Saturday, July 24, 2010

Bustin' my chops.

Here's a simple little recipe to help keep your "center cut" pork chops tender and juicy.  Brining your pork chops for a couple of days before you grill or fry them can make an unbelievable difference in both tenderness and juiciness, and although it takes a little advanced prep, I assure you that it is well worth the effort.

1/8 cup salt
1/8 cup sugar
500 ml of boiling water
500 ml ice
(To total 1 litre of Brine, for 4-6 chops)

Dissolve the salt and sugar in the boiling water.  Add the ice to the solution to cool it down so as to not start the cooking process on the chops.  Cover the chops fully with the brine (an excellent method for this is to use a zip top bag with as much air as possible removed, much like marinating you want the brine to be in as much contact with the meat as possible.)

Let the chops sit in the brine, in the refrigerator, for 2-3 days (if you use the zip top method, be sure to put them in a bowl in case of leakage).  After the brining time, rinse and cook as desired. 

This is an extremely effective at ensuring excellent grilled pork chops, as grilling can easily dry out a pork chop if you don't watch it like a hawk.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Spicy Thai inspired peanut noodles.

I saw someone make something like this on TV one time, and I REALLY wanted to try them.  I could never find the recipe for the show I watched, so I decided to give it a shot from memory and here's what I came up with.

360g Soba Noodles

Sauce
3/4 cup peanut butter
1/4 cup Soya Sauce
3tbsp Sesame Oil
1 tsp Garlic
1/2 tsp Ginger
1-2 tsp Hot Chili sauce (I used 2 tsp of "Sriracha HOT chili sauce", and it was quite spicy)
3 tbsp Brown Sugar
3 Green Onions slice about 1/4 inch on the diagonal
(And if the mixture seems too thick, you can thin it down with some warm water, but just enough to make it easy to coat the noodles.)

Mix the sauce together (Be careful it will splatter when adding liquid to the peanut butter, so be gentle until the peanut butter loosens up and starts to accept the liquid). 
Cook the noodles according to package directions.
Coat Noodles with the peanut mixture.

This recipe is good hot, or room temperature.

Enjoy!

Satay meat marinade.

I created and used this Marinade on both chicken and pork for one meal (marinated individually of course), and it had the exact Asian flavours I was looking for once I grilled the meat.  (This was a throw together recipe where I had an idea of what I wanted, and the results worked out very well!)

1/2 cup Soy Sauce
1 tsp Ground Ginger
1 tsp Garlic
1 tbsp Sesame Oil
1/4 cup Lime Juice
4 tsp Brown Sugar

Mix together and pour over thinly slice meat (Pork, Chicken, or Beef), making sure that all surfaces come in contact with the marinade.  The easiest way to do this is to use a large zip top bag; place the meat and the marinade in the bag and seal it without removing any excess air, next massage the meat and marinade together so that all the solid surfaces come in contact with the liquid, finally remove as much air from the bag as possible and let it marinate for an hour.

Skewer the meat (because thin slices will tend to fall through the grill without them), and grill them until they are done (cooking times very depending on the thickness).  I served these with Costco's "Thai Kitchen sweet red chili sauce", but honestly the flavour from the marinade was so nice it really did not need a sauce.

Enjoy!

Friday, July 16, 2010

Raspbery Iced Tea.

Ingredients

6 quarts water

2 & 1/4 cups sugar 

1 package (600g) frozen unsweetened raspberries (which I have substituted blueberries and strawberries to change the flavour of the tea.) 

15 individual tea bags

1/8 cup lemon juice

Directions In a large kettle or Dutch oven, bring water and sugar to a boil. Remove from the heat; stir until sugar is dissolved. Add the raspberries, tea bags and lemon juice. Cover and steep for 5 minutes. Strain; discard berries and tea bags. Transfer tea to a large container or pitcher. Refrigerate until chilled. Serve over ice.

Of the 3 flavours I've tried so far (Raspberry, Blueberry, and Strawberry), The consensus thus far is that the Strawberry is the best. Strawberry takes a little mashing to get the water fully flavoured, but if you let them boil a little it's nothing to mash them up.  Give it a quick taste after the sugar and berries have steeped for a few minutes, and if it's not strong enough just leave them in longer, or mash them up a bit more.