Special Event


3
Mar 10

Chef Jason Bangerter’s Super Kitchen

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Jason Bangerter
Last month, I visited Chef Jason Bangerter at Auberge Du Pommier in Toronto and got a tour of his kitchen. My jaw dropped as I walked through his large, beautifully designed kitchen. It was the first day of Winterlicious – the restaurant was booked up but the kitchen wasn’t in chaos! Chefs were smiling and had time to say hi. There was also plenty of room in the kitchen such that I wasn’t blocking anybody’s way. The shelves and countertops were also nice and shiny. I was pleasantly surprised.

Then…Chef Bangerter started to tell me about some of his equipment in the kitchen. Imagine that all you knew was how to cook food by campfire and someone showed you a stove for the first time. That’s how I felt while touring his kitchen.

YouCook.ca focuses on how to cook top notch restaurant quality food at home – by sourcing local fresh produce and herbs, by showing you our learnings (and mistakes) of cooking techniques, by interviewing influential chefs and now, this is our first post on what a best in class restaurant kitchen looks like. Here’s our exclusive coverage of Chef Bangerter’s kitchen.

Induction Units

Induction
The kitchen sports 4 induction suites (16 units). You can boil an inch of cold water in 24 seconds on an induction stove top!! I touched it while it was on and didn’t get burned. It seemed so magical, I had to figure out how it worked when I got home. I guess I’ve been living under a rock because I never knew this technology existed.

Here are some things I learned about Induction Units.

  • You need a conductive pot, preferably ferromagnetic (Jason uses stainless steel pots, pans, Demeyere and Stub cookware and All-Clad pots).
  • Electrically insulating pots like ceramic and glass will not heat up.
  • An induction stovetop is simply an electromagnet – a coil of copperwire. When you turn it on, a current is applied to that coil which produces a magnetic field. This induces a current in the conductive pot which produces heat.
  • This process also creates some magnetic loss but it is less than 10% – making this way more energy efficient than traditional electric or gas stoves.
  • The possibility of injury and burns are significantly lower because your hands are not nearly as conductive as the stainless steel pots. There’s no open flame to worry about or red-hot heating elements. However, if you do touch the pot or pan, that will be very hot since the induction heats the cooking vessel itself.
    There may be some danger for people with a pacemaker or defibrillator but it is minimal according to Wikipedia.
  • Induction cooking does not heat up the surrounding air which results in energy savings in ventilation.
  • Smart induction units can automatically turn off the element once the cookware has been removed or keep the pot at minimum boil when all the contents have boiled out. This can be done by monitoring the voltage drop caused by the resistance in the circuit.

You can find more information on Wikipedia. As for me, I’m sold. When I buy a house, it will have induction stoves for sure.

The MerryChef Oven

Merrychef
Chef Bangerter informed me that this piece of equipment has cooking times 18x faster than the standard oven. So of course I had to go home and learn what magic was behind this.

I learned that the MerryChef oven is a combination of a convection oven and a microwave oven aka Convection Microwave. It allows food to be cooked quickly at the speed of microwave cooking but with the browning and crisping affect of a convection oven. Convection ovens work at lower temperatures and the result is more even baking/heating than a standard conventional oven because there are fans that circulate the heat around.

What does this mean?

  • Chefs can make a souffle in 1m20s, madelines in 1m50s, cake in 3m50s and sausage in 1m20s.
  • Chef Bangerter is the undefeated Garland Canada Accelerated Iron Chef Champion.
    Iron chef

He prepared a 6 course tasting menu for 4 judges in 45 minutes using the Merry Chef and induction stoves.
Here is his schedule for the competition:
Time: Start at 0h:00m
1 Cocktail amuse bouche smoked beef tender “both long pepper spiced” Ready at 0:06
2 Glazed chevre tart Ready at 0:14
3 Seared tuna Ready at 0:20
4 Truffle soup Ready at 0:23
5 Game sausage Ready at 0:28
6 Soufflée et chocolat Ready at 0:38

Now that requires a lot of skill, precision, no mistakes, and some really good equipment.
Cooking with the Stars – The Garland Canada Cup for 2010 is happening this weekend – March 7th!

Good luck Jason!!!!!

The Cleveland/Convotherm Combi Ovens Steamers

Convotherm
This is the first of its kind in Canada – and Chef Bangerter has 2 mini and 1 large one. This oven can steam and roast at the same time. You can program recipes into it and can be monitored on your computer.

The Hobart site has more information than I could find in the Cleveland site. Essentially you can have exact control over the humidity while cooking in convection mode. Once you get the right recipe for the cooking times and humidity, you can program it into the machine for the next batches and monitor it remotely.

Thermomix Blenders

Admittedly this is the only piece of equipment that my jaw didn’t drop down for. And this is ONLY because I saw a demonstration of the Vita-Mix last summer at the PNE. At that time, we stood at the booth in awe – watching the presenter demonstrate how to make a smoothie, a hot soup and strawberry ice cream all with the same blender. If not for the $800 price tag, I’d have one at home right now. So this blender has a 2 peak horsepower Swedish motor (YES you read right – TWO HORSEPOWER in a blender).

When making soup, you turn the motor up and since its spinning so fast, it makes the soup boiling hot. You can throw in a lobster with the shell with some butter and brandy and herbs and out comes a soup. Then you can clean it out and make ice cream in it immediately!!

Heated Shelves, Refrigerated Drawers and Renovation Details

shelves
Plates are typically warmed up in the oven. Why waste precious cooking space for plates? Instead, Chef Bangerter put in heated shelves all along the kitchen. Plates sitting on them will automatically be heated. There are also refrigerated drawers throughout the kitchen for cooling needs.

The kitchen was renovated in August 2008 – after 6 years of working at Auberge Du Pommier, the Oliver Bonacini Group let Jason design and build his dream kitchen. These are floor plans that he made:
schematics
Chef Jason Bangerter was the Project Manager overseeing all the renovations and made a very aggressive schedule. The demolition and rebuild was done in 10 days. Auberge even hosted a wedding on Day #3 without a kitchen and on Day #5 there was a gas pipe mishap which pushed renovations out by a day. There were no other glitches which meant Chef Bangerter had his new kitchen in 10 days.


Jason
By now, you must have come to the same conclusion as me, Jason Bangerter is not only a highly skilled chef, but he’s smart and does his research when it comes to cutting edge technology in the kitchen. He is also a proven designer and project manager on large scale kitchen renovations.

This kitchen tour was priceless for me. After my trip to Toronto, I visited multiple mobile or makeshift kitchens in Vancouver during the Olympics and it’s just not the same. The two kitchens that stood out in the Olympics were:

1. Holland Heineken House where Albron shipped entire train car-sized crates of their kitchen, prep, cooking and cleaning areas from Holland.
2. Alberta Rocky Mountaineer Train where there are 6 kitchens which support meal service for 70 people each. They cannot use gas stoves and opt for electric but they definitely could benefit from induction stoves.

Believe me, the food coming out of the kitchen at Auberge Du Pommier is delicious and I appreciate it more after the kitchen tour and meeting Chef Jason Bangerter.

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2
Mar 10

Our Reflections of the Vancouver 2010 Olympics

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The month of February flew by quickly with the setup and now packup of the Olympics in Vancouver. Just a month ago, pavilions were just starting to be built. Everyday on my walk along the seawall there would be something new to see.
Olympic VIllage
Then the Olympics started, bringing along with it people from all over the world, skilled chefs from all over the world, beautiful tourism pavilions, clothing, flags, paraphernalia, pins, music, culture…oh… and the athletes and medals! Can you believe it ?? Canadians broke the record for the number of gold medals in the Winter Olympics – all 14 of them!
Quatchie
As the days inched closer, I was excited to get a mini culinary tour of Europe, all in a 10km radius of Vancouver. Then hospitality started popping up and ready for visits from the media a few days before the Olympics. I enjoyed the conversations about food, food preparation, dining traditions and culture in Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Italy, France and Russia. I loved learning about the special care and attention to air cured meats, sausage seasonings, cheese and potatoes. Alright, I’ll admit that the free food samplings were delicious perks.




What I did not expect was how much I enjoyed the journey through all the Provincial houses of Canada. The Ontario House, Northern House (representing Northwest Territories, Yukon, Nunavut), Quebec House, Alberta House, Atlantic Canada House, Saskatchewan, BC Street, Vancouver Island and Sunshine Coast all put on an amazing tourism experience, and more specifically a delicious culinary experience.

Canada’s Culinary Culture

I’ve come to a realization that Canada’s Culinary scene is World Class. Between the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean, we have the freshest selection of seafood possible. Our prairies produce a large quantity of grains, vegetables, fruits as well as a diverse selection of livestock and wildlife. Our metropolitan cities cater to people’s tastes from all over the world. Our chefs have gone around the globe and learned from the best chefs in the world in all different cuisines and styles of cooking. We’re exposed to so many styles of cooking since everyone’s background is so diverse. I’m actually so excited about the next few years in the Canadian Culinary scene as we evolve and show the world what Canadian Cuisine really is. Susur Lee mentioned this in an interview with YouCook a few months ago and I suppose I’m realizing it now – We have the best and freshest ingredients in Canada. Our people know what good quality is and restaurants and chefs are always pushing the bar to make even more creative dishes with the fresh ingredients.

Maybe I’m just high on Canada right now as I write this
Flag
…but it does bring a smile to my face and optimism that somehow YouCook.ca can play a role to facilitate this promotion of the Canadian Culinary Culture.

Stephan Brunt captures it pretty well in this video essay:



Between winning the most gold medals in the Winter Olympics, and seeing Canadian flags, gear, gloves, face paint everywhere I go, and people sharing stickers, pins, drinks – I am feeling very proud of my country right now.
Canada Hockey Gold

I like how we can show our patriotism but are mindful that we’re not the centre of the world and the Olympics has really shown that. Several of the international houses and chefs mentioned record number of people visiting, sales and consumption of the food. Most of the international houses were set up mainly to host the athletes and people from that country plus expatriates. Nobody really expected the demand from local Canadians to line up for 1-4 hours to get into the Heineken House or the Switzerland House or the Saxony House. Canadians want to try cuisine from all over the world, we love learning from other cultures and everyone around us, we love trying new things, and we love traveling. This is a really cool attitude and it hasn’t gone unnoticed by the world!

Manuel Salchli, Director of the House of Switzerland Canada 2010 said “There was a strong comradery between Canadian and Swiss fans. Nations joining together to celebrate sport and humanity is what the Olympic Games represents and it has been exemplified at the House of Switzerland Canada 2010 in Vancouver and Whistler.

Hospitality House Numbers

Switzerland House reported:

  • Over 60,000 guests
  • “The Swiss also learned that Canadians are food lovers, with a record amount of fondue, raclette, and Lindt chocolate being consumed at the House of Switzerland Canada 2010.”
  • 4 tonnes of Cheese from Switzerland consumed
    Had to order another shipment of cheese half-way through the Games
  • 2 tonnes of Lindt chocolate

Saxony House reported:

  • 75% more people than expected (34,000 total)
  • 11,000 sausages, 1000 steaks, 130kg of Venison
  • 320 kegs of Wernesgrüner Beer



The flip side to all local Canadians wanting to see each of the houses and taste all the food, is that the hospitality houses could barely keep up with all the demand promptly.
Lineups
The biggest complaint echoed throughout Vancouver online and offline were the Line Ups. The Atlantic House had multiple lineups and many people were in the wrong line up or lined up for hours to be told that there were no more tastings. The Heineken House would prioritize Dutch guests first before letting in any Canadians. The Quebec House ran out of Poutine within 30 minutes.
Lineups
Locals and tourists alike probably spent the majority of their time in lineups during the Olympics. There were 1 hour – 5 hour lineups for tastings, tourism, free samples, concerts, clubs, restaurants, bars, skytrains, buses. For the Gold Medal Hockey game, people had to show up to the Pavilions or Bars at 8am for the game at noon.

There’s always the good and the bad. We are after all Canadian and pretty patient, as long as the free stuff or food at the end of the line is worth it. World, take note, the next time you have an event in Canada and offer food or free stuff, expect to accommodate all of us!

YouCook.ca by the numbers:

So YouCook did our best to write about our experiences with the food, the chefs and the host province or country involved in the hospitality. Here’s some statistics of our experience in February in Vancouver.

Pavilions and Hospitality Houses visited: 23
Chefs Interviewed: 20
Pins Received: 32
Olympic Events Attended: 3
Number of Days of Fireworks Watching: 5
Number of Concerts Seen: 9
Number of Consecutive Days with at least 1 drink: 22
Number of Pictures Taken by Thu: 3147
YouCook.ca Staff during the Olympics: 10

YouCook.ca Thank You

Many thanks to everyone who did helped me with Photography, Videography, Cooking, Proofreading, and Support in making the YouCook.ca idea viral around the world in 2010.

Special thanks to:
Melody Lei, Catherine Lam, Elaine Yip – YouCook Toronto
Kevin Chew – YouCook Vancouver
Irene Wijoyo – YouCook Victoria,
Glen Yi – Korea,
David Montgomery – Seattle,
Josefine Westberg – Sweden,
Tomoko Takami – Japan

Thanks to all the friendly people I met – all the chefs and organizers and media that I got to know. To Stephan Colbert for making us wake up early to watch the live tapings of your show! And for everyone in the City of Vancouver for making our olympic experience priceless!

Until next time…London 2012 and Sochi 2014!
Pins

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1
Mar 10

International Pig Day Dessert: Candied Bacon Ice Cream

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Bacon Ice Cream
It’s March 1st ! In the American Southwest today is known as National Pig Day. But Prince Edward County in Ontario (where Jamie Kennedy resides) has adopted this tradition into International Pig Day and the entire month of March focused on Pigs.

Ok, I never knew there was such a day existed where pigs are recognized as one of man’s most intellectual and domesticated animals but it has started since 1972. I found out about it at the Ontario Pavilion during the Olympics in a presentation with Jamie Kennedy where he let us sample his Crisp Pork Belly Confit with an Apple Compote while talking about International Pig Day. I didn’t manage to get the recipe, but here are similar recipes from London: BBC Smoked eel and crisp pork belly confit, BBC Good Food Individual Roast Pork Belly with Apple Confit

Prince Edward County has a variety of pig farmers with different breeds of pigs on small family farms and could benefit from increase of demand for local foods. The day brings awareness to pig farmers and the businesses and people involved in producing, cooking, and of course eating pig.

We have a treat for you! Bacon is appearing in many foods as of late. I even had Bacon in a Caesar the other day. Well, YouCook decided to try putting bacon where its not supposed to go – Ice Cream. We made a Candied Bacon Ice Cream, a recipe from David Lebovitz (author of The Perfect Scoop) with modifications by SomethingLemon.

Summary

Preparation Time for Day 1: Candying bacon and making the custard for the ice cream takes approximately one hour. That is including time in the oven and time on the cooling rack.
Preparating Time for Day 2: Ice Cream Machine: 25 minutes
Servings: 3/4 quart
Meal type: Dessert

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients for Candied Bacon

  • 5 strips bacon
    around ¼-inch or ½ centimeter
  • 2Tbsp light brown sugar

Ingredients for Ice Cream Custard

  • 3 tablespoons (45g) salted butter
  • ¾ cup (packed) brown sugar (170g), light or dark (you can use either)
  • 2¾ (675ml) cup half-and-half
  • 5 large egg yolks
  • 2 teaspoons dark rum or whiskey
  • ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • optional: ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon

Instructions for Candied Bacon

1. Preheat the oven to 400F (200C).
2. Lay the strips of bacon on a baking sheet lined with a silicone mat or aluminum foil, shiny side down.
3. Sprinkle 1½-2 teaspoons of brown sugar evenly over each strip of bacon, depending on length.
4. Bake for 12-16 minutes.
5. Midway during baking, flip the bacon strips over and drag them through the dark, syrupy liquid that’s collected on the baking sheet.
6. Continue to bake until as dark as mahogany. Remove from oven and cool the strips on a wire rack.
7. Once crisp and cool, chop into little pieces, about the size of grains of rice.
Candied Bacon
Note: Bacon bits can be stored in an airtight container and chilled for a day or so, or stored in the freezer a few weeks ahead.

Instructions for Ice Cream Custard

1. Melt the butter in a heavy, medium-size saucepan.
2. Stir in the brown sugar and half of the half-and-half.
3. Pour the remaining half-and-half into a bowl set in an ice bath and set a mesh strainer over the top.
4. In a separate bowl, stir together the egg yolks, then gradually add some of the warm brown sugar mixture to them, whisking the yolks constantly as you pour.
5. Pour the mixture back into the saucepan.
Using brown sugar and half-and-half as opposed to cream gives a healthy allure to this ice cream — makes me forget the contrasting allure of candied bacon!
6. Cook over low heat, constantly stirring and scraping the bottom with a heatproof spatula, until the custard thickens enough to coat the spatula.
I would say it’s best to stick to low heat as it is important not to let the mixture boil because that results in the eggs being cooks and that’s just not cool. On lower heat you will have to stir for longer, but then you also don’t have to worry about whether the temperature is going to cause your mixture to boil any second. Like David says, you know your custard has thickened enough when it coats the back of a spatula. Another sign is when a trail is formed behind the spatula as your are stirring.
7. Strain the custard into the half-and-half, stirring over the ice bath, until cool. Add liquor, vanilla and cinnamon, if using.
I opted to use the cinnamon and also decided to add half a cup of cream to the custard prior to adding the liquor, vanilla, and cinnamon. For the liquor portion I used Bourbon. The smoky aftertaste of the Bourbon combined with the marriage of the salty bacon and the sweet brown sugar may seem an unlikely union, but in your mouth it will be a festival of flavours!
8. Refrigerate the mixture.
I find that refrigerating over night is best. End of Day 1.
9. On Day 2, once thoroughly chilled, freeze in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Approximately 25 minutes.
ice cream maker
10. Add the bacon bits during the last moment of churning, or stir them in when you remove the ice cream from the machine.
11. At this point the ice cream is ready to be devoured, if you like. Although I find that I like my ice cream a bit firmer, and so I usually leave in freezer for at least 2 hours prior to consumption.

Results

The bacon ice cream usually expects cringes and reactions of confusion and disgust. But let me tell you, it is amazing! You would have bacon, eggs, and cream if not in frozen form, no questions asked. So why not embrace this “breakfast” ice cream and while you’re at it, have some Bourbon too.

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1
Mar 10

Auberge du Pommier Winterlicious Recipe: Celery Root Soup

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Jason Bangerter is a very skilled chef – intelligent, friendly and passionate about food. He’s the Executive Chef at Auberge Du Pommier, delivering a consistently amazing French food at one of the nicest restaurants in Toronto. I had the pleasure of trying the Winterlicious tasting menu at Auberge Du Pommier and take a tour of Jason’s beautiful state of the art kitchen. Believe me, it was one of the most memorable experiences of mine in Toronto.

Among many dishes at Auberge Du Pommier that everyone loves is Jason’s Truffle Soup. The creation of that signature dish goes back to Jason’s days in Europe working with Anton Mosimann, the first Celebrity Chef of our time who came up with Cuisine Naturelle and whose philosophy is that you don’t need a lot of butter, cream and alcohol to get Michelin Stars. Instead, Mosimann focuses the freshest ingredients and cooking methods to bring out natural flavours and keep his customers healthy. Chef Bangerter has definitely taken Mosimann’s philosophy in his cooking. The Winterlicious menu appetizers like the St Jacques Marinee (fresh Scallops with valentine radish, apple and lemon) and the Celery Root soup draws attention to the fresh ingredients, simple cooking methods and delicious tastes. This is one of many posts to come about Chef Jason Bangerter, YouCook’s favourite Toronto Chef.

Cat has taken the first stab at following Chef Bangerter’s recipe for the Celery Root Soup. Please read on for her experience.

I have become a recent fan of vegetable pureed soups, being both tasty and healthy – it usually consists of vegetable and chicken stock. So when Thu showed me the recipe for Celery Root Soup from Auberge du Pommier by Chef Jason Bangerter, I volunteered to try it. I was especially eager after she raved about how delicious it was when she had it at the restaurant! It was a little intimidating to make it at first, since I had never cooked with leeks nor celery root, but I managed to find fresh versions of both at St Lawrence Market. The result was delicious, despite the few mistakes I made. Read on for the recipe and my experience on making it.

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 min
Cook Time: 1 hour
Servings: 8 servings.
Meal type: Soup
Grocery Cost: $ 9.67 ($1.21 per serving)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

  • 3 French shallots, peeled and sliced ~ $2.00
  • 1 leek (whites only) split, washed and sliced ~ $1.00
  • 3 pc garlic, peeled and crushed
  • ½ lb. Celery root, peeled and diced ~ $1.99
  • 2 fresh bay leaves or 1 dry
  • 6 sprigs fresh thyme ~ $0.20
  • 4 sprigs fresh parsley ~ $0.20
  • 2 lt. chicken stock, beef stock, vegetable stock or water
  • ½ lb. butter (unsalted) ~ $1.00
  • ½ lt. 35% cream (whipped) ~ $2.49
  • ½ cup white wine ~ $0.80

Cut celery root:

Instructions

1. In a stock pot on low heat, sweat the shallots, garlic and leek until tender.
Sweating vegetables means to cook them over very low heat, usually with a bit of butter or oil. This is commonly done in vegetable soups to soften the vegetables and for them absorb the fat without burning. See this link for more information on sweating.

2. Add the celery root.

3. Add the white wine and the herb bundle.

4. Reduce the wine until almost all is evaporated and add the stock just to cover the ingredients in the pot.
5. Simmer until all the contents are tender and the liquid is well flavoured. Pull off the heat and allow cooling slightly before the next step.

6. Remove the herb bundle and squeeze any juices into the pot.
7. Purée the soup while warm and add the diced butter pieces, a few at a time to emulsify. Pass through a fine sieve. Adjust consistency with left over liquid and season.
Chef’s tip:
Only add enough butter to achieve a velvet texture. It is not necessary to use the entire amount of butter.


8. To serve, heat the soup and fold in the whipped cream at the last minute. Only fold enough to create a frothy velvet consistency. Ladle into warm soup bowls.
9. Garnish with either black pepper, sour cream, smoked salmon, caviar or smoked, confit and braised meats or just enjoy with a piece of crusty bread.

Quick Notes

I had a few hiccups while making this soup. First of all, passing it through a sieve didn’t really work for me. I put all the soup in the sieve, and only little drips of liquid went through. Maybe my sieve was TOO fine? Anyways, I just ended up skipping this part – otherwise I would’ve had about 3 tablespoons of soup.

The second thing that went awry was taking the ingredients too literally, especially the butter. The half pound of butter did seem like a lot, especially since the soup already had good flavour, but I didn’t want to take any chances so I put it all in. After talking to the chef, I realized that the measurements are only a guide, and I should’ve only put in enough butter to reach a velvet-y consistency! Chef Jason Bangerter also said you could use a drizzle of olive oil instead of butter

The last thing was I didn’t whip the cream before folding it in the soup. So instead of the velvety texture, I just had a slightly creamy texture.

Variations

When the dish was presented at Auberge Du Pommier, there was some truffle on top. The truffle really enhances the soup with its delicious flavours – and I suppose it would increase the cost of the soup.

You can feel free to add a different garnish while serving the dish.

Results


Despite my many mistakes, the soup actually turned out quite tasty. The first few mouthfuls were pronounced “delicious” by my boyfriend. However, since I added way too much butter, it was hard to eat too much of it. It is a good recipe and I would make it again, with Chef Bangerter’s suggestion of using a drizzle of olive oil instead. Thanks to Auberge du Pommier for providing a great soup recipe, and introducing me to using leeks and celery root soup!

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26
Feb 10

House of Switzerland National Chocolate Contest: Crispy Pecan Chocolate Bars

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“Basically what I love about chocolate is that it brings people together and is an immediate morale booster, whether it is a cup of hot chocolate on a cold night, or a pack of Lindt shared amongst friends. I love cooking with chocolate and I believe it is a versatile product whether in desserts or even in savory dishes.” That’s why Timothy Nathan Tejuco, the winner of the House of Switzerland Canada 2010 – National Chocolate Contest, loves chocolate. I love chocolate too so I was really eager to try Timothy’s award-winning recipe. It actually looked quite simple compared to the 2nd and 3rd place finishers in the contest – the simpler, the better!

However, I found his instructions deceptively simple – it assumes that you have knowledge on how to make “sabayons” and “ganaches” – which is understandable if you’re a chocolatier or baker, but not to me! I’ve modified the recipe in terms of portion size (his original one made A LOT and would’ve cost me about $40 in chocolate), and also have some comments on proportions. Unless Timothy has some secret trick to holding together rice krispies and crushed pecans with a tiny bit of chocolate, I really don’t see how his amount of chocolate for the base would work, so I’ve doubled the amount of chocolate in the base. I even tried both methods – his original proportions, and then with my doubling of the chocolate. His original proportions just didn’t hold the base together and ended up half the base flaking off. I’ve posted the original recipe in case you want to see his original.

This was a great learning experience for me, so I’ve shared my many tips (as a result of my mistakes) so I hope you find this educational and also have a great dessert in your arsenal of recipes! It turned out delicious, despite my trial and error!

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 min
Cook Time: 20 min
Servings: 30 servings (depends on how big you slice these bars)
Meal type: Dessert
Grocery Cost: $19.39 (~$0.65 per serving)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients


For the base:

  • 170g Pureed Toasted Pecans ~ $1.99
  • 100g Lindt Excellence Extra Creamy Milk Chocolate ~ $1.76
  • 100g Lindt White Chocolate ~ $1.76
  • 126g Crushed Rice Crispies ~ $1.77


For the top:

  • 80g Cream ~ $2.69
  • 210g Lindt Excellence 70% Cacao Dark Chocolate ~ $6.98
  • 80g Egg Yolks (about 3 large eggs) ~ $0.62
  • 60g Icing Sugar ~ $0.10
  • 50g Soft Butter ~ $1.71
  • 10g Water

Instructions

For the base:
1. Melt the chocolate, stir in the pecans and the rice crispies.

Note: If you can’t find crushed toasted pecans, you can buy whole pecans and roast and crush them yourself, which is what I did. This added a good 15 minutes to my prep time. To toast, I laid out my pecans in a single layer, brushed them with oil, and baked them in the oven at 350F for 4.5 minutes on both sides. Season with salt. See the following link for the method I used.

To crush them, place the roasted pecans in a ziplock bag and close it tightly. Use a rolling pin to roll over the pecans to crush them. If you don’t have a rolling pin, like me, you can use any round glass bottle (i.e.soy sauce bottle).

To melt the chocolate, use a double boiler. You can make-shift a double boiler like I did using a metal bowl over the top of a pot of boiling water.

2. Place this on the base of a non-stick sheet pan. Chill in fridge for 1 hour.

For the top (ganache):
3. Whisk the egg yolk and sugar in a double boiler over very low heat to create a sabayon.


Note: A sabayon is a dessert sauce usually made with whipping eggs with sugar and alcohol. In this case, we are only using egg yolk and icing sugar. See the following link on more details on the technique of how to make a sabayon.

4. Melt the chocolate and combine with cream to form a ganache.

Note:This was the hardest part of the recipe. A ganache is pretty complex – pay careful attention to the temperature of the ganache and how hard you’re beating it (don’t overbeat!). See my notes in the “Quick Notes” section below on more detailed steps on how to make a ganache and how to avoid my mistakes and how I fixed them.

5. Slowly add butter and water to the mixture until fully incorporated.

6. Place the mixture on top of the base and spread evenly.

7. Chill in fridge for about 4 hours.
8. Slice into 1 inch, by 2 cm bars and serve just under room temperature! Enjoy!

Quick Notes

My first attempt at ganache was an absolute mess. Every mistake you can make – I made it! My ganache turned grainy and it separated. Luckily, the fix for both is to add a teaspoon of cold cream and stir. This helped a bit but it was still grainy and a bit oily. In the end, I just gave up and scraping off the oil and spread my grainy ganache over the base. It actually turned out well, and no one seemed to notice my grainy, separated ganache. Imagine how much BETTER it would’ve tasted if I had made it properly! I will definitely try this recipe again to perfect my ganache.

I recommend reading up on ganache techniques before attempting to make this. Making a ganache is VERY precise because it is an emulsion. Emulsifying is the process of mixing 2 ingredients that typically do not combine (i.e. a liquid and a fat) into a stable homogenous mixture. The ingredients are forced together and held in suspension through the manual or mechanical action of beating, whisking, or mixing. In a chocolate emulsion, the cocoa butter is the fat and the cream is the liquid. Thus, they are very prone to separation. The 2 most common mistakes are: (a) the improper ratio of cocoa butter to cream or too much sugar; and (b) incorrect temperature. The temperature should be, at all times during the process, above 35C, ideally between 35C to 40C. Another suggestion I read is to use an immersion blender instead of mixing. Check out Elaine’s post on L’Ephemeres Chocolate aux Poires for her tips and simple method on making ganache.

As I bake more, I find a lot of recipes use weight. I do have a scale, but it’s not very accurate. If you plan on baking a lot, I would recommend investing in a good scale – it makes for much more consistent results. I had to estimate a lot, especially with the lighter ingredients, so that may have contributed to me having to adjust the proportions as I went along, or my mess with the ganache!

Variations

The recipe calls for Lindt chocolate because it was for a Lindt chocolate recipe. I found the cost of this recipe to be quite a lot, so to save on costs, you can use baking chocolate instead. Just remember to keep it to the same mix of dark, milk and white chocolate.

Results




Despite my many mistakes with the ganache, the Crispy Pecan Chocolate Bars turned out really well! I really love the mix of roasted pecans with the rice krispies. I brought these bars to work and they were a hit, with many coming back for seconds. I think that is a true sign of what’s good. I will definitely add this to my arsenal of desserts, and it is great for taking to a party. Enjoy and thanks to Timothy Nathan Tejuco and the House of Switzerland for providing this recipe!

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12
Feb 10

Reds Bistro and Wine Bar – Valentine Soufflé

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We got this recipe from Reds Bistro and Wine Bar for a valentine’s soufflé. Soufflé is one of those dishes that requires some precision and good timing to make properly, qualities that I don’t normally have in the kitchen. Ever since I saw the remake of Charlie’s Angels though, when I think of soufflé I think of that scene where Lucy Liu’s character (Alex) is trying to keep her soufflé from deflating while her trailer is getting shot up by a machine gun. So when I saw this recipe I immediately decided I HAD to make it – picturing myself as Lucy Liu the whole time, of course. I think she did a better job with her soufflé than I did, sans bullets, but I had fun making it and it was quite delicious although not quite as puffy as I think it should have been. I also like how this dessert requires minimal ingredients, ones which I always have lying around the kitchen.

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 mins.
Cook Time: 20 mins.
Servings: 2
Meal type: Dessert
Grocery Cost: $19.50 (If you have to buy every ingredient from scratch – but you only use a tiny bit of the butter, sugar, and tartar)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup bitter sweet chocolate ($4.00)
  • 1 tbsp + 1 tsp butter ($3.00)
  • 2 tbsp + 1 tsp 35% cream ($3.00)
  • 2 egg yolks ($3.50)
  • 3 egg whites
  • 2 tbsp + 2 tsp sugar ($2.00)
  • Dash of cream of tartar ($4.00)


The sugar, chocolate, and butter. 1/2 cup of chocolate chips = 76g, so what you see there is 76g of various chocolate bars I was trying to use up. I don’t think you have to be too exact with the amount of chocolate.

A dash of cream of tartar – the tartar is to add acidity to the eggs whites so they fluff up when you beat them. If you don’t have cream of tartar you can also substitute with lemon juice (1/4 tsp per egg white) or salt (a few pinches) – in that order of preference. You should use around 1/8 tsp of tartar per egg white. Also apparently you can beat egg whites in a copper bowl and then you don’t have to use any acid in it…but who has a copper bowl lying around? Not me!

Eggs should be room temperature. If you try to beat cold eggs they don’t fluff up as nice. Here I put my eggs in warm water to get them to room temp quicker.

Method

1. Preheat oven to 375F
2. Combine butter, cream, and chocolate and melt in a stainless steel bowl over simmering water. Once melted, take mixture off heat, add egg yolks and mix with a whisk and set aside

Here is the second batch of melted chocolate – the first one didn’t work out because I forgot to turn down the boiling water from MAX to medium – if chocolate gets too hot, the solids separate from the fat, making it lumpy and unusable.

Adding in the egg yolks.
3. In a separate bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until soft peaks are formed. Add sugar and whisk until peaks become stiff

This is an example of a soft peak. When you lift the beaters out of the egg whites, the whites form a peak but the top droops down instead of standing up straight.

These are stiff peaks – note how the top of the peak is straight and no longer droops down.
4. Slowly fold egg whites into chocolate. Do this in three parts so egg whites don’t deflate

Always spoon the eggs whites into the chocolate, so the heavier chocolate doesn’t deflate the egg whites.

To fold the two together, you use a spatula to move the chocolate from the bottom of the bowl over the egg whites. Do this gently and don’t over mix!

After everything has been folded together, it looks like the above.
5. Pour mixture into a 60 oz. ceramic ramekin. The mixture should reach just below the rim of the ramekin

I guess my egg whites didn’t fluff up enough, because this is only a 30oz ramekin.
6. Place soufflé on a baking tray on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 20-25 min or until soufflé is puffed up but still jiggles in the centre

The soufflé puffs up while it’s baking…careful, it deflates very quickly!
7. Serve immediately

Serving Tips:

Tip #1: Serve with ice cream and fresh berries as an accompaniment
Tip #2: Add a splash of brandy or orange liqueur for extra flavour

Results

Reds Bistro & Wine bar, located on Adelaide Street West, Executive Chef Michael Steh is offering a special 6-course His and Her Tasting menu, available on Friday, February 12 and Saturday, February 13. The menu is designed for sharing and features several unique and delicious offerings such as Duck Confit Poutine, Slow Roasted Beef Tenderloin and Hot Smoked B.C. Steelhead Trout. The menu is available for just $69 person (suggested wine pairings are an additional $30 per person). Diners can also look forward to sweetening the night by sampling Ontario Ice Wine from reds’ award winning wine cellar paired with items from the restaurant’s dessert or cheese menus.
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11
Feb 10

Valentines Day Recipe from Far Niente: Lobster Pot Pie

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Here’s another Valentines Day recipe for those of you a bit more adept in the kitchen, with more time, and up for a challenge – Far Niente’s Signature Lobster Pot Pie. This recipe comes from Signature Group, SIR Corp’s Executive Corporate Chef, Gordon Mackie and is available at Far Niente during Valentines. The ingredients look heavenly – how can you go wrong with something that combines lobster, puff pastry, cognac, mushrooms and heavy cream? It also looks like it takes a bit of effort – I’m not quite sure where you can buy lobster stock. In the interest of time, with Valentines Day just around the corner, we thought we would share this recipe first so you have it in time to prepare for it – and we’ll cook it for Valentines Day too and see how it turns out!

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 minutes (or more if you need to make lobster stock)
Cook Time: 40 minutes
Servings: 4 main course servings, or 8 smaller servings
Meal type: Main

Ingredients

  • 4 tbsp. Unsalted butter
  • ½ lb. Oyster, shiitake, or cremini mushrooms (or a combination)
  • 1/3 cup Shallots, minced
  • ¼ cup Cognac or brandy
  • 1½ cups Lobster stock
  • 2 cups Heavy cream
  • ½ cup Fresh or frozen green peas
  • ½ cup Heirloom or regular carrots, cooked
  • ¼ cup Blanched leeks
  • ½ tsp. Kosher salt
  • 1¼ lbs. Cooked Atlantic lobster; meat cut into bite-size pieces
  • 1½ tsp. Fresh tarragon, minced
  • 1 sheet Frozen puff pastry, thawed
  • 1 Egg yolk, lightly beaten and mixed with two tablespoons water

Instructions

For the Lobster mixture:
1. In a heavy saucepan, melt the butter over medium-high heat.
2. Add the mushrooms and cook, stirring, until wilted and golden brown around the edges, about five minutes. Add the shallots and cook until softened, about one minute.
3. Add the cognac and cook until almost completely evaporated. Add the lobster stock and continue to cook until reduced by half.
4. Add the heavy cream, green peas, carrots, leeks, and salt, and cook for 15 minutes, until sauce is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Set aside until cooled.
5. Add the lobster meat, and tarragon. Divide lobster mixture evenly among four 12-ounce ramekins. Preheat the oven to 400°F.

For the puff pastry cover:
6. On a lightly floured work surface, roll the puff pastry to a thickness of 1/8-inch.
7. Cut the pastry into circles 3/4-inch larger than the diameter of the ramekins so that they will overlap the ramekin dish.
8. Transfer the dough rounds to the top of the ramekins and press the edges of the pastry around the top of the dishes.
9. With a pastry brush, lightly coat the top of the pastry with some of the egg yolk mixture.
10. Bake in the middle rack of your oven for 20 to 25 minutes or until pastry is puffed and golden brown. Serve hot.

Variations

I think you can easily substitute other meats in this recipe for everyday use – try chicken with chicken stock, beef cubes with beef stock, or turkey with turkey stock.

Results

Unfortunately, I have not had the chance to cook this yet, but let us know how it turned out for you, and we will update our post when we have cooked it ourselves. Also feel free to send in your own variations and quick tips to help us in our attempt at it!

Valentine’s Day at Far Niente

To celebrate the lovers occasion, Far Niente restaurant in downtown Toronto is opening its doors on Sunday – making it an ideal location for lovebirds headed to the John Mayer concert at the Air Canada Center that eve. Chef Frank Romano will be offering several special dishes to compliment the dinner menu, where elegant dishes like this Lobster Pot Pie, Lobster Bisque and Roasted Chicken with Mushroom Risotto, Aged Asiago & Truffle Jus, or spicy choices such as Lamb Rogan Josh Curry are available. The restaurant is open both Saturday Feb. 13, as well as Valentine’s Day from 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.

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10
Feb 10

Winterlicious Recipe: Susur’s Braised Beef with Pappardelle

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This Braised Beef Recipe from Susur’s newest Toronto restaurant, Madeline’s, incorporates many interesting flavours but is surprisingly simple to make. In light of the upcoming Chinese New Year celebrations, I would highly recommend you try this one out. The flavours are very Asian, with a bit of a twist. You can pair this with some rice for a more traditional Chinese dish.

Summary

Preparation Time: 15 min
Cook Time: 6 hrs 30 min
Servings: 2 servings
Meal type: Main
Grocery Cost: $11.75 (or $5.88 per person)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

    For the braised beef:

  • 1 lb beef cheeks ~ $3.00
  • flour for dredging
  • 1 1/2 L dark/beef stock ~ $2.00
  • 1/2 L canned tomato (pureed) ~ $1.00
  • 200 g chili bean paste ~ $0.75
  • 1/2 cup oyster sauce ~ $0.50
  • 2 bunches fresh coriander (roots left on) ~ $0.75
  • 300 ml Chinese cooking wine ~ $1.00
  • 3 pieces each of:
  • dried licorice ~ $0.50
  • star anise ~ $0.50
  • cinnamon sticks ~ $0.50
  • Chinese coriander seeds ~ $0.25
    For the pasta:

  • pappardelle or preferred pasta
  • A handful of button mushrooms ~ $1.00
  • oil

Instructions

1. Trim excess fat from beef cheeks but do not remove the membrane (silver skin).
2. Dredge in flour and pat to remove excess.
3. Brown the beef cheeks on all sides in 1/4” of oil.
4. Combine remaining ingredients for the beef and braise the beef by baking it in the oven in a covered oven-proof pan at 250 F for 6 hours or until fork tender.
5. Remove the beef and strain your braising liquid.
6. Cook pappardelle until al dente.

7. Saute button mushrooms with 1tbsp oil, add pappardelle and coriander and saute some more.

8. Plate your pasta, and pour the braising liquid over it. Serve with braised beef.

Learn how Susur does it in this video:

Variations

During Winterlicious, Susur served this dish with pappardelle pasta. You can really use any starch that you enjoy. I recently had a great Beef Bourguignon at Biff’s Bistro in Toronto and they served it with semoule (also known as semolina).
You can also serve this on a potato puree. The sauce will just melt into it… Yum!

Results

Having been braised slowly and for such a long time, the beef is now extremely tender and the flavours have melded into each other perfectly. This is perfect for making in the winter, when you’re spending the day snuggled in at home. Just prepare it and let your oven do all the work. 6 hours later, you have a beautifully gourmet meal!

If you had this at Madeline’s, please comment and tell us how you liked it! Also remember to vote for it on our Winterlicous app if you liked this dish!

Happy Chinese New Year from YouCook!!

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9
Feb 10

Valentines Day Recipe: Susur’s Roasted Crusted Salmon with Mussels

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So it’s that time of year again, when you rack your brain for what to get that special someone for Valentines Day. Also equally taxing is finding a restaurant where it’s not grossly overpriced and packed for the special V-day meal. So how about this year, change it up and give a gift from the heart and cook at home instead? Two problems solved – gift and dinner in one! It doesn’t have to be stressful – YouCook, with Susur’s help, will show you this simple but impressive Roasted Crusted Salmon with Mussels meal that looks as good as it tastes, without having to slave for hours! This is a recipe from Madeline’s winterlicious menu. I was pleasantly surprised at how simple this recipe was (after all, I was cooking with Susur!), and was even more surprised at the secret to the crispy skin – which isn’t salmon skin at all! See the recipe below for his secret ingredient! Thanks Susur for showing us the secret behind your roasted crusted salmon and providing an elegant recipe perfect for the upcoming special occasion!

Summary

Preparation Time: 20 min
Cook Time: 20 min
Servings: 1 serving
Meal type: Main
Grocery Cost: $9.37

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

For the salmon:

  • 1 piece of white bread
  • 1 salmon fillet, about ½ lb ~ $3.50
  • salt
  • white pepper
  • 1 egg

For the mussels:

  • 6-8 mussels ~ $2.00
  • 1 cup white wine ~ $1.60
  • 1 cup chicken stock ~ $0.50
  • 1 cup cream ~ $1.79
  • chives for garnish

Instructions

For the salmon:
1. Prepare egg wash by beating an egg in a bowl. Set aside.
2. Roll a slice of white bread until it’s very thin. You can use a rolling pin or pasta roller.
3. If the salmon fillet has skin on it, cut it off using a sharp knife. Season the skin-less salmon fillet with salt and white pepper.
4. Brush the egg wash over the piece of salmon, on the side where the skin is.
5. Lay the salmon fillet with the egg wash side down over the flat piece of bread. Then simply cut around the bread to align with the salmon. This becomes the “crispy” skin.



6. Heat oil in a heavy cast iron pan that you can put in the oven. Fry the salmon with the “skin” side down for a few minutes.
7. Take the entire pan and put it in the oven to bake until done, about 20 minutes.

Learn how Susur does it in this video:

For the mussels:
8. Mix the white wine, chicken stock and cream in a saucepan.

9. Bring to a boil and reduce until you have about half a cup of sauce
10. Toss the mussels in the sauce until the mussels have opened.

11. Once the salmon is done, serve it with mussels, with a pureed vegetable or mashed potatoes on the side. Pour the sauce from the mussels over top, and garnish with chives.

Quick Notes

This recipe yields one serving, which is what Susur showed us, but you can easily multiply the ingredients to make multiple servings.

If you want a sauce that is less rich, you can use half a cup of cream instead of the full cup, and replace the half cup with milk or chicken broth.

Variations

You can use the rolled white bread to make a crispy skin with any other fish fillet, such as sea bass, haddock – feel free to use this on your favourite dish for a crispy touch.

Susur serves this dish with a pureed vegetable. You can puree many different types of vegetables, such as potato, squash, celery to serve as a side. I personally love pureed butternut squash. See our recipe for Roasted Butternut Squash soup, which I think you can adapt by adding less chicken stock so it’s thicker to use as a pureed vegetable side. I love the taste of roasted butternut squash with ginger. For that special Valentines Day touch, you can shape this into a heart shape!

Results

The result is a crispy skinned, tender salmon with a rich sauce and mussels on the side. I never knew that you could use simple white bread to make crispy salmon skin. If you had this at Madeline’s, please comment and tell us how you liked it! Also remember to vote for it on our Winterlicous app if you liked this dish! Happy Valentines Day – let us know how it turned out for you!

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5
Feb 10

Winterlicious Recipe: Big Daddy’s Coconut Shrimp

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Here’s a tasty recipe from Big Daddy’s Crab Shack and Oyster Bar. It’s one of their most popular appetizers and you will thoroughly impress any guest if you serve this up. The hardest part would probably be deveining the shrimp, but thank goodness the kind chefs at Big Daddy’s took pity on us and did that step for us! Big Daddy’s was generous enough to provide us with ALL the ingredients (including the big tiger shrimps deveined!) for our YouCook night and we’d like to thank them so much. The prices aren’t updated here yet until we make this dish again and have to actually buy all the ingredients.

I’ve always enjoyed coconut shrimp and each restaurant definitely does it differently. Big Daddy’s has mastered this recipe with the use of the larger flattened black tiger shrimps. The combination of flour and panko and coconut flakes makes this dish really tasty. And of course the sauce tops it off to be a great appetizer.

Summary

Preparation Time: 20-30 mins.
Cook Time: 5 mins.
Servings: 4-6
Meal type: Appetizer

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 


Ingredients

  • 24 black tiger shrimp, 21-25 count. Peel, devein, and butterfly, leave tail on

Breading Ingredients – 3 Step process

Step 1: Flour

  • 1/4 cup all purpose flour

Step 2: Egg Wash

  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 fl oz coconut rum
  • Chef’s tip: Big Daddy’s uses Parrot Bay or Malibu

Step 3: Breading

  • 3/4 cup grated coconut
  • 3/4 cup panko crumbs
  • 1/4 cup all purpose flour
  • Canola oil, good quality, amount depends on fryer size

Dipping Sauce Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup orange marmalade
  • 1/2 cup prepared mustard, good quality
  • 1/2 cup buckwheat honey

Chefs tip: Do not use dijon mustard because it will ruin the taste of the sauce. Use only good quality yellow mustard.

We used normal (non-buckwheat) honey which I find tastes much better than buckwheat honey. Maybe it’s the brand I have at home, but I really don’t like that wheat flavour.

Instructions

Dipping Sauce
1. Place items into bowl and whisk until well blended
2. Transfer to bowl and hold until needed
note: Sauce can be made day before
Chefs tip: You can put the sauce in the fridge for about a week actually, as long as you store it properly

I couldn’t quite get the sauce entirely blended, you could still see little flecks of honey…but my arm was getting tired from whisking.

Coconut Shrimp
1. Place butterflied shrimp into flour and lightly coat

2. Transfer to egg wash coating lightly, shake off excess.

3. Transfer to breading.

4. Lay shrimp flat and press coconut mixture into both sides of the shrimp flattening until well coated and lay out on tray
5. Repeat process until finished, let shrimp sit in fridge for at least an hour before using

I forgot to put the shrimp in the fridge but it still tasted good to me.
6. In fryer set at 350F, place the number of shrimp it holds into basket but do not over load
I didn’t have a deep fryer, so I put a small pot on the stove on medium high and filled the bottom inch with Canola oil. I also don’t own a meat thermometer so I had to estimate the temperature. When the oil started looking liquid-y, like water, I tested it by dipping a shrimp in to see if it bubbled or not. The first time it didn’t bubble so I let it heat for another few minutes. The second test had the shrimp sizzling and bubbling as soon as it touched the oil, so I turned the heat down to medium and started frying shrimp. Apparently another way to test the oil is to dip a wooden chopstick in, and when that bubbles then the oil is a good temperature…but I’ve never tested that method out yet!

7. Cook shrimp for 4-5 minutes (depends on quality of fryer and ability to maintain the temp) remove to paper towel lined tray once golden brown
Chefs tip: When the batter on the shrimp turns golden brown, the shrimp is done

My shrimp cooked in about 15 seconds….maybe my temperature was higher than 350! But it did taste delicious anyway. I definitely think the better judge of doneness is the colour of the shrimp. And if it’s been butterflied properly, the meat is so thin anyway that it cooks through super fast.
8. Once cooked, place desired number of pieces on plate or tray, serve with marmalade dipping sauce

Variations

Chicken could be used in place of shrimp – coconut chicken fingers sounds pretty tasty as well! This would be a good variation for people that are allergic to shellfish.

Results


The result was a light and crispy shrimp. The panko crumbs, which is used for tempura batter, gives it the same light texture as tempura. The coconut taste is subtle, as is the coconut rum, but it really brings out the flavour and gives it that exotic coconut taste. This tasty appetizer is a sure crowd pleaser and great finger food for any party!

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