FREDDIE`S top 10 FAVORITE KITCHEN TOOLS
Transcription
FREDDIE`S top 10 FAVORITE KITCHEN TOOLS
FREDDIE’S top 10 FAVORITE KITCHEN TOOLS + 2 exclusive bonus recipes FREDDIE’S Top 10 FAVORITE KITCHEN TOOLS 1 2 3 4 5 CAST IRON SKILLET A cast iron skillet is a crucial tool for any aspiring chef. It’s durable and gets smoking hot, making cooking really efficient. But when you’re cooking eggs, low and slow is the major rule to keep in mind. Let the pan get hot for 2 to 3 minutes, on medium low, then crack your eggs right on the pan. As soon as you see the edges firm up, flip em over. Top your eggs with my red chile sauce and you’ll be in heaven. GRILL TONGS G rill tongs are my real kitchen workhorse. I use them for everything from flipping sausages to charring my favorite New Mexico chiles. Chiles are the backbone of New Mexican cooking, and green chiles are delivered by the truckload to my house every month. My favorite way to eat them is to char them, either outside on my grill or on my stovetop held directly over the flame with the tongs. 6 BASIL PLANTS I can’t keep enough basil 7 GARLIC ROASTER From my jambalaya to my 8 SKEWERS FOR GRILLINGOkay, it might 9 ICE CUBE TRAY G rowing up in Albuquerque, DUTCH OVEN G reen chile stew is the perfect meal to cook when the temp drops below 40 degrees. That doesn’t happen much here in LA, but I still like to use my dutch oven to make a comforting green chile stew as often as I can. Serve with warm tortillas for a taste of my home. PIZZA STONE M y daughter, Charlie, and I make pizza together as an easy weeknight dinner. Tools make pizza easier, and pizza stones are everywhere nowadays. Use one for the best thin crust pizza but make sure you place the stone in your oven while it’s heating up. ALUMINUM FOIL F oil packets are a great way to let a vegetable steam itself while you focus on dinner. I love to pop asparagus or eggplant in there for a delicious side that even my kids gobble up. 10 growing in my back garden. We make a ton of pesto in my family, just like my mama did with me. I have memories of picking basil by the handfuls and bringing them to my mother to make pesto together. Now I do that with my own children. tomato soup, garlic is such an important part of my cooking. A terra-cotta garlic roaster makes sure all of my meals taste perfect. be because we live in LA, but I use my grill constantly, and putting meat and veggies on skewers is the easiest way to put together dinner. Even if you only have access to one in the summer months, it still makes dinner prep a 10-minute affair; you can make all sorts of meat and veggie combinations to suit your family’s tastes. my mom constantly had to invent new ways for us to stay cool. She would freeze chocolate syrup in an ice cube tray as a fun and sweet way to cool down on those hot summer days. GRILL L iving in southern California, we grill outside all year long. But even if you only grill in the summer months, you can still cook so many meals using this tool. Nothing sears meat or gives veggies that unique flavor quite like a good grilling. PONZU WOK POT 2 SERVINGS My wife and I were in Australia working on a movie together. We rented a house right on the water that was owned by the man who created Nintendo, so I was excited. Then a local radio station announced our address and offered the public a cash prize to get a pic with us. Being stalked and hunted like wild game is a bit dehumanizing—makes you feel like a wax figure—so we were kind of trapped. No beach, no hikes, no surfs, no turfs, and I missed my dog. We eventually got the bounty removed from us, as innocent people should not be hunted unless your pursuer is the great Boba Fett. The one thing those DJ jokers couldn’t wreck was our good times: We cooked. We ate. We loved, no matter what. We made this recipe once a week for six months straight. It’s really fast and easy and makes you look like a pro. 3 carrots, halved and thinly sliced crosswise 4 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stemmed 4 ounces shimeji or enoki mushrooms, stemmed ⁄4 pound boneless sirloin, cut across the grain into 1 ⁄4" thick slices 3 10 ounces cooked udon noodles 1 ⁄2 bunch fresh baby spinach ⁄2 cup Japanese ponzu sauce 1 I. Add a splash of oil or water to your wok. Then arrange your carrots and ’shrooms standing up side by side all around the wall of the pot, leaving the center clear. Place the wok over high heat, and let the veggies cook until they begin to soften, about 3 to 5 minutes. 2. Add the sliced beef to the middle of the wok. Cook for 1 minute, then add the ponzu sauce and ½ cup of water. Add the cooked noodles to the liquid, laying them right across the top. Cook them until they warm through, about 4 to 5 minutes, then add the spinach and cover the pot, letting it cook until wilted, about 2 minutes. 3. Remove the wok from the heat and serve the veggies, meat, noodles, and sauce arranged neatly next to each other in a bowl or you can mix them all up. Enjoy. THE PRINZE JERKY MAKES A TON My mother made this in the ’80s with one of the original food dehydrators. It took three days to make, and the smell made my mouth water for 72 hours straight. Fortunately, it’s quicker now. (You can also use an oven for this jerky, which is of course a little faster, but your cleanup sucks.) Here in California I just buy carne asada steak, which is usually skirt steak or flank steak sliced super thin, so this jerky is simple to set up. If your store doesn’t have that advertised, ask your butcher for the thinnest cuts. 4 pounds very thin skirt steak, flank steak, or flap steak, such as for carne asada 2 1⁄2 tablespoons onion powder 11⁄ 2 teaspoons garlic powder 1 cup soy sauce 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 11⁄2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper 1 teaspoon liquid smoke 1 tablespoon ancho chile powder 1. Slice the steak with the grain into ½" slices. Place pieces in a large mixing bowl and add the onion powder, garlic powder, salt, black pepper, and chile powder. Add the soy sauce and Wor’ sauce and mix the meat so it is coated in the marinade. Then add the liquid smoke. 2. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it sit in the fridge for at least 12 and up to 24 hours. 3. Remove the strips of steak and pat them dry with a paper towel. Arrange the strips on each rack of your dehydrator with a little space between each one. Let these dehydrate for 14 hours—or more, depending on what consistency you prefer. SECRET TRICK: If you want to let the oven do it, here’s how: Preheat the oven to 150°F, removing the oven racks first. Wrap the racks with foil, and pierce one all over with small holes, which help the extra liquid that comes off the steak drip on to the lower foil, aiding dehydration. Place the one with the holes right above the one without, then lay out the strips evenly on the top rack with a little space between each one. Cook in the oven for up to 4 hours depending on thickness. (I don’t prefer this method, but not everyone has the Food Dehydrator 1000!)