Recipe: Massaman Curry

Massaman Curry

Massaman Curry

Massaman curry is very easy to make once you procure a can of the concentrated curry paste by Mesri. Personalize with your own ingredients, make it vegan if you wish, add protein or not, and kick up the heat of this mild base with a few hot peppers if you like. Serves 4-6.

Ingredients
1 can Mesri Masaman curry paste
1 can unsweetened coconut milk (we use Chaokoh brand)
1 c chicken or vegetable stock, plus more if needed
1 T ginger, grated
½ c onions, peeled
1 T oil for sautéing
½ c potatoes, peeled
½ c carrots, peeled
½ c protein of your choice, optional
2 T peanut butter
Handful of shelled peanuts, optional
1 jalapeño pepper, peeled and seeded, optional
Coarsely chopped mint or cilantro leaves, optional

Coconut Milk

We like this brand of coconut milk. The cream tends to settle to the bottom, so store upside down then flip it over when you open.

Method: cut onions, potatoes and carrots into bite size (about 1 inch square) chunks. Cook potatoes separately in boiling water till not quite tender, maybe 15 minutes. Sauté onion in oil till it becomes translucent; add carrots and ginger and cook over low heat till carrots are tender, stirring frequently. Add most of the can of curry paste, peanut butter and coconut milk and stir over low heat until combined and warm. Add stock, stirring, to desired consistency;  the sauce should be medium-thick. Add shelled peanuts and jalapeños if desired. Garnish with chopped cilantro or mint leaves and servw over rice.

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Boozy Baking with Great Exbaketations

Boozy Cake

My boozy cake with guidance from Great Exbaketations

Last night we attended a Yelp event, Boozy Baking with Great Exbaketations. Cheyenne, the master baker, led us through the creation of a rich chocolate cake and then hit it hard with a simple syrup infused with booze of your choice (Evan Williams 100 proof in our case; she usually uses rum). This is a great trick to add to your repertoire for those times you want a moist and sugary treat.

Boozy Slice

That dark streak in the middle is pure boozy, sugary decadence

The technique is simple. Prepare a simple syrup by bringing 1 c water and 2 c sugar to the boil, stirring occasionally; the sugar will dissolve as it heats. Cool this and transfer to a squeeze bottle along with enough booze for the flavor to come through. We used about a quarter cup of bourbon with a cup of simple syrup. Bake the cake as usual and let it cool slightly till you can remove from the baking pan, then squirt the syrup on the top of the cake in many places and let it soak in. We also poked a few holes to get the syrup to the interior, and squirted still more syrup onto the serving slices; these would have disappeared if we chose to ice the cake.

Rainbow Bundt Cake

Pride Month cake available from Etsy.

Great Exbaketations is a virtual bakery that will make cakes to order for local pickup in the Albany, NY area or shipment through Etsy anywhere in the country. They’re currently featuring a Pride Month special: a vanilla cake infused with cherry liqueur and covered with rainbow icing and edible glitter. 20% of proceeds  goes to In Our Own Voices, Inc., an Albany-area organization supporting the LGBT POC community.

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Recipe: Lentil Salad, Two Ways

 

Lentil Salads

Lentil Salads: with carrots and cilantro (l) and with olives, feta and mint (r).

Both these lentil salad recipes come from Cook’s Illustrated though we’ve made some changes. Because they have the same base preparation, it’s a good idea to make them at the same time though you wouldn’t necessarily serve them together. Each recipe will serve 4-6 as a component of a salad service with multiple choices.

Ingredients:
1 c dried green or black lentils (don’t use orange or yellow lentils which turn into mush when cooked)
1 t Kosher salt
4 c hot water (hotter than body temperature), for soaking
Chicken or vegetable stock
1 bay leaf
5 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed
5 T olive oil
½ t Kosher alt

For recipe 1:
1 large carrot, peeled and cut into 2-inch matchsticks
½ t ground cumin
¼ t ground cinnamon
Generous pinch cayenne
2 T lemon juice
2 T finely chopped cilantro leaves (some stem okay), plus more for garnish

For recipe 2:
¼ c finely chopped mint leaves, plus more for garnish
¼ c coarsely chopped kalamata olives, pitted
2 T white wine vinegar
2 T finely chopped shallot or red onion
2 T feta cheese, crumbled, plus more for garnish

Lentil Salad 1

Lentil Salad 1

Method: dissolve 1 t Kosher salt in 4 t hot water. Add lentils and soak for at least an hour. Drain and rinse. (According to Cook’s Illustrated, this step helps the lentils retain their shape when cooked.) Transfer the lentils to a saucepan; add bay leaf, garlic and an equal mix of stock and water to cover the lentils with an extra inch of liquid on top. Simmer until just tender, possibly 30 minutes, checking frequently to add water/stock if needed and make sure the lentils don’t cook. Drain lentils and pour over cold water to stop the cooking process. Discard bay leaf and garlic. Add 5 T olive oil and ½ t Kosher salt and mix well.

Lentil Salad 2

Lentil Salad 2

For recipe 1, mix the matchstick carrots with spices in a small glass bowl; add a little water, cover and microwave until just tender, maybe 1 ½ minutes. Mix into HALF the prepared cooked lentils along with lemon juice and cilantro leaves. Give the flavors an hour to develop then taste the salad and add more salt if needed.

For recipe 2, mix HALF the prepared cooked lentils with chopped mint leaves, olives, white wine vinegar, shallot/red onion and feta. Give the flavors an hour to develop then taste the salad and add more salt if needed.

Serve at room temperature, with garnish if desired.

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Recipe: Spicy Eggplant with Miso

Spicy Eggplant with Miso

Spicy Eggplant with Miso.

We had fond memories of the spicy eggplant with miso recipe from Japanese Country Cookbook, an artful paperback issued by the long-closed Mingei-Ya in San Francisco. But when we picked up a used copy we were surprised to discover most recipes were loaded with sugar. We’ve reinvented the recipe with zero sugar, since miso is plenty sweet on its own. Serves 4 as a vegetable side dish.

Ingredients:
1 lb Japanese eggplant (the long, skinny ones)
Kosher salt
Oil for sautéing
½ t red chili flakes
½ c or so chopped scallions, including the green
3 T red or yellow miso
3 T water or mirin or a combination

Method: trim off the stems and slice eggplant, unpeeled, on the bias into wedges about ¾ inch thick. Sprinkle exposed flesh with salt and rest in a bowl or colander until a good amount of liquid has been pulled out, about half an hour. Dry thoroughly with paper towels then sauté in wok or pan until eggplants are tender, maybe 7 minutes. Add scallions and sauté till slightly wilted. Add chili flakes. Mix miso and water/mirin and stir till it reaches a smooth consistency like heavy cream. Add to the eggplant in the skillet and mix in; heat through and serve over rice.

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The hunt for MegaChef

 

Oyster Sauce End Cap

Oyster sauce end cap at Shun Fat Supermarket. No MegaChef though.

We had avoided crossing the Bay Bridge on our previous Bay Area food crawl because I did not want to pay the one-way toll when I returned to San Francisco. It’s only $6 but if you are driving a rental car they may add a service charge for the toll tag, then bill you again every day till you turn in the car. But what I did not realize is that you can now make an online payment without using a toll tag. A game changer!

Kouign Amann Comparison

Kouign Amann from B and Rotha. Rotha’s is closer to the original with fewer laminated layers.

As with our earlier adventure, we started with a theme which was quickly abandoned. In this case it was a hunt for MegaChef oyster sauce, a Thai brand users insist is superior to all others. U.S. distribution is spotty, but with the myriad of Asian groceries in the East Bay surely we could find a bottle for a taste comparison.

Our first pin on the map was Shun Fat Supermarket in San Pablo (at the northern end of Alameda County, just before you turn inland) which had shown up in web searches for MegaChef. But first we would stop at Pâtisserie Rotha, a bakery which is said to have taken the mantle of best kouign amann in the bay area from B Patisserie in San Francisco. They’re only open from 7 to 11 (8 to 11 on Saturdays) and quickly sell out. The kouign amann was indeed excellent as was a croissant, a bostock and a version of the Chinese dan tat or custard tart. These pastries were dense, jewel-like and delicious. I was on my way.

Durian

No returns on durian! At Berkeley Bowl.

A visit to the eerily uncrowded 99 Ranch Market in Pacific East Mall yielded no MegaChef so it was back on the freeway. San Pablo Supermarket, as Shun Fat calls itself on its sign, had no MegaChef Oyster Sauce but they did have so many other oyster sauce brands that I realized a comparative tasting would be much more ambitious than I wanted. The hunt for MegaChef effectively ended at that moment though we’d continue to check for it at each stop.

Next on the itinerary were Monterey Market and Berkeley Bowl, two old haunts with fabulous fruit and vegetables in the tradition of produce markets run by Japanese-Americans. (Both had a grocery section with oyster sauce; neither had MegaChef.) I also stopped at the original location of the Cheese Board Collective to pick up a pizza and some cheese. (I’ve had complaints that the excellent sourdough baguettes here are simply leftover pizza dough but according to their website the opposite is the case; the collective started making pizza as a way to use up leftover dough and cheese.) Anybody visiting the Bay Area should put these establishments on their punch list, along with Chez Panisse across the street from Cheese Board on Shattuck. (Legend has it that Alice Waters located her restaurant in the “Gourmet Ghetto” specifically because Cheese Board was across the street.)

Cam Huong Bahn Mi

#10 Bahn Mi at Cam Huong.

Then it was down the road to Cam Huong, which I recalled as a solid bahn mi place from visits two decades ago. It’s moved from Oakland Chinatown to the gritty realm of International Blvd and is doing takeout only at present (as a general rule, Asian food places seem to be much more cautious about re-opening). I normally order the dac biet or special combination, but the best choices here are the #5 shredded pork with anchovy sauce (i.e. fish sauce) and #10 beef wrapped with onion. Really ideal balance of bread and quality fillings.

And now it was time to virtually pay my $6 toll and cross back in to San Francisco, where I picked up a kouign amann at B Patisserie (ordered in advance online, something you can do here but not at Routha) for comparison purposes. Since I still had the rental car, I made three more stops the following day, all in the San Mateo area. Takahashi Market is a small grocery store that gets an air shipment from Hawaii each Friday (not Thursday as on the website); the must-get item is ogo, a crunchy seaweed that commonly appears in poke in the islands but for some reason isn’t normally imported. Suruki, a few blocks down the street, is destination shopping for perfect sushi fish. They also have odds and ends at non-astronomical prices: I picked up about 2 pounds of yellowtail scraps for $4 and they made an excellent fish chowder. And they have MegaChef fish sauce, proof that the brand exists.

Wakuriya Takeout

Takeout kaiseki from Wakiruya.

The final stop on this odyssey was Wakuriya, a Michelin one-star kaiseki restaurant which is bravely serving its multi-course meal for takeout during the pandemic. The quality and presentation (including the world’s smallest ice pack, nestled in with the sashimi) were incredible and the value ($60 for the whole meal, normally $95 when served for in-person dining) can’t be beat. We were haunted by the rhubarb vinegar served with thin slices of wagyu ribeye, and will be trying  to duplicate it on these pages at some point.

At this point we were foodied out, with zero interest in MegaChef Oyster Sauce. But if we have second thoughts, we can always get it on Amazon.

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Recipe: Bleu Cheese Spread

Bleu Cheese Spread

Bleu Cheese Spread, which The Pleasure of Cooking calls “Coulis Bleu”.

You want bleu cheese on your burger, but the crumbles keep falling off. This Bleu Cheese Spread recipe is the remedy. Coat the top or bottom of your bun, the patty itself, or all the above. This is another recipe from The Pleasure of Cooking, adapted for mixing in a mini-chop instead of a full size Cuisinart. Makes about 2/3 cup.

Ingredients:
1 garlic clove, peeled
2 oz blue cheese, crumbled
2 oz cream cheese, cut into several pieces
5 drops tabasco
1/3 c neutral vegetable oil

Method: purée all ingredients in mini-chop. Spread on hamburger buns or whatever. Refrigerated, the excess will keep for a couple of weeks.

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Recipe: Onion Buns

Onion Buns

Onion Buns from Cooks Illustrated recipe.

This Onion Buns recipe comes from Cook’s Illustrated, in its very early days when it was a digest supporting a new product called the Cuisinart food processor. Update: we were completely wrong in the above recollection. The pub was called The Pleasure of Cooking and had no relation to Cook’s Illustrated other than a (probably intentionally) similar layout. To learn more, go down this wonderful rabbit hole on eGullet. We’ve standardized the instructions for non-machine mixing. Makes 8 buns.

Ingredients:
1 medium onion, about 5 oz, peeled and chopped
2 T unsalted butter
1 ½ t active dry yeast
1 t sugar
¼ c warm water
3-3 ½ c all purpose flour
1 t salt
3/4 c water
Polenta or semolina flour
1 egg or egg white, beaten with a pinch of salt

Method: dissolve yeast and sugar in warm water and rest till frothy, about 5 minutes. Sauté onion in butter till softened. Reserve about 2 T onion for topping and mix the rest with the flour, salt, yeast mixture and 3 c water in a medium bowl. Stir to combine well then rest (autolyse) 20 minutes or so. Knead the dough 7 minutes until it shows good gluten development, adding more water if necessary to hydrate dough; the finished dough should be slightly sticky but not wet.

Onion Bun Burger

Burger Time! with onion buns.

Cover the bowl and let the dough rise until doubled, about 1 ½ hours. Punch down the dough then divide into 8 balls. Flatten and transfer to a half sheet pan with a silicon pad that has been lightly dusted with polenta or semolina flour. Cover with plastic wrap or a towel and let rise 3 minutes until puffy. Brush the tops with beaten egg/egg white then add a bit of onion to each one. Bake in a preheated 425 degree oven 15-20 minutes until lightly browned,

 

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Recipe: Chicken Long Rice

Chicken Long Rice

Chicken Long Rice, a luau staple.

Chicken Long Rice is like chicken noodle soup with a kick of ginger. It’s a luau staple and reputed to be a good hangover cure. Makes 2 main dish portions or 4 appetizer portions.

Ingredients:
3 c chicken stock (should be intensely flavorful; reduce a standard stock or add a hit of good concentrated chicken bouillon if necessary)
½ lb boneless chicken thigh
Neutral oil for sautéing
2 T peeled ginger, sliced into batons
2 cloves garlic, peeled (optional)
½ t salt plus more to taste
1 package (2 oz) cellophane bean thread noodles, or use equivalent amount of thin rice noodles
2 green onions, sliced into thin rings including most of the green

Bean Thread Noodles

These are the noodles used for Chicken Long Rice. In a pinch, you could use “rice stick” noodles.

Method: salt chicken thigh(s) and sauté in a small amount of oil for a couple of minutes on each side, just enough to seal the skin. Drain oil and add ginger, garlic and chicken stock. Simmer over low heat till chicken is tender, about 25 minutes. Remove chicken and cool to handling temperature and cut into shreds. Return chicken to pot along with green onion and heat. Serve very hot.

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Recipe: Lomi Lomi Salmon

Lomi Lomi Salmon

We like the fish and tomato cut to a uniform 1/2 inch size in our lomi lomi salmon.

Lomi Lomi Salmon is a luau staple that deserves to be on a lot more mainland tables. It’s a light, refreshing mix of salmon and tomatoes with a hit of onion and salt and can be eaten as a main dish or a salad. We like ours as it was served at the Salvation Army Tea Room in Manoa Valley, with the salmon and tomato chopped into equal size pieces and a minimum of liquid. Serves 6 as an appetizer or 4 as a main dish.

Ingredients:
1 lb salmon fillet
1 lb (maybe a bit more) Roma tomatoes
1 t coarse Hawaiian sea salt or kosher salt, plus a bit more if needed after tasting
1/2 c sweet onion, peeled and chopped
3 green onions, including a lot of the green part, sliced into rings

Salmon Skinning

Use a filleting knife or other sharp knife to remove skin from salmon. Press the knife into the underside of the skin then cut forward to keep the meat intact. Don’t worry about a few ragged pieces; they’ll disappear in the finished product.

Method: if the salmon has skin, peel it off using a sharp knife and save the skin for a crispy treat. Salt the fish on both sides and rub it in (this is the first “lomi” or massage). Refrigerate for 2 days or a bit longer, turning the fish daily and rubbing the skin to distribute the salt.

On serving day, chop the salmon into half-inch cubes. Cut the tomatoes in half, scoop out seeds and pulp, then chop tomato into pieces the same size as the salmon. Mix in onion and green onion and toss or work with your hands to combine the flavors (this is the second “lomi”). Refrigerate at least 2 hours then taste before serving and add salt as needed; we used an additional 1/2 t. Serve very cold

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Recipe: Radish Kimchi

Radish Kimchi

Radish Kimchi

Radish kimchi is just as good as the kind made with Napa cabbage, and at typical prices for daikon is also a lot cheaper to make. We like the recipe from My Korean Kitchen because it contains a number of halmoni (grandma) techniques, and have changed it only to genericize some of the ingredients. Makes about a half gallon, enough to fill one of those big kimchi jars.

Ingredients:
2 lb daikon, peeled and cut into 3/4 inch cubes
3 green onions, including some of the green part, sliced crosswise into 1/2 inch pieces
2 T sugar
2 T Kosher salt

½ small brown onion, peeled and chopped
½ small red apple, cored and chopped
3 T fish sauce
1 T garlic, peeled and coarsely chopped
½ T ginger, peeled and coarsely chopped
¼ c gochugaru (Korean chili flakes)*
1 T rice flour or white flour
¼ c water

Radish Kimchi Cure

After mixing, ready for the cure.

Method: toss the radish with the sugar and salt and rest for an hour at room temperature. It will throw off quite a bit of liquid. Rinse well and drain in a colander. Mix in a bowl with 2 T gochugaru (adding it separately provides extra color to the kimchi) and green onion. Meanwhile, mix rice flour and water till lumps are absorbed then heat in a microwave oven for 1 minute. It will become a sticky paste. Combine in a mini-chop with onion, apple, fish sauce, garlic, ginger and 2 T gochugaru and blend into a slurry. Combine with the radish mixture and blend until very well mixed. (Tradition is to use your hands, wearing gloves, but a big spoon works fine.) Allow to cure at room temperature for 24 hours then transfer to a jar and refrigerate. Radish Kimchi will be ready to eat in a week and will stay crunchy for several weeks thereafter.

*This provides a fairly mild chili taste, which is desirable if you are serving this along with a spicier kimchi in a panchan assortment. But feel free to add more gochugaru if you like, either during the preparation or after tasting the next day before you refrigerate.

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