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26 Sunday Apr 2015
Posted in Wine
26 Sunday Apr 2015
Posted in Wine
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26 Sunday Apr 2015
What to cook? It’s Sunday evening, I don’t feel like creating a masterpiece, but need to make something that’s tasty and not just a toasted sandwich. I have chicken thighs (surprise!), some left-over potatoes and fresh lettuce and rocket from the garden. After a quick google and found this (http://www.bite.co.nz/recipe/3527/Sticky-soy-chicken-wings/) decide to cook sticky soy chicken thighs and slice off and reheat the hasselback potatoes from last night.
Here is the recipe for the chicken:
Ingredients
500g Chicken Thighs (mine were skin and bone off, but use whatever you have)
| ¼ cup | Soy sauce |
| ¼ cup | Brown sugar |
| ¼ cup | Tomato sauce |
| ½ to 1 tsp | Crushed Chilli Paste |
Combine ingredients and pour over chicken. Toss well. Cover and refrigerate to marinate for 30 minutes.
Heat oven to 200 deg C. Remember that ovens differ, so your oven may require slightly higher, though probably not lower. Place chicken in a single layer in an oven pan. Spoon over some marinade, and continue to spoon over about every 15 minutes. Cook for about 40 minutes. Because my chicken was skin off, I put the chicken under a hot grill for the last 5 minutes to brown up. Spoon over the last of the marinade before you do this.
Last night we had Hasselback potatoes and had some left over. I sliced them, heated some olive oil in a pan, and slowly cooked them until crispy. Hmmmhmmm, almost just as good as last night.
The addition of a green salad, with cos and rocket from the garden, with red pepper and tomatoes was the bomb.
26 Sunday Apr 2015
Posted in Pork
Another Saturday another dinner. This week we had an early start – 5.30 am – as in New Zealand it is Anzac Day. It commemorates all New Zealanders killed in war and also honours returned servicemen and women. The date itself marks the anniversary of the landing of New Zealand and Australian soldiers – the Anzacs – on the Gallipoli Peninsula in 1915. So this year is the centenary observance. Every Anzac Day there is a dawn parade in just about every town in New Zealand. Over the last 10 years or so there has been a growing number of attendees, which is amazing given the ever decreasing number of survivors from wars that NZ has served in. The service this year was packed with people, young and older; a great mark of respect.
So, with an early morning, it felt like dinner needed to be something substantial and tasty. I figured Mr MWCED and Son (who is home for a little while) were probably getting sick of chicken, so decided to get a piece of pork fillet. A cup of tea (my favourite morning drink – Madame Flavour – Green Jasmine & Pear (http://www.madameflavour.com/) and a little surf on net, I found this recipe from a great site (http://www.simplyrecipes.com/recipes/panko_crusted_pork_tenderloin_with_dijon_cream_sauce/) and decided that was the way to go. There were a few ingredients I didn’t have, but figured a little substitution wouldn’t be a problem (detailed in the recipe below).
INGREDIENTS
METHOD
1 Combine the marinade ingredients (buttermilk, Dijon mustard, brown sugar, salt) in a medium bowl. Remove fat and silver skin from the pork fillet. Add the pork fillet/tenderloin to the marinade. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least one hour, or up to overnight. Remove the pork from the refrigerator an hour before you intend to cook it. If you do forget to take pork out of the fridge early, then you’ll probably need to cook a little longer.
2 Heat a thick-bottomed sauté pan on medium high heat. Add the panko breadcrumbs to the pan. Lower the heat to medium and slowly toast the panko breadcrumbs until golden brown. Watch these well – and stir often. Remove from heat. Stir the olive oil, salt, and pepper into the panko breadcrumbs until they are well coated.
3 Preheat the oven to 375°F of around 200 C. Line a roasting pan with aluminum foil and place a baking rack or roasting rack over it. Place the toasted panko in a shallow bowl for dredging. Remove the pork from the buttermilk marinade and place it in the bowl of breadcrumbs. Dredge the pork in the breadcrumbs, pressing the pork firmly into the crumbs as you roll it to help the crumbs adhere.
4 Place the breaded pork on the baking rack and bake for 30 to 40 minutes, or longer if the pork wasn’t at room temperature when you put it in the oven. And time also depends on your oven, so check pork at around 40 minutes and cook longer if required. Pork should be just pink – you’ll have to cut into it to check but it won’t matter, the crust will hide any small cuts you make. Remove the pork from the oven when done and let rest on the rack for 10 to 15 minutes while you make the sauce. (Or make the sauce while the pork is cooking – whatever fits into your schedule)
5 To make the sauce, melt a tablespoon of butter in a shallow saucepan. Add the minced shallots/onion and cook on medium heat until softened, about 3 to 4 minutes. Add the minced garlic and cook a minute more. Add one cup of cream (or substitute), the mustard, salt, and pepper to the shallots. Stir to combine and let come to a simmer. Simmer gently until slightly thickened, 2 to 3 minutes. Check seasonings, and add extra now. Stir in 1 Tbsp of chopped parsley. Set aside until ready to serve. (If you need to reheat the sauce to serve and it has thickened up, loosen it with a little water while you reheat.)
6 Gently transfer the pork to a cutting board and slice into 1/2-inch thick medallions. Place sauce on a serving platter and place the pork medallions on top of the sauce. Sprinkle everything with chopped parsley. Or – place pork on a serving platter with hasselback potatoes, and serve sauce in individual pots (we do this because Mr MWCED isn’t a great sauce fan, so he likes to control his portion – whereas I am a sauce freak).
it came out really well – both Mr MWCED and Son went for 2nds and we had no leftovers – always a good sign 🙂
Served with Hasselback Potatoes and buttered green beans. Do you know the easy tip for cutting Hasselback Potatoes ? Place a wooden spoon behind the potato when you are cutting it – that way you won’t slice right through the potato. Easy!