Showing posts with label puff pastry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puff pastry. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Iron Chef Results - Citrus, Asparagus, Strawberry winners!

The date was set, the contestants were lined up and the three challenging ingredients were selected.  The Iron Chef dinner party was on!


If you haven't already watched an episode of Iron Chef (in English or Japanese) the premise is pretty simple - the guest chefs compete to create the best menu using three ingredients in each course.  The judges taste, review and select a winner.  For our at-home dinner party version, we assigned courses to the guests, told them what the three ingredients were, and although we were prepared to put the kitchen at every one's disposal when they arrived, all the dishes arrived potluck.

We started with six contestants.

Three days before the party, one withdrew due to illness.

The morning of, we lost another, contestant.  The ranks were already closing, the tension mounting as the remaining contestants began to see their odds of coming out on top increase.

During the day, the dessert preparations were under way.  Have you ever tried to concoct a dessert with asparagus?  Even the Internet was no help here...turning up only balsamic glazes in the "sweet" category.  We were on our own and the clock was ticking.

We began to experiment.



Asparagus Sugar.  This had to be one of the weirdest flavors I've ever tasted.  How to describe the pungent, strange, not-sweet-not-vegetable smell of this mix?



Caramel with bits of asparagus - good, but mostly because you can't actually taste the asparagus.  Bad part?  Cleaning up the pan.  (you have to add lots of water and boil the caramel off - good to know!)



Candied asparagus tips.  These were surprisingly good.  Pulled out just when the sugar hit a thick enough stage to coat the tips and harden, they were oddly sweet and savory.  We used a salted caramel, which helped join the flavors.



After going through a tasting station, including some strawberries that were sprinkled with asparagus sugar and a few others soaked in lemoncello and asparagus sugar, we settled on our dessert entry:



A cornmeal crust, a lemon-mascarpone base topped with strawberries marinated in lemoncello and asparagus sugar.  We garnished each slice with a candied asparagus tip just before serving, but they softened after being made and were "sticky and weird" in the words of our judge.  However, the rest of the dessert was delightful.  (This probably cost us the winning spot, but such is the cost of experimentation!)

The other contestants arrived, wine was served on the porch and our judge, the wise, youngest participant, was selected.

Other dishes included:



A platter of puff-pastry shells with a bright lemon-cream sauce enrobing tender pieces of asparagus and chicken, topped with diced strawberries.  Incredibly tasty.



A simple side of blanched asparagus, julienned strawberries and lemon zest, a perfectly simple combination of the three ingredients.



Salt and lime brined chicken breasts, grille, topped with a white wine and strawberry sauce seasoned with thyme and asparagus, and



An asparagus break with lime-cream and strawberries.  The asparagus bread tasted strangely of peanut butter - some strange kitchen chemistry was at work in this last dish.

Our judge dutifully tasted everything and...


After carefully weighing the dishes (and his hosts feelings, his mother's feelings and those of the other contestants) declared "it was all good so I can't choose a winner!!"

In the face of such diplomacy, we had only one choice.  We agreed!  It was a delicious dinner and as the contestants packed up their platters and wandered off into the spring-scented night, we were already imagining the next trio of secret ingredients.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Apple Pockets

If you've ever had a chausson aux pommes, an apple turnover, an apple-pocket or any other crusty, flaky, hand-held apple-filled pastry, you know how wonderful it is when you bite through the crispy outside and hit that thick, sweet apple filling.  Hungry?  We made some quick and simple pastries this week. 

This all began with four apples that had been in the crisper a little too long.  We peeled them, cut off the bad spots, chopped them roughly into 1/2 inch cubes and put them in a sauce pan with 2 TB of butter, 2 TB sugar and a dash of cinnamon and a little cardamom.  While they cooked, we got some eggs ready and rolled out the puff pastry that had been sitting on the counter for a while, warming up to room temperature.

When the apples started to get a little soft around the edges and juicy, I sprinkled about 1 TB corn starch over the pan, stirred and cooked it for a moment longer to let the juices come together to a filling-like consistency then took it off the heat to cool a bit.


We rolled the dough out to about 14 x 16 inches and cut it into 8 long rectangles (cut once down the middle, along the longest dimension, then cut each half into 4 slices).

Using one lightly beaten egg, my daughter painted a frame around each rectangle and I put a heaping spoonful of apples in the middle (a little shy of 1/4 cup).


My son folded the pockets over and crimped the edges with a fork.  Then she painted the top of each pocket with more egg wash and he sprinkled sugar on the tops.



Into the oven (375*) for about 16 minutes and they came out looking lovely...



I'd be embarassed to tell you how quickly these disappeared.  Let's just say I don't have a lot of tips about storage for these treats!

Apple Pockets (makes 8)

Let one sheet of frozen puff pastry come to room temperature (10-30 minutes, depending on location)
Set the oven to 375*

Peel and cut 4 apples into 1/2-inch pieces

In a saucepan, combine:
apples
2 TB butter
2 TB sugar
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground cardamom

Cook over medium-low heat until the apples are soft around the edges and release their juice, about 10 minutes.  Sprinkle 1 TB cornstarch over the pan and stir.  The sauce should become thick.  Remove from heat and cool.

Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface until you have a sheet about 14x16 inches.  Cut into 8 long rectangles.

Assemble as described above.

Bake on a parchment-lined cooking sheet (jelly-roll pan with edges is best) until golden brown on top, about 15 minutes.