Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Texas Texas Yeehaw

Every once in a while, I get a deeeeeep darkkkkkk craving for some super delicious Texas cuisine. Sometimes, I get super lucky and an American chef in London reads my mind and fulfills my wishes! (Her name is Bea['s of Bloomsbury] and she has great desserts and lunches too). A couple of weeks ago, I went to my 3rd one. A few pictures from all 3 are below. I'm not positive, but from my quick calculations and extrapolations, I think James and I ate about the same number as shooting stars we saw. Each. I definitely noticed that I had improved my technique--these guys were stripped and vanishing in a flash.

Other times, I have found someone in my same predicament: a Homesick Texan. After Sarah found and trialled HT's recipe for migas, we've made it so many more times. It's so delicious and you even make your own little crispy tortillas! (Sidenote: If you're looking for breakfast burritos in London, there are good ones at The Hangover Club on Tooley Street (although, this was a summer 2013 pop-up, so I'm not sure how much longer it will exist). I also recently saw them on the menu at The Breakfast Club in Hoxton (there are a few locations and I imagine they have the same menu) and at Barrio East in Shoreditch. I didn't have them at The Breakfast Club, but I did have huevos rancheros and those were pretty delicious. As were the pancakes with berries. Those were to die for. 

Still other times, there's just a little something you need back in your life, so you have to scour a little harder for recipes. Like a good sausage, cheese and jalapeƱo kolache. Or a New Orleans style meat pie. The pies they have here are just. not. the. same. The ones you find outside of Nola in the US aren't even the same!! And these two cravings of mine were just not going to be found on the streets of London, no matter how many pop-ups I went to (gap in the market, anyone?). Although...there has been a fried chicken explosion lately (also conveniently pretty soon after I got a homesick craving for a fried chicken biscuit), so maybe kolaches (and meat pies?!) are next???

For both the kolache recipe (I used this one, but next time, might give this one a try) and the meat pie recipe, I made my own dough by hand, because I'm not sure it's worth me investing in a breadmaker at the moment. And...I felt a bit more homemakery and accomplished by doing it myself, so that was nice. I would set aside a good few hours for the whole process for either, but it's definitely worth it. 

Pictures of kolaches, Natchitoches meat pies and crawfish abound below!

Monday, September 2, 2013

I made it up!

I used to be more of a throw-it-all-in-the-pan kind of girl. If I liked the food/flavors, what could go wrong?? But ever since Sarah introduced me to seriouseats.com, I've been a bit of a slave to recipes because there are just so many good ones out there!

But last week, we ate in a bit more and ended up just doing from-our-head recipes. James made us these great salads last week that had pretty much everything I like in them:

Corn? good. Shrimp? good.  Balsamic? goooood. Gobbled it right up! 

Then on the weekend, I made this:
Quail egg, chorizo, gherkin croissant!
Instructions:
1. Go on an 11.1 mile hike and pick up 1 dozen quail eggs from an honor system farm's roadside box:
2. Get a couple of links of chorizo, a few gherkins and croissants.
3. Crack the dozen eggs into a frying pan, but be reeeeally careful if you want the yolks to stay whole! My success rate was only at 33%. Because they are so small, when you put your thumb in to further the crack, you kind of almost always break the yolk, so be careful!
4. Make the chorizo as the package says to. Mine said to bake it? I was surprised, but it was delish.
5. Toast your croissants in the oven for a couple of minutes.
6. Put a few sliced gherkies on there, add the chorizo (easier if it's split in half, lengthwise), and then add half of your giant amalgamation of 1 dozen quail eggs and enjoy. 

The buttery croissant makes it moist enough that you don't really need sauce, but mustard was kind of nice with it on a few bites too :)