Dairy


12
Apr 13

Ask a Chef™ #50: Ginger Salmon

Ask a Chef

 

 

Question:
=================================
Can the ginger salmon recipe be used for baked salmon when no grill is
available? Also, are their any substitutes to the heavy cream for
lactose intolerant people?

Thanks
Brooke

 

Answer:

==============================

Hi Brooke,

Thanks for writing us with your question about the Ginger Salmon Recipe.

You are exactly right about the baking/grilling and are right on track! You must have been paying attention in the Cooking Methods Lesson. : )

Ultimately our goal at Smart Kitchen is to teach “Improvisational Cooking” where you as chef can sort of wing it the right way with the ingredients on hand (or those that are looking good at retail) and the tools & equipment available.It is great to see you adjusting with the right improvisational sense.

You can use an oven to cook the salmon by providing Dry Heat via Convection when you can’t Grill and provide Dry Heat from below via Conduction.

As to the Heavy Cream component of your question. Basically, you can skip the Heavy Cream or substitute for it. Lactose-free substitutions might be Almond Milk, Soy Milk, or Coconut Milk (which might play well with the ginger). Coconut Milk is not Coconut Water, by the way. Also depending on the severity of the lactose intolerance, YogurtGreek Yogurt, or various Soft Cheeses might also be substitutes.

Hope that helps. Thanks for the great question.

Happy Cooking!

P Chef

Smart Kitchen


25
Feb 12

Has The Bacon-in-Everything Movement “Jumped the Shark.”

This is probably the end, right?

OK, if you know me at all you may not buy this, but for everyone else, this blog post is really a Public Service Announcement (PSA). Really. I derived no specific personal pleasure or glee from the activities described herein. That being said, we are food-blogging and cooking professionals and advise that you don’t try the following at home.
I read (maybe it was a late night TV Commercial) that Jack in the Box, the almost national burger chain with breakfast all day, was marketing a bacon shake as part of their loving bacon (Why don’t You Marry It!) marketing campaign.  We could not believe anyone would be so horrid & so depraved and were compelled by dark caloric forces to explore the rumor, if for no other reason than to spare our readers a similar fate. Of course it is only a coincidence that SK Chef was out of town and unable to veto this blog post.  : )

Before you say it, I strongly resent that anyone would accuse us (me) of wanting to taste such a concoction. I may drive all over the place in search of ridiculous dishes but in this instance, I am acting as a caring blogger concerned for my audience’s welfare. Really!

OK, let’s leave it at this, just because I am willing to sacrifice myself (and my unknowing friends) so that the general public doesn’t have to drink deeply from this strange taste combination that Jack is pushing from his box, doesn’t mean I am experiencing any pleasure from the act. To me, it is just culinary civic mindedness to save you, the reader, from being sucked into the dying act of an unhealthy culinary trend.  That is my story and I’m sticking to it but we can agree to disagree so that I can get back to the story.

So to begin the sampling, we slipped out of our Chef’s Coat, donned a disguise, spurned the drive-thru and since the SmartKitchen-Mobile carries distinctive “Smart Kitchen” signage, parked far across the parking lot . Unobserved, we executed a circuitous, calorie-consuming infiltration of the fast food den. We got our shake “to go,” inserted it into a brown paper bag and reversed our path to exfiltrate the house of fried calories.

Wisely, we had thought ahead and Organized, the 1st of Smart Kitchen’s 4 Levers of Cooking,™ our live sampling to account for the staggering number of calories and fat grams per ounce in something that is both a fast food milkshake and a bacon. We got a bit Tom Sawyer and disguised the rationale for the small focus group as a mid-afternoon “Gift” to our friends at the local coffee shop.

In return for the gift, we orchestrated a 3/4 reduction in the 773 calories (before Whip Cream & Cherry) of the Bacon Shake. Even with some protein (12 g) and a healthy dose of Sodium (319 mg), Nutrition is Not the Strong Suit of a 40 Fat Gram Bacon Milk Shake (only 28 g are saturated fat).

 

12 Grams of Protein and Loads of Sodium, Not Bad! (Not!)

In addition to calorie reduction, we also sourced “data points” on the shake as we now had 4 people who all complained, self righteously, about the decadence and depravity of such a shake, before tucking into a 1/4 sized portion.

A Healthy (er) Portion Cup of Bacon Milk Shake

The results were shameful. I should have known it, even with my good intentions, when entering upon such a caloric enterprise. It pains me to discuss it, so I won’t; all I will say is that we were all properly indignant and in the end we did our duty. Within 2-3 minutes there wasn’t a drop of bacon flavored potion in any of the 4 sampling cups. Rest assured, none can fall into untrained hands.

Now, as I type off the 193.25 calories, my mind turns to how to make the shake healthier….for others. Ingredients like hormone-free Heavy Cream, organic vanilla ice cream, and lean Nueske‘s Applewood Smoked Bacon or even Benton’s no-preservatives, traditional cured and smoked bacon comes to mind. And I am just getting started. Can a Cinnamon Beurre Blanc Milkshake be far away? Oops, did I write that? mmm…….I mean hmmmmmm…..

P Chef

Smart Kitchen

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25
Aug 10

Fat Heads!

 

butter head, butter sculpture, butter bust,

Pretty Good Looking for a Fat (butter) Head.

Or maybe better named, Butter Heads, can be seen this weekend at The Minnesota State Fair. If you are curious about 90 pound, 100% salted butter, sculpted busts (heads) you can see 11 of them at the fair. The models will be the finalists of the Midwest Dairy Association’s “Princess Kay of the Milky Way” contest. They have been carving the finalists’ heads at the fair since 1965 but butter statues have been part of the State Fair circuit longer than that. Since at least the 1890’s, when the dairy industry was trying to roll back the infernal, new margarine business, sculptures carved from solid blocks of butter have impressed consumers and fair goers alike.

Try attending the fair if you are interested in butter busts, 4H animals, fried fairway concession stand treats or a good time, but if you can’t and you want to learn how to do some food carving, you can join us at Smart Kitchen.com. Our forthcoming advanced level has some good carving topics.

P Chef

*butter bust image courtesy of stuartspivak.com


4
Jul 10

Colonial Ice Cream Recipe

Colonial Ice Cream Recipe

Smart Kitchen had a great July 4th Visit at Morven House in Princeton, NJ 08540. While there, we caught a Colonial Ice Cream Making Demonstration by Deborah Peterson of Deborah’s Pantry and share it in the spirit of Independence that befits the day.

Deborah’s recipe for colonial ice cream, uses a Sorbetiere, but you should be able to get away with any similar type of metal canister. Deborah’s recipe as she dictates it is:

1 Quart of Cream,
1/2 Cup of household granulated sugar &
A couple dollops of whatever pleases you. In her recipe she used rasberry jam. We’d get some vanilla in there somehow.

Directions- Place the sorbetiere filled with the ingredients in a bucket of salted ice cubes. The salt makes the ice colder to aid in freezing the ice cream. Turn the sorbetiere as Deborah demonstrates and every so often take off the lid to scrape off the ice cream that forms.

At home in modern era you can also use a blender for a quicker easier version. Take the same 1 Quart of Cream and the Half a Cup of Sugar and mix them in the blender with whatever strikes your fancy. Then put the whole concoction into the freezer. Stir your future ice cream every 10 minutes. In an hour or so you will have ice cream. Enjoy and Thanks to Deborah Peterson of Deborah’s Pantry for the demonstration. Deborah is also the Treasurer of Past Masters, that puts on demonstrations of the colonial domestic arts.

Happy 4th,

P Chef


29
May 10

Blue Veined Cheese by Blue Bloods

Sign for Maytag Dairy Farm Newton Iowa 

I use the Summer Food Drive as an opportunity to visit those places I’ve heard about for years and need to see/try for myself. When I was a kid you could not get me past the Kraft singles and near that weird stinky stuff the “grown-ups” ate while drinking “silly juice.” Over time the odd Fontina, Swiss or Cheddar was added to my repertoire. That summer after college was my first exposure to the real mature European cheeses. A traveling buddy used the ripest smelling varieties he could find as complements to our train compartment meals; to enjoy and to chase off other passengers with the strong cheesy smell so we could stretch out and “sleep for free” on the naugahyde vinyl compartment benches. It was a backwards introduction to a great food product, but it was an introduction.

Maytag Blue Cheese

Maytag Blue Cheese by the Original 1941 Recipe

As I’ve aged, I’ve become a fan of the artistry complexity/simplicity and patience involved in making (and eating) mature (in most senses of the word) cheeses. So while researching the Summer Food Drive ‘10, where I’d wanted to visit some farms raising heritage breeds (and did), I changed tacks and recalled that I’d always loved the blue cheese, but most especially the “Maytag” blue cheese. That researching phase was the opportunity to delve into Maytag cheese. Is it a style? Is it a brand? Where the heck did it come from? What made it so sought after and special?

So loaded with a large, multi-day, ice chest I deviated from I-44, the shortest distance between Pittsburg, Kansas (Chicken Annie’s Versus Chicken Mary’s) and St. Louis, Mo (Pappy’s BBQ and Iron Barley [track back]) to head 300 miles north across rural Kansas and Iowa to seek out Blue Cheese.  Going out of my way is part of what makes the Summer Food Drive so much fun. I’ve seen, as we all have, a lot of office buildings, strip centers and Wal-Marts. I have not seen as many farmers, prairie roadside stands, and old town squares. When there is a worthy goal, to mix metaphors, at the end of the rainbow, the excursion is that much better. The only drawback might have been my rule about only eating at my planned stops. Almost 700 miles would be a long way to go just subsisting on some fancy cheese. I should not have worried.

Idyllic Maytag Dairy Farm Newton Iowa

It Looks Pretty Perfect From Here

Newton, IA about 30 miles east of Des Moines is, to a passing visitor as idyllic a town as you can find. It almost brought a tear to my eye to drive down the small rural lane heading from town to the farm and see the old farmers and their wives, laying wreaths and flags at their town cemetery for the upcoming Memorial Day. This town had served and still cared. Add in the fact that they have one of the most fabulous fancy fromage farms in the country and forget about it.

Rising early, I headed over to the Maytag Farm to meet Myrna Ver Ploeg, Maytag Dairy’s welcoming and energetic president.

Myrna Ver Ploeg

Myrna Ver Ploeg President Maytag Dairy

Here is what I learned. Maytag is owned by the same Maytag family that started with washers and dryers in 1893 also in Newton. Apparently, Fredrick Maytag’s son, E. H. (Elmer Henry) Maytag was not into the corporate white goods thing. He was more interested in finance and in dabbling in a rural, bucolic life. He used his wealth to build a prize winning herd of Holstein cattle on a picture book farm just north of Newton. And the story would have ended there, an apple falling on the other side of the tree, if he had not willed the dairy farm to his sons.

On E.H.’s death, his sons Frederick Maytag II and Robert Maytag inherited a dairy farm and prize winning herd of Holsteins.  What were they to do with it? They’d been to Europe and savored Roquefort Cheese (sheep milk blue cheese from France) and knew no one was making anything like it in the United States at the time (1940). As luck would have it, agricultural scientists Clarence Lane and Bernard Hammer at Iowa State University in Ames, IA just 50 miles away had just invented (1938) a process to make blue cheese from high quality cow’s milk.  The process and the dairy were united and luckily for all of us Maytag Blue Cheese was born on October 11, 1941.

Maytag Blue Cheese starts out as homogenized (separated but not pasteurized) milk that is ripened before receiving a dose of rennet (a coagulating enzyme) to create the curds and whey. The whole concoction is allowed to cook in the hot whey and then drained. Penicillium fungi, which give the cheese it’s characteristic blue/green colored veins, are then added to the finished product.

The cheese rounds are formed by hand and then aged in specially designed caves that have high humidity and cool temperatures. Today, the company still makes cheese the same way as they first did in 1941. Biting into one of their wedges is like eating a bit of flavorful history.

The Maytag family still owns the company (and Anchor Steam Brewing) and sells the product from an office/packaging/warehouse space overlooking the dairy.

Inspection Maytag Cheese

Inspecting and Packing Maytag Cheeses

Packing Maytag Cheeses

Packing Maytag Cheese for the World by Hand

Luckily for my hunger pangs, there is a gift shop that sells product right on site. You can visit to get yours or more easily order via the Internet.

Maytag Blue Cheese, Newton, IA

www.maytagdairyfarms.com

2282 E 8th St N

Newton, IA 50208-8775

(641) 792-1133


9
Apr 10

New Food Safety Bill Worries Small Farms

The Locavore or Locriculture movement may be on the ropes, if large food producers and the Federal Government succeed in imposing new, stringent reporting requirements on the little guy. Small Farmers fear that costly regulation and enforcement will erode their meager profits and drive them from the business they are so passionate about. It would be a shame to force family farms from the market place just as the public is coming to appreciate the health and taste benefits of eating local. There is some hope in that the bill may be tailored to allow the amount of regulations to match the volume of crops produced. As of this writing, it is believed that the final bill will exempt farms selling produce directly to consumers from their own farm stands, which while beneficial won’t cover farmers delivering, in small quantities, to your favorite, sustainable and locally conscience restaurants. P Chef