Showing posts with label Stock (food). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stock (food). Show all posts

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Nana Kate's Chicken Soup - It Will Cure What Ails You.

Chicken soup is a common classic comfort food ...
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I vividly remember the day that Nana Kate taught me to make her famous Chicken Noodle Soup.  Give someone a bowl of soup, and they are fed for the day – teach them to soup and you feed them for a life time. She even gave me permission to post the recipe, such as it is, on my blog.

Such as it is? Yes. Nana Kate usually cooks by eye and handful. She cooks by feel. (It's me who tries to write it all down).


We started by taking a big fat chicken and removing the inards and pop-up plastic do-hickey. The chicken went into my very biggest soup pot and was covered with water. We ground black pepper until the surface of the water was covered with black flecks. We brought this to a boil, then covered the pot and put in on simmer until the chicken was fall off the bone tender. Periodically we skimmed any foam from the surface.
Homemade PastaImage via Wikipedia
While the stock was being made, Nana Kate dumped flour into a large bowl. She said 2 cups – it looked more like 4. 2 eggs were cracked and added, and enough milk to pull the dough into a ball. It was the consistency of bread dough. Too moist? add flour. Too dry? Add milk. Sprinkle the surface of a large work space with flour and roll out the dough until about a 1/4 inch thick - uniformly. 
The dough is then cut with a sharp knife. The noodle ribbons should be about pencil wide and six inches of so long. Leave the noodles on the table to dry out. HUGE HINT – they won’t dry when it’s pouring down rain outside – so they will taste a little more dumpling-like but still oh, so good!

Samgyetang, a Korean chicken soupImage via WikipediaBack at the soup pot…

When the chicken is falling off the bone tender, take the chicken out to cool in a bowl.
To the stock pot add:

Nana Kate said, 2 T of salt, but I think it ended up being about 5 T. Start with a little and keep taste testing.

2 T Morton’s Nature Seasoning (though again this ended up being about 5T so keep tasting until you are happy.)

1 carton of chicken stock (or several cubes of bouillon)

a half a plastic bag of barley (1 ½ cups of dry barley).

Add about 2c of carrots cut into small bites (we just used a small bag of pre-scraped carrots and cut them into thirds).

5 stalks of celery cut into bite size pieces (green part only)

1 onion chopped

Cook until the vegetables are tender and the barley is chewy. Add chicken that you have deboned, de-skinned, and cut into bite size pieces.

To your simmering pot, add the strands of homemade pasta. It will take about ten minutes for the pasta to cook through. Your kitchen will smell FABULOUS. Your family will come running to the table. There will be no conversation as everyone settles into the comfort of their bowl of Nana Kate's Mystical Magical Cure Everything Soup….and they will remember it for years to come and feel loved.  

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Thursday - Nona Sophia's Pappa Al Pomodoro


The ingredients to make a Pesto - pecorino che...
The ingredients to make a Pesto - pecorino cheese, garlic, olive oil, pine nuts and basil. For this recipe. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

          



           If I were to describe my Nona Sophia’s family, I would say that they always had a burner on high, and a pot at the boil. Whether they were angry or happy, loving or grieved, the display of sentiment was passionate. Loud voices. Big gestures. Eyes ablaze or weeping with joy. The spectacle of their household made visible the spectrum of human emotion. Sometimes I thought it was good to have a day of emotional fasting with Nana Kate, to prepare me for the rich drama at Nona Sophia’s.



The pot at the boil on the back of Nona’s stove was often full of  
Pappa Al Pomodoro

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 cups chopped yellow onions
  • 2 carrots (scraped and chopped)
  • 4 cloves of garlic – either put through garlic press or crushed with the side of a knife and finely diced
  • 1 loaf of ciabatta bread – remove the crust and dice into one inch cubes.
  • 2 (28-ounce) cans diced tomatoes. Nona uses Muir Glen
  • 4 cups chicken stock (Nona uses homemade; I use organic stock from the store)
  • 1/2 cup dry red wine
  • 1 cup chopped fresh basil leaves + a few leaves for each bowl as garnish
  • 1 T salt
  • 1 ½ tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 3/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan

Stockpot Français : Une marmine
Stockpot Français : Une marmine (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Start with a stockpot. Pour the olive oil in and heat on a medium low heat.  Add onions, carrots and garlic. Heat these together for about ten minutes until the vegetables are tender. Add the bread cubes and cook for another five minutes. Pour in the canned tomatoes, the stock, and the red wine. Add the basil, salt and pepper and give it a stir. Bring this to a boil then reduce to a simmer. Partially cover the pot by tipping the lid slightly and cook for forty minutes. Remove the lid and use a whisk to stir the soup briskly and break up the bread cubes.

ricetta/recipe sul mio Blog Il Mondo di Luvi i...
ricetta/recipe sul mio Blog Il Mondo di Luvi ilmondodiluvi.blogspot.com (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Pour into bowls, sprinkle with parmesan shavings, float a leaf or two of fresh basil and a twist of fresh pepper.

I know it's not beautiful; it is delicious! (and the addition of the garnishes helps.)


                  Enjoy!




       This is particularly nice with a fresh green salad dressed with balsamic vinaigrette, a lovely glass of red wine, and a piece of fruit with dark chocolate for desert.








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