Saturday, January 9, 2010
Creamless cream of mushroom soup
See the recipe in the images here. From the book CookSmart. The intent of the recipe is to find a good variation on cream of mushroom soup that uses some other thickener besides cream.
Review:
- Taste: 75%
-worktime: one hour
Analysis:
- Replaced the "minute Rice" with short grain white rice (sushi rice). The mixture after puréeing the cooked rice, was incredibly thick and tasted almost gluey. And it only added about half of that mixture in with the other broth/mushroom mixture and it was still plenty thick. I postulated that perhaps minute Rice does not expand as much when cooked since it has hardly been partially cooked. However, both a 1/4 cup of minute Rice and white rice have essentially the same calorie and carbohydrate amount -- arguing against the hypothesis.
Kung Pao Shrimp
Check out the recipe in the images here. Comes from a famous recipe collection that has a name similar to "Sports Illustrated".
Analysis:
- We used plain rice vinegar instead of black rice vinegar (I've had some trouble finding the black stuff in the store)
- replaced the schezuan (spelling?) peppercorns with white peppercorns. I think this was a mistake as it appears that the two are very different in taste. I felt that the white peppercorns dominated the final flavor.
- Replaced the oyster sauce with soy sauce since we didn't have any. Not sure how valid this is. The final product actually tasted under-salted, amazingly. Perhaps because we used reduced sodium soy sauce.
Spanakopita
Well, the fillo dough had been sitting in the fridge for a few weeks and I needed to get rid of the spinach in the freezer, so spanakopita seemed like the logical concoction.
I improvised the recipe and it went something like this:
- sauté half an onion, chopped in olive oil, lightly salted until softened
- stir in a 16 ounce bag of frozen spinach, which has been thawed and drained of any excess water
- Season with salt, pepper and nutmeg
- stir in about two thirds of a cup of cottage cheese and about two thirds of a cup of grated Gruyere cheese (note that I'm deviating widely from the more traditional feta and ricotta cheeses)
- Layout 3 sheets of the dough on top of each other, with a layer of olive oil sprayed between each
- cut the dough into 2.5 inch strips
- Put a blob of the spinach, cheese mixture at the end of each strip and start folding into the triangle shape; brush/spray the top of each triangle with olive oil
- bake at about 375°F for 10 or 12 minutes or until lightly browned
Review:
I think our dough was a bit stale. Otherwise, delicious!
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