Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Appetizer

Dungeness Crab Soup

Appetizer, Fish & seafood, SoupTove Balle-PedersenComment
Dungeness Crab Soup

Dungeness Crab Soup

#SpisLokalt

Madblokkerudforfringen nr. 6

 

Spis lokalt giver jo meget god mening. For mig giver det god mening at spise det der er i sæson, lige meget hvor i verden du bor. Vi ved jo alle at en tomat smager bedst når den tages solvarm af planten. Eller at de bedste jordbær er dem man selv plukker. Men vi har vænnet os til at man til enhver tid kan få både tomater og jordbær, men det betyder at vi får frugter der ikke smager af ret meget, man kan foranlediges til at kalde dem kønsløse. Hvad værre er, vi belaster miljøet, når fødevarerne skal transporteres over lange afstande.

Da jeg flyttede til Californien, skulle jeg vænne mig til at sæsonen for frisk frugt og grønt blev udvidet, men også at jeg ikke længere kunne få fat i ting jeg før havde kunnet få. Jeg savner hyldeblomster, hyldebær, solbær og stikkelsbær. Men samtidig fik jeg foræret et kæmpe udbud af blandt andet citrusfrugter, som jeg slet ikke kendte til. Det er stadig en stor luksus for mig at kunne gå ud i haven og plukke appelsiner og citroner til husbehov det meste af året. 

Photo by Kelvin Yue/iStock / Getty Images

Photo by Kelvin Yue/iStock / Getty Images

En anden ting jeg lærte var at sæsonen for dungeness crabs starter sidst i november, lige omkring Thanksgiving. Denne krabbe er en gudespise. Jeg plejer at købe dem forkogte i Whole Foods Marked, hvor de gør dem klar til servering. Når jeg kommer hjem damper jeg dem, til de er rygende varm, og serverer dem med koldt smør, brød og en god tør hvidvin.

Men der er jo ikke meget ved at lave et indlæg med det, så jeg valgte at lave en krabbesuppe, lidt a la en hummersuppe, bare knap så tyk. Jeg har valgt at bruge californsk olivenolie, Dungeness crabs, Organic Straus Heavy Whipping Cream (fløde) og en pinot grigio fra vores lokale vingård Picchetti

Til 6 personer som forret.

Ingredientser:

  • 4 Dungeness krabber (Jeg brugte 3 hele krabber og skallerne fra 1)

  • 3 spsk olivenolie

  • 3 fed hvidløg, hakket

  • 2 gulerødder, hakket

  • 2 stilke blegselleri

  • 1 fennikel, hakket

  • 3 kviste frisk estragon

  • 3 spsk konc. tomatpure

  • 50 ml cognac

  • ½ flaske tør hvidvin

  • 500 ml fiske boullion, eller vand og en boullionterning

  • 300-450 ml piskefløde

  • friskpresset citronsaft , efter smag

  • cayennepeber, efter smag

  • salt, efter smag

Fremgsangsmåde:

Fjern kløerne og kødet fra krabberne, og sæt det i køleskabet indtil lige før serveringen.

Varm olien godt op i en stor gryde. Kom krabbeskallerne i og steg dem ved høj varme i 3-4 minutter. Tilsæt gulerødder, selleri, tomatpure, hvidløg, porre, fennikel og estragon og forsæt med at sautere i endnu 10 minutter. Tilsæt cognacen og antænd den. (Jeg gør dette udendørs, da jeg ikke ønsker at have brand i køkkenet.) Når flammerne er dødet ned tilsættes hvidsvin og fiskeboullion og evt lidt vand, så det dækker krabberne. Lad suppen simre i 25 minutter, sluk for varmen og lad den trække i yderligere 10 minutter, før suppen sies. Jeg sier suppen af 2 gange. Først igennem en pastasigte og derefter igennem en mere finmasket sigte.

Smag på suppen. Hvis du ønsker en mere koncentreret smag, så kog suppen ind. Husk at suppen stadig skal have en del fløde, så det skal være en kraftig suppe.

I mellemtiden koges fløden ind til det halve. Tilsæt fløden til suppen og smag den til med salt, cognac, cayenne og citroinsaft.

Server suppen i opvarmede tallerkener henover en krabbeklo og lidt krabbekød. (jeg damper kløerne og kødet i et par minutter før serveringen).

Velbekomme!

The English version: 

Dungeness Crab Soup

Serves 6 as appetizer.

Ingredients:

  • 4 Dungeness crabs (I used 3 and shells from 1, all pre-cooked)

  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

  • 3 garlic cloves, chopped

  • 2 carrots, chopped

  • 2 stalks celery, chopped

  • 1 fennel, bulb only, chopped

  • 3 sprigs fresh tarragon

  • 3 tablespoons tomato paste

  • 50 ml cognac

  • ½ bottle dry white wine

  • 500 ml fish stock or water and 1 bouillon cube

  • 300-450 ml heavy whipping cream

  • freshly squeezed lemon juice, to taste

  • cayenne, to taste

  • salt, to taste

Directions:

Remove the claws from the crabs and remove the crab meat from the shells. Refrigerate claws and meat, until serving.

Heat the oil in a large stockpot. Put the shells in the hot oil and brake them with a wooden spoon. Sauté the crab pieces for 3 to 4 minutes. Add the carrot, celery, tomato paste, garlic, leeks, fennel and tarragon and continue to sauté for another 10 minutes. Pour in the cognac and  ignite it. (I do this outside, to prevent a fire in the kitchen.) When the flames have subsided, pour in the white wine and enough fish stock or water to cover. Boil the soup for 25 minutes, remove from heat, let sit to rest for 10 minutes before straining the soup. I strained the soup in two steps. First straining through a colander, removing the large pieces, and then straining through a fine-meshed strainer. Taste the soup. If you want a more concentrated soup, reduce the soup, by simmering it, until you have the desired taste. Remember the soup will be diluted by the cream, so you need a strong base soup.

Meanwhile boil the cream until it has been reduced by half. Add the reduced cream to the base soup. Season the soup with salt, cognac, cayenne and lemon juice. 

Serve the soup in heated bowls over some crab meat and a claw. (Heat the meat and claw by steaming it for a few minutes.)

Enjoy!

 

Salmon Corn Chowder

Appetizer, Soup, Dinner, Fish & seafoodTove Balle-PedersenComment
Salmon Corn Chowder

Salmon Corn Chowder

Dansk udgave

I had my first chowder in San Francisco, it was one of the things you eat as a tourist, and it was so so. I know you can get good clam chowders, but the one I had on Fisherman's Warf, was not one of them. 

Salmon is my go-to fish, and making it to a chowder seemed to be a great idea, the first day the temperature was dropping below the 80's.  

This Chowder is pretty straight forward, a one pot soup, but is packed with great flavors. 

Serves 4-6

Ingredients:

  • 3 medium leeks

  • 2 stalks celery

  • 1 tablespoon butter

  • 6 medium potatoes (Yukon Gold)

  • 3 ears corn kernels

  • 1 pound (450 g) salmon filet, skin and bones removed, cut into 2-inch (5 cm) cubes

  • 3 thin slices smoked salmon, chopped

  • 1 cup (2½ dl) cream, optional, leave out to get a healthier soup

  • ½ cup (1¼ dl) white wine

  • 4 cups (1 liter) water

  • 2 Knorr fish stock cubes

  • 1 bay leave

  • 1½ teaspoons white pepper, freshly ground

  • 1 lemon, zest and juice

  • fresh dill for garnish

Directions:

Thinly slice the leeks.  Peel potatoes and cut them into large dices. 

Melt the butter in a thick bottomed pan over medium heat. Sauté the leeks and celery for about 8-10 minutes, until soft, stirring occasionally.  Add the wine to prevent browning. 

Add potatoes, white pepper, bay leave, water, and/or stock. Bring the soup to a boil, and reduce the heat, and let the soup simmer for about 10-14 minutes until the potatoes is almost tender. Discard the bay leave.

Blend about ⅔ of the soup including (⅔) potatoes and leeks until smooth*. This makes the soup nice and creamy. Mix the blended soup with the unblended part, with the cream, lemon zest and the corn kernels. Bring the soup to a simmer and add  both types of salmon, and let it simmer for about 3-5 minutes until the fish is cooked. The big chunks will separate somewhat, but thats perfectly fine.

Season the soup with salt, pepper and lemon juice.

Garnish with a few spring of fresh dill.

Enjoy!

 

*Be careful when blending hot liquids, it can make the lid pop off, and you may risk getting serious burns on you skin. You can remove the small cap on you blender lid and cover the lid with a clean kitchen towel. You need to hold on to the lid and towel. This will let the steam from the hot soup escape and avoid the lid from popping off. You can also get blenders like the Vitamix, where you can blend hot liquids, without any hassle.

 

The Danish version:

Lakse- og majschowder

4-6 portioner

Ingredienser:

  • 3 medium porrer

  • 2 stilke bladselleri

  • 1 spsk smør

  • 6 medium kartofler (ikke nogle der er melede)

  • 3 majkolber, kun kernerne

  • 450 g laks uden skin og ben, skåret i 5x5 cm tern

  • 3 skiver røget laks

  • 2½ dl fløde, kan udelades hvis du vil have en sundere suppe

  • 1¼ dl hvidvin

  • 1 liter vand

  • 2 terninger knorr fiske boullion

  • 1 laurbærblad

  • 1½ tsk hvid peber, friskkværnet

  • 1 citron, saft og skal

  • frisk dild til pynt

Fremgangsmåde:

Skyl og skær porrerne tyndt. Skræl kartoflerne og skær dem i ca 2x2 cm tern.

Smelt smørret i en tykbundet gryde, og sauter porre og selleri i omkring 8-10 minutter, uden at brune dem. Tilsæt vinen efter de første par minutter, for at undgå bruningen.

Kom kartofler, hvid peber, laurbærblad, vand og boullionterningen i, og lad suppen komme til kogepunktet. Kog suppen i 10-14 minutter indtil kartoflerne er næsten møre. Fjern laurbærbladet.

Blend ca. ⅔ af suppen incl. kartofler og porre*. Det gør suppen bliver dejlig cremet. Bland den blendede suppe med resterne af suppen og kartoflerne. Tilsæt fløde, revet citronskal og majsen, og kog suppen op. Tilsæt begge typer laks  til suppen. Lad suppen simre 3-5 minutter, indtil fisken er færdig. Laksestykkerne vil gå lidt i stykker, men det er helt fint. 

Smag suppen til med salt, peber og citronsaft.

Kom lidt dild oven på suppen, når den serveres.

Velbekomme!

*Pas på med at blende den varme suppe, da det kan give skoldninger, hvis låget hopper af. Man kan evt. tage det lille låg af blenderen og dække hullet til med et viskestykke, men der blendes. 

Crisp bread with beer

Appetizer, Bread, Breakfast, Brunch, SnacksTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Crisp bread with beer

Crisp bread with beer

I have been making crisp breads (knækbrød) for a long time now, but I wanted to change the flavor profile by adding beer and rye. The beer gives the breads a bitter note, that really pairs well with blue cheese or a cold beer.

Ingredients: 

  • 150 g all-purpose flour
  • 50 dark rye flour
  • ½  cup (1 dl) oil, (sunflower- or rapeseed)
  • ¾ cup (2 dl) stout, I used Mikkeller chipotle porter
  • 50 g oats
  • 50 g pumpkin seeds
  • 50 g flax seeds
  • 50 g sunflower seeds
  • 50 g sesame seeds
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1,5 teaspoon salt + more for sprinkling

Directions:

Mix all the ingredients in a stand mixer until combined.  

Divide the dough in two. Roll the dough as thin as the pumpkin seeds allow, between to sheets of parchment paper. 

Carefully remove the top parchment paper and cut the dough in desired sizes with a knife, or use a cookie cutter to make different shapes. Slide the parchment paper with the dough unto a baking sheet. Sprinkle salt, puppy seeds or other seeds. You can brush the breads with a little bit of water before sprinkling.

Bake the breads for 20 - 25 minutes at 400°F.

When the crisp breads are done, remove from oven and let cool completely on a rack and store in an airtight container.

Roasted Butternut Squash Soup

Appetizer, Dinner, Holiday, Soup, VegetablesTove Balle-PedersenComment
Roasted Butternut Squash Soup

Roasted Butternut Squash Soup

Dansk udgave

First time I encountered a butternut squash was after moving to the US. Every fall I would see piles of this oddly shaped beige vegetable in the grocery store. They were hard like a pumpkin, but didn't look like the pumpkins I knew from back home. Pumpkin was not something we cooked with in Denmark, at least not in my family. My mom had made pumpkin jam and sugar pickled pumpkin, but the recipes is long gone.

I got to taste a butternut squash soup at a friends house one Thanksgiving, and I kinda liked it, but I was on the sweeter side, and as I recall it, it had nutmeg or some warm spices in it. 

I don't have to tell you, but I'm not a fan of pumpkin pie, but I will never pass on a Pumpkin Spice Latte. It must be the coffee that make me love it.

I like a fresher and lighter taste to my butternut squash soup, so I was delighted when I found a soup with few ingredients, including an apple, on CHOW.com.  I made a few changes, and got a crisp fresh butternut squash soup, that even my squash-hating husband liked. He ranked it up with his favorite, spicy peach soup, so I must have hit something right with this soup.

Here is my version:

Serves 4 for dinner or 6-8 for an appetizer.

Ingredients:

  • 2 medium butternut squash, halved lengthwise and seeded

  • 2 tablespoons butter

  • 1 Granny Smith apple, peeled and diced

  • 1 small onion

  • 4 fresh sage leaves

  • 3 teaspoons chicken paste*

  • 4 cups (about 1 liter) water

  • 2 teaspoons salt or taste

  • ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper or taste

Garnish:

  • ½ cup toasted pumpkin seeds

  • ½ leek, thinly sliced

  • a few sugar pickled chilies

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 425°F (220℃). 

Line a baking sheet with aluminum foil. Place the squash pieces cut-side up on the baking sheet. Brush them with about 1 tablespoon of butter all over the cut side. Season generously with salt and pepper. Roast squashes for about 50 minutes, until knife tender and browned on the edges.

Melt the remaining butter in a Dutch oven over medium heat. Add the apple and onion, and cook while stirring until softened about 5 minutes. 

When the squash has cooled somewhat, scoop the flesh out with a spoon into the sautéed onions and apples. Discard the skins.

Add chicken paste and water, and bring it to a simmer over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat and let the soup simmer for about 15 minutes, until the flavors are blended. Season with salt, pepper and fresh sage. 

Purée the soup in batches in a blender** until smooth. (You can also use an immersion blender.) Season with more salt and pepper if needed. 

Serve the soup hot with your favorite garnish and a slice of good bread.

* You can use chicken or vegetable stock instead of the paste and water. 

**Be careful when blending hot liquids, it can make the lid pop off, and you may risk getting serious burns on you skin. You can remove the small cap on you blender lid and cover the lid with a clean kitchen towel. You need to hold on to the lid and towel. This will let the steam from the hot soup escape and avoid the lid from popping off. You can also get blenders like the Vitamix, where you can blend hot liquids, without any hassle.


The Danish version:

Bagt Butternut-Græskar-Suppe

Til 4 personer til aftensmad eller 6-8 personer til forret.

Ingredienser:

  • 2 mellemstore butternut græskar, halverede på langs og fjern frøene

  • 2 spsk smør

  • 1 Granny Smith æble, skrællet og skåret i tern

  • 1 løg

  • 4 friske salvieblade

  • 1 liter kylling eller grøntsagsboullion

  • 2 tsk salt, eller efter smag

  • ¼ tsk friskkværnet sort peber, eller efter smag

Tilbehør:

  • ½ dl ristede græskarkerner

  • ½ porre skåret i tynde skiver

  • lidt sukkersyltede chilier

Fremgangsmåde:

Opvarm ovnen til 220℃. 

Kom staniol på en bageplde/bradepande, og sæt de flækkede græskar her på, med skærefladen opad. Pensl dem med lidt smeltet smør, og krydder med rigeligt salt og peber. Bag græskarne i ca. 50 minutter, indtil de er møre og brunede i kanten. De er møre, når du let kan stikke en kniv ned i kødet.

Smelt resten af smørret i en stor tykbundet gryde, og sauter løg og æbletern heri indtil de er bløde, ca. 5 minutter. 

Når græskaret er kølet lidt og det er til at håndtere, skrab kødet ud af skallen og ned til løg og æbler. Smid græskarskallerne ud.

Tilsæt bouillonen og kog suppen op. Lad suppen simre i ca. 15 minutter. Krydr med salt, peber og salvie. 

Blend suppen i en blender eller med en stavblender. Pas på med at blende den varme suppe, da det kan give skoldninger, hvis låget hopper af. Man kan evt. tage det lille låg af blenderen og dække hullet til med et viskestykke, men der blendes. 

Smag suppen til med salt og peber en sidste gang, og server den brændvarm med det ønskede tilbehør.

Velbekomme

NB. Man kan få blendere som f.eks. Vitamix, som gør det muligt at blende varme supper uden problemer.

Grilled Oysters

Appetizer, BBQ, Dinner, Fish & seafoodTove Balle-PedersenComment
Grilled Oysters

Grilled Oysters

I went on a weekend getaway with my hubby. We went to Tomales Bay north of San Francisco. I love getting out of the city, away to small-town USA. Just a few hours driving takes you into the country side. Point Reyes Station is a small town with all the things you need. A few stores, a hole in the wall coffee shop (Toby's coffee bar makes very good lattes!) and a handful of restaurants using mainly local ingredients. 

I hadn't done my research properly, I know that now. I totally missed that we were going to cheese-country, but more about cheese in another post.

The view

The view

The real reason for this trip was to go back to Hog Island Oyster Farm. We went there last year and both of us have been craving their grilled oysters ever since. I know we could get our fix in downtown San Francisco, but it would not be the same. There is something special about sitting on wooden benches eating oysters while enjoying the beautiful view of Tomales Bay.

We brought some oysters back with us. I wanted to try to make these scrumptious grilled oysters at home. And my, oh my, oh my - the home grilled oyster was just as tasty as the ones at Hog Island Oyster Company.

serves 3-4

Ingredients:

  • 12 oysters (small oyster from Hog Island Oyster Company or any local oysters)

  • 1 lemon

Butter:

  • ½ stick (55 g) salted butter, cold

  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar

  • 2 tablespoons bourbon or whiskey

  • 2-3 tablespoons chopped chipotle chilies in adobo-sauce

  • 1 sprinkle of salt

  • 2-3 garlic cloves

And:

  • 1 knife for shucking the oyster (I used a Dexter-Russell)

  • salt for the serving plate

Direction:

Dissolve the sugar in the bourbon/whiskey. Add all ingredients to the a food-processor and mix until you have a smooth paste. Chill the butter until semi firm.

At the grill:

Heat your grill to a medium heat (400℉/200℃)

Shuck the oysters like in this video.

Place about ½ teaspoon of the butter in the open oyster and place them on the grill. Close the lid and peak a few times for the butter to melt and the liquid to start bubbling, let the oysters bubble away for about a minutes. Remove from the grill and let them cool for a brief moment before eating.