This recipe accompanies Vietnamese Chicken and Cabbage Salad
Put in a large soup pot:
three local organic chicken legs
approximately four quarts of water
1 t salt Read More
This recipe accompanies Vietnamese Chicken and Cabbage Salad
Put in a large soup pot:
three local organic chicken legs
approximately four quarts of water
1 t salt Read More
This recipe is from Becky from the Intervale Community Farm. Her grandmother used to make it. A family favorite.
in large cast iron pan or wok sauté one large onion, sliced, in 1 T olive oil on medium-high for a few minutes.
add one chili, minced (optional).
add: half red cabbage, shredded, one apple, peeled and sliced, 1 t salt, 1 t maple syrup and ½ cup raisins or cranberries.
cook for 10-15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
turn off heat and add 1 T balsamic vinegar.
mix and serve.
This recipe shared by my foodie friend July. Simple and tasty.
heat 1 T butter in a large pan.
add 4 cups finely chopped cabbage and saute for a few minutes on high, stirring as needed.
add 2 T chicken broth, 1 t thyme, ½ t kosher salt and a pinch of pepper.
continue cooking on high for another minute or two.
Serve immediately.
Here’s to 2011. This cake is so good that I’ve made it three times since New Year’s Eve! The diet starts next week…
Grating the lemon takes some time and if you are not careful, some of your knuckles. Mine is still sore but the sacrifice was worth it.

Finely grated zest from 3 lemons plus 3 T lemon juice
3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 t baking powder
½ t baking soda
1 t salt
1 t vanilla extract
¾ cup buttermilk
3 large eggs plus 1 yolk, at room temperature
2 ¼ sticks (18 T) unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 cups sugar
2-3 T lemon juice
1 T buttermilk
2 cups confectioners’ sugar
NOTE: You will need 5-6 T of lemon juice in total if you are making the glaze. Three lemons should be enough, but buy 4 just in case since the amount of juice in each lemon can vary.
Finely grate lemon zest (just the yellow part, not the bitter white pith) from three lemons. Combine with 3 T of lemon juice in small bowl and set aside to soften.
Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position. Heat over to 350 degrees.
Coat bundt pan with butter and a little flour.
Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a large bowl.
Combine vanilla and buttermilk with lemon mixture.
In standing mixer fitted with flat beater, cream butter and sugar at medium high speed until pale and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Scrape down sides, reduce speed to medium and add one egg at a time. Scrape down sides again, reduce to low and add about one-third of flour mixture, followed by half of lemon mixture, mixing until just incorporated. Repeat using half of remaining flour mixture and all of remaining lemon mixture. Scrape bowl and add remaining flour mixture. Mix and medium-low until batter is thoroughly combined, about 15 seconds. Fold batter into prepared bundt pan.
Bake until top is golden brown and knife or toothpick inserted into center comes out with no crumbs attached, 50-60 minutes.
While cake is baking, whisk 2 tablespoons lemon juice, buttermilk and confectioners’ sugar until smooth, adding more lemon juice gradually as needed until glaze is thick but still pourable (mixture should leave faint trial across bottom of mixing bowl when drizzled from whisk).
Cool cake in pan on wire rack for 10 minutes, then invert warm cake directly onto the rack. Pour half of glaze over warm cake and let cool 1 hour. Pour remaining glaze evenly over top of cake and continue to cool to room temperature, at least 2 hours. Enjoy!
Cook’s Illustrated, January & February 2006
Chinese New Year was on February 14 this year. The Tiger is considered a formidable animal in the wild and in the Chinese zodiac. Step with confidence and caution this year. When it feels right – press on. When it doesn’t feel right, trust your gut and retreat if necessary. The bottom line is: go with the flow, not against it.
This Chinese New Year I was an animal in the kitchen and I have many recipes to share. I hope you enjoy them as much as we did.
Steamed Pork Buns aka Banh Bao
Steamed Dumplings with Shrimp and Pork
Indonesian Chicken Satay with Peanut Sauce
Makes about 25 small bao.
Vietnamese Banh Bao usually include a quail egg and Vietnamese sausage. My easy recipe has a simple meat and mushroom filling and is similar to some of the Chinese Bao Zi I’ve had, but my family enjoys saying “Banh Bao” so that’s what we call them.
I make them small so I get 25 instead of just 12 like it says on the package. I also make a yeasted version which takes more time and doesn’t yield a significantly better bao. If you want to try it, get the Momofuku cookbook. You can use their dough to make traditionally shaped bao.
Mix in small bowl:
1/2 pound ground pork, chicken, turkey or beef (or mixture)
8 shiitake mushrooms, reconstituted if dried, and chopped
1/2 small onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, chopped
about 2 T oyster sauce
½ t salt
pinch of ground black pepper
Thoroughly mix by hand for ten minutes:
1 cup milk
¼ cup sugar
1 t vegetable oil
1 16 oz bag banh bao flour mix
Let sit for 15 minutes or so.
Knead for about 5 minutes.
Roll dough into a long cylinder and then divide dough into 25 sections.
Cut wax paper into 25 2×2 inch squares.
For each Banh Bao, roll out each section of dough into a little circle. Put 1 T uncooked meat filling in center. Pleat dough up and around, gathering edges together on top. Pinch to seal well. Place on small square of wax paper and arrange in large steamer basket and large pot. Put extras on a cookie sheet and cover with a dish cloth.
Put water in bottom of steamer or large pot with lid (and without the steamer basket) and set over high heat. When water starts to boil, put steamer tray on the pot and the lid on the steamer.
Steam until cooked through, about 15 minutes.
When done, allow to cool for about 10 minutes and enjoy.
Banh Bao freeze well. Put left-over steamed buns in a container in the freezer. Thaw for about 15 minutes and re-steam them for about 1-2 minutes.
large steamer basket
½ pound ground pork or other meat
8 shiitake mushrooms
1 16 oz package of banh bao flour mix (Ba Chuong Vang or other brand)
oyster sauce
onion
garlic
milk
sugar
veg oil
salt and pepper
wax paper
Makes 30.
For this recipe, you will need a steamer basket of some kind. A simple collapsible steamer basket will do. Alternatively, you can get a bamboo or stainless steamer at an Asian market.
12 ounces shrimp, raw, peeled and coarsely chopped
4 ounces ground pork
12 water chestnuts, minced
1 T finely grated ginger
1 T dry sherry or vermouth
1 T cornstarch
1 ½ T oyster sauce
2 t sesame oil
1 egg white
1 t sugar
½ t salt
Pinch ground pepper (or to taste)
4 T minced scallion greens
The filling can be prepared the day before and kept in the refrigerator.
Take 1 package wonton wrappers, round out of the freezer at least one hour before you are ready to start making the dumplings.
Shortly before you are ready to steam them, make the dumplings. Hold the wonton wrapper in the palm of your hand and place one rounded teaspoon of filling in the center. Cup your hand around the wonton wrapper, gathering folds up around the filling. Press the gathered folds lightly around the filling to adhere, forming a cup-shaped dumpling.
You can put wax paper between layers if you want to stack them.
Fill the pan under the steamer with enough water to almost reach the bottom of the steamer basket and begin heating. Lightly oil your steamer basket and place dumplings in basket ½ inch apart. When the water is getting close to boiling lower steamer into pan, cover and steam until the dumplings are cooked through, about 5 minutes.
Serve with Ginger-Soy Dipping Sauce.
steamer basket
12 oz shrimp
4 oz ground pork
water chestnuts
ginger
dry sherry or vermouth
cornstarch
oyster sauce
sesame oil
egg white
sugar
salt
ground pepper
scallion greens
1 package wonton wrappers, round
wax paper
This recipe can be prepared a day or two in advance. If there is any left over, use it in a stir fry or on noodles.
¼ cup soy sauce
¼ cup rice vinegar
2 ½ t sugar or honey
¼ cup water
Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until sugar dissolves. Pour into small bowl.
½ medium scallion, minced
2 t fresh ginger, minced or finely grated
½ t sesame oil
½ t chili oil
Serve with Shrimp Shu Mai or Steamed Dumplings with Shrimp and Pork.
Shopping list
soy sauce
rice vinegar
sugar
scallions
fresh ginger
sesame oil
chili oil
Makes about 30.
I like to make two versions of these delicious healthy rolls, both are equally popular: the Traditional Pork and Shrimp and the sweet and tangy Mango Jicama. Make sure you give yourself lots of time for rolling, or invite your friends to help.
Boil, strain and let cool 1 package of Asian vermicelli.
1/4 pound pork tenderloin
rub with 1 t each kosher salt and sugar, let stand 20 minutes or more and grill on low.
Alternatively, buy some Chinese BBQ pork if you can find it.
1/4 pound of shrimp – quickly boil till pink, peel and cut in half lengthwise.
Wash 1 bunch of spearmint, pat dry with dish cloth.
2 mangoes and 1 jicama – peel and either julienne or use a mandolin to slice into long thin slices.
Pour some hot water in a pie plate and soak one rice paper at a time until it softens (about 30 seconds). You can leave rice paper in to soak while you are rolling another one. Take it out and allow excess water to drip back into the pie plate. Lay the wet rice paper out on a plate and neatly layer 3 or so mint leaves, some noodles and either mango and jicama or shrimp and pork in the lower third of the rice paper. Make the pile of fillings approximately 1 x 3 inches. Fold the bottom of the paper over the veggies and make the little package snug. Fold the two sides in (making 90-degree corners) and roll it up. Add hot water to the pie plate when the water gets cold and keep rolling. Put wax paper between layers so they don’t stick together.
Eat as you go or store covered with damp dish cloth until ready to eat.
Serve at room temperature with Hoisin Dipping Sauce.
1 or 2 packages rice paper
1 package vermicelli
1/4 lb shrimp
1/4 lb pork tenderloin or Chinese BBQ pork
2 bunches spearmint
2 big or 2 sm mangoes
1 med jicama
wax paper
2 T hoisin sauce
1 T rice vinegar
1 t sesame oil
1 T soy sauce
2 T water
1 T vegetable oil in small saucepan over medium heat.
Sauté until fragrant but not browned, about 30 seconds:
2 T fresh ginger, minced (about a 2 inch piece)
2 cloves garlic, minced
Stir in hoisin mixture and cook until flavors meld, about 2-3 minutes.
Off heat and stir in 2 T chopped fresh cilantro
Serve warm or room temperature with Fresh Vietnamese Summer Rolls.
hoisin sauce
rice vinegar
sesame oil
soy sauce
vegetable oil
fresh ginger
garlic
fresh cilantro