Friday, April 26, 2013
Weekend Discussion: Food!
We often note the food because hospitality is a dictate of the ancient gods and because it often demonstrates the relationship of the characters who are sharing the food. We all fell in love with the cooking scenes in Amor Bravio that showed the bonding of Viviana and Rafael and the love between Piedad and her daughter. The waitress in last night's restaurant scene in Que Bonito Amor explaining the dish she served Santos was clearly proud of it and of her country's cuisine. She had a most welcoming attitude. Gala of Un Refugio Para El Amor and Veronica in Porque el Amor Manda use food as a weapon of control; I cringe at the possibility that Valentina will have eating disorders when she's older.
So..... do you enjoy cooking? Do you get creative with it? Do you favor any particular cuisine? Do you have a signature dish you contribute to potlucks and other parties? Do you watch anything on the Food Network?
Finally, do you have a favorite food scene from a novela (just to keep this from being totally off-topic)?
Labels: bravio, Manda, QBA, refugio, telenovelas, weekend
What a most excellent topic for a weekend discussion!
I love to cook, all kinds of cuisines. My Mother was German and I have old family recipes I use. My Uncle was an Italian chef and taught me a lot of things, especially how to make homemade pasta and sauces.
My favorite food scenes from the novelas so far are the ones from QBA last night, the way Dona Magda and Dona Paz cooked in Un Refugio and the food the way food is grown and processed like in LFDD and Abismo de Pasion.
I have a couple of signature dishes I take with me to parties or when I have people over for dinner. I am a big fan of Food Network and the PBS cooking shows and also the Cooking Channel. I really like Alton Brown. I have learned some neat tricks watching his show.
On St Patrick's Day my friend and I made a baked potato bar which was a hit. We've decided that this will be the cold weather option for that holiday and we still did my signature deviled eggs.
My mother taught me how to cook when I was 9. Nothing too detailed, but how long you need to cook X as opposed to Y and that if you want to make good meat gravy you must have onions and bay leaves.
I loved the stuffed peppers they showed at Santos eating in Puebla last night. Have to try that. seems pretty simple...
stuffing peppers with ground beef, seasoning, creme sauce, some parsley and pommegranate seeds... yum!! sounds great.
I too loved the table of Dona Paz and Magda at Refugio.
I usually cook typical stuff from puerto rico, but sometimes feel creative... i seldom use a cookbook, more like go with my own 'come up with' recipes like searing chicken breast then covering with mushroom sauce with sliced fresh mushrooms in it with some herb rice.
But back to the subject line...
For potlucks i diversify myself. i have made from rice with chicken to pasta salad, corn and bean salad mexican style, and stuff i have made so many times i made with blindfold like guava pastries and flan
My split pea soup is legendary and I love making onion tarts. I also do an oven fried chicken that is amazingly simple:
1 jar Goya Recaito*
1 jar Goya Salsa Verde (medium)
plain bread crumbs
Adobo
Olive oil
chicken pieces (drumsticks are best)
Mix the sauces and marinate the chicken for an hour. Mix bread crumbs and adobo.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees with oven pans inside so the olive oil is heated. Remove chicken pieces from marinade one at a time, being sure each is well-coated before dredging in the bread crumb/adobo mix. Place coated chicken in oven pans. Turn carefully every 15-20 minutes until skin is crisp. Drumsticks will take 60-75 minutes; wings longer because of the thickness of the skin.
Serve with salsa and guacamole on the side. Will do about 12 drumsticks.
*Do not use the frozen version; texture is not the same.
London Broil on the Grill
One 3 to 5 lb London Broil
Marinade:
1 cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1/2 to 3/4 cup Kikkoman Soy Sauce, (You can use the reduced Sodium Variety also)
Juice of one large lemon
2 large onions, chopped
3 cloves of garlic, minced
Fresh ground black pepper
Put London Broil in container that will close tightly. Prepare marinade by mixing all ingredients. Pour marinade over the London Broil and close container tightly. Let sit in the fridge for one week.* (See note) Turn the London Broil every day.
The day you make the London Broil, while your coals or grill is getting ready, take London Broil out of fridge and let sit at room temperature for about 30 minutes. When your grill is ready put London Broil on the grill and cook according to how you like it. Medium Rare is about 25 minutes or so depending on heat of your grill. When London Broil is done, let rest for 15 to 20 minutes. Slice thinly and serve.
***Note: London Broil is a tough cut of meat, the longer you marinade this cut the more tender it becomes. Also when you refrigerate extra virgin olive oil, it becomes semi solid. Don't worry about that, just turn once every day.
My specialty is cole slaw. Most people love my cole slaw more than I do!
My favorite TN food scene was the rent party they had near the beginning of UFCS. There were many slow, lingering shots of all the food.
My favorite TN *cooking* scenes were in Querida Enemiga, where everybody was a chef!
Julie, I love Cole slaw. Are you willing to share your recipe? My neighbor makes coleslaw with ramen noodles in it. Most excellent.
But let's not forget the ever present Tostitos! Really if you want mexican junk food, try potato chips with a little lime juice and hot sauce squirted in the bag. It's good. It's no fish tacos or anything that the women in these kitchens make, but still better than Tostitos.
Kelly
I'll post it this weekend when I find my sort-of recipe.
For me, reading all those recipes, even when I never get the chance to make them, is wonderful.
Now I am moving on to other kind of Cookbooks, since I got today, my first book about cooking for pets.
I always make my dogs cookies, but I am going to start giving them something else, healthier, I think.
Most of the cooking I do I know it from heart and I do it from scratch. I grew up under my grandmother's skirt and I have been always very curious, so adding up, I learned to love the kitchen as a place to mix the same ingredients in order to make hundreds of possible combinations.
I was thinking about this every since we talked about the aubergine, but being a little OT I didn't dare. Thanks for allowing us to discuss and share family recipes and/or questions. Anything you wanna ask, go ahead...
What's really funny is that they'll have the poor folks in the vecindad putting on a tremendous group taco feast with all the sides and trimmings, and then they'll show the rich folks at home making a ham sandwich on Bimbo bread. I guess that means the rich folks eat boring "gringo-like" food, LOL!
It shocks me when interesting food is swapped for the mundane, as in that example.
My mother was from Germany and her best dishes were goulash and saurbraten. She used so little garlic you'd think it didn't exist in her pantry. However, German cuisine loves onions and she would never have gone without them.
My earliest memory of food was when I was about 3, sitting in Mercedes' kitchen in her apartment (above ours) and watching her make buñuelos de acelga (swiss chard fritters). She made them on a one-burner primus, like a camp stove. They were the porters for the apartment building we lived in and I spent a lot of time with them. For some reason, her apartment didn't have a stove. She made puchero, tallarines con tuco, sopa de pollo con fideos and just about anything you could cook on the top of a burner, eggs, steak, fried chicken etc. And she used plenty of garlic, too--which my mother disliked to the point of gagging at the odor (she didn't know what she was missing). They ate a lot of cold cuts and cheese in sandwiches and of course, my favorite was french bread spread with butter AND dulce de leche or membrillo (closer to quince than to guava).
Our kitchen was mostly Anglo, but we did enjoy and appreciate the great asados out in the country that took all day to roast over a pit of coals and a big grate, the big chunks of grass-fed beef, blood sausage, ribs and organ meats.
They weren't as big on beans as further north in Central America and the Caribbean. Uruguayans were real meat and potatoes kind of people, in addition to salads, vegetables, fruits, eggs, cheese and of course, with a nod to their large influx of Italian immigrants in the 19th & early 20th C., pastas, pizza and something called faina--which I have yet to see anywhere here. It's made with chick pea flour, water, salt and olive oil and baked like a pizza, best when it's a wood-fired oven. Sadly, I haven't been able to master the technique. It comes out tasting like I think wall-paper paste does. Of course I don't have a wood-fired oven.
My favorite Uruguayan dessert was called Postre Chajá de Paysandu. It was a frozen confection packed in individual square boxes. It was sold out of carts pushed by vendors who plied the streets of Montevideo. It was some sort of layering, or wrapping Chantilly cream, dulce de leche, broken pieces of meringue and a dense yellow pound cake. Mmmmmm. I'm hungry. There are recipes galore on the internet for family-sized Postre Chajá, with pictures, if you care to search.
A second favorite dessert was alfajores. They are thin cookies made into a sandwich with dulce de leche in between and dusted liberally with powdered sugar. These, yes, are available in the States now, or at least in the DC Metropolitan region.
Susanlynn--I sympathize with you. My mother never taught me to cook either. She thought it was more important for me to learn to sew (how wrong she was--I still can't put in a zipper or make buttonholes).
Part of that decision was probably attributed to the fact that my mother didn't *like* to spend too much time in the kitchen (she worked outside the home full-time after we came back from Uruguay), so her cooking was quick, simple and healthy. But we did have our meals out on the patio, picnic style, just about every night during the summer with cold salads, hamburgers, or hot tamale pie (a picadillo filling in between two layers of cooked corn meal mush), canelones (a type of crepe filled with chicken, corn, tuna, whatever was on hand, topped with cream and baked), waffles topped with creamed tuna, shepherd's pie, but not very heavy on the seafood in those days.
I improved on my mother's cooking and got a little more adventuresome, but it's the third generation that really shines. My daughter has become quite the gourmand and enjoys trying anything new--and invariably is successful. Her last offerings when she was here were Vaca Frita and Black Beans and Rice--how much more south of the border can you get and she's in Western Canada now!
I often wondered if all those fresh vegetables were ever cooked for the cast and crew for their meals on the sets. We have seen plenty of the cast eating. Who was it that ate all the time, was it Renata in CME? Camila did her share of eating in AB, too. It must be a Silvia thing. I'd like her secret for staying in shape--especially when Silvia has her own restaurant.
Madelaine, I put a (much smaller) London Broil in your marinade last night to grill tomorrow night. (I know you do yours for a week, but mine's only one pound, so hopefully two days will be enough!)
I also neglected to mention that I am the self-proclaimed Queen of Meatloaf. I make my favorite with ground turkey, grated onion, cornbread stuffing mix, and cranberries. It's funny-lookin', but it tastes good. I also do a Greek-style one with ground lamb, mint, lemon juice, etc.
OK, so, the coleslaw. Mix this together (I'm sorry I literally cannot give amounts - I just eyeball it) in a bowl:
Miracle Whip
A little malt vinegar
Maybe some lemon juice
A lot of onion powder
Paprika & black pepper
A little bit of sugar
Celery powder or flakes (but NOT celery salt)
Parsley
Just enough lemongrass (SECRET INGREDIENT) to make people say "hmmmm, what's that?" but not enough to make them say "ew, what IS that??"
More onion powder
All herbs (including the lemongrass) are dried. You can try with fresh, but the flavor will be very different.
After it's all mixed together, toss it with some shredded cabbage and whatever else you like in your slaw (maybe a little shredded carrot). I don't like purple cabbage much, but some people do and it's fine with this. Little bits of oranges aren't bad. And some people like broccoli slaw. I don't, but I think this would be okay on that. But I can tell you it's not so great with spinach.
You can eat it right away if you're having a cole slaw emergency, but it really is much better the next day. If you've never made slaw before, you may be surprised at how much a heap of shredded cabbage shrinks overnight when you mix it with this stuff.
I love it on pulled pork sandwiches or hot dogs.
The two days should be plenty for your London Broil. Let me know how it turns out.
Marta:
You too, let me know how it turns out!
Did your Mom ever make Rouladen? That is another favorite people like me to make.
SusanLynn:
Chocolate Éclair Cake??? Can you please share that one? Mr. Mads is a Chocolate Éclair fanatic! Thanks : )
So you want a layer of cooked ground beef (or whatever) in a casserole dish, add a layer of any kind of cooked or ready-to-eat canned vegetables (peas and carrots, mixed veggies, etc), add some gravy, and top with (storebought or instant if necessary). Stick it in the oven and bake it until it's all hot. Serve with more gravy.
For a twist, use spaghetti sauce instead of gravy. Or make like you're preparing sloppy joes, or use taco sauce and have corn as your vegetable... I like the Ortega chipotle taco mix, I think that's what it's called.
You CAN get more complicated if you like, but you don't have to.
Loved the kitchen in LQNPA and Maria's dishes cooked there.
La Paloma, La Reina de los Libros
Rouladen is easy but time intensive I think. I will give you the recipe I have:
6 pieces of very thin beef, Milanese cut
6 pieces of bacon, cut in half
6 dill pickles, cut length wise
marjoram
Grey Poupon Country Dijon Mustard
1 small onion thinly sliced
1 1/2 cup of beef broth or beef stock
2 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons of flour
To Assemble the Rouladen:
Take 1 piece of beef and smear with Grey Poupon Country Dijon Mustard, sprinkle with some marjoram, put bacon piece down, top with pickle and onion slice. Roll beef up and either secure with two toothpicks or tie with kitchen twine.
When the assembly of all the beef pieces are done, heat a skillet, preferably cast iron. When skillet is warm, not completely steaming hot, add oil and allow oil to heat about a minute. Dredge rouladen in flour and place in skillet, browning all sides. When browned remove rouladen and place in Dutch Oven. When all rouladen are done, add remaining flour to cast iron skillet and brown for about a minute or two, till flour is brown, then slowly add beef broth and stir with wire whisk until smooth and no lumps. Let cook till thickened and then add to rouladen in Dutch Oven. Cover Dutch Oven and put on stove top, and bring to a boil and then lower the heat to a slow simmer and cook for an hour and a half. Meat will be very tender and moist. Serve with mashed potatoes and a side of red cabbage. This dish is a true German Classic.
Susan Lynn:
Thank you so much for the Chocolate Éclair cake recipe. Mr Mads is very grateful : )
I have a new question: what is the deal with pigs' feet? I stewed some, but they were mostly bones and cartilage and not much meat. Do people eat the cartilage? Because it was a lot of work to get to the very small amount of meat.
Julie, I grew up with pork hocks. I presume the hock is part of the leg and not the feet themselves. These had lots of bone and fat but also meat that was so delicious: some of the most tender and juicy pork I have ever had.
Jarifa
Seems to big at fairs.
Deep Fried Coca Cola:
Mix funnel-cake batter with Coke instead of water. Pour the batter into the fryer and cook up a mass of doughy strands. Stuff into a Coca Cola cup, sprinkle with powdered sugar and douse with pure Coke syrup. Top it with whipped cream and a cherry.
All kinds of street food are available and more and more we're getting Hispanic and Caribbean cuisine (curried beef, chicken or vegetables and rice), in addition to crepes, BBQ ribs or sandwiches, corn dogs, bloomin' onions and other common carnival foods.
Most of the proceeds go to raise money for our local non-profit organizations, while a certain portion is used to pay for the carnival rides the next year. Pretty self-sustaining after doing it for 60 years or so.
I do recall (with a smile on my face) some times when our telenovela comments and discussions strayed to the topic of food and recipes, and some commenters actually became irritated when some of us went off-topic to share recipes. Can you imagine? I remember one time in particular when someone lambasted Carlos for sharing some delicious recipe; was it Lovely Linda's Corn Relish?
Thanks to the Caray Caray family I have some terrific tried-and-true recipes, such as Green Chili Stew from Mike and Emilia, Marta's Puerto Rican Seafood and Avocado Salad, UA's Stuffed Grape Leaves, Vivi's Caramel Rum Bread Pudding, Lovely Linda's Corn Relish from Carlos, and a bunch of other early recipes where I failed to note who provided them such as Posole, Coctel de Camarones, Eggs in Salsa Verde, and a few others. I've also got a few favorite recipes, such as Cochinita Pibil, that were refined during some of our discussions. Remember those, Anita and Carlos?
In Querida Enemiga the sweet mom was always making her specialty Pastel Azteca. Thanks to QE I had a great time researching it and coming up with a truly wonderful pot-luck dish. This was a great food telenovela as they were always going on about their special, traditional dishes.
I also very much enjoyed the kitchen scenes in Cuando Me Enamoro, and I LOVED the kitchen.
Great comments everyone, and huge thanks to those of you who shared recipes and descriptions.
I was also raised on hamhocks and can't imagine making beans or split peas without one or two hocks thrown in. I can make a tasty vegetarian version, but for myself I prefer a nice meaty hock.
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