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Spring into Malbec! World Malbec Day was celebrated this past Sunday, and to assist in my celebration of the day, and Malbec in general, the kind people at Frederick Wildman & Sons sent me a few bottles of Malbec to try. Since I was working with a wine from Argentina, I also decided to cook up a little Argentine-inspired dinner, empanadas, but with a vegetarian, Italian twist.

tomatoes and basil

Caprese empanadas! I started out by making a beautiful, summer filling of shredded mozzarella, a chiffonade of basil, and chopped tomatoes. As you see above, I bought some gorgeous tomatoes, or so I thought. On the inside, they were still wintry, pale, mealy, bleh. Luckily I had a can of chopped tomatoes that I was able to quickly drain for the filling. It helps to be prepared!

tomato, mozzarella, basil

I knew making the empanada filling would be the easy part, but the dough intimidated me a little, as dough tends to do. This dough, however, could not have been easier to work with. I followed a recipe for Chilean Empanadas for the dough, but I substituted butter for shortening. Many empanada recipes use shortening or even lard, but I really preferred to use butter. After some research, I found that it is a 1:1 ratio for butter to shortening, and I got to chopping my Kerrygold into little cubes.

Kerrygold butter

For whatever reason, blending the butter into the dry ingredients this time was a cinch! Perhaps practice makes perfect? Smile Once I added the milk and let the dough rest for 20 minutes, it was time to roll it out.

empanada dough

I usually have a sticky mess of dough or something so dry and cracking that I can not roll it out. This dough was so fun to work with!

empanada dough

I rolled it out on our kitchen table and started cutting circles with a large tupperware container to make the empanadas.

empanadas

Once the dough circles were cut, I added a scoop of the empanada filling, then sealed each empanada with a fork and brushed with egg. My empanadas cooked at 375 for 35 minutes.

empanadas

Sadly, I overstuffed and undersealed the empanadas, so they all exploded a little in the oven. But they dough became light, flaky, fluffy, and golden brown, just as I had hoped. Though not much to look at, the empanadas were quite delicious with a cheesy, garlicky center, dotted with fragrant bits of basil

empanadas

I served the empanadas with a side of orange-infused plantains, and there was, of course Malbec. We didn’t drink all of these bottles in one night; as you can see from the photos, they are all at different times. I received the Malbec about a month ago, and we have been sampling ever since.

Trapiche Malbec Don David Malbec Cuma Organic Malbec

 

Here we have a 2008 Trapiche Oak Cask Malbec, a Michael Torino Estate Don David Reserve Malbec, and a 2009 Michael Torino Estate Cuma Malbec, made with organic grapes. Each of these Malbecs exhibited that gorgeous, dark red-purple color that Malbec is known for, but I loved how different each of these wines were.

The Trapiche offered aromas and flavors of cherry vanilla and a little bit of oak and cedar. The Don David, which we sipped with the empanadas, was smokier and spicier, still with nice fruit flavors, but with a long, lingering finish.

The Cuma was, to me, the fruitiest, with flavors of baked fruit, like dark cherry pie. I really enjoyed all of the Malbecs we tasted (and there are more!), and it was interesting to learn a little more about Malbec, especially how it goes well with Easter and spring dishes such as lamb.

Up next will be some Chilean wine and hopefully a Chilean recipe or two. I love how receiving wine samples encourages me to try new things and to look up new recipes.

Have you tried a new-to-you food, wine, or other item lately?

Tags: Food, Malbec, recipes, wine

Fresh baked scones anyone? Banana and chocolate together is definitely one of my favorite sweet flavor combinations. In the past, I have enjoyed the two together in banana bread, ice cream, and more recently in my farina cereal in the morning. With a cancelled conference call yesterday afternoon and much of my to-do list done before 11, I decided to search for a recipe for banana chocolate scones, and it was my luck that I came across a recipe from the Culinary Institute of America, Greystone, a place we had lunch last year.

banana

I followed the recipe except for the hazelnut part as we did not have hazelnuts in the house. I am certain they would be amazing in this recipe.

It was very easy to follow. I started by mixing up my dry ingredients. I used whole wheat flour in lieu of all purpose flour as we are out of the all purpose. I am actually pretty surprised I went through an entire bag of flour. The newfound baker in me is on a roll!

dry ingredients

When the dry ingredients were mixed, I added in the cold butter. I always dread this part of baking as I just can’t seem to get it right. I don’t have the special tool you can use to integrate the butter, so I got my hands in there, pinching the butter and flour mixture until it was like sand.

kerrygold butter

After adding the liquid ingredients, vanilla and buttermilk, it was just a quick mix before the dough was ready. My dough was a little bit wet, but I was able to make roughly shaped scones out of it.

image

Into the oven they went, and in 20 minutes they were done.

banana chocolate scones

These scones are amazing! Flaky and light and dotted with rich, dark chocolate and soft, gooey banana, they are fine on their own and even better topped with a little Kerrygold unsalted butter and a sprinkle of sea salt. As I have mentioned in the past, I am not a huge breakfast fan, especially when it comes to sweet breakfasts, but I am definitely going to enjoy these scones with my morning tea. It’s nice to have a little something to look forward to in the morning!

What treats do you look forward to during the work week to help you get through?

Banana Chocolate Scones from The Culinary Institute of America

1 ripe banana (4 ounces), quartered lengthwise and diced
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons sugar
4 ounces (1 stick) cold butter, cut into 1/4-inch cubes
1/2 cup toasted hazelnuts, crushed or chopped
1/2 cup finely chopped semi-sweet chocolate, or semisweet chocolate chips
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup buttermilk more as needed to brush the scones
Coarse sugar as needed

  1. Preheat oven to 375° F. Place the diced banana in the freezer until ready to use in step 2.
  2. Place the dry ingredients in a 4-quart mixing bowl and whisk thoroughly to combine. Cut in the cold, cubed butter with a pastry blender, or rub in the butter with your fingers until the ingredients resemble a coarse meal. Add the chopped chocolate, chopped hazelnuts and diced banana, and toss to blend.
  3. Combine the vanilla extract and buttermilk. Make a well in the center of the bowl and pour in the buttermilk. Using a rubber spatula, fold the ingredients together to form a “shaggy mass”. Gently compact the dough into a ball, but do not over-mix.
  4. Transfer the ball to a clean, floured work surface and flatten it into an 8-inch disk, approximately 1-inch thick. Cut the dough into 8 equal wedges, and carefully transfer them to a parchment-lined baking pan, evenly spaced.
  5. Just before baking, brush the scones lightly with buttermilk and sprinkle with coarse sugar. Bake the scones for 15 to 18 minutes, or until browned at the edges. Transfer the scones to a rack and cool for 10 minutes before serving

Tags: banana, breakfast, chocolate, recipe, scones

Bags of frozen shrimp are one of my favorite kitchen staples, and they often lead to last minute meals that turn out pretty great. A few weeks ago, I bought molasses, anticipating using it in brown bread. My brown bread ended up not calling for molasses, but I started thinking of other recipes for this classic ingredient.

molasses

Spicy BBQ sauce was the first thing that came to mind. I started with about a cup of organic cider vinegar and several tablespoons of tomato paste.

apple cider vinegar

Fun fact: my nana drinks organic apple cider vinegar. I can’t do it because I think it tastes gross, but she is rollin’ up on 97 this November, so she must be doing something right!

Cider vinegar makes a great base for a BBQ sauce. I mixed the tomato paste and vinegar in a pot with about a cup of water. I used the vinegar bottle as a vessel for the water to get as much flavoring from the vinegar as possible.

I brought the vinegar and tomato paste to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the paste, then added two large spoonfuls of molasses, about a teaspoon of garlic powder, and two large jalapenos, chopped.

homemade bbq sauce

Toward the end I also added about a tablespoon of grated ginger. I am obsessed with ginger these days, ginger in food, ginger tea, ginger beer in Dark & Stormy’s. Love it!

grated ginger

I made the sauce the night before finishing the dish to ensure the flavors all got together. It was divinely spicy and sweet with a tang from the vinegar.

When I was ready to cook dinner, I peeled and cleaned about two dozen shrimp.

shrimp

Then I popped the shrimp into the sauce and let them hang out for about half an hour.

marinated shrimp

enriched farina

While the shrimp marinated, I got my “grits” going. I used the Trader Joe’s version of Cream of Wheat, a hot cereal I have been loving lately. I enjoy the texture SO much more than oatmeal, and I thought, why not add it to dinner?

farina

I cooked up a pot of the wheat cereal, and in a separate pot cooked the shrimp in BBQ sauce. To serve, I spooned the cereal into bowls and topped it with heaping ladles of BBQ sauce and shrimp. The sauce sunk down into the soft, creamy cereal, flavoring it, making it a little soupy, and just becoming a bowl of spicy comfort.

I am still cold, even though the weather has gotten nicer, so dishes like this will likely be on the blog for a few more weeks.

What are your plans to enjoy the warmer temps this weekend?

Tags: BBQ, Food, recipe, sauce, shrimp

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