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Korean Spicy Marinated Raw Crab

Korean Spicy Marinated Raw Crab

It’s midwinter and I was suddenly hit with the craving for raw marinated crabs. Don’t ask me why but my appetite told me I needed to get me some of that delicious and succulent sweet treat or else I wasn’t going to be in a 

Seolleongtang (Korean Ox Bone Soup)

Seolleongtang (Korean Ox Bone Soup)

This milk colored broth pairs perfectly with a black earthenware bowl. I used the black to show the contrast of how white the soup is. I found that in order to make it extremely rich and flavorful, I baby it over a rolling boil with 

Pasta al Limone (with Fried Egg and Black Trumpet Salt)

Pasta al Limone (with Fried Egg and Black Trumpet Salt)

I had an overabundance of lemons one week and in my quest to use them up, discovered pasta al limone. Whether by itself or as a base, it’s a delicious brunch that I can’t get enough of. Some people only use the pasta water rather than cream claiming it gives a smoother emulsified sauce. I find that using milk with pasta water provides the best of both worlds.

The black trumpet salt was just the dehydrated black trumpets I foraged this past summer packed with pink Himalayan salt. The earthy kick of truffle flavor (which is why I hold black trumpets dear) was perfect, and the fried egg made it decadent.

Ingredients

  • 1 lemon, zested and juiced
  • 1 serving spaghetti/linguine pasta
  • 2 cups Water
  • 1/2 cup whole Milk
  • 2 tablespoons cold butter
  • 2 tablespoons Parmesan cheese
  • 1 egg, sunny side up
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Minced parsley for garnish (optional)
  • Black Trumpet salt, to taste (optional)
  1. Cook the pasta in 2 cups of water plus generous tablespoon of salt (less water makes it starchier, providing a better thickening agent for the lemon sauce.) Place pasta to the side.
  2. In a pot, bring 1/2 cup pasta water and 1/2 cup milk to a boil. Add lemon zest and salt to taste.
  3. Melt cold butter into sauce and whisk until fully emulsified. Add Parmesan cheese and whisk until incorporated into the sauce.
  4. Mix pasta in with sauce and cook. If sauce tightens up too much, add more pasta water.
  5. Put on plate, pour lemon juice over it, garnish with egg, truffle salt, and parsley. Generously crack black pepper over and serve.
Children of the Sea meets Children of the Sky (Egg on Egg, a Karasumi Love Story)

Children of the Sea meets Children of the Sky (Egg on Egg, a Karasumi Love Story)

Oh there are so many ways to use karasumi (dried cured mullet roe), that briny, delicious gift from the oceans. Today it tops my breakfast to elevate my first meal of the day into decadence… Ingredients 1 slice of Homemade Hokkaido Milk Bread, toasted (recipe 

Karasumi / Bottarga / Wu Yu Zi / 烏魚子  (Cured Mullet Roe) Pasta

Karasumi / Bottarga / Wu Yu Zi / 烏魚子 (Cured Mullet Roe) Pasta

Every Autumn I import a few boxes of cured Mullet roe, also called bottarga-karasumi-wu yu zi, from Taiwan to give out as gifts during the holiday season and it’s always a hit. Karasumi is a delicacy in Asia, made from the sacs of the mullet 

Devilish Jalapeno Eggs (Or What To Do With A Bumper Crop of Peppers)

Devilish Jalapeno Eggs (Or What To Do With A Bumper Crop of Peppers)

This past year I was given a bunch of miscellaneous peppers from our friends, which was great because for some reason my pepper plants failed to thrive so I had all but given up on them. However, the question then became “what do I do with all these peppers?”

In the end, I dehydrated and powdered them, the flavor of the jalapenos and spicy bananas shining through–five pounds of peppers ended up being nothing more than half a cup of spicy, tasty dust (be careful when you open the blender for the first time! It packs a very literal punch.) One of the things I love to do with it is actually making deviled eggs, so if you end up with too much peppers (or tomatoes!) over the growing season and don’t want to spend the time and energy canning them/taking up space in your freezer, dehydrating and grinding is the way to go!

Ingredients

  • 6 large chicken eggs
  • 1 tablespoon mayo
  • 1 tablespoon relish (or minced pickles)
  • 1 teaspoon pepper powder
  • 1 tablespoon white wine/red wine/champagne vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon mustard
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Parsley for garnish
  • Cumin for garnish
  • Paprika for garnish
  1. Place eggs in pot of water and bring to a boil. Boil for about 10 minutes and immediately place in cold water bath.
  2. Peel eggs, cut each in half, and put the yolks in a bowl while the egg whites go on a plate.
  3. Mix mayo, relish, pepper powder, vinegar, mustard, salt and pepper to taste with the egg yolks and finely mash and combine until smooth.
  4. Spoon mixture into the egg whites and dust with cumin and paprika, and garnish with parsley. Serve immediately or chilled.
Misfit Market, A Review and A Recipe: Tangy Potato Toss

Misfit Market, A Review and A Recipe: Tangy Potato Toss

Yesterday, my sister came by with a box of supposedly “ugly” produce from Misfit Markets, which delivers said produce that didn’t make the cut right to your door (in NYC at least.) Up to 20% of produce are thrown away because they aren’t good looking 

Man Tou Recipe

Man Tou Recipe

A lot of my childhood memories of breakfast and late night snacks surround these fluffy, sweet, steamed breads that would accompany rice porridge and all sorts of salty pickles and other cured fare. We’d dip them in spicy doufuru (fermented tofu) drizzled in sesame oil 

Hokkaido Milk Bread (Bread Machine)

Hokkaido Milk Bread (Bread Machine)

My mom gave me a beast of a Zojirushi bread machine that she no longer planned on using. I had been making bread by hand at home, and this was a welcome change. One of the breads that I could never make quite right is Hokkaido Milk Bread–a sweet, buttery white bread that’s a staple at most Asian bakeries. No matter how I did it, the crumb would always come out denser and cake-like, and I thought perhaps a bread machine would fix that problem.

It did not, in fact, fix that issue, much to my immense frustration. I tried different ratios of things, wondering if it was an the salt killing the yeast or if the milk needs to be heated, less butter, more butter, I scoured the internet for the recipes trying to figure out exactly what I was doing differently than all those blogs with beautiful, pull apart bread. I thought maybe I wasn’t doing the Tanzhong (flour roux) correctly. I tried all sorts of things, failed bread after failed bread. They were delicious, and didn’t go to waste, but they weren’t what I was after. Even if they were springy while warm, they quickly cooled to a crumbly consistency.

After researching gluten formation, I realized that the milk, butter, and sugar component of the bread that gave it its signature flavor was interfering with the bread’s ability to form gluten! It truly was an AHA! moment. The fats from the milk and butter prevents the proteins from making the long sticky strands, and the sugar competes with the flour (and wins) for the water. Most of the recipes called for putting the ingredients together, even the recipe booklet that came with the bread machine–but I realized in order to get the fluffy, pull apart texture, I needed to allow the gluten to form first.

This takes just an extra step, but the result is well worth it.

You can also do this in the oven, but you’ll need to do the kneading to incorporate the other ingredients.

If the shokupan loaf is STILL tight/crumbly on the inside:

  1. Make sure your machine is not over kneading your dough. 10-15 minutes after all the ingredients have been combined is all you need so you may have to adjust the machine, especially if it kneads twice.
  2. Make sure you are allowing for ample rising time, you may need to adjust your machine’s cycle to increase rise time.
  3. The cycle I have is this: 13 minutes knead time, 2 rises (1 hour each), 1 hour bake. (On a Zojirushi BB-PAC20.)

Ingredients

  • 3.5 cups flour (bread or all purpose) plus 4 heaping tablespoons for the tangzhong
  • 1 cup water, plus .5 cup for the tangzhong
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil (for stabilizing and softness when cool)
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup whole milk powder (Purchased on Amazon, stored in the freezer)
  • 1 packet active dry yeast
  1. Make the tangzhong by heating four tablespoons of flour with the half cup water in a saucepan on the stove. Once the mixture is thickened, about one minute on high, remove from heat. Allow the tangzhong to cool in the fridge for an hour, best overnight.
  2. Proof the active dry yeast in 1 cup water, and combine with tangzhong and flour, kneading until it just forms into a ball. If using a bread machine, place the rest of the ingredients on top of the dough and begin a regular cycle. It will have a rest phase at the beginning. If not, continue below.
  3. Allow to rest for 20-30 minutes in order to allow the gluten to form. Then, with a stand mixer, combine the butter, egg, salt, sugar, and milk powder with the dough until smooth.
  4. Cover with a damp cloth and allow to proof for an hour.
  5. Once it has risen to about twice the size, punch down and knead for another 5 minutes. Transfer to a loaf pan and allow to rise for another half hour.
  6. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and bake bread for about 40 minutes, or until crust is golden brown. Remove and cool.
Yakiniku Gyutan (Grilled Beef Tongue, A Serenade)

Yakiniku Gyutan (Grilled Beef Tongue, A Serenade)

Oh glorious beef tongue, Juicy, fat, and tender, You don’t take much to make people happy, To your delicious, smoky, beefy flavor I surrender Beef tongue is probably my favorite cut of beef for yakiniku style barbecues. No, let me amend that, it is my favorite