26 posts tagged “good food”
Strawberry Risotto (Rice Pudding)
Strawberries are in peak form right now. Here's a way to turn strawberries into a risotto -- it's really a strawberry rice pudding. Instead of chicken stock as your base you'll use milk and a bit of cream. Delicious!
We all know we're supposed to brush our teeth after meals. But has the humdrum of everyday tooth brushing got you down? Maybe it's time to mix it up a bit. Think outside the box. Move on from mint. We stumbled on a toothpaste collector who has an amazing selection of toothpaste. You've got to see it to believe it. It includes Hopalong Cassidy toothpaste. Who knew those cowboys were careful about their dental hygiene? And Scotch Whiskey flavored paste at 6 proof. We don't know if it prevents tooth decay, but it just might liven up your morning. See Dr. Val Kolpakov's entire collection here. While you're there, check out the recipe for ancient Egyptian toothpaste, dating back over 1500 years. Soot and gum arabic, anyone?
I've been making delicious Hunanese chopped salted chiles for the last few months. I've apparently been lacto-fermenting and didn't realize! The recipe is in Fuchsia Dunlop's book "Revolutionary Chinese Cooking" if you're interested, although it's not the most complicated recipe--just chiles and salt. As condiments go, salty, spicy, sour can't be beat.
Ok, so here's the recipe:
1 lb very fresh red chiles
1/4 cup salt
1) Wash the chiles and dry thoroughly. Cut off their stems and
bottoms and chop coarsely with the seeds. (Wear rubber gloves if
you're sensitive.) Place the chopped chiles in a bowl.
2) Add 3 and 1/2 tablespoons of the salt to the chiles and mix
thoroughly. Place in a glass jar and cover with the remaining salt.
Seal with a tight-fitting lid. Leave in a cool pace for a couple of
weeks before using, then store in the refrigerator once opened. The
chiles will keep for months.
Ms. Dunlop says this as well: "(The chiles) are used in stir-fries and
steamed dishes (steamed fish heads with chopped salted chiles is
currently one of the best-known and most popular Hunanese dishes), and
also is offered as a relish with noodles and other snacks."
I used short red jalapeno chiles because that's all I can find around
San Diego. I very rarely see long chiles ( I guess they're Korean or
Thai) but never red ones--only green. The red jalapenos have a pointy
end and are pretty hot, but I can't say what the authentic Hunanese
chile would be like, heat-wise.
I basically throw a spoonful in with stir-fried tofu or veggies or
whatever. But the thing I like the most is to eat it with steamed,
short-grained Japanese Haiga brown rice that I've mixed with a pickled
mustard-green Japanese condiment called pickled takana (or karashi
mentai takana). You can find it in the pickle section of Japanese
markets like Mitsuwa and it comes in a flat plastic puch. It looks
like a chopped up mixture of greens with a little red from red pepper
(but it's not hot) and has sesame seeds, cod roe (although it doesn't
taste fishy), and spices. I don't know if it's supposed to get mixed
with just-steamed rice, although I think I've seen bowls of something
that looked like it at the ramen places, but I think it's a good way to
get more veggies (pickled or not) into me and it's super tasty. I just
mix a spoonful of pickled chiles into my bowl of rice and cry my way
through dinner. I don't know what it is about the chiles I like so
much: you're chewing on some rice and get a little nugget of
salty/sour/hot that is such a kick in the butt.
So, I hope you try the chiles and let me know what you think and if you
come up with another way to eat them. Maybe I'll add them to my
sauerkraut and make the world's tastiest Hunanese German weenie...
Jennifer
Hello,
I listen to your podcast every week. I heard the goat cheese chocolate
woman talking about corn and chocolate and I had to write to you. It's
just a funny thing maybe you can pass on to her. I work night shift, so
sometimes I buy a frozen dinner to take for my late night lunch. I
know, they are not great, but I'm a sucker for the stuff. Sometimes I
get one that has a chocolate "brownie" and corn. It's always just a
little bit mixed together so it comes out as a chocolate and corn
brownie and it's DELICIOUS!! I tell people and they are grossed out,
but I swear, it's a great combination. :)
Great show!!! Thanks
Cindy
Dear Evan:
I have been using these that I made myself in something a little unusual I think. I heard about these lemons on your show I believe and made lots of jars of them. I am not sure my friends know quite what to do with them but they are happy to receive.
Low or Non Fat Yogurt
Berries
Ice
One piece of preserved lemon
Splenda (I have to watch carbs)
Blend to make a smoothie.
The combination of the sweet/fruit/lemon/salt is SO GOOD!
I love your show and listen to it every Saturday.
Cardie
Eagle-Rockdale Community Garden
If you come to our community garden please come see my Hoja Santa plants
that took quite a bit of tracking down to find. Now I need some recipes J
*
Rick Browne traveled around the world in search the best grilled foods in his book, The Best Barbecue on Earth: Grilling Across 6 Continents and 26 Countries, With 170 Recipes. He is the host and producer of public television's Barbecue America.
Moroccan Preserved LemonsMakes 1 quart
- 12 lemons with unblemished skin
- Kosher salt
Scrub the lemons under running water and pat them dry. Cut a
thin slice from both ends of each lemon. Set a lemon on end and make a
lengthwise cut three-quarters of the way through, leaving the halves
attached. Turn the lemon upside down and rotate it 90 degrees, and make
a second lengthwise cut, again three-quarters of the way through the
fruit. Pack as much salt inside the lemon as it will hold. Place the
lemon in a sterilized wide-mouth 1-quart canning jar. Repeat the
process with the remaining lemons. Press as many lemons into the jar as
possible, leaving some air space (1/4 to ½ inch).
Seal the jar and let it stand in a warm place for 30 days, shaking it each dry to distribute the salt and juice. As the lemons pickle they shrink, so if you like you can start adding additional lemons as the rinds of the first lemons soften and the juices in the jar rise to cover them. If the juice released from the fruit does not cover any added lemons, cover with freshly squeezed lemon juice, not water or processed lemon juice. This will prevent the top lemons from darkening.
To use, remove the lemons from the jar as needed and rinse them under running water to rid them of excess salt. Remove and discard the pulp, if desired. There is no need to refrigerate after opening. Preserved lemons will keep up to a year, and the pickling juice can be used two or three times over the course of the year to start new batches of lemon.
On today's Good Food we hear about French dining etiquette -- how you never ask for seconds of cheese and what it means when the host brings out a carafe of fresh orange juice (psst, it means it's time to leave!)
Have you ever inadvertently offended your gracious host in another country simply because you didn't know the etiquette? I'd love to hear about it.
I tried to get this to embed but for some reason, Apple isn't cooperating. Here's a link to the Good Food Music, Volume 2 that our Music Supervisor, Gary Mecija put together. We get a lot of requests for the music on the show and so he decided to put a new list of 14 tracks together.
Good Food, liked your story 6/21/08 about bottled water.
I'm a Los Angeles artist that uses empty water bottles in art installations called Ecolamps... check out my latest installation at Sundance Film Festival.
Thanks,
David Cooney
Thanks so much for your update on the bee situation! I was struck by
one comment. The writer interviewed said that bees were fed corn syrup
when not at a commercial grove. I try and avoid corn syrup but love
honey. Are there kinds of honey I can get gotten from bees not fed on
corn syrup?
Its more of a political agenda at this level than a health concern, but
I'm worried that the bees making my honey are exposed to this new insecticide. How can I avoid both the corn syrup and the poison? Where
are the bee keepers doing it right and how can I support them by buying
their products?
Sincerely,
anne
echo park
Good Food says: We'll find out for you. Stay tuned.
It can be savory or sweet. And it was the only dessert my mom ever made for us. And that's what made me teach myself how to cook.
What's your kugel story? Do you have one? I want to know.
- Evan