Friday, December 31, 2010

Gallina de Aji


Nearly two decades ago, I became aquainted with a Peruvian woman living in Southern California.  One of her signature dishes, Gallina de Aji sent my taste buds to places they had never been before. Aji Amarillo is a small Peruvian chile pepper that is yellow when fresh, but turns to shades of orange as it ages.  In Gallina de Aji, you use the fresh yellow chiles if you have access to them.  There is a unique grassy and very spicy taste to them. On a trip to Phoenix recently, I found a mega international food store that had a paste made from the chiles.  If you have such a store, you might be able to find the chiles whole, or the paste. I don't have em here in New Mexico, but as I write this I am wondering why the heck I haven't ordered seeds to grow my own...perhaps next spring I will. I live at 7500 feet elevation...Peru starts at 7700 feet.  Maybe I will get lucky.  For now, I have found a pretty good substitute when I make this dish.  It's not a hard dish to put together and I guarantee you that the smells that waft through your kitchen will be a wonderful treat for your senses.  My friend uses Jalapeno's when she is out of Aji Chile Peppers but I found that hot New Mexico green chile powder is closer in flavor to Aji Chile.  If you don't do well with chiles, I have successfully made this without the spice, so just eliminate the chiles in the recipe or use a minimal proportion to taste.  Before I begin the dish I make sure to put on a pot of Basmati rice, which partners so well with it.  Enjoy the experience of making Gallina de Aji...it sort of reminds me of scenes from Like Water for Chocolate...you'll see what I mean if you are familiar with the ultimate foodie flick. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hY4lDCaSiJ4&feature=related (this is like the most culinary - sensual scenes in the movie.)

Gallina de Aji

 4 chicken breasts - finely shredded
1 large red onion - finely chopped
6 large cloves of garlic - finely chopped
3/4 cup of walnuts - finely chopped
1 cup shredded parmisano reggiano
1 spicy fresh jalapeno - finely chopped or 1 tbsp hot new mexico green chile powder
1 tbsp curry powder
olive oil
bay leaves
celery
yellow onion
black pepper corns
salt and pepper to taste

place the chicken breasts into a pot of water with 2 bay leaves, a stalk of celery, half a yellow onion and 1/8 tsp of black pepper corns.  Cook the chicken over medium heat.  Make sure to use a pretty good sized pot with at least 5 cups of water.  Start the chicken first because you will be using the stock being created in the pot to make the gallina de aji.

Use a pot such as a dutch over to begin making the main dish.  To save prep time, I use a pampered chef brand chopper...its quick and the pampered chef chopper has wings that open up afterwards for thorough and easy cleaning...most of the choppers out there don't have this ability so food can get lodged up inside where you can't get to it...yuk.
Finely chop your onion, garlic, jalapeno(if using) & walnuts
Shred the Parmisiano Reggiano
In the dutch oven, over medium heat add three tablespoons of a good olive oil to the pot and saute the red onion  for 5 minutes.  Add the garlic and saute for 2 minutes.  Make sure to keep stirring the onion garlic mixture so the garlic doesn't burn on the bottom of the pot.  Now add the curry powder, the finely chopped jalapeno or the chile powder and the walnuts and mix thoroughly.  Ladle in two ladles of the stock the chicken is cooking in.  Make sure you don't ladle in any of the pepper corns.  Stir the mixture and lower the heat to just above a simmer.  As the liquid evaporates, ladle in more stock. 
finely shred the chicken breasts.  I add portions to the pot as I go so the chicken won't dry out.  When all the chicken is added stir in the parmisiano reggiano and salt and pepper to taste.  Remember that the cheese is salty so adjust salt accordingly.  Continue to add stock to mixture and cover and simmer for 15 minutes.  Just before serving taste because as you add the stock the salt gets diluted...you will probably have to add more. 

Enjoy over the Basmati Rice with a good robust red wine.  This dish is enough on it's own, but a green salad goes well with the Gallina de Aji.

Vegetarian version: Use vegetable broth and cubed firm tofu instead.

bon appetit

robert



Thursday, December 30, 2010

Welcome to the birth of Foodolicious!

How did I ever become such a foodie...I spent zero time in the kitchen with my Mom.  Well I did go to the kitchen asking her when her delicious creamy pinto beans would be ready or the Sunday menudo or when she was going to make her fantasic chicken enchiladas again...but not once did I stand there and watch her make something with an intention of making it myself...I don't know exactly when it happened...but it started to "ferment" in me as a little kid...my brother married into this huge Jewish family (the marriage only lasted one year) and I was thrust into "Jewish Culinary Culture" my sister-in-law would parade me to her relatives at their homes...and yes some really did have clear plastic covered couches.  I was eight years old and was about to have my culinary brain blossom.  I recall being at one of my sister-in-law's relatives homes and having lunch...what was put in front of me looked  like a mini meatloaf.  It was the best ground meat burger thing I had ever eaten up to that point in my eight years of living.  All I remember is that the meat had matzo meal mixed in it...that intriqued me.  That there were different ways to prepare food and there was this good tasting thing called "Matzo Meal" that I didn't even know existed until that day.  Maybe that's why "Ethnic Foods" are especially tantalizing and appealing to me.


The purpose of this blog as the name implies, is one-hundred percent culinary in nature.  I love to create and to experiment and to share what comes out of these creative experiments.  I would say the majority of what I create in my kitchen is healthy...such as my canola/olive oil tamale masa or my oven baked buffalo wings...but my tomato soup wouldn't be my tomato soup without the addition of quite a bit of bacon and butter...what isn't better with bacon and butter?  I sort of offset this recipe health-wise by using plain yoghurt instead of the use of cream...I am about to try liquid smoke in place of the bacon..but I will save that for another blog entree...then there is the whole process of mass freezing with the use of a food saver to save soooooo much money and time.  This past season I grew so much basil that I was able to process about one hundred and twenty pesto cubes that are now sitting in our stand up freeezer and used for bread, for pizza sauce, for ravioli filling and for uses I haven't even thought of yet.  But it's exciting to have such pesto surplus especially when you go to the store and look at what it costs for a small jar of pre made pesto sauce...with a whole bunch of preservatives to boot...then it really sinks in how it was worth all the work. 


enuf for now,
robert