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Cuisine Corner

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Feb 23, 2012
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Pizza from Spumoni Gardens in NYC. The cheese is UNDER the sauce. Imitators call it the "upside down" pizza. The dough is light and fluffy, almost like filo, but with more strength. The sauce is stunning and the hidden cheese rounds out the taste perfectly:

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Oct 20, 2012
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Here you are.. I was looking for you!!! :p:D
I'm looking to find desperately an authentic Mexican recipe for Mole. Do you know one to write it here for me please? :)
 
Oct 20, 2012
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krebs303 said:
Not handy. There are 7 different moles. The best authority on Mexican cuisine is an English woman Diane Kennedy. do you know which mole you are interested in?

Thank you for your immediate reply. :)

No I didn't know that there are 7 different moles and I don't know which variation I've tasted. I'm looking for the one that matches best with meat and obviously the one that has not so many exotic or native Mexican herbs and vegetables in it, ( these that are very rare to find in Europe ) because then I would not be able to make it here in Greece or if I make it will not taste the same.

I don't know who is Diane Kennedy too... :eek: :( (problem! :D)
 
Mar 16, 2009
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This would be pretty typical and is the one most people would be familiar with.. yes ingredients would be a problem. There are prepared mole sauces available.

Oaxacan Black Mole: Mole Negro

Ingredients
Chicken:
2 large chickens (about 3 1/2 pounds each), each chicken cut into 8 pieces
2 small heads garlic, scored around the middle
2 small white onions, roughly sliced
6 fresh mint sprigs
Sea salt
Sauce:
1/4 pound chilhuacles negros or guajillos
2 ounces chiles pasillas (Mexican, not Oaxacan)
2 ounces chiles mulatos
1/2 pound (about 1 large) tomatoes, broiled
1 cup water
3 whole cloves
3 whole allspice
6 fresh thyme sprigs, leaves only
6 fresh marjoram sprigs, leaves only
1 tablespoon Mexican oregano
3/4 cup melted lard or safflower oil
1/4 cup sesame seeds
1/4 cup shelled peanuts
10 unskinned almonds
1/4 cup raisins
1 small onion, thickly sliced
12 small garlic cloves, peeled
1 very thick 3-inch cinnamon stick, slivered
1 ripe plantain, skinned and cut into thick slices
2 crisp-fried corn tortillas
3 thick slices dried French bread
1 (2-ounce) tablet Mexican drinking chocolate
Sea salt
4 cups chicken broth
Directions
Put the chicken into a saucepan with the garlic, onions, and mint. Add the water to cover and salt to taste. Bring to a simmer, cover the pan, and continue simmering until the chicken is just tender, about 35 minutes. Strain, reserving the broth. Remove the stems from the dried chiles. Slit them open, and remove seeds and veins, reserving the seeds. Toast the chiles for about 50 seconds on each side; if you're using guajillos, toast them longer, until they are almost charred, about 2 minutes.

Rinse the chiles in cold water, cover with hot water, and leave to soak for about 30 minutes. Put the reserved chile seeds into an ungreased frying pan and toast over fairly high heat, shaking them around from time to time so that they brown evenly. Then raise the heat and char until black. Cover with cold water and set aside to soak for about 5 minutes. Strain and put into a blender jar. Add the broiled tomatoes, unpeeled, to the blender jar along with the water, cloves, allspice, thyme, marjoram, and oregano.

Heat some of the lard in a small frying pan and fry the sesame seeds until a deep golden color, a few seconds. Strain, putting the fat back into the pan and the seeds into the blender jar, and blend as smooth as possible. Fry the rest of the ingredients, except the chiles and chocolate, 1 by 1, strain, and put into the blender jar, blending after each addition and adding water or broth, as necessary, to release the blades.

Heat 1/4 cup of the lard in the heavy pan in which you are going to cook the mole, add the blended mixture, and fry over medium heat, stirring and scraping the bottom of the pan from time to time, for about 15 minutes. Meanwhile, put a few of the chiles and about 2 cups of the water in which they were soaking into the blender jar and blend until smooth. When you have blended all the chiles, add them to the fried ingredients together with the chocolate and cook for 5 minutes longer.

Add about 4 cups of the chicken broth and continue cooking for 35 minutes. Skim the fat that forms on the top if you are going to make tamales or mole. It is added to color and flavor the masa. Add more broth if necessary, the mole should just coat the back of a wooden spoon. Add the chicken and salt to taste; cook for 10 minutes longer.



Read more at: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/...mole-mole-negro-recipe/index.html?oc=linkback
 
Oct 20, 2012
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Thank you very very very much.. I'll try it and I'll tell you then the results.. ( in the worst case we are going to have fun :p:D ).
If you want any Greek recipes that you like to try, I"ll be glad to write them here to you.. :)
 
Oct 20, 2012
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Well you mean just keftedes because you can make keftedes with any kind of minced meat you want.

Here you are and this is my grandmother's recipe.

So you are going to need:

1 kilo of minced meat, (well minced twice pressed in the mince machine and not very greasy <---this is important.. very greasy meat doesn't make good keftedes - if you want lamb tell to your butcher to mince for you the front part of the lamb under its neck which I don't know how is called in English.)

1 large onion

1/2 cup bread crump soaked in water and then squeezed well. ( if you have wheat bread even better).

About* 3 spoons of well chopped parsley

About* 1 spoon of well chopped spearmint ( parsley and spearmint is better to be fresh and not dried).

*about because I don't count it..just to get an idea of how much. If you like more spearmint add more.

1 tea spoonful of lemon juice (little -just a splash).

1 spoon of olive oil

2 eggs

oregano salt and pepper

Flour and olive oil for the frying.

As I said above you soak the bread in water.

You chop the onion well and then you wash it and then you fry it slightly, ( if you want you can use it raw but then your keftedes will be a little heavy for your stomach).

Then you put your mince in a deep bowl, and you mix there everything, the well squeezed bread, parsley, onion, spearmint, oregano, salt and pepper the oil the eggs and the lemon juice.

Make your mix in medium size balls cover them with the flour and fry them in olive oil on medium heat in order to be cooked inside. You may need to add oil while you frying your keftedes and take care not to over do it with the flour or with the frying.

You can eat keftedes almost with everything. With boiled rice, fresh fried potatoes, mash potatoes, salad..but not with pasta.. They don't match with pasta. :)

And that's all. Very easy recipe.

ETA If you don't want to eat fried keftedes you can make them in the oven but then you don't need to use flour. Just cover your baking pan with olive oil and put them in the oven and take care to bake both sides ( you have to turn them upside down).
 
Oct 20, 2012
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Hm.. are you sure that you ate keftedes and not soutsoukakia? Keftedes have not red sause and soutsoukakia recipe is different than keftedes. Did they had garlic in it or not? You might ate kembab as well.. which is made from lamb too.
 
Mar 16, 2009
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they were on the menu as keftedes. as for garlic I cant recall it's been over 30 years. :eek:
edit: not soutsoukakia as it was not a tomato sauce. The sauce was really more purple than red. I've looked for years and never found anything like it. also the meatballs were the size of a baseball
 
Oct 20, 2012
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krebs303 said:
they were on the menu as keftedes. as for garlic I cant recall it's been over 30 years. :eek:

Ha ha ha.. so short time..:rolleyes: ha ha haa...:D
Ok if you want soutsoukakia or kembab tell me.

As for the wine I don't think it is that hard anymore to find Retsina wine in Mexico. Though I prefer Savvatiano wine from Retsina.. white wine but a little bit different.
 
Oct 20, 2012
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krebs303 said:
Is the baked eggplant dish. mousakka? i think baked with ground meat and topped with bechamel sauce

You are right. This is moussakas. Do you want the recipe? (But I warn you,this is not of the very quick or easy ones).
 
Oct 20, 2012
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krebs303 said:
they were on the menu as keftedes. as for garlic I cant recall it's been over 30 years. :eek:
edit: not soutsoukakia as it was not a tomato sauce. The sauce was really more purple than red. I've looked for years and never found anything like it. also the meatballs were the size of a baseball

Now I saw your edit.. Perhaps it was indeed keftedes with red wine sauce but this is not the "official" recipe. Keftedes are made they way I told you.

Now I can write for you here a wine sauce but I'm not sure if it will be close to what you've tasted back then. Most of wine sauces have tomatoes in the ingredients but if you tell me that this wasn't a tomato sauce ..:confused: problem :)
 
Mar 16, 2009
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Pressure Cooker Split Pea Soup
Ready in under an hour

Onion, Garlic, Celery, Carrots, and Smoked Pork Chop
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Add 1lb. split peas, 8 cups chicken stock or water, thyme. bring up to pressure and cook 20 min
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Yum yum
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