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MAKE IT! Longaniza update

I realize that not everyone has access to (or the inclination to buy/use) a sausage stuffer. I don't want to inhibit people from making this month's recipe due to lack of equipment. While I was researching Longaniza, I ran across a note by Rick Bayless saying that you can make longaniza as an unstuffed sausage. Instead of stuffing the longaniza into casings and drying for three days, simply place it in a colander over a bowl in the refrigerator for 2 days. Then you can use it in tacos or burritos or with rice and beans or on nachos, whatever you like. Be creative! 

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MAKE IT! Longaniza

Longaniza is a pork sausage related to chorizo. The version I propose making (and there are many, from the Philippines, to South America, to Spain) is from Southeastern Mexico. Longaniza, like chorizo, comes in dry cured and fresh varieties. This is a fresh sausage. 

Beyond my interest in charcuterie, I was delighted to find a recipe that features bitter (Seville) oranges, which I have been lately extremely excited about using. Seville oranges are now becoming more readily available in the United States. (If you don't think you can get your hands on Seville oranges there is a substitution you can make.)
Achiote (annatto seed) paste can be found in the Mexican aisle of your grocer or at Latino markets (or see link below). Hog casings can be ordered in advance from your local butcher in specified lengths at a per foot price or purchased online at Butcher & Packer or Sausage Maker (see link below for inexpensive purchase of a small quantity).
Longaniza Tabasqueña
--adapted from My Mexico by Diana Kennedy
2 lbs well-marbled pork shoulder
14 garlic cloves, chopped
1 TBS kosher salt
1 tsp black peppercorns
a heaping 1/4 tsp lightly roasted cumin seeds
1 TBS achiote paste
1/2 cup plus 2 TBS bitter orange juice* 

approx 4 ft hog casings, soaked in tepid water for at least 30 minutes and rinsed

Trim the sinew from the meat and cut it into small cubes. Grind (or chop VERY fine) the meat, using the small dye of a meat grinder. Refrigerate the meat. 

Grind the salt, peppercorns, and cumin seeds in a spice grinder or with a mortar and pestle. Smash the garlic to a paste and combine with the spice mixture and the achiote. Dilute with 2 TBS bitter orange juice. Take the meat from the refrigerator and gently mix it together with the garlic-achiote-spice paste. Add the rest of the bitter orange juice little by little. Cover and refrigerate overnight. 

Next day, rinse then soak casings in tepid water for 30 minutes. Remove the meat from the refrigerator and stir the meat well to distribute the juices that have collected in the bowl. Stuff the meat into the casings, fairly loosely, making approx 11 inch lengths (You should get about 3 long sausages). Tie securely and hang to dry in the refrigerator for 3 days. 

Typically this type of longaniza is grilled whole. It will keep in the fridge for approx 3 weeks, but will continue to dry out. You can coat it lightly with lard and freeze it after the first three days of drying if you want to keep it longer than that.

If you can't get your hands on Seville oranges, substitute their juice in the recipe with this: 
2 TBS fresh grapefruit juice
2 TBS fresh orange juice
1 tsp finely grated grapefruit rind
1/4 fresh lime juice

Mix together about 1 hour before using.

As usual, send me your photos and impressions and I will post them in roughly a month's time. 

Filed under  //   Seville oranges   make it!   pork   sausage  

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MAKE IT! Results: "The Queen of Hot Pastries"

"Queen of Hot Pastries" is right! What fun it was making soufflés! I'm happy to say that Jamie and Wendy are keeping this feature alive and I am so grateful for their participation. Both of them made the Cheese soufflé and sent pictures and stories of other soufflés they made. All efforts were successful. Wendy and I both worried about every aspect our first attempts. Before making the cheese soufflé, Wendy made chocolate dessert soufflés that she had been meaning to make for quite a while. She said,"All along I kept thinking I'd messed it up. The chocolate wasn't right (I let it cook too long, it was too thick) I didn't beat the egg whites long enough or maybe I beat them too much, I errored on the side of caution and didn't fold enough..." But success! Everything came out perfectly. Judge for yourself!

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In a completely fortuitous coincidence, the day I posted this MAKE IT! challenge Jamie's daughter had asked him to make soufflés for breakfast. He sent along this wonderful picture of what they made together: Potato Soufflé. 
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All three of use had the chance to make the recipe for Cheese Soufflé. We all loved it. Jamie, who wins the volume prize said it was "like eating a tasty cloud." Look at this puffy masterpiece:
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And Wendy said,"It was wonderful!!!! The kids loved it. We loved it. I should have made two because this one was not enough."
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I made it one evening when Yolanda & Frank and baby Sasha joined us for dinner and I worried and worried that I shouldn't have made it the first time for guests (I'll never learn!). But Yolanda reassured me and we were all delighted with the results. 
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I made the Grand Marnier Soufflé, which was a hit. I had much more confidence this time around and didn't worry too much about making it for the first time for guests also. 
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Finally, Jamie sent along this amazing lobster soufflé he undertook with a friend a couple of years back.

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I'm getting ready to post another MAKE IT! and hope to snag a couple of additional participants this time! Thanks again to Jamie and Wendy!!

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Make IT! Soufflé Update

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For those who made, or are planning to make, soufflés for the current MAKE IT! project, send me your results, reactions, and photos by Saturday. I'll post all of our results then. I'm also planning to post the new MAKE IT! this weekend. 

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MAKE IT! "The Queen of Hot Pastries"

a.k.a. Soufflé

I made my first soufflé last week--and yes, it was the gooey, molten chocolate variety. I've been meaning to make a big--and what I imagine to be glorious--soufflé for years now and have never gotten around to it. So now's the time. 

The first challenge seems to be the egg whites. How stiff should they be? How do you know when they are at the right volume? And then there is the terror of folding. How do you know if you've over-folded and lost too much air? 

I did a little reading on these topics. Harold McGee, in his inimitable On Food and Cooking, has this to say about whipping egg whites for soufflés:

"The best consistency for egg whites in a soufflé preparation is stiff yet moist, glossy peaks. A stiff but dry foam is harder to mix evenly with the base, while a softer foam is still coarse--so the soufflé texture will be the same--and may leave the mix so runny that it will overflow before it sets." (p 112)

After getting the whites right and before you start folding, it's important to lighten the base (bechamel, pastry creme, cheese, chocolate, fruit syrup, vegetable puree, or liqueur). This is done by mixing between a quarter and a third of the egg whites into the base before folding the two together.  

Now, how to fold. Alice Waters describes the technique in The Art of Simple Food:

"To fold, cut straight down through the mixture at the center of the bowl, all the way to the bottom, using the edge of the spatula as a blade. Scrape back to the side on the bottom of the bowl, turning the spatula and bringing it up the side and back over the top with a hand and repeat the circular motion of downstroke and enfolding upstroke, rotating the bowl with each stroke, and repeating until there are only a few streaks of white here and there." (p 169)

McGee says that you can usually expect to lose between a quarter and half of the egg white volume from folding. 

It sounds like making the perfect soufflé just takes a little practice. So let's do it! Here are a couple of recipes. One is a basic dessert soufflé and the other a basic savory soufflé.

Grand Marnier Souffle
-adapted from The Gourmet Cookbook
*This soufflé is made in a gratin pan (flatter than a traditional ceramic soufflé pan) and is not meant to rise terribly high.

2/3 cup sugar
1-1/3 c whole milk
1 stick (8 TBS) butter
1/2 c all purpose flour
4 large eggs, separated, left at room temperature for 30 minutes
1/2 c Grand Marnier
4 large egg whites left at room temperature for 30 minutes
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp cream tartar

a little extra butter and sugar for the dish

Put your oven rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 400F. Butter a 16" gratin dish and sprinkle with sugar. Knock out excess sugar. 

Bring the milk to a simmer in a small saucepan and remove from heat. 

Melt butter over low heat stir in flour and cook, stirring, for 5 min. to make roux. Remove the pan from heat and add milk in a steady stream, whisking constantly, then add the 2/3 cup sugar, whisking vigorously. Cook, whisking all the while, over low heat until smooth. 

Remove pan from the heat and add yolks one-by-one, mixing each until incorporated then adding the next. Slowly whisk in the Grand Marnier. Cover with a buttered square of waxed paper  (to prevent a skin from forming) and cool to room temp. 

Beat 8 egg whites with salt in a large bowl in your mixer at medium speed until frothy. Add cream of tartar, increase speed to high, and beat until white hold stiff peaks. Mix 1/4 to 1/3 of whites into base mixture to lighten it, then gently fold base mixture into remaining whites. 

Reserve 1 cup of mixture and transfer reminder to the gratin dish. Mound reserved mixture in the middle. bake soufflé until puffed and golden, 25-30 min. Take it straight to the table eat it. 

Cheese Soufflé
*This souffle is meant to be a bit saucy in the middle

5 TBS butter
1/4 c flour
1-1/2 c milk
salt and pepper
freshly grated nutmeg
5 eggs, separated
1-1/2 c grated gruyere cheese
3 egg whites

Put the oven rack in the lower third of the oven and preheat to 425F. Butter a traditional 2 quart soufflé dish.

Make the bechamel: Melt butter over medium heat. Whisk in flour and cook until foaming. Add milk, bring to a boil, whisking constantly until the sauce thickens. Season with salt, pepper & nutmeg and simmer for 1 minute. 

Remove from heat and whisk the egg yolks into the hot bechamel so it thickens slightly. Stir in the cheese, but keep just a little aside for the topping. Taste the base, making sure it is highly seasoned (to compensate for the bland egg whites). Press a piece of buttered waxed paper over the top. Cool. (The preceding part of the recipe can be done up to 5 hours ahead of time and kept at room temp.)

Reheat base mixture until just hot to the touch, no more. Beat egg whites, with a pinch of salt, until stiff using a stand mixer. Add a quarter to a third of the egg whites to the base to lighten it. Add the base to the remaining egg whites and fold them together. Spoon the mixture into the buttered dish (it should be almost up to the edge). Sprinkle the reserved cheese on top. 

Bake the soufflé until puffed and brown still a bit wobbly when shaken; 20-25 minutes. If you prefer the center more firm cook another 3-5 minutes. Take to the table and eat!

In the October 2009 issue of Cook's Illustrated is a lemon skillet soufflé. If you have a copy of the magazine I encourage you to try it, or if it sounds good to you, you can get it from their website if you sign up for their free 14-day free trial membership. If you do sign up, they also have an instructional video with this recipe. 

Send me your feedback, experiences, and recommendations after you make one of these (or all of them!) along with a photo. I'll post all of our results next month. If you have a souffle recipe that you particularly like, send the recipe and picture as your Make It! entry and I'll post it as well. 

Have fun!

Filed under  //   make it!   soufflé   vegetarian  

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MAKE IT! Results: Soupe à l'Oignon Grantinée

After two years of thinking about making Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée, I was not disappointed when I finally did make it. The technique was very easy, though somewhat more time consuming than I had imagined. I did end up caramelizing the onions which adds some additional prep time. I wonder if toasting the bread is entirely necessary. Next time, I think I will just use day- (or two) old bread.

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Both Wendy and I used the Emmental cheese which makes a nice, crisp top crust. Wendy felt the "crusty cheese top was divine and totally made up for any mush." Jamie substituted Gruyere because Emmental was not available. The Gruyere did not seem to crisp up as well and Jamie finally ended up putting his soupe under the broiler. 
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As I mentioned, I caramelized the onions which took a little added time. It was worth it, in my opinion. I debated adding stock instead of salt water, as Jamie did, but settled on deglazing the onion pan with a little white wine and adding the salt water to the scrapings to make an onion-y broth. I think I would advise against using a meat broth, in the end. As Jamie said, "toasted bread, carmelized onions, yummy cheese, butter, and tomato puree turned out to provide plenty of richness."

The best part of making this dish was the construction. First, the toasted, buttered bread topped with cheese. 
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Then, a layer of onions with tomato puree drizzled over them. 
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Finally, a layer of cheese. Then repeat to fill the kettle.
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Add the salty water and cook for 90 minutes, uncovered. The final picture is Wendy's. Yum!

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The dish was thick, rich and delicious. My kids were a little reluctant to eat it, but liked it once they did. We only ate half of it on the day we made it. I reheated the leftovers the next night to use as a side dish and it was fabulous. 

I love Wendy's family's reaction: "My husband and six-year-old LOVED it! I was surprised when my 6-year-old asked for seconds. The 4-year-old? Well, he doused his in ketchup and ate maybe two bites. I guess everyone's entitled to their opinion." 

Thanks to those who participated in MAKE IT! If you didn't get around to it this time, I hope you'll try it next time. 

Filed under  //   make it!   results   savory bread pudding   soup  

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MAKE IT! update

I want to give people who want to make Soupe a l'Oignon Gratinee one month instead of one week (what was I thinking?!). One person besides myself has made the dish. Her results were great and she took a really nice picture. I will share my photos and results, as well as any others I receive in January.

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MAKE IT! Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée

I would like to introduce what I hope will be a regular feature of this blog, called MAKE IT! I will give you a week (or so) to make a recipe I present here. After you've made it, send me your pictures and a couple sentences about your experience with the dish: did you like it? what would you do differently in future? and so forth. I will then post your feedback along with my own. 

In the spirit of my previous post on Bready Things, I thought I would introduce a bready recipe I have wanted to make. For over two years I have intended to make Henri Babinski's 1907 recipe for Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée as described in Amanda Hesser's 2007 article in The New York Times. 

This is the perfect recipe for this time of year. The ingredients are very basic, the method is fairly straight forward. I adore well-made french onion soup, it is perhaps one of the ultimate comfort foods. But this, but this! Layers of onions, buttered bread and pureed tomato cooked in savory liquid and topped with cheese. It has to be divine! Doesn't it?! MAKE IT! and let me know. 

Here's the link to the recipe:

Filed under  //   make it!   savory bread pudding   soup   vegetarian  

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