Showing posts with label appetizer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appetizer. Show all posts

Friday, March 19, 2010

To Start: Homemade Fig Jam with Pecorino Romano and Prosciutto

If you will, please take a few moments to imagine the following flavor experience. As you bite into a chewy piece of bread, you immediately taste slightly salty prosciutto, followed by the mellow creaminess of pecorino romano cheese. And then, with the saltiness and creaminess still lingering in your mouth, you taste the luscious, sweet, elegant depth of homemade fig jam.

How could you pass this up?

Now, if confessions are to be made, the inspiration for dried fig jam didn't come out of nowhere. I have become slightly obsessed with dried figs, and it is all thanks to a recent Bicoastal chefs 'trio of figs' tasting (results will be posted soon!). I was amazed to find how delicate, sweet, dainty, and all around delightful figs are. Armed with a new-found love for dried Black Mission Figs, I knew I needed more figs in my life.
And, flipping through my Giada cookbooks, I stumbled across this recipe for fig jam. Given my new culinary inspiration, it seemed perfect. And it was perfect. The jam is amazingly easy, and it is an absolutely delicious way to start a meal.

To make this dish, you need to start by making your simple syrup (equal parts water to sugar).

In a sauce pan, bring the water and sugar to boil, and then reduce to a simmer for 5 minutes. The liquid should be translucent by the time you are done.

In the meantime, toast up some hazelnuts over the stove top (medium heat 8-10 minutes in a dry skillet).
Now, you are going to want to cut up some dried figs.
And pour yourself some brandy. And then pour some more to add to the jam.
(I like E&J VSOP Superior Reserve, you get a lot of quality for an affordable price)

Next, add your figs and brandy to your simple syrup, bring to a boil, remove from heat, and let the figs soak in all that delicious liquid for 10 minutes.
Get out your food processor. Add in the fig mix.
Add in the hazelnuts.
Whiz it all up, until pureed.
And... that's it!! You just made fig jam!
This jam is absolutely perfect with some good bread, pecorino romano cheese, and prosciutto. These ingredients are simply meant to be.
Homemade Fig Jam (adapted from Giada's Kitchen*)
Ingredients:
12 dried figs**
3/4 cup simple syrup*** (recipe to follow, but WARNING! the recipe that follows makes more that you need, be sure to remeasure the right amount after you have made the simple syrup)
1/4 cup brandy
1/2 cup chopped toasted hazelnuts (see note)

Directions:
Combine the figs, simple syrup, and brandy in a small sauce pan. Bring the mixture to a simmer over medium heat, then turn off the heat and set aside for 10 minutes to plump the figs and cool slightly. Transfer the mixture to a food processor. Add the hazelnuts and blend, pulsing until pureed.

Serve alongside pecorino romano cheese and prosciutto.

Note: To toast the nuts, heat them in a small dry skillet over medium heat until they are fragrant and lightly toasted, 8 to 10 minutes. Spread the nuts on a baking sheet to cool completely before using.


*The recipe I include is doubled from the original. It makes a ton of jam, which is delicious on toast.
**The Bicoastal chefs were torn between whether Black Mission figs or Turkish figs are better, but you can't go wrong either way.
***While the recipe would have you put in 1 cup, I thought 1 cup was a bit too sweet, so I reduced it. You could probably reduce the simple syrup more if you wanted.

For the simple syrup:
Ingredients:
1 cup sugar
1 cup water

Directions:
In a saucepan, combine the water and sugar over medium heat. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the sugar has dissolved.

Friday, September 4, 2009

The 'Wow': Spiced Candied Walnuts

I love when something is so good you are compelled to the following sorts of reactions:
-"Wow"
-"Oh my God"
-"this is /so/ good"
-"mmm"
-eyes lighting up
-eyes closed
-ecstasy visibly crossing your face
-the inability to stop consuming what is in front of you

And, it is always surprising to me when I make something that forces people in these directions. Not because I am shocked that I could make anything tasty. It is more that I completely lack the ability to anticipate what items will win this sort of approval. Take these candied walnuts, par example.

Look, they are delicious. They are candied walnuts after all. And they are a superior version of candied walnuts. Often, when you get candied walnuts on a salad in a restaurant, it is more like a clump of powdered sugar with something on the inside that might possibly be a walnut. The coating on these walnuts is light, just enough to caramelize and get a little crunchy in the oven, but never approaching gob-like consistency. Another great feature of these walnuts is all the flavor. Each bite has some sweet, some salt, some pepper, and just a hint of spice from cayenne.

So, I get it, these are tasty morsels. But for whatever reason, these walnuts are one of those things that just make people, time and again, say "wow" as they reach for more.

Bonus: they are so very easy to make.

For the coating, mix sugar, salt, black pepper, cayenne, and light corn syrup.

Toss the walnuts in the mix.

Spread on a sheet and put them in the oven.

Remove from the oven, cool, and brace yourself for the 'wow'.

I especially like these walnuts on a salad with mixed greens, Anjour pear, and Gorgonzola. But, they are great as an appetizer or as a dessert. I promise you, if you leave these in a bowl, they will rapidly disappear just about any time of the day.

Spiced Candied Walnuts (adapted from Epicurious)
Ingredients:
1 Tablespoon sugar
a little less than 1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp fresh ground black pepper
a generous pinch of cayenne (and if you compulsively measure like me, about 1/8 tsp)
2 Tablespoons light corn syrup
1 cup walnuts (I prefer walnut halves)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 325. Spray sheet with Pam or cover with parchment paper.

Combine sugar, salt, pepper, cayenne, and corn syrup in a medium bowl. Stir in walnuts. Once walnuts are coated, spread on a baking sheet (some nuts may clump). Stir occasionally and bake about 15 minutes, until nuts are deep golden and mix is bubbling. Let cool on sheet.

Can be made three days ahead.