Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Chicken Tinga (for spicy shredded chicken tacos, tostadas, etc.

Ally, do you remember long ago when we had a BIG Mexican fiesta for your dad's birthday? And I made that REALLY spicy shredded chicken? Well this is the recipe, only I have since toned down the spice. **Though I did love how spicy that batch turned out, I didn't realize how spicy it was until the next day...and that is never fun. So this is a more, uh, forgiving recipe.

This chicken is good on tacos, on tostadas, in enchiladas, on a salad, with beans, with rice-- the possibilities are endless. I however, am always partial to tacos.

What you will need:

1/3 of an onion, diced
4 cloves of garlic, minced
1 lb of boneless skinless organic chicken breasts
1 32 ounce can of organic diced tomatoes
1 tablespoon of chipotle in adobo sauce or 3 tablespoons of fresh/previously frozen/canned green chili (either come canned in the "ethnic" aisle of the grocery store// you can get at Mexican grocers)
Ground cumin
Mexican oregano
Salt

To serve:
6-8 tortillas
"Stuff for ensalada" (today I used romaine, red cabbage and cubed cucumber, pickled onions and cilantro)
Sour cream/Crema or crumbly Mexican cheese


First, in a soup pot (that has a lid) saute the onion and garlic briefly over medium heat in a scant amount of olive oil two-three minutes, then add the whole chicken breasts, tomatoes and chili/chipotle. Cover the pot and let this simmer on medium heat for 45 minutes. 


While the tinga was cooking, I prepped a small salad to top my tacos with, chopped romaine, shredded red cabbage and cubed cucumber. I then discovered that I still had pickled onions in my fridge, and chopped them into small pieces and used them with a tablespoon of their juices to dress the salad. Wa-la. You have a light salad to top your tacos with.


After 45 minutes of simmering, remove your chicken breasts and let them cool. Turn the heat down on the tomato/tinga sauce that is still on the stove. Shred the chicken once it is cool (with your fingers or a fork) and add it back into the sauce. Season with cumin (about two tablespoons), Mexican oregano (about one hefty tablespoon) salt and pepper. Add up two half of a cup of water or broth to bring moisture back into the shredded chicken so that you may return it to medium heat without it burning or sticking to the pan. Let the shredded chicken simmer with the sauce and spices for about another 10 minutes, stirring regularly.



 Meanwhile, heat up your tortillas, today we did it the quick way in our cast iron, over high heat.


Ready whatever other toppings you have (cilantro, sour cream, cheese, lime).


Top your tortillas with all of the fixins.



Happy taco eating!!!

xoxooxoxoo





Sunday, February 9, 2014

Tom Kha Soup (with Rice Noodles)


Tom Kha soup, also known as the most delicious, creamy, flavor-explosive soup known to man.

Know stories this time, let's just get down to business:

You will need:
**This recipe is completely gluten free and vegan EXCEPT** for the fish sauce, which you can leave out and replace with tamari, if you decide. However if you are ok with ingesting animal products, I highly recommend the very pungent saltiness of fish sauce over the tamari, it really is much fuller flavor.

The broth:
32 ounces of veggie stock
2 fifteen ounce cans of organic coconut milk (full fat)
2 lemongrass chunks as long as your middle finger and as fat as your thumb, cut into rounds and crushed with the butt of your knife
1 thumb sized piece of ginger, cut into chunky pieces (you don't have to skin it)
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and cut into chunky pieces
5-7 kaffir lime leaves (these are sometimes hard to find, either fresh in the herb section or dry, when I do find them I buy bulk and keep them in my freezer)**if you can't find them, quarter a whole lime as a replacement in addition to the other lime for the broth
1/2 of a lime, cut into chunks, skin on
2 butts of yellow onion (the useless part of the onion that you use for broth)
1 heaping tablespoon of brown sugar
1 heaping tablespoon of chili-garlic paste or srirachi
1.5 tablespoons of fish sauce (**or tamari)

4-6 cremini or button mushrooms, washed and cut into thin half moons
3 green onions, chopped (both white and green part)

Toppings:
7 ounces of firm tofu, cut into bite-sized slices
1 lb of rice noodles
1/3 of a red cabbage, sliced in thin shavings
2 handfuls of bean sprouts
8 baby tomatoes, quartered

Garnish:
1/3 of a bunch of cilantro, chopped
wedges of lime




First, prep your broth flavorings. You really want to bruise and smash the lemongrass and the ginger with the butt of your knife to help release the flavor.




In your soup pot, add a tablespoon of coconut oil on medium heat and lightly saute all of the broth ingredients to release the flavor-- about 3 minutes. Add the veggie stock and the coconut milk. Cover the pot and let the ingredients simmer  on medium low in the liquid for at least 45 minutes to an hour.





While the broth is getting flavorful, simmering away, fry the tofu in coconut oil. I spiced mine with garlic salt, cayenne and turmeric. Set aside once they are complete.

At this point, start the water boiling in a separate pot to cook the rice noodles for the soup.


After the broth has simmered for at least 45 minutes, strain the chunks out of it with a strainer or with a colander, and then return the liquid back to the stove. Over medium low heat, add the brown sugar, the chili sauce (or srirachi) and the fish sauce (or tamari).






Allow the broth to continue to simmer on low, meanwhile prep all of your veggies (if they aren't already).




And add your rice pasta to the boiling water, cook 6-8 minutes, until soft but still chewy.



Add the chopped mushrooms and green onions to the broth to let them get soft and soak up the flavor of the soup, they need to be in the broth on medium-low heat for about  7-10 minutes to get to that
"perfectly delicate" texture.



Finish prepping whatever is left (you'll want tomatoes, cilantro, lime wedges, red cabbage and bean sprouts)


Drain your rice noodles:


Now start building your soup! Noodles, veggies, tofu, broth, topped with bean sprouts, tomatoes, cilantro and a wedge of lime squeezed over the whole thing.







When AJ took this photo, the kitchen smelled so much of mouth-watering lemongrass coconuty-ness, and I said to him a moment before he snapped the shot "Can we just eat now, please?"



Enjoy!!!!!!!!! xoxoxo



Kale and Mushroom Stroganoff

Again, AJ asked that I show him how to make this. And I am so thankful! It's been so miserably cold here and I am so tired that some real comfort food, like my mom used to make, is really what the kind doctor ordered. 

***This recipe IS gluten free and can be made vegetarian**
::if you use vegetable stock or mushroom instead of beef stock
and it can be made vegan** 
::if you also replace the butter for vegan margarine or olive oil, sour cream with vegan "sour cream" or plain yogurt and replace the grated parmesan with nutritional yeast or vegan parmesan.

What you will need:
16 ounces of rice flour rotini (curled) or egg noodles 
4 tablespoons of butter
3-5 medium Baby-Bello or Cremini mushrooms, washed and sliced into thin quarters
3 cloves of garlic, minced
1 bunch of kale, I used Red Russian because its so pretty and this is a Russian dish!
3 green onions, chopped thin, with the greens separated from the white part (you will use both but at different times)
1 heaping tablespoon of rice flour
16 fluid ounces of beef, mushroom or vegetable stock
1/3 of a cup of grated parmesan cheese
8 ounces of sour cream (or your choice replacement)
Black pepper
Salt 




With one tablespoon of butter, saute the garlic and the kale until the kale is soft and then set aside over very low heat.


In a shallow sauce pan (or deep saute pan, or a cast iron!!) melt the other three tablespoons of butter over medium low heat, then add the sliced mushrooms and let them slowly turn brown.


Stir your kale occasionally. Also, start a pot of water to boil your rice pasta.


Once the mushrooms turn golden brown, add the light/white end of the chopped green onion and let them cook over medium-low heat for about 3 minutes.





Add one tablespoon of rice flour. Stir until it disappears-- it will stick to the mushrooms and bottom of the pan, about 2 minutes. Then deglaze the pan, adding the 16 ounces of broth and turning the heat to medium. Take your wooden spoon and brush the bottom of the pan so as to remove any stuck flour as the broth begins to simmer.



Let the broth/mushroom mixture cook for about 12 minutes, simmering on medium heat, stirring occasionally. It will thicken as it cooks.

At this point, have your water should be boiling for your pasta to cook, add it and cook for 10 minutes (as package indicates, until al dente) because you area about 10-12 minutes out from everything being ready.

Prep the materials for the rest of your sauce. If you haven't already, chop the "green onion greens"


Grate the parmesan cheese





As your sauce thickens it will begin to look like this:


Small simmering bubbles are good, but if it starts popping, blowing big bubbles or sticking you have it on too high.


Have your finishing ingredients handy, as everything is nearly ready:





Check your pasta, and drain it once it is perfectly cooked. Lightly oil it so that it doesn't stick and cover with a lid to keep it warm until you are ready to serve.


Add the sour cream, green onions, parmesan cheese and black pepper to your mushroom/broth mixture and stir over medium heat for 2 minutes, to meld everything together and heat the sauce.


Serve immediately:




This was seriously the most delicious thing I have had in a while :)

xoxooxo