Monday, February 28, 2011

Salmon and Tangy Pepper Chutney

Sixty minutes. That is the amount of time it took from start to finish to have dinner ready tonight. We had zucchini soup, roasted sweet potato chips, baked salmon with a pepper chutney and a garden salad.

If you ask me, the pepper chutney was the star of tonight's dinner. When Levi walked in the door he commented that something smelled delicious - it was the sauce for the fish.

Not only did it smell incredible, but it tasted even better. Imagine if you can, a sweet and tangy sauce to pair with a very simple baked salmon. The flavor and texture of the chutney sauce truly enhanced the flavor of the fish.

The greatest thing about this delicious duo is that it is simple to create in a very short amount of time!!!

I would also like to add that I think the sauce would also be a wonderful accompaniment to pasta or burgers.

Simple Baked Salmon


Salmon fillets 
Salt
Pepper
Garlic
Onion powder
Lemon juice


Rinse salmon fillets and place in a baking dish. Sprinkle fish with salt, pepper, garlic, onion powder and just a tiny bit of lemon juice. Cover with foil and bake on 385. Bake until fish flakes easily.


Tangy Pepper Chutney


1 red pepper
1 yellow pepper
3/4 cup rice vinegar (natural flavor)
3 tablespoons brown sugar
garlic powder
salt


Wash and dice both peppers and place into a pot. Add rice vinegar, brown sugar and spices. Cook on high until the mixture boils - allow to boil for about 5 minutes, mixing very often. Then lower flame and allow the sauce to reduce. 


Serve Tangy Pepper Chutney over Simple Baked Salmon

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Tomato, Onion and Cornflake Crumb Coated Salmon

I sometimes joke that I am, "recipe challenged". You may not believe this, but there are many, many times where I will take out a cookbook, get to work on a recipe I have found and then twenty minutes later I will discover that I have completely mixed up the ingredients or instructions. While instructions are certainly useful, I have found that most of the time I use a recipe as a springboard for my own creation. Sometimes I modify a recipe because I don't have a certain ingredient in the house, and other times because I simply don't like a given ingredient. At other times I revise a recipe because I have no patience for multiple steps in my cooking and just want to get done quickly. Luckily, the vast majority of my recipe experiments turn out to be just what I want to eat :)

A few years back I came upon a salmon recipe that I wanted to try. The first time I prepared this recipe I actually followed the given instructions, yet the next time I decided to experiment and see if I could get it to be something that I would love. Last night I made this salmon for dinner and it was super delicious!

Tomato, Onion and Cornflake Crumb Coated Salmon

4 1/2 lbs fresh salmon (skin and bones removed)
black pepper
salt
3 tablespoons French's mustard
3 tablespoons honey
6 small tomatoes (I used Campari - Roma would be good too)
1/2 vidalia onion
1 1/2 cups cornflake crumbs
1/4 cup olive oil
a handful of fresh basil - chopped
garlic powder

Preheat oven to 385.
Cut the salmon into roughly 7 oz fillets. Place salmon in a glass baking dish and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Mix honey and mustard together and then brush onto the salmon. Slice tomatoes and onions into thin slices. Start with one piece of fish - place a tomato slice one end of the fish and then place some onion, then some tomato - continue the pattern until the slice of fish is covered, then move on to the next piece of fish until all are covered with tomatos and onions. Mix cornflake crumbs with olive oil, garlic powder and chopped basil. Place crumb coating over the tomatoes and onions. Sprinkle the tops of the fish with a little bit of water and place a tiny bit of water in the bottom of the dish. Cover with foil and place in the oven. Bake until salmon flakes easily.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Asian Style Spaghetti

As a child, one of my favorite storybooks was "More Spaghetti, I Say", by Rita Golden Gelman. I have great memories of reading this book and I remember being fascinated by the huge amounts of spaghetti in the pictures. Additionally, it was probably one of my favorites because I really do love spaghetti.

I love spaghetti and pasta in general and there are countless ways to have your spaghetti fix. Some people like cream sauces, others like tomato based sauces. I like most people have a good number of favorite spaghetti dishes. 

This past Shabbat I took a favorite pasta salad recipe and changed up and turned it into a hot spaghetti dish. 
This spaghetti dish involves sautéing some vegetables and then adding some soy sauce, rice vinegar and other seasonings and then "recooking" the spaghetti in the pot. 

I sent Shabbat dinner to a friend last week, and the next morning she was raving about the spaghetti, and asked if I could post the recipe to UnRecipes - so here it is.

Asian Style Spaghetti

1 lb spaghetti
1 red pepper
1 yellow pepper
6 scallions
1/4 lb snowpeas 
canola oil
soy sauce
rice vinegar
garlic powder
black pepper
sugar

Wash peppers and cut into thin slices. Cut snowpeas diagonally. Slice scallions. Heat some canola oil in a pan and then add the peppers and allow to get slightly soft. Then add the snowpeas and scallions. When the vegetables are somewhat soft, remove them from the fire and set aside. Cook spaghetti. After spaghetti has been drained, return to the pot. Add a little oil, some soy sauce (enough to turn the spaghetti light brown), a few sprinkles of rice vinegar, garlic powder, black pepper and sugar. Add in the sauteed veggies. Turn flame to medium high and mix frequently. Cook just until some of the spaghetti starts to crisp. Serve warm. Enjoy!!

Friday, February 11, 2011

Chicken Soup For the Jewish Soul

There is something to be said for chicken soup. It is truly a comforting food, and I would venture to say a staple in the realm of Kosher cooking. We eat it on Shabbat, we eat on holidays, and there is nothing like chicken soup to help you feel better when you are under the weather.

My kids love having Matzah balls in their chicken soup. Many people prefer rice or noodles. If you are in Israel (or at least want to feel like you are) you pour in a whole bunch of those yellow and crunchy mini croutons (in Israel they call them "shkeiday marak" - soup nuts).

No matter what your preference for soup accompaniments - we can all agree that chicken soup is good for body and soul.

While I have a busy day of Shabbat preparations ahead of me, I am really looking forward to Shabbat. I look forward to lighting my Shabbat candles and filling my home with peace. I look forward to saying Hamotzi and enjoying my freshly baked Challah. I look forward to the lively conversations which will take place around my Shabbat table with family and friends, and most of all I look forward to that piping hot bowl of chicken soup and Matzah balls!

Here's to hoping your Shabbat is filled with peace and warmth - and maybe even some chicken soup!

Shabbat Shalom!

Side note, if you would like to come taste my chicken soup - mark your calendar for Monday, February 21 ~ 7:15 PM at Chabad House. We are having an evening titled, "Chicken Soup for the Jewish Soul" - it will be a delicious night of inspiration, wit and wisdom to warm your soul. It will be led by guest speaker Chaya Teldon who is will be visiting us from NY. Along with enjoying a delicious dinner, (including the chicken soup & all of its accompaniments) Chaya will make you laugh, cry and certainly warm your soul.


Traditional Chicken Soup
1 chicken
10 carrots
3 parsnips
2 turnips
4 large onions
6 celery stalks
1 zucchini
salt 
pepper
garlic powder
dill weed
Place all ingredients in a large pot. Add enough water to cover all of the chicken and vegetables. Sprinkle in spices. Bring soup to a boil and then lower flame and allow soup to cook until it is a pretty orange color.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Ten Awesome Days!

I consider myself to be the luckiest person on earth! I just spent ten days in the beautiful land of Israel. My father and I were lucky enough to staff a Mayanot Birthright trip (he went as the rabbi, and I went as the rabbi's wife - clearly a different rabbi's wife!!).

We met up with 40, incredible, young Americans in JFK airport, met our amazing Israeli staff, Gavriel, Miri and Chana, upon arrival - and were even lucky enough to have seven awesome Israeli soldiers join us for half of our trip.

When you go to Israel with Birthright you can totally forget about that necessary something called sleep. In place of sleep you are guaranteed days which are packed beyond your imagination, experiences that will stay with you forever and friendships to last a lifetime.

We hiked in the Golan Heights (and it was quite a hike!), got in some jeeping action, got the big picture on the borders of Israel, visited the holy city of Tzfat, tried our hand at writing like a Sofer, spent time on the beach in Tel Aviv, heard an original recording of the State of Israel being declared - in the very room in which it was declared, danced at the Kotel on Friday night, enjoyed a beautiful Shabbat dinner together, took in the scene at Ben Yehuda street, heard from a Holocaust survivor at Yad V'Shem, were very moved during our visit to Mt. Herzl (a military cemetary), toured the Old City of Jerusalem, celebrated Bar and Bat Mitzvahs with members of our group, ate dinner in a Bedouin tent, rode camels (well actually I skipped this one in order to get a tiny bit of extra sleep), climbed up Massada in the RAIN, and went for a float in the Dead Sea.

We  walked on the very ground where our ancestors walked before us. We learned incredible tales of our Jewish history. We saw first hand the miracles which take place on a daily basis in Israel and we learned first hand of the sacrifice and dedication of the IDF.

Along with all of these incredible experiences (and truth be told I didn't list everything we did), we also did plenty of eating.

As I like to say, I spent ten days eating fried foods served in a pita (or in a lafa!). I spent my days eating lots and lots of falafel and "shnitzel" sandwiches. Each day I ate something stuffed in a pita and filled with techina, hummus and a variety of vegetables. It was awesome! It was a nice little break from cooking and I happen to love these Israeli foods!

If you have been to my Shabbat table, you know that I truly love Hummus. After my last trip to Israel I truly wanted to be able to duplicate  the taste of Israel in my home. Luckily Susie Fishbein introduced me to a great recipe for hummus. The recipe I have included here is her recipe with just a few tiny modifications.

I hope you enjoy it as much as I do - and as they say in Israel, B'tayavon!

Hummus


1 can cannellini beans
1 can chick peas
3 cloves fresh garlic
1/2 cup tahini paste 
5 tablespoons lemon juice
1 1/2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 1/2 teaspoons cumin
a sprinkle of black pepper
1/3 cup olive oil
1/4 cup water


Drain and rinse the beans and place in the bowl of a food processor. Add garlic, tahini paste, lemon juice, soy sauce, salt, pepper and cumin. Process until smooth.


Drizzle in the olive oil, followed by the water. Process again.


Enjoy!!