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Author Topic: February 1, 2008  (Read 22310 times)
Queen
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« Reply #60 on: January 31, 2008, 06:45:34 PM »

Yes you do! What better way to get your favorite foodies to join in on the conversations here!
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~*~ Jenn aka The Leftover Queen~*~
My Food Blog: http://www.leftoverqueen.com
arimou0
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« Reply #61 on: January 31, 2008, 09:26:17 PM »

It took me a long time to decide what to do but here is what I made:

Lentil soup with fried eggplant


Makes: a lot.
Method: boil, fry.
Preparation time: 10 minutes.
Cooking time: 45 minutes.

For this recipe you will need:

Soup ingredients:

    * ½ cup chopped bacon
    * 1 onion, finely chopped
    * 1 large carrot, finely chopped
    * 2 celery stalks, finely chopped
    * 1 lb lentils
    * 1 cup diced tomatoes
    * ½ tsp cumin
    * 2 quarts chicken or vegetable broth
    * 2 cinnamon sticks
    * salt and pepper to taste

Eggplant ingredients:

    * 1 eggplant, peeled and cut in long slices
    * 3 eggs, beaten
    * 1 cup flour
    * vegetable oil

Preparation:

   1. In a large pot, fry bacon until crisp.
   2. Add onion, carrot and celery and sauté in bacon fat until the onion turns translucent.
   3. Add lentils, tomatoes, cumin, chicken broth and cinnamon sticks and stir.
   4. Increase heat to high and bring to a boil.
   5. Reduce heat to medium, cover and simmer for 45 minutes or until lentils are tender.
   6. Adjust seasoning.
   7. Using a blender or a stick blender puree to the desire consistency.
   8. Serve with fried eggplant, sour cream and chopped parsley.

Eggplant preparation:

   1. Heat oil in a large skillet.
   2. Beat eggs in a large bowl.
   3. Place flour in a large, flat dish.
   4. Dip eggplant slices in egg, then in the flour and place them in hot oil.
   5. Fry for 3-4 minutes, or until golden brown, each side.
   6. Drain on paper towels.

I am not a big fan of lentils, but this recipe was tasty, the cinnamon gave it a really great twist in flavor. My mom used to serve lentil soup with fried plantains. The fried eggplant was a nice touch, though it wasn’t as sweet as plantain. I am still not sure what flavor eggplant is supposed to be. I guess I need to make something different to bring its flavor out. But for now I have enough lentils and eggplant for several days. I don’t think I will be making them again anytime soon.



Good luck everyone!
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protos
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« Reply #62 on: February 01, 2008, 05:04:01 AM »

Hi everyone

I hope I made it on time.  Here's my entry for the Royal Foodie Joust.

I made a Moroccan Style Spiced Lamb with a lentil pilaf and Baba Ghanoush.  I used cinnamon in the spice rub for the lamb, lentils in the lentil pilaf and eggplant for the baba ghanoush.  A full visual and written post can be found o the following link.

http://www.souvlakiforthesoul.com/index_files/Moroccan_Style_Spiced_Lamb_with_Lentis_and_Baba_Ghanoush.html


« Last Edit: February 01, 2008, 05:43:16 AM by protos » Logged

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Núria
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« Reply #63 on: February 01, 2008, 06:06:37 AM »

As Dharn, I can only say WOW all the time!!! Keep on looking through all entries and it's just amazing... Magnífico  Cheesy
I wonder... who will win?Huh??
Good Luck to all!!!
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arimou0
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« Reply #64 on: February 01, 2008, 12:00:48 PM »

This is going to be a fierce competition Núria. I will see you at the ring Wink

BTW I forgot to mention in my recipe that you have to fish for the cinnamon sticks before pureeing it. You don't want to bite a piece of cinnamon while eating your soup!

Good luck everyone!
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Misslionheart♥
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« Reply #65 on: February 01, 2008, 12:18:00 PM »

Plenty of delicious recipes for us all to try! I must take photography classes! Embarrassed

Good luck everyone and have a great weekend!
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Queen
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« Reply #66 on: February 01, 2008, 12:57:53 PM »

WHOA! Peter, that lamb is outrageous! Ben, I love fried eggplant, YUM YUM YUM.
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~*~ Jenn aka The Leftover Queen~*~
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Jen of a2eatwrite
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« Reply #67 on: February 01, 2008, 03:16:19 PM »

Arimou - that soup looks wonderful, especially with the fried eggplant!  This is a must try for my house.

Protos - Wow!  What a gorgeous presentation!  And it looks delicious - I just wished I liked lamb more.  Undecided
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karafaki
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« Reply #68 on: February 05, 2008, 05:49:01 PM »

I've been reading the Left Over Queen for a few months but to be honest I cant understand how I passed these events  Grin
Silly me Cheesy

I'm so excited for the one who will be the winner, and of course for the three ingreidents he/she will pick for the March contest!

Impatient Cheesy
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voodoolily
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« Reply #69 on: February 06, 2008, 03:56:46 PM »



Post is here.

Lentil fritters with venison chorizo, eggplant sofrito and cinnamon aioli

This recipe is broken out into steps, as each component is worthy of being eaten on its own.

Lentil fritters

1 1/3 cup cooked, drained lentils (I used beluga lentils, but any will do, including canned)
1/2 stick (4 tbsp) butter
1/2 cup flour
1 cup milk (microwave for 1 minute to warm)
fat pinch kosher salt, crack pepper
1 tbsp chopped oregano
oil for frying

In a large skillet, melt the butter over medium-low heat. Add flour and whisk until nutty and slightly browned. Turn off heat and whisk in milk until blended thoroughly (or cheat and use an immersion blender like I do for expediency). Let it cool. Gratz, you've just made a bechamel, my favorite of the mother sauces.

Stir the lentils, S&P and oregano into the bechamel. Heat a little oil in a frying pan or electric griddle (nonstick is great for this) and drop a tablespoon at a time of the batter into the hot, oiled pan and fry until golden. If the first one falls apart, you can add a little more flour to the batter and cook them like regular pancakes. Remove from the oil to a cooling rack positioned over a baking sheet lined with a sheet of newspaper. You can keep these in a warm oven until ready to use.

Venison chorizo
Note: you can use store-bought Spanish (not Mexican) chorizo or omit it altogether. My amateur-hour chorizo is not cured (I do have a day job, y'know), and therefore must be stored in the refrigerator and cooked before eaten.

1 1/4 lb. venison stew meat
1/2 lb. salt pork, cut into chunks
4 cloves garlic, peeled
2 tbsp paprika (I used a hot, smoked Spanish one that is to DIE for - pictured above)
1 tsp. dried oregano
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon (I toast the stick and grind it myself)
1/4 tsp. each salt and pepper
1/4 cup basic Spanish red table wine (such as temperanillo), plus a glass to sip while you work

Fire up the meat grinder, folks! Oh, how I love the "wheeee" of my meat grinder (I have a handy attachment for my KitchenAid - best wedding gift EVER). You basically just load the meat grinder (set at the coarsest grind), alternating between venison, garlic and pork. Then add everything else and mix with your hands. So visceral. So sexy.

Put the bright red meatwad into an airtight container for at least 6 hours so the flavors can get friendly. I made mine a coupla days in advance, so it had about 48 hours. If you are an experienced sausage maker and already have casings and everything, knock yourself out. I just left it fresh and crumbled it into a pan to brown. "Muy rústico" and whatnot.

Eggplant sofrito
As far as I can surmise, sofrito is a basic Spanish tomato sauce. I like to keep it real and live up to my motto, so I used fresh tomatoes which I fire-roasted in addition to roasted canned tomatoes. This sauce would also be amazing just on pasta or smeared onto some pizza dough with a little manchego.

1 medium-sized eggplant, stemmed and cut into matchsticks
1 28-oz can whole tomatoes, drained (juices reserved)
4 cloves garlic
~4 oz cherry tomatoes
2 tbsp diced bacon
1/2 medium-sized onion, sliced thinly
1/2 c Spanish red table wine (same as for chorizo)
2 tbsp chopped fresh oregano
olive oil
salt and pepper

Put the drained, canned tomatoes into a baking dish and squish them up a bit with your hands. Add the garlic cloves and drizzle with olive oil and a pinch of salt. Roast at 350 for 1 hour until slightly browned and slumpy as pictured above. Deglaze the browned juices from the baking dish with the red wine, being sure to scrape all that delicious fond off with a wooden spoon. Remove the roasty garlic cloves and chop them up.

Whilst the tomatoes are roasting, put eggplant matchsticks in a colander in the sink and sprinkle with salt. Leave it there 15-20 minutes, then squeeze out all the bitter juices. Set aside.

Put the reserved tomato juice into a small saucepan and reduce over medium heat until syrupy (you can also do this while the tomatoes are roasting, since you have an hour to kill).

If you have a gas range, place a cooling rack or somesuch over a burner and roast the cherry tomatoes over the open flame until the skins pop and char. Gently pull them off into a bowl and cover for 10 minutes to stew in their own juices. Puree the tomatoes and sieve to remove seeds and skin (some of the nice charred bits will still find their way in).

When everything's ready, heat a tsp of olive oil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the bacon and fry for a minute until rendered. Add the onion and saute until a little golden. Add the eggplant, saute for one minute and then add the tomatoes, garlic, reduced tomato juice and the red wine from the baking dish. Let it simmer over medium-low, stirring occasionally, until the juices are reduced almost completely and the sofrito is nice and sticky. Add the oregano and maybe a little pepper and stir. You will not need to salt this because the eggplant already brought all the salt to the party.

Cinnamon aioli
This is much easier with a blender, but if you prefer to use a whisk, knock yourself out.

3 egg yolks
~1/4 c olive oil
1 tbsp lemon juice
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon
pinch salt

Add all ingredients to blender and whizz until a creamy, mayo-like consistency.

Presentation
I like to plate this like a little Napoleon by placing one fritter on the plate, adding a spoonful of the browned chorizo and another of the sofrito, topping with another fritter and then drizzling the aioli over the top.

This dish really tastes nice with a tempranillo or any other Rioja.



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Why saute when you can confit?

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