IT’S APPLE TIME!

Everything You Need to Know about America’s Favorite Fruit

Its undeniable: the days are getting shorter, the grasses are going to seed,  the beginning of autumn is here! Sure, you’ll have to pack away the beach gear and pull out the scarves soon, but there is so much to love about the food of the fall!

The first harbingers? Apples! I started seeing this season’s apples a few weeks ago at the farmers market, but I wasn’t quite ready to pack in the summer fruits. But now, as the air crisps up, I’m ready for another harvest of a most perfect fruit.

All the Varieties!

Unlike the three or four predictable choices at the conventional grocery store, bushel baskets line up on tables at the farmers markets advertising names like American Beauty, Maiden’s Blush and Winter Sweet. Like learning to taste wine, apples are best enjoyed comparatively. Instead of buying five pounds of Empire Golds, get a few of each variety on offer and slice into them at the same time. Some farmers markets will even set up a little tasting for their customers so that you can have a sample of several different types of apples right at the market.

The Right Fruit for the Job

Making Pie? Cake? Chutney? Sauce? Fresh-pressed Cider? The best resource on what apple will do the best job for you is the person that grew the apples. They know the whole story of the growing season and can point you in the right direction. Don’t be shy. Most farmers love to talk food and you might walk away with a new preparation. Some folks make it extra easy and put right on the price tag which apple is just yearning to be made into jelly.

How to Pick an Apple

In general, apples are beautiful and ripe when they easily come off the tree. Once they make it to the market, look for fruit that have an intact skin and are free of bruises and gashes. They’ll only be super shiny if they’ve been sprayed with a food-grade wax so don’t be discouraged if the apples lack the reflective sheen you find in the grocery store.

An especially memorable outing is a trip to the orchard.  PickYourOwn.org is an international resource for pick-your-own farms, complete with customer feedback. Just select your state, scroll through the technicolor typography, and find a list of farms that provide an orchard open for a day trip.

Now, what to do with those beauties once you’ve got them home.   Here are a few recipes to get you started. And for further reading, I highly recommend Apple: A Global History, written beautifully by the eloquent Erika Janik. Get a history lesson on the ubiquitous fruit while your sauce simmers away and the sun sets on summer.

The World’s Easiest Applesauce

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

Apples

Fresh Apple Cider

Maple Syrup

Cinnamon

Nutmeg

Ginger

Kosher Salt

Instructions:

  1. Cut all the apples that you can fit into your largest pot into large chunks. (If you have a fine chinois strainer or a food mill, you don’t need to peel or core the apples, just chunk them. If not, peel and core the apples before cutting into chunks.)
  2. Add enough apple cider to fill about an inch in the bottom of the pot.
  3. Pour on just enough maple syrup until the top layer of apples is shiny and coated, like you would on an ice cream sundae.
  4. Add a sprinkle of ground cinnamon, a few scrapes of fresh nutmeg, and about half as much ground ginger as cinnamon, plus a tiny pinch of kosher salt. Stir to combine.
  5. Cover and cook over low heat until the apples are very soft, about 30 minutes. Remove from the heat and pass through the food mill or strainer if you have one, or mash with a potato masher for chunky sauce or purée with an immersion blender for a smoother sauce. Taste and add more spices if you like a more fragrant sauce. This will keep in the fridge for about 5 days, or you can process the applesauce using a basic water bath method to keep it longer or give away as a holiday gift.

Apple Cider Braised Pork Roast

 

 

Fill your home with the delicious smell of autumn and instead of a puddle of Yankee candle wax, you’ll have dinner at the end.  The applesauce is a perfect accompaniment to this roast.

 

 

 

Instructions:

1 4-5lb bone-in pork roast

Salt and pepper

Grapeseed or vegetable oil

5 yellow onions, sliced

2 stalks celery, chopped

2 cloves garlic, smashed

2 bay leaves

5 juniper berries

5 allspice berries

1 T peppercorns

2 twigs fresh rosemary

2 twigs fresh thyme

Cheesecloth

Kitchen twine

3/4 c Bragg’s apple cider vinegar (usually found in the natural or organic foods aisle)

1 1/2 c apple cider

2 c chicken stock

Instructions:

  1. Salt and pepper generously all sides of your pork roast.
  2. Coat the bottom of a large Dutch oven or a heavy bottomed pot with a tight-fitting lid with oil. Heat the oil on high heat until it shimmers.  Add the pork to the pot. It should sizzle and spit. Roll it around to sear all sides.  You want it very brown but not burned. When all sides are seared, including the ends, remove the pork to a plate and set aside.
  3. Add the onions and stir to coat with the oil and rendered pork fat. Cook until the onions are caramelized on the edges. This requires that you resist the urge to stir. You’ll cook them for about 10 minutes, stirring only once or twice.
  4. While the onions are cooking, make a sachet of the celery, garlic, bay leaves, juniper and allspice berries, peppercorns, rosemary and thyme. To do this, cut a large square of cheesecloth. If the holes are big, double it over so none of your peppercorns get away. This sachet is just for flavor so at the end, you’ll pull it out and toss it into your compost pile. Lay your cheesecloth flat and pile all the spices in the middle. Pull the four corners up and tie around the top with kitchen twine. Think of a hobo’s sachet. It should look like that. Set aside.
  5. When the onions are caramelized, add the cider vinegar and cider. Scrap the bottom of your pot to get all the bits off the bottom and into the sauce. Add the chicken stock and bring to a simmer. Put the pork back in, along with the sachet, turn the heat to low, cover and simmer 3 hours,  turning every 30 minutes or so.
  6. When the pork is done, it will have shrunk significantly and should register 160º on a meat thermometer against the bone. Remove to a plate and loosely tent with aluminum foil. Remove and throw the sachet away.     Simmer the braising liquid until it reduces by half. That’s your gravy.
  7. Serve with applesauce, potatoes (boiled, mashed, baked or otherwise), a green vegetable and the gravy.

*If you prefer a thicker gravy, you can make a roux. Put 2 T of butter into a skillet. Heat to high and stir in 2 T all-purpose flour. Stir constantly with a whisk until the flour smell is gone. Add 1 T finely minced celery and pull from the heat. The celery stops the cooking – don’t skip this step. Stir the roux into the gravy one teaspoon at a time until desired thickness is achieved.

Buttermilk Apple Fritters

 

 

 

These are too easy to make – dangerously easy. You’ve been warned.

 

 

 

Ingredients:

1 c buttermilk

2 eggs, separated

1 t sugar, plus extra for coat the cooked fritters

Pinch of salt

2 c flour

1 t baking powder

2 t cinnamon

1/4 t nutmeg

1 1/2 s finely diced tart apples

Vegetable oil for frying

Instructions:

  1. In a large bowl, whisk the buttermilk, egg yolks, sugar and salt together.
  2. In a separate bowl, stir the flour, baking powder, cinnamon, and nutmeg together, then mix into buttermilk mixture until just combined.
  3. In a third bowl, beat egg whites until they hold stiff peaks, then fold egg whites and chopped apple into buttermilk and flour mixture.
  4. Heat 1” oil in heavy pan to 375º, then drop batter by tablespoonfuls into hot oil. Cook until golden brown, then roll over and cook the other side until golden also. Remove from pan with a slotted spoon and drain on paper towels.  Roll in sugar to coat and serve immediately.

Perfectly Peachy: A Primer on Peaches

I have a friend who once declared to me once, “Oh, I hate fruit!” Hate fruit? How is that possible? That’s like saying I hate movies, or I hate dinner parties. Sure, some are better than others but to declare all fruit inedible? How sad!

Then, I thought of all the mamas out there begging their little ones to ‘try just a little bite?’ I myself once tried coaxing a picky cousin to believe that clementines were Nature’s Candy. And since my little bundle of joy will be here soon, I started thinking about my favorite fruits. What could I convince a grown man and a picky child equally effectively with?

A trip to the farmers market and a swirl of ripe peach on the deeply perfumed late summer air. What oceans I would cross for a perfectly ripe peach! To bite through a snap of taught skin and release a rush of nectar so sweet, its no wonder the humble fruit has a been a metaphor in centuries of love poems!

Selecting a Peach

Its just barely the end of summer, so the peaches currently at the market have been on the tree branches for a long time, meaning that in the hot summer sun, they have had the opportunity to develop lots of sugar. Choose peaches that smell deeply of peach. Even if they are still firm and a bit under ripe, you should smell peachiness. Find those free of deep bruises, have intact skin, and feel heavy for their size when you pick them up. Seek out white peaches for a truly delicious treat!

Peach Quirks

The Mealy Peach

Alas, there are times when even I, a seasoned peach squeezer, go home with the picture perfect specimen only to bite in, and instead of a rush a sweet juice, I am met with a mouth of wet fur. Not real fur of course, but the flesh of a mealy peach. Like Cinderella at midnight, the mirage is broken and my peach is tossed into the compost. This phenomenon occurs when the peaches are harvested too early and put too long into refrigeration, resulting in the offensive mealy texture. Shopping at the farmers market nearly eradicates this risk.

The Freestone Peach

Unlike the mealy peach, I love to learn that I’ve picked up a bag of freestone peaches! As their name suggests, the freestone peach flesh releases easily from the pit in the center and the surrounding pulp in deeply red and flavorful. Their cousin, the clingstone peach, needs to be cut from the pit or the pit nibbled around. This distinction rests with the breed of the tree planted so if you are curious, ask the farmer at the market what she’s got growing.

Finally… Peaches in February.

When I teach people about cooking and eating I regularly use the phrase “peaches in February” to describe our modern expectation of delicious food year round, regardless of what nature has in mind. Certainly root vegetables can get a bit tiresome but running out to the grocery store and buying peaches flown in from all over the world has a huge carbon footprint and you are virtually guaranteed a mealy, disappointing peach experience. Instead, put in a little work now and some dedicated freezer space and come February, you can have all the peaches you want!

Frozen Summer Peach Slices

Ingredients:

Water

Lots of peaches

Ice

Lots of freezer space

Instructions:

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil
  2. Make an ice bath: Fill a large bowl with ice then cover the ice with water. Don’t be stingy with the ice
  3. Using a small paring knife, score an “x” just through the skin of the blossom end of the peaches (opposite where it was connected to the tree.) Gently drop a few peaches at a time into the boiling water and wait 30 seconds. Fish the peaches out of the pot and plunge into the waiting ice bath. Continue until all the peaches are blanched.
  4. Slip the skins from the now cold peaches and discard. Slice the skinless peaches into 1/2” slices and arrange in a single layer on sheet trays lined with parchment paper. Put the peach-filled trays into the freezer and let sit until the peach slices are frozen through
  5. Move frozen peach slices into labeled, 1-gallon size zip top freezer bags. Enjoy in February.

Spicy Fish with Peach and Heirloom Tomato Salsa


You can use any firm fish like striped bass, mahi mahi, or shrimp.

Serves 2

 Ingredients:

For the Salsa

3 ripe peaches

3 medium-sized heirloom tomatoes (or enough to be an even amount with the chopped peaches)

1 jalapeno, minced

1 medium red onion, finely chopped

1/4 c chopped cilantro

1/4 c olive oil


juice from the other half of the lime

really good sea salt to taste

Instructions:

  1. Mix all the ingredients in a large bowl. Let sit 20 minutes. Taste for saltiness. Too salty? Add more lime. Not salty enough? Add more salt!

Meanwhile, for the fish:

Ingredients:

2 fish fillets (about a pound)

2 T olive oil


1/2 t mustard seeds


1/2 c finely chopped yellow onion

1/2 T grated fresh ginger

1/2 jalapeno, seeded and finely chopped (or more if you like it hot)


1/2 t ground coriander

1/4 t turmeric

1/2 T tamarind paste, dissolved in 1/4 cup water

1/2 lime juice and its zest

1 tsp brown sugar

Instructions:

  1. In a pan large enough to hold all the fish, heat the oil on high. When it starts to shimmer, add the mustard seeds and heat until they start to pop. You can’t miss it – its like popcorn. Immediately add the onion and toss with the mustard seeds. (This cools off the oil so it doesn’t burn.) Cook the onion, stirring occasionally, until it starts to brown.
  2. Turn the heat to medium-low and add the ginger, jalapeno, coriander and turmeric. Stir and let cook 3 minutes.
  3. Add the diluted tamarind to the pan and simmer 3 minutes more. Add another 1/2 cup of water and stir to combine.
  4. Add the fish fillets. Cover and simmer 5 minutes.
  5. Take off the cover and spoon the juices over the fish. (You’re not going to flip the fish, so be generous in your basting.) Cover again, and cook until the fish is cooked through, about 5 minutes, but this depends on the thickness. Check its doneness by stretching out your thumb (seriously) and poking the meaty part where the base of your thumb meets your palm. When the fish feels that firm, its done. Move the fish to a warm plate and cover loosely with aluminum foil.
  6. Add the lime juice and zest to the pan. Simmer to reduce the liquid to saucy consistency. Don’t worry too much here. You’ll know when it “looks right.” Trust yourself! Serve the fish with some sauce and with the salsa.

Frozen Peach Margaritas

 Everyone’s got their favorite margarita recipe. If not, here’s one to get you started. Otherwise, toss some of your frozen peach slices into your blender with your preferred proportions and enjoy. Equally delicious in September and February. These proportions make one drink. Multiply as necessary.

Ingredients:

1/4 c of your favorite tequila

1 T triple sec

1 T freshly squeezed lime juice

1 Tablespoon sugar

Frozen peach slices from 1 peach (approximately)

6 ice cubes

Instructions:

  1. Combine all the ingredients in a blender and puree until smooth. For extra flair, garnish with a little lime zest.

Heirloom Tomatoes: A Delicious Legacy

Heirloom Tomatoes: A Delicious Legacy

Tomatoes are spilling out of baskets at farmer’s markets and grocery stores around the country. Once considered poisonous by Europeans, tomatoes are now a year-round staple of international cuisines. If you’ve got a pot and a sunny spot in your yard, apartment, or on the fire escape or stoop, tomatoes are easy, kid-friendly plants to grow yourself.

However in August and September, the farmers market sells a rainbow of bumpy, technicolor tomatoes, no potting soil required! Buy up a few heirlooms and cut in. Be prepared to be blown away by the intensity of the “tomato-ness” that the heirloom flavors provide.

Heirloom vs. Hybrid

Hybrid tomatoes have been designed and modified in a way that requires the gardener to buy the seeds from a seed company, thus making the company’s time in selecting for beauty, taste, shelf life, etc. profitable. Think the tomatoes in the grocery store: uniform, predictable, modified over time and in controlled environments to prevent pollen from one tomato plant from interacting with a different type of tomato plant. Large greenhouses, scientists in white lab coats, clipboards, DNA strands.

Heirloom tomatoes are the hippy cousins who live outside Woodstock in a tree house recycling rain water. Or maybe a better description is that they are the seeds your Great Aunt Lupe saved during The Great Depression and passed down year after year in a tattered envelope hand-scrawled with names like Green Zebra and Amazon Chocolate.

Like hybrids, the seeds from heirlooms can be planted and will produce the same tomato plant next year. However, they may be asymmetrical, not as pest resistant, or have lower yields. The trade-off is you get a tie-dye rainbow of color and flavor to pop out of your flower pot and salsa bowl.

How to Pick a Tomato

Tomato selection is VERY easy. Look for fruits that feel heavy for their size, have tight skins that aren’t leaking juice from any splits and are tender to squeeze. Don’t be put off by tomatoes that are lumpy, ugly, green, or haven’t reddened all the way up to where they were cut from the stem. They are supposed to look like that!

Keep your purpose in mind. Whether you are making a salad or salsa or sauce will help determine particular characteristics in the tomatoes that you want. Extra meaty? Few seeds? Maybe you’re trying out a tomato sorbet recipe and want something extra juicy. The best resource on what’s inside those skins is the person that grew them. Don’t be shy! Ask the farmer (or the person selling the stock) what they recommend and what their favorites are.

How to Use Tomatoes

The uses for those beautiful tomatoes in your kitchen after the trip to the market are as many as many as there are varieties to choose from. Here’s three recipes for my seasonal favorites:

Heirloom Tomato & Toast Salad

 

 

 

 

This salad doesn’t hold up well in the fridge because the bread and tomatoes quickly start to fall apart so plan to enjoy on the night you make it.

 

Serves 8

 

 

Ingredients:

For the salad:

1 medium-sized loaf of day-old, crusty bread, like a boule or baguette, cut into 1” chunks

3 T olive oil, plus more if needed

Kosher Salt

2 large, meaty heirloom tomatoes, cut into 1/2” chunks

1 large cucumber, cut into 1/2” chunks

1 small red onion, peeled and sliced paper thin

25 leaves of basil, torn into small pieces (excellent job for kids little fingers!)

1 small bunch cilantro, chopped, stems and all

For the Dressing:

1/2 c olive oil

1/4 c vinegar (I like apple cider or champagne but balsamic and red wine work well too)

1 T dijon mustard

Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Instructions:

  1. Heat 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. When the oil starts to shimmer, add the bread and a hearty pinch of kosher salt. Toast the bread, tossing occasionally and adding more olive oil if the pan gets completely dry, until the bread cubes are deliciously crisp all around, about 10 minutes.
  2. Meanwhile, toss the remaining salad ingredients in a large mixing bowl, big enough to hold both the salad and the bread cubes.
  3. In a jar with a lid, combine the ingredients for the dressing. Seal the jar,( hand to akid if there’s one nearby !), and shake well to combine.
  4. When the bread is toasted, add the cubes to the salad mixing bowl and gently mix all the salad components together with a big wooden spoon.
  5. Pour the dressing over the salad and mix to combine. Let salad sit at room temperature for 1 hour, then mix once more, transfer to a pretty serving bowl and enjoy!

Grilled Tomatoes with Cilantro-Lime Crema

 

 

 

A perfect cooling side dish for a hot summer night around the grill.

Serves 6

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

6 large, ripe heirloom tomatoes

Olive oil

1/2 t aleppo pepper (use sweet, smoked paprika if aleppo is unavailable)

1/2 t cumin

a tiny pinch of cayenne

2 c crema, homemade or store bought

Zest from 1 lime

Juice from the same lime

2 Tablespoons finely chopped cilantro

Coarse sea salt

Instructions:

  1. Heat grill to hot!
  2. Cut the top off the tomatoes (where the stem was connected) and drizzle all over with olive oil.
  3. Mix together the cumin, aleppo, and cayenne, then sprinkle spice mix on oily tomatoes.
  4. Put the tomato, cut side down on the hot grill and cook until you get some nice, dark grill marks, 3-5 minutes. Then flip and cook 3-5 minutes more, until hot through. It will sizzle when the water from the tomatoes hits the heat – worry not.
  5. Meanwhile, mix together the crema, lime zest, lime juice and cilantro and put into a pretty serving bowl.
  6. Put the grilled tomatoes on a serving platter and sprinkle with crunchy sea salt. Serve immediately with the Cilantro-Lime Crema.

 

Tomato Sorbet-cicles

 

 

 

Vegetables for dessert? Well, technically tomatoes are a fruit. Break out the popsicle mold (or so Dixie cups and lollipop sticks) to make these kid-approved frozen tomato pops!

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

3 lbs ripe heirloom tomatoes

1/4 c fresh-squeezed lime juice

1/4 c water

1/2 c sugar

Grated zest from the limes

Instructions:

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Score the skin on the blossom end (opposite where the stem was connected) of each tomato with a sharp knife to make an “x.” Drop the tomatoes a few at a time into the pot for 20 seconds. Fish out with a slotted spoon then plunge into a bowl of ice water. Repeat until all the tomatoes are blanched.
  2. Slip the skins off the blanched tomatoes. Discard the skins. Quarter the skinless tomatoes and squish the seeds out into one bowl. Keep the now skinless, seedless tomato flesh in a second bowl. This is squishy messy fun for kids! And don’t worry if a few seeds make it into the tomato flesh bowl.
  3. Use your hands to squish the tomato flesh into a pulp. Place a colander over this bowl and pour the tomato seeds into the colander. Smoosh any tomato juice through, then discard the seeds. Rinse the colander for use in the next step.
  4. Pour the tomato juice and pulp into the blender or food processor and puree for 10 seconds. Pour that through the rinsed colander and use a rubber spatula to smoosh all the juicy tomatoey deliciousness into a clean bowl. Discard what’s left behind in the colander. You should have about a quart of sorbet base.
  5. In a saucepan, combine the lime juice, water, and sugar. Heat over medium until the sugar dissolves, then pour into sorbet base. Stir in the lime zest. Pour into popsicle molds* and freeze until solid, about 4 hours.

*Alternatively, you could use a clean ice cube tray or small paper cups. Pour in your base, freeze 45 minutes, then take out of the freezer and sink in popsicle or lollipop stick (available at craft stores) then freeze for the remaining time. If the sticks don’t want to stand up straight, cover with a piece of aluminum foil then poke stick through to help keep it upright. Or, skip the sticks altogether. Pour the base into a dish, freeze solid then use a spoon to shave the ice and make Tomato-Lime Granitas.

 

 

 

To learn more about Chef Emily Peterson click here.

 

Endless Empanadas: One Dough, Three Filings, Endless Possibilities

Endless Empanadas: One Dough, Three Filings, Endless PossibilitiesEmpanadas are like meatballs: everyone’s got their recipe. Master the dough (or pick a perfect store-bought substitute) and your imagination is the only limit to the possibilities.

Served hot, warm, room temperature or cold, empanadas are flexible enough for picnics and lunchboxes, at the dinner table dressed up with side dishes or wrapped in a paper towel, tucked into a pocket running for the school bus at breakfast time. Fried is my favorite cooking method but baked works too and until we stop coming up with flavor combinations, no one will run out of empanada recipes. Here are three of my favorites.

Read Related: Heritage Recipe: Abuelita’s Empanadillas

THREE EMPANADAS

Ingredients

Empanada Dough
1 cup cold water
2 eggs + 1 egg white
1 TBSPcider vinegar
6 cup unbleached all purpose flour
1 TBSP sea salt
6 TBSP shortening

Instructions

  1. Combine all the liquids in a bowl and whisk together.
  2. Place the flour, salt and shortening into the bowl of a food processor and pulse until you get the the consistency of sand with some pea-sized pieces remaining.
  3. With the blade running, drizzle in the liquid mixture until the dough comes together in a ball. You might not need all of it.
  4. Divide dough in half, shape into a disc, then wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill 30 minutes before rolling out.

Breakfast Filling: Guava & Queso

Ingredients
1 pound Fresh Queso Blanco
1 jar guava jelly

Lunch Filling: Chicken & Chorizo

Ingredients
2 TBSP olive oil
2 cups diced onion
1 cup diced green bell pepper
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 TBSP minced garlic
1 32oz can diced tomatoes
8 boneless, skinless chicken thighs
2 cups crumbled chorizo
1 cup green, pimento-stuffed olives, sliced
½ cup white wine

Instructions

  1. Heat the olive oil in a large pan. Add the onion and the bell pepper, season with salt and pepper and cook until beginning to soften. Add the garlic, tomatoes and chicken thighs. Bring to a simmer, then cover and cook until the chicken is cooked through.
  2. Remove the chicken from the pan and shred. Return the shredded chicken to the pan along with the chorizo, olives and white wine. Cover and simmer 15 minutes more.
  3. Turn off the heat and let the filling cool to room temperature.

Dinner Filling: Beef

Ingredients
2 TBSP olive oil
1 small onion, diced
Salt and freshly groung black pepper
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 TBSP ground cumin
1 TBSP dried oregano
1 TSP ground cinnamon
2 lbs ground sirloin
8oz can diced tomatoes
12 large pimento-stuffed olives, chopped
1/3 cup dried cranberries
3 hard-boiled eggs, chopped

Instructions

  1. Heat the olive oil in a large pan over medium high. Add the onion and a pinch of salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion begins to soften, about 3 minutes. Add the garlic cook 1 minute more.
  2. Add the cumin, oregano and cinnamon. Cook 1 minute. Add the beef and cook, breaking up with a fork or a wooden spoon until the meat is cooked through. Add the tomatoes and the olives. Cook 2 minutes.
  3. Stir in the cranberries, turn off the heat and cover for 15 minutes. The cranberries will plump up again with some tomato-y beef juice. Yum. Taste and add more salt & pepper if necessary.
  4. Transfer to a metal bowl and cool to room temperature. Stir in the chopped egg.

To Form the Empanadas

  1. Take one disc of dough out of the fridge. Use a rolling pin to roll the dough to 1/8” thick. To do this, Start the rolling pin in the center of the dough and roll to the edge, then rotate the dough 90 degrees. Don’t worry if it isn’t perfectly round or the edges crack. What’s important is that it doesn’t stick and that you get it evenly thin. If there is sticking, sprinkle a little flour under the dough. Continue to roll and spin until the dough is 1/8” thick.
  2. Use a round cookie cutter (also called a “ring cutter”) to cut out rounds of dough. I usually cut out 3” diameter circles.
  3. Into the center of each shell, put about 1/4 cup filling. (For the breakfast empanadas, smear on a tablespoon of cheese and put in an equal blob of jelly.) Then, fold the circle in half, using a little water on the still-exposed dough edge and press tightly to seal.
  4. Use the tines of a fork to go around the edge and make sure the dough is completely sealed.  Repeat until you run out of dough or filling.

How to Fry (Preferred Method)

  1. Pour one quart of vegetable oil into a pan large enough to fit about 3 empanadas at a time in about 1″ of oil.
  2. Heat the oil to 375º and heat your oven to 200º. Set a cooling rack (like you use for cookies) over a sheet tray and put that in the oven to hold the done empanadas.
  3. When the oil is hot, slip in a few empanadas at a time. Don’t overcrowd the pan – you don’t want the temperature of the oil to drop too dramatically when you add the item you are frying.
  4. Fry one the first side until golden, about 2 minutes, then flip and fry until golden on the second side. Move the finished empanadas to the rack in the warm oven and continue until all are cooked.

How to Bake

  1. Set all your finished empanadas up on baking sheets lined with parchment paper or a silicone pad.
  2. Heat the oven to 375º.
  3. Scramble an egg and brush the tops of each pastry. Bake until golden, about 35 minutes. But really, you should fry them.

 

Emily Peterson

Learn more about Chef Emily Peterson.


 

Hibiscus Lemonade: A New Twist on a Summertime Classic

 

Nothing says sultry summer like a refreshing glass of pink lemonade. Using dried culinary hibiscus flowers (sometimes called flor de Jamaica or sorrel and not the same flower you see tucked behind ladies ears) adds a sophisticated spin that is perfect for a kiddo’s cooler and delicious spiked with rum for Mami!

If you are having a hard time finding hibiscus flowers, check near the bags of dried chile peppers – they have been spotted there. If that fails, six Red Zinger tea bags can be substituted in a pinch.

Yield: 2 quarts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

8 cups water

2 cups dried hibiscus flowers

2 c sugar (or more if you like it sweet)

Fresh lemon juice from 12 lemons

1 lemon, cut into thin rounds, for garnish

Dark rum, optional

Instructions:

  1. Heat the water on high to simmering in a stainless steel pot.
  2. Turn off the heat, add the hibiscus flowers, and let cool to room temperature.
  3. Strain into a large pitcher, discard the flowers.
  4. Stir in the sugar and the lemon juice.
  5. Chill thoroughly.
  6. Serve over ice with a lemon round and a straw for kids.
  7. For Mami, pour 1–2oz. dark rum over ice, then fill the glass with lemonade.
  8. Garnish with a lemon round and don’t mix up the glasses!


To find out more about Chef Emily Peterson click here. 

Cooking Crema: Easy Ways To Make Yours

A favorite condiment around my dinner table is fresh Crema Mexicana. Or crema from Guatemala, Honduras, or El Salvador. Wherever you call home, this creamy sauce can be used on everything from fish tacos (my favorite) and enchiladas to guacamole and veggie dip. What is sold in the supermarkets, while delicious, is loaded with additives such as gums and stabilizers. These ensure that the crema doesn’t separate on its journey to our kitchens, but if you are trying to cut down on processed food additives, whipping up your own crema is a great place to start.

Crema is INCREDIBLY EASY to make – so easy that kids can help out! With a little supervision at the stove and a lesson in patience, here’s how to recreate the crema of your childhood with two readily available American ingredients.

 

Ingredients:

2 c heavy cream

2 T buttermilk

Instructions:

  1. In a saucepan, combine the cream and the buttermilk.
  2. Stir with a wooden spoon over medium heat until the temperature reaches 98º on an instant read thermometer.
  3. Carefully pour the mixture into a clean glass jar or plastic container.
  4. Cover with a clean dish towel and let sit in a warm place (like the top of your refrigerator or inside your turned-off gas stove) for 24 hours.
  5. Stir, admire the thickening that has happened, then refrigerate until cold, about four hours.
  6. Then, use as needed!
  7. It will keep in the fridge for about a week, but chances are it will be all eaten up by then!

 

Next, liven up your fresh crema with some mix-ins:

 

CHIPOTLE CREMA

Ingredients:

1 c fresh crema

1 canned chipotle pepper, chopped fine

Adobo sauce from chipotle can (optional)

Instructions:

  1. Thoroughly mix together the cream and chopped pepper in a large mixing bowl, then taste.
  2. Add a little adobo sauce to make it even spicier!
  3. Move to a lovely bowl to serve.

 

AVOCADO CREMA

Ingredients:

1 ripe avocado

1 c fresh crema

Juice from 1 lime

Sea salt

Instructions:

  1. Smoosh one avocado into a paste in a large mixing bowl.
  2. Stir in the crema and the lime juice.
  3. Add a pinch or two of sea salt.
  4. Serve in your favorite bowl.

 

VEGGIE DIP WITH CREMA AND REFRESHING HERBS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

1 c fresh crema

1/2 c mayonnaise

1/2 c chopped flat leaf parsley

1/4 c chopped chives

1/4 c minced fresh dill

1/4 cup minced fresh tarragon

2 cloves minced fresh garlic

A few cracks of black pepper

A pinch or two of sea salt

Instructions:

  1. Mix all the ingredients together in a large bowl.
  2. Move to a pretty dip bowl and serve with an assortment of veggies chopped into dipping shapes.
  3. Think: carrots, cucumber, asparagus spears, jicama, radishes, celery and broccoli florets!

 

 

To learn more about Chef Emily Peterson click here.