I am at the time of this writing having some fun with a vintage pressure cooker that my friend Jim Dreier found for me at a rummage sale. He and his wife Cindy are the consummate "rummage salers". They make it a part of their weekend event schedule and if I am looking for something I ask Jim if he could find it for me and he usually does. He found me a KitchenAid stand mixer and this pressure cooker. He's amazing. We have been friends since my 5th grade year in school and we hunt deer together and hang out at his grandparents' homestead in Toimi, MN, a place I call "Paradise in the North Woods". I digress. The cooker he found me was a Mirro-Matic Pressure Cooker and it is quite large. I tested it for pressure at 5 lbs, 10 lbs, and 15 lbs and it functioned perfectly. He paid $2.00 for it and it is excellent!
My first recipe is an adaptation of an Emeril LaGasse recipe for white beans; a Mexican quick meal consisting of Chorizo, white beans, Ancho chilies, Lime juice, Tequila, salt and pepper. I substituted Hot Italian Sausage and made it into meatballs about 1 1/2" in diameter. I had the rest of the ingredients and started at 10lbs for 45 minutes and then tested for doneness and taste. It was good but the beans were a little too hard so I put re-set the cooker at 15 lbs and cooked for another 15 minutes and that was the right amount of time.
The meatballs are very tender and the beans are just nicely cooked. Very tasty as well, I might add. I think this is going to be a fun way to cook. I am going to order a cookbook from my cookbook club featuring pressure cooker recipes and start to experiment. I will report my findings along the way and give you the recipes to try as well.
Cooking under pressure,
Tim
Friday, July 30, 2010
Monday, July 26, 2010
Smoked Tomato, pepper and onion ragu
Tonight it is good to get back to the smoker to try a little different take on my smoked pepper and onion ragu to add some tomatoes to the party and see how it comes out. I fired up the smoker with some basic hardwood fire and then added some wet apple wood to the fire for an hour and a half for a "cold smoke" treatment on the vegetables. After removing them from the smoke, I put them in a food processor and ground them to about 1/8" pcs. Wonderful smell, good flavor and success at the smoker for tonight. I think I will try to sell this stuff to a local restaurant for a condiment to their Bison Burgers; we'll see.
I recently met a new friend named Scott at our place on Lake Kabetogama while we were there for a weekend. He is from Stillwater, MN and I offered him some of my Smoked Salt for the Porterhouse Steaks he was cooking for he and his friend. I didn't think anything of it initially, but he called me a few days later and really enjoyed the salt on his steaks as a finishing salt. He said he would like to use it on his ribs as a shortcut to soaking the ribs in Liquid Smoke for while. I ended up sending him a jar of my Smoked Salt as a complimentary gift to him for his interest. He had some helpful tips for possibly marketing my salt and whatever else I come up with to you folks who might be interested. I am offering the Smoked Salt at $4.95/2oz. jar plus shipping and handling. If there is an interest, contact me at tmettner@gmail .com. and I will ship it to you for your culinary enjoyment.
I recently met a new friend named Scott at our place on Lake Kabetogama while we were there for a weekend. He is from Stillwater, MN and I offered him some of my Smoked Salt for the Porterhouse Steaks he was cooking for he and his friend. I didn't think anything of it initially, but he called me a few days later and really enjoyed the salt on his steaks as a finishing salt. He said he would like to use it on his ribs as a shortcut to soaking the ribs in Liquid Smoke for while. I ended up sending him a jar of my Smoked Salt as a complimentary gift to him for his interest. He had some helpful tips for possibly marketing my salt and whatever else I come up with to you folks who might be interested. I am offering the Smoked Salt at $4.95/2oz. jar plus shipping and handling. If there is an interest, contact me at tmettner@gmail .com. and I will ship it to you for your culinary enjoyment.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Antipasti at the lake
This past weekend Teresa and I spent at our place on Lake Kabetogama in Northern Minnesota. We normally would have an easy Friday night dinner of Coneys and Potato Salad but based on the groom's dinner our dinner group did for our friends Casey and Mark's son Jon we decided to do an easier Salumi platter instead. I stopped at the Italian Village store on Central Ave. in Duluth for the Italian Sopresata and Prosciutto. It is a wonderful little shop specializing in all things Italian and serving lunches and various other goodies. I also bought some Ca De Medici Lambrusco for the beverage and some good cheeses and Calamata Olives as well as some Bleu Cheese Stuffed Olives. Then it was a trip to the Northern Waters Smoke Haus for some Smoked Whitefish and that topped off the platter. It was excellent and I think we'll make that a tradition for our first night there at the lake! We polished off the bottle of Lambrusco and it was a very pleasant evening indeed.
Tim
Tim
Thursday, July 8, 2010
new Restaurant find
Teresa and I re-visited our new find, G.B. Schneider & Co. at 46th ave. west in Duluth, MN. I had their pot roast and it was absolutely amazing! the gravy was perfect. The beef was perfectly cooked and Capitol "T" tender and the vegetables the same. Gary Schneider is an amazing chef!
I asked him if I could tour the kitchen and I told him that I designed residential kitchens but I am so intrigued by commercial kitchens that I need to see how his works. He told me that would be fine so I hope to see it soon. Back to the food; Teresa had their Chicken Pot Pie and it was excellent as well! Instead of a traditional savory crust on the top there was a flaky crust with some sweet potato in it and it was marvelous! A bit unconventional, but I thought it was amazing! Serious comfort food as their sign says. I highly recommend this new spot if you can get there. Try the Lake Superior Kayak Kolsch on tap while you're there, it's excellent!
Eat on!
Tim
I asked him if I could tour the kitchen and I told him that I designed residential kitchens but I am so intrigued by commercial kitchens that I need to see how his works. He told me that would be fine so I hope to see it soon. Back to the food; Teresa had their Chicken Pot Pie and it was excellent as well! Instead of a traditional savory crust on the top there was a flaky crust with some sweet potato in it and it was marvelous! A bit unconventional, but I thought it was amazing! Serious comfort food as their sign says. I highly recommend this new spot if you can get there. Try the Lake Superior Kayak Kolsch on tap while you're there, it's excellent!
Eat on!
Tim
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Groom's Dinner
It has been a "screaming busy" Summer so far and I have been woefully lacking in the new post department so I apologize for the lack of attention to this blog.
This past Friday night our gourmet dinner group did a Groom's Dinner for the wedding of one of our owns Son. Casey and Mark LaCore's son Jon was married to Kelly Norri on Saturday, July 2nd and we did the dinner after the practice. It began about a week ago with a brainstorming session at Bruce and Lisa Reeves' house where we talked about the menu. She said it would be simple thing, just some easy stuff to snack on, nothing fancy: Ha! It was a 5 course Italian dinner! She just can't help herself! After all, she had just come back from a trip to Italy to take part in a Culinary School.
Anyway, as a result we decided to do the same format for the dinner using some of her recipes from the school and a few other items based on requests from the wedding couple and some things we shouldn't serve. We settled on an Antipasti course of Caprese Salad and Prosecco.
Next was the Primi course of Pasta, a sort of lasagna made with Eggplant, Zuchini, Marinara sauce, cheeses, etc., served with a nice Placido 2008 Chianti. The next course was the meat, which consisted of a Chicken Salad with Roasted Red Peppers, Olives, Red Onion, Crushed Red Pepper and Gorgonzola cheese served in a toast cup along with A Walleye dish braised in milk and olive oil and stuffed with sweated onions, garlec, parsley and anchovies also served with the Chianti. Both of these were most excellent! I will be adding these to my go-to repertoire. The next course was the Formaggi, or cheese course. We did a variety of hard Italian cheeses along with a couple of requested other types.
We also did a roasted vegetable course and I apologize for not remembering the Italian names for all of these but I don't have the menu in front of me and I am afraid I will butcher the spelling of those names. The vegetables were Red Onions, Zuchini, Asparagus, etc.. The final course of Dessert, or Dolce was four kinds of Fresh Berry Cobbler prepared by Anita Barr and served with some good Colombian Coffee. Then, of course there must be the Digestivo of Limoncello to cap the evening. We started serving at about 7:00 pm and I think we finished around 10:00 or 10:30. It was an absolute blast to do and It was actually our second Groom's Dinner for this family; the LaCores' son Brian was married a few years ago and we served that one on the shore of Schultz Lake at the home of Lisa's parents, the Jeronimuses.
During the course of our cooking and prepping we continued to kick around the idea of doing a once monthly dinner like a Chef's Table sort of theme and invite our friends and acquaintances to make a donation to offset the food and wine costs and we would like to bless them with great food and we will enjoy the process of cooking it and sharing it with them as well as develop some great relationships along the way. I would like to hear from any of you that read these food wanderings and let me know what you think and if you would be interested in participating with us.
Good eating,
Tim
This past Friday night our gourmet dinner group did a Groom's Dinner for the wedding of one of our owns Son. Casey and Mark LaCore's son Jon was married to Kelly Norri on Saturday, July 2nd and we did the dinner after the practice. It began about a week ago with a brainstorming session at Bruce and Lisa Reeves' house where we talked about the menu. She said it would be simple thing, just some easy stuff to snack on, nothing fancy: Ha! It was a 5 course Italian dinner! She just can't help herself! After all, she had just come back from a trip to Italy to take part in a Culinary School.
Anyway, as a result we decided to do the same format for the dinner using some of her recipes from the school and a few other items based on requests from the wedding couple and some things we shouldn't serve. We settled on an Antipasti course of Caprese Salad and Prosecco.
Next was the Primi course of Pasta, a sort of lasagna made with Eggplant, Zuchini, Marinara sauce, cheeses, etc., served with a nice Placido 2008 Chianti. The next course was the meat, which consisted of a Chicken Salad with Roasted Red Peppers, Olives, Red Onion, Crushed Red Pepper and Gorgonzola cheese served in a toast cup along with A Walleye dish braised in milk and olive oil and stuffed with sweated onions, garlec, parsley and anchovies also served with the Chianti. Both of these were most excellent! I will be adding these to my go-to repertoire. The next course was the Formaggi, or cheese course. We did a variety of hard Italian cheeses along with a couple of requested other types.
We also did a roasted vegetable course and I apologize for not remembering the Italian names for all of these but I don't have the menu in front of me and I am afraid I will butcher the spelling of those names. The vegetables were Red Onions, Zuchini, Asparagus, etc.. The final course of Dessert, or Dolce was four kinds of Fresh Berry Cobbler prepared by Anita Barr and served with some good Colombian Coffee. Then, of course there must be the Digestivo of Limoncello to cap the evening. We started serving at about 7:00 pm and I think we finished around 10:00 or 10:30. It was an absolute blast to do and It was actually our second Groom's Dinner for this family; the LaCores' son Brian was married a few years ago and we served that one on the shore of Schultz Lake at the home of Lisa's parents, the Jeronimuses.
During the course of our cooking and prepping we continued to kick around the idea of doing a once monthly dinner like a Chef's Table sort of theme and invite our friends and acquaintances to make a donation to offset the food and wine costs and we would like to bless them with great food and we will enjoy the process of cooking it and sharing it with them as well as develop some great relationships along the way. I would like to hear from any of you that read these food wanderings and let me know what you think and if you would be interested in participating with us.
Good eating,
Tim
Labels:
Chef's Table,
Groom's Dinner,
Italian food,
wine
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Fishing in Canada, good friends, good food
Fishing In Canada has always been a thrill for me. I have been going there to the same fly-in resort since 1989 with my good friend Gordy Larsen. This time we brought along my friend Ted Sexton and we spent a week together at Art Latto's Wilderness Cabins on Churchill Lake. He has four of these outposts and I have been to all of them over the years. The fishing is so good that if I described it you probably would not believe me. Let's just say that 200 Walleyes a day is not out of the question! True story! The resort is about 400 miles North of Duluth to the base camp and then a 50 mile flight into Churchill Lake, which is probably about 4 or 5 times the size of Island Lake near Duluth. At any one time there are only about 12 to 14 people on the entire lake and a population of millions of Walleyes!
I was the cook for the week and our menu consisted of fish every other day with some various other dishes on the other days. Here was our menu:
Sunday--Grilled Rib eye Steaks with Home Fries and a Bourbon Mushroom Cream Sauce and Sweet Corn on the cob.
Monday-- Beer Battered Walleye with Deep Browned Potatoes, Caesar Salad and French Style Green Beans
Tuesday--Pecan Crusted Pork Tenderloin with Mushroom Merlot Cream Sauce, Wild Rice Pilaf with Bacon, Sauteed Onions and Craisins
Wednesday--Walleye Cakes over White Rice Pilaf and Sweet Corn on the cob
Thursday--Burgers with various toppings; Mushroom and Swiss, Caramelized Onions, Tomatoes, etc., Onion Rings and deep fried Pickles (Claussen's).
Friday--Pork Chops with Caramel Apple Sauce over Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes and some Green Beans.
That was the dinner menu and the breakfasts were hearty as well. One that I like to make is Stuffed French Toast: English Muffin Bread, two slices, with softened Cream Cheese and Honey mixed together and spread between the slices, then dipped in egg and then dipped in crushed Special K cereal and fried in butter. Slather on some syrup and you've got some good eats!
I also introduced my friends to some good Grits. I make them using Quick Grits, Heavy Cream, Bacon bits, Fried Onions, Salt and Pepper and then cook a Basted Egg and serve it over the top and a few rashers of Thick Sliced Bacon along side for good measure.
All of that and some good Colombian Coffee in the morning is a fine way to start a day of fishing in Canada.
Let the great adventure continue!
Tim
I was the cook for the week and our menu consisted of fish every other day with some various other dishes on the other days. Here was our menu:
Sunday--Grilled Rib eye Steaks with Home Fries and a Bourbon Mushroom Cream Sauce and Sweet Corn on the cob.
Monday-- Beer Battered Walleye with Deep Browned Potatoes, Caesar Salad and French Style Green Beans
Tuesday--Pecan Crusted Pork Tenderloin with Mushroom Merlot Cream Sauce, Wild Rice Pilaf with Bacon, Sauteed Onions and Craisins
Wednesday--Walleye Cakes over White Rice Pilaf and Sweet Corn on the cob
Thursday--Burgers with various toppings; Mushroom and Swiss, Caramelized Onions, Tomatoes, etc., Onion Rings and deep fried Pickles (Claussen's).
Friday--Pork Chops with Caramel Apple Sauce over Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes and some Green Beans.
That was the dinner menu and the breakfasts were hearty as well. One that I like to make is Stuffed French Toast: English Muffin Bread, two slices, with softened Cream Cheese and Honey mixed together and spread between the slices, then dipped in egg and then dipped in crushed Special K cereal and fried in butter. Slather on some syrup and you've got some good eats!
I also introduced my friends to some good Grits. I make them using Quick Grits, Heavy Cream, Bacon bits, Fried Onions, Salt and Pepper and then cook a Basted Egg and serve it over the top and a few rashers of Thick Sliced Bacon along side for good measure.
All of that and some good Colombian Coffee in the morning is a fine way to start a day of fishing in Canada.
Let the great adventure continue!
Tim
New Restaurant, G.B.Schneider &Co.
The day after I got back from an adventure in Canada, Teresa and I went out for lunch after church and decided to see if the restaurant we had heard about in the old Grandma's location at 46th Ave. West had opened yet. I was excited to see that it was open! We had met Gary Schneider, the chef/owner at the Chef's Club Brunch back in March and he told us he was hoping to be opening a new restaurant by about June 5th. He was close at June 8th.
The decor is very nice and reflects the location in West Duluth very well with some great artwork depicting the landmarks of the area. He has opened the space up better so it doesn't seem small and has a separate dining room from the bar area, which is also nicely decorated.
The best part, however, was the food! I ordered an Italian sausage sandwich with sauteed onions and peppers with some marinara sauce and mozzarella; fantastic! Teresa had a Triple Grilled Cheese sandwich with Tomato Soup; Also fantastic! The sandwich had Asiago, Parmesan and Fontina cheeses and the Tomato Soup was wonderful with just the right spices and a hint of Basil, not too much, and a touch of cream and some tomato chunks as well. As we were looking over the menu it was hard to decide because most everything looked great.
Gary came out of the kitchen and said hello and told us he had opened on a Tuesday and the folowing weekend the place was packed on both Friday night and Saturday. He said that one lady had been back three times in those days. I think that speaks volumes. Honestly, I can't wait to go back. The dinner specials sounded marvelous; his mom's Pot Roast,Chicken Pot Pie, Short Ribs,etc, etc. The signs on the door say welcome to some serious comfort food. It was and we're going back as soon as possible. I wish Gary the best and if you have a chance, get there as soon as you can too!
Enjoy some comfort,
Tim
The decor is very nice and reflects the location in West Duluth very well with some great artwork depicting the landmarks of the area. He has opened the space up better so it doesn't seem small and has a separate dining room from the bar area, which is also nicely decorated.
The best part, however, was the food! I ordered an Italian sausage sandwich with sauteed onions and peppers with some marinara sauce and mozzarella; fantastic! Teresa had a Triple Grilled Cheese sandwich with Tomato Soup; Also fantastic! The sandwich had Asiago, Parmesan and Fontina cheeses and the Tomato Soup was wonderful with just the right spices and a hint of Basil, not too much, and a touch of cream and some tomato chunks as well. As we were looking over the menu it was hard to decide because most everything looked great.
Gary came out of the kitchen and said hello and told us he had opened on a Tuesday and the folowing weekend the place was packed on both Friday night and Saturday. He said that one lady had been back three times in those days. I think that speaks volumes. Honestly, I can't wait to go back. The dinner specials sounded marvelous; his mom's Pot Roast,Chicken Pot Pie, Short Ribs,etc, etc. The signs on the door say welcome to some serious comfort food. It was and we're going back as soon as possible. I wish Gary the best and if you have a chance, get there as soon as you can too!
Enjoy some comfort,
Tim
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