Showing posts with label cookery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cookery. Show all posts

Friday, October 26, 2012

The Candy Season

Candy is a wide term.  There is hard candy, soft candy, chocolate candy, Easter candy, sugar free candy, and the list goes on.  I don't much like any candy that doesn't feature chocolate, but there are plenty of people out there who can't live without their sticks of sugar dust and marshmallows.  Candy is a sugary indulgence that we couldn't possibly live on, but that we can't seem to live without.  Some diet books even recommend  eating a few jelly beans to curb sugar cravings.  A recent challenge on the TV reality show Project Runway had the designers make clothes out of candy, proving that candy can be used to make works of art too.  The stores get their candy push of the year kicked off with the candy gorge of Halloween, followed all too closely by the candy buying rushes of Christmas, Valentine's Day and Easter.  It seems like we half of the year waiting for the next candy-filled holiday to be over.   

Candy has become such a staple of Halloween fun, that it is easy to forget that trick-or-treating for candy has only been in vogue in this country since the 1930s, although the roots of it go back to ancient times.  Wassailing, for example, a term usually heard around Christmas was a form of trick-or treating.  Wassailers sing carols in exchange for food or money.  Begging for soul cakes around All Souls' Day on November 1st was common in the middle ages.  Eventually this evolved into asking for candy door to door and these days candy companies make a killing (ha ha) around this time of year, with everyone stocking up on the latest Halloween offerings.  As someone who is big fan of anything that rots my teeth and expands my waistline, I decided to try to indulge my sweet tooth by looking at the plethora of books about candy available at the Albuquerque libraries.  There is everything from candy fiction, to books about the candy industry, to cookbooks on how to make your own candy.

Some candy books to satisfy your cravings:

Chocolate Wars: The 150 Year Rivalry Between the World's Greatest Chocolate Makers by Deborah Cadbury
This book combines the history of chocolate with the history of the chocolate industry.  This is one of the most interesting and informative books I have ever read. 

Candy and Me: A Love Story by Hilary Liftin
Lufin's memoir revolves around her love of candy and sugar (she is not partial to chocolate like I am).  Each chapter tells a story of her life through the candy she remembers it by. 

Dylan's Candy Bar: Unwrap Your Sweet Life by Dylan Lauren with Sheryl Berk
Lauren's candy store in New York City was the store where Project Runway contestants went shopping for supplies for their candy clothes challenge.  The photos in this book are colorful and show the specials she puts out for the holidays.

Candyfreak: A Journey Through the Chocolate Underbelly of America by Steve Almond
When Almond's favorite candy stopped being manufactured he decided to find out why and discovers the world of candy and chocolate production.  This book about how candy is made is also a wonderful homage to sweets and sugar addicts.

The Candy Bar Cookbook: Cooking with America's Favorite Candy by Alison Inches and Ric McKown
This book is the ultimate candy indulgence.  It also includes a recipe for cake made with leftover Halloween candy!

Also check out:

Candy Apple Dead by Sammi Carter for a mystery series about a candy shop

Sweet! The Delicious Story of Candy and How is Chocolate Made? are fun children's books about candy.

Candy! A Sweet Selection of Fun and Easy Recipes by Laura Dover Doran and The Ultimate Candy Book: More Than 700 Quick and Easy, Soft and Chewy, Hard and Crunchy Sweets and Treats by Bruce Weinstein for instructions and ideas for making your own candy.

The Candymakers by Wendy Mass, a juvenile fiction book about a group of kids who enter a candy making contest.


I hope this brings a little extra sweetness into your life!

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Cooking, New Mexico Style

Autumn in New Mexico.

Balloon-lofting cool mornings, warm days, spectacular sunsets, balmy evenings.

Harvest festivals, arts & crafts shows, fiestas -- each weekend ripe with possibilities, and the quandary of where to spend your time first.

Visitors from out of town, coming to enjoy New Mexico at its best.

Which means partying, and hosting, and cooking New Mexico style.

New Mexican cooking is a unique blend of Mexican, Native American, and European Spanish cuisine, with some gourmet bits added in from other cultures -- and even a bit of cowboy cooking. Many New Mexican dishes are quite simple but allow for a wide range of personalization. Even something so straightforward as a pot of posole, corn hominy, can have as many ways of being prepared, spiced, and presented as there are cooks making it.

One of the delightful things about cooking New Mexico style is that the basics are easy to grasp, but one can always learn new ways to improve upon or customize classic dishes. Or experiment with new dishes, guided by recipes collected from around New Mexico.

"New Mexico recipes" is a tag that has been developed and applied to books in the collection that feature, not surprisingly, recipes from around New Mexico. Searching on that term is a great way to explore the wide world that is New Mexican cooking. (An adventure guaranteed to make one hungry.) You'll be led to dozens of cookbooks containing hundreds of recipes -- more than enough to get you started if you have never cooked New Mexico-style before, or to help you explore new directions in your cooking.


To help you go even deeper into the wonderful world of New Mexican cooking, library staff have added community tags leading you to specific recipes. So, a search for biscochitos leads you to 19 books with biscochito recipes, green chile stew results in 20 hits, and you'll find at least 27 different ways to make posole.

Less commonly-known New Mexican foods are represented too. You'll find out how to make atole (corn meal mush, "New Mexican chicken soup"), how to prepare quelites (wild greens), different ways to spice calabacitas (squash), how piki bread is made, and how to use panocha flour.

If you are new to the region's cooking or wish to expand your repertoire, you can also try the "cooking with _______" tag phrase. This will lead you to resources that have not only recipes but also general discussions and techniques for cooking with distinctively New Mexican ingredients.

The chile pepper -- green and red, mild to fiery, reputedly addictive, very versatile -- is of course the most famous single ingredient in our cooking, and searching on cooking with chile, cooking with green chile, and cooking with red chile will lead you to many resources. But there are many other ingredients that go into New Mexico's cooking, and the "cooking with" tag prefix will help you learn how to use them. Here is a sampling:

cooking with black beans (18 books)
cooking with blue corn (11)
cooking with cactus (10)
cooking with goat cheese (12)
cooking with pinon nuts (10)
cooking with pinto beans (7)
cooking with squash blossoms (14)
cooking with tomatillos (18)

The cooking with ______ search also helps you find resources with guidelines for using the other types of peppers sometimes used in New Mexican cuisine, like jalapenos and ancho, pasilla, poblano, serrano, habanero, and bell peppers.

As we go into the "high cooking season", with holiday parties ahead, you might want to brush up on how to produce quesadillas and salsas for appetizers, and enchiladas and tamales for the masses.With cold weather coming you'll want a big batch of caldillo (green chile stew) available to warm your visitors, and tortillas to go with. You'll want to have empanadas, empanaditas, and biscochitos at hand, for nibbling and as visiting gifts. How could you start a day exploring New Mexico without huevos rancheros or that classic breakfast burrito?

And of course where would a holiday party in New Mexico be without a huge pot of posole on the stove, inviting everyone to scoop out a bowlful? Posole is just about the perfect party food -- you can feed lots of people cheaply, it just gets better the longer it simmers, and each person can customize each bowlful with different toppings. It is a tradition in many parts of New Mexico to eat posole on New Year's, for luck in the coming year and assurance that you won't go hungry, just as black-eyed peas are eaten in the South.

Here is just a partial list showing the variety of the recipe tags you can explore. If you are feeling adventurous, check out the "Related Searches - Additional Suggestions" list on the lefthand side of any of the link results, then look through it until you find a term you've never before encountered. That book is certain to lead to some delicious new New Mexican food experience.

albondigas
arroz con pollo
atole
biscochitos
blue corn bread
calabacitas
capirotada
carne adovada
carne asada
carnitas
chalupas
chaquehue
chicos del horno
chile con queso
chile mayonnaise
chiles rellenos
chimayo cocktail
chimichangas
cooking with an horno
fajitas
fried squash blossoms
fry bread
guacamole
green chile cheeseburger
green chile chicken soup
green chile quiche
green chile sauce
green chile stew
margaritas
natillas
native american recipes
new mexican hot chocolate
oven bread
panocha
piki bread
pinon brittle

pinon fudge
quelites
red chile risotto
red chile sauce
refried beans / refritos
santa fe lasagna
sopaipillas
southwestern corn chowder
squash seed stew
tacos
tostadas
trout with pinon


Tasty Chile Tidbits:

"Chili" or "Chile"? In some older cookbooks you might see references to "chili peppers". But it's official: in New Mexico, it's a chile pepper. "Chili" is reserved for the Tex-Mex dish with beans.

"Red or Green?" -- the Official State Question of New Mexico, heard at restaurants. The waitperson is asking if you want red chile sauce or green chile sauce with/over your entree. If you want red and green, the answer is "Christmas!"
 
It's the same seed. Some people will tell you that you plant different seeds to produce red or green chile plants. (And, if they are really pulling your leg, they will even say the seeds are the appropriate colors.) But a red pepper is simply a ripe green pepper. Similarly, a mild green pepper will dry into a mild red pepper - the drying process does not change the heat.


The pepper may be red or green, but the heat is in the yellow. In a hot chile pepper, the bulk of the heat-producing capsaicin is on the filets or veins inside the pod. The hotter the pepper, the bolder will be the yellow dots along those veins, and in the hottest chiles those dots will have combined into a yellow stripe. Stripping out the veins will remove quite a bit of the fire, but not all -- a hot pepper is still a hot pepper, particularly in the flesh of the upper third of the pod nearest the veins and seeds.

Smaller is usually hotter, but not always.  Generally speaking, a finger-slim pepper will pack more of a burn than something shaped like a bell pepper. But that old rule-of-thumb has been challenged by cross-breeding of pepper plants. Some other classic indications of heat in chile: angular rather than round "shoulders" on the pod, a sharp point or curl on the tail of the pod, and the head of the pod indented in around the stem. But the only sure way to test the heat of a green chile pepper is to "twist the head off" -- crack it open near the top third, and look at the veins for the distinctive yellow stripe. If it's very hot you can smell the heat as soon as it pops. If there is any lingering doubt, merely touch your tongue to the inside of the pod -- a hot pepper will immediately make itself known!

I need my chile fix! While chile is not technically addicting, people certainly habituate to it and develop cravings. The capsaicin in chile causes an endorphin release in many people, similar to the "high" some people get from exercising vigorously. New Mexicans living elsewhere deeply appreciate getting chile from home.

Bless You! Hot green chile produces a wide variety of reactions in people -- some folks sweat or turn red, while others cough, burp, hiccup, or sneeze. Some say hot chile makes their ears ring, while others claim that their ears pop "once for every 10 degrees". Regardless of the reaction, there is no question that chile can have a marked physiological effect on folks, adding to its reputation of being addicting.

"Hatch" chile is not a particular type, but peppers from the noted chile-raising region around Hatch, New Mexico. The town is home to the annual Hatch Chile Festival, celebrating their most famous product. While the majority of the commercial crops are grown in the southern half of the state, chile is grown statewide.

Chile peppers crossbreed very readily, and are affected by weather and soil conditions. Which means that new strains may arise, and "classic" strains are highly prized. Aficianados say they can taste the difference in chile raised from the same seed but in different fields -- making it the New Mexican analog to fine wines! Some of the Pueblos have distinctive strains of chile, the seeds carefully preserved and handed down; even some individual families have their own strain of chile. New strains are also purposely bred and developed for hardiness, disease/insect resistance, and flavor; the New Mexico State University in Las Cruces has been especially productive of new strains.

While much is made of heat in chile, New Mexicans typically prefer rich flavor over a simple burn. It's true that there are some "fire eaters" who seek out the hottest peppers, as a matter of pride (or are we nudging up against addiction again?) But most classic New Mexican dishes have a rich chile flavor with only a pleasant "burn" afterward.

Chile powders come in a variety of forms. The classic chile molido ("ground") is a rich dark red in color, and has a texture almost like coffee grounds -- just the dried pod is used to produce this. Pale red molido, on the orange side, usually indicates that the seeds were ground in as well for more heat (though it may also indicate that the powder is very old.) Chile caribe ("crushed") is a mix of bits of the dried pod and the seeds, similar to the "crushed red pepper" packets you find in pizza parlors. Over the last decade or so green chile molido and caribe have becoming increasingly common, allowing that distinctive flavor to easily be added to dishes; green chile powder can also be shaken over food as you would use other spices. The volatile oils in chile powders are affected by heat and light so cool dark storage is recommended, with freezer storage in a tight container the best of all.

Before freezing became a common way of storing roasted green chile, people often sun-dried green chile. It was either spread flat on trays or screens, or pods tied together by the stems were hung over clothelines, with cheesecloth around them to keep the insects off while they dried. Roasted green chile dried this way keeps well and has a sweet, smoky flavor -- this "chile jerky" is sometimes eaten like candy.

Kitchens in old New Mexico houses sometimes get remodeled, but there is one feature which is usually left undisturbed: the ristra hook in the kitchen ceiling. While ristras are often used as decorative symbols of New Mexico hospitality, hanging by front doors until they weather and fall apart, traditionally ristras once dried were stored in a loft or shed and brought into the home one at a time to be hung in the corner of the kitchen and plucked from as needed. (If you are buying a ristra for cooking, be sure to inquire if it has been sprayed in any way -- sometimes coatings are applied to decorative ristras to increase shine or add color.) Tin cones or discs were sometimes used on the strings of the hanging ristras to discourage rodents from creeping down the string -- New Mexico mice like chile too, especially the seeds!



Friday, September 28, 2012

Preserving Your Garden's Produce

More and more people are turning to gardening and growing their own fruits, herbs and vegetables.  If you are lucky enough to have a garden and enjoy working in it, then all summer you have probably been eating vegestables straight out of the ground and fruit straight off the tree, but now it is that time of year when we think about bringing in the last of our produce from gardens and orchards.  I myself don't have a garden, but lately my friends and neighbors have been pushing their extra wealth of fresh produce on me, which I have been happily accepting.  I've received peaches, apples, tomatoes, and cucumbers to name a few, and while eating them straight from my friends' gardens is wonderful, I have been contemplating how I might stretch the bounty for several more months.  It's the time for putting up freshly grown food to enjoy all winter. 

Luckily the library has lots of books for helping with these tasks, since preserving and canning fresh foods is not something I do on a regular basis.  I'm only just learning how to freeze certain foods, and the library has books to help me with that too.  Great websites that offer tips and recipes for preserving foods are www.mealtime.org and sustainablepantry.com, but to me, nothing beats having an actual book I can hold in my hand and refer to when I get lost. 

Some great books on storing foods to check out at the library:

The Preservation Kitchen: The Craft of Making and Cooking With Pickles, Preserves, and Aigre-Doux by Paul Virant

Food in Jars: Preserving in Small Batches Year-Round by Marisa McClellan

Canning For a New Generation: Bold, Fresh Flavors For the Modern Pantry by Liana Krisoff

Preserving Summer's Bounty: A Quick and Easy Guide to Freezing, Canning, Preserving, and Drying What You Grow edited by Susan McClure

Can I Freeze It?: How To Use the Most Versatile Appliance in Your Kitchen by Susie Theodorou


 

Monday, May 7, 2012

Cooking by the Book (& Sometimes the Film) for Kids

Maybe you've got a kid you'd like to see help out more in the kitchen.  Maybe you've got a voracious reader who's a picky eater.  Maybe you've got kid who loves Harry Potter (or Star Wars, or the Little House books, or the American Girl series) & is just dying to try Pumpkin Pasties! (I know as a child I was intrigued by the food prepared in Little House in the Big Woods.)  Here are some cookbooks that might interest your child, or might be of use if you are throwing a themed children's party.

The Little House Cookbook: Frontier Foods from Laura Ingalls Wilder's Classic Stories  by Barbara M. Walker

The Green Eggs and Ham Cookbook (recipes inspired by Dr. Seuss) concocted by Georgeanne Brennan

Roald Dahl's Revolting Recipes recipes compiled by Josie Fison and Felicity Dahl

The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook: From Cauldron Cakes to Knickerbocker Glory--More than 150 Magical Recipes for Wizards and Non-Wizards Alike by Dinah Bucholz

Once Upon a Time in the Kitchen : Recipes and Tales from Classic Childrens Stories by Carol Odell

Fairy Tale Feasts: A Literary Cookbook for Young Readers and Eaters fairy tales retold by Jane Yolen ; recipes by Heidi E.Y. Stemple

Fancy Nancy Tea Parties by Jane O'Connor

The Star Wars Cook Book: Wookiee Cookies and other Galactic Recipes by Robin Davis

Addy's Cookbook: A Peek at Dining in the Past with Meals You Can Cook Today edited by Jodi Evert [from the American Girl series - see also Felicity's Cookbook, Kirsten's Cookbook, Molly's Cookbook, Samantha's Cookbook]

The Boxcar Children Cookbook by Diane Blain

The Redwall Cookbook by Brian Jacques

The Winnie-the-Pooh Cookbook: Inspired by Winnie-the-Pooh and the House at Pooh Corner by A.A. Milne by Virginia H. Ellison

I'm in the Mood for Food: In the Kitchen with Garfield created by Jim Davis, with recipes by Barbara Albright

The Unofficial Hunger Games Cookbook: From Lamb Stew to "Groosling" -- More than 150 Recipes Inspired by the Hunger Games Trilogy by Emily Ansara Baines

You can also find more children's books with cooking storylines using a subject search under "Cooking - Juvenile".

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Well Done

I think I've written before about my obsession with cookery. However, since I just finished reading (with gusto) Anthony Bourdain's Medium Raw, I thought now might be a good time to talk about new cookbooks in the library system.

A keyword search by "cooking" (sorted by date) will show you the latest additions to our catalog-including offerings from Emeril, Jillian Michaels, & local author Deborah Madison-& will also show you if we have any upcoming cooking classes. Some of the latest finds I have savored:

Life's Too Short to Chop Onions: 99 Dishes to Make When You'd Rather Be Doing Something Else by Kitty Greenwald
This small volume had some good, easy recipes. Plus the author has a fun style-chapters have clever titles like "Shut the Oven Door and Run".

Home Cooking: A Writer in the Kitchen by Laurie Colwin
This is one of those "memoirs with recipes". Possibly the best of its kind!

Taste of Venice/Brunetti's Cookbook by Roberta Pianaro & Donna Leon (recipes by Roberta Pianaro ; culinary stories by Donna Leon)
Taste of Venice has exquisite recipes-some of the meat & fish dishes have ingredients like cuttlefish, which I'm not sure how to find, & veal, which I don't care to eat, but there are many other delights to choose from. None of the recipes are more than a couple of pages in length, most are less, & all are straightforward, if not easy. The cookbook is enhanced by mouth-watering excerpts from Donna Leon's mystery series & essays about Venetian life on culture by Leon & Roberta Pianaro.

A co-worker has been watching Daisy Martinez on PBS & loving her, so I thought I would put in a plug for her new cookbook: Daisy, Morning, Noon, and Night: Bringing Your Family Together with Everyday Latin Dishes. Another co-worker is enjoying the recipes from The French Women Don't Get Fat Cookbook by Mireille Guiliano.

I'm also curious to take a look at: Yum-Yum Bento Box: Fresh Recipes for Adorable Lunches by Crystal Watanabe and Maki Ogawa; Hungry Monkey: A Food-Loving Father's Quest to Raise an Adventurous Eater by Matthew Amster-Burton; & The Lost Art of Real Cooking: Rediscovering the Pleasures of Traditional Food, One Recipe at a Time by Ken Albala and Rosanna Nafziger.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Literary Treats


I love to read about food. I check out cookbooks ravenously, & have a copious collection of recipes that have caught my fancy (though I am less likely to actually cook than I am to drool over the pictures). As a sideline to my cookbook hobby, I like to read books by food writers, from restaurant critics to celebrity chefs, about their lives in & out of the kitchen. Some of these are biographies, some memoirs, some memoirs with recipes, & a couple are cookbooks with memoirs on the side.

No list would be complete without Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly. Bourdain is, of course, the star of No Reservations, the food travel show. Then there's the ubiquitous Gordon Ramsay, who has written Roasting in Hell's Kitchen: Temper Tantrums, F Words, and the Pursuit of Perfection; Sandra Lee, whose memoir is called Made from Scratch ; New York Times restaurant critic Ruth Reichl's Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table; & Marcella Hazan's Amarcord: Marcella Remembers. Bloggers will also have their say-I really enjoyed Molly Wizenberg's A Homemade Life, & there's also Chocolate & Zucchini: Daily Adventures in a Parisian Kitchen by Clotilde Dusoulier & The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Recipes from an Accidental Country Girl by Ree Drummond.


Finally, consider: My Last Supper: 50 Great Chefs and Their Final Meals: Portraits, Interviews, and Recipes , edited by Melanie Dunea; How I Learned to Cook: Culinary Educations from the World's Greatest Chefs, edited by Kimberly Witherspoon and Peter Meehan; Alone in the Kitchen with an Eggplant: Confessions of Cooking for One and Dining Alone, edited by Jenni Ferrari-Adler; What We Eat When We Eat Alone by Deborah Madison and Patrick McFarlin; & A Chef's Story: 27 Chefs Talk about What Got Them into the Kitchen, edited by Dorothy Hamilton and Patric Kuh, for more lip-smacking entertainment.

Searching with the keywords "food anecdotes", "cookery history", or "cooks biography" will bring up more selections in the same vein. Or, just check out any book by Julia Child or M F. K. Fisher-always a winner. Frances Mayes & Peter Mayle are also recommended.

This post was inspired by an article on the Guardian website called "A Taste for Chefs' Memoirs".

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Super Bowl Snacks


Another Super Bowl is upon us! Time to settle in for the game, the halftime show, the commercials...but how are you fixed for snacks?

If you need snacking ideas, the library can help. A search of our catalog (a subject search under 'dips' or 'appetizers' is recommended) brings up Dip It: Great Party Food to Spread, Spoon, and Scoop by Rick Rodgers, Hellish Relish: Sizzling Salsas and Devilish Dips from the Kitchens of New Mexico by Sharon Niederman (both available at Cherry Hills, one of the 3 libraries open tomorrow!) & Great Bar Food at Home by Kate Heyhoe.

All copies of The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Recipes from an Accidental Country Girl by Ree Drummond are currently checked out, but if you are unfamiliar with her website, be sure & check it out-she has an entire section devoted to appetizers & her February 5th post details her Super Bowl plans!

Other websites you could check out in a pinch for Super Bowl suggestions include CooksRecipes, Allrecipes, Epicurious, & the Food Network.