Cooking Capers

For the love of making a mess, buying kitchen gadgets...and occassionally making something that tastes good.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Using up corn tortillas

Similar to the lemongrass, we bought a monster package of white corn tortillas. 120 in all, half of which went straight to the freezer. We made tacos, then tortilla chips and guacamole, then chicken enchiladas. Now it's Sedona White Corn Tortilla Soup.

Unlike our favorite Tortilla Soup from Cook's Illustrated, this soup was all blended up. It wasn't as "fresh" tasting without the chunks of avocado, tomatoes and other ingredients. It was more like chili (especially with the inclusion of cumin and chili powder...)

Don't get me wrong, this soup was great. Just different. Very tasty. Make sure to top with the cilantro. And next time I plan to use twice as many tortillas to make the soup thicker.

The best part was I used my Kitchen Aid immersion blender. What a sweet little machine with a super motor. Never again will I "transfer my soup to a blender in batches". I totally recommend this tool if you make soups and salad dressings. It also came with attachments for chopping and whipping. The chopper is much easier for small food processor chores and has less parts to clean.

I'm excited to make the pizzas from this cookbook...we love the restaurant.

Sedona White Corn Tortilla Soup from The California Pizza Kitchen Cookbook
Rating: great

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Perhaps redundant...

...but we made Spicy Thai Shrimp Kebabs with Chile Lemongrass dipping sauce last night, taken from Fine Cooking magazine, June 2005. I still have the tube of minced lemongrass and I want to use it up before it expires end of the month.

So...more Thai please!

The two dishes, the soup and now the shrimp, had a lot of overlap in ingredients: ginger, lemongrass, chills, fish sauce, cilantro. And yet, the shrimp were enormously better than the soup.

I'll warn you this recipe is tedious. Lots of ingredients and chopping between the grilling sauce and the dipping sauce. It took both of us 2 hours before we ate. (Granted, that 2 hours included cooking artichokes, making sangria and throwing dessert in the oven.)

But it was worth it for a special meal. The shrimp had so many flavors between the grilling and dipping sauce - I thought it would be overwhelming and you wouldn't taste one flavor from the next. But no. It was extremely bold, but balanced. Amazing really. Zingy, zesty, spicy, pungent, fishy - fantastic.

Unless you're an eggplant fan, which we aren't, I don't recommend the grilled eggplant on the side. Whatever side you choose, make it a strong one. Our poor artichoke was weak in flavor by the end; our mouth became desensitized from the strong shrimp. The sangria paring was good.

I experimented with Merlot Blackberry Arbor Mist, which has fruit and sweet built in. Add a cup of OJ, 1/2 C of brandy, 1/2 C orange liqueur and top with fruit for looks. If you want to add complexity, let the fruit sit overnight, strain out the next day and serve with fresh fruit.

To cut corners, I recommend a good quality pre-minced lemongrass and even ginger; we like "The Ginger People" minced ginger. Taste and smell it - it should be close to the real thing or it's not worth using. And for Heaven's sake, get peeled, deveined shrimp!

Spicy Thai Shrimp with Chile Lemongrass Dipping Sauce, Fine Cooking June 2005
Rating: excellent