Month: March 2010 (Page 3 of 3)

Village Coffee Roastery in Scottsdale

We used to live just down the street from The Village Coffee Roastery and still make the 40min journey to Scottsdale to visit from time to time.  It is one of the oldest independent coffee houses in Arizona and has a proud history of utilizing science and technology to develop its own premium coffee. Over the last decade the Roastery has experimented with the finest Arabica beans from all over the world, bringing out the natural essence of the region from which it comes. The atmosphere of the place is fun and comfortable. They showcase local talented artists, live music, free Wi-Fi and knowledgeable staff. Click here to visit the website.

Arizona Culinary Institute

Arizona Culinary Institute is everything one wants from a culinary school. Hands on, personal instruction from great and friendly chefs, small classes, a building built fromt he ground up as a culinary school in beautiful Scottsdale, Arizona. They focus on providing students a solid foundation in the classical culinary arts and we are proud to have them and a friend and partner of Into the Soup. To learn more about their outstanding program, click here.

Check out our Basic Cooking Technique features with Chef Glenn Humphrey and join Heidi and Glenn on Into the Soup on the Radio.

Faith Wipperman’s Duck Soup with Warm Beet Salad

Faith Wipperman was just newly appointed to Saute and Entrementier at Lon’s at the Hermosa, considered one of the best restaurants in Paradise Valley, Arizona. We have known of Faith for a bit now but just recently interviewed her for a magazine article. We found her to be one of the most inspiring young (18) personalities we have encountered. Faith prepared this Duck Soup with Warm Beet Salad for our time together. It was to die for. Enjoy this recipe and look for more of Faith Wipperman in the future.

Duck Soup Ingredients

  • 1 medium yellow onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 Tbsp sherry vinegar
  • 3 Fuji apples, peeled, cored, and quartered
  • Butter
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 2 sprigs thyme
  • ¼ C orange juice, reduced
  • ½- ¾ C roasted potato flesh
  • 4 C duck stock
  • Salt
  • White pepper
  • ¼ C dry sherry

Over low heat, cook the onion in the butter until deeply caramelized and fragrant; this can take an hour or more. Once desired color is achieved, deglaze with the sherry vinegar and reserve.

In a pan melt 4 Tbsp butter and add sugar, cook to combine, then add the apple quarters in a single layer. Cook slowly to caramelize, flipping half way through. When finished, the apples should be caramelized and tender. Reserve.

Infuse the duck stock with the thyme; heat until the stock is completely fluid. 

In a blender combine the caramelized onion, ¾ of the caramelized apples, duck stock, orange juice, and 1/3 C roasted potato flesh. Blend and evaluate consistency: if the soup is still very thin add the remaining apples and enough roasted potato to thicken, if the soup is too thick to blend add more duck or chicken stock. These adjustments will vary depending on how gelatinous your duck stock is.

Once well-blended, strain the soup through a chinois. Heat the soup, seasoning to taste, and finish with the dry sherry. Hold hot.

 

Warm Beet Salad Ingredients

  • 1 medium golden beet
  • 1 medium red beet
  • 1 medium candy stripe beet
  • 2 spring thyme
  • Kosher salt
  • Butter
  • ¼ C walnut pieces, toasted
  • ½ C duck confit, finely shredded and chopped
  • Fresh thyme leaves
  • 1 Tbsp orange juice
  • Salt
  • Black pepper

Trim both end of each beet. To cook the beets place in a pot, cover with cold water, add 4 Tbsp kosher salt, and a sprig of thyme (for best color, cook the yellow beet separately from the other two). Over low heat simmer gently until the beets are tender. Remove from the water and, using a kitchen towel, gently rub away the skin; it should come off easily. Small dice each beet and combine.

Heat a medium sauté pan and melt some butter. Add the diced beets, walnuts, confit, and thyme leaves; toss to combine and heat evenly. Deglaze with orange juice and reduce. Season with salt and pepper. Hold warm.

For Presentation

In a large, wide soup bowl place a 1 ½” ring mold in the center and fill with the beet salad, packing gently. Remove the ring mold and repeat in the remaining bowls. Carefully ladle portions of the hot duck soup around the beet salad and serve immediately.

 Click Here for More Soups of the Week

About Faith Wipperman

Originally from Central Texas, Faith is a graduate of the Arizona Culinary Institute and scholarship winner for Career through Culinary Art Program. She is currently Saute and Entrementier at Lon’s at the Hermosa 


Chef John Paul Khoury’s French Onion Soup

Chef JP is a Facebook buddy of mine who is as passionate about food as anyone I know. I love the fact that his company is farm to table (meaning the products they use are high quality and well cared for). Here he has contributed a great recipe for French Onion soup. I love it!

Ingredients

  • 10 each yellow onions — julienned
  • 3 cloves garlic — crushed
  • 4 sprigs thyme — tied
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 4 Cups chicken stock
  • 4 Cups demi glace (or beef or veal stock)
  • 1 stick unsalted butter
  • ½ Cup sherry or brandy
  • salt and pepper — to taste

Slowly caramelize your onions in the whole butter until the onions give the appearance of melting and are nicely browned. Add garlic and saute a few minutes more. Deglaze with sherry or brandy. Add thyme, a bay leaf, and chicken stock plus demi glace or stock and simmer for 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Season.

At this point soup is best if cooled and refrigerated over night (let thyme bunch steep in soup until the next day). The next day remove thyme (OK to leave bay leafs in) and heat the amount of soup you need.

Either heat soup, top with crouton, gruyere, and parmesan and gratinee’ in the salamander or ladle the cold soup into crocks, top with the same items and bake at 325 degrees until bubbling and browned on top. BON APPETIT’

 Click Here for More Soups of the Week

About Chef Khoury

John Paul Khoury,CCC is the corporate Chef for Preferred Meats, Inc. They are dedicated to quality and freshness. Preferred Meats specializes in Wagyu beef, grass fed Hereford beef, natural Angus beef, Berkshire (Kurobuta)& Duroc pork, lamb, game birds, game meats, and specialty cured and smoked meats.

Preferred Meats was founded with a single goal in mind – To provide the highest quality products available. To develop this goal, Preferred Meats has focused on finding the highest quality products available, and then maintaining that quality. To accomplish this, we have gone to the growers and producers of our fine products to learn how their products are raised, handled, what they are fed, and how they are processed. Their on-line retail store will be coming soon, so keep checking back. www.preferredmeats.com.

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