Sunday, April 25, 2010

Fish Tacos


When coop order has both Tilapia and cabbage, there's just one thing to do - fish tacos! I had never made them before but they turn out to be quite easy. After chopping prep there's only a few minutes cook time and they are just as good as Lone Star's (the SLC Taco place on Ft. Union, not the state of Texas). The amount of fish determines how many people you can feed. Rob and I ate 6 tacos (3 Tilapia fillets) and there was enough sauce leftover for at least that amount 2 more times.

Fish Tacos
Prep: 30 min Cook: 5 min Difficulty: Easy
1 pkg corn tortillas

for the fish:
1-2 6oz Tilapia fillet per person, thawed
1 lime
1/2 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp salt
cayenne pepper to taste

for the sauce:
1 6oz container greek style yogurt (sour cream would work as well!)
3 Tbs mayo
1/4 cup fresh cilantro (1 handful)
1 lime
salt
1-2 Tbs red onion

Toppings:
1 cup green cabbage, sliced thin
red onion
salsa (whip up a quick batch of my current favorite recipe)
more fresh cilantro

1. Marinate the fish by combining all ingredients in a bowl and stir to coat well. Cumin or corriander or hot curry spice are other good additions depending on your spice tolerance
2. Put all sauce ingredients in a food processor or blender and mix for 1-2 minutes until the sauce turns green-ish. (I'm sure you could just mix with a spoon but you get that great Lone Star sauce color when you blend - besides, you had the food processor out for the salsa anyways, right?)
3. Chop up toppings. Cabbage is a must along with either salsa or plain old tomato.
4. Preheat a frying pan over high heat. Add 1 Tbs butter and coat the pan and return to a sizzling level of heat. Cook the tilapia for 3 min on the first side, then flip and 2 min on the other side. (Depending on thickness of the fish - when done it should flake easily, fell free to rip it open in the pan to double check)
5. Assemble the tacos! Start with 1 or 2 corn tortillas (double thickness for re-enforced strength), add 1/2 of a tilapia fillet broken into peices, then salsa, onion, a bunch of cabbage. Top with that magic green fish sauce and serve to smiling people.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Carrot Slaw

What to do if the only vegetable in the house is carrot - Carrot slaw of course! This is adapted from an Alton Brown recipe. I'm not one for mayo in general but this is just enough to bind the carrots without any sort of white residue.

Carrot Slaw
1 lb grated carrots
1/4 cup mayo
3 Tbs sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 Tsp Curry powder
1/2 cup crushed canned pineapple, drained
1/4 cup chopped walnuts

1.Combine the mayo, sugar, salt, curry powder and pineapple and mix well.
2. Toss with carrots - mixing well to ensure even coating
3. top with chopped walnuts and serve.

adapted from
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/carrot-slaw-recipe/index.html

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Cheesemaking

I have been waiting for my Cheesemaking kit to arrive ever since I read that chapter in 'Animal,Vegtable, Miracle' by Barbra Kingsolver. It arrived and was as easy as advertised!

First get the ingredients together: bowl, 1 gallon of milk*, cheesemaking kit**, big pot, spoon.


Mix the citric acid with water and add it to the milk in the big pot - stir.


heat it until 90F. Check the temperature with the thermometer from your cheesemaking kit.


next add the rennant and let it sit covered for 5 min (according to the directions, but I waited about 10 to get a good whey separation). Then when it's hardened, you cut the cheese (literally!) and stir up the resulting curds


Then heat it up to 105F and ladle the curds out into a bowl and then drain off as much whey as possible.

Microwave on high for 1 min, drain whey. Microwave again, drain again, repeat until cheese it 135F and there is no more whey to drain.

Then, stretch the cheese- it is soooo cool! it stretches really really far!


Lastly enjoy. It was supposed to take 30min, I think I took closer to 45min, but still, easy! I've left out a few details, simply because you really need rennant to make cheese and it is darn near impossible to find. There's more how to on the website below if you want it.


* I used Winder Milk
** I ordered mine online from www.cheesemaking.com