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11.13.2009

3 Sprout Sandwich w/ Pinenut Cream & Parsley Puree


Tomorrow night will mark my first vegetarian tasting effort, 5 courses served with Organic wine from the Heller Estate in Carmel Valley California. This dish will start the evening off. As the menu developed I was concerned that there might not be enough substance to satisfy a hungry guest. Having tasted this dish I now feel confident that we will more than fulfill the goal of providing complete nourishment with tasty variety.

1 butternut squash, peeled and sliced thin on a mandoline
1 spicy turnip, peeled and sliced thin on a mandoline
1 cup lentil sprouts
1 cup sunflower sprouts
1/2 cup alfalfa sprouts
1 cup pine nuts (soak in filtered water over night)
1 garlic clove
2 shallots
1 cup parsley leaves
1 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 lemon, juiced
1/2 cup water

Start by placing the butternut quash slices on an oiled baking sheet and roast @ 35 for 10 minutes.

Drain the pinenuts.

Place the pinenuts in a blender and begin running on low, add 1/2 of the olive oil and the garlic and shallots then run at a higher speed, add the lemon juice and 1/2 of the salt, add water as needed. Remove from the blender when smooth.

To plate place the sliced turnips on the plate (3 pieces per plate) then mix most of the sprouts with the pinenut cream (save enough of each sprout variety for garnish). Now place 3 tablespoons of the sprout mix on each plate over the turnips. Top with the butternut squash slices.

Finally combine the parsley with remaining oil and salt and run until smooth. Use a spoon to drizzle over the top of the butternut squash and on the plate. Garnish w/ remaining sprouts and serve.

11.12.2009

Juicy Naam vegetarian tasting, dish #3


As the fall season sets in, creative programing becomes standard practice here at The Little Kitchen. I reach out to those who have a following in the food business but need a room to touch the customer. In this case the lovely Giulianna Torre from East Hamptons' Juicy Naam has agreed to team up with me. We've created a vegetarian tasting menu supported by wine pairings from the Heller Estate, an organic winery and vineyard that's been making wine in Carmel Valley California organically for over 30 years.

Last month, as the leaves began to turn we sat down and discussed our goal of creating a menu specific to vegetables and grains. During our chat, as we were bouncing ideas for quinoa around, Giulianna mentioned a memorable dish that she enjoyed in Manhattan, back in September at The Waverly Inn. She went on to describe a combination of organic red quinoa and diced vegetables with a sensuous green curry sauce, "but how to prepare it? What were the main ingredients?" I asked.

As it turned out she was so swept away by the dish that documenting the method never crossed her mind. Luck has it that the chef at Manhattans' hottest ticket (The Waverly Inn), John Delucie, happens to be a friend so I sent him an email requesting clues. His response was swift and simple. With his notes and my team, the following recipe has been organized from the stoves at Estia's Little Kitchen for service this weekend.

The phone is ringing, tables are booking up and it looks like creative programming is coming to the rescue. If wish lists came true I'd like to have Henry Heller and John Delucie in the house too. Regardless, I'll be happy with smiling customers and my new pal Giulianna.

Stage 1:

Soak 2 cups Organic Red Quinoa in 3 cups of water for at least 4 hours, over nightis best.
1 butternut squash peeled, dice the stem and core the base, slice the base into 4 rounds
place rounds on a roasting pan in 1/2 inch of water and roast for 30 minutes @ 350.
2 large red peppers, toss with olive oil and roast with the squash in a separate pan.
Remove from the oven when completely soft and place in a steel bowl covered w/ plastic wrap.
1 carrot, diced into pieces the same size as the squash
1 leek, diced the rinsed until clean in cold water.
1 large portabello mushroom top, diced
For service remove peppers from the bowl, skin and seed them.
Be sure to reserve the liquid for the Quinoa.
Next slice the peppers into 4 square pieces of equal size.
4 garlic cloves, diced
8 shallots, diced
2 tablespoons olive oil
12 ounces coconut milk
3 tablespoons green curry paste
Bring the shallots and garlic to a sizzle w/ oil over medium heat, when soft add the coconut milk then simmer. Combine with curry paste in a blender at high speed.
In a sauce pan soften the diced squash, mushrooms and leeks then add the drained quinoa and stir. Next, add all of the pepper liquid followed by 2 cups warm water, season with salt and stir.
Finally reheat the butternut squash rounds and the pepper squares on an oiled sheet pan.
Assemble the dish on warm plates by filling the squash rounds with hot quinoa, top with the pepper squares and pour the curry sauce around as you like.

10.16.2009

BRAISED CHILI-RUBBED LAMB SHANKS



Cooking for a living "is hardly glamorous" as Peter Sherwood suggests in his recent Cookingvillage.com piece, Celebrity Bites. And there are times—especially when I find myself slaving over a hot stove during the height of a dinner rush—I have to agree. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be a labor of love, or extremely rewarding in the end. And, sometimes, the most unglamorous cooking methods yield the sexiest dishes.

Being in charge of the menus at my restaurants gives me a great deal of freedom, taking me out of the kitchen (with its attendant hot stove) to explore and taste. Most often, inspiration comes to me from cookbooks. When I’m looking for juice, I often find myself walking the racks of used bookstores; the tomes that usually catch my eye offer more stories than they do recipes, more process than precision. My favorites share tales of kitchen lore, and Richard Olney’s biography, Reflections, is at the top of the heap. Olney tackles the subject of braising in the book, instructing the reader on the art of making a good daube. According to the author a daube—or a traditional French beef dish—must have at least three days between leaving the butcher’s shop and hitting the plate. Day one involves seasoning and browning in a bit of lard surrounded by aromatic vegetables. A stock is then added, and the whole thing is brought to a simmer before being covered and tossed into an oven for several hours at 350 degrees. After the requisite time as passed, the dish is removed from the oven and the meat removed from the pan. The stock is strained and then poured over the meat. And then the meat and stock are stashed in the back of a fridge, where it will sit and soften for the next 24 hours. On day two, the meat is removed from the fridge and the fat is skimmed from the top (talk about unglamorous). As a reward, the cook can now open a bottle of red and add as much as he feels he wants to share with the stock to it before tucking into the vino himself. The meat is returned to braise in the oven for the second time, again at 350 degrees. Two hours later it’s removed again and—we’re not even close to done here—returned again to the depths of the chiller until ready to serve. When service approaches on the third day, the meat is removed, the fat once again skimmed and the whole pot is brought to a simmer on the stovetop. A bit of salt and pepper are added—as well as some fresh herbs—and then, 72 hours later, it’s ready to be eaten. Is the above process glamorous? Hardly. But the dish—glistening under a rich sauce and mouth-wateringly fragrant—certainly is. To make the dish successful, you’ve got to plan ahead. This is not just my advice, but Olney’s too—and it’s one that I’ve found works well for me. It allows me time to step out of the kitchen and listen to my customers’ thoughts on the meals before them. Often, their thoughts turn to praise—something I’m always eager to hear. After all, some of us got into the biz for the glamour of it all.


Chili Rubbed Lamb Shanks w/ Butternut Squash Puree & Sauteed Swiss Chard
serves 4

2 "deluxe" lamb shanks (2-3 lb ea. If you can’t get shanks that big, just get as many as it takes to reach about 6 lbs)
2 dried guajillo chilies, seeded and pureed in a coffee grinder (if you can’t find guajillo’s, substitute 4 tablespoons of chili powder)
2 tablespoons of smoked paprika
2 tablespoons of garlic powder
1/4 cup reserved bacon fat or crisco
2 large onions, peeled & chopped
4 carrots, peeled and chopped
4 celery stalks, chopped
1 quart chicken stock
1 small can of tomato paste
12 oz. red wine
1/2 bunch parsley, stems removed and chopped
1/2 bunch cilantro, stems removed and chopped
1/2 bunch marjoram, stems removed and chopped

1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Rinse the lamb shanks then pat it dry. Mix the chili powder, paprika, and garlic powder together, then rub the shanks all over with the seasoning.
2. In a large skillet over medium/high heat bring the oil to temperature, then add the seasoned shanks to the pan and brown them all over. Now add the vegetables and continue to stir until soft.
3. Reduce the heat to medium, and then add the chicken stock and tomato paste to the pan. When the mixture comes to a simmer, cover the dish and place it in the oven for two hours.
4. After two hours have elapsed, remove the pan from the oven. Next, remove the shanks from the pan and place them in a bowl. Strain the stock over the bowl, so that only stock goes in with the shanks. Compost the refuse if possible and place the shanks in the stock in the refrigerator overnight.
5. On Day 2, remove the shanks from the cooler and skim the fat off the top. Preheat your oven to 350, again. Place the stock and shank back in a small braising pan and bring to a simmer on the stovetop. While that comes to a simmer, clean your herbs from the stems and set the herbs aside for the next day. Add the wine and the herb stems to the braising pan to infuse the stock.
6. Place the dish in the oven for another two hours. When two hours have passed, remove the shanks to the bowl and strain the stock over it as you did before. Cover and chill in the fridge once more.
7. Finally, Day 3! Remove the shanks from the fridge and skim the fat from the top again. Put stock into the braising pan and bring to a simmer over medium high heat on the stovetop to reduce the stock by half. While the stock simmers, place the shanks on the cutting board and carefully pull the meat from the bone.
8. When the stock has been reduced, place the lamb meat into the stock until warmed through. Just before serving, taste and add extra salt if needed. Add the chopped herb, and serve.
Cooks note: To each plate, I like to add ½ cup of steamed spinach seasoned with sea salt as well as ½ cup of roasted butternut squash puree seasoned with butter and sea salt. Ideally, I like to arrange the shards of meat like spikes between the sides, before drizzling the sauce all over.

10.05.2009

Apple and Camembert Harvest Salad



A period sits at the end of my 2009 season, regularMonday afternoon trips to Manhattan commence. Today I chose to drive, not my normal choice as I find the Jitney far more productive, faster, safer and more "footprint friendly". However it is my duty to return Oliver (corgi) to his "regular" routine as a Central Park tree sniffer.
After a productive lunch shift @ The Little Kitchen we set off on the back roads, as the turn onto North Sea Mecox came into view it occurred to me that the Islands' best apples were on sale on the east side of the triangle. I've been told that the trees on this triangle are special but nevermade time to stop, today was the day for a taste (and for Ollie a last pee) before hitting the LIE.
As we approached I noticed that the table was full and the proprietor on site, she was overjoyed with Oliver & we made friends quickly. I was looking for 2 specific apples, one soft for baking and one crisp and sweet for a matchstix cut that would compliment a sharp cheddar sliced the same way.
When I asked she smiled and told me that it had been a few years since she had taken a bite of her apples,"Hard to keep track with so few teeth". The transaction was easy, she had a mixed bag that offered enough for me to make my own choice. It also reminded me how things should be, teach yourself then make your own decisions. A crisp, sweet apple tells it's own story, a good baker will be softer, rounder and less assertive on the first bite. In time, if you live near the trees you'll know which one produces the best results from an oven or on the breakfast table. If you don't know the tree let the first bite guide the menu.

Apple and Camembert Harvest Salad
serves 4
1 good baking apple
1 crisp sweet apple
1 small wheel camembert
1 small piece sharp white cheddar
10 stems flat leaf parsley
1 lemon
1/4 cup apple cider
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

Remove the core from the apple, don't peel it,but remove the core with a thin knife top to bottom. Place the apple on a small baking sheet and pour 1/2 cup of water on the sheet then wrap with foil.Place in the oven @ 400 for 25 min. or until soft butstill firm. Remove and chill.
Just prior to service slice the crisp apple into thin match sticks and place in a bowl. Then slice the same amount of cheddar to the same size and combine.
Remove the baked apple from the fridge and sliceit into thin wedges, then place a slice of camemberton each plate. Top each slice of cheese with a quartetod baked apple slices and then top the apple slices with a smaller piece of cheese (from the rind cut).
On the opposite side of the plate create a pile (2 tablespoons)of the crisp apple/ cheddar matchstix. Garnish with parsley stems and touch the parsley with drops of vinaigrette.
To make Vinaigrette combine the juice of 1 lemon with apple cider and olive oil, pour into a squeeze bottle and shake.You'll have lot of extra apple cider vinaigrette so hold itcold for your next fall salad.

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