Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Victoria Sandwich, Black Velvet Soup, Best New Veggie Burger, St Croix Fish Pie

Sally and I have completed another stellar circumnavigation, one week apart.  My birthday is the 14th, and hers the 21st.  We always try to do something special for "our week", and try to eat special things as well.  This year we spent a long weekend on Manasota Key, one of our favorite olde Florida places...


Victoria Sandwich
Not a savory sandwich, mind, this is a classic British "tea" cake, with sponge cake, whipped cream, and fruit or fruit jam.  The version I make comes from the classic British baker Mary Berry.   The one I made for Sally's birthday this week featured her favorite fruit -- mango from her tree -- and fresh-made whipped cream.

For the Sponge
1 cup softened Butter
1 cup Sugar
1 cup Self-Rising Flour
4 Eggs, beaten
1/2 tsp Vanilla extract

Cream the butter and sugar with a fork, then beat with a mixer until the combination turns almost white and becomes very fluffy.  Add the beaten eggs a bit at a time, beating between each addition until well combined

Sift the flour on top of the mixture and then with a large metal spoon, fold the flour in carefully so you don't knock out any air.  Fold until there aren't any more streaks of flour, then divide it equally between two baking tins which have been buttered on the side and have the bottom lined with parchment paper.

Bake 20-30 minutes until you get a nice golden brown top and the sponges are springy to the touch.  Let them cool for a few minutes before running a thin knife around the edges and carefully turning the cakes out to cool further.

When down to room temp, put one of the cakes upside down on your serving plate, and get ready to fill and finish.

For The Filling
I like to keep it simple -- fresh fruit and fresh whipped cream.  Berries of any kinds are good, but we loooove Mango.  So I dissected a couple of ripe mangos into crescents and kept them chilled while I made the Whipped Cream, Alton Brown style:

1 cup cold heavy Whipping Cream
2 Tbsp Sugar

This will make 1-1/2 to 2 cups of whipped cream>

Chill a metal bowl and your whisk in the freezer for 20-30 minutes.  Then... put the sugar in the cold bowl and add the cold cream.  Start whisking like mad and after about a minute the cream will start to stiffen.  Stop when you get stiff peaks (it took me a total of about 2 minutes total).   

Using a cold metal spatula or knife, spread half the whipped cream on the upside down cake.  Top that with fruit.  

Carefully put the second cake on top of that.  Now use the rest of the whipped cream and more fruit to finish your Victoria Sandwich.  

Don't eat it all at one sitting!

Best New Veggie Burger
Almonds, Sun-dried Tomatoes and Red Quinoa feature in our new favorite Veggie Burger/Rissole.  These even look like finely ground beef patties, and taste A LOT better than any of those Impossible type Burger things.

2 cups Whole Almonds
1-1/2 Tbsp Tomato Paste
1/2 tsp Rosemary
1 Garlic Clove, minced
2 Tbsp Balsamic Vinegar
1 Tbsp low sodium Soy Sauce
3/4 cup diced Sweet Onion
1/2 cup chopped Sundried Tomatoes (not the oil-stored ones)
1-1/2 cups cooked Red Quinoa

Take the almonds for a spin in the food processor until you get a coarse meal.  Add the tomato paste, rosemary, garlic, sun-dried tomatoes, balsamic and soy,  and spin to again to a smooth, thick consistency.  Remove to a bowl and fold in the quinoa and diced onion.  

Form into patties and fry in a splash of oil for 4-6 minutes per side on medium heat.  

Serve in a bun or as a plated rissole.  I like topping them with slices of dill pickle and a schmear of bleu cheese dressing, Sally likes hers with sliced tomato (go figure).

Black Velvet Soup
This takes ordinary Black Bean Soup up a couple notches...  Sally had a black bean soup at Bahama Breeze when we went out for my birthday dinner a week ago, which she said had a hint of "something different".  One taste, and I knew I could match their recipe -- the 'secret ingredient' -- was either tomatillo sauce or salsa verde -- either one would give me that "green chili" flavor.

So I cooked up a 1 pound bag of black beans, with about a tablespoon of Thyme and a 2x2" square of Kombu seaweed to reduce gas emissions, then pureed the whole batch.  I put that in my soup pot and thinned it out with a couple cups of water and a couple tablespoons of Vegetable stock powder.    

I cooked things down a bit to get the consistency I wanted, then added 1/2 cup of my favorite Salsa Verde and simmered for a few minutes more to marry the flavors.  Wow!   What a difference that Salsa Verde makes!  The soup was almost velvety smooth -- hence the name -- and that touch of green chili makes a fabulous taste difference!!    Sally wanted a bit more 'texture' to her soup for the second day's lunch serving, so I added some sauted crimini mushrooms which you can barely see in this photo:


Fancy Fish "Pie"
We spent last weekend at our favorite Manasota Key resort, and Saturday Night we celebrated Sally's birthday a bit early with dinner at Farlow's On The Water in Englewood, a really great eclectic seafood restaurant who's Kentucky owners also feature Hot Brown sandwiches, and corn pudding.  I had their fabulous House Special  St. Croix Seafood Pie with Caribbean lobster, Gulf Shrimp and Scallops, with a lobster-infused cream sauce, between two sheets of puff pastry!  Plus, as you see a side of roasted veg and fingerling potatoes.  It does have a top and bottom "crust" so technically it is a pie....  but who cares about a name, it's delicious!  I'll have to try this 'sheet pie' idea here at home.


I hardly ever mention, let alone recommend restaurants here in Fooding Around With The Kilted Cook.  But...  If you ever get to Englewood, just south of Venice, this is a great lunch/dinner restaurant.  Reservations highly recommended -- service is fast but Farlow's is very popular!!

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Corn Pudding, Kentucky Hot Brown, Malay Apples, and Pesto Pasta with Summer Squash

Isn't this a lovely buncha Malay Apples?  Read about them below...

Corn Pudding
Southern comfort food, and a great thing to do when the sweet corn comes ripe in the field.  My version uses plain yogurt instead of heavy cream.  You can make this with frozen or even canned corn, but it's really much better with fresh kernals off the cob!

Kernals from 3 ears of Corn -- about 1-1/2 to 2 cups
1/3 cup Red Bell Pepper, diced small
2 Eggs, beaten
1/2 cup plain Yogurt
1/3 cup Sugar
2 Tbsp melted Butter
1/3 cup AP Flour
1/4 cup Yellow Corn Meal
1 tsp Baking Powder
1/8 tsp Salt
optional (smoked paprika dusted on top)

Whisk everything together and pour into a greased 8x8 baking dish. 


Dust with paprika if using.  Bake 45 minutes at 350F until the top is getting a bit brown.

The texture is 'softer' than cornbread.  You can cut corn pudding into squares to serve, or use a large spoon to transfer to your plates.  Serve along side almost anything from ham to chicken -- to my Black Bean Rissoles:



Kentucky Hot Brown
First came the humble ham & cheese sandwich.  Add Welsh Rarebit (Mornay cheese sauce on toast),  and the sandwich is elevated to French cuisine stardom as the Croque Monsieur.  Then along came Fred K. Schmidt, at the Brown Hotel in 1926 Louisville, KY.  Fred added slices of turkey breast inside, and crispy bacon outside, and carried this sandwich to culinary godhood, which he called the Hot Brown!

Although I have made my own Hot Browns at home, I feasted on this example at the Boone Tavern in Berea, KY last weekend during the annual Berea Traditional Dulcemore Gathering which I help host.

Try it yourself:
Slices of turkey breast
Slices of ham
Mornay Sauce (white sauce with cheese) from scratch or a packet
Strips of fried bacon
Toasted thick cut bread like sourdough

Stack it together, pour the hots cheese sauce over, add crispy bacon, and chives and cherry tomatoes for garnish.  Delish!!!

Malay Apples
Remember a couple weeks back when I featured Rose Apples?  This is a related species called the Malay Apple  -- Syzygium malaccense.  These I also found in a local garden.

These are larger and rougher shaped than the Rose Apples, which are growing nearby.  And of course the Malay Apples are mottled red and cream rather than being green,  Not nearly as wonderfully perfumed, either.   When ripe, the outer skin is waxy as you can see at the top of the page.
Inside, the pit of the ripe apple isn't as loose as those on Rose Apples.  The flesh is firm like an apple or pear, and not super juicy.  Very neutral in flavor. 

Here I've stewed 16 chopped apples in a cup or so of water, with 1/8 cup of sugar and a 1/2 tsp of Chinese Five Spice. 
Certainly a "quite nice' and  different dessert fruit, when you can find them in season...


Chickpea Pasta, Pesto and Summer Squash
So here I am trying another brand of non-wheat-flour pasta.  This time it's Banza brand Rotini made from chickpea flour.  The last time I tried somethings similar,  the pasta dissolved into mush.  We'll see...

Banza Non-wheat Rotini 
Basil Pesto to taste
1 Zucchini, sliced into matchsticks
1 Yellow Squash sliced into matchsticks
Mushrooms sliced into matchsticks
1/8 cup diced Red Onion
Olde Thompson Everything Italiantm spice blend to taste

Cook the pasta to package directions.   Drain and rinse.  Meanwhile saute the onion, squash and mushrooms with a dash or two of Everything Italian seasoning.

When the pasta is drained, toss gently with a 3-4 tablespoons of  pesto, plate, and top with the sauteed veggies.

This brand of non-wheat pasta turned out very nice!  The pasta has a bit of nutty taste that went very well with the pesto and sauteed squash.