recipes

Mondongo A La Soupi (Ox Tripe & Chicken Gizzard My Way)

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If  this recipe does not make you like ox tripe and gizzard, nothing will do the trick. This is on my list for one of the ten dishes I don’t want to live without 🙂

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Mondongo A La Soupi

Mondongo A La Soupi

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Mondongo A La Soupi

Mondongo A La Soupi

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Gratinated Rib Eye With Straw Mushrooms & Great Northern Beans

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After  two days of turkey, tonight’s dinner required something more beefy. Only a large rib eye with lot’s of other goodies would do, so this is how I rolled:
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Gratinated Rib Eye With Straw Mushrooms & Great Northern Beans

Gratinated Beef Rib Eye With Straw Mushrooms & Great Northern Beans

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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Lettuce cups are widely used in Asia and are usually filled with plain, sesame oil coated rice-, egg- or cellophane- noodles amongst other goodies such as duck, shrimp, tofu, etc. I like my noodles to have a bit more taste and substance, so I usually use a stir fried mixture of noodles and other “stuff”. Here I used dirty rice sticks, along with spicy chicken and a wonderful tasty hoi sin dressing. The result was both eye-pleasing and tasty 🙂

Click here for Dirty Rice Sticks recipe
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Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Lettuce Cup With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

Lettuce Cup With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Dirty Rice Sticks

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Here  is a variation of “Dirty Rice“, this one done with rice sticks. I am a big fan of dirty rice, but I prefer the dirty rice sticks by far, either as a side dish or main course with a couple of fried eggs on top. Serve with soy sauce and chili sauce on the side.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Dirty Rice Sticks

Dirty Rice Sticks

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Stir Fried Crimini & Bok Choy In Special Sauce

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The  seasoning for this dish is composed of some of my basic, always present larder items : Sriracha, hoi sin sauce, ketchup, roasted garlic puree, maggi seasoning, sesame oil, white wine or sherry wine. The ratio of each individual item can vary from dish to dish, from main ingredient to main ingredient, but all together it makes for a great, versatile, delicious and simple sauce. If the dish is dry by nature, you might want to add a bit of stock to thin the sauce a bit.
(Don’t scoff at the ketchup ! It adds acidity, sweetness and color) 🙂

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Stir Fried Crimini & Bok Choy In Special Sauce

Stir Fried Crimini & Bok Choy In Special Sauce

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Grilled Pork Medallions, Chili/Herb Butter & Salad

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Fifteen minutes is all it takes to prepare this delightful meal. Just make sure you leave a wrapped stick of butter on the prep table in the kitchen when you leave the house in the morning so that you have pliable, soft butter when you start prepping in the afternoon.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Grilled Pork Medallions, Chili/Herb Butter & Salad

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season tenderloin medallions with kosher salt, cayenne pepper and granulated garlic. Saute until medium well. Rest for 5 minutes before serving.

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mix soft butter, roasted garlic paste, salt, cayenne pepper, lime juice and chopped cilantro. Scoop out, top with chili flakes

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season radishes and cucumbers with plenty of sea salt, marinate for 10 minutes

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after 10 minutes, drain water, add eggs, ketchup, sriracha, chopped parsley, roasted garlic paste and olive oil, mix carefully so you don’t mush up the eggs

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spicy salad of egg, cucumber and radish

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Grilled Pork Medallions, Chili/Herb Butter & Salad

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Chili Beef, Pennoni Lisci & Peppers

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Great  lunch today with a minimum of time and work. I used whole chili‘s because I find the taste better and more intense than chili flakes. Saute them until they change color and have infused the oil with their pungent heat. Remove the chili’s at this point or leave them in the dish for presentation ( I also like to chew on them a bit)

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Chili Beef, Pennoni Lisci & Peppers

Chili Beef, Pennoni Lisci & Peppers

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Whole Roast Pork Filet, Green Peppercorn Cream, Twice Baked Beets / Potato & Gratinated Broccoli

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This  made my day today.
Old fashioned, work and time intensive and probably a bit ridiculous to prepare for just one person, but oh so worth the trouble. Reminded me of my time as executive chef years ago, when chef’s and guest’s still valued real food and service and the world was a better place  (Maybe? Maybe not) 🙂
The stuffed potato with sour cream, beets and diced apples was excellent, seemed to be a bit Scandinavian in it’s taste and appearance. Gratinated broccoli, what’s not to like! And anything in green peppercorn cream – Hello !
All in all a meal I can recommend to anybody who has a bit of time on he’s/her hand and values quality over the “in”-factor.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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roast pork tender loin

roast pork tender loin

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Ungarischer Rinder Gulasch (Hungarian Beef Goulash)

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In  my opinion, one of the best way’s to prepare a tough beef cut is to transform it into Paprika Gulasch  (Paprika Goulash or Hungarian Goulash).
While there are  many great and not so great recipes out there, the basic principle to a great goulash is simple: Same amount of onions and meat by volume, LOTS of sweet paprika, no flour to thicken (the onions will take care of that) and most important :  Goulash seasoning, which will set it’s flavor apart from any other meat stew : 1/3 finely chopped caraway seed, 1/3 finely chopped thyme, 1/3 finely chopped lemon peel.

“Ungarischer rinder gulasch mit gemelli und gurkensalat”
“Hungarian beef goulash with gemelli and cucumber salad”

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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goulash with pasta, schmelze and yogurt / dill cucumber salad

goulash with pasta, schmelze and yogurt / dill cucumber salad

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Kaninchenbraten Mit Hausgemachten Spätzle (Rabbit With Pasta)

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Last  week I bought myself a rabbit at my neighborhood supermarket. As I was about to prepare it, I started to think about the animal in my hand’s and about how we humans love and respect some animals, while we disregard the majority of most species as soulless, feelingless Beings, which have no other purpose in life as to serve us in any which way we want.
We humans like to think of ourself as getting tougher as we get older. For the first 50 years of my life this was mostly true for me. However, for the past few year’s I have realized that the process has started to reverse itself, at least when it comes to being tough to other beings. Truth is, I have gotten very tough to myself as life and circumstances have hardened me over the years, but when it comes to the way I treat and feel towards others, I’ve become a soft pussycat. To illustrate my point, here is a little story from my past, triggered by this little rabbit:

When I was about nine years old, I begged my dad to allow me to breed rabbit’s in our back yard, so I could sell them to our neighbors as sunday roast for 10 german marks a pop. My dad gave me permission under the condition that once he build the cages for me, the rest of the operation was to be my complete responsibility. This meant purchasing the first pair, gathering the food (cutting clover from behind our house) and feeding them, keeping the cages clean and –  butchering the animals. In these day’s, the way to do this was to hold the animal by it’s ear’s and whacking them in the neck with a honing steel to break the neck. Growing up in the country side, we kid’s saw animals being butchered up close all the time, so there was nothing unusual about it, no second thought’s. So I had this little business going for about a year, after which I became interested in other stuff and had no more time for my rabbit’s, which by that time had grown to a population of about 40, as they multiplied faster than I could sell them :-).
Later in life as a professional cook, butchering animals was a common task while I was younger, so again, not many second thought’s about it. However, during the past few year’s I have become a different person, with different feelings and opinions. Although I am still an advocate of the practice of eating meat and seafood, I am horrified of the way the livestock industry has developed. The way animals are raised, kept and butchered is for the most part a shameful, horrifying, mind boggling heartless, soul-less affair, for which everybody involved should be deeply ashamed.
So here is my point: While I had no problem as a kid to slaughter an animal with my bare hand’s, this would be completely out of the question now. I would sooner cry my eyes out before I could harm a helpless animal for my own gain. I have no illusions that I will give up meat and seafood consumption at this time in my life, but I pray everyday that the circumstances of breeding and butchering animals will improve to a level where we as humans don’t have to be ashamed anymore of the way we treat livestock, from it’s birth and trough it’s life until it’s (hopefully) merciful death.
I would appreciate some of your comments and opinions about this. If you do comment, please do so directly on the comment part of my blog, not trough Linkedin, FB or other links, so we can all share our thought’s in this important matter.
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Click here for “Hausgemachte Spätzle” recipe
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Braised Rabbit In Merlot/Sour Cream Sauce With Homemade Schwäbische Spätzle

Braised Rabbit In Merlot/Sour Cream Sauce With Homemade Schwäbische Spätzle

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