appetizer

Lumpia, Filipino Egg Rolls

December 27, 2012

Author: Czara Thrusta

From pigpartsandbeer.com

 

 

 

Ingredients:

2 Tbsp. vegetable oil

1 lb lean ground pork

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 onion, sliced

1/2 lb green beans, julienned

2 carrots, julienned

1 Tbsp. soy sauce (optional)

15 lumpia wrappers, square or round

Salt to taste

Preparation: Heat oil in skillet and saute garlic and onions until tender. Add pork and saute until browned. Add vegetables and cook until tender, yet crisp, about 5-10 minutes. Remove from heat. Season with soy sauce. When mixture is cool, add bean sprouts. Salt to taste.

To assemble lumpia: Carefully separate wrappers. To prevent them from drying out, cover unused wrappers with a moist paper towel. Lay one wrapper on clean surface. Place about 2-3 tablespoons of the filling near the edge closest to you. Roll edge towards the middle. Fold in both sides and continue rolling. Moisten opposite edge with water to seal. Repeat with other wrappers. Lumpia can be frozen until ready to use.

Deep fry at 350 degrees until golden brown, about 3-5 minutes on each side. Drain on paper towels.

 

 

Ruth’s Kreplach

February 1, 2013

Author: Mo Rocca

Grandmother and math teacher Ruth Teig teaches Mo Rocca how to make classic Jewish cuisine on My Grandmother’s Ravioli. On the menu is kreplach (or Jewish ravioli.) Ruth surprises Mo with a large live Carp in her bathtub to teach him how generations of Jews in Europe would keep their fish fresh before the invention of refrigeration. Mo also gets to taste Ruth’s magical coffee cake that she uses as currency to feed household workmen and to allows her to skip to the front of long lines at the DMV.

Ingredients:

Filling:

• 2lbs Boneless Chuck or Brisket

• 1 bottle of dry red wine

• 1 large onion chopped plus 3 large onions sliced

• 2 carrots chopped

• 2 celery stalks chopped

• canola oil

• salt and pepper to taste

Dough:

• 3 cups flour

• 4 large eggs

Preparation:

1. Place the meat, the chopped onion, carrots and celery in a large dutch oven. Add the bottle of red Wine and cook in a 375 degree oven until meat is fork tender. This should take about 1-2 hours. Let cool.

2. In a large skillet, over a medium flame, sauté the 3 sliced onions in canola oil until they are completely caramelized. remove from heat and let cool.

3. Chop cooled meat into large pieces that will fit into the spout of a meat grinder. Using a meat grinder, alternate grinding the meat and the caramelized onions until it has all been ground together. taste mixture and if necessary, adjust for seasoning with salt and pepper.

4. Place all of the flour and the eggs in a food processor and let it run until it forms a dough.

5. Remove the dough from the food processor, cover it with a dry dishtowel, and let it rest on the counter for a half hour.

6. While the dough is resting, bring a large pot of water to a boil. Once it’s come to a boil, lower the flame so the water is simmering.

7. Cut the dough in quarters. Leaving the other sections covered, take one of the sections and on a well-floured board roll it out until it’s approximately 1/4” thick.

8. Using a knife, cut the dough into approximately 2” squares.

9. Place a teaspoon of filling onto the center of each piece of dough.

10. Wet the sides of the dough with water and fold the dough corner to corner crimping the dough together with your fingers to form a triangle.

11. Join the two ends together like a little ring, as with tortellini or wontons. Repeat with the rest of the dough.

12. To cook the kreplach, in small batches place them carefully into the pot of simmering water. when they rise to the top of the water cook for another 5 minutes.

13. When the kreplach are cooked, remove with a strainer and place them in a bowl with a little bit of oil. This will prevent them from sticking together.

14. Serve in chicken soup, as a side dish, or put them in a 350 degree oven until they get crisp and brown around the edges.

 

 

 

Chopped Liver

February 25, 2013

Author: Varda

Elizabeth wasn’t her real name. The daughter of Lithuanian immigrants, her Hebrew name was Hasia Leah. Her “greener” parents called her, “Lizzie.”

When it came time for Grandma to go to school, the teacher took the roll. When she came to “Lizzie Schaffer,” she told my grandma, “From now on, your name is Elizabeth.”

And so it was.

I didn’t have Grandma for very long. Grandma died when I was five. She had rheumatic fever as a child, and only later on did they discover that it had affected her heart.

She was always frail and spent a great deal of time in the hospital. One night, she told my mother, “I’ve had enough,” and in the morning, she was gone.

But I still managed to store up some treasured memories of Grandma. I remember how I used to love to ride around her apartment in her wheelchair (by that time, she was too weak to walk) and how she always had a china dish of nonpareils on a corner table in her living room. This was the only place I ever saw those chocolate discs adorned with the little white candy shots. Nonpareils are indelibly linked for me with my Grandma, she of the careworn face and hair that was whiter than snow. Only much later did I see nonpareils at a shop in Israel, where I now live, and immediately thought, “Grandma!”

Grandma used to save ribbons from gifts in a heart-shaped candy box, from some Valentine’s Day long ago. These, she took out whenever I came for a visit, and I would play with them. Today, the thought seems so odd and out of place to me, that a collection of ribbons could hold my interest. My children play with iPads and iPods. If I gave them a box of ribbons, they would be bemused, to say the least.

But for me, this was something so special, this box of ribbons. It was sheer luxury to run my hands through the satiny ribbons, to note the details that made one ribbon different from another, this one shot through with silver, that one silky, another one stiff and gauzy. And the colors! Every color a girl could love: orchid, candy pink, fuchsia.

I wish I knew more about my Grandma, but I don’t. So I filled in the blanks by asking my mother. “Did you learn to cook from Grandma?” I asked her. My mother laughed.

“Grandma gave us pasta with ketchup and never heard of garlic. But she made three things well: fudge, sugar cookies, and chopped liver. No one could make them like Grandma. And no one ever will. She never wrote her recipes down.”

“Grandma cooked the way people did in the old days. She put in half an eggshell of this, and a handful of that. That’s why no one will ever be able to duplicate those recipes. I miss her fudge!” my mother exclaimed.

I never got a chance to taste my grandmother’s cooking because she was already so fragile when I knew her. But at least my mother was able to preserve the simple Jewish recipes that my Grandma used to make for the holidays. I learned to make chopped liver just as my Grandma did, just as my mother did and does. Everyone who tastes it says it’s the best chopped liver they ever had. Even those who don’t like chopped liver love mine.

I once had a family over for Shabbos. The wife said she was on a diet, so she’d only have a taste of the chopped liver, liver is so fattening. She took a smidgen on her plate, declared it delicious and said, “Just another little taste.”

I discreetly watched as she slowly carved away a sliver at a time until there was a small neat square of liver in the center of the serving plate. It was now time to clear this course and bring out the next, the main course. But something told me to leave the liver on the table.

By the end of the meal, sure enough, she had polished off the entire plate of chopped liver. Well, we had helped. But most of it went to my lady guest, who talked the good talk about diet, but simply couldn’t resist my Grandma’s chopped liver. No one could.

It begins with schmaltz. You simply cannot make real chopped liver without a generous amount of schmaltz. Is it healthy? Of course not.

Do I have time to make schmaltz, with its necessity for long, slow simmering? Of course not—I’m a working mother, a communications writer at http://www.kars4kids.org

But personally, I wouldn’t want to die without having tasted chopped liver with real schmaltz and so I do from time to time, at least on holidays and special occasions. It’s well worth those extra minutes off my life. What would I do with them anyway? What’s an extra minute without having tasted chopped liver??

Ingredients:

Fat and skin (the choicest selection for this purpose is on either side of the chicken breast), about half a cup (I save it up as I cook chickens, freezing in plastic wrapped bundles until I have an amount sufficient to make schmaltz)

1 small onion, thinly sliced

1 small bay leaf

3 whole peppercorns

Pinch of salt

1 lb. kashered* calves liver

2 hardboiled eggs

1 small onion

Salt and pepper to taste

Preparation:

For the schmaltz, cut up the fat and skin into postage stamp-sized pieces. Place in small saucepan. Add rest of ingredients. Cook on very low heat, carefully swirling pan every so often to prevent the cracklings (griebnes) from sticking to the bottom of the pot.

Schmaltz takes long, careful cooking. It is done when the griebnes are almost brown. Pour the contents of the pot into a strainer over a heat-resistant bowl. Leave the pot inverted over the strainer to capture every last drop. Discard bay leaf and peppercorns from griebnes in strainer. Cool and then store schmaltz and griebnes separately in refrigerator while making the liver.

For the chopped liver, put the liver, eggs, and onion through a meat grinder. Grind twice. Add enough schmaltz to pleasantly moisten the mixture and make it spreadable. Add salt and pepper to taste (you won’t need much as the liver and schmaltz are already salty). Chill. Spread on a flat plate. Score with a knife into serving-sized squares. Sprinkle griebnes over the top and serve

Note: Griebnes are also delicious sprinkled over a bowl of chicken soup.

*Consult a rabbi on how to Kasher liver, if you cannot purchase liver already kashered. The kashering process involves broiling, so the liver is already fully-cooked after kashering and may be used in any recipe requiring cooked livers.

Varda Epstein is the mother of 12 children, a blogger at The Times of Israel and Judean Rose, and a Communications Writer for Kars4Kids http://www.kars4kids.org, the car donation charity.

 

Kreplach

February 10, 2014

Author: Vicky Pearl

My grandmother, who lives in Brooklyn not far from my own home, is well-known for her cooking and baking prowess. Her jelly cookies are the arbiter by which all other cookies made or consumed by my family are measured. But if you ask me, it is her kreplach that stand out. They are truly the gold standard. I can’t tell you how lucky my family and I feel when she serves them up to us on special occasions such as Purim, Erev Yom Kippur, and Hashano Rabba.

So I was a little hesitant when I set out to make these wonderful gems in my gluten-free kitchen. Would I be able to capture the soft in the mouth, not too heavy in texture pillows without all-purpose flour? I can tell you I was a little more than surprised when, after my first try (which, in all honesty have to admit is not always the case), actually achieved the consistency I wanted to reproduce. At first glance I thought I had failed. The kreplach seemed a bit thicker than I would have hoped. However, once they had a leisurely soak in the soup as it rewarmed, they were the perfect texture and I felt I had a winner. I can’t tell you how happy I was – not only because I had reproduced my grandmother’s recipe and could enjoy it without any wheat, but also because I had truly done justice to the original. It wasn’t just my word either. I offered some to my family and friends who eat wheat. As I stood in anticipation, they heartily enjoyed the soup and announced, to my pleasure, that it was the best kreplach they had ever had. I felt I had just won first prize in some national contest!!

So it is with great pleasure that I share with you this recipe for kreplach, made with brown rice flour, tapioca flour and potato starch.

Ingredients:

1 cup brown rice flour

1 cup tapioca flour

½ cup potato starch

1 tsp xanthan gum

2 large eggs

½ cup water

½ cup oil

pinch of kosher salt

Filling:

5 chicken patties, mashed

Preparation:

1. In a mixer fitted with the dough hook, mix together dough ingredients until well combined.

2. Roll dough between two well-floured pieces of parchment paper to 1/8-inch thickness. Cut

into 3×3-inch squares.

3. Place 1 heaping tsp of filling onto each square. Fold dough over filling, forming a triangle.

Press edges with the tines of a fork to seal.

4. Fill an 8-quart pot to a little bit more than ¾ full with water; bring to a boil over high heat.

Add 1/8 tsp salt.

5. One at a time, add kreplach to boiling water. Return to a rolling boil. Reduce heat to medium-

low. Cook, covered, for 20 minutes.

6. Without letting kreplach fall out, pour out hot water from pot. Refill with cold water, making

sure that the water completely covers all the kreplach. Allow kreplach to cool in water. Remove

using a slotted spoon.

7. Add to soup, heat thoroughly, and enjoy.

These freeze very well for up to 6 months. Chill before freezing and thaw in refrigerator.

Yield: 18 to 20 kreplach.

Note: Brown rice flour works best for this recipe. It gives it a fine consistency, and will not taste

grainy as it is being cooked.

Sidebar: Doughs made with gluten-free flours tend to be a touch more sensitive than regular wheat-flour doughs. It’s important to get to know the brands of flour that you work with. Sometimes you will need to add a bit more liquid, sometimes less. If your dough is a bit sticky, flour your parchment paper with a dusting of sweet rice flour. For kreplach, it doesn’t matter if the dough has a little bit of extra flour on top or inside of it. The dough should be pliable without being dry.

This recipe comes from Gluten Free Goes Gourmet.

 

 

 

 

Stuffed Grape Leaves

June 16, 2014

Author: Sandy Speier

 

 

This is a recipe from Susan Zemelman and Steve Zemelman. They got the recipe from a Lebanese student at Brandeis.

Ingredients:

Jar of grape leaves in brine

1 cup of cooked rice

½ cup of ground beef

Salt and Pepper

2 lemons

4 garlic cloves

½ cup of brown cloves

Preparation:

Spread out grape leaves

Mix cooked rice and raw ground beef, and salt + pepper. Form into balls.

Wrap meat balls in grape leaves. Use a casserole, pyrex or microwave dishes with cover.

Bake grape leaves in 350 degree oven with juice

Brush of lemons, crushed garlic and sugar