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Monday, November 29, 2010

Wild Duck Pasta ala Jamie Oliver

This dish is one of my absolute favorites and perfect for the holidays.  The wine, garlic, duck and cinnamon make your house smell like Christmas morning.  It's time and love intensive, but well worth the effort.  

Now, I'm a hunter and have been duck hunting ever since I was a kid.  The problem with duck hunting is that when you're done hunting, you have a ton of ducks and most people don't know what to do with them -- myself included!  Wild duck is much different than raised or farmed duck that you get in a restaurant or store. They're smaller, not nearly as fatty, and have a much gamier flavor. Also, because they're migratory birds, the meat is much tougher than ducks that grew up on a farm. For years, I have gone to "duck dinners", large dinner parties where the hosts cook up a massive batch of ducks for a huge group of people, in hopes of getting rid of all of their duck meat for the year. With enough wine flowing, you usually manage to put a good dent in your haul, but it's tough to muscle 2 whole ducks down, that aren't cooked with care.


So, this recipe from my man Jamie has been a lifesaver.  It's in "Cook with Jamie", which is my favorite alltime cookbook.  In his book, it's called Gorgeous Slow Cooked Duck Pasta.  Now, I can't get my hands on enough ducks, and get requests to make this dish all the time.


What you need: 
2 Wild Ducks or 1 Raised Duck
6 Rosemary stalks, leaves taken off and chopped
6 Slices of Pancetta, chopped
1 Red Onion, diced
2 Celery Stalks, chopped
2 Carrots, chopped
4 Garlic Cloves, sliced
1 Cinnamon stick
2 Oranges
1 28oz can of whole, peeled, plum tomatoes
1/2 bottle fruity red wine, like a zin
Handful of golden raisins
Handful of pine nuts
Red wine vinegar
1 lb pasta, rigatoni, fettuccine or pappardelle are my faves for this.

First - roast your ducks.  Pre-heat your oven to 350F, salt and pepper your ducks, inside and out, then rub olive oil all over the outside.  Quarter one of the oranges, squeeze the juice into the cavity, then stuff 2 of the orange slices into each duck.  Roast, breast-side down in a roasting pan, for two hours, turning every 30 minutes. 

Now, I don't roast my ducks in the oven...  Funny story, when my dad was ill, he started watching TV, which he never did before, and become fond of the Home Shopping Network.  One day, a package arrived at my door -- it was the RONCO "Showtime" Rotisserie.  My dad watched the infomercial for an hour or so, and was so excited about it that he had to buy it for me...he was medicated at the time, I'm sure.  But, I gotta say, this thing really works!  I've made incredible roast chicken and pork on it, and for duck it is outstanding.  Easy to clean, too.  Thanks, dad.  So, roast or Ronco your ducks, and while that's going on, chop all your veggies. 
Get a large pot going on med heat, add a little olive oil and your pancetta.  Cook until golden.  Then, add your diced red onion, chopped carrots, chopped celery, rosemary, cinnamon stick, and garlic. Cook slowly until it all softens up, then add the 28-ounce can of plum tomatoes (drained).  Let that cook for a few minutes, then add your wine. Let simmer for about an hour.

When your ducks are roasted, take it out and let it cool, then strip all of the meat off the ducks.  Shred the duck meat and add it to the sauce.  Using 2 forks to pull apart the sliced duck meat works well.  But really spend some time shredding it up -- this will make your duck tender and gorgeous.  Then add that into the pot, cover, and let it simmer for at least 30 minutes, I recommend an hour an a half.  Check the consistency.  If too dry, add some more wine or a bit of water.  If too thin, take the top off and let it cook down.

When you're ready to eat, boil your pasta and when it's ready, toss it into the pot, and stir.  Than grate in the zest of 1 orange, and add in a good handful of your raisins, pine nuts and Parmesan.  Mix it in, plate, add a little parsley, and Happy Hunting.   

Monday, October 25, 2010

Awesome Cooking Blogs!



I recently discovered two AWESOME cooking blogs:

The Paupered Chef - www.thepauperedchef.com, by Nick Kindelsperger and Blake Royer, professional food writers and cocktail enthusiasts.

and

No Special Effects - http://manggy.blogspot.com, by Mark Manguerra - a 20 something(maybe now 30 something?) amateur chef from the Philippines, who is a Doctor in real life.

These are two really incredible sites with recipes that are right up my alley. Last night my wife made some amazing Califlower roasted with Cumin, Corriander and Chili from No Special Effects. It was out of this world.

I debated whether or not to share these blogs, because once you go to these sites, you may never visit The Regular Guy Again!

The bar has been raised, so I've gotta step up my game big time.

Finding Inspiration


Just got back from my annual fall trip to Montana. So incredibly beautiful and peaceful there.

What was I doing in Montana?

Well, wait for it...wait for it...

Hunting.

GULP.

I know that many readers out there may have an issue with hunting, and I can tell you that I sometimes find myself conflicted about it as well. But, at the end of the day, I'm not a vegetarian and I believe that hunting is actually a much more humane way to provide meat for your family than buying it from growers. Even when you buy organic and free range meat and poultry, those animals are being farmed versus living free until the end. They have good lives and are eating completely naturally. There's nothing more organic than that.

If you haven't seen the wonderful documentay FOOD INC., I highly suggest you check it out. It's a really informative film, done by the guy who wrote The Omnivore's Dilemma.

Anyway, Montana's natural beauty and game provided me with some culinary inspiration -- great dishes for pheasant, duck, wild turkey and venison coming your way, right in time for the holidays.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Afternoon Snack, Table for 1


"Big Ups" to the UK for checking out The Regular Guy -- and to my neighbors in the north, "Sup Canada?" Canada ia my home away from home...esepcially T Dot and Munchreal.

So...my wife was out of town this weekend, which means I was on "Mancation"...obviously, it was time to get seriously wild and crazy.

So, after hitting the Venice park yesterday with my 15 month old daughter, I put her down for a nap and broke out the goods...oh yeah, a whole smorgasbord of aged cheeses and some beauty figs...oh yeah, it was both wild and crazy. Those guys in the Hangover got nothing on me.

Seriously though, there's no finer afternoon treat than some bread, great cheese and some figs. Get some fig spread too while you're at it -- it's fantastic and makes any cheese even better. So next time you're at the market, spend a little time in the cheese section and make an investment. Aged cheeses last for a long time in the fride, and ther'yre great to have on hand for an impromtu get together or when your friends pop over. Get a nice blue, a manchego, a St. Andre, Etorki, and maybe another hard cheese, like a good parm to start, and venture out from there. May want to keep a decent bottle of dry riesling in the fridge, too, just in case!

Friday, October 8, 2010

The Bolognese


First I'd like to give a shout out to the folks who have visited my blog from around the globe - that's you in Russia! I'm talking to you, my friend in Taiwan. France - you're beautiful, hope to see you soon. Tanzania - respect. And Singita South Africa - hope you're keeping it real in the Sabi Sands.

So the weather has turned in Los Angeles (last week anyway), and it feel like fall may be finally upon us…what could possibly be better on a rainy Sunday, than to fill the house with the incredible aroma that comes from cooking a beautiful Bolognese sauce? It makes a house a home.

I mean, who doesn’t love a good Bolognese? Vegetarians and vegans may not eat it, but I’m sure most would have to admit that it’s pretty damn good! Lately I’ve been working on my “Last Meal” -- don’t worry mom, I’m not off to the gas chamber or anything, but I have been thinking, somewhat morbidly I suppose, if I were to have one last meal on this earth, what would it be? Well, I can tell you that Bolognese would be on the menu – probably as a Primi, but it would def be on there.

So a little history on the sauce. As most of you probably know, the word Bolognese, roughly translates to “meat sauce as it is made in Bologna”, Italy, the official recipe of which, was registered with the Bologna Chamber of Commerce on October 17, 1982 by The Accademia Italiana della Cucina (Italian Academy of Cuisine),.

However, Bolognese is considered to be the most widely abused recipe in all of Italian cooking and what many people consider to be Bolognese, is not. For instance, did you know that Spaghetti is not the traditional pasta used for Bolognese? It’s actually Tagliatelle. Interesting, no?
So many Italian chefs were up in arms about the abuse of Bolognese that they banded together to create “Bolognese Day”, in January of this year. The Telegraph reported that “In an attempt to restore the integrity of the dish known to millions of British diners as ‘spag bol’, nearly 450 chefs in Italian restaurants in 50 countries cooked Spaghetti Bolognese on Sunday with authentic ingredients including pancetta, carrots, celery, onions, tomato paste and a dash of wine.”
So obviously, this dish is a national treasure and taken very seriously. However… while the official recipe is fantastic, is it really the only way to make Bolognese? I think not. Bolognese has been around much longer than 1982 and was likely started as a rustic dish that poor Italian famers made, scraping together various ingredients to make a sauce to serve with pasta.

Saveur magazine interviewed Alessandra Spisni, owner of the cooking school La Vecchia Scuola Bolognese, who put it this way:
"Ragù was traditionally made at home, so every version—if it has been passed down for generations within a family—is as authentic as the next. Who is to say whether my neighbor's ragù is more Bolognese than mine or less? ...I learned it like I learned to talk, little by little. It's very traditional: I don't use olive oil because we've never produced olive oil in this region. Instead, I always use rendered pork fat. I add thick tomato purée, not the concentrate in tubes from the supermarket. And it isn't traditional to use broth, so when I do add liquid to the ragù, it's water. A family with little money and many mouths to feed wouldn't spend hours simmering a rich meat broth only to put it into a sauce. That means that the meat has to come from the most flavorful cuts. We don't raise cattle for steak here in Emilia like they do in Tuscany; our beef comes from older cows, so it's very tasty, but it must simmer and tenderize for hours. I use red wine, not white, because those are the types of grapes that grow in the hills outside the city. The tannins in the red wine help to break down the meat. I never use spices or milk. Those ingredients are added to correct something—nutmeg to sweeten overly acidic tomatoes, milk if the meat is too gamy—but they aren't part of the recipe."
So, even though there may be an “official” recipe, Bolognese sauces are actually a highly personal, familial dish – a Coat of Arms of sorts, the recipes of which Italian families pride themselves on – and guard like a national secret!

Now I’ve messed around with Bolognese for years…I’ve tried different combinations of meats, with carrots and celery and without, white wine vs. red wine, different blends of aromatic herbs…I’ve done a bunch of experiminenting, and have finally landed on what I feel is “My” secret recipe, which “Mama” is more than happy to share with my loyal constituency.

Time – 3 Hours. A Labor of Love!!

What you’ll need:

1lb ground beef
1lb ground veal
1lb gound veal
6-7 THICK slices of Pancetta. I’m talking 1/8” thick.
6-10 Cloves of Garlic
2 big yellow onions
2 cans whole, peeled plum tomatoes
2 cans tomato paste
Handful of rosemary
Small handful of thyme
¾ btl cheap, but good red wine – cab, valpocello or barberra is good.
Large stock pot.
Food processor

Now, there’s not a whole lot that goes into a Bolognese, but the execution is very important, which is why I like to get everything prepped and ready to go first. First, preheat your oven to 400 degrees. Oven? For Bolognese? Yeah, I know, you’ll see.

Then peel all your garlic and press with a garlic press – right into the stock pot (not on stove yet), then, pick the rosemary and thyme leaves from the stem and chop up fine – throw that into the stock pot. Next, cut up your pancetta into small squares – throw that in the stock pot. Now take your stock pot and put it on the stove – medium heat, add a glug of olive oil. But don’t burn your garlic! You want the heat to be hot enough to brown the pancetta and render the fat from it, but not burn the garlic, so gently sautee it.

Next, peel and dice the onions. When the pancetta gets golden, add the onions and sautee for another 5 mins. While that’s happening, drain the whole tomatoes of liquid, then reach in with your hand and push down on the tomatoes to squeeze any excess water out, and drain that too. Put the whole peeled tomatoes into the food processor and whizz them up into a nice thick ragu.

After 5 mins, when the onions are nice and soft, add all your meats, some more olive oil, and a good bit of salt and pepper, and brown it for 5 min or so. When the meat gets nice and brown, turn the heat up to high, and slowly add ½ of the bottle of wine. Stir, mix in well. When the wine just starts to boil, add the tomato ragu. Stir in well, add some more salt and pepper to taste, and another ¼ of the red wine. Bring to a boil, stir, then add one can of tomato paste. Stir the sauce to make sure the paste really mixes in – this should thicken the sauce and turn it a beautiful color red. Now, the second can, is optional. It’s really a taste thing, and a sauce thickness thing. The second can will make the sauce more zesty and a little less powerful in terms of garlic and wine flavors. It’ll also take longer to cook down without it. You may want to try just a ½ second can. Up to you really. So I added the second can and mixed it in, and again, salt and pepper to taste.

Tasting your Bolognese, is really important. I probably tasted my sauce 30 times, easily. You need to keep tasting it – does it need more wine? More salt? More pepper? You really need to keep tweaking as you go, so the flavors cook into the meat. Once you’re happy with the taste, cover, turn the stove off and put it in the oven for 90minutes.

Why the oven? A little trick I learned from my man J.O., who thinks that if you do a sauce in the oven instead of on the stove it cooks it evenly, from all sides, and you don’t have to work about the bottom burning. Pretty smart, especially with a Bolognese that eventually does require a lot of stirring anyway – this minimizes it as much as possible.

After 90 minutes, remove from the oven, put back on the stove, uncover the pot, give it a few good stirs, taste (don’t burn your mouth). Now at this point, the sauce was missing something for me…I wanted a little bit of a bite, a tang to my Bol, so I added a good couple of dashes of red wine vinegar – probably 2-3 tablespoons. It really made the sauce. So add it. Now bring the sauce to a boil – low heat’ll probably do it… If you have a splatter screen to cover your pot, it’ll be useful. And now the real work begins…

You need to reduce this nice looking tomato sauce by about 50%, without burning the bottom. This sauce needs to become a Bolognese and the only way to do that is with a little love, patience and elbow grease. Here’s what you do Set a timer for 3 minutes – let the sauce boil for three minutes, then actively stir for one minute with a wooden spoon, being sure to really scrape the bottom of the pot to make sure nothing is sticking and burning. Repeat the process for about 30-45 minutes, or until the sauce has reduced down to a dense meat sauce – as pictured. If you put some in a bowl by itself, a spoon should almost be able to stand up in it.

When your sauce looks good, turn the heat off and let it rest. Boil some water, add salt and olive oil, and drop in some fresh Tagliatelle or Pappardelle for three mins. Drain the pasta, and serve it up with a hulking ladle of Bolognese and smother with parmesan.

It just doesn’t get better than that!

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Grilled Pistachio Pesto Opakapaka with Tomato, Sweet Onion and Chili Relish

This one is a winner...

I love Sundays, especially during the fall. You've got the return of football and your team still has a chance, the air is getting crisp, and ski season is on the horizon. Sundays are also great days to cook. Rather than jjst parking it on the couch with a beer, why not sort yourself out for the week and make some great stuff with NFL Sunday Ticket on in the background? That's what I did Sunday anyway.


So, I hit the farmer's mkt, and picked up some nice looking Opakapaka. Opakapaka is also known as Crimson Snapper or Hawaiian Pink Snapper, and is a mild, white fish -- which is just what I like. Anything that tastes slightly fishy...just can't eat it. On a sustainability level, Opakapaka is okay, depending on where it's caught -- preferably the Northwestern Hawaiian islands where the populations are still healthy. A good alternative to Opakapaka, according to Seafood Watch is Farmed Striped Bass.


Brooke, meanwhile, wanted to make some more fresh pesto, but this time instead of using pine nuts as in traditional pesto, she used pistachios -- which turned out beautiful. The pistachios give the pesto a much richer flavor and thick, hearty texture. As good fortune would have it, both pistachio encusted and pesto are common preparations for Opakapaka, so it seemed like we were in the chips.


We also have a bunch of tomatoes on hand -- our four tomato plants are finally producing, so I decided to make some kind of tomato relish. We made the relish and pesto Sunday, then put it together last night, which was great, because we had a great dinner on a Monday night that took almost no time to get together.

Here's what you'll need:


1/2 lb Opakapaka or Farmed Striped Bass
2 handfuls of various small to med sized tomatoes
2 Fresh Chilis - I used Cherry Bombs and red Jalapenos
1 Sweet Onion
2 cups fresh basil
1/3 cup Pistachios
2 cloves of garlic
1/2 cup olive oil

To make the pesto, please see my "Pesto Buccatini with Diver Scallops" post, but subsititute pistachios for pine nuts.

For onion portion if the relish, make sauteed onions ala Jon Waxman, as in my previous bay Scallops post.

Take your tomatoes -- small to medium sized like cherry, roma, and lemon boy, grab a knife and give them some stabs. You want the tomatoes to break open and fall apart, and this will give them a head start. Clean your chilis (slice open, remove seeds and the while spongy stuff inside), cut in half and then into 1-2" strips. Put the chilis into a sauce pan, add some olive oil and sautee for about 5 mins. Give them a good bashing with your wooden spoon as they cook. Add salt and pepper. After 5 mins or so, add a cup of dry white wine, bring to a boil, then simmer on low heat for about an hour. The tomatoes and wine should really reduce down to a cutney like consistency. Once the consistency is to you liking, combine the tomatoes with the sweet onions, and simmer for 10 minutes.

After combining the onions with the tomatoes, turn your BBQ on full whack and heat to 400-500 degrees. Then, rinse your Opakapaka and pat dry. Season with salt and pepper and rub both sides with olive oil. Then, coat the fish with your pesto -- you may need to add a little more olove oil to it to get it to spread nice on the fish. Don't be shy, get a nice coating on there.

Grill the fish about 6 minutes a side with the top closed or until your fish is white, but slightly translucent all the way through.

Plate, cover with relish, eat and enjoy!

Monday, September 20, 2010

Bay Scallops ala Jon Waxman


Brooke's not a big fan of scallops and in fact, she wasn't wild about the pesto/scallop pasta I made recently...but I'm not giving up! She liked the flavor of the dish, but she has a problem with the texture of scallops. She doesn't like the soft, smooth, fleshy nature of them, so I decided to try out Bay Scallops. And it worked! She loved the dish and because the scallops are smaller, they cook through a bit more and have a texture closer to chicken.

The great thing about scallops is that they are flavor sponges -- they just soak up whatever you give them, and because of this, you don't need to over season them. They can absoarb delicate, complex flavors really well, which is why chef's often have them on the menu -- so they can really show off!
I found this recipe in Jon Waxman's book, "A great American Cook", that I've been dying to try and it was far better than I could have even imagined. So here you go:

1 lb fresh bay scallops
1 cup dry white wine
2 lbs sweet onions
Unsalted Butter
Salt, pepper
Parsely

Put 1 cup of wine into a sauce pan, bring to a simmer, and simmer gently for 20 mins. Cut the onions lengthwise, then slice crosswise as thin as possible, or use a mandolin. Melt 5 tablespoons of butter in a large saucepan over med. heat. Add the onions, season with salt and pepper and cook over very low heat for 40 mins, stirring often. The onions will get super creamy. After 40 mins, add the reduced white wine.

Wash and pat dry your scallops, season with salt and pepper. Melt two tablespoons of butter in a skillet over med. heat. Add the bay scallops into the pan, spread them out evenly, and let cook undisturbed for about 3 mins, then strir them around for the next 3 minutes so they can cook evenly -- which is kind of hard because they;re so small, but do the best you can.
Place the onions on a plate, top with scallops, and garnish with parsely. Start with this dish as an app, and you are on your way to a good night!

Ps. When you take pics of your food, it's readily apparent why chefs use parsely -- it's just for effect and to give the dish some color. The yellow/white of the onions and scallops does not look all that appealing here, but if I had sprinkled some parsely over the top, it would have given the dish depth and color. But it tasted great.