Doesn't TaZte Like Chicken

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Browsing Posts tagged salad

Location: My tiny kitchen

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A mixed green salad with chanterelle and shitake mushrooms, jumbo scallops and pistachios.

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I love mushrooms. From the ordinary everyday button mushroom to the fancy and insanely expensive black or white truffle, I cannot think of a kind that I don’t like. My favourite way to prepare them is to make them into a ragout, which is just a fancy term for sauteing the mushrooms with garlic, shallots, a small amount of stock or wine and cook until all the liquid has been reduced. Most mushrooms have a lot of flavour; the reduction simply intensifies and enhances the great flavour. Sometimes I serve the ragout as a side-dish to compliment a piece of perfectly seared steak, other times I put them on a patty to make a juicy mushroom hamburger. When ET and I want to have a light meal (yes, sometimes we do too!), I would mix up a plate of greens with the ragout. I’m not much of a salad eater, but when the salad has mushrooms, I can easily finish a plate :-)

This recipe serves 2 people.

- 10 medium-sized shitake mushrooms
- 10 medium-sized chanterelle mushrooms (or hedgehog if chanterelle is not in season)
- 30 pistachios, ready-to-eat, shells removed
- 4 jumbo scallops
- Mixed greens (as much as you like)
- 1 clove of garlic, minced
- balsamic vinegar
- extra virgin olive oil
- sherry

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1. Rinse the mushrooms. Remove the stalk of the shitake. Cut off the tip of the chanterelle stalks. Cut the mushrooms into pieces. You don’t need to cut them too small because they will shrink after they are cooked.

2. Heat a pan with 1 tbsp of olive oil. Saute the garlic. Put in the mushrooms. Put in 1/2 tsp of salt, black pepper and 3 tbsp of sherry. Let the mushroom cooked until all liquid has been reduced.

3. Using a paring knife, score criss-cross marks on the top and bottom of each scallop. Season the scallops with salt and pepper. Coat them with cornstarch, dust off excess. In a pan, put in 1 tbsp of butter. Once the butter has melted, place the scallops into the pan. Let the scallops seared over high heat for one minute for each side. After both sides have been seared to golden brown, cover the pan for 1.5 minutes and lower the heat to medium. The trick to have perfectly seared scallops is to not to move them too much during searing. The time noted here cooks the scallops to medium-well. If you want to cook the scallops fully, let them sit in the covered pan for 1 minute longer.

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4. In a large bowl, put in 1/2 tsp of mustard. Put in 1 tbsp of balsamic vinegar. Using a whisk, whisk in 1 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil. Once the olive oil has been completely incorporated with the vinegar, whisk in another 1 tbsp of olive oil. When the oil has been incorporated, whisk in another 1 tbsp. In the end, you will get a dressing that is an emulsion of olive oil and vinegar. Whisking the olive oil one tablespoonful at the time ensures the success. If you have more greens, you can make more dressing by using more vinegar and olive oil, as long as you follow the ration of 1 part vinegar to 3 parts oil.

5. Toss the greens in the dressing.

6. To assemble: place the greens on a plate. Add the mushroom ragout on top of the greens. Place the scallops on the salad and sprinkle pistachios all over it.

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Location: my tiny kitchen

I have always been a fillet mignon type of girl. When my friends and I have dinner at the Keg, I would toss the menu aside without giving it even a glance while my friends consider the pros and cons of getting the Keg’s classic prime rib. I know I would order the fillet mignon wrapped with bacon from the menu, which is what I have ordered in my last ten visits. “The tenderloin is always the safest choice”, I would reassure myself. The meat is tender even if it is slightly overdone. Finding no flaw in this tenderest part of the cow, I was absolutely loyal to it.

My simple life changed when one day my friend asked me to try his New York striploin. Based on my past experience, I was expecting to bite into a tough and chewy piece of meat. I was very wrong. The steak was tender and juicy. To be fair, it wasn’t as tender as a fillet mignon, but it tasted better than a fillet. I was puzzled for a moment. “What is happening?”, I asked myself. The striploin had a much stronger flavour. It had more flavour than two, perhaps three pieces of fillet eaten together. After this encounter, I was never the same beef lover. I know I can’t go back to being a simple fillet girl.

This recipe is my attempt to recreate my friend’s striploin. The taste might not be exact, but the striploin turned out tender, juicy and flavourful. Lime is the special ingredient in this recipe. It tenderized the meat and in addition, its tangy taste perfectly complimented the fatty flavour of the beef.

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I always get my steaks from the butcher counter at Safeway. They sell triple A beef and the quality has always been consistent. I always choose the piece with the most amount of marble. Onto two striploins put:

- 2 tbsp of kosher salt
- 2 tbsp of onion powder
- 2 tbsp of red chili pepper flakes
- juice from 1/2 lime
- generous amount of freshly ground pepper

Message the seasonings into both sides of each steak. Let the steaks marinate for at least 6 hours but no more than 8 hours.

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Heat a stainless steel skillet until it becomes very hot. Put 2 tbsp of vegetable oil into the pan. Put the steaks into the pan. Let one side of the steaks to sear until it turns golden brown, which takes about 2 minutes. Turn the steaks over and sear the other side for another 2 minutes. If the steak starts to burn, turn the heat to medium.

When both sides of the steaks are golden brown, turn the heat to medium and cover the pan. Cook the steaks for 1.5 minute. For steaks that are one inch thick, the cook time stated here will cook the steaks to medium-rare. If you like your steaks to be more cooked, let them cooked longer in the covered pan. My cooking was done with a gas stove.

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The jicama salad turned out to be disastrous. It was served as a side dish at Bin941 and my husband loved it. I tried to recreate it but I didn’t succeed. The salad tasted like a pile of shredded cucumber with a bitter and slimy after-taste. Yuck.

Luckily, the potato tower was a success. Like the jicama salad, the potato tower was also served as a side dish at Bin941. The potatoes were diced, roasted until crispy and then coated with truffle oil. The diced potatoes were stacked to form a tower. The magic comes from cleverly inserting small drops of blue cheese, chunks of deep fried crispy pancetta and pieces of string beans into the potato tower. Before Bin941, I never knew potato could taste so amazing. I will post this recipe later.

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