The Chinese New Year is
fast approaching and I’ve
decided to cook some dishes I haven’t made before. Diving in is the fastest way
I know to learn a new dish and my only kitchen advice: Be Fearless.
I love that the Chinese believe that
the heart of the family is in the kitchen and they always put food offerings in
front of a little altar that they have right by the stove. I’m going to build
mine tomorrow. People in China regard the God of Kitchen as the most important
immortal appointed by the Emperor of Heaven to supervise virtues and vices. As
my kitchen has dished out more vices than virtues this past year, stay tuned.
I shop at Woks n Things at 2234 S
Wentworth in Chinatown when I want to add a Chinese gadget to my kitchen. They
have the best selection and you simply can’t find better prices.
I also love the owners who helped me
select this beautiful Chinese cleaver. They also turned me on to a set of
stunning wooden chop sticks. Price? Can’t even tell you how inexpensive this
place is.
As always in Chinatown, I also
stocked up on groceries and carried a huge bag of sauces and rice back to my
suburban kitchen.
I’ll be cooking a lot of Chinese now
that it’s really cold outside. Nothing like a whole lot of hot and spicy to
warm you up.
Bon Appetit!
My friend Andrew made these wings the
other day and we could not get enough of them. We raided the plate the minute
they came off the grill and honestly, I wished that I could have stayed around
for the feast they were that good.
He threw them on the grill and then
poured the sauce over them.
Claiming this as my new favorite wing
recipe. Have to tell you that I really loved the recipe and really would not
change up the ingredients it was that good.
Bon Appetit!
Gam
Poongi Korean Style Hot Wings
12 oz dark soy
12 oz dark soy
12
oz cane sugar cola
1
tablespoon spicy fermented soybean paste
1
head garlic and equal amounts ginger, minced finely (or pressed)
24
tablespoons dark brown sugar
5
tablespoons honey
Crushed
red peppers to taste
2
stalks green onion, cut into 0.5in lengths
Combine liquid ingredients, bring to a simmer. Add rest
of ingredients, let simmer on low for 1.5 hrs, or until mixture starts
caramelizing. You will be able to tell when you should remove it when bubbles
are very small.
Remove from
heat, let come to room temperature. Add green onions.
Cook wings
on the grill and turn the wings every 3 to 4 minutes until done. About 30
minutes.
Pour the
sauce over the wings.
Chocolate beer is hardly new since
the ancient Aztecs and Mayans used cocoa beans to create alcoholic beverages
hundreds of years ago.
In the new age of great brews, the
combination of beer and chocolate is right up my taste arena and was the Gold
Medal Winner at the Brewing industry International Awards in 2000, and received
the Silver Medal in 2002.
I embraced the taste of Young’s
Double Chocolate Stout with a shot of Kahlua and piled high with whipped cream.
Whoever thought that beer would be
the perfect after dinner drink?
Bon Appetit!
Young’s
Double Chocolate Stout After Dinner Drink
8 oz. Young’s Double Chocolate Stout
1 shot KahluaWhipped Cream
Mix stout and Kahlua. Top with
Whipped Cream.
Make your favorite chocolate chip
cookie. When cool, add a dab of marshmallow creme and a flat, thin chocolate on
top.
Place in microwave for a few seconds
until melted.
Easy!
Bon Appetit!
How do I cook a lamb chop? In my unfailing cast iron grill pan. I love
cooking steaks and chops this way and I have yet to have a failure.
The lamb chop should be taken out of
the oven well below the desired degree of doneness. Carryover cooking will
continue to cook the lamb while it rests. The thicker the cut of meat and the
higher the cooking temperature, the more the temperature of the meat will
continue to rise – from 5 – 10 degrees over the 5-15 minutes of resting time.
If you like rare Lamb like I do, pull
this out of the oven when it reaches 115 – 120 degrees so final serving
temperature will be 125 degrees.
Bon Appetit!
2 Lamb Chops
Salt Pepper
Crushed Garlic
1 Tablespoon Olive Oil
Salt and pepper the lamb chops.
In a grill pan, get olive oil hot,
add garlic (to taste) and grill one side for 2 minutes to sear, then turn over
the chops and place the pan in a 500 degree oven for 5 – 6 minutes - or I used
a thermometer.