MayanPork

World Spice’s Mayan Cocoa always makes me think of sacrifices.  Not MINE, thank you very much!  Chocolate…sacrifice… Nope!  I feel the Mayans of old sacrificed enough.  It’s covered.

I ran across a small package of this delectable combo while cleaning out my spice cupboard.  Dreary December evenings call for interesting dishes with bold exotic elements.  With a bite of this crazy good dish in your mouth, you will simply no longer care what the weather is doing outside!

Mayan Cocoa is a blend of deep chocolate, mellow chile, true cinnamon and allspice from World Market in Seattle.  https://www.worldspice.com/blends/mayan-cocoa  If you aren’t nearby, they definitely ship all their lovely wares.  Check out the website.  If you’re in town, wander down there.  The heavenly smell of the shop, alone, is worth the parking and hills.

Mayan Cocoa Encrusted Pork Tenderloin

Pork tenderloin, trimmed of waste.  Cut into portions.  Each one will serve 2-3 guests

Mayan Cocoa

Salt

Oil for searing the pork.  I like coconut oil for this, but olive is always a great choice

Chicken stock

Rum

Fresh lime

Simply rub the portions with the cocoa and salt liberally.  When your oil is heated, add the pork.  Brown lightly on all sides then put the pan into the oven at 350 degrees.  It will take roughly 15 minutes to finish cooking.  Since the tenderloin size can vary, you will want to keep a close eye on them.  Over cooked pork is so dry and flavorless.

When it’s close to done, remove from the oven and place the pork on a plate to rest while you make the sauce.  Now place the pan on the stove top.  Bring the temperature up, if it has cooled down.  Add a round of rum, preferably a spice rum with vanilla notes.  If you are using gas, this will flame up.  Stir to deglaze any bits from the pan, add stock and a squeeze of fresh lime.  Reduce most of the way.  Season.

While the sauce is finishing, slice the pork into rounds and plate.  The cocoa will have added a touch of pink to the cooked meat.  Don’t be alarmed.   Drizzle with the sauce immediately and serve.

I accompanied my dish with a combo of sweet potato and yam sauteed with onion and seeded jalapeno.

This splendid meal is free of Gluten, Dairy, Soy, Corn, Nuts and Eggs.

PumpkinSeedMole

The game is on.  The ‘fans’ are working up an appetite. You are frightened to open the fridge.  That left over Thanksgiving turkey awaits.  Every creative cell in your body is screaming NOOOOOO!!!  You can’t even consider looking at another bite of the sacrificial beast, or worse, the accusatory glare of your family, should you consider it, but…

Heck, just make some Gonners, Turkey Tacos with Pumpkin Seed Mole!  You know you want to…  Besides, it’s easy and it’s good for your ‘fans’!  No gluten, soy or tree nuts and only optional dairy

Pumpkin Seed Mole

Poblano and serrano peppers, oil roasted, peeled, seeded, chopped

Jalpeno, seeded and minced

Yellow onion, chopped

Garlic, fresh, minced

Oil to cook vegetables   note:  a true mole is best with lard, but olive oil will work fine in this

Pumpkin seeds

Coriander, ground

Chicken stock,  note:  if you are making a vegetarian dish with the mole, vegetable stock is a great option

Cilantro, chopped

Flat leaf parsley, chopped

Salt and pepper

Fresh lime

Using a cast iron pan, dry roast the pumpkin seeds over moderately high heat.  When they are nearly done, add the coriander.  Keep the pan moving, shake it gently, so the spice doesn’t burn.  You need it toasted to release it’s best flavors.  Add lard/oil and onion.  Cook until it begins to soften, add the garlic, do not brown this.  Add the chopped peppers and cook for a bit.  Add enough stock to moisten.  Keep cooking, adding more stock as needed.   You want to get the peppers and onion to begin breaking down.  You can do this ‘green’ mole fast, over higher heat then most brown moles that need time to develop their complex flavors.  If you aren’t in a hurry, turn the burner all the way down and let it do it’s thing.

When you are ready to finish your sauce, add the chopped herbs, salt and pepper.  Cook just until herbs are heated thru.  Using an immersion blender, carefully emulsify your mole.  Don’t get burned!  Add fresh lime juice to taste and serve with warm shredded turkey and finely shredded romaine lettuce or napa cabbage,  in corn tortillas – preferably fresh ones, you just made, if possible (it’s pretty easy!)  For those that can enjoy dairy, some cotija would be lovely!

rancheroshell2

There are those days…  just before a big feast holiday, when it’s difficult to get excited about cooking, let alone being creative.  The kitchen is ready.  The fridge is stuffed to the gills with all the necessities your upcoming throng expects.  Unfortunately, you are hungry TODAY!  Others that occupy your home are giving you ‘the look’.  The phone is right there.  Pizza would be so easy, but you are going to feel so miserable after you eat all that gluten and dairy and…  Yeah.  I know you realize this.  It happens in every well meaning kitchen.

Mariscos Ranchero

Roma tomatoes, quartered

Yellow onion, 1/2 inch slices

Poblano peppers

Optional additional hotter peppers

Garlic, minced

Stock

Prawns, shelled, cleaned

Hard shell clams, cleaned

Mussels, debearded, clean

Cilantro, chopped

Salt and pepper

I like to make the sauce ahead, then finish cooking the shellfish right before serving.

Place tomatoes, onions and peppers on a baking sheet under the broiler.  Keep an eye on the peppers.  You just want to blister the skins.  Keep turning them until you have blistered the entire surface.  Wrap them in a paper towel.  Finish cooking the tomatoes and onion until they begin to blacken.

When the peppers are cool enough to handle, peel them and discard the seeds and membrane.  Rough chop.

Rough chop the onions and cook in a small amount of oil.  Add the garlic when they are nearly done.  Cook quickly and add the chopped peppers and the tomatoes.  Cook on medium until the vegetables begin to break down a bit.  Add enough stock to moisten.  Season with salt and pepper.  Set sauce aside unless you are cooking the shellfish to serve now.

To finish, increase the stock to a just visible level.  Bring the sauce to a simmer.  Add all the shellfish.  Place a lid over the pan.  It will only take a few minutes for everything to cook.  The clams and mussels will be open when they are done.  Toss with fresh cilantro and put into individual serving bowls.

Serve with some warm gluten free bread.

racheroshell

stuffedchicken

Such a pretty pair of Organic chicken breasts!  With thoughts of the holiday frenzy swirling about my brain, I was inspired to do a little preliminary stuffing!

Dried cherries, walnuts and cream cheese went into the pocket I cut, after a couple hours in an apple studded brine to guarantee these beauties would live up to their destiny.

Fresh sage and butter under the skin.  A quick brown to crisp, then into the oven!

Julienne carrots and yellow squash, red onion, and minced seeded jalapeno were sauteed quickly with a dash of cinnamon and titch of cardamom to create an extra layer of flavor when paired with the chicken and stuffing.

While the breasts enjoyed a moment of leisure, I made a sauce from the dripping; sauteing finely minced onion and garlic, deglazed with stock and finished with a splash of balsamic vinegar.

Simple, beautiful and wonderful!  One of the dishes that you can put together in under thirty minutes, with a little pre-planning.  Keep it in mind when your anticipated Elf duties start to seriously encroach on your time.

Like all the recipes I post of Fearless Feast

gluten free

soy free

This one does contain nuts and dairy.  For a non dairy approach consider mixing prepared quinoa with the cherries for a wonderful stuffing.

blacksheepchili

Don’t you just hate realizing you have on an outfit just like someone else?  Well, I’m the same way with my cooking.  I simply do not possess the “do it just like everyone else always has” gene.  I gotta do my own thing; be the ‘black sheep’!

Honestly, my greatest fantasy is to never cook the exact same dish twice.  Yes, I realize this doesn’t work in restaurant cuisine.  But, I’m at home, so NO RULES!!

Black Sheep Chili features, yeah you know it, lamb!  Ground lamb is something I love to experiment with.  Years back, I served a lamb burger at my Seattle restaurant, 94 Stewart that got a write up in New York, alongside the burger from Daniel, of four star fame.

You will find ground lamb to have all the flavor you are looking for in ground beef.  You know, that tantalizing meaty scent that makes your mouth water?  But, when you taste the beef, it simply does not follow thru with the flavor.  More then a let down; don’t you feel totally cheated?!?!

Using lamb in a chili is definitely a bold move, though.  The slow cooking of the meat with onions, sweet and hot pepper, garlic, and tomatoes will result in an increase to the true earthy lamb flavor.  As a burger, the fast sear doesn’t accentuate those qualities like braising does.  That said, I chose to play up the spices a little differently.  Really, using cumin, cinnamon, coriander and oregano don’t sound like such unusual choices, but changing the ratios of one to another, with lamb and they become a Middle Eastern olfactory bizarre.

Add some of your favorite beans, salt to taste, a titch of sherry vinegar to balance the flavors and top with fresh cilantro and sheep milk feta cheese.  Welcome to my world as a well adjusted Black Sheep!

CapresePasta

Using one of the many Gluten Free pastas on the market these days, you can create impressive dishes for your guests.  It’s up to you, whether you tell them they are better for them!

The pretty Caprese Pasta, pictured here, is a dish I served at my last restaurant.

All you need, besides gluten free pasta, are tomatoes, basil, mozzarella, olive oil, mire poix, fresh lemon juice and fresh egg.

For the tomato you can use some of the beautiful roasted tomatoes I featured in an earlier post, sun dried tomatoes, or even good quality canned fire roasted tomato.  You can use fresh, but during the Winter months they have so little flavor all they add is color.

The pictured dish features micro-basil.  If those aren’t available, you can chiffinade fresh leaves.

You will want fresh mozzarella, not drier pizza mozzarella for this dish.  If you get lucky and find some di bufala mozzarella, do a full on HAPPY DANCE!!  This is an incredible treat.

To make the dish, simply saute your mire poix in a small amount of olive oil.  Add the tomatoes to heat thru.  Add a few drops of fresh lemon juice to boost the fresh flavors of the dish.  At the last moment of cooking, drop in your chopped mozzarella.  Do not cook it; just get it to begin warming so it will melt. Turn off the burner and add cooked Gluten Free pasta, directly from the boiling water.* Immediately add a raw egg yolk.  Toss it thru the hot pasta to cook it.  Do NOT let it sit!  Visible pieces of cooked egg will create a very unappetizing  looking dish.  Toss in salt and pepper, as desired.  If the dish isn’t ‘saucy’ enough, spoon some of the pasta cooking water in and toss.  Add the fresh basil, folding it in.  Serve immediately.

note:  Yes, you can make the dish without the egg, if this concerns you.  It does create the richness you are looking for in the finished dish, though.  You could add a small amount of organic cream, instead.  If you are allergic to eggs, be aware that most fresh pasta is made with egg.  Look at dried pastas, carefully reading the ingredients, to find another option.

* Do not over drain your pasta.  You want some of the liquid.  When pasta is over drained it begins soaking up any moisture available in the dish.  You end up with a dish that seems under sauced and dry.

StuffedApples

If you are allergic/sensitive to both gluten and dairy, you know that dessert is seldom an option for you.  It’s just sad to sit there reading all those incredible restaurant dessert menus… “Hmmmm… maybe this one? Oh, no it has dairy. That one?  Nope, gluten… I guess I’ll have the sorbet…” Woohoo! Sorbet, yeah… It’s COLD out, I WANT SOMETHING RICH AND WARM AND WONDERFUL!! 

And you can have it!

The Fall apple crop is rolling through the produce aisles.  So many to pick from!  What’s your favorite?  Personally, I like to cook with Pink Ladies, but there are so many that will work.

 Stuffed Apples

Gluten free oats

Walnuts, unless you are allergic to them

Raisins or substitute chopped dates or currants

Cinnamon

Extra virgin coconut oil

Agave to taste

Dash of salt

Fresh Apples, 1 per guest

Simply mix everything, except the apples, together in a mixer or by hand.   Fill cored apples.   note: when coring, leave some fruit at the bottom, to keep filling from melting out.   Place filled apples on a baking sheet.  Line with parchment first, if you have it.  Way less mess! Pop into a 350 degree oven until the apples soften.  This will vary with apple variety and moisture content.  You will need to watch them and see.  Usually, I know something is done, when I begin to smell it!

This dish can easily be made ahead and then reheated.  If they are in a low temp oven during the meal, you will totally torment your guests with the incredible scent…

 

CarrotTopPestoChef’s favorite flower?  Cauliflower, of course!

I love the texture of steamed cauliflower.  It has such a comfort aspect!  When you have to avoid so many other culinary vices, due to allergies and sensitivities, one simply finds comfort in other dishes.

Honestly, I’m perfectly happy just snacking on it, as is, but sometimes one needs to dress up a bit.  Have you ever tried making Carrot Top Pesto?  It’s easy, it’s beautiful, it has an immense level of flavor and your compatriots ’round the table will be thrilled.  The pictured dish was served with some lovely pork chops.

Carrot Top Pesto

3-4 Cloves of garlic

1/4 C Pine Nuts, toasted

Fresh carrot tops from 2-3 carrots, organic

Olive oil

Salt

Lemon Juice

Simply drop your garlic and cooled pine nuts into the food processor.  When they are rough chopped add the carrot tops and a tablespoon or so of olive oil.  Go for it.  If the greens won’t chop, push them down with a rubber scraper and add a touch more olive oil. When everything is emulsified add a dash of salt, a small squeeze of fresh lemon juice and more olive oil until you have the desired texture. 

Carrot Top Pesto can be used in many of the same ways you would use Basil Pesto.  I garnished my cauliflower and pesto dish with some Pecorino Romano cheese.  Many individuals with dairy sensitivity can indulge in cheeses made from sheep and/or goat milk.  Pecorino means sheep.  Do check labels, like always, though.

TortillaSoup

The roast chicken I made last night was perfect!  So good that, upon opening the refrigerator this morning, I am faced with the evidence of our sins; over indulgence; gluttony… No reminder quite as stern, as a nearly decimated chicken carcass.  Not picked totally clean, mind you!  No, we showed a certain level of restrain; mostly the result of food coma onset.

So, how does one atone for this?  What to do with the gleanings of this once proud bird?  I’m thinking soup!

While contemplating the thick puddle of fat my once feathered culinary cohort is residing in, I conclude that overindulgence is something he/she could have clearly related to.  Fat = Flavor!  This is gonna be wonderful stock to make my soup with.  (If you aren’t familiar with making stock from scratch, I have included instruction at the bottom of the recipe)

Further perusal of the fridge’s deeper recesses produces a poblano, one lonely roma tomato, an onion, half of a delicata squash, a couple carrots and some celery.  I’m getting ideas!  Diligence yields fresh corn tortillas, cilantro and avocado!  Yup!  I’m going to make

Tortilla Soup

This can be a complicated soup or a very simple soup.  I think of it as Mexican Refrigerator Soup.  Once you have the basics, there are many additional ingredients that are good in it.

If you are in a hurry, grab some commercial stock and do a quick poach with fresh chicken.  I prefer to use thighs for the flavor, but you can use breast meat if you would rather.

Mire poix ~ minced onion, carrot & celery

Olive oil

Garlic, minced

Cumin

Coriander

Cinnamon

Mildly Hot Pepper – you can use whatever heat level you enjoy.  If using a larger pepper, like a poblano, you will need to roast and peel it before mincing.  The seeds contain a lot of the heat.  I usually discard them.  I want the flavors in balance. 

Sweet red pepper, seeded and minced

Using a soup pot, start cooking the mire poix in the olive oil.  You want to sweat it down with moderate heat.  When it’s about half done, add the peppers, and garlic.  Continue to cook.  I like to also put my spices in at this time.  The heat opens up the flavors for maximum impact.  When the vegetables are done add the rest of the ingredients

Chicken stock

Chopped or shredded chicken meat

Tomato – I prefer to have the chicken element at the forefront, so chose to use a small amount of V-8.  If you want more tomato, by all means use your favorite tomato puree or even roasted & chopped tomato.

Cilantro, chopped

Salt and pepper to taste

Other ingredients that work well:

Beans, corn, winter squash, and/or a small amount of chiffonade baby kale at the finish

Corn tortillas (check ingredients to be sure they do not contain any wheat) Cut into julienne strips

Avocado, cut into small bites

Cilantro rough chopped

Fresh Lime

Fry the tortillas just before it’s time to plate.   Fry them quickly, either in a deep fryer or using stove top method.  Toss with salt and allow to drain.

Mix the avocado, cilantro and lime in a bowl.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

To plate:  place some fried tortilla in the bottom of the bowl.  Top with a ladle of soup.  Top with the avocado salad.  Garnish with additional tortilla strips and serve.

This is a fun recipe to play around with.  It’s super easy to avoid:  gluten, soy, nuts, and dairy

How to make stock from  left over chicken

Remove as much of the meat as possible.  Set aside.  Place the carcass in a stock pot and cover with cold water.  Add aromatics, ie:  onion, celery, carrot, fresh lemon, bay leaf, cinnamon stick.  I do NOT add salt to my stock.  I prefer to have total control of the salt levels in the dishes I make.  Salt in the stock can be quite the ‘wild card’ detail to work around.  Making stock from a left over roast chicken, can have some salt remaining from the initial roasting.  Just be aware of it.

Allow your stock to come to a full simmer and hold it there for an hour, or more.  The longer it cooks, the more flavor it will have.

For soup, I don’t generally remove the resulting fat.  I want that flavor in the finished product.  If I am using the stock for sauces, etc.  I definitely do not want it.  To remove, allow the stock to cool in the refrigerator.  The health department recommends the stock be no more then two inches deep while cooling.  This should be a small enough batch of stock that that won’t be a problem.  Do be aware of other ingredients in the refrigerator stored near the cooling liquid.  You don’t want them to become warm.

Once the liquid is fully cooled, the fat will rise to the surface.  Simply scoop it off.

It is possible to carefully skim off a lot of the fat with a ladle, while it’s hot, but cooling first gets more and gives a chance for the flavors in the fat to meld with the liquid.

BBgranolabarGr…………………anola bars!  Blueberry!  Gluten Free Granola Bars!

Do you live with lovers of granola bars?  Those individuals that are always in a hurry/snack seekers/lovers of seemingly healthy morsels to nosh on at random times?

I assume you’ve noticed the increasing array of choices, as well as the way a handful of these beauties make you do a double take when the grocery checker gives you the total for that ONE bag of groceries!  Now, I must inquire… have you read the INGREDIENTS?  Some brands, actually ARE healthy, but, many sadly are not.

I’ve been playing around with some recipes.  This is today’s favorite!  The peanut butter ones disappeared before I could get any pictures.  I’m told they taste exactly like peanut butter cookies.  I’ll share that recipe soon.  You got this picture because I’m home alone.

  Gluten Free Blueberry Granola Bars

This recipe is also free of:  Dairy, nuts, soy, corn and processed sugar.  Don’t tell the fam, but they are even vegan…

1 1/2 Cups Toasted Gluten Free rolled oats                                                   (place on a baking sheet in a 350 degree oven, shaking occasionally, until lightly browned)

1 Cup pitted dates, emulsified in a food processor

3/4 Cup dried apricots, minced either with a food processor or by hand.  note:  I used unsulfured, but that’s a personal choice.

3/4 Cup dried blueberries

1/2 tsp kosher salt

1/3 C hot agave syrup

While the oats are in the oven, emulsify the dates and mince the apricots.  Place in a mixing bowl with the blueberries and salt.  When the oats are done, immediately add to the fruit mixture.  Heat the agave in the microwave until just about to boil.  Pour this into the bowl and mix everything together.  Press the granola mixture into a plastic wrap lined 8×8 baking dish.  Refrigerate.  When they are fully chilled and firm, cut into bars, wrap individually and put back into the fridge.

Caution:  Stampede Warning!