Compound butter and flavored olive oil. Make some ahead, freeze it or fridge it, and turn Plain Anything into an Amazing Something with a tablespoon or two. Pork chops, chicken breasts, fish fillets, baked potatoes, steamed broccoli, rice, pasta, scrambled eggs...it is astounding what you can do with this stuff.
In general, I'd use the oil and clarified butter to cook in and the compound butters and chimichurri to finish a cooked dish.
Mojo de Ajo
Makes about 2 cups
Thank you to Jason and Michelle for this one!
2 large heads garlic, cloves peeled and smashed slightly
1 - 1 1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 cup fresh lime juice
red pepper flakes (optional)
Heat oven to 325F. Stir together garlic, oil and salt in a baking dish small enough to keep the garlic submerged in the oil (9x5 works). Bake 45-55 minutes. Add lime juice and return to the oven for 20 minutes. Remove and mash garlic into a coarse puree. Add red pepper flakes to taste, if desired. Store in a pint jar in a cool, dry place (I keep mine in the fridge and take it out a few minutes before cooking to let the oil liquify)
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Showing posts with label olive oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label olive oil. Show all posts
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Egg Substitutes & Olive Oil Cake
Thanks to the Midwest Icepocalypse plus a "light" snow that's put 5" on my driveway, I am snowed in and out of eggs. A few moments on the Googles, however, offered a potential baking solution to the no-egg situation using ingredients I have, ground flaxseed and water, with the promise of "light, fluffy cakes!!"
I decided to test this proposed mixture on Giada deLaurentiis' Almond Citrus Olive Oil Cake since I am also nearly out of butter (I'm also subbing dried fruit for almonds because...surprise!...I'm out of those too). The use of flaxseed instead of eggs, in combination with the olive oil, should make this a fairly heart-healthy cake as well...apropos since today is Go Red For Women Day. Serendipity!
The results are mixed...it's a good moist cake with a nutty, not-oversweet taste, but not surprisingly the slice doesn't hold together well. The cake broke slightly in turning it out, so it looks rather "rustic" LOL Probably baking in a springform pan for a few minutes past the toothpick-comes-out-dry stage would solve that problem. In any case, the two-year-old taste tester scarfed it down, so it's a winner in spite of the aesthetic shortcomings.
Finished product:
The extra bonus of this recipe is using my frozen stash of citrus zest (a prep-ahead freezer staple) and my husband's stash of ground flax. And the double-extra bonus...the accompanying compote recipe uses orange blossom water,one of those ingredients that I bought because I needed 2 tbsp for a recipe and am now constantly on the lookout for ways to use it up. Thanks to my on-hand ingredients, this cake has literally taken less than 10 minutes to whip up.
So here is my egg-less version of Giada's cake...
Cake:
To make the citrus compote: Stir the orange peel, blossom water, and 2 tablespoons of accumulated juices from the segmented fruit in a small bowl to blend. Arrange the orange and grapefruit segments decoratively in a wide shallow bowl. Pour the blossom water mixture over. Cover and let stand 15 minutes for the flavors to blend.
The cake after the liquid combination step:
In the oven:
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I decided to test this proposed mixture on Giada deLaurentiis' Almond Citrus Olive Oil Cake since I am also nearly out of butter (I'm also subbing dried fruit for almonds because...surprise!...I'm out of those too). The use of flaxseed instead of eggs, in combination with the olive oil, should make this a fairly heart-healthy cake as well...apropos since today is Go Red For Women Day. Serendipity!
The results are mixed...it's a good moist cake with a nutty, not-oversweet taste, but not surprisingly the slice doesn't hold together well. The cake broke slightly in turning it out, so it looks rather "rustic" LOL Probably baking in a springform pan for a few minutes past the toothpick-comes-out-dry stage would solve that problem. In any case, the two-year-old taste tester scarfed it down, so it's a winner in spite of the aesthetic shortcomings.
Finished product:
So here is my egg-less version of Giada's cake...
Cake:
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup sugar
- 3 tablespoons ground flax
- 1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon water
- 2 teaspoons orange zest
- 2 teaspoons lemon zest
- 1/4 cup whole milk
- 3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 2/3 cup sliced almonds, toasted, coarsely crumbled
Citrus Compote:
- 2 tablespoons grated orange peel
- 3/4 teaspoon orange blossom water, optional
- 3 oranges, segmented
- 2 pink grapefruits, segmented
To make the citrus compote: Stir the orange peel, blossom water, and 2 tablespoons of accumulated juices from the segmented fruit in a small bowl to blend. Arrange the orange and grapefruit segments decoratively in a wide shallow bowl. Pour the blossom water mixture over. Cover and let stand 15 minutes for the flavors to blend.
The cake after the liquid combination step:
In the oven:
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Labels:
"what do i do with",
cake,
citrus,
egg substitute,
flax,
flaxmeal,
flaxseed,
olive oil,
orange blossom water,
prep-ahead,
zest
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