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Saturday, January 26, 2008
Taimeiken: Omuraisu (Japanese Rice Omelet)
The Japanese have some very interesting ideas about food. Take this omelet for instance. Maybe I shouldn't be surprised, but they put rice in the omelet. And ketchup. Ketchup is apparently the coolest thing ever. And somehow it all just works. Plus, you get to use up that leftover takeout white rice.
Omuraisu (Japanese Rice Omelet)
Adapted from Taimeiken restaurant in the Nihonbashi district of Tokyo
4 green onions, finely chopped
1 large white button mushroom cap, chopped
3 strips bacon, cooked and crumbled
4 teaspoons unsalted butter, divided use
2½ tablespoons ketchup
½ cup cooked and cooled short- or medium-grain white rice
2 teaspoons sake or white wine
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 large eggs
Melt 2 teaspoons of butter in a small frying pan. Saute the onion for a few minutes, then add the mushroom, and then finally the bacon. When the onions in the pan become semi-transparent, season with the ketchup. Add the cooked rice, sake, and a dash of salt and pepper. Saute until done, then turn off the heat and leave in the frying pan.
Break the eggs into a bowl, beat lightly, then add a little salt and pepper. Heat a 12-inch frying pan over medium-high heat, and melt the remaining 2 teaspoons of butter. Pour in the egg mixture. Spread it around quickly with 3 broad strokes while moving the frying pan back and forth. When the egg is half done, place the rice mixture on it, a little on the far side of center. Take the frying pan off the heat, then tip the pan a little to make the half of the thin omelet near you flip over the rice mixture. Raise one side of the frying pan a little, and tap the handle to roll the omelet, gradually wrapping the rice inside the omelet. Keep tapping until the edges of the omelet come to the top, then change the position of your hands on the frying pan handle and tip the omelet onto a plate so that the edges are tucked underneath. Decorate with a squiggle of ketchup.
Makes 1 omelet
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Mastering the Art of French Cooking: Fricassée de Poulet à l’Ancienne (Old-Fashioned Chicken Fricassee with Wine-Flavored Cream Sauce, Onions, and Mushrooms)
Recently I find myself reading quite a bit about Julia Child, and I'm actually quite fascinated by the fact 1) she married late (maybe there's still hope!), and 2) that she basically didn't learn how to cook until she was in her 30's. Now, I like to think that I know how to cook, and I'm not quite 30 yet, but that also means I have plenty of time to become exceptional at what I do, and that's always encouraging. The first thing I did was to rush to the local library and procure a copy of her masterpiece. I sat in the library, reading the cookbook, much to the dismay of my fellow patrons, who I'm sure were giving me she's-actually-READING-a-cookbook looks.
While the recipe took over an hour to finish, and about a bizillion pots, by the time it was finished, I was wiping the drool off my chin. And you know what? Julia was right. It was the richest, chickeniest chicken I think I may ever have eaten. It was tender and concentrated and heavenly. So now I'm in a quandry. If that recipe turned out so magnificently, wouldn't all the others? And shouldn't I try them??
Fricassée de Poulet à l’Ancienne (Old-Fashioned Chicken Fricassee with Wine-Flavored Cream Sauce, Onions, and Mushrooms)
From Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle, and Simone Beck
2½ to 3 pounds of cut-up frying chicken
1 thinly sliced onion, carrot, and celery stalk
4 tablespoons butter
½ teaspoon salt
⅛ teaspoon white pepper
3 tablespoons flour
3 cups boiling white chicken stock, white stock, or canned chicken bouillon
1 cup dry white wine or ⅔ cup dry white vermouth
A small herb bouquet: 2 parsley sprigs, ⅓ bay leaf, and ⅛ teaspoon thyme tied in washed cheesecloth
16 to 20 Oignons Glacés à Blanc (White-Braised Onions)
Champignons à Blanc (Stewed Mushrooms)
2 egg yolks
½ cup whipping cream
Drops of lemon juice
Pinch of nutmeg
1 to 2 tablespoons softened butter
Sprigs of fresh parsley
Dry the chicken thoroughly in a towel.
Cook the onion, carrot, and celery slowly in the butter in a Dutch oven for about 5 minutes, or until they are almost tender but not browned. Push them to one side. Raise the heat slightly, and add the chicken. Turn it every minute for 3 to 4 minutes until the meat has stiffened slightly, without coloring to more than a light golden yellow. Lower the heat, cover, and cook very slowly for 10 minutes, turning the chicken once. It should swell slightly, stiffen more, but not deepen in color.
Sprinkle salt, pepper, and flour on all sides of the chicken, turning and rolling each piece to coat the flour with the cooking butter. Cover and continue cooking slowly for 4 minutes, turning it once. Remove from heat and pour in the boiling liquid, shaking the pot to blend the liquid and flour. Add the wine, the herb bouquet, and more stock, or water, so the liquid just covers the chicken. Bring to the simmer. Taste for seasoning, and salt lightly if necessary. Cover and maintain at a slow simmer for 25 to 30 minutes. The chicken is done when the drumsticks are tender if pinched and the chicken juices run clear yellow when the meat is pricked with a fork. When done, remove the chicken to a side dish.
While the chicken is cooking, prepare the onions and mushrooms. Add their cooking juices to the chicken cooking sauce in the next step.
Simmer the cooking liquid in the pot for 2 to 3 minutes, skimming off fat. Then raise heat and boil rapidly, stirring frequently, until the sauce reduces and thickens enough to coat a spoon nicely. Correct seasoning. You should have 2 to 2½ cups.
Blend the egg yolks and cream in a mixing bowl with a wire whisk. Continue beating, and add the hot sauce by small tablespoonfuls until about a cupful has gone in. Beat in the rest of the sauce in a thin stream. Pour the sauce back into the pot, or into an enameled or stainless steel saucepan (do not use aluminum). Set over moderately high heat and, stirring constantly, reach all over the bottom and sides of the pot, until the sauce comes to a boil. Boil for 1 minute, stirring. Correct seasoning, adding drops of lemon juice to taste, and a pinch of nutmeg. Strain the sauce through a fine sieve.
Arrange the chicken, and the onion and mushroom garniture, in the pot. Pour the sauce over it. Set the pot over moderate heat and bring to the simmer. Cover and simmer very slowly for 5 minutes, or until the chicken is hot through, basting it frequently with the sauce.
Off heat and just before serving, tilt pot, add enrichment butter, and baste the chicken with the sauce until the butter has absorbed into it. Serve the chicken from the pot; or arrange it with the onions and mushrooms on a hot platter, surrounded with rice or noodles, and covered with the sauce. Decorate with sprigs of fresh parsley.
Makes 4 to 6 servings
Oignons Glacés à Blanc (White-Braised Onions)
18 to 24 peeled white onions about 1 inch in diameter
½ cup white stock, canned chicken broth, dry white wine, or water
2 tablespoons butter
Salt and pepper to taste
A small herb bouquet: 2 parsley sprigs, ⅛ teaspoon thyme, and ⅓ bay leaf tied in cheesecloth
Place the onions in a heavy skillet with the liquid, butter, seasonings, and herb bouquet. Cover and simmer very slowly, rolling the onions in the saucepan from time to time, for 40 to 50 minutes. The onions should not color, and should be perfectly tender yet retain their shape. If all the liquid evaporates during the cooking, add more by spoonfuls as necessary. Remove herb bouquet.
Champignons à Blanc (Stewed Mushrooms)
½ pound fresh mushrooms
⅔ cup water
¼ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons butter
Trim and wash the mushrooms. Bring the water, salt, lemon juice, and butter to the boil in a 6-cup saucepan. Add the mushrooms and toss to cover them with the liquid. Cover and boil moderately fast, tossing frequently, for 5 minutes. Set aside until ready to use.