Showing posts with label appetizer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appetizer. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Roasted Tomato - Jalapeno Salsa

July/August Theme: Homemade summer

Well, Readers, summer, and "homemade summer" here on the blog, are both coming to an end. I've tried to come up with some creative ideas for food items to make yourself over these last two months.

And while I think all of them turned out to be really interesting and are recipes that I'll continue to use, I will say this: if you decide based on this series to start making only one thing from scratch, I think it should be salsa. Because aside from all of the environmental reasons for cooking from scratch previously discussed, homemade salsa is just so much better tasting than store-bought salsa. I feel like the two should not even really be in the same category.


When I make my own salsa, I usually make a really simple tomato, onion, and cilantro salsa, but I decided to try and do something more ambitious. This recipe has pretty much the same basic ingredients, but you roast the tomatoes, garlic, and jalapenos before blending them in a food processor. This brought up a couple of new techniques for me: broiling tomatoes in the oven to roast them, and roasting unpeeled garlic along with jalapenos until they are blackened.

The result?

The roasted flavor is really good - it adds a lot of complexity to the flavor of the salsa - and I am also now questioning whether or not there is that much that smells better than garlic being roasted over a flame in its papery skin. So you don't want to miss that.




I made a double batch of this and after five days or so of eating it, mixed it with two avocados (so one avocado per recipe as below) to make a pretty amazing guacamole.

Lastly, I forgot to commemorate this at the time, but the blog was one year old as of July! The first post also happened to be a do-it-yourself recipe just like this one: homemade honey-mustard-ginger vinaigrette salad dressing.


Roasted Tomato-Jalapeno Salsa
From Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen: Capturing the Vibrant Flavor of a World-Class Cuisine 

Makes about 2 cups

1 pound (2 medium - large round or 6-8 plum) red, ripe tomatoes
2 large fresh jalapeno chiles
3 garlic cloves, unpeeled
salt, about 1/2 t
1/2 small or 1/3 medium white onion, finely chopped
1/3 C loosely packed chopped cilantro
1 1/2 t apple cider vinegar
juice of 1/2 lime

1. Cut the tomatoes in half, and lay on a baking sheet and place about 4 inches below a very hot broiler. Roast until blistered and blacked on one side, about 6 minutes; with a pair of tongs, flip the tomatoes and roast on the other side, about another 6 minutes.
2. While the tomatoes are roasting, roast the chiles and unpeeled garlic directly on an ungreased griddle or heavy skillet over medium heat. Turn occasionally until both chiles and garlic are blackened in spots and soft, 5-10 minutes for the chiles, and about 15 minutes for the garlic (remove the chiles from the pan once they are done). Cool, pull the stem off the chiles, and peel the papery skins from the garlic.
3. Once tomatoes are done: cool them, then peel the skins off, collecting any juices with the tomatoes.
4. In a food processor, grind the chiles (including seeds), garlic, and 1/4 teaspoon of the salt to a course paste, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl a couple of times. Add the tomatoes and pulse a few times until you have a course-textured puree. Transfer the salsa to a serving bowl, and stir in any reserved tomato juices.
5. Stir the finely chopped onion into the salsa, as well as the vinegar, other 1/4 teaspoon of salt, cilantro, and lime juice.

The salsa comes into its own a few hours after it's finished. Keeps in the refrigerator for at least a week.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Sweet Potato, Cardamom & Coconut Spread



Whether or not I've cooked with cardamom before, which I'm having trouble remembering, I did learn this while cooking this recipe: it smells amazing while it's cooking. Spicy and sweet and somehow really woodsy-smelling, it kind of made me want to cook up just milk and cardamom for the smell in my apartment, especially now that it's cold and dark outside.

So I was already really into the recipe because of the smell, but I'd say that the taste lived up to it. It kind of tastes like pumpkin pie in a spread, but with the uniqueness of the cardamom and coconut.

One thing about it is that it's pretty sweet, so it tastes much better with something savory that cuts the sweetness somewhat, such as goat cheese. You can combine those on baguette.

Another idea: all week, I've been eating it with peanut butter in a sandwich for lunch at work. It's really good.









Sweet Potato & Coconut Spread

2 pounds of sweet potatoes
2 C milk
1 C white sugar
1/2 C dark brown sugar
1 cinnamon stick
1.5 t vanilla extract
3/4 t ground cardamom
1 C dried unsweetened coconut

1. Peel the sweet potatoes and cut into small pieces, about 1-inch or less to a side. Put in a large, heavy pan over medium heat. Add the milk, sugars, cinnamon, vanilla, and cardamom.

2. Cook over medium heat until the sweet potatoes are soft and tender. Keep an eye on it, as the milk foams up. After the milk comes to a simmer, it will be about 15 minutes before the sweet potatoes are soft. Once the sweet potatoes are soft and tender, mash them into a pulp with a potato masher. Stir well as you do this.

3. Keep the heat on medium and continue simmer, stirring frequently. When the mixture is reduces and thick like a jam, remove from heat. Keep a close eye on it so it doesn't burn as the milk reduces. This takes between 20 and 30 minutes. Stir in the coconut and let cool before serving. Store in refrigerator.

**Try with goat cheese on bread or crackers.