Chicken Adobo Variation #2

L and I were planning a quiet night in to watch TV. I decided for dinner to return to that wonderful Filipino dish, Chicken Adobo. Back in March I tried the recipe for the first time based on its ease of preparation and it turned out so well I thought I’d look around and find another recipe for it. I found Chef Romy Dorotan’s (of Cendrillon Asian Grill and Merienda Bar) recipe and decided to give it a go. One thing that made me think twice while reading over this recipe was the use of coconut milk, I’m not a fan of coconut, but never having tried the milk I’m willing to give anything a go once.

What a great version of adobo. I was so pleased with this dish. The house is still filled with an amazing aroma. What flavour! This meal was more successful in the balance of tang and savoury tastes. I served this as Dorotan suggested with jasmine rice and my own idea of
sautéed swiss shard with garlic and onion (well not so much my idea, the suggested side was mustard greens but our grocery store is terrible and no greens were available...hence swiss chard). This is a recipe worth trying, I filled the bowl with the rice, placed the chard just off to the side and the chicken on top, then poured the reduced sauce over it all. Brilliant.

Ladies and gentlemen, it’s chow time...


for SAUTÉED SWISS CHARD

Ingredients
1 bunch Swiss chard (center stems removed), torn and washed well (about ¾ lb trimmed)
1 medium roast clove garlic, finely chopped
¼ tsp crushed red pepper flakes
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp unsalted butter
¼ cup onion
½ tsp Île de Ré sea salt
¼ tsp freshly ground long pepper

Method
In a saute pan over medium-high heat, heat the oil until it starts to smoke. Add the onion, roasted garlic, and red pepper flakes. When onions are soft add chard. Cook, using tongs to turn the chard over a few times, until it has wilted slightly. Remove from the heat, and season with sea salt and long pepper.


for the JASMINE RICE

Ingredients
1 cup Jasmine Rice
1 tbsp unsalted butter
low sodium chicken broth
water
kosher salt

Method

1. Rinse the rice, until the water runs clear without any milkiness. Drain.

2. Place the rice in a pot and add enough water (or a fifty-fifty mix of water and chicken broth) to cover the rice by ¾ of an inch.

3. Bring the rice to a boil, uncovered.

4. Lower the heat to the lowest setting. Cover and simmer until the rice is cooked through (about 20 minutes).

5. Remove the rice from the heat, add the butter to the rice and allow to sit, still covered, for at least 10 minutes.
Then mix in the melted butter and fluff with a fork before serving.


for the ADOBO CHICKEN

Ingredients
3-3½ lb of chicken, cut into 6 serving pieces and washed
1½ cups seasoned rice vinegar
¼ cup soy sauce
1 cup coconut milk
8 cloves roasted garlic, minced
3 bay leaves
½ tablespoon ground long pepper

Method
1. In a big bowl, combine vinegar, soy sauce, coconut milk, garlic, bay leaves, and long pepper. Add chicken and marinate, covered, in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours.

2. Put chicken in a dutch oven. Pour marinade over chicken and bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer, covered, until tender, 20 to 25 minutes.

3. Preheat broiler. Remove chicken from pot, and place on a baking sheet or broiler pan. Place under broiler until browned, 5 to 10 minutes, turning for even browning. Meanwhile, continue to cook the remaining liquid in the pot until it reaches a creamy consistency. Transfer chicken to a serving platter, and top with reduced sauce. Serve with swiss chard and rice.


Pan-Roasted Bison with Sea Salt and Parmesan Sweet Potato Oven Fries

While shopping at the St Lawrence Market I visited White House Meats and picked up a couple of Bison Rib-Eye steaks at my wife, L’s, request. She heard that Bison was lower in fat and calories as well as having more nutrients than a lot of other meats. White House was clearly the place to go, it’s been around since 1953 and is quickly becoming one of my favourite and more challenging places to shop at the Market. I can easily walk away with a product that I have no idea how to cook; ostrich, rabbit, venison...etc.

So, along with my usual free-range capon for my Sunday chicken roast (from Mano’s), a pack of free-range chicken legs and a couple of skinless chicken breasts from Clement Poultry, I had the two 10 oz Bison Rib-Eyes weighing me down along with eggs, kefir, morels, salt (Île de Ré salt from Andrea Brockie, owner of Selsi Sea Rocks) and a plentiful horn of vegetables hanging from canvas bags (all this with only a peameal bacon sandwich for sustenance). Imagine my surprise when I found out that the street outside the market is alive and wiggly with dogs. Woofstock A Festival For Dogs is an wonderful event...that is unless you are draped in meat. I had every dog in a ten foot radius nuzzling my bags as I shimmied and shuffled trying to get clear without causing a fuss. I stopped only for a second when I came face to face with two gargantuan heads peering at me from over the Great Dane pen. Muzzles all spit-webbed, they just stared blankly at me with a wild sort of, what I knew to be, hunger. With much haste I quickly made my way north to Queen Street, meat swinging heavily.

After getting home I took inventory to make sure all my meat was still there then got online to learn about my Bison. Century Game Park is located in the Northumberland Hills County in Warkworth, Ontario. Rod J. Potter’s great-great-grandfather settled the land Century Game Park is on now. That makes him the fifth generation to live on the family land. 20 years ago Potter got into raising and selling bison meat and in 1992 elk. It’s said that his farm now boasts 75 bison and 18 elk. The bison and elk graze naturally around an environmental grass farm with wetland area and beaver pond. He has a holistic approach to farming and his chemical-free meat routinely appears on the menus of restaurants around the GTA. Bison and elk meat is growing in popularity in general. As I said earlier the reason for the meats’ popularity is not only because of the taste, but they’re high in protein and low in fat. It is great that there are people out there like Potter bringing this magnificent animal back from the brink of extinction to great numbers seen today. Oh, and the Bison tasted amazing. L said afterward that if she were not told what she had just eaten she would say it was really good quality steak. I was curious to find out what kind of bison I was dealing with but unfortunately my email to them was never answered. I hope that means business is good.


PAN-ROASTED BISON WITH SEA SALT AND PARMESAN SWEET POTATO OVEN FRIES


Ingredients

for the SEA SALT AND PARMESAN SWEET POTATO OVEN FRIES
3 organic sweet potatoes, cut in half lengthwise, halves cut lengthwise into wedges
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
¾ tsp Île de Ré sea salt
2 tablespoons chopped parsley leaves
¼ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano

for the PAN-ROASTED BISON
2 x 10 oz pieces bison, rib eye
4 pieces long pepper (or fresh ground black pepper)
1 cloves garlic, crushed
Île de Ré sea salt (or coarse sea salt)
4 sprigs fresh thyme
2 tbsp peanut oil


Method

SEA SALT AND PARMESAN SWEET POTATO OVEN FRIES
1. Preheat the oven to 425 F / Gas Mark 7 / 220 C with heating the oven put a baking sheet in the for at least 5 minutes until it is very hot.

2. While the baking sheet is heating, toss the potatoes with the olive oil and ¾ teaspoon salt in a large bowl. Then dump the potatoes out onto the hot baking sheet, spreading to a single layer. Roast for 30 to 35 minutes, until the sweet potatos are brown and crispy. Toss the fries in a big bowl with the parsley and cheese. Cover with foil to keep warm until ready to use.


PAN-ROASTED BISON
1. Preheat the oven to 400 F / gas mark 6 / 200 C.

2. In a mortar and pestle finely grind the long pepper, then add the garlic and thyme and pound into a paste.

3. Rub the bison steaks with the paste and put aside for an hour to allow the mixture to soak in.

4. Heat a large skillet over high heat. Add oil, season steaks with sea salt and when the oil just starts to smoke add steaks. Sear them for 4 minutes per side and then place them into the oven for an additional 4-5 minutes or until steaks are cooked to medium-rare. Take steaks out of skillet and keep warm until ready to serve.

Four Cheese & Cremini Free-Form Ravioli with Asparagus, Ramp, Morel & Cremini Ragoût

Currently, we are just leaving ramp, fiddlehead, and morel season. Let it be known through-out the land. Actually I’ve just been told we are officially out of ramps season now. See, that’s how quick seasons pass. If you don’t grab foods when they’re fresh, you are out of luck—flavour-wise, and what other “-wise” is there? I tend to stumble into each season, wandering through a market I’ll spot, say, ramps, and immediately know I have to rush about trying to find out where they hid the morels and other vegetables that arrive at the same time. When I was young I was blissfully unaware that all foods had a season. Being city-raised as far as I knew, we had sweet corn simply because we were at the cottage. It was Fenelon Falls food, Hickory Beach food, like the green beans eaten fresh along the rows of the Harrison’s farm where we ran. We were on holiday and the food was just there. Now I know that my family cottaged at the end of July and August, the time that green beans and corn were ripest. I try to be more aware of the seasons as they arrive and look forward to June’s strawberries, lettuces in July, and sweet corn in August.

While digging through my fridge I noticed that I still had ramps, asparagus, morels and a few other things that really needed to be made into something. When seasons for some of these veggies are so short, it is a sin to waste them. I checked through my cookbooks and Tom Colicchio came through again. My recipe is very, very roughly based on his recipe of roughly the same name. The changes all came in the quantities and substitutions I made during it's making. The whole point, though, was to use the seasonal ramps and morels.

Before we get to the recipe let’s look at this seasons gems:

Ramps
I’ve only discovered ramps within the last few years. Long and thin with two or three bright green leaves with the small white bulb attached by a purplish stem, they resemble scallions somewhat. The aroma is quite a strong mix of onion and garlic. The word ramp itself comes from rams, or ramson, old Elizabethan for wild garlic. I didn’t realize how powerful that smell is until I had cleaned and trimmed about a half a pound one afternoon and the house smelt as if I had rubbed the walls with garlic for a day. They are sometimes called wild leeks but according to Wild Harvest’s website, although they are the same plant there is a difference—ramps are harvested earlier.

To prepare the ramp for cooking just remove the loose skin and dirt from the bulb and trim off the roots. Depending on the condition of the leaves, you can trim stock leaving about a ¼ inch of green.

Morels
Morels are conical, honey-combed mushrooms that have a wonderful earthy aroma to them. The flavour is rich and intense. They are usually found after forest fires or around trees like ash, sycamore, yellow-poplar, fallen elms, and old apple trees (remnants of orchards). When you buy them they should be almost dry to the touch. Avoid morels that are soft or mushy or that crumble when rubbed: they are too old and wormy. Keep your eye open for tiny white worms, morels occasionally contain insect larvae that drop out during the drying process. Is this gross? No, this is nature. Pick out the little guys and toss them in the back yard or in the compost. This year I went through a lot of morels and had only two appear.

To clean the mushrooms try not to wash, even brief soaking diminishes their flavour. Just use a brush to gently remove dirt, trim off the stems, and I cut the larger ones in half. They are hollow, so look inside the main body and the chambers to make sure no other critters are tucked up inside. There, you are ready to go.

Fiddleheads
Although I’m not using fiddleheads in the following recipe, it is the season. Fiddleheads are the young coiled fern leaves of the Ostrich fern. They appear in the early spring, during April and May, and are harvested as soon as they stretch up to about an inch or two of the ground. When buying look for a tight coil about an inch to an inch and a half in diameter and only an inch or two of stem hanging. There might be a brown papery skin, or chaff, that surrounds the fiddlehead on the plant. This is sometimes removed before reaching the store but I find there is always a bit left.

To clean, carefully brush out and remove the brown skin and then wash the fiddleheads in several changes of cold water to remove any dirt or grit. Drain the them completely. Cook the “heads” in a small amount of lightly salted boiling water for ten minutes, or steam for 20 minutes.



FOUR CHEESE & CREMINI FREE-FORM RAVIOLI WITH ASPARAGUS, RAMP, MOREL & CREMINI RAGOÛT

For the ASPARAGUS, RAMP, MOREL & CREMINI RAGOÛT
Ingredients
¾ cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter, chilled and cut into pieces
100g morels & cremini mushrooms
50g ramps, cleaned and trimmed
150g asparagus, trimmed and cut into 2- to 3- inch pieces
1 tbsp chopped fresh chervil (or fresh tarragon)
1 tbsp chopped fresh chives
kosher salt & freshly ground black pepper


Method
1. First we make a basic beurre fondue (which is just a fancy way of saying butter melted in water). Bring about a ½ inch of water to a simmer in a small saucepan.

2. Start adding butter, about a tablespoon at a time, whisking to melt. As the beurre fondue reaches a gentle simmer, you may notice small oil droplets starting to form. This happens when the water begins to evaporate, so add a small amount of warm water to compensate.

3. Keep adding the butter until you have incorporated a ¾ cup into the sauce, slowly now, so as not to lower the temperature in the pot and cause the sauce to solidify. OK if it isn’t solid, it’s done.

4. For the ragoût, transfer your beurre fondue to a medium saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat. Add the morels first, a few at a time, then reduce the heat to low. They tend to take the longest to lose their toughness. Add salt and pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, until the morels begin to soften, around 5-10 minutes. Add the ramps and continue to simmer gently until the morels are completely soft and the ramps are nice and tender, say about 5 minutes more.

5. Meanwhile, cook the asparagus in a pot of boiling salted water until they are tender, usually 3-5 minutes. Drain them and add them to the ragoût. Stir together. Season with kosher salt & freshly ground black pepper. Add the chervil and chives and serve garnished with additional herbs if desired.


For the FOUR CHEESE & CREMINI FREE-FORM RAVIOLI
Ingredients
1 or 2 fresh large, thin pasta sheets (around 10 x 10 inches), per person (make your own if you can) 1 pound ricotta cheese
¾ + ¼ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
½ cup grated Gruyère
½ cup grated Mozzarella
¼ Cremini mushrooms, diced up small
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 tbsp chopped fresh basil (or fresh chevril)
1 batch Ragout of Asparagus, Ramps, Morels and Cremini (recipe above)
¼ cup chives (or a mix of fresh herbs such as chervil, chives, basil, flat-leaf parsley, and tarragon)
kosher salt & freshly ground black pepper

Method
1. Heat the oven to 350F / Gas Mark 5 / 200C. Mix the ricotta, ¾ cup of the Parmigiano-Reggiano, all the Gruyère and Mozzarella, the mushrooms and the olive oil together in a medium saucepan. Add kosher salt & freshly ground black pepper and warm the cheese mixture, stirring occasionally, over low heat.

2. Cook the pasta according to the manufacturer’s instructions, then drain, rinse under cold water, and pat dry. Set the pasta aside in a single layer on a cookie sheet lined with plastic wrap.

3. Mix the basil into the cheese & mushroom mixture. Place a heaping spoonful of the mixture in the center of a pasta square, then fold the pasta around the cheese, creating a little bundle. Gently place the ravioli, folded-side down, in an oiled baking dish. Repeat the process until you have filled all the squares. How you do the filling and folding is entirely up to you, I like the look of a rough bundle, all you need to remember is to not over-fill the bundle.

4. Sprinkle the tops of the ravioli with the remaining ¼ cup of Parmigiano-Reggiano, and bake until the pasta is golden and slightly puffed, about 20 minutes.

5. Now break out that warm ragoût you made earlier and place it in shallow bowls, topped with one or two little ravioli bundles (it all depends on how large you made the bundles and how hungry you are). Serve with a sprinkling of finely chopped chives or fresh herbs.