The Tromp Queen COOKS!

The Tromp Queen Cooks! Family Favorites: old and new — all delicious!


Leave a comment

Tom Kha Gai soup

There is a wonderful restaurant at the corner of 60th and North Avenue here in Milwaukee. It is called Mekong Cafe. They serve Thai, Laos and Vietnamese food; the lunch buffet is reliably varied and delicious.

One of my favorite things to have there is Tom Kha Gai soup. I’ve searched for a recipe that comes close to the deliciousness that is that soup.

Lorenia Tom Yum Gai

image of Tom Yum Gai by Lorenia via Flickr CC license

 

 

This recipe might just be even better than the Mekong version. It actually IS better because when I make it at home I don’t have to drive across town which saves me about stress and expense of about an hour in traffic.

THAI CHICKEN AND COCONUT SOUP (TOM KHA GAI)
makes four generous servings

1 stalk lemongrass (I haven’t been able to find this a my grocery store, so I leave this out.)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 medium onion, diced small
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon Thai red curry paste (This is the kind I use.)
6 quarter-inch wide slices fresh ginger (or grate an equivalent amount into the broth)
3 kaffir lime leaves (I used grated lime zest from one of the limes)
4 cups chicken stock (homemade is best, or use a box or bouillon)
1/2 pound (or up to a pound) boneless, skinless chicken thighs or breasts, sliced across the grain into 1/8-inch wide strips. You can also use tofu or shrimp.
2 cups shitake mushrooms, stemmed, caps quartered or 1 can 15 oz.straw mushrooms, drained.
1 14-ounce can coconut milk (Don’t use low-fat. Trust me. I tried it.)
Juice of one or two limes (about five tablespoons)
2 tablespoons nam pla (AKA fish sauce, also available in most groceries these days.)
3 green onions, trimmed and sliced into ¼ inch pieces
¼ cup chopped fresh cilantro

Trim lemongrass, cut into three pieces about four inches long. Whack the pieces with the flat side of your knife blade to crush slightly.

Heat oil in a saucepan over medium-high heat.

Saute onion and garlic for about two minutes.

Add lemongrass, curry paste, ginger discs, and lime leaf (or peel). Cook, stirring, for three minutes.

Add stock. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 15 minutes.

Add coconut milk, chopped chicken and quartered mushroom caps (or drained canned straw mushrooms). Cook five minutes, or until chicken is just cooked through.

Add lime juice and nam pla. Taste for balance between nam pla and lime. If one flavor is dominating too much, add a little of the other.

Garnish with green onion and cilantro.

 

This is the story from the Unfussy Fare website where I found this delicious recipe. I’ll copy it here to save you from clicking through but I’ll also link it to the website for you, too.

This one goes out to everyone who ever brought food when the chips were down. I may have forgotten to write a note, given everything. I’m sure you were busy. It took forethought. You had to find that recipe, get groceries, and cook. Then you had to transport it all, which can be messy. You probably wondered if you’d ever get your Tupperware back. It was good of you.

Years ago, when my mother was dying, people brought food. There were casseroles and brownies, homegrown tomatoes and pots of soup. I was mystified. Did they really think we could eat, at a time like that? Well, yes. They knew we could. Everyone eventually does, inconceivable as it seems. I felt like a traitor, eating while my irrepressible mother was slipping away. But she would’ve rolled her eyes at that sentiment, and reminded me that life is hard enough without my efforts to make it harder.

Years later, my husband and I welcomed a son. Dinner came to our doorstep every night for weeks, courtesy of friends and neighbors. I wept with thankfulness. I wept a lot in those days, but that’s another story. I can still taste those meals, seasoned as they were with naked gratitude. I missed my Mom. I needed help. And help arrived, wrapped in foil and kindness.

Birth and death are demanding. They just swoop right and in and put their feet up, blithely flicking away the orderly unfolding of our days. We are tender and tired as we attend our loved ones at the beginning and the end. We sing and stroke. We wash and feed. The clock ceases to provide useful information. These are the rhythms of lives, not days. In the midst of these marathons of nurture, gifts of food stand in simple relief. Meals arrive like little missives from the world where the clock still applies, like souvenirs of simpler times. It’s hard to remember simpler times when you’re in the thick of life’s seismic upheavals. Food gives strength, and comfort.

A family friend dropped this soup by for me and my stepfather when my mom was sick. We were dazed by the unfolding loss. My memories of that time are foggy, but I recall thinking this soup was the most delicious thing I ever tasted. I wouldn’t have thought it possible to even notice a bowl of soup just then, never mind enjoy it. But I savored every bite. It served to remind me that a world outside of sorrow still existed. Life would be there, with all its flavors and delights, when the time came to gather up the fragments of my broken heart and look forward again.

To this day, the complicated interplay of flavors in Tom Kha Gai puts me in mind of nurture, solace, and motherhood. When I know someone with a new baby, or an illness, or a death in the family, this is the dish I most often bring. I pass it on with thanks, for all the grace and sustenance.

I get a lot of requests for this recipe, which is the true measure of any dish’s popularity, if you ask me. This soup somehow manages to be feisty and harmonious at the same time. It’s interesting enough to impress foodie types, but simple and comforting enough to appeal to less adventurous eaters. (You might need to explain to the aforementioned “less adventurous eaters” that the big stalks of lemongrass and discs of ginger floating around in the soup aren’t meant to be eaten. They’re just adding flavor.) Sometimes I throw in cooked basmati rice at the end. That may be some kind of Thai-food no-no, but I find chicken and rice a soothing combination.


1 Comment

TTQ’s Improved Spinach Dip

Image by kitchenplate via Flickr CC license

Image by kitchenplate via Flickr CC license

Most people are familiar with the classic Knorr Spinach Dip recipe.

I tweaked the recipe a little and think it tastes just a good, if not better.

Classic Knorr Spinach Dip recipe ingredients:

  • 1 box (10 oz.) frozen chopped spinach, cooked, cooled and squeezed dry
  • 1 container (16 oz.) sour cream
  • 1 cup Hellmann’s® Real Mayonnaise
  • 1 package Knorr® Vegetable dry mix
  • 1 can (8 oz.) water chestnuts, drained and chopped
  • 3 green onions, chopped (optional)
Image by Artzone via Flickr CC license

Image by Artzone via Flickr CC license

Here are my tweaks:

Use 8 oz. of sour cream and 1/2 c. of mayonnaise.
Add 1 or 2 grated carrots.

Other tweaks you might consider:
Add finely chopped green or red pepper.
Add grated radishes.
Substitute plain Greek yogurt for 1/2 the sour cream and/or mayonnaise.
Start with fresh spinach. Cook in skillet with a little EVOO til it wilts. Drain.

Mix all ingredients. Chill for an hour or two. Eat with sliced veggies, rye garlic chips, wheat thins, or Hawaiian bread chunks.

 


1 Comment

Recipe Review: Sesame Noodles with Chicken

Image by John Herschell via Flickr CC license

Image by John Herschell via Flickr CC license

I am fortunate to live near a Half-Price Books bookstore.  I love books, stationery, music, cards, CDS and LPs — you name it — this store seems to have it.

I tend to browse the cookbooks at this store, even though I already have a HUGE collection of cookbooks at home.  (I also have a really good Goodwill store nearby, too.  Hardback books, including cookbooks, are only $1.79.)

On a recent trip to Half-Price Books I got Food Network Kitchens Favorite Recipes.  

I have a combination of three part-time jobs right now, so cooking dinner has become a somewhat rarer activity than it was previously.

I decided to try this recipe because you can only eat out so many times in a week before you get tired of

  • food that involves deep-frying
  • food that involves a drive through
  • food that begins to all taste the same
  • food that has no vegetables in it

Ingredients:  *I tweaked a few ingredients and amounts so this isn’t exactly like the recipe in the book

1 pound of spaghetti noodles (or Chinese egg noodles if you can find them)
2 T. toasted sesame oil
1 whole roasted deli chicken
1 cucumber peeled, quartered, seeded, sliced and diced
4 scallions, sliced (white and green parts)
1/3 dry-roasted salted peanuts
cilantro, chopped
1 clove garlic
1 one-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeeled (I grated mine)
1/2 cup smooth peanut butter
1/4 cup soy sauce or tamari
2 T brown sugar
1 T rice vinegar
1/2 t crushed red pepper flakes
1/4 c hot water (I used the pasta water as it was cooking)


Cook the pasta in boiling, salted water.  Drain and toss with sesame oil

While the pasta is cooking, prepare the garnishes and sauce.
Also de-bone the deli roasted whole chicken.   Cut the meat off the bones; save the “runnin’ gears”– the bones, skin and carcass — to make some quick chicken stock for future use.  Keep the meat warm until the pasta is ready.

Garnishes:
1 cucumber peeled, quartered, seeded, sliced and diced
4 scallions, sliced (white and green parts)
1/3 dry-roasted salted peanuts
cilantro, chopped

Mix the ingredients (listed below) in a blender and blend thoroughly.  Toss this mixture with the pasta.
1 clove garlic
1 one-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeeled (I grated mine)
1/2 cup smooth peanut butter
1/4 cup soy sauce or tamari
2 T brown sugar
1 T rice vinegar
1/2 t crushed red pepper flakes
1/4 c hot water (I used the pasta water as it was cooking)

  1. Cook the pasta in boiling, salted water until al dente.  Drain.  Put it in a large bowl and toss it with the 2 T of sesame oil.
  2. While the pasta is cooking, combine the ingredients for the sauce in a blender.  Blend.  Add this mix to the sesame oiled pasta.
  3. Also while the pasta cooks, de-bone the deli roasted whole chicken.  Prepare the garnishes.
  4. To serve:  Put pasta on a plate.  Top with desired amount of chicken plus generous garnishes of cilantro, peanuts, scallions, and cucumber.
Image by Madeleine via Flickr CC license

Image by Madeleine via Flickr CC license This image is not the actual recipe I’m posting. It looks very similar to this, though.

REVIEW:  This recipe was quick to fix.  It has very good flavor and was delicious.  I happened to have nearly all the sauce ingredients on hand, so it was not a huge amount of items to buy at the grocery store — basically just a deli chicken, a cucumber and maybe some spaghetti, cilantro and scallions if you happen to have none of those things at the moment.  I liked the fact that it tasted a little Thai and a little Chinese — but that it wasn’t overly spiced in either direction.  You could definitely bump up the crushed red pepper if you need more heat or add Siracha sauce at the table.

This could easily be made vegetarian if you leave out the chicken.  You could add tofu.

I think it would be good with grilled shrimp instead of the chicken.  If you have them, fresh bean sprouts would give a nice crunch as well.  You could use honey instead of brown sugar in the sauce.  I grated my ginger into the blender because I didn’t want to chomp down on an unblended chunk of ginger.  I would add more garlic next time, too.

It would be nice to add some toasted sesame seeds.  I didn’t have time or energy for that, but it would be good.

FULL FORKS for this one!  FIVE FORKS! Go fo it!  Please let me know if you try this recipe and how you like it.

Thanks for reading and cooking with me.

Possible recipes for the photo I found on Flickr:
http://leitesculinaria.com/73673/recipes-sesame-peanut-noodles.html
http://leitesculinaria.com/18259/recipes-asian-noodle-salad-peanut-dressing.html


Leave a comment

Lemon Pecan Rice

Image by The Tromp Queen, CC license

Image by The Tromp Queen, CC license

Cook rice however you prefer to do it.  I use 1 c. rice to 2 c. water and about 1/2 t. salt. I bring the water to a boil, then add the rice and salt, stir, cover and simmer (low) for about 14 of 15 minutes.  It can sit off the heat until you are ready for it. I use Indian Basmati white rice for this recipe.  I often double it b/c it is so yummy and is good leftover.  I love it w/ grilled ribeye steaks or any grilled meat (chicken or pork are especially good with it as well).

While the rice is cooking, put the following into a small bowl:
(these amounts are good for 1 c. uncooked rice — double this if you use more than that)

1 T. olive oil
2T. lemon juice (or the juice of 1 lemon)
2 tsp. lemon zest (the zest of 1 lemon)
3 or 4 thinly sliced green onions (incl the green part)
1 t. Dijon mustard
1/2 t. salt (I use kosher)
a couple of dashes of tabasco or cayenne

Stir this mixture into the cooked rice.  Stir well so it gets through all the rice.  Cover and let sit for a couple of minutes.

While the rice sits, toast a handful (1/4 to 1/3 c. or so) of pecans (or zap in the micro), then chop them finely and scatter the pecans over the rice right before you serve.

(My longtime Facebook friends might recognize this recipe from a NOTE I posted a couple of years ago.  Since this dish is something I make frequently, I want to be sure it gets published here on my recipe blog, too!)