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Showing posts with label dinner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dinner. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2010

Tilapia with Turmeric & Dill - Bok Choy with Mushrooms and Scallions



I am always looking for something new and different to do with tilapia, much like someone might do with chicken. I call it 'The Low Fish' because it's low in mercury, fat, calories, saturated fats, sodium and carbs. It's also low in price to boot! I can certainly get behind that.

Of course all the low factors change depending on how you prepare it.  There is one tried and true go-to tilapia recipe that I know will get scarfed up by everyone it gets put in front of, which I will inevitably make soon and post about. But that particular dish is not low anything...

This recipe, however, is a most refreshing change. It's light and tasty. I usually serve it with jasmine rice and steamed sugar snaps or a bok choy and mushroom stir fry that's really complimentary to the dish.

Combine sugar and lime juice and stir until sugar is dissolved.
Add the fish sauce and minced jalepeno.
Chop a few scallions.
Season fish with ginger, tumeric, salt and pepper.
Fry 2-3 minutes per side in a few tablespoons of hot oil.
Remove fish and add scallions, dill and the sauce with jalepenos you made earlier.
Spoon sauce over fish to serve.

Tilapia with Tumeric & Dill

serves 6

4 tbsp sugar
4 tbsp lime juice
4 tbsp fish sauce
1/2 jalapeno, minced
3-4 scallions
1 small bunch of fresh dill, chopped
6 tilapia fillets
1 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground tumeric
Salt and pepper to taste
2 tbsp oil


In a small bowl or glass, combine the sugar and lime juice and stir until the sugar has dissolved. Add the fish sauce and jalapeno. Set aside.

Trim the scallions and cut them into 1/2-inch-long pieces.

Pat the fish dry with a paper towel. Sprinkle the ginger, turmeric, salt, and a few grinds of black pepper all over the fillets on both sides. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the tilapia and cook, flipping once, until just firm and opaque in the center of the thickest part, about 4 minutes total. Transfer the tilapia to serving plates.

Add the scallions to the pan and cook, stirring frequently, until they just start to wilt, about 45 seconds. Add the dill and continue to cook until it has wilted slightly, about 15 seconds more. Pour the sauce into the pan and stir to heat through. Drizzle the scallion-dill sauce over the tilapia and serve.

This is the bok choy and mushroom stir fry - with recipe below!

Stir-Fried Bok Choy with Mushrooms and Scallions

1-1/4 lb bok choy (1 large/6 baby)
2 tbsp fish sauce
2 tbsp chicken broth
1 tsp cornstarch
1/4 tsp sesame oil
2 tbsp oil
Salt
8-10 scallions cut into 1 inch lengths
2 cloves minced garlic
1 pint of mushrooms, any kind (I had button mushrooms on hand that I washed & halved)
1 tbsp minced fresh ginger

To prep mature bok choy, separate the leaves from the stems by slicing the bok choy head crosswise at about the point where the leaves begin to spread out. Cut the leaves into lengthwise strips 1 to 1-1/2 inches wide. Quarter the stem end lengthwise and remove any inner leaves, putting them with the leafy tops. Slice the stem quarters crosswise into pieces about 3/4 inch thick. Rinse and dry the stems and leaves separately. (If using baby bok choy, simply cut the heads lengthwise into 3/4-inch-wide pieces or wedges.)

In a small bowl, combine the oyster sauce, chicken broth, cornstarch, and sesame oil. Whisk well to dissolve the cornstarch.

In a 12-inch nonstick stir-fry pan, heat the oil over medium-high heat. When the oil is hot, add the bok choy stems and mushrooms, and season with 1/8 tsp. kosher salt. (If using baby bok choy, add all the pieces now and skip the step of adding the leaves later.) Cook, tossing frequently with tongs, until the stems are pliable and lightly browned, 5 to 6 minutes.

Add the scallions, garlic, and ginger and cook, stirring constantly, until the aromatics are tender, fragrant, and starting to brown, about 2 minutes. Add the bok choy leaves and 1/8 tsp. salt. Using tongs, toss until the leaves are completely wilted and integrated with the stems, 1 to 2 more minutes.

Remove the pan from the heat and stir the sauce and quickly mix it with the vegetables in the pan. As soon as the sauce thickens and has coated most of the vegetables (a few seconds), transfer to a platter and serve.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Sesame Chicken with Snap Peas and Jasmine Rice



It's no big secret that one of my biggest weaknesses is Chinese food. Any Chinese food. I am not picky when it comes to that. I could eat it every day for every meal and (probably - never say never!) not tire of it. The combinations, the flavors, the tastes...

Let's just say that I am just short of drinking soy sauce straight from the bottle and leave it at that, shall we?

Not to mention that stir fry is a fast, easy and inexpensive meal. Yeah, that always helps. Especially if you're me. Which you are not. And you wouldn't want to be me, trust me. Especially if you don't like stir fry.

This is an easy peasy one that is a snap (pun intended, thank you) to make and tastes out of this world.

I like to mix the marinade in a ziplock for less cleaning later.
Dice up your chicken.
Bathe it in soy saucy goodness...
Mix up the sauce.
Plate it up and go to town.



Sesame Chicken with Snap Peas and Jasmine Rice

serves 4

5 tbsp soy sauce
4 tsp dark sesame oil
2 tsp honey
4 boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite sized pieces
6 tsp oil
3 scallions, thinly sliced
1 tbsp grated or finely minced ginger
3 cloves minced garlic
1-1/4 cup chicken broth
3 tbsp sugar
4 tbsp cornstarch
1 tbsp rice vinegar
1 tsp chili paste (more if you like additional heat)
4 cups steamed snap peas
4 cups cooked jasmine rice
2 tbsp sesame seeds, toasted

Whisk 3 tbsp soy sauce with 2 tsp sesame oil and honey. Add chicken and marinate 30 minutes or longer.

Heat 4 tsp oil on wok or skillet over medium high heat. Cook chicken until browned, 3-5 minutes. Transfer chicken to a plate and wipe wok or skillet clean.

Heat remaining 2 tsp oil over medium high heat. Add scallions, ginger and garlic; stir fry about 1 minute. Whisk together the chicken broth, sugar, cornstarch, vinegar, chili paste and remaining 2 tbsp soy sauce. Add mixture to skillet; stir and cook until thickened, about 3-4 minutes. Stir in the remaining sesame oil.

Return chicken to pan, stir to coat and heat through.

Serve chicken with steamed snap peas and jasmine rice. Top with a sprinkling of toasted sesame seeds.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Norwegian Epic - Food, Fantasy and Frustration - Day Two



Day two finds us at sea. All day. Breakfast in the Manhattan Room, anyone?

My morning Cuppa...
My usual standard breakfast on any cruise...bagel with smoked salmon, cream cheese and capers
Mini pancake stack with bacon
Buttermilk waffle with syrup and warm banana compote

We pretty much walked around the ship exploring most of the day.  There are 19 decks in all on the Epic. Decks 1 through 4 are off limits to passengers, so I'm guessing that's where all the crew resides, storage, engines, etc. All the action is on Decks 5, 6, 7, 14, and 15-19. Decks 8-14, 16 and 17 have the staterooms.  If you're rich enough to book a Deluxe Owner's Suite, 2-Bedroom Villa or a Courtyard Penthouse on deck 16 or 17, you get exclusive access to the Villas Courtyard, the private Concierge Lounge and a private restaurant and bar. Ooh La La! Fancy-schmancy sounding, ain't it?? Needless to say, we didn't see any of that stuff!

Deck 5 consists of business meeting rooms (Boring! Who has business meetings on vacation? Really?), the photo gallery (pick up and pay $10 each for all those professionally awkward photos, people!), Internet Cafe, the Epic Theater (for Blue Man Group, Legends, Nickelodeon Slime Time Live), Le Bistro French restaurant, Taste restaurant, the Atrium Bar (coffee bar!), art gallery and Epic Theater bar.

Click Photo Gallery
Entrance to the Epic Theater
Le Bistro entrance
Taste entrance
Looking down on Taste dining room
Internet Cafe
Art Gallery
Atrium Bar
Atrium Bar with view of the two story movie screen

I decided to have a pre-lunch cocktail in the Cascades Bar on deck six. This was a great decision, I think...

Pear Pleasure:  Grey Goose LaPoire, Limoncello, Apple Juice, splash of soda and fresh pear garnish

We decided to have lunch in the Irish pub on deck 6, O'Sheehan's.  This was one of the 'freebie' dining areas.

Chicken Pot Pie
Fried Mozzarella Sticks (loved the presentation on these!)
Fish n' Chips (and in case you were wondering, as I was, the green stuff was Mushy Peas...)
The ever popular standard:  Buffalo Wings! Someone (including me) was bound to order them at one point...
 Corned Beef on Rye with Fries
The fare was fair; it was your standard bar/pub food. Not good enough to write home about.  I ate the wings and corned beef.  My wings were mushy, almost like overcooked, but had a powdery texture to them. Would that be 'beyond overcooked' then?  I only ate two of them after writing the first one off as a fluke, then figuring if the second one tasted exactly the same that there was something a bit...er, wrong.  Papa Bear had the wings, too - and he said his tasted fine. The sandwich was okay with the portion being really half of a normal-sized sandwich.

We ate at the bar table right in front of the bowling alley in O'Sheehan's.  Afterwards, Granma took the girls bowling whilst my main squeeze and I tried out another martini back at the Cascades Bar.

The alley directly in front of us
...and if we looked to the right...
The Coco Cabanatini: Bacardi Coco, Creme de Banana, Goldschlager Cinnamon Schnapps and fresh cream served with a coconut rim and cinnamon sprinkles. This was to die for...
All of this nefarious activity just plum wore out three quarters of our crew, so we all went  back to the stateroom to chill and refresh...

Papa Bear's idea of a reboot...
..and my idea of a reboot. I win!
Which, in retrospect was probably not the best idea I had all day, because those mushy, powdery wings were beginning to do a helluva number on my stomach...

When everyone (but Little Lawyer and myself) had woken from their catnaps, we explored deck 6 some more.  This deck has my beloved Cascades Bar, Fat Cats Jazz and Blues Club, Headliners Comedy Club, O'Sheehan's Pub, Shanghai's Chinese restaurant and Noodle Bar, the Spiegel Tent, the Manhattan Room restaurant and the Epic Casino.

Cascades Bar
Fat Cats entrance
Headliners Comedy Club
O'Sheehan's
Shanghai's

Spiegel Tent entrance (to the left)
Manhattan Room entrance
Casino
Granma playin' the slots
More casino fun

We had reserved a table at Shanghai's that evening for dinner. I wanted to be stoked for this, but those wings had given me the stomach cramps from hell - I could not stay vertical long enough to eat after I ordered.

Waiting for dinner at Shanghai's
Rice crackers with a bevy of dipping sauces: wasabi, chili and hot mustard
Harvest Spring Rolls with Sweet Chili Sauce
Salt and Pepper Calamari with Wasabi Mayo
Drum Roasted Hoisin Barbecue Pork Spare Ribs
Hot-n-Sour Soup
Cantonese Scallops with Snow Peas, Sweet Peppers and Garlic
Beef Broccoli with Oyster Sauce
Shrimp Fried Rice
Malay Lamb Curry
  
Shortly after the main course arrived and I took one or two bites, I had to leave and go back to the stateroom and lay down. We had reservations to see the Blue Man Group after dinner, but there was no way I could have sat through it.  Granma had them bump the reservation to the next night because they didn't want to go without me (even though I said they could) Awww, they really do love me!

I spent the rest of that evening in bed - from about 7pm til I woke up the next morning at 7am. The bathroom and I had a long discussion (maybe even an argument...but I'm not sure exactly which one of us actually won)
and I felt much better the next day. The rest of the crew hung out, went for ice cream or ordered room service and just chilled.