Dining with Out-Laws
Category Archives: Hot on the Blog
Dining with Out-Laws may sometimes be unwelcomed in the near future…
Filed under Dining with Outlaws, Hot on the Blog, January 2013, Uncategorized
How to Gear Up for the Holidays
Let the festivities begin and Happy Holidays to you! If you’re not feeling festive yet- may I entice you in gearing up for the upcoming month of December? You don’t have to be religious to celebrate Christmas, after all it’s based on a pagan Nordic tradition from the folklore elves to the festive drinks.
Nothing better than celebrating the darkest days of the year with some lights, fairy dust, and gift giving and I can’t think of a better reason to throw another big festive food shindig…can you? I did pretty good this year and got a Canadian Fraser Fir the day after Thanksgiving. Nothing beats a black Friday Christmas tree deal, over six feet tall for under thirty bucks.
I decided to turn myself into the anti-Scrooge this year. Normally I’ld cringe and hiss before family members manage to get me into the holiday mood- occurring sometime towards Christmas Day (the day before to be exact). I just always believed religion and obsessive spending/ indulging in food, drink, and buying excessive unnecessary stuff was just unnecessary and therefore a bit sinful.
But there’s nothing wrong with celebrating the darkest days with lots of light, elves, festive food and drink to warm your soul. Since that’s a strictly unreligious practice- I’m glad to announce I’ve been converted, yay! To gear up for the holidays I’ve managed to prepare:
7. Last but not least. If you get one of these bottles gifted to you this holiday season, you know you’ve been a little naughty this year. P.S. They’re sold at big chain liquor stores and Whole Foods Market nationwide.
That’s about it for today! I hope ya’ll are ready for Christmas! The one thing I didn’t get a chance to get is a furry red sweater with reindeer and snowflakes. Still shopping for one of those cooky sweaters. Where to buy a Cooky Christmas Sweater Guide coming very soon! Happy December Everyone!!
Filed under Dining with Outlaws, Holidays, Hot on the Blog
Favorite Moments: How to Eat Your Favorite Thanksgiving Pie
May I introduce my little pumpkin pie, the ultimate fan favorite Thanksgiving dessert?! Some lifetime memories were made late last night after we devoured two rounds of turkey and glazed ham married with my new kimchi sofrito recipe. Afterwards- we were greeted by the inevitable delectable pumpkin pie, who sat next to a perfect pecan pie. They were both pinched long before dessert time of course. But who can blame a room full of overstuffed adults and children? Not me….and I certainly couldn’t say no to anyone asking for more whipped cream…Hope you had fun with yours, because we certainly did!
Me: Show everyone how to eat pie Daniel, Mommy’s taking pictures with my iPhone!
Daniel takes his FIRST bite of pumpkin pie, EVER.
Me: You didn’t smile. Can you smile for me?
Daniel: Ok, take another picture…CHEESE!!!!!!
Me: That’s such a fake smile Daniel! Ugh- just eat your pie then.
Daniel: Ok.
Daniel: (silent thoughts) This pie sucks. I’m bored. Thanksgiving sucks.
Daniel: (silent thoughts) I’m sooooo bored……
Daniel: (silent thoughts) At least it’s better than more turkey and veggies!
Daniel: (silent thoughts) I wonder if it tastes any different if I cut it into pieces?
Daniel: (silent thoughts) One more piece to go and then I’ll know. Nothing better than pie with whipped cream…yay!
Daniel: Oh no! I’m out of whipped cream!!!!!!!! MOMMY!!!!!! There’s no more whipped cream!
Me: You mean this? You want more?
Daniel: Yay! Yes! Yes! Yes!
Me: Here you go gorgeous! On second thought- do you want to try a big bite of whipped cream?
Daniel: Huh? On my fork?
Me: No. Just open wide!!
Daniel: Um, ok.
Alex: (in the background) Hey what are you doing to Daniel?
Me: You want some too Alex?
Alex: Hey- what are you doing with that thing in my face!!!
Me: Just say Ah- look! It’s really yummy…
Mozie: I don’t think so. Get that device away from my furry face! (jumps off the couch and hides)
And Daniel takes the last big bite before we’re off to sweet dreams….
Daniel: Mommy, can I tell you something? I had so much fun today! I love you very very much Mommy.
Me: I love you more my little black beauty.
Fireworks sparked off somewhere in the distant sky before we were gently swept away into a dreamy landscape with magical unicorns and fairies…
Filed under Favorite Moments, Holidays, Hot on the Blog, November 2012, Uncategorized
How to Drink Juice from a Sippy Cup
Want to know how to be a stylin’ with your juicy juice? Here’s my guide on how to drink from a sippy cup:
Doesn’t juice make everyone happy? It certainly makes me happy…
I hope there’s nothing floating in my sippy cup.
Double check.
I’m so glad I can finally put my feet up at the end of a long day…
The birds are singing outside…the sun’s shining…
There’s nothing I would rather do then..to be sipping on some juice with my sippy cup.
Guess what I’m having!
It’s made with grapes.
Do you want some of this grape juice in a sippy cup?
Filed under Favorite Moments, Hot on the Blog, June 2012, Uncategorized
Favorite Moments: How to Eat a Peach
Howdy! Here’s a whole new category called Favorite Moments where I’ll be sharing how to eat your heart out with style. It’s not just what you’re eating that counts, how you do it makes up about fifty percent of the overall experience. Here’s a guide on how to eat a peach:
“Hello? What? You want to know how to eat a peach? Um…ok. I’ll take some pics with my iphone.”
Hello happy peach.
Fuzzy little thing, aren’t you?
The first bite is always the best…
That was pretty good. I think I must finish eating this fruit.
And a second bite shortly thereafter…
Do you want to try this? I know you do, trust me, it’s really good.
I’m about halfway through eating this.
It’s just me and the peachy peach.
Almost done, down to the pit.
Devoured. The End~
Filed under Favorite Moments, Hot on the Blog, June 2012, Uncategorized
Patjuk, a vegan Winter Solstice Food
On Donjinal (December 22): Patjuk, a red bean porridge is cooked and eaten throughout Korea. It’s popularity stems from the seasonal scarcity of fresh meat and vegetables as a mid-winter food which eventually sustained as an entire meal minus all the side dishes one would normally consume during other seasons.
A popular mysterious belief is that the food drives evil spirits away, brings good harvest in the coming months, and of course good luck. It is typically served with glutinous rice flour cakes formed into small balls that resemble a quail’s egg.
I tweaked my recipe from the traditional method by incorporating cooked rice instead of using raw grain rice to cook the porridge. After all- tis the holidays and less work means more time for other things!
Ingredients
1 cup dry red beans
1 cup cooked medium grain glutinous rice
100 grams glutinous rice flour
6 tablespoons boiling water
1 teaspoons salt
6-8 cups water
Directions
Soak red beans overnight in a medium bowl with water (about 3-4 cups) to cover. Drain water before use.
Bring about 4 cups of water to a boil. Add red beans and allow to cook for about an hour uncovered on a simmer.
Stir in cooked rice, season with salt and pepper and cook for an additional 45 minutes to an hour on a simmer. Mash with a potato masher and stir in steamed rice cakes.
The beauty of this dish is that you can buy your rice cakes instead of making them yourself (which is a labor of love in itself). If you’re like me, you’ve made the rice cakes a few weeks in advance and stored them in the freezer. They’re actually very easy to make, and shouldn’t take longer than 15-20 minutes total prep and cooking time.
Combine salt and flour.
Have your boiling water handy and stir in one tablespoon at a time. Your dough shouldn’t be too mushy or too dry.
Knead your dough for about 5 minutes. Form into small quail size balls and steam them for about 15 minutes until they are completely cooked through. The center should be moist, not dry.
Transfer rice cakes into red bean porridge and serve with kimchi or other banchan on the side. You can also enjoy this on its own!
Filed under December 2011, Holidays, Hot on the Blog, Korean Food at Home, Red Bean Porridge
Feast of the Seven Veggies: Celebrating One Year of Meatless Monday!
Being Korean born and growing up in the US was aberrant when the timely holidays rolled in. Korean holidays are virtually desolate here. My initial Thanksgiving culinary traditions began at fourteen years of age, with the help of a Betty Crocker cookbook purchased at Woolworth’s in Flushing, Queens.
I cooked my first holiday dinner for my parents, aunt, uncle, and cousins. The dishes served were mashed potatoes with gravy, buttermilk biscuits, and stuffed turkey.
Here’s my grownup version of mashed potatoes: Potato gratin. Looking back, I can’t recall serving any green vegetables that year. The tradition continued well into my twenties, where I explored traditional American holiday foods married with my Korean heritage which translated as kimchi on the side.
Patjuk is typically served as a Winter solstice food in Korea (one of very few major Korean holidays).
When I eventually married an Italian American, an entire continent of food emerged and I finally discovered how to enjoy seasonal dishes which included lots of fresh local tomatoes, fresh herbs, and really good cheese. I learned how to adjust my salt in salads according to the season, and pasta went far beyond spaghetti and meatballs. I became versed in fixing up marinara sauce discerning contrasting characteristics between marinara and Sunday sauce. Lasagna had been discovered long before the marriage of two cultures- (I have to credit myself for having perfected it thanks to a handy old copy of a NY Times cookbook I picked up from the Piermont library when I was a teen). In short, I spent the last six years exploring this new and exciting cuisine, discovering porcini mushrooms, risotto, cavetelli, pesto, and an endless repertoire of recipes from family members and cookbooks. I finally began cooking the green vegetables during this time. Our typical holidays included a marriage (literal) of Koreans and Italians. Whether it was Easter, Thanksgiving, or Christmas. It was Italian food with kimchi as its co-star.
Kimchi & soy pajeon, zucchini pajeon.
Cooking Korean food at home meant, there was much tweaking which led to the creation of newly adapted dishes for my big Italian family. I eventually became so involved in cooking that spending six hours in the kitchen seemed conventional and acceptable. To outsiders, it may have looked like I was absolutely manic about food- that’s because I was! I loved food so much that I enrolled into culinary school to really hone my kitchen skills and became a professional chef.
Roasted beets with red onion and champagne vinaigrette.
Last year, I discovered Meatless Monday and when I was asked to submit a holiday post for Food2.com, I ventured into my old handy Betty Crocker cookbook for advise and cooked up American classics with a twist. It was the beginning of a year-long relationship with seasonal vegetables. Here’s a seasonal roasted root vegetables dish: (purple potatoes, heirloom sweet potato, chippolini onions, garlic) below:
This holiday season celebrates my one-year anniversary with going Meatless one day a week! I cooked up a Christmas dinner starring Korean food served up as the Feast of the Seven Veggies! It’s my Korean version of the classic Italian Christmas Eve supper. Christmas for Koreans has become more popularized in recent years and they have a special name for it (seongtanjeol). I made seven main dishes, with matching seven side dishes (banchan) for this special occasion. Some traditional recipes originated from the Royal kitchens of the Joseon Dynasty in Korea. It was a labor of love- the nine delicacies in Gujeolpan were a tad bit time consuming.
I suggest if you’re going to try this at home, give yourself a few days to make the dinner. Start with Gujeolpan, use the leftover veggies to make japchae, cook your vegetables ahead of time and marinade and dress them right before consumption. When the feast is finished, you can have the leftover banchan in a mixed rice bowl (bibimbap) the following day.
No dinner is ever complete without a hot spicy soup at the end! Spicy tofu soups and stews are an absolute food staple made with gochugaru, tofu, and garlic, this version includes kimchi.
Here are the seven Korean style side dishes I made!
Acorn Starch Jelly…looks like jello, sort of tastes like jello- except it’s 100% vegan!
Assorted mushrooms with crushed sesame seeds…
Baby Bok Choy with perilla seeds and sesame oil…
Mung bean sprouts…
Braised Korean peppers with garlic…
Marinated spinach…
What kind of Korean meal is complete without kimchi?! None!
For dessert, I made Songpyeon. A sweet and savory rice cake. It’s typically served up during Chuseok (Korean Thanksgiving according to the Lunar calendar). I’m currently working on finishing up a round up of all the dishes I’ve conjured up this past year for a vegetarian cookbook! Recipes are coming shortly, stay tuned…
Meatless Monday: Vegetarian Pancakes
The last twelve months have been an amazing food adventure. Going meatless every Monday meant putting those creative bugs to work, utilizing ingredients I’ve never used before and thinking outside of the box.
I’ve sourced local produce directly from farmers more often than I’ve bought it from a supermarket, and realized it’s always better and often cheaper buying local and seasonal.
I’ve truly become a Meatless Monday advocate, convincing friends, family and animals to go meatless one day a week. Yes — even animals! I fed my dog tofu several times this year and started including local root vegetables and rice in his diet. Thanks to the folks here at Food2, I’ve gone from amateur food writer to pro.
I’m sad to hear that the end is fast-approaching for the site. I will miss all the irreverant quirkiness! And where am I to go next? I’ll still be going meatless on Mondays, still continuing to make Korean Food at Home (the other food I love, the food I’ve spent countless hours cooking this past year).
I’m off to writing and illustrating a superhero comic book. This isn’t the last you’ve heard from me — I promise there will be more coming soon. Until then, stay tuned. I’ll be back!
Vegetarian Pancakes
Ingredients
1 cup Chinese Chives, sliced into 2″ strips
3 Korean peppers, sliced on the bias
2 California carrots, diced
1 cup sweet rice flour
pinch salt
1 cup water
2 eggs
4 eggs, beaten
Directions
Sautee vegetables in a skillet with two tablespoons of vegetable oil over medium heat. Cook for about two to three minutes, remove and set aside.
Mix batter in a mixing bowl: add flour, salt, water and eggs. Whisk until it’s nice and creamy. Reserve four eggs beaten for finishing the pancakes at the end.
Return cooked vegetables to the skillet with some vegetable oil. Pour about batter over veggies, pour beaten egg (about 1 egg per pancake).
Flip pancake over using spatula. Continue cooking for 2 minutes on each side. Remove, slice and serve!
Food2 Farewell
I’ve decided to prepare a holiday special and given the craziness that comes from shopping, re-organizing, and traveling, most individuals, including myself, don’t want to spend an entire day cooking on that special day. So I’ve started to prep my holiday meal ahead of time, by slowly purchasing groceries, cleaning, and pre-cooking them. To kick it off, I found these cute baby radishes and California carrots last week.
I blanched them in boiling water for a few minutes, threw them in an ice bath and into a ziplock bag for the freezer. I’ll see you soon little vegetables…to be continued…
Rina Oh is an artist, writer and chef and a Meatless Monday advocate. For the last year these Meatless Mondays recipes have appeared on Food2.com, a website that is owned and operated by Scripps Networks. These posts are copyrighted material and any photographs, illustrations or written material are forbidden to be used or reposted anywhere without permission. For more information on Meatless Monday, please visit meatlessmonday.com
Filed under December 2011, Food2, Hot on the Blog, Meatless Mondays, Pancakes, Rina's Food2 recipes
Korean Food at Home: Seaweed Soup
Seaweed is an amazing plant. It’s a silky, virtually guiltless food that works miracles for any type of cleansing diet. Usually green, but sometimes brown or purple, it grows in the ocean. Coastal farmers throughout the world raise and dry them. Although I grew up far away from the ocean, I consumed seaweed quite frequently: whether it was roasted, cooked, or served as a cold salad. You can add some to your noodle soup or simply make an entire meal out of it! Some experts believe compounds found in limited varieties of seaweed called fucoxanthin can even assist in breaking down stored fat cells in your body.
Miyeok guk (Korean seaweed soup) is consumed on four main occasions: A newborn’s 100th day, baby’s first birthday, women’s postpartum diet (consumed with every meal for six consecutive weeks), parents 60th birthday and more generally on every birthday. Pair it with rice and a few side dishes of banchan, and you’re good to go.
Korean Seaweed Soup Miyeok Guk
Ingredients
4 cups water
½ cup sirloin beef, cut into small cubes
1 cup dried seaweed (miyeok), re-hydrated in water for 30 minutes
1 tablespoon dashida (instant beef stock)
1 teaspoon salt
Directions
Rinse re-hydrated seaweed under cold running water.
Place beef cubes in cold water and bring to a boil. Skim impurities.
Add seaweed, dried stock and cook at medium heat uncovered for about 30 minutes.
Season to taste with salt. Enjoy!
TIP: You can substitute 4 cups of real beef stock for the dashida and water: remember the leftover stock I recommended you freeze!
Rina Oh is an artist, writer and chef. This post was originally appeared in Korean Food at Home on Food2.com, a website that is owned and operated by Scripps Networks. These posts are copyrighted material and any photographs, illustrations or written material are forbidden to be used or reposted anywhere without permission. For more information on Meatless Monday, please visit meatlessmonday.com
Filed under Hot on the Blog, Korean Food at Home, November 2011, Seaweed, Soups
Meatless Monday: Butternut Squash Soup with Spinach and Cocao Nib Grissini
Growing up, I never imagined I’d be able to eat chocolate with my favorite soup and bread. That is, until I came across the incredible versatility of the cocoa nib. It’s what chocolate looks and tastes like before it is ground into a paste – not quite as sweet, not quite as chocolatey; perfect for savory dishes. For this recipe, I used Pure Dark Caramelized Cocoa Nibs. It’s a pairing you’ll fall in love with, just as I have.
Butternut Squash Soup with Spinach & Cocoa Nib Grissini
Ingredients
For the Soup and saffron potato garnish:
1 butternut squash, oven roasted
1 medium white onion, chopped
1 garlic clove, minced
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 quart vegetable stock
1 cup water
1 teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon all spice
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup heavy cream
2 medium potatoes, peeled and diced
a pinch of saffron
For Grissini:
2 cups All Purpose flour
1 teaspoon kosher salt
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 package dry active yeast, proofed in ½ cup warm water
1 cup fresh spinach, blanched and rinsed in cold water
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
Cooking spray
Directions
In a large stock pot, place olive oil and onions and allow to cook on a low simmer until onions are translucent for about five minutes. Add garlic and continue cooking for 2-3 more minutes.
Deglaze with vegetable stock, add butternut squash and spices. Season with salt and pepper to taste and continue cooking for 15-20 more minutes. Stir in heavy cream. Blend soup in batches until it’s nice and creamy.
Place potatoes in cold water with pinch of saffron and allow to cook for about 10 minutes in medium heat until they are tender. Set aside.
Place spinach in a food processor and pulse with a tablespoon of olive oil until nice and creamy.
Combine flour, olive oil, salt and yeast mixture and gently knead for about 5 minutes. Add creamed spinach and continue kneading mixture for another 2-3 minutes.
Place dough in a greased bowl, covered for about 20-30 minutes and allow it to rise.
Grease baking sheets with cooking spray. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Section dough into small strips, roll out with fingers and gently twist at one end.
Place cocoa nibs on top, spray cooking spray on top. Place in preheated oven and bake for 12-15 minutes until golden brown.
Remove and serve with butternut squash soup!
Rina Oh is an artist, writer and chef and a Meatless Monday advocate. For the last year these Meatless Mondays recipes have appeared on Food2.com, a website that is owned and operated by Scripps Networks. These posts are copyrighted material and any photographs, illustrations or written material are forbidden to be used or reposted anywhere without permission. For more information on Meatless Monday, please visit meatlessmonday.com
Filed under Hot on the Blog, Meatless Mondays, November 2011, Rina's Food2 recipes, Soups