1 bunch fresh small Asparagus trimmed
1 lb. Fresh cherry tomatoes, halved
1 tbls Maille old Style Mustard
2 tbls. Best Food Mayonnaise
1/2 tsp. Cayenne pepper
5 pounds beef neck bones, sawn into small chunks
1 ten inch section of beef marrow bone, sawn in half length wise then
cross cut
Two pigs feet, cut into eights
1 white onion, quartered
2 celery stalks, quartered
2 carrots, quartered
4 bay leaves
Teaspoon pepper corns
2 quarts of water
1 bottle of white wine
2 garlic gloves
1 pound ham cut into small pieces1
1 bag of small white Northern beans
10 bay leaves
Black pepper
Crushed red pepper
1 large can chopped tomatoes
Pinch of ground cloves
5 tablespoons brown sugar
1 large yellow onion, chopped coarsely
Cover beans with 5 quarts of water and soak over night.2 Drain. Add enough water back
into pot to cover beans by 1 ½ inches. Add ham and ham bone if available and all other
ingredients. Bring to a boil then cook slowly for four hours. Add water as necessary.
(Ham may already have enough salt that no more is needed, but correct seasoning at the
end just before serving as required.)
Notes:
1. I make a variation on this recipe that substitutes two smoked ham-hocks that have been sawn by
the butcher into chunks.
2. Some of the chemical compounds in beans that contribute to flatulence are water-soluble and will
be partially removed when the bean soak-water is discarded. If your water is very hard (having
lots of minerals) the beans would benefit from bottled water for cooking and soaking.
Alternatively, filter the water through a activated carbon water filter before using. Hard water may
also require extended cooking times.
1 pound ham cut into small pieces1
1 bag of small white Northern beans
10 bay leaves
Black pepper
Crushed red pepper
1 large can chopped tomatoes
Pinch of ground cloves
5 tablespoons brown sugar
1 large yellow onion, chopped coarsely
Cover beans with 5 quarts of water and soak over night.2 Drain. Add enough water back
into pot to cover beans by 1 ½ inches. Add ham and ham bone if available and all other
ingredients. Bring to a boil then cook slowly for four hours. Add water as necessary.
(Ham may already have enough salt that no more is needed, but correct seasoning at the
end just before serving as required.)
2 pounds small white pearl onions
Pinch turmeric
Olive oil
Salt to taste
Pinch pepper
Pinch paprika
Asian soups have become so popular that whole soup-houses cater to these in many of
the business districts of many large metropolitan cities across the United States. Silicon
Valley in the California’s Bay area is no exception. This soup is an unxious rich aromatic
brown broth, studded by big generous chunks of beef, small pieces of beef tendon over a
base of rice noodles and garnished with greens. Although this recipe calls for rice
noodles, it could be made with your favorite noodles. (More on noodles below.) An
amazing transformation occurs with the protracted cooking time turning inedible beef
tendons into a delicious punctuation to this famous Asian dish. To make things quicker,
the beef stock could be made a day ahead. The tendons could also be cooked in the stock
until the point they are tender and the recipe resumes the next day from that point.
2 1/2 pounds prepared beef tendons (Asian Market provides this)
2 scallions, sliced
4 cloves chopped garlic
2 tablespoons minced fresh ginger
4 lemon grass stalks bruised with back of cleaver
2 tablespoons dark mushroom soy sauce
3 tablespoons rice vinegar
3 tablespoons Marin
1 tablespoons Fish Sauce (optional)
3/4 package fresh rice noodles (Asian Market) (see notes)
2 teaspoons white pepper
1 teaspoon red pepper
½ cup Shao Hsing wine
Juice from 2 limes
Lime zest from 2 limes
Pinch of sugar
Salt as required
Beef Stock
3 pounds beef ribs (Have these sawn into strips)
1 coarsely chopped yellow onion
1 chopped coarsely carrot
1 quart of water
1 coarsely chopped rib of celery
¼ cup dried shitake mushrooms
Lime slices
Bean sprouts
Chopped fresh cilantro
Make Beef Stock the day before
Cut up carrot, onion, celery, and beef ribs into chunks and brown beef ribs pieces and
vegetables under the broiler, turning occasionally until meat has browned on most sides.
Using a bag fashioned from cheesecloth and string, tie up the vegetables and mushrooms.
Add meat, and bagged vegetables with 1 quart of water to a stock pot with a lid. Cover
and bring to a boil then simmer until meat is tender. Discard expended bagged
vegetables. Cool stock several hours or refrigerate. Skim and remove all fat. Strain the
stock and retain. Discard bones, separating meat which is retained for later use.
Bring a pot of water to boil. Add tendons and boil five minutes to purge them. Strain
tendons and rinse in cold water. If there are any LARGE pieces cut them down to size so
everything cooks evenly.
Discard bottom root sections and dried out top sections of the lemon grass stalks, bruise
the stalks with blows from the back of the cleaver or chef’s knife on both sides of the
stalks and retain for later.
Boil tendons in the retained beef stock until fairly tender, about 3 ~ 4 hours but 2 hours
out, add bruised lemon grass stalks. When tendons are very tender, remove lemon grass
pieces and discard them. Using thongs and kitchen shears, cut tendons into small edible
1/2 chunks. This is an important step as the soup would be very difficult to eat otherwise.
If the preceding is advanced preparation, start the next step the next day.
Add soy sauce, ginger, garlic, rice vinegar, wine, red and white peppers, juice from limes,
Marin, lime zest, the retained pieces of beef. Heat on high and when boiling add noodles.
Assist the noodles to separate and when noodles are hot add chopped scallions, a handful
each of bean sprouts, and chopped fresh cilantro. Correct the seasoning with salt, 1
teaspoon of sugar, additional vinegar and lime to taste.
To serve, bowl up soup with a portion of noodles in each bowl. Serve with a plate
holding a garnish of lime slices, bean sprouts, and chopped fresh cilantro so guests can
add their own.
Put some Thai hot sauce on the table (Shark Brand Sriracha or see
Thai_Chile_Sauce.) otherwise offer some other form of hot.
Notes on Noodles:
You can buy noodles fresh or dry, gluten flour, rice, or even buckwheat in large
diameters, flat, vermicelli or round. The noodle isle at the Asian market I go to in California is 40 yards long - all noodles at that just the dry ones! If going “dry” not fresh, adjust cooking time according to package directions or cook ahead of time in water then drain and rinse in cold water when the noodles are “al dente” or a little under done. The next reheating will soften them some so keep that in mind. Fresh is much easier and less work.
Banh pho – Rice Sticks - Pad Thai Flat Shape Noodle / Fresh Dry
Banh Tam – Rice Noodle (Round shape)
Bunch of finely diced parsley
Bunch finely diced chives
3 eggs plus 2 egg yolks
3 cups leftover Risotto alla Romano (al dente) (see recipe)
4 ounces of mozzarella cheese cut into 3/8 inch cubes
2 cups dry bread crumbs made entirely from the crust of crusty Italian bread.
3 - 4 cups of canola oil
1 clove crushed chopped garlic
3 tablespoons olive oil
two squeezes of fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoon cream sherry
4 large Portobello mushroom caps, stems removed
Sea salt
Fresh ground black pepper
Ground red pepper (optional)
2 tablespoons Tarragon vinegar
1 ear baby sweet white corn
1 tablespoon chopped shallots
3 tablespoon butter
1 bunch of spinach
Pinch of nutmeg
Garnish
A few basil leaves, chopped
A few nasturtiums flowers
Rub Portobello caps with olive oil, salt and pepper, red pepper and sauté on both sides
until tender. Deglaze pan with a tablespoon of sherry.
Remove caps from pan and set aside. Add 2 tablespoon butter to pan and wilt spinach
with vinegar and a squeeze lemon juice using a lid to keep the initial stem in. Remove
spinach and chopped coarsely. Add corn and pinch of nutmeg to pan and just warm until
hot.
Assemble presentation plates. Put a little of the corn and spinach on each plate and top
with Portobello cap. Sprinkle some kernels on corn on each cap. Deglaze pan a squeeze
of fresh lemon juice, and tablespoon cream sherry. Turn of heat and swirl in a table spoon
of butter. Pour over mushroom caps.
Garnish with nasturtiums and chopped basil
By Leslie Beribeault, 1996
This is simply the very best of its class- rated five stars!
3 heads of roasted Garlic
1 cup of Sun Dried Tomato, softened for 20 mins in very hot water.
1/2 cup on pine nuts
1/4 cup Grated Asiago Cheese
Olive oil
Salt
Pepper
Combine and process into a paste in the food processor.
Maybe used on pasta, bread, pizza. Most excellent.
Slice the tops off of 2 whole heads of garlic. Brush liberally with olive oil. Place in oven at 350 F. Roast for one hour. After the garlic has cooled, remove cloves by squeezing the head inverted over a dish. The cloves pop out.
Glen is an agriculture area right on the Sacramento River in Northern California. Every
year the local Glenn Pheasant Association ((530) 934-3606) raise some 500 birds for
local release a few weeks before the pheasant hunting season begins. Hunters have a
limited season and perhaps cull less that 10% of these birds; hence California now has
more pheasants than in their original indigenous range of Nepal through Tibet, Northern
Burma including northwest China. To hunt pheasant, you must possess a valid California
hunting license, an upland game bird stamp, enjoy sloshing around in soaking wet attire,
be good at lifting your feet cover with five or six pounds of muddy clay while negotiating
precariously uneven fields caused by the wake of the harvesters way back in September.
The area grows millet, sorghum, rice and beans all of which these birds love.
Local farmers eat simply, many, the food they grow themselves. This is one of those
dishes, probably traditionally from the Old South. My son and I ate it many cold winter
afternoons while consoling ourselves to the fact that in 8 years pheasant hunting, the only
bird we ever shot was with a camera equipped with a telephoto lens.
1 pound (or so) of dried red beans
4 Smoked Ham Hocks (have butcher saw this in quarters)
Parsley or green onions as garnish
10 bay leaves
1 tablespoon crushed black pepper
Instant beef stock granules is used as salt to correct the seasoning
Add ingredients in a kettle cover with cold water. Cook on low 4-5 hours
until meat falls apart and beans are tender. Add water as necessary, but allow
stock to reduce down the last hour. Correct seasoning.
Cook rice the last hour the beans are cooking in an oven-proof pot equipped
with a lid.
2 cups premium long grain jasmine white rice
3 3/4 cup of unsalted boiling water
Add rice, cover, and bring to a boil on high. Put the covered rice pot
in 350 F oven for 45 minutes.
Ladle beans over a serving of rice. Butter two slices of rustic country bread.
Serve atop rice plate on presentation.