Sunday, September 25, 2011

Spaghetti Carbonara

My friends signed me up for a year's subscription to the Masterchef magazine for my birthday and the first one arrived this week. All that food porn has reignited my experimental cooking habits... If you haven't noticed, it is rare for me to be able to follow a recipe without making my own changes.

Inspired by a recipe from the magazine, along with an episode of Jamie Oliver's 30 Minute Meals and some hints from a friend, I ended up with this.

Ingredients
  • Two slices of short cut bacon, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, diced
  • 1 cup button mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 cup of frozen vegetables (I used peas, corn and carrots - substitute with whatever you want)
  • 1 egg
  • 100g spaghetti
  • Parmesan cheese, salt and pepper to taste

Method
  • Boil water in a saucepan (it's faster to use the kettle). Salt the water and add spaghetti. (Check the cooking directions on your pasta - the longer it takes, the earlier you should start boiling the pasta. For 3 minute pasta, leave this step until the end.)
  • Add bacon to a hot frypan, saute until fat is rendered and bacon starts to crisp up. Add garlic and saute until fragrant.
  • Add frozen vegetables and mushrooms. Cook until mushrooms are soft and vegetables are heated through. Turn off heat.
  • Crack egg into the bacon mixture, break yolk and gently fold the egg into the mixture until a smooth sauce begins to form. Sprinkle some Parmesan cheese in and continue to fold.
  • Using tongs, remove some of the cooked pasta from boiling water and place into the sauce. Toss pasta through sauce. Continue to add pasta to sauce, spooning in some of the pasta water to slowly build up the creaminess of the sauce.
  • Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and cracked black pepper to serve.

spaghetti carbonara

The beauty of this dish is that you get the creamy texture of most carbonara sauces, but without the heaviness of the cream found in most restaurants. Which means you can eat more of it without feeling like you have overeaten!

Drunken Butter Scallops


A Japanese dish that always seems to stand out for me is 'asari sake' (Kobe Restaurant, Doncaster) or 'asari butter' (Izakaya Chuji, Melbourne) - pipis (cockles) in a sake and butter broth. The smooth nuttiness of the butter and the strong almost acidic flavours of the sake blend together to create a whole new depth of flavour.

So with a handful of scallops leftover from my quiche last weekend, and memories of the two dishes in mind, I decided to attempt the dish with what ingredients I had in my kitchen. It worked surprisingly well, although I don't think I'll be repeating it again with scallops. Pipis are definitely the way to go!

Ingredients
  • 100g fresh scallops (I left the roe attached, but you can remove it if you want)
  • 50g butter
  • 50ml Chinese rice wine
  • 50 - 100ml water (add more if turning this into a soup)
  • salt and pepper to taste

Method
  • Lightly season scallops with salt and pepper.
  • In a heated pan, melt in half the butter.
  • Sear scallops in the hot melted butter.
  • When scallops are par-cooked, pour in rice wine. Gently swirl pan to mix the butter and rice wine together.
  • As liquid starts to evaporate, add in remaining butter, then pour in water.
  • Season with black pepper.

drunken butter scallops

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Scallop & Oyster Quiche

What does one do with a handful of leftover smoked oysters? Taking some inspiration from the yum cha take on baked oysters, I decided to improvise and turn them into a something like a seafood quiche.

scallop & oyster quiche

Ingredients
  • 1 sheet puff pastry
  • 1 cup of smoked oysters (can substitute with fresh oysters, but cook quickly before using)
  • 1 cup of scallops, halved
  • 3 eggs, beaten
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup plain flour
  • 1/2 cup tasty cheese, grated
  • 4 medium mushrooms, sliced
  • 2 slice short cut bacon, diced

Method
  • Line a baking dish with baking paper, then fit pastry into dish. Using a fork, prick the base of the pastry.
  • In a hot pan, brown bacon. Remove bacon from pan, leaving bacon fat in pan.
  • Quickly sear scallops, remove from pan. If using fresh oysters, cook them at the same time.
  • Add mushrooms to pan, saute until they begin to soften. Remove from pan.
  • In a bowl, whisk milk, eggs and flour until combined. Add cheese and salt and pepper to taste.
  • Layer mushrooms, seafood and bacon in baking dish. Pour over egg mixture.
  • Bake in a preheated oven at 200 degrees for 25 minutes or until egg mixture is set.