Soup: Superb Ways With a Classic Dish

This week’s cookbook is Soup: Superb Ways With a Classic Dish, another one of the $5 cookbooks published by Hermes House that I’ve picked up. The range of this book is pretty remarkable: it covers soups from around the work such as Hot and Sour Soup, Chiang Mai Noddle Soup, and Plantain and Corn Soup as well as western standards like Chicken Noodle Soup.

I decided use this book when I woke up on Monday and saw an inch of snow on the ground (!) I flipped through the book and decided to make a lentil soup since I had most of the ingredients on hand and it seemed like a cozy-type of soup. Never mind that it had warmed up to 55 degrees by the time dinner rolled around. (Crazy Utah weather.)

The soup was easy to make but a little on the subtle side. I like spicy food and was tempted to squirt some Sriracha or Tabasco into it to liven it up but I resisted and tried to embrace the lentil-y goodness.


Lentil Soup with Rosemary from Soup: superb ways with a classic dish

Ingredients

  • a cup dried green or brown lentils
  • 3 Tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 3 bacon slices, cut into small dice
  • 1 onion, minced
  • 2 celery stalks, minced
  • 2 carrots, minced
  • 2 sprigs of fresh rosemary, minced
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 14-oz can plum tomatoes
  • 1 3/4 quarts vegetable stock
  • salt and fresh ground black pepper

Directions

  1. Place the lentils in a bowl and cover with cold water. Leave to soak for at least 2 hours; rinse and drain well.
  2. Heat the oil in a large sauce pan. Add the bacon and cook for about 3 minutes. Stir in the onion and cook for 5 minutes until soft. Stir in the celery, carrots, rosemary, bay leaves, and lentils. Toss over the heat for 1 minute until well coated in the oil.
  3. Tip in the tomatoes and stock, and bring to a boil. Lower the heat, half-ocer the pan, and simmer for about 1 hour until the lentils are tender.
  4. Remove the bay leaves and add salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste.

The Verdict
3 out of 5 stars. This is a handy book that covers almost every soup you’d want to make. The wide scope kind of makes me wonder how consistently good all the recipes are, though. Most recipes are pretty healthy but unfortunately nutritional information is not included. All recipes include several photos and clear directions. An introductory section includes step-by-step recipes for creating stocks from scratch. Worth picking up for $5 or $6 if you can.

Best-Ever Curry Cookbook

This week was the first time since I started this series that I noticeably stretched myself in the cooking department. I made two recipes from the Best-Ever Curry Cookbook and it literally took me over two hours to get everything together. Not that the recipes were crazy difficult or anything like that; I just think I am sort of the anti-Rachel Ray in that I can take the simplest recipe and futz around with it until the time and energy I’ve used could have powered a good cook *cough*Mindy*cough* through preparing a lavish banquet.

But at least after my hours spent in the kitchen I ended up with some tasty food. I made Chicken Saag and Courgettes (zucchini) in Spiced Tomato Sauce.

Chicken Saag is one of my favorite Indian dishes. In particular I love how they make it at this local place. This recipe wasn’t exactly the same but it tasted pretty similar and was really good. I’m definitely want to cook it again.

Nothing fancy to look at but it was really tasty.

The only problem with the recipe was that it has you adding one or two ingredients at a time and then simmering for 5 minutes, then repeating over and over. I kept getting lost as I was cooking so I’ve simplified it a bit here.

Chicken Saag from Best-Ever Curry Cookbook by Mridula Baljekar

Ingredients

  • 8 oz fresh spinach leaves, washed
  • 1 inch piece ginger root
  • 2 garlic cloves, crushed
  • 1 fresh green chili, roughly chopped
  • 1 scant cup of water
  • 2 T vegetable oil
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1/4 t black peppercorns
  • 1 yellow onion, finely chopped
  • 4 tomatoes skinned and finely chopped (I forgot to buy some so I used canned *gasp!*)
  • 2 t curry powder
  • 1 t salt
  • 1 t chili powder
  • 3 T plain yogurt plus extra to serve
  • 8 chicken thighs, skinned

Directions

  1. Cook the spinach, without water, in a tightly covered pan for 5 minutes (on medium-low heat). Put the spinach, ginger, garlic, and chili pepper with 1/4 c of water into a food processor and puree.
  2. Heat the oil in a large pan, add the bay leaves, pepper corns, and chopped onion and saute, stirring, until the onion is translucent.
  3. Add the chopped tomatoes, curry powder, salt, and chili powder to the pan and simmer for 5 minutes.
  4. Add the spinach puree and the remaining water (3/4 c) to the pan and simmer for 5 minutes.
  5. Stir in the yogurt, about 1 T at a time and simmer for 5 minutes. Taste and adjust spices as needed.
  6. Add the chicken. Cover and cook (on low) for 25-30 minutes or until the chicken is tender and cooked through.
  7. Serve with warm naan (I used whole wheat pita because I had it on hand), drizzled with plain yogurt and dust lightly with the chili powder.

Serves 4

The Verdict
4 out of 5 stars. This rating is conditional on you being able to pick it up in the bargain section of a bookstore for about $5 like I did. For that price this book is a great deal. It provides a solid grounding in Indian food complete with lots of background information. And each recipe includes multiple photos showing some of the steps involved and the finished dish. The only faults I found are that the directions can be kind of vague (as in not specifying what level of heat you should use) and at times not very clearly written (I found myself rereading the list of directions several times because I kept getting lost). But both of those issues were probably exacerbated by my own inexperience in the kitchen. This book give you a window into authentic Indian cuisine for a great price.

Burgers and Books

We had a nice weekend. On Saturday the three of us had lunch at the newish Smashburger in Orem for lunch and then stopped by the Provo Library’s Children’s Book Festival. This was our second time at Smashburger and it’s fast becoming one of my favorite burger places.

They have a great menu. The first time I ate there I had a Baja burger (pepper jack, jalapeños, guacamole, lettuce, tomato, and chipotle mayo) which was really good. I’m not sure how they do it, but the patty was the most flavorful and juicy I’ve had in a long time. The toppings went well together and the whole thing was awesome.

But I’m trying to eat better now so this time around I grabbed the Baja salad which has basically the same flavor profile. It was tasty enough that I didn’t feel deprived for not getting a burger.

Eh, it wasn’t the healthiest salad ever (with all the bacon and cheddar and whatnot) but it was really tasty!

Somewhere underneath all those haystack onions is the rest of N’s Beehive Burger (Honey BBQ sauce, bacon, and cheddar cheese). I stole a bite and it was good but a little heavy on the fried toppings for my taste.

While the restaurant is more stylish than the average burger joint, it’s pretty kid-friendly. When I asked the cashier how much a kid-size drink would be for E she just gave us one on the house which I thought was nice. And since they fry in olive oil and not peanut oil like some other burger places E is free to enjoy the fries.

After we ate we headed down to the Provo library which is located in a gorgeous historical building. I had heard that they were having a children’s book festival and thought E might have fun. It turned out to be super crowded and the lines for balloon animals and the free books were too long for E’s patience. But he enjoyed seeing characters like Curious George and a Wild Thing in costume and giving them high-fives. The other highlight for E was when he found a bunch of stickers stuck to the floor and spent five minutes prying them up and carefully placing them on his shirt. You know, simple pleasures.

Our friend (and one of N’s old college roommates) Brandon Sanderson is a fantasy author and was there signing books but the line of fans was so long we didn’t get a chance to say hi. It feels kind of weird intruding on him when he’s in author-schmoozing-with-fans-mode anyway. But if you like fantasy you should check out his books. And if you have any precocious book-loving kids in your life they’d probably like his Alcatraz series.

Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast

This week I’m taking a look at Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast, one of several impulse Costco purchases I’ve made over the years. This book focus on simple (5-ingredient) quick recipes. It covers a while range of dishes: soups, salads, meats, poultry, etc… Some of the recipes include prepared ingredients (like canned tomatoes) which some might question but which doesn’t bother me. These recipes are more for weeknight dinners than for having company over.

May’s a crazy month for us. It includes Nathan (and my dad)’s birthdays, Mother’s Day, and our wedding anniversary (9 years this week!).

I wanted to make something a little special for dinner so I used this steak recipe. There was a bit of um, shall we say scope creep? The recipe called for 4 oz tenderloin steaks but the market was having a crazy sale on ribeyes so N’s dinner ended up looking like this (mine was smaller):

So it was fresh and fast but not so light. However, the flavor of the sauce was really good. And I’m officially in love with the salads we had with it: iceberg wedges with blue cheese dressing and dried cranberries and candied walnuts. Crunchy and fresh–yes, super healthy–eh, no.

Beef Tenderloin Steaks with Red Wine-Mushroom Sauce

Ingredients

  • 4 (4-ounce) beef tenderloin steaks, trimmed (about 1/2 inch thick)
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
  • butter-flavored cooking spray
  • 1 (8-ounce) package presliced baby portobello mushrooms
  • 1 cup dry red wine
  • 2 tablespoons better
  • 1 teaspoon minced fresh rosemary

Instructions
Heat a large nonstick skiller over med-high heat. Season steaks with salt and pepper. Coat with cooking spray. Add steaks to pan: cook 3 min or each side or until they reach your preferred degree of doneness. Move steaks to a serving platter and keep warm.

Add mushrooms to same pan. Coat mushrooms with cooking spray, saute 3 min or until browned. Stir in wine, scraping pan to loose browned bits. Cook until the liquid is almost all evaporated. Remove from heat and add butter and rosemary. Stir until butter melts. Pour sauce over steaks and serve.

Yield: 4 servings (serving size 1 steak and 1/4 c sauce)

The Verdict:
3 out of 5 stars. This is a decent weeknight-dinner type of cookbook. Clear directions paired with recipes that use mostly fresh, easy-to-find ingredients make this book good for singles or couples that want to be able to put dinner on the table quickly and have enough leftovers for lunch the next day. Detailed nutritional info is included so you can figure out your points if you’re doing Weight Watchers. However, most recipes make 4 servings so it’s not really geared towards families with several kids.

Overall, I like this book. Recipes from it will probably make it into our regular dinner rotation (once we set up a regular rotation).

The Joy of Vegan Baking

I bought the highly-regarded The Joy of Vegan Baking by Colleen Patrick-Goudreau a while ago with the intention of regularly baking E some dairy-free, egg-free treats. I had visions of myself wearing a cute apron pulling steaming muffins out of the oven and presenting them to him, my grateful offspring. (After which I would go and sit on the couch in my dress and pearls and make small talk with Don Draper.)

The book covers a wide variety of baked goods and most recipes are accompanied by tasty-looking photographs, always a big plus in my eyes. Probably the biggest selling point of this book for me is it uses easy-to-find and rather inexpensive ingredients. Some vegan cookbooks call for a lot of exotic ingredients like coconut oil and specialty flours that are pricey and require at least a few trips to a specialty store to gather. Except for things like soy butter and non-dairy milk this book uses pretty standard baking ingredients which I really appreciate.

I used the book’s recipe for chocolate cake to bake some cupcakes for N’s birthday this last week. It’s a variation of Wacky Cocoa Cake. They turned out well except they were a little underdone. I checked them at 15 minutes like the recipe said and ended up pulling them out at 20 minutes because I was afraid they were burning. They were really moist and pleasingly on the dense side.

The cupcakes didn’t quite rise all the way (maybe I over-mixed?) but I just filled the little divots in the middle with frosting–ta da! Flavor-wise I think this is just as good as a normal chocolate cake mix cake. I’ll probably make this recipe again and try and figure out how to fix the sunken tops.



Chocolate Cake Recipe from
The Joy of Vegan Baking

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 c unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 c granulated sugar
  • 1/2 t salt
  • 1 t baking soda
  • 1/4 c unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 1/2 t vanilla extract
  • 1/3 c canola oil
  • 1 tablespoon white distilled vinegar
  • 1 c cold water

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 f
  2. Lightly oil a bundt pan, 9-inch sprinigform pan, or muffin tins
  3. Combine all dry ingrediants and mix
  4. Create a well in the middle and add the wet ingredients to it.
  5. Mix until just combined.
  6. Pour into your prepared pan and bake for 30 minutes
  7. (For cupcakes, check for doneness after 15 minutes)
  8. Cool on wire rack and then run a sharp knife around the inside of pan to loosen the cake.
  9. Cool completely before frosting.

Yield: one 9-inch cake of 8 cupcakes.

The Verdict:
4 out of 5 stars. If you’re interested in milk-free, egg-free baking for either health reasons or food allergies this should be one of the first books you get. It’s covers a wide range of baked goods and most recipes use easy-to-find ingredients (I’m looking at you, Babycakes!).

A Yogurt Upgrade

Lately I’ve been trying to eat better, not just in terms of calories but also in terms of eating food that is more natural and less processed (watching Food, Inc will do that to you). I recently picked up a couple varieties of Chobani Greek yogurt on sale at the store and man, they ARE GOOD.


I hadn’t had Greek yogurt with fruit before but these are thick and rich and satisfying and not too sweet. These also have a lot of calcium and protein in them as well as probiotics. They’re non-fat and 140 calories a serving which is a little more than your average lite yogurt but they don’t have that fakey artificial aftertaste that some yogurts do. I used to get those dessert-flavored yogurts sometimes but now I’ve come to the conclusion that yogurt shouldn’t necessarily taste like fake key lime pie. It should taste fresh and natural like these.

I would recommend trying these if you get the chance. I got them on sale for $1.25 a piece. I’m not sure what they go for normally but they are a bit on the pricey side, comparatively speaking. But at least Chobani donates 10% of their profits to charity which makes me feel better about the cost. If they were cheaper I would eat one for breakfast almost everyday but as it is I’ll probably have them as feel-good treats.

I poked around their website and they have a page where you can print off a buy-2-get-1-free coupon.

(In case you were wondering I wasn’t compensated for this review in any way and I bought the product with my own money.)

Cutest Salad Ever

When I was in WA I went shopping in Koreatown and picked up a few fun kitchen toys. These Japanese fruit/vegetable cutters were among my booty. Over the weekend we made a couple green salads and I thought it would be a good time to try them out.

It was fun using the cutters to punch flower shapes out of carrot and cucumber slices (my 3 year-old niece was especially enchanted) and we ended up with the cutest salad ever.

I looked around online and found the cutters for sale here (but I’ve never heard of this site so caveat emptor).

Family History

The weekend was kind of a mixed bag. Saturday was great: N and I took E to a dim sum restaurant we had heard about and it was really good. I love dim sum! While we were there two grandmas sitting next to us who made a point of complimenting us on how well E was behaving and how cute he was. We assured them that it was entirely the luck of the draw (as it usually is with two year-olds; sometimes E can really be a monster at restaurants) but it still felt nice to have strangers go out of their way to compliment E. Then the grandmas asked us about dim sum and how ordering it worked and we explained it to them and then basked in a parents-of-a-perfect-child/cosmopolitan-foodie glow which lasted all of about one minute until E started yelping and I couldn’t bring myself to order the chicken feet even though I was kind of curious. But then that evening we went to visit some good friends and stayed until entirely too late talking and laughing and watching our sons play together.

Sunday was okay except that I woke up feeling under the weather AND we totally spaced the time change so we showed up for church an hour late. (I know, I know–we felt like morons.)

At chuch N and I are attending a Sunday School class on family history. My church is very big on family history because our doctrine teaches that family members can be sealed together for eternity though covenants we make with God inside temples. So the church is working on an online database system that helps people find their ancestors.

Participating in this Sunday School class has sparked an interest in family history in me. When I was at my parents’ house I took the opportunity to scan some old photos. Are these great?

My mom with my grandmother.

My grandmother (Halmoni) at her house in Korea.
My aunt and her husband on their wedding day.

I really enjoy looking at old pictures. My mom has all our family pictures in a cardboard box but I would love to get them all scanned and put together in a book.

Oh, the food, the glorious food! (part 1)

N and I like Korean food and usually eat it at least once every couple weeks or so. We would eat it more often but I only know how to make a handful of dishes. But I have ambitions of becoming better at cooking Korean food, especially because most dishes don’t contain things that E is allergic too.

Anyway, any visit to my parents’ house is guaranteed to feature some delicious Korean food since my mom is a great cook and we also usually grab a bite to eat in Koreatown at least once or twice.

(I can’t remember the Korean name): Buckwheat noodles in fish broth topped with egg, sesame spinach, dried seaweed, and kimchi.

Ojinguh: squid served with spicy dipping sauce (not pictured).
This is one of my favorite Korean snacks and has been since I was a kid.
(Don’t knock it until you’ve tried it!)

Ddukbokki: spicy pressed rice cakes with fish cakes
And the spread at the Korean BBQ place Honey Pig in Tacoma.
(I really like this place. It’s the only BBQ place I’ve been to that serves you rounds of pickled daikon and chewy wonton wrappers to wrap your meat up in. The crunchy+chewy texture is delicious and addictive–yum!)

*Sigh*…looking at these pictures is really not helping with my Korean-food withdrawal.

Menu for the week of Feb 8th

Things seem to have calmed down with work so things shouldn’t be quite as crazy this week (phew!). But this week will still be kind of hectic since I’ll be trying to put my house back in order after letting it fall apart last week and also preparing to take E and go visit family in Washington. So we’re trying to keep it simple this week, dinner-wise.

  • Monday (N): Potstickers and rice/noodles
  • Tuesday (Faith): Homemade chicken noodle soup (made without egg noddles so E can have some. He’s been really into soup lately)
  • Wednesday (N): Salmon patty sandwiches
  • Thursday (Faith): Pulled pork sandwiches
  • Friday: Takeout
  • Saturday: Leftovers