On Saturday, I'll be presenting the following recipes for CBC's Weekend Morning Show, with guest host, Laurie Hoogstraten.
Everyone's Tarragon is bursting forth these days. The French tarragon has the flavour, while the Russian, sadly, disappoints. Tarragon Pistou is a classic French sauce, similar to pesto, but without the cheese. I'm serving it in a cream sauce with mussels for this dish but is excellent as a garnish in soups, on grilled fish or on a toasted tomato sandwich. Fresh gorgeous PEI mussels are available now on sale at Gimli Fish.
The Perilla, or Shiso leaf kimchi is one of my favourites. The large herb is available at many Asian specialty markets. I'm going to try this with carrot tops to make kimchi as well.
(Getting ready for the perilla leaf kimchi)
(Perilla leaf Kimchi all stacked with paste)
Perilla Leaf Kimchi (Aka, Shiso leaf and Ooba leaf)
3 cups Perilla leaves (can use large mint leaves)
3 tbs fish sauce
1/4 cup thinly slice onion
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 stalks of green onion (or chives), chopped
1 tbs honey
1-2 tbs Korean hot pepper flakes
1-2 tbs good soy sauce
roasted sesame seeds
2 tbs thinly sliced carrot
1. Wash and drain the leaves well and let dry in a basket.
2. Make kimchi paste as follows; mix minced garlic, green onions, sliced onion, matchstick carrots, fish sauce, hot pepper flakes, honey and soy sauce well in a bowl. Spread paste onto leaves and stack as you coat them in the paste. WEAR GLOVES! Store in a non-metallic container(glass refrigerator box).
3. Enjoy Perilla Leaf kimchi with rice and sprinkle with sesame seeds before serving.
Tarragon Pistou (on fish or mussels)
1 clove garlic
2/3 cup fresh tarragon leaves
1 cup fresh basil leaves
1/4 cup toasted walnut halves
1/4 cup olive oil, plus extra for searing the fish
2 1/2-lb fillets of boneless, seasonal fish (halibut, sole, pickerel, salmon)
Salt and freshly cracked pepper
Lemon for serving
In a blender or food processor, pur�e the garlic and add the tarragon and basil leaves, pulsing to start. Add the walnuts and season. Pulse until a fine grainy texture. Turn on and drizzle in olive oil.
Coat fish with a generous amount of pistou. Bake at 350�F for 1- - 12 minutes, depending on thickness of the fillet. Serve immediately with lemon wedges. If serving with mussels, steam mussels in lemon and olive oil water with tarragon leaves and white wine in the water until mussels are open. Drizzle pistou over mussels and enjoy with BBQ Frites. Or, make a white sauce with cream, butter, tarragon pistou and white wine.
Enjoy!
Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts
Friday, August 21, 2015
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Thanksgiving Stuffing Roundup
Thanksgiving is only two days away!? How did that happen? I had all these great plans for you. A few more T-day side dishes, some desserts, maybe even a cocktail. But then this crazy thing happened that fully derailed everything� I GOT ENGAGED. Our whole relationship has been a crazy whirlwind of excitement� we met, fell in love, moved in together, and got engaged. So fast.
Just kidding about the fast part� we�ve been together since spring of 2004, when we were wee little freshman babies in college. Most people probably think we�re already married. The general response to our engagement has been �IT�S ABOUT TIME!�
But more on that later, because it�s almost Thanksgiving! So, let�s discuss stuffing. Or dressing, which is technically what it�s called when baked separate from the bird. This is how I prefer it, because it�s not a soggy lump of a mess, but instead it�s crispy in places, soft in places, all around amazing. But I still call it stuffing.
First, the bread: start with super crispy dry bread, whether it�s 2-days old or popped under the broiler to crisp up. Try classic French bread, or mix it up with cornbread, ciabatta, or a combo! Second, the additions: I think there are 6 main categories here. Mushrooms, fruit (cranberries and apples), winter veg (squash, sweet potatoes), pork (bacon, sausage, chorizo), nuts (chestnuts, pecans, walnuts), and herbs (thyme and sage are classics).



- Kale and Mushroom Bread Pudding via A Thought for Food: Savory bread pudding is a lot like stuffing/dressing, just a bit eggier. This one looks amazing.
- Apple and Herb Stuffing via Smitten Kitchen: Two of the main stuffing additions, together in one glorious dish.
- Andouille Sausage and Cornbread Stuffing via Food 52: This sounds like an amazing year round stuffing with a southern twist.
- Butternut, Sausage, and Fennel Stuffing via Gimme Some Oven: I want to eat this for every single meal this winter.
- Ciabatta Stuffing with Chorizo, Sweet Potato, and Mushrooms via Food 52: Another recipe that takes several of the addition categories and mashes them all together for perfection.
- Pancetta Sage Stuffing Muffins via A Cozy Kitchen: WHAT! Stuffing in adorable hand-held muffin form. Genius.
Labels:
herbs,
mushrooms,
pork,
stuffing,
Thanksgiving
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