Category Archives: Menus

2008 Christmas Eve Dinner

My 2008 Christmas Eve Dinner may very well be my last Christmas dinner for a while. I loved the menu and I loved cooking it and serving it and eating it, but it was a two day affair (three, if you count shopping), and it was exhausting. I also spent more time in the kitchen during the meal than I really wanted to. I’m also not sure that it made sense financially – taking my guests to a relatively nice restaurant would have probably been cheaper. But hey, it was a nice experience and the food was great.
This time dinner included Mike and I, our two daughter, my father & sister, and our friends Lola and Ignatius. Great company.
I started by serving a Mixed green salad with balsamic vinaigrette. I wanted to use the very expensive balsamic vinegar Mike got me for Xmas last year. The results were very good.
This was followed by Butternut squash soup with cider cream. Apparently my father has not stopped raving to my mother about the soup. Everyone else also said they liked it, and given that Mika (my 6.5 yo) had seconds, I’m inclined to believe them.
The third course consisted of panettini served with Hot artichoke & spinach dip and Mushroom ragout. Everyone loved the dip – I enjoyed the mushrooms. They’re both dishes I might make again (the dip definitely if Kathy, my sister, requests it again) – plus I now have a dish for it.
The fourth course was supposed to be Rost Rack of Lamb with Madeira Peppercon Reduction served with Toasted Israeli Couscous with Pine Nuts and Parsley, Roasted cauliflower and steamed broccoli. Alas, I neglected to trim the lamb, and it took much, much, much longer to cook than I imagined. Alas again, by the time I realized that, I had already served the sides – so the couscous turned out to be the fourth course. Fortunately, it was absolutely delicious.
The cauliflower wasn’t as successful. I’d cooked it in the toaster oven because I didn’t have the main oven was busy with the lamb (and I only have one oven). I removed it when it started to brown, and that apparently was too soon as it was undercooked. I had to throw out most of it.
It took quite a while for the lamb to hit the table, and I did have to cut it in individual chops in order to cook it quicker (which reminds me, I really need a carving knife), but it was absolutely delicious. I would definitely recommend serving it on the rare side of medium-rare (as I did by default). It was moist, tender and incredibly flavorful. I did buy it at a good butcher, Enzo’s Meat & Poultry’s in Rockridge, and at $17lb it was $4-5lb more expensive than the lamb at the supermarket & Costco. But it was domestic, which I wanted, and I think well worth the price. It couldn’t have been better.
The sauce, on the other hand, was a complete failure. On the one hand, it would have been a crime to cover the taste of the lamb with any kind of sauce. Really, I should have thought of that. On the other, the sauce itself wasn’t that good. I didn’t like the briny taste of the peppercorn, and I might have reduced the madeira too much because I thought it was almost bitter. Fortunately, I had the good sense of only putting a little bit on my plate.
Dinner ended with two desserts. I made a Low sugar apple-sauce for my dad, and everyone ended up loving it. It’s made with apple juice concentrate instead of sugar – but apples still have a lot of natural sugars, so it’s still not the best.
I also made Cornmeal cake with buttermilk ice cream. I don’t think this dessert was as popular as the other one, but I personally liked it very much. The cake was sweet and a tad dry, but the ice cream added the moisture it needed. They both definitely compliment each other very much – neither is as good by itself. The buttermilk ice cream was pretty good – it had great consistency, very creamy though dense (and not at all crystally), and its lemony taste is reminiscent of cheesecake. It’s definitely a dessert I’d recommend.
I had planned on serving hot chocolate with speculoos, a Belgian spice cookie I’d made the day before. IMHO, the speculoos were great, and the kids themselves loved them – but Lola didn’t seem to be very impressed. A couple of people ate one, but most of us were too full from dinner. I did leave some for Santa, who ate at least one 🙂
And that was dinner. We had a Treana viognier/marsanne wine with the earlier part of the meal and a Deloach Zinfandel with the latter part. The white was better than the red.-

Ethnic Menus Up

In the last few weeks I’ve been cooking ethnic food on a semi-daily basis. I would like to get through the C’s by early next year, which means I need to hurry. The latest menus are:
Cantabrian (a region of Spain)
Chihuahuan (a region of Mexico)
Cowboy

Cantonese Menu Up

It’s available at http://www.marga.org/food/int/canton/

Balti & Caucasian Recipes Up

My house is a mess. Always. Every day. No matter how much I clean, it’s always a mess. I say this as way of explanation of why I haven’t, and don’t see myself hosting dinner parties in the near future. I just can’t manage to both clean the house and have people over all in the same day.
I have, on the other hand, been very much in a cooking mode lately – so I’ve gone back to my international food project -, only now I’m following it by cooking single dinner dishes for my family. It makes it a little difficult to come up with a full menu – appetizers, main dishes, sides and dessert – but some of the cuisines I’m cooking don’t really lend themselves to mutli-course dinners anyway. I am hoping that by making the project part of my everyday cooking, I will start advancing it on it more quickly than in the past. After all, it’s taken me 8 years just to do 2 letters.
This past week I’ve cooked Balti cuisine and Caucasian cuisine. The former is a style of food cooking and serving created by Indian cooks in England – as far as I can gather, it’s very similar to what we get at Indian restaurants in the US. Next on the menu are Cantonese dishes – my first foray ever into Chinese food. I’ll also be cooking a couple of Awadhi dishes and may indeed go back to some “A” cuisines for which I didn’t have enough recipes to make a full meal.
Balti Menu
Caucasian Menu

Canarian Menu up

Last night I made Canarian food for my little family. We had oven-baked potatoes, a very nice braised chicken with onions and an almost healthy banana pudding. The recipes are up at:
http://www.marga.org/food/int/canary/

Burkinabe Menu Up

My 2-dish Burkinabe menu is now available at:
http://www.marga.org/food/int/burkina/

Bourguignon, Cameroonian and Calabrian Menus up

I’ve posted three new menus in my website. The Calabrian one includes food I’d cooked a couple of months ago, while I only made the Cameroonian one last Sunday (as I made the boeuf bourguignon).
Burgundy
Calabria
Cameroon

Birthday Party Menu for 6 year olds

Yesterday was Mika’s 6th birthday parties. She had 5 friends over, as well as her 3 yo sister. I don’t want to tell you the mess they made! But hey, that’s for Mike (mostly) to clean up! They did have the time of their lives, though.
The party included dinner, and Mika wanted the main dish to be apple chicken sausage. This is what else I served:
-carrots with ranch sauce
-cubed Monterey Jack cheese (went over very well)
-laughing cow cheese (they didn’t like it much)
-Ardell’s apple chicken sausage, sliced
-cheese tortellini with butter (and grated cheese for those who wanted it)
-fruit salad
-popcorn
-cake
It all went over pretty well. I didn’t feel bad that I was feeding them too much junk, and the kids enjoyed the food. There was a lot of waste, of course, and also a lot of leftovers.

Tea with the girls (and Frank)

Yesterday, my friends Lotty, Vienna, Frank and Regina came over for tea. We get together every month for tea, sometimes at someone’s house, and sometimes at a tea house. It’s a way to keep in touch while enjoying a tradition we all grew up with in our different countries.
This time I prepared a simpler menu than usual:

  • Cucumber and butter sandwiches
  • Watercress sandwiches (I wasn’t crazy about these)
  • Chicken salad sandwiches
  • Oatmeal cake
  • Pound cake with fresh strawberries (picked the day before) and cream
    Lotty brought a salad and cookies, and Vienna, Frank and Regina brought cookies and biscotti as well.
    Later they measured my kitchen, to start the process of designing a new one.
    Michaela stayed for tea with us. She wanted to, mostly so she could eat the yummy things we had, but she grew bored pretty quickly. She’s still only 5. She helps me a lot in the kitchen, though 🙂

  • Bahraini, Bruneian and Acadian Menus up

    Available at:
    http://www.marga.org/food/int/bahrain/
    http://www.marga.org/food/int/brunei/
    http://www.marga.org/food/int/acadia/