Archive for March, 2008

Backyard Foraging: Dandelion Greens

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

At various points in American history, from the Westward expansion to the Great Depression, hard times called for frugality in the homestead. For those generations of Americans, the knowledge of edible wild plants was not recreational, it was necessary; the collection of wild mushrooms wasn’t brave, it was survival.

These days, most people wouldn’t even consider scouring pastures and forests for dinner, much less the front lawn or cracks in the sidewalk. But whether we’re strapped for cash or are hunting for delicacies, there are many great reasons to overcome our recent cultural fear of foraged foods. One particularly abundant example appears this time of year in wild prairies as well as city streets: dandelion greens.

These small, tender greens are named for their sharp, tooth-shaped cutouts. Easily identifiable by its bright yellow flower, “dandelion” is an alliteration of the French dent de lion, or “lion’s tooth”.

Dandelion greens are as good in salads as they are sautéed. Use the young raw greens to replace arugula, watercress, or other peppery greens in salads. You can also treat dandelion like a cooking green, and throw it in a pan with garlic and butter.

Farmers’ markets and grocery stores will soon be selling bunches of these bright leaves, but you’ll probably walk on more dandelion greens on the way to the car than you can afford to buy. Save yourself the money - you’ll find plenty in your own backyard.

Link: How to Survive in New York on 99 Cents

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Henry Alford wrote an article about his recent foray into the 99-cent store diet.

Herb Garden

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008

Whether your backyard is a sun drenched farm or you live in a one-bedroom apartment on the tenth floor, growing your own herbs is easy and rewarding. Supermarkets’ high prices for rosemary and oregano become a thing of the past,Sage and you can finally perfect your bouillabaisse and pot-au-feu when your bouquet garni is just steps from your stove.

The reasons go beyond convenience and money saved. The taste of fresh, homegrown herbs can invigorate your recipes and give depth where the dried versions fall short of that complete, well-rounded flavor.

The Basics

Rosemary, oregano, sage, thyme and mint can survive dry, hot, summer dirt, as well as damp, cold windowsills. These herbs are hearty and adaptable, not to mention ubiquitous in your recipes. All they need is a little dirt, a little water, and direct sunlight if you’re feeling fancy.

Given how easy it is to grow these herbs, not to mention the culinary benefits of having them fresh, getting these plants started when you move houses or apartments should be an urgent need. After cleaning the fridge, but before unpacking your shoes.

The Next Level

Basil, tarragon, chives, cilantro, dill, and parsley are more delicate in disposition, needing a bit of care to ensure proper soil and drainage. Without healthy sunlight, these herbs can be minimal producers.

But the pleasures of fresh pesto, homegrown cilantro in your carnitas tacos, and crackling chicken skin with lemon and fresh tarragon can convince us to kick the dog off the bed and coo our sensitive, potted herbs to sleep at night.

The Exotics

Many herbs don’t make it into the the kitchen nearly as often as they should. High prices and rarity can stigmatize them as “special occasion” herbs, but if you’ve got a garden and a decently green thumb (give or take a shade of brown), there’s no reason to not grow them at home.

Shiso, lemongrass, and hoja santa fall into this category. These plants are certainly not native to our backyard, but we’ll be working hard this spring to make sure our tom yum and mole verde have that fresh punch of flavor that you can only get with homegrown herbs.

Wine: Ravenswood Old Vine Zinfandel, Pier 1 Stemless Glasses

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Ravenswood Sonoma County Old Vine Zinfandel

This wine is refreshing and easy-drinking, but without the bombastic jam and bright berries you might expect from younger zinfandel vines. The old vines’ pepper and tannins give this wine a playful, palatable core with surprising depth, like the soundtrack to a Wes Anderson movie.

At $15 a bottle, this is a great bottle to stock up on for summer barbeques.

 

Pier 1: Stemless Wine Glasses

Pier 1 is offering stemless wine glasses for $2. These glasses feel large and solid in the hand, unlike the ultra-thin (and ultra-breakable) Riedel versions. Without the fragile stems, these are the right choice for lively dinner parties. The quality of these glasses far exceeds the price.

Crème Fraîche

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Europe knows dairy.

The sheer number of incredible cheeses in such a small continent is evidence of a deep cultural wisdom. Even the butter, which is cultured into a yeasty, umami-rich, eat-it-by-the-spoonful kind of delicacy, towers above the lumps of bland milk fat Americans have given the same name.

The European dairy section of your local fancy food shop can be an amusement park for adventurous eaters, but the cheaper American analogues of all this fermented milk can - to put it bluntly - spoil a meal.

Here at the Budget Gourmet Kitchen, we have been searching for ways to enjoy the delicious world of European dairy without having to pay the high price accompanying imported food. While we haven’t found a way to transform the American versions of muenster, gouda, and brie into their flavorful European predecessors, we have found a gem that can be perfectly recreated using pasteurized cream and common American dairy products: crème fraîche.

French for fresh cream, crème fraîche is the result of letting unpasteurized heavy cream sit at room temperature - an act that feels thrilling and naughty the first time you try it. Microbes that occur naturally in cow’s milk will break down parts of the cream; the result is thick and tart, almost yogurt-like in flavor and appearance. Because of its high fat percentage, crème fraîche can be stirred up into a tangy whipped cream, or cooked into sauces without the fear of separation or curdling.

Making Crème Fraîche at Home

The bacteria responsible for the cream’s blossoming into crème fraîche is, unfortunately, destroyed during pasteurization. Luckily, the very same bacteria can be found in buttermilk or sour cream. As long as the buttermilk or sour cream has live cultures, they will convert the heavy cream into crème fraîche if left to sit at room temperature for a day or two.

Add two tablespoons of buttermilk or half a cup of sour cream to each cup of heavy cream. Let sit at room temperature (around 70°F), stirring every 8 hours. Once the cream has thickened to an almost yogurt-like consistency, put it in the fridge where it will further thicken and keep for two weeks.

Links

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Here are a couple links sent in by readers:

Cooking Seasonally: Beets

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Beets

Beets present big obstacles for the home chef. Stained counter tops and chopping blocks, as well as a somewhat lengthy preparation process, cause many of us to leave beets to the restaurants. But beyond these hurdles lie tender, sweet roots that stay firm and moist through cooking, nutritious chard-like leaves and dazzling colors when winter has bled the land of all pigment.

Some species are grown and processed commercially for their high sugar content, and some for their characteristic red dye. In the grocery store you will usually find theBeetpan common red beet, with its sweet and strongly earthy flavor. Also common is the golden variety, whose earthiness is less pronounced, and occasionally the sweeter but slightly less firm white-fleshed variety.

At one point considered an aphrodisiac, beets have been forsaken by many home chefs who associate the red root with bland, thin soup recipes from Eastern European great grandparents. But there is no need to banish these vegetables to the culinary calaboose. A natural pairing with acidic flavors, they make a great addition to salads with endive, goat cheese, hazelnuts and a balsamic vinagrette. They can be pickled with vinegar and sugar and stored for summer months. In our favorite recipe, given below, they are steamed and paired with the flavors of fennel, rosemary, cracked pepper and gruyère.

Beet juice can blemish wood, so use a plastic cutting board to minimize kitchen pigmentation. Betanins, the chemical group responsible for the beet’s striking colors, are water soluble; just wipe away any spilled juices with a sponge. If you’re squeamish about colored hands, use thin latex gloves.

Gougères Stuffed with Beets and Fennel

Prepare a pound of beets by chopping off all but two inches of the leaves, place in a deep baking dish with an inch of water, and cover with foil. Place in a 400° oven until tender in the center (note: smaller beets cook quicker, and often taste better), approximately 30 minutes for two-inch wide beets. After cooling the cooked beets, slip off the skin under cold water and set aside.

gougeresMake the gougères: bring a cup of milk and a stick of butter to a near boil. Add a teaspoon of salt and half a tablespoon each of freshly cracked black pepper and crushed rosemary. Add a cup of white flour and beat over low heat for two minutes (it will be thick). Add 3/4 cup of grated gruyère and mix until you have a homogeneous, gooey dough. Remove from heat and add four beaten eggs, stirring until the dough comes together. On a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, spoon balls of dough 1.5 inches thick, 3 inches apart. Wipe with egg wash and bake at 425° until golden brown, around 12 minutes.

After the gougères cool, slice them in half into top and bottom. Fill with a mound of thinly cut fennel, a few slices of beet, and a few drops of lemon juice.

Article: How to be a foodie without breaking the bank

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Novella Carpenter wrote an article about a foodie in the Bay Area working with a very limited budget.

Wine: La Vielle Ferme, La Crema, Vin de Pays & Vin de Table

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

We love wine. We love drinking it, we love cooking with it, and we love running our finger through the layer of dust that settles on bottles which have somehow managed to survive in our basement for more than a few days. We just don’t like paying a premium for it. Our Wine series will feature notes on our favorite great-value wines, plus tips and tricks for finding excellent wine at low prices.

La Vieille Ferme: Côtes du Ventoux 2005 (Red)

This robust wine is made in the foothills of the Provence behemoth, Mt. Ventoux (”The Windy Mountain” in Provençal, a local dialect). It’s a robust, ripe Côtes du Rhône, and for $8 this is a great wine for every day drinking and cooking.

La Vielle Ferme balances its chewy Grenache backbone with spicy, smokey Syrah, Carignan, and Cinsault. Have a glass with a hearty lunch to keep the blood flowing during the cold days in the garden, or try it in your next Coq au Vin.

http://www.bevmo.com/

La Crema: Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir 2005 / 2006

At $19 a bottle (2006), this Pinot Noir is an excellent value for evenings that call for something classy. This is a well balanced wine from California’s Sonoma Coast, with dynamics not often achieved in this price range.

Take a sip and you’ll notice the distinct lack of a punch-in-the-mouth sensation of explosive fruit, all too common in New World Pinots. Slowly, after swallowing, the flavors come trickling in. A soft duet between cranberries and vanilla nearly becomes a symphony before the decrescendo. By avoiding that overpowering first sip, La Crema has made a wine we could drink all day.

http://www.klwines.com/

Tip: Vin de Pays / Vin de Table

One trick to cut down on the cost of imported French wine is to look for “Table Wine” and “Country Wine” on the label. In French, Vin de Table and Vin de Pays (similar phrases exist in other European languages).

It’s tempting to assume that these wines would be thin and underdeveloped, but the distinction between Vin de Table, Vin de Pays, and AOC (the third and most popular category for French wine exported to America) lies in tradition.

Wine designated AOC must grow only traditional grapes and use traditional harvesting and winemaking methods. These traditions are different for each AOC region and are strict, usually resulting in a more expensive wine. Vin de Table and Vin de Pays, however, are much less strict, and are quite often less expensive.

So what do you get with a less restricted wine making process? Sometimes it means super-dense vine planting or fast fermentation, which can lead to bad wine. But sometimes it simply means that the vintner added a grape variety that was not deemed “traditional” in his city. Or perhaps his winemaking methods were distinctly modern, preventing an AOC designation.

Ask for a good Vin de Pays or Vin de Table the next time you’re looking for French wine at your local bottle shop. You might find a gem of a wine for much less than its AOC counterparts.

Cooking Seasonally: Kohlrabi

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

One of the best ways to make great food affordably is to cook seasonally and locally. By choosing produce during the peak of its local harvest (which will change from region to region), we can make food that’s good for us, good for farmers, easy on the wallet, and tastes wonderful. The Budget Gourmet Kitchen series Cooking Seasonally will discuss recipes, kitchen lore, and frugal practices about a highlighted seasonal ingredient.

Winter may seem like the least fruitful season, with its gloomy skies and bare trees. During the cold weather, many plants save energy by dropping their leaves and sending sugar underground where the energy will be stored until sunnier weather. Not surprisingly, some of the best produce this time of year is root vegetables, which are full of life while many fruit trees are sleeping.

One of the few non-root vegetable families that can hold up to the heavy rains and frost of harsh winters is the cabbage family. This familly includes broccoli, cabbage, kale, and today’s special guest, kohlrabi.

While kohlrabi is not quite a root vegetable, its bulbous stem makes it look like a close relative. The stem has a hard green or purple skin, with a sweet, earthy, pale center similar to celery root or parsnips. The leaves can grow two feet tall, and are close in consistency and flavor to swiss chard.

Thanks to enzymes common in the cabbage family, you can play with the spiciness of kohlrabi by blanching. If desired, dunk slices of the peeled stem into boiling water for a few seconds immediately after cutting to subdue the spiciness. This will kill the enzymes responsible for developing spiciness and the kohlrabi will taste less like a radish and more like a celery root.

Our favorite kohlrabi dish, Kohlrabi Gratin, is made with the peeled and sliced stem, but make sure to keep the leaves handy for a side dish of sautéed greens. Gratin purists will be horrified by our use of a white sauce flavored with spices and - gasp! - cheese.

But here at the Budget Gourmet Kitchen we’ve found that Kohlrabi releases so much water during cooking that, without the thickness of a white sauce, the gratin can fall apart between the oven and the dinner table. The herbs and spices in the sauce help complement the earthy and spicy flavors of kohlrabi. And the cheese? Gratin purist or not, you’ve got to appreciate the salty crunch and gooey creaminess of melted, slightly browned cheese.

Kohlrabi Gratin

Peel and slice 3 - 4 kohlrabi bulbs and set aside. Make a roux with 2 Tbs. each of flour and butter, and add a cup of warm milk to make a white sauce. Flavor with salt, herbs and spices — our favorites for this dish are usually some combination of nutmeg, white pepper, ginger, rosemary, and Dijon mustard. Add a sprinkle of emmenthaler or gryuère to thicken the sauce if needed.

Preheat the oven to 400°. Cover the bottom of a deep baking dish with slices of kohlrabi, and spoon enough sauce to nearly cover. Continue alternating kohlrabi and sauce, and finish with a shredded handful of emmenthaler or gruyère. Bake until the cheese on top is brown and the kohlrabi pieces are tender, around 40 minutes depending on the thickness of the slices.

You can also experiment by adding other sliced vegetables to the mix, like potatoes and celery root.