Posted on 07/11/2021 6:29:27 AM PDT by NOBO2012
It’s been one of those weeks; I can’t take any more affairs of state, stories of cultural suicide or tales from the dark side. I’ve no capacity today for the arrogance and contemptuous intolerance of the woke amongst us.
And since man cannot live on outrage and anger alone I give you…food! Vicarious food, so completely calorie and guilt free.
Starting with a report back on last Sunday’s diversion, the vinegar free refrigerator pickles. I tasted them after 2 days as the recipe said you could and found them to be a bit meh. Then they got lost and forgotten in the frig till yesterday. I’m happy to report that they are quite surprisingly delicious. I only made them because I had all the ingredients on hand and thought they sounded interesting. After a 6 day swim in the saline/sugar brine I declare them a triumph of so little effort I will gladly make them again and again.
Pretty, with the pink peppercorns, and tasty too
I even made Raj a little jar of his own with de arbol chilis because he likes spicy – he said they were great but I wouldn’t know because …spicy.
I didn’t think I’d care for a non-vinegared pickle but I’m a convert. After 6 days they still retained good crunch and cucumber flavor along with all the other good things in the jar with them. I give them 4 1/2 stars.
Also from yesterday: blueberry pancakes on the deck. Because Michigan blueberries were in the market this week and the morning was cool and beautiful. And because Jettie sent us some delicious Canadian maple syrup – which is divine. Thanks BlueDog!
Yes, with bacon and scrambled eggs because Raj gets no carbs without protein when I’m in charge.
The next is from a few weeks back: seabass marinated in the world famous Nobu miso marinade. I happened to splurge on sea bass when Costco had it but I usually make this with either halibut or far more reasonable cod. They are all fabulous. Not hard but you do need to plan ahead as the fish needs to marinate for a day or two (I’ve let it go as long as 4 days, which might even be better, but your fish will shrink more). I cut the filets in smallish pieces to get more marinade coating.
Nobu-style Miso Marinade
Ingredients
Instructions
Adapted from Nobu: The Cookbook
Recipe Notes
Instead of cooking the fish on the stovetop, you can do this on an outdoor grill or under the broiler in your oven. I did this batch under the broiler, but warning: it does smoke! So turn on the fan and open the windows. If doing on the grill be sure to oil the grate really well and maybe leave the pieces larger for easier turning.
Serve with anything you like – it plays well with many things from macaroni salad to sticky rice. I served it with a compendium of things I had on hand: Japanese quick pickles, seaweed salad, leftover brown rice, asparagus served cold with Japanese mayo and avocado. Sort of deconstructed sushi.
I also did a Thai yellow chicken curry last week because I had a bumper crop of Thai basil that had to be harvested. I don’t have a real recipe for this, it’s just a can of coconut milk, 2 tbls brown sugar, 2 tbls fish sauce, 2 heaping tbls yellow curry paste (Mae Ploy) – green is good too, but much spicier – boil together for 5 minutes. Add cubed potatoes and cook about 5 minutes, add cubed chicken thigh meat, green beans, slivered onions (and sliced hot Hungarians if you like your curries really hot) and cook until chicken is done. Stir in a large handful of Thai basil leaves just before serving over rice.
The leftovers, because I forgot to take a “before” picture
So, what are you guys cooking?
Posted from: MOTUS A.D.
Onaka itia !
The peach harvest has started in Washington State around the Columbia River and up to Yakima. I picked up some tree-ripe “Red Haven” peaches a couple days ago in Spokane Valley and they are good, ripened to perfection. You do have to eat them quickly before they over-ripen.
Breakfast just now was a full peach cut up with some Wheat Chex and Rice Chex cereal, a tiny bit of sugar, 2% milk, and coffee. The Chex cereals are left over from our last batch of Christmas Chex Mix. There must be a lot of preservatives in the cereal because they are still dry and crispy.
There’s nothing like fresh summer fruit, especially stone fruit!
Peaches, tomatoes, and salmon! Summer! Tomato sandwiches for most meals these days. Ripe, warm from the garden. Salmon, foil-wrapped and grilled with salt, pepper, lemon, with squash and sourdough bread. Summer! We eat like Kings.
But the local Farmers Market has wonderful tomatoes grown by our local farmers and there's a good honor-system stand just down the road.
I have tomato sandwiches on sourdough, but usually add a leaf or two of Romaine, a slice of turkey, maybe a slice of cheese, some thinly sliced cucumber (for crunch), maybe some sweet relish, maybe some horseradish mustard, a bit of mayo, some avocado, some shredded carrots, sprouts, and whatever else is ripe and handy. It's always an adventure to try different ingredients, but they are all great because of the ripe tomato.
Outstanding! Thank you!
That looks delicious! I have never used white miso, may need to try it.
I am visiting my 85 year old mother in NC. Just did a big batch of sauteed chicken, garlic, mushrooms, onions, & tomatoes with a vermouth & heavy cream sauce to go over mashed potatoes. I pack these in freezer containers & she has meals ready to go.
Gotta go mash 🐱
I used to keep my sailboat in a marina south of Annapolis. One weekend I invited a friend from north Jersey to come for a sail.
As we were loading the cooler for the trip we went to the ship's store where they had 2 large, self serve ice freezers and a drop box for the couple of bucks the bags sold for. He was shocked! He said in Jersey the money would be gone, along with the ice and there would be homeless people living in the ice lockers who would yell at you for disturbing them. Glad to know there is still somewhere that integrity matters.
Btt
In the past few days, I have made the follow: Pizza, chicken, potatoes & dumplings, bbq chicken, corn & garlic mashed potatoes, lentil chili, zucchini parmigiana, baked Italian meatballs and cream of potato leek soup.
It’s still common here in North Idaho. There’s a flower stand that’s also an honor system over in Rathdrum.
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