Saturday, April 21, 2012

Weekend Meal: Shrimp, Fennel, Citrus

This is my ceviche inspired dish - I hope you enjoy!

Ingredients:

1/4 lb Raw Shrimp (shell on = better flavor)
1 Grapefruit
1 Orange
2 Key Limes
3 Bulbs of Fennel
1 Teaspoon cumin
1/4 cup cilantro
1 Tablespoon Dill
1 Scallion
3 Tablespoons Olive Oil
1 Baguette
Kosher salt + cracked pepper

Directions:

Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a pan over medium heat:

Throw the shrimp on and cook them in their shell until they turn pink:

Remove the shrimp from the pan and set them to the side to cool.  Add another tablespoon of olive oil to the pan, slice the fennel and place it in the pan.  Next, sprinkle the fennel with cumin:


Let the fennel get good and brown:


Remove the fennel from the heat and let it cool.  Start sectioning the grapefruit and orange, and be sure to get all the juices:



Squeeze the juice of the limes over the fennel:


Its time to chop the herbs and the scallion:



Whisk the remaining juices from the orange and grapefruit together with a tablespoon of olive oil and salt & pepper to taste:


Take the shells off the shrimp, toss all of the ingredients together and pour the citrus vinaigrette over the salad.


 Serve with toasted slices of baguette.



And its that simple.

Enjoy!

~A~

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Candlelight Dinner #2: Salmon With Mango Salsa

Mango Salsa:

1 Tablespoon Fresh Dill
1 Tablespoon Fresh Cilantro
1 Tablespoon  Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Kosher or Sea Salt and Cracked Pepper
Juice of Half a Lemon
1 Teaspoon Onion
Two Mangoes

Directions: Peel and slice the mango into cubes (this is the hardest part of this recipe).  Whisk lemon juice and EVOO, then add herbs, onion, salt, pepper, and mango.  Set aside.

Seared Salmon:
Salmon Filet (enough for Two)
Kosher Salt
1 Tablespoon Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Directions:  Heat oil over medium heat.  Leave skin on the fish and sprinkle salt on the salmon flesh.  Lay fish in the stainless steal skillet with the flesh side down.  Once the fish is in the pan do not touch until it is done.  Cover the skillet, and when the salmon has changed from translucent the salmon is done - about 8-10 minutes.  Use a stainless still spatula to get all the golden bits up with your filet.

Plate the salmon and top the filet with the mango salsa.

Brussels Sprouts


1/2 lb Brussels Sprouts rinsed and cut in half
1 Teaspoon Kosher Salt
1 Tablespoon Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1 Tablespoon Grated Parmesan Cheese

Coat a skillet with olive oil and throw the brussels sprouts and salt in and cook until just soft and the edges chard. Plate and sprinkle with the Parmesan cheese.

And there you go ... it is that simple.  This is Delicious...

~A~

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Ron Paul Wins?

      In chess, a game is often won or lost long before it’s officially over. When that tide turns, it may take any number of moves to work out the impact, but the final result is inevitable. In other words, the battle has already been won, even though the doomed opponent may not even see it.

     I went to see Ron Paul speak at UCLA last night. Few in attendance (or elsewhere) believe that Paul can win the Republican nomination, yet the 5,800-seat stadium was full, with many climbing nearby trees just to catch a glimpse. I can bear witness to the fact that Paul’s supporters are continuing to show up in larger numbers than any of the leading candidates. Including Paul’s Tuesday stop in Chico, more than 12,000 folks came out to support Ron Paul in the last two days.

     On April 5, 2012, the day after setting two attendance records in a row, the only mention of Ron Paul on the Fox News site is an article (1) titled “Where’s Ron Paul? Campaign slows…”  The article flat-out lies by claiming that “the Ron Paul ‘revolution’ has gotten awfully quiet,” it “appears to be winding down on the trail,” and that “So far this month, [Paul’s] held just one [campaign event].” The sham of an article then poses this question: Why doesn’t Ron Paul quit? 

    Near the end of Paul’s 50-minute, no-notes speech, last night Paul provided the answer:  Ron Paul and his supporters believe that the ideas they hold cannot be stopped because their “time has finally come.”  As fellow Ron Paul champion Jesse Chapman put it, “Ron Paul can’t lose. He’s already won. He has won the battle of ideas.” (2)  You see, Paul understands what few politicians understand these days: good ideas are more powerful than people.  Rather than argue that he is better than President Obama or other politicians, Paul focuses his campaign on principles and ideas that are more powerful than himself. 

  If Paul, Chapman and the other thousands are correct, Paul’s campaign is simply the next move in the process of playing this game out to its inevitable conclusion.  So I pose a better question: Why quit a game when you’re winning? 


1 - http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/04/04/paul-campaign-making-fewer-stops-but-still-rolling


2 - http://www.examiner.com/city-buzz-in-los-angeles/massive-crowd-shows-up-to-see-ron-paul-los-angeles