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Kitchen
Oh, the sweet smells of creation!  Those holiday goods, and those everyday treats - all are found in this little corner of the web.  Maybe, just maybe, you can find a new twist on an old recipe.  Or some advice from fellow Kitchen adventurers.  In any case, it's warm and toasty, and no one could turn down the tasty treats found inside. 

Spicy Chocolate Sauce PDF Print E-mail
Kitchen - Kitchen Witch
Written by Pairodox   
Monday, 02 November 2009 16:17

Spicy Chocolate Sauce

Inspired by South American hot chocolate tradition, but a total bastardization, much the way the spanish added milk and sugar to chocolate.  I prepared this sauce to be served with the cornbread, and it went over well.

Ingredients:

Big block of chocolate (preferrably dark chocolate with a low sugar content)

Stick of butter

2 teaspoons (more or less) of crushed red pepper

1 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon cardomom

Suggestions:

cinnamon, fine crushed hazel nuts and almonds, tiny bit of anise, vanilla extract

Take a double boiler, and boil water in the bottom.  Add chocolate and butter to the top, and melt into sauce.  Add spices to taste.  Enjoy tasting.  Taste frequently until it is PERFECT.  And then taste it again.  Then consider sharing it with friends. Or perhaps hide it in your room, and listen to see how many roomates say, "Oh yeah, it smells like tasty chocolate in here, I wonder where it is coming from," while you eat it ALL.  I kept it in the double boiler so as to keep it warm, so I do not know if it solidifies at room temperature.  It is hard for me to imagine it surviving to reach room temperature.

Chocolate, especially Hot Chocolate, was considered an extremely healthy food by early Europeans.  It was said to allow a man to go a whole day without eating and serve as an aphrodesiac.  It was also supposed to encourage good humor, lustous skin and hair, as well as making one pleasantly plump.

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Honey Corn Bread PDF Print E-mail
Kitchen - Kitchen Witch
Written by Pairodox   
Friday, 23 October 2009 18:02

I am a pirate, and as such, I am cheating.  I haven't made this recipe yet, but it looks simple and wonderful, and should be grand.  This is step one in my Day of the Dead dish.  The second part I will not write up until after I have made it, because it is the part I am nervous about.  But for now, a nice, sweet corn bread recipe, that I will probably modify, but I'll report back on it.

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Pizza Dough PDF Print E-mail
Kitchen - Kitchen Witch
Written by Pairodox   
Tuesday, 29 September 2009 13:44

One of the easiest, most useful, and tasty doughs to make: Pizza dough.  What makes it so great?  Well, that's easy, you use it to make pizza, which should more properly be considered a class of foods at this stage in its development, than viewed as a simple dish of its own.  There should be SOME kind of pizza that makes your tummy smile in a way few other foods can.

For example, I made basil feta pizza last night, and loved it.  Pizza dough covered with a quick home made pizza sauce, fresh basil, feta, and covered in mozzarella.

Here is the dough:

Ingredients:

3 1/2 cups of flour (I used 3 cups unbleached all purpose, ran out and used rye flour for the rest)

1 1/3 cups water (warm but not boiling) 

2 tablespoons honey (or sugar of choice)

1 tablespoon salt

2 tablespoons olive oil (I used sesame, because of my slightly different choice of toppings.)

1 packet of yeast (approx. 2 3/4 teaspoons?)

Take your water and get it hot to touch, add honey and yeast.  Stir together, and leave to blend for 5 minutes.  Then add salt and oil.  Place the solution in an oiled mixing bowl.  Slowly add flour, until you go from batter to dough.  I just used a fork to stir the flour in.  The dough should be stick to the bottom of the bowl, but not necessarily to the sides of the bowl.  Gently alter water or flour proportions until you get the consistancy you desire.  Then knead it for a good ten minutes.  Then coat it in oil, cover it, and leave it at warm room temperature for an hour or two.  When you come back, it should have doubled or so in size.  Beat the heck out of it when you return.  This is acceptable domestic violence, so enjoy.  Knead it some more.  Let it sit for at least 15 more minutes.  Take this time to prepare your sauce and toppings for the pizza.  Get your baking sheet ready by coating with oil or corn meal (or both), and then start stretching your dough to cover your baking sheet.  I unfortunately do not know the fine art of dough tossing, so I cannot share it here.  I generally practice more of a dough stretching.  I flatten my dough, and gently lift and tug, stretching it thinner and larger.  Work with it until it is pizza shaped.  Push your fingers down, and forceably flatten the middle area for the topping, while leaving the edge relatively unabused.  Then coat the middle in a layer of oil, to keep the pizza sauce from soaking the baking bread and giving you a runny middle.  Add sauce and topping.  Preheat oven to 300 degrees.  Pop in the pizza.  It should be ready in 10 to 25 minutes.  I generally find 15 to 20 will do it.

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Vegetable Chowder PDF Print E-mail
Kitchen - Kitchen Witch
Written by Pairodox   
Monday, 10 August 2009 20:35

Or Veggie Chowdah.  Or maybe it's just a veggie mash (depending on how you make it).

So I recently was on a whirlwind tour of the North East, specifically Maine.  As such I was exposed to a wide variety of tasty Chowders.  Unfortunately, I am not quite ready for most seafood chowder, as I am still building my comfort with fish.  I did have a lovely lobster stew.  But I haven't got a recipe worked out for it yet.  But as soon as I got home I whipped this up, and was pleased with it.

One of the important traits for chowder is apparently thickness, so as such I cheat, and create a chowder that cannot help but be as thick as you like.

Take a pot, and put potatoes, carrots, and celery into, prefferably heavy on potatoes.  Cover the veggies with water, and boil for half an hour or so.  (I put a little garlic in the water as well).

In a frying pan, make a fast blonde roux (I don't know if this is a North Eastern cooking technique at all, but I like roux).  Heat oil or butter in the frying pan at medium heat, and add an equal portion of flour to it. (So one cup flour to one cup of oil)  Cook it for half an hour to an hour.  Make sure it is blended thoroughly, and stirr it to keep it from burning.  (This keeps you nicely occupied as the veggies boil.)

When the veggies have boiled long enough and are tender, drain off the water.  Use an electric mixer to blend in the roux with the veggies.  This should start making thick mashed veggies.  Add milk and seasonings to taste.  Milk will make it thinner and smoother.  I used pepper, salt, thyme, rosemary, parsely.

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Green Tea Ice Cream PDF Print E-mail
Kitchen - Kitchen Witch
Written by Pairodox   
Wednesday, 15 July 2009 20:58

 If you like green tea ice cream, and don't mind your ice cream a bit melty, this is wonderful. 

Created by Aedan.

Get a bowl of your favorite vanilla ice cream.

Add a pinch of green tea in matcha form (powder).

Stir until evenly green.

Taste.  If you want more green tea, add it.  Reapeat as necessary.

The matcha is very strong, and it will probably take less than a teaspoon (I like about 1/2 teaspoon). 

 

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