Gobble Day 2010

Well, it was more like gobble days. I prepped for this year’s gobble day for 4 days….in between work, snow, school, and all that crazyness I got the job done.

I’m not a big fan of the yearly buffet style eating frenzy that has become Thanksgiving so I decided to course it out for my parents, Mindy, and my friend Sean.  One reason I don’t like the normal buffet style Thanksgiving thing is that most of the food ends up becoming cold before anyone gets a chance to eat it…yeah, bring a chafing pan with burners and all that but who really has that at their home (me one day)??  My kitchen is tiny and I don’t really have space for people either but once again this little place in West Seattle rocked another cool dinner :)

I took the turkey apart and I created several dishes with some being really simple like the buffalo style turkey wings to the complex stuffed breast.  I looked back at last year’s Thanksgiving that I cooked and I have come a long way in just a year which is very exciting (click).  I just hope by this time next year I’ll be hanging out in Spain or Denmark….

Here it is, Gobble Day 2010.

The picture above is of a turkey leg confit. I cured the turkey leg overnight then cooked it in duck fat for 4 hours at very low heat.  I reserved the skin, made it crispy then used both pieces to finish a dish. I’ll get to that later.

First up was Pork Porchetta with roasted pumpkin seeds, pomegranate arils, fresh rosemary, and sherry vinaigrette.

Next up was the deep-fried turkey leg tossed in Frank’s Hot Sauce and clarified butter (the original buffalo wing sauce).

Next up, my winter vegetable clam chowder with rosemary bread bowl.

The meat and cheese course.  Brie, chorizo, and fromage with sea salt crostini. Contadina and rosemary.

Saute of turkey tenderloin with cranberry glaze served with “winter ratatouille”, crispy sage, and pumpkin/tonka bean puree.

Turkey leg confit with French lentils mixed with bacon, rutabaga, and potato topped with crispy skin and dill. There is a duck fat pan sauce that was served on the side.

The next dish had a bit more work involved.   I took the turkey breasts then flattened them out, and stuffed them with winter vegetables, sage, rosemary, and chanterelle mushrooms.

I wrapped it in turkey skin then tied it up.

I sealed it then threw it in the immersion circulator for a little bath time.

I had originally planned for it to be cooked in the oven but the oven broke midway through dinner so I had to resort to being all awesome and stuff.

Once it was done I seared it quickly in duck fat then let it rest and proceeded to slice it up.

Finally, plated up.  I wasn’t very happy with the presentation but the flavors all worked.

Stuffed Turkey Breast served on a bed of roasted cauliflower with satsuma orange glaze on top of parsnip/potato mash with cranberry/black pepper puree and pumpkin/tonka bean puree.  Pan sauce of course.

Until next year Mr. Gobble.

Eric

House-Cured Pancetta, Egg Yolk, Avocado, Tomato, and Hearts of Palm

Tomatoes from Mindy!  That’s the pancetta I’ve been working on for a month resting on top of a quick poached egg yolk….when the yolk is broken it flows over the other items on the plate.   The pancetta is rendered then I worked that fat into the avocado puree. There’s more to it but I won’t bore you with you details.

Eric

Bounty from Seattle Tilth’s Harvest Festival

We purchased a few things at Seattle Tilth’s Harvest Festival and one of my favorite things was available at the event. Chanterelle mushrooms are by far my favorite mushrooms. I love the color, their texture, and taste and I have yet to find a dish that doesn’t work amazingly well with them.  The best part is that they were selling them for about $4/lb. under retail market price!

Hey, look at these cool egg plants!

Kick ass squash

Fingerling Potatoes

Shallots

Leeks

Alright, time to cook something!

Eric

When In Doubt…..TACO PARTY!!!!!

Audrey and Dan came over to our place in West Seattle so I decided to cook a few things for them.  Audrey loves spicy food and so do I so it was me and her versus Dan and Mindy and the cook always wins so spicy was the theme!

Adobo spiced cheddar cheese

Fried Corn with a brown butter chipotle sauce……Trying to perfect my technique for work!

Pique Coleslaw!

U.S. Wild Caught Shrimp in a pickled red pepper sauce with green bell, garlic, Walla Walla Onion, and Cilantro

Ghost Chili Blackened Hawaiian Mahimahi.

Garbanzo Awesome Rice

Sauteed Limes

Roasted Salsa.  Green Bell, Red Bell, Tomatoes, Garlic, Walla Walla Onion, and more!

Eric

Herbed Goat Cheese Stuffed Squash Blossoms with Macerated Peach Sauce

The squash blossoms, goat cheese, and peaches are from the West Seattle Farmers market. Peaches are macerated in PX S’orange then blended, strained, and made a little tighter with agar.  The squash blossoms are cleaned, blanched, shocked, drained, stuffed then warmed in the oven then topped with sel de mer.  The goat cheese is herbed with herbs from MindyRiveraFarms.

Eric

Thanks for the plates Bonnie and Bruce!!!

Dinner at my place………..

Fruit salad with Rainier Cherry Syrup and tons of goat cheese.  I unleashed the goat cheese right after this picture….looked much better…oh well. The tiny clear things are white currants and the yellow specks are candied meyer lemon.

Savory Clams with Salumi Smoked Paprika Salami and Saffron Buerre Blanc.  Savory clams are amazing….second year on this blog…..Taylor Shellfish.

Lobster and Chanterelle Mushroom Risotto

Practice makes perfect……  Almond and Pickled Mustard Aioli Crusted Halibut with Mindy Rivera Farms Vegetables, Cilantro Oil, and Pique Broken Vinaigrette.   Totally stole this idea from work….. I work at an awesome place.

Have fun in California Heather! Hopefully we’ll join you soon.

Eric

Kasu Black Cod with Ginger Carrot Stir-Fry and Black Bean/Corn Relish

At Blueacre I was working on the saute station which involves cooking all the main course fish dishes (say that 3 times fast).   I love that kasu black cod so much that I decided to go and buy some cod yesterday and marinate it with the kasu paste.   The cool thing about this is that I know how to cook it now! Well, I did before I worked at Blueacre but now I know how to cook it how Chef Davis wants it to be…..very cool.

When it’s done it has a nice caramelized sheen on top of it and the black cod will separate a little bit so you can see it’s nice white color.   It’s f’ing amazing actually. I think if you didn’t know what was going on you would think the fish was burnt to a crisp……no fear, kasu is on here (ugh).

I love practicing!

Eric

Braised Mangalitsa Leg with Accompanying Homegrown Lettuce Wrap Party

Mindy’s lettuce was ready to use so I decided to throw it a lettuce wrap party……it’s a wrap….get it?!?! No??? Ugh…I’ll be in the kitchen if anyone needs me.

I pulled out my mangalitsa leg and proceeded to braise it up!

Look at how much fat is on the outside edges!!!!! Awesome!!  If you ever see a recipe that says, “trim off excess fat”, throw that crap away and come back to my blog and I will show you the way to cooking awesome food!!!!  Fat is flavor…..finding a breed of pig that has more fat than any other breed is like eating Disneyland.

Sear the leg in a large dutch oven.  Remove from dutch oven, sweat some vegetables, add some stock (triple stock….yeah), add some fresh herbs from Mindy’s garden, and let it sit in the oven for a while…..the longer the better.  Strain entire mixture, reduce juices left over, pull apart meat, and add contents back into reduced juices mixture.  Adjust seasonings, serve with:

  • Roasted Tomatillo Jus Relish with Pineapple and Sage
  • Squid Ink Rice
  • Herb mix (Cilantro, Thyme, Oregano)
  • Special seasoning
  • Limes
  • Mindy’s Lettuce!!!!!!!
  • Tostones with mayo-rooster-ketchup

That’s how you rock a lettuce wrap party.

Eric

The Pickling Brine Wars Have Begun

I’m working on a few different pickling brines so that way when I start doing some canning I’ll have the right tasting pickled delights.

The container on the bottom is my spicy mixture. The peppers used are aji dulce, japones, and ghost chili. It is f’ing spicy and pretty darn good too.  1 or 2 with some other finger foods and it’s a nice sweat inducing fun time.

The next one up features tarragon and rosemary which I will probably add other vegetables to, it seems like it works well with others.

The last one is sage, rosemary, coriander, garlic, and black pepper…..it’s my favorite mixture and I’ll probably tinker with it a little more.

All three have the same white wine vinegar, water, and salt base.  I can’t wait to put these to work in some actual canning.

Eric

I don’t know what to call this post….Who cares, the food was pretty good.

I’m not feeling the whole funny post name thing today….. My head is in other places right now but I wanted to post these pictures of dinner last night.  My sister had a bunch of lechugas so I put them to work along with a bit of kale. I think it turned out to be a great dinner but could use a few refining touches.

The dish above is a salad using lettuce from RiVog Farms (my sister’s urban garden).  It’s dressed in a sherry vinaigrette (PX) and includes blackberries, Sahale Snacks Tuscan Almonds, Golden Glen Creamery Sweet Basil Cheese, sel de mer, and black pepper

Spicy Dill Cucumbers from Woodring Northwest Specialties.   I really like their products and I’m going to be doing a large amount of canning later this year so I need to perfect my brine!  The pickle is served with a hot pepper from their can and heavily reduced balsamic vinegar.   They look great on the new plates ($1.50)! :)

Pickled watermelon rind with poached egg and mangalitsa jowl bacon bits.  Amazing.

Braised kale in a triple meat (Veal Bones, Pork Belly, Flank Steak) stock with carrots.  Cooking kale? Do this to it every time.

Blackberry Terrine with Almond Chantilly Cream.   Kind of a scary looking picture…..I like it.

Well, that’s it. NEXT!

Eric

RiVog Farms

My sister has a little urban farm at her house in West Seattle.  The good thing is that she lives 3 minutes away so I usually get a call or text message that says, “I have lechugas for you” and then I respond, “What time do you want to come over for dinner…bring wine…..and lechugas”.

This time she brought more than lechugas (lettuce for all your non-Spanish speakers); she brought some kale.  She is fascinated with kale because her up-and-coming chef/brother showed her how to cook it.  However, my sister doesn’t cook so it’s still up to me to show her how kale should be cooked and how hippies make it taste awful.  Hippies, you give kale a bad name

She also brought over some lechugas to display for me. It’s a nice variety and I put them to work during dinner.

Eric