Showing posts with label foodie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foodie. Show all posts

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Variations on Filipino Adobo: Spice Paste


I keep imagining what Filipino food would be like if the Spanish influence was scaled down to a minimum. I keep looking at Indonesian cuisine and Malaysian cuisine; all three countries have a shared history and culture. Perhaps that kind of Filipino food already exists in the southern islands, but there is another factor that I would like to add in: being a Filipino in California. What happens to Filipino food if the use of spice pastes became more common, just like in Indonesia and Malaysia? What does California- Malay-amplified- Filipino diasporic cuisine look like? What if the Fujian influence was amplified? What if the South Indian influence was amplified?

**edit: As with all adobos, I suggest not eating this on the same day. Adobo tastes better the following day. My theory is that the vinegar mellows out and the meat marinates even longer.

Ingredients:
  • chicken legs and thighs, attached, skin on, bone in, 3 each (total of 3 thighs and three legs)
  • soy sauce, 1/2 cup
  • cane vinegar, 3/4 cup
  • water, 2 cups
  • coconut milk, 1 can
  • garlic cloves, 10 each
  • shallots, slice into large chunks, 4 large
  • fresh turmeric, sliced unpeeled, 2-inch piece
  • cilantro stems, roughly chopped, 2 tablespoons
  • limes, 2 each
  • ground coriander, 1 teaspoon
  • bay leaves, 5 each
  • whole black peppercorns, 2 tablespoons
  • tomato paste, 2 tablespoons
  • kale, ribbed, cut into 1-inch pieces, 1/2 bunch
  • brown sugar, 2 tablespoons
  • sea salt, to taste
  • grapeseed or any neutral oil, 2 tablespoons
Season chicken with salt. Set aside.
Make a spice paste with garlic cloves, shallots, fresh turmeric, cilantro stems, 3 strips of lime zest, and ground coriander using a food processor or an immersion blender. Set aside.
Heat grapeseed oil over high heat in a heavy bottomed pot. Sear chicken legs and thighs on both sides until skin is golden brown. Lower heat, remove chicken from the pot and set aside.
Slowly and carefully add in the spice paste and gradually increase the heat to medium. Cook the spice paste until fragrant and darkens in color. Add the tomato paste and cook until the mixture starts to coat the bottom of the pot.
Add the chicken back into the pot along with the bay leaves and peppercorns. Pour in the soy sauce, vinegar and water. Increase heat to high and bring to a boil. Cover and lower heat and simmer for 40 minutes.
After 40 minutes, uncover, and increase heat to medium high, and simmer for 15 more minutes.
Pour in coconut milk and mix in brown sugar. Simmer for 15 more minutes or until the sauce thickens to a consistency of heavy cream.
Turn off heat and add in kale. Let the residual heat of the curry wilt the greens. Adjust seasoning and add in lime juice. Garnish with cilantro leaves. Eat with jasmine rice.

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Variations on Filipino Adobo: Mushrooms


This is a recipe that I will have to develop further. I sort of knew that mushrooms won't really work as the main ingredient of adobo, but I went ahead and tried anyway. Firstly, I am not a fan of the texture of stewed mushrooms, but this could be from the types of mushrooms I used - king trumpet, maitake, and buna-shimeji mushrooms. Secondly, since this is a vegan recipe and is a relatively quick cook, it lacks the flavor development that happens when something is stewed for a long time. Thirdly, I only used about a tablespoon of brown sugar for sweetness, but I think it needs another form of sweetness - perhaps from oyster sauce (but it wouln't make the dish vegan anymore). I personally cannot eat a lot of it, but the dish is good with jasmine rice. I can see the recipe being modified further for steamed buns if I add crumbled tofu, scallions, honey, and sesame oil. Or maybe even as empanada filling. For now, I'm gonna have to mix these mushrooms with other quick stir fry dishes. Here's the recipe if you want to try it: (Feel free to cut the recipe in half.)
  • maitake mushrooms, broken into large segments, 2 packages
  • buna-shimeji mushrooms, broken into large segments, 2 packages
  • king trumpet mushrooms, cut into thirds and torn into large chunks, 1 package
  • shallots, large, minced, 2 each
  • ginger, 1-inch knob, minced
  • garlic cloves, minced, 6 each
  • soy sauce, 1/4 cup
  • water, 1/4 cup
  • unseasoned rice vinegar, 1/4 cup
  • white miso, 1 tablespoon
  • bay leaves, 2 each
  • whole black peppercorns, cracked, 1 tablespoon
  • grapeseed oil, as needed
  • chives, minced, to taste
  • parsley, minced, to taste
In a small bowl, whisk soy sauce, rice vinegar and white miso until cohesive. Set aside.
In a wok or a sautoir, heat oil over high heat. Saute maitake mushrooms until at least one side has browned. Remove from the pan and set aside. Do the same for the rest of the mushrooms in batches. King trumpet mushroom will take the longest to brown as they release a lot of water.
Add a little more oil in the pan and saute shallots, ginger, and garlic until fragrant and shallots are translucent.
Pour in the sauce mixture and add bay leaves and peppercorns. Simmer for a minute and then add the mushrooms back in along with the 1/4 cup water. Simmer until the sauce reduces into gravy consistency, around 10 minutes. Lower the heat and mix in brown sugar. Taste and add more sugar if you like. Turn off heat and mix in parsley and chives.


Friday, June 19, 2020

Variations on Filipino Adobo: Tomato



This week was tough. I watched so many YouTube videos and read so many recipes about adobo. I also read through Reynaldo Alejandro's The Philippine Cookbook from 1983. It was probably one of the first Filipino cookbooks catered to the American kitchen, and it was disappointing. It isn't surprising though, since it was published in 1983. While reading, I started to become aware of this large hole in Philippine history. When I was a young student in Manila, Philippine history was taught starting from Spanish colonization. There was maybe a day dedicated to prehistory, but nothing in between that time and the Spanish era was taught. On top of that we were taught to be grateful for all the "innovations" that the Spaniards brought, mainly Catholicism. The Philippine Cookbook has the same underlying tone. 

Adobo was named by the Spaniards even though the dish existed even before the Spaniards came. They just didn't know what to call it. That is what exactly got me deeply emotional. The Spaniards changed our lingua franca, changed our names, and erased our history.

I was uprooted from my home country at a very young age, but being in a different country made me feel a lot more Filipino. I was craving my history. I have no knowledge of what the Philippines was before the Spaniards came, but there is so much power in being able to define and decide what it means to be a part of the Filipino diaspora in the now and in the future. I choose to define it through food.

Many might say that this recipe is not adobo. But I will argue that it is cooked in the style of adobo: meat stewed in soy sauce and vinegar with bay leaves, garlic, and peppercorn. I changed the ratio of vinegar and soy sauce to equal parts and used fresh tomatoes and tomato paste to compensate for acidity. This would be really good with buttery mashed potatoes. It's also important to know that this was a stove-top braise but it can definitely be done in the oven. However, the sauce will still need reducing on the stove-top.

Ingredients:
  • beef short ribs, bone in, 3 lbs.
  • soy sauce, 1/2 cup
  • balsamic vinegar, 1/2 cup
  • water, 1 cup + 1/4 cup
  • garlic cloves, crushed, 6 each
  • large shallots, sliced, 4 each
  • whole black peppercorn, 2 tablespoons
  • bay leaves, 5 each
  • large vine-ripened tomatoes, chopped, 2 each
  • double concentrated tomato paste, 2 tablespoons
  • chives, minced, to taste
  • sea salt, to taste
  • grapeseed oil, 2 tablespoons
  • (optional) calamansi citrus or lemon juice, to taste
Season ribs with salt. Over high flame, heat oil in a large heavy bottomed pot. Sear ribs, fat side down until rendered and golden brown. Lower heat, remove ribs from pot and set aside.
Turn heat to medium and add in shallots and garlic. Saute until shallots are translucent. and in tomato paste and cook until the paste darkens in color and oil begins to separate. Add in fresh tomatoes and let its juices deglaze the bottom of the pot.
Add the ribs back into the pot along with bay leaves and black peppercorn. Pour in soy sauce, balsamic vinegar and water. Bring to a boil.
Once it boils, bring back down to simmer and cover. Simmer for 2 hours or until ribs are tender. Check after 1 hour to see if water needs to be added.
After 2 hours, uncover and turn heat to medium and reduce the sauce by half. Season with salt to taste.
Squeeze calamansi citrus over the dish. Sprinkle with chives.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

All Rise!

In late 2009, I became Spago's pastry stagiaire for one night and Sherry Yard was not even there to observe me work. She came in at the end of my shift though, and asked me technical questions about what happens to sugar when it starts caramelizing - I wasn't able to answer properly. She sat me down, offered me a glass of water, and told me that I'm a wannabe. I didn't get the job.

A couple of months later, in 2010, I became one of Providence's pastry cook. (Providence, by the way, has one more Michelin star than Spago and I really wanted to rub it in Sherry Yard's face.) Long story short, I burnt out 6-8 months later, and left the restaurant industry overall. Learned a hell of a lot though. I never really understood the point of making and serving food under fear and guilt anyway.

These days, I'm primarily an artist - a painter. But my love for cuisine is still strong and I find myself nostalgic of my good days in the kitchen. I need to stay in practice, and I think blogging about what I cook will be a good motivation because eating out is getting really expensive. I quit eating land animals though.

So here I am. And Sherry Yard is still wrong about me.