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Chicken Quesadillas with Guacamole & Pico de Gallo

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Chicken Quesadillas on a green plate accompanied by guacamole, sour cream, and pico.

Kids love quesadillas! Parents love them, too. Quesadillas are a fun way to pack several food groups into one single serving, and they are easy to make. Chef Alekka Sweeney enjoys putting together menus for kids that bring them into the kitchen to help prepare yummy, nutritious fare.

Alekka Sweeney is a Pittsburgh-based culinary director and baking instructor focused on dining curations and cooking classes. After more than 20 years spent in Chicago, her main goal is to share her culinary and baking skills with all ages and cooking levels. Her kid-friendly recipes are intended to be easy enough to give children some independence in the kitchen, encourage them to explore new flavors, and help them learn to prepare things for the entire family to enjoy.

CHICKEN QUESADILLA WITH GUACAMOLE AND PICO DE GALLO RECIPE

Yields 4 servings

Ingredients

1/2 cup queso fresco-crumbled
1/4 cup cheddar cheese-shredded
4 large whole wheat tortilla
1/2 lb boneless skinless chicken breast, cooked and shredded
1 red bell pepper cut into small dice
1/2 onion peeled and sliced into half moons
1/4 bunch cilantro-washed and chopped
Olive oil spray

Instructions

  1. Pre-heat the oven to 400°
  2. Combine the fresco and cheddar cheeses.
  3. Lay the tortillas on a cutting board or plate.
  4. On the bottom half of each of the tortillas, sprinkle 2 T of the cheese mixture.
  5. Then, you want to layer the chicken, red pepper, onion and cilantro on top of each of the tortillas. Each of the tortillas should have an equal amount of each of these ingredients.
  6. Sprinkle an additional 2 T of the cheese mixture on top of each of the tortillas.
  7. Fold the top half of each of the tortillas over the bottom half to cover the filling.
  8. Move to a cookie sheet lined with foil.
  9. Spray lightly the tops of each of the tortillas with the olive oil.
  10. Place the cookie sheet in the oven. Bake 8 to 10 minutes or until golden brown and heated through.

GUACAMOLE

Yields 4 servings

Ingredients

2 avocados
1/2 jalapeño, small
2 tbsp red onion
1 tsp garlic
1 bunch of cilantro
1 small tomato
1/2 lime

Instructions

  1. Open avocado and remove pit.
  2. Dice jalapeño into bite-sized pieces.
  3. Chop red onion and tomato.
  4. Mince garlic and tear cilantro.
  5. Scoop out the avocado and mash it with a fork.
  6. Mix in cilantro, tomatoes, jalapeño, red onion, and garlic.
  7. Squeeze in lime juice and mix.

PICO DE GALLO

Yields 4 servings

Ingredients

2 Plum tomatoes
1 jalapeño
2 tbsp white onion
Salt to taste
1 lime
1 bunch cilantro

Instructions

  1. Dice tomato and onion.
  2. Seed and mince the jalapeno.
  3. Add jalapeno and onion to a bowl with tomatoes.
  4. Squeeze juice of one lime over bowl.
  5. Add salt and pepper to taste.
  6. Optional: finish with chopped cilantro.

RECIPE BY ALEKKA SWEENEY / STYLING BY KEITH RECKER / PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE BRYCE / STORY BY STAR LALIBERTE

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Breakfast Smoothie Pops

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Children of all ages will say yes to a smoothie pop for breakfast.

Breakfast is the day’s most important meal and should house all your nutritional needs. These protein + oat protein-pops are Michaela Blaney’s answer for the whole family. Quick, convenient, and tasty. Fruit adds flavor and fiber; the protein keeps us from getting a glucose spike too early in the morning and houses sustainable energy, oats aid in stabilizing our blood sugars through and altogether. It is packed with antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals.

Here’s the best part — we know how hard it is getting out the door in the morning, so make these the night before, freeze them and serve the kiddos “popsicles” for breakfast en route to school. No more tears and tantrums when they don’t want what you’re serving. The recipe makes enough for mom and dad to enjoy one too!

Michaela Blaney is a certified health coach, clean recipe developer, and overall health enthusiast. Being a proud “Aunt” to many tiny humans, cooking nutritious and “kid-approved” meals has become both her hobby and a life feat. She sees first-hand how challenging being a parent is — juggling all the balls while trying to appease many picky appetites that change with the wind. She has made it her goal to provide friends and parents alike with tasty, super nutritious, and fun food for the whole family.

Breakfast Smoothie Pops Recipe 

Blueberry Protein Pops Recipe 

Blueberry Protein Pops Ingredients

  • 1-2 frozen bananas (depending on size)
  • 2 cups frozen blueberries
  • 2 scoops of vanilla protein powder (I use Ritual or Rootz)
  • 1 handful of frozen spinach
  • 3.5 cups of lite coconut milk
  • handful or blackberries

Protein Pops Preparation Instructions

  1. Blend all ingredients except the blackberries on high for 1 minute until smooth (most blenders have a smoothie option).
  2. Add the blackberries and pulse a few times.
  3. Pour into popsicle molds and freeze overnight.
  4. Take what’s leftover, separate it into two mason jars, and store it in the fridge until the morning!

Peach ‘n’ Porridge Pops Recipe

Peach ‘n’ Porridge Pops Ingredients

  • 1-2 frozen bananas (depending on size)
  • 1 cup frozen peaches
  • 1 cup fresh peaches (if you can’t find fresh, just use frozen)
  • 2 scoops of vanilla protein powder (I use Ritual or Rootz Nutrition)
  • 1 cup of gluten-free quick oats
  • 4 cups of unsweetened almond milk (or any plant milk of your choice)
  • granola for garnish

Porridge Pops Preparation Instructions

  1. Blend all ingredients on high for 1 minute until smooth (most blenders have a smoothie option).
  2. Pour into popsicle molds and sprinkle a little granola on the base if you’re fancy – this is TOTALLY optional — freeze them overnight.
  3. Take what’s leftover, separate it into two mason jars, and store it in the fridge until the morning!

Recipe and Story by Michaela Blaney / Photography by Erin Kelly 

Find more recipes and wellness information on Michaela’s instagram @michaelablaney or at her website www.michaelablaney.com.

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Snackle Box

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Michaela Blaney saw a meme online of someone at the beach using a fishing tackle box as a snack box, aka a “snackle box.’ Though this was supposed to be a joke, she took it VERY seriously and set out to create her own.

Why? “I have seen it countless times: you present a child with 1 to 4 snack options, and each one is swatted away,” she says. So to avoid hangry children on the verge of a meltdown, present them with The Snackle Box. “Yes, I feel like this is something a ‘cool aunt’ would do, and might be used ONLY for special occasions, but it does the trick,” Michaela asserts.

The options are endless, so use your imagination and pantry. Presenting mundane snacks like carrots and grapes in this way can reinvigorate joy in the little things. “My friend used it to play a snack bingo as they drove to their next activity; ‘eat something that’s GREEN!’ — tricked ya kid!”

Michaela Blaney is a certified health coach, clean recipe developer, and overall health enthusiast. Being a proud “aunt” to many tiny humans, cooking nutritious and “kid-approved” meals has become both her hobby and a life feat. She sees first-hand how challenging being a parent is — juggling all the balls while trying to appease many picky appetites that change with the wind. She has made it her goal to provide friends and parents alike with tasty, super nutritious, and fun food for the whole family.

SNACKLE BOX

Here are some of my favorite healthier options:

Hu Cookies – refined sugar-free, grain-free, and tiny!

UNREAL – healthier m&ms but surprisingly yummier!

Miniature anything: grapes, cookies, chips, etc

Cereal – I like ones with added protein like Three Wishes or Magic Spoon!

Cut seaweed snacks down to fit the box

Smart Sweets offer dye-free gummies and lollipops sweetened with low sugar options that are great alternatives for kids!

Note: try to buy a BPA-free, washable tray!

RECIPE & STORY BY MICHAELA BLANEY / PHOTOGRAPHY BY ERIN KELLY

Find more recipes and wellness information on Michaela’s instagram @michaelablaney or at her website www.michaelablaney.com

Try Michaela’s family-friendly recipes from TABLE:

Breakfast Smoothie Pops

Ever’s Banana Muffins

Clean Pot Roast

Fancy Fish Sticks

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White Nectarine Julep

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A white Nectarine Julep in a clear glass with mint garnish sits on a table.

Skim this recipe quickly, and you might be surprised to see a glaring omission from this White Nectarine Julep: bourbon. While Kentucky has popularized day-drinking mint and bourbon, it is, apparently, not the only way for a drink to qualify as a Julep.

About the Julep

According to Liquor.com, “The Mint Julep gained prominence in the southern United States during the 18th century, and it first appeared in print in 1803 in John Davis’ book Travels of Four and a Half Years in the United States of America. He wrote that the Mint Julep is a ‘dram of spirituous liquor that has mint steeped in it, taken by Virginians of a morning.’ An ice-cold whiskey drink is certainly one way to start your day. Since its creation, the Mint Julep has remained popular, but the julep itself is actually a category of drinks featuring a spirit served over crushed ice.”

How This Inspired Our White Nectarine Julep

With that bit of freedom, I sought an often overlooked spirit, Lillet, and took advantage of stone fruit season. A simple syrup made with wildflower honey and rooibos tea adds a spiced note to the juicy fruit. The resulting cocktail is light, refreshing, and perhaps, as John Davis would say, quite “spirituous.”

This cocktail also lends itself to batching, so make a big mason jar, so you can sit back and enjoy more of your next summer soiree.

 

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A white Nectarine Julep in a clear glass with mint garnish sits on a table.

White Nectarine Julep


  • Author: Quelcy Kogel, Adapted from Serious Eats
  • Yield: 2 Cocktails 1x

Description

Not a fan of bourbon? Here’s the julep for you!


Ingredients

Scale

For rooibos tea syrup:

  • 1 ½ cups water
  • 1 cup honey
  • 6 rooibos tea bags
  • 1/2 cup boiling water
  • 1/2 cup honey

For the cocktail:

  • 1/2 of an overripe peach, cut into slices
  • 1 1/2 oz rooibos tea syrup
  • 1 ½ oz fresh juice from 1 lemon
  • 2 oz cognac, such as Pierre Ferrand
  • 2 oz Lillet Blanc
  • Crushed ice
  • Large bunch of mint for garnish


Instructions

For the rooibos tea syrup:

  1. Bring the water and honey to a boil to combine.
  2. Remove from heat, add the tea bags, and steep for 5 minutes.
  3. Let cool before straining and using.
  4. Store the syrup in the refrigerator.

For the cocktail:

  1. In a mixing glass, muddle peach slices, rooibos syrup, and lemon juice into a rough pulp.
  2. Add cognac and Lillet blanc, stir to mix.
  3. Pour unstrained into serving glass.
  4. Fill the serving glass with crushed ice, garnish with a large bunch of mint.

Recipe and Photography by Quelcy Kogel

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Cheater Mint Juleps

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This mint julep is an icy, refreshing flavor perfect for grilled pairings, days by the pool, a beachy nightcap, or simply a sipper while watching the fireflies.

Many years ago I brought home my adorable Aussie-Lab puppy, and we bonded immediately. What didn’t quite click was her farm-given name of Greta. I figured dogs are “man’s best friend” and bourbon is a girl’s best friend, so put the two together, and she became the classic Kentucky Derby cocktail, Julep. (She even has an “M” pattern on her tummy, which makes me think she was always meant to be minty.)

Mint Julep Season

Mint Juleps are the drink to have come Derby time in May, but the combination merits a longer summertime run, especially when mint is rampant. It’s an icy, refreshing flavor made for grilled pairings, days by the pool, a beachy nightcap, or simply a sipper while watching the fireflies.

The classic mint julep muddles mint and sugar at the bottom of each cocktail glass before adding crushed ice and bourbon. Instead of muddling the mint, I like to make a batch of mint simple syrup with bourbon-barrel maple. It makes for a quick Mint Julep once the syrup is ready and waiting in your fridge.

For you gardeners, green thumbs, and farmers market fans, the simple syrup is a resourceful way to take advantage of mint while there’s a surplus and preserve that fresh flavor into the fall.

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This mint julep is an icy, refreshing flavor perfect for grilled pairings, days by the pool, a beachy nightcap, or simply a sipper while watching the fireflies.

Cheater Mint Juleps


  • Author: Quelcy Kogel
  • Yield: 1 Cocktail 1x

Description

The mint maple syrup makes this unlike any julep you’ve had before.


Ingredients

Scale

For the mint maple syrup:

  • 3/4 cup water
  • ½ cup maple syrup
  • A large bunch of fresh mint

For the mint julep:

  • Crushed ice
  • 2 oz bourbon
  • 1/2 oz maple mint syrup, or more, to taste
  • Fresh mint, to garnish


Instructions

For the syrup:

  1. Combine the water and maple syrup in a saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a low boil, then simmer until combined.
  2. Remove from heat, and add the fresh mint. Cover and set aside to infuse for at least 30 minutes (I often leave mine in the refrigerator overnight for a really minty flavor).
  3. Strain the mint, and transfer the syrup to a glass jar, and store in the refrigerator.

For the cocktail:

  1. Fill a glass with crushed ice, then pour the bourbon and simple syrup over the ice. Top with fresh mint, and enjoy!

Recipe and Photography by Quelcy Kogel

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Smoked Carrot Dip with Pretzels

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Smoky and delicious. Kids will enjoy making this. You will enjoy eating it.

We’re doing our part to bring you recipes that will encourage you to get your kids in the kitchen. This roasted carrot dip is a great make-ahead treat that is perfect as an after school snack for kids. Once they get the hang of this recipe, have them make a batch for you. TABLE friend and contributor Chef Alekka serves this at her dinner parties. It’s a great dip to add to a grazing table or to serve alone as a tasty little snack for your guests.

Alekka Sweeney is a Pittsburgh-based culinary director and baking instructor focused on dining curations and cooking classes. After more than 20 years spent in Chicago, her main goal is to share her culinary and baking skills with all ages and cooking levels. Her kid-friendly recipes are intended to be easy enough to give children some independence in the kitchen, encourage them to explore new flavors, and help them learn to prepare things for the entire family to enjoy.

SMOKED CARROT DIP WITH PRETZELS RECIPE

*Adapted from Epicurious

Ingredients

½ cup skin-on almonds

2 lb. carrots, trimmed, peeled

2 Tbsp. plus

½ cup extra-virgin olive oil; plus more

2½ tsp. kosher salt, divided, plus more

2 garlic cloves ½ cup canned chickpeas

3 Tbsp. (or more) fresh lemon juice

1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

¾ tsp. smoked Spanish paprika

½ cup coarsely chopped parsley, plus leaves for serving

1 bag mini pretzels

Instructions

Preheat oven to 350°.

Toast almonds on a rimmed baking sheet, tossing halfway through, until slightly darkened and fragrant, 8–10 minutes.

Let cool; set aside.

Cut any thick carrots in half lengthwise, then slice all carrots crosswise into 4 pieces.

Toss on a parchment-lined baking sheet with 2 Tbsp. oil and 1 tsp. salt.

Spread carrots out evenly on baking sheet and roast, stirring once or twice, until very tender and starting to shrivel and brown (but not char), about 1 hour

Transfer carrots to a food processor; add garlic, chickpeas, lemon juice, pepper, paprika, chopped parsley, ½cup oil, 1½ tsp. salt, and reserved almonds.

Process, adding more oil as needed, until mixture is almost completely smooth.

Taste dip and add more lemon juice and/or salt if needed.

Place dip in a bowl and garnish with olive oil and parsley.

Serve with pretzels.

Yields 3 cups

RECIPE BY ALEKKA SWEENEY / STYLING BY KEITH RECKER / PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE BRYCE / STORY BY STAR LALIBERTE

Try some of TABLE’s other kid-friendly recipes:

S’mores Empanadas

Strawberry Pineapple Agua Fresca

Homemade Marshmallows

Quesadilla with Guacamole and Pico de Gallo

Turkey and Granny Smith Apple Sandwich

Chicken Satay with Cucumber Salad

Peach and Corn Salsa with Tortilla Chips

Chili-Lime Popcorn

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Huevos Rancheros with Corn Tortilla Arrows

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Small portions of Huevos Rancheros, A classic Mexican dish reimagined into a lighter, more delicate version of itself.
A classic Mexican dish reimagined into a lighter, more delicate version of itself.

Chef John Sedlar conceived this preparation as a lighter version of the traditional hearty Southwestern breakfast dish. You might use it as an appetizer for a lunch or dinner menu, or as part of a larger morning spread. Serving the huevos mixture in the egg shells takes a bit of fiddling, but is so worth it for the presentation’s wow factor. You might want to have a couple of extra eggs on hand, though, in case you break a shell while creating the egg “containers.” Pair brown-shelled eggs with white or yellow tortilla arrows, or white-shelled with a blue corn variation, if you like.

Huevos Rancheros with Corn Tortilla Arrows Recipe

INGREDIENTS FOR THE TORTILLA ARROWS

3 corn tortillas

Vegetable oil for frying

INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE TORTILLA ARROWS

  1. Cut each tortilla into 12 long slim triangular “arrowheads.” Heat ½ inch of oil in a large heavy skillet over high heat to 375 degrees on a deep-fry thermometer. Fry the tortilla triangles in several batches until crisp, about 2 minutes per batch. Drain them on paper towels and pat off any excess oil.

INGREDIENTS FOR THE HUEVOS RANCHEROS

12 large or extra-large eggs

¼ cup half-and-half

Table salt to taste

2 tbsp unsalted butter

6 tbsp finely diced white onion

1 to 2 fresh jalapeños, roasted, peeled and diced fine (See note below)

½ red bell pepper, roasted, peeled and diced fine

4 oz creamy goat cheese, such as Montrachet

INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE HUEVOS RANCHEROS

  1. Use an egg cutter or a sharp small knife to cut off the top quarter of the narrow end of each egg. Empty the eggs into a bowl and carefully rinse out the shells. Whisk the eggs with half-and-half and a bit of salt.

  2. Melt the butter in a saucepan over moderate heat. Sauté the onion in the butter until very lightly colored, about 1 minute. Lower the heat and add the beaten eggs and remaining ingredients. Cook over low heat, stirring frequently, for only about 3 minutes, until the eggs are just cooked through and still very creamy.

  3. Carefully spoon a portion of the scrambled eggs into a shell, mounding the eggs slightly. Place the filled egg in an egg cup. Repeat with remaining eggs and shells. Stand 3 tortilla arrows around one side of the inside rim of each eggshell. Serve immediately.

Note: Roast the jalapeños in the same way as described for the New Mexico green chiles in the previous recipe.

Styling by Keith Recker / Photography by Gabriella Marks

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Fire-Roasted Green Chile

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Acclaimed Chef John Sedlar elevates traditional chile rellenos with French inspiration.

The striking green chile dish that acclaimed Chef John Sedlar made TABLE comes from his 1980s restaurant Saint Estephe. John fills New Mexican pods with a French-style reduction of mushrooms, then blankets them with a velvety goat cheese sauce. Sweet peas were in season when the meal was served, so John scattered some over the plates. Feel free to add a handful of lightly cooked peas, if you wish. The original recipe appeared in John Sedlar’s Modern Southwest Cuisine (Simon & Schuster, 1986).

Fire-Roasted Green Chile Recipe

For the Mushroom Duxelles:

1 tbsp unsalted butter
2 lb button mushrooms, rinsed, patted dry, and finely chopped
½ cup whipping cream
½ tsp table salt
½ tsp white pepper

 Instructions

Melt the butter in a large saucepan over moderate heat. Add the mushrooms and sauté them until all of their liquid evaporates, about 20 minutes. Stir in the cream, salt, and pepper. Continue cooking the mushrooms, stirring occasionally, until they have absorbed all of the cream and the mixture is thick, about 20 minutes more.

For the Garlic Chèvre Sauce:

½ cup dry white wine
3 garlic cloves, finely chopped
½ tsp table salt
2 cups whipping cream
5 oz creamy goat cheese, such as Montrachet, crumbled
6 plump, fresh New Mexican green chiles, roasted, peeled, and seeded (see note below)
½ tsp table salt

 Instructions

  1. Put the wine, garlic, and salt in a medium saucepan over moderate-to-high heat. Bring to a boil, and reduce by about one-half, about 5 minutes. Stir in the cream and goat cheese with a wire whisk, then pass the sauce through a sieve. Set it aside and keep warm.
  2. While the sauce is cooking, spread the chiles open on a work surface. Lightly salt their insides and spoon 3 tablespoons of the duxelles along the length of each. Fold the chiles closed and place them, seam-side down, on a greased baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.
  3. When the sauce is ready, cover the rellenos with a damp kitchen towel and bake them until heated through, about 10 minutes.
  4. Spoon equal portions of sauce on the middle of warmed plates. Place a chile on each plate and serve.

Note: Chiles can be roasted in several ways, or purchased already roasted, from a New Mexico farmers’ market or supermarket, in season. The easiest way to roast just a handful of pods, as needed here, is to hold each chile over a gas burner with a high flame. (Alternately, use a gas or charcoal grill to blister the pods.) Use tongs or a large fork to turn. Sear and blacken the chile’s skin on all sides. Transfer the pod to a covered dish or plastic bag, to steam briefly. Repeat with the remaining pods. When cool, strip off the peel, using a paper towel to help remove any stubborn bits of skin. Slice down one side of the chile lengthwise, and gently cut out the seed pod at the chile’s stem end.

Styling by Keith Recker / Photography by Gabriella Marks

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Wild Caught Alaskan Salmon

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Chef Nath’s recipe for Wild-Caught Alaskan Salmon blooms with colors and aromas.

While Khmer cuisine may not be as well-known as other Southeast Asian traditions, it contains a multitude of intriguing flavors and combinations. Chef Nath’s recipe for Wild Caught Alaskan Salmon blooms with colors and aromas. Its unexpected notes of lemongrass, lime leaves, turmeric, and more, launch you on a remarkable journey through its marinade. After a perfect sear, adding a dollop of rice and seared vegetables will have you wanting to linger where it takes you.

Tips for Picking Out Salmon Filets

When you’re selecting salmon fillets for our Wild Caught Alaskan Salmon, you want to really look at freshness and quality. Look out for fillets with vibrant and consistent color. Each salmon’s color can range from a deep red to a bright pink, depending on the variety. You don’t want to buy fillets with dull or faded hues since these cuts are normally older. The actual texture of the flesh should appear moist and firm, not mushy or dry. Plus, any strong, fishy odor usually means spoilage. If possible, choose fillets with the skin on, especially for this recipe, which helps retain moisture during cooking and can add flavor.

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Chef Nath’s recipe for Wild-Caught Alaskan Salmon blooms with colors and aromas.

Wild Caught Alaskan Salmon


  • Author: Chef Nath

Description

Learn how to cook salmon to perfection.


Ingredients

Scale

  • 3 stalks lemongrass, thinly sliced (use only the bottom 3 inches of the stalk)
  • ½-inch piece galangal (blue ginger), peeled and finely chopped
  • 10 kaffir lime leaves, finely sliced with the hard center ribs removed
  • 4 oz turmeric, chopped
  • 12 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 5 shallots, finely chopped
  • Chili flakes or fresh chilies
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 spoonful palm or coconut sugar
  • 4, 6 oz salmon fillets, skin-on
  • Sesame oil
  • Sprouts


Instructions

For the marinade:

  1. First, pound or blend together the lemongrass, galangal, lime leaves, and turmeric.
  2. Then, put garlic, shallots, chili flakes, salt, and sugar together and pound with pestle (can also be done with robot coupe machine) until the mixture forms a thick paste.

For the salmon:

  1. Marinate the salmon with lemongrass paste and sesame oil (or your preferred oil) for 30 minutes.
  2. Pan-fry or broil salmon until just done.
  3. Serve with white or brown rice, sautéed vegetables, and sprouts.

Story by Gabe Gomez
Styling and Photography Douglas Merriam

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Prime Steak Tartare

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Aerial view of Prime Steak Tartare on a small, black, bowl looking plate.
Chef Kathleen Crook’s recipe for Prime Steak Tartare is a classic, beautifully executed interpretation of a perennial steakhouse favorite.

Chef Kathleen Crook’s recipe for Prime Steak Tartare is a master class in restraint and a valuable reminder that the best ingredients are best handled simply. Her dish is a classic, beautifully executed interpretation of a perennial steakhouse favorite. marketsteersteakhouse.com

Ingredients

  • 1 shallot, minced

  • 2 tsp ketchup

  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce

  • 2 tsp Dijon mustard

  • 2 dashes hot sauce

  • 2 tsp brandy

  • 1 gherkin, minced

  • 1 tbsp flat-leaf parsley

  • Sea salt as needed

  • 3 oz beef filet

Instructions

  1. Mix all ingredients together. Toss with the meat and serve Prime Steak Tartare cold.

Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling and Photography Douglas Merriam

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