Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Christmas Day in Oaxaca

It was kind of an odd day. We started the day with breakfast with our host family and decided it must have been leftovers from their Christmas Eve feast rather than some sort of traditional Christmas breakfast. We started with bananas, then thick slabs of caramel jello and chopped bits of bright green apple jello, then spaghetti in a creamy mushroom sauce, then chicken breast stuffed with fruits, then finished with sandwiches of thin sliced ham lunchmeat with mayo on Pan Bimbo (the Mexican Wonderbread equivalent). Z and I rushed off to church, but found it locked and empty and had to assume they had cancelled because it was Christmas.

We wandered back to our place, stopping to sit in a park and talk for a while, then found C moving all our things into a new room when we got back. Our new room is upstairs, and we have a kind of balcony (without any railing) where we can sit in the shade of a pomelo tree and listen to all the songbirds while we eat or work or relax.

For lunch we ate at the fantastic La Olla Restaurant. Z ordered tacos with nopales (cactus) and after finishing about half decided that their sliminess was grossing her out a little too much. C & I agree that nopales are mucous-like and that we don't really like them any more than we like okra, but we were pleased that she wanted to try them.


C ordered chiles rellenos, Oaxacan style. I had some a couple days earlier at the restaurant Flor de Oaxaca and they were tasty, but made me pretty sick that night. At La Olla, they came in two types of chiles - one was stuffed in a dried Oaxacan Pasilla chile (smaller and smokier than the chiles called pasillas in other parts of Mexico), and the other in a chile de agua, which is light green and thin-skinned and usually medium spicy. The stuffing here, called picadillo, rather than the ground beef or cheese that you might get at a Mexican restaurant in the U.S., is made of shredded chicken with almonds, raisins, capers, green olives, herbs, tomatoes, onions and a long list of other ingredients that make it as complex and lovely as a good mole. They stuff the chiles, dip them in a batter made of whipped egg whites mixed with the yolks and a bit of flour, then fry them and bathe them in a light tomato sauce. There's a recipe from Diana Kennedy here which looks pretty accurate. These at La Olla were the best I've ever had.

I, however, won the best ordering prize for the day - I got a thick white fish, perfectly seared in garlic and olive oil, served with spinach and over mashed plantains. It doesn't sound so great, but the three together were perfection.










Link

We also ordered ponche, which is a hot fruity punch kind of like spiced cider, with tiny apples, spears of sugar cane and cinnamon sticks, and hibiscus blossoms.











And we finished with a delicious cake of freshly ground oaxacan chocolate and cinnamon and a bit of passionfruit puree on the side, and then a very tasty flan.









Yum.

That evening we went down to the Zocalo briefly, hoping there would be a replay of the fireworks from the night before (which I missed because I was sick from those darn chiles rellenos from Flor de Oaxaca), but we were out of luck. Just lots of people walking around. We read the Christmas story and watched some fireworks from our balcony before we said goodnight to Z. Overall a pretty merry Christmas - I hope yours was good too!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Mexico City

Mexico City. No matter how I try to describe it, I'll fail. It was a madhouse, the entire zocalo packed with thousands of people there for the - wait for it - ice-skating. Although it was in the mid-70's while we were there, they somehow had set up a big ice-skating rink in the middle of the zocalo and another area that pumped out snow as fast as it melted, where kids wore helmets and threw snowballs at each other. It was so much more crowded there than when we were there in 1995, even during the indepence day celebrations, that I had to look it up, and yup, it is a substantially more crowded city. The population has increased from 15.6 million to 21.2 million (compare this to NYC's 8 million). I'm so used to my isolated life that I sometimes find it frightening to be around so many people and to picture a future world where it's hard to find a city that isn't so densely populated. The subways are extremely efficient, but while in 1995 I found them cleaner and in better condition than the New York subways, the intervening years haven't treated them as kindly. So crowded and dirty and smelly - they're far worse than in NYC in 1990. There's no subtlety to the commercialism. A 50-foot Christmas tree was decorated entirely with flashing Pepsi logos. Giant logos and characters everywhere you look.







Obviously children dictate the terms of the family Christmas photos - the Alameda had not just carnival rides and hundreds of vendors selling everything from roasted bananas to plastic buckets, but about 50 gigantic Christmas photo stands, each flashier than the last, about 2 stories tall and 20 feet deep, with all the latest characters. The one that I tried to convince Z to take a family photo in was a rather tame Simpsons theme, with life-sized Simpsons characters, big clouds painted in the back, "Los Simpson" written over the top, and, of course, Santa dancing to Shakira. The Smurfs were rather popular, but I saw one girl holding out for it all: she turned down a stand that had the Smurfs, woodland creatures, Disney Princesses, Tinkerbell floating overhead, and blue glitter-coated reindeer, complete with the metallic din of digital carols from flashing Christmas lights.






We tried lots of new foods we've never tried before. In Coyoacan, we ate at Tostadas Coyoacan, a stand in the middle of the market with rave reviews doing raging business that dished up tostadas topped with things like ceviche, cochinita, salpicon, champinones, chicken mole, and camarones.

We also tried tacos de canasta, which we've heard is a favorite food of Chilangos (people from Mexico City). At a mere 4 pesos (about 25 cents) each, these tacos come filled with spiced mashed potatoes or refried beans or chopped beef or mole verde with shredded pork. They're traditionally wrapped in a cloth and stacked together in a big basket while they're hot, so the corn tortillas are kind of steamed by the time you eat them. The place we ate served them out of big stainless steel buckets.

Not knowing what to expect, but wanting fish and seeming to remember that bacalao was a type of fish, I ordered the bacalao at Cafe Tacuba, which was deliciously prepared with a flavorful sauce, peeled almonds and pinenuts, but the fish itself was shredded, tough and salty. It seems to be a traditional holiday food, showing up on lots of the special Christmas menus, along with Romeritos, which I never dared try after the bacalao. I saw one store selling cans of bacalao, imported from Norway, and an internet search revealed that it is dried salted cod. Not my favorite.

I got a bit sick from a spinach salad at a vegetarian restaurant (Vegetariano Madero) - I knew the raw spinach was risky, but figured it was the type of place to disinfect the veggies. I figured wrong. I was smart enough to recommend that Z choose the salad with cooked veggies. It was great to have veggies again after so much meat and tortillas, so I got a bit over-excited in my ordering, I guess.

A safer source of veggies was the juices at Jugos Canada, just across the street from our hotel. We watched them squeeze the oranges and juice the carrots before they poured it into a glass. My favorite was the "Canada Especial" with papaya, guava, orange and carrot juice. C preferred the orange and carrot blend, and Z liked her "Antigripal" (flu-fighter) with lime and honey added to her pineapple, papaya and orange juices.

As a follow up to the churros and chocolate we had in Madrid a couple of years ago, we had fantastic churros with hot chocolate at Churreria el Moro, where they had two enormous vats of boiling oil into which they cranked the batter, spinning the tubes of dough into big wheels, then cutting them up to serve sprinkled with sugar or cinnamon sugar. They have 4 different kinds of hot chocolate and we tried 3 of them. I have to say the place in Madrid was better, even though this one has also been serving churros and chocolate for over 100 years.







Our best meal, though, was probably at the fancy"El Cardenal", where we ate an appetizer with avocado, queso fresco, and a fresh tomatillo salsa. I had chicken with a sauce made from "natas" (some kind of thick cream) and chiles. C had small beef steaks beautifully served over tortillas and beans and topped with a sauce made from a type of cactus fruit we'd never tried before. Z ordered the quesadillas with flor de maguey - cactus blossoms. We finished with a decadent "flan de queso" - a richly cheesy flan, that was made with something similar to ricotta cheese.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Happy 14th Birthday!

So, for a Halloween/Day of the Dead themed party, I made the darkest chocolate cake I could find and Clay decorated it with a stencil and powdered sugar. Pretty awesome looking!

Among other things, guests got to make their own Ultimate Caramel Apples. Which really turned into a bit of a disastrous mess, as you can see in exhibit #2. The girls had a lot of fun, and the apples were quite tasty, with all the topping options and the homemade caramel and all, but the caramel was a little too runny and slowly slid off the apples while they were supposed to be cooling. They looked great when we left them, but when we came back, all the toppings had drooped to the bottom.

We had a bonfire and a taco bar and they watched "Wait Until Dark", which they deemed the scariest movie they'd ever seen in their lives (old-fashioned suspense!). Overall it was a success, but we worked so hard on the whole affair that I've sworn to just order a pizza next year and let them hang out.

So here are the recipes:

Caramel for Apples

Chocolate Beet Cake

The first time I made the caramel (test run), it seemed like it was going to have big crystalline chunks of sugar because of the way it melted while I was stirring, so the second time I added a bit of water to help it dissolve, which is, I think, the reason it all dripped off the apples at the party. The first batch didn't do that. So just follow the recipe and don't try to second guess it. I just used salted butter, though, because that's what I had on hand. Don't do this with the frosting for the cake without reducing the salt, though, because it will be too salty. My favorite apple topping is currently sea salt and toasted pecans. Mmmmmmmm.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Pasta Georgina

I've been working lately on assembling a binder full of our favorite recipes - the ones that we eat and say to each other, "Why don't we eat this every week?" My hope is that if I have them indexed in one location that I'll remember them better when I'm doing my meal planning, but the problem is that there are so many of them. I also have a binder of recipes I want to try, and a third binder of recipes I like well enough to keep... The "Foods We Eat" project is taking much, much longer than I imagined it would.

I have the recipes organized by categories that I have listed in my four week menu plan. My menu plan has general headers for each day of the week, like Mexican on Thursdays or leftovers on Wednesdays, then within each I have slightly more specific ideas like for Italian I have pasta, pizza, and polenta. Then when I'm planning my menu for the week, if the idea is pasta, I choose a pasta recipe based on what sounds good and what produce is seasonal and what I happen to have on hand. I haven't much stuck to the days of the week thing - I tend to switch the days around based on what ingredients need to be used before they spoil and what our schedule is and how long the meals take. In general it has helped me a lot with my meal planning and has worked better than any other system I've tried because of its flexibility.

Z is in Hershey right now for a big cross-country meet. They got a hotel suite and cooked their dinner last night. Her coach recommended a dinner of pasta on Thursday, so we had Pasta Georgina - one of our last chances to have it this summer, as the season of fresh tomatoes and basil is coming to an end. I got this recipe from Kretschmanns, our CSA farmer and I can't find the recipe right now, so I'm going to write it from memory. Sorry no photos lately - our camera is getting repaired.

Pasta Georgina
2 cloves garlic
1 Tbs. minced fresh ginger (this is the surprise in the recipe)
4 large summer tomatoes, chopped (about 4-5 cups)
1/2 lb cubed mozzarella
1 bunch fresh basil, chopped
salt and pepper to taste

Saute the garlic and ginger in olive oil until fragrant. Add the tomatoes and simmer until most of their liquid is gone (I've also added 2 cups chopped kale with the tomatoes, and it's good). When you're ready to serve the pasta, stir in the mozzarella and basil, add salt and pepper to taste, and toss it with about a pound of your favorite pasta, then serve. This is a recipe that is strong enough to work well with whole grain pasta.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Zucchini Carrot Muffins

In case your gardens are still producing zucchini (my squash vines have all succumbed to powdery mildew), I present for your consideration Zucchini Carrot Muffins.

These are yummy, relatively healthy, and freeze well. I usually freeze whatever we don't eat when they're fresh from the oven and throw them into Zoe's backpack for snack time. I used to send one of these with a yogurt for a lunch, but she eats a lot more than that now. The frozen ones are best reheated a bit in the toaster oven to get that crunchy top back. I also often freeze extra zucchini (shredded), in the amounts for my favorite recipes, and this is one of them.

I've adapted this recipe from one my sister sent me for Trail Ride Zucchini Muffins. I substituted carrot once when I was short on zucchini, and I like the flecks of color - I would do about 2 c. zucchini and 1/2 c. carrot. I also like the extra brightness the lemon peel gives them.

Zucchini Carrot Muffins
1 c. whole wheat flour
1 c. flour
2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp baking powder
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 egg, beaten
1/3 c. oil
1/2 c. sugar
1/2 c. nonfat dry milk
2 1/2 c. zucchini and carrot, grated
2 tsp vanilla
1 tsp lemon extract
1/2 c. raisins (optional - I haven't used these yet)
1/2 c. chopped nuts
zest of 1 lemon (optional)

Preheat oven to 350. Sift flours, soda, baking powder and cinnamon together in a bowl; set aside. Combine egg, oil, sugar, dry milk, zucchini/carrot, vanilla and lemon extract in another bowl; beat thoroughly. Stir flour mixture into egg mixture just until smooth. Stir in raisins and nuts. Fill greased muffin cups 2/3 full. Bake for 20 minutes or until done. Other whole grain flours are good.

Raspberry Buttermilk Cake

I've been meaning to try this recipe for a couple of months. It's fantastic and pretty easy after all. It works with frozen raspberries and other berries or even rhubarb. It's tender and delicate, sweet and tart. Buttery, but not so rich you couldn't consider having it for breakfast. I gave the recipe to my daughter and her friend after they picked black raspberries. It was easy enough for them to make it and they devoured it all before I got a chance to try it. Her friend's family has made it multiple times since, and I finally got around to it this week and have regretted not trying it before. It takes about 15 minutes, plus cooking time. I really wish our raspberry bushes were still fruiting now, but I can still get them from the farmer's market, I think.

(from the June 2009 Gourmet)

Raspberry Buttermilk Cake

1 cup flour
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 stick butter, softened
2/3 cup plus 1 1/2 Tbs. sugar, divided
1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
1 large egg
1/2 cup well-shaken buttermilk
1 cup fresh raspberries (about 5 oz)

Preheat oven to 400 with rack in middle. Butter and flour a 9-in round cake pan. Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.

Beat butter and 2/3 cup sugar at medium high speed until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes, then beat in vanilla. Add egg and beat well.

At low speed, mix in the flour mixture in 3 batches, alternating with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour, and mixing until just combined.

Spoon batter into cake pan, smoothing top. Scatter raspberries evenly over top and sprinkle with remaining 1 1/2 Tbs. sugar.

Bake until cake is golden and a wooden pick inserted into center comes out clean, about 24-30 min. Cool in pan 10 min, then turn out onto a rack and cool to warm, 10-15 min. more. Invert onto a plate.

Blackened Tilapia with Cilantro-Lime Slaw

I need something a little perky and fresh to help me through these cloudy days. This is a recipe I keep coming back to because it tastes great and it's pretty good for you, too. Although I might prefer the tilapia with black bean mango salsa, that one requires fresh tomatillos and mangos, which are hard to come by and keep on hand. I almost always have cabbage and a lime on hand, plus tilapia in the freezer, so it doesn't require extra shopping. I've found the cilantro is such a small amount that it's ok if I leave it out.

This slaw recipe is tangy and salty and it's kind of addicting. Even Clay, who generally dislikes coleslaw, really likes this one.

(adapted from Fine Cooking 96)

Blackened Tilapia with Cilantro-Lime Slaw

serves 2

1/2 small clove garlic
kosher salt
1 med. lime
3 Tbs. mayonnaise
about 2-3 cups cabbage or Savoy cabbage, thinly sliced (I use my mandoline)
2 scallions, thinly sliced
2 Tbs. chopped fresh cilantro leaves
freshly ground black pepper
1/2 tsp. chili powder
1/4 tsp ground cumin
two 5-oz tilapia fillets, cut in half lengthwise
1 Tbs. unsalted butter

Mince or finely grate the garlic, zest and juice the lime, mix with garlic and mayonnaise. Toss in the cabbage, scallions, cilantro. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

In a small bowl, mix the chili powder, cumin, 1/4 tsp salt, and several grinds of pepper. Sprinkle the spice rub all over the tilapia.

Melt the butter in a 10-inch cast-iron or nonstick skillet over med-high heat. Cook the tilapia on both sides until browned and cooked through, about 3 minutes total for the small pieces and 5 minutes for the large. Transfer to a plate. Toss the slaw and add more lime juice, salt, and pepper to taste. Serve the tilapia with the slaw.

I like to serve it with warmed corn tortillas.