Showing posts with label sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sauce. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

caramel sauce

In the photo above, there are several jars of Pear jam which I will get too shortly. But that jar on the bottom left? BEST Caramel Sauce EVER. My favorite recipe to use. The one I always have in the refrigerator. The sauce that is served with apples, and pears, and cookies, and cakes, and sometimes enjoyed with a spoon, secretly, when no-one is looking (not so much of a secret anymore is it?) 
What else can I tell you about this? I feel caramel sauce - as is the case with many other things but especially my favorite caramel sauce - is a matter of practice, and may take a couple of attempts. As you are cooking it, it will seem like it's taking forever. Then all of a sudden you start seeing that gorgeous amber color and you're all excited. Then within the next nano-second you smell it burning. And then it's a mad dash to get the heavy cream (carefully) in there and calm things down. But then that cream bubbles up like a creature out of Star Trek and you're wondering why you didn't just purchase the cute little jar at the grocery with the gingham checked lid.
Does it still smell like it's burning? You probably burnt it. And the family is going to ask "why does it taste like it's burnt?" And then they may refuse to eat it. And then you're going to toss the entire thing in the trash. And then a few days later you're going to try again and it's going to be perfect. Moral to this little peek into my first few attempts? Practice. It is completely worth the effort and expense to make your own caramel sauce. There will be no turning back after you do this. And the fresh vanilla beans that will require an entire week's paycheck? Just do it.

Here's how.

YOU WILL NEED:

2 cups of sugar
1/2 cup water
1 vanilla bean - split - seeds scraped 
1 cup of heavy cream
1/2 teaspoon good salt - preferably fleur de sel

TO DO:

Sugar into a large saucepan - pour the water around it.
Add the vanilla bean and seeds and cook over medium high heat.
Stir only until the sugar is dissolved.
Continue to cook without stirring until you get a deep amber color.
Should only be 7 to 8 minutes.
Swirl the pan occasionally to even out the color (cooking).

Remove from the heat and add the heavy cream.
Let the bubbling calm down.
It might look like one big glob of weirdness at this point.
It's okay.

Return to the stove and cook over medium heat stirring constantly.
That big glob will go away.
Cook until smooth.

Remove from heat.
Discard the vanilla bean.
Stir in the fleur de sel.

Let cool.

Sneak as many tastes as you can before anyone gets home.
OR...serve over this pear cake
Here's a link to the cake above (click here for Gateau de Poire)

note:
there is a post-it in my recipe binder that says this caramel sauce was found in an old issue of Epicurious magazine...okay...good luck if you go searching for it :-)


Thursday, January 19, 2012

lemon caper sauce

These last few days have had me looking for all sorts of meats and vegetables that can be dipped or served with this sauce. So far I can say pork chops, tilapia, cut carrots and celery work really well with this. How did this come about? I was making pork chops for dinner the other night and used to have a recipe for 'pork chops and caper sauce' but of course couldn't find it. I already had the pork chops in the oven and I had already purchased this rather pricey jar of capers so I had to come up with some sort of sauce item! I started putting various ingredients into a bowl along with a little bit of this and a little bit of that and now I have this pretty delicious sauce to serve with everything! (well, maybe not quite everything)


Here's what capers look like out of the jar.














They're tiny, very salty, and according to my daughter they are very smelly!
("but not as smelly as kimchee" is what she said)
You can usually find a little jar of these at the grocery near pickles or dijon mustards, etc.
Because of the brine the capers are packed in - which is necessary for the 'caper' flavor - you should always rinse them before using. Many years ago I made a tuna salad and just dumped the entire jar into the bowl with the tuna and all the other ingredients - needless to say that entire salad went into the garbage! So please rinse the capers before adding to your dishes.


YOU WILL NEED:


1 4oz jar of capers
1 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon sour cream
zest from 1 lemon
juice from 1/2 of that lemon you just zested
2 or 3 tablespoons olive oil
1 heaping tablespoon fresh parsley - chopped
pepper


TO DO:


chop some parsley.
set aside.
scoop out a teaspoon of the capers and some of the brine.
place in a small dish and set aside.


rinse the rest of the capers under cold water for just a few seconds.
then carefully place them onto a paper towel.
cover and roll them around for a minute to dry.
place onto a cutting board and give them a rough chop.
set aside.
























in a medium bowl add the mayo, sour cream, lemon zest, lemon juice and parsley.
mix well.
slowly add the olive oil - mixing the entire time.


into this bowl now add the reserved capers and 4 or 5 turns of pepper.


taste for seasoning.
adjust as necessary.


serve with most everything.