lemon

Sort of grown up French toast

by Patricia on March 17, 2009 · 2 comments

French toast is the first thing I can remember cooking completely on my own.  I can’t remember learning to make it.  I just remember making it: eggs, milk, loaf bread, maybe some cinnamon or nutmeg, and if I was feeling really crazy a dash of vanilla.  Do you have anything like that?  You know, one of those things that you don’t know how you know it, you just know it?

Growing up, things around the house were kind of basic (well, except that we had a second refrigerator in the garage where mom kept all of the kimchi and other Korean foods).  We didn’t have the fancy breads in the house.  And we almost never had heavy cream or half-n-half.  My step-dad was strictly a Coffee-Mate kind of guy (the powdered kind).  But we always had eggs, milk, and some form of white loaf bread at home.  So my childhood French toast was pretty straightforward, but oh-so-good drenched in butter and Log Cabin syrup (or Mrs. Butterworth if I was lucky… I cherished those buttery-sweet bites when mom would let me pick the syrup at the grocery store).

These days I don’t buy much bread because I live alone and I don’t eat many sandwiches so the loaf goes uneaten.  When I do buy bread, it is usually a baguette or some other crusty bread that pairs well with cheese or is good for dipping in olive oil.  With so little bread in the house, I don’t have French toast very often any more which really is sad.  But after this post-run meal, I may have to reconsider my bread stocking habits.

I started with a good sized hunk of almost stale “rustic” bread.  I split it in half to expose the once tender middle.  A couple of eggs with heavy cream (I did just go for a run after all), about 15 minutes of patience, and I had a great meal.  Topped with homemade Meyer lemon curd and dusted with powdered sugar.  My one complaint?  I used the last of the lemon curd.  I guess I’ll have to make some more…

Unfortunately, this picture doesn’t really do it justice. The cream added a richness to it.  And my lemon curd… oh I miss you already.

French toast

4 pieces of bread (preferably something crusty like a baguette or brioche and slightly on the stale side, but good ole loaf bread works too)

2 large eggs

1/2 cup milk, half-n-half or heavy cream (you determine how decadent you’re feeling and choose accordingly.  I chose heavy cream this time)

1/4 teaspoon nutmeg and/or cinnamon (I like to use both.  And I don’t measure, I just sorta of sprinkle it until I’m satisfied)

a dash of vanilla extract (let’s say about 1/2 teaspoon)

1. In a small bowl or a pie plate, beat the eggs and cream or milk if you’re going light.  Add the nutmeg, cinnamon and vanilla.  Mix well.

2. I like to use a pie plate or a baking dish because it has a flat bottom and you can lay the bread in to soak.  If you are using fresher loaf bread, you don’t need to do this, you can just dip it, flip it and throw it in the pan (dip it for 30 seconds to 1 minute).  BUT if you are using something slightly stale or thick and crusty, you will want a flat bottomed dish that your bread will fit into.  For my 2-day old crusty “rustic bread”, I soaked each side for about 5 minutes to give it a chance to really soak in the egg-milk custard.

3. Is your pan hot?  I like a good cast iron skillet (even heating and all that).  But a nonstick or any other pan or griddle will work.  Heat a small amount of oil in your pan and then add some of your now eggy-soaked bread.  Don’t overfill the pan, but put as much as you think fits.

4. When the first side is brown and happy, flip it.  The cook time will vary according to the bread thickness.  The bread slices I used were about 1/2 inch thick and I cooked them for about 3-4 minutes per side.  (Note: if your french toast is brown on both sides but still gooey in the middle, you can put it in the oven at about 350 degrees to cook the middle).

5. Top it with butter and syrup or lemon curd and powdered sugar… or mom’s blueberry jam.  (You seriously can’t go wrong.  I’ve even skipped the cinnamon/nutmeg/vanilla and added salt and pepper to make a savory french toast and topped it with sundried tomato and olive bruschetta topping).

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Meyer lemon curd

by Patricia on March 1, 2009 · 8 comments

Meyer lemon curdI have never made lemon curd before, I always just buy it. But with 3 Meyer lemons awaiting their destiny, I thought WWBCD(What would Barefoot Contessa do)? I want to be the Barefoot Contessa when I grow up.

I followed this lemon curd recipe from the Barefoot Contessa, Ina Garten. It is an easy recipe if you have a food processor at your disposal. I don’t think it would be too much harder if you don’t have a food processor, but I might zest the lemon with a grater or zester rather than a vegetable peeler. Actually, I might do it that way next time anyway. The peeler method left me with pith to scrape off before I could use the zest.

The flavor of this lemon curd is fantastic. Fresh, very lemony. Not too tart and not too sweet. It is not as thick as the store-bought lemon curds I have tried, but the flavor makes up for that by leaps and bounds. I wonder if I should have cooked it a few minutes longer to thicken it more? Or is store-bought lemon curd just thicker because they use thickeners and preservatives? (It did thicken up a bit after being refrigerated overnight, but still not as crazy thick as some of the store bought stuff).

Either way, if you have not tried homemade lemon curd and like me have been intimidated by the process, I say just go for it. The flavor experience is worth all ten minutes you have to stand there stirring. I read while I stirred so 10 minutes went by very quickly: book in 1 hand, spoon in the other (I’m reading The Martha Rules by Martha Stewart. It’s interesting to read her perspective on starting a small business and following your passion).

I’m very much a chocolate girl, but I have really enjoyed the detour from chocolate with these Meyer lemons. In fact, I see more lemons in my future.

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Lemon custard cakes

by Patricia on February 26, 2009 · 11 comments

I bought a few Meyer lemons the other day with no purpose in mind except to try them (I know, I’m late to the party. But I’ve been swimming in chocolate ganache lately). So I started searching for a lemon recipe that spoke to me. I went through all of my cookbooks to no avail and then my fairy godmother handed me a recipe (Ok. She isn’t my fairy godmother. But Martha Stewart has been called the fairy godmother of the Meyer lemon, like in this article from NPR. Can you imagine having Martha Stewart as your fairy godmother?… lucky lemon).
lemon custard cake
This lemon custard cake was simple to make and dreamy to eat. It is light and airy and much too easy to eat (Much too easy to eat). It was a ray of sunshine in the middle of my weary day. It is more custard than cake. The top is almost like souffle. But the bottom is where you find the custard… and what dreams are made of. Lovely lemon-flavored dreams. I’ve got to say, Martha really knows her Meyer lemon (like a good fairy godmother should), and for that I thank her and her website minions for bringing us this recipe for lemon custard cake. I’ve also included the full recipe down below…

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By the way, I used a tip from Dorie Greenspan’s Baking: From My Home to Yours – I put the lemon zest directly into the sugar and rubbed it around to release the oils from the zest. It was kind of fun, like playing in the sand (lovely lemony sand that doesn’t end up in your bathing suit).

making lemon custard cake
This is just before folding the egg whites into the lemon-egg yolk mixture. I just thought it looked pretty so wanted to share it with you.

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My mix-and-match ramekins getting ready to go into the oven. There is a towel underneath the ramekins in the baking pan so that they stay put when you pour the boiling water into the pan.

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Exactly 1 minute before I took this photo, I was turning the timer off thinking “What am I supposed to do with a pan full of hot water? How do I get it out of the oven without spillage or worse? Martha didn’t say what to do. Why didn’t she say what to do?!” But you know what you do? You take a deep breath, open the oven door, slide the oven rack out and… calmly lift it to the stovetop. I’m embarrassed that I was so worried, but I had visions of sloshing boiling hot water all over myself and the kitchen. I wouldn’t recommend trying to transport the pan full of hot water across the kitchen (see sloshing), but lifting it out to the stovetop… easy peasy.

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A light dusting of powdered sugar and víola! Warning: these disappear quickly. I’m home alone and somehow 4 of them are already gone.

Lemon Custard Cakes
adapted from Martha Stewart’s Lemon Custard Cakes

Unsalted butter (room temperature), for buttering the ramekins
3 large eggs, separated
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
2-3 teaspoons grated lemon zest (1 lemon)
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1 cup milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
Confectioners’ sugar, for dusting

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Set a kettle of water to boil. Butter six 6-ounce custard cups (ramekins). Line a baking dish with a towel and place ramekins in the pan.
2. In a small bowl, massage your lemon zest into the sugar to release the lemon oils.
3. In a large bowl, whisk egg yolks and sugar until light. Whisk in flour. Gradually add lemon juice, then milk.
4. With an electric mixer, beat egg whites and salt until soft peaks form (I beat the egg whites until peaks formed when I lifted the beater but the whites were still glossy and the peaks sort of fell a little… soft peaks…)
5. Add the egg whites to the lemon batter and fold in carefully with a whisk (the batter will be liquidy).
6. Divide the batter into the ramekins (a ladle makes this really easy). Place the baking dish in the oven and fill with boiling water to halfway up the sides of the cups.
7. Bake until the cakes are puffed and lightly brown on top (Martha says the pudding is still visible in the bottom, but if your custard cups are white you’re not gonna see it. Also, with all of that water and stuff going on in the pan, I say if the tops are light brown its time to pull them. That’s what I did anyway). 20 to 25 minutes.
8. Serve slightly warm or at room temperature, dusted with powdered sugar.
Serves 6 (or 1 if you’re anything like me…)

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