National Blueberry Muffin Day

Today is National Blueberry Muffin Day. JOY! I’ve got a load of blueberries and a good recipe. Here it is:

Blueberry Muffins

  • 4 tablespoons butter

  • 1-3/4 cups all-purpose flour

  • 1/4 cup sugar

  • 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder

  • 3/4 teaspoon salt

  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda

  • 1 tablespoon grated fresh orange peel

  • 1 cup buttermilk or stirred plain yogurt

  • 1 large egg

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

  • 1 cup blueberries

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Place 10 muffin liners inside a muffin pan or lightly grease the hollows. Melt the butter and set aside to cool. Mix the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, baking soda and orange peel in a bowl. Stir to combine ingredients thoroughly. In a second bowl mix the buttermilk, egg, vanilla extract and melted butter. Pour into the flour mixture and mix just to combine ingredients (it will be very thick). Fold in the blueberries. Spoon into the muffin tins, about 2/3 the way up. Bake for 22-25 minutes or until browned and a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean.

Makes 10

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Fresh Dutch Pea Soup

Have to be fair. Yesterday I gave a recipe for Gazpacho, a soup from Spain to serve for World Cup watching. Now on to the Netherlands. I’ve been working on a recipe for a summer version of Dutch pea soup. Dutch Pea Soup (Erwtensoep) is thick an…

Have to be fair. Yesterday I gave a recipe for Gazpacho, a soup from Spain to serve for World Cup watching. 

Now on to the Netherlands. I’ve been working on a recipe for a summer version of Dutch pea soup. Dutch Pea Soup (Erwtensoep) is thick and smoky, made with dried peas and a ham hock or bacon. It’s one of my favorite winter soups but it’s too heavy for a summer day.

Here’s the one I came up with. It has fresh peas and it’s as light as a feather. I’ve made it with yogurt and buttermilk. Either way, the recipe works, and it’s very refreshing. The jewel green color is lovely too. To get that smoky flavor of Erwtensoep use some bacon — but you can also substitute fake bacon (Morningstar Farm soy strips).

I had a friend once, a much older woman named Ro whose family escaped Holland during World War II. She always said she hated Dutch Pea Soup. She was such a gracious and gentle woman and yet when she talked about pea soup she would get an impossibly angry look on her face. One day she told me about the time when she was a young girl and her mother served pea soup. She didn’t want to eat it. Her father made her sit at the table for hours and hours, past her bedtime and she kept refusing to eat. Finally she fell asleep at the table and when she woke up the pea soup was still there. She finally gave in and ate the soup, now cold, for breakfast. But she never ate pea soup again.

Ro is gone now but I would like to think she would try — and even enjoy — this recipe.

Summer Dutch Pea Soup

4 ounces Morningstar Farms veggie bacon

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 medium onion, chopped

1 large Yukon Gold potato, peeled and chopped

6 cups vegetable stock

6 cups shelled fresh peas or 3 (10-ounce) packages frozen peas

3/4 cup plain yogurt or buttermilk

salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

extra plain yogurt or dairy sour cream or creme fraiche

Cook the bacon in a soup pot for 5-6 minutes over medium heat or until it is crispy. Remove the bacon and all but a film of fat from the pan. Crumble the bacon and set aside. Pour the olive oil into the pan. Add the onion and potato and cook, stirring frequently, for 2-3 minutes. Add the vegetable stock, bring to a simmer, cover the pan and cook for about 12 minutes or until the potato has softened. Add the peas. Cover and cook for another 3 minutes. Remove the cover and remove the pan from the heat and let cool. Puree the ingredients in a blender or food processor. Whisk in the yogurt. Taste for seasoning and add salt and pepper to taste. Serve topped with a blob of yogurt or sour cream and some of the crumbled bacon. Makes 6 servings

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Gazpacho, World Cup Winner

Doesn’t matter who you’re rooting for in the World Cup final between Spain and the Netherlands. Gazpacho is a Spanish soup but it’s an all around winner and almost everyone loves it, so it’s a good dish to serve to friends who might be watching the game with you Sunday.

The first time I ever tried Gazpacho was right after my brother Jeff and sister-in-law Eileen returned from their honeymoon in Spain and they invited the family over for dinner. Eileen, who’s good at lots of stuff, will be the first to admit that she’s not such a great cook. But she was determined to make Gazpacho for us.

It took her seven hours, not including the shopping. In her effort to make the dish the authentic way, she traveled to a distant neighborhood to find perfect produce from a Spanish market, hand-chopped the vegetables rather than use a food processor and ground the bread and herbs using a mortar and pestle that she borrowed from her grandmother. 

The soup was fabulous. Plump, ripe, fruity summer tomatoes. Crunchy bell peppers. Icy-crisp sweet cucumbers. Homemade, well-seasoned croutons.

She never made it again. And once we heard how long it took her no one asked for the recipe. Who would bother??

A few years ago, for a food column, I played around with Eileen’s recipe. I wanted readers to be able to make this recipe — the easy way. It still requires several steps, but it won’t take you seven hours to make. Here’s the modern, still-tasting-authentic version. You might have to do this in portions, depending on the size of your food processor.

Food Processor Andalusian Gazpacho

The Soup:

5 ripe tomatoes

1 cucumber

1 green bell pepper

4 slices homestyle white bread, torn into small pieces

2 large cloves garlic

1 medium onion, cut into chunks

5 tablespoons olive oil

1 cup water

salt to taste

1/4 cup red wine vinegar

3 cups tomato juice

2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil or oregano

2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

freshly ground black pepper to taste

Croutons (or use packaged):

4 slices homestyle white bread

3 tablespoons olive oil

2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil

salt to taste

Garnish:

chopped green bell pepper, scallions, cucumber and fresh chili pepper

To make the soup, cut the tomatoes in half, crosswise and squeeze out the seeds. Chop the tomatoes and set aside. Peel the cucumber, cut in half lengthwise and scoop out the seeds. Chop the cucumber and set aside. Remove the stem and top of the bell pepper, cut in half and remove the seeds and pith. Chop the pepper and set aside. Place the bread, garlic cloves, onion and olive oil in a food processor. Process until finely minced. Scrape down the sides of the bowl once or twice during the process. Add the water and a shake of salt and process for a few seconds. Add the tomatoes, cucumber and bell pepper and process to the desired consistency. Pour into a large bowl and add the wine vinegar, tomato juice, basil or oregano and parsley. Refrigerate for at least one hour to let flavors blend. Taste for seasoning and add salt and pepper to taste. Serve soup topped with croutons and garnish on the side. Makes 6 servings

To make croutons: trim the crusts from the bread and dice the slices. Heat the olive oil in a saute pan over medium heat. Add the bread. Sprinkle with basil and salt to taste. Cook, tossing the bread occasionally, for several minutes until the dice are toasty brown. Dish out and set aside.

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Spicy Corn Fritters

foodforjubilee:

Spicy Corn Fritters | droolfactor

Photo of a stack of crispy corn fritters greeted me as I went to Tumblr this morning. I haven’t eaten corn fritters in years and this brought back some delicious memories. My mother used to m…

foodforjubilee:

Spicy Corn Fritters | droolfactor

Photo of a stack of crispy corn fritters greeted me as I went to Tumblr this morning. I haven’t eaten corn fritters in years and this brought back some delicious memories. My mother used to make corn fritters all the time and serve them with fried chicken. (She made the best fried chicken.)

Her recipe isn’t as sophisticated as this one, which has cumin and coriander and a spicy dipping sauce.

Her fritters were a more old fashioned Southern style and she served them with maple syrup. They were memorable, so I’m posting the recipe. Easy to cook and the are really terrific with any meat or vegetable you grill over the summer.

Corn Fritters

1 cup flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon sugar

1 large egg

1/2 cup milk

2 tablespoon melted butter

1 cup corn kernels (fresh or thawed frozen)

vegetable oil for frying

maple syrup

Sift the flour, baking powder, salt and sugar into a bowl. In a second bowl, beat the egg, milk and melted butter together. Add the liquids to the flour mixture. Fold in the corn kernels. Heat enough vegetable oil in a large saute pan to come 1/4-inch up the side. Cook over medium-high heat until hot enough to make a bread crumb sizzle. Drop the corn batter by heaping tablespoonful onto the batter, leaving at least 1/2-inch space between fritters. Fry for about 2 minutes per side or until golden brown and crispy. Drain on paper towels and serve with maple syrup. Makes 6 servings

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Lemonade, all sorts

You know American capitalism is alive and well when July 4th comes around and you see kids selling lemonade on the street. My daughter Gillian did it, with her friend Dana to help her (and potentially earn half the profits). They used an upside down crate and made two simple signs. One said “Homemade Lemonade 15 cents.” The other said “Best Lemonade.” (It was.)

Unfortunately we lived down a glen where there was literally no traffic on our road. The only cars that came and went were our neighbors (3 of them) and only one neighbor could actually see into our driveway.

There were no profits. But there was a lot of fun and the enthusiasm factor was high.

They also had a good recipe. They didn’t open a can of frozen concentrate or mix some crystals and water. They made lemonade from —- lemons! And sugar. It was delish. Tangy but sweet.

What better drink to drink on July 4th weekend than some good old-fashioned American lemonade. The real thing, from scratch. Frozen and packaged lemonade can’t compare.

You can make lemonade concentrate and keep it for days and days in the fridge. And if you have the basic concentrate you can also make variations easily — like Spice Lemonade or even “adult” versions like Yellow Jacket Lemonade (with tequila or vodka).

Try some. Here are a couple of recipes.

Old Fashioned Lemonade

1-1/2 cups water

1-1/2 cups sugar

grated rind of one large lemon

1-1/2 cups fresh lemon juice

ice cubes

cold water or seltzer

Place the 1-1/2 cups water and the sugar in a saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Boil for 3 minutes. Add the lemon rind and lemon juice and stir. Let cool, then place in the refrigerator and let cool completely. Strain the mixture. Keep refrigerated until ready to make individual glasses of lemonade. To make the lemonade, place some ice cubes in a glass, fill 1/3 of the way up with some of the cold lemon syrup. Add cold water or seltzer, stir and drink. Makes about 8 servings

(Alternatively, pour the cold syrup into a pitcher and fill with water or seltzer and some ice cubes.)

Spice Lemonade

4 cups water

3-inch piece cinnamon stick

6 whole cloves

6 allspice berries

1-1/2 cups lemonade syrup

Place the water, cinnamon stick, cloves and allspice berries in a saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat and simmer for 5 minutes. Strain the liquid into a pitcher. Add the lemonade syrup. Stir to mix thoroughly. Chill in the refrigerator until cold. Pour into glasses half filled with ice. Makes about 8 servings

Yellow Jacket Lemonade

3 cups homemade lemonade

1 cup tequila or vodka

2 cups ice water, approximately

1 sliced lemon

Mix the lemonade and vodka or tequila and pour into a pitcher half filled with ice cubes. Mix in 2 cups water (taste and add more water as preferred). Add lemon slices. Makes about 8 servings

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Rebecca Chan's Challah

You don’t have to be Jewish to bake challah.
The other day I was shopping at Fairway in Harlem in Manhattan and overheard two young women talking. One one of them said she loved loved loved challah, which she had recently tried, and would like…

You don’t have to be Jewish to bake challah.

The other day I was shopping at Fairway in Harlem in Manhattan and overheard two young women talking. One one of them said she loved loved loved challah, which she had recently tried, and would like to learn how to bake one.

I couldn’t resist saying something. I wasn’t exactly eavesdropping — they were talking loud enough for everyone around them to hear and I was right next to them at the olive bar. So I excused myself for breaking into their conversation and told the one who loved challah that I was a food writer and had a great recipe. That I would email the recipe if she wanted.

She did. I sent my recipe.

Two days later Rebecca Chan had not only baked two challahs successfully, but was thrilled enough to take this photo. She said the breads were delicious and would make them again.

I was thrilled she had actually tried her hand at challah so quickly.

But when it comes to challah, you just can’t wait.

So, for everyone out there who wants to make homemade challah, here’s my recipe. I suggest baking it a bit longer than Rebecca did — it needs to be a bit darker. But this is a terrific first challah if you ask me.

Kudos Rebecca!!! Keep baking!!

Challah

2 packages active dry yeast

1/2 cup warm water (about 105 degrees; feels slightly warm to touch)

1/2 cup sugar

8 cups flour, approximately

1 tablespoon salt

5 large eggs

3 tablespoons vegetable oil

1-1/2 cups warm water (about 105 degrees)

poppy seeds or sesame seeds, optional

In a small bowl, mix the yeast, 1/2 cup water, 1/2 teaspoon sugar and a pinch of flour. Stir and set aside for about 5 minutes or until the mixture is bubbly. While the yeast is resting, place 7-1/2 cups flour with the remaining sugar and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer with a dough hook. Add 4 of the eggs, the vegetable oil and the 1-1/2 cups water. Mix using the dough hook until well combined. Add the yeast mixture and blend in thoroughly. Knead (at medium-high speed) until the dough is smooth and elastic (3-4 minutes). Add more flour as needed to make the dough smooth and soft, but not overly sticky. Cover the bowl and let the dough rise in a warm place for about 1-1/2 hours or until doubled in bulk. Punch the dough down, cover the bowl and let rise again for about 45 minutes or until doubled in bulk. Remove the dough to a floured surface. Cut the dough into 3 or 6 pieces depending on whether you are going to make one large or two smaller loaves. Make long strands out of each piece. Braid the strands and seal the ends together by pressing on the dough. Place the bread(s) on a lightly greased cookie sheet. Beat the last egg. Brush the surface with some of the egg. Sprinkle with seeds if desired. Let rise in a warm place for 30 minutes. While the dough is in the last rise, preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Bake for about 30 minutes for one large bread, 22-25 minutes for two smaller breads. They should be firm and golden brown. Makes one large or two smaller challahs

NOTE: you can make the dough in a food processor — cut the recipe in half

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Coffee Grand Marnier Ice Cream

It’s Creative Ice Cream Flavor Day.

I’m not sure where that could lead us, but one time, in one of my newspaper columns there was a mistake in the printed copy of my recipe for vanilla ice cream. Instead of listing vanilla as an ingredient, the newspaper copy listed the ingredient as Dijon mustard!

You can imagine the calls I got for the mustard ice cream recipe!

Actually, there is such a thing. Gourmet Magazine printed a recipe for mustard ice cream to go on top of gravlax. And food writer Patricia Wells wrote about mustard ice cream on top of gazpacho.

Mustard ice cream for dessert though? Uh uh. No way.

I’m sure there are lots of creative dessert ice cream flavor to try. However, I never stray far from this one: Normandy Ice Cream. It’s from an old French Cookbook “La Cuisine” by Raymond Oliver, who was once the chef and owner of the world-renowned Grand Vefour Restaurant in Paris.

Normandy Ice Cream is basically coffee ice cream but it also has Grand Marnier in it. Very sophisticated flavor, not too alcoholic. This is the kind of ice cream you eat by itself. It doesn’t need sprinkles, fudge sauce or nuts or anything.

The recipe is easy. You can mix it up in a home ice cream maker. But if you have a bowl and electric mixer you don’t even need an ice cream machine (the machine will of course make the ice cream smoother). I’ve changed the instructions somewhat from the original recipe.

Raymond Oliver’s Normandy Ice Cream

  • 4 cups heavy cream
  • 1 cup superfine sugar
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 1/4 cup Grand Marnier
  • 2 tablespoons instant coffee

Beat the cream, adding 1/2 cup sugar gradually, until the mixture is thick. Set aside. Beat the egg yolks with the remaining half cup of sugar until the mixture is thick and light yellow. Beat in the Grand Marnier and instant coffee and blend in thoroughly. Fold the coffee mixture into the whipped cream. Blend thoroughly. Freeze in 2 shallow pans for about 45 minutes, then beat the mixture again and return to the freezer until hard (you can use a pretty mold). OR: place the coffee mixture in an ice cream machine and proceed according to manufacturer’s instructions.

NOTE: this includes raw egg yolk, which might pose a health risk. If preferred, you can make this recipe by cooking the egg yolks into a custard: use 2 cups of the cream for the whipped cream. After you beat the egg yolks and sugar until thick and light, stir in the remaining cream and cook this mixture until it is thick and coats the back of a spoon (or 160 degrees). Then stir in the Grand Marnier and coffee.

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All-American Thanksgiving World Cup Dinner

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I’m making an all-American World Cup dinner today to send good vibes to the team. They play Ghana today. Go USA!!!!

Here’s the dinner — Thanksgiving! I’m roasting a turkey. I made stuffing, Baked Cranberries (and added Grand Marnier), Mashed Sweet Potatoes and later will roast some asparagus. Dessert will be a Blueberry Crumb Cake with ice cream.

Here’s a recipe for the Mashed Sweet Potatoes. Takes almost no time. No  sweetener in these. If you have a sweet tooth you can add some honey or maple syrup. But even someone on a diet can eat these. Sweet potatoes are healthy. No need for the butter either.

Mashed Sweet Potatoes

  • 4 large sweet potatoes

  • 2 tablespoons butter, optional

  • 2 teaspoons grated fresh orange peel

  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

  • 1/2 cup orange juice, approximately

  • salt to taste

Roast the potatoes in a 400 degree oven for about one hour or until tender. Cut the potatoes in half and scoop the flesh into a bowl. Add the butter, if used, and stir it in. Add the orange peel, cinnamon and the juice. Mash the ingredients and blend them thoroughly. Add more juice if needed to make the sweet potatoes fluffy. Taste for seasoning and add salt to taste.

Makes 6-8 servings

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Cajun Fried Fish

About 30 years ago most Americans thought of catfish as an ugly, bewhiskered, leathery-skinned bottom-feeder known primarily in the American south and fit only for the poor. Then Cajun cooking came along, catfish farming became big business and people from New England to Montana to California knew what they had been missing all those years.

Catfish, the ugly duckling of fish, has become a lovely swan, with people loving the sweet, mild, delicate meat. 

Catfish became so popular in the 1980s that June 25th was declared National Catfish Day in 1987.

So today, to celebrate, have some Cajun Fried Catfish. If you don't eat catfish, this recipe is still awesome and easy. It’s terrific with fresh corn and sliced tomatoes. Great plain but I like it on a Portuguese roll, slathered with tartar sauce too. Southern cooks make hush puppies with catfish. These crispy corn meal puffy fritters are a perfect side dish. Try it if you have extra time.

Cajun Fried Fish

2 pounds grouper, tilapia, etc. or catfish fillets, cut into 3 pieces each

1/2 cup milk

2/3 cup flour

2 large eggs

1 cup corn meal (approximately)

1 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

1/4 teaspoon garlic powder

1/4 teaspoon dried thyme (or 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves)

vegetable oil

Place the fish fillets in a pan and pour the milk over them. Let the fish soak for at least 30 minutes. Place the flour in a dish. Beat the eggs in another dish. Combine the corn meal, salt, cayenne pepper, garlic powder and thyme in a third dish. Remove the fish from the milk and dredge the fillets in the flour. Coat the fillets with beaten egg, then dredge the egg-coated fish in the corn meal mixture. Place the fillets on a rack to “air dry” for 15-20 minutes. Heat about 1/2-inch vegetable oil in a large, deep pan. When the oil is hot enough to sizzle a bread crumb, fry the fillet pieces, a few at a time, for 3-4 minutes per side, or until browned and crispy. Drain on paper towels. Makes 4 servings

Hush Puppies

1-1/2 cups corn meal

1/2 cup all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

3/4 teaspoon salt

1 small grated onion

1 large egg

3/4 cup milk

vegetable oil

Combine the corn meal, flour, baking soda, salt and onion in a bowl. Beat the egg with the milk and pour into the corn meal mixture. Heat about 1/2-inch vegetable oil in a large, deep pan. When the oil is hot enough to sizzle a bread crumb, drop about a heaping tablespoon of the corn meal batter into the oil and fry for 2-4 minutes or until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Makes 4 servings

You could also use the oil you used to fry the catfish.

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