April 2010 Archives

A big change

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Yesterday John and I realized that we had separately reached the same conclusion: It is time for us to give up being vegetarians.

I bet you weren't expecting that! We weren't either. The reason we're making the change, oddly enough, is for health reasons. We're not getting enough protein. We're not getting enough zinc. I need more iron, and there is only so much spinach and lentils one person can eat. Then there is my infertility and diabetes. It is very difficult to eat properly to manage my diabetes as a vegetarian. I'm still eating too many carbs, and my cholesterol is elevated. Not terribly, but enough that my doctor had me start taking fish oil and recommended that I add fish back in to my diet.

On top of that is the fact that the soy has got to go. Rather than go into a whole long discussion of how it is highly processed and sometimes genetically modified and not good for you, I'll just go with this - we eat too much soy. It's not healthy. It could be contributing to my infertility. It certainly isn't helping.

This is not a decision that I've made lightly. I've been turning it over and over in my mind for a while now. It is only after doing a lot of research that I concluded this is the best option for me. You won't see me in McDonalds scarfing down Big Macs. I'm still going to eat plenty of vegetarian and vegan meals. But I'm also going to add in fish a couple of times per week, and then the occasional piece of poultry or beef.

It is definitely going to take some time to get used to. I've been a vegetarian for nine years, and I'm not completely comfortable with the change yet. You should have seen me at the grocery store. The selection at the organic market was tiny, and yet I dithered around and took 30 minutes to pick one salmon fillet, one piece of beef, and a package of frozen turkey burgers. They probably thought I was going to steal some fish or something. Focusing on opportunities to try new and different recipes is my current strategy for dealing with this change. We'll see how it goes.

Chocolate Caramel Tartlets

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I almost never follow a recipe exactly as it is written. There are several reasons for this. I'm a picky pain in the ass for one, which means that many recipes have ingredients in them that I don't like. Sometimes I think I the recipe will be better if I tweak it. And sometimes I just like to experiment. Anyway, I've had a bunch of conversations where I've talked to people about how you don't have to follow the recipes exactly, and I thought I'd give an example. I made these Chocolate Caramel Tartlets for my mom's birthday and I changed the recipe around a little here and there.

The original recipe, which I got from Martha Stewart's 2009 Holiday Sweets magazine:
For the tart shells
2 ½ cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
½ cup sugar
¾ teaspoon fleur de sel
½ cup (1 stick) cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
3 large eggs, lightly beaten

For the filling:
1 cup sugar
½ cup water
½ cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons ruby or tawny port
2 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 ounce bittersweet chocolate (preferably 70% cacao), finely chopped
1 cup roasted Marcona almonds (4 ounces; or roasted salted blanched almonds) finely chopped
Fleur de sel for sprinkling

1. Make tart shells: In a food processor, pulse flour, cocoa, sugar until combined. Add butter; pulse until mixture resembles coarse meal. With machine running, add eggs through the feed tube, process just until dough comes together. Turn out dough onto a work surface; shape into a disk. Wrap in plastic. Chill 30 minutes, or up to overnight.

2. On a lightly floured surface, roll out dough to about 1/8 inch thick. Using a 3 inch cookie cutter, cut 10 rounds from the dough. Transfer remaining dough to a flour dusted baking sheet, chill while you work with the tartlets.

3. Fit dough rounds into ten round tartlet pans each 2 ¼ in diameter. Trim edges of dough flush with rims. Chill shells 30 minutes.

4. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Prick bottoms of dough all over with a fork. Bake until firm, about 12 minutes. Transfer pans to a wire rack to cool completely before unmolding.

5. Working in batches of ten and using remaining dough (reroll the scraps) repeat steps 2, 3 and 4 until you have 40 shells in all (or until you run out of dough).

Caramel Filling:
6. Make caramel filling: Heat sugar and the water in a small saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring until the sugar has dissolved. Continue to cook, without stirring until syrup comes to a boil, occasionally washing down sided of pan with a wet pastry brush to prevent crystals from forming. Let boil, swirling pan to color evenly, until syrup is dark amber. Remove from heat.

7. Carefully stir in cream and port (mixture will spatter). Add butter and chocolate; stir until melted and the mixture is smooth. Let cool until slightly thickened but still pourable, about 20 minutes.

8. Sprinkle about 1 teaspoon chopped almonds over the bottom of each tart shell. Spoon the caramel mixture into shells, filling almost to the top. Sprinkle with remaining almonds and fleur de sel. Chill until ready to serve, up to 3 hours.

What I did:
For the tart shells, the only change I made was to use Maldon salt for the fleur de sel, which Martha suggests as an appropriate alternative. You can use any sea salt, but a nice flaky one will help.

What I wouldn't change: Sometimes, I deliberately use salted butter when the recipe calls for unsalted, (like with chocolate chip cookies) but I think it would be overkill here.

I also did not have the right size tartlet pans. Mine are 3 and 7/8ths inches, so they made about 20 tartlets. The cooking time was essentially the same, because it is based on the thickness of the dough, not the size of the rounds.

It helps to chill the tarts in their pans on a cookie sheet before you bake them, but you don't have to be quite as thorough about the chilling as Martha is.

I made a few changes to the filling, listed in bold
1 cup sugar
½ cup water
½ cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons ruby or tawny port (what am I, an 18th century ship captain? I have no port. Instead, I substituted 2 tablespoons vanilla extract) 2 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 ounce bittersweet chocolate (preferably 70% cacao), finely chopped (I went with semisweet chocolate)
1 cup roasted Marcona almonds (4 ounces; or roasted salted blanched almonds) finely chopped (I couldn't find Marcona almonds, so I bought some blanched slivered almonds, roasted them in my oven and then tossed them with a little of the Maldon salt, and then chopped them).

I get anxious about overcooking the caramel, so I used a candy thermometer to gauge when I thought the caramel was done, rather than going by color alone. I think 320 degrees is about the right temperature.

To toast the almonds, place them on an ungreased baking sheet and toast them at 350 degrees for about 5 minutes. Open the oven and shake the pan gently. Put back in the oven for another 3 to 5 minutes, but don't let them get too brown. Remove from oven, allow to cool and then chop into smaller pieces.

So there you can see what I changed and what I didn't. They weren't dramatic, but they were changes. And I assure you, the tarts were absolutely delicious.

Punch buggy black

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I finally got around to taking my car into the body shop last week. The damage to the car from when I got rear ended wasn't all that serious, but I did want a car with a bumper that was at 100% of its bumper capacity if you know what I mean. The other guy's insurance arranged for me to get a rental car from Enterprise (motto: we'll pick you up. Hope you're prepared to wait a while). Seriously, if I had known how long that was going to take, I would have gotten a ride.

And once I got there, the guy actually said to me "hey, the car we were going to give you needs an oil change. It should take about 20 minutes. Is that ok?" I then explained that I really had to get to work at some point that day and asked if they had anything else available. You know it would have been more than 20 minutes, and frankly I'm surprise they even had the nerve to ask me given how long they'd left me waiting at the bodyshop.

This is how I ended up driving a cute little VW Beetle. I have to say it was fun to drive a car with personality. I love my Honda Civic Hybrid, but it is reliable and practical and efficient, but it is not a fun car. The Beetle is. I'll never buy a VW again after the spectacularly bad experience I had with my Jetta, but it wasn't a bad car to drive for a few days. Plus, it had heated seats. I LOVE heated seats and have decided they are an absolute must for my next car. However, it turns out that I've gotten really used to my digital spedometer in the Honda. I felt like I was guessing at my speed in the VW. Also, I was lost without the jack to plug my iPod into the stereo. Funny how stuff you never even knew you cared about becomes indispensable after a while. So I'm happy to be back in my boring Civic. Plus the bodyshop got it so clean it's like a new car!

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This page is an archive of entries from April 2010 listed from newest to oldest.

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