Category: Recipes

Feijoada à Brasileira – Brazilian Black Bean Stew

(image credit: www.acontece.com)

My family loves Feijoada à Transmontana – Portuguese Bean Stew that I make on cold winter days. This recipe for Feijoada à Brasileira is similar but it uses black beans which gives the stew and meat a dark rich color. Known references to the dish in Brazil, go back almost 100 years ago when an article about feijoada appeared in; Diario de Pernambuco, in Recife, August 7, 1833.

This is perfect dish to serve for a large group of friends! The recipe seems complicated but it’s relatively easy because the stew cooks in one pot. I’ve included the recipe for the sides which are also easy to make and require few ingredients. I also have the recipe for the national drink of Brazil;  “Caipirinha” which is typically served with the feijoada!

Caipirinha Recipe

1 lime (quarted)

2 teaspoons sugar

2 ounces cachaça liquor

Place the lime and sugar in a thick glass. Mash the sugar and lime together. Add ice. Add the cachaca and stir well.

(image credit: foodviva.com)

 

The recipe is also posted in the Portuguese language below for my Brazilian followers!

If you’re wondering why the recipe calls for 2 oranges? It’s because you use 1 orange to cook in the stew to cut the fattiness in the meats. The other orange is served on the side as a garnish to clean your palette.

This recipe is adapted from a Brazilian foodie website run by a group of four friends which include an advertising agent, an architect, an administrator, and an attorney. They were very helpful and also sent me a very informative article on the history of “Feijoada” which is fascinating!



“Food goes beyond the taste, aroma, color and texture … Every food has a story!  An advertising agent, an architect, an administrator and an attorney … what do they… have in common? Besides the passion for two wheels, friendship, and charm they have an immense curiosity for cuisine.  Mix it with travel, history, tasting, and with motorcycling! We decided to begin our on the road culinary search on our motorcycles. We go behind the history of food, wherever it is! Come travel along our roads as we explain about food and have fun around the table!

This is; “every food has a story”…

Instagram:todacomida 
Twiter:todacomidatem 

 

Traditional “Feijoada a Brasileira” recipe adapted from Toda Comida tem Historia

Ingredients:

1/2  pound of beef jerky

1/2  pound of salted or smoked pork ribs

1/2 pound of salted pig trotters (optional)

1/4 pound of  salted pork tail

1/4 pound of salted pork ears

1/4 to 2/3 pound of smoked or salted pork Loin

1/4 pound of sausage (Paio Portuguese Sausage)

1/4 pound of Portuguese chourica sausage

1/4 pound  of smoked ox tongue

1/8 pound of cured bacon

2 pounds of uncooked black beans

2 cups chopped onion

6 minced garlic cloves

6 bay  leafs

1/4 cup olive oil

2 oranges (1 for cooking, 1 for garnish)

 

Sides

Collards

2 pounds Collard greens

2 garlic cloves

2 tablespoons olive oil

 

Rice

2 cups rice

4 cups water

1 tablespoon of butter

salt

 

Cassava

1/2 pound of cassava (manioc) flour

1 onion (chopped)

3 garlic cloves

6 tablespoons flour

salt

 

Instructions:

Prepare the beans the day before:

Pour the black beans into a bowl and discard any stones or debris. Wash them in a colander under running cold water and place them back into the bowl. Cover with cold water 3 inches above the beans and let soak in the refrigerator overnight.  The beans will double in size. Drain them and set aside for cooking.

Wash and clean salted meats, removing excess fat and nerves. Let soak in water for 24 hours in the refrigerator, changing the water three or four times during this period.

Day of cooking:

Boil salted meats in whole pieces for about 20 minutes over high heat, and through out the water.  In a large heavy soup pan saute the onion and garlic in 1/4 cup of olive oil on medium heat. Add the beans, bay leaves and oranges cut in halves. Add the meats in the following order; beef jerky, pig feet and ear. Add enough water to cover the meats, stir and cook on low medium heat. Half an hour later add the tongue, tail and ribs. Half hour later add the pork loin, the sausages, and bacon, cook for a few minutes and remove any of the fat that is rising to the surface.

Remove the orange halves and bay leafs, and cook for 2 hours on low simmering heat stirring very often so it does not stick. After two hours test the degree of doneness of the meats by piercing with a fork. Remove the meats that are done and set aside. Continue cooking the remaining meats until fork tender. Remove meats, cut them into small serving size pieces and return them to the pot with the beans. Cook for 10 to 15 minutes on low heat to incorporate the flavors.

Serve with white rice and steamed cabbage in olive oil and garlic, and a beautiful crumbly cassava.

Collard green preparation:

Wash, pat dry and remove the stem from the collards. Stack the leaves on top of each other and form a roll. Cut the collards into thin strips.

Saute one garlic clove in 2 tablespoons of olive oil until translucent. Add the collards a dash of salt and cook for about 3-5 minutes stirring continuously until tender.

Set aside and reheat if necessary on low heat before serving.

White rice preparation:

Bring 4 cups of water to a rolling boil. Add 2 cups of rice, 1 teaspoon of salt and 1 tablespoon of butter. Stir, lower heat to medium, cover and cook for 15 minutes stirring a few times.

Remove from heat, leave covered until ready to serve.

Cassava preparation:

Saute the onion and garlic in the olive oil on medium heat until translucent. Add the flour a few tablespoons at a time while stirring until it is cooked and golden brown.

Set aside and serve warm.

 

(image credit: .esquinamagica.com.br)

History of Feijoada

The popular most widespread explanation of the origin of feijoada is that the masters – the coffee farms, and the gold mines of the sugar mills – supplying slaves to the “remnants” of pigs when they were carneados. The cooking these ingredients with beans and water, was to give rise to revenue. This version, however, does not hold, either in culinary tradition, is lighter in historical research. According to Carlos Augusto Ditadi, specialist in cultural affairs and historian of the National Archives of Rio de Janeiro, in an article published in the Gula Magazine, May 1998, the alleged origin of feijoada is merely contemporary legend, born of modern folklore, a romanticized view social and cultural relations of slavery in Brazil.

The dietary pattern of the slave does not differ fundamentally in eighteenth-century Brazil. Still based on cassava flour or corn made ​​with water and a few more additions, ie, which had been established since the early days. The slave society of Brazil in the eighteenth century and into the nineteenth, was constantly plagued by shortages and high prices of basic foods, due to the monoculture, the exclusive dedication to mining and the system of slave labor, there are rare deaths due to poor diet including the death of lords themselves.

The slave could not be bullied simply because it was expensive and the cost base of the economy. Should eat three times a day. Usually lunched at 8 o’clock in the morning, dined at 1 o’clock and dined around 8 or 9 o’clock at night. In historical references on the menu of slaves, found the clear presence of corn meal mush, or cassava flour, besides beans seasoned with salt and fat, served very thin and the occasional appearance of a piece of beef or pig. Harvested some orange complemented the rest of the foot, which prevented scurvy. Sometimes, at the end of good coffee harvest, the foreman of the ranch could even get a whole pig slaves. But that was the exception. Recognized no historical reference about a poor and humble feijoada, elaborated within the most sad and starving senzalas no.

There is also a sales receipt for the Imperial House of April 30, 1889, a butcher in the city of Petropolis, State of Rio de Janeiro, in which one sees that ate up green meat, veal, lamb, pork, sausage, blood sausage, liver, kidneys, tongue, brains, entrails and ox tripe sauces. This proves that not only were slaves who ate these ingredients, and they were by no means “leftovers”. Instead, they were considered delicacies. In 1817, Jean-Baptiste Debret now report the regulation of the profession of tripeiro in the city of Rio de Janeiro, who were street vendors, and which sourced these parts of the animals at slaughterhouses from cattle and pigs. Debret also reports that his brains were going to hospitals, and liver, heart and tripe (cow, cattle and pigs) were used to make polenta, commonly sold for slaves to gain or blinders in the squares and streets of the city. This practice, which arises, in Rio de Janeiro, is called “the angu Bahia”, mainly because it takes in its composition, palm oil (palm oil).

Therefore, its creation and name has to do with ways of making Portuguese, the regions of Extremadura, the Beiras and Tras-os-Montes and Alto Douro, mixing beans of various kinds – minus the black beans (of American origin) – sausages, ears and pig’s foot. In fact, cooked are common in Europe, as French cassoulet, which also leads beans in its preparation. In Spain, the Madrid native Asturian stew and pork and, in Italy, the Milanese casseruola or casserola beans are prepared with chickpeas. Apparently, all of these dishes were similar to that ugly, it was increased with the passage of time, becoming even in the dish of the present development. Cascudo noted that its formula is still in development.

The feijoada seems to be already well known in the early nineteenth century, as evidenced by a notice published in the Diario de Pernambuco, in Recife, from August 7, 1833, in which a restaurant, Hotel Theatre, newly opened, informs that Thursdays would be served “the Brazilian feijoada”. On March 3, 1840, in the same newspaper, Father Carapuceiro published an article in which he said:

“In families where the real food is unknown where regabofes take, and it is usual practice comezinha convert into feijoada fragments from dinner when they call burying the bones […] You can lay in a large pot or cauldron leftover turkey, roasting pigs, fatacões bacon and ham, moreover good vassalhos jerky aka Ceará, everything will mix with the beans essential: everything is reduced to a grease “!

In 1848, the same Diário de Pernambuco already announced the sale of “beef bacon, suitable for stews, 80 reis pound”. On January 6, 1849, the Jornal do Commercio of Rio de Janeiro, is a statement that the newly installed eatery “New Coffee do Commercio” near the tavern of “Fame Coffee with Milk”, will in all Tuesdays and Thursdays, at the request of many customers, “Bella Feijoada to Brazilleira”.

composition

Full feijoada, as we know, accompanied by white rice, orange slices, braised kale and farofa, was very renowned restaurant in Rio G. Lobo, who worked on General Street Hall, 135, in the city center of Rio de Janeiro . The establishment, founded in the late nineteenth century, disappeared in 1905, with the works of enlargement of the street Uruguayana. With the construction of Avenida Presidente Vargas, in the 1940s, this street disappears definitive.

In the books “Chest Bones” and “Iron Floor”, Pedro Nava describes the feijoada G. Wolf, praising the one prepared by Master Wolf. Especially, it is revealed in the presence of black beans, a Rio predilection. Contemporary revenues would have migrated from the establishment G. Wolf kitchen to other restaurants in town, as well as São Paulo, Minas Gerais and Bahia. Bars and taverns of the great cities of the East Central also adopted successfully. But caveat is that Pedro Nava (…) “before the venerable evolution of Latino dishes.”

“In my Chest Bones said, repeating Noronha Santos, who is legitimately complete feijoada carioca dish. Was invented in Old Hall Street General, the famous restaurant of G. Wolf, whose name was said in Globe contracted. Emphasis added now the “invented” to score well marked its meaning of “finding.” we can not say that it was spontaneous creation.’s venerable before the evolution of Latino dishes like French cassoulet which is a ragout of white beans with goose meat , duck or lamb – which asks cooker stoneware – cassole – so be prepared.

– Pedro Nava in “Iron Floor”

The feijoada, anyway, become popular among all social classes in Brazil, always a spirit of festivity and celebration, far from remembering shortage. Became famous in remembrance those prepared in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Bahia by Tia Ciata.

And previously, the writer Joaquim José de França Júnior, text 1867, notionally describes a picnic in the field of Old Jail, serving a feijoada with “(…) Loin, pork head, guts, mocotós, language Rio Grande, ham, beef jerky, sausage, bacon, sausages (…) “, and, in 1878, describes a” feijoada in [Paqueta] “, where it says:” (…) The word “feijoada “whose origin is lost in the mists of time of the King our Lord does not always means the same thing. in common sense, feijoada is a succulent and savory delicacy of our ancestors, the bastion of poor table, ephemeral whim of banquet of rich, essentially the national dish, as the theater of Pena, and the thrush of felt endeixas Gonçalves Dias. figuratively, that word refers to binge, that is, “a role made ​​between friends in remote or little patent “(…)”.

Currently, it spreads throughout the country, as the most representative Brazilian cuisine recipe. Revised, enlarged and enriched, feijoada is no longer exclusively a dish. Today, as also noted Cascudo, is a complete meal.

Text reference: Gula Magazine

 

Feijoada tradicional

Ingredientes

200 g. de carne seca bovina
200 g. de costela de porco salgada, ou defumada
200 g. de pé de porco salgado
100 g. de rabo de porco salgado
100 g. de orelha de porco salgada
150 g. de lombo de porco defumado ou salgado
100 g. de paio
100 g. de linguiça portuguesa
100 g. de língua de boi defumada
050 g. de bacon
900 g. de feijão preto
200 g. de cebola picada (para o tempero do feijão)
100 g. de alho picado (para o tempero do feijão)
006 fls. de louro (para o tempero do feijão)
002 un. de laranjas com casca (bem lavadas)

Modo de fazer

Limpar bem as carnes salgadas, tirando o excesso de gorduras e nervuras, limpando os pêlos e colocando-as de molho em água por 24 horas, trocando-se a água três a quatro vezes durante este período.

Ferva as carnes salgadas em peças inteiras, durante mais ou menos 20 minutos em fogo forte, e jogue a água fora, pois nela está todo o excesso de gordura. Coloque então as carnes para cozinhar de forma definitiva, já com o feijão, as folhas de louro e as laranjas cortadas em metades, na seguinte ordem: carne seca, pé e orelha. Meia hora depois coloque a língua, o rabo e a costela, e após meia hora, coloque o lombo, a linguiça, o paio e o bacon, cuidando para tirar e jogar fora, durante todo o cozimento, a gordura que for subindo à superfície.

Em uma frigideira, doure bem a cebola e o alho em duas xícaras de óleo previamente aquecido, colocando na panela do cozimento, junto com as últimas carnes para cozinhar, retirando antes as metades das laranjas, que já cumpriram a sua missão de ajudar a cortar a gordura das carnes. Após duas horas comece a testar o grau de cozimento da carnes com o garfo, pois nem todas chegam ao grau de maciez ao mesmo tempo, retirando e reservando as que já estiverem no ponto.

Quando todas as carnes e o feijão estiverem no ponto, retire e corte as carnes em pedaços pequenos para servir, voltando para a panela com o feijão e cozinhando por mais 10 a 15 minutos em fogo brando.

Sirva com arroz branco e couve refogada no azeite e alho, e uma bela farofa de mandioca.

Peach Berry Salad with Raspberry Vinaigrette

Peach Berry Salad

It’s peach and raspberry season so I went to my local fruit store which harvests their own peaches and berries this week.

Their  black raspberries were phenomenal and about 2 inches long. They looked like grape clusters instead of berries! I made this salad with sweet ripe peaches which were perfect blend with the tart berries.

I also made home made raspberry vinaigrette with the berries. The dressing is easy so you don’t have to buy store bought dressing. Enjoy!

Ingredients:

2 cups leafy green lettuce

2 cups baby spinach

1 small carrot (finely shredded)

1 cup Black Raspberries

1 peach (finely sliced)

1/4 sweet red onion (sliced very thin)

Raspberry Vinaigrette:

1/4 cup balsamic vinegar

1/4 cup olive oil

3 black raspberries (finely mashed)

Salt

Pepper

1/4 teaspoon of yellow mustard

1/4 teaspoon garlic powder

1 teaspoon of honey (optional)

Mix the vinaigrette in a small jar and shake vigorously to incorporate. Pour desired amount over the salad and store remaining dressing in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

Zucchini Vegetable Lasagna

 

This will be the last Zucchini recipe for this summer! I promise!

The lasagna is perfect for your meatless days. My family loved it and said it was even better the next day!

Serves 8-10

Ingredients:

6 to 8 Zucchini (sliced to 1/4 inch lengthwise)

1 package of frozen broccoli, cauliflower and carrots (or your favorite combination)

1 package of lasagna

3 cups of low fat ricotta cheese

2 cup of shredded Mozzarella cheese

5 cups of whole milk

1/3 cup of butter

1/3 cup of flour

Salt and Pepper to taste

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1 teaspoon paprika

Dash of Nutmeg

 

 

Instructions:

Season the Zucchini with salt, pepper, garlic powder and paprika and set aside in for the moisture to drain. Cook the vegetables in 1 cup of water for about 5 minutes or until tender. Drain them and let them cool.

Saute the Zucchini for about 3 minutes on each side or until they get slightly cooked but not mushy. Set aside.

Cook the lasagna to package directions and set aside to cool.

In a non stick pan, melt butter and add the flour to form a roux. Slowly add the milk, a dash of salt, pepper and the nutmeg, taste for seasoning, and stir continuously until it thickens for about 5 minutes. Set aside to cool.

Mix the Ricotta cheese with 1 cup of the Mozzarella in a bowl and set aside.

Begin layering the lasagna by coating the lasagna pan with cooking spray or butter. Start with the pasta, then a layer of the cheese, vegetables and top with Zucchini. Spread 1/3 of the cream sauce evenly over the Zucchini and repeat the layering. You’ll end up with about 3 or 4 layers ending with the pasta.

Spread with the remaining cheese. I added a few very thin slices of Zucchini on top but this is optional.

Cover with foil and cook at 375 for about 1 hour. Remove from oven and let it sit for about 15 minutes to set.

It’s even better the next day so don’t worry if you have leftovers. Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

Zucchini and Potato Omelet

Just when you thought you’d had enough zucchini recipe here’s one more!

This is what happens when you miss a few zucchini’s overgrowing in your garden.

They look like baseball bats and remind me of the baby on the Flintstones named “Bam Bam”, who carried around a big club shaped like these.

This omelet is simple to make in just 5 minutes! I used leftover Portuguese Roasted Potatoes from last night’s dinner but you can use only zucchini and cheese if you prefer.

Serves 1-2

Ingredients:

1 medium zucchini (thinly sliced)

1 cup of cubed cooked potatoes

3 eggs

1 tablespoon of olive oil

Shredded cheese

Salt and pepper to taste

Instructions:

Saute the zucchini with the potatoes in a medium skillet with the olive oil for about 4 minutes until the zucchini is slightly cooked while stirring it often.

Add the beaten eggs and let them cook for about 1 minute. Gently loosen the omelet on the sides so it doesn’t stick. After another minute, cover the skillet with a large plate and invert the omelet back into the pan uncooked side down.

Turn off the burner. Add the cheese and cover for another minute. The omelet will finish cooking and the cheese will melt. Add salt and pepper to your taste. Enjoy!

 

SUMMER TIME SHRIMP & PASTA SALAD

This shrimp and pasta recipe is one dish meal or a perfect dish for your next cook out! The savory shrimp goes perfectly with the sweet tomatoes and tender pasta. Kick thisvrecipe up by using my Spicy blend with some crushed red pepper! Enjoy!

Ingredients:

1 to pounds of peeled deveined shrimp

2 tablespoons of olive oil

1 tbsp TASTE PORTUGAL SEASONING

Pasta Ingredients:

1/2 package of your favorite pasta (approximately 8 oz.)

2 small ripe tomatoes chopped

1/4 cup of finely chopped onion

1 stalk of finely chopped celery

1 tablespoon of mayonnaise

2 tablespoons of finely chopped parsley

1 teaspoon of fresh lemon juice

Salt and pepper to taste

Instructions:

Toss the shrimp in seasoning in a small bowl and mix well. Let the shrimp sit for about 5 minutes to absorb the flavors.

In a small skillet heat the olive oil on high heat and add the shrimp.  Cook for about 3 minutes until the shrimp becomes pink. Remove from heat and set aside

Cook pasta as per package directions and rinse with cold water.

Place pasta in a large serving bowl and add the tomatoes, celery, onion, and parsley and stir.

Add the shrimp to the pasta. Add the mayonnaise, and lemon,  stir taste and add more seasoning if desired.

Store in the refrigerator until ready to serve. Enjoy!

Bolo de Bolacha Maria – Maria Cookie Cake

This easy recipe requires not baking and makes an elegant dessert. Bolo de Bolacha Maria is traditionally made with butter, or sweetened condensed milk, but my version uses home made pastry cream which makes it lighter and uses less sugar. You’ll find that you have all the ingredients for this recipe in your pantry. If you don’t have Portuguese Maria Cookies, you can use the Mexican Maria Cookies found in most grocery stores as an option. Enjoy!

Makes 1 small cake or approximately 4 parfaits

Ingredients:

1 package of Bolacha Maria (Maria Cookies any brand)

1 or 2 cups of warm strong black coffee

2 cups of whole milk

3 large egg yolks

1/2 cup of sugar

1/4 cup of corn starch

1/2 teaspoon of vanilla extract

2 tablespoons of butter

pinch of salt

Whipped cream

Instructions for Pastry Cream:

In a small saucepan heat the milk, 1/4 cup of the sugar, vanilla and pinch of salt until scalding but not boiling and set aside.

Meanwhile mix the egg yolks with the remaining sugar and corn starch until smooth and creamy.

Slowly add the yolks to the milk beating as you pour. Cook the mixture on medium heat for two minutes until it thickens stirring constantly.

Pour the cream into a bowl and add the butter. Beat with a mixer for about 5 minutes until very smooth and creamy.

Cover the bowl and place in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours to cool completely and thicken.

Dip 1 cookie into the coffee for about 5 seconds and place into the bottom of parfait glass. The cookie shouldn’t fall apart, if you find it gets too soft dip the cookie for only a few seconds.

Spread pastry cream on top of the cookie and continuing layer to your desired height leaving the last layer with the cream on top.

Crumble a few cookies in a plastic bag and sprinkle on top.

If you want to make the cookie mold with ribbon it’s very easy to do.

Place whole cookies around the sides to form an even square. Wrap a ribbon around and make a bow. Add tiny flowers for a nice effect.

Store in the refrigerator for a few hours to set. When ready to serve top with fresh whipped cream and cookie crumbles.

You can also make this recipe as individual parfaits but don’t top with the cream until ready to serve.

Store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Enjoy!

 

 

Wines of Portugal: 10 Chefs 10 Wineries August: Roasted Saddle of Rabbit with Chartreuse flavors and Spring: Apple Street Farm Herbs and Sprouts/Quinta do Cruzeiro “Sousa Lopes Unfiltered, 2012”

To showcase the incredible versatility of Portuguese wines with food, Wines of Portugal is launching an exciting new culinary-focused program in the United States this April. The program, known as “10 Chefs / 10 Wineries,” will match ten Portuguese wineries with ten of America’s top chefs, culminating in an online cooking series and limited edition printed recipe guide that will be available to trade, press and consumers by the end of the year.

 

Recipe and photos credit: http://www.winesofportugal.com/us/food-and-wine/10-chefs-10-wineries/

Wine
Quinta do Cruzeiro
“Sousa Lopes Unfiltered, 2012
www.adegacasadatorre.com

 

Chef Mathew Delisle – L’Espalier Boston, Ma.

Recipe

Roasted Saddle of Rabbit with
Chartreuse flavors and Spring:
Apple Street Farm Herbs and Sprouts

As a first course serves 4

Rabbit Saddle

2ea rabbit saddle
2 tbls olive oil
2 tbls butter
salt
black pepper
3 sprigs thyme
2 garlic cloves
2 tbls Chartreuse liquor

First, clean any excess fat and extraneous meat from around the saddle. Preheat a heavy bottom saute pan over medium heat and turn the oven on to 350 degrees. Generously season the saddle with salt and pepper. Add olive oil into the pan and saute the saddle on each side until golden in color. To finish cooking, place in the oven for 5-7 minutes. Remove pan from the oven and return to stove top. Deglaze pan with Chartreuse, add butter, thyme, and garlic; baste for 2-3 mins. Take off heat and allow rabbit to repose and reserve any juices and some of the pan butter to dress the final dish.

Spring Vegetables

1 cup English peas (shelled)
1 cup fava beans (shelled)
1 cup asparagus tips
12 ea ramps

Clean and wash all vegetables. Bring a large pot of salted water to boil and prepare an ice bath. Blanch each vegetable separately (except the ramps) to desired doneness and then place in ice bath (to stop the cooking process). Peel the peas and favas.

Oyster Emulsion

4ea fresh – preferably New England Oysters
1 cup fresh herbs – chive, tarragon, chervil, parsley, dill
1 cup fresh spinach
1 cup grape seed oil
1 lemon (for the zest)
salt
black pepper

Shuck oysters and retain all liquor (oyster juices). Blanch herbs and spinach for 3 seconds in a pot of salted boiling water and then remove to ice bath. Drain well. In a blender, puree oysters and herbs together until very smooth. Then, on low speed, slowly add in oil to form an emulsion. Season to taste and zest in the lemon.

Pickled Vegetables

1 ea sweet onion (i.e., Vidalia or Maui)
2 ea small carrots

Slice onions and carrots into thin strips (either by hand or with a mandolin).

Pickling liquid

2 cups vinegar – white wine or white balsamic work best
1 ea star anise
5 ea green cardamon
1/2 ea cinnamon stick
1 tsp anise seed
1 ea mace
2 ea clove
2 tbls kosher salt
2 tbls sugar

Gently toast all spices over low heat until they release their aroma. Bring vinegar, sugar, and salt to a low simmer, just enough to dissolve the sugar and salt. Add toasted spice and remove from heat. Helpful tip: It is helpful to wrap the toasted spices in cheese cloth before adding to the pickling liquid (making it easier to remove later). Let the pickling liquid cool to room temp and pour over the carrots and onions, with the spices so that they continue to release flavor. Cover and place in the refrigerator and allow to sit at least over night (up to 2 weeks) so the vegetables can absorb the vinegar and spices.

Greens

1 cup wild miner’s lettuce
1/2 cup wild wood sorrel
1 cup petite nasturtium leaves
1 cup chickweed
1 cup sunflower sprouts
1/4 cup nice green olives, pitted
various herbs – chive, chervil, tarragon, and mint
1 cup Pistachio oil
1 ea lemon
finishing salt – Maldon or Fleur de Sel
edible flowers such as mustard, borage, violets, or nasturtium pedals

To Finish

Warm rabbit saddle in oven gently. Zest and then juice the lemon in a bowl, add pistachio oil and season to create a broken style vinaigrette. Heat one tablespoon butter over medium heat until it becomes lightly brown and nutty in aroma. Add ramps and various other Spring vegetables and lightly saute until just warmed. Remove rabbit from the saddle and reserve one loin per guest. Arrange oyster puree on the bottom of a large plate. Disperse the Spring vegetables equally on to each plate, haphazardly strewn about. Slice rabbit loin and place onto each plate. Garnish with generous amounts of olives, greens, herbs, and flowers – creating a Spring garden effect. Finally, drizzle dishes with the reserved warmed pan butter, rabbit juices, and the pistachio-lemon oil. Season with finishing salt and a touch of fresh ground black pepper if you like.

L’Espalier
774 Boylston St, Boston, MA 02199
(617)262-3023

http://www.lespalier.com/
https://www.facebook.com/lespalierboston
https://twitter.com/LESPALIER

Sugar and Spice Baby Shower Tea Party

“Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice, That’s What Little Girls are Made of”

Here’s the photos from my daughter in law Rebecca’s baby shower hosted by my daughter Lisa and I. We had the shower at the beautiful “Ludlow Country Golf Club” at 10:00 am, where a delicious breakfast buffet was served by caterers: Salt & Pepper.

Each table was decorated with pink and white linens where a photo frame stated the shower theme along with the photo of the babies ultrasound.

The table center pieces were hand made with vintage tea pots filled with fresh cut flowers from my sister Rose’s garden. She was up at 5 am that morning cutting the flowers and arrived at my house at 6 am. They came out beautiful! Salt and Pepper’s staff suggested we add mirrors under the tea pots which created a stunning affect.

At the end of the shower, we held a contest where the quest at each table with the closest birthday date to the babies due date won the centerpiece!

Two of my friends sitting at the same table were both born on the same day as the babies due date. We decided to award the prize to the one that was born earliest on that day.

To keep with the “Sugar and Spice” theme we served vanilla cupcakes with vanilla frosting. We topped the cupcakes with fresh babies breath and one rose bud also from Rose’s garden.

For the “sugar and spice” themed favors, we created a gift bag that had a vintage tea cup, a sachet of cinnamon spice tea and pure sugar cubes. Then we tied the bags with pink baby ribbon. The cupcakes were placed inside the tea cup to take home.

I made the “tutu” gift basket by simply sewing pink netting around a white basket.

We had a door prize raffle table for quests that brought a bag of diapers. There were 15 gift bags filled with goodies such as; spiced tea tins, cookies with vintage dessert plates, tea mugs, spiced muffin mixes, and tea pots.

Here’s a sample of the teas we had.

We passed around a “Pink Princess Piggy Bank” for guests to put in a “lucky penny”. I noticed that some guests were putting in dollar bills. What a great way to start the babies college fund!

We had a wonderful time and everyone is waiting for our beautiful baby girl!

Portuguese Biscuit Cookies

biscuits

This recipe for simple biscuit cookies is one of my favorites. They’re perfect for breakfast or a snack any time of the day. Enjoy them!

Portuguese Biscuit Cookies:

Ingredients:

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup olive oil

2 eggs

3 cups of flour

1/4 cup milk

1/2 teaspoon of baking powder

1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon

2 teaspoons of whiskey (optional)

1/2 of a lemon zest

1 egg yolk for brushing tops

sugar for dusting

 

Instructions:

In a large bowl beat the eggs and sugar until frothy. Add the milk, lemon zest, oil, whiskey and cinnamon. Beat until well incorporated.

Add the baking soda and then the flour about 1 cup at a time until the batter becomes like cookie dough.

Form the batter into round balls about 2 inches wide and place on greased cookie sheet. Brush with egg yolk and sprinkle with a little sugar. Cook at 350 degrees until they turn golden brown. Release one cookie to check the bottom to be sure they don’t overcook after a few minutes. Let cool slightly and sprinkle on more sugar.

 

 

All Natural Fresh Strawberry Pie

Fresh Strawberry Pie

Ingredients:

9 inch pie crust (recipe below)

2 quarts fresh strawberries

1  cup sugar

3 tablespoons corn starch

3/4 cup water

whipped cream

Shortbread pie crust:

4 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened

3 tablespoons sugar

1 large egg yolk

1 cup all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon salt

Instructions:

Make pie crust by stirring  butter and sugar in a bowl. Add the egg yolk and stir. Add the flour and salt, and mix until crumbly. Press the dough into the bottom and up sides of a 9 in pie dish. Place in freezer for 20 minutes. Cook in a 375 degree oven for about 15 minutes and let it cool.

When ready to make the pie wash and dry the strawberries. Arrange 1/2 of them on the pie crust and save the remaining to make sauce.

To make filling:

Mash remaining berries and mix with sugar in a medium saucepan. Cook over medium heat and bring to a boil but keep stirring gently.

Mix the corn starch with the water in a small cup. Stir to dissolve and add to the strawberry sauce.

Cook the sauce on low heat for about 8-10 minutes until it thickens and becomes clear. Let the sauce cool before adding to the strawberries.

Chill the pie for at least two hours and serve with whipped cream.

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