Archive for the Quick and Simple Dinner Delights Category

The Final Frontier

Posted in Quick and Simple Dinner Delights, Travels to Distant Lands on February 4, 2008 by theredkettle

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The time has come, the Walrus said, to post about Chris’s SURPRISE birthday party. The Thai food we made for it turned out very well. I think I will post individually about a few of the dishes and sauces that seem most important, but here are photos of the final spread:

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Spring Rolls: tapioca flour wrappers, and filled with glassy vermicelli noodles, bean sprouts, mint, basil, cilantro, carrots, and tofu, followed by a piece of soft-leaf lettuce.

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Spicy Garlic Shrimp with Snow Peas

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Sweet and Sour Cucumber Salad

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More Spring Rolls

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Chicken Satay with a Simple Thai Fish Sauce Marinade

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Tangy Tamarind Sauce

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Sweet and Syrupy Soy Sauce and Thai Peanut Sauce

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Corn Fritters and two very Spicy Dipping Sauces, one involving vinegar and chile flakes, and the other involving Thai bird chiles

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Thai Toasts, made with SmartGround, along with eggs, green onions, cilantro, white pepper, tamarind liquid, fish sauce, and stale white bread.

Tasty Trifles at the Table

Posted in Quick and Simple Dinner Delights on February 4, 2008 by theredkettle

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Well, I realize it’s no longer January, and I am now back in Oberlin, not Montana, but I have just a couple more posts to finish off the cooking-blogging project. And I also have an update on the banana-bread front… Caleb said he liked it. That, unfortunately, is all the information I have on the subject, as I did not speak to Caleb directly, but rather to my mom, who simply said that he liked it. But it must be said that based upon The New Best Recipe’s track record, it is likely to have been very, very good.

First, I must post about a meal I made long before all the catering began, which was TRULY delicious and included MANY of the items that must most certainly be on the Red Kettle’s menu:

Oven-Droopified Grape Tomatoes with Garlic and Olive Oil

Sweet Potatoes, Baked and Sliced

Mashed Potatoes with Basil and Garlic

Spicy Crispy Tofu

Very-Hot-Oven-Cooked Green Beans with Garlic, Soy Sauce, and Olive Oil

It was after this meal that I decided that the restaurant should, perhaps, serve largely a la carte options. Which is not to say that it couldn’t have more pre-arranged meals, but I do like the idea of being able to choose many of what might normally be thought of as side-dishes, rather than a main dish with one or two sides. It is something to consider, anyway.

What explanation of this meal shall I offer?

The tomatoes are done by simply putting some in a baking dish with a ton of olive oil and a bunch of garlic, depending on your taste, and cooking them at a very low temperature for a very long time– several hours. The trick is not to leave them in so long you forget about them and then burn them. Truly, that is the trick.

The sweet potatoes need few directions, I imagine, although it could be recommended that to cook them first in the microwave for a time, before placing in the oven does speed up the process, with little detectable difference in final product.

The mashed potatoes did inspire some research in the good ole New Best Recipe, which reported that after extensive testing, it was discovered that mashed potatoes are most flavorful in the end if when boiling them you leave them whole and unpealed, which does add to the total cooking time by quite a bit, but could be worth it. The test cooks also explained that it is best to first add butter to the potatoes having been mashed (preferably with a ricer), rather than milk, as it coats the somethings and makes for a smoother, creamier, less soggy final product. These I look forward to making with many additional ingredients, but the garlic and basil were certainly a good idea.

The tofu I sauteed in olive oil having rolled it in cornstarch, which made the result quite crispy, and I also cooked curry powder in the oil before adding the tofu, which gave it a more interesting flavor than it might otherwise have had. I would like to experiment here with more spicy ingredients, and other not spicy additions.

And finally… the green beans! These, in my estimation, FAR FAR exceed the taste, texture, and overall dining experience one can get with a French fry. It is my contention that they should replace French fries with these trusty vegetables, which are indeed reminiscent of thinly sliced potatoes except in color, in all fast food restaurants. The world would certainly be a better place for it, I think. To make them: Place, with some olive oil, soy sauce, and garlic, in very hot oven, and wait ’til they seem like the right texture. If they are left in long enough they become crispy, almost like a French fry. Sea salt also works very well for seasoning.

Try them out. These are some of my Favorites.

These ravioli were balanced perilously on the boring-exciting divide…

Posted in Quick and Simple Dinner Delights on January 28, 2008 by theredkettle

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Luckily, we fixed them just before they fell into that deep and dark abyss…

On a couple of occasions, it has been decided that store-bought ravioli and tortellini can make an excellent meal, with only a little bit of sprucing. My take on the sprucing this time around(which you can see pictured here)was the addition of as much basil as I could get my hands on, chopped up, a whole bunch of Parmesan cheese (or goat cheese, which I’ve pretty much decided is good on everything) and some kind of soft-ish nut, like pine nuts, walnuts, or I suppose pecans, though I’ve not yet tried that (all toasted). And be sure to use plenty of butter. I do not stand for this leaving-out-the-grease business. No sirree.

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This picture (which I couldn’t rotate, though I gave it my best effort… don’t hurt your neck, please, I just could never forgive myself) and that of the ravioli are from the dinner my mom and I had with a friend of ours who happens to be a graduate of Oberlin College, and who because she knew I was going there brought along her old co-op cookbook. It holds some recipes certainly representative of another era. Helen pointed out a hamburger and cheese casserole-ish dish, which I decided not to read.