Category: Recipes (Page 28 of 55)

Chef Joshua Hebert’s Miso Soup

Chef Joshua Hebert is an awfully busy guy, so we completely understand why he was unable to send us a recipe for his famous Miso Soup this week…

No–but really folks, it’s culinary season here in Arizona, and the chefs are running around like crazy getting ready for the Scottsdale Culinary Festival, arguably the biggest food festival in Arizona, and DEFINITELY on many gourmet radars throughout the Southwest. Here’s a recipe we think Chef Josh would have sent us…correct us if we’re wrong Hebert! 😉

Dashi Recipe

Ingredients

  • 4 cups water
  • 5” x 5” piece of kombu
  • ½ cup katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes)

 

Place the kombu in the water, and place on a burner set to medium You must watch the pot carefully because you have to remove the kombu from the water when it floats to the surface, before the water boils.  After removing the kombu, as the dashi starts boiling, take the pot off the heat and add the katsuobushi. Let the katsuobushi soak until it sinks to the bottom. Strain through a fine sieve.

 

Miso Soup Recipe

Ingredients

 

  • 4 cups dashi
  • 3 tbsp miso paste
  • ½ block Tofu (Firm), diced
  • ½ cup wakame (dried seaweed)

 

First, soak ½ cup wakame in lukewarm water for 10 minutes. Rinse the reconstituted wakame, roughly chop it and add it, along with the tofu, to 4 cups of hot dashi. Remove about ½ cup of dashi into a separate bowl, and add 3 tablespoons of white, red, or a combination of the two. Whisk the miso paste into the dashi until smooth, return the mixture to the pot, and thoroughly stir the soup until the miso is distributed evenly. Garnish with chopped green onions.

 

This soup is a great appetizer for a Japanese-style entrée.

 

Heather’s Fav– Roasted Balsamic Tomato Soup

This is Heather—one of the ITS interns. I’m not a big soup fan (shhhhh… don’t tell my boss!). I don’t get along very well with hot liquids because I have no patience. However, I make an exception for this soup: it is awesome in the flavor department and the oven does most of the work for you! I’m sure that the soup is great piping hot, but it’s also very good at a more mid-range (i.e. lukewarm) temperature. Please try—you won’t be sorry!
 

Ingredients:

  • 1  cup  broth (beef, chicken, or vegetable—I use vegetable!),   divided
  • 1  tablespoon  brown sugar
  • 3  tablespoons  balsamic vinegar
  • 1  tablespoon  low-sodium soy sauce
  • 1  cup  coarsely chopped onion
  • 2 –  5  garlic cloves (depends on your feelings towards garlic!)
  • 2 – 28-ounce cans whole tomatoes
  • 3/4  cup  half-and-half
  • Cracked black pepper (to serve)
  • Fresh basil, chiffonade (to serve)
  1. Preheat oven to 500°F.
  2. Combine 1/2 cup of broth, sugar, vinegar, and soy sauce in a small bowl. Place onion, garlic, and tomatoes in a 13 x 9” baking pan that has been coated with cooking spray. Pour broth mixture over tomato mixture. Bake at 500° for 50 minutes or until vegetables are lightly browned.
  3. Place tomato mixture in a blender. Add remaining 1/2 cup broth and half-and-half; process until smooth. For a VERY smooth soup, strain mixture through a sieve into a bowl; discard solids.  For a soup with more BODY, skip the straining.  Garnish with cracked black pepper and fresh basil, if desired.
  4. Tastes great with a triple grilled cheese sandwich!

Yield: ~4 cups
Note: This soup may be prepared up to 2 days ahead and refrigerated. Reheat to your desired temperature over medium heat before serving.

 

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5 Tips on Healthy Living: Spring Cleaning

by Kami Pastis

Spring is a season of renewal and growth, not only for the Earth, but for the mind and body as well. The following are some tips that may help you kick-start the cleanse and find your natural balance.

1.     Mono meals. This means you stick to all one food for a snack or meal like a whole serving of strawberries rather than strawberries and pineapple and grapes and nuts and cheese. Mono meals are very easily digestible which frees up extra energy for other endeavors like a bike ride or flying a kite or repairing cellular damage. The bottom line is “Mono Meals” are just easier for your body to deal with and who doesn’t want an easy button?

2.     Proper Digestion. Allow your body to fully digest one meal before cramming down your next nosh. Waiting 3-4 hours usually does it between meals, but use your own body wisdom to tune into how your digestive process is moving along.

3.     Water!!! This is the old standby health tip. Yes, it’s that important; especially if you want to cleanse the body and help every system work more efficiently. To figure out the minimum amount you should be consuming daily, figure half your body weight (in lbs) and drink that many ounces (Example: A 150-lb person requires at least 75 ounces of water per day). If you are doing yard work or working out, that number increases exponentially.

4.     Breathe.  It’s not food in the culinary sense, but breath is just as essential as food and water for cleansing and renewing the body. The springtime air is sweet and fragrant; it’s easy to enjoy this tip. The lungs are your 2nd largest detox organ next only to your skin, so use them to release stagnant energy and old carbon dioxide. A great benefit to regularly utilizing slow, deep breathing is that the mind follows the breath.

5.     Seasonal Foods. (AZ style) Asparagus, strawberries, citrus, artichokes, arugula, celery root, broccoli & broccoli rabe, garlic, bok choy, clementines, etc. These are the foods locally available during spring. They are packed with nutrients, and it is always a good idea to eat with the seasons to help your body go with the flow of nature.

For more tips on Health & Wellness click here

 

About Kami

Kamara Pastis is a certified personal trainer, life style educator, group fitness instructor and licensed massage therapist in the Phoenix area. Clinical, therapeutic massage has been her mainstay for seven years where she has experienced the lasting therapeutic changes massage can make in cases with debilitating pain and disfunction. The traditional Thai and Yogi tradition of metta (literally “loving kindness”) is Kami’s healing philosophy. When not healing her patients, Kami is more than blissfully occupied with her husband and three kids.

To contact Kami and learn more about her services Click Here: www.kamaralmt.com or call (602) 622-1046. Tell her you saw her on intotheSoup.com

Chef Susan Thomas’ Awesome Green Pork Chili

Chef Susan Thomas isn’t just a chef, she’s my lovely sister-in-law.  She introduced me to her brother, my wonderful husband, when we worked in careers not even remotely related to the culinary world.  We share a passion for cooking and our families and have been sharing our recipes and cooking tips for nearly 20 years.  She is very dear to me and makes the enjoyment of my job all the more special with her encouragement and love of the art.  Thanks for the chats this weekend, Sissy – you’re the best!

Green Pork Chili

Yield: 1 large pot

Ingredients:

  • 2 Tbsp Puritan oil
  • Flour
  • 1 to 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 large onion, julienned
  • 3 pound of lean pork, cubed
  • 1 large can of stewed tomatoes
  • 1 1/2 cans of chicken broth
  • 12 cans (yes, 12!) of green chilis, chopped
  • 3 fresh jalapenos
  • cumin
  • white pepper
  • 2 bunches fresh cilantro
  • sour cream (to serve)
  • yogurt (to serve)
  1. Heat oil in large pot, medium high.
  2. Add garlic and cook until garlic turns clear in color.
  3. Dredge cubed pork in flour and cook until browned in the oil, stirring to keep from sticking.  If pork does stick, add a little more oil.
  4. Add all pork back to the pot and add tomatoes, and onions and stir thoroughly.
  5. Shake a GENEROUS amount of cumin into the pot and stir.
  6. Add chicken broth to pot until just covers pork.  Take it easy with broth, you don’t want this too watery!
  7. Slice jalapenos and add to mixture.  Bring to a boil and let boil for 25 minutes.
  8. Add green chilis (juice and all) and a little tabasco if you’d like.
  9. Reduce heat to a simmer and let cook at least an hour!  (I cook mine for at least 2)  After the first 30 minutes add a roughly chopped bunch of cilantro.
  10. Continue to cook.  Serve over rice with a mixture of equal parts sour cream and yogurt and fresh cilantro.  We suggest lots of beer and corn bread or corn tortillas!!  Enjoy~ 

 

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St. Patrick’s Day Recipes: Irish Coffee and Irish Chocolate Tapioca Pudding

The  main dishes for St. Patrick’s Day are easy; Colcannon and Corned Beef and Cabbage are always winners, but what do you serve for dessert? You could just grab a box of those ridiculously sweet supermarket cookies with the green sprinkles, but why spend the evening in a sugar coma? We recommend trying these lovely alternatives from our friends at Robert Rose.

Irish Cream Coffee

 

  • 1⁄4 cup  cold brewed espresso coffee
  • 1⁄4 cup  chocolate ice cream
  • 3oz        Irish cream liqueur

1.)     In blender, on high speed, blend coffee, ice cream and Irish cream liqueur until smooth.

2.)     Pour into an old-fashioned glass or a coffee cup.

 

Irish Chocolate Tapioca Pudding

 

  • 1⁄4 cup    tapioca pearls (see Tip below)
  • 21⁄2         cups milk, divided
  • 6oz          bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, broken into pieces
  • 2              eggs
  • 1⁄2 cup    granulated sugar
  • 1⁄4 cup    Irish cream liqueur
  • 1⁄2 tsp    vanilla
  • Boiling water
  • Whipped cream

• Works in a large (minimum 5-quart) oval slow cooker
• Lightly greased 6-cup baking dish

 

1.)    In a bowl, combine tapioca pearls with water to cover. Stir well and set aside for 20 minutes. Drain, discarding liquid. Transfer to prepared dish.

2.)   Meanwhile, in a saucepan, heat 1 cup of the milk over low heat just until simmering. (Do not boil.) Remove from heat. Add chocolate and stir until melted. Pour into prepared dish and stir to combine.

3.)    In a blender, combine eggs, sugar, the remaining milk, liqueur and vanilla. Blend until smooth. Pour into prepared dish and stir well. Cover with foil and secure with string.

4.)    Place dish in slow cooker stoneware and pour in enough boiling water to come 1 inch up the sides of the dish. Cover and cook on High for 21⁄2 to 3 hours, until a toothpick inserted in the center of the pudding comes out clean. Stir well.

5.)    Serve warm or cover and chill overnight. Top with a dollop of whipped cream.

 

TIP:

Don’t confuse the tapioca pearls called for in this recipe with instant tapioca, which is often sold under the Minute brand. Instant tapioca has been thoroughly precooked and would become unpleasantly mushy if soaked then cooked for a prolonged period of time.

 Irish Cream Coffee Recipe:

Excerpted from 400 Blender Cocktails by Andrew Chase, Alison Kent, Nicole Young © 2006 Robert Rose Inc. www.robertrose.ca Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved. http://www.robertrose.ca/book/400-blender-cocktails

Irish Chocoate Tapioca Pudding Recipe:

Excerpted from Sensational Slow Cooker Gourmet by Judith Finlayson © 2008 Robert Rose Inc. www.robertrose.ca Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.

http://www.robertrose.ca/book/sensational-slow-cooker-gourmet

 

Robbie Fox’s Guinness Beer Cheese Soup

Robbie Fox’s pet peeves are chewing gum and “Drunken Yahoos” who punch (and break) the paper towel dispensers in the bathroom every weekend. If you’re headed to his Public House for an evening of authentic pub fare and fun, we suggest you leave the Trident at home and avoid bathroom brawls with inanimate objects. Besides, what does a paper towel dispenser know about “yo’ mama” anyway? Just keep on walkin’ buster.

Not in the mood for the pub? At least you can make some of the grub at home!

Robbie Fox’s Guinness Beer Cheese Soup

by Chef Don Santos

Yield: ~4 gallons

Ingredients:

  • 2 qts        Carrots, 1/4” dice
  • 2 qts        Onions (yellow), 1/4” dice
  • 2 qts        Celery, 1/4” dice
  • 3 oz         Garlic, minced
  • 1 oz         Cholula hot sauce
  • 3/4 tsp     Cayenne pepper
  • 1 Tbsp      Kosher salt
  • 1-1/2 tsp  Black pepper, freshly ground
  • 18-3/4 cups     Chicken broth
  • 12-1/2 cups     Guinness beer
  • 1 lb          Butter (unsalted)
  • 2 cups      Cod seasoning
  • 12-1/2 cups     Heavy cream
  • 12-1/2 cups     Half & Half
  • 3 lbs        Irish Cheddar cheese
  • 1-1/2 lbs  Gruyere cheese, shredded
  • 1-1/2 lbs  Parmesan cheese, shredded
  • 1/3 cup    Dijon mustard
  • 1/4 cup    Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 Tbsp      Dry mustard powder

 

  1. In a large saucepan over medium heat, stir together carrots, onions, celery and garlic. Stir in hot pepper sauce, cayenne, salt and pepper. Pour in chicken broth and beer; simmer until veggies are tender, about 12 minutes. Remove from heat.
  2. Meanwhile, heat butter in a large soup pot over medium-high heat. Stir in cod seasoning with a wire whisk; cook, stirring until the mixture is light brown, about 3-4 minutes. Gradually stir in heavy cream, whisking to prevent scorching, until thickened. Remove from heat and gradually stir in cheese. Keep warm.
  3. Stir beer mixture into cheese mixture. Stir in Dijon, Worcestershire sauce and dry mustard. Adjust for hot pepper sauce. Bring to a simmer and cook 10 minutes. Enjoy!

 

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