Archive for February, 2008

Fish Tacos with Mexican Rice

Like K said before, we had an IM convo about fish tacos. While giving her my white-fish recipe, I started to crave fish tacos as well so I decided that I would go home and make some. The Boyfriend, having being raised in the Bay Area, was very pleased when I told him we’d be having fish tacos for dinner. You can take the boy out Cali… In addition to the tacos, we had Mexican rice. Yes you can easily buy a box in Mexican Rice flavoring but why would you do that? Don’t you want to spend a half hour prepping and then another thirty minutes making it? Of course you do and now you can!

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You will need: cumin, garlic salt, half a can of tomato sauce, olive oil, a cup of white rice, salt, pepper, one garlic clove, half an onion (yellow or white but no purple), and a tomato. Quick note: if you just want enough to feed two people, use a half cup of white rice. A full cup will probably feed four people, with seconds!

While you heat up your pot/pan/anything you can cover with a lid, dice up your veggies.

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Add what I would guess to be about three tablespoons of olive oil. Sorry, I no longer measure anything with this recipe. Anyway, here is the key to making Mexican rice: frying the rice. There are two reasons why you want to do this: 1. the color. Mexican rice is typically light to deep orange in color and this is primarily achieved by frying the rice beforehand. 2. the taste. I believe that the heat sort of opens up the flavoring, giving it a nutty taste. So fry, fry, fry! Okay, not really. I did time it and for a cup of rice, you want to fry for at least ten minutes. If a few grains turn black, eh, say you’re Cajun.

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After you have sufficiently fried your rice, chunk in your onions and cook until translucent.

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This is what it should look like after frying the rice and onions.

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So here’s my problem with this next step (and where I will once again use colons): I’ve been making this stuff for so long that I no longer use measuring spoons. I just know! Even if I had tried to use measuring spoons, I don’t think I would have gotten it right because I measure by look with this recipe. Lucky you, I counted how many times I shook the bottles of spices. Yay for me! Okay, so you want about four shakes of pepper, and at least ten of cumin. I know, I know, but trust me, it makes it.

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Then you chunk in your tomatoes with two shakes of salt and garlic salt each.

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Then pour in your half can of tomato sauce. This I measured and it came out to a half cup. Why didn’t I just say half cup of tomato sauce? Cause I just remembered I measured it. So I’m sure that by now you know that for every cup of rice grains, you use double the water to boil it, right? So with that, add two cups of water. Cover with a lid, lower your burner, and simmer until done. I didn’t time it but I kept checking it and it was done, eventually.

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Now for the fish tacos. I decided to bread my tilapia and for the breading I used: salt, garlic salt, plain breadcrumbs, chilli powder, cumin, and pepper.

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This breading really depends on your own taste. Like spicy? Add a lot of chilli pepper. Earthy taste? Cumin. I say I used about two shakes of salt and garlic salt with an entire lid of the chilli pepper, and three shakes of cumin and pepper.

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I cut my tilapia into sushi size pieces.

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Dipped in eggs.

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Dipped in the batter.

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And fried it! Okay, so this isn’t the healthiest meal ever but hey, it’s good and yeah, that’s about it.

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With prep time and actual cooking, this took me an hour. An hour of slaving in the kitchen and The Boyfriend devoured it in fifteen minutes. I’d say it was a success.

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Melissa’s Fish Taco Recipe a la K

I was IMing with M because I am very good at working and IMing at the same time but that’s a different story for a different time. I told M that I wanted to make fish tacos and she gave me this great and simple recipe. I have never made fish tacos and so I decided to give it a try.

You will need fish (I used Mahi Mahi), salt & pepper, cumin, and paprika, lemon for the fish.  I added an onion, tomato, avacado, and Tapatio for toppings.

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First I rinsed the fish because I’m OCD.  Then I put it on a plate and seasoned it with the S&P, Cumin, and because I’m a tard and forgot to buy paprika, I used a pinch of Old Bay seasoning for the fish. Then I put them in a skillet with a bit of oil to pan fry them (obviously you should heat up the oil a bit first).

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Cook fish for about two minutes a side. I had to cook that big sucker in center for longer because it was big. After I finished frying up the fish, I put it on a paper towel to drain off some of the oil because I’m weird and trying to be all healthy. Then I threw in the onions that I had diced up to cook in the pan.

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While the onions were cooking, I chopped up that tomato, sliced a lime in half (because I forgot to buy a lemon) and because I forgot to buy cabbage, I heated up some black beans really quickly and sliced up an avocado.  (We Californian’s are so lucky when it comes to avocados. wOOt!)

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After I had all my toppings together, I squeezed the lime on the fish, dropped a bit of Tapatio on it, then put the fish into flour tortillas (forgot to buy corn tortillas too), and then threw in some black beans, the avocado, and the tomatoes.

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Yum!

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Snickerie Snickerdoodles

Though my boyfriend claims to not like sweets, there are a few things that I make that he will eat a lot of – those include sugar cookies, snickerdoodles, angel food cake, and banana bread. I made snickerdoodles not too long ago and decided to capture the moment for my other blog. So, here is the recipe for some very easy, very delicious snickerdoodles (made by hand here as this was before I got my beautiful Red Kitchen-Aid Mixer):

You will need:

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1/2 cup butter (softened)

1 Cup Sugar (I use C&H Bakers Sugar)

1/4 tsp. baking soda

1/4 tsp cream of tartar

1 egg

1/2 tsp vanilla

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

2 tbls sugar (I use organic sugar from Trader Joe’s)

1 tsp ground cinnamon

First, beat the butter on med to high for 30 seconds (or stir it by hand like crazy). Then add the sugar, baking soda, and cream of tartar. I use the C&H Bakers Sugar because it’s fine and mixes well with the butter. However, I know that granier sugar cuts into the butter more so it’s really up to you.
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Beat until combined, scraping the sides of the bowl as needed. Next, beat in the egg and vanilla until combined. Then beat in the flour (if using a mixer, beat in as much as you can then add the rest by hand).

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Cover and chill the dough for an hour so it’s easy to handle. I only chill it for a half hour cos I’m impatient. When you take the dough out, pre-heat the oven to 375.

Combine the 2 tbls of sugar and the cinnamon. I like using the organic sugar from Trader Joe’s because it’s grainer and more like old fashioned sugar crystals. Shape the dough into 1-inch balls (ha! I said balls), roll them in the cinnamon sugar mix and then place on an ungreased cookie sheet.

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Bake for 10 to 11 miutes or until the edges are golden. Transfer to a wire rack and cool (or eat when warm if you’re a piggie like me)

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Snickerdoodles Recipe

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Welcome

Welcome to We Be Cookin’. M and I are also interested in sharing our culinary talents with the world (or in my case, culinary experiments as I’m learning).  M is a good cook and though I’m learning to cook, I would say that I am a good baker.

We’ll post recipes, pictures, experiments, tasting notes etc. If we keep this up until October of 2008, I already have a plan to do a whole series of posts of foods made with beer and paired with beer in honor of Oktoberfest! (Plus I love beer)

We’ll try to post the recipe in a word doc or something so you can print them too if you want… not sure how that will work out but this is a work in progress!

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