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Best in the West Rib Cook-off

September 14, 2015 by Dan Leave a Comment

Beef Ribs, Carson City BBQ by D Fenwick, http://dfenwickphotography.com

Beef Ribs, Carson City BBQ

Baby back ribs, Carson City BBQ by D Fenwick, http://dfenwickphotography.com

Baby back ribs, Carson City BBQ

We spent all too much time at the Best in the West Rib Cook-off, so we missed getting a post up.

The cook off,  in late August/early September, marks the end of summer for us.  Snow is already forecast for the higher peaks later this week!  So heading to Victorian Avenue and indulging in lip-smacking ribs and fresh grilled corn is our summer-end’s pilgrimage.  We just can’t say “No!”.

So, this week we’ll make up for that with two. First is some pictures of the ribs from Carson City BBQ, They are one of my favorite places to get ribs at the event. Always good food and friendly service.

Filed Under: Photo Tagged With: beef, Best in the West Rib Cook-off, ciook-ff, Pork, ribs

Pork Cherry Stir Fry

May 20, 2015 by Dan Leave a Comment

pork cherry stir fry by D Fenwick, http://dfenwickphotography.com

Pork Cherry Stir Fry

Ever had one of those nights when you had no idea what you wanted for dinner? Well, after a long day at work, tonight was one of those nights. So we wandered through the grocery store looking for what looked fresh and sounded appealing. We arrived back in our kitchen with bing cherries, roma tomatoes, an English cucumber, pork, and appetites waiting to be sated.

What you’ll need:

2 pounds Pork Loin or thick cut Pork Chops
1 cup pitted Cherries
3 Roma Tomatoes
1 large Cucumber
1/2 cup Soy Sauce
1/2 cup dry Sherry
1/4 cup Teriyaki Sauce
fresh Mint

Slice the pork into thing strips. Into a large bowl mix the soy sauce and sherry then add the pork making sure to cover it well with the marinade, and let sit for half an hour to an hour. While you’re waiting for the pork to bathe in the marinade, seed your tomatoes and cucumber and cut both into bite sized pieces.

Heat a large skillet and some oil (I used olive oil) over medium high heat. Drain your meat and then place it in the hot skillet. Stir until cooked through. Add the cherries, reduce the heat to medium, cover and let cook 5 to 10 minutes or until the cherries get soft. If the pan is dry, add some of your marinade to the pan, you want a little bit of juice so the cherries will steam.

Once the cherries are soft, add the cucumber and tomato. Stir until the tomato and cucumber are hot. Don’t over cook. Add 1/4 cup teriyaki sauce and stir to coat everything evenly.

Serve over rice or noodles and top with a little fresh chopped mint.  Enjoy!

Filed Under: Photo, Recipe Tagged With: Cherries, Cherry, cucmber, Dinner, Pork, stir fry, tomato, tomatoes

Sweet and Sour Pork Meatballs

February 4, 2015 by Dan Leave a Comment

 

Sweat and Sour Pork Meatballs

Sweat and Sour Pork Meatballs

Here in America, much of the news lately has been consumed with coverage regarding deflated balls (NFL footballs).  Few have been unable to resist the urge to take to social media or put their special touch on headlines decrying soft balls.  So who are we to let the subject slip by without manhandling a ball or two, slathering sauce all over it and serving it up for din-din.  This is a surprisingly simple recipe and much preferred over similar sweet and sour offerings from local takeouts.  Enjoy!

 

Meatballs

1-1/4 lbs ground Pork
1 large Apple, coarsely chopped
1 teaspoon grated Ginger
1/4 to 1/2 small Onion, finely chopped
2 to 3 oz Water Chestnuts, chopped
1/2 to 1 teaspoon Salt
1/2 teaspoon ground Pepper
1 Egg, lightly beaten

Sweet and Sour sauce

32 oz Chicken Stock
1 medium Onion, cut into wedges
1 cup White Vinegar
1/4 cup Honey
1 large Bell Pepper, cut into bite sized pieces
2 tablespoons Corn Starch
2 tablespoons Soy Sauce
Salt and Pepper to taste

Garnish

Green Onions sliced or slivered
Sesame Seeds

Directions

Combine all of the meatball ingredients in a large bowl. Mix with your hands until well combined. Use a 1/4 cup measuring cup to portion the meat and then roll into balls.  This recipe makes approximately 14 meatballs.  Heat a little olive oil over medium-high in a non-stick pan and brown the meatballs on all sides.  Do not remove meatballs from pan when done.

Now add the Chicken Stock and bring to a boil, then turn down to medium-low, cover and simmer for about 30 minutes. Add the onion and cook another 5 to 10 minutes.

In a small bowl combine the vinegar, honey and soy sauce. Add the corn starch to the vinegar mixture, mix in well.  Turn the heat back up to medium-high and add the vinegar mixture and the bell pepper.  You’ll want to bring this back up to a boil uncovered for about five minutes.  This will thicken the sauce and soften the bell pepper.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

Serve over rice or noodles.

Filed Under: Photo, Recipe Tagged With: Dinner, ground pork, meatballs, Pork

Balsamic Glazed Pork Chops

July 2, 2014 by Dan 1 Comment

Balsamic Glazed Pork Chops

Balsamic Glazed Pork Chops

We’re firing up the bbq again for this delicious Balsamic Glazed Pork Chops dish.  The glaze is a lovely balance between the acidity of vinegar and the sweetness of honey.   We’ve placed it over rice noodles but you could easily substitute fried rice or a baked potato.  Let’s get cookin’!

Ingredients:

1/2 cup good Balsamic Vinegar
1/4 cup Honey
fresh Rosemary
Salt
Pepper
Cinnamon
4 Pork Chops
Noodles / fried rice / vegetables as desired

Light your bbq, you’ll want a direct fire.  We prefer charcoal.

Finely chop a sprig of fresh rosemary.

In a small sauce pan, combine 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar (for best results, use a good balsamic, I like the one from Wine Country Kitchens.) and the honey.  Add half of the chopped rosemary. Heat over low heat until the honey combines with the vinegar and the mixture begins to thicken.  Keep just warm so it doesn’t over thicken.  You will need to be able to pour or spoon the glaze.

Season your pork chops by lightly sprinkling with salt, pepper, a little cinnamon and the remaining rosemary.  Be sure to season both sides of the meat.  Grill for 10 to 15 minutes per side (depending on how thick your chops are and how hot the fire is.  In cold weather it may take longer to cook them.  An open grill may also take longer.)  Five minutes before the chops are done, spoon some of your glaze over the pork chops, cover and let the chops finish cooking.

We served these chops over noodles and drizzled the remaining glaze over the noodles and chops.  In the background above  you can see bbq’d apples with a little bit of spiced brown sugar.  Your grill is still hot – add a little bit of dessert before you shut the bbq down and take another bite out of summer’s bounty.

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Photo, Recipe Tagged With: balsamic, balsamic vinegar, chops, Dinner, glaze, glazed, Pork, pork chops, rosemary

Char Siu Bao

May 14, 2014 by Ginger Leave a Comment

Cha Siu Bao by D Fenwick, http://dfenwickphotography.com

Cha Siu Bao

Realtors like to remind potential homebuyers in the area “You’re only 4 hours away from San Francisco!”, which might be awesome if you want to smell some sea air every now and again, but if you’re a Dim Sum aficionado, 4 hours is WAAYY too long to wait to eat your way thru Chinatown during Dim Sum serving hours.

So today is our little ode to those pillowy buns of goodness and the succulent Char Siu hidden within.  I’m salivating already, let’s get cooking!

Tip:  The “easy” route for these buns is to forego cooking the Char Siu part yourself and just buy some cooked slabs ‘o char siu at your local grocery store.  Many now have in-house Chinese takeaways that sell fairly good char siu.  If you want to make it yourself, that recipe is at the end.  Part 1: The dough  Part 2: Filling Recipe w/ Store-bought Char Siu  Part 3: Filling Recipe w/Homemade Char Siu

Part 1: The dough:

Prepare a large bowl with a tiny bit of vegetable oil swirled around the inside.  Set aside for the dough to rise in later.

Place 1 cup of whole milk in microwave for ~25 seconds and have a thermometer standing by.  The milk CANNOT get hotter than 95 deg F. If your temperature is under 95 F stir in (1) tsp sugar and (1) tsp of Active Dry Yeast (I use Fleischmann’s -This is not the whole packet, it’s only 1 tsp).

Place the cup of milk back into the microwave (where it’s warm) and let it sit for about 15 mins or until it gets nice and bubbly.

While the yeast is having its way with the sugar, into a large mixing bowl sift:

2 cups all purpose flour
3 tsp sugar

When the yeast mixture is bubbly add this to the flour mixture AND 2 tsp vegetable oil (canola works too).  Mix ’til combined then pour out onto a floured flat surface.
Knead for about 5-8 mins.  It shouldn’t be super sticky, add a little more flour as you knead if it is.

Once the dough ball is holding a round plump form, place into the oiled bowl to rise.  Take a clean dishtowl, wet with water and then tightly wring out all the water (use your elbow grease – I mean ALL the water).  Place this directly on top of the dough, covering it all around, then cover the bowl with plastic wrap.  If your microwave is still warm  you can place this bowl in it OR you can place the bowl in your oven with the light on (but do not turn on the heat).  You just want to keep the yeast warm  but not hot.

The dough needs to rise for about an hour, but if it doubles a little earlier, or a little later, it’s all good.  You just want a nice rise to the dough indicating that some yummy fermentation has taken place – this will give the cooked bao that signature tart smell.

Place the dough back onto a clean and lightly floured board and with a rolling pin, gently roll out the dough then fold into thirds.  Roll this back into a ball, then roll out gently one last time, folding into thirds.  Cut into 8 (or 9) even pieces and recover with your dishtowel or plastic wrap.  You’re now ready to add the Char Siu.

Part 2: Filling Recipe
Make sure your pot of water is heating on the stove and your steamers are ready to go!

Into a bowl mix:
2 Cups of evenly cubed strips of Char siu (these are less than bite sized, they’re small)
3/4 tsp Honey
1 tsp Sesame Oil
1 Tablespoon Hoisin
1 Tablespoon Thick Soy Sauce (I’ve only ever seen it in an Asian Market, looks like molasses)

Mix well.  Depending on the moisture of your char siu, if this looks too dry, add a bit more hoisin.

Now take one of your little dough balls and gently roll out a little larger than palm sized.  It needs to be large enough to hold ~2 Tablespoons of Char Siu mixture AND have enough clean dough on the edges to seal.  Gently pinch around the edges (think accordion or dress pleats) until the bao has been sealed around the mixture.  Give one final little twist and squeeze together your final pleat placing seam-side down on a piece of cut parchment.  In Frisco we used to have edible paper, but cooking parchment works well here, if you don’t have parchment lightly grease your steamer with a tiny bit of vegetable oil and place sealed bao, seam-side down directly into the steamer.

Make sure to leave enough room inside the steamer for the bao to expand.  Steam for 8 – 10  mins  (at our altitude, probably 5 – 8 at sea level.)

Don’t they look delicious!

Cha Siu Bao by D Fenwick, http://dfenwickphotography.com

Cha Siu Bao

 

Part 3: Homemade Char Siu

Good homemade char siu will take about 24 hours and a bbq is best to get the crispy edges, but an oven broiler will do in a pinch.

So the day before you actually want to eat your Char Siu Bao get yourself some pork loin (we buy ours at Costco, this will produce a leaner product) or pork butt (if you don’t mind the fat).  About a 1.5lbs will get you enough for this recipe but if you want some char siu leftovers for fried rice, etc, just adjust the marinade by a little bit as appropriate and add more meat.  The pork should be cut into strips so you get that nice char around all the edges, the width of your first and second finger is a good guesstimate of the diameter they should be.  Place the strips into a zip lock baggie then add this mixture, coating well:

2 Tablespoons Sesame Oil
2 Tablespoons Brown Sugar
3 Tablespoons Honey
3 Tablespoons Hoisin
3 Tablespoons Thick Soy Sauce
1/2 teaspoon Chinese Five Spice Powder (you can buy this in your regular grocery store, spice aisle)
1/2 teaspoon Garlic Powder

After a few hours rotate the meat around in the marinade.  Do this a couple times prior to the time you are actually going to bbq it, which hopefully is at least a day later.

Barbecue the pork as you normally would until done, then let cool.  We’re ready to mix the filling and fill the bao.

Filed Under: Photo, Recipe Tagged With: bar-b-que pork, Char Siu Bao, chinese, Pork

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