Posts Tagged ‘Eggs’

“Home Alone” Zucchini Quiche with White Rye

Posted on: October 27th, 2015 by Carla Johnson No Comments

My husband and I are usually pretty good to each other, but we sure can be bad influences on each other when it comes to food. He loves salty, fatty. I love sweet, chocolatey. He taught me to love potato chips and I taught him to love handfuls of chocolate – preferably dark chocolate.

Cooking With Sin author Carla Johnson

Funny thing is, when he goes away I eat very healthfully. A few weeks ago he was gone for several days and I found this quiche recipe. It grabbed my attention because I had zucchini in the fridge needing to be eaten. It had an Italian lean to it so I wanted to mix in some grappa, but I went a delicate white rye distilled right here in Ontario. I added it to the onions while they were browning, along with some balsamic vinegar. I thought the red onions were a nice contrast to the green zucc. Plus, who doesn’t love to caramelize their onions!

Cooking With Sin author Carla Johnson

The further Canadianize this recipe, I fried bacon instead of pancetta and used ready-made pie pastry. Plus I used Parmigiano-Reggiano instead of the grana Padano cheese and baked it at 400°C for 40 minutes.

Cooking With Sin author Carla Johnson

Source: http://www.italianfoodforever.com/2015/06/caramelized-onion-zucchini-pancetta-quiche/

Carla Johnson author Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson author Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin


 

Cooking With Sin 2014 Calendar – April

Posted on: March 30th, 2014 by Carla Johnson No Comments

Each month in 2014, I am sharing a calendar page that includes a CWS recipe. Here is April’s!

Click to open up the large version of the calendar page, then right click and save or copy it for yourself. Print it off for your fridge, share it with a friend, post it at your office… etc.

I just ask, if you use it in a document, please use the entire image, so Cooking With Sin gets the credit. Thank you. It is yours to enjoy!

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin Calendar 2014

CWS Calendar 2014-04

Check out the story from the original recipe “Wedding Pudding” Dutch Advokaat.

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

“The Morning After Sex” Scrambled Eggs for Two

Posted on: February 15th, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

Vermouth

The less I behave like Whistler’s mother the night before, the more I look like her the morning after.” ~ Tallulah Bankhead, actress

With a title like that, there couldn’t be a better day to post this than the day after Valentine’s Day!

My husband had a good group of friends as a teen and a lot of them have stayed close over the years. Growing up together in a small town instilled a special sense of community and closeness. Evenings were spent playing Dungeons & Dragons in someone’s basement or they would trek off for adventures in “the bush” and occasionally they hung out at the drive-in theatre.

Time has found the friends in different parts of the country and the globe, but they continue to maintain a nice loyalty to each other.

Wes is one of those long-time friends. He was quick to move to Toronto after high school. He loved the energy and diverse life of the bigger city. It gave him a chance to mingle with people from a variety of ethnicities. Becoming a French Immersion teacher naturally fit with his love of languages.

Kenya

Kenya

Liberia

Liberia

During his time off, Wes has volunteered with Project Overseas, a branch of the Canadian Teachers’ Federation.

Liberia

Liberia

Scrambled Eggs

Wes and his Project Overseas team

He loved working with teachers in Grenada, Kenya, Liberia and Burkina Faso and while he went with the intention of helping them, he returned from each place deeply enriched with a greater understanding of himself and humanity.

Scrambled Eggs

Wes & Patrick

Wes and his partner Patrick enjoy the wide range of great restaurants and markets found in Toronto. They live adventurously here and abroad and make sure to treat themselves to good times and great food. Normally I explain the titles of the recipes with more details,but with a title like this, need I say more? 😉

“The Morning After Sex” Scrambled Eggs for Two

 

2 tablespoons butter
1 large shallot
1/4 cup dry white vermouth
1/2 red pepper, chopped
1/2 cup mushrooms, chopped
salt & pepper to taste
4 eggs
1/3 cup milk
100g young goat cheese
4 slices of your favourite toast


1. Heat the butter in a frying pan on medium-high and add the shallots. Stir until they are softened.

2. Stir in the vermouth then add the red pepper and mushrooms. Stir on medium-high until the liquid is reduced. Season with salt and pepper.

3. Whisk the eggs and milk together and add to the mixture in the pan and scramble.

4. Crumble the goat cheese into the scrambled eggs and continue cooking until the cheese begins to melt.

5. Serve with toast and hot fresh coffee.

Wes recommends you drink your coffee black with this breakfast!

Next Post… “2nd Half” Icewine & Tequila Martini

Vintage poster courtesy of http://vintagefeedsacks.blogspot.com


‘Black Oak’ Crème Brûlée

Posted on: January 17th, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

 

“Amelie has no boyfriend. She tried once or twice, but the results were a letdown. Instead, she cultivates a taste for small pleasures: dipping her hand into sacks of grain, cracking crème brûlée with a teaspoon and skipping stones at St. Martin’s Canal.”
~ Excerpt from the script of “Amelie”

As Ken tapped the keg, the party-goers lined up their mugs and the suds flowed. One after another the “Mmmm”s and the “Oh ya”s filled the room. The new beer was a hit!

Ken Woods tapping a keg

Black Oak Brewery in Toronto is known for throwing great parties and this night was extra special. They were celebrating surviving 10 years in the craft brewing business and Ken had brewed a strong batch of “10 Bitter Years” to celebrate the occasion.

The new beer was a hit with the crowd, but the revelers did not know Ken’s tongue was firmly planted in his cheek when he named it “10 Bitter Years.” The craft brewing business is tough and while many brewers had failed, Black Oak was still standing. There had been tough obstacles along the way and some bitter memories lingered, yet it was truly an occasion to celebrate.


Ken Woods had always loved craft brews, so in 1999 he decided to try his hand at creating his own, and Black Oak Brewery was born. Ken sees the large brewers as similar to the fast food industry where large amounts are produced to appeal to a mass market. He loves being in the craft brew business and equates it to a fine, personal dining experience where every subtle element is carefully attended to by the brewer.

If you ask Ken what makes his beer special, he will tell you it is prepared in small batches with custom engineered, high tech, Canadian made equipment. He will tell you the majority of the ingredients are Canadian, but the key ingredient he wants you to know is the reverse osmosis water. It is 99.9% pure and creates consistency in the brewing, plus it allows them to treat the water with minerals for authentic types of beer.

Black Oak has two beers it brews year round – Black Oak Pale Ale and Black Oak Nut Brown Ale – and five seasonal beers. The “10 Bitter Years” beer continues to be very popular.


Ken is very smart and has surrounded himself and his business with great people. I have personally enjoyed getting to know a few of them.

Tracy Phillippi

Tracy Phillippi. Tracy handles the Black Oak marketing and administration business. She is a passionate craft brew and food writer who does everything with enthusiasm and her unique flair. Extending her love of good food into the community she started the Toronto Youth Food Policy Council “to mobilize and engage youth to make change by building a just food system.” www.tyfpc.ca

Jason Rees

Jason Rees. Jason is a chef and griller. http://bbqblog.ca He worked some kind of magic and created this amazing crème brûlée with Black Oak Nutcracker Porter, one of Black Oak’s seasonal beers. Jason certainly has a wild side to his personality, and he also has a big heart. He just spent three weeks in Haiti building homes with Habitat for Humanity.http://www.habitat.ca


Black Oak

“Anything-For-An-Excuse-to-Use-My-Blow-Torch”

Crème Brûlée


2 cups 35% cream
1/2 cup granulated white sugar plus more for the topping
1 cup of Black Oak Nutcracker Porter reduction
1 vanilla bean, split and scraped
1/2 nutmeg pod freshly ground
7 egg yolks room temperature

1. Start by reducing a 341ml bottle of Nutcracker Porter on the stove to 1 cup (about 1/3) do this over moderate heat, do no let the beer boil, as it will get a burnt flavour. This will take at least 30 minutes to do. Don’t forget to drink a beer while you are waiting for the reduction, it makes the time watching it so much more fun.

2. After then beer has been reduced to 1 cup, add the cream, scraped vanilla bean 1/2 the sugar and nutmeg, and bring almost to a boil, whisking constantly. When you see boil bubbles reduce the heat, if you are using a thermometer the temperature you are looking for is no more than 175°F/80°C  and at least 140°F/60°C hold this temperature for 10 minutes to let the flavour from the vanilla bean steep like a cup of tea. Carefully remove the vanilla bean from the hot mixture, and remove from heat.

3. In a separate glass or metal bowl combine the egg yolks and the remaining 1/4 cup of sugar and whisk until the sugar is dissolved and the yolks are frothy.

4. Slowly pour about 1 cup of the hot cream mixture into the egg yolks whisking constantly as not to make the eggs scramble. This is often referred to as “tempering” the eggs. Combine the entire mixture and whisk gently for another 5 minutes.

5. Strain the mixture through a fine mesh into ramekins to remove any vanilla bits and cooked eggy bits.

6. Place ramekins in (water bath) a pan with at least 1 inch of water in the bottom to help equalize the heat, and cook in your oven at 300°F for 45-55 minutes, until firm around the edges but still “jiggly” in the center.

7. Remove from oven and leave in the water bath until cooled, about 2 hours. Remove ramekins from water bath and chill for at least 2 hours. I like to chill mine over night.

8. Here’s the best part. Get out your blow torch! I like to do this with my guests watching- sprinkle about 2 teaspoons of sugar over each custard. I like to use a small, hand-held torch to melt sugar. I’ve been told this can be done under the oven broiler, I’ve never tried it though, as i love any excuse to use my blow torch. This step can’t be done too far in advance, as the cooked sugar will dissolve into the creme in about an hour.


http://blackoakbeer.com/

Are you a craft beer fan? You’ll probably enjoy “Steam Whistle” Team Cedar Grilling

“Hand Made” Egg Nog

Posted on: December 7th, 2011 by Carla Johnson No Comments
If you see a fat man who is jolly and cute,
Wearing a beard and a red flannel suit,
And if he is chuckling and laughing away,
While flying around in a miniature sleigh
With eight tiny reindeer to pull him along,
then lets face it… your eggnog’s too strong!!

Just in time for the Holiday Season! Two wonderful drinks you can serve your guests.

When my husband’s Aunt Susan was a young child, she emigrated with her family – and her 9 siblings! – from the Netherlands, more specifically, Friesland.

By her early 20’s, Susan was well-settled into Canadian life when she met Robert Hogeboom. They fell in love, married and had two beautiful children. Sadly, while the children were still young and Bob was only in his 40’s, he succumbed to cancer. He passed away too quickly and too young.

Susan was energetic and creative and watched her children grow up to marry and have grandchildren, but in her late 50’s, she too succumbed to cancer.

It is an honour to remember Bob and Susan here on the blog. There were very special people who left us wanting so much more of them.

Bob and Susan loved to entertain and Bob always made his own eggnog at Christmas time. Interestingly, he always made it by hand. He said the key was to mix it all with your bare fingers. I think it was his way of adding love. All great cooks know good food needs love. So, roll up your sleeves, scrub your hands really well and let’s get to work.

 

Uncle Bob’s “Hand Made” Egg Nog

 

6 egg yolks
1 cup granular sugar
2 cups cognac
1 cup white rum
8 cups (2 quarts) 15% cream
1/2 cup confectioner’s sugar
6 egg whites

1. Beat egg yolks until thick.

2. Gradually add granular sugar until it becomes light in colour.

3. Slowly stir in the alcohol, cognac and rum.

4. Add add the cream and 3 of the egg whites. Stir until mixed thoroughly.

5. In a separate bowl, beat remaining egg whites until thick, then gradually add the confectioner’s sugar.

6. Beat the egg whites and sugar until soft peaks form.

7. Gently stir the egg whites and sugar mixture into the egg yolk mixture.

8. Serve in glasses and garnish.

*By the way, Bob’s egg nog recipe remains popular with many of their relatives & friends. They have all made his egg nog over the years, but none of them make it by hand. 😉

Raise a glass of Christmas Cheer!

Susan was very musical and she often sang with her sisters. They all have great sense of humour and call themselves “The Sour Lemon Sisters.” One of her sisters, Maaike, whips up a very “sin”ful drink she calls Northern Slush. She once served it at a company gathering where it was a hit. One of the people at the party asked for the recipe and as Maaike was writing out the recipe, she realized she had accidentally doubled the liquor in the party batch. That night, a good time was had by all! :-)

 

“The Sour Lemon Sisters” Northern Slush

 

1 – 48 ounce can pineapple juice
1 – 12 ounce can frozen orange juice thawed
1 – 6.5 ounce can frozen lemonade thawed
26 ounces of gin or liquor of choice. Maaike recommends Peach Schnapps.
1 cup strong tea, cooled to room temperature

1. Mix all the ingredients together and freeze for 48 hours. It will become a slush.

2. To serve, scoop the slush into glasses and top with clear soda like 7-Up or Sprite.

 

Wassail! Wassail all over the town!
Our toast it is white and our ale it is brown;
Our bowl it is made of the white maple tree;
With the wassailing-bowl, we’ll drink to thee!
~ Traditional
 

Happy Holidays!