Monthly Archives: January 2018

Korean Japchae (Stir-Fried Vermicelli with Vegetables)

8-22-2017-Japchae-03

Brighten your culinary palate with this noodle dish traditionally served at large banquets. Korean restaurants offer this popular dish as an appetizer. It’s also a great way to use any leftovers you may have!

Korean Japchae (Stir-Fried Vermicelli with Vegetables)

By Rina Oh

Ingredients

  • ¼ cup sunflower oil
  • ½ cup julienned carrots
  • 2 cups baby spinach
  • 1 cup thin-sliced shiitake mushrooms
  • 1 zucchini, julienned
  • 4 ounces boneless beef short ribs, sliced very thinly
  • 6 ounces Korean vermicelli (cellophane noodles)
  • 4 quarts water
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon sesame seeds

Directions

  1. Heat oil in a nonstick pan over high heat; add carrots, season with salt and pepper, and sauté until slightly softened, about 2 minutes. Transfer carrots to a large bowl. Repeat sauté process with spinach, mushrooms, and zucchini, respectively.
  2. Sauté beef in the remaining oil until browned completely, about 3 minutes; transfer to a cutting board and slice into thin slicers approximately the size of the vegetables.
  3. Bring water to a rolling boil in a large pot. Cook vermicelli at a boil until soft and stretchy, about 6 minutes; drain.
  4. Toss noodles with the vegetables in the bowl. Stir soy sauce, sugar, and sesame oil together in a small bowl to dissolve the sugar; pour over the noodles and vegetables and toss to coat.
  5. Divide noodles and vegetables between four bowls; garnish with sesame seeds to serve.

 

Tip: Prepare ingredients ahead of time and reserve in the refrigerator to help save time in planning healthy meals for the week! You can purchase the Korean vermicelli noodles at Asian Markets or online.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Dining with Outlaws, Hot on the Blog, Korean, Korean Food at Home, Recipes

Korean Bulgogi Sliders

Korean Bulgogi Sliders

Korean Bulgogi Sliders

Take your sliders to the next level and add some Unami to it by marinating your protein with Korean BBQ sauce. It’s packed with flavor that is a bit different and familiar at the same time!

Korean Bulgogi Sliders

By Rina Oh

Servings: 4

Time: 2 hours

Ingredients

  • Buns:
  • ½ cup lukewarm water
  • 1 tablespoon yeast
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 whole egg
  • 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • Sliders:
  • 1 pound ground beef
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon pepper
  • 1 teaspoon rice wine vinegar
  • 2 scallions, sliced thinly

Directions

  1. Mix water and yeast with sugar and allow to proof for 5 minutes in a warm area; add egg with vegetable oil and mix thoroughly.
  2. Combine dry ingredients and add liquid mixture. Knead the dough for a few minutes. Cover and allow to rise for 1 ½ hours in a warm area.
  3. Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C).
  4. Prepare grill for direct high heat (450°F to 500°F; 230°C to 600°C).
  5. Divide dough into 8 to 10 or smaller balls if desired.
  6. Bake in the oven for 12 to 15 minutes until golden brown.
  7. Combine all the ingredients for the sliders. Form mixture into small patties.
  8. Preheat grill on high and brush the patties with vegetable oil. Place on grill and cook to desired temperature; remove patties from grill once they are cooked and allow to rest for 5 minutes.
  9. Slice buns with a serrated knife and place patties on top; garnish with scallions if desired.

Tips: For medium, cook at high temperature for 3 minutes on each side. For well done, cook at temperature for 5 minutes on each side.

Leave a Comment

Filed under American Food, Dining with Outlaws, Food Porn, Hot on the Blog, Korean, Korean Food at Home, Recipes

Vegan Red Kidney Bean Stuffed Peppers in a Tagine

Vegan Red Kidney Bean Stuffed Peppers in a Tagine

Vegan Red Kidney Bean Stuffed Peppers in a Tagine

 

Happy Meatless Monday! Make this Indigenous Cuisine inspired vegan stuffed peppers utilizing all the spices traditionally used with ground meat recipes. I added my new favorite grain, kasha to this mixture that provides the perfect combination of complete proteins to get your body the essential nutrients it needs, craves, and wants- minus all the animals. Treat yourself to a great healthy start to the week!

 

Vegan Red Kidney Bean Stuffed Peppers in a Tagine

Recipe by Rina Oh

 

Ingredients

2 cups red kidney beans, cooked

1 cup corn kernels, cooked

1 cup kasha, cooked

1 small onion

1 cup fresh parsley

4 medium peppers

4 small tomatillos

1 roma tomato

2 jalapeno

1 teaspoon garlic ground

1 tablespoon paprika

1 teaspoon cumin ground

salt

pepper

 

 

Directions

Combine red kidney beans and parsley with paprika, salt, and garlic powder. Pulse for 30 seconds until mixture is coarsely chopped; transfer to a bowl; add kasha, corn, and toss together.

Using the same processor, combine tomatillos, roma tomato, onion, jalapeno, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Process for about 1 minute on high speed.

Slice pepper tops off leaving about ½ inch. Remove the seeds and discard. Add stuffing mixture and press firmly down midway through. Pour tomato mixture into tagine or baking tray and cover peppers with tops. Cover the tagine with lid or baking tray with foil and bake in the oven for about 2 hours. Remove from oven and divide into four bowls. Serve immediately!

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Food for the Fashion People, Food Porn, Hot on the Blog, Meatless Mondays, Recipes, Uncategorized, Vegan, Vegetarian

Magical Farmstead Feast with Sprinkles of Fairy Dust

  • JBF-1-27-2018-Mise-en-Place-07
  • Smoked Wagyu Beef Liver Pâté with Giardiniera, Toasted Hazelnuts, and Housemade Mustard
  • JBF-1-27-2018-Croquettes-07
  • JBF-1-27-2018-Tartare-05
  • 1-27-2018-Rina-at-Beard-House-01
  • Beard House Bathroom selfies
  • Takeda Farms Reserve Wagyu Beef Crudo with Fermented Corn, Farm Radish, Smoked Foam, Red Fife Bread Crumbs, Shaved Bone Marrow, and Farm Corn Shoots
  • Chicken and Mushrooms > Chicken Sausage with Crispy Chicken Chips, Local Oyster Mushrooms, Housemade Ricotta, Salsa Verde, and Fennel Fronds
  • JBF-1-27-2018-Pork-Skin-Noodles-02
  • Joseph Decuis Wagyu Beef Rib-Eye with Sunchoke–Chestnut Purée, Potato Confit, Farm Carrots, Spinach Purée, and Demi-Glace
  • Joseph Decuis Farm Wild Pawpaw–Persimmon Sorbet
  • Flambe the clams
  • JBF-1-27-2018-Chefs-in-the-Kitchen-31
  • JBF-1-27-2018-Banana-Pudding-03
  • Banana Cream Pie with Vanilla Wafer Crust, Malibu Dulce de Leche, Pastry Cream, Toasted Meringue, and Bananas
  • MAGICAL FARMSTEAD FEAST Sat, January 27, 2018

I only write about memorable dining experiences, and this dinner from last night was certainly magical. The aura of the chefs in the kitchen filled me with so much joy, and hope that we are all doing the right thing. I sat alone near the kitchen with a nearby table full of doctors who didn’t mind my occasional blurts intruding on their conversations. We shared our love for the same meal.

1-27-2018-Rina-at-Beard-House-01

Waiting for my date to arrive in the James Beard House dining room.

Beard House Bathroom selfies

Beard House Bathroom selfies series continued…

I started taking selfies at the Beard House recently, it only makes sense. I spend on average 40-50 days out of the year here. So that’s about 6 hours times 40-50 times every year. That’s a lot of time spent in one restaurant! Why didn’t I think about doing this sooner? I should’ve taken advantage of the mirrored bathroom earlier. I love taking photos of myself making faces in different poses! Ha!

Takeda Farms Reserve Wagyu Beef Crudo with Fermented Corn, Farm Radish, Smoked Foam, Red Fife Bread Crumbs, Shaved Bone Marrow, and Farm Corn Shoots

Takeda Farms Reserve Wagyu Beef Crudo with Fermented Corn, Farm Radish, Smoked Foam, Red Fife Bread Crumbs, Shaved Bone Marrow, and Farm Corn Shoots

Getting back to the dinner last night. We had our stomachs filled with Wagyu beef from the Moon. I usually don’t like the taste of any red meat crudo, however this one sang in my mouth. It could’ve been the crisp fermented radish paired with it, with the crunchiness of the corn, and little bits of foamy stuff going in there as well.

Chicken and Mushrooms > Chicken Sausage with Crispy Chicken Chips, Local Oyster Mushrooms, Housemade Ricotta, Salsa Verde, and Fennel Fronds

Chicken and Mushrooms > Chicken Sausage with Crispy Chicken Chips, Local Oyster Mushrooms, Housemade Ricotta, Salsa Verde, and Fennel Fronds

After that we had this chicken sausage, that came with a very crispy pork skin or chicken skin? It tasted really good. The sausage itself was a bit salty- overall most of the dinner was on the saltier side. It’s meant to be consumed with all the wines I figured, although I prefer more whites and rose wine these days.

JBF-1-27-2018-Pork-Skin-Noodles-02

Mangalista Pork Skin Noodles with Housemade ‘Nduja, Manila Clams, Sherry Vinegar, Cracklings, and Farm Herbs

The Mangalista Pork Skin Noodles were a big fustian mark. I wasn’t a fan of the noodles and I loved the clams in the sauce. It sang in my mouth. The clams were barely touched by fire and I watched as the chef sautéed those little guys and drowned them in white wine in a flambe afterwards.

Flambe the clams

Flambe the clams!

Joseph Decuis Wagyu Beef Rib-Eye with Sunchoke–Chestnut Purée, Potato Confit, Farm Carrots, Spinach Purée, and Demi-Glace

Joseph Decuis Wagyu Beef Rib-Eye with Sunchoke–Chestnut Purée, Potato Confit, Farm Carrots, Spinach Purée, and Demi-Glace

I felt like a real voyeur last night, one whom graduated from being a seer to a creator of something new, you now see the images of the chefs from a cook’s point of view. I started taking my shots in angles that would only come from someone who’s actually in the kitchen cooking or working the line. I started calling out “behind”, “corner”- like the good old days. I miss cooking like this.

Joseph Decuis Farm Wild Pawpaw–Persimmon Sorbet

Joseph Decuis Farm Wild Pawpaw–Persimmon Sorbet

This persimmon sorbet was everything. I’m hungry today thinking about it.

JBF-1-27-2018-Banana-Pudding-03

And finally the finale was this spectacular-spectacular Banana Cream Pie with Vanilla Wafer Crust. I can still taste the crispy wafer crust and melting meringue in my mouth. I should’ve finished it last night but there’s that diet I keep talking about. Oh well- maybe I’ll really start it tomorrow.

I’m off to the market now to buy some fish for Daniel. I got a sudden urge to make brussels sprouts with a white fish and butternut squash.

Until we meet again Mr. James Beard. (Literally next week)

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Dinners at the James Beard House 2017, James Beard House, Restaurants, Short Ribs, The James Beard Foundation, Uncategorized

Buddhist Tea with Corinne Trang, Holistic Teacher, Yogi, Author

  • Dining with Outlaws has High Tea with Corinne Trang
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-02
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-03
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-04
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-05
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-06
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-07
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-08
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-09
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-10
  • Tea-Corinne-Trang-11

 

I met Corinne through the Mealthy Team whom I got a chance to work with a few months ago as their recipe editor. Corinne’s recipes caught my attention and I started following her on Instagram, and then there was a day that we needed her to resend some images, and the rest is history. I was thrilled to be invited to visit her in her home upstate. It was over an hour for me to drive there but worth the trip.

Tea-Corinne-Trang-02

We had a traditional Chinese gong fu tea service that lasted approximately 2 and a half hours. There were four teas that we drank, each steeped several times. You start by pouring the hot water into a vessel called “gaiwan”—meaning cup and lid—and the tiny teacups to warm them up. Then you pour out the water into a large discard bowl. Then you add the tea leaves in the gaiwan and pour water on top, pouring out the water immediately into the discard bowl again. That step rinses and awakens the leaves. This is an essential step to serving oolongs and black teas, but green teas don’t generally need rinsing. Then you add water on the wet leaves again and steep for about 5 to 10 seconds (yes that little!), depending on the tea. The infusion, referred to as “soup,” is decanted into a glass “fairness” pitcher, insuring that each serving has the same balanced flavor. Corinne generously poured every single tea, offering several steeps for each type, as the leaves can be reused several times, about 7 to 9 times on average. The experience showed her beautiful humility, acquired over time from studying Hinduism, Buddhism, and The Way of Tea.

Tea-Corinne-Trang-04

The first tea was green tea called “Mao Jian,” therefore not oxidized, and its 2nd and 3rd steeps were the most intense., the first just awakening the leaves. It was steeped in a gaiwan. The water used in steeping tea has a ph level of 6.5 to 7, ever so slightly acidic, like tea, to neutral.

 

Tea-Corinne-Trang-04

She followed that with a semi-oxidized tea (about 40%), aka “oolong,” called “Chi Ye”. It is from the Phoenix Mountains in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong. Unlike the vibrant, grassy green tea, this one had a deep floral note. She steeped that one at 93°C. The first steep was 5 seconds. We steeped it 3 times, the flavor intensifying a little more with each steep. The third steep brought out the true characteristics of this tea at its peak. In the spiritual practice of tea, Cha Dao, steeping the tea until it returns to water allows you to experience the arc of the tea all the way to the end, appreciating the journey. Corinne carries this technique when selecting teas from the new harvest, in order to understand the tea fully, from aroma to taste and mouthfeel. Drinking tea this way also allows you to slowly release the energy of tea, which in turn allows you to maintain energy throughout the day. The experience is both stimulating and relaxing.

Tea-Corinne-Trang-08

Corinne brought out some special fermented tea called “puerh,” at the end. She explained you can actually get “tea drunk” if you drink too much and especially if you are not used to it. Again, drinking it slowly over several very short steeps, will offer a pleasant journey. Some of these teas can be steeped at least 12 times and often more than 15.

Tea-Corinne-Trang-06

The 4th tea we had was made in the year 2009. “Purple Tip” “shou,” or cooked, puerh. It was musty and sweet and very calming. We agreed to set a future date for another tea party event and I can’t wait to have tea with Corinne again! I was pretty high by the time I left.

Tea-Corinne-Trang-10

 

CORINNE TRANG
Award-winning Author, Chef, Consultant, Holistic Health and Nutrition Counselor, Tea Purveyor
Skype: “corinnetrang”

Cell: 917-657-0193
Email: ct@corinnetrang.com

www.corinnetrang.com

http://amzn.to/pev7hE

www.liquidgoldtea.com

Corinne Trang is the award-winning author of several books including the most recently published “Switch It Up: A Fresh Take on Quick and Easy Diabetes-Friendly Recipes for a Balanced Life” (2017), “Asian Flavors Diabetes Cookbook” (ADA, 2012), “Noodles Every Day” (2009), “Curry Cuisine” (2007), “The Asian Grill” (2006), “A Food Lover’s Companion: Vietnamese” (2006),” “Essentials of Asian Cuisine” (2003), and “Authentic Vietnamese Cooking” (1999), and has contributed to many more including “The Encyclopedia of Food & Culture” (Scribners & Sons, 2006). She has served as spokesperson to various national brands and commodities such as Kame and Thai Kitchen. Dubbed the “Julia Child of Asian Cuisine” by the Washington Post, she is a frequent television and radio guest and has appeared on national, regional, and cable network including NBC’s Today Show, CBS’s Early Morning Show, PBS, FOX News, ABC, CNN, Lifetime, Discovery, Food Network, Sirius, Business Talk Radio, National Public Radio, and Bloomberg to name a few. She has written for numerous publications including Saveur, Food & Wine, Fine Cooking, Islands, Gourmet, Cooking Light, and Bon Appetit, and has taught and lectured internationally. She has worked as a food consultant to not-for-profits, developing mindful cooking workshops for children and adults alike. She maintains a holistic health and nutrition practice integrating yoga, meditation, and mindful food practices. Trang is also the founder of Liquid Gold Tea,  a wholesale and retail source for handcrafted premium whole leaf tea, Gong Fu Cha tea service, Cha Dao meditation, private instruction and custom tea events.
Corinne Trang is a member of Les Dames d’Escoffier, NY Chapter. 

Here is the 2018 Tea schedule for lessons and events with Corinne Trang:

Get in touch for details…

 

🍵 January 20 & 21 – Pop-up T-Bar & Shop
Northern Grade Barn Days, Bruceville Road, High Falls, NY 12440

from 11 AM to 6:00 PM – free tasting

🍵 January 27 – Healing with Tea

Cook Space Brooklyn603 Bergen Street, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11238

from 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop RSVP 718-230-8400

🍵 January 28 – Cha Dao, The Way of Tea

Whole Sky Yoga10 Old Rt 213, Ste 2S, High Falls, NY

from 1 to 4 PM – workshop RSVP 845-706-3668

🍵 February 1 – The Power of Tea for Good Health
sponsored by The Roundout Valley Holistic Health Community
Stone Ridge, NY Free event

_________

 

bluecashew kitchen homestead

37b North Front Street, Kingston, NY

for details, and to RSVP for workshops, call 845 514 2300

🍵 February 4 – In- store Tea Tasting, 11 AM to 6 PM – free tasting

🥑 February 17 – Oodles of Noodles, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🍵 February 18 – Tea 101: History, Origins & Tasting, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🥑 February 24 – Dumplings and Spring Rolls, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🥑 March 3, 2018 – Wok This Way, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🥑 March 10, 2018 – Yakitori & The Art of Japanese Grilling, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🥑 🍵 March 18 – Cheese & Tea: A Farm To Table Tasting, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

🥑 March 24, 2018 – Congee: China to Japan, Vietnam to India, 1 PM to 4 PM – workshop

 

More events coming up!

be sure to subscribe for updates at

www.corinnetrang.com and www.liquidgoldtea.com

 

1 Comment

Filed under High Tea, Uncategorized