Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Sides,Sauce

Green Goddess Dressing

Sauce, Spread & DipsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Green Goddess Dressing

Green Goddess Dressing

The delicious green dressing is believed to originate back to 1923 at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. Where the executive chef Philip Roemer wanted to pay tribute to an actor and his play The Green Goddess.

This dressing is new to me, it must be my Danish hesitance that have made me miss out on this delicious dressing. But from now on I am going use it with my salads from time to time.  

I know this dressing is old school, but the tanginess from the buttermilk and the taste of herbs really pairs well with a green salad.

Ingredients:

  • 180 ml (¾ cup) mayonnaise
  • 180 ml (¾ cup) buttermilk
  • 20 g (4 tablespoons) chopped fresh chives
  • 15 g (¼ cup) fresh Italian parsley, chopped
  • 3 tablespoons (about 5 g) fresh tarragon leaves, chopped
  • 1 glove garlic
  • 2 teaspoons anchovy paste
  • 1 lemon, the juice from
  • salt & pepper

Directions:

Combine all the ingredients in a blender, and blend the dressing until smooth. Season the dressing with salt and pepper. Serve the dressing with a pasta salad or a green salad.

Enjoy!

 

Roasted Hokkaido Pumpkin 5-Grain Salad

Salad, SidesTove Balle-PedersenComment
Roasted Hokkaido Pumpkin 5-Grain Salad

Roasted Hokkaido Pumpkin 5-Grain Salad

This is a perfect side to your fall roasts. It's colorful, healthy and has great texture. Hokkaido pumpkin is a mild pumpkin, not overly sweet like other pumpkins and winter squashes. This makes it easy to season so that it goes well with many different cuisines. This time I seasoned it a little to the mild side, and it went perfect with our rotisserie chicken.

Ingredients:

  • 1 medium Hokkaido pumpkin/red kuri squash
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • ½ teaspoon piment d'espelette
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 250 g (8.8 oz) 5 grains (mix of spelt, barley, whole grain long rice, Kamut and oats berries)
  • 1 large handful Italian parsley, chopped
  • 15 g roasted pumpkin seeds
  • 1 orange, peeled and cut into filets
  • salt & pepper to taste 

Directions:

Cook the grains according to package instructions. I cooked it in chicken stock. Drain and let sit to cool.

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃). 

Peel the pumpkin, cut it into two halves and scoop out seeds. Cut the pumpkin into ¾-inch cubes. Coat pumpkin with olive oil, rosemary, piment d’espelette and salt. Bake the pumpkin in a large ovenproof dish in a single layer, for 30-40 minutes. Let the pumpkin cool before mixing.

In a large bowl, mix together pumpkin, grains, parsley, orange filets and pumpkin seeds. Season the salad with salt and pepper. You can dress the salad with a lemony vinaigrette that you like.

Enjoy!

Whiskey Cream Sauce

SauceTove Balle-PedersenComment
Whiskey Cream Sauce

Whiskey Cream Sauce

Danes are a potato and gravy/sauce kinda people. I grew up on a lot of potatoes and my moms quick skillet sauce, which was made with milk or cream in the skillet, she had used for preparing the meat. Nowadays I only make this kind of sauce maybe once or twice a year. The amount of fat, is not agreeing with my way of living anymore.
In the 80's and 90's most Danes would serve you Knorr béarnaise when serving steak, some might make the homemade béarnaise for an extra treat. In the 00's whiskey cream sauce became a big hit, especially when Jensens Bøfhus (a chain of steakhouses) started selling their popular sauce in most grocery stores in Denmark.

This is my take on this classic whiskey cream sauce.  

Serves 6.

Ingredients:

  • 50 g salted butter (maybe you can use less)

  • 85 g (3 oz) tomato puree

  • 200 ml beef stock

  • 250 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 2 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

  • 2 tablespoons whiskey (DO NOT use a smokey one)

  • ½ teaspoon sugar

  • salt, pepper to taste

Directions:

Melt the butter in a saucepan. When melted, the butter will foam up, swirl the butter in the pan. When the foam subside and the butter is turning a golden brown, whisk in the tomato paste and then the rest of the ingredients. Let the sauce cook at a simmer, while whisking, for a few minutes so the most of the alcohol evaporates. Season the sauce with salt and pepper. You can thicken the sauce with cornstarch in cold water, if you like a thicker sauce.

Serve the sauce with your favorite steak.

Enjoy!

Garlic Green Beans

Dinner, vegan, Vegetables, Vegetarian, SidesTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Garlic Green Beans

Garlic Green Beans

For the longest time I have been making a bean salad with the same ingredients. It is a really easy salad that pairs perfectly with simmer foods. But instead of boiling water to boil the beans in, we now have to conserve water, because of the severe drought here in California, so why not just cook the beans in oil, and season the beans. This must be a win-win situation.

I like to just heat my beans through without getting them soft and soaky. I want my beans to be crispy and have somewhat of a bite.

Ingredients:

  • 300 g fresh green beans
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed
  • salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

Break off the ends (tops and tails) of the beans. Heat the oil in a large skillet. Add the beans and cook them over high heat, until they start to get some color, and they are heated through. Remove from heat. Season the beans with garlic, salt and pepper.

Pour the beans into a warm serving dish, and serve immediately.

Enjoy!

 

Hot Hot Sauce

condiments, Sauce, Spread & DipsTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Hot hot sauce

Hot hot sauce

We really like spicy food in my house. But I don't like hot and spicy just for the heat/pain, there is no fun in that. I need flavor, lots of flavor, and then the heat comes second. This sauce is flavor packed, with a good amount of heat. 

Mix the hot sauce with your ketchup, and you have a great "homemade" condiment for your next backyard BBQ.

Aiming for a very hot, hot sauce like the Google hot sauce by chef Charlie Ayers, the former executive chef for Google. This is what I came up with, using ingredients I had in the kitchen, giving the Google hot sauce a twist.

Makes little under 1 cup.

Ingredients:

  • 3 habanero chillies

  • 1 jalapeño

  • ½ carrot, diced

  • ¼ onion, chopped

  • ¼ teaspoon ginger, minced

  • ½ tablespoon raw sugar

  • ½ teaspoon chipotle chili

  • 1 teaspoon tomato pure

  • 1 teaspoon agave nectar

  • ½ teaspoon white wine vinegar

  • 1 teaspoon worchestershire sauce

  • ¾ teaspoon Thai fish sauce

  • ½ lime, the juice

  • water to almost cover

Directions:

Bring it all to a boil in a saucepan. Let it simmer, lid on, for 30-40 minutes, until the vegetables are soft.

Puree the sauce in a blender, and pass through a strainer. Store the sauce in a clean sealed jar in the refrigerator, it will keep 3-5 days like that.

Enjoy!

 

 

Warnings:

Use gloves, while chopping the chilies. 

Do not inhale the steam from the sauce, it works kinda like pepper spray.

Do not get sauce in your eyes. 

Be careful when working with hot liquids in a blender.  If you need a new blender, consider a Vitamix. They are expensive, but they are worth all the money. They can liquefy almost anything and makes soup and margaritas so smooth and creamy. But the best part, you can blend hot liquids without having to clean the soup off all your kitchen cabinets afterwards. Just saying. ;)