Author: unrivaledkitch

Pho So 1

Pho So 1

I’m in love with Vietnamese food. I’ve only recently really been able to enjoy it during the last couple of years. My sister in law Viet Linh is full Vietnamese so I’ve been lucky to be brought around a new culture as well as new 

Maleeya, Welcome home Feast, and Nothing Bundt Cakes

Maleeya, Welcome home Feast, and Nothing Bundt Cakes

My baby niece Maleeya  was born 4/8/11 at 810pm at Kaiser Woodland hills. She is 19.5 inches, 7.2 lb My sister gave birth naturally and was in labor for over 19 hours, honestly child birth is one of the most traumatic experiences I’ve ever witness 

Life and Pita Pizza with Spinach Pomodoro Sauce

Life and Pita Pizza with Spinach Pomodoro Sauce

Life, I’m sure is overwhelming at times for us all. And if it’s not, please tell me what planet you’re residing on, I’ll take a ticket there any time. My life over the last 10 months has become a place where I frequently feel at peace and content with the path I have decided to take, that will ready me for the next phases of my life. The simple pleasures and the brief moments shared with friends and family where peace and laughter are the focal point of our meetings are the times I truly enjoy.

My sister is supposed to be having my niece any day now, today April 6th was her doctors said due date. The family and friends are pouring in over text messages, lunch dates, and outings while we’re trying to stay peaceful and calm till Maleeya gets here. I can’t help but feel the pressure myself so I know my sister is tirelessly counting the seconds till her lovely baby girl meets us all.

As for me I’ve been running my mind over the whole situation, I’ve never lived with a small child and this is my big sister we grew up together going crazy over one another and the whole situation for me makes me a little scared but very excited. I know I’m really happy to help but this does really change everything. So my peace maybe interrupted a bit, well more than a bit but it will all be worth it to see this beautiful little girl bring so much happiness and joy to so many people’s lives.

Lately I’ve been cooking simple meals and not photographing too much, too many people around, too many things to do, and so much on my mind.

Yesterday I must have been a bit unkind to my body in yoga because it was screaming at me all day and very unhappy, luckily my back seems to be doing much better today after a good night’s rest. Tonight will be my 30th Yoga class in a row. I will of completed my challenge but I’m pretty sure until I for some reason (AKA BABY BIRTH) can’t make it to class I’ll keep going every day. My yoga studio has this wonderful program where you work about 4 hours a week volunteering your time helping at the desk and you receive yoga classes for free. I think things do happen for a reason, the precious gift of yoga has been placed in my life for a wonderful reason and I’m glad I can be a part of the experience.

So for you today I have these lovely easy pizzas, they are made atop thicker pita pockets that I found in my local Middle Eastern market. I love to scour that place for new breads, spices, herbs, and pickled vegetables whenever I can. These pizzas were thought of with a touch a veggie friendly influence as well as just making simple cheese pizzas for my brother in law. My sister loves pizza and she loved these little pockets. The pizza sauce is made with spinach instead of basil to achieve the veggie goodness that I love and to hide it from those suspecting doubters, plus i had no fresh basil. This sauce will also make a wonderful pasta sauce as well and can be used in recipes where you’d like a vegan tomato base. I hope you enjoy!

Pita Pizza’s with Spinach Pomodoro Sauce

Pita Pizza

4 thick pita’s
1 ½ cups of mozzarella cheese shredded
Kalamata olives
Sundried tomatoes
Roasted bell peppers
Spinach leaves thinly sliced for topping
(choose whatever type of toppings you would like!)

Spinach Pomodoro Sauce

1 large can of peeled whole tomatoes
2 cloves of garlic chopped
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 teaspoon dried parsley
1 large pinches of salt
1 pinch of black pepper
3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
2 cups of chopped spinach
8 oz of tomato paste

Place all the items in a large blender leaving aside the tomato paste


Oregano and parsley


Garlic


oil

Spinach

Salt and pepper

Blend till the tomatoes are mashed and ingredients well incorporated about 2 minutes of blending.


If there are still large chunks of tomato puree for longer depending on your blender

Place mixture in a medium sauce pan one medium heat

Add to the mixture the tomato paste

Cook till incorporated about 10 minutes

Color should be vibrant red, check seasoning to your preference, and set aside

Preheat oven to 450

On a sheet tray with parchment paper place pitas on top
Spread sauce over the top keeping a rim along the edge of the pizza

 

Place cheese on top of sauce and toppings to your liking

Place in the oven cook about 10-12 minutes or until the cheese is bubbling and browned
If you’re still not getting the bubbling brown effect put them in the broiler for a minute or two and you got it

Cheers

Unrivaledkitch
Twitter and Foodbuzz

A gesture of gratitude March

A gesture of gratitude March

At the end of the month I always wonder where the time has gone. So many beautiful, terrible, wonderful, painful, and all the other moments in between have happened and sometimes I think it’s easy for us to get carried away with these feelings.  I’ve 

Shattered Cauliflower Farfalle

Shattered Cauliflower Farfalle

Shattered Cauliflower Farfalle with kalamata olives, sun dried tomatoes and spicy garlic rosemary olive oil Shattered cauliflower is just boiled cauliflower till it melts off of its stems. I kinda wack it with the back of the knife and it shattered into small pieces. I 

Olvera Street

Olvera Street

 

I enjoy cultural playgrounds, places where people can come together over food, trinkets, and just good company to enjoy themselves and maybe something out of the ordinary. In downtown Los Angeles these places are very prominent. The one I’m going to introduce today is Olvera Street. My family has been going to Olvera Street for my whole life, we would go as children and I fondly remember the scents of rich flavored foods, cinnamon, and cumin floating about from the nearby restaurants. This is street is lined with carts full of strange items to wear, trinkets to buy, and amazing goodies to eat and scattered throughout are restaurants selling some amazing Mexican delicacies.  

When my sister was born right after (well I’m assuming not right after but you know what I mean) my dad and grandma went over with a couple of other family members to Ceildo Lindo to get taquitos which are fried shredded beef stuffed larger corn tortillas smothered in a beautiful green avocado/ tomatillo salsa and fresh creamy refried beans topped with cheese to celebrate the 1st born child/grandchild. My sister is now 28 years old and shes about to have her first baby.   Ceildo Lindo is a small shack of a place where there are about 6 tables inside the cubby corner and you stand and order and someone hands you your food right there, its simple and fantastic. The sauce is what really does it more then anything. I’m sure these are good because I expect them to be a certain way and they normally always are.  My sister and I recently visited and we sat outside eating and talking remembering how it used to be.

My grandma has been going to Olvera Street probably at least 50 years now or longer, we used to take a trip to Olvera Street before we went to stay with her in Huntington Beach for the weekend. We’d hold hands walking together as little kids, looking and poking one another, drinking piping hot champurrado from La Luz del Dia. Champurrado is a Mexican hot chocolate that is thickened with masa or corn flour. It has a very strong cinnamon flavor with subtle chocolate notes & a different kind of thickness of corn mixed into it. It’s delicious in the stick to your ribs kind of way, where you can’t have too much but I love it.  So in my life these two places are staples of my childhood memories and I’m sure they’ll be passed down to whoever wants to listen to them.

La Luz is a beautiful place but normally we just get champurrado because we want to have taquitos, but the food here is wonderful and authentic. Their hand made tortillas are really delicious and there are always people filling the place.

Delicious food fun


Cheers

Unrivaledkitch

Twitter and Foodbu

Four More Days till the Online Bake Sale to Help Japan
Click the banner to check it out and see the details


here’s the link to my auction items that I’ll be supporting the cause with!

Birthday celebrations, food, friends and good beets

Birthday celebrations, food, friends and good beets

I love food as a celebration. Large parties, huge spreads of tons of food that have peoples eyes opening wide and mouths salivating and pleasant aromas and sights to only be quieted by the shoveling of food in to mouths. Those are the times I 

Online Bake Sale Auction Items to Help Japan

Online Bake Sale Auction Items to Help Japan

The Japanese need your help more than ever; this is what we’re doing to help. Actions speak louder than words but cookies and cakes speak across the globe for a hand in helping out. Japan is a part of my culture and my mind. As 

Cream less Clam Chowder

Cream less Clam Chowder

 

Cream less Clam Chowder

How can it be you say?

Well it can be and it’s actually delicious and complex. Also the addition of smoky pancetta also makes it rich and inviting. I love pancetta… salty delicious peppery pork. When one day I have a closet that I can devote to charcuterie I will make me own pancetta. Right now my sister would kill me if there was a huge piece of hanging pork in my bed room.  I can see it now, can I barrow those shoes, go in my closet and scream bloody murder. I will avoid that for now.

Cream less clam chowder came about in the process of thinking I wanted clam chowder but I didn’t want to feel like I was a fat lump after eating it. It’s so rich and delicious which is what I think about when I think about eating clam chowder but I wanted to change it a little make it a little less abrasive and refine the little nuances of clam and vegetable marriage in a pot. Well with Italian bacon to back it up. So I was wondering around whole foods looking at their breads and I bought a loaf of sourdough. They must have been running low cause the bread section was kind of eh not really jumping out at me like buy this I’ve seen so many beautiful breads online and in the three bread books I’ve been bouncing around in that grocery store bread just nothing special. But I wanted sourdough and I can’t just whip that out in an evening so I decided that would be good enough. I walked through the market; it’s a special occasion if I go to whole foods. It’s not really in a normal budget for me but some things I desire like excellent organic spring mix, more exotic veggies, organic stocks or soups, seafood, or certain kinds of cheeses I have to go there to get them.

Thank god for living in a place where I have so many amazing markets to get things from top of the line to local farmers out here it’s pretty high living for a foodie out in Southern California. I used to frequent the particular Whole Foods I was in quite often when I lived in that area but I was passing through on my way back from the library and I found myself just browsing seeing what was nice. I knew I wanted to get some clams. They had a nice batch of them and I bought pancetta, and some veggie stock and while I was in the soup isle, which is rare for me to buy boxed soups because I make my own just fine but my best friend used to always have these things in the kitchen when we were living together. She loved them almost lived by them, along with lots of lettuce, cans of tuna, blueberries, and soy ice cream. I love you dude.

But anyway I thought of using this creamless organic potato leek soup made by Imagine as part of the base of the clam chowder. Now I’m sharing this particular recipe to show you that you really can build a lot of flavor from things that you never really thought of using. I was running low on time for dinner and had to make two things because my brother in law doesn’t eat clams so I used this soup as a base for flavor. That’s one of the things that makes restaurant cooking different from home cooking they have 24 hours (maybe less depending on how early they open and how late they close but you get what I’m saying) to develop flavors from stocks and sauces and ingredients that a lot of home cooks don’t have access to. So making your own stocks one day and freezing them is an amazing way to build flavor but if you can’t I like using organic veggie stock from Whole foods.

So this recipe will sound a little weird, it’s not a conventional clam chowder, its full of clams and veggies but see if you can take what I’ve done and maybe one day when you’re feeling a little adventures make your own chowder, I’d love to hear how it comes out.

Cream less clam chowder


The Stuff

¼ of an inch thick slice of pancetta cut into small dice

1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil

1 box of organic potato leek soup

2 cups of veggie stock

1/4 lb of clams(i used a combo of all kinds of different clams, the smoke form the oil packed clams is nice, the texture of fresh clams always rivals any kind of boxed or caned clam though) If you want to do all fresh clams go for the gold

1 small can of shelled clams (used wild caught baby clams in water and drained them)

1 small box of smoked clams

3 carrots peeled and diced small

2 sticks of celery diced small

½  small white onion minced

1 clove of garlic

1 teaspoon dried parsley

½ teaspoon of dried thyme

Salt to taste which should be very little considering the pancetta and the stock which has sodium in them

Black pepper to taste

4 small Yukon gold potatoes washed and sliced in ½ then in ¼ and then ¼ inch thick pieces

The Way


Take clams and rinse them in cold water so that any sand that may be there is cleaned away, if any of your clams are open discard them they are dead and not good. For storing clams keep them in the fridge with a couple of paper towels that have been soaked in water and ringed out so that they are not sopping wet, over the top, never keep clams immersed in water you’ll kill them.

In a small sauce pan place 2 cups of stock over medium high heat and bring to a boil

Chop vegetables and pancetta in about the same sized pieces if you want this to be done faster cut the veggies and potatoes into very small pieces (I like the texture of large/medium sized pieces of veggies in this soup)

Mean while in a larger pot or pan whichever you have on hand you can also do this in a Dutch oven place the olive oil at the bottom of the pan on medium heat till glistening then add pancetta be careful not to walk away from it because it will burn and you have to throw it out. Mine came out a little crispier then I had hoped but it was still good. You want it to release all the flavors of the pork into the bottom of the pan so if it sticks a little that’s just fine it will lend to the flavor of the soup. Now when they are nice and golden take the pieces of pancetta out of the pan and set them aside on a small folded over paper towel.

Add in the onions and sauté till the onions have sweat and are translucent, then add the garlic and cook till soft, then add carrots and celery and potatoes cook for about 5 minutes till everything is incorporated and fragrant.

After this is done the stock should be boiling, place clams inside small sauce pan with the stock  and simmer with a lid on till all the clams have opened, turn off the heat and take the clams out of the stock and if you’d like de-shell the calms and discard shells. You can also keep a couple in the shell for garnish if you’d like. (why do I do this you say to yourself? Well I guess you could not do this and then toss the clams in at the end but I like the extra element of clam juice simmering with the veggies when they cook and not over cooking the clams at the same time)

Now add the box of potato leek soup and the rest of the stock from when you steamed your clams to the vegetable mixture and simmer for about 25-30 minutes or until the vegetables are at the tenderness you’d like them to be.

Now add dried parsley, ½ teaspoon of dried thyme, drained clams, and smoked clams mix together and simmer for about 7-9 minutes till the soup takes on the clam flavor

In the last 2 minutes of cooking add ½ to ¾ (depending on how much you want for garnish)of the fresh clams to the soup along with adjustments of seasoning

Ladle out and top with some of the fresh clams and crispy pancetta and a nice piece of toasted sourdough or any other kind of bread you’d like, and maybe a little salad.


Variations

**if you don’t want to use potato leek soup, you can double the amount of potatoes you use and add about 4 cups extra stock, after you steam the clams add the potatoes to the stock cook them till their falling apart use a steam want and blend till thickened and smooth, the soup will have a different texture but still good

** vegetarian option. This can easily be a nice vegetable chowder just don’t use the pancetta and skip out on the clams, adding a couple different types of potatoes, some bell peppers, and corn will really make this soup a lovely vegan or vegetarian option. I’d boost up the herbs in this with a little fresh parsley and some fresh thyme slow simmering and adding the vegetables at different times during the cooking process to vary the textures will make for a really delicious healthy dish

Enjoy!

 

Happy Chowder Eating

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My blog will be promoting the Online Bake Sale for Relief in Japan
hosted by Thetomatotart.com

This bake sale is a over 40 blogger event to band together to do what we do best baking/cooking and help Japan in the process.The bakesale will feature people all across the globe reaching out through the food blogger community to show the people of japan they have not gone unnoticed.

An auction has been set up by Sabrina at thetomatotart.com which will give you the opportunity to bid on these wonderful food bloggers creations and have them sent straight to your home. All proceeds will go to Second Harvest which aids in offering food to those in need.

To meet the bloggers who will be baking for this amazing opportunity to help the people of Japan
please check out this link or click the banner below

http://www.thetomatotart.com/recipe/update-on-online-bake-sale-for-japan-meet-the-bakers/

I’ll be promoting this on my blog till the auction ends on March 30th and within the next couple of days, I’ll post what I’ll be contributing to the sale.

If you have any ideas of what you’d like me to make, please post a comment. I’ll be happy to take into consideration anything my readers have been wanting but haven’t been able to make themselves and wouldn’t mind bidding on, save japan and get a treat.

Baked from my hands with love.
Thank you

If you could spread the word please do so!

Unrivaledkitch

Twitter and Foodbuzz

Simple Whipped Cream Pistachio Pie

Simple Whipped Cream Pistachio Pie

  Pistachio Pie is one of the things I remember as a child. My sister would ask my mom every year to make this simple pie for her birthday dessert. There would be blue candles atop (her favorite color) and she would smile big as