And the beet goes on

Continuing (and concluding) with my theme vegetable, the beet root, I made a recipe suggested in my comments by ZakiahKheema Shulgum, or Ground Meat and Beet Root, has definite Indian flavors, is really easy to make, and is healthy to boot.

I’m going to share the recipe here as I suspect that Zakiah wouldn’t have written it in the comments section if she wanted to keep it secret.  I cut back on the oil and butter as our lamb here has a pretty good fat content.

1 Tsp each oil and butter
1/2 cup sliced onions (I used a whole medium sized onion)
1 Tbsp paste of ginger and garlic
1 Lb ground beef or lamb (I used lamb)
1 Tsp chili powder
1 Tsp turmeric
3/4 Tsp salt
1 cup beet root, cut into matchstick-sized pieces (I added about 2 cups)
1 Tbsp shredded coconut
1 Tbsp sour cream 

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Start by heating the oil and butter, sauteing the onion till golden brown.  Add the ginger/garlic paste and fry till fragrant.

Add the meat and brown well.  There will be some liquid from the meat, so try and dry that a little.  I unded up having to spoon out some of the liquid.

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Add the chili powder, turmeric and the salt and continue to cook for about five minutes or until the spices’ aroma has blossomed.

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Add the sliced beetroot pieces and cover the dish with a tight-fitting lid for five minutes, stirrring every so often.  I improvised and added three small roma tomatos, seeded and diced.

Cook until the beet root is fork-tender but not mushy, then add the coconut and the sour cream.  The sour cream I added was mixed with some shredded Granny Smith apple, left over from the borscht recipe.

Serve warm, garnished with mint and cilantro, neither of which I had handy. 

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It turned out very nicely, a squeeze of lime substituted for the missing herbs.  I also added a sprinkle of some more coconut just for visual appeal.

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To accompany this meal I baked pita bread, some of which actually puffed up this time.  Last time, you might recall, they turned out mighty flat.  Letting the dough rest for a few days definitely improved it.

Thanks again to Zakiah for that wonderful recipe.  Reading the entry, I realize it just has my improvisational marks all over it.  Can’t just follow the recipe the way it is written, can I? 

As for the beets, I think I’m ready to move on to another vegetable!

 

Borscht

My life isn’t an episode of Iron Chef by any stretch of the imagination, but lately there has definitely been a featured “challenge ingredient”: beet root.  Thanks to some buy-one-pack-get-one-free specials on locally-grown organic beets, I’ve been stocking up and trying different beet root recipes. 

First it was beet pizza.  Then a beet and goat cheese salad.  Now comes borscht, the classic Russian peasant soup that is served either hot or cold and is garnished with sour cream.

I don’t recall ever having had borscht.  My friend Ken, whose parents are from Russia, hates it, but maybe if he tried this recipe he might change his mind.

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I started out by sauteeing some aromatics – carrots and onions in this case, although a bit of celery would have been nice, too – with some thyme.  I had already roasted the beets with just a little olive oil and a splash of orange juice until tender and let them cool.

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Once softened and slightly caramelized, I pureed the beets and aromatics in a blender with some chicken stock.  Stock, while relatively simple to make, is time consuming.  I just buy my stock from the khao man gai (chicken over rice) vendor up on Sukhumvit Road.  He probably loads it up with MSG so I dilute it in a 1:1 ratio with water.  Even if it doesn’t have MSG in it, it is pretty richly flavored and I don’t want my borscht’s beet base overwhelmed.

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After blending, which results in a beautiful color, I return the mixture to the pot, adjust with more stock and water to get the right consistency.  Best to aim for just a little watery as it will thicken on the stove.  A touch of honey and a bit of red wine vinegar adds a nice sweet and tangy flavor, which keeps the borscht from tasting heavy.

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The garnish was interesting: in addition to the normal sour cream dollop, the recipe suggested grated Granny Smith apple.  So I mixed the two.  This was really nice as the apple adds a bit of texture to the soup.

We also enjoyed a nice pork loin and cheese panini on homemade bread, which is becoming a regular midweek dinner feature.  This was a really satisfying dinner, easy to make and healthy, too.

Stay tuned for another beet recipe tomorrow!

 

Beet Root Pizza

I try my darndest to support local and sustainable farming practices.  This is something of a new industry here in Thailand, although I guess you could say it is really an old industry coming back around, since until a few decades ago all farming here was both local and sustainable.  The seed and fertilizer companies gained significant influence, like they have elsewhere, creating a dependence on the part of farmers that is just now starting to be broken.

When I’m at my local market, I make it a point to look for specials and seasonal items.  We don’t really have as distinct growing seasons here as you do in more temperate climes, though.  This week, though, there was a special on beet roots.  Buy one pack, get one free.  Local, organic, free!  What more do I need to be told?

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I walked home with six packages of beets (yeah, all pre-wrapped in plastic trays and plastic wrap… what can you do?) – about fifteen beets, each about the size of a small orange. 

Not knowing what to do with the beets, I decided a good first step would be to roast them.  This took a bit more than an hour but afterwards, I was rewarded with some beautiful and tasty roots.

Looking at some recipes online, I decided I would make a beet root pizza for dinner last night and then use the rest of the beets for a borscht (beet root soup) later in the week.  The pizza was more of an idea rather than a specific recipe, a little bit of a walk on the culinary tightrope.

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First step – some pizza dough (always have some homemade half-whole wheat dough in the freezer) covered with homemade hummus (I keep portions of cooked chickpeas in the freezer, too) as a base.  In retrospect, the hummus, while tasty, wasn’t the right choice.  Something acidic was needed to brighten the flavors and a tomato sauce or a tangy squash sauce would have been a better fit.

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Some onions, which I had baked at the same time as the beets with a little bit of balsamic vinegar.  These would have been more lovely had I spent a few hours making truly caramelized onions.

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Sliced beets on top.  I also boiled some eggs and was going to add these, but then forgot to take the container out of the refrigerator so they are still sitting in there this morning!

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A little bit of chèvre – goat cheese – sliced on top.  One recipe I read also used a little bit of mozzarella cheese, which would have been nice.  This pizza was a tad… fat-less.  Does that make sense?  Sometimes you need a little fat to make the flavors rounder and fuller.

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Just out of the oven – it looks quite nice but it isn’t a balanced meal yet.

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Topped with some organic, locally-grown rocket (arugula) – now it is finished.  You can tell it is organic because of all the little bug bites on the leaves.  At least they left some for me.

At the same time, I’m playing around with a new master bread recipe, an olive oil dough that has about 1/3 whole wheat flour.

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As you can see, it rises nice and with a dusting of flour and a truly sharp knife, it looks pretty.  (I just realized, as I searched for an entry about going to a local market to get my knives sharpened, that I haven’t written that entry yet!)

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Even more so once it comes out of the oven.  This was tasty bread, but it is a quicker dough than the “no knead” recipes I’ve been using, and as such the interior has a very uniform crumb, almost like sandwich bread.  I kind of prefer to have some larger bubbles and spongier texture.

 

A Little Sunday Brunch

It was a small brunch on Sunday, just five people.  It seems that when we get more than six or seven, the table’s capacity is exceeded and the dynamic just isn’t as intimate.  Also, eating while sitting around the sofa just isn’t as comfortable.

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Left to right: Suchai, Ken, Tawn and Doug.

The menu was a fairly simple, mostly vegetarian and vaguely Mediterranean one.

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To begin with (after appetizers of celery sticks with white bean hummus), I pulled together an interesting salad based on a suggestion from Tawn.  A Hawaiian papaya half filled with a shrimp, mango and cucumber salad.  Flavored with nigella and cumin, it was really wonderful.

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The main meal included scrambled eggs; oven-roasted asparagus; a quinoa salad with feta, corn and cherry tomatoes; and a roasted red pepper fougasse.

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The fougasse, a stuffed flatbread from Southern France, came from a website I was recently recommended: Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day.  It is really easy to make.  After roasting some red bell peppers under the broiler and skinning them, I rolled out a basic olive oil yeast dough.

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I cut a few slits on one side and spread the peppers on the right.  Next time I’ll roll the dough a little thinner and add more peppers.  I then sprinkled coarse sea salt and thyme on the peppers.

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Then, I folded the dough over, sealing the edges firmly.  A brush of olive oil (I would use an egg white wash next time) and another sprinkle of thyme and it went into the oven on a pre-heated bread stone.

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After about 20 minutes at 450 F / 230 C I pulled it out and let it cool a bit before cutting and serving.  Easy!

In the afternoon, after everyone headed home and Tawn went to his parents’ house, I tackled a long standing project: finish scanning various recipes from old Cooks Illustrated magazines and sorting and shredding old bills and receipts.  What an exciting Sunday, I know!

 

Little Hanoi Bangkok

For a few years, there was a vegetarian restaurant on Sukhumvit Soi 20 called Tamarind Cafe.  It was owned by French-born Sylvie Bruzeau and Taiwanese-born Luka Wong, two women who met in Japan and decided to open a restaurant.  Tamarind Cafe was a chic little place with a small gallery on the second floor.  It had a wide variety of vegetarian food, done in a variety of culinary styles.

Little Hanoi Sadly, the lease on the space ran out and the owners did not renew.  However, they opened several ancillary food places at some department store food halls, including a Vietnamese place called Little Hanoi, located on the fifth floor of the Emporium shopping center.

Vietnamese food is one of my favorites, so when I discovered that Bruzeau and Wong had opened Little Hanoi, Tawn and I made it a point to visit.

The restaurant is small, as you can see.  And it wasn’t nearly as busy as the picture from their website shows!  Sadly, the Emporium remodeled their food court, leaving several of the businesses in sort of a blind spot at the back of the floor.  Not good for foot traffic, I’m afraid.

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We began with a vegetarian variation on what is traditionally beef skewers wrapped in betel leaves.  Instead of beef, Beuzeau, who is the chef, creates a mixture of herbs and potatoes.  It was tasty, although a little under-seasoned.  Gorgeous presentation.

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While Bruzeau emphasizes vegetarian options, there are plenty of meat items on the menu.  We enjoyed this spring rolls with shrimp, which were very fresh and plump.  Lots of beautiful herbs accompanied the meal.

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For a main course, we were feeling like fish, so we ordered this white fish, fried with spices and greens.  This was served with a plate of banh trang, the rice paper crepes used to wrap spring rolls, and rice noodles.  We wrapped our own little dumplings with a little fish, some greens, noodles and fresh herbs.  The fish was tasty, although the portion (which was meant for two people) seemed a little small for the price. 

For dessert, we tried their beignets, little puffs of dough friend up donut-style.  These were light and not at all oily, but they had the faint aftertaste of fish, making me think that the oil in the deep-fryer was perhaps a bit old.

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A return visit a few days later for lunch and I tried their pho, the hearty beef noodle soup, and a vegetarian banh mi, the French roll sandwich.  The soup was excellent, very flavorful, but something that I could probably find for half the price at the small shop run by the Vietnamese lady near Thong Lor Soi 12.  The banh mi was inventive, with roasted pumpkin.  The menu announced that it also had cheese, and I was expecting a nice goat cheese or something.  Instead it was a single slice of oily cheddar.  In addition to a slathering of much too much aioli, there was plenty of cilantro and carrots.

All in all, Little Hanoi gets high marks for creativity and beautiful presentation.  The food was good but not great, kind of b-grade food from the standpoint that it makes a good effort but just falls a bit short of excellence.  For the money, there is better value elsewhere, but if I’m in the mall and going to eat at a sit-down place as opposed to the inexpensive food court, Little Hanoi is still a decent option.

 

Second attempts at macarons

A week ago Sunday, Tawn’s friend Pat came over to teach us how to make French macarons.  The results were tasty but technically flawed, thanks to my inexperience.  Wanting to master the secrets of this elusive, meringue-based confection, I did a week’s worth of research and then set out again this past Sunday for another attempt.

P1160800 The first attempt had resulted in macaroons (right) that were too puffy and lacked both a smooth, even surface and a “foot” – the slightly cracked edge around the bottom.

They also suffered from problems with hollow interiors, caused when some of the insides would remain stuck to the parchment paper after baking, pulling away from the outside of the cookie.

My goal this week was to improve my technique and get to something that looked a lot closer to this ideal:

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As promised in the last entry about macarons, I’ll provide you with more detail about the process, which isn’t exactly difficult but does require attention to detail.  If you want to skip the whole “reading” thing, there’s a nifty video that I edited, recounting my adventures in macaron baking.

Macarons basically involve three steps: the first is to make a relatively dry dough combining almond flour, powdered sugar and egg whites (below, left).  The second is to make a meringue: egg whites, caster sugar and water (below, right).  Then you fold the two together to form the batter.

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All the ingredients including the egg whites are measured by weight, in order to keep the chemistry of the recipe correct.  This is my challenge with baking: I have to closely follow instructions.

The almond flour and powdered sugar have to be sifted.  Because almond flour tends to clump, I sifted it first by itself and then again with the sugar, resulting in a fine powder.

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Two egg whites are then added to the flour/sugar combination, then the mixture is stirred until no dry pockets remain.  Since I was making orange-flavored macarons, I added some fresh orange zest.

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The next step was to make the meringue.  Most macaron recipes I found just make a traditional meringue: beaten egg whites with powdered sugar added.  The recipe Pat gave me (as well as one or two other recipes I found online) use an Italian meringue.

Italian meringue is made by pouring a steady stream of boiling sugar syrup (soft ball stage – 116 C / 240 F) into partially-whipped egg whites, then continuing to whip them to the desired stiffness.  Italian meringue is a bit more complicated than the traditional soft meringue, but it is also much more stable – a huge benefit when you don’t want your batter to deflate.

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I learned a few things from the experience of making Italian meringue that will come in handy next time:

First, get the egg whites to soft peaks before you incorporate the sugar syrup.  Second, when you pour the syrup into the mixing bowl, keep it away from the whisk itself.  I ended up with little “sugar icicles” that stuck to the bottom of the whisk and were a pain to clean up afterwards.

The meringue is then folded into the almond flour mixture, a little bit at a time.  It has to be incorporated fully but not overworked.  This is a careful balancing act and I think I overworked it a bit as my macarons ended up just a little flatter than I would have hoped.

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The next step is to fill a pastry bag with a number 10 tip and pipe the macaron batter onto parchment paper.  Pastry bags and piping aren’t my forte so I used a nifty little technique: trace circles onto the back side of the paper so you have something to fill in.

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Two lessons I learned here: keep plenty of room between the circles because they spread, and don’t overwork the batter next time, so the macarons don’t spread so much!

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After piping (notice a few misshapen and inconsistent circles!), the macarons have to air dry until they form a skin and are no longer sticky to the touch.  With the air conditioner on high (on a drizzly afternoon) it took the better part of two hours.  This is a crucial step, though.  The first time I made these we didn’t wait until we had a full skin on them, and the tops cracked and were not smooth.

I also tried baking them one sheet at a time instead of two, as I did the previous weekend.  While I have a convection oven, so theoretically the heat is even throughout because of the fan, I have observed that there are some significant hotspots, so cooking one pan at a time will give me more control over even cooking.

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One challenge I still encountered was the problem of the meringues sticking to the parchment.  The ones in the upper-right of the picture were ultimately not usable because there wasn’t enough substance left.  The recipe calls for 130 C oven and about 12-13 minutes of baking.  That wasn’t enough.

While I risked overcooking, it seems like I got better results at 150 C for about 16-17 minutes per tray, turned once in baking.  Various helpful techniques I read online, such as spraying some water under the parchment paper after taking them out of the oven, didn’t seem to help.  Also, letting them cool on the pan versus moving the paper to a rack didn’t seem to make a difference.

If anyone has any thoughts or suggestions of how to tackle this problem, please let me know!

As the macarons were cooking, I cooked up an orange curd: eggs and egg yolks combined with sugar, thickened over a bain marie – a pot of boiling water – and then some orange juice is incorporated.  This didn’t get quite as thick as I’d like; I need to experiment more to get the best texture, but it worked well enough.

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The end results turned out much better than before: my macarons have “feet” and puffed up nicely – although a little less overworking would have made them even puffier.  They have a nice smooth surface, although they don’t have the glossy sheen that some patisseries are able to achieve.  I wonder if they brush the surface with egg whites before baking?

Of the eight dozen individual macarons, about two dozen were not usable because of the sticking problem.  This resulted in about three dozen gerets – the macaron sandwiches. 

I also learned that they store in the freezer (in an airtight container) for several days very nicely.  Good to know.

So, I think I can call this weekend’s second attempt a success.  I’ve created a macaron that is substantially similar to what I can buy in the hotel pastry shops.  They aren’t nearly as good as the ones in Paris, but were pretty decent.  Given that the entire process took the better part of five hours of my Sunday, I’m not sure they’re worth the effort, though!

But, still, a fun and tasty adventure.

 

My Adventures in Italian Cooking

Everybody has a different “cooking personality”: some are rigid, by-the-recipe people, others are rebellious free-form experimenters who have never cracked open a cookbook in their life.  I’m definitely more of a “Hmmm… interesting idea.  Now let’s improvise!” type of cook, which led to an adventurous experience in a recent attempt to make raviolli.

The whole thing is documented in this video, but for those of you who don’t watch video, let me share the story.

Somewhere not too long ago, I read about using no-boil lasagna sheets to make manicotti, the Italian stuffed pasta tubes baked in tomato sauce somewhat like a rolled lasagna.  According to the article, instead of making your own pasta, you just soak the lasagna sheets in warm water for a few minutes and they become pliable enough to roll into manicotti tubes.

Hmmm… interesting idea.  Now let’s improvise!  If the sheets get flexible enough to be rolled, surely they could be folded in half to form raviolli, right?

What sounded like a good idea didn’t work so well in practice.  The pasta sheets are simply too thick and even after ten minutes in very hot water, attemps at making raviolli with the sheets were failing badly. 

Never one to be fearful of switching the proverbial horses mid-stream, I retreated to making manicott, albeit without a recipe.  I will say this, though: the improvised white bean and spinach stuffing was to die for. 

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Above, White bean and spinach manicotti with fresh green salad.

Just to make sure the meal turned out okay, I threw together an apple crisp.  This is always a safe end to a meal, though even here I stepped out on a limb for a bit more improvisation and tried some maple syrup instead of sugar to sweeten the apples.  Along with a few handfulls of chopped pecans, the crisp was a perfect end to the raviolli – er, manicotti – meal.

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Above, a scoop of maple-pecan-apple crisp to finish the meal.

 

Macaron Party

Macarons vs. macaroons: Have you been caught up in this latest pastry craze?  While macaroons are the dry piles of coconut often dipped in chocolate, macarons are a French confection made of almond flour and meringue, baked and then formed into little sandwiches with buttercream filling.

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I first had these at Le Goûter Bernardaud in Hong Kong.  While I think most versions are a bit too sweet for my tastes, they are tremendously delicate.  The exterior is just a little chewy, giving way to a cake-like interior.  The flavors are as intense as the colors.  One bakery in San Francisco, Miette, dispenses with the food coloring, which I personally prefer.

From what I’ve heard, the macarons are supposed to be one of the most difficult things for a pastry chef to bake.  Of course, that just set my competitive side on fire.  I was very happy when one of Tawn’s friends, who trained at Le Cordon Bleu cooking school and interned at La Nôtre here in Bangkok, offered to conduct a macaron cooking class for us.

In no time at all, the offer had been turned into a party for ten of their fellow university classmates complete with food and wine.  They say too many cooks spoil the soup.  In this case, I’m not sure about the soup, but the kitchen was definitely crowded!

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Pat, our teacher, flashes the victory sign in our crowded galley kitchen.  At one point, we had seven people working in there!

I’m planning on trying another batch of these tasty treats this weekend and will go into more detail on the ingredients and techniques after that.  Instead, I’ll just share some of the fun shots form the party.

Bobby, the only other native English speaker, decided to join me in the kitchen after the Thai gossip got incomprehensibly out of hand.  He did a fantastic job separating eggs.  This was the first time I’ve baked by measuring the egg whites by weight!

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While I was pushing for no food coloring – no adulteration, please! – the other gay boys won out and pastels ruled the day.

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Macarons are indeed difficult to make.  So many steps and so many factors that can inhibit success.  One of the biggest challenges is that you have to pipe the darn things onto parchment, trying to get them the same size.  Penciling circles on the back of the sheet helped.

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But it took a little practice because the batter, which immediately after piping looks like it will stay nice and pert, slowly begins to spread, until this happens:

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D’oh!  After which, you have to scrape the batter back into the bag and start over.

The other challenge is that you need to let the batter air dry until it forms a skin.  We waited close to an hour but with our humidity, two or three hours would have been better.  Next time I’m getting the air con going full blast well in advance.

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After the first batches came out, Pat (with her husband standing over shoulder, eagerly awaiting a sample) started piping raspberry jam between the cookies and sandwiching them together.

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Above, Tawn and Pat with the first batch of macarons.  Below, detail of our first plate.

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Yeah, they look cute, but they really turned out crap.  Here’s what they should look like:

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Ignore the color for a moment.  What we’re really shooting for are two things: the shiny top and then the “foot” at the base of the cookie.  We didn’t get those and I think there are a few factors.  Based on what I’ve read in several online recipes and my conversation with Pat, I think I didn’t incorporate the meringue into the almond flour mixture sufficiently, and I think I didn’t let it air dry long enough.

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My suspicion is based on what is happening on the underside of the macarons: the centers are sticking to the parchment paper, which I think means the interior is significantly moister than the exterior.  In other words, not dry enough.

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Left to right: Bim, Ko, Pat, Prince, Tuk, Fluck and Tawn.

If all goes according to plan, I’ll do another batch this weekend.  Let’s hope they turn out better.  The good news is, even when they don’t look perfect and their texture is a bit off, they still taste good!

Update: Last Sunday I made another attempt at macarons and they turned out a lot better.  Pictures and more detail here.

 

Chili Mac and Me

Another week comes to an end, this one ending with what Buddhists consider their most holy day.  Of course it is a holiday in this predominately Buddhist nation, so Tawn is at home while I still have to work.  Nonetheless, I’ll take a few minutes to keep this blog up to date.

There was a really interesting series of comments left on my last post about the book “Free Range Kids“.  I enjoy when an entry generates a healthy discussion.  It makes me feel like Xanga is some kind of a town barber shop, where we can sit around sipping lemonade, playing checkers and chatting about the concerns of the day.  And, I suppose, it is some kind of “third place”, albeit a virtual and global one. 

(See this interesting website for the Project to Public Spaces to learn more about the importance of third places in our communities.)

Speaking of Free Range Kids, I’ve been scanning old photos when visiting my maternal grandparents, trying to organize these and eventually create some photo albums in which to capture family memories.  Along the way, I’ve come across a whole bunch of photos of an original free range kid.

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Me at age 4 with my maternal grandmother.

My question is, what happened to all that hair?

Recently, I’ve been trying to cook at home a bit more often.  Earlier in the week it was a dish of chili-mac (chili combined with macaroni, which results in something like a southwestern flavored goulash).  Later in the week I tried a white bean and spinach ravioli but which, in some pics and video I’ll share later, turned out to be a cannelloni.  Long story.

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The chili-mac recipe started with a recipe but then took an improvisational turn when I started adding carrots and corn. 

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After adding some whole wheat penne and topping it with some mozzarella cheese, it turned out to be a fine meal, quite healthy and very satisfying to eat.

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Since it is hot season (which equals mango season) we had to partake of some khao niaw mamuang – sticky rice with mango!

Busy weekend coming up with several things that should make for fun blog entries.  Hope you have a great weekend!

 

Bitten by Bittman’s Blog

I like food blogs.  I like writing one and I certainly love reading other people’s food blogs.  One of my favorite is “Bitten“, written by Mark Bittman of the New York Times.  He’s kind of a no-nonsense cook, doesn’t worry about incredibly fancy preparation but instead focuses on health and flavor.

Here are three recipes I found in his blog recently and prepared at home.  Click on pictures for a larger version.

The first was for a Curried Cauliflower Flatbread.  Quite easy to make, this unleavened bread cooks in a skillet (perfect chance to test out that recently restored and reseasoned cast iron skillet!) and makes a very tasty appetizer.  It does look a little plain when finished – some roasted peppers, hummus, a sauce or something would perk up the color – but it is tasty!

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The second dish was an unusual pairing of lentils and rhubarb in an Indian Spiced Lentil and Rhubarb Stew.  Yes, rhubarb in a savory dish.  Sadly, I may have overcooked this as the lentils were a mushy mess.  My bad as I was on a conference call while finishing it.  And I think using chicken stock instead of water would have made the flavor more robust.  Interesting concept, but I’m not sold on it yet.

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Finally, for dessert I made a Chocolate Semolina Pudding from a recipe in Bittman’s new book, “Food Matters”.  Ostensibly somewhere between a pudding and a cake, my version turned out kind of dry, maybe because the whole milk yogurt here in Thailand has a different consistency from that in the US.  The texture was good, though: semolina flour gives it a little “toothier” consistency.  Will have to play around with this and see what I can make of it.

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Happy May Day to everyone!