




It was really great.
"Where good food happens, mostly"
Like Motley Crue, my weekend was full of girls, girls, girls. Must have been 12, 15 of 'em around. All of them under the age of 7. Quite the tsunami of happy, silly, fun energy. If this is what it's like at 7, I can hardly wait til they're all 12 or 14 - I'm definitely going to need reinforcements.
I almost certainly moved a few steps closer to being allowed into heaven after taking 4 girls under the age of 7 to buy a hamster at the local mall on Saturday. They ooh'ed, they ah'ed, they squealed, they shouted "daddydaddydaddy" a few hundred times. They told me that when this hamster dies, they wanted a horse.
But the trip was a success and we're now the proud owners of a miniscule, smelly rodent that bites and poops a lot but the girls just adore. Depending on who you're talking to - and when - it's either named "SqueakSqueak" "NumNum" or "Stripey". It was sweet though; I got to be hero for a day and was justly rewarded with a nap afterwards. We'll see how attentive the girls are to the new pet. I certainly don't intend on shopping for a horse any time soon.
If that wasn't enough, I decided to have a few friends over for an ad hoc BBQ on Sunday. A "few" turned in 15 or 16, luckily most of them were kids. Teresa brought over some lamb shanks (we think - they were in her freezer for a long time), a large hunk of beef she thinks was a London Broil and a large variety of sausages. I cooked up the corn and potatoes, there was plenty of wine, swimming, running around like banshees and everybody had a good time, it seems. The kids certainly slept well.
While we were cooking, the adults ate a big hunk of really ripe Valencay (a French goat cheese that, after an hour or so in the tropics, resembles Jabba the Hut - though far tastier) with some sliced baguette and Wasa crackers. And a chicken liver pate I made earlier in the day.
We buy chicken from the same guy at the wet market every weekend and sometimes he gives us a bag of chicken livers as a bit of a bonus. We got a pound of them on Saturday and since I knew we'd be having the bbq, I thought I'd try something new with them. The "Silver Palate Cookbook" has been on my shelf for a long time and many of its recipes seem a bit dated - kind of 70's. But every once in awhile, I can still find a gem in there, and this is one.
The pate is quite easy to make and people were literally licking the bowl clean. That may say more about my bbq skills than the pate, but people genuinely seemed to like it and it disappeared pretty quickly. I substituted vermouth for cognac with no ill effects - and I added about a spoonful of rendered chicken fat we had skimmed from the soup the day before. Oddly, I didn't have a 2 cup terrine vessel lying around, but a standard bowl worked fine.
My own pictures to come shortly.
6 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup finely minced yellow onion
2 cloves garlic; peeled chopped
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 cup celery tops
10 black peppercorns
2 bay leaves
6 cups Water
1 pound chicken livers
2 tablespoons Cognac
1/2 teaspoon Salt
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
5 teaspoons Water-packed green peppercorns; drained
1/4 cup heavy cream
Melt the butter in skillet. Add the onion, garlic and thyme and cook,covered, over medium heat for about 25 minutes, or until onion is tender and lightly colored.
Meanwhile add celery tops, black peppercorns and bay leaves to 6 cups of water in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer for 10 minutes.
Add chicken livers to water and simmer gently for about 10 minutes, livers should still be slightly pink inside.
Drain livers, discard celery tops, bay leaves and peppercorns, and place livers, butter, onion and garlic in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade. Add Cognac salt. pepper, allspice and 4 teaspoons of the green peppercorns. Process until smooth.
Pour in the cream and process again to blend. Transfer to a bowl and stir in remaining teaspoon of green peppercorns.
Scrape mixture into a 2 cup terrine, cover, and refrigerate for at least 4 hours before serving. Let pate stand at room temperature for 30 minutes before serving.
(Yield: 2 cups)
Had a friend over for dinner Saturday evening, and wanted to have as much food prepared in advance as possible. As the 2/3's of the kids don't really like spicy food, I hadn't had a chance to really try much in my newly purchased "The Cuisines of Spain" by Teresa Barrenchea (cover below) and this gave me a fine excuse.
As her Pollo en Escabeche recipe was pretty simple - and almost demanded a few hours of cooling and settling - this seemed like a good one to try out. Fast, simple and nothing really too exotic.
Escabeches are foods that fried or steamed, then cooked and/or simply stored in a brine. Obviously these come from the days before refrigeration. Apparently, you can cook/store just about anything this way, including partridge, quail, trout, sardines, mussels, prawns, etc. As most of these aren't available in Singapore, I opted for the chicken version here.
2-pound chicken cut into serving pieces (done at the market - so be sure to wash it thoroughly before cooking)
1 yellow onion, thinly sliced
4 garlic cloves, halved
2 bay leaves
10 black peppercorns
1 or 2 sprigs of rosemary
1 cup red or white wine vinegar
1 cup of extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 teaspoon sweet pimenton or paprika (I used the latter)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
Brown the chicken pieces in a big skillet, casserole, whatever - as long as it's big enough to hold all the chicken and allow the brine to cover it while cooking. Add everything else (which then constitute the "brine"). Bring to a boil, then simmer for 30-60 mins, until the chicken is cooked.
Let it cool completely, then store in the brine at cool room temperature for a day or up to a week in the fridge. I kept mine in the fridge for about 4 hours to cool and then let it sit another 2 hours out to hit room temperature.
Verdict: Certainly easy enough too cook and everybody - including, surprisingly, all 3 kids the next day - really liked it. The most common comment was that there simple wasn't "enough" flavor and that it needed more salt. That's never really been a problem in out house, so I was a bit surprised by that, but it was fixed easily enough at the table.
Yes, I'd definitely make this again; but perhaps with a little more kick. A good, fresh paprika or pimenton would probably help on the flavoring front, so I'll experiment more next time around. Definitely a winner.