Category Archives: Wine and Cheese Pairings

Stopover Istanbul, sensory overload and killer kofte, recipe included

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Spice Market Istanbul

On my way to this years #EWBC, held in Izmir, Turkey I couldn’t resist making a pit stop in one of the world’s most exotic cities, Istanbul. I’d done a bit of foodie research, but, frankly I was in no way prepared for the kaleidoscope of color, tantalizing aromas and gracious welcome into the window of a completely foreign culture.

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Suite in Sultania

After a head turning ride from the airport I arrived at my little gem of a hotel, The Sultania,  in Sultanamed. Check in here was a bit of a treat for this weary traveler. After ordering me up a sampling of Turkish delight (a sweet made from a gel of starch and sugar) and a petite cup of the infamously strong local coffee my informative host checked me into a fabulously posh suite and had me booked on a walking tour of the Spice Market later in the day. A quick drop at my room, another bite or two of more sweet delights left in a gleaming copper serving vessel and I headed out to explore the markets.

Filled with Turkish delights!

Filled with Turkish delights!

I’ve been to many markets, in every corner of the world, but none quite like the Spice Market in Istanbul. As I peered in a psychedelic spectrum of colors blurred my jet lagged eyes. Walking down the aisle jam-packed with small booths vendors beckoned me in with promises of the best seasoning blends, price and quality.

Spice Market Istanbul

Spice Market Istanbul

Mountains of cumin, sumac, saffron, chili, rubs and dried fruits tempted me with their odoriferous splendor. While sampling a few seasoning blends I wondered just how much room I had in my suitcase? Surely I could find a way to transport just a bit of this boatload of flavor back home? Admittedly I’ve been known to leave clothes behind just to make room for culinary treasures. I had a feeling this trip would set a new record in happy maids overjoyed with finds of little black dresses left in my various hotel rooms.

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Settling on several different spices including a kofte blend for making what would be my favorite Turkish treat, a type of meatball dish, I happily stashed my culinary booty into my shopping bag dreaming of winter nights full of recipe research and experimentation. Walking through the stalls I wandered to the outside booths selling fish, meats and a variety of delicious Turkish cheeses including Tulum, Cecil and Kasar.

Turkish cheeses

Turkish cheeses

The friendly cheesemonger offered tastes to hungry shoppers passing by and I found the Tulum and Cecil my favorites. Tulum’s salted curds are aged in goat skins for 6 months to develop a unique aroma and texture. Pungent and flavorful it did not disappoint! Apparently there are many different versions depending on which region it is produced in but this one was dry and flaky with a salty savory finish. The Cecil is a type of string cheese but unlike the funky, dense sticks sold in the US it pulls apart in delicate, airy strings that are addictively snackable! Remembering the list of Turkish wines I spied at Sultania’s rooftop lounge I bought a bit of each planning  a bit of late night pairing.

Walking back to the hotel for a much-needed rest before dinner I found myself tempted by food vendors selling crazy street foods including wet burgers, grilled corn, circles of sesame coated bread and kofte. Choosing some kofte with roasted tomato I experienced my first taste of Turkish meatball heaven, I was hooked. A Cheshire cat grin beamed on my face as I devoured the spicy spheres of meaty goodness, my first meal in this country full of mystical moments. While pondering what was is store for the rest of my trip I wondered if I could duplicate this delicious but simple meal at home?

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Different shapes, sauces, spices and  cooking methods of kofte seem to be endless. Depending on chopped or grated onion, fat content of meat and regional differences there is thought to be around 290 different versions of kofte in Turkey. Throughout my visit I tasted many different versions but found the ones I liked the most included cumin and a bit of fresh mint. After a bit of trial and error I’ve come up with a recipe I love. I hope you enjoy it also!

This is just a brief snippet of my journey into the world of Turkish food, wine and culture. Many more posts on the grapes, regional specialties and history of the culture are on the horizon. Stay tuned for updates!

Kofte with yogurt sauce

Ingredients

In large bowl mix meat with eggs, breadcrumbs, onion, garlic and red pepper. Add all spices and blend well to incorporate. Cover bowl and refrigerate for at least 2 hrs or overnight. Shape meat mixture into large cigar shapes. Heat olive oil in frying pan over medium heat. Add the meatballs and fry till browned  flipping so not to get to dark, around 5 minutes on each side in total. I like to serve these with sautéed tomato, yogurt sauce and veggies but fries or pita bread would also be a good complement.

Cigar shaped Kofte

Cigar shaped Kofte

For yogurt sauce-

  • 1 cup yogurt
  • 1/4 cup chopped red onion
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint
  • 1 teaspoon sumac
  • 1 teaspoon lemon juice
  • pinch of kosher salt and white pepper, or to taste

Blend all ingredients and chill for at least one hour. Serve with meatballs and enjoy.

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Balls for Christmas! Cheesy inspiration for your holiday table

Almond covered pine cone, try using spiced almonds or marcona almonds with rosemary for a different spin

Ok, I know what your thinking. What the hell? Is she really posting about cheeseballs? No self-respecting #cheeselover would ever admit to eating (or God forbid craving) such a thing. It would be like admitting I was longing for a taste of another holiday tradition in my family, that lead weight, doorstop of  fruitcake my crazy spinster Aunt made every year. Aren’t they just a fixture on the holiday table, an old and better forgotten culinary dinosaur? Well think again! Cheeseballs have come a long way from those funky, salty things made from processed cheese, rolled in soggy nuts and topped with a glowing maraschino cherry!

Last years Cheeseball Invitational and the creation of the Turducken of cheeseballs (a 5 lb. dream of layered cheesy goodness) got me thinking on how to showcase just how many ways  you can make a cheeseball that tastes great, looks beautiful and won’t just sit on the table untouched until everyone is loaded with enough holiday cheer to devour anything.

Goat cheese balls rolled in parsley, paprika, chives, chopped walnut

I made two kinds of cheeseballs, 1 a mini goat cheese/blue cheese combo stuffed with a seedless grape and a variation of my Mom’s Southern pimento cheese. Both can be made into beautiful shapes, garnished with fresh herbs, spices and veggies to add some color and style to your next festive celebration!Using quality cheese, mayo and fresh herbs and spices are the key to both recipes. I used my favorite cheeses and gourmet mayo but you can sub your own local cheeses as long as they are of the same type and style. Shaping cheeses into forms and careful arranging of garnish are also important. After forming cheese mixture into desired shape chill in fridge for 1 hr to meld flavors and become a bit firmer to work with.

Sassy spiced Pimento Cheese with English Cheddar and Empire Mayo

  • 2 1/4 cups Keen’s Cheddar, shredded
  • 3/4 cup Empire mayonnaise, I like the smoky bacon or paprika flavored
  • 1 teaspoon red wine vinegar
  • 4 ounces pimentos, chopped
  • 1/2 teaspoon finely minced roasted garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon grated onion
  • 1/2 teaspoon paprika
  • 1 dash hot sauce (or more!)
  • fresh ground black pepper, to taste

Directions-

Blend all ingredients except pimentos till smooth with a hand mixer. Add pimentos and mix till some pieces still remain, not completely smooth. Cover and chill for 1 hr. Serve with warm hush puppies, bread, crudite or as a kick ass burger topping.

For pine cones form into tear drop shapes and garnish with whole almonds, trim top with fresh pine.

Stuffed Cheese Balls with Toasted Pistachio 

Directions

In a dry pan, roast the pistachios for 5 minutes or so, shaking the pan regularly to avoid burned spots. Let cool a little. Chop finely and transfer to a shallow bowl.Blend cheeses, honey and curry powder with hand mixer till smooth. Take about a teaspoon of cheese and cover each grape with it. Roll each goat cheese ball in the finely chopped roasted pistachios or fresh chopped parsley, you may also use paprika or red peppers for different color variations. Keep in the fridge until serving. Serve cold or at room temperature.
ENJOY!!!!!!!!!!!
Short on time? Make a wreath!

Mozzarella Wreath

On Pinterest I also found a simple but brilliant arrangement of fresh mozzarella balls, grape tomatoes and basil leaves that would be fast, easy and just the thing for last-minute get togethers. Try it by layering fresh basil in a circle on your favorite platter, alternate tomatoes and cheese securing with small toothpicks to hold design together. Drizzle with EVOO and enjoy!

Wishing you a wonderful holiday season,

Wendy

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Sassy Starters; Off dry Riesling with Liptauer cheese spread

Last week I literally stumbled upon a wonderful little Germanic wine garden called Berlyn after a movie at Bam Rose in Brooklyn. Relaxing on the back porch filled with strange gnomes, animal figurines and pillows fashioned into sausage shapes I perused the wine and snack menu happy to see one of my favorites, Liptauer cheese as a starter. Snacking on a small order of this tasty spread I sipped a crisp Alsatian field blend wondering, why don’t I make this more often at home? It’s so easy to prepare and delicious!

 Liptauer cheese spread, an Austro Hungarian favorite and traditionally made with a soft sheep cheese has just about as many variations as there are types of other soft cheeses used in recipes I’ve found spattered across the internet. I’ve been served numerous versions ranging from mildly spicy with a more pickled flavor to those with a  bite, full of hot paprika, caraway and mustard seed. I’ve tried using many different types of cheese including feta, cream cheese, ricotta and goat milk chevre with varying results. My favorite version uses fresh chevre and has a bit of a kick, perfect with an off dry Riesling served spread on apples, sausage, brown bread or crackers.

You can experiment with amounts of spice, pickles and scallion but one thing is for sure, it’s a perfect summer starter with a chilled glass of off dry Riesling.

A great choice to celebrate #SummerofRiesling

Wine pairing-My choice for pairing a Leitz, Rudesheimer Drachenstein, Dragonstone, Rheingau, Germany 2010 was the perfect complement. Bright, juicy, peachy, a hint of savory flavor and a touch of minty/flint on the finish. Pure heaven on a steamy summer evening! Coming in at just over $2o in the NY market it’s a perfect wine to celebrate the current Summer of Riesling promotion taking place throughout the US. It would also pair well with a variety of grilled German wurst, spiced grilled shrimp or a selection of aged cheeses.

Try this version of Liptauer I created and let me know how you like it. It can also be served stuffed into small tomatoes, with carrot sticks or slathered on a crusty loaf of freshly baked bread!

Liptauer Cheese Spread

8 ounces / goat cheese, room temperature , I used Vermont butter and cheese fresh chevre

4 oz unsalted butter, room temperature

2 teaspoons paprika, 1 sweet/1 hot

pinch cayenne pepper or to taste

2 tablespoon Dijon mustard

2 big pinches of salt, or to taste

2 pinches white pepper, or to taste

1 1/2 teaspoons caraway seeds, toasted & crushed

2 tablespoons chopped scallion

1 tablespoon chopped kosher dill pickles

a few dozen thin crostini or crackers

one bunch of chopped chives, to serve

Cream the goat cheese in a large bowl  by hand or with a hand blender. Add the butter and incorporate that as well. Add the paprika, mustard, cayenne, white pepper and salt and cream some more. Now, by hand, beat in the caraway seeds, scallion, and pickles. Taste and adjust until everything is to your liking.

Best to make a few hours ahead and chill for flavors to meld.

Enjoy!

Cheers,

Wendy

 

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Kidding around at Coach Farm

Back in the early 80’s so called exotic ingredients started showing up in specialty food shops and quality grocer’s shelves.  The wildly popular cookbook ‘The Silver Palate’, written by NYC’s UWS food mavens Julee Rosso and Sheila Lukins was my go to guide for ideas to create dishes from such luxury ingredients as goat cheese and sun dried tomatoes. Trends come and go, but, at one time I remember goat cheese served at virtually every dinner party I attended in the 80’s. Whether crumbled on fresh pasta, stuffed in chicken breast or proudly dressing mounds of farm fresh greens it was chic and fabulous. Today almost every grocery store has some form of goat cheese on its shelf, some local, others from France. Goat cheese days as an exotic ingredient may have come and gone but I still include it in many dishes or enjoy it on its own spread over a crusty loaf of fresh baked bread.  There are more than a few local cheesemakers using goat’s milk to produce some fabulous cheeses.

Steven Jenkins, author of the Cheese Primer, one of the best cheese guides ever written, highly recommends New York State’s Coach Farm goat cheese, stating they  set an almost unattainable standard for America’s cheese makers. Coach Farm founded by Milles and Lillian Cahn of coach bag fame was one of the first to produce goat cheese in the Hudson Valley. Miles Cahn often joked that they lived happily held captive by 1000 goats. For over 20 yrs they ran Coach with great success before selling to Best Cheese several years ago. Not much has changed since Best’s takeover. Careful attention to detail and tasty cheese are still being made each day. Being so close I couldn’t believe I had never visited!  A few weeks ago I decided it was time to check out Coach Farm’s  operation for myself  so I planned a visit with my friend Linda, a cheese newbie.

Arriving in time for the afternoon milking we were greeted by Willy Bridgham, operations manager. After suiting up in sterile booties, a hairnet and lab coat (to keep our germs from contaminating the cheese making process) Willy guided us through the rooms where the fresh milk is directly transported from the milking parlor and made into yogurt, fresh chevre and other forms of fresh and aged cheese.

After seeing the fresh cheese being hand molded into logs we moved on into rooms where specific types of cheeses are cured  on wire racks to age and form the gentle pillowy rinds. Cheesemaker  Mark Newbold also noted workers  peeling the grating sticks that Coach are famous for.  Grating sticks were created by accident when some logs were forgotten about and a  harder aged cheese was revealed under  the rind! Peppercorn studded pyramids and triple crème goat cheese where also resting comfortably to achieve the peak of ripeness. The sights and smells where all very tempting!

Next we toured the barn and milking parlor with Rene DeLeeuw, the man behind the care of each French Alpine goat, the specific breed raised at Coach.  Rene and his crew of 8 where very busy with 10 newborns that had arrived earlier that morning. As each goat has its own distinct personality they are all named, this new addition was already being called Tator Tot for its petite size.

500-600 out of the herd of 1000 are milked every day at 4am and 3pm, 28 at a time every 4 minutes. Rene explained women tend to have a more gentle touch for the work done in the milking parlor, the goats are more at ease. Happy goats produce superior milk! Before each goat is hooked up to the milking system  a bit of their milk is manually squirted onto a screen to detect any problems or possible sickness that would pull the goat out of the daily rotation. Then each teet is dipped into a disinfectant solution and wiped dry before it’s hooked up to the milking apparatus, with each doe producing 9 lbs. of fresh milk daily. It takes 10 lbs. of fresh milk to make 1 lb. of cheese, the process of turning the milk into yogurt, fresh chevre or aged cheese is started within 24 hrs. to retain freshness and optimal flavor.  A gentle pasteurization is done but milk is not homogenized. Only microbial rennet is used to start the cheesemaking process.

On to tasting!

Watching and learning about the inner workings of the farm was fascinating but tasting was even better! As we tasted I couldn’t help craving some local wine  to complement the peppercorn studded pyramid and the grating stick!

It’s been many years since I first experimented with goat cheese.  I haven’t looked at my Silver Palate cookbook in quite a while but still think back fondly on all of the great memories of meals crafted from its stained and earmarked pages.

Try this pasta recipe I created topped with a generous amount of shredded Coach grating stick cheese. Wanting to make this a Hudson Valley meal I paired my dish with Hudson Chatham Baco Noir, the bright cherry and slightly earthy flavors complimented this dish perfectly!.

Shrimp, Chicken, Sausage and Broccoli Rabe Pasta

Ingredients

1 lb. fettuccine, cooked al dente, drained and rinsed with cold water

1 dz peeled and deveined cooked jumbo shrimp

2 hot or sweet Italian sausage, baked for 20 min in 400 degree in oven, cooled and sliced into 1 inch pieces

2 cups Broccoli Rabe, rinsed and coarsely chopped into large pieces

2 boneless skinless chicken breast, cut into 3 inch strips

2 finely chopped shallots

3 cloves finely minced garlic

1 Coach Farm grating stick shredded

½ stick butter

4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1 3/4 cups dry white wine

Salt/pepper to taste

Saute shallots, garlic in olive oil and cook till transparent in large frying/sauté pan.  Add chicken pieces and cook 2 minutes on each side over medium heat. Add broccoli rabe and sauté for 2-3 minutes stirring to incorporate ingredients. Add wine, butter, salt/pepper and heat till slightly simmering. Add cooked sausage and shrimp and simmer for a few minutes till heated through.  Transfer all to large stock pot, add cooked pasta and toss well with sauce over low heat till all ingredients are incorporated. Serve in large pasta bowl topped with grated Coach Farm cheese.

Enjoy!

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Eden Ice Cider, Dangerously delicious! Paired with Irish Cashel Blue Cheese…

I love apple wines and cider. Especially with strong, bold cheeses. Last week I had the chance to taste something new to me, Eden Ice Cider from Vermont. Wow! Danger Will Robinson! This luscious liquid could pose a delicious dilemma. Addictive overindulgence!Image

Each bottle contains a blend of over 8 lbs of apples. In addition to Macintosh and Empire there are some varieties chosen to specifically enhance the final blend. Russets are selected for full-bodied sweetness, Calville Blanc for acidity, citrus notes and balance, and Ashmead’s Kernel for structured tannins.

 As in ice wine, which is made from grapes frozen on the vine, production for ice cider is an intricate process. Apples are held in cold storage till winters temps plummet. Apples are then pressed into juice and stored outside for 6 to 8 weeks. A rich concentrate is created from a freezing and melting off process, then fermented at 50-55 degrees for several weeks or months to the peek of crazy, unique tastiness!

Eden http://www.edenicecider.com/ , located in Vermont, produces 4 different styles of ice cider including an herb infused version named Orleans. I’ve only had the chance to sample this style but I’ll be on the lookout for the other offerings from Eden.

As it is nearing St. Patrick’s Day I couldn’t help but to try this juicy unctuous treat with one of my favorite Irish cheeses, Cashel Blue. Image

Creamy, salty, buttery goodness oozes from each morsel of this decadent blue cheese. Made in Tipperary, Ireland from the milk of friesian cows Cashel Blue is the original Irish Farmhouse blue cheese. Cashel Blue is the unique creation of Jane and Louis Grubb, established in 1984. Developed at a time when softer blue cheeses were a rarity it has truly developed a following among those seeking a smoother, less intense style than English Stilton. 

The Cashel Blue paired beautifly with the crisp, chilled Ice cider! Pick up some at your favorite cheesemonger and celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in style!

Eden Ice Cider is available at Vinoversity and Astor Wines in NYC. Cashel Blue is available at Murray’s and Artisanal in NYC and online. http://www.edenicecider.com/

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