Archives for the 'spicy' Category
Marinated tofu - deconstructed stir-fry

Tofu is okay…if it’s not prepare well it can be nasty. But steep it in vibrantly seasoned marinade and pan fry it until the edges are crisp…then you have a tasty pile of flavor. I’m a Top Chef watcher and when goofy-hair-guy rendered some beef fat and then marinated the tofu in it, I thought it was genius…of course I probably would have gone with pork fat…whatever.
This meal is a deconstructed stir-fry. I’m a fan of this method because it allows each component’s flavor to shine brightly. Also it plates much prettier than a jumbled stir-fry, and sometimes that’s important too.
Here’s a simple guide on how to create the marinated tofu and the deconstructed stir-fry:
1. In a blender jar add 1/4 cup soy sauce, 1/4 cup rice vinegar, 1 teaspoon chili oil, 1 teaspoon sesame oil, 1/2 a shallot, 3 cloves garlic, 2″ x 2″ knob of fresh ginger (cut into pieces). Let this rip on medium speed until the ginger, shallot, and garlic are emulsified. Pour 1/3 of it into a dish. Slice a firm-style block of tofu into 12 pieces and arrange the tofu on top of it, pour the remaining marinade over the tops of the tofu.

2. Prep the remaining components. In my case I sliced 2 huge white mushrooms and 2 green onions. I diced 3 cloves of garlic and another 2″ x 2″ knob of ginger.

3. Chop and wash/spin the bok choy. Preheat the oven to 150°.

4. Heat a skillet up over a medium flame and once it’s hot add two or three tablespoons of neutral oil, like canola. Once that comes up to heat carefully transfer the tofu into the hot skillet, piece by piece, being careful to watch out for the spattering oil.
5. Now this is the hard part…don’t do a thing. Don’t try to flip them, don’t try to pry them up and look at them…just let them cook for about 5 to 7 minutes and then you can look…chances are they’ll need another 5 minutes or so. Then using a spatula, gently flip each one and let the other side brown. I think my batch probably took 15 - 18 minutes total, this is the most time-consuming part of this dish. While the tofu cooked I unloaded the dishwasher and cleaned up the kitchen.
6. Once the tofu is deep, beautiful brown, remove it from the skillet. Take the skillet over to the sink and douse it with water and clean it up…it’ll clean easy while it’s hot, but once it cools down it’s a bitch.
7. Put the skillet back on the burner with high heat this time. Let it heat up for 5 minutes or so. In the meantime, put the tofu in the oven to stay warm.
8. Now that the skillet is hot add 1 tablespoon of oil and the diced garlic and ginger. Then add the mushrooms and salt them. At this point you might think you need more oil but actually add some water. The pan should be so hot that it should vaporize immediately and it acts as a tool to move the mushrooms around the pan. This should portion should take about one minute to cook.
9. Remove the mushrooms, garlic, and ginger. Add the bok choy to the pan (still on high heat). Shake or stir the pan to keep the bok choy moving and salt it. Again, you can add some water to create some non-stick action with it’s vapors. This portion should take about 1 minute.
10. Slide the bok choy to the coolest part of the skillet and add the green onions. Toss a little canola (1 teaspoon) on them if you like and salt them. Shake or stir and remove from the heat.

11. I plated this meal by making a mound of bok choy, encircled with the mushrooms, I arranged the tofu on top and garnished it with a bok choy leaf. Then I tangled the onions over the whole thing. It was awesome! The garlic and the ginger really perked up the bland mushrooms, the bok choy was delicate and sweetly tasted of spring and the onions are always addicting. Low calorie, low carb and delicious.
Grinding my own garam

Spicy food is something I love, but even though I have a cabinet full of spices I’ve never actually made my own garam masala before. This is mostly because I’m incredibly lazy but it’s also because we have a Penzeys Spice Store here in town…I always assumed that their blends are as good as fresh. Holy cow…I can’t believe how stupid I was. Penzeys is good, but fresh toasted and ground is fantastic…it’s like fireworks in your mouth…like spicy pop-rocks, like a mini-vacation to a warm and loveable land.
I guess you can tell I’m enthusiastic about this…it’s like someone who just quit smoking, or lost 30 pounds, or found god….it’s all they can talk about, and every single conversation eventually turns to their obsession. That’s me baby…I’m a grinder and toaster now…never to go back to my lazy, idle ways of sloth and less robust flavor.
Besides being filled with that aforementioned fabulous flavor, it was super easy (btw, I said “super” with a french accent…as in “soup-per”). I searched the interwebs and found lots of recipes for garam masala and they all pretty much used similar spices while noting that garam masala is perfect for customizing to your personal taste. I used black peppercorns, cloves, green cardamom, star anise, nutmeg, cinnamon, and black cumin seeds. I toasted them in a cast-iron skillet over medium heat until they were fragrant, the aroma flitting about the house like a spring breeze, and then I tipped them into the grinder that I use for spices. I pulsed them until they were ground well…but not too fine and then I made the best garam masala curry I’ve ever, ever made.

Garam Masala Spice Blend
printer-friendly recipe
1 1/2 Tbs black peppercorns
3/4 Tbs black cumin seeds (kala jeera)
1 1/2 tsp whole cloves
4 large green cardamom pods
2″ stick of cinnamon
1/2 a whole nutmeg
2 star anise
Gently roast all spices and grind everything to a fine powder in a coffee or spice grinder. Makes enough for two batches.
Garam Masala Curry
1 onion
1 potato
1/2 head of cauliflower
1 chicken breast
canola oil
Peel and dice the onion. Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a heavy pan and toss the onions and half of the garam masala spice mix into the pan. Stir and cook over medium heat.
While the onions are cooking peel and dice the potato. Add it to the pan. Segment the cauliflower into small florets and add it to the pan too. Lastly dice the chicken and add it to the pan. Add salt. Add just a bit of water or chicken stock to come up about halfway on the ingredients. Cover and allow the ingredients to heat up to a boil and then immediately lower the heat to a simmer.
Let the covered pot simmer until the potatoes begin to get tender then remove the lid and adjust seasonings. Maybe add more salt, more garam masala (just a bit). Check the liquid level and adjust by adding more water, stock, or cream or allowing it to cook down. When the ingredients are all tender and the seasoning and consistency is right then you are ready to eat. For me it cooked for about 30 minutes total…20 with the lid on and 10 with it off.
More liquid love…black bean soup

I don’t know if you’ve noticed but it’s been pretty damn cold here in Wisconsin. Top it off with a day of moderate snowfall and you’ve got an extreme Monday…it seemed to go on forever. Since I was out and about this afternoon I stopped by La Mestiza, a great little Mexican joint, and picked up some pork tamales to have for dinner. I’ve never tried to make tamales…they seem related to the dumpling family, don’t they? What with being a flavorful meat surrounded by masa and then wrapped in a corn husk…. I’m wary of dumplings, as you may remember, so I think I’ll continue to let the trained professionals fulfill this need.

But remember, it’s cold here…today our high was 9…that’s it, 9. Right now it’s 8, feels like 1. Woohoo folks this is warmer than yesterday!!! Yes, I’m aware how sad that is. But I digress…last week I posted that scrumptious buttermilk soup…and it was sooooo good, especially with those little pillowy oyster crackers and lots of black pepper. It was more like a tangy vegetable chowder and I loved it. But we were all talking about soup and I think it was dear reader JEP who mentioned black bean soup. Well, that was it…I couldn’t get black bean soup out of my mind.

So I came home today and before I did anything else, before I got out of my work clothes and into my blue jeans, before I booted up lappy or checked to see if my new camera had arrived, before laundry, even before I warmed up my poor, cold feet…I made black bean soup. Prep time is maybe 5-10 minutes, and then it cooks, and bubbles, and simmers for a couple of hours…then 2/3 of it gets pureed in the blender with 4 cloves of garlic, it gets one last seasoning dose, and it’s soup time baby!!! I can’t tell you how thrilled I was when the boys didn’t like it…more for me!!! Notice the dollop of yogurt gracing the soup…I love how that creamy coolness sidles into a bite of the spicy hot soup…it’s superb and a satisfying accompaniment to a porky tamale…a great dinner, no muss, no fuss, and I even had time to make Bakers Chocolate One-bowl Brownies…my favorite. Lucky you…you get the recipe.
Black Bean Soup
Printer-friendly version
1 large onion, peeled and diced
2 to 3 tablespoons chili powder
1 tablespoon smoked Spanish paprika
1 teaspoon ground cumin
salt
1 pound bag of black beans, rinsed and picked over
4 cloves of garlic, peeled
cheats: 1 tablespoon chicken boullion, generous dash of Maggi Seasoning, lime juice
Put a heavy pot on a medium flame, toss the onions in with some olive oil and saute them for 3 minutes or so. Add some salt, the chili powder, paprika, and the cumin. Stir it about and let it heat up for a few minutes. Add the beans and add enough water to cover the beans. Put a lid on the pot and let it come to a boil.
Turn the flame down until you have a medium simmer. Cook like this, with the lid on the pot, for 1 to 1 and 1/2 hours. Occasionally stir it. After the time elapses taste the beans for seasoning and to see if the beans are tender. If they’re not turn the heat back up to a boil and cook them for 10 minutes or so like that. Make sure you have enough liquid with the beans.
Once they are tender transfer 2/3 of the beans to a blender and puree them with 4 whole cloves of garlic. Pour this puree back into the pot, taste for seasoning and add some of the cheats if necessary to boost the flavor.
Serve with a dollop of yogurt.








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