Binagoongang Baboy (Pork in Salted Shrimp Paste)

I’ve long believed that good food, good eating, is all about risk. Whether we’re talking about unpasteurized Stilton, raw oysters or working for organized crime ‘associates,’ food, for me, has always been an adventure” ~~ Anthony Bourdain

 

 

Those of you who frequent my blog know that I lurves me some Filipino food.

This is yet another wonderful dish from the Philippines.  It’s so good, full of flavor, and sure to please anyone’s palate.  One thing you have to be prepared for is the smell (while it’s cooking).  It’s strong, and some people don’t like it too much.  I mean…you’re cooking with raw fermented ground shrimp.

If you like more exotic food and flavors, then this shouldn’t phase you, as I’m sure you’ve used unusual ingredients before.

If you like to stay inside a certain culinary box…then you might just want to stick with ordering this the next time you’re dining out.

Ingredients

4 1/2 lbs pork tenderloin, cut into 2 inch cubes

3/4 cup vinegar

5 cloves garlic, crushed

1 bay leaf

5 peppercorns, crack

2 tbsp vegetable oil

1 small onion, chopped

2 cloves garlic, minced

3 tbsp bagoong (shrimp paste)

black pepper

Directions

Place the pork in a heavy bottomed pot and cover with water.  Add the vinegar, 5 cloves crushed garlic, bay leaf and peppercorns and bring to a gentle boil for about a half hour.  Check back periodically to remove any scum that’s on top.  Once tender, remove the pork from the water and set aside.  Strain the water and discard solids.  Set water aside.

In a large sauté pan, add the oil, onion and garlic and cook on medium low heat until the onion is translucent.  Add the pork and shrimp paste and combine well.  At this time you can add a bit of the reserved water if you’d like a bit of sauce (I like to add just a couple tbsp at the most, but wet or dry are both traditional).  Cover and cook for an additional 5-10 minutes.

Serve over steamed rice.

Mexican Chorizo

Don’t you just love Chorizo!!  Well I do too.  Chorizo con papas, chorizo con huevos, and breakfast tacos are some of my favorite ways to eat this sausage.  There’s different types of Chorizo; Spanish, Mexican,  and Portuguese chouriço.  There’s even Indian and Philippine types of Chorizo.

The only types of Chorizo I’ve tried is Mexican and Spanish.  Mexican is my favorite, and it’s the most common type of Chorizo used in the U.S.

chorizo con papas taco

I’m not sure if you’ve ever looked at the ingredients on the back of a package of store bought Chorizo…but most of them consists of parts of the animals head such as cheeks, salivary glands or lymph nodes.

Yikes.  Well, kinda yikes.  I’ve been known to eat some pretty funky things in my lifetime.  Things that might make many people cringe actually.  So, I can’t say that these ingredients have shied me away… for the most part.

I recently decided to do some investigating on how to make my own Mexican Chorizo.  I consulted a few cook books that I have laying around.  I researched on the internetz.  And I think I came up with a pretty darn good recipe.  It’s easy, and most of all, it doesn’t call for lymph nodes (that’s the one thing that kinda bothers me…just a weeeee bit)

Give this recipe a try!  If you’re a Chorizo lover like me, I think you will surely enjoy it!!

chorizo con queso

Ingredients

6 ancho chiles

6 guajillo chiles

6 cloves garlic, roughly chopped

1/4 onion, roughly chopped

1/4 cup cider vinegar

1/4 water

2 lbs ground pork

3 tsp kosher salt

1/4 cup chili powder

3 tbsp spanish paprika

2 tbsp dried mexican oregano

1/2 tbsp cumin

1/4 tsp cinnamon

1 tsp black pepper

1 tsp sugar

Directions

Remove the stems and seeds from the chiles.  Place them in a bowl and cover them with hot water, and let them soak for at least 30 minutes.

Once softened, place the chiles, vinegar, water, garlic and onion in a blender and blend until smooth. Set the sauce aside.

Break up the meat in a large bowl, and in an even layer add the dry ingredients.  Cut in with two forks until evenly mixed, then knead a bit with your hands until well mixed.  Add the sauce, and mix again (I would suggest putting on gloves for this part), this time squeezing it through your hands, basically making it somewhat mushy. (If you’ve ever squeezed Chorizo out of a casing, you know the consistency I’m talking about)

With alot of Chorizo recipes I’ve checked out, at this stage they say to pinch off a bit of mixture and fry it up to test how it tastes.  Then it goes on to tell you that once you have it to the way you want it to taste, to let it sit in the fridge for 24 hrs for the flavors to marry before you use it.

To me this really makes no sense.  If it’s suggested that you wait 24 hours to use it to get the full flavor…then why are you testing the flavor as soon as you finish mixing everything together?

Anyway, what I’ve done is once everything is mixed together, cover well and refrigerate for 24 hours.  Then pinch off a bit and fry it up.  If you want to adjust the seasonings, this would be the best time to do so.  If it tastes the way you want, fry it up and use it in your favorite mexican dishes.  And it can last refrigerated for a couple weeks.  Or, you can separate it and it keeps well in the freezer for months.

chorizo con huevos

Enjoy!!

Humba (Filipino Braised Pork Belly)

**sigh**

I love pork belly, and all things that have to do with pig.  Humba is kind of the Philippine answer to Adobo.  Kind of. With the combination of soy sauce, brown sugar, salted black beans, and garlic.  Really?  Paired with Pork Belly.  C’mon!! If you’re a pork belly fan, then you should give this a try.

Humba is one of the comfort foods of every Filipino household. It’s a popular filipino indigenous to the Visayas and Mindanao regions.

This dish is best served over rice.

***note***  This recipe calls for Salted Black Beans.  This is not the black beans used in many south american dishes!!  You can buy them in specialty food markets.  If you have trouble finding them, you can substitute with black bean paste, which is much easier to find.  You can find more info here…and here.

This is a variation of a recipe I found a couple years ago.  The way I’ve tweaked it, it tastes more like the Humba I’ve enjoyed while living in the Philippines.



Ingredients


3 lbs pork belly (trimmed of thick layers of fat)

5 cups chicken broth, or just enough to cover the pork belly

6 cloves garlic, minced

3/4 cup white vinegar

1/4 cup soy sauce

1 cup brown sugar

2 tbsp salted black beans

1 tsp black pepper

1/4 cup roasted peanuts, skin removed

2 bay leaves

1 star anise

Directions


Place the pork belly and chicken stock in a large stock pot.  Bring to a rolling boil for 10 minutes.  Remove from the heat, and let cool.  Once cooled, place the pork in the freezer to quickly set up for slicing.  Place the reserved broth in the refrigerator for later use.

To make the marinade/braising liquid, combine the next 7 ingredients in a large bowl.  Mix thoroughly until all the sugar is dissolved.  Gently fold in the bay leaves and star anise.  Set aside.

When the pork belly has hardened a bit and able to slice, remove from the freezer and slice into 3 in x 1 in squares.  Add the pork slices to the marinade place in the refrigerator over night, or at least 8 hours.

About an hour before cooking, remove the marinating pork and the reserved broth from the refrigerator.  Scrape the fat layer that has hardened on top of the broth.

In a heavy pot, add the pork, marinade, and broth, and bring to a boil.  Once boiling, reduce the heat to a simmer and let cook for 2 1/2 to 3 hours.  When you can easily pierce the pork belly (kinda like a hot knife through buttah…), the pork is ready.

Once the pork is tender, remove from the braising liquid.  Remove the bay leaves, and increase the heat.  Reduce to a glossy, thick consistency.

Serve over white rice.

Mama’s Meatballs

This is really a great recipe for nice, flavorful, tender, moist meatballs.  I usually make them about golfball size, which yields about 12-13 meatballs.  Sometimes I add a bit of veal in addition to the other meats, though it’s quite fabulous with only the beef/pork combo.

Yields 12-13 meatballs

Ingredients

1 1/3 cup dried italian breadcrumbs

1 cup milk

1 lb ground beef

1 lb ground pork

1/2 tbsp kosher salt

1/2 tbsp ground black pepper

2 lg garlic cloves, minced

2 eggs

1 3/4 cup freshly grated romano cheese

1 1/2 tbsp italian flat leaf parsley, chopped

Directions

Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees f.   In a small bowl combine the bread crumbs and milk.  Add the milk slowly and incorporate with the breadcrumbs after each pour.  The breadcrumbs should be the consistency of wet sand, not soupy.  Set aside.

In a separate and larger bowl, add the beef and pork, and lightly combine.  (so that the meat does not end up being overworked, at this point just mix the meat together enough that they’re slightly incorporated).  Add the salt, pepper, garlic, egg, cheese, parsley and breadcrumb mixture.  Combine thoroughly. 

Form meatballs to the a size slightly larger than golf balls.  Place in a baking dish and bake for about 25 minutes. 

After 25 minutes, remove the meatballs to a big simmering pot of sunday gravy and let them cook for an additional hour.

Best Meatloaf EVER!! (Recipe Included!!)

So, my boyfriend and I were watching ‘The Best Thing I Ever Ate’ (‘The Classics’ version) the other night, and Ina Garten’s selection was the Meatloaf at The 1770 House Restaurant and Inn, located in East Hampton, NY.  When they showed this meatloaf, I have to say it didn’t look as appetizing as the meatloafs I’m used to.  You know, the kind with some type of sauce on top…etc.

This meatloaf consists of beef, pork and veal, along with other kinds of flavorful goodies.  Then the sauce is chicken or beef broth simmered with butter and cloves of roasted garlic.  After perusing the internetz for about 10 minutes looking for the recipe, I was delighted to find that the Food Network posted the recipe on their site!!  Oh happy happy day!

I made this meatloaf last night (sorry, it makes enough for 6-8 ppl and I froze the rest after we ate…no picture taken.), paired it with homemade mashed potatoes and whole kernel corn.

And it was one of the best dishes I’ve made in quite a while.  The taste was savory, and the sauce with the roasted garlic was spot on!  I know I’ve posted my own version of meatloaf on this blog a while back, and I do figure I’ll make that version again.  But you can rest assured…this one is for sure to be in heavy rotation.

Here’s the link!!

Gyoza

As I’m sure you can tell…I love all kinds of foods.  I’ve been lucky enough to have traveled outside the U.S. in my younger years, and during my adult life I’ve made friends with quite a few people of many different nationalities. 

These potstickers origininated in China, but have become widely popular in Japanese cuisine.  They are time consuming, but I’m the type of person that actually enjoys cooking.  :-)   Gyoza have always been one of my favorite things to eat.  Everytime I’m at a Japanese restaurant, they’re are always part of my meal.  

Having the ability to make these, as well as other well known Japanese dishes is truly a bonus.  With this Gyoza recipe, you can tweek this pretty much any way you’d like.  I’ve added minced shrimp, beef, and have even had them vegetarian style. 

 

10 servings

Ingredients

1 tbsp sesame oil

2 cups cabbage, minced

1/4 cup green onion, minced

1 clove garlic, minced

1 tsp ginger, minced 

(fyi…obviously all the mincing  goes alot quicker if you use a food processor)

1/2 lb ground pork

2-3 shakes of soy sauce

Vegetable oil

1 pkg Gyoza wrappers (you can use wonton if you can’t locate Gyoza)

Water or Beef Broth

Directions

 

In a large bowl, add the sesame oil, cabbage, green onion, garlic, ginger, pork, and soy sauce until well incorporated. 

Heat the vegetable oil in a wok or large skillet over medium highg heat. 

Lay the Gyoza wrapper on a flat clean surface, and place approximately 1 tbsp of the mixture in the center of the wrapper.   Wet one half of the wrapper with moistened finger tips, and then fold over.  (It should look like a half circle)  Crimp the edges about 5 times.  (See the pictures I’ve posted to see how they should look).  Repeat this process until all the mixture and wrappers are processed.

Add a few Gyoza to the hot oil (do not overcrowd the pan) and cook for approximately 1 minute or until nicely browned.  Increase the heat to high, and add enough water (or beef broth) to the wok to until the liquid is about half the height of the dumplings.  Cover immediately and steam until the liquid has evaporated. 

Remove and repeat the process until all dumplings are cooked. 

Enjoy with Gyoza dipping sauce.

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Gyoza Dipping Sauce

(adjust to you’re personal taste.  This can be a little spicy)

Soy Sauce

Sesame Chili Oil

Dash of vinegar

minced garlic

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Feijoada, Brazilian Rice, Couve a Mineira, and Farofa. The Perfect Brazilian Meal.

Fiejoada is the national dish of Brazil and is is traditionally served on a Saturdays. 

Fiejoada is traditionally served atop Brazilian Rice (see recipe below), and accompanied by Couve a mineira, which is Brazilian style Collard Greens, (see recipe below), Sprinkled on top is Farofa, which is toasted manioc flour (see recipe below), and oranges that are peeled and sliced and served on the side.  And don’t forget the hot pepper sauce!

 

First recipe:  Feijoada 

8 cups dried black beans

3 pounds carne seca (Brazilian salted cured beef)

(Translated carne seca means “dried meat”.  Thin strips of dried, salted beef essentially the same as beef jerky found in the U.S.  You can substitute the carne seca with good quality jerky; not the reconstituted snack form found in many grocery stores.  It is best purchased from a meat market or butcher that makes their own)

2 pounds portuguese choriço (or spanish chorizo) sausage 

2 pounds pork tenderloin, or spare ribs

3 bay leaves

Salt & Pepper

4 tablespoons olive oil

1 large onion, chopped

2 cloves garlic, chopped

Soak the beans for at least 8 hours or overnight in a large bowl with water to cover at least a few inches.  At the same time, soak the carne seca in water.  After the beans are done soaking, drain them and place in a large pot with water to cover by at least 3 inches. Bring the beans to a boil over medium heat.

Meanwhile, cut the carne seca into 1-inch pieces. Cut the sausage into 1-inch pieces.  Many cooks poke their sausage a few times with a fork and let it simmer, covered in water for a few minutes before cutting it into pieces, but I usually eliminate this step.   Cut the tenderloin in 2 inch sections, or if using ribs, cut into 2-rib sections.

Add the carne seca, sausage, pork and bay leaves to the beans. Simmer for about 2 hours or until soft.  Make sure the heat isn’t too high, and that you stir it often, to prevent the beans from burning.  Add water as necessary to keep beans covered.  Salt & Pepper to taste.

Chop the onion and garlic.  Cook over medium heat in a heavy bottomed  skillet until soft and lightly browned.  Add two heaping ladels of beans to the skillet and mash them with a potato masher, then add everything back into the pot of beans. The mixture should be thick and starting to become creamy.

Continue to simmer gently for at least another hour, adding water as necessary. 

Feijoada should have a nice creamy consistency when done. Remove the bay leaves.  Re-season with salt & pepper if needed.  At this point, you can remove the meats and serve on the side, or leave them in the beans. 

Serve over Brazilian Rice

Brazilian Rice

 

 

2 cups long-grain white rice

2 tablespoons minced onion

2 cloves garlic, minced

2 tablespoons vegetable oil

1 teaspoon salt

4 cups hot water

Directions

Place the rice in a colander and rinse thoroughly with cold water; set aside. Heat the oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Cook the onion in the oil until softened.  Add the rice, garlic and salt and cook and stir until the rice and garlic start to brown. Pour hot water over rice mixture and stir. Reduce heat to low, cover the saucepan, and allow to simmer until the water has been absorbed, 20 to 25 minutes. 

 

Couve a Mineira

 

3 lb Collard Greens, washed and stemmed

1 large clove garlic, chopped

1 medium onion, chopped

4 tbsp olive oil

Directions

 

Taking a few collard leaves at a time, stack them on top of each other and roll like a cigar.  Once rolled, slice into 3/4 inch ribbons.  Once all the collards are sliced, toss to separate the rolls and set aside.   

In a large skillet, heat the oil.  Cook the garlic and onion in the oil over moderate heat, stirring, for 2 minutes or until it softened.  

Add the collard greens, toss them to coat and cook them, covered, stirring occasionally, for about 6 minutes or until they are tender.

 

Farofa

 

In Brazil, where farofa is particularly popular, typical recipes call for raw manioc flour to be toasted with butter, salt, and bacon until golden brown. It is an essential accompaniment to Feijoada. 

There are many variations to farofa.  This version is pretty basic, but you can also add…raisins, olives, hard boiled eggs, banana, nuts, and prunes. 

Serves 4

3 tablespoons butter
1 small onion,chopped
1 egg
1 cup manioc meal
2 tablespoons fresh parsley, minced
2 slices bacon
Salt and pepper to taste

Heat a skillet to medium and add the bacon.  Fry until crisp, remove and chop.  Drain the fat from the pan, and add the butter.  Sauté onion in butter until soft, but not browned. Reduce heat and add egg, stirring until scrambled and well mixed. Gradually add manioc meal until the mixture becomes golden and resembles toasted bread crumbs.  Add the bacon, and add salt and pepper to taste.  Add the parsley and combine.

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Lumpia (Authentic)

During the few years I’ve spent in the Philippines, I truly loved each and every dish that I was lucky enough to shovel into my mouth.  It’s hard to be lady like when you’re inhaling your food. 

When we moved back to the states, unfortunately I was too young to even think that I’d ever think about or crave Filipino food again.  You see…I was only 9 years old when we moved back.  Of course I knew I loved the food I was leaving, but since I lived there at such a young age, it NEVER crossed my mind that when we came back to the states, I wouldn’t be able to get some Lumpia, Pansit, or any other dish I so desired; whenever I desired it.  Oh to be young and foolish…

Fast forward about 20 something years. 

I had met a Filipino woman at work.  She had recently moved here from her homeland because she met and married her american military husband while in the Philippines.  Well, as soon as she heard that I lived in the Philippines for a few years, knew a bit of Tagalog, and missed Filipino food, the NEXT DAY she brought a whole shitload of Lumpia to work.  For me.  It was a great surprise, and I was overjoyed that she thought of me so highly.  That was before I took my first bite.  After I had my first Lumpia, I wanted to propose to her.  I’m not sure how my boyfriend at the time would have felt about that though.

Anywhooo…  These were exactly like the Lumpia I had as a child when sitting in the home of one of my many Filipino friends.  And I think that’s awesome because there are many different variations of this recipe and they are all authentic.  Just with different fillings.  I’ve heard of using crab, shrimp, raisins, bean sprouts, mushrooms…etc.   I’ve never had all those different ingredients in mine.  I don’t think I want to actually.  I believe I have probably the most popular, and basic one right here. 

The basic sauce for Lumpia is Soy Sauce, hot pepper flakes to taste, and a squeeze of lime.  Mix it all together, and that’s it.

 Some people like to use sweet and sour sauce.  Though it tastes great, it’s not very filipino-ish.  But in the end, I guess taste is what it’s all about, right?

Ingredients

  

2 lbs ground beef

1 1/2 lbs ground pork

salt

pepper

garlic powder

2 stalks celery, minced

2 carrots, minced

1/2 head cabbage, chopped and minced

3 eggs

1-2 tbsp soy sauce

1 egg white

flour

vegetable oil for deep frying

Lumpia wrappers (I found them in an Asian store in Colorado, if you can’t find them you can use egg roll wrappers, though they are a little thicker) 

Directions

 
Brown the meat and drain the fat.  Season to taste with the salt, pepper and garlic powder, mix and let cool.

In a large bowl, mix the meat mixture and the vegetables together.  Add the soy sauce, and re-season if needed (usually doesn’t need any additional seasoning, but good to check it anyway) add the eggs and combine well. 

In a small bowl, mix the egg white and enough flour to make a paste (it might be a little difficult to combine at first, but just keep mixing for a minute or two).  Take the Lumpia wrappers and cut them on the diagonal (if they’re square) to make 2 triangles.  Place a heaping teaspoonful of the meat mixture at the bottom of the triangle (the wide part, not the pointed end).  Fold each point towards the center of the meat, and roll up towards the top of the triangle.  On the tip of the triangle, dollop a bit of the egg/flour mixture and complete the roll.  The egg/flour mixture should act as a glue to hold the roll closed.

Fry in oil heated to 375 degrees f.  When I remove them from the oil, I usually use tongs, and hold them vertically over the oil for about 10 seconds so the oil can drain from the inside of the Lumpia.

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Brussels Sprouts with Bacon

I was never a Brussel Sprout fan until I had them like this.  The original recipe I received a few years ago called for Pancetta, but I found it overly salty.  I tried it once with thick cut bacon, and I haven’t looked back.  If you think you don’t like Brussel Sprouts…think again.   Enjoy!!

Serves 4-6

Ingredients

8 oz thick cut bacon, cut in 1/4 inch pieces

2 tbsp butter

1 shallot, diced

2 lbs frozen brussel sprouts, thawed and cut in half

1 cup chicken broth

1/4 tsp each, salt and pepper

Directions

Fry bacon till crisp over med-high heat.  Remove to a paper towel.  Reduce the heat to medium and add the butter to the reserved bacon grease.  Add the shallot and cook until tender.  Add the brussel sprouts and cook until softened and slightly carmelized.    Stir every few minutes.  Once softened, add the chicken broth.  Cover and let simmer for about 15 minutes.  The brussel sprouts should be fork tender, but not mushy.  Remove with a slotted spoon and serve with the bacon on top.

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Red Beans & Rice (Slow Cooker Version)

If you’re into southern food, then you know about red beans & rice.  This is an authentic recipe that will impress anyone that is a connoisseur of this great dish!

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Serves 8

Ingredients

1 pound dry kidney beans

1 large onion, chopped

1 green bell pepper, chopped

2 tablespoons garlic, minced

2 stalks celery, chopped

4 cups chicken broth

2 cups water

2 bay leaves

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

1 teaspoon dried thyme

1 tablespoon dried parsley

1 teaspoon Cajun seasoning

1 pound andouille sausage, sliced

4 ham hocks

Directions

Rinse the beans to make sure they have no rocks or gravel and place in the slow cooker. Clean the ham hocks under warm running water and place in the crock pot along with the rest of the ingredients. Cover and cook on high for 4 hrs or low for 8. 

About 3/4 of the way through, I usually check to make sure my beans haven’t gotten too dry (if I’m home), if so, just add enough water or chicken broth to make them moist again.  They should be more creamy…not soupy.

After cooking is complete, remove the Bay Leaves.  (If you don’t remove them, at least, please don’t eat them!!)  Remove the hocks and put them on a plate (remove any beans from the hocks).  With a potato masher, mash the beans until they reach the proper consistency (about half the beans should be mashed, the other half stay whole).  After smashing about half of them, mix together.  They should be creamy. 

When the hocks have cooled for a few minutes, remove and discard the skin.  Take the meat off the bone, and chop into chunks.  Add the meat back to the beans and stir to incorporate.

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Rice

4 cups water

2 cups long grain white rice

In a saucepan, bring water and rice to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for 20 minutes.  Uncover, and fluff with a fork.  Cook uncovered for another 5 minutes.

Serve beans over steamed white rice.

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