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Monday, October 26, 2009

Beef Dip

Beef Dip

Beef Dip is a hearty and delicious dish that’s perfect for gatherings, weeknight dinners, or whenever you’re craving tender roast beef with savory dipping sauce. The secret? A humble package of onion soup mix adds incredible flavor with minimal effort. (Shh...don't tell the chefs at Le Cordon Bleu! They would want you to make French Onion Soup from scratch and dehydrate it yourself!)

Serve with crusty French bread for the ultimate comfort meal.

Recipe: Beef Dip

from Auntie Joyce

Serves: 8

Ingredients:

4-pound beef roast
1 teaspoon dry mustard
½ teaspoon dried oregano
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 yellow onions, cut into slices or rings
5 cups water
½ cup soya sauce
1 package onion soup mix
1 garlic clove, minced

Insructions:

To Prepare and Eat Now:

  1. Preheat your oven to 325°F (163°C).
  2. Pat the roast dry with paper towels. Rub or sprinkle it with dry mustard, oregano, salt, and pepper.
  3. In a large roasting pan, heat vegetable oil over medium-high heat. Sear the roast on all sides until browned. Set aside.
  4. Add sliced onions to the roasting pan and sauté until tender, about 10 minutes.
  5. Pour in water, soy sauce, onion soup mix, and minced garlic. Stir to combine. Return the roast to the pan.
  6. Roast in the oven for 2-2½ hours or until the beef reaches your desired doneness:

    Extra-rare (bleu)115-120°F (46-49°C)
    Rare125-130°F (52-55°C)
    Medium rare130-140°F (55-60°C)
    Medium140-150°F (60-65°C)
    Medium well150-155°F (65-69°C)
    Well done>160°F (>71°C)

To Freeze:

  1. Cook the roast to a slightly lower temperature than desired, allowing it to finish cooking when reheated.
  2. Slice the beef and layer it between sheets of wax paper.
  3. Freeze the roast and sauce in separate containers. Recommended freezing time: 6-12 months.

To Prepare After Freezing:

  1. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
  2. Reheat the beef slices and sauce in the microwave or on the stovetop.
Beef Dip

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Week 5 at Le Cordon Bleu (Basic Cuisine)

Time is flying by so fast here at Le Cordon Bleu. Week 5 seems long ago and was all about soups and compound butters. Well, "soup" is not the right term; "potage" is more accurate. Soup, a type of potage, is derived from the word souper, which means to absorb. To be called a soup, it must contain bread (such as French Onion Soup or Fish Soup). A potage is either thickened (called a lié) or unthickened (clair), such as consommé.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Orange Pumpkin Loaf

Orange Pumpkin Loaf

This Orange Pumpkin Loaf combines the warmth of pumpkin with the bright, zesty taste of whole orange, peel and all! A recipe straight from the professional kitchens of Le Cordon Bleu, this loaf is packed with seasonal spices, walnuts, and raisins, making it a delightful treat for breakfast, tea time, or dessert.  I was in the kitchen at Le Cordon Bleu to practice filleting a Dover Sole and turning mushrooms, and Chef shared a pumpkin loaf with me. It was so delicious, I asked for the recipe.

It uses a whole orange, making it extra flavorful and perfect for this Fall season. Enjoy!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Week 4 at Le Cordon Bleu (Basic Cuisine)

Taste, turning, trussing, and tears.

Last week, we had a seminar on taste! Spending a morning talking about taste was pretty cool! In many little white tubs, lined up in rows, were a variety of different colored liquids. In groups, we were given a container and asked to think of a memory that went along with it. Unfortunately, many of the tubs contained slightly stale versions of the originals, and too often Grandma's lace or even, in some cases, urinal pucks came to mind! Here's what we had to guess: white balsamic vinegar, lavender, truffle, shrimp paste, bergamot, lime, hazelnuts, sesame oil, anise-flavored alcohol, hoisin sauce, cognac, soy sauce, fish sauce, vanilla, port, rum calvados, pear alcohol, tabasco, chili paste. I found it challenging to deconstruct the aromas, but it was fun.

The next demo was all about Les Fonds Blanc et Brun (Brown and White Stocks), the base of sauces in French cuisine. We covered chicken stock, veal stock, tomato sauce (one of the mother sauces), and fish fumet. Our practical was to fillet a whole Dover sole, use the bones to make a fish fumet, and finish with a dish called Filet de sole de Douvres Dieppoise. This dish must include mussels and shrimp to be called Dieppoise. Not a problem. I've cooked mussels before and the shrimp came pre-cooked. However, the whole Dover sole slowed me down. It was the maiden voyage for my filleting knife and my hands with a whole fish. My filleting needed practice, so I attended an extra practice the next day and bought some frozen ones from the local fishmonger. I can happily say that I now know how to fillet a flatfish. I can't say that about turning mushrooms. Even after turning pounds of mushrooms that night, my mushrooms are more "carved" than "turned".

Here are some of the dishes the chef made during the demo.


Clockwise from top: Chef’s Fond blanc de volaille (Basic recipe for white stock)
Filets de sole Dieppoise (Sole fillet served with a white wine sauce)
Turned mushroom
Sauce tomate (Tomato sauce)

The next demo discussed two more mother sauces (Espagnole and Béchamel) and their derivatives (demi-glace, Sauce Crème, Sauce Mornay, and Sauce Soubise). Trouble came when it was time to truss the chicken during the practical. It looks easy enough. Cut wing tips. Dig out the wishbone. String needle. Poke through cartilage in one leg, through the other leg, flip, through two bones of one wing, under neck, through two bones of the other wing, and tie. With the leftover string, thread through cartilage in one leg, through the pope's nose, and through cartilage in the other leg and tie the legs together. Tuck wings under. Not so hard. But it was for me. After three tries and each time, the chef shook his head saying "Do it again" in his stern, French accent, tears started to fall. I knew this would happen, but I thought it would be over a burnt sauce or charred meat, not over a simple truss. Meanwhile, the other students were getting their chicken broth cooking, but I was still bent over my string with salty tears brining my naked bird. Finally, I plopped my tear-stained and weakly tied bird into the pot and hid it with water hoping I could catch up. Unfortunately, I also seemed to pick the station where the flame kept going out under my pot. This bird did not want to get cooked.

I made my roux and checked it with the chef who with a slight air said I'd added a touch too much butter for the amount of flour. Then, it was onto the rice pilaf. The onions had to be cut in ciseler fashion and were to be the size of a grain of rice. Some were; some weren't. I sweat the onions in butter making sure they didn't acquire any color, then added the rice and cooked until nacré (a pearl color!). A bit of salt, a bouquet garni, the right amount of water, and a lid of parchment paper, and into the oven for exactly 17 minutes.

Back to the chicken. Checking it confirmed my fears: it wasn't cooked yet. And for some reason, I didn't think to remove some of the broth to reduce separately for the sauce. I turned my attention to the roux and mistakenly added the cream before adding the broth, ruining both in the process! This was not my day. So, I was back to making a new batch of roux. I quickly measured 30 grams of flour and butter and hastily set about to cooking it to the required blond, nutty color. By this time, I had the forethought to put some broth in a separate pot to reduce. When the roux was ready, so was my broth. I added it to my roux, thickened the mixture, and let it cook for as long as possible before adding the cream. Everything else came together. My sauce was à la nappe, coating the chicken, my bird was cooked just right (not a second more), and my rice was done with the odd large piece of onion thrown in. And the tears buried in my chicken earlier made it taste even better.

Here are two of the dishes the chef made during the demo.


Chef’s Sauce Espagnole and
Poulet poché sauce Suprême (Whole poached chicken served with a white creamy sauce)

The final demo last week was about emulsion sauces including hollandaise and Béarnaise. I love these two rich sauces. The first step in the Béarnaise is a reduction. Easy enough, but you need enough liquid after the reduction to make the sabayon. For the sabayon, which contains two yolks, you need two half-egg shells full of liquid. I thought I had enough, but it became apparent while whisking my sabayon that I was lacking a few drops! The chef came over, frowned, went to the sink dribbled a few more drops of water expertly in my bowl, and warned that it might break on me in no time flat. I whisked and whisked and whisked. Although it never broke, it was a little thick. Again, when the chef came over, and saw me whisking in the clarified butter on the "cold" side of the station, he grimaced and suggested I move to the stove side, again warning that my sauce would break and that it was saturated with butter! Funny because I had started clarifying more butter since I didn't have as much as the recipe called for. We also had to turn some potatoes à l'Anglaise (a specific size that is three fingers long) and grill some salmon. Again, I finished on time, but a critique of my plate was all critique. School is tough, but I'm learning a ton, even through my tears.

Here are some of the dishes the chef made during the demo.


Clockwise from top: Chef’s Saumon Grillé, sauce Béarnaise (Grilled Salmon with Béarnaise Sauce)
Sauce Rémoulade (Sauce derived from Mayonnaise) & Hollandaise
Sauce Tyrolienne (Béarnaise sauce made with oil) & Sauce Moutarde (Sauce derived from Hollandaise)
Sauce Grebiche (Emulsified cold sauce based on cooked egg yolk) & Mayonnaise

. . . . . . . . . .

Here is a link back to the recipes as I did them last year (although they aren't exactly the same as what we did in class):

Class 10: Les Fonds Blanc et Brun (Brown and White Stocks)
Fumet de poisson (Fish stock)
Filets de sole Dieppoise (Sole fillet served with a white wine sauce)
Fond blanc de volaille (Basic recipe for white stock)
Fond brun clair de veau (Basic recipe for brown stock)
Sauce tomate (Tomato sauce)

Class 11: Les Sauces et Liaisons (Mother Sauces and Liaisons)
Poulet poché sauce Suprême (Whole poached chicken served with a white creamy sauce)
Sauce Espagnole and Demi-glace (Basic brown sauces)
Sauce Béchamel (White sauce): Crème, Mornay, and Soubise

Class 12: Les emulsions (Emulsion sauces)
Sauce Hollandaise (Warm emulsified sauce) and Sauce Moutarde
Sauce Béarnaise (Warm emulsified sauce derived from Hollandaise sauce)
Sauce Mayonnaise (Basic emulsified sauce) and Salade Messidor (Summer Harvest Salad)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Whisk Wednesdays—Beignets aux Pommes, Sauce Abricot (Apple Fritters with Apricot Sauce)


Beignets aux Pommes, Sauce Abricot (Apple Fritters with Apricot Sauce)This recipe completes my goal of working through the Basic Cuisine curriculum on my own, in my own kitchen. I started my blog as a way of documenting my progress working through this Le Cordon Bleu curriculum, not knowing that I'd actually be attending 20 months later!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Fresh Pasta

Fresh PastaOne of my favorite kitchen gadgets is my KitchenAid Stand Mixer (affiliate link). I’ve thrown some tough dough its way and it has yet to fail me. Recently, I was pleased to receive the pasta attachment as a gift. The KitchenAid Companions Gourmet Pasta Kit came with the following items:

• a metal pasta roller
• a metal fettuccine cutter
• a pasta server and slotted spoon
• two boxes of Ecco La Pasta flour (egg and spinach)
• a cleaning brush

The timing of this gift was fantastic since we had just covered fresh pasta dough in Lesson 6 at Le Cordon Bleu and practicing making pasta at home was the perfect way to test out this attachment.

Now, in the Basic Cuisine course, no kitchen machinery is allowed and all work must be done by hand to develop a sense for the feel of the dough at various stages. So I decided it would be fun to do a "bake off" so to speak: half of the pasta I hand rolled and cut and the other half I made using the mixer attachment. As an extra experiment, I made one batch with just yolks (and added extra water) and the other with whole eggs. The chef had suggested we try this to see if we preferred one dough over the other.

Using the attachment was twice as fast as without. Within the hour, I had fresh pasta ready for lunch. Not only that but it was easy enough to use that my 10-year-old daughter quickly figured it out and had fun putting the dough through, each time moving the dial to a thinner setting appropriate for fettucini. Hand rolling took a lot of effort, but eventually, after much rolling, I rolled it to the proper thickness. My daughter found it difficult to get it thin enough, so I helped her. Even so, our dough was uneven and squaring it off to cut even lengths meant re-rolling. Though not impossible to hand roll, we both preferred the attachment, which makes pasta making a breeze.

As far as the eggs are concerned, no one could taste a difference between the two so I would use whole eggs next time, just for the sake of convenience.

All in all, we're looking forward to making more pasta and using the roller to make lasagna noodles (a family favorite). Clean-up was also easy! My daughter just wiped it with a cloth and used the small brush to get any bits out. She was so pleased with her homemade pasta that she took it to school the next day in her lunch. With this pasta-making attachment, I'll be making homemade pasta often! Or maybe my daughter will be making it for me!

Recipe: Fresh Pasta

Serves: 6

Fresh Pasta ingredients

Ingredients:

250 grams flour
5 grams salt
10 ml olive oil (you may need more)
2 eggs
10 ml cold water

Instructions:

1. Prepare the Dough:

  • Sift the flour onto a clean countertop. Whisk in the salt. Create a well in the center.
  • Add olive oil, eggs, and water into the well. Using your fingers, gradually mix the wet ingredients while slowly incorporating the surrounding flour to form a paste.
  • Once the mixture becomes crumbly, use a pastry scraper to gather and knead it into a smooth dough. Add extra olive oil or water if the dough feels dry.

2. Rest the Dough:

  • Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and let it rest in the refrigerator for 20 minutes. This step ensures elasticity and easier rolling.

3. Rolling the Dough:

  • By Hand: Roll the dough to a 1–2 mm thickness with a rolling pin. Square the edges with a knife, then fold the dough into even layers (approximately 5 cm wide). Slice into fettuccine strips and dust with flour to prevent sticking.
  • Using KitchenAid Attachment: Attach the pasta roller and start at the widest setting. Pass the dough through, folding it in half and repeating until smooth. Gradually reduce the roller thickness to the desired setting. Use the fettuccine cutter attachment for even strips.

4. Cooking the Pasta:

  • Boil a large pot of salted water. Cook the pasta for 3–5 minutes, or until al dente. Drain and serve immediately with your favorite sauce.

Tasting Notes
Freshly made pasta offers a soft, silky texture that elevates any dish. Whether hand-rolled or made with a KitchenAid attachment, the difference in flavor and quality is unmistakable. Pair with a classic tomato sauce or creamy Alfredo for a satisfying meal.

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