Sunday, July 25, 2010

Spanish rice - as easy as the rice in the box, without the rice in the box taste

OK, so I really like Spanish rice. I'm like a long distance runner, I love to carb load... except that I don't believe in running unless I'm being chased by a grizzly bear, land shark or Godzilla, so I guess I'm not like a runner at all...

Anyway, Spanish Rice! I got addicted to great rice when I used to frequent a little hole in the wall taco joint in Seattle. Great street style tacos, but the rice was the perfect. The grains were tender but not mushy, the spices accented the meal well, but weren't too overpowering.

When I moved back to Salt Lake, I attempted to relive the experience but couldn't find something similar anywhere. I tried a number of the boxed Spanish rices for years and none of them were very good. Some were sticky, some were dry, some were the right color, but had no flavor. Some were a nuclear red-orange that looked like sweet and sour rice.

You know... nothing is worse that restaurant Spanish rice that has been soaked in a bland tomato sauce and is passed off as "a delicious side dish". No, Bad tacquiera!!! That kind of rice is just lazy and the affront to the senses should be pulverized and used as a substitute for kindergarten paste.

So I started tinkering with a few recipes that I found on the web and distilled it down to what I like. It has a few more steps than the boxed rice mixes, but has much more flavor. I actually will make extra so I can take the leftover to work the next day. Drench it in hot sauce, salsa and melted cheese, and then spread a little cubed chicken on top. You now have a great Mexican bowl. Here's the details:

Spanish Rice

Serves 4-6


1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable shortening
1 1/2 cups long grain rice
1/4 small onion, diced
2 cloves garlic
2 14.5 ounce cans of chicken broth
1 tablespoon taco seasoning (or 1+ teaspoons each of chili powder, cumin and coriander)
heaping 1/8 cup salsa
(Spicy version: add any of the following to taste (not all of them unless you want to burn out all of your nose hairs) : a couple teaspoons of hot sauce/habenero sauce, 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper, or one small minced jalapeno)

Dice the onion into small pieces. Mince the garlic cloves into very small pieces. Place the results of each to the side to add later.

Place a 2 quart or bigger saucepan on the stove over medium-high heat. Add the shortening and allow it to melt. Pour in the rice and slowly stir it until the rice begins to brown. At that point add the onions and stir for another two minutes so the onions start to become translucent. Add the garlic and stir for another 30 seconds. Add the chicken broth (watch out for the steam!), followed by the spices and the salsa. Stir until the concoction comes to a boil for two minutes, then drop the heat to low (add any spicy ingredients at this point too) and cover. Let it cook for another 20 minutes. Do NOT uncover unless it begins to boil over, and then uncover only long enough to let the bubbles subside.

Remove from the heat and let stand for another 5 minutes.

Place the contents into a bowl and fluff slightly with a fork and serve with any Mexican style dish. It pairs up well with the Beef Enchiladas, Tacos, Fajitas or Tequila Lime Enchiladas (coming soon).

Friday, July 23, 2010

Beef Enchiladas


My mother is the reason for my Mexican food addiction. First, we ate tacos about every other week as far back as I remember. Second, my mom had a recipe for enchiladas using canned chili that was really good. Third, she cans a few dozen cans of homemade salsa every year. It was a cooked/stewed salsa that probably more of a picante sauce, but still... man... it is AWESOME!!! She blends all of the ingredients before putting them in a 20 quart stock pot and slowly cooking it for almost 8 hours before pouring the heavenly sauce into the mason jars. This salsa spoils you for any other. I've yet to find anything that comes close. She still makes it every year when the the tomatoes come ripe at the local farmers markets and I always get a dozen or so. They sit in my freezer and I treat them like gold.

This enchilada recipe is something I've compiled after some experimentation. I like it a little better than the enchilada sauce in a can. It's got a fuller flavor and it's thicker, so it sticks to the tortilla and doesn't end up all over the plate.

Beef Enchiladas

serves 4-6

Enchilada sauce
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoon flour
1/4 cup chili powder
2 14.5 oz cans chicken broth
2 6 oz cans tomato paste
1 1/2 teaspoons oregano (Mexican oregano if you have it)
2 tablespoons ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon garlic powder

Meat
2 tablespoons cooking oil
1 1/2 pounds ground beef
1/2 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic

Other ingredients
4 cups Mexican blend cheese ( or cheese of your choice)
12 corn tortilla or 8 flour tortillas

Start with the sauce. In a saucepan, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the flour and mix together. Once the flour lumps are gone, add in the chili powder and mix until it's completely incorporated. Add the chicken broth and the tomato paste and stir until the tomato paste is completely mixed in. Add the oregano, cumin, salt and garlic powder and bring to a boil. After reaching the boiling point, drop to low heat and cook for about 15 minutes so it thickens up. Stir occasionally. While this is cooking down, move to the meat.

In a large skillet or saute pan, heat the cooking over medium high heat. Add the onions and garlic and saute them until the onions start to become translucent. Add the meat and stir until completely brown. Set aside for the assembly process. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

If you're using corn tortillas, I recommend that you either briefly fry them in oil or microwave them to make them more pliable so they don't tear when you roll them.

Once each ingredient is ready, it's time to assemble the enchiladas. Spray a 9 x 13 inch pan with cooking spray, then pour a little bit of the sauce in the pan to cover the bottom. Then take one tortilla, spoon and spread a small amount of the sauce on the inside of the tortilla. Add as much meat and cheese as you'd like. Roll the tortilla up and then place in the pan, laying the edge of the tortilla down so they don't roll open. Repeat until the pan is full. Cover the enchiladas with the rest of the sauce and sprinkle on as much cheese as you'd like. Wrap the top of the pan with foil and cook covered for 15 minutes, then uncovered for 10 more.

Serve with any greens or salsa you like, refried or black beans and Spanish rice, which is the next recipe you'll see...

Hot Fudge! Drizzle it on anything and it tastes better!

I've always been a sucker for GOOD hot fudge. Nothing's better than a chocolate mess that melts crevasses into a gob of ice cream, sliding off the face of the dessert and then pooling into the freshly melted but still chilled cream in the bottom of the bowl.

Now most of the bottles you can buy in the store have some chocolate in them, but there's a lot of corn syrup and congealing agents as well. And there's always that little bit of a waxy texture as well. I was partial to the Letherby's hot fudge for a while, but there were a number of times where the fudge's sugar would crystallize in a container I brought home, so it would go from smooth and silky to gravelly overnight in the fridge.

So I decided to make my own. It's simple, you can make a batch in about 15 minutes, and even make it with your kids. Place it in a mason jar when you're done and then store it in your fridge for up to a month. And you can freeze it for as long as you'd like.


Hot Fudge


1 stick butter
5 ounces of semi-sweet or dark chocolate, your choice
1 ounce unsweetened chocolate
3 cups powdered sugar
1 cup evaporated milk
1/2 cup whole milk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla

Melt the butter in a saucepan over low heat, then add the chocolates, increase to medium heat and fully melt them into the butter. Add half the powdered sugar and milks and stir until well blended. Add the other half and stir. Bring the mixture to a simmer over medium heat and simmer for about 15 minutes until it’s thick and creamy. Remove from the heat and stir in the vanilla. The sauce will thicken as it cools. Store in a mason jar or other airtight container in the fridge if you aren’t using it immediately.

To reheat, place the desired amount in a small bowl and microwave on high for 30-40 seconds.

There are lots of uses for this hot fudge. Ice cream, chocolate cake, the Peppermint Fudge Pie, and ... well, extra-curricular activities... wink, wink, nudge, nudge, say no more.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

The Award Winning Peppermint Fudge Pie


I won a contest with this pie.

No... really. It's true. I didn't believe that I would, but I did.

So I've already talked about how I've taken pies to the Radio From Hell group for X96. Back in 2008, they had their First Annual Tasty Pie contest. Now they had tasted my pies before and they said they liked them, so I figured I should enter and try my luck. But I thought that I would try something a little out of the ordinary and see if it would fly.

I created this veriation out of the blue and tried this recipe once to see how it turned out. I thought it was quite tasty, but my usual guinea pig, my wife, has never been a mint fan. So I was flying blind when I brought my pie to the station.

And after seeing some of the other entries, I was sure I wouldn't win. There were some absolutely beautiful entries. I even tried three different slices by contributing money to the Road Home shelter. Hey, pie can be breakfast food! Why do you think pop-tarts are so successful?

Anyway, there was an apple pie that made my mouth very happy and a tart Blueberry with an extremely flaky crust. So I went to work and resigned myself to losing. But they announced the winners at the end of the show, and I was SHOCKED to hear that I had won first prize: A concert flyaway to Chicago.

I took my older brother (my wife was pregnant, so she couldn't fly, no nasty comments about leaving her home) and it was the perfect weekend. It was two weeks after Obama was elected, so we experienced some of the hometown euphoria. It was the weekend before Thanksgiving, so we saw the Holiday Parade roll down the Miracle Mile. And it was the weekend of the annual BYU/Utah football game, so we saw the game on a 108" screen at the ESPNZone in leather recliners with food and drink brought to us at regular intervals. Absolutely GREAT weekend.

Back to the pie... this pie is just another variation of the Cream pie recipe and works especially well around the holidays when candy canes are prevalent. I highly recommend using the best chocolate you can find for the hot fudge. It's definitely worth it.

Peppermint Fudge Pie

First the Oreo Cookie crust....

1 package Oreos
8 tablespoons butter

Scrape the filling off of the cookies and place them in a gallon Ziploc bag. Eat the discarded centers, if you really want to...or just throw them away. Then using a rolling pin, rollover the cookies until they are at the desired consistency, somewhere between very small chucks to almost powdered. Melt the butter over medium heat in a saucepan. Then add the cookies and stir the cookies in until they have soaked up the butter. Scoop the mixture into a pie plate and press the mixture flat until the plate is covered. Cook in a 350 degree oven for 7 minutes. As the pie crust has cooled, move onto the filling.

30 starlight mints or 15 candy canes
2 1/2 cups milk
3/4 heavy whipping cream
1/2 cup sugar
5 1/2 tablespoons cornstarch
3/4 teaspoon salt
3 egg yolks
2 1/2 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/4 teaspoon peppermint extract

Before you start cooking the filling, crush the mints or candy canes in a Ziploc bag until they are crushed into very small pieces. Measure out 1 cup worth of the candies and set them in a bowl. Leave the remnants in the Ziploc bag for garnish later.

Separate out the three egg yolks, place them in a small container and mix them thoroughly. Hold onto them for later.

In a medium saucepan, thoroughly combine the sugar, cornstarch and salt to reduce the chance of lumps. Add the milk and cream to the mixture and whisk to ensure there are not any lumps present. Cook over medium heat and stir constantly to prevent any scorching. Once the mixture begins to thicken from the consistency of milk to that of warm pudding, scoop a small amount of the mixture into the egg yolks and immediately stir the yolks. This warms the yolks slowly so they don't curdle. (Tricky part is to keep stirring the filling and the yolks at the same time). Add more of the filling to the eggs two more times, then SLOWLY add the yolks back into the mixture. Once they are completely mixed, add the vanilla, butter and the peppermint candy. Remove from heat after another minute of cooking and stir the mixture until the candies are melted. Add the extract and food coloring until the color is thoroughly mixed and then pour into the Oreo crust. Place in the fridge for 3 hours.

Serve with whipped cream and garnish with the remaining crushed peppermints. And of course, drizzle or douse the slice with hot fudge. You could buy it from the store, but I have a homemade recipe that is much better than almost anything you would find on the shelves. And that is the next post...

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Homemade Chunky Marinara or Meat Sauce - and a Wine Recommendation!


I grew up a Prego man. My mom used it for all sorts of italian dishes. And honestly, it's not a bad store bought sauce. It's OK in a spaghetti emergency, but you taste the extra corn syrup. I tried a few others... but none of them were that good. Ragu tastes like Spaghetti-o sauce. Paul Newman's is better, but don't warm it up twice, it gets a little crusty.

So once I started cooking in my own kitchen, I thought that I should try to make one of my own. Now there were some suggestions. My ex-wife stated that her mom used to make a sauce out of ketchup... and after holding down the bile that was going to paint our university student apartment cinder block walls, I thought I should start doing some cookbook reading.

You know, marinara sauce can seem like one of the simplest things in the world. But to get the perfect combination of spice, tomato and other accents is pretty difficult. And ironically, it was my current wife who made the suggestions to make this sauce exactly the way I like it.

Ah... my wife. I love her so. She's my culinary guinea pig. I cook all sorts of outrageous recipes and she always is willing to try it. And she's always great at recommending slight changes. She's the one who recommended a small amount of pepperoni to add some extra flavor to the meat sauce recipe. So to my wife, I thank you, I love you and I will always make you anything you desire.

So after years of practice, I think we have a winner. I wanted to make a sauce that didn't require a lot of preparation. You can combine all of the ingredients and as soon as the spices are added, boil the water and cook the noodles. When the noodles are ready, the sauce is as well.

Marinara Sauce



Covers 6 portions of pasta

2 tablespoons olive oil (regular or extra virgin preferred)
2 cloves of garlic, minced
4-5 white mushrooms, sliced to whatever size you prefer
1 28 oz can crushed tomatoes
1 28 oz can petite diced tomatoes
1 small can tomato paste
2 1/2 tablespoons dried basil, or 1 1/2 tablespoons of freshly cut basil
1 tablespoon oregano
1 tablespoon Italian seasoning
1 tablespoon brown sugar

Heat a stock pot or large deep saute pan over medium heat and add the olive oil. add the minced garlic and mushrooms and saute for about 2-3 minutes. Next add the crushed tomatoes, diced tomatoes and tomato paste and stir until the paste is completely mixed in. Now add the spices and the brown sugar (to cut the acidity of the tomato paste) and stir. Once the sauce begins to lightly boil, reduce the heat to medium-low heat and cover loosely so the steam can escape. Better yet, if you have a splatter guard (big metal mesh pot cover), use that instead. Stir every couple of minutes while you cook your pasta. After about 15-20 minutes the sauce should thicken and be ready to serve.

Now a pure marinara is good, but I'm a carnivore. I need to have a little meat in there. Now you can anything you'd like. I've seen hamburger, Italian sausage, pepperoni, salami, chicken, and even panchetta added to marinaras and all of them are great. I really like the panchetta. For those of you have not tried this glorious creation, it's an Italian cured bacon that is sliced like salami. But it's pricey, like $14.99 a pound type of pricey. So what I normally use is the following...

Meat Sauce


Marinara Recipe listed above
1/2 pound ground beef
1/2 pound Italian sausage
2 ounces pepperoni

Follow the same instructions as above, but as you finish sauteing the mushrooms, add the ground beef and sausage and brown the meat. Next, add the tomatoes and spices, slice the pepperoni into very small pieces and add to the mixture. reduce to medium low and cook for 15-20 minutes.

And when your done, make sure you top your noodles and sauce with a little fresh Parmesan cheese.

This sauce also freezes well, so you can double or triple the recipe, place the leftovers in plastic containers and keep in the freezer for up to 3 months. And if you make a large batch, the ingredients you use will be cheaper than the pre-bottled sauces on the grocery store shelves.

I use this sauce for almost any Italian dish I create, like Manicotti, Stuffed Chicken Parmesan or Lasagna. I'll post each of these recipes in the next few months, so keep reading!!!

Oh and before I forget... A good glass of wine always goes will with pasta. Now there are people who say that you have to have a red or a white with a certain type of meal. To them I say, "Why are you being picky? Drink up and shut up!" I like to think that there's never a wrong choice, as long as you like the way it tastes!

My personal wine preference is a Reisling (light white wine) or a Cabernet Sauvignon (solid red) from the Chateau Ste. Michelle winery in Woodinville, Waashington. I was spoiled by its convenience when I lived 3 miles away from the winery during my short stint in Seattle, but I definitely partook of it often. I love how they taste and the name reminds me of my best friend in Phoenix. They're great wines, available almost everywhere and economically priced. My last bottle of Reisling cost $9.00. So if you're looking for a great bottle of vino, definitely try this out.