Sesame brittle

Sesame Brittle

Ah! Happiness is when an Ottolenghi recipe (Book: Sweet) looks exactly like the picture – well except without the black sesame seeds. The taste ? Well imagine every sesame laddoo, Burfi or chikki you’ve ever had- this is better

Oven at 375, dissolve 100 g light corn syrup, 100g sugar, 3.5 tbsp butter and pinch of salt on the stovetop. Add 125 g of toasted sesame seeds and mix

Divide the mixture into 2 blobs on silpats or parchment cut to fit half baking sheets. Put another parchment sheet on top and roll to 1/8 inch thickness. Wait for a minute to cool and peel off top parchment. Slide on baking sheet and bake for around 15 min ( I burnt one batch because the instructions said 20 min)

Wait for them to cool – shatter into shards. Use as a garnish or just to eat. The recipe laughably says these will last for a week- it’s going to be tough to have them last for a day at the rate they are disappearing

Vegetarian pozole

Vegetarian Pozole

Vegetarian Pozole

I love all varieties of corn and all varieties of soups with toppings and when I came across Rick Bayless’ episode on pozole with pork, I knew I had to try it. Pozole corn is the nixmatalized corn (say that five times fast) that is used to make hominy ( boiled), dried masa (ground) or wet masa(cooked and ground) for tamales, tortillas etc. The flavor difference between dried Pozole and canned hominy is worth the effort of soaking and cooking it. I get my pozole from amazon or the Mexican grocery

I cup Pozole grains- soaked for 24 hours, discard the water, pressure cook for 1 hour till they “bloom” like pop corn and drain

1 cup kidney beans – soak for 24 hours.

Add one tbsp oil and 6-7 crushed cloves of garlic to a pressure cooker (I used my Cuisinart). Add beans and enough water to get about 2 inches above bean height. Pressure cook for 20 minutes. The garlic disintegrates to a flavorful stock,

Add Pozole, 2 cups of vegetable stock (I used better than bouillon after serious eats kept talking about how good it was and they were of course right)

Oh – before you started cooking stuff in the pressure cooker, you should have dry roasted some aromatic Mexican chillies (I used 4 pasillas) and soaked them in warm water for 2 hours. Now blend that to a paste

Add chili paste to soup, 1 tbsp cumin powder, 1 tbsp coriander powder, thin with water, add salt (this soup needs a lot of seasoning)

Cook everything on a slow simmer for 30-40 minutes.

The toppings make the Pozole

Radish shaved thin is my favorite (didn’t have any today), thinly sliced cabbage, onions, cilantro, avocado and so on and on.

The only essential topping is a huge squeeze of lime and some crushed Mexican oregano

Very good and smoky and healthy (1 tbsp of oil in the whole soup) and so worth the effort. It’s even better the next day