Friday, January 14, 2011

Macaroni and Cheese for Dinner


So today I have taken the easy way out and made my version of mac and cheese for the kids dinner. This does mean making the pasta as well but pasta isn't that hard to make, especially if you have a helper in the kitchen like I do.

So to start, make up your pasta, I have been making pasta for a while now and have found that the amounts are a little about what looks right at the time, here are my approximate amounts:

Basic Pasta
100 g 'OO' Flour
1 egg
1 Tbs oil
1-3 Tbs water

This recipe is then just multiplied out for how much you want to make, tonight I have made 300grams of flour and instead of 1 egg replaced it with two egg yolks as I want the whites for cooking with tomorrow. The deep yellow colour of my pasta comes from the yolk of the eggs only, these are from our own chickens that have a better colour than even buying free range eggs from the market.
Mix/knead together to make a dough then use pasta machine or roll out to make your pasta.

When we went to America in November one of the major purchases that I made was the new Pasta Press for my KitchenAid mixer, this allows me to make the more shaped pasta. Why did I buy this in America? Simple really it was more than 1/2 the price here in Australia!

As Gracie had decided that we were having large macaroni tonight we put that plate into the machine, I then rolled the pasta into small balls,

and left the rest of the work to my kitchen help, Gracie.
The really nice thing is that all that needed to be done now is for Gracie to put the balls of pasta into the top of the press, and then cut the pasta to the length that we wanted.




Gracie putting pasta in press, pasta being extruded at bottom of press

pasta drying on tray.



To finish I just made a simple cheese sauce, mixed the pasta through it and put a little more grated cheese on top and into the oven to brown a little.

DARING COOKS’ JANUARY, 2011 CHALLENGE: CONFIT & CASSOULET





Our January 2011 challenge comes from Jenny of The Gingerbread Whisk and Lisa from Parsley, Sage, Desserts and Line Drives. They have challenged the daring cooks to learn how to make a confit and use it within the traditional French dish of Cassoulet. They have chosen a traditional recipe from Anthony Bourdain and Micheal Rulman.

The recipe that we were challenged to make did not seem very hard, and in fact it wasn't but it did take a lot of time, the other thing that slowed me from making it was that being the middle of summer it really didn't seem a great option but then the rains hit. I am luck to say that we live in Victoria and only watched the rain and floods take over Queensland but still very scary stuff for them. The constant rain here, even with the mid 20s in temperature meant that it was a good time for this dish.

The recipe for the dish below is how I received it. Variations that I made. Instead of duck legs I did use chicken, they came up beautifully. I don't know if it is correct but I rinsed off the salt from the chicken legs before cooking them in the duck fat. I used pancetta instead of pork rind in the Cassoulet. The other thing I did was 1/2 the recipe, even then we had more than enough for 6 people. We did eat it on the 2nd day of cooking and the 3rd day, it was much better after sitting in the fridge for the night!
As you can see I served this with steamed veg and roast potatoes, after all I did have duck fat and roast potatoes in duck fat are great!


Preparation Time:

For Duck (or Chicken) Confit: 2 Days.
First day, 15 minutes.
Second Day, 2 hours.

For Cassoulet: 3 Days
First Day: 10 minutes, if that
Second Day: Approximately 3 ½ hours, most of which is oven time
Third Day: 1 ½ hours, all oven time


Ingredients for Duck Confit

4 whole duck legs (leg and thigh), size does not matter
sea salt, for the overnight (at least 6-8 hours) dry rub (the amount varies depending on the size of your legs, so just know that you need to have enough on hand for a good coating.)
2 cups/480 ml/450 gm/16 oz duck fat
a healthy pinch or grind of black pepper
4 sprigs of fresh thyme
1 sprig of fresh rosemary
1 garlic clove

Day One

1.Rub the duck legs fairly generously with sea salt, place in the shallow dish, cover with plastic and refrigerate overnight.

Day Two

1.Preheat the oven to moderately hot 375ºF/190ºC/gas mark 5.
2.Render (melt) the duck fat in the saucepan until clear.
3.After seasoning with the black pepper, place the duck legs in the clean, ovenproof casserole.
4.Nestle the thyme, rosemary and garlic in with the duck legs, and pour the melted duck fat over the legs to just cover.
5. Cover the dish with foil and put in the oven. Cook for about an hour, or until the skin at the "ankle" of each leg pulls away from the "knuckle." The meat should be tender.
6. Allow to cool and then store as is in the refrigerator, sealed under the fat. When you need the confit, you can either warm the whole dish, in which case removing the legs will be easy, or dig them out of the cold fat and scrape off the excess. I highly recommend the former. A nice touch at this point is to twist out the thighbone from the cold confit. Just place one hand on the drumstick, pinioning the leg to the table, and with the other hand, twist out the thighbone, plucking it from the flesh without mangling the thigh meat. Think of someone you hate when you do it.


Cassoulet
Cassoulet by Anthony Bourdain and Michael Ruhlman
(Serves 4 - 8)

Ingredients for Cassoulet

5 cups/1200 ml/1100 g/39 oz dried Tarbais beans or white beans such as Great Northern or Cannelini (if you use canned beans be aware that you will need double this amount!)
2 pounds/900 gm fresh pork belly
1 onion, cut into 4 pieces
1 pound/450 gm pork rind
1 bouquet garni (tie together two sprigs parsley, 2 sprigs thyme and one bay leaf)
salt and pepper
1/4 cup/60 ml/55 gm duck fat
6 pork sausages
3 onions, thinly sliced
1 garlic clove, thinly sliced
4 confit duck legs

Day One

1.Place the beans in the large bowl and cover with cold water so that there are at least 2 or 3 inches (50mm or 75mm) of water above the top of the beans. Soak overnight. That was hard, right? (Beans will double in size upon soaking, so use a big bowl!)

Day Two

1. Drain and rinse the beans and place in the large pot.
2. Add the pork belly, the quartered onion, 1/4 pound/115 gm of the pork rind, and the bouquet garni.
3. Cover with water, and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook for about 30 minutes. Season with salt and pepper to taste and continue to simmer until the beans are tender, about 30 minutes more.
4. Let cool for 20 minutes, then discard the onion and the bouquet garni.
5. Remove the pork belly, cut it into 2-inch/5-cm squares, and set aside. (If you plan to wait another day before finishing the dish, wait to cut the pork belly until then.)
6. Strain the beans and the rind and set aside, reserving the cooking liquid separately.
7. In the sauté pan, heat all but 1 tablespoon/15 ml/15 gm of the duck fat over medium-high heat until it shimmers and becomes transparent.
8. Carefully add the sausages and brown on all sides.
9. Remove sausages and set aside, draining on paper towels.
10. In the same pan, over medium-high heat, brown the sliced onions, the garlic and the reserved squares of pork rind from the beans (not the unused pork rind; you'll need that later).
11. Once browned, remove from the heat and transfer to the blender. Add 1 tablespoon//15 ml/15 gm of the remaining duck fat and purée until smooth. Set aside.
12. Preheat the oven to moderate 350ºF/180ºC/gas mark 4.
13.Place the uncooked pork rind in the bottom of a deep ovenproof non-reactive dish. You're looking to line the inside, almost like a pie crust. Arrange all your ingredients in alternating layers, beginning with a layer of beans, then sausages, then more beans, then pork belly, beans, duck confit and finally more beans, adding a dab of the onion and pork rind purée between each layer.
14. Add enough of the bean cooking liquid to just cover the beans, reserving 1 cup/240 ml in the refrigerator for later use.
15. Cook the cassoulet in the oven for 1 hour, then reduce the heat to very slow 250ºF/130ºC/gas mark ½ and cook for another hour.
16. Remove from the oven and allow to cool. Refrigerate overnight.

Day Three

1. Preheat the oven to moderate 350ºF/180ºC/gas mark 4 again.
2. Cook the cassoulet for an hour.
3. Break the crust on the top with the spoon and add 1/4 cup/60 ml of the reserved cooking liquid. (Don't get fancy. Just pile, dab, stack and pile. It doesn't have to be pretty.)
4. Reduce the heat to very slow 250ºF/130ºC/gas mark ½ and continue cooking another 15 minutes, or until screamingly hot through and through. Then serve.