New Braces: Compromised Chewing not Taste

IMG_1887IMG_1888

Puberty and braces unfortunately happen together here in the U.S.  Last week we had one child completing her time with braces while another began the process. New braces brought new challenges to my already complex chopped and blended dinner table. Soups and smoothies worked until she got tired of a liquid diet. Then came the minimal chewing but more substantial meals. I made her soupy khichuri (a Bengali mix of rice and lentils, lightly spiced), one of her favorite, braces or no braces. She also enjoyed the savory corn pancakes (a batter made with the addition of creamed corn). The chicken enchiladas still required too much chewing for her comfort. I lost a point there. Its always somehow surprising when small unrecognized parts of ourselves, once hurt or broken, change the way we do things. Teeth are wonderful machines that allow us to enjoy so many delicious simple things, like apples and crusty bread. Certainly not to be taken for granted by foodies, eaters and gourmands.

I’ll report back with brace friendly bowl food like khichuri, congee, risotto, grits, polenta and various sauces for the months of tightening to follow.

Life is like a bowl of blueberries

IMG_1166 2IMG_0111

Our local Prelock Blueberry Farm includes us in the growth of the blueberries by keeping us posted through facebook and other media outlets.  After much anticipation, this year the farm officially opened it’s gate July 6th. http://www.prelockblueberryfarm.com/

This is quite a cause for celebration. Nothing comes close to the taste of fresh off the vine fruit warmed by the sun accompanied by girly giggles. This is also as close as I come to actually participating in a “farm to table” experience. The pie we baked yesterday evening was made of blueberries alive just two hours prior to being enjoyed in the basement against the blaring sounds of tornado sirens, thunder and lightning. In the context of American supermarkets and international produce, this seems almost magical. It is not without irony that the store bought pie crust just crumbled to pieces and gently forced me to make a homemade pie crust. I know, I know…..pie crust is very easy…what am I doing buying processed pie crust anyway….bad hungry philosopher. Point taken. Ava and Lucy picked the blueberries, Jim carefully inspected the 10 pounds of blueberries for stems and bugs, I made the pie and some blueberry sauce. It was a shared process of production and consumption. A rare event in our household. Even Lucy our picky eater announced that the pie was “pretty good.” Yes….it was a magical event indeed.

Now I’m going to ruin this heartwarming story with a bit of philosophical analysis. What made the destruction and consumption of these tiny blue globes, delicious to human, bears and birds alike, so enjoyable? What is the difference between a carton of blueberries picked at our local Payless and a bucket of blueberries picked at our local Prelock Blueberry farm? The answer is worth a long discussion that ranges from skill, atmosphere, process, beauty, labor, taste etc. All gardeners and farmers answer this easily…..the love, understanding and effort, makes it different of course. Somehow, in knowing more we enjoy it more ( as all efforts to “cultivate taste” argue). Investment and knowledge increases appreciation and by extension pleasure. Considered consumption. Slow design proponent Alistair Fuad-luke calls this “reflective consumption.” We killed the blueberries but also gave them a glorious funeral. Hmmmm….that’s a bit of a downer. The point maybe that being invested in the process makes us “care” more. Slow food and farm to table efforts try to capture this pleasure of caring to various degrees of success. Makes me think of how philosopher Hannah Arendt defended the pleasure of the mind or Aristotle defended the pleasure of the good. My explanation of last evening’s blueberry pie may require a dissertation.  So I’ll stop now and ask you……… Why do you go to pick-your-own farms, be it apples, strawberries or blueberries?

Blueberry pie recipe from TidyMom:

http://tidymom.net/2012/rustic-blueberry-pie/

Boil, Steam, Eat – no recipe required 

  
 This year we celebrated the American Declaration of Independence on July 4th with the simplicity of steamed and boiled seafood. A deviation from our usual BBQ chicken and accompaniments, but well worth it! Aside from the seafood, corn and potatoes we had melted butter, ghee, sweet rolls and sweet tea on the table. It was fun, messy, steamy, decadent and delicious.

Frankly, I think the kids would’ve been happier without the old bay seasoning. I, on the hand, had to resist the urge to make a curry with the crab legs. Hmmm… Now that I think about it…. Maybe a few curry dipping sauces next year? Simplicity is difficult.

If you’re in the U.S, I hope you had a delicious and bright holiday too!

Warm Mother’s Day Wishes with a Bowl of Braised Short Ribs and Polenta

IMG_1753IMG_1750

If you have a weekend to work off a good meal, here’s an idea:  Braised short ribs with Creamy Polenta and Oreo Brownies. Yes it was, over the top. Wow! I really don’t need to say anymore. Both easy recipes. Very forgiving. Didn’t have carrots, didn’t feel the need to reduce the braising liquid, didn’t really have the best short ribs either, didn’t have enough parmesean for the polenta…still delicious and creamy. The brownies…well…I don’t think I ate more than a few bites….super chocolatey…really needs the milk alongside, as the recipe warns. So, be warned. This was an easy recipe to make and very easy to eat. Maybe too easy. Perfect for a weekend treat. Or a beloved’s homecoming.

Had salad and soup for dinner tonight. I feel less guilty about last night. Tomorrow is Mother’s day…all bets are off.

Wishing all of you hungry moms a very warm satisfying meal and HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY,

HungryPhil

http://www.williams-sonoma.com/recipe/braised-short-ribs-with-creamy-polenta.html

http://www.yummly.com/recipe/external/Oreo-Brownies-976297 for the Idea Room

Chicken Salsa Verde Enchiladas for Amani

DSC_0091

Dear Amani,

Here is what you need. Next time you’re home we can make it together.

1. Shredded Chicken: Do the Ina Garten method of roasting 2 or 3 chicken breasts (bone in, skin on) sprinkled with salt, pepper and oil at 350 for 35 minutes or until the skin gets crispy and juices run clear. Make more. You can always use the extra shredded chicken in curries, soup or sandwiches.OR….just buy a roasted chicken from the grocery store.

2. For the Sauce: Tomatillos (7-8), half onion, one bunch of cilantro, 2 garlic cloves, cumin, coriander. Or just buy a canned version.

3. Two avocados and two tomatoes, other half of onion, cilantro, one lime.

4. Tortillas: I prefer corn but some (most) people in our house like flour.

5. Cheese: Queso fresco is best, but any cheese would do. For a low cal version, leave cheese and cream out. And, instead of frying the tortillas in oil to make them soft, dip in the warm sauce and then roll. The fast flauta trick doesn’t work with the low cal version.

Once you have all the ingredients, here is what you do:

DSC_0075

DSC_0076

1. Peel and wash tomatillos.

DSC_0077

2. Simmer (with water that comes half way up the tomatillos) with two garlic cloves and half onion about 20 minutes until soft.

DSC_0080

3. While tomatillos are simmering, chop the pico de gallo.

DSC_0081DSC_0082

4. Shallow fry tortillas in vegetable oil making them soft, pliable and yummy.

DSC_0083DSC_0084

5. Stir fry chicken with cumin, coriander, salt and pepper. Add left over salsa if you have any. Add a can of  black beans if you’d like. Add half of the chopped pico (before the addition of avocados) to the mix.

DSC_0085DSC_0086DSC_0087

6. Blend the tomatillos, water and all. Add a fresh jalepeno or green chilies, cilantro, salt, pepper.

DSC_0088

7. Roll each tortilla with the shredded chicken mixture and cheese.

DSC_0089

8. Fill up your pan. Bake just like this as flautas for those who prefer no heat and no sauce. This is the batch I make for Lucy and Ava.

DSC_0090

9. Pour salsa over the rolls and bake until bubbly at 350 for about 30 minutes. I add a hint of cream or mexican crema for Jim.

10. Serve with avocado salad or guacamole and sour cream on the side.

Enjoy! Hope this works for you!

Deshi in the Dorm Kitchen (Chicken Rezala)

Dear Amani,

Here is the chicken rezala recipe. When cooked the yoghurt will look a little curdled. Don’t be alarmed. After it cooks down and you add the fried onions (and the oil you fried it in)…chili pepper, sprinkle sugar and squeeze lemon, it all looks good. Very yummy with porata but rice always works. You can add sauteéd mushrooms to stretch the dish and make it more non-deshi friendly.

The mixed vegetable dish is one that your Dadi makes really well. My shortcut and take on her recipe is simply to boil a bunch of vegetable together (be sure to cube the same size). In this case eggplant and squash (lao?). Boil with spices, half a teaspoon of each until the vegetables are tender. Add water almost covering the vegetables.

Cumin, Coriander, Chili powder, Tumeric, Ginger and Garlic (paste)

Salt about 1 teaspoon.

Fry half an onion sliced and one clove of garlic with ghee, butter or oil. If you have “panchforan” and cilantro, add it. If not, no problem. Finish with a sprinkle of sugar and a squeeze of lemon.

Eat well.

Love,

Mom

Photo from Sep 2014 Photo Stream

photo 1photo 2photo 3

SUPER Easy Chicken Curry….Seriously.

photoI’ll admit it, South Asian curries are sometimes not the best looking. This one with its deep red is reminiscent of a rich pasta sauce which makes it a less intimidating for those new to South Asian cuisine. The flavors and mouth feel of tomato and cream are also very familiar. Works well for my chopped and blended cultural family. You can chose to add more exotic flavors or not. Up to you and your picky, ahem….. “discerning” eaters.

I make this curry often since its so easy. I’m not kidding. Made this with my 10 year old. It’s a one pot, throw in, with no frying or sauteing. Put all the ingredients in a pot and simmer until the chicken is soft. If you cook it low and slow the flavors will develop like a rich bolognese.

Here’s the basics:

1. Six Boneless skinless chicken thighs cut into bite size pieces (did I mention the recipe is cheap too!)

2. Sour Cream 1/2 cup ( I had light sour cream on hand)

3. Tomato puree 1 small can

4. Salt and Pepper to taste

The rest of the ingredients are optional….add what you have or feel like. The base of sour cream and tomato puree will make a yummy sauce on its own. With the following spices the recipe approaches a restaurant butter chicken taste.

5. Ginger paste 1 teaspoon

6. Garlic paste 1 teaspoon

7. Chilli powder 1/2 teaspoon

8. Coriander powder 1/2 teaspoon

9. Cumin powder 1/2 teaspoon

10. Onion one small chopped

11. Cilantro chopped 1 tablespoon

12. Oil 2 tablespoons

Serve with rice or naan. IMG_1322

 

I made a Coconut Rice Pulau  to go with it.

Basmati rice 1 cup

Coconut milk 1 cup

Hot Water 1 cup

Chopped Onion 1 tablespoon

Cinnamon, a generous pinch

Cardamom, a pinch

Salt to taste

Ginger 1/4 teaspoon

Cumin Seeds 1 teaspoon

Raisins about 10-12

Almond Slivers

Peas, 1/2 cup

Saute the onions and cumin seeds in a tablespoon of ghee or oil.

Add all the dry ingredients except peas. Saute until the rice turns translucent and smells nutty. Add hot water and coconut milk. More water may be needed to finish cooking the rice.

Cook rice until the water evaporates and the rice kernels are soft and yummy. Add water if needed. Add peas. Simmer on low for a few more minutes, top with fried onions or cilantro and then enjoy!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DHUA’S CHICKEN PULAO (American Kitchen Update)

DSC_0159

Chicken                   1

Yogurt                      ¼ cup

Onion Puree         2 tbs

Ginger Paste         1 tbs

Garlic Paste           1 tsp

Mace                         ¼ tsp

Nutmeg                   ¼ tsp

Salt                            1 tsp

Cardamom             3 or 4

Cinnamon              ½ inch stick

Bay leaf                    1

Shan Morog Pulao or Biriyani spice 1 tsp

Dried Plum/ Prunes          6 or 7

Butter / Ghee       4 tbs

Eggs                          6

Potatoes                  4

Onions/Shallots    1 cup (sliced and fried)

Saffron                     1 tsp

Rose Water            1 tbs

Vinegar                    1 tsp

Rice                           2 ½ cups

Green chilies            7/8

1. Quarter chicken and marinate at least half an hour in yogurt, onion, ginger, garlic, mace, nutmeg, cardamom, cinnamon, bayleaf, plums, Shan Biriyani spice and 1 tablespoon ghee.

DSC_0124

DSC_0112

DSC_0113

DSC_0115

DSC_0118

DSC_0128

2. Soak saffron in rose water.

DSC_0121

DSC_0122

3. Half potatoes. Boil potatoes and eggs.

DSC_0119

4. Lightly fry eggs and potatoes (add yellow coloring, if desired)

DSC_0133

DSC_0137

5. Fry onions or shallots until golden brown. Reserve a portion of fried onions for garnish.

DSC_0132

6. Add  1 tsp vinegar and another tbs ghee to marinated chicken and simmer for 20 minutes until liquid is reduced. Add ½ tsp sugar.

DSC_0143

DSC_0148

7. Rinse and strain the rice.

DSC_0140

8. Heat on tbs of ghee, add rice and ½ tsp salt, cook until opaque.DSC_0146

9. Add 5 cups of hot water to rice. Cook until half done.

10. Add half cooked rice to chicken. Stir. Add more water if needed to fully cook rice.

DSC_0153

11. Add potatoes, eggs and green chilies.

DSC_0156  DSC_0152

12. Stir in saffron infused rose water and garnish with fried shallots. Serve.

DSC_0158

DSC_0161

DSC_0162

DSC_0126

YUM! Thank You, Dhua for sharing your recipe!

RECIPE UPDATE!

I tried the recipe recently and here a few notes of adjustment for the American kitchen.

1. I used two cornish hens quartered and skinned instead of one regular roast chicken.

DSC_0323

2. Instead of whole spices that my daughters do not appreciate biting into, I added 1/4 teaspoon of cinnamon and cardamom each.

DSC_0324

3. I used 4 medium yellow potatoes (halved).

DSC_0327

4. I added 6 cups of water. The rice was almost done by the time I added it to the chicken.

5. I added another tablespoon of ghee and simmered until the oil separated from the chicken in order to gently fry the pieces in the spices.

DSC_0328

6. I also added 1 teaspoon of salt in the rice water.

DSC_0330

It was moist, delicious and so aromatic with the spices, the rose water and the saffron. Truly a special occasion treat!

Chopped and Blended: Cooking for my modern family

Image

This summer marks the third year of our blended family adventure. The family dinner has been the locus of both frustration and joy. In our case, we negotiate complex fluctuating schedules that involve cooking for three half the time during the school year, for five the other half and occasionally six (when my college kid visits). We have yet to cook for each other on the rare occasions when its just the two of us. That topic may be a future series entitled, “The Raw and Well Preserved.” Complicating the logistics of groceries and preparation, we also bring with us two very different cooking traditions. mine, South Asian (Bengali) and Jim’s, Southern. Which means, I crave spice and he craves sweet. This basic difference only begins to map the gastronomic battleground that is our dinner table that also includes four daughters with divergent taste profiles. What is a cook to do?

Here is my developing three-pronged strategy. I’d love to hear yours.

  • Do not take any food preferences as a judgment and respect each member’s flavor profile.
  • Deconstructed dinners are your friend. Fajitas, burgers, pasta…anything that can have multiple toppings. Similarly, condiments are required to personalize each dish.
  • Left-overs can make a wonderful buffet or the basis for a recreated and re-purposed dish.

Despite these efforts there are dinners that fail to satisfy everyone. I’ve accepted the inevitability and the evenings of resignation that involve the phrase “let’s just eat out.” My efforts have not been futile. There have been a few good meals that we all shared and enjoyed together. Most importantly, I learned a lot about each of my loved ones. Learning their flavor profiles help me anticipate their reactions and makes my cooking deliberate. Gastronomic profiling certainly has the potential of being abused. Like, telling my 19 year old…”but you loved chicken nuggets and baked potatoes when you were 4.” On the other hand, it can be a working guideline, just like recipes. When judging recipes, I look at which flavor profiles are met or not met and change the recipe accordingly. Cooking becomes a form of user centered design and object oriented attention to ingredients. Let me explain what I mean by flavor profiles and preferences. My family consists of the following profiles: milk, eggs, bread, meat, eggplant and calamari. (of course, there are lot of cross overs and blending of preferences)

Jim (aka MILK) enjoys anything with the smooth rounded umami feel of cream. His preferences lean towards the salty and sweet. Oreo shakes, steaks, mashed potatoes, fried chicken, lemon bars, barbeque sauce on anything. To “Jimmify” a recipe, I add cream. Cream for Jim has the power to transform a curry from a foreign adventure to familiar comfort. Thai curries with coconut milk, alfredo sauce (no pesto for Jim), chicken marsala with mashed potatotes, Indian butter chicken all these have the common denominator of a smooth silky taste.

I have always had a deep love of eggs, whether scrambled, fried, made into a custard, salty, spicy or sweet. After a hard day, I console myself with a fried egg on buttered toast with guava jelly. I enjoy bright lemony flavors. Vegetables. Broccoli is my friend. Spice and heat make me feel alive. Three days of bland food leaves me depressed. I have a love/hate relationship with desserts. I prefer the last bites of my meal to be spicy.

Calamari is one of the last things I ate with my eldest daughter home from college. She sets a very high bar. Every bite for her should aspire to contain a rainbow of flavors. She’s a fan of the refreshing and hearty combo. Burgers with layers of flavors. Tapas style dinners. Dinner plates that offer a range of taste from salty, crunchy, acidic, creamy etc. Aiming for diversity and choice, she is my most adventurous eater. When she visits, I try to have a mix of new and familiar dishes, a mix of cultures, a mix of flavors. Fried Calamari with a dipping sauce, has the elements of chewy, savory, crunchy, creamy, lemony that befits her.

Eggplant represents my second daughter who is the only kid I know who really and honestly enjoys vegetables. Eggplant, broccoli and green beans are her favorite. I’m so in awe of her. She will eat eggplant cooked any style, Indian, Italian, Greek, Thai….Her flavor profile includes clean bright flavors of vegetables, sushi, lentils, as well as savory lamb, goat, eggs, shrimp, lobster, all Asian flavors, Indian food. She will try anything as long as I describe it to her first. Like me, she tires of bland food and left overs.

Meat represents my daughter from another mother. She is my simple eater. Chicken, steak, shrimp, pasta, rice with no spice, no sauce or gravy. Her major food groups are burgers, bacon, cinnamon rolls, Bertolli’s Chicken Florentine and peanut butter sandwiches. She likes her meals to be predictable and consistent. For her, I deconstruct meals by leaving off the sauces and gravies. She’s our minimalist.

Bread represents my youngest daughter from another mother. She will eat or at least try anything if accompanied by bread (and butter). She happily tried beef curry and butter chicken dipped in porota (Indian flat bread). In the past three years she has absorbed the most of our culinary blending.

Everyone LOVES desserts. Brownies, cookies, cakes, lemon bars, magic bars, pecan pie, coconut pie……..anything.

As long as I have something new, something familiar, something starchy, something meaty, something creamy, something spicy and something sweet on our chopped and blended dinner table……….. all is well. It doesn’t happen everyday but on the few occasions when it does….the silence around the table is magic.

This Chopped and Blended Series will be devoted to recipes for deconstructed meals. Look for the first installment soon.