Archive for January, 2010

Mexican Steak and Green Poblano Rice

For a while now we have been cooking Mexican food on and off. We started with the usual fajitas, tacos, chill con carne, guacamole, etc, using recipes that friends had recommended or that we had found somewhere on the world wide internets. While some of these turned out really well, we eventually felt that we should explore more real Mexican cooking rather than sticking with these few “stereotypes” of Mexican food.

So we bought Rick Bayless’s “Mexican Kitchen” (which I am sure we have mentioned before) and cooked a number of dishes out of it. One of the biggest discoveries has been dried chillis of various varieties, particularly guajillo, pasilla and ancho. These need to be soaked before using (sometimes toasted before being soaked too) and when they are soaking give off a lovely fruity, tangy, sometimes smoky aroma that makes its way into the finished dish too.

We haven’t had steak for ages, and really fancied the idea of it this Friday. We thought we would check quicky to see if by some chance there was a Mexican steak recipe in the Mexican Kitchen and lo and behold there was. It had to be done. This required a bit of advance preparation – there was sauce to be made ahead of time so that some of it could be used as a marinade. We did this on Thursday night in order to have it ready for Friday. We managed to cook the steaks just right and the marinade and sauce were brilliant, really worth the effort. The recipe is really for barbecued steaks so we definitely need to remember this recipe for when summer comes around.

We served it with “green rice” which again turned out really well – a nuttiness from frying the rice, a bit of depth from onion and chilli and a lot of herby flavour from coriander.

Grilled Steak with Spicy Guajillo Sauce (the original recipe was for 6, have tried to take it down to 2 portions here):

2 garlic cloves, unpeeled
5 dried guajillo chillies, stemmed and seeded
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano, preferable Mexican (we didn’t have either, so used Marjoram)
pinch freshly ground black pepper
pinch ground cumin
1 1/2 cups beef stock
1/2 teaspoon sugar

1/2 tablespoon cider vinegar
2 steaks (we had sirloin, which the recipe suggested)
few sprigs coriander for garnish

Roast the unpeeled garlic on a skillet over medium heat, turning occasionally, until it is soft and blacked in bits (about 15 minutes). Let them cool and peel them. While this is happening, open up the chillis and toast them in the same (or another) skillet, pressing them down firmly with a spatula until they crackle, even send up a wisp of smoke, then flip them over and do the same on the other side. When done, put the chillis into a bowl and cover them with hot water, letting them soak for 30 minutes, stirring now and then to ensure even soaking. Drain them and discard the water.

Put the oregano, pepper, cumin, garlic and chillies into a food processor or blender with about 1/4 cup of the stock. Blend to a puree, adding a little more stock if needed. Press through a medium-mesh strainer into a bowl (we didn’t do that bit actually, missed it). Heat 1/2 tablespoon oil in a heavy saucepan over medium high. When the oil is hot enough to make a drop of the puree sizzle sharply, add the puree and stir constantly until it reduces to a thick paste, 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in the rest of the stock, partially cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, for about 45 minutes. If necessary, stir in a little more stock to bring the sauce to a medium, saucy consistency. Tate and season with salt if needed (probably not needed due to the stock) and sugar.

Mix 1/8 cup of the sauce with the cider vinegar and pour into a dish large enough to accomodate both steaks. Coat the steaks well in the marinade and leave in the fridge for up to 4 hours. At this point the recipe tells you to get your fire going to barbecue the steaks, which we didn’t do because we were just griddling them. We did make our green rice though. Then barbecue / griddle your steaks and serve with heated sauce poured over them. The recipe also says to barbecue some red onion slices and serve them with the steaks, but we didn’t do that. Garnish with coriander (didn’t do that either…)

Green Poblano Rice (original recipe serves 4, we halved it here)

1 cup chicken stock
1 fresh poblano chilli, stemmed and seeded and roughly chopped (we just used a generic supermarket chilli here actually)
12 sprigs coriander (this is the whole amount of coriander rather than half, felt like it needed a lot)
1/4 teaspoon salt if using salted stock, or 1/2 teaspoon if unsalted stock
1/2 tablespoon vegetable or olive oil
1/2 cup rice preferably medium grain (we actually used basmati here)
1/2 small white onion, finely diced
2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped

Bring the stock to the boil in a saucepan, then add the chopped chilli and let it simmer gently for about 10 minutes until the chilli is very soft. Pour this into a food processor, add the coriander (stems and all) and process to a smooth puree. Press through a medium-mesh strainer into a bowl and add the salt (we didn’t do this strainer-pressing again…)

Clean the saucepan, add the oil and heat over medium heat. Add the rice and onion and cook, stirring regularly, until the rice is chalky looking and the onion is soft, about 5 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cook a minute longer. Stir in the warm chilli liquid, cover, and cook over medium-low heat for 15 minutes until the rice is done. If the rice is almost done, leave the cover on the saucepan and turn off the heat and leave for 5 to 10 minutes longer to complete the cooking.

Daikon Pasta

We use ground daikon in many ways: with grilled fish, grilled egg, soba, nabe, etc. It makes for a light dish, also has lots of vitamin C, so it’s good for your health! This recipe contains a little bacon, and as you know, everything goes better with bacon, so enjoy!

Yield: 2 servings
Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients
  • 1/2 lb pasta noodles
  • 3/4 lb ground daikon
  • 3 pieces of bacon (1/2″ pieces)
  • 3 mushrooms (sliced)
  • 1 clove of garlic (sliced)
  • 1/4 lb eggplant (1/4″ slices)

Spices

  • 2 tbps soy sauce

Preparation

    1. Boil pasta until al dente (save 1/2 cup hot water for the daikon)
    2. Mix 1/2 cup hot water with ground daikon and soy sauce
    3. Heat oil in a frying pan and cook garlic until fragrant, then add bacon and grill well
    4. Add eggplant and mushrooms, cook for 2 minutes
    5. Add mixed daikon sauce; turn off the heat and stir
    6. Mix with boiled pasta and serve

    ‘Avatar’ Continues Its Winning Streak In The Saturday Box Office Report

    DESC1. “Avatar” ($7.5 million)
    2. “Edge of Darkness” ($5.7 million)
    3. “When in Rome” ($4.4 million)
    4. “The Book of Eli” ($2.5 million)
    5. “Tooth Fairy” ($2.3 million)

    After seven straight weeks in theaters, you didn’t really think that “Avatar” would fall from the top of the charts, did you? James Cameron’s science fiction epic continued to barrel ahead of the competition on Friday with a $7.5 million intake, bringing the record-smashing film’s cumulative domestic tally up to $572 million.

    Already, “Avatar” has taken the all-time worldwide record away from “Titanic,” Cameron’s previous record holder, though the 1997 Oscar winner remains the film to beat when it comes to the domestic box office with a $600.8 million total. Given the success that “Avatar” continues to have, however, it’s a sure bet that the Na’vi of Pandora will claim that record from “Titanic” as well.

    But “Avatar” wasn’t the only noteworthy film at the box office on Friday, as Mel Gibson made his return to acting in “Edge of Darkness,” director Martin Campbell’s adaptation of his BBC television series from the 1980s. The thriller earned a second place finish worth $5.7 million, certainly an admirable effort but not quite the result that Gibson was used to seeing in his prime.

    Third place went to “When in Rome,” the romantic comedy starring Kristen Bell and Josh Duhamel. Denzel Washington’s “The Book of Eli” continued to impress with a respectable fourth place finish, bringing the movie’s domestic total up to $68.1 million thus far. “Tooth Fairy,” the Dwayne Johnson family comedy now entering its second week in theaters, took the top five’s final spot with $2.3 million.

    Tell us what you think of Friday’s box office results in the comments section or on Twitter!

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