Archive for the ‘Cooking and Recipes’ Category

Father’s Day: Kansas City Ribs

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Forgive me if my rib tale goes on a little long, but its a tasty story worth telling.

In our hyper-materialist society, it can be easy to lose track of what family and celebrations are all about. In my youth, holidays were all about presents. In my 20s, they provided excuses to throw parties. These days, I’m most interested in good food and company. Living alone, I rarely make fancy food for myself. I require an audience if I’m going to fuss in the kitchen. There’s nothing better than an appreciative audience.

My step father is a good man, and truly treasures good food, especially barbecue, particularly pork ribs. Because Father’s Day and his birthday are so close on the calendar, we usually celebrate both at once. I never have to think of gift ideas. I do the same thing every year. I make him glorious barbecued ribs.

Sometimes my brother Tim and I surprise the old man with a new recipe, but this year, I gave him four recipes to choose from. He immediately decided upon Kansas City spareribs: rubbed with spices, smoked over wood, and sauced with a tangy concoction. The previous champ of rib recipes was Dr. BBQ’s, which is quite sweet and tender. I chose this year’s recipe from Weber’s Big Book of Grilling. It was a great bargain bin find with an impressive array of international recipes.

The most difficult part of making ribs is finding them. Many supermarket specimens are inferior with high price tags. Butchers are like mechanics: they are good to know. Unfortunately, I couldn’t make the time to go to Cacciatore Brothers in West Tampa– or better yet, George’s in St. Pete. These Publix ribs were passable, but barely: a 5 out of 10. I bought the only two racks they had. They were rather fatty, but I could work with them. I cut the racks in half to make them easier to handle. They also cook better this way: the thick side and thin side of the ribs cook at different rates, and i had limited smoker space.

Dry spice rubs are an excellent way to flavor meat. This rub works perfectly for fans of traditional barbecue. Grinding fresh spices with a mortar and pestle can be theraputic. It makes cooking more physical and the flavor more fresh. Mother nature sometimes demands it– rejoice!

For the rub: 2 tbl salt, 2tbl mild or hot Hungarian paprika, 1.5 tbl cumin, 1 tbl dry oregano, 2 tsp onion powder, 1 tsp garlic powder, 1 tsp fresh ground black pepper, half tsp ground allspice, half tsp ground cinnamon. I increased the recipe by half, but did not increase the salt.

Mix up the various spices and be sure they are evenly distributed.

Rubbing your meat is an act of love. Don’t be afraid to touch it often.  I tend to be generous with the rub. Sauce cannot compete with this powder.

I had to smoke the ribs in two waves, so the thick sides when first.  In the meantime, I whipped up a barbecue sauce. The veggies deliver great flavor, and I thank my brother Tim for his prep work on the sauce:

2 tbl unsalted butter, half cup diced celery, 3 tbl diced onion, 1 cup ketchup, 2 tbl fresh lemon juice, 2 tbl sugar, 2 tbl cider vinegar, 1bl Worcestershire sauce, 1 tsp dry mustard, and black pepper. Mix all and bring to a boil. Simmer on low 10-15 minutes. I used my wonderful new immersion blender to puree the mixture. The veggies dissolved into the mixture, thickening it. If you don’t have an immersion blender or food processor, try to cut the onions and celery as fine as you’re disposed.

The thick end of the ribs came out of the smoker juicy and fragrant. Note the meat receding from the bone to the left. The scorched rub spices make the ribs look burnt, but they are just fine.

Who’s your daddy, spareribs? If you like it rough, slap on the sauce with your brush. The thirsty exterior of the hot ribs drinks in the sauce quickly.

The next day, a treasured Father’s Day feast was delivered with the help of my beloved mother. Her fruity veggie slaw on the left featured fresh mango with a lively dressing. Real bacon bits brought pleasing flavors to her baked beans. The fresh corn was appreciated. I heated the ribs gently in the 350 degree oven for about 15 minutes.

Pop moaned and grunted as he tasted each layer of flavor shellacked on those ribs, one pleasant surprise after another. He tasted the love and instinctively understood. In the words of the Great Brillat-Savarin: “A man becomes a cook, but he is born a roaster of flesh.”

Mom’s raspberry cheese cake was divine.

I don’t want to feature many photos of people on this site, but the meat here seems luminous with a reddish hue. The ribs don’t look bad, either.

kofta rock

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

I recently visited my good friends Will and Kristin in Pinellas county. I regularly cook gourmet dinners to relieve Kristin from her cooking duties. She is a wonderful cook, but I prefer to let Kristin relax if she can. Will’s boyish outbursts increase when I visit, perhaps because we’ve been close friends since middle school. It can help to occupy Will’s time with water calistenics and constructive activities such as grilling. So I quickly put together a celebratory summer menu of comfort food.

I humbly present another summer favorite: kofta. The mixture of lamb, beef, mint, onion, garlic, and cinnamon shines best when grilled. Instead of fooling with skewers, I form the meat into larger balls for easy handling. Provided that the meatballs are formed well, they don’t fall apart when handled. Using too much onion can lead to weaker balls. It helps cohesion to dice the onion more finely than I did above.

My buddy Will is a tested grillsmith, and handled my balls quite well. The smell alone is impressive and refreshing. I’d like to have a party some day and serve only meatballs of every nationality.

I made a spiced butter mixture by browning garlic in butter. I added cayenne pepper, Old Bay seasoning, black pepper and let it cook a minute with a couple splashes of pineapple juice, about 1/4 cup. The resulting butter on the grilled shrimp proved so good that it disappeared before my camera was ready.

I prepared the lemon orzo recipe I mentioned in my last post, and it turned out better than ever. For 2 pounds of orzo, I used

1/4 stick of butter

4 cloves garlic, minced

half of a yellow onion, diced

the zest and juice of 3 lemons

1 bottle white wine (I used pinto grigio)

1/4 cup of fresh rosemary

1/2 cup fresh parsley

3 tbl black pepper

1 tbl salt

approx. 3-4 cups of low sodium chicken stock

Sautee garlic and onion with butter over medium high heat. add next 6 ingredients and reduce heat to medium. add chicken stock a cup at a time until orzo is cooked. If you feel frisky, garnish with a leittle parmesan cheese.

as a side dish, I fell back on sauteed garlic and spinach with a little butter. It works very well with the bright orzo. Toasted pita rounded out the plate. Can I get an amen? Can I get a hell yeah?

We feasted that night like a cross between Olympic athletes and Hell’s Angels. The excitement was palpable and quite palatable. It made Will and I feel like we could still do something foolish, like drink more Gumbe Smash cocktails. More about those another time.

Will soon resorted to loading up his pita with the rest of the food, which he attacked like a tipsy gorilla. His side of the table soon lay strewn with the ruins and detritus of a great meal. Lemon-scented orzo had been scattered like rosemary-flecked constellations drunk on white wine. For once, I looked like the polite fellow. We all watched bull riding, Kristin’s favorite, and Will soon fell asleep on the couch. It was soon time for dessert: 2 a.m.  I’m sorry, doc. One thing led to another. At least I was in good company. Can i get an Amen?

Bring it on, Summer!

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Bring on the heat and stifling humidity. Bring on the daily subtropical rains. Bring on the roiling mosquitoes and hurricanes. Bring on the primordial cockroaches, trilobites, gnats and mole crickets. Bring on the wafts of smoke from neighbors’ grills and ripples of laughter from their children. Bring on air conditioning’s chilling throb. Bring the dull stupid thud of passing car stereos. Bring drag racing on slick shiny streets. Bring on vodka and lemonade and bright chlorine swimming pools. Bring on the women’s summer clothes, shoulderless, strapless, light playful dresses, bikinis with dangerous angles.

Bring on the summer food. Pasta salad will not get the job done tonight.

I created this meal recently with very specific flavor profiles in mind. I wanted a bright-tasting lemon, chicken stock, rosemary, and white wine orzo to compliment the earthy taste of a simple grilled steak.

The orzo turns out much like a risotto, seemingly rich and creamy without added fat. I add the stock and wine as needed, so there is no need to strain it. The flavor of the lemon juice and zest is so full that it requires very little salt. Sauteed spinach and garlic round out the plate. I only wish I had a few briny green olives to add to the plates.

I took the leftovers (steak, orzo, and spinach) and tossed them together for a fine lunch during the week. With a little parmesean cheese, it delivers all over again.

The orzo’s aroma is brilliant with lemon, white wine, garlic, and rosemary.

The light orzo serves as centerpiece for a simple plate of steak and garlic spinach.

For a gourmet lunch the following week, stir orzo, diced steak, and sauteed spinach together and add a little parmesan cheese.

Stay tuned for the recipe while i work it out. It is not revolutionary, but it works!

Thai chicken, grilled asparagus, chili dogs, flambeed apples (and the delights of cornhole)

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Over Memorial Day weekend, I had a few friends over and fired up the grill. I was long the devotee the charcoal/wood smoker, but I am less earnest and more lazy than my grad school days. I’m also well beyond the point of trying to impress company. So I decided to serve chili dogs featuring my homemade hornytoad chili. I will have to devote a whole different post to the wonders of chili, so for now, the picture of my preparation below will have to suffice. I never measure anything when making chili, so i will have to make it some time and write something down. This time, I tried a spice mixture of chipotle and cocoa in addition to my usual ingredients. It turned out great. I once dubbed it “hornytoad chili” for no reason in particular. I guess it just reflected my feelings at the time. Forgive me, I get lost in the moment. More about chili some other time.

My friends Scotty and Jess brought some wonderful marinated Thai chicken. The flavors were strong and clear. For less salt, use low-sodium soy sauce and worcestershire if possible. I adapted the recipe a bit (boosted the garlic and lowered the salt), but it didn’t require much tweaking. I’d double the chili flakes if I wanted more burn, but these have a decent kick already. Thai Chicken Marinate 5 cloves garlic, minced 2 tbs fresh ginger, miced grated zest of a lime juice of a lime 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes 1/2 cup water 1/4 cup low-sodium soy sauce 1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce 1 tb sugar This will marinade about 2-3 pounds of chicken breast. For easy serving skewer the chicken before you soak it.

I grilled some asparagus, which acts as nice finger food or a fancy side dish. I trim off the bottom of the stalks and roll the asparagus in a little olive oil, and salt and pepper, and grill until charred but not limp. I always sprinkle lemon or lime juice before and after cooking. Depending on the thickness of the asparagus, it takes two or five minutes, but i never look at the clock. Just keep an eye on the food. Don’t let the asparagus wither.

As for the hot dogs, i strongly prefer Nathan’s or Sabrett’s on the grill. I can’t bring myself to eat hot dogs any other way. The chili is essential as well. Once or twice a year I get a craving. A friend was nice enough to bring by some ice cream from Snack City. Alfredo Naranjo is an artisal of ice cream, but his ginger flavor this time was a little disappointing. The cashew and raisin was great as always. More about Snack City another time. I like to top ice cream with sauteed fruit, usually bananas or apples. I chose Granny Smith to accompany the ginger ice cream. It is so simple. Cut two apples into chunks and heat with a pat of butter. I opted for the extravagance of flambeeing the apples in whiskey, Canadian Club, which is not as strongly flavored as bourbon, but over proof bourbon puts on a much better fireworks show. Add cinnamon and pour in the alcohol. Wait a couple seconds for some alcohol to evaporate before lighting it, at least if you have an electric range. If you have gas, it will be much easier. Once the fire was burnt itself out, serve over ice cream. It is also wonderful with pork (chops, ham, loin, roast) or eggs. Very easy but still impressive.

After dinner, we enjoyed a nice evening of playing cornhole, a bad name for a fun game. Like horseshoes, but with bean bags filled with corn, long story, check out the links. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornhole_(game) http://www.playcornhole.org/rules.shtml

Family Culinary Chronicles

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

I’m pleased to share this article that I originally wrote for my friend Leland Hawes. Leland wrote the Tampa Tribune’s history and heritage column for about 20 years, but his experience as a journalist goes back much farther. As a boy in the 1940s, he created a little newspaper called The Flint Lake Diver in Thonotosassa. These days, he is a key member of the American Amateur Press Association, a group of people who print home-grown publications. He is an amazing fount of knowledge on local history and very generous to up and coming writers and historians. It is my pleasure to contribute to his Gator Growl when I can.

When he mentioned he was assembling an issue on family, it inspired the following piece that he called “Culinary Chronicles.” I finally shared it with my mother when we celebrated Mother’s Day recently. Other family members thought she might take offense to some of the things I wrote about her cooking, but she laughed and took it all in stride. Just as she criticizes her sons out of love, I wrote this piece out of genuine love and respect for my entire family. There will be more content related to family food.

Culinary Chronicles

In 2003, my mother created a family cookbook and gave me a copy on Christmas. Many of the recipes are not particularly historic or special from a scholarly perspective, but all have sentimental value. The dishes evoke an amazing album of memories. I can trace my family’s fortunes through the food we ate.

In a sense, every cookbook is notable for what it does not contain. I knew times were tough after my parents divorced in 1980, when I was seven. My mother worked nights, clipped every coupon she could find, bought in bulk, and made her own dressings and sauces to avoid paying retail. Her version of Bull’s Eye barbecue sauce was quite close to the original.

My brothers and I were reminded of how tight things were every time when mom served us powdered milk with our cereal. Besides the flat flavor and watery consistency, we dreaded the lumps of unincorporated powder at the bottom of the pitcher. It was a real bummer to get glops of powdered milk in your cereal. Mom tried to fool us by filling empty milk containers with the powdered stuff, but the bits at the bottom always gave away her secret. When she remarried, we couldn’t have been happier. When our step-father banned the use of powdered milk, we rejoiced, and he became family.

The family recipes themselves bring up happier thoughts. On my mother’s side, most of our ancestors’ Anglo-Irish recipes were lost somewhere in the Midwest. On my father’s side, the German-Polish Huse clan, evidence of our roots was much more evident. Grandma Huse made excellent Sauerbraten and roasts. On adventurous nights, my mother dabbled in Midwestern versions of Chinese and Tex-Mex. Her chili is still an inspiration.

Mom also made excellent Sloppy Joes. It is often the simplest dishes that become the most revered. When my parents first married, my mother began to make Sloppy Joes one night. When dad found out, he insisted that she call his mother to get her recipe. Understandably, his stubborn insistence insulted my mother, whose recipe was perfectly good. Dad kept saying that Grandma Huse’s recipe was the best in the world, and he wouldn’t back down. My mother gave in and made the call. It is testament to the recipe that my mother grudgingly wrote in her cookbook, “I have to agree, it is one of the better ones.” But the episode wasn’t a good omen for my parents’ marriage.

The recipe itself is pure simplicity: ketchup, mustard, water, brown sugar, vinegar, and ground beef, served on cheap hamburger buns. About a year ago, I decided to make a huge batch for a party I was throwing. A friend thought Sloppy Joe would somehow be too humble for entertaining. He was dead wrong. Not only is the recipe delicious, but the finished product makes for great drinking food, and that night called for handy sustenance.

Sometimes, the recipes stir mixed emotions. I always found the “Russian Tea” distasteful. It makes sense now when I look at the recipe. Two of the key ingredients are powdered iced tea and Tang, which the astronauts should have jettisoned into outer space. My step-grandmother Lakins’ recipe for Spinach Balls proved to be her only positive contribution to the family. Tasting those Spinach Balls at age eight or nine was a revelation to me: Spinach could taste great.

Then there are Steak-Ums, a questionable potted meat product sold in frozen slices. I loved them as a kid, and I learned an important lesson from them. After having Steak-Ums for dinner one night, I clearly remember looking at the serving platter. The small puddles of industrial grease had coagulated into hardened white clusters. That was the first time I sensed that grease probably isn’t a good thing to eat. Our relationship has never been the same.

The Taffy Apple Salad seems like a throwback to the 1950s, but it sure works: pineapple, tart apple, Spanish peanuts, and mini marshmallows, all bathed in a sauce of Cool Whip, egg, vinegar, and pineapple juice. The Poppy Seed Chicken was probably fancy in the 1960s, and it still tastes great today. Who knew that chicken, cream of mushroom soup, sour cream, egg noodles, poppy seeds, and Ritz crackers could taste so sublime? When I make it these days, I add scallions, peas, and fresh mushrooms.

Not all of the family’s food used Tang, canned soup, and Cool Whip. My uncle Roger, a colorful guy who comes off as bitter, funny, and inspired, passed a great Chicken Marebella recipe to my mother. It is simple, but uses more interesting ingredients than we normally ate. After marinating the chicken with garlic, oregano, red wine vinegar, olive oil, prunes, olives, capers, and bay leaves, it is all baked with brown sugar, white wine and parsley. My mother loved the recipe for entertaining, especially because all the preparation had to be done in advance.

Uncle Roger is known for a few other recipes, including 30-clove garlic chicken, which didn’t make the family cookbook. He was a rather fiery figure in his younger days in and out of the kitchen. My most vivid memory of Roger is when he was living with us. He made me a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for me after school one day. I was probably 8 or 9. He made the sandwich too big, and I didn’t want to eat it. Angry at my ingratitude, he shoved the whole thing in my mouth. If I hadn’t found some milk in a jiffy, I might have choked on that oversized sandwich.

Christmas was always special in my family, and brunch has become our favorite holiday tradition. My mother makes a great spread, and we eat as soon as we’re all gathered on Christmas morning. Gifts take a back seat to mom’s French toast with berries, egg casserole with mushroom sauce, breakfast and Italian sausage, fruit salad, and an array of Christmas cookies. Being a nurse and a bit of a health nut, cooking such a rich meal for her family only happens once a year for my mother. In her cookbook, she warns against reducing the fat or sugar in Christmas cookies—they should be enjoyed in all of their obesity-inducing glory. The thought of a low-fat version of her Buckeyes, sweet peanut butter balls dipped in melted dark chocolate, is depressing indeed.

My mother has certainly cooked her share of amazing meals, but these days, I try not to arrive at her house too hungry. I was appalled when she recently put frozen skinless chicken directly on to the grill to make for supper. The ubiquitous half-frozen shrimp cocktails she serves taste more like shrimp-flavored ice. I don’t mean to sound ungrateful. My mother worked hard to make food interesting as her boys grew up. And lately, she’s quite busy nursing full time and running her own business, Smooooth Sailing School in Dunedin Beach, Florida. But it felt clear that the next generation had to pitch in.

My tastes were quite bland until I first started to cook at age 17, when my feeding habits became more unpredictable. Strangely enough, one of my biggest revelations was supplied by Steak-Ums, that evil frozen potted animal product. As I cooked up some of the mystery meat, the smell must have reminded me that it didn’t have much flavor. All that goodness must have been leached out in the factory. Then I did a very strange thing. I diced some green bell pepper and onion and added them to the pan. Up until then, I never cared for those blessed ingredients. That day, I loved them. It was a rare occasion when an industrial meat product encouraged healthier eating. I picked up on most other vegetables after that, though I still don’t fancy cauliflower.

Some of my early cooking can be found in mom’s cookbook. I lifted the rustic chicken and dumpling recipe from John Egerton’s Southern Food when I first began studying history, food and culture at the University of South Florida. In most of my subsequent writings about food, I’ve always felt a little uncomfortable writing in the first-person. I never considered myself an authority on food and cooking, just an enthusiastic trainee.

Like many novice male cooks, my first earnest efforts at cooking took place outdoors, on a grill. The smoker became my dearest fascination in the late 1990s. During grad school, my buddies and I threw parties every weekend at our apartment with whatever money we could scrape together. I punctuated every event with barbecue specialties like bourbon-glazed spareribs, beer can chicken, and turkey “Toolong”—which was injected with beer and butter, then smoked for 18 hours. Neighbors begged for scraps at our door the next morning. It was one of my proudest moments.

Thanksgiving is a demanding holiday for an ambitious family chef, and my mother has done more than her share. I began smoking turkeys each thanksgiving. Then, my brother Tim took over turkey duty, using a great German stuffing of toasted pumpernickel bread, gizzards, bacon and spices. I offered another cut of meat from the grill or smoker, usually lamb, London broil, or boneless country ribs. These days, I make a meat and all of the sides, my brother handles the turkey, and mom makes the pies. It is a wonderful arrangement that I wish could last forever. Somehow, having the recipe book makes me much more sentimental. So many people who contributed their recipes are no longer with us.

Shortly after my father died in 2004, I had an intense dream. He had moved into a new apartment, and I brought him a bunch of fried chicken and biscuits. Dad was a happy spirit that night. Then, we took a drive with my brothers deep into the forest. Dad took a sapling out of the SUV, walked into the woods, and didn’t come back. I drove my brothers back into the city.

My brother, Tim, and I take don’t add recipes to our family tomes often. But we feel a sense of responsibility and compulsion to make new additions into our culinary chronicles. I have a few recipes of my dad’s to add to the cookbook. My brother and I have many more of our most recent specialties. Cooking and writing for each other makes and preserves precious memories.