Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Pine Nut Tōfu Sauce, and a Japanese recipe book to help Japan's recovery efforts.




Today I am proposing a recipe extract from an ebook that I have just purchased: KIBŌ (Brimming with Hope. The Author is Elizabeth Andoh, a renowned Japanese food writer (also the author of Kansha  a book about Japanese Vegan and Vegetarian cuisine!)

The book is being sold online for under $US4, and a portion of the proceeds will be donated to Japan's recovery efforts. If you like to have a look inside the book, and for more sample recipes, please click here, where you will also find the links to purchase the book. You can also find the info on Amazon by clicking here.



Pine Nut Tōfu Sauce  (Matsu no Mi Shira Aéadapted from page 87:
KIBŌ (Brimming with Hope): Recipes & Stories from Japan’s Tohoku 
by Elizabeth Andoh (10 Speed, 2012).



Recipe Elizabeth Andoh, photographer Aya Brackett, stylist Karen Shinto

Reprinted with permission from Kibo ("Brimming with Hope"): Recipes and Stories from Japan's Tohoku by Elizabeth Andoh, copyright (c) 2012. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Random House, Inc.


This nutty tōfu sauce comes to the Tohoku table in two ways: either mixed with fruit or tossed with greens. If you choose the fruit version, try fresh apples and dried apricots, cranberries, or blueberries, diced. The classic version, stuffed into a whole scooped out persimmon, is shown on page 71 of KIBŌ (photo on page 70), If you prefer, toss slightly bitter greens in the tōfu sauce; briefly blanched and coarsely chopped spinach or kale are good choices.


Recipe makes about 1 cup sauce, enough to make 6 to 8 small servings when mixed with fruit or blanched greens.

4 ounces (about 1/4 to 1/3 large block) tōfu, drained of packaging liquid
1/4 to 1/3 cup pine nuts (matsu no mi), un-toasted
Pinch of salt
Drop of mirin (syrupy rice wine)

Bring plain water to a vigorous boil, add the tōfu and cook it for 1 minute (begin counting from the time the water returns to a boil). With a slotted spoon, remove the tōfu, draining it well as you set it aside to toast and crush the pine nuts.

In a heavy skillet set over medium heat, dry roast the pine nuts, stirring them with a spatula or gently swirling the skillet to keep the nuts in motion. When aromatic and very lightly colored, about 2 minutes, remove the skillet from the stove. The nuts will continue to roast with retained heat so judge color on the light side. While still warm, transfer the nuts to a suribachi (grooved mortar) to crush them the old-fashioned way, or to the bowl of a mini-sized food processor the modern way.

If you are using a suribachi grind the nuts until completely crushed and slightly oily BEFORE adding the drained tōfu you set aside earlier. Continue to grind until the mixture is smooth and thick. Sprinkle with the salt and grind further. Finally, drizzle in a few drops of mirin. When ready to use, toss in your fruit or greens and mix. Serve family-style from the suribachi bowl, or divvy up into individual portions, mounded in small bowls or cups.

If you are using a mini food processor, pulse-process the nuts until crushed and slightly oily. Scrape down the sides BEFORE adding the drained tōfu you set aside earlier. Continue to pulse-process until the mixture is smooth and thick. Sprinkle with the salt, drizzle in a few drops of mirin and pulse to blend.

Scrape out the sauce and use immediately, or store in a covered glass jar in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. 






This ebook is really lovely and it has many vegetarian recipes, if you like, please have a look and spread the word.



And since I am talking about a cookbook I am also entering this post to the blogging event Cookbook Sundays, hosted by New Zealand blogger Sue of Couscous & Consciousness


CookbookSundays

Monday, March 19, 2012

Stories over Supper book event on Wednesday 21 March



I will be there with Arantxa and other NZ children's authors. Come and meet us, it is a free event, with dessert too!

Where: Paper Plus Gelndfield Shopping Mall, 
When: 21 March 2012, 6:30, 
rsvp Maria Gill <mariagill@ihug.co.nz>

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Volvo Ocean Race, leaving Auckland today



Today we went down to the Viaduct in Auckland to see the yachts of the Volvo Ocean Race leave Auckland. There is a short video here if you like, with some great filming (even if it was a grey day)!

Photos by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Friday, March 16, 2012

Tiny potatoes from the garden and... what is happening to the WordPress comments??





Potatoes and Cape gooseberries




The veggie garden is full of small potatoes, I picked a few, some really tiny, but I didn't want to leave them there, and the kids love them. I washed them and boil them, in three batches, from the largest to the tiniest.






After boiling them, the larger (but still new potato size) were then sautéed together with small steamed carrots and green beans in olive oil, garlic, smoked paprika, cumin seeds, chili flakes, coriander seeds, and salt. A very satisfying combo!




The smaller potatoes were sautéed with garlic, olive oil, rosemary, sage and salt. A real luxury to eat such small potatoes, but I need to make more space in the garden, and there are plenty more to dig up! 




Any suggestions for more tiny potato recipes?

Lastly, a little note to my WordPress blogger friends: I am not able to post comments to your posts anymore! What's going on? I managed to do it in the end by signing with my Twitter account, but this is so strange... it almost seems like there is a war between Blogger and WordPress! Let me know if you have had a similar experience, and how I can comment using my name (and possibly my link), if know it. Cheers! :-)

Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Pink and Plum Inspiration





Pink Plum Cupcakes




 The other day in Titirangi I bought something new, a plum powder! I was very keen to try it and so I made some vanilla cupcakes and added some to the mixture. I also made a soft royal icing topping with about 1 tsp of plum powder. In baking I would say that you possibly need quite a bit to make a difference in colour and taste, but for icing it works really well, giving off a mild colour, smell and taste. I am keen to try more Fresh As flavours now! And of course the flowers are from my garden :-).










Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Sunday dinner, Zaru Soba and Vegetable Tempura





This was Sunday dinner, Zaru Soba and Vegetable Tempura (mostly pumpkin). For the recipes I have to direct you here for the Zaru Soba, and here for the tempura (my own recipe).
And since I have learned to cook zaru soba from The Book of Soba by James Udesky, this post is dedicated to the blogging event Cookbook Sundays, hosted by New Zealand blogger Sue of Couscous & Consciousness


CookbookSundays





Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Titirangi










Today I'll take you for a virtual tour of my neighbourhood: Titirangi is the best known village close to my house, a funky corner of Auckland for bush, beaches, coffee, art, books, shopping, and eating. For me this is one of the best parts of Auckland, I feel comfortable and inspired here, and I always discover more beautiful spots and little treasures. No particular recommendations here, only a few snapshots of a Saturday morning in Titirangi.











Photos by Alessandra Zecchini ©
 


Friday, March 9, 2012

Chocolate and peanut butter cookie-brownies, and are food bloggers proper food writers?




Recipe first. I felt it coming when my husband asked me three times if I was going to the supermarket (no, no, and no) and then moved around the kitchen saying that there wasn't anything bad to eat. Our American wwoofer lifted his eyes in surprise, but I knew exactly what it all meant, and replied that the cookie jar is empty on purpose. Yes, that he worked it out too, I am not the type that simply forgets to fill the tins, I simply try to 'regulate' the weekly intake of sugar in this family. But then I felt guilty, with the wwoofer we had an extra mouth to feed, and another thought crossed my mind: I never made peanut butter cookies!

When I told the American he couldn't believe it, they are such a classic US thing, but to be honest I am not really fond of them and I rarely eat peanut butter, which is also the only food that my kids don't like.
But my husband loves it, so I decided to go for peanut butter and chocolate and invent something that would feel more .... decadent? 

I used:
200 g smooth peanut butter (with salt)
100 g 72% dark chocolate, melted
100 g sugar
1 egg
more sugar, regular and icing, to dust.

It is great to see that flour is not needed (gluten free, hurrah!!) you realize that as soon as the egg goes in: everything becomes really thick! I rolled the mixture into walnut size balls and then rolled half of them in icing sugar and the other half in regular sugar before baking them. I wanted to see the difference, and regular sugar works better for this recipe, possibly because there is no butter.
Baking flattens the balls into little domes, keep it at 180°C for about 16 minutes, no more than 18 if you like me like the cookies to be soft inside. Let them cool completely outside the oven before removing from the baking tray. 

I actually had step by step images but they got lost while a keen helper erased more images that needed to be erased from my phone, but the process is very simple and similar to this one, a method that I often use, with few variations, to make most of my chocolate cookies. Of course I didn't tell this to Jacob, the American wwoofer, since he was so impressed that without having ever made peanut butter cookies I came up with these little beauties in less than 40 minutes, and no recipe! 

Of course he loved them, so did my husband, but what about the kids? The came home from school and smelled chocolate. Arantxa was the first, one bite and she looked at me, but her expression wasn't happy. 

What did you put in it? 
You tell me, use your sense of taste! 
Mmmh, some sort of nut... hazelnut? 
No. 
I thought so, I like hazelnuts... oh... no... you didn't!!! How could you!!!!

Max hadn't taste his yet

What!!! What is it, what did she put in it!!
Shhh don't tell him...
Peanut butter!!! She put peanut butter in!!!
You did?
Yes... but the chocolate is stronger, try...
Yes, they are not bad, you can just taste the peanut butter.
No, this is not good, these are like the cookies that Dad likes...

... And she doesn't. So, feeling guilty, I also made some vanilla cupcakes :-).



Next chapter: on Wednesday I went to a social media seminar held by the Guild of Food Writers. I have been a member for years, but attended very few events, and it was about time I showed up again. Nothing new to report back to food bloggers about the content of the seminar itself, since all of us seem to be already connected to most of the social media available now, but there is one thing that I like to tell you: Greig Buckley, the presenter, mentioned the New Zealand Food Bloggers Association, the fact that we had our first well attended conference, and put up on the screen this page, telling how many members there are already. I think that I was the most surprised person there. I was surprised because bloggers were talked about so 'officially'. And I was the only member there who also happens to be a (non commercial) blogger. I asked the committee if they would consider food bloggers as potential Food Writers Guild members, and they said yes, they had talked about it already (didn't I read the newsletter???), and bloggers are food writers (or write about food...) although individual blogs will need to be considered first for 'quality'. But mostly I had the impression that food bloggers matter, I said that food bloggers can be very powerful (why use half terms here?) and a lot of people nodded. Maybe not everybody likes it, but that is another matter.
So, if you like to belong to the NZ Guild of Food Writers, you should submit your blog!

Well, happy weekend to all, I leave you with one of Arantxa's art pieces, a thank you token for watching and supporting her video.


 Artwork by Arantxa  Zecchini Dowling©


Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©


Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Glass Petit Fours


Photos by Alessandra Zecchini ©


Yes, made from glass, I bought them here, I think that they are really cute, and it took me a while to choose the right ones to take home. I also have a collection of glass lollies :-).

Monday, March 5, 2012

Making easy royal icing flowers' video tutorial, ed un premio!




This is my first ever video, made with Arantxa's ipod, we are in our kitchen and she is making easy royal icing flowers. Then our woofer Jacob helped me load it on Youtube (everyday learning something new!!!) and here I am sharing it with my blogger friends!

It is super short, so I hope that you will watch it, and I would love your opinion :-). And of course feel free to share it, in fact I would love that!

Thank you!

Alessandra



E adesso un po’ in italiano:









Prima di tutto vorrei ringraziare Artù per avermi passato questo premio, che a quanto pare si assegna ad un blog che:

1. E' aggiornato regolarmente
2. Mostra la passione autentica del blogger per l'argomento di cui scrive
3. favorisce la condivisione e la partecipazione attiva dei lettori
4. offre contenuti ed informazioni utili ed originali
5. non è infarcito di troppa pubblicità


Le regole di "Il blog affidabile"sono disponibili a questa pagina http://www.gliaffidabili.it/a/altro/il-premio-il-blog-affidabile (ironicamente piena di pubblicità), e magari io non le ho seguite correttamente, ma in fondo non mi dispiace non essere 100% affidabile!!! (n.d.r. qui dovete ridere).

Difficile però decidere a quali 5 blog passare il premio, ne avrei molti di più infatti che sarebbero, per usare le parole di Artù,
una risorsa utile per gli utenti della rete e meritevoli di essere conosciuti da un pubblico più ampio. Comunque, eccone 5, e ovviamente questa non deve essere una catena di Sant’Antonio quindi se non li volete io di sicuro non mi offendo :-).

(come non potrei, questo premio sembra fatto per B.!)
 (idem con patate a ciò scritto sopra!)
 (un gentiluomo in cucina, le signore saranno daccordo con me)
 (mi piace troppo il suo Avatar!)
 (anche se ho appena passato loro un altro premio, Franci e Vale curano molto il loro spazio e meritano di essere conosciute!)

E visto che sto scrivendo in italiano, se non lo avete ancora fatto per favore guardate il mio primo video su youtube, tanto è cortissimo! Mia figlia (12 anni) fa i fiori di glassa reale, giratelo, postatelo. Twittatelo, FBookatelo, metteteci un commentino, fate il LIKE, quello che volete (se vi piace ovviamente, e se non vi piace faccio l’offesa e batto i piedi e trattengo il respiro fino a che divento viola tiè!! Lol! ) perché voglio vedere se vale la pena farne altri, visto che abbiamo solo un ipod per registrare e 0 esperienza!

Grazie e Ciao
Alessandra


Saturday, March 3, 2012

Leftover rice: two Tians


When I have leftover risotto I make croquettes, when I have leftover short grain rice I make fried rice, and when I have leftover long grain, Thai or Basmati, I make tians. I am not sure why I only use long grain rice to make a tian, it is one of those thing that looks logical to me, maybe because long grain is not sticky enough and so I need to add an egg? Anyway, this is my classic tian recipe:



























I grease a terracotta round pan with olive oil. Mix the leftover rice with some cooked spinach (or similar green leaves), add one or two eggs (depending on how much rice I have) and then salt, pepper and nutmeg. Put everything in the terracotta pan and bake until the top is crispy. A bit like a baked rice frittata really!


The other day I had some rice left, but no greens. Also, the rice wasn't Jasmine or Basmati but standard long grain and it was a little sticky. I thought that I could make a tian without egg, a pizza tian!



I greased my terracotta pan with olive oil, pressed the rice down, topped with Italian tomato sauce (recipe here), then mozzarella and oregano. Another drop of olive oil and into the oven to bake!
Certainly a bit more difficult to serve because it doesn't cut perfectly like a tian made with eggs, but nevertheless my kids, who like everything that smells like pizza, gulped it down in no time! Maybe a good gluten free variation to a pizza??

Happy weekend everyone!


Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Friday, March 2, 2012

Ugly but Vegan...




...gluten free and sweet. It all started when my husband came back from Japan, I alway ask for some edible souvenirs, so this time I got a bottle of Choya Umeshu (sweet plum sake), soba noodles, umeboshi (pickled plums) and nama choco.




I love nama choco, it finished in no time, the kids loved it too since this was a type without liqueur, so maybe one day I should make it, it is so easy and blogger Nami has a good recipe for it here




After indulging in this extra cream + extra chocolate treat I decided that it was time for a less sweet and possibly non dairy sweet treat, and I remember that one of my favourite Japanese sweet is the baked sweet potato wagashi. I made something like this before, and I thought that the New Zealand kumara looks like a Japanese potato... but then I ended up with something completely different :-).




First of all kumara are much softer that Japanese sweet potatoes, then I only had an orange kumara at home (the red ones are better because they are white inside). I thought of baking my kumara, as steaming it was going to make it even softer and in the meantime I drunk a bit of Umeshu, and decided to soak a few sultanas in some too. Once my kumara was done I quickly realized that it was going to be far too soft for molding, so I reverted to plan B, i.e. not shaping the sweets by chakin shibori (with a muslin cloth or handkerchief), but simply dropping them on the baking tray with a spoon! For one mashed kumara I added 2 tsp of brown sugar, and then 'dropped' three tablespoons of the mixture on the baking tray. I did the other three adding the sultana soaked in Umeshu, just to make a variation. 



I decided against brushing the top with beaten egg yolk, so that this could be also a vegan recipe, and I baked everything at 180°C for about 15 minutes. To look at them I think that these are among the ugliest sweets I have ever made, but they tasted incredibly good, especially the ones with the sultana. I will make them again, but I will also look for some more 'floury' sweet potatoes (not kumara) so if you know where I can get some in Auckland please let me know!





With this recipe I take part in the monthly blogging event Sweet New Zealand, this month hosted by a Kiwi blogger living in Australia who publishes lots of wonderful recipes and likes gluten free ones! Over to you Emma, and thank you for hosting!


Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Thursday, March 1, 2012

My favourite cheese at the Monteith's CheeseFest 2012


This year the Monteith's CheeseFest was even better than last year, I got a Monteith beer on arrival, but I was pleased to see that you could also have wine, and my friend Valentina got a white one, plus we were offered a small plate, fork and napkin (we didn't have those last year!). Then in we went for some serious tastings! Being both Italians I guess that we were a bit fussy (or at least I was, and Valentina obediently followed me to the cheese stalls that I wanted to visit). 

Remembering the previous year, and my inability to eat cheese without bread, I had a box of crackers in my bag (sounds cheesy eehh!) but I was also happy to see that there was also some bread available this year from one of the sponsors (and we even got a couple of loaves in the goodie bag). 

I didn't take many photos, in fact I only took these published below: it was hard to balance a bottle of beer, a small plate of cheese and fork, and get my iPhone out. So the photos this year are of my favourite cheese: Massimiliano's mozzarella!

I like to point out that his was the only cheese of which I had two tastings of (Valentina had three), maybe because we are Italian and mozzarella is what we like, or maybe because the cheese makers are Italians and it was great to see Massimiliano again (he even won a prize for his mozzarella so we were all happy), or a mixture of everything... anyway, the mozzarella I made at home and posted yesterday was quickly forgotten after tasting this one!

And Massimiliano gave Valentina and me a burrata each to take home! Yum, I saved mine for Arantxa, it is her favourite cheese and she was so happy when I told her!

We also bought lots of other yummy cheeses (really cheap on the night), and today I made a focaccia with some feta and some fresh goat cheese, a real luxury to have good cheese to cook with, instead of saving it only for after dinner treats!


Photos by Alessandra Zecchini ©

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