Tuesday, May 15, 2012

A Walk about in SanDiego

A trip to San Diego was on my "bucket list" and a few weeks ago me and my partner made the trip. It was two fold...we are drowning in an over abundance of rain here and was desperate for some warm sunny weather and seafood;  so we headed South and it was one of my most enjoyable trips.
Besides the weather being just right, San Diego has got to be one of if not the most beautiful State in the US...just saying. The views of the ocean and beaches for miles and as wide were breath taking. The smell of the ocean, the high boisterous waves,  the hikes to La Jolla park, and Torrey Pine were all great memorable experiences. 
The locals were friendly and their food - well, let's get to it.


We just about by passed Coronado Island, but was highly encouraged by the locals to visit, and boy we are so glad we did. After a stroll around the island, we did one of our most favourite things. We set out to find the best cafe or restaurant that served seafood and happy hour. A thing about happy hour; they can be found just about everywhere in San Diego from inexpensive to high end classy joints. Happy hour is a great deal and a bonus is to find really tasty food plus happy hour; double the pleasure.
Hello "Candelas on the Bay" a mid to high end restaurant located on the board walk and pleasant décor.
We lucked out in securing a booth, ordered a margarita and Sangria (the best Maria ever had) it was time to order.  Shrimp tacos, soft shells with shrimps marinated in a rosé sauce with a kick got us up and running. The flavours were bursting in our mouths. The pulled pork nachos was creative and succulent, and the fresh green salad with walnuts and goat cheese was refreshing. Everything under $25 and we were stuffed.

Brunch, lunch or Dinner at Humphries Restaurant is a must, and if you have the time then have all three, you won't be disappointed. You can't go wrong with their scallop dinner or seafood risotto. Brunch a well balance variety and you taste the freshness in every meal.


Now my to do list is to try and recreate a few of those amazing dishes and share them with you.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Fish Stew with a Twist

When the weather is cold, wet and dreary I usually crave a nice bowl of home made hearty stew. 
The kind that is rich with flavour, colours, a good balance of meat and veggies or dumplings and enough sauce to sop up with a chunk of home made bread. Nothing beats that. 
I am sure we all have a "favourite" stew recipe; either our own creation or from someone else. There's chicken stew with the meat falling off the bone, with soft tasty dumplings.  Beef stews on simmer for a few hours for melt in your mouth pieces of beef and potatoes soaked with flavour. Then there's fish stew with a twist.


Tilapia Fish Stew with Rice Noodles


I grew up eating fresh fish; fresh as in there's still signs of the fins, gill, and tail moving; now you can't get any fresher than that. We are fortunate to have a local wharf that we visit during the late spring to late summer to purchase fresh salmon, halibut, shrimp, and black cod. Fresh anything is always better and especially seafood; having it fresh just tastes so much better.


Anyhow back to this dish I made with help from my partner. A combination of South American and  Asian flair. 


Tilapia Fish Stew with Rice Noodles
What you'll need:
2 lbs of tilapia washed and cut into chunks
2 tbsp. olive oil
1 medium size onion coarsely chopped
About 4  leaves of Fresh Thai Basil
3-4 medium size ripe tomatoes diced
1 thumb nail size ginger finely chopped
6-8 bunches of bok choy washed, and chopped into large pieces
2 carrots thinly sliced
4 cups stock
3 squares of dry rice noodles
Pepper to taste


Putting it Together: 
Turn stove on to medium temperature
Add oil, and when heated add onions cooking for about 3 min to caramelize.
Add tomatoes and stock bring to a boil then simmer for 30 min.
Add carrots, ginger, basil and bok choy cooking for 5 min.
Add fish cooking for 3 min then add rice noodles cooking for 5 min.
Add pepper, remove from stove and serve hot.


Enjoy!





Monday, March 19, 2012

Juice it Up

Juicing is neither Caribbean, North America, European or Asian. Juicing covers all ethnicities; after all who doesn't enjoy good juice, and no I am not talking about orange juice and vodka or any store bought juice, though Oasis is a juice on the market that is closest to the real thing,  why go there when you can do your own fresh, save dollars and quick to make.

I've been juicing for a number of years and it's vitally important to have an excellent juicer; not a good juicer but an excellent one which means not going cheap and doing your research. To help make things a bit easier for you I've done the research, tried and proven and comes highly recommend.

First there's Waring Pro an excellent juicer with minimal parts, and sturdy - lasted me 9 years.
The only down side is the apples or beets could not be juiced whole - not a big deal, and the second tiny downside I found was not enough pulp was sieve through with the juice extraction. Again, it wasn't a huge deal to me as I loved the machine and the clean up was a snap.

I would have replaced it with the same Waring pro juicer but unfortunately the Waring pro company does not ship outside of the USA, and that's too bad for Waring Pro:)

After much research we decided on Hamilton Beach 800watts big mouth juicer. Besides it being noisy, that's easily cured by placing a dish towel under the machine and issue solved.
We love this machine, no cutting up of the vegetables or fruit, and there's enough pulp within the juice to give it a nice balance, and cleaning up is easy.

Alright, those are my recommendations and for free also. The benefits of juicing are all positive with no negativity in place, trust me on this. Some of the benefits we enjoy from juicing

  • Juice with organic vegetables and fruit
  • rich with Live enzymes and vitamins
  • Fresh raw juice without preservatives
  • A good balance of fibre
  • Great for the skin, eyes, bones, hair, and organs
  • Inexpensive and can be stored for two days in a glass jar while maintaining it's freshness
  • Increased energy
  • Provides 2-4 servings of vegetables (depending on how much you drink)
  • Absolutley delicious



.So now you probably want to know what veggies I juice with, right? Thought so!

Kale, carrots, beets, apple, celery and ginger is my favourite blend. Sometimes I get creative and add other vegetables or fruit, but most of the time I stick with the ones mentioned.  Ok, to your health and drink up.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Momma's Bread Recipe a Winner

Today, I made bread the same recipe I shared with you but this time I added margarine and I loved the texture way more that the bread baked without. A machine runs better when oiled right? Well hope you got that one:)  This time I let the dough rise for 2 hours instead of one, and this batch made two large braided loaves. The texture was just right, the feel not heavy but kinda middle of the road and the taste - impeccable.

So go ahead use the recipe I shared and add 3/4 cup margarine to the mix for a lighter loaf while maintaining the great home made taste no store brought bread can stand up to.

Rising Dough

Mamma's Fresh Baked Bread
When you try this recipe I would love to hear from you; thoughts, feed back welcome.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Knead it

Just to let you know this recipe I am about to share makes a heavier solid loaf. There is no hollow sound on the tap, and when you slice into it, there is no chance you will see glimpses of what's on the other side; no matter how thin you slice it. Makes me want to sing; solid, solid as a rock, but not literally.

If you want a lighter loaf the you would have to add margarine to the mix. sorry, I did not remember to take pictures of my loaves, but with a decent imagination you can visualize the stages; from the prep process, to the kneading, to the rising, rolling out to either braid (intertwining three strands of dough) or shape into rectangle shapes, and gently places in their pans. Cover for 15 minutes to set, then it's baking time and 45 minutes later, the bread is ready, the smell that comes from the steam as you cut a thick slice and lather with butter makes your mouth water. There you go, you got the picture; now on to the recipe.
Now, this is bread making simplified.
This recipe makes 3 loaves.

Bread

You will need:
2 tbsp. or 2 packages  Instant or Active dry Yeast (whatever your preference)
1 tsp. salt
2 tbsp. sugar
1 1/2 cup warm water
4 cups white flour
2 cups whole wheat flour
3 tbsp vegetable oil

Putting it together:

  1. If you are using the "active dry yeast" dissolve it in 1/2 cup warm water with sugar and let sit for 10 mins. If instant yeast is used then add it to the flour mixture directly.
  2. In a large bowl add all the dry ingredients, then drizzle oil, mix well and add warm water to form a soft dough. Add additional water to use up the flour.
  3. Knead until a firm smooth dough is formed; knead for about 8-10 mins. 
  4. Oil the bowl, place dough, flip to coat the other side, cover and let rise for 2 hours.
  5. Oil baking pans.
  6. Deflate the dough and turn unto a light floured board, form into desired shape,cover and let rise for 15 mins.and preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  7. Bake for 30-45 mins until the top is golden brown, use a skewer stick to check for to see if bread is fully baked.
  8. Remove from pans; tun unto a cooling rack.
This bread can be kept frozen for up to 2 months if properly packaged.
you can opt to use all white flour or 50/50 or 60/40 etc
.
Enjoy, and  your feed back, questions or suggestions are appreciated.


Friday, February 24, 2012

It's not that Complicated

I've been unable to post every week as promised, it wasn't on purpose or neglect in anyway; I have still been diligent in taking pictures of food cooked, and continue to be creative in the kitchen. 


Today, it''s about bread making and like the title says "it's not that complicated" is a truth and no, I am not talking about bread making with a bread machine. I don't know if you can relate, but kneading bread in some ways is therapeutic; fine you LOL, but that has been my experience.


Bread making for me started by observation;every Saturday morning my mom or dad would pull out the largest basin (bowl) and without measuring any ingredients, they would proceed to add flour, salt, margarine, sugar and yeast mixture into the basin, and mix together.  Then the fun part would begin; me the water pouter would have the pleasure of making a well in the centre of the flour mixture, and pour water into the hole. My parent would then begin the pulling together of wet and dry to form a massive dough; all sticky and pasty and my job was to add water or more flour as told.


The final outcome would be a well formed, smooth, elastic soft but firm dough. A clean towel would cover the dough and timer set for two hours. I would make frequent trips to the kitchen to see this big blob of dough rise rapidly, which fascinated me. 
OK, time to oil the pans - yeah, the second fun part is here. I loved watching the dough spread out on the table like the slow crawl of lava flowing from a volcano. With rapid motion from years of experience the dough would be sliced with a sharp knife into even pieces, rolled out on the table and with three 12" lengths they're braided; yes, like plaiting hair:)


By now you must know I am a lover of anything, or just about anything made with flour. Aside from kneading and eating fresh bread, the smell while it is being baked is one smell that never grows old on you. You know that bottle of perfume you save for special occasions and used sparingly? Well take it from me, the smell of bread is oh so ah, good. The finished product is simply beautiful; the tearing of warm bread with steam rising and butter spattered on quickly melts before it disappears into my mouth. 


Well, still to this day my mom continues to bake her own bread, and over the past 3 months we've decided to follow suit. Why? for health reason it's about preservatives and the other is cost.
Next post I will share the ease in baking bread from scratch; and you can give your bread machine a break.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Make It Your Way

There are a number of foods you can take and make your own and Pizza definitely sits on top of that list. When I think laid back; Friday night; week-end; warm weather and a nice cold beer. Yeah, it's pizza. Mind you I am not talking about the fast food greasy, soft, sloppy, salty and over priced pizza.
I got tired of trying different pizzas and with every bite; it was "I can do better", what a waste of hard earned money. I wanted something with flavour, taste, soft texture inside, and a thin crisp outer layer. I wanted to bite into a slice of pizza and experience a mix of dynamic flavours coming alive inside my mouth as the melted cheese makes a string of melody as my lips plays along.
Fresh herbs, Caribbean spices and as much or as little cheese you want-heck make it a lot of that gooey gooey melted goodness. 


It was a fun creative experience which turned out to be delicious; this is The Bam D Pizza Spinach, goat cheese, caramelize onions with sprinkles of cumin seeds, thin slices of spicy salami, pepperoni, colourful sweet peppers, thai basil, corn and pineapple makes this a winning combo, and a garlic crust completes this beauty.


This is home made pizza made easy, inexpensive, fresh, loaded with YOUR favourite toppings.
The Bam D Pizza
The toppings and dough can be prepared the night before; so the night you're planning to serve it; it's just load and go and within 45 minutes I had myself a. well take a look.  if you'd like the recipe drop me a line.