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- Rec.Food.Recipes Digest #129
- Mon 27 May 1991
-
- M: Chinese Baked Shark (Michael Mealing)
- Col: Almira's Fruitcake (jj, like it or not)
- OV: Simple Dahl (Shankar Bhattacharyya)
- OV: Mussoor Dahl (Shankar Bhattacharyya)
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- .RH REC.FOOD.RECIPES-#129 SHARK-CHINESE M "20 May 91" 1991
- .RZ "CHINESE BAKED SHARK"
- .KY FISH CHINESE
- My father does alot of off shore deep sea fishing and usually has alot of
- small sharks in the freezer that usually get dumped on me since I've found
- some rather creative things to do with good shark steaks (besides stir fry).
- .PP
- I don't know if chinese food is baked usually but this tastes good anyway
- .IH
- .IG "2-4" "shark steaks"
- (the younger the shark the better)
- .IG "" "white cooking wine"
- .IG "" "onion"
- .IG "" "green pepper"
- .IG "" "mushrooms"
- (the more the better, but that's just me)
- .IG "" "Hoisin sauce"
- (or whichever chinese sauce you prefer)
- .IG "" "various spices"
- .PH
- .SK 1
- Make sure the steaks are fresh (frozen shark can be used as a retread
- rubber). Marinate them in a few spices and 3-4 tablespoons of wine per
- steak for about 2 hours.
- .SK 2
- Saute your veggies with some butter and wine and add the chinese sauce.
- Bring to a simmer and add about a cup of wine and then turn the heat
- down to low.
- .SK 3
- Now, butter the bottom of your baking dish, add some fresh veggies to
- the bottom of the dish if you want (I make a different variation of
- this each time I cook it). Put the steaks in and then pour the sauce on
- top. Bake at
- .TE 350 180
- for about 20 minutes or until they're white
- throughout. Don't overcook because the can get rubbery.
- .NX
- I usually serve them with some stir fry vegetables and rice. You can also
- make it an Italian dish by substituting tomato sauce for the hoisin sauce.
- .SH RATING
- .I Difficulty:
- easy.
- .I Time:
- 45 mins. + 2 hours marinading.
- .I Precision:
- no need to measure.
- .WR
- Michael Mealling
- ccoprmm@prism.gatech.edu
-
-
- .RH REC.FOOD.RECIPES-#129 FRUIT-CAKE-3 Col "21 May 91" 1991
- .RZ "ALMIRA'S FRUITCAKE"
- Almira is my mother, but although this is much modified from hers we don't
- compete, we just eat each other's.
- .IH "Servings: Many! About 12 lbs." "Servings: Many! About 5 \(12 kg"
- .SH Dry:
- .IG "3 cups" "flour"
- (all-purpose, or unbleached. No bread flour, no cake flour)
- .IG "1 tsp" "baking powder"
- .IG "1 tsp" "baking soda"
- .IG "\)12 tsp" "salt"
- .IG "1 tsp" "ground cinnamon"
- .IG "1 tsp" "ground cloves"
- .IG "1 tsp" "ground allspice"
- .SH Fruit:
- .IG "2 \)12 cups" "chopped walnuts" "300 g"
- (give or take)
- .IG "1 \)12 lb" "chopped pitted dates" "700 g"
- (give or take)
- .IG "1 \)12 lb" "halved glace cherries" "700 g"
- (give or take)
- .IG "1 \)12 lb" "fruit cake mix" "700 g"
- (candied fruit) (give or take)
- .SH Other:
- .IG "3 cups" "cold water" "675 ml"
- .IG "8 oz" "butter" "225 g"
- .IG "2 cups" "sugar" "450 g"
- .IG "3 lb" "raisins" "1350 g"
- (dark and/or golden)
- .IG "1 lb" "chopped dried apricots" "450 g"
- .IG "3 large" "eggs"
- .IG "\)14 cup" "decent brandy or dark rum" "55 ml"
- .PH
- .SK 1
- Sift dry ingredients together. Reserve half.
- .SK 2
- Use \)12 of the dry ingredients to keep dates and candied fruit from
- sticking together after chopping. A food processor makes chopping the
- fruit much easier, but make sure you use the flour to keep things from
- sticking. In general, hand-chopping is more work, but is much more
- reliable.
- .SK 3
- Beat eggs very lightly, just until uniform.
- .SK 4
- In a large kettle (10 quart minimum), combine sugar, raisins, apricots,
- and cold water. Heat until mixture steams, *** do not boil ***.
- Cook for 10 minutes without boiling, then add butter and stir until mixed.
- .SK 5
- Cool until lukewarm. Add eggs, mix.
- .SK 6
- Add fruits and dry ingredients in alternating parts. The mixture will
- be agonizingly stiff. Add brandy and mix. It will still be just as
- stiff, but the smell will be much in the spirits... ;-)
- .SK 7
- Fill greased pans 2/3 full (12-14
- .AB "1 lb" "450 g"
- fruit cake pans). Bake at
- .TE 275 140 .
- Cake is done when a toothpick inserted in the center pulls out clean,
- roughly 2 - 2 \)12 hours. Cool for 10 minutes in the pans, then remove
- and finish cooling on racks. As odd as it sounds, SLOW baking is right,
- you don't want to caramelize the outside of the cake very much, if any.
- .SK 8
- Wrap fruitcake in foil, refrigerate. Will keep for several months.
- May be sprinkled with rum or brandy if desired.
- .NX
- .SK 1
- Our last few batches used more fruitcake mix and less cherries due to
- supplies in-house. Suit yourself, try to keep the *sum* more or less
- constant.
- .SK 2
- Depending on the state of the raisins and apricots, you may or may not
- have to add a BIT of water to make the dough wet-cement-like rather than
- granite-like, but it's supposed to be stiff.
- .SK 3
- You should plump the raisins and dried fruit longer, rather than shorter,
- if possible. That's how you avoid chewy fruit. If the raisins are
- really dry, add JUST enough water so that they are almost covered.
- .SK 4
- After spooning dough into pan, if you push down the raisins, apricots
- and dates, you will get no chewy parts.
- .SH "Possible changes to taste:"
- Endless. We sometimes use candied citron, or candied pineapple as well (well
- chopped!) You can use rum to soak the cakes afterwards, or not. Adding the
- brandy before cooking dissolves fruit flavors into the dough, this is key to
- a good tasting (rather than bland/sweet) cake. You can use other dried fruits
- as well as apricots. Figs don't work, though, in our experience, so you're
- warned. Rum before cooking is a different flavor than brandy, we like either.
- If you add both, it's probably too much liquid, but you'll just have to bake
- longer in that case.
- .SH RATING
- .I Difficulty:
- moderate.
- .I Time:
- 1 hour + 2 - 2 \)12 hours cooking time.
- .I Precision:
- Very little
- .WR
- jj@alice.att.com
-
-
- .RH REC.FOOD.RECIPES-#129 DAHL-SIMPLE OV "21 May 91" 1991
- .RZ "SIMPLE DAHL"
- .KY INDIAN
- If one uses vegetable oil, the recipe is vegan. Ghee is better to my palate,
- in which case, the recipes are lacto-vegetarian.
- .PP
- A fair number of dahl recipes have been posted here in the last couple of
- months. Many have been a bit more elaborate than the dahls that Indians cook
- every day. While a fancy dahl is delightful from time to time, I prefer the
- simpler ones most of the time.
- .PP
- This is an utterly simple dish. It works, or it does not. There is nothing to
- hide behind, nothing to salvage. And it is possible that a preference for a
- simple dish is acquired.
- .IH
- .IG "" "lentils"
- .IG "" "ghee"
- .IG "" "spices"
- .IG "" "salt"
- .PH
- .SK 1
- Boil the lentils until they are cooked through.
- .SK 2
- Heat a little ghee in a wok. Stir fry the spices for a few seconds, to
- produce what we call the tarka or phoron. Expect some spitting and
- foaming during this step.
- .SK 3
- Pour the boiled lentils in, salt to taste, remove from heat.
- .NX
- This uses a spice called kalonji, often referred to as "black jeera" or
- "black cumin". This looks like small chips of obsidian. It does not look
- remotely like cumin, nor does it taste like cumin. Labels may be ambiguous,
- since I have also seen dark cumin seeds labelled as "black cumin". Stay
- conscious of this. If someone knows a proper English name for kalonji,
- please let me know.
- .SH RATING
- .I Difficulty:
- very easy.
- .I Time:
- Total real hands-on time required is 5-10 minutes.
- .I Precision:
- no need to measure.
- .WR
- Shankar Bhattacharyya
- sbhattac@rnd.gba.nyu.edu,
- sbhattac@sales.gba.nyu.edu
-
-
- .RH REC.FOOD.RECIPES-#129 DAHL-MUSSOOR OV "21 May 91" 1991
- .RZ "MUSSOOR DAHL" "Simple dahl using red lentils"
- .KY INDIAN
- If one uses vegetable oil, the recipe is vegan. Ghee is better to my palate,
- in which case, the recipes are lacto-vegetarian.
- .IH
- .IG "1 cup" "red lentils"
- .IG "2 - 2.5 cups" "water" "450-550 ml"
- (depends on desired texture)
- .IG "1 0r 2" "serrano peppers"
- .IG "\)14 tsp" "turmeric"
- (maximum)
- .IG "1/8 tsp" "kalonji"
- .IG "~1 tsp" "ghee"
- (can use oil or clarified butter)
- .IG "" "salt to taste"
- .PH
- .SK 1
- Wash the lentils. Add the water, bring to a gentle boil. Some scum will
- develop, from lentil dust, and surfactants in the lentils. Skim it off.
- .SK 2
- Add the turmeric powder. (Doing this before the scum is removed causes
- the turmeric to float up with the scum, and it is then lost. If you do
- not skim the scum off you will have problems with the mixture boiling
- over). Do not postpone adding the turmeric too long. Undercooked turmeric
- is not nice.
- .SK 3
- Pierce the sides of the peppers (or slit them), and drop them in. Boil
- gently, almost covered, till the lentils are comletely cooked. If
- necessary, add some water along the way. The end product should be
- fairly fluid.
- .SK 4
- Remove the peppers, homogenize the mixture with a hand mixer, drop the
- peppers back in.
- .SH "Make the tarka:"
- .SK 1
- Heat the ghee, preferably in a wok, which makes it easy to deal with the
- very small quantity of oil. Add the kalonji.
- .SK 2
- As soon as it stops sizzling, add the cooked lentils rapidly. You may
- want to let the oil cool briefly, so that splattering is avoided.
- .PP
- \fB--- SEE CAUTION BELOW. THERE ARE RISKS FOR THE CARELESS. ---\fR
- .SK 3
- Salt to taste (0.5 to 1 tsp), mix, simmer briefly, serve.
- .SH Variation:
- .B Materials:
- As before, except:
- .IP skip the kalonji
- .IP use somewhat more ghee
- add:
- .IP 1/8 - \)14 tsp cumin seeds
- .IP a modest handful chopped onions
- .B Procedure:
- The only difference is in the tarka. Cook the lentils as before.
- .B "Prepare the tarka as follows:"
- .SK 1
- Heat the oil. Add the cumin seeds. Stir-fry for a few seconds. Add the
- chopped onions, and sautee.
- .SK 2
- Pour in the cooked lentils. Salt to taste. Serve.
- .IP "CAUTION: \fBADDING THE LENTILS TO HOT OIL MAY CAUSE SPLATTERING.\fR"
- .PP
- If you are not experienced at this, allow the oil to cool first. Also,
- against the intuition, there will be more splattering if you get too gentle
- about pouring the lentils into the oil. If you add the cooked lentils rapidly,
- the oil gets swamped quickly by the lentils, and splattering is avoided, even
- if it is hot. At the same time, rapid addition of hot fluid involves some risk
- of splashing it around.
- .PP
- The safest way to deal with this is to let the oil cool down, then pour it
- into the cooked lentils (instead of the other way around), and then use some
- of the lentils to rinse the rest of the tarka into the main container. Respect
- hot oil.
- .SH Accompaniments:
- The first implementation, in particular, is one of the most common ways in
- which red lentils are made in Bengal, where I'm from. It is usually served
- with rice, a wedge of lime, and fried potatoes. Mix the dahl with the rice and
- potatoes, squeeze the lime over it and eat.
- .PP
- If you want to serve this with bread, use less water, so as to get a thicker
- consistency.
- .PP
- By some small margin, I prefer the first implementation with rice, the second
- with breads. Chappatis in particular.
- .SH "Fried potatoes:"
- Cut potatoes into
- .AB "0.5 - 0.75 inch" "1.5 cm"
- cubes. Optionally, parboil the potatoes and
- drain. Sprinkle with salt and turmeric. Fry over medium to high heat.
- .PP
- I have a strong preference for the parboiled version, but lack the technique
- to do it consistently.
- .SH RATING
- .I Difficulty:
- easy.
- .I Time:
- ?
- .I Precision:
- measure ingredients.
- .WR
- Shankar Bhattacharyya
- sbhattac@rnd.gba.nyu.edu,
- sbhattac@sales.gba.nyu.edu
-