Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts

Hidden Stinky Treasure Salad

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I’m not too down with mould – the stuff on French cheeses sometimes looks a lot like strains I’ve encountered at the back of fridges or at the bottom of shower curtains. By comparison, the blue streaks in gorgonzola look positively clinical –an astringent shade of mould, like toilet cleaner, blurred at the edges as if with a paint brush. Not festering, wet and splotchy.

I’m quite into fermented beans and some fermented fish products though, so I wouldn’t say I’m against partially decomposed food. I’ve grown to enjoy the whole melted rounds of goat’s cheese that come atop salads in Germany: the same cheese that I used to think tasted like vomit due to the pungency and lingering acidity in the back of the throat.

The taste for super-funky foodstuffs seems to be something that can be cultivated, rather like the moulds themselves. Maybe my taste buds are simply dimming. Maybe at 70 I’ll be eating bowls of candied dried fish sprinkled with fermented natto-beans for breakfast, like cereal.

But I am still challenged by the small cheese shop in the centre of town that specialises in French cheeses, with that sock-like smell that wafts out when you pass the front door, and the multi-coloured, botanical garden of moulds in the window.

When we were in Barcelona in November, I found that Spanish cheeses suit my timid yet adventurous palate very well. There are lots of raw milk and goat’s milk cheeses in Spain, and a lot of interesting textures, from the curd-like pliancy of the breast-shaped Tetilla, to chewy and crumbly aged caciocavallo or manchego. The Cabrales blue cheese is not as intense as some cheese writers make out, its enicillium cabralensis spores cultivated in humid caves.

I had read of one Spanish food commentator’s favourite cheese being Torta di Casar, a ewe’s milk cheese only 7% of which is exported abroad. I bought one from the cheese section of the supermarket under El Corte Ingles for 17 euros. The rind was nut brown and in its centre lichen-like white splotches were starting to form with, even more disturbingly, moist rust-coloured edges. I imagine the centre as being semi-liquid and fetid smelling.

So I did not eat it in Barcelona, instead wrapping it well and carrying it home to Germany in my hand luggage, to share with some friends who I knew enjoyed the whiffier side of life. We thought to serve it with crackers, but worrying that this would be too intense, decided instead to serve it in the manner of a delicious salad we’d eaten at Barcelona’s Bar Mut (picture above).

There, a smear of melted goat’s cheese (torta di cabra) spread on the plate lurked at the bottom of a refreshing salad of spinach, warmed walnuts, cherry tomatoes and fresh figs, balancing out the pungent cheese perfectly. It was very enjoyable to dig out little bits of hidden cheese with each forkful of leaves.

The improvised home version turned out to be just as good as Bar Mut’s rendition. I highly recommend using this ‘hidden smelly treasure’ salad technique next time you have a ripe cheese you aren’t sure what to do with.

The Torta di Casar was not liquid inside as I had expected, though very soft, so we softened it further under the grill for just a few seconds. The taste was funky enough to make a good counterpoint with the salad, to which we added a honey-lemon dressing and dried figs in place of fresh.

This was not a scary cheese, despite its florid casing: nutty and smooth with a round pungent flavour, almost reminiscent of fish sauce. As everybody finished their salads and began digging into the cheese with spoons and spreading it on crackers, I realised that Torta di Casar is best eaten by itself. Let me rephrase that: it is best eaten by oneself.

Muttering that they should not fill themselves up on cheese before I served the soup, I whisked the last crumbs of cheese away. It's hard to imagine coveting a Vieux Boulogne so, but who knows? As my age ripens, hopefully my hang ups will soften like ewe's milk curds in a warm, dark place.

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Good things: tetilla cheese with 'bacalao' cod products and dark beer.

Ah, the power of cheese!

Cooking With High Voltage Electricity


Things - Cooking with High Voltage Electricity from Bre Pettis on Vimeo.

Thanks Mandevu!!!! Cheese and grapes....hmmm, high voltage fondue?

Cooler Fun.

LN2 Avocado
Super freezing avocados

It is an amazingly simple task when it comes to blending super frozen items into a fine snow (vivid green coloured snow in this case) especially when you take food close to -196°C in a matter of minutes. The powder/snow that we created made a great finish for a tomato hops broth with a garnish of pure halloumi noodle which we also blended and bound with a percentage of Methocel A15C to form a wonderful salty cheesy take on pasta.

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Another cool use for LN2 is its ability to turn liquids into little pearls of yumminess, coconut pearls in this case. We used our mighty Pacojet to spin 100% pure frozen Thai mangos into a creamy sorbet then finished this little pre-dessert with coconut pearls made from fresh Thai coconut cream and then finished the shot glass with freeze dried "organic" banana granules which of course came from Switzerland.

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Mango, coconut, banana

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Soft shell crab salad (from the same menu)

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Chocolate chestnut dessert, cocoa nib ice cream (also from the same menu)

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Chef Rongs very cute two year old son seemed to enjoy the cocoa nib ice cream.

Gothically Drunk

el porro

Above is El Porró: the Catalan wine glass/jug. Sergi reckons his grandmother can pour it into her mouth with her arm extended straight in a salute as the wine cascades in an arc of half a meter. Don't pass his grannie the mic. And don't pass me the Porró 'cause I'm wearing a white shirt.

It was National Day of Catalonia on Thursday. Instead of celebrating by burning the Spanish flag like some people around here, we went to Set de Born xarcuteria and ate 'esqueixada': it's a salad of tomato, onion, vinaigrette, olives and soaked salt cod or 'bacalao'. Bacalao is also popular in Italy and Portugal: Mayuko tells me that in Lisbon, the signs advertising bacalao are strung up with flashing fluorescent lights that put the red light district to shame.
I really get that. Bacalao is awesome.

esqueixada

Catalan 'farm-produced' goats cheeses like Nevat goats cheese (acid), Sant Mateu (strong & tender) and Mutanyola (soft & tasty)

catalan cheeses

According to wikipedia, Catalunya has an official population of 7,210,508 from which immigrants represent an estimated 12.3% of the total population.

The name Catalunya either derives from 'Land of the Castles', or Gothia, "Land of the Goths" since the Spanish March was one of the places known as Gothia, whence Gothland and Gothlandia theoretically derived, though critics usually consider it rather simplistic.

Post wedding mash-ups Pt 2

lentil

That zip-locked lentil salad from Metzgerei Schmitz went a ways, even when we gave half to Carmen & Demi: I guess I never need to eat it again.

I still didn't find out what that nice orange cheese was called (Edit: I found out today. It's 12-month old Mimolette, a cheese from North France, coloured with flower seeds and flavourized by an insect called the 'cheese mite'). It's fun to eat things in extreme colours.

By the way, we still didn't figure out what to do with all those extra champagne glasses from Ikea. I am currently gazing through a forest of them on our kitchen bench.

We thought of giving half to Carmen & Demi, but Demi doesn't drink.

Next time I am asked for money by one of Cologne's executive bums (pseudo-anarchist alcoholics who sit on the footpath beside ATMs and curse people, when not playing petanque in the park), maybe I should give him a box of champagne glasses. They would either sip 90% proof out of them, or smash them over their dogs' heads. Either way, it could suit their brand of punk-ethos to a tee.

Post-wedding mash ups

goatrose

In the week or two after the wedding we managed to stretch out the left-overs quite well. Boy, I enjoyed them!
Above is fresh soft goat cheese from France, coated in dried petals. Thanks to Alice, John and Mayuko for the endless cheese feast!

I'm not really an expert on cheese, especially not French cheese. If visiting Holland I would often try to bring back some aged Amsterdam gouda; and in London, there are nice hard English cheese like Wensleydale. But when it comes to the softer, riper genre of French cheeses, I'm a bit in the dark.

It turns out that French cheeses really are all that – and you don't even have to go for the really smelly stuff. I loved the St. Dominin lavender goat's cheese below, just spread on toast, I ate in about 2 days all by myself! A sort of honey vibe to the lavender, and the perfect balance of yielding crust and subtle melting vibe. Almost porno. I am definitely going to go back to Manufactum for this!

lavendar goat cheese

peanutz

The dog's breakfast you can see above is what remained of a Peanut butter-almond-chocolate pie from the Fresh cookbook. I scooped it into a bowl to take up less space in the fridge. This decadent treat tastes a bit like Reeses Pieces - but you can sort of trick yourself that it might be healthy because it contains a few spoonfuls of tofu. It has a really good texture between pumpkin pie and toffee.

It's quite easy to make. Line a pie-dish or tart dish with crumbled dark chocolate cookies. Here is the recipe for vegan cookies (it's very easy).

Fresh's Double Choc Cookies

Combine 2 1/2 cups of maple syrup (or Agave cactus syrup, which is a lot cheaper, I got a gallon for 10 euros or something), a cup of oil and 1 1/2 cups dark chocolate chips. Combine 2 1/2 cups of dark cocoa with 5 cups of wholemeal flour and add to the wet stuff. Add a pinch of salt, and 2 tsp vanilla extract or to taste.

Scoop the batter in teaspoons onto a waxed cookie sheet, bake for about 20 minutes at 200 degrees.

Peanut-butter Choc Almond Pie

Combine cookie crumbs with 1 tbsp oil and 1/4 cup syrup (maple or Agave), don't mix too much, but don't worry too much if it turns into a paste. Line your dish and bake at 220 degrees for 10 minutes.

In a food processor, blend 3/4 cup smooth peanut butter, 1/4 cup raw sugar, 1/4 cup syrup, just over half a cup of firm silken tofu, just over 1/4 cup soy milk, and a pinch of salt.
Pour into crust and bake for 15 minutes.
When it has cooled, top with more crushed dark chocolate and almonds (optionally toasted/chopped), then refrigerate for at least 2 hours.

You can also freeze it without damage for a few nights.

cheeses

I am not usually the type of person to buy ingredients without an idea of what I'm going to do with them, so I am not usually the type of person to search around online for a recipe idea. But I wanted to make sure we did something yummy with the Roquefort Carles blue cheese from the wedding, before it went to waste. I wanted something fresh, but a blue cheese and pear salad sounded too healthy. I found a great recipe from Mark Bittman online where you blanch a mixture of veges in boiling water (we used green beans, fennel and zucchini) - put into a flat dish, season, sprinkle with 2 bread-slices worth of bread crumbs and then 1/4 cup of crumbled or grated blue cheese. Then bake! Awwwwwwwesome.

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Follow with several bottles of left over pink wedding champagne and a game of Shithead.

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Curry Sauce and Yoghurt

I got home at 9 pm tonight and went to borrow a cup of milk from my neighbour/ landlord/ co-supervisor/ dept convenor/ professor and he invited me to eat his strange pork chop with pumpkin concoction that he had cooked

And so I had a glass of wine and ate and then drank some more and ate junk food that his 14 year old son had left around the place....

Cheese Balls

And we chatted and I was told him about Hock, my husband, and how lovely he is and that when people meet him they tend to rethink their opinion of me in a good way

and my landlord/ prof/ supervisor said

"You mean he's the yoghurt to your curry"

And I giggled for a long time and said "yes"

Ginny's Goats Cheese

My sister in law is obsessed with goat's cheese and is constantly finding new ways to eat it.

This is her aged cherve wrapped in olive oil and thyme and prosciutto...she then baked it in an oven and served it with crusty bread
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This was a holiday brunch: fresh goats cheese and pine nut omelette
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Birthday Parties For Boomers

On Sunday we cooked my pops a special birthday dinner. He tunred 57 today. Happy Birthday Pops. We were going to take him out to a fancy schmancy hotel restaurant but I then realised that given that I am married to one of Bangkok's finest chefs and master of all things sous vide, we decided to make a little party at home instead.

Its pretty easy to please a baby boomer, you just have to pull out as many old school cordon bleu stops as you can and dose them thoroughly in wine. Set the table properly to add extra atmosphere. I even ironed napkins.

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To start Chef prepared a platter of smoked salmon (which Dad had actually bought back from New Zealand...he left all his clothes in New Zealand and arrived back with an entire suitcase of our national bread vogels, fruit and salmon) with accoutrements...it actually goes really well with dill and kewpie BTW
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Main course was an enormous wagyu steak with enormous slices of foie gras on top, dosed in tarragon, prune eau de vie and green pepper corns, served with baby potatoes and brocollini. The first time I had ever seen anyone eat such a thing was Christmas in Cambodia, when Chef J.LO smothered his celebratory steak with sous vide foie gras and proceeded to giggle the entire time he ate it. It seemed to have the same effect on my father....I personally couldn't finish mine, as it was far too rich.
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Noticeably absent from our dinner was my step mother, who doesn't eat beef due to a long standing Chinese belief that the evil father of Guan Yin (Goddess of Mercy) was supposedly reincarnated as a cow. Like a small number of Chinese she wont eat beef out of respect for the Goddess. She also doesn't drink much or eat a lot of cheese.

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Someone to Eat Cheese With

....Starring my favourite lady in the whole wide world.....Sahra Silverman (as a chubbychaser)...Amy Sedaris...and apparently in association with the Curb Your Enthusiasm people. It's coming to a screen near you.

Perhaps a new romantic comedy that won't make you want to puke...?


Cheesy
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Pork Roll

All this talk of bacon and chocolate and liver cheese made me remember the Ween album, chocolate and cheese...I don't know if they are the most prolific band when it comes to songs about food but they have a fair number including

- Candi
- Don't Shit Where You Eat
- Who Moved the Cheese

and this...Pork Roll Egg and Cheese

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