Thursday, August 7, 2014

Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust



Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust

Lance is one of those rare individuals who does not like meat pies. I blame the horrible, gristle-filled soggy-pastried reheated things that often passed for pies when we were younger. But it’s something he’s carried with him in life and now he doesn’t like pies. He’ll quite happily eat fresh homemade pies with their delicious chunks of meat and flaky buttery pastry if we have dinner at someone elses’ house and that’s what is served, but he still ‘doesn’t like pies’. So I don’t cook pie. Except the other day, I cooked this pie.

So, how do you cook a pie for someone who doesn’t like pie? Step one. Don’t tell them you’re making pie. Step two. Make this pie.

This isn’t a pie in a traditional sense, as the ‘pastry’ contains no flour and isn’t really ‘pastry’ as we know it. So before you start imagining said buttery flaky goodness…stop. Instead, the ‘pastry’ part of this pie is made out of corn puree. When I read this recipe, I knew it was something I wanted to try. I love corn and was so intrigued by how this would turn out, that I made it a few days later. This is from one of my swag of Christmas cookbooks A Taste of Old Cuba, a book chosen to satisfy my obsession with Cuban food which is somewhat hard to indulge out in Perth. The filling is a chicken and tomato base, with flavours rounded out by the briny deliciousness of olives and capers, and the sweetness of prunes. I changed a few things in the making of it, but just barely.

The end result was remarkable. The ‘pastry’ puffs nicely in an almost cake-y way, with the delicious sweetness of corn and a sort of crisp top layer. The flavours of the filling are all perfectly balanced and so entirely comforting.

Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust


 Cuban Chicken Pie

(barely adapted from A Taste of Old Cuba)
4 cups corn kernels, (if using frozen, thaw in a colander and pat dry with paper towel)
8 tbsps butter (plus extra for greasing pie dish)
1 tbsp sugar
3 tsps salt
½ cup hot water
12 pitted prunes, cut into quarters
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1brown onion, diced
3 cups crushed tomatoes
1 tsp pepper
3 cups shredded cooked chicken
½ cup pimento stuffed olives, sliced
1 tbsp capers
4 egg yolks
2 hard boiled eggs, sliced
¼ cup slivered almonds

Puree corn kernels until smooth in a blender or food processor. Melt the butter in a large frypan over medium heat. Add the corn puree, sugar and 1 tsp of the salt. Turn the heat down to low and simmer for 15 minutes or so, until the corn thickens, and pulls away easily from the pan, similar to the way it does when you cook polenta. Set it aside to cool.

Soak the prunes in the hot water for 15 minutes.

In a large pot, heat the oil over medium and cook the onion in the remaining 2 tsps salt until soft and translucent, 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes, pepper, chicken, olives and capers and the prunes and their soaking liquid. Simmer for 5 minutes, stirring to combine everything fully. Turn off the heat.

Preheat your oven to 170C. Grease a casserole dish with butter.

Spread just over half of the corn mixture on the bottom of the casserole dish, spreading evenly across the bottom and up the sides. Very gently pour the chicken mixture on top, then lay the boiled egg slices on top. Spread the remaining corn mixture over the top and smooth.

 Bake for 45 minutes, the top should be crisp and brown. Sprinkle the almonds on top and cook for another 5 minutes, or until the almonds are toasted.
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust
Cuban Chicken Pie with Corn Crust

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple

Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple

There’s a restaurant in Perth that sells dessert nachos. Whilst dessert pizzas are a bit of a thing these days, I’d never heard of dessert nachos before. Whilst I haven’t had them, the description was unsalted tortilla chips with fruit sauces (strawberry and mango if I recall correctly) that are designed to look like salsa and cheese. It sounds delicious, and it sounds like something I’ll definitely be wanting to try at some point BUT it got me to thinking – why plain tortilla chips? Why not flavoured? That could be a thing, yeah?

I decided upon trying my hand at chocolate tortillas. And then I decided I wanted to make dessert tacos, instead of nachos. If I’m making the tortillas fresh, I might as well eat them fresh, too, right? We don’t often eat dessert in my house. Occasionally there’ll be a bowl of ice cream, but more often than not if there’s sweets after dinner it’s just some squares of chocolate or something snacky like that. I just can’t be bothered making dessert for two of us, especially on weeknights. So the obvious next choice for dessert tacos was as a lovely breakfast or brunch spread. You surely all know by now that I love breakfast!

The fillings for the tacos were mainly based on things I had in the house already and things that work for breakfast. The combination of which would feel decadent, but not super rich. I wanted it to be basically a healthy breakfast. Knowing that I had two different types of homemade caramel sauce ready to go in the fridge (the caramel sauce from my pavlova and a homemade dulce de leche) the other accompaniments had to have minimal sweetness. Even the tortillas themselves had minimal sugar to keep them fairly neutral (but chocolatey!). Add Philly cream cheese for dairy, peanut butter, fresh banana, toasted walnuts, cacao nibs and a spiced apple mix and it made a pretty awesome DIY taco bar. My favourite combination was cream cheese, dulche de leche, spiced apple and walnuts. Feel free to add whatever other fillings you have on hand. Strawberries or blueberries would be amazing. Nutella to ramp up the chocolate factor. Cream and Ice Cream if you want to forego the illusion of healthy.

This makes a lot more tortillas than 2 people need for brunch. But the leftovers make amazing chocolate tortilla chips. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar!
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple

Chocolate Tortillas

3 cups masa harina
¾ tsp salt
¼ cup sugar
1/3 cup cocoa powder
2 1/3 cups warm water

Whisk together the masa, salt, sugar and cocoa powder until completely combined. Add the warm water, starting with the two cups and knead until it becomes a smooth, slightly tacky ball. Set aside to rest for 10 minutes.

Heat a pan to medium high heat

Grab two bits of baking paper about the size of a tray. Pick up golf ball size pieces of dough, roll into balls, then place between the two bits of paper and roll out with a rolling pin into a tortilla.

Gently peel the tortilla off the paper and place in the hot pan. Flip after 30 seconds, cook for 45 seconds (it will puff up), flip and cook for another 30 seconds. Set in a shallow flat bowl (or plate) lined with a clean kitchen towel and cover to keep warm.

Repeat for the remaining tortillas.

Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple


Spiced Apple

3 pink lady apples, finely diced
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ginger
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Juice half orange
1 tbsp maple syrup

Stir the orange juice, maple syrup, vanilla and spices together in a small saucepan. Add the apple pieces and stir to coat. Place over low heat and simmer for 10-15 minutes until the apple has softened, but still holds it’s shape

Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced AppleBrunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple
Brunch Stars - Chocolate Taco Bar featuring Chocolate Tortillas and Spiced Apple

Monday, July 28, 2014

Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi


Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
I wrote before that as a teenager, I had the dream of writing a cookbook called Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Bacon. But that seems a little restrictive these days. Chorizo also definitely has it’s place in that ‘improving vegetarian recipes’ scenario. So it’s much less catchy, and would probably sell a whole bunch less copies but maybe we should go with “Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats”. This dish is a riff on the classic dish Turkish dish Imam Biyaldi. That in itself is often already made non-vegetarian through the use of minced meat. But it is a garlic, tomato braised eggplant dish that is perfect in this cold weather. The smokiness of some fried chorizo kick up the rich creaminess of the eggplant into the next realm of deliciousness. I took some of this with me for a wintery Down South escape with friends and it was a huge hit.

The original dish is usually stuffed eggplants, so this is a lazy man’s version as well as a meated version where I’ve turned it more into a casserole. I’ve also added black rice to make it an all-in-one meal. The Nanna Shop had bags of the cutest little baby eggplants, I used 10 or so. If you only have normal sized eggplants, you’ll only need one or two for a dish for 4 people.

Serve with lemon wedges and some fresh parsley sprinkled over the top for a fresh kick. Oh, and red wine. A nice, full bodied Cab Sauv would be perfect.
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi

Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi

(serves 4)
10 baby eggplants, tops cut off and sliced lengthwise
1 chorizo sausages, sliced into rounds
Olive oil
1 brown onion, diced
1 tsp sea salt
2 big cloves garlic, minced
3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1 chipotle pepper, soaked in warm water to rehydrate 15 minutes, minced
350g jar tomato passata
2 cups water
1 tbsp honey
2 tsp oregano
One cinnamon stick
1 bay leaf
1 heaping tablespoons capers
1 ½ cups cooked black rice
¼ cup toasted cashews
1 tbsp cacao nibs
fresh parsley, chopped for serving
lemon, cut into wedges for serving

Heat the base of a tagine or large, lidded frypan to medium-high heat. Fry slices of chorizo until crispy on each side, and a lot of the fat has rendered out, approximately 4 minutes per side. Remove to a paper-towel covered plate. Turn the heat down to medium.
Add the eggplant halves to the chorizo oil, cut side down first. Cook until softened slightly on the edges, around 5 minutes, flip and cook for a further 3 minutes. Remove to a bowl.
If the eggplant has soaked up all of the oil from the pan, add a little olive oil. A tablespoon should do. Allow it to heat in the pan and then add the onion and salt. Cook for 5 minutes until translucent. Add the garlic, balsamic vinegar and chipotle pepper. Cook until the garlic is translucent and very fragrant.
Add the passata, water, honey, organo, cinnamon stick and bay leaf and stir it all together well. Simmer for 5 minutes, then add the eggplant halves back into the pan. Put the lid on, turn the heat down to low and simmer for 20-25 minutes, or until the eggplant is completely soft.
You can use this simmering time to cook your rice if you don't already have some cooked.
When the simmering is done, stir through the rice, capers and chorizo. Leaving for 5 minutes for the flavours to mingle and the chorizo to reheat. Stir through the cacao nibs and cashews.
Serve, with fresh parsley and a lemon wedge if desired.
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi
Vegetarian Recipes Improved by Cured Meats - Deconstructed Chorizo Imam Biyaldi