Showing posts with label glaze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glaze. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2012

Feliz Thanksgiving: 8 kilograms, Mini Ovens, & Contraband Soup

This year, I am working as an English language assistant in a public school in northern Spain. In October I left my quiet, happy life in Utah to live in a country with a different currency, measuring system, and language, 5,000 miles away from everyone I know and love. The first few weeks were a little rough with the eight hour time difference, finding an apartment, and separation anxiety from my car, but now that I am two months into my stay, I'm having the time of my life! I'm improving my Spanish, meeting new people, traveling through Europe, working with the best kids and teachers, and trying the most amazing food!

While I'm willing and excited to dive head first into Spanish culture, I'm reluctant to let go of all my Americana, including putting my napkin in my lap, my favorite TV shows (Gossip Girl, New Girl, 30 Rock, Happy Endings), and my favorite holiday, Thanksgiving! I mentioned in my Mexican Hot Chocolate Pie post that Thanksgiving is my favorite because of the menu planning, grocery shopping, hours in the kitchen, and sharing food with my loved ones. This was not my first Thanksgiving away from home, but it was definitely the first spent on a different continent. Did that drive me to deny myself a day of feasting and food comas? Never. Together with my fabulous roommates and the other language assistants in Ourense, we created a traditional Thanksgiving spread, drawing on our creativity, resourcefulness, and breaking a few airport security rules to acquire the necessary ingredients!


I'm exaggerating on the airport security rules. The green bean casserole cook bought the hard-to-find Campbell's Cream of Mushroom Soup on a weekend trip to Madrid. She had to plead her case to get it past airport security! We thanked her dedication and bravery by eating the entire casserole.


Turkey is not a common meat in Spain. In this country, ham is king. We special ordered an 8 kilo turkey (17.5 lbs) a week before our Thanksgiving feast. It did not come frozen like the butterball turkeys stocked eye high in Walmarts back home. The man at the deli sold us a fresh turkey, so fresh we had to remove a few feathers ourselves, with no giblets already removed. That presented a major gravy-making problem, but I'll get to that later.

 

The turkey brined in our tiny fridge overnight. Everything in my European kitchen is one size too small, including the roasting pan for the turkey! In order to prevent the bag from ripping on the turkey's feet (yes they left those on!) while it soaked in the savory herbs and spices, we double bagged the turkey, set it in a stock pot, set that stock pot in the roasting pan, and propped the bird up with Diet Coke and beer cans. That is the epitome turkey brining ingenuity!

Brown Sugar Thyme Turkey Brine

recipe adapted from epicurious.com

Ingredients:

8 quarts water
2 cups kosher salt
1 cup brown sugar
2 Tbsp black pepper
2 tsp dried thyme OR 2 bunches fresh thyme
8 garlic cloves, smashed
rind from 1 orange, peeled in large strips
rind from 1 lemon, peeled in large strips 

Directions:

In a large stockpot, combine water, salt, brown sugar, and pepper and stir until salt is dissolved. Add thyme, garlic, orange rind, and lemon rind and stir. Line a large roasting pan or stock pot with a plastic garbage bag. Rinse the thawed turkey and place in the plastic bag. Pour the brine over the turkey and tie off the plastic bag so the turkey is completely submerged in the brine. Refrigerate in the stock pot or roasting pan for 12-18 hours.


The next day, we prepared our brined turkey for roasting. At home, our turkey is set on a rack in a roasting pan to allow the drippings to collect in the bottom of the pan during roasting. Those drippings are later transformed into creamy, rich gravy. To compensate for the lack of roasting pan with a rack, the turkey roasted atop a bed of aromatics (chopped onions, carrots, celery, and apples) and was stuffed with onion, garlic, and the flesh from the lemons and oranges used in the brine. Before the bird went into the oven, I rubbed the skin with a compound butter made from room temperature butter, salt, pepper, and thyme.


As you can see, the bird took up the entire oven! I tented it with foil to prevent burning on the top and to facilitate auto-basting, similar to using a roasting bag which were nowhere to be found in the supermercado. We left the bird alone for 2 hours and 45 minutes. During this time, our power turned off twice because of the oven induced overexertion!


Nearly three hours into the turkeys roasting, I removed the tin foil and prepared a glaze. I glazed the bird three times in 15 minute intervals, rotating the pan after each coat to facilitate even browning. Finally, with the help of my stronger male roommate, the turkey was removed from the oven (it weighed a ton!), tented with foil, and left to rest for 30 minutes. It's very important to let meat rest after roasting or grilling. The resting time allows the meat the soak in the juices released during cooking. If you cut into hot steak or poultry right after it's cooked, all the juices will escape from the meat, leaving it dry and flavorless.

Brown Sugar Mustard Glaze

recipe by Martha Stewart

Ingredients:

1/2 cup brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup dijon mustard

Directions:

In a small bowl, whisk together brown sugar and mustard. Beginning 45 minutes-1 hour before the turkey is finished roasting, glaze the turkey with the brown sugar mustard mixture every 15 minutes, tenting with foil if browning too quickly.

Once the turkey had rested, we started the gravy. It took 2 people to tilt the roasting pan while 1 person held a saucepan underneath the collect the drippings! (Everything about this Thanksgiving was unorthodox!) I made a quick gravy by blending together some onion and apple slices from the roasting pan and the turkey drippings. I transferred that mixture to a saucepan, added a few tablespoons of flour, and whisked while the mixture came to a boil. Finally I added salt and pepper to taste. The gravy was slightly sweet and every one loved it!  


This was our spread! We had all the classics, turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, two kinds of stuffing, creamed corn, green bean casserole, macaroni & cheese, and our friend from Argentina brought ham and cheese empanadas!


I loaded my plate with comfort food and joined my new friends in celebrating a tradition from our home. It was definitely a Thanksgiving to remember! We brought Thanksgiving to Spain with a fabulous dinner and decadent desserts....




Silky Smooth Pumpkin Pie

 

and Walnut Crumble Apple Pie!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Lime Glazed Coconut Cookies

My mom is an amazing cook. She can bake anything, cook anything, and usually get it done without glancing at a recipe. When I try a new recipe and make a horrible mess of it, she can always swoop into the kitchen and rescue my ruined dish. Growing up, she made dinner every night and baked goodies on the weekend for us to snack on throughout the week. Because of all this culinary pampering during my youth, I am a bit of a food snob! I know every kid blames their parents for their problems, but this is definitely all her fault. And I love her for it:)

When it comes to cookies, my food snobbery prevents me from getting excited about these sweet treats if they're from a bag, box, wrapper, or from premade cookie dough. I love homemade cookies because that's what I grew up with. I think they taste a zillion times better than those bought from the store. Note: Oreos and Girl Scout Cookies are an exception here! There's just no improving on those cookies. Furthermore, I love the process of baking cookies from scratch. It's relaxing and fun for me and I especially love giving cookies I made to my friends and neighbors....and saving a few for myself!

These cookies remind me of Mother's Iced Oatmeal Cookies with a tropical twist. A bit of a stretch you say? Here's a visual aid...

+=

These are a fresh twist on a classic cookie and 100% homemade. Let these cookies transport you to the tropics!


Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Farenheit and line a cookie sheet with a Silpat or parchment paper.


In a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars for 2-3 minutes until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg and extracts.


In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.


With the mixer on low speed, add dry ingredients to the creamed butter and sugar mixture. Mix until just combined. Add coconut and oats on low speed, mixing until the dough just comes together. Give the bowl a good scrape with a rubber spatula.


Roll the dough into 1-inch balls and evenly space onto your prepared cookie sheet. Chill excess dough between batches.


The cookies will flatten considerably while they bake.


Bake for 10 minutes until browned. Let cool 2 minutes on the hot cookie sheet before moving to a cooling rack to cool completely. Repeat the rolling, baking process until all the cookies are baked and cooling.


While the cookies cool, prepare the lime glaze.


Zest and juice about 3 limes.


Whisk the lime zest, juice, and powdered sugar in a medium mixing bowl until smooth.


There you go! Easy glaze. 


When the cookies are completely cool, set them on top of the glaze face-down. You may need to gently press the cookie into the glaze to evenly coat top side of the cookie.


Return cookies to the cooling rack until the glaze sets, about 5 minutes.


Enjoy! Put the lime in the coconut cookie and eat them all up!

Lime-Glazed Coconut Cookies yields about 3 dozen cookies

Ingredients:

Coconut Cookies: 
  
1 stick unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar 
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp coconut extract
1 1/4 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup oats
1 cup shredded coconut

Lime Glaze

2 1/2 cups powdered sugar
5 Tbsp lime juice
3 tsp grated lime zest

Directions:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Farenheit. Line a baking sheet with a silpat or parchment paper.

In a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars on high speed until light and fluffy, 2-3 minutes. Beat in the egg until smooth, scrape the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula, and beat in the extracts.

In a medium mixing bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. With the stand mixer on low speed, incorporate the flour mixture, being careful not to overmix. Scrape the sides of the mixing bowl. Turn the stand mixer on to low speed again and add the oats and coconut until just combined. Scrape the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl with a rubber spatula.

Roll the dough into 1-inch balls and place onto the lined baking sheet. (12-15 balls of dough will fit nicely onto one pan.) Bake for 10 minutes. Allow to cool for 2 minutes on hot pan, then place cookies onto a wire rack to cool completely.

When the cookies are cooled completely, prepare the lime glaze. In a medium mixing bowl, whisk powdered sugar, lime juice, and lime zest until smooth. Dip the cookies into the glaze face-down to evenly coat the tops of the cookies. Return the cookies back to the wire cooling rack to allow the glaze to set.