Sunday, August 27, 2017

Provençal Garlic Soup


August has rolled around, and you know what that means.  Yep, it's soup month here at An Eat'n Man.   This month we decided to get all garlicky with it and present you with this Provençal treat.  Yes, Garlic soup.  Sounds weird, but it tastes great, and that's all that matters.

I'm a sucker for garlic flavor.  Garlic bread, garlic on pasta, garlic on pizza.  If you're like me, this soup is a great way to get your garlic fix.  It's also quick, simple and easy to make.



Ingredients

8 Cups Water
3/4 Cup Garlic Cloves
1/2 Cup White Onion
1/3 Cup Celery
1/3 Cup Fennel Bulb
2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
1/2 Cup White Wine
4 Sprigs Fresh Thyme
2 Sprigs Fresh Rosemary
1 Bay Leaf
6 Cups Chicken Stock
2 Cups Heavy Cream
1 Potato
Salt and Pepper to Taste

Directions

Start the water boiling in a saucepan.

Now, prep the garlic.  I basically use a full bulb and break it into individual cloves.



Now, peeling all those little cloves can be a chore.  Thankfully, I've got this little device, a garlic peeler.



It's basically just a rubber tube that you insert said garlic clove into...



press down firmly and roll a few times...



and presto, the garlic clove comes out perfectly peeled.  Amazing.



Boil the peeled garlic cloves for five minutes.



This will cut their bite but still leave behind their flavor.

Next, dice your onion,



then your celery and fennel bulb.



Discard the fennel leaves.

Saute the onion, celery and fennel bulb with the olive oil in a large pot.



Drain the garlic and discard the water.



Add the whole garlic cloves to the pot and saute until the veggies are soft.

Add the white wine and deglaze the pan.



Add the chicken stock.



Peel and dice your potato into small cubes.  Add this to the pot.

Make a herb bundle.  Tie up the thyme, rosemary and bay leaf with kitchen twine.



Add it to the pot.



Bring to boil and then reduce to a simmer and cook for 30 minutes.

Remove herb bundle and discard it.

Using a stick blender, puree the soup to a fine consistency.



Add heavy cream and stir.



Let warm through.

Season to taste with salt and pepper and serve immediately.



Until next time,


Chris







Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Jagerschnitzel



I love German food, but you wouldn’t know if from this blog.  I have many different cuisines represented here—lots of French and Italian, a good bit of Asian, with a smattering of others like Greek, Russian, Dutch and even Hungarian, but no German.  Well, that’s a shame, because the Germans have one of the world’s great cuisines.  Sure, it’s not considered as fancy and gourmet as French or romantic like Italian, but it’s great.

German food doesn’t get pretentious.  It doesn’t take itself too serious.  It’s simple and hearty and sort of like good home cooking.  I’ve enjoyed it over the years on a couple of trips I made to Germany, and back here at home, where we’ve got a great German restaurant that’s been around for almost fifty years.  Other than bratwurst on the grill now and then, I don’t cook it a great deal, which is probably the reason for the dearth of German recipes on this blog.  Well, I decided to change that, and do it with one of my favorite German dishes:  Jagerschnitzel.

Jagerschnitzel is a variation of the classic dish wienerschnitzel, which is a veal or pork cutlet that is breaded and fried.  Some say that famed Texan dish Chicken Fried Steak was actually created by German immigrants who substituted beef (plentiful in Texas) for the pork and the rest was history.  Well, jagerschnitzel is basically wienerschnitzel taken a step further, with the addition of a wonderful mushroom sauce.  Jager means ‘hunter’ in German, so perhaps this is the way the hunters ate their wienerschnitzel back in the day.   

Whatever the case jagerschnitzel is delicious and I’ve been making it a lot over the last year, so I’m pretty happy with this version, which is perhaps not 100% trad but it makes up for it in flavor.  Give it a try some time.  Ser Gut!

Ingredients

4 pork loin cutlets
2 eggs
1 tablespoon German mustard
1/4 cut flour
1/4 cup panko bread crumbs
4 strips bacon
1 medium onion
8 oz small mushrooms
1 clove of garlic
1/3 cup white wine
8 oz consommé
1/2 cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons butter
Salt and Pepper to taste
1 cup peanut oil

Directions

Using the flat (non spikey) side of a meat hammer...



pound pork cutlets to 1/4 inch thickness.



Note how much bigger (and flatter) the pounded cutlet is than the unbeaten one.  This will help it fry up nice and quick and get cooked through before the breading burns.

Get some good German mustard:



Whisk eggs and mustard together, then make a dredging station with flour, egg/mustard mixture and bread crumbs in three separate pans.



Dredge cutlets in flour,



then egg mixture,



then bread crumbs.



Place cutlets on tray and refrigerate for an hour or so.



Fry bacon in skillet



Remove bacon and reserve

Chop onion and slice mushrooms.



.



Saute the onion and mushrooms in the bacon grease until golden and soft.



Mince garlic and add to skillet

Add white wine and simmer until reduced by half



Add consommé and simmer for a minute



Add heavy cream and cook a few minutes more



add butter and stir until melted.



season with salt and pepper to taste.  Keep sauce warm.

In a clean skillet, heat oil to 400F.  Fry cutlets in oil, one or two at at a time...



until golden brown and crisp.  They will cook fast, so just a couple minutes a side.  



Serve sauce over the cutlets.

Here we've served the jagerschnitzel cutlet with some red cabbage and sauerkraut, and of course a hearty beer as well.  You just have to have a beer with German cuisine.



Until next time,


Prost!


Chris

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Moroccan Kefta Kebabs



























One of the great things about being a foodie in this day and age is the wealth of great cuisines available to be had.  Time was, one had to travel the world to sample anything more exotic than Italian or French, but now, distant cuisine comes to you, usually in the form of a restaurant, often managed by expats from those distant lands.

Here in my neck of the woods, we have a couple of Lebanese Restaurants, an Ethiopian one, and quite a smattering of others.  What we don't have at the moment is a Moroccan one, and that's too bad, because I've sampled this cuisine other places (though, unfortunately, not Morocco itself) and I quite enjoy it.  It is spicy, savory and just a bit exotic.

I've always been planning to feature some Moroccan food here on the blog, particularly since we received a tagine, or Moroccan cooking pot, as a wedding gift years ago.  I've even photographed a few recipes in that pot, but for whatever reason those photos never came out good enough to blog, alas.  But the food was good.  Moroccan recipes often feature some unique, interesting ingredients. Preserved lemons are big in their cuisine, as is Harissa, a spicy, piquant pepper sauce that is all the rage in Morocco, and it's popularity is spreading rapidly.  



I received some Harissa as a Christmas gift a year or so ago, and I've been fascinated with it ever since.  I've picked up several more brands and tried them.  They run the spectrum on heat and flavor, but all were good, and Harissa could be well on its way to becoming the 'new' sriracha.



Anyhoo, this recipe features harissa prominently, so give it a try if you get a chance.

Ingredients

1 lb Ground Beef
1 Medium Onion, Minced
1/4 Cup Fresh Cilantro, Chopped
1 Tablespoon Harissa Sauce
1 Tablespoon Smoked Paparika
1 Teaspoon Cumin
1 Teaspoon Granulated Garlic
1 Egg
1/3 Cup Panko Breadcrumbs
1/2 Teaspoon Harissa Powder (optional)




Directions

Preheat Oven to 400F.  Mince Onion



and Cilantro



Mix with Harissa, Smoked Paprika, Cumin, Garlic and Egg



Add Breadcrumbs



Add Ground Beef and mix until thoroughly blended



Grab about a hand full of the meat mixture



Shape into kebabs of about three ounces each.



Usually you would from these onto a stick like a true kebab, then grill them over an open fire.  I find that 1) the ground beef kebabs don't tend to stay on the stick very well and 2) they will break apart if you try to grill them this way.  Sure, grilled over a charcoal fire will give you better flavor, so go that route if you want, but I usually fix these in the oven for simplicity's sake, and they come out great.

Place on tray and roast in 450F oven for 15-20 minutes until cooked through.



Serve right away.  Here we've served some with rice and harissa-roasted carrots.



Until next time,


Chris