Archive | Puerto Rican delicacies RSS feed for this section

Foodbuzz 24,24,24: A Very Veggie Experiment

26 Apr

When I was a little girl I was a very picky eater… so much that my parents put me in a school where they offered lunch to see if I would expand my eating horizons.  For 2 years I ate white rice and ketchup for lunch.  True… my mom would ask me everyday what I had for lunch and I would reply – Arroz con ketchup!  Proudly…

But my pickiness never came because my parents never offered me a wide variety of foods.  They always instilled in me I had to TRY EVERYTHING BEFORE I could say I didn’t like it.  In my former life, before I became a vegetarian, there used to be a time where I would only eat the paella rice and not eat anything else in it.  I would only eat the sauce of stewed beans and still remember how my dad tried to teach me to swallow oysters with cocktail sauce… never did it, but became a fan of the sauce and horseradish.  Also, when in a ballet summer camp, they made us go on a diet where we ate steamed broccoli and cauliflower…  I hated the taste, the smell, the texture, but now I eat them regularly.  I also remember how in my Quinceañero I spent the whole evening eating these delicious “onion rings”.  When I told my mom how good they were, my mom told me there wasn’t any onion rings on the menu… that they must have been the calamari rings!!!  I never took the calamari off the paella anymore after that.  And I remember the first time I had marinated tofu in a sandwich and fried gluten… that fried gluten tasted like pork “chicharrones” rinds and I was “scared” that someone at the yoga center got confused and made something not suitable for the vegetarians at the party.

                   calamari_in  Don’t they look like onion rings???

 My point… people, kids and adults alike are many times prejudiced with what THEY THINK something tastes like.  They think they do not like to eat something because of its color, its appearance, their idea of its taste.  Something I have learned throughout the years is that you might not like a specific ingredient in a specific preparation… but if you give it a few tries you might like it prepared differently.  For example, I much prefer eggplant battered and fried than stewed.  I very much prefer garbanzo beans in a hummus than in a bean salad… you would “never” see me eating a bean salad.  That’s something I have not been able to conquer or think I will…

8c3d5ccbd0b5467c

20332

Being such a finicky kid, believe it or not, I was not the finickiest…  My friend Mariví was worse than me.  We have a LOT of history together.  And it was not until we were late in high school that she came to eat at her first salad bar.  We went to Ponderosa to eat and she asked me if she had to eat the salad… I said emphatically “OF COURSE!!!, why else would we come to Ponderosa if not for the all-you-can-eat salad bar???”  She confessed, with her salad plate in front of her, that she thanked me because it was the first time she had tried lettuce, tomato and corn.  I could not believe her mom had not taught her to eat salad…  It was so far-fetched to me, as finicky as I was…

n682480173_3763480_6160

Now time has passed… Madelyn is vegetarian and Mariví has 5 kids!!!  Yes, that was not a typo…  5 kids – Ignacio who’s 11, Diego who’s 10, Kamila who’s about to turn 8, Daniel who’s 4 and the newest one, Sergio who’s just 3 months old.  They’re as finicky about eating as Madelyn and Mariví were when growing up…  the thing is that by having also a finicky mom, it’s my theory they’re not as exposed to as many foods as they should be…  And this might be my own impression, but I see plain hamburgers without an ounce of lettuce, tomato, or even ketchup at their birthday parties… and when I mention certain things to eat to my goddaughter Kamila, she makes faces at me…

n659501058_1805436_8835

So I decided to hold a little experiment…  I would prepare a meal for Mariví and her 4 oldest kids without telling any of them what is in any of the dishes.  They will eat them, enjoy them, hopefully even LOVE them and then afterwards tell them what was in it…  to prove to them that they do indeed like to eat more than what they’re exposing themselves to and to expand their eating horizons.   It is my belief that kids learn mostly by example and what better example than their parents habits.  If the parents do not eat something or do not expose kids to certain things they will not gain an appreciation for them.

They came over without knowing of the experiment… I did not want them to prejudice themselves knowing I am vegetarian.  I explained to them I had made dinner and I assured them they would love it all.  And if they wanted to know about how anything was made, I would tell them at the end of the meal.

Here was last night’s menu:

Asparagus Party Sandwiches

Cauliflower and Cheese Mac

Breadfruit Tostones

Lettuce, Tomato and Cucumber Salad with Thousand Island Dressing

Vanilla Ice Cream with Fresh Strawberry Sauce

THE TASTING

Asparagus Party Sandwiches

sand-esparragos-3

    I can remember the first time I ate an asparagus sandwich at a birthday party.  I just ate it thinking it was a regular “sandwichito de mezcla” just rolled into a different shape and loved it.  It was not after I had eaten about 10 of these little sandwiches that someone told me it was asparagus.  I was hooked.

I knew Mariví’s kids would be surprised about liking them too…  I just make a mixture of jarred asparagus and egg-less mayonnaise and spread it onto whole-wheat bread.  I flatten the bread so I can roll the sandwiches and give them a fancier look.  Sometimes people place a whole asparagus spear in the center and then roll the bread around it, but because I knew these guys are finicky, I just made a puree out of the ingredients to avoid any apprehension before they tasted them.

Both Ignacio and Diego smelled them before putting them in their mouths… so typical of a finicky kid!!!  Ignacio, Diego, Kamila and Mariví all loved them.  They were all trying to figure out what was in them.  Ignacio and Diego had about 4 each and even told me they would love to have them again…

 ignacio-esparragos  This was Ignacio’s face when I told him the sandwiches were made from asparragus – HUH?!?!?

Cauliflower and Cheese Mac

couliflower-and-cheese-mac

A few weeks ago I tested my Undercover Carrot Mac and Cheese as a way to “sneak in” some added veggies into my niece’s, Mariana, dinner.  A reader suggested me to try it also with cauliflower.  So this is my version of mac and cheese with added cauliflower.

I usually make mac and cheese with a white cheese sauce. I thought it would be something different the kids would enjoy – steering away from the orangy sauces they’re so used too.   I cooked the cauliflower in the same water as the macaroni.  I used Jerusalem artichoke pasta instead of the regular semolina pasta.  I then combined it all with a cheese sauce made from soy milk, gruyère, pecorino romano, cream cheese, an Italian-blend grated cheeses and Parmesan.  I baked it all in the oven for about 30 minutes to get the crust golden brown.

Mariví was amazed that this has cauliflower and was so good.  Ignacio felt there was something more in there than just mac and cheese and kept asking me how I made it…  Diego just didn’t care and started shoveling it in.  The two little ones did not understand how a mac and cheese was white instead of orange.  So I convinced them to try it again after I mixed in a few slices of American cheese into their portions – bringing to the cheese total to 6 – the cheesiest I have ever made a mac and cheese before.   The learning… when you make mac and cheese from scratch  for the little ones, make it ORANGE with regular cheddar cheese.  They’ll find it more familiar and will not look at it as funny as Kamila and Daniel did.

ignacio-eating          kamila-eating

Breadfruit Tostones

tostones-pana

Tostones in Puerto Rico are typically made from plantains… but you can make tostones also out of Breadfruits.  We call them PANA in Spanish.  Breadfruits are very polarizing – people either love them of they hate them.  There’s a breadfruit tree behind my grandma’s house and I decided to expose Mariví’s kids to breadfruit.

These were a complete hit!!!  Everyone wanted to be in the kitchen with me when I fried them and everyone gobbled them up.  Even the little ones went for the tostones first before they started on the fixed-up mac and cheese.

Tostones need to be fried twice… so I had fried them for the first time earlier in the week and kept them frozen in a Ziploc bag.  I defrosted them in salted garlicky water and fried them again right before eating them.

 diego-eating Diego going first after the Breadfruit Tostones…

Lettuce, Tomato and Cucumber Salad with Thousand Island Dressing

thousand-island-dressing

I knew this was going to be the most difficult one to “sell” to these kids.  They are just not used to eating salad. But I had to give it a try…  I used organic romaine lettuce and organic cucumbers.  I bought mini cherry tomatoes and told them these were tomatoes specially made for kids.

I made them a Thousand Island Dressing to go along with the salad.  That used to be the only dressing I liked when I was a kid, so I figured they might prefer that to any vinaigrette I could make.  I started with a Mayo Ketchup base and added some sweet pickles.

Some of them tried the tomatoes only but they were not impressed.  It was so sad to see all the salads left almost intact…  I was the only one who really ate the salad.  Everyone else, including the mom, left salad on their plates.  This was the real challenge… but I will not give up.  I will make them eat salad if it’s the last thing I do for that family…

Vanilla Ice Cream with Fresh Strawberry Sauce

strawberry-sauce

Recently, Kamila had told me she loved strawberry ice cream. So when this idea started I decided to make strawberry ice cream from scratch for her.  Unfortunately, I live this crazy life that I did not have time to fix it.  So I decided to do the next best thing I knew… prepare a fresh strawberry sauce to top vanilla ice cream.

This is great with any berry, in fact, the original recipe I learned from Ina Garten in her Barefoot in Paris book.  I had made it with raspberries, but strawberries are cheaper and more readily available.

Just cook some fresh strawberries with some water and brown sugar.  Mix them in a food processor with strawberry preserves and voilà!! – Fresh Strawberry Sauce.  Kamila even wanted hers with a fresh strawberry as a garnish.

Surprisingly, the little ones loved this strawberry sauce, not so much the older ones.  They exchanged it for plain ice cream.

THE RESULTS

I believe all in all this VERY VEGGIE EXPERIMENT was a SUCCESS!!!!  More thumbs up than thumbs down… overall.

Marivíand her kids were exposed to a bunch of different foods they are normally not exposed to – asparagus, cauliflower, gruyere and pecorino romano cheeses, Jerusalem artichoke pasta, pickles, breadfruit…  And out of the 5 things I prepared, they liked 4 of them with the salad being the most challenging of all.  Which I was really expecting…

    

I hope Mariví now has learned how exposing her kids, and even herself, to foods she might not be familiar to is a good thing.  They will in the end be healthier and better-rounded individuals.

Based on this experience, I will make an effort to invite the kids over more often to expose them to foods I know they might never try otherwise and even teach them how to prepare these dishes for their parents.

For complete directions on how to prepare all these dishes, stay tuned in the next few days to KarmaFree Cooking when I will share the recipes and instructions in detail.

Fried White Sweet Potato

21 Apr

There are two kinds of sweet potatoes – white sweet potato and the orangy sweet potato we call batata mameya.  Most Americans are familiar with the orangy kind, which I believe can also be called yam.

 sweet-potato-2

                                                             batata-blanca

The white sweet potato, or batata blanca, is much sweeter and versatile than its mameya counterpart.  I really like it baked in the oven, which is a very traditional side dish to eat at BBQ rotisserie chicken stands.  But my grandma also used to make it for us fried… it’s a nice alternative to a plantain tostón or french-fries…                

 

 batatas-fritas

FRIED WHITE SWEET POTATO

1 white sweet potato, peeled and sliced thin
Canola oil for frying
Salt, optional

 

  1. In a large skillet, pour about ½” of oil…  heat it at medium-high heat.
  2. While the oil heats up, prep the sweet potato… I peel it using a vegetable peeler because I am not too good peeling using a knife.  The sweet potato will start to get dark after being exposed to the air a few seconds.  Don’t worry, it’s normal and it will not change the texture or taste of the sweet potato.
  3. After you’ve peeled and sliced the sweet potato and the oil is hot enough…  start frying.  The sweet potato will take a while to fry because of its moisture content…  but with patience, it will cook on the inside and get crispy on the outside.  The thinner you slice the potato, the faster they will cook and the crispier it will be.  They should be golden brown, without any burned spots.
  4. Drain them onto a plate with paper towel and sprinkle with some salt if you want…  I usually do not salt them.

Rice and Soy Picadillo

7 Mar

This is a staple of Latin cuisine…  made the vegetarian way.    This is also another way to use they Soy Picadillo recipe I gave you guys a few weeks ago.

It’s amazing, but I have several non-vegetarian friends who regularly ask me to make this Soy Picadillo for them and their families.  They tell me they love to eat it as a filling for lasagna, on top of a baked potato, as an appetizer in “barquillitos”.  But the most popular way of eating it is on top of white rice… I still have not been able to convenience them to change to whole grain rice, but one has to pick their battles.  They’re eating soy picadillo already!!!!

 arroz-con-picadillo

RICE AND SOY PICADILLO

Soy Picadillo recipe here
Whole Grain Rice

 

Serve with a side salad and sweet plantains…  traditional Puerto Rican fare at its best.

Mami’s Tembleque

6 Feb

My mom is not one of those moms that slaved over the stove when we were growing up.  That was my grandma… my grandma would offer you food from the moment you stepped into her house, until the moment you left.  My mom would take home bowls of food my grandma had made and served it to us after we had returned from ballet classes and done our homework.

She taught us how to cook a few survival dishes so we would not “starve to death” when we went to live by ourselves when we left for school.  She did many dips and salads for parties… hey, she even once made a Friendship Cake where she had to macerate fruit for almost a month.  But in general, desserts were not her thing.  That’s why it surprised me when for Three Kings Day (Día de Reyes) she made Tembleque.

I asked my aunt to come to my grandma’s house to have lunch for Día de Reyes… I wanted to eat her Arroz con Maíz and Ensalada de Papas.  But my mom surprised me the most when she said she had made a tembleque from scratch and even more so that my dad had found her the recipe in the Internet!!!  My dad – the least online-friendly person I know!!!  This will be a 2009 full of surprises if this is the way the year is starting…

Like me, my mom almost follows recipes… so even though she got a recipe off the Internet , that was not what she did…

 tembleque-mami

 

 

MAMI’S TEMBLEQUE

1 can cream of coconut – Coco Lopez or any other brand, this is what you use to make Piña Coladas
1 can coconut milk
Water
2 cinnamon sticks
A pinch of salt
½ cup + 1/3 cup cornstarch
Ground Cinnamon to taste

 

  1. Take the 2 cans of cream of coconut and coconut milk and add enough water to make 5 cups of liquid all together.  Reserve 1 cup of liquid and pour the rest in a large pot to cook over medium-high heat.  Add the salt and cinnamon sticks to the pot.
  2. Mix the cornstarch to the liquid you reserved.  Mix well and add to the pot when the mixture starts to simmer.  The coconut mixture will start to thicken a bit as it simmers/boils.
  3. Take it off the heat and pour into the container you want to serve it in.  You can do it in a square pyrex dish or even individual demit asses or ramekins.  Place it in the refrigerator to set.  It will set just like gelatin does.
  4. Sprinkle the top with ground cinnamon just before serving.

Sorullitos de Maíz- Cornmeal Fritters

4 Jan

After a whole week of fasting, these sorullitos de maíz were the first actual food I ate after I finished my spiritual retreat.  Not the best choice, but you have to “go with the flow”. And the quality of these sorullos, it was well, well worth it.

I visited my sister on New Year’s Day…  She had welcomed the New Year with her husband and his family at their house with a typical Puerto Rican fare – arroz con gandules (rice and pigeon peas), pasteles (a plantain or yucca- based boiled “thing” similar to a tamal), pernil, potato salad, etc. – and the only vegetarian-suitable thing on the menu were these sorullos…  pero qué sorullos!!

My brother-in-law made the recipe according to Carmen Valdejuli’s recipe, the author of Cocina Criolla and the authority on Puerto Rican Cooking.  (The book also comes in an English version.)  He did double the batch because he was unsure of how many sorullos the recipe would yield.  Apparently he was too busy to read right underneath the recipe’s title it yielded 50 sorullos… so he made enough to make 100.  My sister said she was not making 100 sorullos, so she made these “mega sorullos” – not that thick, but extra long.  Regular sorullos are usually about the size of a small index finger.  These ones are like 6 inches long.  But you get the drift.

Most cornmeal bags – at least the ones sold in Puerto Rico – include a sorullito recipe on the packaging.  They’re easy to follow and very reliable.  This recipe, to me it’s the ultimate… the Gouda cheese is melted into the batter giving them a really nice and salty taste.  Some people add a little piece of cheese inside the sorullito so that it melts inside when you fry them.

sorullitos-maiz

SORULLITOS DE MAIZ

Recipe from Carmen Valdejuli, Cocina Criolla – Makes about 50 sorullitos

2 cups of water
1 ¼ tsp salt
1 ½ cup cornmeal
1 cup Edam cheese, grated – my brother-in-law used Gouda cheese…
 

1.  Bring the water with salt to a boil. Take away from the heat and add the cornmeal. Quickly, mix the water and cornmeal together and cook under moderate heat. Continue mixing about 3 to 5 minutes until the mixture separates from the bottom and sides of the pot.

2.  Take away from the heat and add the grated cheese – you’ll see the mixture will loosen a bit when you add the cheese.

3.  Immediately, take spoonfuls of the mixture and form balls in the palm of your hands. Press them to form like small cigars of about 3 inches long. As you can see my sister/brother-ion-law version are much longer than the original recipe calls for.

4.  Fry them in plenty of vegetable oil at 375 F. Take them out when they’re golden and place them onto paper towels to drain the excess oil.

And the only way to enjoy sorullitos is with a great MayoKetchup Dip.  My brother-in-law showed me a new version of MayoKetchup.  A nice little twist with even more flavor… check it out.

This is not diet food… but it is certainly, food of the Puerto Rican gods…  I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.