Monday, January 28, 2008

Choosing Sides, Yukon Gold Potatoes

French fried, baked, boiled, grilled, mashed and stuffed; the potato is a most versitile side dish. The 99c only Stores are selling 5 pound bags of Yukon Gold potatoes for 99 cents. Similar to the red potato in texture and size, the Yukon Gold is less waxy and more creamy. The Chef has a simple recipe you can stake your claim on.

Ingredients

4-6 potoatoes
fresh herbs 2 tablespoons
2 slices of butter or 1 tablespoon of olive oil (you can use your favorite butter substitute)
salt and pepper to taste


Directions

Boil potatoes until soft; about a half hour to 45 minutes. Potatoes are done when a fork easily pierces the flesh. Drain and break potatoes into large pieces; leaving the skin on. Mix in rosemary or any herb you have. Add a couple slices of butter or drizzle with a tablespoon of olive oil. Salt and pepper to taste.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Cornish Game Hen and Orange Sauce

The 99 Cent Chef has not had Cornish Game Hen since I don't know when. For some reason, I remembered Cornish Hen as having a gamey, strong flavor. Wrong! It has the most delicate texture and a light, buttery flavor.


This winter, my local Ralphs and Albertsons markets have had sales on Cornish Game Hens for 97 and 99 cents per pound, respectively; normal price is $2.39 per pound, on a 2 bird package.






I like to baste the bird with a mixture of melted butter, orange juice and honey. Make your favorite stuffing to complement the bird. It's kind of funny to stuff such a small bird, but the stuffing will be delicious.

Orange Sauce for 2 Cornish Game Hens
juice of 4-6 medium oranges or 1 cup orange juice
zest of one orange (grate the skin and stop when you see the white, bitter, rind)
1/4 stick of butter or 2 tablespoons of olive oil
1/4 cup of honey
1 teaspoon of corn starch or flour
Mix and heat the orange mixture until it thickens; about 3-5 minutes.
Baste cornish hens 3 or 4 times during baking.

Directions


Baste the bird; salt & pepper to taste.


Bake at 375 degrees for a hour to a hour and a half. I check for doneness by piercing thigh with a fork to see when juices run clear. Cooking takes longer than package directions when you frequently open the oven to baste.

Friday, January 18, 2008

The 99 Cent Mojito - Video Short

The Chef loves Cuban music, Cuban food and especially Cuba's oldest cocktail, the minty Mojito. Like Cuban cigars; Cuban rum is on the American embargo list. Let's end this embargo. The Chef wants access to real Cuban rum! Fidel Castro and Che Guevara's Cuban Revolution is so last century. Hey White House, get over it!

The Chef popped his Mojito cherry during a happy hour at Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger's (a.k.a. "Too Hot Tamales") fine downtown Latin restaurant, Ciudad, soon after it opened in 1998. The Chef has spent many a Thursday afternoon there, reading the L.A. Weekly while sipping a Mojito and savoring a Cuban sandwich (alas, said sandwich is off the happy hour menu,) before hitting the downtown art scene (Why Thursdays? MOCA and The Geffen Contemporary are free after 5 p.m.)

In the following video you will notice The Chef's Mojito is not clear like most; that's because dark rum and fresh-made sugar cane juice is used. Most Mojitos are made using white sugar and clear rum.


Play it here. The video is 4 1/2 minutes.

Ingredients
2 oz. sugar cane juice, or substitute 1 tablespoon sugar
5 -10 mint leaves, depending on size
1 99-cent airline bottle of rum (usually white, but whatever you can get)
1 lime, juiced plus a slice for garnishing
3 oz. sparkling water or club soda
Crushed or cubed ice

Sugar Cane Juice
Using two 12 inch stalks of sugar cane; peel, cut into several pieces and crush (cover pieces with plastic and mash with a hammer.) In 3 cups water, boil crushed sugar cane until 1/2 cup of liquid remains. Let sugar cane juice cool. This makes enough juice for about 4 cocktails. While not as sweet as granulated sugar, homemade cane juice imparts a rich, earthy, lightly sweet flavor.

Directions
Muddle (crush) mint leaves in bottom of a cocktail glass. Add rum, sugar cane juice, juice of one lime and sparkling water. Garnish with a lime slice. When substituting cane juice with sugar, add it to mint leaves during muddling.


99 thanks to my neighbor Nuno Pinheira for his camerawork and a taste testing cameo.
To embed or view the Chef's video from youtube, click here.
...

Do you have a favorite quenching cocktail The Chef can turn into a 99 cent creation? It's just a comment away.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Chicken and Eggplant Stir-Fry

This week chicken breast (whole, bone-in) is on sale at my local grocery store for 99 cents a pound and eggplant is showing up at the 99c only Stores. Let's make a stir-fry.



Directions
Whole chick breast is easy to fillet; a couple of slices down the center bone/cartilage and the white meat separates easily. Chop into bite sized chunks and season with salt and pepper.


Cut into cubes and stir-fry eggplant over high/medium heat in 2 tablespoons of oil.
May seem like a lot of eggplant but it reduces by half. Saute until soft, about 5 - 7 minutes and transfer to a large bowl.


Stir-fry chicken breast in one tablespoon oil until done, about 5-7 minutes. Remove and add to bowl with eggplant.


Add any of your favorite veggies; I'll add carrots, bell pepper and chopped garlic.
In a teaspoon of oil, stir-fry for about 3 minutes.




Add cooked chicken breast and eggplant to wok/fry pan. Clear an empty area in middle of wok and pour in
Sauce. Stir liquid for a couple of minutes at high heat until it thickens. Stir together meat and veggies, heat through; serve with white or brown rice.
 
Ingredients (serves 3-4)

  • 2 whole chicken breasts
  • 1 large eggplant
  • 1 cup each chopped carrots and bell pepper
  • 2 cloves chopped garlic
Sauce
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 cup oyster sauce or sweet/sour sauce
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon corn starch or flour1 tablespoon honey or 1 teaspoon sugar
  • (for sweet/sour or Teriyaki sauces,
  • leave out honey/sugar)

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Muffaletta Sandwich & Bobby Flay

Tonight, Food Network stalwart Bobby Flay will do battle over a Louisana delicacy, the Muffaletta Sandwich. The show is called "Throwdown with Bobby Flay," and basically, he travels state to state challenging the locals to a cookoff. You haven't heard of a Muffaletta Sandwich, right?

The Muffaletta was invented in 1906 in the French Quarter, at an Italian store called Central Market Grocery by Signor Lupo Salvadore. Central Market is still in operation. Basically an Italian deli sandwich of salami, ham and cheese, dressed with an "olive" salad, instead of mustard / mayo; it's served in an Italian bread round loaf.
I went to high school in the Cajun state, so The Chef knows a Muffaletta -- although he's more of a
Po' Boy sandwich kind of guy (it's hard to beat fried oysters on a French roll.) When driving through Louisiana, stop at a small town grocery store and chances are you will find a sandwich counter in the back. Order a Mufalleta and tell them The 99 Cent Chef sent you.

Ingredients

10 inch round loaf of bread, halved (will serve about two)
3 oz of sliced salami and smoked ham (about half a package each)
4 slices of cheese (normally provolone, but whatever you've got is fine)
"olive" salad


Olive Salad
1 cup of pickled mixed vegetables (sans liquid)
1 cup total of salad green olives with pimiento and black olives
1/4 cup of olive oil
1 clove of garlic
A sprinkle of dried oregano
Black pepper to taste



Directions
To make olive salad, combine ingredients into a blender and
chop roughly at lowest speed; or hand chop to a chunky consistency.



Slice halved loaf and layer olive salad, salami, ham and cheese.

The Chef will be watching Bobby Flay on The Food Network tonight.
Hey Bobby, next time you're in L.A., The 99 Cent Chef would love to challenge you to a 99c only Store "Throwdown!"

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Rainy Days and Grilled Cheese - Video Short

The 99 Cent Chef loves rainy days in LA. The dramatic build up; the sounds of rain and the clean air that follows. Taking it all in at the kitchen window, while grilling a cheese sandwich, is the perfect pairing.



In the past few months, I've found an
abundance of cheese at the 99c only Stores, including Monterey Jack, European Swiss, French Petite Buche, Imported Austrian and good old American. But beware; they stock cheese made with vegetable oil, an abomination; I do have standards.






For a miscegenation of cheeses, try combining three cheeses to make a delicious rainy day grilled cheese sandwich. French goat cheese blends well with American and Swiss. For color, layer white and yellow cheese.








A sourdough or
multi-grain bread works well, as toasting brings out the flavor of the grains. I like to grill my sandwich in a little butter.
Use plenty of cheese, as nothing is more pleasing than a gooey grilled cheese sandwich.




I've collected rainy day video footage for awhile now. Enjoy the montage.

Play it here. The video is 2 minutes.

Do you have a favorite rainy day recipe?

 To embed or view the Chef's video on youtube, click here..