Monday, February 6, 2012

Playing with Poached Eggs


Cheesy Grits with Poached Eggs
I was watching one of my favorite cooking shows, 5 Ingredient Fix with Claire Robinson. She has brunch episodes sometimes and I watched a recorded episode where she made deep fried poached eggs over heirloom tomatoes. They were breaded and then rolled in panko before being lightly deep fried and they looked so good. I will try them another day, but yesterday morning I went for a slight variation of one of our favorite weekend breakfasts. I made cheesy grits with a soft poached egg on top. It was quite the treat. Even though I don't know how to poach eggs in water and I use silicone poaching pods that you put in boiling water because I'm a cheater.

This afternoon as I was deciding what to make for dinner, I took out Rustica and started to make some decisions. One thing that I noticed is that Spanish home cooking is a slow process. Most recipes cook for 30 minutes to 90 minutes. I did let my short ingredient list rule fly out the window to try this recipe out. The recipe was called Sopa De Tomate Al Camino, Tomato and Cumin Soup. Here was the recipe (with my slight variations):

Spanish Tomato and Cumin Soup
Heat some olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add 1 red onion (diced) and a pinch of salt and cook until translucent. Add 1 chopped red pepper and 2 fine sliced garlic, turn heat to low, cover and cook for ~40 minutes. Stir in 2 lbs diced fresh tomatoes and 2 cups of water and simmer for 30 minutes. Add 2 tsp superfine sugar, 1/2 tsp of paprika and 1/2 tsp of cumin. The recipe called for smoked paprika and sea salt, but I could only find regular paprika so I used what I could and used my North Market Spices smoked salt instead. I think this gave me the desired flavor. I used about 1 tsp of the smoked salt. After the soup had cooked for a while, about 15 minutes, and ran the soup through a food processor. After returning the soup to the pan and heating to a simmer, I added the eggs. Crack the eggs in a bowl and slide them into the pan along the edges and the eggs poach in the soup, giving them a delicious consistency and flavor. Poach for about 3 minutes for runny eggs (just the way we like them!) and gently spoon the eggs into the bowls. Ladle in the soup and serve with toasted baguette slices. The whole thing was awesome, but breaking the poached eggs in the soup gave it such a fantastic eggy taste that just can't be beat! I also know that I need to get a hand immersion blender because pouring things into the food processor and then back into the pan is too much of a pain.

Spanish Inspired Broth
I know that the chefs all say not to be afraid of spices, but I am still a little afraid. Especially since I am still unfamiliar with most of the spices. The paprika was complete unfamiliar to me, never used it before in my life. The cumin is still slightly unfamiliar to me, I have only used it in one other recipe before and I under-spiced then too. One of these days I will be comfortable with spices and I won't under-spice. Cooking with salt is a new experience for me too since I don't tend to do it very much.

Spanish Inspired Tilapia
Also for dinner, I made a Spanish inspired tilapia. I took some flavors that I read about in my cookbook and made up this recipe:
Make a broth with 1/2 cup water, 2-3 bay leaves, 1/4 tsp paprika, 1/4 tsp smoked salt with garlic, sprinkle of garlic powder and onion powder. I cooked the tilapia in the broth for 5 or so minutes, until cooked through, flipping once.

Dinner was so good that Nathan couldn't stop telling me about it. He said I could charge for it ;)

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