Sunday, January 30, 2011

Lemon & Lime Fish Chowder

Lemon & Lime Fish Chowder

1 small leek, thinly sliced
2 TBL unsalted butter (don't substitute or leave out)
3 sprigs marjoram
1 1/2 lbs white fish (cod and sole), fillets
1/2 a medium lemon
1/2 a medium lime
salt to taste (1 tsp)
splash (around 1/4 C) of mirin cooking sake (sherry or white wine)
fresh parsley, chopped (optional)

I used to think that every meal would be improved with garlic. The problem is how often anything I cook tastes the same as any other thing I cook: garlic, oregano, black pepper. Tonight I set out to cook something that would bring out the best in the fish. Due to too much fish for too small a cooking pot, this became a chowder instead of poached fish. Happy accident!

In a 3 quart (or there abouts) saucepan, melt the butter. Add the leeks and cover. Cook on medium heat until soft but not brown. (About 3 minutes.) Cut a couple thick slices of lemon.

Cut the fish into 1/2 pieces and place in the pot on top of the leeks. Add the marjoram and the lemon slices. Squeeze the juice out of the remaining lemon and the lime, over the fish. Cover and cook over low heat. (About 5 minutes.) Add the mirin. Let simmer uncovered for another minute. Don't overcook; you'll lose the "broth". When the fish flakes easily, remove the pot from heat and gently turn all the ingredients, removing the marjoram twigs, slices of lemon, and any pips or bones that got loose.

If you're serving this, you can garnish it with a pinch of chopped parsley and one of the lemon slices, which should still look pretty good, since this all cooks very fast. I would say that this serves 2 people generously. I ate the whole thing, I will admit, and it was too much. I ate the whole thing partially because it was soooo gooood and partially because I don't think this is something that will hold up to reheating. I was too hungry/impatient/lazy to make rice or angel hair pasta to go with the fish I wanted for dinner; again, I think that turned out for the best. While some crusty bread would compliment any fish chowder, I don't think this needs it.

It's all about the fish and the butter, but the delicately musty marjoram, the mildness of leek, and the zingy mix of citrus, further sweetened with the mirin, were the right supporting flavors. Sole by itself would have been mushy. The fillets are so thin, they are better for flash cooking. Mixed with the cod, which is a pretty robust fish, the sole broke up the dominant flavor and added texture interest.

No photo. I had nearly eaten it all before I thought, "I should post this."

Saturday, January 15, 2011

It won't always be a beautiful breakfast


If every breakfast could be fruit and tea, every day would start out pretty awesomely. Today wasn't a fruit day, and maybe not awesome, but still, pretty cool. I cooked bacon on my George Foreman grill. I attempted to cook an egg, but forgot to correct for the slope and therefore got a very thin omelet out of about 75% of the egg. (The rest was lost to the grease collection.) Plus cheddar cheese and corn tortillas, so nutritionally not on par with bananas, apples, and honey.

I haven't wanted to cook anything from raw on the little electric grill, in an effort to keep it sanitary. It makes great sandwiches. Today I discovered that it also makes great bacon. The cut-down-for-size strips cook flat, and to just the right crispiness. They don't swim in a pool of bacon grease and burn.

The clean up is a lot easier, so I saved water, too. Yay!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Eat Pretty

I took a photo of my dinner last night. It wasn't a special meal, but it looked pretty. All it was was battered fish (Trader Joe's calls them Fish Nuggets, LOL) squares with mustard greens that had a little onion, garlic, and lemon. It might end up in the food album on Picasa eventually, though the pic is still on my phone at the moment.




I'm not very good with presentation, but I like what I eat to be pretty, so improving my meal presentation is something I have been working on without realizing that I'm doing it. I focused my intent to do so at some point, and then it ran on autopilot. The splash of warm color that carrots or a curl of lemon zest provide creates an ember of aesthetic pleasure for me.

The good thing is that food is pretty in smaller portions. Also, veggies and fruit are prettier than "brown and white" meals.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Honey, Almonds, Dried Figs, Dried Apricots, and Two Colors of Raisins

The timer is on its final 10 minutes. I've peaked at the baking, and I think it will be done at the projected time.

Wouldn't it be great to stick to the rule of dessert only once a week? It's unlikely. I've already had an oatmeal raisin cookie today (from Little Ray's Bakery, all natural). After dinner I had a craving for something sweet, but not sugary, yet not one of the deliciously perfect gala apples of which I still have two. I wanted something like the baked honey-date-butter-phyllo creation I made that one time a few years back. I didn't want anything that was only at its best while still freshly made, like a scone.

Using a coffee cake recipe as a guideline, I came up with this:

Batter
 1/3 Cup light brown sugar (tightly packed)
2 Tbl butter, cold
1/3 C oil (Canola, because that's what I had on hand)
1 egg
1/2 C plain yogurt (Greek style, in this case)

1 C All Purpose Flour
1 tsp Baking Powder
pinch of salt
pinch of ground Cloves
1/4 tsp ground Ginger (lackluster stuff)
1/4 tsp cinnamon

Fruit & Nut filling
Chopped dried figs, golden raisins, and Thompson raisins simmered in 1/4 of black tea with a cinnamon stick
Chopped dried Apricots
Whole dry roasted, unsalted Almonds
About 1/3 C (a little more than) Honey. (Mesquite honey from Trader Joe's, in this case.)

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Mix dry ingredients and set aside.
  3. Cut the butter into very small cubes and cream into the brown sugar with the oil. I did this by hand.
  4. Mix in the egg. Don't overwork it.
  5. Mix in the yogurt.
  6. Fold in the dry mix, adding a third of the dry at a time while you blend it with the wet.
  7. Prepare the baking dish. I used an 8" cake round lined with a circle of parchment.
  8. Spoon half of the batter into the pan. It will not cover the bottom layer.
  9. Drizzle on half the honey.
  10. Spoon on the soaked fruit (no extra liquid)
  11. Drizzle on the remaining honey.
  12. Layer the apricots and almonds.
  13. Top with the remaining batter. Using a rubber spatula, shaped the sides so that you have a dome of unbaked goodness.
  14. Bake for 35 minutes. Allow to cool enough to remove from the pan, but serve warm.





I love tea and fruit together, poaching fruit with tea or, as in this case, softening hard, dried fruit to make a soft filling. Black tea adds a subtle flavor. I just used a tea bag that had already been steeped once for a cuppa.

Yogurt is awesome in places where sweet recipes usually ask for heavy cream or sour cream. It's a good way to use yogurt that you don't want to eat, because you have too much of it, or it's been open for a while, or it just crossed the expiry date. (Look at me, using non-American words. Snark not.) Yogurt is less expensive than sour cream and far less expensive than heavy cream. I find it works well in scones, waffles, and coffee cakes (anything levened with baking soda).

Most batter cake recipes that I have made that call for butter work just as well with oil. I like to put a couple of tablespoons of butter to get some of butters oomph. Mixing fats creates all kinds of rewarding results in flavor and texture. Roll out biscuits and cookies have to be made with solid fat, and if it calls for shortening, don't think you can get away with butter. If you make a biscuit recipe with oil, you get a fluffy scone or bannock. Make it savory with cheese, herbs, and olive oil and you have a good thing.