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Showing posts with label canola-oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canola-oil. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24

Pork chop Milanese with arugula salad

Active: 40 minutes; Total: 40 minutes; Yield: 4 servings

Pork chops, bone-in, rib-cut, about ½-inch thickness; frenched, fat and membrane removed, pounded to ¼-inch thickness 

4

Salt, kosher

1 ½ teaspoons +
½ teaspoon + 
¼ teaspoon

Pepper, freshly ground

½ teaspoon +
½ teaspoon +
¼ teaspoon

Flour, all-purpose

½ cup

Eggs; beaten

3 large

Breadcrumbs, plain

1 cup

Parmesan cheese, grated

½ cup +
½ cup

Italian seasoning blend

1 ½ teaspoon

Canola oil

¾ cup

Arugula

4 cups

Olive oil, extra-virgin

1 tablespoon

Vinegar, white wine

1 tablespoon

Tomatoes, cherry; cut in half

½ cup

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°F. 
  2. Set a wire rack on a large rimmed baking sheet; set aside. 
  3. Season the pork chops evenly with 1 ½-teaspoons salt and ½-teaspoon pepper. 
  4. Place the flour in a large, shallow bowl. 
  5. Place the eggs in another large, shallow bowl. 
  6. In a third large, shallow bowl, stir together the breadcrumbs, ½-cup cheese, Italian seasoning, ½-teaspoon salt, and ½-teaspoon pepper. 
  7. Working in batches, dredge the chops in the flour, shaking to remove excess; dip in the egg, letting excess drip off. 
  8. Dredge in the breadcrumb mixture, patting to adhere; transfer the coated chops to a parchment paper-lined work surface. 
  9. In a large skillet, pour canola oil in to a depth of ¼ an inch; heat over medium-high heat until shimmering. 
  10. Working in batches, cook the chops until golden brown and a thermometer inserted near, but not touching, the bone registers 140°F, 2 to 3 minutes a side. 
  11. Place the chops on the prepared wire rack on a baking sheet, and sprinkle with salt to taste; transfer to the preheated oven to keep warm while preparing the remaining chops and salad. 
  12. Combine the arugula and ½-cup cheese in a medium bowl. 
  13. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, and drizzle with olive oil and vinegar; toss to combine, and garnish with tomatoes. 
  14. Serve salad with the pork chops. 
Recipe from Food & Wine Annual 2025.

Friday, March 31

Chicken tikka meatballs with ginger rice

Active: 20 minutes; Total: 1 hour 25 minutes; Serves: 8

Ginger root, peeled, chunk cut

5-inch piece

Garlic, halved

8 cloves

Oil, canola

1 teaspoon +
1 tablespoon

Rice, long grain, uncooked

1 ½ cup

Water

3 cups

Green onions, sliced

3 +
3

Garam masala, divided

1 tablespoon +
1 ½ teaspoons

Tomatoes, crushed

28 ounces

Cream, heavy whipping

½ cup

Salt, dividied

½ teaspoon +
1 teaspoon

Cilantro leaves, fresh, chopped

1/3 cup +
1/3 cup

Pepper, freshly ground

¼ teaspoon

Chicken, ground

2 pounds

Sour cream

½ cup

Lime juice, fresh

1 tablespoon

Cumin, ground

¼ teaspoon

  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F. 
  2. In a food processor, process the ginger until a paste forms; remove and set aside. 
  3. Repeat with the garlic; remove and set aside. 
  4. In a small saucepan, heat 1-teaspoon oil over medium heat. 
  5. Add the rice and 1-teaspoon ginger paste; cook and stir until the rice is lightly browned, 3 to 4 minutes. 
  6. Stir in the water; bring to a boil. 
  7. Reduce heat; simmer, covered, until the rice is tender, 15 to 20 minutes. 
  8. Meanwhile, in a Dutch oven, heat 1-tablespoon oil over medium heat. 
  9. Add half of the garlic paste and half of the remaining ginger paste; cook and stir until fragrant, about 1 minute. 
  10. Add half of the green onions and 1-tablespoon garam masala; cook and stir 1 minute longer. 
  11. Stir in the tomatoes, cream, and ½-teaspoon salt; heat through (do not allow to boil). 
  12. In a large bowl, combine 1/3-cup cilantro, pepper, and the remaining green onions, ginger and garlic pastes, 1 ½-teaspoons garam masala, and 1-teaspoon salt. 
  13. Add the chicken; mix lightly but thoroughly. 
  14. Shape mixture into 1 ½-inch balls; place meatballs on a greased rack in a 15x10x1-inch baking sheet. 
  15. Bake until browned, about 15 to 20 minutes. 
  16. Transfer the meatballs to the sauce; cook until heated through. 
  17. Stir in remaining cilantro. 
  18. Combine the sour cream, lime juice, cumin, and pinch of salt. 
  19. Fluff the rice with a fork; serve with the meatballs and sauce. 
  20. Drizzle with the sour cream mixture; top with additional cilantro and green onions. 
Recipe from Taste of Home.

Wednesday, November 16

Shoyu ramen

Active: 1 hour 15 minutes; Total: 6 hours 30 minutes; Serves: 4

Broth, chicken, low-sodium

8 cups

Mushrooms, shiitake, dried

16

Kombu

30 grams

Bonito flakes

20 grams

Mirin

1 ¼ cups

Soy sauce

1 ¼ cups

Sake

½ cup

Sugar, granulated

¼ cup

Ginger, sliced

2-inch piece

Scallions, halved

3

Garlic, peeled

3 cloves smashed +
8 cloves sliced

Sugar, brown

2 packed tablespoons

Water

1 ½ cups +
6 cups +
6 cups +
6 cups

Pork belly, skin-on

1 pound

Eggs, cold

4 large

Oil, canola

½ cup

Cayenne

1 tablespoon

Sesame seeds

2 teaspoons

Wheat noodles, fresh

4 ounces

Chicken dashi 
  1. In a medium pot over medium heat, bring the broth to a bare simmer; remove from heat and let cool for 2 minutes. 
  2. Add the mushrooms and kombu, and let steep for 5 minutes. 
  3. Add bonito flakes, and let steep 5 minutes more. 
  4. Strain the dashi; reserve solids. 
Tare & chashu 
  1. In a large pot over medium heat, bring the mirin, soy sauce, sake, sugars, ginger, scallions, smashed garlic, and 1 ½-cups water to a low simmer, then reduce heat to low. 
  2. Meanwhile, in a medium pot over medium heat, bring the pork and 6-cups water to a bare simmer; immediately drain, and gently rinse the pork. 
  3. Transfer the pork to the pot with the tare, and bring to a simmer. 
  4. Cover and cook over low heat until tender, about 1 hour 20 minutes. 
  5. Let cool 20 minutes, then strain and reserve the tare liquid. 
  6. Refrigerate the pork and tare separately. 
Nitamago 
  1. In a medium pot over medium heat, bring 6-cups water to a boil. 
  2. Prink the bottom of the eggs with a pin. 
  3. Gently lower the eggs into the pot with a spoon, and simmer for 6 minutes; drain. 
  4. Transfer the eggs to an ice bath, and let cool 5 minutes. 
  5. Thoroughly and gently crack the eggshells, then return to the ice bath to cool for 10 minutes more. 
  6. Carefully peel the eggs, and transfer to a medium bowl. 
  7. Pour tare over; weigh down the eggs with the reserved spent kombu to fully immerse in liquid. 
  8. Let marinate in the refrigerator at least 4 hours, and up to 12. 
Garlic la-yu 
  1. In a small pot over very low heat, simmer the garlic in canola oil, stirring occasionally, until translucent, about 15 minutes. 
  2. Remove from heat, stir in the cayenne, then the seeds; let cool. 
Serving 
  1. Slice the chashu into 2-inch-wide slices; torch lightly, if desired. 
  2. In a pot of boiling water, cook the noodles, stirring occasionally, until al dente, about 1 to 2 minutes; drain. 
  3. In a small pot over medium heat, bring the dashi and mushrooms to a simmer; cook 1 minute. 
  4. Transfer the dashi to a serving bowl, then add tare and noodles. 
  5. Top with mushrooms, chashu, nitamago, scallion, and a drizzle of la-yu. 
Recipe from Delish magazine by June Xie.

Monday, December 7

Shrimp toast with scallion-chili sauce

Total: 35 minutes; Makes 4 dozen toasts

Shrimp, large, shelled & deveined

8 ounces

Egg

1 large

Salt, kosher

1 teaspoon

Butter, unsalted, cold, cut into cubes

2 tablespoons

Sesame seeds, toasted

2 teaspoons +

1 ½ teaspoons

Bread, white, crusts removed

6 slices

Oil, canola

For frying

Scallion, finely chopped

½ +
Garnish

Soy sauce

1 tablespoon

Vinegar, rice

1 tablespoon

Sambal oelek sauce

1 ½ teaspoons

  1. Combine the shrimp, egg, and salt in a food processor; process until smooth, about 15 seconds, stopping to scrape down the sides as needed. 
  2. Add butter and 2-teaspoons sesame seeds, and pulse until smooth with flecks of butter remaining, about 7 pulses. 
  3. Spread ¼-cup shrimp mousse on each bread slice. 
  4. Pour oil to a depth of 1/8 inch in a large nonstick skillet; heat over medium until shimmering. 
  5. Working in batches, add bread slices, mousse-side down, and cook until lightly browned, about 2 minutes. 
  6. Flip the toasts; cook until browned and mousse is firm to touch, about 1 minute. 
  7. Transfer to a paper towel lined plate to drain. 
  8. Stir together 1 ½-teaspoons scallions, soy sauce, vinegar, samba oelek, and remaining 1 ½-teaspoons sesame seeds in a small bowl. 
  9. Cut each toast into eight triangles; transfer to a platter or board. 
  10. Garnish with slice scallions; serve soy sauce mixture with toasts. 
Recipe from Food & Wine Holiday Recipes.

Sunday, October 13

Duck, green onion, & chicken sausage gumbo

Active: 1 hour 15 minutes; Total: 4 hours; Serves: 10 to 12
Canola
1 cup
Flour
1 cup
Onions, large, diced
3
Duck, cut into 12 pieces
6 pounds
Creole spices
2 tablespoons
Sausage, chicken, sweet Italian, sliced into ½-inch-thick rounds
2 pounds
Bell peppers, green, seeded, diced
2
Garlic, minced
2 cloves
Green onions, chopped
8
Chicken stock
2 quarts
Bay leaves
2
Sausage, andouille, chopped
1 pound
Worcestershire
1 tablespoon
Salt

Pepper, freshly ground

Tabasco

Rice, cooked
6 cups
  1. Make the roux by heating the oil in a large cast-iron pot over high heat. 
  2. Whisk the flour into the hot oil. 
  3. Reduce the heat to moderate, and continue whisking until the roux takes on a nice brown color, about 15 minutes. 
  4. Add the onions, stirring them into the roux with a wooden spoon. 
  5. Reduce the heat to medium-low, and continue stirring until the roux is a light brown color, about 10 minutes. 
  6. Season the duck with Creole spices. 
  7. Add the duck to the pot, increase the heat to moderate, and cook, turning the pieces to browned, about 10 minutes. 
  8. Add the Italian sausage, and stir for a minute, and then add the bell peppers and garlic; continue cooking for about 3 minutes. 
  9. Add the green onions, chicken stock, and bay leaves. 
  10. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. 
  11. Reduce the heat to medium-low, and simmer for 45 minutes. 
  12. Stirring occasionally, and skim off the fat from the surface of the gumbo every so often. 
  13. Add the andouille sausage, and then the Worcestershire. 
  14. Season with salt, pepper, and Tabasco. 
  15. Simmer for another 45 minutes, continuing to skim the fat from the surface. 
  16. If possible, cool to room temperature, shred the duck meat, discarding the bones and any fat; refrigerate over night.
  17. Warm the gumbo, then serve in bowls over rice.
Recipe from My New Orleans The Cookbook by John Besh.