Thursday, September 1, 2016

Pão de Queijo

I've been making these for years, using the same grossly inaccurate recipe and making the adjustments in my head. It occurs to me a shareable version might be a nice thing to have! So here's my comprehensive Brazilian cheese roll recipe, with commentary.

Ingredients:

2 cups milk*
8 tablespoons butter, melted
1/2 cup vegetable oil
12 oz Bob's Red Mill tapioca flour**
4 eggs
2 cups grated cheese, the cheaper and oilier the better. Store-brand cheddar is great.
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese (optional but recommended)
salt to taste

Variations:

rosemary, thyme, or other savory seasonings to taste
sugar, cinnamon, etc to taste
Fillings - I'm working on a proper filled roll strategy, but squashing them and putting filling in the middle, thumbprint-cookie-style, works just fine. You can use savory (more cheese, sausage, etc) or sweet fillings (marscapone, fruit/pie filling, etc)


* Original recipe calls for whole milk, but if you're using cheap oily cheese as I suggest, 2% will work just fine.
** This used to be just one package - they've switched to a 16-oz package and I need to redo the measurements for simplicity's sake. At least the new package is reclosable! This stuff aerosolizes if you let it move around when it's dry. Also, different brands have different grinds which leads to variations in texture. Feel free to experiment, but different proportions may be required.

Instructions:


1. Melt butter in large pot

2. Add milk, vegetable oil, and salt, and bring to a boil. Once boiling, remove from heat.

3. In small stages, stir in tapioca flour. It tends to lump, so the more gradually and thoroughly you can fold it in, the better.

4. Add eggs when the tapioca overwhelms the moisture. Continue adding tapioca.

5. Knead in cheese when tapioca is all in. The dough will be thick and sticky, but not liquid. Keep kneading until it's smooth and uniform. (If it's too wet, add more tapioca. If it's too dry, add more milk. This is the hard part, as it will vary batch to batch depending on humidity, phase of the moon, 24/7 news cycle, etc.)

6. The dough will still be hot enough to melt the cheese at this point. For ease of handling, stick it in the fridge for half an hour or so.

7. If finishing rolls today***, preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

8. Oil your hands. No, more oil. The original recipe calls for flouring them, and I have never in my life seen so vile a falsehood.

9. Roll the dough into golf-ball-esque portions, re-oiling your hands every few balls. If necessary, wash the sticky dough off first and then re-oil. (Yes, this part is annoying.)

10. Arrange them on parchment paper on a baking sheet, or see *** below if you're freezing them for later. (Recipe makes about 2.5 baking sheets' worth of rolls.)

11. Bake at 325 for approximately 35-40 minutes. Keep an eye on them for the last ten minutes - they should be just brown with a firm crust and a gooey (but not raw-tasting) inside. Go ahead, taste one, the recipe makes plenty.

12. Eat until you feel ill. Then share.


*** This dough freezes beautifully. If you're saving some for later, make the individual dough balls, stick them on parchment paper in the freezer for an hour or two, then peel them into a ziploc once they're hard. Give them an extra five or ten minutes in the oven when cooking frozen dough.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

London Broil

I still have no idea what cut we actually got, since it was just labeled "London Broil", but we London-Broiled it and it was just fine.

London Broil

I only marinated it for about four hours, and that seemed to work. It was meat. Tasty, tasty meat.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Rabbit Stifado

Rabbit is not nearly as exciting a meal as it sounds, and this recipe was only so-so - it is *really* heavy on the winey flavor, and not particularly complex.


I made this in the crockpot, and if I were to do it again I would stick to the stovetop and let the liquid reduce to a sauce. I'd also want it to be sweeter - less vinegar, more sugar, and possibly stewed tomatoes instead of paste. But really, I'd probably just look for a different recipe if we get another rabbit.

It's not terrible - I don't mind having leftovers. But it's not really a keeper.

UPDATE: We took the leftovers, cooked the liquid way down, and added sugar and butter. It came together quite nicely, and went from very much "meh" to something I'd actually want to make.

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Garlic-Stuffed Petite Tender Roast

Our butcher recommended the petite tender, a cut I'd never had before, so I found this recipe for it. It was quite good - very meaty flavor that stood up to the garlic and rosemary (although I'd cut back on rosemary next time.)

Garlic-Stuffed Petite Tender Roast


Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Sesame-Ginger Beef with Asparagus

This was a classic "Google what I have in the fridge" find. We had stew meat, asparagus, and a recently-expanded collection of oils and spices, and this happened to fit neatly. It was quite tasty.


Simple prep, a classic Chinese restaurant flavor, and not too many ingredients. We'll be going back to this one. I should have sliced the beef very thin as instructed - stew-sized chunks got too tough - and the fresh ginger was perhaps a little too much for the vegetable mix, but the sauce was just about perfect. I suspect it would go very well with broccoli, too.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Elk Stroganoff

Tonight's recipe was a roaring success by my lights. We had some ground elk (yes, we're those people) and poked around for recipes that weren't chili - surprisingly hard to find. We ended up adapting this Beef Stroganoff recipe to great effect:

Beef Stroganoff III

Various alterations:

- Elk instead of beef, obviously - but also ground meat instead of steak.
- corn starch instead of wheat flour for my gluten issues
- Yellow onion instead of green, because... well, because we forgot we had green
- fresh mushrooms instead of canned, and cooked with the onions instead of added last
- added the wine with the broth to help pull everything together.

One of my favorites so far. Totally a winner.

Radishes

Neither of us were thrilled to get a bunch of radishes in our CSA box, but hey, the vegetable is mandatory, so we poked around for recipes, and ultimately settled on sauteeing them in about half a stick of butter. There was probably some brown sugar involved, too. They ended up entirely edible - barely bitter at all, more like potatoes than radishes. Not something either of us would seek out, but it worked just fine to get them out of the fridge.