Highland Games Weekend – September 8 – 9

This weekend is the Scottish Highland Games weekend at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival. We have a lot of interesting demonstrations lined up:

11am – spice making demonstration, learn how to make Garam Masala, Curry, and Ras El Hanout

12:30pm – Scotch Eggs and Shortbread

2pm – History of Spices and their uses

4pm – Haggis (yes, I will be making haggis from scratch)

5pm – seasoning your cast iron and wooden utensils.

Tandoori and Naan

This past weekend, September 1-3, 2012 was the Mideast Mirage weekend at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival.  We struggled through the long weekend with the excessive heat, but we overcame it and made very tasty recipes.  Our 12:30 show centered on our wood-fired oven that was funded through Kickstarter.  The campaign concluded on July 1, 2012.

Tandoori and Naan prepared at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival on September 3, 2012. Photo taken by Alice the Cook.

Each recipe we use is tested and altered to suit our needs.  The recipes below are the perfected versions of our recipes. 

Ingredients
2 lbs. skinless chicken thighs with bones
1 tsp saffron
1 tbsp hot water
1 cup onion, chopped
1” x 1” fresh ginger, minced
3 cloves of garlic, minced
1 tsp cumin seed
3/4 tsp coriander seed
1/8 fresh ground nutmeg
1/4 tsp chilies
3/4 tsp salt
2 tsp paprika
3/4 tsp turmeric 
1/2 a lime, zested and juiced
1 tsp olive oil
2 tsp of Punjab powder (1 tsp cinnamon powder, 1/2 tsp ground cloves, 
3/4 tsp of black pepper, 1/4 tsp ground cardamom) 
1 and 1/2 cup of unflavored Greek yogurt
1/4 cup melted butter or ghee

Preparing the marinade: 
Crush the saffron with your fingers and add to hot water and set aside for 10 minutes. Place whole seeds in a mortar and pestle or grinder and break them down to a course powder.  Mix the crushed spices with the powdered spices and mix in with the yogurt, saffron water, onions, garlic, ginger, lime juice and zest, oil and yogurt and mix until creamy. 

Cooking:
With a sharp knife cut deep crosses into the tops and bottoms of each piece of chicken.  Add the chicken to the marinade and transfer to a ceramic or glass bowl.  Let it sit in the refrigerator for 4-24 hours.  The longer it marinades, the better the flavor.

When ready, preheat oven to 425º F and remove the chicken from marinade and place the chicken in a single layer in a shallow, ceramic dish. Discard Marinate.  Bake for 15 minutes and baste the chicken with the butter/ghee and bake for another 10-15 minute or until the chicken is cooked thoroughly.

 

NAAN
1 package active dry yeast (or, if from bulk, 2 teaspoons yeast)
1 cup warm water
¼ cup white sugar
3 tablespoons milk
1 whole egg, beaten
2 teaspoons salt
4½ cups bread flour
2 teaspoons minced garlic (optional)
¼ cup butter (one half stick), melted

In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in warm water and let it stand about 5 minutes. Add the sugar to the yeast water and let it sit for a couple of minutes.  The sugar will help feed the yeast.  Stir in milk, egg, salt, and enough flour to make a soft dough. Knead for 6 to 8 minutes on a lightly floured surface, or until smooth. Place dough in a well oiled bowl, cover with a damp cloth, and set aside to rise. Let it rise 1 hour, until the dough has doubled in volume.

Punch down dough and pinch off small handfuls of dough about the size of a golf ball. Roll into balls, and place on a tray. Cover with a towel, and allow to rise until doubled in size, about 30 minutes.  The oven should have the fire removed and the temperature stabilized around 700 to 900 degrees F. 

At oven side, roll balls of dough out into thin circles. Use your rolling-pin to roll in the minced garlic into the naan and brush with butter.  Place dough on hearth, and cook until puffy and lightly browned. Brush uncooked side with butter, and turn over. Cook until browned (about 45 seconds in a 900 degree oven). Remove from hearth, and continue the process until all the naan have been prepared.

Now, if you do not have the advantage of a wood-fired oven, you may do a couple of things instead.  You may use a pizza stone in the middle of the oven and heat your oven to 500 degrees.  This will take longer, but will offer an adequate way of baking the naan.  Naan may also be baked in a cast iron fry pan on high temperature.  My assistant Rissa has used the back part of a pan as it is flat and easier to flip the naan. 

 

Mideast Mirage Weekend – September 1, 2 and 3

Alice the Cook and her assistants, Rose (L), Alice, Rissa, and Olaf (R). Photo by Renee Neumann (August 26, 2012)

This weekend is Mideast Mirage weekend at Minnesota Renaissance Festival and Alice the Cook is doing 5 shows each day:

11am – Spice blends of the Far East

 12:30pm – Chicken Tandoori and Naan

2pm – History and uses of spices

4pm  – Curried Chicken with wontons and samosas

5pm – Seasoning your cast iron pots and wooden utensils

As always, we love your questions.  Please come and sit in the shade and enjoy one (or all) of our shows!

Royal Ale Weekend – August 25 and 26

This next weekend is the Royal Ale weekend and Alice the Cook and her assistants are focusing on the cuisine from the British Isles. 

Alice the Cook working at her wood-fired oven

 11am – Spice making demonstration – learn how to make curry, garam masala, and ras el hanout spice blends

12:30pm – Cooking demonstration:  Pasties (need I say more)

2pm – History of spices

4pm – cooking demonstration:  Bubble & Squeak and Lemon Bread Pudding

5pm – How to season your cast iron cookware and wood utensils

You can see a preview of this weekend at http://renaissancefest.com/Assets/Forms/Guest/DailyProgram_wk2.pdf.

See you this weekend!

Wood-Fired Pizzas

This past weekend was the opening weekend for the Minnesota Renaissance Festival.  It was the Italian Carnivale themed weekend and we broke-in our new wood fired oven discussing the history of pizza and how it developed as well as demonstrated how to make pizza from scratch.  Many of those who attended the lectures requested the recipe for the pizza dough and I said I would comply.

Below is the recipe that my assistant Olaf provided.  It is very easy to do and use and made a very tasty pizza.  This is a pizza dough recipe that worked in our wood fired oven, but it is tailored for a standard oven.  Beneath this recipe is a pizza dough recipe ideal for wood fired ovens.

A pizza created by Alice the Cook and her assistants. August 18, 2012

Pizza dough (yields two 14” pizzas)
4 cups of flour (extra for rolling out)
1 tsp sugar
2 tsp salt
¼ cup oil (we used olive oil)
1 oz of yeast
½ cup warm water

Place the flour in a bowl and mix the water and yeast together in a separate cup.  Once done, add the sugar to the yeast water (this will feed the yeast).  Pour the yeasted water to the flour and begin to mix.  Add the oil and the salt to the dough.  The dough should be somewhat sticky, but not too much.  If it is very sticky, add more flour.  Knead the dough and prep it for rising.

To raise the dough, do not roll it into a ball. Press down on the dough and have the loose ends tucked under the dough and place the tucked side down.  You can place the dough in a bowl and set aside for a couple of hours at room temperature to rise.  After a couple of hours, separate the dough as needed (we made smaller 5-6” pizzas).  Use your hands to flatten out and place your desired toppings on the dough to cook.

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