Pickles are everywhere at 401 in Santa Fe – and they are just one of many delights

By Karen Peterson / For the Journal

Named for its address on S. Guadalupe, 401 is the latest addition to Santa Fe’s company of fine dining establishments. Welcome it is, too: we enjoyed a recent dinner laden with house-made goodies of all descriptions, at prices on the lower side of its fine-dining competition.

Somebody in 401’s kitchen must love pickles, because a mad assortment of them, all house-made, sparkles across the menu. We like pickles, too, and were quite dazzled by the array of vinegar-treated fruits and vegetables that appeared in 401’s pâté-and-pickle appetizer ($15).

Not that the pâté was any less intriguing: 401 delivers two varieties on the plate. One, the standard chicken-liver mousse, was very good, but the other, a pâté de campagne en croute, was so interesting we dispatched the waiter to the kitchen to find out about the ingredients.

Duck liver and calamata olives, he reported. The result was a darker and earthier version of this chunky cousin of the mousse, with the olives giving the whole an unexpected taste twist. The pastry case was appropriately flaky, too.

Pickled cherries were a dazzling foil to this meaty starter, as was the sweeter, but still tart, orange peel. Pickled raisins? Yes! Pickled beets, peppers, pickled onions, pickled Persian cucumber slices and pickled asparagus spears rounded out the selections. All were excellent, with the single exception of the asparagus, which we found too sour and un-nuanced for our taste.

We were quite taken with the “mustard caviar” atop the mousse, though – we took it to be straight-ahead brined mustard seed, an imaginative take on the obligatory complement to any respectable pâté.

In a similar vein, my companion chose the toast du jour ($9). Crostini appear to be a specialty here and vary daily. The Friday we dined, a chunky and very excellent smoked salmon was felicitously paired with whipped feta.

We might also have chosen pan-roasted peaches with pepitas and balsamic vinegar, an heirloom tomato salad with goat cheese and mint or a melon salad featuring smoked lemon oil, gorgonzola and basil from the lengthy and intriguing list of starters. Steak tartare was on the list, too, as was a Caesar salad featuring duck-fat croutons.

In fact, it might be more fun to assemble supper from 401’s lengthy list of starters, since it is longer by 50 percent than the list of main courses. The latter range from three kinds of pasta to lamb chops, steak frites and a daily fish preparation, which on the night we dined was soft-shelled crab.

Having just returned from a lengthy stay on the Pacific Northwest seaboard, I opted for one of the menu standards, fresh pasta with wild mushrooms in cream laced with Marsala ($18). My companion, in an unadventurous and carnivorous mood, opted for the steak frites ($28).

The pasta was billed as linguine, but more resembled fresh pappardelle. I like the latter better and was quite pleased. The cream sauce with its hint of nuts and slightly fruity undertone, courtesy of a judicious dollop of Marsala, was similarly delicious, and there was a generous and variegated handful of meaty mushrooms laced throughout. Lovely.

My guest pronounced her steak excellent and, judging from my sample bite, it was indeed. It was absolutely perfectly cooked to her medium-rare choice, well spiced with a crust of black pepper and very tender. The frites were perfect, too, and proper American “French fries,” not the skinny shoestring variety often served up.

The accompanying red cabbage slaw, spiced with more of those pickled raisins, showed the kitchen pickle-meister at work again. It was freshly crunchy and a nice foil to the meat, I thought. My guest was less intrigued.

We were ready for dessert, and dessert there was. As recited by the waiter, the evening’s list included a chocolate mousse, lemon-ricotta cheesecake, apple galette with whipped cream and tiramisu (each $10). We opted for the latter two and were pleased, although getting ahold of that slice of tiramisu was the only wait-staff glitch of the evening. Perhaps he misunderstood, but the chocolate mousse arrived in its stead and it took some more confusion to get that, tempting as it looked, replaced.

The tiramisu was worth fighting for, however. The lightest of cake and cream layers were balanced by a coffee-soaked bottom layer and a bitter-chocolate dusted top coat of cream. It was scrumptious.

My guest was equally pleased with her galette. The free-form crust was appropriately melt-in-the-mouth, and the single layer of apples both tender and tart.

The corner space formerly occupied by the Palace Swiss Bakery is now home to 401. It isn’t fancy, whimsically decorated as it is with a herd of dancing zebras across one wall and an eclectic mix of photographs. The service is attentive and knowledgeable, the kitchen prompt.

401’s dining room was pleasantly packed the night we dined, but we were pleased to note that the tables are well-spaced and conversation at normal volume was very pleasantly possible throughout. A soon-to-come patio promises more space.

Chef Laura Licona, a New Mexico native lately returned from Seattle, has started small; as we noted, the menu has nine appetizers and just six entrees, three of them pasta variations. We’d like to see the entrees expanded a little, delicious though they all sound, and trust that, as 401 matures (it opened in June), the choices will grow.

 

World’s hottest chilli pepper goes on sale in Ireland

The Carolina Reaper measures 1.5m Scoville units – 400 times hotter than the jalapeno

By Marie Claire Digby   –   The Irish Times

Moruga Scorpion, Komodo Dragon, Carolina Reaper… there’s a theme running through the names of these foods, so it’s perhaps no surprise that eating them can lead to a range of symptoms from a runny nose to seizures, heart attack and even death.

Yes, it’s competitive chilli time again, with the hottest variety in the world going on sale in Tesco Ireland branches this week, and the Big Grill Fest in Herbert Park, Dublin 4 (August 11th-14th)  inviting competitors to prove their mettle in hot chilli and spicy wings eating competitions.

The Carolina Reaper is the hottest chilli in the world, according to Guinness World Records, a title previously held by the Moruga Scorpion, and you can buy packs of two or three of the fiery fruits for €1.49 in 50 Tesco stores around the country.

They, and the Komodo Dragon variety introduced last year and brought back “due to popular demand” according to supermarket chain, are part of a super-hot chilli pepper range that is proving surprisingly popular with Irish consumers, with sales expected to reach 5,000 during the season.

They are grown in Bedfordshire by the UK’s largest producer of chilli peppers, Salvatore Genovese.

To put their heat potential in context, the Carolina Reaper, which measures an average 1.5 million Scoville units (the universal heat measurement scale for chillies), is an estimated 400 times hotter than the jalapeno. The Komodo Dragon isn’t far behind with its 1.4 million Scoville heat rating. The chillies will be sold in the supermarkets with a blue flash label warning of their potency – just in case.

“The Carolina Reaper’s fiery fusion combined with fruity taste is a sensation like no other. This chilli is only for those who can really handle the heat; only the smallest slice is needed to add an explosion of flavour to any meal,” says Tesco Ireland fresh food buyer Joe Casey.

Unless you’re out to prove something, it might be best to heed Casey “smallest slice” suggestion, or use a whole, unchopped one in a curry and remove it before serving.

Though that approach won’t get you in the record books. Last April Wayne Algenio of Jamaica, Queens, ate a staggering 22 Carolina Reapers in 60 seconds to set a new world record at the NYC Hot Sauce Expo in Brooklyn. “You eat as many as you can in a minute and then after that you have to stand there for another minute without vomiting or drinking any liquids. After I stopped, I could feel the burn in my throat,” said Algenio, who soothed his pain with milk, lots of it.

At least his after effects were confined to a sore throat – two people were taken to hospital after a ‘world’s hottest chilli competition’ at an Edinburgh curry house in 2011, and reports said that many of the contestants dropped out “after witnessing the first 10 diners vomiting, collapsing, sweating and panting”.

Let’s hope there’s nothing as unseemly in the genteel surrounds of Herbert Park next month, where, according to the Big Grill Fest, the hot chilli and spicy wings eating contests are a popular part of the programme and attract about 20 or so hardy souls to take part in a “last man or woman standing” showdown.

Let pickled cucumbers be key players on the plate

By Arthi Subramaniam / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Give pickled cucumbers the credit they deserve. Tucking them beside sandwiches is so unimaginative and such an easy way out. That’s what the lazy would do.

How about getting a little imaginative and using them in a zingy Caesar dressing along with anchovies and minced garlic or in a classic sherry vinaigrette to elevate a simple green salad. Or substitute the sour cukes for capers in a lemon-butter sauce.

Minced pickle can add a good punch to garlic aioli or tartar sauce to be drizzled over a pollock or haddock fillet. And there’s no reason to hold them back from appearing in a classic Hollandaise of eggs yolks and butter to serve with the Sunday brunch staple — eggs Benedict.

There’s more to pickles than just being crunchy and sour. They can be salty, vinegary, spicy and sweet, too. So they help to round out the taste when added to potato salad or savory cornbread muffins, and even chicken roasted with shallots and lemon wedges.

This month, Kraft Heinz came out with two pickle flavors in 16-ounce bottles featuring the Heinz Keystone logo. The Sweet & Spicy Chips have a sweet brine and at the same time gets a kick from crushed red peppers while the Spicy Garlic Chips are packed with garlic slices and red pepper flakes.

As their name suggests, they both have a good amount of bite to them, and so are perfect for a quesadilla filled with burger fixings such as fried onions, tomato and cheese or tossing into a summer slaw with thin strips of broccoli stems, carrots and red peppers or for hot dogs stuffed with wasabi paste and cabbage.

The spicy chips also work magic in a mac ’n’ cheese loaded with Monterey Jack, cheddar, chevre and prosciutto or in a grilled cheese sandwich layered with tomatoes, grilled onions and aged cheddar or as a topping for toast that includes bechamel sauce cooked with pieces of ham and Gruyere cheese. In each case, the pickled cukes cut through the cheese and assert themselves without shouting.

Pickles have had a place in history dating back to the Mesopotamians, who are believed to be the earliest picklers. It is said that Cleopatra thought that pickles helped her stay healthy and beautiful and Julius Caesar hailed them for bringing strength and energy. The story goes that Napoleon Bonaparte ordered them served at every meal, and some believe that he lost the Battle of Waterloo because the cook forgot the pickles that day.

Christopher Columbus is credited with bringing pickles to the New World, and they have stayed ever since.

Pickled cucumbers have become staples at sandwich shops and burger joints, but instead of having them play second fiddle as an accompaniment or garnish, let them be a key team player.

Arthi Subramaniam: asubramaniam@post-gazette.com, 412-263-1494 or on Twitter @arthisub.

Broccoli Slaw

PG tested

Don’t toss the broccoli stems because they work really well in a slaw. The pickle chips and pickle juice help to cut the strong smell from the stems. It’s important to refrigerate the slaw for at least an hour before serving so that the flavors can meld.

1½ cups tender broccoli stems, julienned

1½ cups carrots, julienned

1/2 red pepper, seeded and julienned

1 cup Heinz Sweet & Spicy Pickle Chips, cut into strips

1/4 cup mayonnaise

2 tablespoons sour cream

1/4 cup pickle juice

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Combine broccoli stems, carrots, red pepper and pickle chips in a large bowl.

In a small bowl, combine mayonnaise, sour cream and pickle juice together. Add salt and pepper to taste and mix well.

Add creamy mixture to the vegetables and combine.

Refrigerate for 1 hour before serving.

Makes 8 servings.

— Arthi Subramaniam

Pickled Quesadilla

PG tested

Fill a quesadilla with ingredients that usually accompany a burger, and the result is delicious.

4 whole wheat tortillas

3 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese, divided

2 cups fried onions, divided

2 cups Heinz Spicy Garlic Pickle Chips, chopped finely, divided

1/2 cup finely chopped tomatoes, divided

2 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided

Place a tortilla on a cutting board and scatter 1½ cups of cheese on top.

Then sprinkle 1 cup fried onions, 1 cup pickles and ¼ cup tomatoes evenly over the cheese.

Place another tortilla over the filling and gently press.

In a large, nonstick pan over medium heat, add 1 tablespoon oil. Place tortilla in the pan and cook until both sides are golden brown.

Remove tortilla from pan and cut into 8 wedges. Repeat the process with the other 2 tortillas.

Makes 16 wedges.

— Arthi Subramaniam

Spicy Pickle Dip

PG tested

Garlic pickle chips and red pepper have a way of getting along, and when combined with cream cheese, Greek yogurt and hot wing sauce they don’t know when to stop partying.

1 cup Heinz Spicy Garlic Pickle Chips, chopped finely

1/2 red bell pepper, seeded and diced finely

1 package (8-ounce) cream cheese, softened

1/2 cup Greek yogurt

1/2 cup Parmesan cheese

1½ teaspoons hot wing sauce

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

2 tablespoons pickle juice

Combine pickles and red pepper in a small bowl.

In another bowl, beat cream cheese, yogurt, cheese and hot wing sauce together with a hand-mixer, until they are well combined. Season with salt and black pepper, and beat for 1 more minute.

Fold in vegetables to the cream cheese mixture. Add pickle juice and mix well. Taste and add more salt and pepper if need be.

Refrigerate 30 minutes. Serve with pita or tortilla chips.

Makes 15 servings.

— Arthi Subramaniam

Wasabi-and-Savoy Cabbage Hot Dog

PG tested

The original Kraft Heinz recipe called for napa cabbage but I substituted savoy, which is a bit sweeter and more tender, and easier to find in the grocery store.

4 all-beef hot dogs

1 teaspoon wasabi paste

1/4 cup mayonnaise

1 tablespoon cider vinegar

1 cup finely shredded savoy cabbage

1 carrot, peeled and finely shredded

1 cup Heinz Spicy Garlic Pickle Chips, chopped, plus more for garnish

4 top-split hot dog buns, toasted

Grill or pan-fry hot dogs until heated through, 5 to 7 minutes.

Meanwhile, mix wasabi paste, mayonnaise and vinegar until blended; taste and add more vinegar or wasabi as needed. Add cabbage, carrot and chopped pickles and toss to combine.

Place 1 hot dog in each toasted hot dog bun. Top with cabbage mixture and additional pickle chips, if desired.

Serves 4.

— Gretchen McKay adapted Kraft Heinz recipe

Cheesy Pickle Pretzel Sliders

By MOLLY YEH   –   Tastemade

INGREDIENTS

  • For the burgers:

  • 1 lb ground chuck and sirloin mix

  • Kosher salt, for seasoning

  • Pepper, for seasoning

  • 8 pretzel slider buns

  • 8 slices tomato

  • 8 leaves lettuce

  • Ketchup, mustard, mayo, etc., for topping

  • For the cheesy pickles:

  • 2 kosher dill pickle spears

  • 2 slices havarti cheese

  • 2 egg roll wrappers

  • Canola or vegetable oil, for frying

LET’S GET COOKING…

  1. Divide meat into 8 equal parts and form into patties. Salt and pepper both sides. Coat the bottom of a pan with oil and heat over medium heat. Cook the burgers on each side to desired doneness.

  2. To make the pickles: pat pickle spears with paper towel to remove excess moisture. Wrap pickle in cheese, then the egg roll wrapper, sealing with water if necessary. Heat 2 inches of oil in a large saucepan to 360℉. Fry the pickles on all sides until golden brown and crispy. Transfer to a paper towel to drain. Slice each pickle into 4 slices to garnish burgers with.

  3. Toast your burger buns, if desired, and top with tomato, lettuce, meat patty, condiments, and a slice of fried cheesy pickles. Enjoy!

Polished design for candy pouch boosts product sales 500%

Little Bird Curious Confections trades in a cellophane bag with sticker for sophisticated yet fun packaging for its candied jalapeño products to gain entrance to retail venues.

A most unusual taste combination, Little Bird Curious Confections’ candied jalapeño peppers were born one day when company co-founder Sara Meyers began experimenting in the kitchen with candying everything in sight. Says husband and co-founder Corey Meyers, “We joke that we had to keep the kids out of the kitchen, or she would have candied them!”

After receiving overwhelming praise for the products from co-workers, the Meyers began selling candied jalapeño products, as well as other candied treats, at venues such as flea markets and local boutiques. But to take their product to the next level, they needed to upgrade their packaging from a cellophane bag with sticker to a professional, polished presentation. Upon meeting with creative agency BrandFire, Corey Meyers says, “the ideas just started flowing.” From there, BrandFire assumed the rebranding of the product, in addition to the package design.

Says BrandFire Director of Content & Strategy Casey Hochberg, “They were looking for something that reflected the brand story and captured their passion for making their curious confections. The name ‘Little Bird’ meant a lot to them, so we create a playful brand and modern packaging that leaned into that meaning.”

Taking a deep dive into the brand, BrandFire learned that Little Bird’s most popular product was its candied jalapeños, which comprised 80% of their revenue. “We sensed their playful, experimental energy, so we focused Little Bird’s whole business on making ‘curious confections,’ which actually helped them decide which products to develop down the road,” says Hochberg.

The Meyers gave BrandFire free rein with the design, with the understanding that they wanted something “clean, bold, and fun,” says Sara Meyers.

The new package is a flexible stand-up pouch with zipper that holds 1 to 1.5 oz of product. There are four varieties under the Fire Bites name—Dark, Milk, and White Chocolate Covered, and Candied Jalapeños—and one under the Fire Bark name, Dark Chocolate Fire Bark with Crushed Candied Jalapeños. The pouch is made from a multilayer film construction of PET/ink/aluminum/linear low-density polyethylene, is five- or six-color gravure-printed (depending on variety), and is supplied by Dura-Pack.

Providing a clean, sophisticated backdrop, the pouch has a white background. The central focus of the graphic design is the jalapeños, which Hochberg says are a bigger story than the chocolate—“a pretty universal ingredient.” She adds, “The word ‘Fire’ in both product names carries some of that story, and great product photography with serious appetite appeal helps complete it. While the bites product uses a glossy finish, the bark features a modern matte texture to differentiate the two lines, while making sure they’re perceived as the same family.

The Little Bird name—taken from Corey Meyers’ grandmother’s name Faye, which means “little bird” in Yiddish—is part of a logomark that includes a red icon that can double as a bird, or as a chili pepper, which Corey Meyers says is a talking point for everyone.

The new packaging was launched in early 2015 and since then has been picked up by nearly 45 specialty and candy stores across the Southwest and East Coast, boosting Little Bird’s sales by 500%. Its most recent product, Fire Syrup jalapeño-infused syrup in three flavors, with packaging also designed by BrandFire, was introduced in summer 2016.

Shawnee Co. Fair’s pickle eating contest tests strength and stomachs

OPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) — Shawnee County Fair goers put their stomachs to the test at this years pickle eating contest.

“The worst part is it actually takes your breath away. It’s not just hot, it takes your breath away and it’s good they give you water so you can catch your breath and keep moving,” said contestant Bobbi Luttjohn.

The idea isn’t how many, but how fast, as contestants race to see who can bare to finish their pickle first.

Winning the contest does involve a cash prize, but the grimacing faces, and weak stomachs are what keep fans and participants wanting in on the action.

“It is very popular. We get a big crowd, we get a lot of people cheering their favorite pickle eater on,” said Shawnee County Fair Association Treasurer, Karen Kelly.

Contestants ages 7 to 17 eat one classic whole dill pickle. The competition heats up for the adults who have to eat Porubsky’s special hot pickles made from their secret recipe.

“Porubsky’s donated three jars. They’ve prepared them, they’ve cut them up, cause I don’t want to touch them. They’re that hot that I wear three layers of gloves to take them out of the jar.”

As the 2015 pickle eating champion Bobbi Luttjohn says the key is perseverance.

“I think I just inhaled them as fast as I could to get the pain over quickly,” said Luttjohn.

3 Easy Recipes To Keep You Cool By The Pool

BY    –   CW33

While the heat is up this summer Roni Proter has a few easy recipes that not only look cool but will also cool you and your guests down. 

Beer is an iconic drink to have poolside or while grilling, but it can be very filling. Wine spritzers, which are lower in alcohol and refreshingly fizzy, are a tasty alternative to beer. They won’t leave you feeling bloated.

Next up, instead of just drinking water make some Cucumber Greek Yogurt Soup. Cucumbers and yogurt both help lower body temperature. It’s also a great way to fill up on something healthy and delicious. It’s everything cooling and refreshing about Tzatziki but in a bowl of smooth soup.

Spicy foods, surprisingly, lower your body temperature and keep you cool. Roni says you can take shrimp ceviche with a little Jalapeño Ginger Beer Granita on top and make a light appetizer that will help chill you out. It has just the right amount of kick to spice up your palate.  Also, since you are eating seafood, your body won’t hold onto it like it would with a heavy burger. 

However, if you want to get your meat fix you can always add a little bacon to your guacamole dip. It’s the same coolness of guac with a hint of meat to tide you over. You can also substitute fresh veggies for chips while you’re dipping.

Shrimp and Lobster Ceviche with Jalapeño Ginger Beer Granita
1 lb Gulf shrimp, peeled and deveined (I live near the Gulf, so that’s super fresh for me, but wild caught is great too)
1 lb wild caught lobster tails
1/2 red bell pepper, chopped very fine
1/2 red onion, chopped very fine
1 large handful cilantro, chopped fine
generous slug of Extra Virgin Olive oil (chili infused oil would be great too)
juice of 5 limes
salt and pepper to taste
Directions:
Bring a pot of water to boil and salt it generously. Have an ice water bath nearby. Place the shrimp in the boiling water for 1 minute. Remove and shock in ice water. Place the whole lobster tails in the water for 3 minutes, then remove and add to ice bath. Drain the water and remove the lobster tail. Chop both shrimp and lobster into bite sized chunks, add them to a bowl. Add the rest of the ingredients, toss and cover. Chill and allow to marinate over night. Serve on tortilla chips with Jalapeño Ginger Beer Granita (recipe follows).

Jalapeno Ginger Beer Granita
1 bottle good Ginger Beer of your choice
1 jalapeno, depending on your heat preference, whole, with seeds or seeded and pith removed
1 Persian Cucumber, skin on
juice of 1 lime
salt to taste
Directions:
Combine all the ingredients in a high powered blender and completely puree. Place in a freezer safe container and freeze overnight. Then, using a fork, scrape the top until a fluffy ice forms. Place on top of each ceviche topped tortilla chip.

Chilled Cucumber Soup
10 small Persian cucumbers, sliced in 1 int pieces
5 avocadoes
1/2 red onion, roughly chopped
2 cloves garlic
2 tbsp fresh tarragon, chopped
2 tbsp fresh dill, chopped
1 cup of low fat Greek yogurt
1 cup low fat buttermilk
juice of 2 limes
generous salt and a little pepper to taste
Directions:
Place all the ingredients in a blender and blend on high until very smooth. Pour into a pitcher and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate overnight, adjust any seasoning and serve with chopped red onion and cucumbers.
Pineapple Salsa
1/2 pineapple, diced
2 small roma tomatoes, seeded and chopped
1 jalapeno, seeded and chopped fine
1/2 red onion, diced
1 cup (or more if you love cilantro like I do) cilantro, chopped
juice from 2 limes
generous salt and pepper
Directions:
Combine all the ingredients in a bowl and toss. Refrigerate for several hours and serve. I like to scoop out the flesh of the pineapple and save the spiky exterior to use as my bowl. It is always a big hit at parties! This salsa would be delicious simply with chips, or as a sweet accompaniment to grilled pork, spicy beef tacos or even chicken.

3 Ways to Boost Your Menu with 1 Ingredient

First used as a way to preserve foods without refrigeration, pickled vegetables have been a part of the human diet for millennia. Yet pickled vegetables other than the ubiquitous pickled cucumber have only started to appear in American quick serves and fast casuals in the last few years as chefs are finding that this one ingredient can add value to menus in many ways.

1. Pickled vegetables add brightness and excitement to dishes

One reason to add pickled vegetables to a menu is that they add unique flavor, texture, and color to almost any dish.

Robert Kabakoff, executive chef for Bruegger’s Bagels says that the brightening qualities of pickled vegetables are one of the reasons he uses them on the chain’s sandwiches, such as the Harvest Turkey Sandwich and the Bistro Burger, which both feature pickled onions.

“You can pull so much flavor from pickled vegetables that adds another layer to your sandwich,” Kabakoff says. “If you think about our food, you have pastrami, Muenster cheese, and things that are big, rich flavors, and you need that pickled vegetable to give you that little pop of relief.”

Celebrity chef Bobby Flay is also using pickled onions to cut through bold flavors, as well as to add texture and color, to the New Mexico burger at his fast-casual chain called Bobby’s Burger Palace.

“The main reason we added pickled onions to the New Mexico,” Flay says, “is that pickled flavor cuts through the richness of queso sauce. Secondly, it adds crunch. And thirdly, we eat with our eyes too, and the magenta color is magnificent.”

2. Customization options are endless

Another reason pickled vegetables are gaining momentum as a trend is that they can be customized to capture the exact taste that chefs want for individual dishes.

As processes around pickling continue to improve, the availability of quick-pickled custom products that only take three or four days to produce, as opposed to the month needed for traditional pickling, means that customization options are virtually limitless.

“What’s pushing the pickled vegetable trend are uniquely flavored brines along with utilizing different varieties of vegetables, not just the basics like dill pickles or onions,” says Mike Leccese, director of culinary for Haliburton International Foods. “Root vegetables, fruits, legumes, and dried chilies are new ingredients that are hitting the brine.”

But chefs can choose more than just the ingredients that are pickled. They can also work with suppliers to customize unique brines to give pickled vegetables and fruits additional variety.

“The brine is traditionally water, sugar, salt—very basic, but we’re moving into diverse flavor profiles that are not necessarily over-indulgent with vinegars,” Leccese says. “Sometimes we use citrus juices, such as orange, pineapple, and lime. We also use vegetable and chili purees to help add body and spicy notes to brines.”

3. They can help your budget

In addition to elevating dishes, the versatile ways pickled vegetables can be used on a menu means operators can save money on ingredient orders. Pickled vegetables can be used in sandwiches, salads, and a variety of dishes, but even the brine can be used as an ingredient in other offerings.

For example, Leccese says, “We can customize a brine that could later be used in a vinaigrette, sauce, or as the curing liquid for ceviche.”

By multi-purposing the brine and ingredients across a variety of dishes, operators don’t have to order as many products to create a diverse menu.

As pickled vegetables continue growing in popularity, the innovations will continue along with them, and if history is any indicator of a food’s future performance, the long history of pickling means this trend will not be going away any time soon.

by Peggy Carouthers   –   QSR Magazine

Cheese on the grill? It’s easier than you think.

Camembert, jelly and jalapeño go great with crackers

You just have to trust the process.

When I saw a recipe for smoked Camembert with jalapeños and jelly in Steven Raichlen’s book “Project Smoke,” I knew I had to try it, especially since I was already planning on smoking some salmon.

All of the ingredients are in the name of the dish. Get an 8-ounce wheel of Camembert (or brie), a jar of pepper or apricot jelly (or jam of your choice) and a whole jalapeño stemmed, seeded and cut into thin slivers.

And you need a cedar plank and your favorite crackers or toasted bread to put the cheese on.

All together, the ingredients for this dish cost about $12 at the grocery store. Aside from the cheese, you can get multiple servings out of the ingredients. This is a huge bargain, because this appetizer easily could sell for $20 or more at a restaurant.

Dealing with the cedar plank requires the most effort. Soak it in water for a good hour to keep it from catching fire, and prep your standard grill and get it hot (around 400 degrees).

Char each side of the plank for a couple minutes and don’t leave the grilling area at all while doing this. Even wet, the plank picked up a flicker of flame.

Raichlen says the charring process is optional, but if you have the time, it’s a silly step to skip. It smells amazing.

And I wasn’t a big fan of wasting a full charcoal grill setup for five minutes of plank roasting, so I tossed some asparagus on there indirect to add another menu item.

Prepping the cheese is a one-minute process. Place it on the center of the plank, and coat the top with a heavy layer of sweet stuff (I used apricot jam instead of pepper jelly) and liberally scatter the slivered jalapeños on top.

If you want to get to eating the cheese quickly, Raichlen actually recommends putting it in the high heat of the grill you used to char the planks with some smoke chips. It will be ready in about 10 minutes.

Since I was using my water smoker that caps out at about 250 degrees, the cheese took about 35 minutes before it was finished. When the cheese swells and has a slight jiggle to it, it’s ready.

You can’t get a better serving plate than a hot cedar plank. Raichlen’s marriage of the aroma provided with the plank and the smoke penetration into the Camembert is tough to beat. Add in the jam and this dish could work easily as a dessert.

The cheese was intended to be a prolonged appetizer for the salmon and asparagus, but my wife and I devoured it all in less than five minutes.

My only word of caution was that the Camembert oozed out a bit after that first bite, so be prepared for some quick repair with extra crackers.

Also, you probably have to make at least two of these if hosting a gathering with four or more people.

And even though the high-heat cooking method is primarily listed in the recipe, doing it on the smoker will allow a prolonged margin of error before the cheese gets away from you.

This one now will be a regular offering at Chuck’s Patio Bar and Grill.

 

Crispy, golden, flavorful: That’s Terrine’s pickle-brined fried chicken. Here’s the recipe.

By Noelle CarterContact Reporter   –   Los Angeles Times

Done right, fried chicken is a beautiful thing. Unpretentious as this classic comfort food might be, there’s a definite art to it: a tender piece of meat, delicately seasoned and lightly dredged with a dusting of flour, then baptized in a pool of sizzling fat to crisp, golden perfection. And while fans of fried chicken may disagree on the method, we can all agree that it requires technique, time and dedication — fried chicken is not “fast food.”

At Terrine restaurant on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles, chef Kris Morningstar offers his take on the classic with a pickle-brined fried chicken. Morningstar doesn’t brine the chicken in actual pickle juice; rather, he brines chicken thighs overnight in a mixture of pickling spice, garlic and fresh dill — at the restaurant, he also injects the thighs with brine for added flavor — and then coats them with a cayenne-flavored cornstarch slurry. After dredging them in a spiced flour coating, he rests the thighs on a rack in the refrigerator for an hour; the extra drying time makes for an extra-crisp crust. Morningstar serves the chicken over a bed of warm grits drizzled with maple syrup. The chicken has just the right amount of savory tang, the pickle brine playing nicely against the sweetness of the maple.

TERRINE’S PICKLE-BRINED FRIED CHICKEN

2 hours, 20 minutes, plus brining time. Serves 6 to 8.

BRINE

2 quarts water

1/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon (125 grams) kosher salt

¼ cup plus 1 heaping teaspoon (62.5 grams) sugar

6 tablespoons pickling spice

1 head garlic, split

1 ounce fresh dill

3 ½ pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken

1. In a heavy pot, combine the water, salt, sugar, spice, garlic and dill and bring to a simmer over high heat. Remove from heat and cool completely.

2. Place the thighs in a non-reactive container. Pour the brine over the thighs, keeping the thighs submerged, cover and refrigerate overnight.

PICKLE-BRINED FRIED CHICKEN

About 1 ½ cups cornstarch

2 teaspoons cayenne powder, or to taste, divided

1 cup water

1 ½ teaspoons paprika

1 ½ teaspoons Old Bay seasoning

1 ½ teaspoons ground black pepper

2 cups Wondra flour

1 ½ cups all-purpose flour

1 1/4 teaspoons kosher salt

Brined chicken thighs

Canola or vegetable oil, for frying

1. In a large bowl, whisk together the cornstarch, 1 teaspoon cayenne powder (or to taste), and the water to form a slurry. Set aside.

2. In a separate large bowl, whisk together the remaining teaspoon cayenne, the paprika, Old Bay seasoning, pepper, flours and salt.

3. Remove the chicken from the brine and pat dry. Dip a piece into the slurry. Shake the excess slurry off the piece and dredge in the flour to coat completely. Place the chicken on a wire rack set over a rimmed baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining pieces. Refrigerate the chicken, uncovered, for 1 hour.

4. When the chicken is almost ready, heat a deep-fryer or heavy pot filled at least 3 inches deep with oil to a temperature of 325 degrees.

5. Fry the chicken, 2 to 3 pieces at a time, until the skin is crisp and golden-brown, the meat is white and firm and a thermometer inserted reads 165 degrees, 8 to 12 minutes. Drain the chicken on a rack, and serve immediately.

Each of 8 servings: Calories 641; Protein 31 grams; Carbohydrates 58 grams; Fiber 1 gram; Fat 31 grams; Saturated fat 6 grams; Cholesterol 152 mg; Sugar 1 gram; Sodium 882 mg

Note: Adapted from a recipe by chef Kris Morningstar of Terrine restaurant in Los Angeles.