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Kitchen On the Road- Ho Chi Minh City

June 15, 2012 by Renee

This year has been full of travel!  (Hence our sporadic postings!) We have so much to catch you up on!  In February, I took a tour with Intrepid Travel called the Cambodian Traveler. It took me to Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand. My first stop- Ho Chi Minh City.

The trip started on a really high note when after checking into my Cathay Pacific flight I was called back to the check in counter and asked for my boarding pass.  As a jaded New Yorker my first thought was “Oh crap, what’s wrong now?”, but instead I was handed a new boarding pass with a new seat assignment….Business Class! My chin hit the ground and I thanked the check-in agent and walked away quickly before he could change his mind. I was in shock! Inside, I was jumping up and down like a little kid and I called Renee and told her the good news. Needless to say, she was a bit jealous!

I located the Business Class lounge at JFK and waited there until my flight was called enjoying a light breakfast as well as a glass of wine before the flight. Why not?

The flight time to Hong Kong was almost 16 hours during which I ate like a king! For airline food, Cathay Pacific serves up dishes that are actually restaurant worthy.

Marinated prawns with grilled asparagus and artichoke mousse

Imperial fried noodles and Chinese dim sum

Chicken with chili vinegar sauce egg fried rice and kalian

 All of that plus a strawberry smoothie, cheese and fruit and a piece of chocolate truffle cake. Oh, and a snack of barbecued duck in noodle soup!  I think I gained weight for sure and the trip had barely started.

I slept comfortably in my pod, watched a few movies and countless television shows before we finally landed in Hong Kong where there was a 2 hour layover before another flight to Ho Chi Minh City.

I arrived in Ho Chi Minh City a little after 6pm on Friday and the amazing thing is that the hustle and bustle of the city starts right at the gate of the airport! There was no break from the din of horns and the frantic frenetic nature of the driving for the entire ride into the city center!

I checked in, showered and went to explore the area.  One curious thing about some hotels in Vietnam is that not all rooms have windows, and mine was one of them.  It certainly made for good sleeping because it was so dark, but it also was a bit cave like and you never knew what time of day it was.

As I ventured out into Ho Chi Minh City, even at almost 9pm, the flow of motor scooters seemed never ending. I later found out that there are about 4 million scooters registered in the city! Incredible!

On my own for a few days before the official tour began, I took advantage of the time and tried to see as much as possible. That first night I found a great little place up an alley and off a side street-The Huong Viet Restaurant (Vietnamese Aroma) where for 250,000 VND (about $12) I had an appetizer of spring rolls followed by beef rolls served with a very light noodle that looked like rolled gauze and just melted in your mouth like cotton candy. I also drank a liter bottle of Tiger beer hoping it would help me sleep.  I was wrong!  I got back to the hotel and fell asleep quickly but was up by 3:30 am-jet lagged and not knowing what day or time it was.

I stayed wide awake until breakfast which turned out to be an interesting and eclectic mix of eastern and western food. But not just breakfast foods, there was spaghetti bolognaise being served right next to the bacon and a steaming pot of Pho simmering by the omelet station.

My first morning was filled with so many sites.  I toured the Reunification Palace, Norte Dame and the Ben Thἀn Market.  By mid afternoon and the temperature was already in the 90’s- a big change from the  winter I was experiencing in New York right before I left-and the heat and lack of sleep had finally caught up, so it was time to head back to the hotel for a cool shower and a very long nap.

 

The largest lacquer painting in the world is housed in the Reunification Palace

The Dining Room

Notre Dame

Ben Thἀn Market

Sunday was my last full day in Ho Chi Minh before I’d met the tour group for our trip to Cambodia the next day.  My first stop after breakfast was The War Remnants Museum. It was extremely interesting to see the Vietnam War from the other side.  It was also no holds barred either in their description of the horrors of the war.  They certainly don’t hold the same feelings towards the French as they do with the Americans. I was actually taken aback a bit, but only because I didn’t fully expect to confront the anger that is still predominate.

I was also surprised to see in the gift shop that they were selling original dog tags. From what I could make out, they looked as though they belonged to South Vietnamese soldiers. I was left to wonder what happened to the original owners of them.  An odd souvenir for purchase.

After the museum I needed a little uplifting so I took a cab across town to Chinatown and the Binh Tay market.  I was really hoping to find some good food stalls but I left disappointed because I could not find a single one! It was mostly house wares and such.  So after a quick snack it was nearly time for me to meet the group I would be with and have our first of many group dinners, so I just headed back to the hotel to get ready.

 

The thing about traveling with a group is that you never know what kind of people you are going to get. Thankfully, everyone seemed really amazing! There were 12 of us total and people came from every corner of the globe; New Zealand, Vancouver, Germany, UK, and a few Americans all ranging in age from mid 20’s to mid 70’s. Our guide, Sky, was Cambodian and really got us excited for the adventure we were about to embark on.

Tomorrow,  an early bus ride to Phnom Penh….

Filed Under: Travel, Featured Posts, Vietnam Tagged With: Ho Chi Minh City, Pho, Travel, Vietnam

Crispy, Sriracha Spiced Chicken Bites Recipe

March 18, 2012 by Renee

20120223-photo-1I’m not gonna lie. I am addicted to Sriracha lately. Addicted! The spicy, sharp flavor combined with a bright, zesty lime and a hint of sweetness from either sugar or honey is one of my favorite taste combinations. My current favorite “snack” comes from Food 52- the Sriracha Fried Brussels Sprouts. I usually can eat the whole pint of sprouts by myself when made with this recipe. It’s that good. (Albeit, a bit of a mess to make- frying Brussels sprouts is dangerous and they splatter hot oil everywhere!!!! Use a very, very deep pot-like a stock pot with a screen on top! Just a warning!)

And since it’s a flavor I love,  I have been experimenting a lot with it to make the perfect sauce for dipping my crispy fried chicken bites into.

Here’s what I came up with and it’s now my ‘go to’ recipe. It makes more sauce than you need, but I like to use it on other things- like broccoli or cauliflower or even over fish.

 

 

Crispy, Sriracha Spiced Chicken Bites

For the Sauce:

Ingredients

½ cup rice wine vinegar

½ cup sugar

2 tablespoons fish sauce

1/3 cup Mirin

¼ cup Sake

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 tablespoon dried crushed chili flakes

5 tablespoon Sriracha hot sauce

1 ½ tablespoons cornstarch, dissolved in 3 tablespoons water

Juice of 1 lime

Method

In a large saucepan, over medium high heat, add the rice wine vinegar, sugar, fish sauce, Mirin, Sake, garlic, chili flakes and Sriracha in a sauce pan and bring to a rolling boil. Taste and adjust the seasonings to your likening. (I love the hot, but sometimes, it’s too hot- so I’ll add a dash more Mirin, Sake and Fish Sauce to balance.)

Reduce heat to low and simmer for 5-6 minutes.

Add the cornstarch-water mixture to the pan and stir until the sauce thickens. Remove from heat and let cool. Squeeze in the lime juice and mix to incorporate. Set aside until ready to use.

For the Chicken:

Ingredients

2lbs boneless chicken breasts, sliced into cubes

½ cup rice flour

½ cup Panko bread crumbs

½ cup cornstarch

2 eggs, beaten

½ cup milk

Method

Create your breading station by adding the dry ingredients into one bowl and the eggs and milk into another bowl.

Dip the cubed chicken into the egg and milk bowl then into the dry ingredients. Coat to cover.

Return the chicken to the egg mixture and then again to the dry ingredients to recoat.

Set all the coated pieces of chicken on a large plate and let stand in the refrigerator for 15-20 minutes.

Heat the oil to 350 degrees in a deep pot or fryer.

Add a few pieces of the chicken at a time to the hot oil being careful not to splatter yourself! Don’t overcrowd the oil. Cook the chicken bites until golden brown. Remove to a plate lined with a paper towel to drain. Repeat until all the chicken is cooked.

In a large bowl add the cooked chicken and drizzle some sauce over the top to coat. You may not have to use all of the sauce, so coat with as much as you would like. Give the chicken in the bowl a quick toss around in the sauce and serve.

The remaining sauce will keep up to a week in the fridge tightly sealed.

Serve over your favorite rice with a side of steamed broccoli and you’ll have your own ‘take out’ for the night!

The bites also make a great appetizer or snack!

 

Filed Under: Eat, Featured Posts, Appetizers, Poultry, Sauces, Dressings and Condiments Tagged With: Fried Chicken, Lime, Recipe, Sriracha, chicken

St. Paddy’s Day- Erin go Bragh! A Menu for the Day

March 17, 2012 by Renee

I should be Irish. I have the requisite red hair, the fair complexion and even a few freckles. William Butler Yeats is my favorite poet (tied with T.S. Eliot, who’s American/English but Shhh!) and I love Guinness and all things Kerrygold.

So it goes without saying that I take St. Paddy’s day a little personal. Well, I don’t do the whole, green paint your face or wear strange shamrocks with glitter on them (unless I have drank all the Guinness), but I do cook up some traditional and some non-traditional Irish fare to celebrate the day.

When we were young newlyweds, Ari and I were regulars at a pub in the West Village, where both the Italian and Irish firemen all moonlighted as bartenders. We would sit at the bar, drink pints of beer and chat with everyone that came in. It wouldn’t take long before the whole place would burst into song and sing an Irish tune called “Four Green Fields”. It was great fun, but one of the best parts of the place was the traditional pub foods they served (along with several dishes that were way more upscale and delicious!) We dined on so many great things that came out their tiny kitchen-that happened to be setup in an alleyway (I wonder what the NYC Dept. of Health’s restaurant grading system would give them today if they were still open…). Anyway, one dish that we loved there was the Shepherd’s Pie.  The meat was cubed and tender, the peas and carrots were fresh and sweet. The mashed potatoes were creamy and the melted, cheesy top gave it such a nice crust and variation of texture. One Au Gratin dish was plenty for two people to share- and sometimes even three.

We used to eat it there at least a few times a month, if not more. But now, we only seem to make Shepherd’s Pie for St. Paddy’s Day or once in a blue moon. We may want to revisit that. It’s the perfect all-in-one meal. Meat, potatoes and vegetables all together in one perfect marriage bound by aged cheddar cheese. Separate, all the parts are perfect. Together? They live in harmony. Both on the plate and in our bellies.

We were on our way to make our standard version of Shepherd’s Pie, but while watching The Chew today and seeing Carla and Clinton make their insanely decadent Eight Layer Shepherd’s Pie, we knew that we had to give this one a try. We made some adjustments to theirs and will note them below. Here’s the link to their recipe–

Our notes:

-They say that the Skill Level is ‘difficult’. It’s not. Not at all. What it is, however, is a lot of little steps that must be done before the final assembly. So, it’s not difficult, it’s time consuming. Very, very time consuming. Like, give yourself a good two hours of prep time if you are doing it all by yourself. It took the two of us, both completing different parts a good hour and fifteen minutes to finish the prep. (And Ari is a pro- so for the rest of us…. extra time.)

-The recipe also states in the Kitchenware (needed) section that it’s a 9×9” baking pan. That’s an error. It should be a 9×13”pan. And make it a deep one!

-It says to use a mandolin, but you certainly don’t have to if you don’t have one.  Just be sure to slice the potatoes very thinly for the first layer.

-For the cheese sauce, it’s important to let the flour and milk mixture come to a small boil to thicken the sauce. Be sure to keep whisking so it doesn’t burn, but the high heat helps the roux and the milk come together. One thing they don’t mention, but you should also do, is to remove the milk from the heat and whisk in the cheese. This prevents it from scalding and burning and sticking to the pot. We also upped the cheese to 1 cup as the sauce was just too liquid and added a healthy pinch of salt because it tasted flat without it.

-For the mashed potato layer, we use our standard potato to butter ratio- 2:1. And butter to heavy cream ratio- 1:1. A la Joël Robuchon. It’s just how we roll. And we added salt to taste here- which, surprisingly, is left out of their recipe.

Some tips to make it all go easier (and faster):

  • Read the entire recipe beforehand. (Sounds like it should be a no-brainer, but you’d be surprised!)
  • Bake the puff pastry first and set aside.
  • Chop/dice/cube all the vegetable you will need for the entire recipe all at once. (You need potatoes and cheese twice, so divide accordingly! Keep the potatoes for layer one in a bowl of water to keep them from turning brown until you need them.)
  • When it’s time to brown the meat, at the same time, go ahead and boil the potatoes so they are ready for mashing when you get to the step for the mashed potatoes. While the potatoes are cooking, cook the peas and carrots and set aside until that step.
  • Salt every layer. A pinch of salt takes food from flat to fantastic.
  • The cheese was just not browning after the allotted time, so we kicked the oven up to broil just to give it some much needed color. And crust. We left off the final step of the fried onions but they would make an excellent addition for sure!

Here’s the finished result-

So how was it, you ask? It was truly decadent. And cheesy.   And deep. The beer flavor really comes out in the cheese sauce. The mashed potatoes and the meat were perfectly seasoned and the entire dish came together in perfect harmony. The puff pastry dough gave it a biscuit like flavor and texture in the middle of all the creaminess.  I loved the cheese topping and its crispy crust that it formed over the mashed potatoes.

Bottom line, it’s definitely a keeper recipe. But, reserved for large gatherings or special occasions. Only because of the time commitment involved in making it. I could see making the cheese sauce for other things though- like cauliflower or pasta.

If you try it, let me know your thoughts. I am always curious to know if people “follow the recipe” or improvise and what they come up with.

We also made Corned Beef, Cabbage and Potatoes. The most traditional Irish meal there is. It’s what everyone thinks of when you say St. Patrick’s Day, so of course, we made this too. Basically, everything goes into a pot of water and cooks until it’s done. The meat first, then the potatoes and then the cabbage.  Served with a good mustard and maybe a splash of vinegar for the cabbage, it’s as easy a meal to make as any. If you are looking to glaze your corned beef, a black current mustard sauce is the most flavorful and you will please all of your guests.

In a small saucepan, over low heat, combine a jar of black current jam with three tablespoons of Dijon mustard. If you prefer a bit spicier, just add more mustard. Once liquid, pour it over the cooked corned beef and serve.  You’d be amazed at how fast your corned beef disappears. It’s also really excellent the next day if you can sneak a slice or two away to save.

Irish Soda Bread is the perfect accompaniment for the pie and the corned beef. The thing about Irish Soda Bread is that there truly is only one recipe with a variation of different ratios. I think from the beginning of time, it just consisted of these simple ingredients. Traditional Irish Soda Bread doesn’t have baking powder or sugar in it. If it does, then it’s cake, not bread. And while you can experiment with different flours, it’s either bread flour or AP Flour that’s traditionally used in Irish kitchens.

 

Irish Soda Bread

Ingredients:

4 cups (16 oz) of all purpose flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
14 oz. of buttermilk

Method:

Preheat the oven to 425 F. degrees.  Lightly grease and flour a round cake pan.

In a large bowl sift and combine all of  the dry ingredients.

Add the buttermilk and mix to form a sticky dough.  Place on a floured surface and lightly knead. Don’t overwork the dough- too much and the gas will escape and leave you with a flatter bread.

Shape the dough into a disc and place it in the round cake pan. Cut a large “X” in the top of the dough.

Cover the pan with an inverted pan and bake for 30 minutes. (This cover simulates the Bastible Pot- or the Dutch Oven traditionally used to make the soda bread in).  Remove cover and bake for an additional 15 minutes.

When completely baked, the bottom of the bread will have a hollow sound when tapped.

Cover the bread in a kitchen towel and lightly sprinkle water on the cloth to keep the bread moist until ready to serve.

Serve warm with your favorite Irish butter!

 

For dessert, we created fun “Green Velvet” Whoopie Pies. The recipe is the same for the one’s I created last Valentine’s Day, just with green food coloring instead of red. They are festive and everyone loves them. We hope you will too.

So, we’ll leave you with this Irish Blessing:

May the Irish hills caress you.
May her lakes and rivers bless you.
May the luck of the Irish enfold you.
May the blessings of Saint Patrick behold you.

For fun pub song’s- try this or this.

Have a great St. Patrick’s Day and remember- Don’t Drink and Drive!

Filed Under: Eat, Featured Posts, Bread, Desserts, Meats Tagged With: Beef, Cabbage, Corned Beef, Ireland, Irish, Lamb, Mashed Potatoes, Potatoes, Shepherd's Pie, Soda Bread, St. Paddy's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Whoopie Pies

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