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chives to garnish
Preheat oven to 350F. Trim beets, rinse, do not peel. Place beets in baking
dish. Fill pan with 1/4 inch water, cover with aluminium foil. Bake 1 hour. Remove foil.
Bake 30 minutes. Peel beets and slice into 1/4 inch thick rounds. Set aside.
Melt butter in skillet over low heat. Add beets. Sprinkle with vinegar, orange
zest, caraway seeds, salt and pepper. Cook, tossing gently, 3 to 4 minutes. To serve,
sprinkle with chives.
A Herd of Thundering Carrots
5 carrots, peeled and sliced ¼ inch thick
2 tsp. sugar
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
4 tbsp. butter
2 tbsp. orange juice
salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
10 dried apricots, slivered
1/3 cup sliced almonds, toasted
Steam carrots for 12 minutes. Stir sugar and cinnamon together until well mixed.
Set aside. Melt butter in skillet. Stir in carrots, orange juice, sprinkle with sugar
cinnamon mixture. Cook over medium heat until carrots are glazed and sauce is
slightly thickened. Season with salt and pepper. Stir in apricots and almonds. Cook 3
minutes.
© Aliske Webb 1999. All rights reserved.
Published by Bookmice.com
The Quilt Inn Country Cookbook
Aliske Webb
Hunka Hunka Burning Love
We had a special guest drop by the other day. Bill Parker was passing through
town and needing a place to stay, was recommended to The Quilt Inn by Horace the
pump jockey down at the Service Station across from the Cheese Shoppe. We’re
always delighted to learn new and interesting things from our visitors but Bill’s
comments on sitting down to one of our home-cooked meals, set us back a bit.
“Not very spicy,” he said, adding more pepper from the pepper mill. “Do you
have any Tabasco Sauce or better yet, Sauce From Hell?” The latter, I learned, is a
local specialty in his town. It’s prime ingredient is chiles and of course this led to a
conversation about these fiery little devils.
Bill travels out of his native State a great deal and was well prepared for the
relatively bland tastebuds of “foreigners”. He had some Habenero peppers in his carry
bag which he generously offered to share with me. One taste and the heat was so
intense I nearly fainted. With a gasp, I asked Michael for three things. “Water! 911! Last
rites!”
Most people would avoid such incendiary peppers. Not Bill and his asbestos-
lined fellow gastronomes. Some crave the wave. They crave the heat.
Once I had recovered, Bill explained that a true pepper fiend wouldn’t even flinch
at the ordinary Jalapeno, considering it child’s play.
“Myself, I particularly like the Scotch Bonnet,” said Bill, a native of Louisiana
where his mother had introduced him to the taste of spicy food. I’m rather fond of an
occasional drink,and the image of a “Scotch bonnet” produced a vision of Bushmill’s
neat in a glass with a paper hat on it. It turns out that the Scotch Bonnet is a pepper, a
close cousin to the Habanero, related in the same way as the Hatfields and the
McCoys, who incidentally at this very time were having a war of their own in my
stomach. These two peppers are kings of the Scoville Scale, a system that rates
peppers based on capsaicin content, the compound that makes chiles hot.
At the bottom of the Scoville is the green bell pepper, with 0 Scoville Heat Units,
or “H.U.” The Jalapeno, Bill said, smokes in around 2500 to 5000 H.U.’s. The
© Aliske Webb 1999. All rights reserved.
Published by Bookmice.com
The Quilt Inn Country Cookbook
Aliske Webb
Habenero and Scotch Bonnet fall into the 100,000 to 300,000 H.U. range. Other hot
chiles include the Thai, at 50,000 to 100,000 H.U., and the Pequin, Cayenne, and
Tabasco peppers at 30,000 to 50,000 H.U., and the Arbol, 15,000 to 30,000 H.U.
So, if you want to take the chile plunge, what do you do with them? Here’s what
Bill suggests. Chiles will grow mould in a few short days. Store them in a dry place for
up to a week, or preserve them by roasting. Cover with a bit of olive oil.
A warning: handle the exotic chiles with care. Some can blister the skin, so wear
rubber gloves and do not touch your eyes with hands still contaminated.
Insidentally, chile peppers have less nutritional value than sweet peppers but still
contain vitamins A,C and E. Roast them, and vitamin levels decrease.
Roast Chiles If You Dare
Cut a small slit in the chile close to the end to let the steam escape. Place the
chile on a baking sheet directly under the broiler and turn with tongs. Or, bake them in
a 375F oven for 30 minutes. When the chile darkens and blisters, remove from heat
and place in a plastic bag or damp paper towels for 10 or 15 minutes. Remove from
bag and peel away skin. Chilies can be frozen in freezer bags for convenient use.
When do you use chiles and where? “Anytime, anyplace,” Bill informed us. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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