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Endive & Citrus Salad

17 Feb

Endive citrus saladThis winter salad is super refreshing and has a touch of creaminess from the avocado/goat cheese. It makes for a really nice treat from or alongside heavier winter fare. Citrus is in season and you could also use orange, blood orange, pomelo or any combination thereof. The great thing is the juice from your citrus becomes the dressing base. Can add honey at the end depending on your taste and how tart your citrus is. And man, endive, what an underutilized and classy veg (1).

It’s a snacko backo original recipe so measurements are loose and feel free to play around with ingredients and proportions (2). This is enough for 2 small bowls (or one big bowl) of salad. Scale up or down depending.

1 ½ endive, sliced

1 avocado, diced

1 grapefruit. Quarter grapefruit, peel it, then removed the fruit from the pith and membrane of each slice. (Is this completely necessary? Maybe not. But just do it. It’s easy and the whole thing mixes together better if you do. Be sure to do this over a bowl so all the juice ends up in your salad.)(3)

Goat cheese (the first time I made I used this awesome Adirondack honey lavender goat cheese. Loved the touch of sweetness. When I couldn’t find any next time I made the salad, I subbed regular goat cheese mixed with a touch of honey).

Mix all ingredients in a bowl with a small glug of olive oil, salt & pepper and an optional drizzle of honey.

 

Best to serve immediately. When you mix up, it looses this ordered look and becomes a creamy and delicious mess. So, if having a dinner party, I might wait until serving to mix. If you wanted to do ahead, I’d prep everything then throw in the endive last minute so it stays nice and crunchy.

footnotes:

  1. my mother actually would actually use endive all the time. it was salad standard fair. her dressing would be lemon/olive oil/salt & pepper and pinch of sugar. So good.
  2. Ibid. Maybe recipe not so original. For other inspiration source see: this.
  3. special thanks to CD for his work on his grapefruit/orange peeling for this photo. And the delicious pulled pork that accompanied it. recipe coming soon…?  Also, CD & Rachel initiated this 2016 once-a-month post challenge. 2 for 2, bitches.

Sesame Noodles

1 Feb

sesame noodle2

So I was challenged to make a new years resolution: add one post a month to snacko backo in 2016. I didn’t quite agree, but here we are anyway. Made on Jan 31 and posted Feb 1- let’s say this one falls right under the wire. I had a craving for Sesame noodles last night- and I’m going to go ahead and say these are better than the take out version. I think these would be really great for a dinner party type/pot luck situation because they come together in like 5 mins and taste a bit outside the box. Plus good warm or cold. Perhaps could make w. beef and broccoli or easier ginger pork, with dumplings, scallion pancakes and maybe a wonton/egg drop or miso soup. Original NY Times recipe serves with some slices of cucumber- so I think Vietnamese cucumber salad (gah, realizing that recipe never made it to the blog- will add) would be especially nice. But – after a trip to the overwhelmingly inspiring Russo’s in watertown (with obscure produce I hadn’t seen since my co-op days)- I ended up with some baby bok choy and chinese spinach.

For the baby bok choy, I gave a quick sear in a cast iron with some olive oil. Once just cooked, I took out, and tossed in a bowl with a dash of sesame oil and soy sauce. I treated the spinach similarly. But after seared and wilted, instead of sesame/soy, I added equal parts miso and butter (maybe a tsp or so of each) to the cast iron. Stirred to coat. Inspired by an old Japanese turnip with miso butter recipe, it adds a nice sweet coating.

Perhaps I should add- the skill level for this noodle recipe is naught. The only effort is buying the ingredients- after that- i think it would be pretty difficult to fuck it up.

Closely adapted from a Sam Sifton NY Times recipe
1 pound Chinese egg noodles (1/8-inch-thick), frozen or (preferably) fresh, available in Asian markets *

2 tablespoons sesame oil, plus a splash

3 ½ tablespoons soy sauce

2 tablespoons Chinese rice vinegar

2 tablespoons Chinese sesame paste*

1 tablespoon smooth peanut butter

1 tablespoon sugar

1 tablespoon finely grated ginger

2 teaspoons minced garlic

2 teaspoons chili-garlic paste, or to taste*

Half a cucumber, peeled, seeded, and cut into 1/8-inch by 1/8-inch by 2-inch sticks

¼ cup chopped roasted peanuts

*Ingredient notes

– I used fresh lo-mein noodles from H-Mart (Asian grocer). Also I found that to get the dressing to noodle ratio coating right- I only ended up using ¾ of my cooked noodles with the amount of dressing made below.

– yes, there is a difference between tahini and sesame paste. Sesame paste is made from toasted sesame seeds so is darker and richer in flavor. I’d say if you have tahini already on hand- use it and add a dash more sesame oil to compensate. I got sesame paste from H-Mart, since was already there.

– I used siracha for chili paste

 

Bring medium pot of water to boil. Add noodles. Cook until barely tender. About 5 mins (timing maybe less if fresh noodles)- they should retain a bit of chewiness.

Drain, rinse with cold water, drain again, toss with a splash of sesame oil.

In a large bowl, whisk together 2 tablespoons sesame oil, the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame paste, peanut butter, sugar, ginger, garlic and chili-garlic paste.

Add in pasta a bit at a time, stir to coat. As noted above, add enough noodles for desired coating – for me it was ¾ pound noodles.

Chop peanuts and add to serve.

 

 

Pancakes

15 Mar

IMG_4409

alright so this may be the third pancake recipe on snackobacko– but this is the go-to one. it takes about 5 mins to make the batter, another 5 before you are eating delicious pancakes. for sunday morning, for dinner, anytime. if you have leftover- douse with a little bit of water before putting in toaster oven. I think the key to these is the copious amount of baking soda. it makes them nice and fluffy. sometimes/usually i half this recipe (using whole egg)

Rita’s pancakes via Ruthie

Makes about 9 small pancakes

1 ½ cups flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

1 egg, beaten

1 cup milk

3 tablespoons butter, melted

1 tsp vanilla extract

3/4 tsp kosher salt (if only have table salt, use 1/2 tsp)

Optional add-ins (blueberries, mini chocolate chips, mashed bananas, etc.)

In a bowl, combine flour, baking powder, and salt.  Make a well in the center.  Pour in egg, milk, vanilla, and butter.  Mix to combine.  Mix in the add-ins.  (Ruthie says- When using chocolate chips, I drop them onto the pancakes when they’re in the pan before turning them.

I go with non-stick pan.  Melt a little butter in the pan.  Using a ¼ cup measuring cup for each pancake, pour batter into pan.  When bottom is lightly browned [you will see bubbles popping in the batter], use a wide spatula to turn pancakes and brown the second side.

Serve with maple syrup, powdered sugar, cinnamon/sugar mixture, or a topping of your choice.

 

Hot Chocolate Trio

27 Jan

hot choc trio

Snow Day. 15 minute venture outside deserves three kinds of hot chocolate. Here we have peppermint hot chocolate; cayenne; and cinnamon/vanilla/kaluha

Base:

2 mugs milk (whole or whatever you like/have on hand)

2 oz bittersweet chocolate

3 tablespoons sugar

4 tablespoons cocoa (Valhrona, Ghiradelli or something else good)

1 tsp vanilla extract

Bring milk to near simmer. whisk in all other ingredients.

Hot chocolate add-ins:

Peppermint extract

or

Cinnamon (and optional Kaluha or Bailys)

or

Cayenne

Photo highlights from Ireland

17 Oct

 

So I have been admittedly terrible about posting recipes from Ireland. Part of that is due to the fact that the measurements are a little different- and I want to remake recipes before I post them- so I know I am giving them to you right. That said, it will take me forever to do this- so I thought i might as well share a couple pictures from it- and feel free to email me if you are after any particular recipe.

Also please see Inside the Tiny Kitchen for some new purchases I made in Ireland- as well as the many other updates I have made to that page.

Gateau Pitivier (homemade puff pastry w. almond filling)

Grand Marnier Souffle

White Yeast Bread

Brown Soda Bread

Cardamon pudding/yogurt (sweet)

Duck Lentil and Pomegranate Salad

Vietnamese Cucumber Salad

Quiche and Pastry Crust

Dill Mayonaise- from scratch

 

Cheesy Cauliflower Gratin

Beef w. homemade red curry paste

Sea Salt Crackers

What are these called? Made from puff pastry & pastry cream. Also used leftover homemade puff for Palmier cookies (elephant ears) in background.