Posts Tagged ‘Home’

4th December
2009
written by mattborn

I have Minnesota heritage, so when it comes to casseroles, hotdishes, and potatoes, I have natural instincts.  Often this takes the form of adding cheese.  On the flip side, though, I’ve never had much luck with cooking meat.  I can fake it with dishes involving ground beef and chicken, but now I feel the time has come to try grander things.

First, prepare the squash, as it  takes the longest time to bake.  I find that half an acorn squash per person is about all I can take, even though it’s delicious.

Using a sharp knife, and if you have the equipment, a rubber mallet, split an acorn squash in half from stem to tip.  Using a spoon, scoop and scrape out the seeds and stringy sections. For best results, you’ll now want to perforate the squash flesh in some way (although not the skin) – use a fork to poke some holes or a knife to make a few slits.  Then, brush half a teaspoon of melted butter over the flesh of each half, and drop a tablespoon of brown sugar in the hollow of each.  Place the halves cut-side up in a baking dish or tray with a quarter inch of standing water (to prevent burning the skin), and bake at 400 for an hour and a quarter.  Undercooked squash is not terribly tasty so err on the side of overcooking.

Cooking the rice is left as an exercise to the reader.  Or the reader’s rice cooker.

Now to the duck.  Use a glass dish (my hand-me-down Corningware seems to be working fine) for which you have a lid.  Grease the dish, and spread about a quarter cup of orange marmalade on the bottom.  Place your duck (in my case, a large duck breast from the corner butcher) on the marmalade.  I’m new at cooking duck, but I think it best to place the skin-side up, and it’s customary to cook duck with the skin on (in case you were wondering).  In order to help some of the fat run off, pierce the skin in many places but try not to pulverize the meat underneath.  Top the breast with more marmalade, sliced onions, minced garlic, and sliced oranges.  Bake at 475 for fifteeen minutes with the lid on, and then (to facilitate crisping the skin) remove the lid and bake until it reaches your desired level of “done”.  Apparently duck may be served rarer than other poultry, but for my first attempt, I went for at least 165 degrees – maybe another fifteen minutes.

And now, the verdict:

I had a logistical issue with timing the squash and the duck at the same time but while cooking  at different temperatures, so despite my own advice I undercooked the squash because I once I turned it up to 475 for the duck I had a problem estimating when the squash was finished.  As if to karmically compensate for this, the duck turned out to be overcooked.  I believe this was operator error on reading the thermometer…  In any event, it looked good, and the orange and onion was a fantastic combination, but it would be better next time to have two ovens and an assistant who can work a thermometer.

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12th November
2009
written by mattborn

So I picked up a bottle of pomegranate liqueur tonight, since Maria had had a pomegranate beverage at dinner sometime last week and liked it.  So here is a version of a pom-tini and my impressions of it.

1.5 oz pomegranate liqueur

1.5 oz vodka

0.25 oz orange liqueur

In particular, I used Pama (specially bought for the purpose), Svedka (only vodka on hand), and a really old bottle of Bols triple sec.  Shake over ice, serve in a martini glass with a lemon zest garnish.  I confess I didn’t measure the triple sec.  (Speaking as manly-ly as possible) I think the pomegranate flavors are just fine; possibly a superior vodka might carry them better.  Sadly I think my triple sec is the weakest link, but I don’t have cointreau to do a side-by-side.

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3rd November
2009
written by mattborn

So ridiculously awesome.  They’re based on potatoes, so feel free to spice and top as you would a baked potato.

Take five or six potatoes, peeled and diced.  Boil until mashable, then mash with a tablespoon or two of butter.  Whip three eggs and stir into the cooled potatoes.  Spoon into greased muffin cups, bake at 350 for 45 minutes, and enjoy.

I added salt and pepper while mashing, and threw some cubed cheddar in before baking.  I topped with bacon, green onions, sour cream, and more cheddar.  I actually think the mashed spuds could have been a bit more delicious with some more spicing, possibly chicken bouillon or broth.  Cream cheese has also been suggested.  In any case, these things are awesome.

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16th April
2009
written by mattborn

For dinner party #5, I whipped up some creme brulee for dessert.  The most difficult part of this process was actually getting up the guts to drop $40 on a blowtorch, and the results, while not perfect, were a great first attempt.  I was pleasantly surprised by how easy everything was and plan on giving it many second tries.

Creme Brulee
Ingredients
Heavy cream 1 C
Egg yolks 2
Sugar 1/3 C + 2 T
Vanilla Extract 1/2 t
Steps
  1. Preheat over to 300F.
  2. Boil several cups of water.
  3. Combine cream and 2 T sugar over medium heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until small bubbles appear around edges of pan (~5 minutes). Set aside.
  4. In a bowl, beat egg yolks and vanilla until smooth and light.
  5. Pour hot cream mixture into egg yolks, a little at a time, beating continuously until well blended.
  6. Strain mixture through a fine sieve into a bowl.
  7. Divide mixture among 4 4oz ramekins.
  8. Arrange ramekins in a baking pan and place on middle shelf of preheated oven. Fill pan with boiling water to halfway up side of ramekins. Cover pan loosely with aluminum foil. Bake until custard is just set, ~25 minutes.
  9. Chill custard in ramekins ~2-3 hours
  10. Sprinkle remaining sugar evenly over top of cooled custards. Apply torch flame continuously in a circular motion until sugar becomes golden brown and bubbly. Serve immediately.
Source: Bonjour Creme Brulee Torch instructions.
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11th April
2009
written by mattborn

I caught this never-before-seen wine at TJ’s today for $7.99 and thought that I should give it a try.  I’m cooking a spicy Indian-style dinner tonight and was shopping for Rieslings or Gewurtztraminers to stand up to it, but I thought “Muller Thurgau” sounded decently German and might be able to hold its own.

In color it is nearly clear, and the first taste is lightly sweet and is followed quickly by a shot of tangy.  It lingers with pepper, and indeed compares favorably with Riesling.  That’s my limit of pretentious description so if you want more you’ll have to try it yourself.

On my admittedly granular scale, I rate this wine a “buy it again”.

Winery Airlie
Vintage 2007
Variety Muller Thurgau
Origin Willamette Valley, Oregon [map]
Alcohol 10.0% (20 proof)
Grapes Unknown
Availability Trader Joe’s [map]
Price $7.99 / bottle
Rating +
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24th January
2008
written by mattborn

I have a new radio dealie.  It’s the size of a dresser, and runs on vacuum tubes.  It glows when it’s on.  It sits in my dining room and plays off of my ipod.  I love it.

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