Out with the old – In with the new – New class at UCLA – Restaurant Operations

A quick update as I head to hit the books!  I enrolled in UCLA’s extension class in…<<<drum roll>>> Restaurant Operations & Management.  It’s once a week night class from 7-10pm – I know it’s late – but it’s really gotten me excited and energized.

There’s something to be said about putting yourself in an unfamiliar environment, meeting new and sometimes strange people of all walks of life, almost all who wants to someday (fantasize) about opening their own restaurants, some with restaurant experience, some who are just foodies, and some who are just lost looking for that passion to be sparked.

So far, it’s been learning the basics.  The sometimes boring but necessary stuff.  After all, it is a business – it just happens to be someplace where people get together to nourish themselves, to “break bread” with others, to socialize and communicate, and have fun.

More to come on class~  hitting the books~

-ck

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Korean street food recipe – Kimchi Pancakes

In a rather odd-weathered week here in LA where it’s been storming wind and rain the last two days, there’s no better way to stay indoors than frying up some golden-crisp kimchi pancakes to share with your loved honeys.  Of all things, a non-Korean friend of mine reminded me how you could enjoy it anytime, with pretty much anything you have in the fridge.  Of course – if you happen to have some stinky, pickled kimchi – that’s the bomb!

I think every country has their version of savory pancakes, whether it be crepes of France, latke of the Jewish tradition or hash browns of a la U.S. of A.  The thing that makes kimchi pancakes the “bomb” is that they have a lot of texture and flavors melded together in differnent notes.  You have the crispy ruffled edges of the golden fried batter.  A dip in a soy/vinegar sauce, and you’ve got a savory umami cut with the tangy acid.   Bite into the pancakes, and the sweet, tenderness of the vegetables, the crisp pseudo crunch of cooked kimchi, all wrapped up in some velvety greasy goodness of the batter – it’s the perfect food~

So have a kimchi pancake party the next time it rains, or just when you want some comfort food to ease your winter blues…

Kimchi Pancakes (6-8 pancakes)

INGREDIENTS:

1 c. (organic) white flour

1/4 c. cornmeal (gives it a nice :crunch:)

1/4 c. sweet rice flour (sold at Japanese grocery stores – I happened 2 have it around – can substitute with 1/4 c. white flour)

1.5 – 2c water

1/2 tsp salt

1 egg

1/2 c. sliced onions

1/2 c. sliced leeks

1/4 c. red bell peppers, jalapeno (whatever raw veggies you have in fridge would work, well – not root vegetables like carrots or potato)

1/2 c. pickled kimchi (y’all – it’s gotta be pickled/sour/pungent – or it just ain’t good~  squeeze excess liquid and chop in small bite-size pieces)

COOK:

1) Whisk the first 6 ingredients until blended well (don’t overdo it as it’ll get tough – just enough until the clumps disappear)

2) Add veggies and kimchi and fold into batter.

3) Heat your griddle/frying pan on medium-high.  Do a water-drop test to see if it’s hot enough.  If it sizzles and takes 2-4 seconds for the water to evaporate, it’s ready.  Generously drizzle some oil – I like grape seed oil as it’s light in taste, can withstand a high temperature (perfect for frying) and supposedly is better for you due to antioxidants as well as having the least amount of saturated fats of all vegetable oils.

4) Using ladle, making sure to get enough “stuffing” along with the batter, pour into griddle and fry one-side until golden-brown.  Drizzle little more oil, flip and golden brown the other side.

5) Make a dipping sauce by mixing 1 part soy sauce to 1/2 part apple cider vinegar (not only is it a natural vinegar, but apple cider vinegar has some sweetness to it which goes nicely with the soy sauce).  You can also substitute juice of a lemon wedge.

6) Be sure to serve it while hot and crispy.  You can make it sorta like a performance cooking by having party around you while you’re cooking and getting them served straight from the cooktop.

Savor the goodness and watch your blues go away.  Bon appetit!

-chef kelly

made with two tablespoons of love; 1 tbsp love for food, 1 tbsp love for life.

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Baby, it’s cold outside…perfect for some white chicken chili to warm your soul…

Even though we’ve been spoiled with low to mid 70s here in LA, there’s something about the winter “air” that’s a little blue, a little gloomy – a perfect excuse for making some comfort dishes.  One of my favorite is a white chicken chili dish from Kate Mantillini.  Below is my attempt.  Verdict?  Awesome!  The hubs said it best, “it was worth the wait”.  Bon appetit!

Ingredients (serves 2-3)

4 sm. pieces chicken tenders diced

1 boneless, skinless chicken thigh diced

1/2 diced white onion

1/2 diced red bell pepper

1/2 jalapeno, 1/2 yellow jalapeno

(trick – the heat is all in the white “innards” of the jalapeno.  Avoid massive heat by cutting jalapeno in half and cutting the white “innards” away from the outer jalapeno.  Julienne them first and then finely dice).

4 cloves of sliced garlic

2 pickled jalapeno slices (from jar) and 2 tsp of the juice from jar

2 cups organic chicken broth

Spices:

1/4 tsp ea. of black pepper, 4C’s: Chili powder, Cumin, Curry powder, and Cajun spice, oregano and 2 bay leaves

Cook:

1) Sautee garlic and chicken in grape seed oil in medium heat until chicken’s more white than pink (from cooking).

2) Add onion, bell pepper and jalapeno and sweat until translucent.

3) Pour chicken broth and spices.  After boiling for a few minutes, reserve 1/2 cup of liquid and cool.

4) Simmer for 30-40 min.  To the reserved liquid, whisk 4 tbsp of heavy cream and 4 tsp of arrowroot starch to thicken liquid.

5) With the chili boiling, stir in the reserved liquid/heavy cream mixture and simmer for 5-7 min.

6) Serve over a bed of whole grain “egg” noodles, garnish with minced cilantro, lime wedge, grated cheddar cheese and low fat sour cream.

And for desert – how about some fresh blackberries with homemade whipped cream?  Whipped cream – whip 1/2 c. heavy cream with 1 tsp of apple Calvado liquer, 2 tsp of light brown sugar, 1/8 tsp vanilla (scraped from bean), and sprinkle of lemon zest.  HEAVEN!

Enjoy!

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Snapshot of Holiday Cooking pix – Dumplings, Sweet Potatoes, Bokchoy and all over the place

It was my birthday yesterday and my perfect, best-in-the-universe-husband surprised me with a Macbook Pro and so here I am with a debut of blogging on my own Mac.  Wordpress looks a little different and I am sure I have to get used to it – but so far – it’s pretty sleek~

The kitchen is now open (at least 80% as workers are still sanding drywall down as we speak) but hopefully – all the strangers will be out of the house soon and I’ll be in the kitchen full-time cooking up yummy concoctions and dishes.

In the meantime, below are some pix of all the cooking that’s been going on with the fam around…

Wishing everyone a BEAUTIFUL, wonderful, peaceful and happy New Year filled with lots of laughter and much happiness – whatever it is that makes U happy.

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Nancy Silverton, the Bread Queen – learning Italian cooking from the best…

Inaugural Mozza cooking class of 11 eager-beaver, hand-raising (that would be me:)), ravenous foodie students gathered on one weeknight of Nov 12 at the impressive, fully-equipped kitchen at Mozza with the one and only Nancy Silverton – with pix to prove it;)

Kelly with Nancy Silverton

They (Nancy, as well as Matt Molina, the executive chef at Mozza and Dahlia Narvaez, the executive pastry chef at Mozza) made things look so easy and approachable, I thought, there’s nothing to this!  I can be a chef:)  And with beautiful and importantly, delicious out-of-this-world Italian-influenced Thanksgiving recipes – even in middle of moving and packing -I was able to impress the family with the dishes I learned.  They liked it so much that they practically BEGGED for doggie bags!  No more cooking the entire crazy bird, it’ll be roulades for me from now on.  Not only does it look beeeautiful but it’s juicy, tasty, and sooo much better than the traditional turkey.  And the brussel sprouts – oh. how. i. love. thee.  After you try mine, actually, Nancy Silverton’s, seared to perfection and drizzled with sherry vinaigrette and pancetta bread crumbs – you’ll never look at these so-called-exotic and bad-rap-with kids-veggies the same way again.  And to that point – I’d like to share the recipes below (Turkey here and Brussel Sprouts on next post).  Let me know how it turns out and what you think of it.  For those of you who’s had traditional bird for Thanksgiving, this recipe would be PERFECT for the upcoming holidays~  ciao~

Taccino Alla Porchetta – Turkey Roulade (provided by courtesy of Nancy Silverton at Mozza and tweaked by moi) – Serves 8 with some leftovers

Turkey RouladeNeed:

6 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

2c yellow onion, peeled, halved, and sliced into 1″ rounds

2c yellow onion, finely minced

3 garlic cloves, minced

8 tbsp fresh fennel fronds, chopped (the frilly dill-looking stuff when you buy your fennel bulbs)

2 tsp. fennel seeds

2 tbsp. plus 2tsp. kosher salt

2 tbsp plus 1/4 tsp fresh ground black pepper

4 tbsp fresh rosemary chopped

2 tbsp fennel pollen (found at your exotic spice stores – and what both Nancy and Matt refer to as “cocaine” of Italian cooking.  Intensely concentrated fennel flower pollen with beautiful color and intense, intense aroma and flavors of fennel)

4 deboned turkey thighs (~5 lbs in total and easily found at your local market like Whole Foods.  They only had the bone-in ones and I sweetly asked the nice butcher to debone it for me)

20 14″ lengths of butcher’s twin

3 c fennel bulbs, stalks cut off and sliced 1″ thick

 brine: 1/3 c sugar, 1/3c salt and 4c water

Cook:

Brine –

Mix brine and soak turkey thighs for 1 hour.  According to Mozza, this helps not only to flavor and bring moisture to your protein but also tenderizes the meat.  After 1 hr, remove turkey, pat dry with paper towl and set aside;

Prep filling –

1) Heat pan with 4 tbsp olive oil.  Add onion, garlic, fennel seed, 2tsp salt and 1/4 tsp pepper; sweat for 7 min until tender.  Turn off heat, add chopped rosemary and cool.  Stir in fennel fronds into filling mixture – it will have a consistency of a paste.

Rub –

1) Mix the following dry ingredients: fennel pollen + 2 tbsp salt + 2 tbsp pepper.  Rub unto turkey thighs, lay skin-side down.

Jelly Roll/Roulade time – Pre-heat oven to 325 degrees.

1) Line up turkey thighs on cutting board, skin-side down.  Divide filling equally among the four thighs, placing it toward the end of the turkey closest to you.  Start rolling, a la egg-roll style.  Repeat for the rest of the turkey.

2) Tress your turkey by tying it once lengthwise with the butchers twine, and then tie it ~3-4 times horizontally.

3) Heat a dutch oven (a fancy name for any kind of oven-proof, preferably iron cast deep roasting pan) on cooktop with 2 tbsp of olive oil.  Sear turkey (seam side down) and brown about 2 min on each side.  This helps to tighten up the seam so that you don’t have fillings busting out of the jelly roll.  Plus – it makes a nice sear that I swear helps to keep the flavors “inside” and keep the protein moist.  Turn off heat, pull out turkey rolls, add onion and fennel bulbs to pan, scrape bottom and (if you like), pour 1/4 cup of white wine to deglaze the pan. 

Roast-

1) Place turkey roll back into the pan, and roast for 45 min until the center comes to 165 degrees.  I didn’t have a thermometer so I just guessed and cooked it for ~1 hr and it turned out fine. 

Serve –

Remove turkey from oven, let cool for ~15-20 min.  Remove twine, and slice into 1″ thick medallions.  Serve and enjoy~

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Cooking class at Mozza tonite! Inaugural class with co-owner Nancy Silverton and Chef Matt Molina

Can’t wait!  Inaugural cooking class at Mozza2go, of the infamous Nancy Silverton of Osteria Mozza and chef Matt Molina.  I so lucked out – was put on a waiting list and got a call late last night of a cancellation – so SCORE! 

Tonight’s menu:
“Thanksgiving in Panicale” 
 
Nancy & Matt will prepare a 3-course dinner marrying the American Thanksgiving feast with the flavors of Nancy’s Umbrian hometown. 
                Panzanella with Dried Cranberries & Bitter Greens
                Tacchino alla Porchetta
                Brussel Sprouts with Prosciutto Breadcrumbs
                Pumpkin & Date Crostata

Happy cooking!

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Cheap dinner- Stretch your dollar with one chicken, three very different recipes.

Make one damn good roasted chicken. Get three tasty n very different meals out of it. Your dinner worries are half over with three days of chicken. I promise you won’t be tired of chicken as each recipe is totally different. See below.

One danm good fall-off-the-bone-tender roasted chicken-
Night b4-
1. Buy a 4lb whole chicken (organic freerange, if possible. Little more pricey but you ARE getting 3 meals out of it).
2. Wash it well scrubbing it down with kosher salt which with its large grains will rinse away any nastiness.
3. Stuff inside with: 1/2 onion, 6 cloves of garlic, 1/2 lemon, a small bunch of fresh thyme and rosemary. Tie opening with twine.
4. Sprinkle s/p (salt n pepper). Drizzle olive oil and few splashes of shoyu. Place in French casserole n sit overnight in fridge.

When ready to roast- bake in oven at 375• with lid on for ~1 hr. Then take out lid, broil at ~400 for ~ 20 min til it gets nice golden brown. Take it out of oven and cool for 10min b4 carving.

Meal 1- Roasted Chicken
Serve dark meat with some grown-up mashed sweet potatoes (boil til tender, peel, mash, add s/p, nutmeg, pat of butter and soy milk and some sauteed onion n leeks if avail) and sauteed bok choy(olive oil, garlic, salt and splash of oyster sauce)

Meal 2- Chicken Fried Rice
Cook brown rice. Sautee chopped vegetables (carrots, onion, mushroom), add chopped roasted chicken, add rice, season with sesame oil, sprinkle of evaporated cane juice, shoyu and thinly sliced fresh ginger. Serve with chawamushi- Japanese egg custard. Simply double boil the following concoction(2 beaten eggs, 1 1/2cup water, 1 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp sesame oil, splash shoyu) for ~10 min and a nice warm egg custard to enjoy with your fried rice.

 Meal 3- Chicken Enchilada
1. Sautee julienned onion and button mushrooms.
2. Line casserole with Las Palmas green enchilada sauce. Layer yellow corn tortilla on top.
3. Layer the following: pulled chicken, onion/mushroom mixture, reduced fat Mexican cheese blend. Pour enchilada sauce til loosely covered. Repeat with one more layer. Finish top with cheese.
4. Bake at 375• for 45-50 min. Cool for 10min and serve with a side of arugula salad.

Goodness. Let me know how it turns out.

[ btw – can you believe i wrote all of the text of this post while waiting at the dentist’s office?  jeesh!]

-ck

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Converting oatmeal haters with quick-n-easy Irish steel-cut oatmeal recipe

Irish steel-cut oatmeal

Irish steel-cut oatmeal

Mmm..aahhh~  It’s starting to smell like fall.  No leaves changing color here in SoCal but definitely feeling the chilly mornings and nights and with Halloween around the corner, it’s definitely fall. 

And what better way to start your morning than warm & hearty Irish steel-cut oatmeal?  Psshaw!  Who wants mushy, slimy, tasteless porridge for breakfast?  Then you haven’t had Irish steel-cut oatmeal yet!  Minimally processed with just the removal of the outer inedible husk and steel-cutting the oats into bigger pieces, not only is it WAAY more nutritious (than the rolled flat quick cook/instant ones) but it’s gluten-free,  full of fiber amd best of all has a nutty, chewy taste that doesn’t even compare with the boxed kinds. 

Ok – maybe you’re convinced but who’s got the time ?  After all – it takes a good 25-30 min just to cook it. 

Here’s a recipe that makes your oatmeal while you get your beauty sleep.  Not kidding.

Slow-cooked Irish steel-cut oatmeal recipe

Serves two (your honey & you or just awesome you for two breakfasts)

1/3 cup Irish steel-cut oatmeal (buy organic bulk from your local Whole Foods or McCanns is nice too – and so many uses for the awesome tin)

1 2/3 cup filtered water

1 pinch kosher salt

1 tbsp brown sugar

2 tbsp dried raisins (I like white ones as it seems to have less sugar content)

Toppings:

Fruit (what’s in season?  bananas, strawberries, peaches, whatever~)

1 tsp ground flax seeds/serving

Roasted slivered almonds

Maple syrup or Agave syrup

 

Make – 2 steps, really!

1. Purchase a small slow-cooker with warm setting option available (I got mine from Target for ~$8 bucks).  It’s more than paid for itself.

2. Right before bedtime (usually ~10:30-11pm), pour oatmeal, water and pinch of salt.  Turn on slow-cooker to WARM.

3. Sweet dreams~ go to sleep.  This oatmeal is very low-maintenance with NO stirring needed.  Have window of cooking time of~7-8 hrs.  If it sticks a little around the sides, no problem.  Let it soak and the crock pot is like brand new again.  

4. Rise and Shine:)!  Turn off slow cooker, add brown sugar and raisins, stir and leave it.  The raisins will soak up some liquid and get all soft & plump, the brown sugar will meld nicely with the oatmeal.

[ Do your getting-ready-in-the-morning thing, start coffee/tea,  and make yourself a nice irish steel-cut oatmeal bowl, adding  your toppins of fruit, flax seeds, almonds and syrup.  Add your milk (organic soy milk if you have), stir the goodness and enjoy~]

Made with two tablespoons of love; love for food, love for life.  Stay warm and cozy!

-ck

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Check out this video! I want to have fun at work too! Backstreet Boys’ I want it that way~~~Office-style

When is this corporate thing going to get better?!?…

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Bring zing to your chicken recipe…Chicken Marbella (tribute to Ms. Sheila Lukins)

On my way to work driving down the ever-treacherous demonic 405 in LA, I heard a clip on KCRW.  A listener, an expat in a far-away land, perhaps Sweden or even Iceland wrote in, saying how uncanny it was that at the very moment she heard the recent passing of Ms. Sheila Lukins, the infamous cook, co-author of The Silver Palate and food editor for the Parade Magazine (taking over Julia Child’s role in the mid-80s), that she was eating her infamous Chicken Marbella.  Indeed, I was sorry to hear she had passed.  But I didn’t even know her.  It was Julia Child with her boosterous, high-pitched voice and personality.  Julia who had her TV show and even a movie, Julie and Julia, Julia who seemed to be synonymous with introducing Americans with French cooking.  I was too young when the first Silver Palate came out but come to find out, in some sense, the baton had been passed from Julia to Sheila, pushing taste buds to go beyond the often snobby Frenchy food to healthier and practical dishes such as gazpacho, hummus, spicy carrot cake and of course, Chicken Marbella.

So. Chicken.  I think it is one of those “neutral” meat that’s approachable, thought to be better-for-you than say, beef and frankly, one that I do eat quite often but often get bored with what it renders.  The chicken marbella by Ms. Sheila Lukins is simply amazing!  And the secret ingredients that take chicken to the next level?  PRUNES!  Who would have even thought that marinating chicken with prunes, green olives, capers, olive oil, oregano, red wine vinegar (& a few others) would create this delightfully tantalizing chicken?!  It’s the perfect melange of flavors; savory, salty, sweet, and sour with just the right amount of decadence of olive oil fat infused into chicken that makes me salivate.  And the best part?  It’s super EZ!  Everyone will think you spent hours cooking it;)   Just marinate overnight, pop it in the oven the next day and voila – chicken marbella.

With much thanks and full credits to Oprah Winfrey who shared the Chicken Marbella recipe on her site – here’s my attempt which turned out beautifully; served with sauteed arugula & smashed roasted potatoes. Total comfort food.  Also was able to use cold leftover slices tossed with a salad for a meal the next day. 

Chicken Marbella

 

 Share your FAV chicken recipe HERE!!!

Made with two tablespoons of love; love for food, love for life.

-ck

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