Thursday, June 26, 2008

Cooking with KIds - An Everyday Affair

Growing up both Mom and Dad provided cooking lessons everyday that fostered my skill and love of cooking early. Dad was very deliberate in his instructional approach. Since his work day ended early, it was Dad who cooked most family meals during the week. As youngsters, he would call my sisters and I in from playing with the neighborhood kids , tell us to wash our hands, and then seat us at the kitchen table to watch him cook.

When we were a bit older, my older sisters would be allowed to cut veggies or stir a boiling pot, while I would be on dishwashing duty. Dad was adamant about cleaning as you go and was constantly wiping the counters and stove down as he cooked.. His standard dinner fare was hearty –meat or beans, rice and potatoes, and vegetables – lots of vegetables. In spring, he’d plant a large garden and delighted in walking the rows to pick ripen tomatoes, scallions, or pole beans to cook for dinner. Cornbread was made everyday by Dad. He had his own recipe that produced a rough textured, salty bread that he baked in a cast iron skillet. To this day, I can made great cornbread without a recipe courtesy of Dad.

Mom was a dietitian in a hospital, paid to cook bland vegetables and mystery meat products. But at home, she loved to clip recipes and experiment with flavors and dishes especially desserts. It wasn’t uncommon for us to enjoy toasty Crepes Suzette, or oozing Cream Puffs, or blue colored 7-Minute Frosting masquerading under a mile high Coconut Cake on Sunday.

Learning to cook from Mom was by way of osmosis. I delighted in watching her prepare these confection delights with the skill of a professional chef. To her, the recipe was king and she’d follow it to the letter…up to a point. She knew when and how to make substitutions or additions that improved the taste of or made most recipes even more interesting. Her cooking daring-do was passed on to me and now, rarely do I follow a recipe to the letter. There’s always room to experiment and improve.

Once I became a parent, I followed both Mom and Dad’s approaches to teaching my children to love cooking. Like Dad, I got them involved in meal preparation even when they were too young to actually cook. I’d give them an empty pot and a big spoon to mimic me as I cooked. Little hands used plastic knifes to cut. up vegetables. Later, they were permitted to patty up their own hamburgers, of course with spotless clean hands before and after. Helping with preparation is a sure remedy for a finicky young eater. Everything tastes good when you’ve cooked it.

Like Mom, I’ve amassed a huge collection of recipes, many of them desserts from Mom. Since 1986, I’ve kept a food diary of all special event menus like holidays and remembrances about those cooking adventures. Long after I’m gone, my daughter will be able to duplicate the cooking learned at my elbow and sample my Mom’s recipes. Being able to stroll down memory lane through cooking memories will able her to cherish good times made possible with and by good food.

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Christmas 2005 Dinner

On this sweetest of cooking holidays, here's what I whipped up:

Prime Rib with Gorgonzola Sauce
Christmas Grits (stone ground grits with sun-dried tomatoes)
Duck with Turnips
Mac & Cheese (part Martha, part me)
Green Beans with Bacon (Paula Deen recipe)
Holiday Wreath Salad (a Jello Mold with fresh cranberries, pineapple, nuts and a long family tradition)
Jamie's Coconut Cake (Paula Deen recipe - delicious by the way)
Cookies (2 varieties - would have made more but got lazy)
Cranberry Wassail (spiked of course!)

What did you cook?

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Too Late for 2005 (yes 05) Diet Resolution?

Darn it, 2006 is just around the corner and I've waited until the 12th hour to get on with 2005's resolution to lose those extra pounds. Oh well, better late than never! Look at this way, I've gotten a head start on my 2006 diet resolution.

Tonight I fixed Poached Tilapia. Poaching as a fish cooking method is really under-rated (or maybe I was just starving from that little salad I had at lunch). But honestly it was delicious. Here's my recipe. Try it.

POACHED FISH

Prepare the poaching liquid first and let simmer for 15 minutes before adding fish.

Small sliced white onion
Green stems of 3 scallions
1 carrot sliced thin
1 stalk celery sliced thin
1/2 Lemon thinly sliced
Thyme (used dried) to taste
1 Bay leaf
10 whole black peppercorns
Salt to taste
Two whole Tilapia (or other firm fish such as salmon)

Cook about 20-30 minutes on low flame.

Cooked any great meals lately? Tell me about it!

Friday, December 09, 2005

Bread Pudding Blues

I don't know why people don't cook more Bread Puddings. They're easy and delicious. You must make the Whisky Sauce that accompanies sophisicated Bread Puddings as opposed to the block of bread with raisins dry version you see in deli window cases.

Recently, a lot of people are using donuts, cake and other sweet confections to make Bread Puddings . While good (in fact these variations are great), they tend to be very sweet, overly sweet in some cases and the sugary sauce on top is "over the top".

Here's an Old Fashioned Bread Pudding Recipe:

2 Beaten Eggs
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 teasp salt
1 teasp vanilla
4 cups scalded milk
1/4 cup soft butter or margarine
2 cups bread cubes

Combine wet ingredients and add bread. Pour into buttered dish. Bake 350 degrees. 45 mins.

Whisky Sauce (pour directly on warm pudding or pass around)
Stick melted butter
Box Confectioners Sugar
Bourbon to taste

Friday, November 25, 2005

Thanksgiving Day Meal Analysis

It's the day after Thanksgiving and I'm not pleased with either the meal or the company. First I was exhausted from not just the process of preparing the meal, but also the planning:looking through magazines for recipes and inspiration, the shopping: having to do a 2-state hunt for ingredients, and then have to actually brine the bird and prep everything else: staying up half the night with said brining & prepping. Only to wake at the crack of dawn to actually get that (rather quick cooking (18 pds/350 degrees/4 hours)turkey at last into the oven.

Second, being thus tired, I was compelled to take a nap at 3pm and overslept. I woke in a foul mood. The guests hadn't even arrived! I never eat after 6pm on a holiday at home. To hell, that I had several other things yet to fix...dinner rolls being one of the them. I declared dinner was what was already prepared. I wasn't cooking another thing!

And so Thanksgiving dinner was: Turkey (very moist and delicious from brining) and Oyster Dressing* (see recipe below), Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Mustard & Turnip, Buttered Rutagas, Giblet Gravy (I make monster turkey gravy), Spiced Pumpkin Cake (a two box cake recipe from Food TV's Semi-Homemade), Crispy Top Applesauce Pie (a recipe from Paula Deen).

I don't think anybody went away hungry.

OYSTER CRACKER DRESSING

Make oyster dressing as usual using cornbread but add a sleeve of saltine crackers for a pleasing textural undertone.

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Black Tie Dinner...Again

Another Black Tie Dinner meal. Poor ole me...or make that my poor ole family. I'm usually the one slaving everyday to fix a dinner and now for a change, dinner out (just for me) and a fabulous Black Tie dinner to boot.

This time, I travelled to NYC's Hilton Hotel. There were over 800 guests at this educational organization's annual gala. I was pleasantly surprised when I saw the table's floral setting was beautiful, creamy white calla lilies. I knew I was in for a real treat when I learned the dinner was a "Buffet". Tables and tables of great food. And seconds if you wanted. I did.

A wonderful seafood bar with fresh oysters on the half-shell (cold and creamy going down) , crab claws and tons of sweet shrimp. There was a somewhat disappointing Soul Food station with not so good looking Fried chicken and fish, passable barbecue ribs but some half-way decent Collard Greens (Can you say Glory?).

I went back for seconds. Salad stations, Pasta tables, dessert tables. Great!!! An unlimited Dirty Martinis. Another memorable food night.

Well, it's back to the kitchen stove for me. Thanksgiving looms.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Black Tie Dinner...Halloween 2005

Halloween night Monday Oct 31st was a great food night.

I attended a Black Tie fundraiser at New York Central Park Boathouse. The meal was exquisite. Of course, the family back home had to contend with KFC. It started with a fresher than fresh, Salmon Carpaccio, a musclun salad (nicely dressed) followed. The main courses choices were Filet Mignon or Salmon. I chose the steak. Tender...mmm.

There were some nondescript veggies on the plate as a nest for the beef, which I couldn't exactly makeout in the candlelight room (some pieces looked like Shitaki mushrooms). Everyone around me said the veggies, whatever it was, were good. Dessert was a decadent warm chocolate torte with a chocolate ganache center.

Tonight, I'm cooking a birthday dinner for my daughter. She loves Lobster. So it's the big Sea Roach, tonight. Those big stockpots are key to cooking lobsters. Wrestle those babies into the stockpot and say a silent prayer for them. Drawn butter and a loaded baked potato are a must!

Tomorrow, I'm off to another Black Tie event and hopefully, another great meal. Will report all.