Monday, July 11, 2011

Taco Cart "Carne Asada" Style Tacos

I'll be 100% honest, I don't really know what "Carne Asada" is or means, except that it's really good. I wanted to try and make tacos like they have at the taco trucks/carts do here in SoCal, and it's definitely a work in progress, but I made these the other night, and they are DELICIOUS. I think they are the best tacos I have, personally, cooked. And I got verbal confirmation from our friends Jessica and Luke that they were pretty dang good too.

Here is a pic from the taco cart that James got for my 30th b-day party. Awesome!


A little side schpeal on why some of the recipes are honestly that much better when you marinate for long periods of time: a lot of people turn their noses up at flank steak, saying that it can be tough. This is true, if you don't know what you are doing.
- 1) You should always cut flank steak, or any other typically tougher piece of meat, into thin strips, and most importantly, cutting/slicing against the grain. For example: when you look at a piece of flank steak, you see lines running lengthwise in the meat. You should be slicing then, width-wise, perpendicular to the natural lines you see (this is what "against the grain" means).
- 2) There are certain ingredients that act as natural enzymes with tough meat, that when given time, break down the meat muscles holding it all tight together, loosening the meat up. If you have a  tougher piece of meat, such as flank steak or sirloin, etc., marinating it for long periods of time in certain ingredients actually tenderize the meat. Use vinegars, creams, milks, acids (fruit juices: lime, lemon, orange, pineapple, etc.), soy, 7-up, Sprite, beer, wine....that's all I can think of for now. But you get the idea. Use any one of these, or combination of them in your marinade (even if for short time), can help tenderize your meat.

I don't know if any of you care to know this random food education, but I am a nerd and think it's interesting. Like science. Food science. Nerdy science.


Cheesy Factor (1 no cheese, 10 all cheese): cheese is optional in this one
Dummy Factor (1 easiest, 10 hardest): 2
Time Factor (1 shortest, 10 longest): long marinate time, after that, a 2 at the most

"Taco Cart" Style Tacos
Flank Steak (1.5-2 lbs for 4 people)
1/3 cup white distilled vinegar
1/2 cup soy sauce
5 large cloves garlic, minced
2 limes, juiced
1/2 cup olive oil
1 tsp salt
1 and 1/2 tsp pepper
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp chili powder
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp paprika
1/2 sweet onion, chopped
1/2 cup fresh cilantro, chopped
1 lime, juiced
1 package white corn tortillas
1-2 cups fresh grated manchego cheese (optional)
Hot Sauce (optional)
Sour Cream (optional)
Salsa (optional)
1-2 Tbl Vegetable oil

In mixing bowl, combine vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, lime juice, olive oil, salt, pepper, garlic powder, chili powder, oregano, cumin, and paprika. Whisk and then pour over flank steak in a shallow glass baking dish. Turn once to coat, cover with plastic wrap, put in refrigerator, and marinate for 8 hour or overnight. In small bowl, combine onion, cilantro, and lime juice as relish for tacos. Remove meat from marinade, discard remaining marinade, and thin slice or chop the flank steak. In large skillet over medium-high heat, heat 1-2 Tbl of Vegetable oil. Add meat to skillet, and cook over medium-high heat until meat has cooked through (5 minutes or so). Heat separate small fry pan over medium-high heat. Add 1 tsp of liquid from large meat skillet pan to it, and add tortilla, turning once to get some of liquid on both sides, and cook tortillas, briefly one by one to heat through (it should be about 15-30 second per tortilla to warm). Drain meat from mixture, serve meat in tortillas, topped with cheese, salsa, sour cream, onion relish, and hot sauce.

Optional Rice Addition:
1 cup long grain white rice, cook as directed
2 limes, juiced
1 tsp salt
2 Tbl chopped fresh cilantro

Cook white rice as directed. Just prior to serving rice, mix lime juice, salt, and fresh cilantro into rice and stir well. Serve rice in tacos with meat and toppings.


So, the rice I made was not quite what I was expecting. I was trying to make the rice that they have at Chipotle or Qdoba, but I make the rookie-ball mistake of 1) using our Asian white sticky rice and 2) adding the cilantro in, then shutting the rice cooker and letting it sit for an hour, which basically burned the cilantro. Oops. So use your normal white rice, and don't add the cilantro until just before serving. 

Saturday, July 9, 2011

WHY?!

WHY WHY WHY can't lemons be like limes and have all the juicy flavor, but with NO SEEDS! So annoying.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Meatballs for Lil' Bow Wow

I am so embarrassed to admit, but I LOVE lil' Bow Wow movies. All of them. I am watching "Like Mike" right now, and I can't stop. Roll Bounce? Loved it. Tokyo Drift? Awesome. I can't help myself! I knew James and I were meant to be when we decided to rent Lottery Ticket one night on a date. It wasn't until James that I was willing to admit to my love of Bow Wow movies.

(Off kilter, but I think this love affair started with Drum Line, which doesn't have Bow Wow in it, but was a similar type of movie that I have probably seen 20 times, at least.)

Anyway, this has nothing to do with meatballs. But if I were to try and tie this all in together, I'd say the last time I watched a movie like this, I ended up watching random tv (food network and Bravo) and Barefoot Contessa was on. I don't typically watch her show, but when it's on, I love the food that she makes. I finally decided it was time for me to try to make some.

My friend Jill and I were talking about meatballs recently, and she told me that she never tries to make meatballs because she's afraid to try and fry them. I told her that all the times I made meatballs, they were always baked and put into a slow cookers. Then, boom! The next meatball recipe I find, it has me frying meatballs. I'm not sure I'm too good at it, as my perfectly shaped spheres started to look like little geometric shapes while frying. There has to be a trick I don't know for keeping them circular. Any ideas???


Cheesy Factor (1 no cheese, 10 all cheese): 2
Dummy Factor (1 easiest, 10 hardest): a little more challenging, but not impossible
Time Factor (1 shortest, 10 longest): 4

Meatballs
1/2 lb ground pork
1/2 lb ground beef
1/2 cup fresh bread crumbs (2 slices bread, crusts removed)
1/8 cup seasoned dry bread crumbs
1 Tbl fresh flat-leaf parsley, chopped
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 tsp Kosher salt
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/8 tsp ground nutmeg
1 egg, beaten
1/4 cup plus 1/8 cup warm water
Vegetable oil
Olive oil
Tomato Sauce
Spaghetti noodles, cooked 

 Place the ground meats, both bread crumbs, parsley, Parmesan, salt, pepper, nutmeg, 1/2 the beaten egg, and the water into a mixing bowl. Combine lightly with fork. Using hands, form lightly into 2-in diameter meatballs (you will have about 7-8 meatballs). Pour equal amounts of olive oil and vegetable oil into a large frying pan until depth is about 1/4 inch high. Heat the oil. Very carefully, place the meatballs (in batches if necessary) in the oil, and brown them well on all sides over medium-low heat, turning carefully with a spatula or fork. (This should take about 10 minutes per batch.) Don't crowd the meatballs. Transfer meatballs to plate covered in paper towels. Discard the oil but don't clean the pan. Add the tomato sauce to pan, and bring to simmer. Add meatballs back into sauce, cover, and simmer for 25-30 minutes, until the meatballs are cooked through. Add spaghetti noodles to sauce, toss, and serve hot with meatballs.

* Note: if you are using a non-stick pan, you won't need to do anything to your pan after you discard the oil and before adding tomato sauce. If you are using a stainless steal pan, you should add a little red wind to the pan and scrape up all the bits on the bottom of pan (de-glaze) before adding the tomato sauce.

These are some of the best meatballs I have ever had. The original recipe from Barefoot Contessa calls for 1/4 lb ground pork, and 1/4 lb ground veal. I opted out of the veal simply because the grocery store I was at didn't sell ground veal in quantities less than 1 lb, and since it's pretty expensive, I didn't want to waste the rest.

As for the tomato sauce, you can use whatever you like. The recipe for sauce I put in the "Impress Me Spaghetti" blog post would be good, or the sauce in the "Best Lasagna Ever" post. Or you can just buy jarred sauce (although it won't be nearly as good).

Anyway, these are super super good. The frying part is a little tricky if you actually care that the meatballs be perfect circles. At least for me anyway. 

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Homemade Garlic Bread

I use the term "home made" loosely, as I did not actually make the bread, but I did make the spread that goes on it. I bought a partially cooked loaf of ciabatta, and finished off in the oven.

Cheesy Factor (1 no cheese, 10 all cheese): you could add cheese, it would obviously make it even better
Dummy Factor (1 easiest, 10 hardest): 1
Time Factor (1 shortest, 10 longest): 1

Garlic Bread
7-8 large garlic cloves, loosely chopped
1/2 cup fresh herbs, chopped (combination of parsley, oregano, and basil recommended)
3/4 tsp kosher salt
Fresh ground black pepper
1/2 cup good quality olive oil
1 loaf ciabatta bread
3 Tbl unsalted butter

Preheat oven to 350 deg (if using already cooked bread, 385 deg if partially cooked). Place garlic in food processor and process until minced. Add herbs and salt and pulse 3-4 times. Put olive oil in sauce pan over medium-low heat and then add garlic mixture. Cook, while stirring for 2-3 minutes or so, then remove pan from heat. Slice ciabatta bread in half horizontally. Spread butter on one half of the bread, spoon all olive oil mixture on the other half and spread around in even layer. Close the two pieces of bread back together, wrap in tinfoil. Cook for 5 minutes in tinfoil, then remove from tinfoil and cook additional 5 minutes, if using pre-cooked bread (otherwise, cook additional 8-10 minutes if using partially cooked bread, until crispy on outside).

This is really really good. And don't be afraid of using all the olive oil mixture. It looks like a lot, but it is dang good. 

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Sirloin or Pork Skewers- The Filipino Way





Pork skewers, or "BBQ" as the Filipinos call them, are one of my all-time favorite family recipes. So much so, that we had our family bring them from California to Michigan for our wedding (shown above with Kyle). They were such a hit! I naively assumed that when we got married I would be given the "keys to the city", aka given the family recipe for the BBQ, but no luck so far.

I made the below marinade last week using top sirloin for kabobs, and when eating, I noticed it tasted strangely familiar, and amazing, and when naming off ingredients used to my husband, he responded with, "That's the BBQ marinade!". So, it may be a little off here and there with proportions, etc., but it is pretty dang close. They use pork butt for the meat, and it is soooo good, but if you don't eat pork, or can't find pork butt at your local Asian market, then top sirloin tastes pretty dang good too!

Cheesy Factor (1 no cheese, 10 all cheese): 1
Dummy Factor (1 easiest, 10 hardest): 2
Time Factor (1 shortest, 10 longest): 7, but only because need to marinate minimum 8 hours or over night

Sirloin or Pork "BBQ" Skewers
1/4 cup soy sauce
3 Tbl brown sugar
3 Tbl distilled white vinegar
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp seasoned salt
1/2 tsp garlic pepper seasoning
4 fluid ounces of Sprite or 7-up
1 lb top sirloin, cut into 1.5 inch pieces, OR 1 lb pork butt, cut into 1 inch strips

In medium bowl, mix all ingredients except meat. Pour half of the mixture into a plastic bag with meat, seal, and marinate minimum 8 hours, or over-night, in refrigerator. Save the other half of marinade for basting. Preheat grill to high heat. Put meat onto skewers, discard marinade in bag. Lightly oil grill grate and cook skewers about 10 minutes, turning and basting heavily last 5 minutes of grilling. Serve hot.

You can also thread vegetables onto skewers if desired. 

Lite Deli Breakfast To-Go

I'm happy to report that MOST of the time, my food experiments work out pretty good. I had another success this morning, and it made me realize the only time that I experiment with food is when I have limited ingredients in the fridge and need food now.

The idea behind this post is that you can make an AWESOME breakfast sandwich with your lunch deli stuff. The recipe I am going to put on here is the one I made this morning, which was a complete experiment of flavor combinations, and it was delicious. It got me thinking, I bet you can make some really amazing breakfast sandwiches with different types of deli sandwich products.

The second best part of this idea, is how fast you can make these. These are the perfect breakfast to take on the run or when in a hurry because that longest thing on here is toast.

So this isn't so much of a recipe, as an inspiration.

Cheesy Factor (1 no cheese, 10 all cheese): well, mine, of course, is lots of cheese
Dummy Factor (1 easiest, 10 hardest): 2
Time Factor (1 shortest, 10 longest): 1 so so short!

Lite Deli Breakfast To-Go
1 slice of bread
1 slice of Monterrey Jack Cheese
2 slices of deli peppered turkey
1 egg white
Cream Cheese

Put slice of bread in toaster. While toasting, spray non-stick spray into small bowl, and put egg white into it. Put egg white into microwave for 35 seconds. When done, take cooked egg white out, place on a plate, and put slice of cheese on top of it to melt. Take When bread is done toasting, slice it in half, and put cream cheese on (optional). Put the egg white and cheese on one half of toast, then top with turkey slices, and other half of bread. Eat hot.

This isn't the largest breakfast in the world, so double it up if you want a big breakfast. Otherwise, it's a great morning starter to grab with a paper towel on the way out the door!