Sunday, December 31, 2006
Weekend Cat Blogging - Ywette and Kelly
Kitties say Happy New Year, too! Ywette is looking forward to being a grandmother - we're hopefully having kittens by next weekend! Kelly is content just being beautiful. (But we hope to mate her relatively soon.)
WCB is hosted by Champaign Taste this week! See the round-up here!
Happy New Year!
It seems proper on the last day of the year to think back. It's been a great, great year. Highlights include moving to a house, turning 30, getting a new government in Sweden, buying a new camera, cutting my hair, and making many new friends. (I won't bore you with what haven't been quite as good.) I hope next year has a lot of fun in store, too! I plan to make a number of food-related resolutions, just like this year. But first, it's time to see if I actually kept the ones I made for 2006.
1. Budapest Swiss Roll. Yep, I did that for the blog's birthday!
2. Roast Chicken. Yes! Finally! What on earth took me so long?
3. Gnocchi. Um. Well. Let's see. I made it with my friends Lena and Nico who are the gnocchi experts. I also made a Swedish dumpling called kroppkaka, which can maybe be loosely interpreted as a very large, filled, gnocchi. But regular gnocchi? No. Sorry. I tried, though. I followed Jamie Oliver's recipe (where you bake the potatoes, rather than boil them) and everything looked fine and dandy until I tried to gently drain them from the cooking water and they turned to mush. I can safely say that I'm not in the mood to try again anytime soon.
4. Real veal stock. Sorry. Haven't found any veal legs. Or honestly, haven't really looked. And I don't think I will. I tend to think home-made stock is largely over-rated, sorry.
5. Penne alla Vodka. Oh yes, numerous times!
All in all, I say three out of five isn't bad!
Now, I'm off to get a little extra sleep before tonight's big party. I hope you all have a wonderful New Year's Eve! Happy New Year to all, and I hope to see you in 2007!
Saturday, December 30, 2006
Bachelor Cooking Now Number one on Google for Bachelor Cooking
This Blog, Bachelor Cooking was never number on the google search result, when you do a search for bachelor cooking on google. It was alway Jeremy Zawodny, since he had once mentioned the term Bachelor Cooking on his Much Linked Blog. It has been like this since i started my blog, but after a few tweaking with anchor words, I just saw today that a search for the word Bachelor Cooking returns my Blog. And not only that, but my new blog on wordpress is number. Once I start writing that blog, We will have that one the number one Position... Hopefully.
On my not updating my Blog... I didn't have net connection at home for the past 2 months. My office computer is hardened, ie, all the USB ports are not accessible, so I thought I had take a break.
Also Now I want to post all recipes only in the new blog, whose design will be ready by first week january hopefully, as promised by a very dear blogger friend who is designing it for me.
This Blog will not die... Just keep it in your blogrolling as is..
I will Host the Curry Mela on this blog only, when I do resume the curry mela... As such, this blog had become more curry mela than my recipes. The new blog will be a Pure Recipes and Tips Blog. I will let the old posts remain here only.. I tried to import to the new blog, but the images gets warped.. so I'd rather post new recipes.. maybe I will repost some selected posts from here. But I have Huge list of recipes I will be Cooking up this Comming Year.
Keep Coming Back..
Wishing you and your family a very happy New Year 2007..
Here are some pork recipes for the white meat lovers.
Here are some easy ways cook baked pork chops even though I love Pork loin roasts the most among all Pork roast recipes but I also can cook some real mouth watering Pork Roast with spices and lime.
One more thing I love about this white meat is that we can whip up real nice recipes using the previous meals' left over to cook this awesome Leftover pork recipes like this Pork Hash for breakfast that I love bit this Pork Burrito is my personal favorite. Elise also prepares some nice Pulled Pork Sandwich.
And also try these Shredded pork recipes which goes really well with bread.
High protein Bread Rolls
The rage here lately has been to bake with fancy flour. Fancy, as in high protein. The most popular kind is called Manitoba Cream but there are others as well. It'll be touted as "strong" flour, and the point is that it develops more gluten than normal flour, thus creating really fluffy, pillowy bread. I very much love these little rolls. They're perfect to either fill with just about anything and grill in a panini grill, or just toast them for breakfast.
The dough is a bit sticky and thus not as user-friendly as many other breads, but it's worth the trouble. Wear plastic gloves if you want to minimize the mess. You can get Manitoba Cream in Stockholm at Cajsa Warg, Fine Food or if you want 35 kg, at Martin Olsson.
High protein Bread Rolls
makes 8
Starter dough:
25 g fresh yeast
250 ml tepid water
250 g high-protein flour
Dough:
25 g fresh yeast
250 ml tepid water
350 g high-protein flour
1 tbsp sea salt
Mix the starter dough and leave to rise for an hour.
Add the remaining ingredients to the starter, and work into a dough. Work in a machine - I like my Kitchen-Aid for this - for ten minutes. Five minutes at low speed, and five at higher speed.
Remove the dough to a lightly oiled bowl, cover with a towel and leave to rise for 90 minutes. Punch down after 60 minutes.
Divide the dough into eight pieces and shape eight rolls, using lightly floured hands. Place on a lined baking sheet, and leave to rise under a towel for 30 minutes. Bake at 225°C for 12-15 minutes. I like to keep these fairly light-colored, as I usually toast them later on, but you can certainly let them bake for a little longer if you prefer.
Recipe in Swedish:
Portionsbröd med Manitoba Cream mjöl
Friday, December 29, 2006
A very good girl.
New wine glasses, Iittala Essence.
I've been a *very* good girl this year. Apparently. Because Santa brought me a truckload of stuff. Really. I feel very spoiled. Here are some of the more food-related gifts I got - not all though. We also got more Villeroy Boch New Wave plates, a huge ceramic dish (also Villeroy Boch), a huge bag of Mauro DeLuxe espresso beans, and several new cookbooks, that I'll tell you about later on. And - my darling gave me a new camera lens! I know I'll have fun playing with it!
Electric beaters - my old ones was dying.
A sauteuse from Demeyere.
And a new coffeemaker - we found this on the after christmas sale half off, so not technically a christmas present. It's from Moccamaster.
Thursday, December 28, 2006
Christmas Orange Salad
I know, you're probably sick to death of christmas food. But I can't help sharing this recipe with you. It's so fresh and yet with christmas flavors - you really have to try it. It's dead easy, and takes about five minutes to prepare. Goes perfectly with salty, rich foods like ham or turkey, but it'll be fine with a simple steak, too.
Christmas Orange Salad
Serves 4
2 large oranges
1/2 red onion
2 tbsp white wine vinegar (balsamic if you got it)
2 tbsp mild olive oil
1 tsp allspice, whole
1/2 star anise
salt
Peel the oranges with a knife to get rid of any white bits. Slice thinly. Slice the red onion thinly, too, and arrange with the orange slices on a plate.
Use a pestle and mortar to grind the spices. Add vinegar and olive oil, and maybe a few grains of salt. Drizzle over the salad, and serve.
Recipe in Swedish:
Julig Apelsinsallad
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Foodie Gifts: Whisky Marmalade
We got this big jar of home made orange-whisky marmalade from Tesse and Danne. Tesse blogs about whisky here - if you ask nicely, I'm sure she'll share the recipe.
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
Rocky Road Semifreddo
Maybe you're looking for a fancy dessert recipe, to serve for New Year's Eve? This is probably not it. But it's darn tasty! Perfect for a nice dinner with friends, even though it doesn't exactly scream "glamour"! I got most of the recipe from Swedish tv-chef Leila Lindholm, but added marshmallows and chopped-up chocolate to make it.. oh, a bit more special. You can obviously substitute as much as you'd like - use different kinds of chocolate bits, different nuts or omit them completely, add swirls of caramel... anything, really. And speaking of caramel, I served this with caramel sauce on the side. Perfection!
Rocky Road Semifreddo
Serves a lot - depending on greediness. At least 8, I'd wager.
200 g dark chocolate
4 eggs, separated
4 tbsp sugar
200 ml heavy cream (35-40% fat)
200 ml thick yogurt (greek or turkish style, about 10% fat)
2 tbsp hazelnut liquer (Frangelico). You can use Amaretto, instead. Or omit.
100 g toasted, skinned hazelnuts
100 g dark chocolate, finely chopped
1 handful miniature marshmallows (or large ones, chopped up)
1 handful crushed meringues
Melt the chocolate. (The first 200 g!) Beat the egg yolks with half of the sugar, and the egg whites with the rest of the sugar. The egg yolks should expand to a fluffy mass, the egg whites should be firm and stiff.
Beat the cream until stiff, and mix with the yogurt.
Mix the melted chocolate with the egg yolks and the liquer, if using. Add the cream-yogurt mix, and carefully fold in th egg whites. Add the chopped up chocolate.
Layer the batter with meringues, nuts and marshmallows in a big freezable dish, and put in the freezer for at least four hours or over night. Take out about half an hour before eating, so it's not rock hard. And serve with caramel sauce, if you're so inclined.
Recipe in Swedish:
Rocky Road Semifreddo
Monday, December 25, 2006
Green Apples and Blue Cheese
Feeling a bit full after your christmas meal? Me too. So I thought I'd share a really light and super flavorfull dish - something that takes no time at all to assemble, but gives rich rewards in every bite. I got this from a lovely Swedish food blog, I Mitt Franska Kök - thank you Annette!
You need green apples (Granny Smith or other very tart apples are perfect), a sharp blue cheese (I use Fourme d'Ambert per Annette's recommendation), some walnuts, and if you'd like, some good oil (I use cold-pressed rapeseed oil), a not too sharp white vinegar, and a few drops of runny honey. Make sure the cheese is not straight from the fridge, as the flavor will be much, much better after half an hour in room temperature. The proportions are something like two apples, about 50 g cheese, a small handful of nuts. This should serve four, as a light appetizer.
Core the apples and slice them thinly. Arrange on a large platter. Crumble the cheese and walnuts all over the platter. If using a dressing - I did, but Annette didn't - just whisk together oil, honey and vinegar until emulsified. Drizzle over the salad. You need to serve it pretty much right away or the apples will loose their color.
Recipe in Swedish:
Gröna äpple, blå ost
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Weekend Cat Blogging - Glinda
Oh, I couldn't resist posting a few pics of Glinda in her santa hat. She's very pregnant - two weeks left - and couldn't be bothered to move. Thankfully.
The ham is ready. The swede bake is ready. The peppermint bark is ready. The tree is decorated. The gifts are wrapped. (Umm, almost all of them.) And I am ready for christmas. Bring it on!
WCB - Hamlet
Hamlet is eagerly awaiting christmas on the hat shelf, happily perched on my new, bright pink crinkled silk scarf.
And we're frantically running around, trying to get everything ready. Tree? Food? Candy? Presents? Cleaning? Aarrgh!
Friday, December 22, 2006
Swedish Meatballs, oven-baked
I was sure I had posted about this before, but now I can't seem to find it. Oh well! Swedish meatballs are absolutely necessary for christmas. In fact, I'll go so far as to say that it's my ONLY necessity. And I hate store-bought meatballs, so I insist on making my own. Which is always somewhat of a hassle, because of the frying. So this year - huge revelation. You can make them in the oven. Completely. No frying. At all. Did everyone else already know this? It feels like I'm the last person on earth to discover it. In case I'm not, I'm sharing it with all of you, dear readers. This is definitely the way to go.
I didn't measure my spices, just add quite a bit of the white pepper, and just a dash of everything else. You can fry (sorry, for this you'll have to) one to try out the seasoning, but I never bother. And they're always good.
You can serve these with anything - potatoes and gravy, macaroni and ketchup, as part of a large buffet, with any vegs, the possibilities are endless.
Swedish Meatballs, oven-baked
900 g ground meat
1 yellow onion, very finely chopped
1-2 small cloves of garlic, minced
1 egg
salt
white pepper
pinch of cinnamon
pinch of ground ginger
pinch of cardamom
pinch of allspice
Mix everything to an even batter, and form small, round balls. Put in a large roasting pan, and bake for about 15 minutes at 175°C. (I'm using a convection oven, if you're not, add a few minutes.) Shake the pan a few times to ensure an even surface on your meatballs.
Recipe in Swedish:
Julköttbullar
Thursday, December 21, 2006
White Chocolate & Lingonberry Cantuccini
Here's something slightly different! Cantuccini - that's small Italian cookies - is a favorite of mine to bake, since it's so easy. Perfect to wrap up in small bags and give away - and that's excellent for christmas. I've made several flavors before, but this one was new to me: white chocolate and lingonberries. I had some frozen lingonberries left over from this fall, so I used those. I know that many of you can't find lingonberries - but cranberries should work just as well. It's a great combination - the tangy berries contrast really well with the white chocolate. But I bet raspberries would be good too, or blueberries! Just make sure your berries are frozen, so they don't become a mushy mess.
The recipe is from "Två Systrars Söta" - a lovely cookbook with cakes and cookies, only available in Swedish. I had problems drying these out though - it took a lot longer than my usual cantuccini. But don't worry - you can just leave them in the oven until they're crisp. I ended up letting them sit there over night and it worked out well.
White Chocolate & Lingonberry Cantuccini
Makes about 60
100 g butter, at room temperature (tip: go ahead and blast fridge-cold butter in the microwave for half a minute at the lowest setting. Works wonderfully!)
200 ml sugar (about 180 g)
3 eggs
700 ml flour (about 450 g)
3 tsp baking powder
1 tsp vanilla sugar
1/2 tsp salt
100 g white chocolate, chopped
200 ml (a little more than 2/3 cup) frozen lingonberries
Heat the oven to 175°. Beat the butter and sugar until fluffy, add the eggs one at at a time and beat carefully. Add chocolate and the frozen berries. Mix the dry ingredients together - flour, baking powder and salt - and gradually add this to the dough.
Roll out into three long ropes, and put on a lined cookie sheet. Bake for 15 minutes. Remove from heat, lower the oven to 100°C, and cut the dough into thin cookies. Put back in the oven for half an hour or so to dry out. If they're not dry, turn the heat off and let the cookies dry for longer - even over night.
Recipe in Swedish:
Biscotti med vit choklad och lingon
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Foodie Gifts: An early christmas present
Here's my (and Per's) christmas present from my brother and his family: a lovely basket with hand made raspberry truffles, cherry marmalade, Italian salami and a wonderful big chunk of tasty Parmesan cheese. Yeay!
And I also got a surprise in the mail the other day - two bottles of Vanilla Extract from Howard in Canada! Thank you!!
Monday, December 18, 2006
Blogging By Mail - from Korea!
I am totally floored by my generous blogging by mail package. It's sent from Jen of I Got Two Shoes, a lovely blog that was new to me. (Well, I'd seen the Weekend Cat Blogging posts - like me, she's a cat lover and has a beautiful black boy.) As you can see, my own cats were very interested in the package. Edith is rubbing against a box of sesame roll mix. As you can also see, there is SO MUCH STUFF! Here's what I got:
Three different kinds of instant miso soup! This excited Per who is a big miso fan. And I'm really looking forward to trying the different kinds - I've only ever had tofu miso soup, which I suppose is the "normal" here.
Bamboo salt. Which can apparently be used as a seasoning, a tooth paste or a beauty exfoliator. How intriguing!! I think I'll try all three. It's a big package.
Fantasy Herb Tea. What this fantasy herb is, I have no idea. But I'm guessing ginseng, perhaps?
More tea - this time, ginger. Looks absolutely perfect for the cold season, which is definitely here.
Skittles!!!!
Fruitella Crazy - these are just like sour Skittles, but with the charming addition of swapped colors. Very weird. Purple ones are not grape anymore, but lime. And the yellow ones are strawberry. Red, are grape. Very confusing. I like it.
Gum, I'm guessing.
Oooh, this was great stuff! Garlic! Fried! It's like little garlic chips - *very* tasty. And I bet they give you great breath. But hey, that's what gum is for. I wonder so if you can make this yourself though, does anyone know?
A very red spice, I'm guessing something hot.
Mix for sesame rolls! Looks very yummy!
Absolutely delicious cashew clusters, crunchy and slightly sweet and salty at the same time. Not sharing these. But Ywette tried to make me.
Coffee!! Yeay!
Chocolate, in a vitamin-style jar. In fact, I'm thinking these are much nicer than my regular vitamins. I think I'll have one every morning. I'm sure it's very good for me.
And soba noodles! I've always wanted to try, and hey - here's my chance. It's both noodles, and packets of sauce.
Wheew - quite a write-up, for quite a package. Many, many thanks to Jen, and also to the host of this round, Stephanie at Dispensing Happiness. You did a great job!
Swedish Pepparkakor
Or crisp gingerbread cookies, as they're also known. A classic. A necessity. No pepparkakor - no christmas. They're crunchy, spicy and plain delicious. And whey you get tired of just eating them on their own, try spreading them with sharp blue cheese, like gorgonzola or stilton. A-m-a-z-i-n-g.
Most people buy their dough ready-made in the stores, and that's perfectly fine. However, it's not at all difficult to make your own, it's a simple matter of mixing stuff together. And waiting. This particular dough comes from a book called Riddarbageriet's Söta (Sweets from Riddarbageriet) and the only thing I've changed is to substitute a bit of the regular flour for a slightly healthier alternative, dinkel flour. (Also known as spelt.) The resulting cookies are probably not any healthier, but they are crunchier than usual.
I used a plethora of cookie cutters, and for the first time my cat's head cutter, handmade in copper. It made me realise that copper cutters really are superior, and now I must endeavour to collect many, many. (God knows where I'll find them though - I found my first one on a small craft's fair last year, and have never seen any more. Except for on Ebay.) On the top of the want-now-list is a snowflake cookie cutter, like the one Lex Culinaria has. Beautiful!
But more to the point, use any cutter you'd like. Dagmar has cute Moomin cutters. Or go with traditional Men. Or hey, make a house! (The link is to a Swedish magazine holding a contest for the prettiest gingerbread house.) Either way, this is the dough you want.
It's supposed to rest in the fridge for at least one week, preferrably - according to the original recipe - two. I baked mine after one, and it was excellent - I doubt the longer time will do much to change it, but I saved a bit to try, so I'll let you know. If you want a more immediate dough, try my old recipe. It's a bit different though, resulting in lighter-colored cookies, with a hint of lemon.
This recipe makes a LOT of cookies. A lot.
Swedish Pepparkakor with dinkel
400 g regular white flour
200 g dinkel/spelt flour
300 g sugar
250 g butter, at room temperature
125 g cream (35-40% fat)
125 g dark syrup (molasses should work fine)
7 g baking soda
7 g ground cinnamon
7 g ground ginger
4 g ground cloves
4 g ground cardamom
4 g ground bitter orange peel
Mix all ingredients until you have a smooth and supple dough. Divide into two or more smaller pieces, flatten into discs and wrap in plastic. Keep in the fridge for at least a week.
When you're ready to bake, heat the oven to 175°C. Remove the dough (a little at a time) from the fridge, and knead until it's softened. Roll out on a floured surface, and use a cookie cutter to make shapes. Place on a lined baking sheet, and then bake for 6-8 minutes, or longer if you want them to be very dark.
Recipe in Swedish:
Pepparkakor med dinkel
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Christmas Candy: Walnut "knäck"
I've told you about Swedish "crack" before - it's called knäck, and that's because of the sound your teeth will make when breaking on this hard, sticky candy. No, maybe not. (But maybe - be careful when eating these!)
Almost every family in Sweden eats knäck during the holidays. It's wildly popular. And a bit fussy to make - you need to boil it until *just* the right temperature. Or you can just do like I do, and use the microwave. It's never failed me. The only problem is finding the right container for the job - I use a one litre (about 1 quart) Pyrex measuring jug, and that works perfectly. Sure, it sometimes spills a bit, but it's not hard to clean off with hot water.
You also need to work fast when filling your little paper cups. If you don't have paper cups, you can just pour the entire thing in a lined pan, and cut it into suitable pieces before it sets completely. But paper cups are traditional, and hopefully not completely impossible to find.
This year, I decided that in addition to the normal knäck, I'd also try a version using dark syrup instead of light, and walnuts instead of almonds. The results were fab - a grown-up version which is still sweet, but with more dimensions, and a great balance between the walnut and the sugar. Ni-i-ice.
Dark Walnut Knäck
makes about 40
100 ml dark syrup (a not too dark molasses, would surely work.)
100 ml sugar
100 ml cream (35-40% fat)
3-4 tbsp finely chopped walnuts
Mix syrup, sugar and cream in a suitable container, and cook in the microwave for seven minutes on full effect. Test to see if it's done by dropping a little bit into cold water - if you can form a fairly firm ball, you're done. Remove from microwave, quickly stir in the nuts, and quickly fill into tiny paper cups. Store in a cool place - I keep mine in the fridge.
Recipe in Swedish:
Mörk Valnötsknäck
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Weekend Cat Blogging - Ywette
I really tried to pose one or more cats for a christmas photo today. It didn't work very well. Ywette, being slightly more compliant than the others, agreed to at least let me take one picture.
Weekend Cat Blogging is hosted by KitchenMage today!
Friday, December 15, 2006
Frozen Holiday Cheesecake
I've blogged about this before - but it's time to highlight this excellent recipe for the holidays. It's so easy to make, and so tasty! You can prepare it several days in advance, and so far, everyone I've served it to likes it. In my world, that's pretty perfect.
You can find lingonberry jam (and gingerbread cookies, too) at Ikea.
Frozen Holiday Cheesecake
200 gram cream cheese
3 eggs, separated into yolks and whites
200 ml sugar
300 ml heavy cream
100 ml lingonberry jam
1-2 tsp cinnamon
100 g gingerbread cookies
50 g butter, melted
Use a springform pan. Blitz the cookies in a food processor. Add in the melted butter. Press this firmly into the base of your pan.
Cream the cheese, egg yolks and the sugar. Beat the cream until it forms stiff peaks. Carefully blend with the cheese cream. Mix in lingonberries and cinnamon. Beat the egg whites until stiff, and fold those in too. Pour carefully on top of the crust in the pan. Put in the freezer for at least six hours or overnight. Take out about twenty minutes before you want to eat.
Recipe in Swedish:
Frusen cheesecake med lingon och pepparkakor
Thursday, December 14, 2006
2006 Food Blog Awards
The Well Fed Network is hosting the 2006 Food Blog Awards! You only have until midnight dec 15 (EST) to leave your nominations, so head over there and nominate your favorite food blogs! There are several categories, including best photos, best recipes, best original recipes, best food blog overall and lots of others. You can nominate in all categories - have fun!
Finally, a roast chicken!
Not a big deal, surely - a roast chicken? Considering I've been cooking turkey for the past three years, what's a chicken compared to that? Well, I knew it wouldn't be very hard, but for some reason, I had never come around to actually cooking a chicken. Whole. In the oven. Until this week.
In fact, it was one of my new year resolutions! (And I'm having great fun thinking about five new resolutions for 2007!) Anyway. It was really easy, and really, really tasty. I read several recipes for roast chicken in my trusty Nigella and Jamie books, and then did something like this:
In the morning, I rubbed the chicken inside and out with salt and pepper. Back in the fridge it went. When I was ready to cook, I heated the oven to 200°C. I tossed in two small lemons with my boiling potatoes, and when they were hot I fished them out, stabbed them all over and stuffed them into the chicken. I then rubbed some olive oil into the skin of the chicken, tied it up neatly with my beloved FoodLoops and pushed it into the oven, where I left it for about an hour. And that was that.
We ate it with roast potatoes, roasted parsnips and carrots, and my favorite cold sauce, raitziki.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Christmas Candy: Peppermint Patties
These are amazingly easy to make! I had never really thought about it, but encountered hand made peppermint patties when out shopping with my friend Tesse. (Who has a nice blog about whisky, by the way.) She said that she loved them, and could I please find a recipe? So I did. And it's so easy. And tasty.
I absolutely suck at tempering chocolate, so my poor patties - the ones left after the first two days - turned grey and dull. Not suitable for giving - but just as good for eating, thankfully. Next time, I must try harder. After all, how hard can tempering really be?
Peppermint Patties
makes about 24
1 egg white
about 350 g confectioner's sugar
1,5 tsp peppermint extract
0,5 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
dark chocolate for dipping
Beat the eggwhite until foamy, but not stiff. Gradually add sugar, and beat until you have a stiff dough. Add the flavorings, a little at a time and taste until they're to your liking.
Form small balls and place on parchment paper. Flatten slightly so you have round, thick patties. Cover with plastic wrap and let dry out a bit, overnight preferrably. (And if possible, turn them over once so they dry on both sides.)
Then melt your chocolate, and dip the patties on both sides.
Recipe in Swedish:
Mintkakor
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Menu for Hope III
You probably haven't missed it, but just in case - today is the starting day for the third year of Menu for Hope. What's that? It's a fund-raising event by food bloggers all over the world. Last year we raised over $17.000 and the plan is - of course - to raise much more this year. All money goes to United Nations World Food Program, a very worthy cause indeed.
So how does it work? Lots and lots of food bloggers have donated prizes, and what you do is make a donation, on this page. By doing that, for each $10 you donate, you're buying a virtual raffle ticket for a specific prize. And you can see all the prizes here! You must remember to enter what prize you'd like to win, and your e-mail address so the hosts can get in touch with you if you do win.
I'm not participating with a prize this year, but two other Swedes are! Check out Dagmar's offering, a lovely kit with several teas, an infuser and hand-made candy, or Clivia's huge packet of Swedish candy!
All prizes are on this page. There's some great, great stuff there. How about a Kitchen-Aid? (Just like the one I have!) Or your very own canapé party, catered by The Passionate Cook and Cook Sister? Now there's a prize I'd love to win. (Wanna come to Sweden, guys?)
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Cheese Pierogi
Here's another recipe leftover from summer - however, these little pierogi would work very well for christmas too. They're an excellent addition to any buffet. And feel free to play around with the filling - I like them with cheese, but they're fine with anything, really. You can also sprinkle them with sesame seeds, nigella seeds, maybe some dried herbs, chopped up nuts.. hey, maybe a filling with feta cheese and dried apricots, and a sprinkling of hazelnuts? You can eat them hot or at room temperature, and they can easily be frozen.
And yes, you need quark for this recipe. If you can't find it, make your own or use ricotta. It will be close enough.
Cheese Pierogi
makes about 20
300 g butter
200 g quark
about 1 litre (4 cups) of flour
1 tsp salt
filling:
100 g shredded sharp cheese
50 g cream cheese
1 egg yolk
black pepper
decoration:
1 egg, beaten with a few drops of water
Run flour, salt and butter together in a food processor. Add the quark, and let it run until you just have a gathered dough. You might need a bit of extra flour if it looks very wet. Leave to rest for about an hour in the fridge.
Mix all ingredients for the filling.
Roll out the dough and cut squares, about 10 cm in size (4 inches). Add a spoonful of filling, brush the edges with beaten egg, and fold into a triangel. Press down with a fork to make the edges completely sealed. Brush pierogi with egg, and place on a baking sheet.
Bake at 200°C for 10-12 minutes.
The recipe in Swedish:
Ostpiroger
My Friend is vety confused! Who should he Follow!
One of my colleagues posted on our Bulletin Board!
Just for laughs!!
My Home Net connection starts today evening!
Had to shift twice so I had been erratic!!
My new blog's desugn has also been pending!
Shall get it done before the week is over!!
Oops, which one shall I follow ??
Laziness is the worst enemy of humans. . .
- Jawaharlal Nehru.
Humans should learn to love even their worst enemies...!!!
- Mahatma Gandhi
Help me out with this.....
Just for laughs!!
My Home Net connection starts today evening!
Had to shift twice so I had been erratic!!
My new blog's desugn has also been pending!
Shall get it done before the week is over!!
Eat like a genius, 2006
Didn't get invited to the Nobel Prize Awards this year? Here's the menu:
Mosaic of salmon and scallops with Kalix bleak roe
Herb-baked saddle of lamb, mashed potatoes and Jerusalem artichokes, olive oil-glazed vegetables and port wine sauce
Pineapple parfait with caramelised pineapple salad and mint
Read more and see older menus here.
This menu actually sounds really good - I'm not so sure about the starter, but the main dish and especially the dessert sounds yummy. I hope recipes will be in Swedish newspapers soon.
The other big news today is that the first Swedish astronaut, Christer Fuglesang, actually made it into space. Yeay!
Mosaic of salmon and scallops with Kalix bleak roe
Herb-baked saddle of lamb, mashed potatoes and Jerusalem artichokes, olive oil-glazed vegetables and port wine sauce
Pineapple parfait with caramelised pineapple salad and mint
Read more and see older menus here.
This menu actually sounds really good - I'm not so sure about the starter, but the main dish and especially the dessert sounds yummy. I hope recipes will be in Swedish newspapers soon.
The other big news today is that the first Swedish astronaut, Christer Fuglesang, actually made it into space. Yeay!
Saturday, December 9, 2006
Advent Saffron Buns
Saffron buns is an absolute must in Sweden during the holidays. It's strongly connected to Lucia (december 13) but is common all through December. You can buy them everywhere, but home made are generally better. However, saffron tends to really dry out ordinary yeast doughs, so you want to make sure to use lots of fat in the dough, and most people nowadays also use quark to make the dough extra soft and pliable.
This recipe is for round buns filled with almond paste, but the most traditional way is to not fill them at all, just make the saffron dough and then shape into various traditional shapes. Dagmar shows some on her blog.
These freeze very well, which is handy. I got the recipe from ME at Jungbo, and the only thing I've done is halving it (my Kitchen-Aid could JUST about take this amount) and I added some finely chopped almonds to the filling.
A word of warning. Don't even think about making these if you have issues with messy baking. The part where you're supposed to mix a fully risen dough with a very loose batter? Messy. As in, yellow batter ALL over the kitchen, on me, on the counter, on the cupboards, on the floor, on the cats, on the Kitchen-Aid... Absolutely everywhere. And make sure you read through the entire recipe before you begin - you want to be well prepared for this! But it's all worth it, so don't worry too much.
(Oh - and a dl means a deciliter, which is 1/10 of a litre, or 100 milliliters, ml.)
Advent Saffron Buns
Makes about 60
dough 1:
50 g butter
500 ml milk (2 cups)
50 g fresh yeast
1 tsk baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp sugar
12-13 dl flour (about 5 cups)
Melt the butter, add the milk and heat until it's lukewarm. Crumble the yeast in a large bowl (preferrably the bowl of your sturdy mixer) and add the liquid. Stir until dissolved, then add all the other ingredients, and work for about five minutes until you have a soft dough that doesn't stick to the bowl. Cover and let rise for about an hour.
dough 2:
1,5 g saffron
125 g butter, softened
100 ml white syrup (substiture corn syrup, that should be close enough. It's just sweet.)
100 ml (0.4 cups) sugar
1 egg
200 g quark
10-12 dl flour (4-5 cups)
Mix the saffron with the butter, syrup, sugar, egg and quark. This dough is to be mixed with the fully risen white dough, and the rest of the flour should be mixed in too. This is messy. Be careful. And don't add too much flour - the dough shouldn't be sticky, but still soft and pliable. Too much flour makes the buns dry and hard.
filling:
250 g almond paste (about 50/50 almonds/sugar)
50 g almonds, finely chopped
100 g butter
100 ml (0.4 cups) sugar
Mix into a rough, but evenly distributed paste.
decoration:
1 egg beaten with a few drops of water
flaked almonds
Prepare baking sheets with paper cups. Take a small piece of dough in your hand - about the size of a golf ball - and roll into a ball. Flatten and put a bit of filling on it. Shape the dough around it so you have a ball again, firmly sealed. Place, seam-side down, in a paper cup. Then brush with a little bit of egg and sprinkle over a few flaked almonds. Leave to rise for about 45 minutes.
Heat the oven to 200-225°C. (The lower temperature is for convection ovens.) Bake for 8-10 minutes until the buns are lightly golden, but not brown. Let cool completely before stashing in plastic bags in the freezer - but make sure you eat some right out of the oven!
The recipe in Swedish:
Adventsbullar
Thursday, December 7, 2006
Walnut Bread
Hey, where did this week go? It totally breezed by. And it's already mid-December (well, almost) and my decorations are most decidedly not up yet. Need to fix that - this Sunday is second of Advent, and Advent is a big deal here in Sweden. I *have* baked the required saffron buns though, so I don't feel completely behind.
Today, let's make some bread. This is one of the best recipes I know for walnut bread. It's not difficult, not time consuming, not messy and very tasty. The recipe comes from Gateau, a bakery in Stockholm that some years ago made a cookbook. Virtually impossible to find in stores, but libraries often have copies! Mine did, and that's when I learned about this bread.
Walnut Bread
2 large breads
500 ml water
50 g fresh yeast
800 ml white flour (about 3 cups, plus 3 tbsp)
400 ml fine rye flour (about 1.7 cups)
1 tbsp salt
20 g softened butter
200 ml walnuts (about 2/3 cups)
Heat the water until tepid. Crumble the yeast into the bowl of your mixer (if using) and add the water. Stir until dissolved. Add all other ingredients except for the walnuts, and let the machine work the dough for five minutes. (Or you can work it very vigorously by hand, count on doubling the time.)
Add the walnuts, and knead for a few more minutes. Then leave the dough to rest for 30 minutes.
Punch it down, and let it prove for 30 more minutes. Then tip it out on a floured table, and shape into two loaves. Place them on baking sheets, and leave to rise under a towel for about an hour.
Preheat the oven to 250°C. Put the bread in the oven, and lower the heat to 200°C. Bake for a total of 30 minutes.
The recipe in Swedish:
Gateaus Valnötsbröd
Leftovers
Turkey plus Brussel Sprouts with Feta Cheese plus 250 ml cream (light fake stuff, half and half will probably be about right), 20 minutes in a hot oven - and out comes an amazing baked bubbly casserole. Perfect over pasta.
Wednesday, December 6, 2006
Brussel Sprouts with Feta and Pinenuts
Another excellent veggie side dish - I served it for thanksgiving, and everyone (who likes brussel sprouts) loved it. If you're not a sprouts lover - well, you might want to pass on this.
Brussel Sprouts with Feta and Pinenuts
Serves 8
1 kg fresh brussel sprouts
1 large red onion
50 g pine nuts
200 g feta cheese
butter
Trim the sprouts, and remove any dark or damaged leaves. Boil in lightly salted water for a few minutes until just soft. Drain and immediately plunge into ice water, to stop the cooking and retain the green color.
Slice the onion. Toast the pine nuts in the oven or in a dry frying pan until golden and fragrant.
Heat a bit of butter in a large pan and fry the sprouts for a few minutes. Then add the onion slices and the nuts, and crumble over the feta. Serve at once.
Recipe in Swedish:
Brysselkål med fetaost och pinjenötter
Tuesday, December 5, 2006
Estonian Mushroom Salad
Another recipe that's left over from late summer. I made it several times, took photos, and never blogged about it. Stupid me. Anyway. This is something my Estonian father makes quite a bit. It's delicious - especially on toasted bread, crisp rye bread or just with crackers. Perfect on crostini, too. If you can't find créme fraîche, you can use smetana. Essentially, you need a fat (about 30%), soured milk product.
Estonian Mushroom Salad
200 g chanterelles
1 small yellow onion
200 ml crème fraîche
salt, pepper
Dice the onion and the chanterelles. Fry the mushrooms in a dry pan until the liquid is released and you hear popping sounds. Remove from heat and let them cool completely. Mix with the onions and the crème fraîche, and season with salt and pepper. It keeps for a few days in the fridge, well wrapped in plastic.
Recipe in Swedish:
Estnisk svampsallad
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