Showing posts with label last supper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label last supper. Show all posts

Friday, July 24, 2009

The Last Supper, pt 3


Right? A part three? Halfway through the cooking of the soup I was starting to question if I was really up for a part three. And then I remember that because the only mushrooms I can find at the farmers market are so damn expensive, this might be my last note.
A general disclaimer here: The only other time I’ve ever had chicken marsala was at the dorms. And lets be real, dorm food isn’t exactly real food. As my first attempt at marsala chicken, I felt it could have gone better. This wasn’t bad, but it also wasn’t super amazing.



Still adapting from Smitten Kitchen
Chicken Marsala and Mushrooms

3 chicken breasts
1 cup marsala wine
3.5 teaspoons butter
2 tablespoons minced parsley
¾ pound mushrooms
Salt and black pepper

Season the chicken breasts with salt and black pepper, and then cook in the pan with butter (use olive oil for a healthier alternative). Take out, and cook mushrooms with wine until mushrooms are cooked through. Add in chicken to get the marsala flavor, then serve, adding the parsley on top.
This would have been better with the onion I forgot, and maybe some garlic, or at least not on its own. It wasn’t bad, but if you have a better recipe send it my way. Part of it may have been I took some shortcuts in the cooking by this point.



Well, tomorrow starts my eating local, we’ll see how that goes. Also, in very exciting news I got a new roommate tonight, and lets just say that she is pretty adorable and the best thing to happen to my kitchen floor.

The Last Supper, pt 2



Until very recently I have never really made soup. Besides the kind that comes in cans, and even then I was never a huge fan. So it is with more than a little trepidation that I started making this squash soup, but it just seemed so colorful and fun that how could I not?
While the bread was resting, I began to chop up all my ingredients to prepare.

Adapted from Smitten Kitchen
Summer Squash Soup

½ onion, diced
2 sticks of carrots, thinly sliced
2 pounds of yellow squash (I used sunburst), halved and thinly sliced
1 potato (it was supposed to be yellow fleshed, but I just used russet), thinly sliced
½ teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 cups chicken broth


Brown the onions by sautéing them with the butter and salt, about 8 minutes. Onions, by the way, are super tasty but make me cry and I spent the vegetable part of this evening by the window before returning for only a couple of chops, before going back to the window. (Side note, these squash are perhaps the most adorable ingredients I have ever worked with)


Once the onions are ready add everything else, and bring to a boil. Then simmer for 20 minutes covered. Remove from heat and uncover, and then take out your blender. In batches, puree the soup, use caution. Return to pot, thin with water and/or season with salt, then simmer for another three minutes. And there you go, soup!




On top of this soup, of course, is something else very tasty. Which I’m glad for, because by itself the soup is a little bland for me.




Still adapting from Smitten Kitchen
Pistou

¾ cup loosely packed basil leaves
½ cup loosely packed parsley sprigs
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons water
¼ tablespoon salt
1 dash paprika
1 clove garlic (finely diced)




The original recipe called for mint leaves, not basil, but I wanted to work with what I already had in my garden. Add the basil and parsley, puree in a blender, add everything else. Spoon a little in a swirl over each bowl of soup, pretty and tasty. And, according to my family, it was unbelievable that the soup did not contain cream.


Seen here with the homemade bread

The Last Supper, pt 1


Tomorrow I embark on something a little scary. I’m going to eat local for an entire week, local being a 150 mile radius from my location in pretty urban Seattle. I’ll be documenting and doing this for my anthropology of food class, and while part of me is really excited because being a locavore is something I believe in, I’m also scared that I won’t have anything to eat. I am, after all, a pasta addict, and if I can’t find flour there goes my standby meal.




So tonight was a last supper of sorts (although a lot of the ingredients here are local too, so it isn’t like I binge on Twinkies normally) and also a pseudo birthday celebration. Because my birthday may have been a week ago, but as long as I keep getting baked goods, I’m going to keep celebrating. Initially I thought to make pasta (the thought of going without it for a week terrifies me), but as this will be a family affair and my eldest sister is gluten intolerant, something else was in order. That did not of course stop me from making bread.


Or trying to make bread. Because although I decided on a Smitten Kitchen based feast for tonight, and picked out my recipes I may not have read them. You know, the refrigerate overnight part. Which is where we come to part 1 of this recipe (yes, there are parts).


Adapted from Smitten Kitchen
Biga

Biga is apparently a starter for bread, and as right now I know next to nothing about making bread I highly suggest you click the link to Smitten Kitchen where there is a far more useful explanation.

2 ½ cups flour (the recipe calls for bread flour, but I just used all-purpose)
½ teaspoon yeast
1 cup water

Mix dry ingredients, then add the water to form a ball. Then knead either by hand or in your mixer for a couple of minutes. Lightly oil a bowl (I used canola), and place the dough in this. Cover with plastic, let ferment on counter for about 2 hours.
At this point, you’re supposed to degass it (just knead some more) and place in the fridge for overnight. Due to my poor planning skills, it was only in the fridge for about two more hours. But right now, I am not a good bread role model. It can keep in the fridge for three days, and you should take it out an hour before it is bread making time.




At this point, I took a break, took out some store bought sandwich bread, and made a grilled cheese with herbed cheese curds and mozzarella. It was excellent, and mostly I spent lunch feeling like I was cheating on my bread. But now we get to the bread making part.




Still adapted from Smitten Kitchen
Italian Bread


3 1/2 cups biga
2 1/2 cups unbleached bread flour
1 2/3 teaspoons salt
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon instant yeast
1 tablespoon olive oil
3/4 cup to
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons water, lukewarm


Stir together dry ingredients before adding in olive, oil, water, and the biga (I just added all the biga I previously made. Once again, this probably is better when you follow the recipe). Adjust water or flour and once again make a ball. Then knead (or use your mixer on a medium-low speed with the dough hook) for ten minutes.

Oil a bowl (I reused the one I made biga in) and roll the dough to coat in oil before placing some plastic over and let it rest for two hours. At this point, realize that making bread is hard even if you have about five minute spurts of activity followed by hours of letting the bread rest. The dough should have doubled in size at the end of the two hours, and you want to be super careful to not degass it when you’re making it into a loaf shape. Also, you should put it in a large bowl, because with about 20 minutes to go I realized that my bowl of dough had developed a muffin top to say the least.

As we should have learned from the tortilla making escapade, I fail at shaping dough. These are supposed to be folded like a letter (I write postcards, okay?), and one of them the rectangle was too narrow to really succeed, but my second half of the dough (you should divide the dough into two, by the way) which started out still a rectangle but more squareish seems to look better.
Now that you have loaves, place them on a baking pan dusted with flour and…cover and let rest another hour. Bet you never saw that coming.

Start heating the oven to 500 degrees. One of my loaves I sprinkled with rosemary, and then I put both in the oven, along with a steamer pan on the bottom rack filled with about a cup of hot water. After thirty seconds in the oven I opened it up and sprayed the walls with water (which creates such a cool effect. If I had a cooking show I’d do it for this very reason), waited thirty seconds and re-sprayed, then turned the temp down to 450 and the time on or 20 minutes.



Then it has to, you guessed it, rest for an hour. But after all your resting you’ve surely worked up an appetite and now you get to dig in. And despite all my worries about fermentation and not using bread flour this turned out super delicious, the rosemary didn’t add much, but didn’t detract either.