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Archive for the ‘Dark Days Challenge’ Category

Potatoes and Cheese

Posted by itsjusttoni on January 18, 2012

Mr. M has a fondness for Potatoes Au Gratin, or Potatoes and Cheese. Usually, I have served him the kind that comes in a box with dried potato slices and powdered cheese. We all know how healthy that stuff is! I have been afraid of making this particular dish. I don’t quite know why.

But I wanted to rise to the occasion for the Dark Days Challenge. A meal in a single dish. I thought I can do this! And make it SOLE (Sustainable, Organic, Local, Ethical)! Well, maybe SOLEish.

I had potatoes, the kind that are yellow inside. Not the biggest and I probably won’t be trying to grow potatoes in the future; despite my Irish Heritage, I am not the best potato grower. I do grow some great sweet potatoes (yams?) though. More about those later.

I have lovely homegrown leeks,onions,and garlic.

I don’t have any kind of cream though, just yogurt, plain and nonfat. As I mentioned in my last post, I have local butter  and cheese. Cheese! It is not the first food one thinks of when thinking of Mexico, but the variety of local cheeses is amazing! There is everything from dry grating cheese similar to Parmesan, crumbly cheese, stringy cheese, soft cheeses, cheeses  that melt beautifully (especially in chiles rellenos!), so many different types of cheese. My choices for this dish are a crumbly cheese and an aged, local gouda-style cheese.

The only addition to this dish that is not really local are the mushrooms. They are Monterey Mushrooms  and their source is a bit north  of my 150 mile limit, but a family owned business with good stewardship practices, so I consider them to be ethical mushrooms. Ethical mushrooms? Okay, from an ethical business.

Now, like I said, I haven’t made this without a boxed mix before. So I sort of winged it.

Let’s see:

potatoes: check,

leeks: check

mushrooms: check

garlic: check

cheese: check,

something creamy: check

butter: check

Looks okay to me!

I sliced the leek, mushrooms, garlic and potatoes.  I melted about 2 tablespoons of butter and sauteed the leeks until they wilted. I added the garlic and mushrooms and sauteed them for a couple of minutes. I mixed the yogurt (about a cup and a half) with the crumbly cheese (its sort of like feta), and some sea salt and black pepper. I layered the thinly sliced potatoes with the leek mixture, then the yogurt mixture and the Gouda-like, shredded cheese. In that order. When I came to the last layer, I saved the cheese to add later. I covered the casserole with foil and baked it at 325 for about an hour. I removed the foil and added the rest of the shredded cheese and baked it for about a half hour more.

About five minutes after I removed the foil Mr.M started sniffing the air, followed shortly by, “How long until dinner?”. It smelled that good!

He was so eager to try it that I didn’t let  it sit for a while after removing it from the oven. It probably would have looked better if I had. The taste? As great as it smelled. In fact, one of the last things Mr. M said at bedtime was, “There were leftovers, right?”.

Posted in Cooking, Dark Days Challenge, Mexico | Tagged: , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Simple Soup

Posted by itsjusttoni on January 14, 2012

Creamy potato soup

Creamy potato soup

Yahoo! A new camera shoots clear! As I said in my earlier post, my beloved camera recently went to Camera Heaven, so I have been out of blog posting for a while. Finally, I have a new camera! Not blogging hasn’t kept me from cooking though.

After our trip to Fort Worth to celebrate Christmas with our two daughters and their families, Mr M and I came home a bit fatter and feeling the after effects of rich food and driving long distances. I have been longing for simpler meals. In addition, my little vegetable garden has been happily continuing to grow in our absence; with no care or water, mind you!

Yesterday, I found this lovely leek that I planted as a tiny seedling. Not only was there the big one, it had 2 babies that I replanted for the next harvest.

Fresh from the garden!

In addition I had some yellow potatoes, harvested earlier, that had been waiting for our return. Potatoes and a big leek, hmmmm… I also had just finished making ham stock from a big bone from some ham I found on sale here (local smoked pork). What could I make? Potato soup of course!

I sliced the leek, some onion from the garden, and sauteed them in some local butter:

Delicious local butter

This dairy is very local! The distributor is just a few blocks from my house and the cows live just beyond the north edge of our little town, maybe 8 kilometers from here. I find it very amusing that despite the company name, the cows are black and white Holsteins!

Holstein Cow

Jersey Cow

But I digress, so here is how I made the soup:

I used about 2 tablespoons of the butter to saute the aromatics, and about 1 cup of sliced carrots from the garden. I added about 16 cups of the strained ham stock, and 8 cups of peeled, diced potatoes. To make the stock, I simmered the ham bone with a couple of carrots, half of a large onion, a bay leaf, a few black peppercorns and about a teaspoon of dried,  homegrown marjoram.

I brought everything to a boil and lowered the heat to a simmer until the potatoes and carrots were tender. I used my handy new immersion blender (thank you  Mr M for the lovely Christmas gift!), to puree the soup, leaving some  tiny bits for texture. I added maybe a cup of diced ham. With a little Jack cheese, this soup is a little bit of Heaven!

Posted in Cooking, Dark Days Challenge, Food, Recipe | Tagged: , , , , | 4 Comments »

The Mighty Pak Choi

Posted by itsjusttoni on December 11, 2011

It is our “winter” here in Baja; the time for growing cool season crops like lettuce, cabbage, and Asian greens. As I have been posting, I am attempting to participate in the Dark Days Challenge. This week, my post is about one of our favorite Asian greens Choi: in this dinner Pak Choi. I grow both the full size plants and the smaller Tsai Choi.  Here are some photos of each in the garden.

A huge Pak Choi ready for harvest

Tsai Choi are much more compact

The big Choi here is destined for this dinner; it is huge and ready for harvest. Before I chopped it up, it filled my dishpan.  No photo of that, but here it is after I attacked it with my chef’s knife.

Chopped up and ready to cook

Before I chop it up I soak the entire head in cool water laced with a few tablespoons of vinegar to chase out any freeloaders. I garden organically so I don’t mind a few holes in my vegies. I handpick snails and it is easy to miss those tiny, tiny babies, but they are no match for the vinegar. I am not much on homemade escargot, too much effort to clean the snails and mine are usually too small anyway; it’s the big ones from next door that are the real problem. They know where the free lunch, or should I say dinner, lives.

I matched the chopped Choi with a few other ingredients: onions and some late ripening peppers from the garden and some local pork.

Sliced pork, peppers, onion, and Choi stems

Beside the Choi, the star of this dinner is some homemade Duck Sauce from our beautiful spring Santa Rosa plums. The sauce is way good and wonderful over rice.

Hmmm, rice… Not exactly local, since it doesn’t grow well here; it’s too arid. It does grow in central California just beyond my 150 mile range, so I am going to use it anyway. I do buy it in San Diego, so does that count? I could have just not admitted it but I wanted to show off the secret flavor of the day: homegrown lemon grass.

Steamed rice with crushed lemon grass

This represents a triumph of a sort for me: it is my third and only successful attempt at growing it. The two previous attempts met their demise at the overzealous weeding hands of Mr. M. After all it is lemon grass. I actually had to plant it in my vegetable garden because he is forbidden to weed there. (NO, don’t pull out those nettles! I need them!) But that is another story.

I steam the rice with homemade chicken stock, a bit of Kosher or sea salt and few smashed stalks of the aforementioned, highly prized lemon grass.

The Bok Choi stars in the stir fry:

Ready to serve

Here is the simple recipe:

2 locally grown boneless pork chops, or chicken thighs

1 Tbs fat or oil (I used some reserved fat from making stock)

1 Tbs dark sesame oil (I’m counting this as a spice)

1 large head of Bok Choi or other preferred greens, sliced crosswise

1 medium onion, thinly sliced

½ large green or ripe sweet pepper, or a few small ripe sweet peppers, thinly sliced

Several cloves of homegrown garlic, sliced, or chopped

1 pint homemade Duck Sauce (a half pint would work if less sauce is desired)

½ to 1 Tbs Cornstarch dissolved in 1 Tablespoon cold water, optional

Semi-freeze and thinly slice the meat. Heat fat and sesame oil, add sliced meat. Cook, stirring constantly, until the meat loses its pink color. Add onions, sliced stems of the Choi, and peppers and fry until the onions begin to soften. Add the garlic and sauce.  Add the leafy part of the Choi and cook until the leaves wilt. If the sauce is too liquid from the moisture in the leaves, thicken with the cornstarch.

I’m pretty sure that this dinner meets the SOLE (sustainable, organic, local, and ethical) requirements: well almost. And, if you are interested, here is the recipe for the

Duck Sauce

(loosely based on the Ball Blue Book’s Plum Sauce recipe, page 84)

4 pounds of Santa Rosa plums

2 cups grated pilonchillo sugar (Mexican cone sugar)

1 cup cane sugar

3/4 cup chopped onion

2 Tbs mustard seed (I get mine at a local Botannica,or herb store; it grows wild here)

1 chopped, roasted, peeled poblano chile

1 minced jalapeno or serrano chile

1 (1/4 X 1″) piece fresh ginger, minced or 1 tsp ground, dry ginger

3 garlic cloves

1/4 tsp ground cloves

1 cup cider vinegar

Wash, pit and slice plums. Combine the rest of the ingredients in a large pot. Bring to a boil and add plums. Cook until plums are soft. Blend with an immersion blender until smooth. Cook until the thickness preferred. Ladle sauce into hot jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Adjust two piece caps. Process 20 minutes in a boiling water bath. About 4 pints, but your mileage may vary.

Note: when my plums ripen, I have a lot so I double or triple this recipe. I put the sauce up in pints and half pints because it also makes a great dippng sauce.

Posted in Cooking, Dark Days Challenge, Food, Food Preservation, Gardening, Mexico, Photos, Recipe | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Fish Delish!

Posted by itsjusttoni on December 3, 2011

Yesterday, I posted about the Dark Days Challenge.  Today, I am posting my first entry. The challenge is to make a meal of sustainable, organic, local, and ethical (SOLE) foods. I have chosen one of our favorite, yet quick and easy, meals: Fish Tacos Modified Baja Style.

Good Conscience Tacos

Baja is famous for its fish tacos that are widely available from street vendors selling from small carts with propane powered fryers. We love to eat them but realize that deep fried fish with a floury crust is not the healthiest food. Adaptation! I decided that I could create a healthier style of fish tacos for our more frequent enjoyment. Be gone floury, fried, greasy crust! Enter spicy, diced, delicious fish cubes!

Savory, delicious fish

It seems easy to think, “I’ll just whip up some fish tacos tonight”, until you have to think about where the fish comes from and if it is sustainable and ethical. The best fish for this recipe comes from the large predatory fish like tuna, wahoo, or dolphin fish, which produce meaty, solid fillets.

The majority of the fish we eat here is locally caught; either just off of the coast in the Pacific, or in the Sea of Cortez, on the opposite side of our peninsula. In the past, Mexico, just like many other countries (including the US), has been ignorant of the dangers of overfishing certain species. Fortunately, Mexico has taken huge steps to protect its bounty of sea resources.

My favorite fish for this recipe is local, line caught yellowfin tuna. It is caught just off our coast from small boats called pangas. We buy it seasonally from our favorite fish monger at the local Mercadito, or open air market, and freeze the fillets for use later. Best of all, yellowfin tuna is not a protected species and appears to be increasing in population. Yay!

Put this in your taco!

And the rest of my ingredients? Yup,they meet the SOLE requirements, too! We are very picky about tortillias. Our preference is a thicker style that will hold up well for making enchiladas, tacos and other Mexican dishes. We actually import the majority of our tortillias from a small, family owned factory in San Diego, about 50 kilometers from here, called Porkyland. Mr. M’s parents used their tortillias in a Mexican restaurant they owned years ago and they are still the best. (Sorry Rosarito). By the way, Porkyland tortillias have made it to the big time; they are available at Costco and Amazon!

Next I had to examine the cheese. Sometimes we use local Queso Cotija, the tasty crumbly cheese, but I was out of that. I did have a chunk of Queso Viejo, which accurately translates to Old Cheese. It is very strong and uniquely tasty; maybe too strong for the fish. So I added some local Monterey Jack cheese to tone it down. Perfect!

Tomatoes from the garden? Check. Cabbage? Hmmm, not ready yet. No lettuce either. We do have an abundance of ready to harvest Wong bok, a type of Chinese cabbage. One leaf was more than enough to shred for this recipe. Take my word for it, not the best choice! Use regular white cabbage or, if you have to, lettuce. The Wong bok was too strong!

The Baja Secret Sauce? All fish tacos in Baja are offered with a creamy white sauce. It is usually, crema, local cultured cream that is not sour, combined with mayonnaise. I prefer to use plain nonfat thick yogurt, combined with mayonnaise. Okay, here is my failing: the mayo. I don’t make it, I buy it, but it is sustainable and available locally.

The red salsa? Homemade and home canned. I used my Salsa de Arbol. I will post about that later.

What else? Ah yes, my secret taco seasoning: THE special touch to the fish; here it is:

Taco Seasoning

1 Tbs dried ground California Chiles: NOT commercial chili powder

1 Tbs coarsely ground dried Chile Mulatto or Chile Ancho

1 tsp granulated garlic or 2-3 cloves minced fresh garlic

¼ tsp ground cinnamon

1/8 tsp ground cumin

½ tsp dried marjoram, crushed

½ tsp dried oregano, crushed

Salt and cracked black pepper to taste

This is sufficient for about ½ to ¾ of a pound of cubed fresh fish. It can also be quite tasty on ground beef or turkey. If you like it hotter, use New Mexico Chiles instead of California. You can substitute any ground dried chiles actually. This is just our preferred combination. The key ingredient, surprisingly, is the cinnamon. Don’t be afraid! Use it!

To use: Place fish fillets in freezer until just slightly frozen, or defrost frozen fillets, so that the fillet will be solid enough to easily cut into cubes. Put about 1 tablespoon of your preferred fat (I use coconut oil) into a skillet and heat. Add fish cubes and toss until they are opaque on the outside. Add seasoning and cook until the fish flakes easily. The fish will exude some moisture. Cook until the moisture and seasoning adheres to the cubes. This is just a couple of minutes.

The last condiment? Fresh limes to squeeze over the fish. We do have an abundance of limes from our trees, but I decided to use a more unusual citrus, a lemon from our Pink Lemonade Tree. Yes, as you can see in the photo it is pink inside when ripe! It is also a very pretty tree with green and white variegated leaves and striped lemons! The taste? It is a sport of the regular yellow Eureka lemon so familiar in US markets and tastes just like it.

And to accompany the tacos? Locally harvested pinto beans, previously home canned and just heated and smashed. When I can them, I add  homegrown onion and garlic before sealing. Delish and the ultimate fast food!

The musical fruit

The final result? A quick, easy, delicious SOLE meal that will brighten even the darkest day. Start to plating less than 20 minutes. Try it and let me know if you like it.

Posted in Cooking, Dark Days Challenge, Food, Frugal, Recipe | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Dark Days Challenge

Posted by itsjusttoni on December 2, 2011

I try my best to be a localvore : one who eats foods grown locally whenever possible, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary. Fortunately, living in Baja is ideal for this. I can garden all year and there are great sources for locally grown and produced food. After all, how much produce eaten in the US actually comes from Mexico?

This year I decided to see just how well I am doing as a localvore by entering The Dark Days Challenge. Here is some information about it and a form if you are interested in challenging yourself. I don’t know how well I will do because there are some things that Mr. M and I like that are not grown locally, like peanuts, but we do our best!

Posted in Dark Days Challenge, Frugal, Shopping | Tagged: , , , , , | 3 Comments »

 
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