Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Bay Park Fish Co.

Luna Oysters from North SD County
One of my favorite places to eat lunch in San Diego is Bay Park Fish Co., conveniently located next to Seisel's in Bay Park. The Fish Co. serves dinner too, but I enjoy sitting out on the (dog friendly) patio in the sunshine. Supporting local fishermen is what this place is all about but they supplement with fish from elsewhere to keep the menu consistent. Sunday turned out to be gorgeous after an unusual San Diego storm and Fish Co.'s patio was where we could be found for beers and beautiful fresh food.

We started with a half dozen local oysters from Carlsbad AquaFarm that were spectacular. Small and reminiscent of Kumamotos, these were Luna oysters and had the most pure, clean flavor that I have ever had. They serve them with lime and lemon wedges, cocktail sauce, and prepared horseradish, but I didn't put anything on the first few just to taste them properly. I admit I squeezed a little lime and dripped a drop of Tapatio (the condiment caddies on the tables are well stocked with Tabasco too) on a couple others, just to mix it up. Lance had ordered clam chowder (New England style) that I was ignoring, so was lucky to get one of my precious oysters; and while intended to share one with my spoiled dog, she merely got to gnaw a shell. I should have gotten another 6. Damn.

Lance had perfectly grilled Mahi tacos, (panko crusted and fried is another option, and they also let you choose between flour and corn tortillas). They're served 2 to an order, with very tasty rice and beans, house made hot sauce that I love on the side, a big roasted jalapeno, lime wedges, and all the fixin's (pico de gallo, cabbage & crema) inside. Avocado and cheese can be added optionally. The generous portion of fish in each taco was juicy and not over-seasoned. The taco plate is $10.
Grilled Mahi Taco
 Even though I came here with the intention of eating a few oysters, having a beer and a taco or two, I am a sucker for the smoked fish plate. It's on the menu as a starter, but it's a sizable lunch for me. Think smoked tuna salad- they add corn, which really add nice sweetness and crunch, and don't add too much mayo. It's served on Romaine with tasty corn chips to scoop the smoked fish onto, and I ask for extra romaine to try to tone down my chip consumption. Didn't work, I ate all the lettuce AND all the chips. I also dig that they serve the smoked fish with a big pile of perfect plain avocado sliced on top. The smoked fish plate is $9.
Smoked Fish Plate
They have a few taps that are either local or Mexican, and we had Pacifico with our starters (a refreshing beer that paired nicely with the oysters without overpowering) and Calico, a local amber ale from Ballast Point, with our mains. Perfect perfect perfect.


Fish and Shellfish for sale at the counter
Bay Park Fish Co. also has a fresh fish counter and a leetle tiny sushi bar inside. I often pick up tortillas at Siesel's next door and fresh Mahi from the counter at Fish Co. to grill up my own tacos at home and I'm never disappointed in the quality of their fish. The selection isn't huge, and it ain't cheap, but I'll trade that for great quality any day.

The Fish Co. is the perfect casual place to take out of town guests who want to experience San Diego's fresh mexican inspired local cuisine, but it's definitely not a tourist spot. Flip-flops are practically required.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Chile Paste

Inside an Ancho Chile
I saw another great idea in Mike & Sherry's Menu In Progress blog that I knew I had to try when I saw that huge bags of dried chiles were on sale at the store. Chile paste could definitely come in handy around the house. I picked up big bags of Anchos (smoked Poblanos that have a raisiny sweetness to compliment their smokiness) and Guajillos (dried Mirasol chiles that are mild and toasty) that were so cheap, they were practically free. I spread them out on their own sheet pans and toasted them for 10 minutes in a 400 degree oven first, let them cool, and then seeded them half-assedly- a few seeds are not worth worrying about, so whatever came out when I ripped off their stems and shook them, was good enough for me.

Next I soaked the chiles in very hot water from the tap for as long as it took to watch a couple episodes of 30 Rock. Half an hour probably would have been enough. I scooped them out of the water and into the blender, then added about a cup of the soaking water (now very dark brown) so that the puree would not be too thick and the blender would blend nicely.
Will It Blend?!

Smooth, but not too smooth Ancho chile paste
Without salt or vinegar, this isn't really a condiment so much as an ingredient- an easy way to pre-process dried chile pods so they're ready to go when you need them in a recipe- but I bet they could morph into some pretty great sauces with just a few extra additions.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Sandwich Loaf

While I love me an authentic crusty baguette, most weeks a sandwich loaf is in order. It's obviously great for sandwiches, but also makes damn delicious toast with butter and jam.

My recipe is simple and doesn't require a stand mixer but if you have one and want to use it, I won't begrudge you the convenience and the recipe will turn out just fine. I happen to like kneading dough by hand. It doesn't take much longer than if you did it in a mixer, and I feel....I don't know...a little more connected to the bread. I also find it rather soothing.

After it's risen in the loaf pan, right before it goes into the oven, I like to brush it with whole milk and sprinkle it with something, here I did sesame seeds.

Sandwich loaf ready for the oven 
Don't be tempted to slice it before it's totally cooled or it will dry out quickly
Everyday White Sandwich Loaf

Ingredients
3 c. all-purpose flour

2 Tbsp. sugar
2 1/4 tsp. active dry yeast

1/2 c. cold whole milk
2/3 c. hot water
4 Tbsp. melted butter
2 tsp. Kosher salt
non-stick cooking spray
milk for brushing the top of the loaf
seeds for the top of the loaf (optional)

Equipment
8 1/2" x 4 1/2" loaf pan
Flexible dough scraper (recommended)
bread knife (recommended)
big flat surface for kneading, like a granite counter or slab of heavy wood or marble

Procedure
Mix the flour and sugar together. 

Make a little well in the flour mixture and add the yeast, rubbing it into the flour mixture with your fingers, until the yeast has "disappeared." 

Add the cold milk, hot water and warm melted butter and mix with a spatula or, ideally, a flexible dough scraper, until the ingredients are incorporated. 

Turn the dough onto your kneading surface and knead the dough without beating the crap out of it. Incorporate air, turn, fold, but don't punch or smash. 

After a minute of kneading, add the salt and knead to incorporate. The dough will be sticky at first, but will come together into a supple dough after about 8-10 minutes of kneading. 

Form the dough into a ball and put it into a clean bowl that's been greased with non-stick spray, cover with plastic wrap and let it rise for an hour or two in a draft-free place in your kitchen, until it's almost doubled in size. 

Use your dough scraper to encourage the dough out onto your kneading surface and press the dough out with your fingertips, roughly into a 7"-8" long rectangle. 

Fold the dough down it's length and press the seam closed with your fingertips. Do this again, so you've got an 8" long log of dough. Roll the log so the seam side is facing up, then press the seam down toward your kneading surface.  All this folding and pressing gives structure to the way the dough rises, and will ensure your bread will have an even, orderly crumb. 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Place the log into a greased pan and cover lightly with a greased piece of plastic wrap (give it room to rise up out of the pan) and allow to rise for another hour until it's up out of the pan. 

Remove the plastic, brush with milk, and if you'd like to sprinkle on seeds, now's the time. 

Bake for 35 minutes, until it looks and acts like bread. Be sure to let it cool before you slice into it- it will dry out more quickly if you cut it while it's still warm. Store at room temp in a big ziploc, remembering that it's going to get stale more quickly than store bought bread with all those creepy preservatives in it, so EAT IT!

Friday, February 4, 2011

Hungry Like a Wolf

I don't plan on making posts about dog food a frequent occurrence on the blog, but the way I feed my dog is a little unusual in this country and I get a lot of questions about it. I'd like to use this space today to try and address them. There's so much information scattered around the internet and some of it gets a little preachy and weird, and a lot of it is outdated or outright wrong. This is all about raw feeding from my perspective and my experience- there are plenty of people who disagree with me, this is the internet, after all.


What do you mean, you don't feed your dog kibble? What does she eat?!
Kira is raw fed. Which means she eats a blend of raw muscle meat, fat, bone, and organs from animals as her main source of food.

Kira with a pork picnic bone/meat (foreleg of a pig) on her towel in the kitchen
Why do you choose to feed her this way? 
Like all domestic dogs, Kira is genetically a gray wolf. Do you have a Chihuahua? It's a gray wolf. Pretty badass, no?

So what do wolves eat? Raw prey that they hunt, kill and sit around a campfire cooking eat raw. Wolves eat almost every part of an animal; the bones, organs, meat and a little of whatever else they encounter (maybe their prey ate some awesome berries that are still in it's digestive system...bonus!). Dogs are carnivores, not omnivores, like us. Our teeth are omnivore teeth, pretty all purpose tools to eat whatever our environment provides us with. Dogs' teeth are carnivore teeth, take a look at your little Chihuahua's teeth- they're shaped to rip and shear meat, and crush bones. I'm feeding her what she's born to eat, so I have reason to believe she'll be healthier throughout her life.


Why don't you cook the food?
Because that's just weird. Why would you do that? Besides altering the proteins and essentially changing the food, cooking bones makes them dangerously brittle. All that you've heard about chicken bones being dangerous to dogs is true...about COOKED chicken bones.


Does she eat any vegetable matter or grains?


Raw Chicken Egg
She nibbles grass from the lawn from time to time, enjoys a nice carrot from the garden now and again, and is terribly fond of the strawberries, but I don't *feed* her those things as part of her diet. It's like candy to her. A good treat, but not a major source of nutrition. Also, she likes raw eggs for a treat- shell and all. She does get dog cookies too and they often are grain based. I even bake her treats out of peanut butter and spent grains leftover from homebrewing. As a side note, she's never fed from the table or when she's begging, and so she doesn't beg or swipe food that doesn't belong to her. It's awesome.


Where does she eat?
She eats outside in a spot she's chosen in the yard. No matter where I put down her food, she'll pick it up gingerly and bring it to that spot to eat it. I've also taught her to stay on a beach towel on the floor of the kitchen to eat. Very handy for when it's raining. She caught on pretty quickly that she needed to stay on the towel. It gets washed when I feel like it's dirty, about a week. After she's done eating inside, it gets folded up and tucked away for the next feeding.


How much does she eat?
Kira is 10 months old, 62 lbs and eats 2 lbs of food every day.

The guideline is to feed 2%-3% of your dogs IDEAL weight every day. So if your dog is overweight, talk with your vet about what your dog's healthy weight is and calculate from that number, not their actual weight. I feel like you should be able to see (if your dog has a short coat) or feel the last couple ribs on your dog. If your dog is active, aim for 3% if your dog is a couch potato, aim for 2%.

Kira's ideal adult body weight (I'm just guessing, she's still growing a little at 10 months old) is 65 lbs. and she's a very active dog, so I aim for 3% of that per day, which is 1.95 lbs. I round up to 2 pounds and break that up into 2 feedings per day. So she eats one pound in the morning and one pound at night. Easy peasy.


How do you know how much to give her of each thing?
Animals are made up of about 80% muscle meat, 10% bone, and 10% organs (half of the organ meat should be liver) and I try to mimic that in her diet, feeding this way is sometimes called the "Whole Prey Model." It's not something to get all worked up about, just make sure they're getting mostly meat, some bone and a little organ meat, mostly liver. With a little practice, you'll be able to eyeball all this pretty well.


Where do you buy her food?
Mostly at an ethnic market near me. They have great variety (whole goat legs, hooray!) and excellent prices (Chicken leg quarters (drumstick + thigh all still in one piece) are 79 cents per pound there when they're not on sale).

Sometimes the grocery store has sales that I take advantage of, too, and the grocery store is where most raw feeders that live in the city get their meat from. If you live near hunters or ranchers though, you can sometimes score beautiful meat for cheap for your dog.


Is it expensive?
I aim to feed Kira for about a dollar a pound. I feel that over her lifetime, she'll be healthier, which means fewer vi$it$ to the vet. Premium dog food, which is what she was eating before, was about the same price.


Are there any meats I should avoid feeding my dog? 
Fresh fish from the salmonid family (salmon & others). They have a parasite that is killed by freezing, so salmonids that have been frozen for a while are safe for your dog to eat.

You should also avoid meat that has been "enhanced", flavored, brined or in any way screwed around with. If it's packaged, it's often enough to check the sodium content- if it's under 100mg, you're looking at un-enhanced meat, and if it comes from the butcher counter, just ask. If you can afford hormone-free, pasture-raised, locally butchered meat for your pet, more power to you. I compromise and get her the best stuff I can afford, but it's rarely to that level of awesome.


What about all that bacteria and stuff? Won't the dog get sick? Can the dog get people sick?
Your dog is made to eat this stuff, even after days of sitting outside without refrigeration, and in fact, some dogs like their meat a little "ripe." Their digestive system can handily deal with the bacteria and most parasites found in raw meat. When Kira gets a bug, it's invariably Giardia from San Diego Bay, not her food, and it's very common around here.

I handle the raw meat for her just like I handle the rest of the raw meat in my kitchen; using normal sanitation practices and common sense.

I think that raw fed dogs' mouths are cleaner than other dogs I encounter. A lot of that has to do with having nice clean teeth from raw feeding, so there's fewer places for bacteria to cling and multiply, spreading infection. Additionally, the meat "products" in dog food is usually pretty nasty stuff from sick and dying animals, so I know what I'm giving her is a hell of a lot less contaminated than that. There's just not a lot of solid research available though, so my common sense plus all the other anecdotal evidence from the web tells me that your dog will not get you sick if it licks you or anything like that. Now, if I had a long haired dog that liked to get it's paws and face all over it's food, I'd wipe them down after each meal. Kira hates to touch her food (as you can see from her funny wide stance in all the pics where she's eating) and is immaculate when she's finished, so I've stopped stressing over it.


What should I expect when I make the switch to raw?
The Good

  • Smaller, less stinky, more compact & easier to pick up poops. You'll be AMAZED. Commercial dog food is filled with stuff your dog can't really digest properly, which means big, stinky, sloppy poop. 
  • Clean teeth & nice breath. All that chewing of bone and tearing of meat really leaves their teeth white and beautiful and healthy. You will probably never have to brush your dog's teeth again or take them to have them cleaned professionally.
  • Shinier coat & less "doggie" smell. She's definitely shinier, and though some people report having a less stinky dog, she smells about the same to me.
  • If your dog has food allergies, limiting ingredients is a great way to avoid reactions. You can start with chicken for a month or two, then introduce beef for a month or two, then introduce the next meat, and so on. You can pull whatever your dog reacts to out of the rotation and really hone in on what they're allergic to.
  • Your dog will require less water to drink because their food is now full of water, unlike dry kibble.
  • No more need to express anal glands. Gross. Your dog's new diet will take care of this naturally when they strain a little more to poop. Again, gross.

The Bad

  • During the first week or two, runny poop might be a problem. As their system adjusts, their poops might be loose and almost look like diarrhea. This happened to Kira and I started pulling the skin off of the chicken leg quarters I was feeding her and it seemed to help. Once her poops firmed up for a week, I started leaving the skin on again and she adjusted fine.
  • Raw meat and bones can take up a lot of fridge and freezer space
  • Slightly more prep work required than opening a bag of kibble (I buy 2 weeks of food at a time and portion it out when I get home from the store, which takes about 10 minutes, tops). On the other hand, no more food bowls to wash!
  • If you travel with your dog you can't just pack up some kibble. (I usually just get where I'm going, find a grocery store, and get her food then.)


Any other tips?
Don't defrost meat with bone in it in the microwave because you might accidentally cook the bones, making a nasty choking hazard. Most dogs don't care if their food is still frozen, but if you need to defrost it, just soak in warm/room temp water in a ziploc bag.

Leave the meat/ bones as whole as possible. One chicken leg quarter is better than a separate thigh and drumstick for a number of reasons. It slows their eating down so they can't gobble down little pieces, and it gives them something to work on, kinda like Sudoku. Seriously, taking apart a roast with bones and fat is stimulating for your dog. Chewing like that triggers their digestive system and tearing apart meat and crunching bone is a very enriching activity for their brains too! A big pile of ground beef doesn't have that same benefit.

Some dogs may look at you like you're nuts the first time you feed them like this. It's ok, just be persistent and don't cave. Dogs won't starve themselves to death. Thankfully, Kira took to it quickly and has only refused one food, (I eventually caved because I'm a pushover) and that was a ginormous 3lb. Tilapia with scales, fins, etc. still on.

Watch your dog when it eats. This goes for all dogs, not just raw fed dogs. Animals choke to death sometimes. It's that simple. Wouldn't you rather be there to help your dog if it needed you?


How should I get started?


Raw Feeding Day 1 - Chicken Leg Quarter
Just quit feeding kibble one day; it's that simple. Go out to the store and buy a bunch of Chicken Leg Quarters. They are a good beginner food because they are a big chunk of meat, have plenty of easy to crush bone (more than the requisite 10%) and are readily available. If your dog gets loose stool, pull off the chicken skin first. Once they seem regular again, you can leave it on.

Don't be in a rush. You can feed the same thing for a few months with no ill effects. Introducing too many new things at once is a common mistake- it may be fun for you to go pick up a buffalo head & some alligator meat, but your dog's digestive system might want to take it a little slower. I didn't start feeding organs for a month either. One new meat a month is a good guideline. And you may find the first month or two will be fine tuning how much of what you feed.

Remember: Feed mostly meat and then adjust with more bone for firmer stools, more fat for slippery stools, and more organs looser stools.


Do I need to cut up the food or anything?
Nope. Try to give your dog the amount of food it needs for a meal in as few pieces as possible. And don't panic when you hear the crunch of the first chicken bone. Everything's fine. I know they look sharp, but they get digested and turn almost rubbery by the time they make it out the other end. They'll get better and better at eating raw, so if they look confused and awkward at first, don't worry, it will pass.


Anything special I need?
A kitchen scale is helpful, especially as you get started.


My vet says this is bad for my dog! WTF?!
When a vet hears that people are raw feeding their dog its because most people cannot even be trusted to provide themselves with proper nutrition (McDonald's anyone?) and so kibble/commercial dog food at least is a known quantity for your vet. Your vet also may have been trained about pet nutrition through courses sponsored by pet food companies that want to sell pet food. It's not rocket science to see that there may be a conflict of interest there. Combine that with a fear that you may be raw feeding your dog nasty bloated roadkill you found in an alley, and your vet has every reason to be cautious.

One fact I found enlightening is that commercial dog food has only existed since the 1950s. Clearly dogs can thrive without it. I haven't told my vet my dog eats raw because we haven't seen her in ages (Kira is healthy as a horse) but if I did, I would let her know that she eats a whole prey model diet of unscrewed around with animals (you might be surprised that a pork roast at the store often has ingredients other than pork), and if she was unfamiliar with that, I'd talk to her about her meat/bone/organ percentages and her animal sources (Chicken is about 75% of Kira's diet because that's what's cheap and easy to feed here, the rest is cow, fish, pork, buffalo, goat...whatever we can get our hands on). Hopefully it will be clear that my dog gets a more ideal diet than I feed myself- I love her an awful lot and want her to live a long and healthy life.

So to sum up, my dog eats raw animals, like nature intended. She's happy, healthy, and that's all that matters to me.

Kira at 10 months at OB Pier

Actual Garden Salad

I truly love growing food at home. I get to choose to grow weird stuff I couldn't find at the store (many of the best tasting fruits and veggies are delicate so they don't ship well, or quickly go downhill after they're picked), I get to triumphantly watch seeds sprout, and I can run outside and collect ingredients for a meal, working with what's ready to eat- nothing could be fresher or more delicious.

I planted a patch of 25 "Berri Basket" everbearing strawberry plants (one of the few things that I was too impatient to plant from seed and is not an heirloom variety) in one of my 3' x 3' raised beds last spring and they really do produce throughout the year thanks to the gorgeous weather we enjoy in San Diego.

Berri Basket Everbearing Strawberry

The lettuces that I grow are a colorful heirloom mix from Seed Savers Exchange, and I sprinkle down a bit of extra butter lettuce because I love it. Lettuce is easy to grow and I sow it in succession, sprinkling a quadrant of the bed every two weeks, to ensure that I don't have too much lettuce all at once. I find it's best to pick it early here, before it gets mature and tough from any hot days.

Seed Savers Exchange Lettuce Mixture

The strawberries are amazing sliced in half and tossed with a little balsamic vinegar and cracked black pepper and besides being great on a salad, are wonderful on ice cream too. (yes, with the pepper!) My go to vinaigrette involves extra virgin olive oil, a splash of sherry vinegar, a tiny dab of dijon, some salt and a dash of Sunny Paris seasoning from Penzey's.

Actual Garden Salad, the berries were still warm from the sun

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Meatstravaganza

Meatstravaganza 2009

New Year's Day is the traditional day for Tristan's Meatstravaganza and it's my homage to the traditional meal my parents made for the new year. It's the day I bust out the white tablecloth and the whole 9 yards, and this year's feast marked the 13th annual Meatstravaganza. Whether it's been on folding card tables and BYOC (bring your own chair), or in a real dining room with enough chairs for everyone, this is one meal that I. Will. Cook. every year come hell or high water in my life (lord knows 2008 and 2009 almost didn't happen).

The star of the show is the Prime rib roast, which is backed up with all the traditional English fixins'- au jus, horseradish cream, yorkshire pudding, mashed potatoes, creamed spinach, and roasted carrots and parsnips with gremolata. Dessert is chocolate souffle.

In today's post, I'll focus on documenting the roast, jus and horseradish cream.
Plan for 20ish mins per pound for medium rare, and if you want anything other than medium rare, you're nuts. Aim for 130 degrees when you pull it out of the oven. I like to roast it super duper slow- in a 300 degree oven. I don't brown it all over in a skillet first because its an unwieldy monster, so for the last 20 mins or so of roasting I up the heat to 400 to brown it and also get the oven hot for the next stuff to go in (Yorkshire Pudding and roasted carrots).

This roast was from Da-Le Ranch in Lake Elsinore. It was 4 ribs and little over ten pounds. It would have served 10 or 11 people with no leftovers, but that would just be tragic for the morning's hash. It was cut from the small end of the roast and was tied and dry aged. 

Ingredients
For the roast
  • 4 rib standing roast (~10 lbs.)
  • 10 cloves garlic
  • 3 Tbsp. butter
  • 2 Tbsp. Kosher salt or sea salt
  • 1 Tbsp. cracked pepper
  • 8 sprigs thyme
  • 4 sprigs rosemary

For the jus
  • ~2 c. Red wine
  • ~2 c. Beef stock

For the horseradish cream
  • 1 c. whipping cream
  • 1 horseradish root
  • 2 tsp. cider vinegar
  • 1 tsp. honey
  • salt & white pepper to taste

Equipment
  • Roasting pan
  • Roasting rack (you can substitute old vegetables like onions, carrots & celery to set the meat on top of out of it's juices)
  • Carving board with a well to catch juices
  • Food processor if using fresh horseradish root

Procedure
Ready to rock-n-roast

Preheat the oven to 300 degrees.

Smash 10 cloves of garlic with the heel of your chef's knife or something heavy. Cut up 3 Tbsps of butter into half inch cubes. 

To prepare the beef for roasting, cover it in a couple tablespoons of Fleur de Sel (French Sea Salt) and cracked black pepper all over it. Don't go too crazy on the cut ends because then the end pieces will be too seasoned. Place on an adjustable rack in the roasting pan and top with thyme and rosemary and dot the top with the garlic and butter.
Put the probe thermometer in the center of the roast and pop the thing in the oven.

Don't baste it. Don't keep looking at it. Yes, the garlic smells like its burning. Its OK.

Remember to turn up the heat to 400 during the last 20 mins until the meat gets to 130 degrees.

Take it out of the oven and transfer the roast to a carving board to rest, preferably on something that will catch the juices. When you are ready to serve it, make sure everything else is already on the table before you carve the roast. It should be the last thing to happen and allows you time to seat everyone, parade around with your meat on display, then carve and serve.

Jus
After taking the roast out and transferring it to a carving board, take the rack out of the pan, dump whatever is in there into a fat separator (I pretty much got 100% fat with burnt garlic bobbing around in it) and set the pan on the stove so it spans 2 burners. Turn both burners to medium high and throw a nearby glass of red wine at the pan to deglaze it. Use a spatula to scrape up all the goodies stuck to the bottom of the pan. Slosh in some beef broth and reduce for a few minutes. Keep throwing wine and broth into the pan and reducing until you're ready to serve or you feel like it tastes good and you've got enough jus. Add any collected juices from the resting roast, strain with a sieve and pour into a serving thing to pass at the table.

Fresh Horseradish Whipped Cream

This works just as well with prepared horseradish in a jar, but there were fresh roots available, so I picked one up. While reading up on preparing fresh horseradish, I came across a tip: if you grate the horseradish in the food processor, don't stick your face over the bowl when you take the lid off. Good advice. Did I follow it? No.
OMG, it burns.

Grate horseradish, then process fine in food processor. Combine 3 Tbsps of horseradish with 2 tsp cider vinegar, 1 tsp honey and a pinch of salt and pepper. Whip some whipping cream and mix in horseradish mixture. Season and add more horseradish if necessary.

One last tip...when you run out of wine at your house and the Meatstravaganza runs long, this could happen:
Please don't ask why I had a 40 of Colt 45 in the fridge- it was a rough year.
Also, it really classes it up by pouring it into the Riedel crystal stemware, no?

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Malt Balls for Mutts


Malt Balls ready for baking at 250 degrees overnight
After brewing a nice batch of Mike & Sherry's Piggish IPA from menuinprogress.com, there was a big ol' pile of soggy grains that I figured the dog might enjoy baked into cookies. They're very simple to make, and judging by the dog's reaction to me mixing up this batch, there's apparently an invisible ingredient in there: doggie crack. 

I cook in the kitchen with my "Little Chef" all the time and she usually ignores me- mind you, the dog eats raw meat and bones and offal as her actual diet, so she's usually unimpressed with whatever the people have going. Not this time. She promptly set down her pork leg and rammed into my legs while I opened the ziploc with the grain in it. Good thing I didn't put it in the compost or I suspect the whole thing would have been dug up.

This recipe made a lot of dough, so I froze half to thaw and bake up later. 

Malt Balls for Mutts Recipe

Ingredients
  • 8 c.  GRAINS left over from your brew (No hops!)
  • 4 c. All-purpose flour
  • 2 c. Unsalted smooth peanut butter
  • 4 large eggs


Equipment
  • Big mixing bowl
  • 2 or 4 sheet pans (a half batch of 1" balls makes 144, which fills 2 sheet pans)
  • Parchment or Silicone Baking Mats


Directions

Mix the ingredients well using your hands (the dough is a little stiff to work with an electric mixer or a spoon). It shouldn't really be sticky and should hold together easily when squeezed. Since your grains may be drier or wetter than the ones I used, feel free to add stock, water or whatever liquid you want (I had recently made a batch of yogurt and would have used the whey if I'd needed any, but I didn't) if you to get the dough to the right consistency.
Dough mixed and ready to portion

Use a teaspoon or a disher to form the dough into balls onto parchment or silicone lined baking sheets. There's not enough fat in this recipe for the cookies to spread at all, so whatever shape they go in as, that's the shape they're coming out as, so be sure to smooth any rough edges from the disher or teaspoon by rolling each portion in your hands to form the balls.
Be sure to smooth the rough edges by rolling the balls in your hands

144 malt balls ready for baking

Bake overnight in a 250 degree oven until the malt balls are completely dried out (moisture means mold) and store in an airtight container.
I can't look at the camera, my cookies might get away!