So You Wanna Be a Chef


So You Wanna Be a Chef

by Anthony Bourdain
I am frequently asked by aspiring chefs, dreamers young and old, attracted by the lure of slowly melting shallots and caramelizing pork belly, or delusions of Food Network stardom, if they should go to culinary school. I usually give a long, thoughtful, and qualified answer.
But the short answer is “no.”
Let me save you some money. I was in the restaurant business for twenty-eight years—much of that time as an employer. I am myself a graduate of the finest and most expensive culinary school in the country, the CIA, and am as well a frequent visitor and speaker at other culinary schools. Over the last nine years, I have met and heard from many culinary students on my travels, have watched them encounter triumphs and disappointments. I have seen the dream realized, and— more frequently—I have seen the dream die.
Don’t get me wrong. I’m not telling you that culinary school is a bad thing. It surely is not. I’m saying that you, reading this, right now, would probably be ill-advised to attend—and are, in all likelihood, unsuited for The Life in any case. Particularly if you’re any kind of normal.
But let’s say you’re determined. You’re planning on taking out a student loan and taking on a huge amount of debt. In many cases, from lenders associated with—or recommended by—your local culinary school. Ask yourself first: is this culinary school even any good? If you’re not going to the Culinary Institute of America, Johnson and Wales, or the French Culinary Institute, you should investigate this matter even more intently, because the fact is, when you graduate from the Gomer County Technical College of Culinary Arts, nobody hiring in the big leagues is going to give a shit. A degree from the best culinary schools is no guarantee of a good job. A degree from anywhere less than the best schools will probably be less helpful than the work experience you could have had, had you been out there in the industry all that time.
You’re about to take on $40,000 to $60,000 in debt training for an industry where—if you are lucky—you will, for the first few years, be making $10 to $12 dollars an hour. In fact, if you are really, really lucky—one of the few supremely blessed with talent, ability, and great connections deemed worthy enough to recommend you to one of the great kitchens of Europe or New York for your post-school apprenticeship—you will essentially be making nothing for the first couple of years. You will, once living expenses are factored in, probably be paying for the experience.
Should you be fortunate enough to be among the one-in-a-million young cooks taken on at a famous and respected restaurant like Arzak, in Spain (for example), this will truly be time and money well spent. If you perform well, you will return home never again needing a résumé. In this case, the investment of all your time and money and hard work will have paid off.
But the minute you graduate from school—unless you have a deep-pocketed Mommy and Daddy or substantial savings—you’re already up against the wall. Two nearly unpaid years wandering Europe or New York, learning from the masters, is rarely an option. You need to make money NOW. If that imperative prevails, requiring that you work immediately, for whomever will have you—once you embark on a career dictated by the need for immediate cash flow, it never gets any easier to get off the treadmill. The more money you get paid straight out of school, the less likely you are to ever run off and do a stage in the great kitchens of the world. Time cooking at Applebee’s may get you paid—but it’s a period best left blank on the résumé if you’re planning on ever moving to the bigs. It may just as well have never happened. Country clubs? Hotel kitchens? These are likely employers straight out of school—and they promise a pretty decent, relatively stable career if you do well. It’s a good living—with (unlike most of the restaurant business) reasonable hours and working conditions—and most hotels and country clubs offer the considerable advantage of health insurance and benefits. But that sector of the trade is like joining the mafia. Once you enter the warm fold of their institutional embrace, it’s unlikely you’ll ever leave. Once in—rarely out.
If it matters to you, watch groups of chefs at food and wine festivals—or wherever industry people congregate and drink together after work. Observe their behaviors—as if spying on animals in the wild. Notice the hotel and country club chefs approach the pack. Immediately, the eyes of the pack will glaze over a little bit at the point of introduction. The hotel or country club species will be marginalized, shunted to the outside of the alpha animals. With jobs and lives that are widely viewed as being cushier and more secure, they enjoy less prestige—and less respect.
You could, of course, opt for the “private chef” route upon graduating. But know that for people in the industry, the words “private” and “chef” just don’t go together. To real chefs, such a concept doesn’t even exist. A private “chef” is domestic help, period. A glorified butler. Somewhere slightly below “food stylist” and above “consultant” on the food chain. It’s where the goofs who wasted a lot of money on a culinary education only to find out they couldn’t hack it in the real world end up.
How old are you?  Nobody will tell you this, but I will: If you’re thirty-two years old and considering a career in professional kitchens? If you’re wondering if, perhaps, you are too old? Let me answer that question for you: Yes. You are too old.
If you’re planning on spending big bucks to go to culinary school at your age, you’d better be doing it for love—a love, by the way, that will be, almost without a doubt, unreciprocated.
By the time you get out of school—at thirty-four, even if you’re fucking Escoffier—you will have precious few useful years left to you in the grind of real-world working kitchens. That’s if you’re lucky enough to even get a job.
At thirty-four, you will immediately be “Grandpa” or “Grandma” to the other—inevitably much, much younger, faster-moving, more physically fit—cooks in residence. The chef—also probably much younger—will view you with suspicion, as experience has taught him that older cooks are often dangerously set in their ways, resistant to instruction from their juniors, generally slower, more likely to complain, get injured, call in sick, and come with inconvenient baggage like “normal” family lives and responsibilities outside of the kitchen. Kitchen crews work best and happiest when they are tight—when they operate like a long-touring rock band—and chances are, you will be viewed, upon showing up with your knife roll and your résumé—as simply not being a good fit, a dangerous leap of faith, hope, or charity by whoever was dumb enough to take a chance on you. That’s harsh. But it’s what they’ll be thinking.
Am I too fat to be a chef? Another question you should probably ask yourself.
This is something they don’t tell you at admissions to culinary school, either—and they should. They’re happy to take your money if you’re five foot seven inches and two hundred fifty pounds, but what they don’t mention is that you will be at a terrible, terrible disadvantage when applying for a job in a busy kitchen. As chefs know (literally) in their bones (and joints), half the job for the first few years—if not the entirety of your career—involves running up and down stairs (quickly), carrying bus pans loaded with food, and making hundreds of deep-knee bends a night into low-boy refrigerators. In conditions of excruciatingly high heat and humidity of a kind that can cause young and superbly fit cooks to falter. There are the purely practical considerations as well: kitchen work areas—particularly behind the line— being necessarily tight and confined . . . Bluntly put, can the other cooks move easily around your fat ass? I’m only saying it. But any chef considering hiring you is thinking it. And you will have to live it.
If you think you might be too fat to hack it in a hot kitchen? You probably are too fat. You can get fat in a kitchen—over time, during a long and glorious career. But arriving fat from the get-go? That’s a hard—and narrow—row to hoe.
If you’re comforting yourself with the dictum “Never trust a thin chef,” don’t. Because no stupider thing has ever been said. Look at the crews of any really high-end restaurants and you’ll see a group of mostly whippet-thin, under-rested young pups with dark circles under their eyes: they look like escapees from a Japanese prison camp—and are expected to perform like the Green Berets.
If you’re not physically fit? Unless you’re planning on becoming a pastry chef, it is going to be very tough for you. Bad back? Flat feet? Respiratory problems? Eczema? Old knee injury from high school? It sure isn’t going to get any better in the kitchen.
Male, female, gay, straight, legal, illegal, country of origin—who cares? You can either cook an omelet or you can’t. You can either cook five hundred omelets in three hours—like you said you could, and like the job requires—or you can’t. There’s no lying in the kitchen. The restaurant kitchen may indeed be the last, glorious meritocracy—where anybody with the skills and the heart is welcomed. But if you’re old, or out of shape—or were never really certain about your chosen path in the first place—then you will surely and quickly be removed. Like a large organism’s natural antibodies fighting off an invading strain of bacteria, the life will slowly push you out or kill you off. Thus it is. Thus it shall always be.
The ideal progression for a nascent culinary career would be to, first, take a jump straight into the deep end of the pool. Long before student loans and culinary school, take the trouble to find out who you are.
Are you the type of person who likes the searing heat, the mad pace, the never-ending stress and melodrama, the low pay, probable lack of benefits, inequity and futility, the cuts and burns and damage to body and brain—the lack of anything resembling normal hours or a normal personal life?
Or are you like everybody else? A normal person?
Find out sooner rather than later. Work—for free, if necessary—in a busy kitchen. Any kitchen that will have you will do—in this case, a busy Applebee’s or T.G.I. Friday’s or any old place will be fine. Anybody who agrees to let your completely inexperienced ass into their kitchen for a few months—and then helpfully kicks it repeatedly and without let-up—will suffice. After six months of dishwashing, prep, acting as the bottom-rung piss-boy for a busy kitchen crew—usually while treated as only slightly more interesting than a mouse turd—if you still like the restaurant business and think you could be happy among the ranks of the damned? Then, welcome.
At this point, having established ahead of time that you are one fucked-up individual—that you’d never be happy in the normal world anyway—culinary school becomes a very good idea. But choose the best one possible. If nothing else, you’ll come out of culinary school with a baseline (knowledge and familiarity with techniques). The most obvious advantage of a culinary education is that from now on, chefs won’t have to take time out of their busy day to explain to you what a fucking “brunoise” is. Presumably, you’ll know what they mean if they shout across the room at you that you should braise those lamb necks. You’ll be able to break down a chicken, open an oyster, filet a fish. Knowing those things when you walk in the door is not absolutely necessary—but it sure fucking helps.
When you do get out of culinary school, try to work for as long as you can possibly afford in the very best kitchens that will have you—as far from home as you can travel. This is the most important and potentially invaluable period of your career. And where I fucked up mine.
I got out of culinary school and the world seemed my oyster. Right away, I got, by the standards of the day, what seemed to be a pretty good paying job. More to the point, I was having fun. I was working with my friends, getting high, getting laid, and, in general, convincing myself that I was quite brilliant and talented enough.
I was neither.
Rather than put in the time or effort—then, when I had the chance, to go work in really good kitchens—I casually and unthinkingly doomed myself to second-and (mostly) third-and fourth-tier restaurant kitchens forever. Soon there was no going back. No possibility of making less money. I got older, and the Beast that needed to be fed got bigger and more demanding—never less.
Suddenly it was ten years later, and I had a résumé that was, on close inspection, unimpressive at best. At worst, it told a story of fucked-up priorities and underachievement. The list of things I never learned to do well is still shocking, in retrospect. The simple fact is that I would be—and have always been—inadequate to the task of working in the kitchens of most of my friends, and it is something I will have to live with. It is also one of my greatest regrets. There’s a gulf the size of an ocean between adequate and finesse. There is, as well, a big difference between good work habits (which I have) and the kind of discipline required of a cook at Robuchon. What limited me forever were the decisions I made immediately after leaving culinary school.
That was my moment as a chef, as a potential adult, and I let it pass. For better or worse, the decisions I made then about what I was going to do, whom I was going to do it with and where, set me on the course I stayed on for the next twenty years. If I hadn’t enjoyed a freakish and unexpected success with Kitchen Confidential, I’d still be standing behind the stove of a good but never great restaurant at the age of fifty-three. I would be years behind in my taxes, still uninsured, with a mouthful of looming dental problems, a mountain of debt, and an ever more rapidly declining value as a cook.
If you’re twenty-two, physically fit, hungry to learn and be better, I urge you to travel—as far and as widely as possible. Sleep on floors if you have to. Find out how other people live and eat and cook. Learn from them—wherever you go. Use every possible resource you have to work in the very best kitchens that will have you—however little (if anything) they pay—and relentlessly harangue every possible connection, every great chef whose kitchen offers a glimmer of hope of acceptance. Keep at it. A three-star chef friend in Europe reports receiving month after month of faxes from one aspiring apprentice cook—and responding with “no” each time. But finally he broke down, impressed by the kid’s unrelenting, never wavering determination. Money borrowed at this point in your life so that you can afford to travel and gain work experience in really good kitchens will arguably be better invested than any student loan. A culinary degree—while enormously helpful—is only helpful to a point. A year working at Mugaritz or L’Arpège or Arzak can transform your life—become a direct route to other great kitchens. All the great chefs know each other. Do right by one and they tend to hook you up with the others.
Which is to say: if you’re lucky enough to be able to do the above, do not fuck up.
Like I said, all the great chefs know each other.
Let me repeat, by the way, again, that I did none of the things above.
It’s a little sad sometimes when I look out at a bookstore audience and see young fans of Kitchen Confidential, for whom the book was a validation of their worst natures. I understand it, of course. And I’m happy they like me.
But I’m a little more comfortable when the readers are late-career hackers and journeymen, like I was when I wrote the book. I like that they relate to the highs and lows, the frustrations and absurdities, that they, too, can look back—with a mixture of nostalgia and very real regret—on sexual liaisons on cutting boards and flour sacks, late-night coke jags, the crazy camaraderie that seems to come only in the busiest hash-house restaurants—or failing ones. I wrote the book for them in the first place. And it’s too late for them anyway.
But the young culinary students, thousands and thousands of them—new generations of them every year, resplendent in their tattoos and piercings—I worry that some of them might have missed the point.
At no point in Kitchen Confidential, that I can find, does it say that cocaine or heroin were good ideas. In fact, given the book’s many episodes of pain, humiliation, and being constantly broke-ass, one would think it almost a cautionary tale. Yet, at readings and signings, I am frequently the inadvertent recipient of small packets of mysterious white powder; bindles of cocaine; fat, carefully rolled joints of local hydro, pressed into my palm or slipped into my pocket. These inevitably end up in the garbage—or handed over to a media escort. The white powders because I’m a recovered fucking addict—and the weed ’cause all I need is one joint, angel dust–laced by some psycho, to put me on TMZ, running buck-naked down some Milwaukee street with a helmet made from the stretched skin of a butchered terrier pulled down over my ears.  Smoking weed at the end of the day is nearly always a good idea—but I’d advise ambitious young cooks against sneaking a few drags mid-shift at Daniel. If you think smoking dope makes you more responsive to the urgent calls for food from your expeditor, then God bless you, you freak of nature you. If you’re anything like me, though, you’re probably only good for a bowl of Crunchberries and a Simpsons rerun.
On the other hand, if you’re stuck heating up breakfast burritos at Chili’s—or dunking deep-fried macaroni at TGI McFuckwad’s? Maybe you need that joint.
Treating despair with drugs and alcohol is a time-honored tradition—I’d just advise you to assess honestly if it’s really as bad and as intractable a situation as you think. Not to belabor the point, but if you look around you at the people you work with, many of them are—or will eventually be—alcoholics and drug abusers. All I’m saying is you might ask yourself now and again if there’s anything else you wanted to do in your life.
I haven’t done heroin in over twenty years, and it’s been a very long time as well since I found myself sweating and grinding my teeth to the sound of tweeting of birds outside my window.
There was and is nothing heroic about getting off coke and dope.
There’s those who do—and those who don’t.
I had other things I still wanted to do. And I saw that I wasn’t going to be doing shit when I was spending all my time and all my money on coke or dope—except more coke and dope.
I’m extremely skeptical of the “language of addiction.” I never saw heroin or cocaine as “my illness.” I saw them as some very bad choices that I walked knowingly into. I fucked myself—and, eventually, had to work hard to get myself un-fucked.
And I’m not going to tell you here how to live your life.
I’m just saying, I guess, that I got very lucky.
And luck is not a business model.

Greek Mahi Mahi with Greek Salad

I was at Nugget the other day and bought a 1/2 pound of Greek Salad. It inspired me to come up with a dinner last night and this is what I threw together.

Greek Salad

2 or 3 small to medium tomatoes
1 cup Greek olives with no pit
1 cup  Feta (buy one container and save some for the fish)
2 cucumbers
Balsamic dressing or Caesar

Make wedges out of tomatoes and remove seeds.
Peel cucumber ( I left 1/4 inch strips of skin between my 3/4 in peels)

In a bowl combine tomatoes, olives, cucumber 1 cup Feta and dressing.  Refrigerate one hour.

Fish

4 Mahi Mahi Skinless fillets
1/2 cup Mayo
1/2 cup Feta
1 TBS finley chopped Rosemary
1 TBS fresh or dry dill weed
1 teaspoon chili powder

Combine all but the fish in a bowl. Line a baking dish or rimmed cookie sheet with foil. Place fish on foil and season fish with S&P. Spread a thick layer of sauce over each fillet. Broil fish 8 inches from heat. When sauce is toasty brown turn broiler off and set oven to 450. Total cooking time 15 to 20 minutes.

My Homemade Smoker

I have been smoking New York Strip for years. This smoker can hold up to 160 pound of strip or it can be converted to smoke one large turkey.

Tagliatelle with Fresh Corn

Tagliatelle with Fresh Corn Pesto Bon Appétit August 2010

by Ian Knauer

Pesto is traditionally made with basil, pine nuts, garlic, Parmesan, and olive oil. Here, the classic Italian sauce is re-imagined with corn in place of the basil. The finished dish has a creamy richness that's reminiscent of carbonara.

Yield: Makes 6 first-course servings
Active Time: 45 minutes
Total Time: 55 minutes

4 bacon slices, cut lengthwise in half, then crosswise into 1/2-inch pieces
4 cups fresh corn kernels (cut from about 6 large ears)
1 large garlic clove, minced
1 1/4 teaspoons coarse kosher salt
3/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese plus additional for serving
1/3 cup pine nuts, toasted
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
8 ounces tagliatelle or fettuccine (I used bowties)
3/4 cup coarsely torn fresh basil leaves, divided
(optional, I would add two cups heavy cream next time)
Cook bacon in large nonstick skillet over medium heat until crisp and brown, stirring often. Using slotted spoon, transfer to paper towels to drain. Pour off all but 1 tablespoon drippings from skillet. Add corn, garlic, 1 1/4 teaspoons coarse salt, and 3/4 teaspoon pepper to drippings in skillet. Sauté over medium-high heat until corn is just tender but not brown, about 4 minutes (next time I'll add 2 cups heavy cream). Transfer 1 1/2 cups corn kernels to small bowl and reserve. Scrape remaining corn mixture into processor. Add 1/2 cup Parmesan and pine nuts. With machine running, add olive oil through feed tube and blend until pesto is almost smooth. Set pesto aside.

Cook pasta in large pot of boiling salted water until just tender but still firm to bite, stirring occasionally. Drain, reserving 1 1/2 cups pasta cooking liquid. Return pasta to pot. Add corn pesto, reserved corn kernels, and 1/2 cup basil leaves. Toss pasta mixture over medium heat until warmed through, adding reserved pasta cooking liquid by 1/4 cupfuls to thin to desired consistency, 2 to 3 minutes. Season pasta to taste with salt and pepper.

Transfer pasta to large shallow bowl. Sprinkle with remaining 1/4 cup basil leaves and reserved bacon. Serve pasta, passing additional grated Parmesan alongside.

Grilled Mustard Chicken with Fresh Corn Polenta

Grilled Mustard Chicken with Fresh Corn Polenta Bon Appétit August 2010

by Ian Knauer

Cornmeal and fresh corn are used in the creamy polenta. A green onion Dijon mixture is spread under the skin of the chicken before it's grilled.

Yield: Makes 6 Servings
Active Time: 1 hour 25 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 25 minutes

Chicken:
6 green onions, finely chopped
1/4 cup Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1 large garlic clove, pressed
6 large chicken thighs with skin and bones
Olive oil

Polenta:
5 cups water
1 cup polenta (coarse cornmeal)
1 1/2 teaspoons coarse kosher salt
1 teaspoon sugar
2 cups fresh corn kernels (cut from about 3 large ears)
1/2 cup mascarpone cheese

Special equipment: Small metal turkey-lacing pins (I didn't use these)

Ingredient info:

Polenta is sold at some supermarkets and at natural foods stores and Italian markets. If unavailable, substitute an equal amount of regular yellow cornmeal and cook about half as long. Mascarpone is an Italian cream cheese that's available at many supermarkets and at Italian markets.

For chicken:

Whisk onions, mustard, lemon juice, and garlic in medium bowl to blend. Using fingertips and leaving 1 side still attached, loosen skin on each chicken thigh. Lift skin flap on each and fold back. Spoon half of mustard seasoning atop thighs, dividing equally; spread to cover meat. Fold skin flap over to enclose seasoning and secure skin with metal pin. Sprinkle thighs with salt and pepper on both sides. Turn thighs, skin side up, and spread remaining mustard seasoning over skin. Transfer to small baking sheet. DO AHEAD: Chicken can be prepared 6 hours ahead. Cover and refrigerate.

Prepare barbecue (medium-high heat). Preheat oven to 250°F. Brush grill rack generously with olive oil grill chicken until golden brown and cooked through, turning chicken occasionally and moving to cooler spot on grill if browning too quickly, 40 to 50 minutes. Transfer grilled chicken to another baking sheet; keep warm in oven while preparing polenta.

For polenta:

Bring 5 cups water to boil in heavy large saucepan over high heat. Gradually whisk in polenta, then 1 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt and sugar. Reduce heat to medium-low; simmer until polenta is tender, thick, and creamy, whisking often and adjusting heat to maintain gentle simmer, 25 to 30 minutes. Add corn kernels and cook, stirring constantly, until corn is tender, about 5 minutes. Mix in mascarpone cheese. Season polenta to taste with salt and pepper.

Spoon polenta onto each of 6 plates. Top with grilled chicken and serve.

Better Than Sex Chocolate Cake

1 box dark chocolate cake mix
1 – 14 oz. can sweetened condensed milk
1 20 oz. plastic squeeze bottle Smucker’s caramel sundae syrup
1 tub Cool Whip
1 bag Heath Bar pieces (usually found in store by chocolate chips)

Make cake according to directions for 9 x 13 pan. Let cool 15 minutes.

Use bottom/handle of wooden spoon to poke holes in warm cake ½-1 inch apart.

Drizzle condensed milk over cake and let absorb into cake, getting into holes and around edges. If milk is too thick to pour, stir a little water into milk, heat to warm in microwave, and stir again to make milk pourable.

Repeat drizzle process with caramel. You’ll probably have more caramel than needed for one cake.

Cover and refrigerate for 2 hours or over night. Spread Cool Whip over cake and sprinkle toffee pieces over top. Keep refrigerated.

Texas Chili

This Texas Chili doesn't include beans or tomatoes, only beef, homemade chile paste, and a few flavorings.
Yield: Serves 4

2 ounces dried, whole New Mexico (California)(6 to 8 chiles)

1 1/2 teaspoons ground cumin seed

1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Kosher salt

5 tablespoons vegetable oil

2 1/2 pounds boneless beef chuck, well trimmed and cut into 3/4-inch cubes
1/2 cup finely chopped onion

4 large cloves garlic, minced

2  cans low-sodium beef broth

2 1/4 cups water

1 tablespoon firmly packed dark brown sugar

1 1/2 tablespoons distilled white vinegar

Sour cream

Lime wedges

1. Place the chiles in a straight-sided large skillet over medium-low heat and gently toast the chiles until fragrant, 2 to 3 minutes per side. Don't let them burn or they'll turn bitter. Place the chiles in a bowl and cover them with very hot water and soak until soft, 15 to 45 minutes, turning once or twice.

2. Drain the chiles; split them and remove stems and seeds (a brief rinse helps remove seeds, but don't wash away the flesh). Place the chiles in the bowl of a blender and add the cumin, black pepper, 1 tablespoon salt and 1/4 cup water. Purée the mixture, adding more water as needed (and occasionally scraping down the sides of the blender jar), until a smooth, slightly fluid paste forms (you want to eliminate all but the tiniest bits of skin.) Set the chile paste aside.

3. Return skillet to medium-high heat and melt 2 tablespoons of the oil, swirl skillet to coat and add half of the beef. Lightly brown on at least two sides, about 4 minutes per side, reducing the heat if the meat threatens to burn. Transfer to a bowl and repeat with 2 more tablespoons of oil and the remaining beef. Reserve.

4. Let the skillet cool slightly, and place it over medium-low heat. Melt the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil in the skillet; add the onion and garlic and cook gently for 3 to 4 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the stock, the remaining 2 cups water. Stir in the reserved chile paste, scraping the bottom of the skillet with a spatula to loosen any browned bits. Add the reserved beef (and any juices in the bowl) and bring to a simmer over high heat. Reduce heat to maintain the barest possible simmer (just a few bubbles breaking the surface) and cook, stirring occasionally, until the meat is tender but still somewhat firm and 1 1/2 to 2 cups of thickened but still liquid sauce surrounds the cubes of meat, about 2 hours.

5. Stir in the brown sugar and vinegar thoroughly and add more salt to taste; gently simmer 10 minutes more. At this point, it may look like there is excess sauce. Turn off the heat and let the chili stand for at least 30 minutes, during which time the meat will absorb about half of the remaining sauce in the skillet, leaving the meat bathed in a thick, somewhat fluid sauce. Stir in additional broth or water if the mixture seems too dry. If the mixture seems a bit loose and wet, allow it to simmer a bit more. Adjust the balance of flavors with a bit of additional salt, sugar, or vinegar, if you like.

6. Reheat gently and serve in individual bowls with a dollop of sour cream on top and a lime wedge on the side.

Sweet Potato Casserrole

If you dislike sweet potatoes and yams then you haven't had my sweet potato casserole. This is my most requested recipes.

Mixture
3 cups mashed sweet potatoes (use fresh peeled and boiled or canned sweet potatoes)
1/3 cup butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
2/3 cups sugar
2 eggs

Topping
1 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup flour
1/3 cup butter
1 cup chopped pecans
1 cup shredded coconut

Mixture:
Mix ingredients together like pumpkin pie texture (optional; mix with electric hand mixer) and place in 9x13 baking dish.

Topping:
Mix and crumble on top of potato mixture.

Bake 30 minutes at 350 degrees

Tri Tip Taco's

  • 1 - 1 to 2 lb. Tri Tip Roast (fat trimmed off)
  • 2 envelopes Lipton onion soup mix
  • 2 large glass bottles or 1/2 an extra large bottle of Pace Medium Picante sauce
  • 1 white onion, diced
  • 4 medium tomatoes, diced
  • 1/3 cup cilantro, chopped
  • Gurerro corn tortillas
  • Shredded lettuce
  • Grated Cheddar cheese
  • 2 limes; 1 halved and 1 sliced
  • Hot sauce

Add the following to crock-pot

  • Tri Tip Roast
  • Lipton onion soup mix
  • Pace Picante sauce
  • Enough water to cover meat
  • Cook meat for 5-6 hours on high or 6-7 on low. Remove meat and place in bowl. Shred meat with 2 forks. Add some liquid from crock to keep meat moist.

Mix the following in a bowl to make Pi co De Gallo (taco topping)

  • White onion
  • Tomatoes
  • Cilantro
  • lime juice

Warm tortillas and serve family style.

Talapia with Tangerine Beurre Blanc



For fish

1 1/2 tablespoons butter, melted

2 tablespoons chopped shallot

 2 tablespoons fresh graded tangerine zest

4 large Talapia fellets or 8 small fillets

1/2 cup water

For the beurre blanc sauce

1 cup fresh tangerine juice

2 tablespoon finely chopped shallot

1 stick (1/2 cup) cold unsalted butter, cut into tablespoon pieces

1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
Prepare fish:

Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 450°F.

Brush a 13- by 9-inch roasting pan with some of melted butter, then sprinkle shallot and zest in pan.

Arrange fish fillets in roasting pan and brush fish with remaining melted butter. Season with salt and pepper, then add water to pan. Cover pan tightly with foil and bake 20 minutes.

Make beurre blanc while fish bakes:

Boil tangerine juice with shallot in a 2-quart heavy saucepan over moderate heat until reduced to about 1/2 cup, 10 minutes. Reduce heat to moderately low, then whisk in 1 tablespoon butter, whisking constantly. Add remaining butter, 1 tablespoon at a time, whisking constantly, adding each piece before previous one has completely melted, and lifting pan from heat occasionally to cool mixture. Remove from heat and stir in lemon juice.

Transfer fish with a slotted spatula to a platter and reserve pan juices. Cover fish with foil, then pour pan juices into a 10-inch skillet and boil over moderately high heat until reduced to about 2 tablespoons, about 2 minutes. Gradually whisk into beurre blanc.

For Broccoli

Steam enough Broccoli for each person


Arrange fish and Broccoli on a platter and spoon sauce over top of both

Corn Beef

1 Corn Beef and Pepper Corn Package
1 Onion - Chopped
2 Carrots - Chopped
4 Potatoes - Chopped
1 Head Cabbage - Quartered
2 Cups Brown Sugar
3 TBL Mustard

Put beef, onion and pepper corn in a crock pot. Cover with water and cook all day or in stock pot boil 2.5 hours.

Prepare glaze; mix brown sugar and enough mustard to make glaze moist but firm.

Remove beef and reserve water. Set meat on foil covered baking sheet. Cover with glaze bake at 300 for 40 minutes.

Transfer water to stock pot (if crock pot was used) Add carrots and potatoes to water (add more water if needed) boil until potatoes are almost done. Add Cabbage boil till tender.

Slice meat 1/2 inch thick and place on serving platter. serve vegetables in separate serving dish.

Pork Pot Roast in Cider

Pork Pot Roast in Cider

Fettuccine Alfredo

4# dried fettuccine
1# butter
12 oz. grated Asiago cheese
1 pint heavy cream
1/2 cup pasta water
2 tsp salt
2 tsp pepper

Cook fettuccine in large pot or two pots

Melt butter in large saute pan or shallow pot. Add cooked pasta and toss to coat. Add cheese, reserved water, heavy cream, salt and pepper. toss and serve immediately

Veal Scaloppine

1 to 1½ pound Veal Cutlet, pounded into very thin slices
1 Cup flour
8 tbsps Butter
1 1/2 Cup Marsala or Sherry wine. (I used a dry cocktail sherry)
1 can Beef Consommé
Salt and pepper
1 lb Mushrooms sliced and sautéed in butter

Roll the veal slices in flour.
Brown slices on both sides in butter.
Add wine and beef stock
Cover
Cook over medium heat for 5 to 8 minutes, until tender
Salt and pepper to taste.
Add the sautéed mushrooms serve with steamed rice

Smoked Salmon Pizza

1 Large Boboli Pizza Crust
1/3 cup red onion
¼ cup capers
8 oz. plain cream cheese (do not use reduced fat)
2 cups dry molasses smoked salmon (kippered)

Spread cream cheese evenly on Boboli

Top with red onions and capers

Flake salmon with a fork and sprinkle on top of pizza (do not use the slimy wet kind, it has to be dry and flakey)

Slice pizza into 1 ½ inch by 3 inch strips

Serve on a platter chilled or at room temperature

South West Grilled Salmon



Salmon;
4 to 8 skinless/boneless filets (one per person)
Olive oil
Salt and pepper

Rub salmon with olive oil, salt and pepper.
Grill on BBQ over medium heat exactly five minutes per side.

Black Bean and Corn Salsa;
1/4 cup olive oil
1 ripe avocado, chopped
1 cup frozen corn kernels
1 red bell pepper, diced
1 yellow bell pepper, diced
1 orange bell pepper, diced
1 cup red onion, diced
1 can black beans, rinsed and drained
1 lime, juiced
1 orange, juiced

Mix ingredients and chill in refrigerator for 30 minutes

Tomatillo Vinaigrette;
one pound tomatillos
1 lime juiced
1/2 bunch cilantro
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 ripe avocados
1/2 cup olive oil

Blend all ingredients in food processor. Blend until consistency is thick and smooth.

Garnish;
Sour cream

Presentation;
Cover the bottom on a plate with a 1/4 inch layer of Tomatillo Vinaigrette.
Using an icing bag with a small tip make a design out of sour cream on the Tomatillo Vinaigrette. Set one fillet off center and pile a cup of salsa next to fillet.
garnish with sprig of cilantro. You can serve tortillas with this but I prefer to serve two big ice cream scoops of Sweet Corn Tomalito with it.

Notes;
I buy my frozen salmon fillets, avocados and tri colored peppers at Trader Joe's.
I used to make my Sweet Corn Tomalito from scratch but now you can buy El Torito's Corn Cakes At Most Grocery Stores.

Cream of Broccoli Soup

4 cups chopped fresh broccoli
1 1/2 cups chicken broth
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 bay leaf
1 small clove garlic
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
2 tablespoons flour
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 pepper
1 cup milk

In a sauce pan combine broccoli, broth, onion, bay leaf and garlic. Boil till broccoli is cooked. Blend mixture in food processor. Do half at a time if needed. Set aside. In sauce pan over medium heat melt the butter. Stir in flour to make a roux. Add milk stirring until it thickens. Add broccoli mixture and bring to a boil. Salt and pepper to taste.

Serve with french bread or crackers

Popovers



Pop overs are a fancy dinner roll make from a thin batter. They pop out of the pan when they cook.

1 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted, plus softened butter for greasing pans
1 1/2 cups flour
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3 extra large eggs, at room temperature
1 1/2 cups milk, at room temperature

Preheat oven to 425

Whisk together the flour, salt, eggs, milk and melted butter until smooth. The batter will be thin.

Generously grease popover pans or 12 Pyrex custard cups with softened butter. place the pans in oven for exactly 2 minutes to preheat.

Fill the pop over pans half full and bake for 25 minutes. Do not peak. They should be a little darker than Golden brown.

Beef Kabobs

1" to 1 1/2" cubes of sirloin, about 5 per person

Skewers

Use whatever vegetables you like:
red onion, peppers (red, green, yellow, orange)
pineapple, mushrooms, etc.

Marinade

1 part Soy Sauce
1 part White Vinegar
1 part Vegetable Oil
Adolph’s Meat Tenderizer with spices (Albertson’s)
Use up to 1 cap per cup of marinade less for large quantities

marinate meat up to 24 hours in refrigerator assemble and BBQ.

Grill on high turning to cook all sides

Pesto and Pasta

Regular Pesto

1 to 1 ½ cups packed fresh basil
1/2 cup packed fresh parsley (optional)
5 oz. graded Romano cheese or Italian trio cheeses
2 cloves garlic
1/2 cup olive oil
your favorite pasta (enough for 4 or 5 people)

In a food processor blend all ingredients except pasta. Add up to ¼ cup water if needed to processor.

Cook pasta, drain and mix with pesto


Creamy Pesto

1 to 1 ½ cups packed fresh basil
1/2 cup packed fresh parsley (optional)
5 oz. graded Romano cheese or Italian trio cheeses
2 cloves garlic
1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup sun dried tomatoes (optional)
2 cups cream
your favorite pasta (enough for 4 or 5 people)

In a food processor blend all ingredients except pasta, cream and tomatoes.
Add up to ¼ cup water if needed to processor, Set aside.
In a large shallow saucepan slowly bring cream to a boil and reduce heat.
Add pesto and sun dried tomatoes.
Simmer until cream thickens (about 5 minutes)Cook pasta, drain and mix with pesto

Steve's Famous Portuguese Beans

10 pounds pinto beans
5 pounds bacon - cut into small pieces
3 pounds onions - chopped (Smart and Final)
5 bell peppers - chopped
½ cup garlic - chopped (Store bought jar)
1 15oz. bottle Lea & Perrin
1 cup cumin
1/4 cup chili powder
6 bay leaves
1/3 cup kosher salt
1/8 cup black pepper


Soak beans 12 hours - drain off water
Add half the cumin and the rest of the ingredients to a pot
Cover with water plus three inches
Boil three hours then add remaining cumin
Cool a few hours and server or refrigerate (I like to make them a day ahead of time)

Slow Cooked Baby Back Ribs


Large racks pork baby back ribs, about a half rack per person
Barbecue sauce, Use your favorite; I use Mc Ques or Sweet Baby Rays BBQ sauce
Salt and Pepper
Foil

Remove membrane from the bone side of the ribs.

Cut each rack in half and season with salt and pepper.

Tightly wrap each portion of ribs in foil.

Cook foil wrapped ribs in oven for 2.5 hours at 275 degrees.

After ribs have baked remove foil and grill ribs 5 to 10 minutes on each side.

Brush with barbecue sauce while still on grill, just before you serve them.

Grilled Peaches with Grand Marnier

1/2 half peach per person (use firm ripe freestone peaches)
Brown sugar
Butter
Grand Marnier
LargeMarshmallows
.
Cut peaches in half and remove pit
Place each peach half on a piece of foil
Place one pat of butter one each peach half
Crumble 1 tablespoon brown sugar on each peach half
Drizzle Grand Marnier onto each peach half
Wrap carefully with foil and place on grill for 15 minutes
Remove from grill, open and place one large marshmallow on each peach half
Reclose and let stand for 5 minutes
Open pouch and enjoy!

Swiss Enchiladas

This recipe became my specialty dish when I was in the 7th grade.
1 whole chicken
7 oz. Herdez Casera Salsa
4 oz. Ortega diced green chilies
10 dozen flour tortillas
1 pound grated Monterey Jack cheese
1 pint whipping cream
1 onion chopped
Salt and pepper

In large stock pot boil chicken with chopped onion and salt and pepper for 1 hour (this can be done a day ahead of time)
Separate meat and chop into small pieces
In a bowl combine meat with salsa and chilies
Pour whipping cream into a 9x13 Lightly fry 1 tortilla in oil until soft less than one minute each side
Dip tortilla in whipping cream and remove to a platter
Place 1/2 level cup meat mixture in center of tortilla and roll up
Place seam side down in a separate 9x13 baking dish
Repeat with remaining tortillas
Pour remaining whipping cream over enchiladas, spread evenly and fill holes

Bake 30 minutes at 350 degrees

Revised 1/25/2010
Serve with refried beans and a salad.

Option: reserve stock and strain through a chinois. Refrigerate for future use.

Lamb Marinade

You will think your eating BEEF

6 oz. soy sauce
8 oz. white wine
12 oz. red wine
8 oz. water
1-teaspoon ground ginger
1-teaspoon garlic powder
1 lemon sliced
Lamb chops, kabobs or steaks ( I don’t recommend this for whole legs)

Mix ingredients and marinade 24 to 48 hours in refrigerator

Note if you are going to multiply this recipe reduce the amount of lemon. When I multiply it by 12, I use 3 lemons.

I have used this recipe twice for parties of over 100 people. Once we cut a whole lamb into steaks and once I had Bel Air cut eleven legs into kabobs.

Savory Peas

3 medium leeks (white part only)
10 slices bacon, chopped
1 medium red bell pepper, julienned
2 pkg (10 oz each) frozen peas, thawed
1/4 cup chopped parsley
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper

Wash leeks; cut crosswise into thin slices and set aside.
In 3 quart pan saute bacon until crisp. Remove bacon and set aside.
To drippings in pan add leeks and red pepper saute until tender (about 12 minutes).
Stir in peas, salt and pepper and half the parsley
Cook until heated through.
Spoon into serving dish and garnish with bacon and parsely.

Christmas Breakfast


White sauce with hard boiled egg whites

over English muffins, topped with finely

graded hard boiled egg yokes.

Creme Brulee

Emerils.com

CREME BRULEE

Ingredients needed:

1 quart heavy cream
1 cup granulated sugar plus 8 teaspoons raw sugar
1 vanilla bean, split and scraped (see note)
8 large egg yolks

In medium-size nonreactive saucepan, combine the cream, 1/2 cup of the granulated sugar, and the vanilla bean and pulp over medium heat. Bring to a gentle boil, whisking to dissolve the sugar.

In a small mixing bowl, whisk the egg yolks and the remaining 1/2 cup of granulated sugar together. Whisk 1 cup of the hot cream mixture into the egg yolk mixture until smooth. Slowly pour this mixture into the hot cream mixture, whisk for 2 minutes, and remove from the heat. Strain the mixture through a fine-mesh sieve. Let cool completely.

Preheat the oven to 300 F.

Fill eight 6-ounce custard cups with equal portions of the cream mixture. Place the cups in a deep baking dish large enough to accommodate them comfortably without touching. Fill the baking dish with enough water to come halfway up the sides of the cups.
Bake in the lower third of the oven until lightly golden brown and just set, about 45 minutes. Remove from the oven and let cool. Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours or up to 12 hours.

About 2 hours before serving, sprinkle 1 teaspoon of the raw sugar on the top of each custard. One at a time, using a kitchen blowtorch, approach the sugar with the torch at a low angle until the inner blue flame is 1/4 inch above the surface and move the flame in a continuous motion over the surface until the sugar has caramelized. Or, preheat the broiler, sprinkle the sugar over the custards, and slide the dishes under the broiler. Broil until the sugar caramelizes, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove and allow the custards to cool again. Refrigerate and serve chilled.

NOTE:Vanilla beans are long and thin. To get the essence of the bean, it must be split lengthwise, then scraped to remove the resinous, pasty insides. Lay the bean on a flat surface with its seam as the center and split to one end. Place the point back at the center and split it to the other end. Use the blade of the knife to scrape the pasty seeds out.

Yield: 8 servings

Chocolate Mousse

16 0z. cream cheese at room temperature
2 cups sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 pint heavy whipping cream
1/3 cup powder sugar


With a stationary mixer mix cheese, sugar , cocoa and vanilla on medium speed until peaks form. In a separate bowl whip cream and powder sugar until cream thickens and peaks form. Mix whipped cream in with cheese mix half at a time. Do not over mix just until color is blended. Fill piping bag with mixture and pipe into wine glasses or dessert dishes. Chill two hours or over night.

Fontina Risotto Cakes with Fresh Chives

Fontina Risotto Cakes with Fresh Chives


Bon Appétit
December 2004
Yield: Makes 10 servings
3 cups (about) low-salt chicken broth

2 tablespoons olive oil

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 cup plus 2 tablespoons arborio rice

1/4 cup dry white wine

6 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese

2 tablespoons (1/4 stick) butter
1 1/2 cups panko (Japanese breadcrumbs), divided

1/2 cup (packed) coarsely grated Fontina cheese (about 2 ounces)

1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley

3 tablespoons chopped fresh chives

1 large egg yolk
2 large eggs

Canola oil (for frying)
Additional grated Parmesan cheese

Fresh chives
Bring 3 cups broth to simmer in small saucepan. Reduce heat to very low; cover and keep warm. Heat olive oil in heavy medium saucepan over medium heat. Add onion; sauté until translucent, about 5 minutes. Add rice; stir 1 minute. Add wine; stir until absorbed, about 30 seconds. Add broth, 1/3 cup at a time, and simmer until rice is just tender and risotto is creamy, allowing broth to be absorbed before adding more, and stirring often, about 18 minutes. Remove from heat. Mix in 6 tablespoons Parmesan and butter. Season generously with salt and pepper. Spread risotto in 13x9x2-inch pan and cool completely.
Mix 1/2 cup panko, Fontina cheese, parsley, chopped chives, and 1 egg yolk into risotto. Shape into 1 1/4-inch balls; flatten to 2-inch rounds. Arrange on rimmed baking sheet. (Can be made 2 days ahead. Cover and refrigerate.)

Preheat oven to 250°F. Set another rimmed baking sheet in oven. Beat 2 eggs in shallow bowl to blend. Place 1 cup panko in another shallow bowl. Dip risotto cakes into beaten egg, then into panko to coat. Pour enough canola oil into large skillet to coat bottom; heat oil over medium-high heat. Working in batches, sauté risotto cakes until crisp and brown, about 2 1/2 minutes per side. Transfer to baking sheet in oven.

Serve risotto cakes sprinkled with cheese and garnished with chives.

Test-kitchen tip:

These cakes owe their delicate, crisp coating to panko, which have a coarser, lighter texture than regular dried breadcrumbs.

Epicurious.com © Condé Nast Digital, Inc. All rights reserved.

Winter-Spiced Molten Chocolate Cakes


Recipes: Printer Friendly

Practice makes perfect. Do several test runs with this recipe. Ovens temperatures may very. When you cut into your cakes the center should flow like lava. I serve this Breyer's Vanilla Bean ice cream.

Winter-Spiced Molten Chocolate Cakes


Bon Appétit
January 2004
These cakes are great for parties because they can be completely assembled the day before and then quickly baked before serving, for the all-important "ooze" factor.

Yield: Makes 8
Cakes

14 ounces bittersweet (not unsweetened) or semisweet chocolate, chopped

1 1/4 cups (2 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter

2 teaspoons ground coriander

2 teaspoons ground cardamom

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon ground cloves

1/2 teaspoon ground white pepper

6 large eggs

6 large egg yolks

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

3 cups powdered sugar

1 cup all purpose flour

Additional powdered sugar

Crystallized ginger strips

For ice cream:

Place softened ice cream in medium bowl. Using plastic spatula, fold ginger and rum into ice cream. Transfer to airtight container. Freeze ice cream mixture until firm, about 4 hours. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Keep frozen.)

For cakes:

Generously butter eight 3/4-cup soufflé dishes. Stir chocolate, butter, coriander, cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and white pepper in heavy medium saucepan over low heat until melted and smooth. Cool slightly. Whisk eggs, egg yolks, and vanilla in large bowl to blend. Whisk in 3 cups powdered sugar, then chocolate mixture, then flour. Transfer batter to prepared dishes, filling to top and dividing equally. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Cover and refrigerate.)

Preheat oven to 425°F. Bake cakes until batter has risen above dish, top edges are dark brown, and centers are still soft and runny, about 15 minutes, or about 18 minutes for refrigerated batter. Run small knife around cakes to loosen. Allow cakes to rest in dishes 5 minutes. Using hot pad and holding dish very firmly, place plate gently atop 1 cake and invert onto plate. Repeat with remaining cakes. Dust with powdered sugar. Top with crystallized ginger. Serve cakes with rum-ginger ice cream.

Epicurious.com © Condé Nast Digital, Inc. All rights reserved.