Friday, October 18, 2013
Weekend Discussion: Virtual Feast
Labels: Manda, telenovelas, weekend
I still miss the kitchen of La Bonita in CME. And I would LOVE to have a CME cookbook should Televisa (hopefully they read this) puts one out.
Kelly
I made pozole once, though, and some of the relatives liked it. When I make lasagna, I bring some for my grandmother, who loves it. And there are a couple of family recipes I do for Thanksgiving or Christmas, including pork dressing. I also like to make cranberry sauce, but more than half of the relatives prefer the homogenous can-shaped blob of jel instead.
Yes, autumn. Time to fire up the oven once again. Stews. Soups. Baked beans. More beans. Shepherd's pie. Pastitsio, if I get around to it. If my relatives don't want it, that just means more for me, baby!
As for the PEAM finale - usually for these things I get some tequila or a fancy ice cream and call it good. If this were a really great TN where I was sad that it was ending, I might do something a little more special. But for PEAM, maybe just a Dove Bar.
We've done two batches so far and they turned out pretty well. Her Mexican boyfriend, his brother, and uncle liked them. We may do more for Thanksgiving.
I would also love someday to do the Rainbow Cake again now that I know how long is necessary to whip the stuff.
Kelly, I was thinking of the CME kitchen right before I started to read the comments. Wasn't it beautiful? I bailed on LQNPA really quickly, but was there long enough to see the kitchen. I would take that one, too.
I do enjoy cooking and love to listen/see the really good cooks on TV and hear them on the radio (NPR). I love "Splendid Table", but found one of her cookbooks (Lynn Rosetto Casper, sp?) to be a bit time consuming for me. Chef Rick Bayless is my "go to" man for all things Mexican, but I am always on the look out for other good Mexican/Spanish/Latin chefs.
I make a really good pesto with my home grown basil and also do a really good chicken noodle soup from scratch. I get many requests for these from friends. My time constraints are such that I can't spend the time doing the things I love the most like breads and soups.
I have learned so much from the Julia Child/Jacques Pepin series. They do so many simple things even in the midst of some of their more complicated dishes that I have used for some every day types of dishes. My friends think I'm some super cook, but I just try to learn from these experts and keep it simple until I think I can move on up a notch to the more difficult recipe.
I am dying to do a Jacques Pepin recipe for French Onion soup and hope I can get to it soon.
Urban, I am SO hungry now for cake!!
Fatima
For Thanksgiving I might also try to make Tomato in Aspic as well as the sugar-free cranberry sauces.
I always make my cranberry sauce with whole berries and throw in some orange rind for added flavor.
Tomato in aspic sounds good!
Fatima
The best thing about LQNPA was the kitchen. Similar style to the CME one with it being so open; no closed upper cabinets to close in the room. It's my dream kitchen, assuming there is a pantry nearby to hide the less attractive plastic containers.
It would be the perfect place to practice making stuffed nopales (sliced open, stuffed with cheese, breaded and sauted in oil, salsa dumped on top). And I sometimes use a molcajete for making guacamole just because I have one and can pretend I'm at La Bonita.
Kelly
Fatima
Fatima
They all seem to have everything that one could desire that is, except an automatic dishwasher. I have yet to see one of those even in the multimillion dollar mansions
that many of the novelas are filmed in. I have never been able to understand this.
As for winter food---my favorite is
a very hot and spicy bowl of red. That's chili and beans. Most gringo's eat their chili with crackers, I prefer mine the Mexican way with corn tortillas, nothing else. I mean, no appetizers, salads, nothing. Chili is king and is too good to share with other foods. There are chili books and dozens of recipes online.
I often make my own but if I buy it out, Chili John's is a very good place.
the gringo
I'll have to check out my DVD of CME to see if I can spot one.
Fatima
Cactus, I told them, are wonderful. Versatile and healthy.
You can eat them raw, boil them in water, fry them and even grill them. Prickly pears are sweet and delicious. Next time we see each other we will go to the store so she can buy cactus already peeled, so she can start sooking them. Besides her NOpalina juice, it doesn't hurt to eat the real thing in its many variations...
ITA with Fátima, the kitchen is the heart of the home.
How does one remove the spines from the prickly pears?
I'm pretty sure Chef Bayless has done a program on the nopalitos. You've got me intrigued now, so I will search and see if I can find it.
Fatima
:)
Kelly
I know, so many questions! Thanks so much Kelly and Pablo. :))
Fatima
With the prickly pears is a lot easier because you can hold it carefully from the spots that don't have fuzzy stuff and cut a little from the top and a little from the bottom. Then make a cut only on the skin from top to bottom and pop the meat out. Cold are delicious and you can find, whites, red and purple ones. They all have slightly different taste.
Fo the cactus. You can also hold it with tongs until you have peeled enough to hold it with your bare hands. Then you can:
RAW:
Depending on the size, put half or a whole piece with 1 part natural pineapple juice and 1 part orange juice. This is delicious because you won't even notice the cactus is in there.
Chopped really fine you can also add it to the pico de gallo (tomato, onion and pepper sauce). I tried this but didn't like it much.
BOILED:
It will always be slightly slimy (slime is the fiber, in its liquid state), but after rinsing it you can use it mostly with everything.
FRIED:
Chopped real fine it can be fried with a little butter (or a mix of butter and oil) and then cooked with tomato salsa, with eggs and chorizo, etc.
GRILLED:
Is how I like it best because ti dries up (toasts) a little bit and the slimy sensation disappears.
I rub the whole piece with olive oil and then add salt, pepper. Then I make four or five cuts along the lenght and put it on the grill. Once toasted I put half of it in a corn tortilla (now you can also find corn/nopal tortillas), add beans, cheese, or juárever I have in hand and voilá!
In any way you prefer them, nopalitos are good, you just need to find the right recipe for you.
Thank you, Pablo!
Fatima (with an accent over the first "a", but I can never figure out how to put it there!)
So far, the only TN where I have seen people prepare nopales is VIVIR A DESTIEMPO. They were transfering them from a place to another, but at least they showed them.
Re the accent, I made my keyboard ''bilingual'', going to Control panel. Now I have a little button on the task bar to turn it on or off at wish.
Fatima
gringo, chili? Now there's something we have in common. I love me some chili. Have you ever had the opportunity to try Wolf Brand Chili? It's a canned chili made here in Texas and is really quite good (excellent for Frito pie), though I prefer homemade or cafe made chili. I especially enjoy it for breakfast over loosely scrambled eggs and topped with chopped onion and grated cheese. Corn tortillas? Of course, though flour tortillas go well with this as well. I first tried it that way when I was a student at Baylor University in Waco. I would get it at Ed's Truck Stop. When the Lovely Linda makes chili here at home she generally uses Wick Fowler's 2 Alarm Chili Mix tweaking it with a few extra ingredients. Though here in Texas it's almost considered blasphemous to add beans to chili, I prefer my chili with some beans in it. She often adds a can of Ranch Style Beans which I think enhances the overall dish.
Carlos
I am from México, so chili was something new for me. I only use it for the hot dogs, buy the Wolf brand with no beans and turkey meat in it.
I add another pound of ground turkey, which I brown before adding the can of chili, and then all over the weiner on the hot dog bread.
I once made chili from scratch becaue I didn't have cans and had practically everything to make it and I remember this was not so red, or didn't have so much reddish juice (the one that stains the plastic recipients).
I like chili and I am glad I know now there are another ways to use it besides on Hot Dogs. Thanks!
Rockfish Mexican Shrimp Martini
Carlos
Carlos, a good friend of mine from Austin has sent me some of that Wolf chili you mention. I eat it as you do, minus the eggs, tho' and I love it!. Have to also add that I will often make a homemade chili with ground turkey (easier on the stomach). I rarely use beans and often make the chili New Mexican style with cubed beef (lean) and fresh green chili. If the local specialty market has some of those wonderful chilies from Hatch, NM, I use those.
Sometimes, the market will be roasting those chilies from Hatch right in front of the store. OH MY GOSH! I'm salivating even before I get out of the car!!!
Fatima
Years and years ago I found a recipe in Esquire Magazine called Gordo's Mad Dog Chili, which called for little bits of bacon. It became a hit and my neighbors (from Canada) asked the Lovely Linda to make some for their house guests (a couple also from Canada) who were immersing themselves in the Texas experience during their visit. The husband innocently inquired about the little fatty bits in the chili and I (now I'm not proud of this... and alcohol may have been involved) replied that it was armadillo. He nodded but seemed to really enjoy the meal. When I was helping to clear the table there were tiny little bits of bacon on his plate which he had carefully extracted from his chili.
Carlos
Carlos, a big laugh at your armadillo chili story. We don't use a recipe for our chili, so we never make it exactly the same way from batch to batch.
We like to make a big pot and freeze some individual portions.
Thanks so much for this delicious topic. I love to cook and I am always on the lookout for new things to make.
As far as kitchens go, I really loved the kitchen in LQPNA, but as far as food in TNs I liked the food in Amores Verdaderos, Que Bonita Amor, PEAM, and LQPNA. I loved the way they showed how the food was made and the way they displayed it.
I really like prickly pears. I had them in Italy when I was stationed there. I used gloves, you know the Playtex ones, to get the spines off. The first time I ever took the spines off, I didn't and got those spines in my fingers. Ouch! I learned the hard way. Those prickly pears are really a sweet treat. I cooked them and used them as topping for ice cream and put some in a custard tart. Delicious! The flesh was dark purple.
I too like chili. I lived in San Antonio when I was little and my Mom had gotten a recipe from a neighbor lady. It was always the best chili. She cooked it and stored it in glass jars in the fridge for three days before serving it. It aged the chili and the spice was wonderful! I still do it today. It always tastes better the longer you age it, than served the same day.
I usually make things homemade. I try to stay away from the processed foods. It may take longer, but it tastes so much better : )
I probably shouldn't admit that I watch Hart of Dixie (I can't even claim it's educational, like learning Spanish from telenovelas), but that show has the best kitchen ogling. Lavon's kitchen is big and beautiful and everything is perfectly displayed and there are always fabulous-looking pastries and bowls of fruit and jars of spices and legumes and something tantalizing being cooked.
My favorite chili is the kind my mom makes. I'm not sure exactly what's in it; definitely tomatoes and onions and beans and lots of spices. We always ate it with cheese melted on top and scooped it up with tortilla chips.
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