About spicebox travels

Aside from durian and bitter melon, Linda Shiue hasn't met a fruit or vegetable she doesn't like. Her openness to new flavors has led others to challenge her with armadillo and bunny ears, and once, to lie about her ethnicity in an attempt to access the secret menu at a local Cambodian restaurant. After she took her first French cooking class at age 7, it took almost forty more years before she finally went to culinary school at San Francisco Cooking School. In between, she studied anthropology and medicine at Brown University, with fieldwork in rural Sichuan, China and in uber-urban Singapore, continued her medical training at the University of California, San Francisco, and learned about plant-based nutrition at Cornell University. She has been known to play spin-the-globe to choose travel destinations. An enthusiastic eater, she inspires strangers to copy her order and restaurant chefs to send her a little something special. Linda is a practicing physician in San Francisco, where she also founded a popular vegetable-forward teaching kitchen to inspire people to cook for health. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @spiceboxtravels, on Facebook and YouTube at The Doctors Spicebox and on her blog, SpiceboxTravels.com.

Hawaii: Plate Lunch

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Plate Lunch is an iconic meal in Hawaii.

Usually served with two scoops of white rice, a meat or two, shredded cabbage and macaroni salad, this is a favorite and economical (though not light!) everyday lunch in Hawaii.

We took the form and modified it for Supperclub. Instead of rice, we included plantains stewed in coconut milk, a dish Peter remembered from his field work in Samoa.  We included a second starch in the form of taro, boiled and then mashed like mashed potatoes.  This was our substitute for poi, the paste of fermented taro that is usually served with Hawaiian food, but an acquired taste for most outsiders.  For the meat, we served Kalua pork (also called Kalua pig), traditionally cooked underground in an oven called an imu. Lacking an imu,  we made it an indoor kitchen. To lighten up the plate just a bit, we served it with shredded raw cabbage (which is traditional) as well as cucumber kimchi.

Sam Choy’s Kalua Pig from Epicurious

Makes 8 servings
Ingredients

1 5- to 5 1/4-pound boneless pork butt roast
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons Hawaiian alaea sea salt or coarse sea salt
3 frozen banana leaves, thawed
6 cups water, divided
1/2 teaspoon liquid smoke

Technique

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
  2. Using small sharp knife, cut 1/4-inch-deep slits 1 inch apart all over pork roast.
  3. Rub 2 tablespoons sea salt all over pork.
  4. Unfold 1 banana leaf on work surface and place pork roast atop leaf. Fold up leaf around pork, enclosing completely. Repeat wrapping pork in remaining 2 banana leaves, 1 at a time.  Tie with kitchen string to secure, then wrap roast in foil. Place pork in roasting pan; pour 4 cups water into pan.
  5. Roast pork in oven until very tender when pierced with fork, about 5 hours. Unwrap pork and cool slightly. Shred pork and place in large bowl.
  6. Bring remaining 2 cups water and remaining 2 teaspoons salt to boil in small saucepan. Add liquid smoke; pour over pork and stir to blend. Let stand 10 minutes to allow liquid to flavor pork. Serve.

Fa’alifu Fa’i  Samoan green bananas in Coconut Milk

Recipe adapted from http://www.ipacific.com/forum/index.php?topic=526.0

Ingredients

2 bunches plantains

2 cans coconut milk

1 chopped onion

Technique

  1.   Fill a pot with water to cover the bananas and bring to a boil.
  2.   Add bananas and cook until soft when poked with a fork.  Drain.
  3. Mix coconut milk, onions and salt, stir together, and add to the bananas.  Bring to another boil.Cook until the sauce thickens.

 

 

At this point, you probably won’t have much room left, but you should definitely save room for dessert, coming up next!  For the rest of the menu, please visit the overview.  Aloha!

Hawaii: Spam Musubi!

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Anyone who knows Hawaiian/Pacific Island cuisine will recognize what this is. Did you know that Spam is so beloved in Hawaii that Hawaiians consume 5 million pounds a year? That’s 6 cans per person (children included) per year. That’s too much. And if you’re interested, beyond the pork, there’s more to Spam. According to National Geographic, Spam’s popularity in Hawaii is related to dark events in WWII history.

But all seriousness and data aside, let’s get back to the “meat”. Today I’m featuring Spam musubi, possibly one of the most popular creations involving the porky ingredient. This is not Spam straight-up. This is Spam prepared in one of the most beloved ways to people in Hawaii, including President Obama. Musubi is basically like Spam sushi. As simple and possibly frightening as this might sound, this was the hands-down favorite of the menu items at our Hawaiian Supperclub– our guests actually clapped!

Without further ado, here is my recipe for Spam musubi.

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Spam Musubi

Makes 10

Ingredients

1 can Spam

3 cups uncooked sushi rice

Soy sauce

Sugar

Nori sheets (seaweed used for sushi)

Furikake (seaweed and sesame blend available in Asian markets)

Special equipment: musubi maker (available in Japanese supermarkets)

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Technique

1. Slice the Spam into 10 even pieces.

2. Mix about 2 tablespoons each of soy sauce and sugar into a bowl and stir to dissolve.

3. Heat a large frying pan over medium high heat. Add slices of Spam.

4. After 2 minutes, pour the sauce over the Spam. Cook for another 2 minutes on each side until crispy and caramelized.

5. Prepare your musubi maker. (if you can’t get one, you could try shaping these by hand, but it will be messy.) Cut the nori sheets into one inch wide strips and lay them on a flat surface. Center a rice press on the sheet and press your rice (about 1/2 cup) firmly inside, then remove the press. Sprinkle furikake on top, then add a prepared slice of Spam. Wrap the nori around the rice and Spam and seal the edges with a dab of water.

sushi press

filling rice press

pressing rice
pressed rice

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Repeat until you have used up all the rice and Spam. Eat immediately or wrap tightly in plastic wrap.

 

I bet you’re hungry now! Don’t get too full, the main event is coming up next– Plate Lunch! To view the entire menu, please visit the overview.  Mahalo and aloha!

Hawaii:Ahi Poke Napoleons

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Do you know poke? It’s been popular for ages in Hawaii, but is only now cropping up more widely on the Mainland.  In fact, poke has been named on of 2016’s food trends.

Poke, like sushi and sashimi, is made with very fresh, raw fish, usually tuna (ahi) or salmon.  It’s then marinated with soy sauce, sesame oil, and a range of other seasonings.  It is eaten sometimes as an appetizer and at other times as a meal in a poke bowl, served over rice.

We decided to fancy this up just a little bit for Supperclub, by stacking bits of poke between Japanese rice crackers, napoleon-style.

 

First, make the poke:

Ahi Poke

Recipe adapted from Food Republic , Jayson Kanekoa, Executive Chef at the Waikoloa Beach Marriott and poke champion.

Servings: 8

Ingredients

2 pounds sushi-grade Ahi tuna

1/4 cup Ogonori (fresh seaweed) or dried nori

2 tablespoons green onion, sliced

2 tablespoons roasted garlic, chopped

6 tablespoons soy sauce (Yamasa is preferred)

salt, to taste

hot chili flakes (optional)

Directions

Cut Ahi tuna into 1/2-inch cubes.

Mix all ingredients in a bowl.  Allow to marinate for at least 30 minutes before serving.

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Serve as is, over rice, or stack between large Japanese rice crackers.

 

Up next: the showstopper, Spam Musubi!

To see the rest of the menu, please read the overview.

Aloha!

Hawaii:Tiki Drinks and Tall Tales

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Dave, who was our bartender for the Hawaii edition of supperclub, doesn’t cut corners.  This means getting original recipes, infusing his own mixers, and making his own mixers.  And we wouldn’t have it any other way.  For our Hawaii supperclub, Dave donned his best vintage aloha shirt and treated us to not one but two beautifully crafted South Pacific themed drinks for the occasion.

And what are cocktails without tall tales? This one happens to be true, but it’s hard to believe.  Peter had been to Hawaii at least a few times before Linda’s first trip, which was in the summer of 1995.  Linda had just finished her first year of medical school, and sometime in the winter of that first year, had casually looked for summer internship opportunities.  One day, she read through the alumni notes section of her medical school magazine.  There was a feature on someone who had graduated about 10 years prior and was working at the University of Hawaii and had done some research on lifestyle factors in heart disease.  This was long before Linda realized that she would also one day get into the field of lifestyle medicine, but what caught her eye were the words “Honolulu, Hawaii.”  Ever the enterprising student, Linda send a letter to the alumna, which read somewhere along the lines of:

“Dear Alumna,

I am a first year medical student at your alma mater.  I read with interest about the research you have been conducting and am wondering if you could use a summer research assistant.

Sincerely,

Linda.”

Into the mail it went (pre-email!), with dim hopes for a response.

A few weeks later, Linda received an unbelievable response!  It read:

“Dear Linda,

Thank you for your interest.  I do not need a research assistant, but you are welcome to stay with me.  I don’t have a guest room, but you can pitch a tent on the back deck.

Sincerely,

Incredibly Generous Alumna.”

Call it naivete, but Linda decided this was an opportunity she could not pass up.  So she took some of her student loan living expenses and bought a roundtrip ticket to Honolulu.  Peter thought it was a good idea, too, so he did the same.

Summer came along, and somehow, it still seemed a reasonable idea to fly all the way from Providence, Rhode Island to Honolulu with the only plan being to stay with a complete stranger in a strange land.  Linda went alone, to be joined by Peter the next day.  She was greeted at Honolulu airport by the very friendly alumna who welcomed her like a long-lost sister, and drove her to her home.  There, she was also welcomed by the alumna’s boyfriend and her son, who was about 6.  “This is my son,” she said.  “Maybe you can babysit him one day.” Then she showed me a tent set up on the promised deck, which was along a canal.  “That’s where you will be staying.”  Finally, she handed Linda a ring of keys.  “Here’s a key to my extra car– it’s kind of a clunker.  And that’s the access key for the yacht club, in case you want to hang out there.”

So the next day, Linda drove in her borrowed car to the airport to pick up Peter, who couldn’t believe his eyes.  They spent one happy week on one beautiful island, and only good things, like sunsets and beaches, happened.

Their host shared her story.  Linda and Peter accepted it as truth, but in retrospect, it’s a bit hard to believe.  Their host said that after completing medical school, she wasn’t sure what field of medicine she wanted to go into.  So she pursued her other passion, sailing, and decided to crew yachts for people around the South Pacific.  This is how she found herself on Tonga, the Polynesian island Kingdom. While she was there, a young member of the royal family had a seizure.  She happened to be around, and using her very limited medical knowledge, helped stabilize the young boy.  Once he was stable, she examined him, and saw that he had an ear infection.  Thinking this might have been the cause of the seizure, she approximated a dose of penicillin for him from her own supplies, and he recovered.  She was rewarded for her efforts by being given her first medical license (from the Kingdom of Tonga), and use of a house, a horse and houseboy for the summer.  She named the horse “Ti’e Ti’e,” “stitches” in Tongan.

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Skeptical? Don’t forget, Linda and Peter were told and believed this story at their impressionable young ages of their early 20s, and with perhaps more than an average amount of naivete.  Would they allow their children to follow in their trusting footsteps? Of course not! Would they do it again? Maybe… But they are so very glad that they did, tall tales or true stories regardless.

And they lived happily ever after.

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South Pacific

1/2 oz pineapple juice

1 oz passion fruit juice

Juice of 1/2 lime

1 oz citron vodka

1 oz lychee liqueur

Shaken, served in citrus-sugar rimmed cocktail glass.

 

Homage to Traditional Trader Vic’s Mai Tai

1 oz pineapple ginger infused rum agricole

1 oz Jamaican rum

1/2 oz orange curaçao

1/2 oz orgeat (preferably home-made)

Juice of one lime

Shaken, served in tiki mug over ice with mint sprig.

 

 

Thirsty for more? Come back next week for our starters! For a overview of our Hawaiian menu, visit the first post.  Aloha!

 

Spicebox Supperclub: Hawaii

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Aloha from Hawaii!  Sorry for the very long absence– we’ve had two supperclubs since our last post!  It seems we’ve been busier eating (and other things) than posting, but we hope to catch up! Before we get to the islands, first, some big news! We were able to share a bit about our Supperclub in a national print publication, a lovely food writing journal called Remedy Quarterly.  Until recently, you could only obtain Remedy Quarterly either online or from specialty culinary booksellers, but now it is available at your local Barnes and Noble. Please check us out in Issue 19: Share, available now!

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Now, back to Hawaii.  Supperclubbers Peter and Linda have been spending a lot of time in Hawaii, our spiritual home (and possible future retirement home), so we decided to pay homage to the islands we love with this menu for Supperclub #6, which we presented on May 24, 2015.

Hosts: Linda and Peter

Executive Chef: Linda

Bartender: Dave

Sommelier: Nalin

Pastry Chef: Chris

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Menu

Cocktails:

South Pacific

Trader Vic’s Mai Tai

 

Cocktail Snacks:

Wasabi macadamia nuts

Japanese Shoyu Iso peanuts

Starters:

Ahi Poke Napoleon

Spam Musubi

 

 

Courses:

Butter Lettuce Salad with Mango, Avocado and Pickled Sea Asparagus with Rice Vinaigrette

“Plate Lunch”:

Kalua Pork with Mashed Taro and Samoan Savory Green Banana in Coconut Milk

Shredded Cabbage

Cucumber-Napa Kimchi

Dessert:

Chris’s Mom’s Big Island Lilikoi Cheesecake

 

 

 

 

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Thanks for coming by!  Mahalo and Aloha!

Up next: South Pacific cocktails! See what Dave mixed up!

 

 

Mexico: More Chiles

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The Spicebox Supperclub has been celebrating the wonderful flavors of Mexico in our latest series.  See our menu overview to see what we enjoyed.  We started with cocktails, then had a tour of chiles.  This week, we enter the realm of main courses, still exploring the variety of chiles and other flavors used in Mexican cuisine.

Spicy Pasilla Mushroom Tacos

Ingredients

8 garlic cloves

6 large pasilla chiles, stemmed, seeded

1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano

¼ spoon black pepper

1/8 teaspoon cumin

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

½ cup chicken broth

4 cups sliced woodland mushrooms (shitake)

¼ cup thinly sliced epazote

12 corn tortillas

½ cup finely diced onion

1/3 cup diced queso anejo

12 corn tortillas

Directions

Pasilla Paste

  1. Roast unpeeled garlic. Toast chiles in skillet, then rehydrate for 30 minutes. Drain and reserve 1/3 cup of the soaking fluid.
  2. Combine chiles, soaking liquid, garlic, oregano, pepper and cumin. Blend to a smooth puree. Strain through a medium mesh strainer.

Mushrooms

  1. Heat oil in a medium pot, once hot enough to sizzle seasonings, add all of pasilla paste. Stir for 5 minutes. Stir in broth, then add mushrooms and epazote. Partially cover, simmer over medium-low until mushrooms are soft and sauce reduced, about 15 minutes.
  2. Season with salt. Sprinkle with queso and garnish with epazote. Serve with tacos on bed of shredded cabbage. 

Corona Bean Soup with Ancho Chile and Mint

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Ingredients

1 pound corona beans

8 cups chicken broth

6 garlic cloves

1 large white onion

3 medium-large tomatoes (9-12 plum tomatoes)

6 medium ancho chiles, stemmed and seeded

2 tablespoons olive oil

2 tablespoons cider vinegar

1 teaspoon Mexican oregano

2 ½ teaspoons salt

½ cup loosely chopped cilantro

2 tablespoons chopped mint

½ cup queso anejo

Directions

Soup

  1. Soak beans for several hours. Drain and place in 8 cups of broth and simmer for 3-4 hours.
  2. Roast garlic unpeeled. Roast tomatoes, discard skins, keep juices. Chop.
  3. Add garlic, onion, tomatoes to beans, cook until ready.

Chiles

Cut chiles into 1/8th inch slivers. Heat olive oil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Add chiles and stir for a minutes. Remove from heat, and add vinegar, 3 tablespoons water, oregano and a ½ teaspoon of salt. Let stand for ½ hour, stirring occasionally.

Finishing Soup

Remove some whole beans from soup. Reserve. Blend remaining soup until smooth but with some consistency. Stir in mint and cilantro. In bowls add a few whole beans, chile, and then pour soup over ingredients. Sprinkle crumbled cheese over soup.

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Sandia Ice with Tequila

IMG_9005Directions

Take cubes of frozen watermelon (no seeds), place in freezer for an hour, mix, and freeze again.

Blend and add small amount of good quality tequila.

Serve in cognac glass with salt sprinkled. 

Chicken with Nutty Queretaro Green Mole (Mole Verde Queretaro)

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Ingredients

½ pound (3 medium-large) poblano chiles

12 ounces (8-9 medium) tomatillos

½ cup sesame seeds, some extra for garnish

½ cup whole blanches almonds

1 small soft plantain, peeled and sliced ½ inch thick

1 corn tortilla torn into pieces

2 large garlic cloves, chopped

½ cup golden raisins

½ cup roasted skinless peanuts

1 large leaf of romaine lettuce

8 good sized sprigs of flat-leaf parsley

½ teaspoon cinnamon, preferably fresh ground Mexican

½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper

½ teaspoon freshly ground aniseed

big pinch of freshly ground cloves

5 cups chicken broth

1 tablespoon olive oil

Salt, about 2 teaspoons

8 small boneless, skinless chicken breasts

Directions

Roasting, Toasting, Browning

  1. Roast chiles directly over a gas flame, about 5 minutes. Cover with kitchen towel and let stand for 5 minutes. Peel, pull out stem, and seed. Rinse. Roughly chop.
  2. Roast tomatillos on a baking dish 6 inches below the broiler until softened, about 3 minutes. Then turn over and roast other side. Transfer tomatillos, along with juices, to bowl with chiles.
  3. Heat small skillet over medium and add sesame seeds. Stir continually until aromatic and golden, about 2-4 minutes. Scrape into the chiles, and then do the same with the almonds.

Finishing the Mole

  1. To the bowl, add the remaining ingredients (plantain, tortilla, garlic, raisins, peanuts, romaine, parlsey, cinnamon, pepper, aniseed, cloves). Stir in 2 cups of the broth, and in blender, in batches, puree to a smooth consistency. Pass through a medium mesh strainer.
  2. Medium sized pot over medium heat and add oil. Once oil is hot enough to sizzle a drop of the mole, add all at once. Stir for 3-4 minutes. Add another 3 cups of the broth, partially cover pot and gently simmer over medium low, stiring regularly, for 30 minutes. Sauce should have consistency of a thick cream soup. Season to taste with salt, about 2 teaspoons.

Chicken

  1. Oven to 350 degrees. Coat bottom of a 13×9 baking dish with mole, lay in chicken breasts in a single layer, then ladle remaining sauce over. Bake until chicken is done, about 20-30 minutes. Transfer chicken to a warm platter. Slice the chicken. Add the sauce over the chicken. Sprinkle with sesame seeds.

Seared Corn (Esquites Dorados)

Ingredients

5 large ears of corn

hot green chiles (3 serranos, or 2 small jalapenos) stemmed, sliced crosswise

½ teaspoon salt

1 tablespoon fresh lime juice

3 tablespoons chopped epazote (or ¼ cup chopped cilantro)

Directions

  1. Cut kernels from corn. Cook chiles and kernels in nonstick skillet (5-10 minutes), until kernels were browned.
  2. In a cup, combine ¼ cup water, salt, and lime juice. Sprinke cilantro over corn and drizzle on liquid, let stand covered for several minutes. Add more salt as needed. Serve with lime wedges.

Pickled Red Onions

Ingredients

1 small red onion, peeled, sliced 1/8 inch thick

¼ teaspoon black peppercorns

¼ teaspoon cumin seeds

½ teaspoon Mexican oregano

2 garlic cloves, peeled, and halved

¼ teaspoon salt

1/3 cup cider vinegar

Directions

  1. Parboil onion by blanching in boiling salted water for 45 seconds, drain and place in a bowl.
  2. Coarsely grind peppercorns and cumin in a mortar and add to onions. Add remaining ingredients plus enough water to barely cover. Stir well, and let stand for several hours until onions are bright pink (covered and refrigerated, onions last several weeks).

Topolo ‘Ceasar’ Salad (Ensalada Estilo Topolobampo)

Ingredients

Romaine lettuce

Olive oil, vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, serrano chile, egg

Tortilla chips

Directions

  1. Make dressing
  2. Combine with lettuce, cheese, and tortillas

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Oh, did you remember to save room for dessert? Don’t worry, we’ll give you a week to recover.  See you next time! 

Mexico: A Lesson in Chiles

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After we were warmed with micheladas and margaritas, we were ready to dine! Not content with just a few tacos and burritos, Chef Nalin took the opportunity to explore and educate us with chiles.

Amuse Bouche – ‘Pico de Gallo’

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Ingredients & Directions

Cherry tomatoes (10-12)

Puree onion (with lime)

Puree cilantro (with lime) and a small amount of apple

Slice tomatoes in half, core out

Toss tomatoes with salt, drain. Marinate with lime for 2-3 hours.

Add onion, and cilantro to center of tomato. Top with a thin slice of fresh serrano. 

Roasted Tomatillo Serrano Salsa (Salsa Verda Cruda)

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Ingredients

1 pound tomatillos (10-12 tomatillos)

Fresh serrano chilis, about 5 (1 oz)

2 large garlic cloves

1 small white onion

¼ cup roughly chopped cilantro

salt, sugar

 Directions

  1. Roast tomatillos below broiler (4 inches) until they blister (5 minutes). Cool.
  2. Roast chilis and garlic on an ungreased skillet. Cool, and stem chilis.
  3. Scrape tomatillos, chilis, garlic into blender. Pulse until chunky. Add water to give it a good consistency. Rinse diced onion, and stir into salsa along with cilantro. Taste and season with salt and sugar. 

Tomato Chipotle Sauce (Salsa de Chile Chipotle y Jitomate)

Ingredients

3-4 dried chiles chipotles colorados (moritas)

4 garlic cloves

1 ½ pounds (3 medium-large, or 9-12 plum) ripe tomatoes

1 tablespoon lard, or olive oil

Directions

  1. Stem chilies, remove seeds, toast on skillet for a few seconds on each side.
  2. Rehydrate in hot water for 30 minutes, discard water.
  3. Roast unpeeled garlic. Roast tomatoes under a broiler, 5 minutes a side. Remove skins.
  4. Add ingredients to blender, puree.
  5. Heat saucepan enough to make drop of puree sizzle, then add all at once. Stir for 5 minutes. Taste and season with salt.

Guajillo-Sauced Shrimp/Scallops with Nopales (Camarones al Guajillo con Nopales)
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Ingredients

16 medium (1 pound) fresh cactus paddles

2 pounds medium-large shrimp

For 2 cups Simmered Guajillo Sauce (Salsa de Chile Guajillo)

6 garlic cloves, unpeeled

16 dried guajillo chiles, stemmed and seeded

1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano

¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper

pinch cumin

3 ½ cups fish or chicken broth

6 tablespoons vegetable oil

about ¾ teaspoon sugar

2 medium-large tomatoes (or 6-8 ripe plum)

Directions

Trim the nopales, cut into ½ inch squares

Peel and devein the shrimp

Sauce (make earlier in week)

  1. Roast unpeeled garlic
  2. Rehydrate chiles in hot water for 30 minutes, discard water
  3. Combine oregano, pepper, cumin in food processor or blender, along with chilis and garlic and 1 cup of the broth. Blend to smooth puree. Strain through medium mesh.
  4. Heat 2 tablespoons oil in saucepan, stir constantly until reduced to paste (5-7 minutes). Stir in remaining 2 ½ cups of broth, simmer for 45 minutes. Add broth to bring to medium consistency. Add 1 teaspoon salt as needed for taste.

Tomatoes

Roast tomatoes under broiler, about 6 minutes, collect include juices, then puree.

Nopales

  1. Cut remaining chilis into very thin strips.
  2. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil on medium-high heat, add the cactus and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Add the chili strips and stir fry for another 1-2 minutes. Stir in lime juice, sprinkle with ½ teaspoon of salt and cook until liquid evaporated. Spread out on plate and keep warm.

Finishing Dish

Wipe skillet clean, use remaining 2 tablespoons oil and put over medium-high heat. Lay shrimp in single layer, sprinkle with salt, cook for 2 minutes, flip, then add the chile sauce and tomatoes. Cook another 2-3 minutes until barely done. Place into plates with cactus on side.

Jicama, Radish and Cucumber

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This plate, served as a palate cleanser before the next course, conjures up the colors of the Mexican flag.  ¡Viva Mexico!

Ingredients

Large jicama

2 cucumbers

radishes

Directions

  1. Julienne ingredients, and then marinate separately in lime.
  2. Serve together.

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Thanks for visiting! Believe it or not, this is just the beginning! Please come back next week for the main courses.  For an overview of our Mexican feast, here’s the first post in this series: spiceboxsupperclub.wordpress.com/2015/05/30/spicebox-supperclub-mexico/

Mexico Cocktail Hour: micheladas y margaritas

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We opened the night with micheladas, the Mexican beer and tomato juice cocktail.  With a rim of celery salt, this was a great palate teaser to open our tastebuds to the spicy menu to come.  And what’s a Mexican fiesta without margaritas? Peter stirred up his specialty cocktail using the perfect recipe out there, Rick Bayless’ perfect margarita.

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Michelada

from Food52 The Flying Foodie http://food52.com/recipes/420-michelada-a-k-a-bloody-beer

Serves 4

Ingredients

Lime wedges, for garnish

Celery salt or plain salt, for garnish

1 6oz can tomato juice
2 limes, juiced (about 1/3 cup juice)
1/4 teaspoon celery salt
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1/4 -1/2 teaspoons Tabasco or preferred hot sauce
2 12oz bottles or cans of beer (Modelo is ideal)
Several handfuls of ice cubes

Technique

1. Prepare the glasses: rub the rims of four tall glasses with the lime wedges then coat the rims with either celery or plain salt.

2.  In a bowl or measuring cup, combine the tomato juice, lime juice, celery salt, Worcestershire and Tabasco (or desired hot sauce) and mix well. Adjust seasoning to taste.

3.  Add a handful of ice to each of the prepared glasses, then divide the tomato juice mixture between them (each should have approximately 4 tbsp/60ml of juice).

4.  Top up the glasses with half a bottle of beer each, then garnish with a lime wedge.

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Rick Bayless’ Perfect Margarita

http://www.fronterafiesta.com/cook/drinks/187-pure-and-simple-margaritas

Makes: 4 generous drinks

Ingredients

1 cup tequila, preferably a young silver or reposado 100% agave tequila
½ cup Cointreau or other orange liqueur
1/3 cup fresh lime juice, plus a little extra for moistening the rim of the glasses
A little sugar if necessary
About 1/3 cup coarse (Kosher) salt for crusting the rim of the glasses
About 3 cups medium ice cubes

Technique

1.  In a small pitcher, combine the tequila, orange liqueur and lime. Taste and decide if you think the mixture needs to be a little sweeter or a little tangier (keep in mind that it will taste a little tangier once it’s been shaken). Add a bit more lime or a touch of sugar, if necessary.

2.  Spread out the salt onto a small plate. Moisten the rim of four 6-ounce martini glasses with a little lime juice (if you have a cut lime, even an already-squeezed one, moisten the rims by running it around them). One by one, turn the glasses over and dip them lightly in the salt, creating a thin, even crust all around the rim.

3.  Pour half of the margarita mixture into a cocktail shaker, add half of the ice cubes. Shake vigorously for about 15 seconds (this is important to achieve the perfect strength—some of the ice needs to melt into the margarita—and the right degree of frostiness). Strain into the prepared glasses, then repeat with the remaining margarita mixture. Relax and enjoy.

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Thanks for coming to our fiesta! To see the amazing menu Chef Nalin prepared to follow, come back next week!

Spicebox Supperclub: Mexico

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It’s been embarrassingly long since the last Spicebox Supperclub update! But we’re back! We’ve actually had two Supperclubs since our last foray to Eastern Europe.  Without further ado, here’s an overview of Supperclub #5: Mexico, which was on November 22, 2014.

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Hosts: Heather and Nalin

Executive Chef: Nalin

Bartender: Peter

Sommelier: Chris

Pastry Chef: Dave

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Menu

Cocktails:

The Perfect Margarita

Michlelada

Amuse Bouche:

Pico de Gallo-stuffed cherry tomato with cilantro purée

Starter:

Shrimp with guajillo salsa

Amalaya Torrotnes Riesline 2012 Argentina

Palate Cleanser:

Tricolor of radish in apple cider vinegar, jicama in lime juice and cucumber in lemon juice

Courses:

Taco with shiitake and beech mushrooms with pastas, red cabbage, onion and quest anejo

Crisopa Albariño 2011 Spain

Corona bean soup with roasted tomato and ancho chiles

Muga Rioja Rose 2013 Spain

Palate Cleanser:

Watermelon ice with tequila and salt

Chicken with green carretero mole dusted with smoked ground clove

Pickled red onion

Corn with bell pepper and lime

Romaine with topolobampo

Villa Montefiori Cabernet-Sangiovese Mexico 2009

Purple Angel Chile 2011

Desserts:

Rick Bayless’ Pineapple Flan with Lime Zest

Mexican Wedding Cookies

Mango Dipped in Cayenne and Dark Chocolate

Tequila Pineapple

Raventos i Blanc Cava

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The setting was stunning.  Hosts Heather and Nalin have spent the year getting their house remodeled, so this fiesta was held in their super swanky Telegraph Hill rental.  The luxurious furnishings and to-die-for views of San Francisco added to the convivial atmosphere.

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Up next: cocktail hour! Come back soon to savor mixmaster Peter’s Mexican themed cocktails.

Eastern Europe: Pickles

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Hey, Spicebox Supperclub!  I shared Dave’s pickles from the last supperclub on Spicebox Travels with #LetsLunch, a virtual monthly potluck of food writers and bloggers from around the world.  This month’s theme is all about pickles and I hadn’t had a chance to post Dave’s recipes yet, so it was perfect timing.  Thanks, Dave, and here’s the post!

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Aside from my Quick Asian Pickles, which I posted recently, I am not much of a pickler. But I love to eat anything pickled. Pickles, and fermented foods in general, are all the rage these days. Dating back millennia, fermentation was one of the original methods to preserve food. These days, from kimchi to yogurt, it’s all about the probiotics. Probiotics, or good bacteria, are increasingly being seen as beneficial not only for digestive health but possibly also for allergies and even weight loss.

The most recent homemade pickles I’ve enjoyed were at a recent dinner by the supper club I’ve belonged to for the past year. Unlike other supper clubs, which are usually pop-up restaurants hosting meals for strangers, ours is a private affair. A year ago, a couple of friends proposed the idea of having a supper club. The idea for our supper club came about from a member who has vivid memories of his parents’ supper club in the ’70s, enigmatic adult-only dinner parties that would last into the wee hours of the morning. We’re reviving the model and plan quarterly themed dinner parties. We’re a group of four couples in San Francisco who share a love of food, travel, adventure and conversation. To be clear, we really, really love food. Several of us have been known to fly across the oceans in pursuit of one particular meal. As might be expected from people who travel to eat, we can be a bit fanatical in our menu planning.

While all of us were friends with the organizing hosts, several of us were strangers to each other when the supper club began. But after marathon dinners stretching for 6 hours or more, we’ve gotten to know each other quite well. A lot of things come up around food. One time, the host recalled a particularly embarrassing incident involving an ill-fitting sky blue suit jacket. (Sadly, this was before social media.) Another time, when we were going around sharing where we’d gone to college and what we’d studied, one of us couldn’t stop giggling at the revelation that another member had majored in European History. The rest of us are still not sure why that was so amusing. But, all is accepted without judgment in our supper club family. With all this bonding, these supper club dinners have produced some truly wonderful meals as well as nourished, or since we’re talking pickles, fermented some great friendships.

What have we cooked? The first year’s supper clubs explored ethnic themes, either based upon the host’s heritage or a recent trip. We started with an Asian Mashup, which explored one of the host’s Indian heritage as well as other food from Asia. That was followed by Comida Porteño, based upon the host’s recent trip to Buenos Aires. We followed with a Trini Carnival themed menu that explored the Indian and Afro-Carbiiean foods of my husband’s home, Trinidad. And most recently, we explored the foods of Eastern Europe and the varied Eastern European backgrounds of our hosts. If you’re interested in the menus, recipes and stories, please visit our group blog, Spicebox Supperclub. Who knows where we’ll go next?

Now, for the pickles. Our host, Dave, presented a trio of typical Eastern European pickles: cucumbers, carrots and turnips. These presented a bright and tart contrast to the rich Eastern European fare.

Quick Cucumber Pickles

from http://toriavey.com/toris-kitchen/2013/08/quick-pickles/

Prep Time: 10 Minutes
Total Time: 48 Hours
Servings: 10-12 pickles

Ingredients

8 garlic cloves, sliced
2 handfuls handfuls fresh dill
2 bay leaves
1 tsp peppercorns
1 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp dill seeds
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (optional)
1/2 tsp celery seed
1/4 tsp fennel seed
1 ¾ lbs. Kirby or Persian cucumbers (small pickling cucumbers, no wax on skin)
4 cups water
1/2 cup white vinegar
3 tbsp kosher salt

Equipment

Two 1 quart mason jars or one ½ gallon jar, funnel, whisk, saucepan

Technique

1. Place the sliced garlic in a small saucepan of water and bring to a boil. Boil the garlic for 1 minute, then drain immediately. This blanching process will keep the garlic from turning blue in the pickle jar.
2. Place the blanched garlic, fresh dill, bay leaves and other spices into the pickling jar or jars. If using two jars, divide the ingredients evenly between them, half in each. The red pepper flakes are optional, and will add a little kick to your pickles—if you don’t like spice, feel free to omit.
3. Slice off the tip ends of each cucumber, then place them into the jars, half in each jar. It’s okay if they’re tightly packed, they will shrink up a bit as they pickle.
4. In a saucepan, bring the water, white vinegar, and kosher salt to a boil, whisking till the salt is fully dissolved. Boil the mixture for about 1 minute, then remove from heat. Pour the hot brine through a funnel into each jar, submerging the cucumbers completely in liquid.
5. Let the jars cool completely to room temperature (this will take a few hours). Secure the lids and place pickles in the refrigerator. Your first pickle will be ready to eat in 48 hours; they’ll become more pickled and flavorful as they age. Pickles will keep for up to 2 months.
Tip: For crunchier pickles, before pickling you can place the cucumbers in a bowl and cover them with ice water. Soak them in the refrigerator in ice water for 4-5 hours. Drain and proceed with recipe. If you already have pre-mixed pickling spice on hard, you may substitute 4 tsp pickling spice for the spices (if using two jars, divide the spices between jars, half in one, half in the other).

Pickled Turnips

from http://www.davidlebovitz.com/2012/09/pickled-turnips-turnip-recipe/

Ingredients

3 cups (750 ml) water
1/3 cup (70 g) coarse white salt, such as kosher salt or sea salt
1 bay leaf
1 cup (250 ml) white vinegar (distilled)
2-pounds (1 kg) turnips, peeled
1 small beet, or a few slices from a regular-size beet, peeled
3 cloves garlic, peeled and thinly sliced

Technique
1. In a saucepan, heat about one-third of the water. Add the salt and bay leaf, stirring until the salt is dissolved.

2. Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature. Once cool, add the vinegar and the rest of the water.

3. Cut the turnips and the beet into batons, about the size of French fries. Put the turnips, beets, and garlic slices into a large, clean jar, then pour the salted brine over them in the jar, including the bay leaf.

4. Cover and let sit at room temperature, in a relatively cool place, for one week. Once done, they can be refrigerated until ready to serve.

Pickled Carrots

from http://www.davidlebovitz.com/2008/11/easy-pickled-carrots/

Ingredients

1 pound (450 g) carrots, peeled
1 1/4 cups (310 ml) water
1 cup (280 ml) cider vinegar
1/4 cup (50 g) sugar
2 garlic cloves, lightly-crushed
1 1/2 teaspoons fennel, dill, or anise seeds (See Note)
1 1/2 tablespoons coarse salt
2 bay leaves

Technique
1. Cut the carrots into stick approximately the size of your fourth finger. Bring a medium-sized pot of lightly-salted water to a boil. (Use a non-reactive pot.)

2. When the water boils, drop the carrots in and simmer for one minute. Pour into a colander and rinse under cold water. Drain thoroughly.

3. In the same pot, heat the remaining ingredients. Once it begins to boil, reduce the heat and simmer for two minutes.

4. Remove from heat and add the carrot sticks. Cool until room temperature, then put into jars and chill.

Carrot sticks should be made at least one day in advance, and will keep for up to four weeks in the refrigerator.

Have any of you participated in a supper club before? If so, please share your stories!

And please come back later for more pickle recipes and stories from #LetsLunch.