Archive for the Travels to Distant Lands 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.

An Evening of Thai!

Posted in Travels to Distant Lands on January 28, 2008 by theredkettle

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As I mentioned earlier, I was recently asked to cook a simple supper for a book club gathering, and it was requested that the food be Thai. With the help of Mrs. Kelly, who is an exceptionally good cook and organizer, I found a recipe online for Spicy Curry Noodle Soup with Sweet Potato and Chicken, which seemed like it would be suitable. Sheila also suggested a good salad dressing with Thai flavors for a wilted baby spinach salad. And, as I mentioned in an earlier entry, I decided on a Fallen Chocolate Cake for dessert. Pictured above is the spread at the dinner table, which I had no part in setting, but which I think is quite lovely.

Unfortunately, I didn’t stick around long enough to take any pictures of the soup after it was served and garnished, but I do have a few of the process. The recipe can be found at epicurious.com, and a lovely picture of a bowl of soup not mine, but probably quite similar in appearance to that which these ladies ate.

Because it was such a production, and because it was my first real catering job, I shall give you the blow by blow. The soup was relatively simple to make. I began by cooking in oil garlic, shallots, a little each of ginger and galanga root, lemongrass, curry powder, green Thai curry paste (I didn’t have the yellow the recipe called for), and spicy red chili paste in the bottom of a large pot until fragrant. I then added a lot of coconut milk and chicken broth, and some fish sauce, and brought it all to a boil. This was done a day ahead and refrigerated overnight.

Separately, and also a day ahead, I blanched snow peas and cooked cubed sweet potatoes and rice vermicelli noodles, which I then refrigerated along with the vegetables for garnish: red onion, sliced thin, green onion, and cilantro.

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The day of book club, I boiled the broth and added the sweet potatoes and thinly sliced chicken thigh which cooked quickly. This was a new experience for me– I am a vegetarian and haven’t cooked much meat before, but this went pretty smoothly despite my worries.

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Now for the salad. I dressed the baby spinach leaves fairly early in the day in order to let them wilt a bit– they seem to be easier to eat when they’ve had a chance to soften some. The dressing was of Sheila’s invention, and contained canola oil, natural peanut butter, ginger, rice wine vinegar, lime juice, and later after tasting it post-food processing, a couple handfuls of peanuts and some soy sauce. Although at first it tasted too citrus-y, when eaten with the spinach it turned out very well. I later added to the salad some mango, cucumber, and red onion, which looked very pretty pre-tossing.

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Because the cake is meant to be eaten warm or at the very least, fresh, I timed it to be removed from the oven at the last possible moment. The soup too is designed for last minute assembly, so my mom helped me pack the peas, noodles, and garnish items in Ziplocs, and we put them with the salad and whipped cream (for the cake) in a large box to be transported to the party house. The cake remained in its springform pan, to be unmolded and dressed up later. The soup remained in my lap during the car ride, which proved tricky and a bit messy, since snowy roads do in no way make for a bump-free trip. But all arrived safely!

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I later received word that the food was enthusiastically received and that there were recipe requests. I’ve been thinking it could be an outstanding summer job, if I organized well and could muster enough courage, and enough customers. Here’s hoping the next job goes as well as this one did.

Oh, and I can say for myself that the soup turned out well, because I did set some aside with no chicken so that Sheila, my dear consultant, could try some, and I got a bite as well. A winning recipe. Definitely Red Kettle material.

Tapas!

Posted in Travels to Distant Lands on January 28, 2008 by theredkettle

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This particular cooking endeavor I can take very little credit for– I was merely one of several contributors to this evening of good food. My mother and Mrs. Kelly and I decided one day that some night we should experiment in Spanish cooking, and so sure enough, soon we were making tapas! Sheila taught me all about how to make Tortilla Espagnol, which will certainly be on the Red Kettle menu, among many other things from the other night. The list of menu items on this particular evening included: Crostini of numerous varieties, the Tortilla Espagnol, broiled green beans with sea salt, stuffed mushrooms, several experimental appetizers involving cheese, and of course, olives (because what would any evening of good food be without olives??)

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Featured above, top, then left to right:

Tortilla Espagnol: potatoes and onions cooked in a ton of olive oil, with beaten eggs poured over, in a casserole dish and popped in the oven.

Very thinly sliced Parmesan, topped with really high quality, syrupy balsamic vinegar.

Mushrooms, stuffed with Parmesan, garlic, and something else (I took no part in this– mushrooms are not my fave.)

A Spanish raw sheep’s milk cheese the name of which eludes me, topped with roasted red pepper and thyme.

In the upper photograph are some of the several renditions of Crostini we made using ciabatta, including some with winter squash-goat cheese-smoked sea salt-red pepper flake-roasted garlic-paste and topped with sliced figs, some with anchovies, capers, and roasted red peppers, some with pear-mustard jam, some with olive tapenade, and some with pesto and goat cheese.

Not pictured here, prosciutto and spicy pickled red pepper-wrapped mozzarella, and the broiled green beans with sea salt and tons of olive oil, which I, personally, think give French fries a run for their money. You know those money-laden French fries.

Things I learned (which I’d heard, but which it is important to experience for oneself):

1. Presentation ought to be high on the list of priorities, because who’d have thought cheese and balsamic vinegar could look so tasty — so much tastier — all lined up?

2. Tortilla Espagnol is perfect for a college-girl’s budget: potatoes, eggs, onions, and olive oil– a cheap and tasty meal that can look truly fab (see number 1).

3. (I kind of already knew this, but…) I want to go to SPAIN.

I’m done.

Shopping in Seattle

Posted in Travels to Distant Lands on January 16, 2008 by theredkettle

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Last weekend, I rode the 12 hours in the car to Seattle with my brother, Caleb, and mother to deliver Caleb back to school. While we were there, it was determined that we should do some shopping, particularly because I have been charged with the task of catering a party for some friends. The food is to be Thai and just hors d’oeuvres. I have been negligent with my photography, so there are fewer pictures than I would like.

My first foody experience was in a wee little place on Capitol Hill called Glo’s, very near where my brother lives, which serves only breakfast. They have really excellent Hollandaise, and truly supERB scrambled eggs and hash browns. High on MY list of favorite breakfast places, I’ll tell YOU.

Later, we walked down to the Pike Place Market, where we didn’t buy anything, but where it is so much fun to walk around because it is such a feasty for the EYES. Above and below are some pictures.

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Pictured below, a great bakery, and close by, Sur Le Table, a famoose kitchen supply store:

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Our last, and most important stop was at Uwajimaya market, which is like the Whole Foods of Asian food. I had a list of ingredients that can’t be found in Great Falls: lemongrass, kaffir leaves, Thai (Red) basil, galanga root, palm sugar, tamarind, Thai chilies, and glass noodles. We also bought spring roll wrappers and coconut milk for the better prices and selection. There were many rawther exotic-looking things that we didn’t find, like these really long mountain potatoes that a woman explained grow horizontally, three feet below ground, and these fruits that look like oranges from the top, but if you turn them sideways you’ll see that they are many-fingered and kind-of octopus-esque. Unfortunately, I didn’t have my camera for this. It was a great outing, especially after having gone out for really good Thai food the previous evening with my uncle in Bellevue.

I’m hoping I can get the Thai basil to last until I start making the food for the party, which isn’t ’til the end of the month. So far the menu is as follows: Thai corn cakes, spring rolls, grilled shrimp with some kind of Thai garlic-y sauce, these great things called Thai toasts, which usually involve pork but which I was taught to make with this meat-substitute called Smart Ground, which is very good, and for the meat eaters, some kind of skewer item involving chicken. I’m also planning on making several other Thai sauces and maybe a curry. Wish me luck!