Food and Drink

March 23, 2008

Referrals

Good Easter Morning!  I have spent the last few days putting together the neatest list of kitchen tools and toys that you can find.  Everything on this list I either own or own something very similar.  I have tested all these products and only recommend them to you because I like them.  Many of the items are cheap!  Some are very expensive.  I do not recommend you go and replace everything you own for things that I recommend.  However, if you do me the favor of referring two people you know to www.chefdawn.com, I will email you this  11 page list of awesome kitchen gadgets and where to get them.  Not only that, but you will also see on the list that I have made arrangements for some of my vendors to give you a discount for mentioning my website.  Many students and friends of mine come into my kitchen and want to know what tools I love.  It is so hard to pick out just the right spatula or a good pot.  This list makes it easier for you to purchase tools for you kitchen.  This project has taken me a long time.  It has pictures of many of the items, along with descriptions and helpful hints.  You will LOVE it!!!!  Email me at dawn@chefdawn.com

March 10, 2008

Artichokes

Yesterday, we had the best dinner.  I steamed twelve artichokes and we ate them with drawn butter.  I served fish, ravoli and pinapple too but the artichokes were the biggest hit.  I got them 3 for $1!  All I do to prepare them is cut off the top and the bottom and snip the sharp tip from each of the leaves with a sizzors.  Then I steam them in a big stock pot until I can easily pull a leaf from the inside of the artichoke.  Once we have gobbled up the outer leaves, I cut the thisle out and we eat the hearts.  YUM!!!!  With the leftovers, I will marinate them in olive oil, vinegar, lots and lots of dry spices and cut them in half.  Then I'll throw them on the grill to brown a little.  These will take us through the week.  My kids just love to eat artichokes because they are fun, like playing with your food.  Here in Southern California, we eat artichokes year round.  This year, on a trip to Monterey, we stopped in Castroville, the artichoke capital.  They have an annual festival which will be held this year May 17-18, 2008.   Go to artichoke-festival.org to find out more information.  The drive from Monterey north is beautiful with farms spread out growing hundreds of thousands of artichokes that get shipped all over the country.

Castroville Festivals
P.O. Box 1041, Castroville, California 95012
(831) 633-2465 • Fax (831) 633-0485
info@artichoke-festival.org

March 03, 2008

Yummy Sweet Soy Chicken Wings

This is my 90 year old Nana’s recipe.  This is a family favorite.  The more you heat and reheat these, the better they get.


Sweet Soy Chicken Wings

Ingredients:

5 lb. chicken wings

(cut off the wing tip and separate the drummette and double-bone pieces use the latter two)

1 cup soy sauce

cup  juice (orange, mango, pinapple, mixture)

teaspoon dry mustard

1 cup brown sugar

2 cloves garlic minced



Bake chicken wings in a single layer in roasting pan at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.  Simmer all other ingredients until well dissolved. Pour over wings and continue baking 2 hours longer.  Baste every 30 minutes.  Wings should be dark and sticky!!!  I have 2x, 3x, 4x, and 6x this recipe and works great any way.


March 02, 2008

My Kitchen

In 2002, when housing prices were starting to rise, I proposed to my husband that, with our forth kid on the way, that we look for a bigger house.  He agreed to LOOK.  We looked at several areas but wanted to move to a part of town that was closer to the freeways and shopping.  When we walked into this house, you would have said, like we said, how odd.  It was a 5 bedroom, 4 bath house with over 3,300 square feet of living space.  The master was downstairs with four rooms and a HUGE loft upstairs.  The kitchen was average with little room for a kitchen table.  The reason the house was odd was that the entire downstairs had a 12 by 12 tile floor which had not been completed.  The laundry room tile butted against the hall tile but did not match.  The worst part was that they attempted to make it match so it just looked off.  The master had a wood floor which was elevated, probably over the tile underneath. The walls were painted with watered down primer and they painted around the pictures that were hanging on the walls.  No one was living upstairs where we found unpacked boxes and stained carpet.  Bottom line, the house did not show well.Origkit

But I had a dream.  I knew this house was a diamond in the rough.  My vision included gutting the kitchen for a gourmet kitchen I could teach out of.  We got rid of the family room to make the kitchen and eating area more like a great room.  We eventually put laminate flooring all over the house, upstairs and down which made cleaning up after the kids a breeze.  The kids are all upstairs and my husband and I have a suite downstairs.  Dan finally gave in when I told him that we could view the stairs from our room so that any female teenaged child of ours who attempted to bring a male teenaged child up the stairs would be seen and shot!   Just kidding.  But the house seemed just right.

This is what I did to the kitchen:

Islandsmall_2 1.    Had a 5 foot by 10 foot dual level-island installed.  There is granite on the top, custom wood cabinets on the bottom with plenty of storage and electrical, an extra-deep double stainless sink with an instant-hot water faucet, two built in soap dispensers and a button for the garbage disposal.  Basketssmall One side of the island has three pull out baskets where I store onions, potatoes and squash and plastic ware, set vertically and on the other side is my proud invention of a cooling rack.  It is made of aluminum inside and has 5 racks.  The door has mesh so that the hot items placed on the cooling rack won’t steam.    Finally, I have four stainless Coolingracksmall_2 steel bar stools and an additional 8 checkerboard bars stools that I use for classes.

      2.    I put in two self cleaning, extra-wide electric conventional/convection ovens and a warming drawer.  I use my double ovens several times a week.  Sometimes I even wish I had a third!  The warming drawer comes in handy during my classes or dinner parties to keep plates or extra food warm.

3.    I put in deep, large storage drawers for pot lids and small appliances like a juicer and spice grinder.

Appliance_garagesmall 4.    I had butcher block cutting boards installed in two areas of my kitchen, one right above the trash and one on the other side of the kitchen.  The one over the trash works well because I can toss the remains of anything I’m preparing easily.  The other cutting board is nice, specifically when my kids are cooking with me because it is just out of the way that I can still watch what they are doing but they are not in my way of whatever I am preparing.  Also, the second cutting board sits below my appliance garage which houses the mixer, food processor and vacuum sealer.  The appliance garage has an outlet but the cutting board allows me to pull the appliances out when I am using them. 

5.    My favorite toy is my pot filler.  I think now pot fillers are standard in custom kitchens, but when I installed mine five years ago, the contractor looked at me funny.  The pot filler is a cold water spout on a pivoting arm that extends the area of my six burner Viking range top.  I can put a stock pot on any of the burners and fill them with water.  I use the pot filler all the time.  It protects my back because I don’t have to fill and left the filled pots from my sink to the burners.  Plateracksmall

     6.    I added a wine glass and bottle holder above, a plate rack setting ten dinner plates within reach, some book shelves to show off some of my favorite cookbooks, and a shelf for alcohol where I keep my Sherries, Madeira’s, and cognacs.Dscn5781

      7.    I choose all stainless steel appliances.  My close friend, who is a CIA trained chef and married to another CIA trained chef says that she hates stainless appliances because it reminds her too much of industrial kitchens.  Well, I never tire of the look.  I do not care that there are handprints on it.  This just lets visitors know that my kids are around.  I do not mind that they are not magnetic because all the magnetic stuff just clutters the kitchen.  I don’t even mind the water stains in the sink.  That just proves how much I use it.  I do not have time to wipe it down because it is constantly in use.

When I prepared to have the kitchen redone, I acted as my own general contractor.  I read up on all my sub contractors to make sure that none were in bad standing.  I took the proper insurance precautions to make sure that I was covered in case of an accident.  I kept on top of all the subs that they were sticking to my time frames and incentivized them financial to finish on time.  Being 7 months pregnant was my incentive to have the job done in 3 months.  I cleaned out my dining room and living room and converted them into a kitchen during the construction.  I had my fridge, microwave, gas camping burners, shelves for food and plastic ware, and my laundry room sink for washing dishes.  It worked out nicely.

I love my kitchen.  There are a few things I would do differently, but that is for another article.  See more pictures below.

Spiceracksmall Spice Racks

Makeshiftkit Make shift kitchen in my livng room during construction.

Drawersmall Organized Drawers

Entirekitchensmall Entire Kitchen

Dscn5724 Custom builtins on the other side of my kitchen.

March 01, 2008

Chef Dawn Walker Persian Cucumbers

Images2

A long time ago, I discovered Persian cucumbers at Valley Produce, a local Mediterranean market in Tarzana, CA.  I love Valley Produce because they have incredibly low prices on produce.  Often I can get 30 to 40 pounds of fruit and vegetables, enough for my family for a week and a half, for under $30.  Persian cucumbers are small and have edible skins and seeds.  You can eat the whole thing like you would eat a carrot or a pealed banana.  Persian cucumbers are also super crunchy.  They snap when you break them in half. They usually measure four to five inches long and are available year-round.  Technically, cucumbers are a fruit, because they have seeds.  However, most people think of them as a vegetable.  Cucumbers, in general, have practically no fat, are low in calories and offer a little fiber.  Cucumbers are believed to have originated in India and have been cultivated for about three thousand years. Especially popular in Greek and Arab cuisine, this cucumber may have origins in Persia because of the name; however, there is no evidence to support that theory. Cucumbers have an amazing capacity to retain water and to remain cool. Its interior may be up to twenty degrees cooler than its exterior. A fact that explains the old expression, "cool as a cucumber". At Valley Produce, they usually cost $.59 or $.69 a pound.  At a regular supermarket, they may cost up to $3.00 a pound.  Depending on the size, you can get 4-8 per pound.  My kids eat them like carrots.  They pack a whole one in their lunch and munch on it during their recess times.    Try these beauties!!!  You will LOVE them.

February 28, 2008

Chopping with Macey and her videocamera

http://www.youtube.com/v/GCJXqfLwjLc

Here is a clip from our day today.  Macey and I were demonstrating how to cut large round fruit.  Its very shakey but we will get better!!!

Chef Dawn Live

This was a pilot for an Internet cooking series produced by Noisivision Studios.  Thank you Braddon Mendelson from Noisivision (www.noisivision.com).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRQFqnve99M

Chef Dawn Swordfish Family Favorite

I've been making this swordfish recipe since 1999. It’s a family favorite. I can't remember where I got it but you have to try it!!!

Spicy Swordfish with Citrus-Walnut Sauce

4 Tbl. Italian-seasoned breadcrumbs
1 teas. ground cinnamon
1 teas. ground ginger
1/2 teas. pepper
1/2 teas. salt
1/2 teas. ground cumin

4 teas. olive oil
4 (6-ounce) swordfish steaks (about 1 inch think)

1/2 cup currants or raisins
1 teas. grated orange rind
1/2 cup fresh orange juice
2 Tbl. coursely chopped toasted walnuts
1 Tbl. honey

cooked rice or couscous

Combine first 6 ingredients in a bowl. Stir in 2 teaspoons oil. Rub spice mixture over both sides of swordfish. Cover and chill for 30 minutes.

Combine 1 teaspoon of oil, currants, orange rind, orange juice, walnuts and honey in a small saucepan. Bring to a simmer. Set aside: keep warm.

Heat 1 teaspoon of oil in a large non-stick skillet over medium-high heat. Add swordfish, and sauté 5 minutes each side or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork.

Serve with rice or couscous and drizzle with sauce.

Yummyyyyyy.

Chef Dawn and Moms Broccoli Bake

My mom is a great cook.  She found a recipe similar to this and created what you see below.  Its a very simple recipe with only five ingredients.  Its easy and yummy and also good for a low carb diet.  The reason I chose this recipe for my first culinary blog entry is that my mom is my inspiration.  She is a bright, thoughtful, loving, nurturing, passionate women who gives her all to everything she does.  Cheers, mom!

Also, If you grow up in my house than you love food, love to cook and love to eat. This recipe is great because kids can help with almost all of it. I even give my four year old a butter knife to cut up the broccoli (think play dough only with food). They can spray with Pam, layer the cheese, mix the ingredients, top with cheese and fried onions. Not only is this fun for them to make but they love to eat it as well. Have fun and get those kids cooking young.

Mom's Broccoli Bake

All you need is:
1 10ounce packages of frozen broccoli (or five cups of fresh broccoli microwaved until tender)
1 packaged sliced munster cheese
1 container fried onions
2 eggs, beat slightly
8 ounces of cottage cheese

Defrost the frozen broccoli in the microwave. If using fresh broccoli, cut stems and florets into small pieces and microwave until tender. Combine broccoli, egg, and cottage cheese. Grease a rectanglular glass baking dish (like Pyrex). Spread pieces of munster cheese to cover the bottom of the baking dish. Pour the broccoli mixture over the cheese. Top with another layer of cheese and fried onions. Bake at 350 degrees for 1/2 hour or until hot and bubbly. Reheats well.

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