Sunday, September 20, 2015
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Friday, September 11, 2015
Quinoa Granola Recipe
60 ml butter,
175 ml honey,
225 grams brown sugar,
1 liter toasted Quinoa,
1/2 liter toasted and chopped pecans,
7 grams salt.
Place butter, honey and brown sugar in a heavy bottom sauce pan. Bring to a simmer. Add Quinoa, pecans and salt. Simmer for 1 minute. Let cool briefly and shape into desired patterns or shapes. Once cooled completely cut to size.
Store wrapped in air tight container in a cool dry place. 1 week shelf.
Maple vinaigrette recipe
1/2 tsp garlic over a micro plane,
1 TB whole grain mustard,
5 TB champagne vinegar,
8 TB extra virgin olive oil,
8 TB canola or grape seed oil,
8 TB good quality maple syrup.
Place all ingredients in a bowl and ix together. Slowly add the oils making an emulsification. Season to taste with salt sugar and fresh ground black pepper.
Store refrigerated until needed, 1 week shelf.
I use this as the dressing on a beets salad. The beets I dress with vinaigrette's made from their cooking juices and the maple vinaigrette is used on the greens.
Potato pancake base
We are doing a potato "pancake" right now. Done in 8 inch egg pans, with apple preserves, sour cream, dill, salmon roe and cured salmon. Make sure to season the potatoes well before and after...
Make a batter of:
6 eggs,
2 TB pork spice,
1 pint flour,
2 TB salt,
4 cups milk,
4 cloves of garlic, micro planed.
Box grate and squeeze out all moisture of 5 Idaho potatoes and mix with the preceding batter. Fry in hot egg pans (canola or grape seed oil) until golden brown on each side. Place on a rack and keep warm until service.
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Quahog Clam Chowder with Crispy Clam Fritters
Using which ever local clams you can get, can be substituted for the above mentioned. This is what is available now.
For 4 people.
Chowder: 2 tsp rendered bacon fat, 2 ribs celery, chopped, 1 large shallot, peeled and finely chopped, 8 clams, scrubbed, 2 bay leaves, 1 cup dry Savignon Blanc, 2 ounces yukon gold potatoes, peeled, cut into 1/2 inch pieces, trim reserved, 1/2 cup cream, salt and pepper to taste.
For the clam fritters : 5.5 ounces cooked clam meat, chopped, 1 cup all purpose flour, 1/4 cup stone ground corn meal, 1 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp salt and fresh ground pepper, 2 large eggs, 1 cup whole milk, 1 tsp finely chopped parsley, 1 tsp finely chopped chives, 1 tsp finely chopped tarragon, 1 TB finely chopped scallions, 1 TB finely chopped shallots, 2 TB finely chopped celery, kosher salt for seasoning and malt vinegar powder for seasoning.
For the dish : Canola oil for deep frying, 1 TB finely chopped celery, 1 ounce dried chorizo, finely chopped.
For the garnish : Baby celery, parsley leaves, Mustard flowers.
In a large pot over medium heat, add the bacon fat, celery, and shallots, sauteing until just translucent. Add the clams, bay leaves, and white wine and simmer, covered. When the clams begin to open, lower the heat, remove from the pot, and discard any un opened clams. Shuck the clams and strain through a fine mesh sieve, adding juice back to the pot. Reserve meat for the fritters. Add the potato pieces and stir in the cream, continuing to simmer. Season with salt and pepper and remove from heat. Discard bay leaves and transfer to a blender. Blend on high speed for at least 1 minute. Strain through chinois and keep warm.
For the fritters : Heat a deep fryer to 325 degrees. Mix together clam meat and all other ingredients, adding more flour if batter seems to wet or clam juice if batter seems to dry. Form small mounds and fry until golden brown.
To serve : Spoon chowder into a shallow bowl. Add fritters, reserved potato trimming, celery and chorizo. Garnish with baby celery, parsley leaves and mustard flowers.
Salad of Raw Herbs and Vegetables with Creamy Tarragon Vinaigrette
For a long time this is something that I really have wanted to do. A summer salad made with raw assorted baby heirloom vegetables, herbs and flowers. The dressing works very well as it does not weigh down the greens or vegetables but has enough flavor to transfer over with out having to drown everything.
Dehydrated Olives : 1 cup mixed pitted olives
For the salad : Assorted baby heirloom vegetables ( baby candy cane or chiogga beets, english peas, baby leeks, assorted squash and zuchinni )
Assorted herbs and flowers (picked tarragon, parsley, dill, baby mustard greens, baby kale, nostrum flowers and greens)
Extra Virgin Olive Oil and Salt, fresh Pepper.
For the dehydrated olives : Place in a dehydrator set at 135 degrees for at least 12 hours. Transfer olives to a cutting board and finely chop. Store in an air tight container.
For the Creamy Tarragon Vinaigrette : 1/2 cup aoili, 1/4 cup butter milk, 2 TB minced tarragon, salt and pepper to taste. Combine all ingredients and season to taste. Transfer to a squeeze bottle and store chilled.
To serve:
Dress the greens and vegetables with the dressing. You can wisk the dressing right before to incorporate some air to make it even lighter. Place on serving vessel and sprinkle with dehydrated olives. Dot with extra virgin olive oil. Using the dressing that has been whipped, add dots and lines around the salad. Add flowers. A little bit of fresh whole grain mustard scattered about.
For the above vegetables I shuck some of the fresh peas but leave some in tact and just halve them. Do not dress the flowers and be careful to not over dress the greens. In fact all I dress are the vegetables and maybe half of the green's.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
new plates... and pork perogies....
We had this beautiful french china set donated to us a week ago by a grateful customer. Villeroy and boch. Also a pork rogie dish with apples and Marigold market greens.
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
pig from the "farmer"
Every other week a local farmer will bring in to us a fresh kill. This time it was a pig, sometimes we only buy half, other times we buy the whole animal. With this pig being around 240 lbs we took half. So they split the animal right down the middle, wrap it in plastic, load it into their pick up and drive into chicago. Once in the city, in the alley several of us will go outside and carry the animal inside and off the farmer goes. Thats just the beginning for us. Regardless of what we choose to buy that week be it a goat, lamb or pig, a decent amount of time and thought goes into the breakdown of the animal. In this case we save the front and back legs for hams or to cure. The tenderloin will be first to be served, unless we have the heart and liver in which case they are. Next will be the belly section to be cured and confit'd, the loin, hocks, etc. All the way down to the fat which we clean up and portion to be used in the future cooking, as well as the skin which we slowly poach until tender and then reserve for a number of possibilities. Nothing is wasted, the bones are roasted for a pork jus, even the blood if it is a fresh farm kill from that morning.
I feel like when getting in an entire animal it changes how you treat and prepare the animal. You have much more respect and appreciation not only for the product itself but knowing that an animal has been killed for you, you almost take on a responsibility morally to make sure this animal was not killed just to be stocked on a shelf in a grocery store somewhere.
Its good for the cooks as well, giving them the same feeling of respect for the animal.
closing time
Monday, August 10, 2015
staff
The biggest challenge we face every day and continue to do so is aquire and retain great staff.
Over the course of the last 2 weeks we have lost 4 people, one of them being management. It just kept getting worse every day something seemed to come up. There was a stretch of 6 days where we could not even make it through a day with out someone calling in or no showing. And in this industry, unlike other jobs, if some one does not come in, that work, that station still must go on. For some one to not even call is to myself and a few of my friends a sign of complete dis respect. Because the individual doing this knows that the above must go on and that some one or every one is going to at the last minute have to put their work together.
I only bring this up because Jimmy and I were very down a week ago, wondering if we were doing some thing wrong, and if not us then what is causing this to occur so frequently.
Who knows... We could speculate for ever. Only reason I wanted to mention this was because as of this week we have 4 new guys ans girl's coming aboard. And they all are "Promising".
So stick with it in the future, no matter what it is, if it is some thing you truly believe in, things will turn around.. It would have been so easy to throw up our hands and say "that's it!" And move on to a hotel, but thank God, we did not.
Staffing has always been the hardest part of leading a team as a chef. Because everyone wants to move up and on, so just when you feel like the dream team is composed, the sous chef puts in notice because he has been offered a chef position somewhere. The prep guys want more money or promotions, and the dish washer has to go back to Equador. Its a never ending cycle. Always has been and as long as people are passionate about what they do, and those are the types we want working in our kitchens, people will move on...
So be thankful when and if you do ever get the team together and appreciate it every single moment. You never know what will happen next..
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
great food
more pork... from our whole pig
From the pig we got earlier. Up coming we still have the bellies that have been braised, the shoulders that have been brined and will be roasted. We have 2 hams and the head has been braised and picked. Made a broth from the bones, infused with some of our ham hock stock. We also have the hocks that have been smoked.
This was what was ran in the cellar last night. We smoked the porter houses and then grilled them. Heirloom cabbage, creme fraiche, elder flower vinaigrette, pecans and a mix of plums from the local market.
It's hard to describe the feeling of getting an entire whole animal that has been butchered that day and using every bit. The skins even. This time we gently poached and will eventually fry or de hydrate them.
It is always best to plan ahead before the animal arrives so you are ready to get into it in a quick and efficient way. This way you can utilize the most delicate pieces first, heart, kidneys and liver. Then work into your loins, then roasts, finally the pieces that will be brined or confit or braised. Then the pieces such as cured meats, pancetta, belly etc.
All staff yearly meeting
So as our one year anniversary came on Tuesday the boss's bought us lunch (pizza and Shake Shack ice cream). The owner's each had a small speech and just some basic information on what has been accomplished. A small part was dedicated to fore casting for the year to come.
Everyone I work with is amazing in their own way. I am so happy to be a part of this and this is a fantastic opportunity.
herb garden at home...
Thai basil which is now flowering, baby basil, micro cilantro, chocolate mint, sage, European style thyme and oregano.
These are what we have grown in the apartment so far this year. Outside we also have some cilantro and more basil. The Thai basil flowers are so beautiful. We used them in the pasta dish tonight.
In a large city where there is no garden space and the smaller spots of grass are un usable as we have no idea what's in the soil or been exposed too. In this way we do. Plus they smell fantastic in our kitchen and apartment.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
last moment before closing....
After a busy day and everyone who puts so much effort into our space leaves it is very peaceful but almost earily quiet. So after the server's have cashed out, the bar tenders and backs broken down, the line cooks and chefs have cleaned and written their lists and the dish crew has finished the floors and re stocked the line; here it is. As I leave I think how fast a day goes by in our life, and at the end of it all....
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