Author Archives: casconed

Sip Snap Savor Test Kitchen – the Morales’ Empanadas

For the first official Sip Snap Savor test kitchen, it seemed appropriate to jump right in with something a little flashy. Empanadas fit the bill perfectly  – intensely flavorful, crispy pockets of pure fried goodness. Following the instructions provided by the Morales, I set out to recreate a bit of their magic.

First up was the filling. I opted for ground beef – 85% lean to keep it on the moist side – and flavored it heavily with cumin, coriander, garlic, and cilantro. The filling by itself was a bit intense, but per the Morales’ recommendation I trusted that it would work out will once stuffed in the masa pockets.

Having worked with masa before, I was well aware of the tendency of the dough to dry out quickly, so I went ahead and made the dough a little moist. My first few pockets were muy feo, but just as Claudia said they got progressively more beautiful as I went along. By the time I folded my sixth empanada, i was cranking out perfect half-moons.

I ran into two problems at this point. The first was my inability to keep the oil at the correct temperature – too hot and the masa burned on the outside before it cooked through, too cold and the dough simply soaked up the grease rather than frying correctly. It takes a bit of balance, and you should err on the high side at first since adding multiple empanadas will lower the heat of the oil. give it ample time to heat up and test it first with a lump of dough to make sure it isn’t too hot. On the whole, you will probably try and cook before the oil is hot enough, so let it get a little hotter than you think you ought. As always, be extremely careful working with hot oil.

The second problem was my utter inability to follow Claudia’s directions, and overfilling most of the empanadas to the point that they burst when i was trying to cook them. Later efforts with less filling were perfect, so trust #3 on her list and use less filling than you think you need.

Overall i’d rate this an 8/10 for awesomeness and a 6/10 for ease. I cranked out about 20 empanadas in an hour, which was more than enough for a small crew of us. Served up with the hot sauce and some cold ones, they made an incredible evening snack.

Empanada Masa Dough:

Take 2.5 C of warm water, 2 C Pan Masa (found in hispanic grocery sections or supermercados) and 8-10 cucharditos (teaspoons) of salt and mix in a large bowl. Knead until smooth and let rest for a few minutes.


Empanada Filling:

Fry 4 potatoes diced, 2 whole, diced onions and 4 cloves of garlic on medium heat with a little oil to coat the pan. Add a pound of ground beef or ground turkey for a lighter filling. Also add a bunch of diced cilantro, several tablespoons of cumin, salt and pepper to taste. As the mixture cooks add the juice of 6-10 limes and a cup of fresh peas (canned or frozen are fine).

Empanada Hot Sauce:

Create this fresh, raw sauce for topping off your fried empanadas. Combine 1 onion, diced, 1 fresh chile diced & 1 bunch of cilantro, diced into the juice of 10-15 limes. Salt the sauce to taste.

1. Form a disk in your hand the size of your palm, about 1/4″ thick.

2. Add filling in small spoonfuls, fold the disk in half.

3. Use a small cup or bowl to secure in place.

4. Pinch in place and to seal closed.

5. Fry for 3-5 minutes per side, in corn or vegetable oil.

Top with hot sauce and serve alongside, hot salted plantains.

Empanadas with the Morales’ – Alameda, CA

“My grandmother used to make tortillas. So this empanada making is similar.” – Polo Morales

Fusion is a common theme amongst most families we encounter during our culinary road trips. But no where was it as prevalent as in our most recent dinner in Alameda, CA with Claudia (6months pregnant) and Polo Morales.

He is the son of Mexican parents, his Father is from the Zacatecas and mother & grandmother from Jalisco. His mother is very proud of her cooking and passed along recipes and techniques to her children. Stews in his family were common and were based on what part of the pig was being used for that nights meat portion of the meal. “The cut of meat makes the meal!” – Polo

She is the daughter of a Colombian-born mom and an English-Canadian dad. Since her mother handled most of the cooking in their family most of everything she knows is steeped thickly and heavily in the culture of her mother’s family back in the Quindio coffee region of Colombia.



“Je no soy gringa!”
– Mama Ross

Claudia recounts the story of her mother and how she came to the United States.

“My mother saw her sisters and cousins getting married very young, around 13 years old, and starting families. She wanted more for herself. So she went away and became a nun. She earned her degree and eventually became a superintendant of a local school district. And at 25 years old when she decided she wanted a family she was essentially an old spinster.



The War of Colombia
had diminshed the marriable male population. She saw how equal the gringos in the peace corps were. How the women were treated the same as the men. And she wanted to marry a gringo. So she came to the US, met my father, had my brother and I.”
– Claudia Ross

Ballsy



“The filling needs to be really strong, because you only use a little bit of filling for each empanada and the masa is almost tasteless.” – Claudia















Tips for making Empanadas

1. Firm Binding Technique: use wax paper to fold over the empanada, it won’t stick and it will help you get the hang of creating the dumplings.

2. Keep practicing.

“They get better as you go, just watch, they’ll be beautiful.” – Claudia

3. Use less filling than you think you need

4. To make the ridges, “just pop your finger in and create them manually.” – Polo

5. Use a cup to form the domed shape of the empanada.






Smashed Plantains: Slice 4 plantain “bananas” into 1/2″ thick disks. Heat 3-4 inches of corn or vegetable oil in a skillet. When hot, add plantains. When the float, fish them out of the oil, smash them with a spatula, return to the oil for another 3-4 minutes, Drain and salt them.









Empanada Masa Dough:

Take 2.5 C of warm water, 2 C Pan Masa (found in hispanic grocery sections or supermercados) and 8-10 cucharditos (teaspoons) of salt and mix in a large bowl. Knead until smooth and let rest for a few minutes.



Empanada Filling:


Fry 4 potatoes diced, 2 whole, diced onions and 4 cloves of garlic on medium heat with a little oil to coat the pan. Add a pound of ground beef or ground turkey for a lighter filling. Also add a bunch of diced cilantro, several tablespoons of cumin, salt and pepper to taste. As the mixture cooks add the juice of 6-10 limes and a cup of fresh peas (canned or frozen are fine).



Empanada Hot Sauce:


Create this fresh, raw sauce for topping off your fried empanadas. Combine 1 onion, diced, 1 fresh chile diced & 1 bunch of cilantro, diced into the juice of 10-15 limes. Salt the sauce to taste.

1. Form a disk in your hand the size of your palm, about 1/4″ thick.

2. Add filling in small spoonfuls, fold the disk in half.

3. Use a small cup or bowl to secure in place.

4. Pinch in place and to seal closed.

5. Fry for 3-5 minutes per side, in corn or vegetable oil.

Top with hot sauce and serve alongside, hot salted plantains.

Team Lexington Burlesque Dinner – Quiche

The gothic goddess glided into the kitchen and stopped everyone short. We had no choice but to admire her confidence, beauty and presence. The seas parted. Even with her little prizefighter red robe on, everyone knew what was lying in wait underneath.

But just like any normal everyday Susie Q. Homemaker, Raquel Van Nice went about her business setting out ingredients for her quiche. Food bonds people together and makes everyone feel comfortable. Because we are all familiar with food.

Food and dancing are two constants.


“When I’m done with this, lets have a dance party! Remind me to cut this into smaller slices so it gets all the way around this crowd.”
– Raquel Van Nice





Squashy, Asparagusy, Bacony QUICHE!
(makes 2 pies)

Ingredients: 3/4lb asparagus (diced), 1/4lb zucchini (diced), 10 slices bacon, 6 eggs, 2 8″ pie crusts, 1 egg white (beaten), 1 1/2C heavy cream, 2C shredded cheese (you choose, Raquel used 1/2 swiss & 1/2 manchego), 1/4tsp nutmeg, salt & pepper to taste

Instructions: Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Meanwhile Steam aspragus and zuchini for about 6 minutes on the stovetop. In another pan, fry up bacon, drain and crumble. Brush pie crusts with egg white. Sprinkle in steamed, diced vegetables and bacon.
In a large mixing bowl beat together eggs, cream and spices. Fold in cheese. Pour over vegetables in pie crusts. Bake uncovered for 35-40 minutes until firm and golden brown. Cool 10-15 minutes, then slice and serve.

Burlesque Dinner – Fried Rice


“Fried Rice is totally a recession food. HAHAHA. Ham Flied Lice. Joo Won Sum Fried Rice.” – Jen Ford

Imagine a 5 foot 6 inch brunette, dressed head to toe in leopard, charging into a kitchen at full speed. Whipping around so fast it was nearly impossible to capture her on film. What wasn’t tough at all? Eating. The hang over food to cure all hang overs, ills or walks of shame: homemade fried rice.

You can essentially take leftovers from your fridge and dice, dice, dice them into a hot wok. Toss everything together, crack a few eggs, give that wok a little hand stir action. Soon, friends, you will have a crazy easy, crazy delicious dinner entree.

“Eat like your life depends on it!” – Jen Ford


Ingrediants: steamed jasmine rice (1lb), diced ham (1/2 lb), green onion (1 bunch, chopped), 1 stick butter, garlic (2 chopped tbsp), 6 eggs, peas (1 cup, thawed if frozen), soy sauce to taste

Instructions: Warm butter in wok or large pan. Add garlic, green onions and ham. Saute until warmed throughout (2-4 minutes). Add rice and soy sauce. Cook until hot. Crack the eggs directly into the wok or pan. Stir until eggs are dry and distributed throughout the rice mixture. Add peas to taste and serve.

Team Lexington Burlesque Dinner – Ratatouille

“It’s harvest time. These are all things in my garden right now. All the herbs, vegetables, everything is in season. Eggplants, zucchini’s, peppers, basil, marjoram.” - Melissa Duscha

Melanie Neault and Melissa Duscha showed up to Martini Oaks with baskets of veggies under one arm and floaty feathers piled into their hair. They eased around the kitchen, dresses swirling, fishnet legs darting and ducking, feathers trying desperately to keep up with heads that swiveled to talk and concentrate on chopping.

Duscha, is recently returned from living in Shanghai. She peppered our conversation with asides from living in China. Though she learned this ratatouille recipe from a fellow student, during a study program in France.

Here are her tips for a delicious french vegetable stew:
1. Chunks: all the vegetables should get cubed up into manageable pieces
2. Be really liberal with the herbs de provence
3. Don’t be afraid of olive oil or garlic. Fry them up together.
4. Use home grown vegetables when possible, they have more flavor.
5. It’s easier to cook half naked about 10 minutes into it. You are concentrating more on what it’s front of you and less on what’s jiggling behind you.





Mel’n'Mel Ratatouille

Ingredients: tomatoes, eggplants, zuchini (or in-season squash), belle pepper, chilis, garlic cloves, olive oil, pepper and salt, lemon juice (to taste) , pinch of sugar, white wine (to taste), herbs (fresh marjoram, basil, rosemary, oregano & bay leaves)

Instructions: Heat olive oil in a skillet and add (chopped) garlic and (chopped chilis). Control the spiciness of the stew by adding fewer or more chilis. Let fry for a bit (3-5 minutes). Do not let burn. Add eggplant and bell peppers and saute for 7-10 minutes depending on amount and heat. When soft, add remaining vegetables. Let cook down for another 15 minutes. Add wine, lemon juice, herbs and salt & pepper. Let simmer another 30 minutes. Serve.

Autumn Apple Delight – Worth The Whisk

“We’re experimenting as we go along on this dessert.” – Patti

It’s Autumn and apples are in season. Crunchy, crisp, juicy, tart and juicy apples. For a complete guide to everything apple related, click here.

When you are experimenting with fruit desserts the most fun variable is the fruit itself. Play with heirloom varietals and combinations of fruits. My personal favorite dating back to the early 80′s when my grandfather would make it for me, fresh from his garden, is strawberry rhubarb pie.

Mmmm

Patti Londre runs Worth the Whisk, a complete cooking bible online. She hosted our finale dinner over the 09 Fourth of July holiday weekend. When I saw the apples coming towards me, I was pretty excited. Apples have large amounts of quercetin which is known to activate energy levels in your body.

We had a LONG drive home in front of us. So Patti graciously donated the whole batch of Apple Delights to us and our road trip home to San Francisco.

MWA Patti!





Apple Delights

1. Unfold slightly softened puff pastry sheets. If the sheet defrost too much and come to room temperature, they may become difficult to work with. Pop them back into the freezer for a few minutes.

2. Cut the puff pastry into little squares, about 2″. Plop each square into a greased muffin tin opening.

3. Scopp heaping spoonfuls of applesauce into each puff pastry opening. Use Chunky apple sauce and sprinkle with cinnamon after each scoop.

4. Bake at 400 degrees for approx. 15 minutes.

5. Let cool and Enjoy!

Patti & Larry – (Westwood) Los Angeles, CA

“You’ll notice I have a two drawer dishwasher. Pug dogs think an open door is a buffet table. So we put these pull out drawers in to keep Sake out of the dishwasher.” - Patti

We were greeted by Penny the mischevious kitten and Sake the heavy breathing albeit laid back pug. They both eyed us for a moment. And then Penny went into attack mode on my leopard dress. She wouldn’t give up until the queen of the jungle, my very unalive printed dress, knew who was BOSS in this household.

Hilarious.

Patti is a foodie-pro who runs Worth the Whisk. Her husband, Larry is a professor at USC. Together they run a very pretty household just a mile from Marilyn Monroe’s tucked away gravesite and a stones throw from UCLA.

“You girls ought to go down to Marilyn Monroe’s grave, it’s a quick mile walk from here. Here lemme show you on the computer.” – Patti

So we did. We went.

But not until we had stuffed ourselves silly with Lasagna. Patti was making an extra lasagna for a friend who had just had surgery. She’s ridiculously sweet and kind like that.



“You can never have enough cheese. Never.” – Patti



“Everything about lasagna is on the ‘or so’ side of measurement.”
– Patti



Londre Lasagna

1 Box Lasagna Noodles (whole wheat will absorb everything in the pan and get mushy. Use white pasta for lasagnas)
1 Pint Fat Free Cottage Cheese
1/3 C Shredded Parmagiana Reggiano
Several Cups Shredded Mozzarella (it’s up to you how much to use)
1 Can Spinach (or two handfuls fresh spinach, reduced down on the stove top)
Small Can of Black Olives, sliced
“This is the part where I start looking in my fridge for things I can sneak into the cheese mixture and hide in the lasagna.” – Patti
1/4C Egg Free Eggs or simply 1 egg
Several Cans Chopped, Peeled Tomatoes blended in a bowl with Tomato Basil Classico sauce
1 Tsp Dried Rosemary
Salt & Pepper
EVOO

1. Heat a large pot of salted water to a slow boil. Add noodles. Cook 8-10 minutes or until soft. Strain and cool until they can be handled.

2. Combine egg with cheeses and cottage cheese.

3. Take a large baking pan and drizzle olive oil in the bottom of the pan. Add a layer of noodles until pan is covered.

4. Spoon cheese mixture atop the noodles. Layer olives, tomatoes and cheese noodles.

5. Repeat.

6. Top with remaining tomatoes and cheese.

7. Bake 45 minutes at 350 degrees. Let cool for 10 minutes before serving.

Liza Cortez’s Mojitos

“You Feel GLOWY with these drinks.” - Liza Cortez

Mojitos
3 dozen mint leaves, muddled in a large cup with a fork or wooden spoon
7-8 limes juiced (more limes if you use smaller key west limes)
1 1/2 C simple syrup
1 bottle Cachaca
1 liter of sparkling water

Add lime juice, simple syrup and mint leaves to punch bowl. If you have not muddled the mint yet, do so now. Add cachaca and sparkling water. Ladle into cups over ice.

CHEERS!

La Familia Cortez – Inglewood, CA

“These recipes are mother to mother recipes. Mine comes from my mother and her mother and her mother’s mother in El Salvador.” - Ana Cox

Misconceptions are horrible ‘ceptions. Maybe it’s because I had listened to Snoop Dogg and he was always rapping about Inglewood being up to no good. But I was nervous about the Inglewood Sip Snap Savor dinner.

It turned out to be the most lovely experience with the most loving family. I sort of wanted to move in – Mom & Dad Cortez have four squirmy, giggly, classy daughters. Each with her own ideals and goals. It was fascinating to sit with them for a few hours in their kitchen and then in their garden patio for a long Sunday lunch.

When Jamie and I walked into the house, Fleetwood Mac was belting out in the living room. Sister Liza, was rolling limes along the length of the kitchen table in preparation for Mojitos. Mom Ana was buzzing around the kitchen and came out to greet us with hugs and smooches on our cheeks.

It already smelled incredible. Chayote Chilaquiles and Arroz Frito was in the air. The sun was shining. I was starving.


Salsa De Chilequiles
4 tomatoes
1/2 green or red bell pepper
1/2 white onion
1/2 slice of bread
1spoonful of paprika and Knorr tomate caldo
Salt & Pepper to taste

Put all vegetables, seasonings and the bread into the blender. Top off with water. Blend the “salsa” until smooth. The bread adds textures.

Heat over medium low heat. It perfumes your whole house and a slow heat allows all the flavors to coagulate.

Chayote: also known as sayote, tayota, choko, chocho, chow-chow, christophene, mirliton, and vegetable pear, is an edible plant that belongs to the gourd family Cucurbitaceae along with melons, cucumbers and squash.

Chilequiles: The name chilaquiles is derived from the Nahuatl word chil-a-quilitl which means “herbs or greens in chile broth”.


El Salvador:
is the smallest and most densely populated country in Central America. It borders the Pacific Ocean between Guatemala and Honduras. It lies on the Gulf of Fonseca, as does Nicaragua further south. It has a population of approximately 6 million people


“We don’t put alot of condiments or heavy spiced sauces on our foods en Salvador. We preserve the way things really taste. It’s why I like fresh Asian foods so much. Fresh. Vibrant. Flavorful. Natural.” – Luz Cortez


“Wow! There’s no masking it’s natural flavor. This is Chayote. I will never forget it.” – Melissa

“Yes! Yes, its why I enjoy cuisines that serve fresh radishes and pickled vegetables. Lemon wedges. A little chile. Those natural condiments that preserve everything and bring it together. Not mask and hide. You have to have food integrity you know.” – Luz Cortez


“The center of the chayote is the tan rico part!” – Liza Cortez



“Eating meat all the time is too heavy. You feel better if you eat some vegetables. You can make these ahead of time, two or three days in advance. Store them in tupperware in the fridge.” - Ana Cortez

“This is a make you pretty dish. Full of proteins vegetables and it’s so simple!” – Luz Cortez





Chilequiles
Serves 10 people

6-8 Chayotes, peeled and sliced into disks, just as you would slice a cucumber into disks
1 pckg Ranchero soft Farmer Cheese
4Tblsp Crema Salvadorena
5 egg whites (save yolks)
1/4 C vegetable oil
Salt & Pepper

Soft boil the chayote disks. When soft, 8-10 minutes, let drain and cool. They need to be cool enough to touch. Meanwhile crumble the package of Ranchero cheese into the tablespoons of crema in a small bowl. Set aside cheese mixture.

When chayote is cool enough to touch. Spread cheese mixture on one side and top with chayote to make a sort of chayote/cheese sandwich. Set on plate and make another sandwich. Continue until all chayote has been sandwiched with cheese.

Beat egg whites until stiff peaks form. Slowly add in 2-3 yolks after peaks form. This egg meringue will be the coating on the chilequiles.

Heat large skillet on medium high heat with bottom of skillet filled with half of the vegetable oil. When hot enough, coat a chayote sandwich in the egg meringue and set into skillet.

Do not crowd chayote sandwiches as they fry. Depending on the size of the skillet, fry 5-6 sandwiches at a time. The sandwiches will bubble and foam up like little marshmallow puffs.

Continue frying in batches. Stop and stir Salsa de Chilequiles occasionally. Ensure the Salsa hasn’t gotten too hot.

When done frying arrange all chilequiles in a bowl. Top with Salsa de Chilequiles. Rice is a great side dish to this meal and for sopping up the beautiful Salsa.

Enjoy!

The Neuhaus Family : San Luis Obispo, CA

“The family that opens cans together, stays together!” – Dr. Tom Neuhaus aka Casanova


In sunny San Luis Obispo it can be hard to find anything that deviates from the main populace formula of rancher/farmer chic or college undergraduate hipster. So it was a treat for Jamie and I to find ourselves in the progressively artsy home of two pioneering Chocolatiers and their families, cooking up West African delights in the coziest, friendliest kitchen.

“This whole project idea is marvelous. Bringing people together, aaah. Food is so close to everyone’s heart!” – Eve Neuhaus

Tom Neuhaus and his wife Eve run Sweet Earth Chocolates – a fair trade, ingredient driven sweets company. But they really run a lifestyle brand complete with West African Fair Trade socio-economic information that will convince to drops your Mars Bar with a quickness. Their extended family includes daughter Elise and son-in-law Martin who help run COG, a coop grocery in Berkeley.

“Don’t be bashful! Just cook. just. cook.” – Casanova

While we were perfectly content to marvel at the trials and tribulations of 80′s rap and hiphop artists. Eventually the conversation covered topics ranging from Dutch & English colonists to finding a modern day Sir Isaac Newton. Son-in-Law Martin, humorously spanked out his laptop to fact find and fact check throughout dinner. Forgot the name of an obscure spice, explorer or 17th Century Canadian politician? No problem.

He’s got you covered.

Our dinner conversation went something like this:


Berbers?
NO! Bergers.

What? A marsupial?

Thats the Italian way to roast a chicken.
450 degrees for 10 minutes

The Brits were the best. Everyone hated France, ya know.

The best African colonies were Nigeria and Ghana. They were British Colonies.

The KING OF BELGUM! BISMARK?!?!
Henry Stanley, you know Morgan Stanley, helped carve Africa. That’s how the Belgian got The Congo.

They smoked baskets of hands.

My great-great-great-great-great-grandfather was the food taster for King Louis the XIIII!

Well, juju comes from Togo. TOGO. JUJU.



For dessert we had homemade fair trade chocolate marshmallow men. Dinner couldn’t have ended on a more fun note. Bellies full of delicious West African Red Red, Plantains and Heads filled with even more delicious world topics and stories.

To learn more about Fair Trade Chocolate click here.
To visit Sweet Earth Chocolates click here.
To glimpse inside the coop grocery in Berkeley, CA click here.

“We believe that capitalism comes in different flavors–not just the survival-of-the-fittest sort, but a softer, kinder, and more sustainable way of doing business that considers the needs of our planet and its people. Chocolate that’s better for the environment.Chocolate that’s better for the earth. Chocolate that’s better for the people.” – Sweet Earth Chocolates