Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Fava bean sweatshop


The times I've tried fava beans in the past, I've liked them quite a bit. I've only had fava beans that had been dried, soaked, and cooked (they are usually yellow), but I had seen various descriptions of fresh fava beans as being much better than the dried ones. As far as I knew, the fresh variey were to be found only in prohibitively expensive and intimidating restaurants. I had never seen fresh fava beans for sale before, so I tried my hand at growing some this year. So far, my plants are mostly flowers and a few immature pods. This weekend, I spotted some at our local yuppie farmstand and bought a bagful to finally see what the hoopla was about.

I remembered the last time I tried to prep
are dried fava beans - lots of peeling the tough skin off the individual beans after cooking, plus they're kind of hard to cook evenly. I figured that with fresh beans, there would be less work because maybe the skins on the beans would be edible. Nope. I still had to peel the beans after blanching them. And before peeling the beans, they had to be removed from the pods. This is why they're only served at the fancy-pants restaurants because they're pretty labor intensive. I don't think that the preparation of fresh favas was significantly more involved than dried ones, though. Certainly it takes less planning since you don't have to soak them, and they cook evenly when fresh.

Another discovery was that a fava pod looks huge, but it's almost all pod, spongy pod lining, and bean shell. After de-podding and shelling the giant bag of beans, you're left with a small handful of bright green favas. But they are very good - lovely texture and flavor, not grainy at all like some frozen large beans I've had. I've recently seen the rule of thumb that 1 lb of pods yields 1 cup of shelled beans. Hmn, maybe I should have planted more than four fava bean plants and less than four zucchini plants.

I will follow Jeshica's lead of asking questions at the end of a post to get the comments rolling in: What else have you made that made you think, "Damn, that was fiddly and ridiculously involved. But heck, this is pretty tasty!"?

The NPR method of blanching beans is as follows: First remove the beans from the pods. Bring enough water to a boil to cover the beans. Drop beans in boiling water for 30 seconds, then immerse beans in cold water. Peel beans.

I have no idea whether fresh favas are ever traditionally used in ful nabed, but I thought it was good:

Ful nabed (Egyptian fava bean soup),
based on a recipe from Sundays at the Moosewood Restaurant
(sorry for the crappy picure; the sun went down)

1 c chopped onion
2 garlic cloves, pressed
1/4 c olive oil
1 tsp ground cumin
1.5 tsp sweet paprika
1/4 tsp cayenne, or I used a random assortment of finely diced seeded chili peppers from my garden
2 bay leaves
1 carrot, finely chopped
1 c fresh tomatoes
3.5 c vegetable stock*
2 c blanched fava beans**
1/4 cup flat leaf parsley
3 tbsp fresh lemon juice
salt and black pepper to taste
mint leaves to garnish

*
Being cheap and lazy, I keep a jar of vegetable "Better than Boullion" in my fridge, which is a couple steps above using boullion cubes, is pretty common in supermarkets, and no I don't really want to think about what sort of preservatives must be in there.

**See above instructions for blanching fresh favas. I only had 1 cup - should have bought more!

In a soup pot, saute the onions for a few minutes. Add garlic and saute until onions are translucent. Add cumin, paprika, cayenne, bay leaves, and carrots; cook on medium heat for 5 minutes, adding roughly a teaspoon of water at a time while stirring to prevent spices from burning by deglazing the pot. Stir in chopped tomatoes. Add vegetable stock and simmer until the carrots are tender, about 15 minutes.

Remove from heat, add cooked fava beans, parsley, and lemon juice. Add salt and pepper. Garnish with mint.

Serve with... chianti, of course (groan!).

DISCLAIMER: Please note that there is a serious genetic blood condition called favism. G6PD deficiency can result in red blood cell destruction after ingestion of fava beans (it is more prevalent amongst certain ethnic groups, and the gene for G6PD deficiency is on the X chromosome, hence it is expressed much more frequently in men). Don't say I didn't tell you so when your RBC's start exploding.

Monday, August 27, 2007

State Fair



Admittedly this is the first state fair I have attended, but my impression is that most state fairs are half agriculture show and half carnival. Both of these involve food, so I thought my sojourn to the New York State Fair this Saturday was worth mentioning.

I was volunteering, so I didn't get to roam as much as I might have, but I did make it to the dairy building, which was very impressive if you're looking for edibles. In addition to as much information as one could want on locally produced cheese, there were actually milk fountains (think beer taps flowing a very different substance) and the famous butter sculpture.

Food called out from other parts of the fairgrounds as well from the giant soft serve cone shaped ice cream shops to the smoke coming off some wonderful smelling chicken BBQ in a poultry pavilion. I got some excellent BBQ from a place that advertised an ox roast, an apple dumpling with ice cream that I couldn't finish (not for lack of trying), and a nicely tangy lemon italian ice. The only disappointing thing was a frozen lemonade which I don't think had ever seen a lemon.

There were also some fresh cut french fries which brings me to a bit of a tangent. On the table with the condiments was a spray bottle of vinegar. This is the second place around here I've seen vinegar for fries, and it's a welcome addition in my opinion, and while the spray did give me a nice coating on top of the fries, as soon as I ate past the first layer it was gone. Very disappointing. I remember clearly when I was a second grader my teacher telling us about serving the fries in a paper bag so you could salt and vinegar them, and then SHAKE!

Alright, enough of that. Suffice to say, I came back quite full despite making slime for 90% of the time I was there. Did anyone else make it to the State Fair, here or anywhere else? It's going on next weekend too, you know, and that apple dumpling was really, really good.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Don't just drink, Think!











I'm Posting this in preparation of the (hopefully) many beer reviews that I and many of you (once again, hopefully)
might be writing in the future. If many of you aren't into the beer thing, I just wanted to give a heads up on how many reviews work.


There are generally 5 components of a beer review: Appearance, Nose, Taste, Mouthfeel, and Overall Impression. These components are generally used by official beer judges certified by the Beer Judge Certification Program (BJCP, for short. Nerdy, eh?). I'll give a breif description of what these are.

Appearance: What does it look like? This does mean that you will have to pour out your beer into a glass; you can't do nothin' from a bottle. Note color. I've been told that you shouldn't hold it up to a light, but I do anyway; some beers have a REALLY nice color when held up to a light. This is also where you should note the head of the beer. Is it substantial? Does it quickly disappear? Just talk about how it looks.

Nose: This is a fancy term for the smell of the beer. Stick your nose right in the glass (not the beer) and take a good whiff. Give your impression (and let us know if it knocks you out).

Taste: Umm...taste the beer. How does it taste? You'll read a lot of reviews that list very faint traces of something-or-other, or notes of this-and-that. They'll often use a lot of other fancy talk. Don't be intimidated; they're usually making it up anyway. Note: All joking aside, this is an important component, actually, it's the most important one. Just think long and hard about what you are tasting. Don't rush it; let the flavors develop on your toungue and think of what you taste long after you have swallowed the beer. If you think you taste something, no matter how weird it is, make a note of it.

Mouthfeel: Ok. This may sound like an odd one. This is literally a judgement of the consistency and carbonation of the beer. Is it crisp? Full? Chewy? Sticky? All of these and more are appropriate descriptions.

Overall Impression: Some people list the final component as "drinkability". I think that this is important, but can be covered in your overall impression. This is also an area to discuss random things about the beer that you liked (or disliked) that don't really fit in any of the other categories. Did it have cool label art? chunky things floating in it (puposefully)? Did it give you the warm fuzzies for no discernable reason? Just let it all out.

I do have a couple notes for any future beer drinkers/reviewers out there. Do NOT drink your beer too cold. A cold beer will have little flavor and some beers are best at near room temperatures. Not sure where a beer's best temperature is? Look it up online, or pour one and drink it over a long period, sipping occasionally; see where its flavor profile is best.

So there you have it, a beer tasting guide. Do you have to think about each of these things everytime you have a beer? HECK NO! But if you seriously sit down to review a beer and using these criteria from time to time, you might start thinking about your beer a bit more when you drink it. It may be a good thing or a bad thing, but I, for one, love it.

Good health and good drinking.

Friday, August 24, 2007

In the Name of All That is Sacred

Let's pretend for a moment that this pizza was good (which it really wasn't). Let's suppose it had my favorite topping (I like mushrooms, but they ain't it). Let's also imagine that they included those wonderful little hot peppers with the pizza that are so enjoyable (which they didn't).

Even in this wonderful fairyland, something is amiss.

Look at this pizza. Notice the strange horizontal and vertical markings across the pizza. These are "slices" into the pizza.

Now, could someone explain to me why someone would take a perfectly good, ROUND, pizza and decide to cut it into SQUARE slices??? Some art nouveau thing? A commentary of our society forcing people into their small cubicles? Some pizza maker who likes to buck the norm and "take it to the next level".

Pizzas are round. They should be in slices. Like pie. If you want square pieces, all laws of decency and sanity state that you must make a square (I believe it is called Sicilian style) pizza. Otherwise you have pieces with lots of crust, no crust, a little crust. It is insanity. To paraphrase Walter: "This isn't 'nam. There are rules"

Please, someone teach these people how to make a pizza and end this cruelty. I think I'm going to be sick.

Save some time for...


Okay, here we go. Quick sappy rant:
Life goes by fast. NPR is always on during breakfast. Work is always so boring. The TV somehow is always on during supper.

These are not criticisms or complaints, it's just the way things are sometimes.

Take some time. Have a glass of wine, a good meal, and be sure to light a candle. It doesn't matter if the picture in you dining room has fallen down. Ignore it.

Pretend you're in a fancy restaurant even if you are serving frozen garlic bread. I'm sure they do it sometimes too. Make someone their favorite dish (one of Julie's is pasta with vodka sauce), buy a slightly more expensive wine than normal (this one was $10, no comments please) and enjoy the meal with that special person.

Let them be a friend, coworker, significant other, child, whatever. Just enjoy it with someone.

Talk, laugh, and most of all enjoy the food. We can eat for sustenance, or we can use food to improve our lives. This meal cost about 15 bucks for the two of us. If you can find entertainment for less than that, you're a liar and a thief.

Keep cooking, keep eating, and keep having fun!

Peppers and Stuff(ing)


From time to time, I like to make stuffed peppers. They're a really fun food: they're fun to make and to eat, and I've always loved food that comes in a type of packaging. I think they are an old standard you can really play with (ingredient wise) as long as you keep the two core components: a pepper and some stuffing. As I don't make them too often, I've yet to perfect the recipe. I'm sure that everyone has either their own recipe/opinions, I thought I would present my current recipe for suggestions.

I also have to apologize for the ambiguous measurements. I'm a bit of a
kitchen cowboy, and I'm writing down the recipe after-the-fact.

Vegetarian (did I mention they are vegetarian?) Stuffed Peppers:

4 Large green bell peppers

2-3 cups rice (depends on how much you like rice; I love it)

1 can diced tomatos (flavored optional)

1 can black beans

1/2 cup salsa

1/2 cup cheddar cheese, shredded

dash crushed red peppers

garlic powder TT (I use about 1/4t)

Chipotle Tobasco TT

salt & pepper TT


1. make rice according to directions. Meanwhile, cut caps off peppers and clean out seeds, including from the caps!


2. mix about 1c. of cooked rice with can of tomatos, beans, 1/4 c. cheese and 1/4 c. salsa. Add red pepper, garlic powder,Chipotle tobasco, salt and pepper to taste.


3. Put remaining rice into baking dish, creating nests for peppers (if you have any filling left after stuffing peppers, mix in with this rice). Stuff peppers and place in rice. Cover with remaining cheese. Put caps on peppers (will seal them to a degree). Distribute rest of salsa over rice, as well as more Chipotle Tobasco to taste. Lightly drizzle olive oil (or I guess, lamp oil, according to an
earlier post) over the lot to prevent drying out.

4. Bake in 350 degree oven for 1 hour (I did about 35 minutes and they could have used more) or until peppers are tender.

Remove and enjoy with a good beer or cheap white table wine (as we did in my case). I serve them whole, but cut one open for a better picture of the innards.


Heh, innards.


Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Pita Perfection


I wasn't going to post tonight's meal, but I had a great thing happen.

I decided to make a meal of a bunch of mediterranean-like food. Hummus, cous-cous, cucumbers, and pitas. One thing: no pitas.

So, I pull out Bernard Clayton's New Compete Book of Breads. In it, I found a wonderful recipe for pitas that I felt I had to share. Now, I'm not saying this is the perfect pita recipe, but it is very, very close. And it takes...wait for it...about 35 minutes to prepare. With rising. Enough said. My Kitchen Aid mixer helped, but it would be pretty easy by hand as well. (It would just take a little longer to knead.)

2 1/2 cups flour (it calls for bread, but I used AP (all-purpous)
2 tsp salt
1 Tbs sugar
1 package dry yeast
2 Tbs oil (Olive oil preferred. Here is where I use my machine oil.)
1 cup hot water (120º-130ºF)

Eight 7" squares of aluminum foil.

1. Mix 1 cup flour with dry ingredients. Add oil and hot water. Beat for ~3 minutes. Stir in balance of flour, 1/2 cup at a time until you get a very soft dough. (I used 3 cups flour this time.)

2. Knead for 6 minutes or so. If using the mixer, do the last minute by hand.

3. Preheat the oven to 500ºF (yes 500!). Divide dough into 8 pieces (I did 6 because apparently, I can't count). Roll into balls an dlet rest for 20 minutes.

4. Flatten each ball and roll into ~6" diameter disk (don't worry if they aren't round). Place each disk on a piece of foil.

5. Carefully place 2-3 at a time in the oven on the middle shelf. Bake 8 minutes.

6. Remove and wrap all the breads from a batch in a large piece of foil, stacked (this allows them to soften). Serve warm or let cool and freeze.

I don't know if I'll ever buy pitas at the store again.