Archive for June, 2009

Tastespotting.com

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Cambodia

Thanks to my little sister who is just as obsessed with food blogs as I am, maybe more, I have recently started looking at tastespotting.com  I love the variety of recipes you find on there and the great way that it links to all these amazing blogs.  I find inspiration in the recipes and have always wondered how you manage to get your recipes on there.

Well I took the plunge a week or so ago and submitted my first recipes to the site.  It makes me want to create new and exciting things so that I have more recipes to submit, no one likes to read a blog where someone just used a recipes and didn’t try and make it their own.

Unfortunately, I was disappointed to find out that my recipe was rejected.  Not because of the recipe or the picture but because they thought that it was too negative.  I can understand that it wasn’t positive through out, but I didn’t feel it was negative.  I think it was realistic, not every recipe turns out.  That doesn’t mean that it is a bad recipe or that I am a bad cook it just means it might go better next time.  I would rather someone read my blog and see that you don’t have to be perfect to enjoy cooking.

Long story short, I think I deserved to be on the website.  There are no other wasabi ice cream recipes and I thought the picture was pretty good as well.

But just wait, I will get one of my recipes on the website one day.

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The Gourmet Warehouse

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Shopping Bag

How is it that you can drive down a street dozens of times over a few year period and completely miss the most amazing cooking store.  What a wonderful surprise it was to find The Gourmet Warehouse on Hastings.

I stumbled across this store when trying to find a place to buy some lavender for my green tea ice cream.  With only an hour before the store closed I raced there from Burnaby to get my lavender and knew I was in trouble the minute I walked in the door. 

With limited time to browse I had to walk a little faster than I would have liked, just getting a taste of all the amazing things for sale in this store.  It took everything I had not to start buying all the fun tools and serving dishes, sprices and sauces, and all sizes and shapes of baking pans.  I limited my purchases to lavender, a butter dish we have desperately been needing, cupcake wrappers, and a zester. 

I can’t wait to return to this store with all the time in the world to browse and pick up fun new ingredients for dishes I have yet to create.

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Library Books

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Library Gold

Cookbooks have recently become an obsession.  The only problem I find with them is that they are expensive to buy and if you really only want a couple recipes out of them then you are stuck with a whole book you won’t use.  I like the idea of checking the books out because if I don’t end up liking them then it hasn’t cost me anything.

Recently Sean and I have started walking to our local library, mostly for the walk but also to browse.  Having never really used the library in the past I was surprised to find the cookbook section on a recent trip.  Although this might not be anything new to most people I was overjoyed at the sight of a huge row of every kind of cookbook I could imagine.

I started looking through the sections trying to narrow down which ones to take home with me that day.  Do I take a baking one since those are the recipes I have most recently been working on?  Or do I try and find the mexican cookbook some friends talked about that has a great mole recipe?  I am left with the plan to just start looking through the ones that catch my eye.

After a few minutes I have amassed a pile of books, probably too many to be taking home with me that day.  Sean finds me engrossed with the cookbooks and decides to set a limit on the number to take home that day, 3, one of which has to be the book he picked.  How in the world am I going to pick just two books to take home with me?

My first pick was The Perfect Scoop by David Lebovitz which I had just seen on a blog earlier that day and was going to go buy next time I was in the states.  Since I am not only trying to perfect my wasabi ice cream but also expand my collection of ice cream recipes I knew this one would get used.

The other book I had to take home with me that day was Rick Bayless’s Mexican Kitchen.  I have been obsessed with mole sauce for quite a few years, trying any recipe I can find, but they never seem to be just what I am looking for.  I am hoping this book can finally give me a recipe to add to my permanant file.

Sean’s pick from the library was The British Columbia Seasonal Cookbook which looks like a fun cookbook of ideas for more seasonal cooking here in Vancouver.

I couldn’t resist getting more cookbooks and have already gone back to get Baking Illustrated which was recommended by my older sister.  I am excited to start working my way through that huge book.

I have yet to use all of them but hope to start trying out the recipes very soon.  I look forward to more trips to the library and all the fun recipes to be created.

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Blueberry Lemon Curd Tart

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Blueberry Lemon Tart

Last Saturday we attended a baby shower and needed to bring something.  I naturally decided I should bake something since I find I really like baking.  After going back and forth all Friday night I was leaning towards a tart.  The only problem was that 1. I didn’t have a tart pan and 2. the crust recipes I could find were really intimidating.

So Saturday morning I woke up and decided I was going to bite the bullet and just make a tart using one of the easier recipes I could find.  The recipe ended up being a bit harder than I thought but I was still convinced I could do it.  Getting the dough ready for the fridge was the easy part.

Now that the dough was chilling I decided to run out and buy a tart pan, little did I know that Saturday was the day that no one was going to have tart pans.  After scouring 3 different stores I headed home trying to come up with other options since we had to leave for our baby shower in a few hours.  I decided on improvising with a cheesecake pan, which ended up working great.  After a bit of stress and a frantic call to my mom I got the dough in the pan and ready for the oven.

Now was time for the filling.  The recipe seemed pretty easy, which was a combination of a few recipes.  I was excited to be making my first lemon curd, something my sister has long mastered and left a lot for me to live up to.  I was pleasantly surprised that it was really good.  Now I just had to mix it with a few other ingredients and blueberries and I was left with a very pretty tart.

Fast forward to the party, where I was a bit nervous that it wasn’t going to be very good.  I had no reason to be nervous, it was a big hit.  One of the guests had a few helpings and was surprised when I told him that it was my first time making a tart.

In the end I was very proud of my dessert and look forward to mastering pastries to improve on this recipe in the future.

Prebaked Flaky Pate Sucree

Courtesy of nookandpantry.blogspot.com

1 C flour

1/3 C confectioner’s sugar

1/4 tsp salt

6 Tbsp cold butter, cut into 6 pieces

1 egg yolk

2 Tbsp cold milk or ice water

1/2 tsp of vanilla

Add the flour, confectioner’s sugar, and salt together in a food processor and pulse once or twice to combined. Add the pieces of butter and pulse until the butter pieces are no bigger than a pea.  Make sure the butter stays cold to keep the dough from getting greasy.

Mix the egg yolk, milk, and vanilla together. Drizzle the mixture over the butter and flour mix in the food processor. Pulse again until the dough start to form large clumps. If it looks too dry add a little more milk.

Scrape the dough onto a large piece of plastic wrap and press the clumps together to form a disc. Wrap the dough in the plastic wrap and chill at least an hour up to overnight. Or store it in the freezer for as long as you want.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Lightly flour a work surface and rolling pin and roll out the dough to into a large circle. Move the crust around often to make sure it doesn’t stick to your work surface.

Transfer the dough to an 8 or 9 inch tart pan. To make this easier, drape the dough over the rolling pin and lay it over the pan. Lift the edges of the crust and gently press the dough down into the pan. Roll over the top of the pan with a rolling pin to trim any overhanging dough.

Prick the surface of the dough with a fork. Press a sheet of aluminum foil onto a crust and add pie weights, beans, or clean pennies on top.  Bake on the middle rack for 25 minutes. Remove the foil and baking weights (be careful the weights will be very hot!) and return the crust to the oven to bake for another 10 or so minutes until it is golden. Cool to room temperature before filling

Lemon Cream Tart

Adapted from nookandpantry.blogspot.com

2 oz. cream cheese

3 Tbsp granulated sugar

1/2 C heavy cream or whipping cream

1/4 C lemon curd

With a whisk attachment, using a stand mixer or hand mixer, beat the cream cheese and sugar on medium high speed until fluffy. Slowly drizzle in the whipping cream and whip until stiff peaks form. Fold in the lemon curd.

Since the original recipe called for store bought lemon curd I decided be adventurous and make my own.

Lemon Curd

Courtesy of Food Network Canada

1/2 cup unsalted butter (125 mL)

1 1/4 cups sugar (300 mL)

3/4 cup fresh lemon juice (175 mL)

2 tbsp lemon zest (25 mL)

6 eggs

In a medium saucepan, over medium-high heat, combine butter, sugar, lemon juice and lemon zest. Cook, stirring constantly, until all butter is melted and sugar is dissolved about 4 minutes.

In a heatproof bowl, whisk eggs. Continue whisking while pouring in about 1 cup of hot lemon liquid. Once combined transfer egg mixture back to saucepan, and continue to cook, over medium-low heat, stirring constantly until mixture thickens and coats the back of a spoon, about 5 minutes.

Cover surface directly with plastic wrap. Cool in fridge until ready to serve with Strawberry and Lemon Shortcake.

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Wasabi Ice Cream

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Wasabi Ice Cream

Wasabi Ice Cream was the inspiration I needed to start this food blog.

During our most recent trip to Japan we stumbled across a dessert mall, I know sounds amazing.  There were different sections depending on what type of dessert you wanted.  I was in heaven.  After walking around trying to decide what we were going to have for dessert I finally decide on ice cream.  You really can’t go wrong with ice cream no matter what country you are in.  They had the standard flavours to try but then I saw wasabi and was instantly intrigued yet slightly scared. We were both pleasantly surprised when the sweet and creaminess of the ice cream kept the wasabi from being too spicy.  I knew at that point I had to make my own wasabi ice cream.

Here we are today 4 months later and I have finally made the wasabi ice cream.  A combination of things delayed me from actually making the ice cream anything from laziness to forgetting to freeze the ice cream bowl to a lack of Wasabi Ice Cream Recipes.  There are plenty of recipes for ice cream but since I wasn’t sure how much spice to put in I didn’t want to over do it.  After looking through many food blogs I finally decided to take my most basic vanilla ice cream recipe from the KitchenAid recipes book that came with the ice cream maker and just start adding wasabi.

I am happy to say I made my wasabi ice cream, but what I learned from it was that you should stop adding wasabi even when you think it isn’t quite enough because boy did it turn out hot.  After only one scoop I had an upset stomach from the heat, thankfully I only made a small batch.  The heat didn’t stop my husband.

I look forward to making this recipe again but trying it with a little less wasabi to find a good balance of sweet and spicy.

Wasabi Ice Cream

Adapted from KitchenAid Recipes

1 1/4 cups half and half

4 egg yolks

1/2 cup sugar

2 1/2 cups whipping cream

1 tsp vanilla

1/8 teaspoon salt

Wasabi

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, heat the half and half until very hot but not boiling, make sure to stir often.  Remove from heat and set aside.

Place egg yolks and sugar in bowl and mix for 30 seconds or until blended and slightly thickened.  Gradually add half and half mixture and mix until blended.  Return half and half mixture to saucepan and cook over medium heat until very small bubbles form around the edge and mixture is steamy, make sure to stir constantly.  DO NOT BOIL.

Transfer half and half mixture into large bowl, stir in whipping cream, vanilla, and salt.  When adding wasabi start with a 1/2 tsp and then just increase by 1/2 a tsp until it is the right amount of spice.  Cover and chill thoroughly, atleast 8 hours.

Place chilled mixture in ice cream maker and follow directions for your machine.

Makes 8 servings (1/2 cup per serving)

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The Reluctant Chef

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Eating Good Food

I believe cooking is something that everyone can enjoy.  I am the first to say that it is possibly something you have to learn to love but if you spend the time to learn things in the kitchen it helps to show you it isn’t quite as scary as you thought.

Many people in my life, especially my mom and sisters have seen over the years that cooking and baking just weren’t for me.  It has always been something I wished I enjoyed but just never could get into.  Something changed within the last couple years and I began to cook, and actually enjoy it.

My husband has been the one here for both the disasters and the masterpieces.  He knows when to be supportive and when it is okay to just laugh at the dish that just didn’t turn out.  He always tries to find the good in all the meals.  Thankfully I am getting better and there is more and more time between the disasters.

My experience writing blogs has always been from a travel point of view.  Now that my new passion/obsession is cooking I thought I would take a leap of faith and start a food blog.

I hope this is a place for those who, like me, thought they couldn’t cook.  A place for people to see that the whole experience of cooking is meant to be fun.

Regards,

Kimberly Payne

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