Showing posts with label Bacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bacon. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2012

Bacon Tomato Lentil Pasta

These lentils look so pretty!
 Things I love about this recipe:
(1)   It’s got bacon (and no….I do not have a bacon addiction ….I’ve been tested...)
(2)    I love the bitter flavor of arugula
(3)    The lentils make the pasta seem creamy without actually adding any cream (healthy-ish, right?)
a.     I've also heard that lentils are good for you (wikipedia knows everything!)
(4)   The ingredient list is pretty simple...
a.     Whenever a recipe calls for 'pasta', I try to use brown rice pasta (as a general rule, I 'try' to 'healthify' the rest of my diet in an effort to balance out the amount of bacon that I consume....)
b.     If arugula isn't your cup of tea, you can supplement with flat leaf parsley (...now, I am not trying to tell you what to do here, but I would really 'recommend' giving arugula another try... )

I adapted this recipe from one I found in a Martha Stewart magazine a million years ago.  It's a good hearty winter pasta and makes for good leftovers. 

(Although I don't always do this....even though I should) I recommend reading the directions in its entirety prior to starting the recipe.  In order to minimize the cooking time,  you can caramelize (- this is possibly the most overused word in my Dad's vocabulary....he'll be excited that it made an appearance on my blog...) the onions and boil the lentils at the same time.

Bacon Tomato Lentil Pasta
(Makes 4-6 servings as a main course)

Ingredients:
4-5 slices smoky bacon, diced
2 large onions, thinly sliced (about 4 cups)
Salt & pepper
12 ounces tomatoes, cored and diced (2 cups) (In the winter, I use the unsalted canned ones – I think 'Unico' is the brand)
3/4 cup lentils, rinsed and picked over for the hard/sandy bits
1 bay leaf
Low sodium chicken or vegetable stock
12 ounces (brown rice) fusilli or another short pasta
1 bunch arugula
1/2 cup finely grated parmesan

Directions:
(1) In a large skillet over medium heat, sauté bacon pieces until crispy
When I remove the crispy bacon from the pan, I put it on a plate lined with paper towel to suck up the extra grease...
(2) Remove bacon from pan; drain out all but 2 tablespoons of bacon fat from the skillet.
(3) Add the onions and 1/2 tsp of salt; cover and cook on medium-low heat (stirring occasionally) until onions are wilted (about 20-25 minutes).
Wilted onions....
(4) Remove cover and turn heat to medium.  Cook onions, stirring often, for about 30 minutes until onions are a rich brown colour.
Caramelized onions....
(5) Add back bacon pieces and tomatoes to the skillet; cook for about 5 minutes more stirring often.
(6) (while the onions are wilting/browning) In a medium sauce pan, cover lentils with chicken stock by 1 inch.  Add the bay leaf to pot.
(7) Bring the lentils to a simmer; then cover and let cook for 20-25 minutes - until they are tender, but still hold their shape.
(8) Once the lentils are done, drain them and mix into the onion/bacon/tomato mixture.  Season for salt and pepper.
Onion/bacon/tomato/lentil mixture....
(9) Cook pasta in salted water until tender; reserve 1/2 cup of pasta water, drain pasta and return the pasta to the pasta pot (this will be a good place to mix everything together).
(10) To the pasta, add the lentil mixture, 1/2 cup of parmesan cheese and the 1/2 cup of pasta water.  Toss, drizzle with a bit of olive oil (I drizzled with hazelnut oil, because I had some on hand - which added a lovely nutty flavour) and serve with more parmesan if required.
This pasta makes for good leftovers the next day....
...Should you want to make this a vegetarian dish, (1) Scrap the bacon (gasp) and use 2 tablespoons of olive oil prior to adding the onions and salt in Step 3; & (2) Use vegetable stock or water to boil the lentils in Step 7.


Happy Cooking!

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Bacon Caramel Popcorn


 

I still have bacon left over in the freezer from the Butchery and Charcuterie class that I took last November/December. 

My lovely aunt (the same one who organizes our yearly cookie exchange) sent me this recipe a couple of weeks ago as she knows I have a particular affinity for anything with bacon in it....

I love caramel popcorn.  (and I'm sure I am not the only person that finds it addictive.)

So - because of all of these things, I felt like the stars were aligning for me to make this recipe. 

Bacon Caramel Popcorn 
Adapted from Edible Canada.
(Approx. 10 servings)

Ingredients:

3/4 pound of bacon
1/3 cup of popcorn kernels
1 cup salted butter
2 cups brown sugar
1/2 cup corn syrup
Pinch of sea salt
1 tsp baking soda

Directions

(1) Finely chop the bacon and fry until crispy; Once cooked, removed bacon pieces from pan with a slotted spoon (I put mine onto a plate lined with paper towel to suck up any excess grease)
-I fry the bacon in a deep pot; which can then be used to pop the popcorn - thereby reducing the amount of dishes that need to be washed...
Mmmmmm...Crispy bacon....

(2) Reserve about 4 tablespoons of the bacon fat (supplement with butter if required); Heat the bacon fat in a large pot with a cover. 
(3) Add a few popcorn kernels to the pot and cover - Listen for the kernels to pop; Once they have popped, add the rest of the popcorn kernels;  Cover and shake occasionally until the popping stops.
(4) Put the popped corn in a deep mixing bowl...
***make sure to remove the un-popped corn kernels (this is very important - otherwise you will have a big sticky mess in the oven if that's where the un-popped (caramel covered) kernels decide to pop)***

(5) Preheat oven to 225 degrees.
(6) In a large pot, heat the butter, brown sugar, corn syrup and salt over medium-high heat (stirring occasionally) until it reaches 275 degrees on your candy thermometer.
-be very careful when handling this mixture - hot caramel will burns your skin quickly....

(7) When your candy thermometer says 275 degrees, remove caramel from heat and stir in baking soda and bacon bits...
-the baking soda will cause the caramel to double in size

 

(8) Pour the caramel over the popcorn and mix until covered.


(9) Put the caramel covered popcorn in a baking tray lined with parchment paper.
·         Step 7, 8 & 9 - try to do this quickly (and carefully) - as the caramel cools, it will harden
(10) Place in oven for an hour; Using a silicon spatula, turn caramel covered popped corn every 20 minutes to redistribute the caramel and bacon bits.  

Mmmmm...Bacon Caramel Popcorn in the oven!

(11) Remove from oven, let cool a bit before tasting (hot sugar in mouth can only lead to disaster); Add more salt if necessary.


(12) Once it's completely cooled, break into bite size pieces.

Optional - once it's cool enough to handle, but not completely hard yet, you can roll chucks into balls for presentation purposes...

***If you don't want to put in bacon (it’s beyond my why you wouldn’t want to put the bacon in), you can supplement with some roasted peanuts (like the cracker jack popcorn) in step 7***
Happy Cooking!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Makin' Bacon.

The intention for this post was to talk about the next Culinary Arts course I took, Culinary Arts II... 

...I am going to go out of sequence here a little and talk about Bacon.  I love Bacon.  All types of Bacon.  It makes me happy. 

A couple of weeks ago I started the newly offered Butchery and Charcuterie class at GBC.  I really had no idea what to expect.  I enrolled in it because butchery seemed like a good skill to have.   To my delight, I discovered that on the first day of class, (bright and early on a Saturday morning) we were 'makin' bacon'!  I was like a kid on Christmas.  I had a big goofy smile on my face for the whole class.  

First, we were given a pork belly and the ingredients to make a rub for the pork belly in order to 'dry cure' it.  After rinsing, drying and scoring the skin side of the pork belly with a knife, we massaged it with the rub and left it to cure for the week in GBC's industrial-sized fridges. 

Pork Belly Rub for Dry Curing
(for 6KL pork belly)
216g kosher salt
108g brown sugar
21g INSTA CURE NO.1

(look at that colour!  Perfection...)

The next week....
We massaged it once again with maple syrup (Mmmmm....maple syrup).  And then smoked it in an oven (@350 degrees for about 3 hours, skin side up) with wood chips. 



(see that brown stuff in the pan?  I totally stuck my finger in it....It tasted like maple-fatty-goodness)

I felt pure joy through the whole process of bacon making.  I have a feeling its because I love bacon so much.  (and no, I do not have a problem...lol)

One of the best things I found with 'makin' bacon' is that the method demonstrated in class is completely replicable at home (and after tasting the end product, I would say that it's definitely worth doing).  We soaked and heated the wood chips (in a foil pan) on a stove top until they began to smoke, at which point we covered them with a foil cover.  We then poked holes in the foil cover so all that yummy smoke could infuse the pork belly in the oven. 

When I attempt this at home, I think I will be using a backyard bbq as I (unfortunately) do not have the industrial fans that the George Brown kitchens do to suck all the smoke that is emitted out before everything (jackets, furniture, carpets, clothes, hair etc.) smells like smoking wood (don't get me wrong, eau de 'camp fire' is great, but only to a certain extent).

So far, the Butchery and Charcuterie course is getting a big *thumbs up* from me...and there is still a whole class on sausage making to come!

Happy Cooking!