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As Close As You Get-Mexican Rice

Betsy spent a long time getting this rice to as close to what you get in your favorite Mexican Restaurant.  Betsy worked with the then owner of Santa Fe, at 426 Main St., Glen Ellyn, IL to get it right before we moved to Minnesota.

Serves 4-6

1 cup long grain white rice

2-3 Tbsp olive or other oil (enough to coat the rice)

2 cups Chicken broth

2 tbsp tomato paste

salt-pepper

1/4 cup salsa

hot sauce if desired

can add a bit of corn, too if desired.

Toasting Mexican Rice

Put rice in a skillet (top left-we use cast iron on this).  Add oil (center). Over medium high heat roast the rice stirring fairly constantly to keep from burning. At the end it will be kind of opaque and golden (right photo)  Originally Betsy washed the rice after toasting,  but Juanita said no.

When golden brown, add broth, tomato paste, salt, pepper, salsa and a bit of Mexican Ricehot sauce if desired.

Simmer, covered, until rice is tender (about 20 minutes).  Let sit another 10-15 minutes covered.  Serve.

This is what the finished rice looks like.

Close-up below.

Mexican Rice Finished

Ella's Banana Bread

This one is proof that the potter (Tom) can be bought.  Mary Ellen and Margaret Ann can have ‘most anything for bringing this bread by all summer when they’re at the cabin.  (‘course I tell Linda L. something similar).  A good reason to buy a few more bananas than you can possibly eat before they get ripe!

Ella’s Banana Bread

3 ripe bananas
3 Tbsp. sour milk
½ cup butter or margarine
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking soda
¼ tsp. salt
1 cup chopped nuts (optional)

Mash bananas with sour milk and set aside. Cream butter. Add sugar and mix well. Add eggs and beat well. Add banana mixture and mix to incorporate. Fold in dry ingredients. Add nuts if desired.

Put into two regular or four small loaf pans. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until cake tester comes out clean when loaf is pierced. Cool and store in plastic. Freezes well.

Notes:
You can make sour milk by adding a small amount of vinegar or baking soda to regular milk.

Loaves will release from pan more easily if bottom of pan is lined with wax paper

Ella’s Banana Bread

This one is proof that the potter (Tom) can be bought.  Mary Ellen and Margaret Ann can have ‘most anything for bringing this bread by all summer when they’re at the cabin.  (‘course I tell Linda L. something similar).  A good reason to buy a few more bananas than you can possibly eat before they get ripe!

Ella’s Banana Bread

3 ripe bananas
3 Tbsp. sour milk
½ cup butter or margarine
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking soda
¼ tsp. salt
1 cup chopped nuts (optional)

Mash bananas with sour milk and set aside. Cream butter. Add sugar and mix well. Add eggs and beat well. Add banana mixture and mix to incorporate. Fold in dry ingredients. Add nuts if desired.

Put into two regular or four small loaf pans. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until cake tester comes out clean when loaf is pierced. Cool and store in plastic. Freezes well.

Notes:
You can make sour milk by adding a small amount of vinegar or baking soda to regular milk.

Loaves will release from pan more easily if bottom of pan is lined with wax paper

Italian Rub “Beer Can” Chicken

It can no longer be called “Beer Can Chicken.  Paula’s roasting rub elevates this simple dish to gourmet status.

1 Roasting Chicken 3-1/2 to 5 lbsChicken Baker
3 Garlic Cloves
1 TBSP Juniper Berries
2 tsp coarse Salt
1 tsp dried Oregano
½ tsp Black Peppercorns
2 Cloves
2 Bay Leaves
3 TBSP Extra Virgin Olive Oil, rendered duck fat
or clarified butter
1 sm Lemon – sliced thin

We’d always used dry rubs on the chicken bakers. We sent one to Paula for the heck of it, and she developed this extra special Mediterranean style recipe. It is fabulous! We made two of them for our “company” Paula Wolfert Christmas party (everything from appetizers to dessert was from “Mediterranean Clay Pot Cooking”.  Juniper berries are available from Penzey’s Spices. If you don’t know about them, you need to!  This is clay pot cooking at its best!

1. Rinse the chicken inside and out and pat dry with paper towels. Cut off tail. Place on a rack over paper towels and refrigerate, uncovered.
2. Use a heavy pestle to pound the Juniper Berries, garlic, salt, oregano, peppercorns, cloves, and bay leaves to a paste in a mortar. Or use electric grinder or spice mill to grind. Blend in the olive oil.
3. Remove chicken from refrigerator. Slip fingers under the skin of the thighs and breasts and gently separate skin from the meat to create an air pocket without tearing the skin. Insert pinches of the mixture under the skin and massage into the flesh. Use remaining mixture to season the cavity and the skin.
4. Slip lemon wedges into the cavity.Chicken Oven
5. Preheat oven to 350 degF. Bring the chicken to room temperature. Fill the center cup about 2/3 full with water and juice of 1 lemon. Seat the chicken over the cup with legs to the side making a tripod.
6. Bake, uncovered for 1-1/2 to 2 hours (depending on size)
7. The bird can be placed on the table on the baker (juices can be removed with a baster to make gravy) or lift the bird carefully off the stand and transfer to a cutting board and let rest for 5-10 minutes before carving. Juices can also be put in a skillet and boiled down to about ½. Correct seasoning and serve with the carved bird.

Chicken Collage copy

Paula Wolfert's Cassoulet

This article originally appeared in Food and Wine Magazine in October 2005

Cassoulet in Clay Coyote Cassole

Cassoulet in Clay Coyote Cassole

Paula’s book “The Cooking of Southwest France” is available through her website at www.paula-wolfert.com. We heartily recommend getting a copy because of all the background material included (not to mention all the other incredible recipes). An excellent read, also. We also recommend doing your cassoulet as Paula’s recipe suggests. It really is worth the effort to get the suggested ingredients and use the methods she notes. If you live in a rural area, lucky you, your local butcher can get most of it for you. Or check out www.localharvest.org for listings of local producers throughout the US. It makes a world of difference!

CASSOULET IN THE STYLE OF TOULOUSE
Cassoulet de Toulouse
This is the recipe given to me by Pierrette Lejanou. The addition of walnut oil at the last moment brightens the taste of the beans. You need to begin preparations two days before you plan to serve the cassoulet. (It’s good to be a friend of your local butcher.)

SERVES 10 TO 12

1 pound boneless pork shoulder, trimmed of excess fat and cut into 12 chunks.
 1 1/2 pounds fresh ham hock or pigs knuckles cracked by the butcher.
 3/4 pound fresh pork skin with 1/4-inch layer of hard fat attached
 Salt and freshly ground pepper
 2 pounds dried white beans, such as Tarbais, Lingots, cocos, or cannellini, picked over to remove any grit
 1/3 cup fat from confit or rendered duck fat
 2 medium onions, chopped
 3 small carrots, peeled and cut into thin rounds
 1/2 pound pancetta or ventreche, or blanched lean salt pork, in one piece, about 1-1/4 inches thick
 1 whole head of garlic, unpeeled, plus 4 small cloves garlic, peeled
 1 large plum tomato, peeled or 1 tablespoon sun-dried tomato paste
 2 quarts unsalted chicken stock (store bought or homemade)
 Herb bouquet: 4 sprigs parsley, 2 sprigs thyme, 1 bay leaf, and 3 small ribs celery, tied together
 6 confit of Pekin or Muscovy duck legs, or 3 confit of Moulard duck legs, drumsticks and thighs separated, homemade (See Cooking of SW France) or store bought
 1/4 pound blanched fat salt pork with rind removed or fresh hard pork
 1 pound Toulouse sausages, fresh garlic-flavored pork sausages, or
Confit of Toulouse Sausages (see Cooking of SW France)
 4 tablespoons fresh bread crumbs
 2 tablespoons French walnut oil, optional

1.    2 DAYS IN ADVANCE, season the pork shoulder, fresh ham hock or pigs knuckles, and the pork skin moderately with salt and pepper. Place in an earthenware or glass dish, cover, and refrigerate overnight. Wash the beans in cold water. Put them in a large bowl with three times their volume of cold water and let soak overnight, or for at least 12 hours.

2.   THE FOLLOWING DAY, simmer the pork skin in water to cover until the skin is supple, 10 to 20 minutes. Drain, roll up the skin into bundles, and tie it with string. Cover and set aside in a cool place until needed.

3. Dry the chunks of pork shoulder with paper towels. In an 8 or 9-quart flameproof casserole, heat the duck fat over moderately high heat. Add the pork shoulder and lightly brown on all sides. Add the onions and carrots and saute, stirring, until the onions are soft and golden, about 5 minutes. Add the ham hock or pig’s knuckles and the whole piece of ventreche or pancetta. Allow these meats to brown a little around the edges, turning the pieces occasionally. Add the whole head of garlic and the tomato or tomato paste; cook, stirring, for 1 minute. Add the stock, bundles of pork skin, and herb bouquet. Bring to a boil; cover, reduce the heat to low, and simmer the ragout for 1-1/2 hours
..
4. When the ragout has cooked for 1 hour, drain beans put into a large saucepan, cover with fresh water and slowly bring to a boil. Skim and simmer for a few minutes, then drain and immediately add the beans to the simmering ragout. Continue simmering for up to 2 hours, or until the beans are tender.(You can tell when the beans are done by removing one or two beans with a spoon and blowing on them—the skins will burst.) Let cool, then skim off all the fat that has risen to the top; reserve 2 tablespoons of this fat for finishing the cassoulet. Cover the pork ragout and beans and refrigerate overnight to develop the flavors.

5. THE NEXT DAY, steam the duck confit for 10 minutes to soften. As soon as the meat is cool enough to handle, pull it off the bones in large chunks.

6. Remove the ragout and beans from the refrigerator and bring to room temperature. Pick out the ham hock or pigs knuckles, pancetta, garlic head and herb bouquet. Cut the meat from the ham hock or pigs knuckles into bite-size pieces, discarding bones and fatty parts. Cut the pancetta into bite-size pieces discarding extraneous fat. Set all the meats aside. Press on the garlic to extract the pulp and set aside. Discard the garlic skins and herb bouquet.

7. In a food processor or electric blender, puree the pork fat or salt pork with the cooked and raw garlic and one cup of water. Add this garlic- puree to the ragout and beans simmer for 30 minutes. Remove from the heat. Fold reserved meats into the ragout and beans.

8. Preheat the oven to 325 F. To assemble the cassoulet, remove the roll of pork skin from the ragout. Untie, cut the skin into 2-inch pieces, and use to line your Cassole fat side down. (The skin side sticks.) Using a large slotted spoon or skimmer, add one half of the beans and pork shoulder. Scatter the duck confit on top of the pork and beans. Cover with the remaining beans, and pork ragout. Taste the ragout cooking liquid and adjust the seasoning; there will probably be no need for salt. Pour just enough of the ragout liquid over the beans to cover them. Be sure there is at least one inch of growing space between the beans and the rim of the dish. Drizzle with the 2 tablespoons reserved fat in step 4. Place the cassole in the oven and let cook for 1 1/2 hours.

9. Prick the sausages and brown them under a hot broiler or in a skillet. Drain; cut larger sausages into 3- or 4-inch pieces.

10. Reduce the oven heat to 275 F. Gently stir up the skin that has formed on the beans. Place the sausages on top of the beans. Dust the bread crumbs on top of the beans and sausage. Bake the cassoulet for 1 more hour. The top crust should become a beautiful golden brown; if it isn’t, turn on the broiler and carefully toast the top layer of beans, about 2 minutes. Transfer the cassoulet from the oven to a cloth lined surface and let it rest 20 minutes. Drizzle with the walnut oil just before serving.
NOTES TO THE COOK
1. Fresh pork rind is essential to enrich and flavor the beans. If only salted rind is available, do not include in the first day’s marinade.
2. The acid of tomato in the ragout keeps the beans from cooking too quickly, so that they can absorb more flavors.
3. If you have a Hearth Kit, a chamber much like a beehive oven that fits right into your oven, use it for this cassoulet. Place the prepared cassoulet in the chamber, heat to 350 degrees F for l hour. Reduce the heat to 250 and cook as directed above. A Hearth Kit is made of ceramic materials and has great conductive properties.

Please Note: You can also use your new Cassole for many things…..Large salad bowl, large fruit bowl, punch bowl, or use it to bake any stew type of recipe in the oven. Essentially follow “Crock Pot” instructions and bake on a low heat (250 to 300 degrees). What a great piece for entertaining! Enjoy!