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Archive for the ‘food’ Category

How to make cheese

notes from workshop given by Hani Khouri at Fairchild Ramble

1 gallon fresh raw goat milk milk will produce approximately 1 pound cheese.

Heat milk to a boil. Add 1/3 cup lemon juice, apple cider vinegar or another acidic medium. This will cause the milk to curdle. Remove from heat.

Hani Khouri strains curds from whey with a cheesecloth-lined colander.

Have a colander lined with cheesecloth, set inside a larger bowl. Pour curdled milk into it to strain out whey (liquid). What to do with whey – can use in baking instead of water, use as base for soup or smoothies, or in pickling. (Hani pours it on his plants.)

Stir in salt to preserve, can use coarse or pickling salt. Don’t use iodized. Optional: can add fresh chopped herbs — oregano, thyme, sage. At this stage, if you hang the cloth and let a ball form, you get mozzarella.

Pushing whey out with cheese press. Finished cheeses are in background.

After it’s fully drained, put into cheese press (can get online at Gaiam). Press all the whey out, keep turning the press and keep pushing the whey out. Let it stand overnight. Don’t let the press stand in the whey.

Take out cheese from press and remove cheesecloth, and let cheese air dry on bamboo mat for three days, turning frequently. Rub the cheese with coarse salt every day.

Cook the cheese in brine (3 parts water, 1 part salt). The longer it boils, the more crumbly the texture. Be careful so the buttermilk doesn’t separate from the cheese. After cooking cheese, need to keep it in brine for storage.

Serve as you would in a Greek salad, or with chopped tomato and olive oil, or with watermelon.

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Thank farmers

Today, Americans will take time to sit down and share a Thanksgiving meal with family and friends. Now, more than ever, I am thankful for those who provided the Thanksgiving meal.

I am thankful to live in the United States where the average consumers spend about 10 percent of their disposable income on food, compared to those in India who spend more than 50 percent. According to the American Farm Bureau Federation, menu items for a classic Thanksgiving dinner dropped 4 percent in price this year.

I am thankful that I have the opportunity to serve the people who grow our food. If you bought fresh pole beans for Thanksgiving dinner, then family farmers Larry and Mark Dunagan grew them with care in Redland. If you’re enjoying squash, then family farmers such as Arturo DeLeon, Angela DelliVeneri, Sal Finocchiaro, Vito Strano and Eric Torrese grew them with pride in South Dade.

Family farmers such as John Alger and Robbie Martens grew the super sweet corn in the fertile fields of the East Glade. The red tomatoes you’re enjoying were grown by family farmers such as Freddy Strano, Kern Carpenter and Ed Hagan. The green beans for your casserole were grown by family farmers such as Bruce Dunn, Leo Talarico and Dan Howard. There are so other many family farmers in Miami-Dade County who deserve our thanks for growing safe, affordable and abundant food.

I am thankful for the efforts of Donna Reno, Gabrielle Berryer and Hani Khouri, who are helping consumers reconnect with their food source through Slow Food. I am thankful for the work of Charles LaPradd of Miami-Dade County, who helped launch the Redland Raised regional marketing program at Publix Supermarkets last month. I am thankful for Gabrielle Marewski of Paradise Farms. She cultivates interest in local agriculture from chefs and foodies.

The South Dade farmer holds many titles — businessperson, steward of the environment, neighbor, community leader and grower. Taking seed, soil and water, this farmer produces not only a crop but an economic impact of $2.7 billion and provides jobs for about 20,000 people. Privately owned agricultural land provides wildlife habitat and is an aquifer recharge area. All the farmer asks for is the opportunity to make an honest living growing food for a hungry nation.

All of our farmers, large and small, deserve thanks every time we eat. We take many things for granted. America’s farmers should not be among them.

KATIE A. EDWARDS, executive director, Dade County Farm Bureau, Redland

published in Letters, the Miami Herald, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2009

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Hani Khouri and Martha Montes de Oca

Chef and goat cheese maker Hani Khouri of Redland Mediterranean Organics has joined forces with Martha Montes de Oca, owner of Sous Chef 2 Go, to offer ready-made takeout lunches during the week. You get a choice of one of Hani’s Lebanese dishes or one of Martha’s Hispanic creations. Prices range around $7-9 for the meal.

Right now the prepared lunch is strictly takeout. Bistro tables will be set outside when the weather is cooler. Also, fresh local produce will be for sale at the store in a few weeks as the season picks up.

I dropped by a few days ago to check things out. Hani’s special of the day was lamb kofta. He was busy in the kitchen patting ground lamb between his hands and shaping it into oval kebabs, then cooking them on the grill. Lunch was two generous sized kebabs topped with chopped parsley and ripe tomato, resting on a pita. The lamb was cooked through, seasoned with minced onion, a dash of chipotle and other spices. A generous dollop of hummus topped with a puddle of olive oil was served on the side. Humble hummus, I’ve had it a million times, but Hani’s actually tastes like chickpeas!

Lamb kofta with hummus and pita

Martha’s lunches are Hispanic in flavor. Her daily special was chicken fricassee simmering in a crock pot. Its delicious aroma filled the kitchen and made my mouth water. She explained that all her ingredients are organic except for the meats. The customer has the option of organic (more expensive) or natural (less expensive). She also said, with a proud smile, that she deciphered the familiar favorite Sazón Goya, and created a similar blend with all-organic seasonings minus MSG.

To find out what the lunch of the day is, go to the Sous Chef 2 Go web site and click on the picture of the take-out bag. That will lead you to the lunch/takeout menu. Drop in for lunch, or call ahead to order a recipe that you can cook at home.

Sous Chef 2 Go
7758 SW 88 St.
Miami, FL 33156
305.595.8010
contact[at]souschef2go.com

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It took a bit of arm twisting, but Robert Barnum, the Cantankerous Chef, sent over recipes for Possum Pizza and pictures. Enjoy!

Possum Pizza Dough

7 cups plus 2 tbsp. King Arthur flour
2 cups plus 2 tbsp. tepid water
1/3 cup olive oil
1 pkt. yeast
1 tsp. salt

Put 2 tbsp. flour, 1 tsp. sugar and 2 tbsp. tepid water in mixing bowl and let sit at room temperature for several hours or over night. Put bowl in mixing stand (Kitchen Aid) with dough hook and mix slowly as you add the flour, oil, salt and water. Mix and knead till smooth, 2-3 minutes. Put out on a smooth surface with some flour dusted over the kneading surface. Knead for several minutes and return to the now oiled mixing bowl and cover with dry towel for 1-3 hours. Then place the dough on a smooth flour dusted surface and knead for several minutes and form a ball. Cut the ball into 8 pieces of similar size and roll into balls and place on a tray to double in size again. Each ball can then be made into a 6-8″ thick or 12″thin crust pizza. For outdoor baking on gas or real wood fired smoker/oven, the thick crust works easier for handling. It takes about 4-6 minutes to cook. (I leave the 8 balls of dough on the tray and after they rise place the whole tray into the smoker and bake for about 30 minutes for king sized hamburger buns with a smoky flavor.

Possum pizza cooking on a wood fired grill. Those are smoked eggs off to the side. Photo by Robert Barnum.

Possum Pizza Sauce and Toppings

Herb Onion Butter Sauce
1-2 sticks butter
1-3 onions peeled and sliced either way
2 tbsp. minced garlic
2 tbsp. thyme

Saute all till onions either soft or caramelized, your preference.

Tomato Sauce
2-3 cups of homemade tomato sauce
1 small can tomato paste
2 small cans tomato sauce
1/2 cup cooking wine or beer
— seasonings if no homemade tomato sauce (canned tomatos with basil, garlic, onions, celery, green pepper, salt, black pepper, oregano, hot sauce and soy sauce).
— simmer browned Italian sausage in the sauce to cut and use for toppings while preparing other ingredients for the pizza. It adds flavor to the sauce and the cut medallions of sausage for topping the pizza. Heat and reduce till desired consistancy.

Toppings:
smoked eggs sliced thin
thin sliced green and or red pepper
thin sliced onion
thin sliced mushrooms
thin sliced black olives
thin sliced pepperoni
thawed green peas and corn
thin sliced heart of palm
small chunks of ham
sliced italian sausage
shreded cheeses (can use 1 to many different types, what ever is left over in the fridge)
1 small tin of flat or rolled anchovies

Flatten the dough sort of thick if using outdoors grill for easier handling. Then put herb butter and tomato sauces on 1/2 of each pizza for variation. Each pizza feeds one to overfull. The herb butter side gets the corn, peas, onions, egg, ham, olives, heart of palm and shredded cheese. The tomato side gets cheese, italian sausage, pepperoni, mushroom, green pepper, onions and anchovies.

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Possum Pizza

No, it doesn’t have opossum in it…  but it’s Possum Trot Robert Barnum’s own ‘creation’.

Robert has been bitten with the smoking bug, big-time. Since he put some eggs next to whatever else he was smoking on his specially-modified barbie, he’ll smoke just about anything! …and no, he tries not to inhale 😉

So, last Thursday, he invited Marian (who, unfortunately, got called in last-minute to work),  plus the whole crew from Bee Heaven Farm to enjoy his Possum Pizza. Hani & his wife also joined us. This was a ‘make your own pizza’ affair, for which he provided balls of dough, a couple of sauces (homemade, of course), shredded cheese and an assortment of toppings. This time, he had both a whole wheat and a white flour dough, and the toppings included pepperoni, sausage (sliced), a seasoned ground meat of some sort (no, not ‘possum, I told ya already!), bacon, ham, sliced smoked eggs, corn, green pepper strips, peas, hearts of palm (from the famous drive-by harvest – see BHF’s blog about that adventure), King mushrooms, and probably something else I’m forgetting…

We all trooped over there after winding down a long day of weeding and transplanting tomatoes on the farm, bringing freshly-brewed tea and ice, to join some of Robert’s homemade Antidesma (bignay) wine. We met his other guests, a couple of who drove down all the way from Ft. Lauderdale to partake of the goodies. I’d say it was well worth the drive!

Since only one of our group had any real pizza making experience, our pizzas were anything but round. To help slide them on/off the smoker, Robert fabricated pizza peels out of some scavenged hardwood and thin pieces of scrap aluminum – with a generous dusting of corn meal, those pizzas rolled right off. With a not-so-generous dusting, they kind of  stuck on their way to the smoking shelf, and they got even more warped. Oh, well – master pizza makers we’re NOT, but they still ate well.

After partaking (and sharing) our creations, Robert surprised us with some of his exotic fruit ice creams – this time it was Monstera (aka Ceriman) ice cream, and a Passion-Allspice ice. And to finish it off, a small glass of a thick, after-dinner lychee wine that left us all mmmmmming.

Early-birds that we are, we were finished by 8:30pm, and meandered on home to bed. I think we encountered a grand total of 3 cars on the way home. Only in Redland!

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