So Much On My Plate – Artichokes

Img_1799I had hoped to recreate Carciofi Alla Guidea, pictured here, which is a deep-fried artichoke I enjoyed in Rome on my recent trip, enjoyed in restaurants in the Jewish ghettoes of Rome.

Somehow my efforts were not quite so beautiful as what you see here.  The recipes I researched had two quite different methods, so if you want to try them you can look at this one at Epicurious, and this one at ItalianMade.com.

Img_1787 There’s a great reference page on artichokes here, complete with a little video of trimming the artichoke which doesn’t really get into the removing the choke part. The trimmed artichokes pictured here at a Roman market are so young you don’t even have to remove the chokes, because they haven’t formed yet.

Img_1807 I also braised some artichokes in chicken stock, which came out alright, but nowhere near the big, yet tender and flavourful artichokes we had in Rome.Are you picking up on a theme?  The best artichokes to eat whole, whether braised or deep-fried, are young and fresh.

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It’s quite a chore to find them here in Canada, at least this time of year.  They’re not just piled up for sale on street corners, like they were in Italy!  However, if you still want some artichoke flavour, without having to trim, de-choke and otherwise fuss, try this recipe I adapted from an appetizer I had several years ago at King Pacific Lodge in northwestern BC.  The chef at the time served it after a chilly day out on the boat fishing, so this warm dip was a perfect way to move from outside to inside with a glass of wine before dinner.  Serve on fresh slices of baguette.  The best part about this recipe is that the artichokes come from a can…and you never get any chewy and prickly parts.

Warm Artichoke Spread   

Ingredients:

1 14 oz./398 ml can artichoke hearts…not marinated!
1 tbsp. lemon juice
1 tsp. minced garlic
1/3 cup olive oil
1/3 cup pimento-stuffed green olives, chopped into small chunks
1/3 cup parmesan cheese shavings or 1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese
salt and pepper to taste

Put the artichokes, lemon juice, olive oil, and garlic into a food processor.  Process until just blended and there are no artichoke chunks left.  Transfer to microwavable bowl, and stir in the green olives, cheese and salt and pepper to taste.  Microwave the spread for a minute or two before serving to warm it up.  (it tastes best warm!)

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“Planking Secrets” contest winners and upcoming opportunities to win!

Planking_secrets_1_1Congratulations to Ron Hartman and Diane Nation!  They are the winners of a copy of Ron Shewchuk’s ‘Planking Secrets’ cookbook.  Thanks to all of you who entered.

Upcoming contests:  Tuesday, June 20th on Pacific Palate, listen in for your chance to win an entire flat of Fraser Valley strawberries!

And in a couple of weeks, a contest in which you can win one of Anthony Bourdain’s books, ranging from his first best-seller, Kitchen Confidential, to his latest collection of writing, The Nasty Bits.

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Food For Thought – Fraser Valley Part Three – Salmon and Wasabi

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Crayfish and Wasabi…oh yeah, and coho salmon.  This week on Food For Thought, a visit to a land-based salmon farm where waste water is used to raise crayfish and irrigate wasabi, Japanese horseradish.

Img_1933 The wasabi root is grated or macerated to produce a greenish paste, that has much more flavour than you get from that toothpaste style-stuff you get at most Japanese restaurants, which is made up of regular horseradish powder, not wasabi.  Bruce Swift, of Swift Aquaculture, irrigates his wasabi and his watercress with waste water from his coho salmon tanks.

Img_1934Bruce is part of the Agassiz Circle Farm tour.  Check it out!  To listen to my documentary in streaming RealAudio, click here.

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Pacific Palate – Fraser Valley pt. 2, cheese

Debramakingcheese Tuesday on Pacific Palate I paid a visit to The Farmhouse Natural Cheeses in Agassiz.  We tasted brie, caemembert and blue cheese style offerings.  Yummy!

Farmhouse Natural Cheese is part of the Agassiz Farm Circle Tour, a great day trip from Vancouver, or you can stay somewhere overnight like I did, at the Harrison Beach Hotel, a relatively new property that has fantastic views and is right on the beach at Harrison Lake.

Oh, and if you can’t make it out to the Valley but you’d still like to try some of the cheeses, you can find a selection of them at the Les Amis Du Fromage locations in Vancouver and West Vancouver.

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Food For Thought – Fraser Valley Part Two-The Farm House Natural Cheeses

Farmer_outstanding_in_his_field Now that’s a cow!  This week on Food For Thought I featured George Boyes and Debra Amrein-Boyes, owners and operators of The Farm House Natural Cheeses in Agassiz.  They talked about their decision to sell off some milk quota in order to save the family farm and diversify their operation.

George_and_calf George and Debra treat their cows like princesses, and George’s knowledge of breeding and what he should feed the cows to gain optimal results in cheese production is essential to their success.

I loved the cheeses I tried, including some goat’s milk cheese they currently make with animals they own but are pastured elsewhere.  They’re in the midst of moving the goats onto the farm to centralize operations.  Debra also makes butter from the cow’s milk, but I didn’t get to taste any while I was there, because, as George says, ‘it’s as scarce as hen’s teeth!’

The Farm House Natural Cheeses is part of the District of Kent’s Circle Farm Tour of Agassiz.  If you can’t make it out to the Fraser Valley from Vancouver, you can also find a pretty good selection of Debra’s cheeses at les amis du FROMAGE in Vancouver.  To listen to today’s program in streaming Real Audio click click here.

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Pacific Palate – Hazelnuts

Hazelnuts If you’re looking for the ‘Planking Secrets’ contest page, click here.  This week on Pacific Palate, I talked about hazelnuts, specifically those that come from Canadian Hazelnuts in Agassiz.

The farmer, who was a hazelnut ‘hobby farmer’ up until a few years ago, is Pentti Hanninen, a former Air Canada pilot who purchased a large hazelnut farm and processing plant a few years ago, and is now the single largest hazelnut producer in BC.  At the shop at the plant, you can purchase all kinds of organic hazelnut products, including hazelnut oil and chocolate-hazelnut spread, just to name a couple. 

Canadian Hazelnut:  6682 Loughheed (#7) Highway  604-796-2136

e: canadianhazelnut AT telus.net

The plant and orchard are part of the Agassiz Circle Farm Tour in the District of Kent, and the tour is an easy day trip from Vancouver. But you might want to make a weekend of it and like I did, stay at the Harrison Beach Hotel at Harrison Lake.  Thanks to general manager Matthew Lynam for his great hospitality, and apparently his son is a big fan of mine!

I made a recipe for the show this morning but I wasn’t that happy with it so I won’t reproduce it exactly here.  It was from a book I picked up in Oregon, North America’s largest hazelnut producing region, called Hazelnuts & More Cookbook, by Lucy Gerspacher. 

The recipe I made called for chopped hazelnuts to be combined with chopped green onions, then coated onto fresh oysters that you have already dipped in egg, then flour. Then you fry them in butter and olive oil until crisp.  I don’t think I ground the hazelnuts finely enough, and ended up with quite a mess in the frypan, although the oysters tasted pretty good, I’m not giving this recipe the Pacific Palate Test Kitchen ‘stamp of approval’.

In fact, many of the recipes in the book seem to be of the sort, ‘hmmm, let’s see what classic dishes we can make, then add hazelnuts to at the last minute.’

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