Sunday 6 March 2016

Albondigas verde

I thought I'd repurpose some of my recipes from other places so I can have all of them in this new blog. So here goes.

From the archives


For the many Sephardim that read this blog (and there are so many of you I can barely count you on one finger), you'll be familiar with the traditional version of albondigas that we've been eating (and loving!) since we were all tiny. They're red, it's all about the tomato. Well tonight I went off the beaten path, well onto the somewhat beaten path of Mexican flavours that I've embraced and turned the blessed albondiga of my youth on its ear! Tonight's were green, that's verde, yes!

I had some tomatillos sitting in the fridge that I had picked up at a farmers' market a while ago. I needed to use them. I was not willing to let those beauties go to waste but I needed something one step up from salsa verde, because that does not a dinner make. So a little searching and a little cobbling together and here's what I came up with.



Albondigas verde
  • 1-2 pounds of ground beef
  • 10 or so tomatillos
  • 2 poblano peppers or a couple of jalapenos
  • 3 cloves of garlic
  • 1 big white onion (1/2 cut into chunks, 1/4 chopped super finely)
  • 1/2 cup of chopped cilantro
  • 2 tbsp of uncooked rice
  • few tablespoons of oil
  • salt 
  • 1 or 2 eggs
Clean and remove the husks from the tomatillos and put them in a pot of water to boil for about 15 min until they turn a little yellowish. If using jalepenos, boil with the tomatillos and remove seeds etc once cooked.. Once ready, drain the water from the pot.

Roast the poblano peppers (either under the broiler or over the flame of a gas stove) until they are fairly charred. Put in a plastic bag and let sweat for about 10 minutes so the skin will be easy to get off. Clean the skin off, remove the seeds and rinse the pepper to get all the black bits and seeds off.  

Chuck the cooked tomatillos, poblano peppers/jalapenos, chunks of onions, cilantro, garlic, and about a cup of water into a blender and blend until it is a very nice green colour.

To make the meatballs, mix the eggs, ground beef, finely chopped onion, rice and a couple of pinches of salt into a bowl and then form into walnut sized balls. Not too tiny but not big either.

In a pot large enough to fit the balls essentially in one layer, add the oil and let it get hot. Pour the tomatillo mixture in (and enjoy the sizzle). Mix and let it come to the boil. You should add a bit of water to thin it out now (I used the blender and got all the rest of the tomatillo mixture out with the water). 

Once the sauce comes back to the boil, add the balls, turn down the heat, and let it simmer partially covered for 30 minutes. Add salt etc as required to taste.



I served this over pink rice and a little Mexican style salad with chopped onion, a few of the last stragglers from my tomato crop, chopped lettuce, and some chunks of avocado dressed simply wiht some lime juice, olive oil and a bit of salt.  They don't look all that fantastic in pictures but we're about flavour here, not looks!

(c) 2013 Gail J. Cohen

Saturday 5 March 2016

Chile powder

My love of chiles knows no bounds, so I'm always looking for different things to do with them. The reality is, though, that you can't cook every meal with chiles because the people you live with might not be quite as in love with them as you are. That doesn't mean my mind isn't always thinking about things to cook and ways to use all the beautiful chiles Mexico has to offer.




The most recent round of chile idea generation was spakred by my friend Sarah, who recently went to Arizona and came home with a big bag of cascabels. Cascabels are cutie little chiles - they look like big cherries, but, you know, with a bit of a kick. Unlike many chiles, the cascabels don't flatten out when they dry. Literally cascabel translates to "rattle" as the seed inside rattle around when the chile is dried and you shake it all about. The Gourmet Sleuth describes cascabels as "moderately hot and have a nutty flavor with a rich tannic and slightly smoky nuance."

While Taco Tuesday has become quite the thing, I am all about Taco Everyday. So I figured I'd try making some chile powder to make tacos later. This is what I whipped up it's still making my nose tickle hours later.


Yield: 2-3 tablespoons

Ingredients

2 dried cascabel chiles
2 dried chiles morito (chipotles)
2 dried cayenne peppers (I grew these in my garden last summer)
1 tsp dried cumin
1 tbsp Mexican oregano
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp dried coriander

Deseed the chiles. Then add all the ingredients to a grinder - I have a coffee grinder that I use only for spices. Grind it all up until it's a fine powder.

Use it as you would any chile powder.

(c) 2016 Gail J Cohen

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With this, I made some tasty beef taco. Just took 3 teaspoons of the chile powder, 1 pound of ground beef, 1 chopped/sauted onions, and a tablespoon of tomato paste and cook it all up for 20 minutes or so.  Then add the fixings and it's  Taco Saturday Night!



Tuesday 1 March 2016

Corn and poblano soup

There really are few things I love more than corn and poblano peppers (well avocados but who’s counting). So any opportunity to have them together is a win-win for me. Poblanos have to be roasted before you use them, which gives them a beautiful smokey flavour. And while it’s a little finicky to do it and clean them, I absolutely adore the smell as they are roasting over the flames of the gas stove. Try it, you’ll love it. 

It sure is easy eating green.
This soup can be spicy but it totally depends on the poblanos you have. You can also add other green chiles or peppers if you want. If you want to ensure heat, toss in a jalapeno or serrano. I had some Anaheims kicking around so roasted and added one. 

And consider this my latest installment in the poblano soup series, which also includes Poblano, Leek, and Potato soup, and more to come.

Serves 6

Ingredients

2 or 3 poblanos, roasted
3 cups chicken stock (use vegetable stock for a vegetarian version)
1 onion
1 clove of garlic
1-2 tbsp butter or oil
couple of sprigs of fresh thyme
1 stick of celery
1 can corn niblets
1 can creamed corn (oh yeah!)
or one or two ears of fresh roasted corn cut off the cob
1 tbsp lime juice
salt and pepper to taste

Roast the poblanos. If you have a bbq or gas stove, char the skin over the flame. If you have an electric stove, put it under the broiler for 10-15 minutes turning it so all sides get charred. Put the hot peppers in a bowl, cover them with a tea towel, and let them sit/steam for 10 minutes or more. The skin should now come off easily when you rub it. Remove as much as you can then cut out the stem and seed. Rinse it to get all the black stuff off and remove the final few stubborn seeds. Then roughly slice or chop.

Thinly slice the onions and celery then chop the garlic.

Heat the butter or oil in a medium to large pot and then add the onions and celery. Sautee until the onions are translucent. Then add the garlic and fry for another minute or so.

Add the stock, pinch of salt, thyme, and chopped up peppers to the pot. Slowly add the corn so you don’t splash yourself.

Stir it up a bit, bring to the boil and then lower the heat to medium-low and let simmer for 30 minutes.

Take the pot off the heat and use a hand blender to waz it all up and make a smoothish soup. With the corn, it’ll never be velvety, but don’t worry about it. Just make sure there aren’t chunks.

Taste, add salt and pepper as required. Squeeze in the lime. Stir and serve.

© 2016 Gail J. Cohen