Irish Fish Soup

1 slice of bacon (Uncured, non-smoked, sugar free, dry rubbed, Garrett Valley Farms) cut into lardoons.
3 tablespoons butter
2 cloves garlic, sliced into coins
½ shallot
1 medium onion, chopped
3 ribs celery, chopped
3 large carrots, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
½ Tbsp. fresh thyme leaves
½ tsp. ground black pepper
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour, (with butter is a roux)
3 cups chicken stock
1 cup dry white wine
2 cups Yukon gold potatoes, diced (about 12 oz.)
1 pound boneless, skinless cod filets, cut into 1” pieces
Several slices of smoked salmon (lox)
½ cup heavy whipping cream

I can’t speak enough about Garrett Valley Farms bacon. Firstly it is non-smoked. Secondly, no antibiotics, no sugar, less salt and humanely raised. It is great to cook with a non-smoked bacon. Often I have to tone down the smoked bacon by leaving it in hot water for a brief period. However, in this dish I will use smoked salmon.

Add bacon to the pot and render all the fat and removed the cooked bacon. Sauté the veggies in the butter. Add the flour. Add 1 cup of wine and stir into a paste. Add another cup of chicken broth and stir into a gravy. Add some salt and pepper. Add the potatoes. Cook 20 minutes on medium low.

Add the lox and cod. Add the cream. Add another cup of broth as needed. Cover. Cook ten minutes on medium low. Adjust seasonings, keep covered, turn off heat. Let rest at least 10 minutes with cover on. Serve.

Shoyu Ramen Soup

The old standard for hungry and broke students is the instant Ramen packs you see at the store for 99¢. Takes all of 10 minutes to make. This version takes a little bit longer, six hours longer.

Shoyu Ramen is made with soy sauce. You can leave out the soy sauce for a Shio Ramen. When using white miso (soy bean) that is a Miso Ramen. This Ramen I’m making will also have a touch of Dashi, which consists is Sweet Aji-Mirin (8% alcohol sake and a little sweeter than sake), and a dash of Kombo (sea kelp). The noodles in Ramen noodle soup don’t have to be like the ones you get with the store packet. They can be Udon (thick noodle) or a non-wavy Lo Mein, which is what I’m using in this dish. I start the broth with chicken wings, onion, peppercorns, a little celery, carrot and green onions. I cook for an hour, strain, return the chicken (discard the rest), return the strained chicken stock and simmer 4 to 6 hours while adding fresh garlic and fresh ginger. Chicken wings makes a “stock”, which is meat and bones. This is a labor intensive dish but worth the effort.

Serves 2:

Meat:
1 Lb. chicken wings
2 Chicken thighs

Vegies on top:
1 carrot, cut into match sticks
½ green pepper, cut into match sticks
2 baby bok choy,
1 batch of scallions (green onions)
6 dried shitake mushroom, rehydrated
1 hand full of spinach

Other:
1 boiled egg
2 cubes of chicken bouillon

Marinade the Chicken Thighs:
2 TBSP. Aji-Mirin
2 TBSP. Soy Sauce
1 Garlic clove chopped

Place the thighs in a plastic bag, add the marinade and let sit for an hour at room temp.

Ramen:
1 inch circle of cooked Lo Mein noodles, boiled ad dente

Stock:
¼ cup red onions
½ TBSP. peppercorns
1 small celery stalk chopped
1 small carrot skinned and chopped
3 green onions chopped
1 small strip of sea kelp (kombu)
4 TBSP. Aji-Mirin
1 inch ginger
3 cloves garlic
4 cups water

Add water, chicken wings, red onion, peppercorns, a little celery, carrot, 1 clove garlic and green onions. Cook for an hour, strain, return the chicken (discard the rest), return the strained chicken stock and simmer 4 hours adding 2 clove fresh garlic finely chopped and fresh ginger. Remove chicken meat from bones, return the bones and add the kombu and add 4 TBSP. Aji Mirin cook on low 1 hour.

Note: A drain lid pot with spouts works great here.

Strain the stock and return. Remove 1 cup of stock and add to another smaller pot.

Cook Vegies on top:
In the cup of stock cock 1 minute each until al dente
Add and cook the carrots and remove
Add and cook the green pepper and remove
Add and cook the spinach and remove
Add and cook the green onion and remove

Lo Mein Noodles:
Cook the Lo Mein (your noodles) exactly 12 minutes and strain

Glaze for Chicken thighs:
2 tsp. brown sugar
2 TBSP soy sauce

Chicken thighs:
Heat oven to 425. In a pan with parchment add the chicken thigh skin side down and cook 15 minutes. Mix the glaze. Turn the skin side up cook 15 minutes. Remove. Debone the chicken. Return to the pan and add the glaze and cook another 10 minutes, remove and slice the chicken to serving size for chop sticks.

In a serving bowl add the noodles, stock, top with vegies, chicken thighs and egg and serve.

Burgoo

This dish was totally extraordinary.

Burgoo is said to be the name of an oatmeal porridge served to English sailors in the 18th century and beyond. Burgoo of yesteryear had any meat available to the hunter. Akin to gumbo in many ways it does not depend on a roux. It is just a pot of pretty much anything handy. “Kentucky Burgoo is eaten all year around, but like most stews, it’s popular in the colder months. It is also a traditional part of Derby Day in Louisville, along with the official drink, the Mint Julep.” It should be cooked in an iron pot.

1 Lb. Pork Shoulder, (Picnic Roast) fat cut off, cut into squares
½ Lb. Beef Shoulder (Chuck) fat cut off, cut into squares
1 chicken thigh, w/bone and skin

1 Tbsp. Olive Oil
1 small onion chopped
2 carrots, skinned and chopped
Mix of red, orange and yellow bell pepper, chopped
1 small Jalapeño pepper cut into thin coins
3 Roma tomatoes, skinned, chopped and mashed
3 ears of sweet corn, corn cut from husk
1 Russet potato, skinned and chopped
3 cloves garlic
1 can Lima beans, drained
Tabasco
Worcestershire
S&P
(No herbs)

1 cup chicken stock
1 bottle Sierra Nevada Pale Ale

Brown the pork and beef in olive oil and remove.

Sauté the veggies except for potatoes and lima beans.

Return the meat, add the potatoes and add the liquids. Bring to a boil, and then set the temp to low and cook slow 2 hours. Remove the chicken, debone and deskin and pull the meat apart and return the meat back to the pot.

Add the Lima beans, Tabasco and Worcestershire and cook another 20 minutes on low.

Turn off heat and let rest 5 minutes before serving.

Honey Glazed Garlic/Ginger Asian Pork and Stir Fry Veggies

This dish was absolutely perfect.

Ingredients
Meat:
1 LB pork shoulder
Dash Kosher salt
Dash black pepper
Salt/pepper pork and mix

2 TBSP Veg Oil
2 cloves garlic, run through zester
2 inch knob of fresh ginger, run through a zester

Sauce:
1/3 cup honey
2 TBSP soy sauce
1 TBSP rice vinegar
1 TBSP Hoisin sauce
1 TBSP Teriyaki
1 TBSP Sriracha

Veggies:
¼ red onion (sliced in banjo #2)
½ red green bell pepper (sliced in banjo #2)
2 carrots (cut into match sticks)
3 leaves of Napa cabbage (cut down center and into thin slices)
2 white mushrooms (sliced thin)
4 scallions (green onions, chopped small)

1 cup rice (Precook in rice cooker, ~1/2 hour)

If you like hot add a little Chiu Chow Chili oil on top.

Make the Sauce:
In a 2 cup liquid measuring add all sauce ingredients and mix. Set aside.

Cooking Meat:

Pour the 1 TBSP oil into a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium high heat. Brown the pork in batches and remove. Add garlic and ginger. Stir until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Raise the heat to high and pour in the sauce mixture and bring to a boil, stirring frequently. When the sauce is very bubbly and thickened like warm honey, toss the pork back in and toss constantly to coat everything and reduce the sauce to a thick, sticky glaze on the pork. Cover and cook stir fry veggies.

 

Stir Fry:
Add 1 TBSP of oil to Wok. Place veggies in and add a little soy sauce. Sauté until tender and ready to serve.

Serve rice, then veggie and then add the pork and serve.

Ron’s Fish and Veggie Pot

I have this tried-and-true dish I’ve made for a long time.

Sauté veggies, in this case equal sliced red onion, Napa cabbage, radicchio and spinach in olive oil for a couple of minutes, always add dry white wine, capers, shiitake mushrooms and a little chicken broth, use any kind of fish, always sliced lemon and serve over rice or in this case couscous. Steam until the fish is cooked.

It always works. I used Pollock filet here and sprinkled a dash of turmeric on top.