/3 cup white wine vinegar
  • 3 tablespoons minced peeled fresh ginger
  • 2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cardamom
  • 3 to 3 1/2 pounds cut up chicken
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 3 cups chopped onion (about 2 medium onions)
  • 1 14.5 ounce can diced tomatoes in juice
  • 1/3 cup chopped fresh cilantro

Combine curry paste, vinegar, ginger, cumin, and cardamom in a food processor.  Blend into a paste.  Transfer spice paste to a large bowl, add chicken pieces, and rub to coat well.  Season with salt and pepper.

Heat 1 tablespoon oil in a large nonstick skillet or dutch oven over medium  high heat.  Add chicken pieces and any  remaining spice paste to the skillet.  Cook about 3 minutes per side or until well browned.  Transfer chicken to a platter.

Add onions to skillet and cook until golden, approximately 5 minutes.  If the pan dries out, add water one tablespoon at a time.  Add tomatoes and juice, bring to a simmer.  Add chicken to the skillet and bring back to a simmer.  Reduce heat to medium low, cover and cook until about 25 minutes until the chicken is cooked through.  Turn chicken once during cooking and add water by 1/4 cupfuls to thin the juices, if desired.

Sprinkle with fresh cilantro and serve.

{Printable Recipe}

En Papillote

En Papillote

Traditionally, cooking en papillote means using parchment paper.  Not the kind you write on, so don’t go looking for it at your office supply or card store.  It’s baking/cooking paper that is treated with a bit of nonstick magic and it has countless uses in the kitchen.  Sure I use it to line cake pans and cookie sheets and wrap things like sandwiches, but in a pinch I also use it like a funnel for dry ingredients or a nonstick surface to roll out doughs.  It’s pretty freaking versatile.  I prefer the precut sheets that King Arthur Flour sells and I find that the 100 count really is a Best Buy.  The $19.95 that I just spent to restock my supply will get me a year, maybe a year and a half, or parchment perfection. Continue reading “En Papillote”

Tender Loin

Cocoa & Chile Rubbed Pork

During my marathon blog reading session, courtesy of Mr. Bittman, I wandered over to A Lusty Bit of Nourishment. How’s that for a great name? A few clicks later, I was introduced to Cocoa & Chile Pork Tenderloin. As I’ve said before, I love, love, love, the combination of chocolate and spice. So it was only a matter of time before I pulled a tenderloin out of the freezer and gave this a go. Continue reading “Tender Loin”

French Chicken In A Pot

fcip

French Chicken refers to the cooking method, not some crazy requirement to obtain a chicken from France.  Although I’m rather amused by the idea of a yard full of free range chickens squawking Le Cluck, Le Cluck.  And there was that episode of Iron Chef America that did use Blue Footed Chickens which are normally only found in France, if I remember correctly.  So maybe the idea of finding beret wearing, parlez vous francaising chickens in your grocery store isn’t that far fetched after all. Continue reading “French Chicken In A Pot”

Mango Salad with Seared Tuna

Mango Salad with Seared Tuna

Who came up with idea for the word leitmotif? I like words.  Alot.  But that one, in particular, always confused me.  Of course learning that it is derived from the German leiten (to lead) and motiv (motive), it makes perfect sense.  But I failed miserably at German I in college (I thought switching from French to German was a good idea because?) so without the help of Mr. Merriam Webster, I would have still been in the dark about that one.

Have you noticed any of the themes that run through my kitchen?  There are several leitmotifs hiding here at BAH.  Fast and Easy are probably the most obvious.  But if you poke around enough, you’ll see that I often try variations on a recipe.  So today I present you with another tuna experiment. Continue reading “Mango Salad with Seared Tuna”

Mother Necessity

Spice Dusted Tuna

Schoolhouse Rock taught me that necessity is the mother of invention.

Mother Necessity
With her good intentions,
Where would this country be
Without her inventions?

So when faced with a need, I try to get creative in my solution.  I look at what I do have and see if I can’t repurpose an item.  It’s amazing how many ordinary household items can be used in ways they are not specifically designed for.  For instance, did you know that in a pinch, a basket style coffee filter can be used to line a cake pan instead of parchment?  It can. Continue reading “Mother Necessity”

From The Files – Chicken with Rosemary Sauce

rosemary2

As I was fixing dinner the other day, the phone rang. Expecting it to be some random telemarketer, despite being registered on the Do Not Call list, I was surprised to see a number I knew on the Caller ID. It was then that I had a decision to make. See, most weeknights my default selection is for recipes that are quick. I tend to leave the long and lazy recipes for the weekend when I have more time to put into them. So I basically had to choose between a quick “how ya been?” before the timer went off or playing a round of phone tag with my caller. Continue reading “From The Files – Chicken with Rosemary Sauce”