Tuesday 13 October 2015

Coconut Cream Pie

October 13, 2015

Ingredients:

1 Can coconut milk
Approx 1 cup heavy cream*
3/4 cup sugar
3 tbsp cornstarch
3 egg yolks
1 tsp vanilla
pinch salt
2 cups sweetened shredded coconut

2 cups heavy cream
1/3 cup icing sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 F
Evenly spread coconut on cookie sheet
Bake for 5 minutes, turn
Bake in 2 minute intervals turning after until coconut is toasted
In a medium saucepan, combine coconut milk, cream, sugar and cornstarch
On medium heat bring to boil stirring constantly
Once bubbling remove from heat, temper eggs with small amount of mixture, and add eggs into saucepan, stirring vigorously
Add vanilla and salt, mix well
Add 1 1/2 cups toasted coconut to mixture and pour into pie crust**
Cool and let set in refrigerator for at least 4 hours
Whip heavy cream until soft peaks
Add icing sugar, whip until stiff peaks
Add vanilla, top chilled pie with whipped cream
Sprinkle top with remaining toasted coconut

Editor’s Note:  For those who are unfamiliar with the term Tempering, and don’t immediately turn to Google.  Tempering, is just mixing two liquids of different temperatures together without altering the texture of either liquid.  Tempering is very important when dealing with “heat sensitive” foods such as eggs.  Your main goal is not ending up with scrambled eggs.  You want to slowly bring up the temperature of your eggs by slowly adding your hot liquid in small amounts and mixing well.  It is fairly easy, but does take some practice.  

*NOTE: You want a total of 2.5 cups of liquid, so use the can, and fill a measuring cup to 2.5 cups

**NOTE: I use a graham cracker crust for this pie, but you can use whatever you want.

Even though this recipe is a fairly long one, it is actually pretty easy to make. This requires no baking, other than to toast the coconut, and can be done in about 30 minutes altogether. I am a big fan of coconut, and pies, so this is another one of my favourites. I make it whenever I have an excuse to bring pie to someone's house. The smell of toasting coconut in the house lingers for a few hours and my wife and I both enjoy it very much.

You could use coconut extract in the whipped cream, or use actual coconut cream, but I am happy with the level of coconut-ness of the pie as I make it, but each person has their own tastes.

I hope you have enjoyed my pie recipes, I don't have too many left to share, so I will probably keep those ones until Christmas. Hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving weekend, and ate lots of turkey, ham and of course, Pie.

Cheers and Best Wishes!

The Omnomnivore

Monday 12 October 2015

Pecan Pie

Pecan Pie

October 11, 2015

Ingredients:

2 eggs
1/2 cup butter, melted
1 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup white sugar
1 tbsp milk
1 tbsp flour
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup chopped pecans

Directions:

Preheat oven to 400 F
Beat eggs until foamy
Add both sugars mix well
Add butter and milk, mix well
Add vanilla and pecans, mix well
Pour into unbaked pie crust and bake for 10 minutes
Reduce heat to 350, bake for 30-35 minutes, until done*


*NOTE: Until done means the middle is set, and the crust is golden brown but not burned.

Pecan pie has recently become one of my favourite pies. For anyone who hasn’t had a slice before, it is basically a giant butter tart with pecans. I will admit that I cheat and buy store-bought crusts for all my pies, I find the Pillsbury ones work really well. I have never tried to make my own, and it would probably be better, but at this point I think my pies turn out well enough that I am ok using them.

There isn't much more to say on this other than you should try pecan pie for yourself if you have never had, because it is really really good. I will probably be posting some more recipes with pecans over the next couple of weeks now because I have a lot left over.

Happy Thanksgiving!

The Omnomnivore



Saturday 10 October 2015

Farfalle and cheese

Farfalle and cheese

October 10, 2015

Ingredients:

Farfalle (bowtie) pasta, or any other of your choosing
Butter
Milk
Pepper
Cheddar Cheese
Worchester Sauce
Bacon

Directions:

Boil water and cook pasta as per directions
Make a roux with the butter and flour
Add milk and stir constantly until it thickens
Add cheese, pepper, and dash of worchester sauce
Pour cheese sauce over cooked and drained pasta
Add bacon to taste

Editor's Note:  Making a roux was covered in a previous post. It should be mentioned that you are not going to want to cook this one too long. The rich nutty flavours that you can develop with a well prepared roux may not be what you are looking for in a cheese sauce.

Today for lunch I decided to make a homemade version of mac and cheese with bacon. This version really doesn't take any longer than the classic KD and tastes at least a full order of magnitude better, and that's even before the bacon is added. If you were to leave out the cheese, pepper, and worchester sauce you would have a bechamel sauce which is the base for many other sauces, and can be used on its own. I didn’t put any ingredient amounts on here because it is really easy to scale as needed. As a general rule, use equal parts butter and flour, and then about a cup of milk per tablespoon of butter. You can very easily play around with the cheese types and amounts as per your own tastes

This was just a quick post to try to make up for not posting in so long, and it was a pretty tasty lunch.


Cheers and Best Wishes!
The Omnomnivore

Pho House

Pho House

October 10, 2015

It’s been a long time since I have posted, and for that I apologize, it has been a very busy time for us. With that being said, this is Thanksgiving weekend, which always means loads and loads of food, so there should be a post or two forthcoming with the weekend festivities.

To start us off this weekend, there is a new restaurant in Grande Prairie, called Pho House, which opened a couple weeks ago. If the name didn’t give it away, they specialize in Pho. But they also have rice bowls and other Vietnamese dishes. I had never had pho before, but I had always heard very good things from other people that I knew. While it is a very simple dish: Broth, rice noodles, and meat, it is very complex and deep in flavour.

The first time I went, I had the Pho with beef strips and beef meatballs, and was with my editor, who had the same. He showed me that on the table, they have spoons for the broth, chopsticks for the noodles and meat, hoisin sauce, sriracha, and sambal for flavouring the soup to your liking. The soup also came with a side of lime, basil, and bean sprouts for further customization of your soup. It felt like a production in the best kind of way: you start with an amazing broth and can add things as you like, or leave them out to make it just the way you want.

I returned a few days later with my wife and baby, and I had the same, and my wife ordered the charbroiled pork, spring roll, and shrimp noodle bowl. I did the soup as I liked it from the last time, but my wife liked it better without anything but the lime juice. Her noodle bowl came with a sauce that is some sort of rice vinegar sauce that was fantastic but I have no idea what it was. The portion sizes were very generous in my opinion, and the prices very reasonable.

Both dishes were very, very good, and it was something different than most of the food that you can find around here. But one of the things that can make or break it for me for a new place is the service, and this place has it. Both times I went I was greeted and seated immediately, and the staff is prompt, helpful and happy. This makes a HUGE difference to me, I have not gone back to places that have good food but poor service, and I have gone back to places that had poor food but good service to give them another chance.

Overall, I am very impressed with this new addition to our food-scape, and will be returning for sure. I would rate this new restaurant a 8.5/10 on my overall scale, and that is probably a full point better than any other restaurant in town.



Cheers and Best Wishes!
The Omnomnivore


Tuesday 29 September 2015

Dinner Party!


September 29, 2015

Dinner Party

First, let me apologize for not posting in 5 days, I am sorry. Over the weekend, we had a bachelor party for my brother. In my family we like food, a lot. We decided to do a full prime rib roast, twice baked potatoes, roasted carrots and rutabaga, and caesar salad for the main course. We had bruschetta with goat cheese for an appetizer, cheesecake for dessert and escargot for a midnight snack. Everything turned out fantastic, and I will share below as much as I can. This is going to be the conclusion to the Month of Meals. I am going to take a few days off and start on the new schedule at some point this week. We are moving to a one or two post per week schedule now, with hopefully more pictures and more details. It would be really great if you could comment and share, and we will try to make some really good food!



Bruschetta

Ingredients:

1 28 oz can diced tomatoes, drained
1 bunch fresh basil
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
olive oil
balsamic vinegar
parmesan cheese, finely grated
salt
pepper
Baguette
goat cheese

Directions:

Drain tomatoes
In a small frying pan fry garlic in olive oil
Chiffonade the basil
In bowl, combine tomatoes, basil, garlic, balsamic, parm, salt and pepper
mix well, taste and adjust seasoning
slice baguette, toast lightly
spread with goat cheese, top with bruschetta mixture, top with more parm, and toast until cheese is melted and tomatoes are warm

This is one of my all time favourite appetizers. It is really good without the goat cheese, but having it adds an extra layer of flavour and goodness. I don't have amounts for the olive oil, balsamic, and parmesan, because you need to do those by taste, depending on the canned tomato flavour and salt content. Yes, you can use fresh tomatoes, but I find it very hard to get good tasting tomatoes in town, and I didn't grow any of my own, canned works great and saves a lot of cutting time. If you do want to use fresh tomatoes you will want to roast or stew them first.

The baguette can be sliced and toasted ahead of time, and just warmed up when ready to serve, you want the tomatoes warmed up but not so hot as to burn people, and the whole thing toasted but not burned. This is a sure winner if you are hosting a party and want to have something easy and quick but impressive for your guests.

Also, I have always pronounced this dish “brew-shett-a”, and I am aware the “proper” pronunciation is “brew-skett-a”, but I don't live in Italy, and every person in town I’ve met says it the same way I do, so I am not going to change at this point.


Prime Rib

Ingredients:

1 Prime Rib Roast, bone attached
Butter
Granulated garlic
Montreal steak spice

Directions:

Let roast warm to room temp*
Trim excess fat from roast**
Cut meat away from bone***
Season all 4 sides with seasoning
Tie roast back to bone with butcher twine
Rub ends with butter, season
Place in roasting pan
Roast for 15-20 minutes at 450 F
Turn down oven to 350 F and roast until internal temp of 125F
Remove roast, cover and rest for at LEAST 10-15 minutes
Remove strings, pour off juices to use in gravy or jus
Slice and enjoy

*NOTE: I know a lot of people might say this is unsafe, but as long as you don't leave it out too long and cook it properly, there is nothing unsafe about having the roast sit on the counter for a while. This will ensure proper cooking as all of the meat will start from the same temp and it doesn't have to come up from fridge temp.

**NOTE: Most of the fat on a prime rib you are to leave on, there may be some chunks of fat that are excess though, when in doubt, leave it on.

***NOTE: we did not cut through the last bit of meat holding the roast to the ribs, this allowed for the bones be more easily tied back to the roast but still allowed for proper seasoning and then could be quickly and easily cut through when ready to slice the roast.

We did an entire prime rib roast, which is from rib 6 to 12. There was a lot of meat, and it was fantastic. Cooking the meat to 125 F and then letting it rests brings you to a perfect medium rare. You can quickly fry a cut of the roast in some butter and beef stock to bring it to whatever done-ness your guests would like, but there is really no better way to eat any beef than medium rare. The initial higher temp is to brown the outside of the roast and help to seal in the flavours, similar to pan frying a smaller cut of meat before putting it in the oven to finish. I don't have a cooking time on here because it will very much depend on the size of your roast. For the whole roast we were somewhere in the range of 2.5 hours at 350F, have a good meat thermometer you can trust, and check it once in awhile to make sure you are not going over.

Leftovers make great sandwiches, or if you have a large amount leftover, you can reheat in oven or slice and in frying pan and eat as a before. Cooked roast does not freeze well, but you can cut off a portion of the uncooked roast before seasoning and freeze for up to a month before you start loosing quality.


Twice Baked Potatoes

Ingredients:

Potatoes*
butter
milk/cream
cheddar cheese, grated
sour cream
bacon bits
chives or green onion

Directions:

Bake potatoes at 425 F until cooked, cool
Cut in half and scoop out middle, leaving just enough on the outside to maintain shape
Mash the scooped out bits with butter, milk, cheese, sour cream, bacon bits, chives, salt and pepper to taste.
Refill potato skins with filling
Bake at 350 until warmed through
Top with more shredded cheese and broil until melted.

*Note: Use large potatoes with a thicker skin, I prefer redskin.

This is my preferred way to eat potatoes with steak. I can get away with putting more things into it than I would normally with just mashed potatoes, and it has a really nice presentation. Most of the time I plan for 1.5 halves per person, because with larger groups a lot of people are only going to have 1 half, but some will want their “whole” potato. These keep very well for the next day and can be quickly warmed in the oven at 350F. You can play around with the flavourings for the filling and do whatever you want, but this recipe is a really good one to start with.


Cheesecake

Ingredients:

2 cups Graham cracker crumbs
2 Tbsps sugar
5 Tbsp butter
4 packages cream cheese
1 1/3 cup white sugar
pinch salt
2 tsp vanilla
4 large eggs
2/3 cup sour cream
2/3 cup heavy cream

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 F
Melt butter
Mix butter graham crumbs, sugar and butter
Pat into bottom of 9” springform pan evenly
Use tinfoil to encase outside of springform pan, waterproofing it.
Bake for 10 minutes, turn oven down to 325 F
Mix cream cheese for 5 minutes with stand mixer until light and fluffy
Add sugar, salt and vanilla, beat for 2 minutes
Add eggs, beating for 2 minutes after each addition
Add sour cream and heavy cream, mixing until incorporated each time
Boil 2 litres of water
Pour Cheesecake mixture into springform pan
Place springform pan in large roasting pan





Pour water into roasting pan until halfway up springform pan
Bake at 325 F for 1 1/2 hour
Turn off oven, crack door and cool for 1 hour
Remove from water, refrigerate overnight or at least 4 hours


This is a rather time consuming cheesecake to prepare but is WELL worth it. I am a very big cheesecake fan, and this is one of the best that I have ever had. I know that lots of people will say they make good food and it's not that great, but I have always been the most critical of my own food, and I have had other people tell me that it is the best they have had too. I like to top with a strawberry sauce just made from a bit of sugar and frozen strawberries boiled down, but you could use anything you wanted. Don't let the 4 bricks of cream cheese scare you, this is a very tall cheesecake that is surprisingly light and airy from all the mixing.

Make sure to use a good whole fat sour cream and high quality whipping or heavy cream, or this just won’t be the same. Don't worry about the fat content, just have a smaller slice, then another one because it is so good.



This concludes the Month of Meals. As mentioned above, we did make a midnight snack of Escargot as well, but that is my father's recipe and I'm not actually sure of all the steps, maybe another time I will post that. I hope you have enjoyed the journey, and have tried some new things. I'm sorry to the one reader who discovered I left the milk out of my pancake recipe, and thank you all for reading. Keep watching to see more great food, and feel free to comment!

Cheers and Best Wishes!
The Omnomnivore

Thursday 24 September 2015

Chicken Fajita


September 24, 2015

Chicken Fajita

Ingredients:

Rice
6 Chicken thighs (or 3 breasts)
1 packet fajita mix
1 onion
2 peppers
tortilla shells
sour cream
hot sauce
cheese


Directions:

Cook rice
Cook chicken
cook peppers and onions
add chicken to peppers and onions, add packet, follow directions on packet
wrap everything in tortilla


Easy recipe tonight, we had some leftover chicken thighs from last night's recipe, so we cut them up and made fajitas. Yes, we cheat and use the packet, it makes life easy and quick, which is what we were looking for in tonight's menu.

Dinner was quite tasty, but without a microwave, I’m not a huge fan of these as leftovers. Yes, I use a microwave for leftovers, but that is pretty much the only time I ever use one. We can argue about it later if you want.

Another short post today, coming up on a very busy weekend, so some of the posts might be a bit late, but I will get them out. I think we have decided to go to a 2 posts per week format for next month, and see how that plays out. As always feel free to leave a comment, I would love to hear any feedback, or follow me on Facebook!

Cheers and Best Wishes!
The Omnomnivore

P.S I gave the editor a night off, so whatever mistakes are in here are totally on me.

Fold it like a burrito after you take a picture ;)