Friday, March 29, 2013

Nebraska-style Beer Chili

Okay, so I'm not really sure if Beer Chili comes from Nebraska, but the chili I ate at home is most certainly not like the chili eaten in Kentucky. No, the folks in Kentuckiana's chili is darker in color, and, horror, they add PASTA to it, which confused me terribly when I first saw it.



Beer should be added to more food. It seems to be a running theme for me recently - I made a Guinness Chocolate Cake, and then Wednesday John and I went to a beer tasting, all of which served with beer infused food (see pic --->), at the Campbell Club here in town. Now beer chili!

The other 'secret' ingredient in this recipe is the Southwest Chipotle flavoring. Adds a further depth to an already very hearty, very flavorful chili.

I used 2 pounds of ground beef, 1 pound sausage, in this particular batch. Sometimes I use more sausage, sometimes turkey, venison, bison... Mom's version uses shredded porkloin and beef brisket smoked by Dad. Calls it her '$75 chili'. No joke, that.

Chili freezes really well. People also seem to appreciate receiving some, not sure why. ;)  (I tell you what I can't give away anymore - my deserts! Apparently it makes you fat, or some such thing. Pchah! I won't listen to such negativity!)


Monday, March 18, 2013

Chocolate Guinness Cake

St. Paddy's day is over, and I am (mostly) recovered from the holiday. I wouldn't call my celebrations wild, per se, but it wasn't sober. John and I headed to a friend's lake house, and stayed there most of the weekend, with plenty of beer, red wine (my favorite), and this Chocolate Guinness Cake!


I'd heard of using Guinness beer as an ingredient in food, in both main courses and deserts, before. Sounded like a unique challenge, and who doesn't want to try a cake with beer in it??? The finished product is not as sweet as your average store bought chocolate cake mix, but not bitter either. The beer adds a unique taste that is hard to describe, giving it depth.

I placed the batter in a 8" spring form pan when it reached the consistency of brownie batter. You can see a crack in the cake, where frosting dips down in the photo above. Cracking creates more space for holding the made-from-scratch cream cheese frosting on top!

One last note - I'd like to introduce you to the most expensive butter I have ever bought, ever.  I'm not going to tell how much I paid for my Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter. It's sinful expensive, like eating a cake with an entire bar of it inside! Feel free to use regular old plain butter, if this is bit much for the budget.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Curry Rice

This is the first dish I ever learned to make. Really. While studying abroad in Japan, I made an effort to set the kitchen on fire while making potatoes. Seeing that I needed help, the Japanese RA's, M and N, decided to show me how to do some stuff. The rest, is history!


Curry Rice is probably the most popular Japanese comfort food. Nikujaga is up there, too. And Omurice. YUM. I love them all. Japanese food has got to be the most delicious food in the world! Most Americans think that Japanese food is all sushi, but this just isn't true. (The Japanese DO eat a lot of sushi, however.)

Making Curry Rice is very easy. You need 3 large carrots, peeled and cut into pieces, 2 potatoes, PACIP (peeled and cut into pieces), half a yellow onion roughly chopped, and a meat of your choice. Chicken is the most traditionally used meat. The sauce is readily available in most major grocery chains, including Wal-mart. Just look for it in the Asian foods section. Comes in a shiny little cardboard box with 'Golden Curry' written on the side. English instructions! The curry comes in little blocks, and looks decidedly like chocolate. Funny smelling chocolate...

I've Americanized my Curry Rice. (The horror, the horror!) Instead of chicken or beef, I prefer Jimmy Dean's hot sausage. It is SOOOOO good. Adds even more flavor to a dish that is extremely flavorful to begin with. I'm lazy and simply break up the sausage while browning it, but a more ambitious person could form them into meatballs.

After browning your meat, set it aside and brown the potatoes and carrots, adding the onions when the potatoes start to turn translucent. I keep a glass full of water on the side, and have never actually measured out the quantity, but this recipe will call for around 3 cups total. After the vegetables have browned enough, I add a little water to continue cooking, then pour the rest in later.

Once the potatoes and carrots are soft, add the remainder of the water, until the vegetables are covered. Add the meat. Bring to a boil. Once boiling, turn the heat back down to a simmer. Take the sauce mix, and break up the curry cubes. Place the curry cubes into different areas of the pot, tucking them under vegetables. Slowly begin to stir, mixing the curry mix in with the rest of the ingredients. When it turns thick and stew like, the curry is done.

Serve with rice on the side. I know its odd, rice and potatoes (starch and starch), but you just can't have curry without rice.