Posts Tagged: 30 min


23
Mar 11

Avocado and Chickpea Salad recipe from the Spice Goddess

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Rating: 5.0/5 (4 votes cast)


Avocado and Chickpea salad


As promised in our recent interview post, we’re sharing with you a recipe from Bal’s Quick & Healthy Indian cookbook by the Spice Goddess, Bal Arneson. With just over one hundred recipes in the book, it was hard to settle on just one, but we were drawn to the Avocado and Chickpea Salad.

This salad is a very interesting alternative to guacamole. The chickpeas, spanish paprika really work well with the avocado. If you are a fan of guacamole, you’ll love this recipe!

Summary


Preparation Time: 20min
Total Time: 30 min
Servings: 4 portions
Meal type: Salad
Cost: $5.25

Ingredients


avocado and chickpea salad ingredients

Dressing

  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1 tbsp finely chopped ginger
    avocado and chickpea salad ingredients
  • 1/2 tsp ground cardamom; we used whole cardamom and removed the seeds from the pods to crush
    green cardamom pods
  • 1/4 tsp ground cumin
  • 1/8 tsp Spanish paprika
  • 1/8 tsp salt

Salad

  • 4 avocados, cubed (save the avocado shells if you plan to serve in it); $4
    Avocado
  • 14 oz can chickpeas, drained and rinsed; $1
    Chickpeas
  • 1/4 cup green onion , finely chopped; $0.25
    Chickpeas

Instructions


1. To make the dressing, combine the olive oil, lemon juice, ginger, cardamom, cumin, paprika, and salt in a small bowl and mix well.
We actually ended up doubling the amount of cumin, paprika, and cardamom because we found it was quite light and wanted to have a bit more of a kick. We suggest following the original recipe and tweaking it to suit your own taste buds!

2. Combine the avocados, chickpeas, and green onion in a large bowl and toss gently. Just before serving, pour the dressing over the salad and toss to thoroughly coat the ingredients.

avocado and chickpea salad ingredients

3. Serve in an avocado shell.

avocado and chickpea salad in shells

Results

The YouCook team loved this dish! The recipe was straightforward, simple and we put it together in under half an hour from start to finish. It was fresh and had great texture from both the avocado and chick peas, while the spices were a welcome addition.

We found that adding some chili flakes and salt really enhanced the flavours. We will definitely try this with tomato and onion next time since this salad really reminded us of guacamole. We were inspired by the pictures in Bal’s cookbook to serve this salad inside the avocado shell as well. Not only did it look nice, it was a perfect serving size and meant less dishes to be washed.

Indian Guacamole

 

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Rating: 5.0/5 (4 votes cast)


26
Apr 10

Thai House: Yum Nua

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Veggies

We found some recipes on the Thai House website. There are many restaurants in Vancouver under the Thai House family and many of them are participating in Vancouver Dine Out this week.

Many of the recipes call for getting curry from Thai House which is a major time saver! We decided to try one that didn’t require curry. Here’s a beef salad recipe that was quick and easy to make. Thai House, thanks so much for posting some great recipes on your website.

Summary

Preparation Time: 15 mins (cutting veggies)
Cook Time: 15 mins (preparing the sirloin steak)
Servings: 2 as a full meal, 4 if served as a side
Meal type: salad
Grocery Cost: $10.50

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

Veggies

  • 1 lb of top sirloin beef ($6.00; I bought slightly more than 1 lb)
  • 1/4 head of lettuce ($0.30)
  • 1/2 cucumber ($0.60)
  • 1/2 onion ($0.50)
  • 2 whole tomatoes ($1.40)
  • 1/2 shallot ($1.00)
  • 3 fresh red chilli peppers ($0.20)
  • 5 mint leaves ($0.10)
  • 1/4 cup fresh cilantro ($0.20)
  • 3 limes ($2.00)
  • 1 tbs white or palm sugar (I used brown sugar because that’s what I had in my cupboard)
  • 4 tbs fish sauce
  • 1 tsp light soy sauce

Instructions

1. Barbeque or grill the beef. The method I always use for making steaks is to pan-fry at high heat on a cast-iron skillet to get the outside browned and then stick the entire pan in the oven at 500F to cook the inside.

Pan-frying the steak

2. Cut the beef into thin almost bite-size pieces.
Slice the sirloin steak

3. Thinly slice the red chilli peppers. I remove most of the seeds, but you can leave them in if you want.
4. Wash all vegetables and then slice them into bite-size pieces.
5. Add all the vegetables into a mixing bowl along with the sliced steak.
6.In a separate small bowl, mix the fish sauce, soy sauce, and sugar. Add to the mixing bowl.
7.Cut the 3 limes in half and then hand squeeze the juice over the salad. I squeezed the juice in with the other sauce ingredients in the small bowl so I could taste it and adjust accordingly. It turns out that I only needed 1 decent-size lime and it was enough to balance out the saltiness of the fish sauce and soy sauce. I think 3 would have been too much for me, so you can experiment and see how much lime juice and sugar you need to balance everything out.
Making the dressing
8.Toss everything together and enjoy!
Combine

Results

Yum Nua

WOW, I was kind of surprised how easy it was to make this salad! I’ve ordered it before at two different thai restaurants in Victoria and Vancouver and enjoyed the combination of flavours. I think the mint and cilantro are really important in giving this dish it’s distinct taste. Although the recipe only asks for 5 mint leaves, I actually added more like 12 and it was good. I think 5 would have been too little for this much salad. I may have also added a bit more cilantro than called for! As a variation, I actually put half of the chopped red onion and shallot on the skillet for a bit as well to cut down on the sharp red onion and shallot flavour, which I find overpowering sometimes.

This salad is easy to make and a really good switch from your regular everyday salad. I would definitely make this again!

Thai House (Robson) on Urbanspoon

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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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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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5
Feb 10

Chaise Lounge::Macaroni and Cheese

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I had the opportunity to learn from Chef Dan White at Chaise Lounge on how to make my favourite dish of all time – Macaroni and Cheese. My love for Mac N Cheese started at a young age with cheap Kraft Dinner ;) And has grown to an appreciation for how fine dining establishments have taken this dish to a whole new level with different cheeses, different toppings and different cream and oils. I always opt to order this at the classiest steak houses I go to and always get made fun of but, at last, I get the last laugh and a full comfy tummy.

Last week I tasted the Mac N Cheese at Chaise and loved it. They kindly agreed to sit down with YouCook to show us how to make it! Chef Dan was so approachable and friendly and full of insights and tips. All chefs mention a certain acute sense (taste, smell, sight) to help them in their culinary mastery. Chef Dan talked about how important his ears and hearing the sounds of cooking is. With his back against something boiling or broiling or sizzling, the only thing he can rely on are his ears. He knew exactly when the Macaroni and Cheese was nicely golden and toasted by the noise it made. Coming from a computer engineering background where you simply rely on your eyes and brain, I have found that my culinary journey has made me appreciate other human senses and it is exciting!

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 min (Infused Cream and boiling pasta)
Cook Time: 15 min. 30 second broiling time.
Servings: 4 (big main) portions
Meal type: Main
Cost: $22.88 (for $5.72 each for a full meal or serves 8+ appetizers which would cost $2.86)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients for Infused Cream


This makes for 1L of cream which could be used for 4 portions of the Macaroni and Cheese.

  • 1L Whipping Cream (33%) – $6.99
  • 1 slice of onion – $0.97 for whole white onion
  • 2 bay leaves – $0.10
  • 2 tsp black pepper
  • 1 sprig of fresh thyme – $1.49
  • 1 tsp of salt

Ingredients for Macaroni and Cheese

The portions mentioned here are for 1 large main. We used all the infused cream and made 4x the measurements specified here. Prices will reflect the grocery bill for 4 portions.

  • 250g Cornetti Pasta – a little longer and thinner than macaroni. – $1.99
  • 2 cups of the infused cream
  • 1 cup of mozzarella and old white cheddar cheese grated (you can use any cheese you’d like – some recommendations are gruyere or goat cheese) – $4.45 for old white cheddar, $5.99 for mozzarella, and some gruyere was used in our cooking.
  • 2 tbsp of fresh chives
  • 1 tbsp of black pepper
  • 1 tbsp of salt
  • 1/2 tsp of Black Truffle Oil – $9.99 for the bottle, probably used $1 with generous amounts of it.

Instructions for Infusing Cream

1. Heat up the cream on medium heat
2. Add slice of onion and sprig of thyme and bay leaf.
3. Bring to a slow boil and then turn off heat, stirring as that nothing sticks to the bottom.

4. Pour through a strainer

5. Optional – if making this ahead of time, chill in an ice bath, refrigerate for later. There’s no need to chill if you are using the cream right away.
Chef Dan noted that instead of making a white sauce (Roux), it is much easier to use 35% cream and heat to reduce. The cream becomes just as thick as roux. 35% fat sounds ridiculously dangerous to eat though :) With Roux, you combine butter and flour, so you can pick your evils between fattening cream or fattening butter. Either way, this hearty Macaroni and Cheese dish would never make the top healthy meal award. I choose the cream for the sake of using less ingredients.

Actually, it is debateable whether or not you really need to infuse the cream. There is definitely more flavour with the bay leaves and chives but in the interest of time, you can use the 35% cream directly and follow the next set of instructions.

Instructions for Macaroni and Cheese

1. Bring water to a boil and follow instructions on Cornetti Pasta box but only cook al dente to 75% of the time specified. My Del Cecco pasta box said 4 min, so I boiled for 3 minutes.

2. Bring infused cream to a simmer in an aluminum pan on medium heat.

3. Cream will get thicker and then you can add the pasta.

4. Add the pre-cooked pasta. Add salt/pepper to season.

5. Stir and tilt pan, cream and pasta is ready when the cream is no longer runny.

6. Add chives.

7. Add all grated cheese. Turn off heat.

8. Season with salt/pepper.

9. Transfer into a oven-safe baking dish and sprinkle on some more cheese.


10. Turn on oven to high broil and put in dish for about 20-30 seconds to get a nice golden toasted top. The restaurant kitchen had a Salamander which is simply awesome and quick.

11. Instructions from Chaise says Dot lightly with truffle oil and serve. I think I absolutely love this dish from Chaise Lounge because of the generous amount of truffle oil on the Mac N Cheese.
12. Add some cheese, chives, salt and pepper on top just so that everyone eating will see exactly what was in the dish.

Quick Notes

We did not follow the measurements for cheese exactly and used much more. Even with chives and with the truffle oil, we just add as much would taste good and it’s hard to measure. Chaise’s recipe also called for Cheddar mix in the end before putting the dish in to broil, we skipped that part. This or bread crumbs might make the pasta more crunchy/toasty but it was delicious enough.

Chef Dan suggested making the cream ahead of time as well as the pasta. They can keep in the fridge for days so this would save a lot of time.

I found it interesting that Cornetti was suggested instead of Macaroni. I never even knew there was a difference – cornetti is a little bit thinner and longer than Macaroni. It’s actually a lot quicker to cook than other pastas so beware and cook only to 75% of what the box says!

Variations

As Chaise’s owner Stephan and Chef Dan puts it, there’s millions of ways to put variation into this dish. Experiment with different cheese, different spices and herbs, different pastas, different truffle oil. You can also add toppings such as pancetta or lobster or bacon, or really anything you crave.

This recipe is a good base for a tasty tried and tested meal. Tell us what your favourite variation is!!

Results

This was a quick and simple recipe to make at home. The ingredients cost way more than that Kraft Dinner box but it’s well worth it in the end. This is going to be a staple in my kitchen from now on and a sure crowd pleaser as an appetizer or side dish for any occasion!

Thank you Chef Dan and Chaise Lounge for teaching me how to make this so that I could share it with all of you!

Here’s what it looked like at YouCook night:

And after 10 min of Chef Dan’s cooking:

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27
Jan 10

Michael Smith: Prosciutto Wrapped Salmon

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I’ve only recently discovered what prosciutto is in the past year, by making a meat sauce for lasagna. It’s delicious!! I also love salmon – BC is lucky to have so many kinds of fresh salmon. So when I saw this recipe in Michael Smith’s Chef At Home book I jumped at it. It’s very simple and quick.

Summary

Preparation Time: 5 min
Cook Time: 15 min
Servings: 4
Meal type: Main
Cost: $16.00 ($4 per person)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

  • 4 salmon fillets (6oz, 175g) ~ $12.00
  • 1/4 cup (60mL) of grainy mustard ~ $0.50
  • 4 (thin) slices of prosciutto $3.57
  • Sea salt, ground pepper

Instructions

1.Preheat oven to 375°F (190°F).
2. Season the salmon filets with a sprinkle of salt and pepper.
3. Evenly spread the mustard on the top surface of each filet.

4. Tightly roll each fillet in a slice of prosciutto so that the end is weighed down beneath the salmon.

5. The filet should be sitting on the seam and the ends of the salmon will protrude beyond the prosciutto.
6. Place wrapped fillets on a baking pan, seam side down.
7. Bake until done – about 15 min.

Quick Notes

I didn’t specify the thickness of the prosciutto when ordering it at the grocery store so it was way too thick. I’d recommend getting the thinnest slices possible and get more than just 1 slice per salmon. Since my prosciutto wasn’t wrapping the salmon nicely, putting the whole thing in parchment paper really helped preserve the juices in the salmon and prevent drying out.

Variations

Michael Smith’s cookbook has a “Freestyle Variation” with every recipe. For this recipe, he suggests: “This dish is also very good with pesto, tapenade or hummous spread on the fish instead of the mustard. This technique also works very well with chicken breasts.”

Results


I like quick and simple and this definitely is quick and simple! Within 30 min we were done! There’s minimal ingredients (3 + salt/pepper) and is delicious.

I really enjoy cooking from Michael Smiths Chef at Home book. The recipes are simple, the ingredients are simple and easy to find as well. I really would recommend this book to anybody starting to cook at home.

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4
Jan 10

Magnolia Bakery :: Red Velvet Cupcakes

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Magnolia Bakery
One of the few things I truly miss about living in New York City is Magnolia Bakery’s red velvet cupcakes and cheesecakes. I discovered this beautiful dessert in New York and now I can’t live without it! Unfortunately, there is no Magnolia Bakery in Toronto, so I have to make do with baking it myself now. Red velvet is a light cocoa cake, made red by red food colouring, topped with cream cheese frosting. This cupcake looks gorgeous, red with white icing on top and is perfect for giving to friends as holiday treats. You can quite easily find the Magnolia Bakery Red Velvet Cake recipe online and in their cookbook. Make sure you ice the red velvet cupcakes with cream cheese frosting! See my other post for the cream cheese icing.

Summary

Preparation Time: 30 min
Cook Time: 10 min for each batch of cupcakes
Servings: 36 cupcakes
Meal type: Dessert
Grocery Cost: $ 6.00 ($0.20 per cupcake)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

  • 3 ⅓ cups cake flour (not self-rising)
  • ¾ cup (1 ½ sticks) unsalted butter, softened ~ $2.00
  • 2 ¼ cups sugar
  • 3 large eggs, at room temperature ~ $0.62
  • 6 tablespoons (2-28mL bottles) red food coloring ~ $4.38
  • 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa ~ $0.15
  • 1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract ~ $0.15
  • 1 ½ teaspoons salt
  • 1 ½ cups buttermilk ~ $0.75
  • 1 ½ teaspoons cider vinegar $0.10
  • 1 ½ teaspoons baking soda

Instructions

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Place cupcake papers in the tins.
3. In a small bowl, sift the cake flour and set aside. In a large bowl, on the medium speed of an electric mixer, cream the butter and sugar until very light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
Step 3
4. In a small bowl, whisk together the red food coloring, cocoa, and vanilla. Add to the batter and beat well.
5. In a measuring cup, stir the salt into the buttermilk. Add to the batter in three parts, alternating with the flour. With each addition, beat until the ingredients are incorporated, but do not overheat.
6. In a small bowl, stir together the cider vinegar and baking soda. Add to the batter and mix well. Using a rubber spatula, scrape down the batter in the bowl, making sure the ingredients are well blended and the batter is smooth.
Step 6
7. Divide the batter among the prepared cupcake liners.
Step 7
8. Bake each tray of cupcakes for 10 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cupcake comes out clean. Let the cupcakes cool in the pans for 1 hour.
Step
9. Ice each cupcake with cream cheese frosting.

Quick Notes

I’ve noticed that this cupcake batter comes out a bit thicker when compared to cooking with box cake mixes, such as Duncan Hines or Betty Crocker, so don’t worry if the consistency seems a bit thick. Sometimes I half this recipe because I find 36 cupcakes too much, but this recipe seems to turn out better if I make the full batch instead of a half batch. If you do need to half the recipe, and need 1.5 eggs instead of 3, try cracking an egg into a bowl, mixing it, and using only half of the mixed egg.

Another tip that I always use is to bring out the butter, eggs and buttermilk beforehand to get it to room temperature before using it. This is a baker’s trick that works well.

Variations

I don’t really deviate too much from this recipe. I will use normal flour instead of cake flour, but I do sift it to make sure it’s fine.

Results

Red Velvet Cupcakes
As usual, the red velvet cupcake is a crowd pleaser. How could you go wrong with chocolate cupcake and cream cheese icing, especially when it looks this pretty? I used red sparkles to decorate the tops of the cupcakes to make it look more festive. Get creative with the decorating – it adds a lot to the cupcake!

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13
Dec 09

Challah French Toast

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Spring Street Natural French Toast

Since living in New York City, I have developed a love for brunch. Going out for brunch on the weekend with friends after a night out is a Manhattan tradition. One of my favourite places to go in NYC is Spring Street Natural Restaurant in SoHo, for their delicious, moist, fluffy challah french toast loaded with fruits and icing sugar. So when I invited my friend Christina for brunch this weekend, I decided to try to re-create this for her at my apartment. I didn’t have the recipe from Spring Street Natural Restaurant, but I decided to search online once again for a similar recipe, and add the touches I remember to it to make it as close to the restaurant version as possible. This resulted in using the Barefoot Contessa’s Challah French Toast recipe, and adding lots of fruit and icing sugar garnish.

Summary

Preparation Time: 10 min
Cook Time: 20 min (Depends on how much space you have in your frying pan!)
Servings: 4
Meal type: Brunch
Grocery Cost: $10.00 ($2.50 each)

Recipe Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Ingredients

Ingredients

  • 1 loaf challah, sliced and left out to dry ~ $ 5.00
  • 1 1/2 cups whole milk or half-and-half ~ $ 1.79
  • 6 large eggs ~ $1.99
  • 1 pinch salt, to taste
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • butter (for frying)
  • oil (for frying)
  • raspberries, for garnish ~ $1.00
  • blueberries, for garnish ~ $1.00
  • icing sugar, for garnish

Instructions

1. In a bowl, whisk eggs and milk.
2. Add honey and vanilla.
3. Add salt.
French Toast batter
4. Place slices of  bread in the egg mixture and let soak about three minutes each side.
5. Meanwhile melt one tbsp of butter and oil each in a large frying pan.
6. Transfer challah to pan and cook 3 minutes on each side or until nicely browned.
French Toast cooking
7. Add a little more butter for each round of bread.
8. If you are not ready to serve it yet, transfer french toast to oven until rest of meal is complete.
9. Garnish with blueberries, raspberries and icing sugar on top.

Quick Notes

Looking back at the instructions, I realized I didn’t soak the french toast long enough, leaving it for only about 30 seconds on each side. Not sure if this made a difference – I found the french toast not as “egg” tasting as I like, which I blamed on the cream. I will also have to try putting orange zest in next time (I didn’t this time because I didn’t have oranges on hand) as I’ve read other reviews that says this makes all the difference!
Also, the first batch I made I didn’t cook enough and it was very soft still – make sure it’s nice browned and crisp on both sides.

Variations

I actually didn’t have Challah bread, so I picked a similar egg bread loaf laced with cheddar cheese. It was GOOD. How could you go wrong with good bread, cheese and eggs? :) I was really tempted to put in cinnamon in this french toast as I really like cinnamon, which I refrained from doing this time, but I can see that also going nicely.

Result

French Toast
The result was a very pretty looking French Toast from a quick and easy recipe. The bread was delicious (I also love eating it by itself), so it made the French Toast taste good. I think that using a good quality bread makes all the difference with French Toast. I thought the egg batter had a bit too much cream in it – I prefer a stronger, egg taste, but that could be due to me not soaking the bread long enough. I think I will have to make this again and find out for sure!

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