Showing posts with label papaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label papaya. Show all posts

Monday, May 5, 2014

Cinco de Mayo Savory and Sweet Empanadas!!


 

Happy Cinco de Mayo! Cinco de Mayo, as I wrote about in last year’s post, is a holiday celebrating the Battle of Puebla. It is celebrated as a holiday of Mexican heritage pride, and is widely celebrated in the United States, becoming more popular in mainstream American culture. So much of America is a huge melting pot of different cultures, that to celebrate a holiday that has been adopted and assimilated in American culture, we have made a dish that has been adopted and assimilated by many cultures; the empanada!

 

Empanadas origins are traced back to Spain and Portugal during the time of Moorish invasions, coming from the word empanar, meaning wrap or coat in bread. Through colonization, travel, and trade throughout the world, the empanada has moved to Latin America, Southern Europe, Southeast Asia, and parts of Southwest America; it is a truly universal food.

We made two kinds of empanadas, one savory and one sweet. The savory empanada is filled with potato, chorizo, and queso fresco, the sweet is filled with papaya jam.

This recipe takes about 2.5 hours

Ingredients: serves 10-12

Empanada Dough:
2 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 stick (1/2 cup) cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
2 large egg
1/3 cup ice water
1 tablespoon distilled white vinegar

Savory Empanada:
10 oz chorizo
2 cloves garlic
4 medium golden potatoes
1 Tablespoon white wine vinegar
2 large pinches salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper

Sweet Empanada:
1 very ripe papaya
¼ cup + a pinch sugar
1 Tablespoon lemon juice

 
 



Start by making the dough. Either by hand or in a food processor combine flour, salt, and cubed cold butter and mix until everything combined. In a small bowl whisk together one egg, vinegar, and water and pour into the flour mix, and using a fork mix everything together. On a floured surface knead out dough until just combined, pat into a rectangle, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for one hour.

To make savory filling, chop up potatoes, remove chorizo from casings and mince both garlic cloves. Fill a medium sauce pan with water, bring to a boil, then drop in potato and boil for about 10 minutes, or until soft. In a sauté pan set to medium heat, render the fat out of chorizo for about 7 minutes, constantly stirring, then add garlic and cook for another 5 minutes. Set chorizo aside and let cool. Once potatoes have been cooked, drain and the water out, add salt, vinegar, and pepper, and mash up with two forks. Let cool.

To make sweet filling cut the papaya in half, remove seeds, and remove from skin with a spoon. In a small sauce pan on medium heat, start smashing up the papaya. Once the papaya starts to bubble, pour in sugar and lemon juice and stir for 6 minutes. Pour in a small bowl and let cool.

After the dough has chilled for an hour, cut in half, and one half at a time on a floured surface roll out about 1/8” thick. Using any circular shape (we used a bowl, and then a cookie cutter) cut out circles, larger ones for savory, and smaller ones for sweet.

To fill the empanadas, in a small bowl whisk one egg. To make the savory empanada; scoop about a Tablespoon of potato, a Tablespoon of chorizo, and sprinkle some queso fresco in the middle. Brush around the edge of the dough with egg, and then fold over, and using a fork push down on edges to seal. To fill the sweet it is a bit tricky and involves so finger skills. Pick up the smaller circle, fold slightly in half, fill with papaya jam, brush the inner edge with egg, push the edges together, lay back down on baking sheet, and using the fork push together. Chill the empanadas for 30 minutes. Keep egg wash.

Preheat oven to 375. Once empanadas chill, poke some holes to allow for steam to escape, and brush with the remainder of egg wash. Sprinkle the sweet empanadas with sugar.

Bake for 30 minutes, rotating half way. You want them to be golden brown. Check the sweet ones at 20 minutes to make sure they don’t burn, sugar can brown very quickly.

Enjoy!!

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Heat Wave Popsicles!



Michael and I live in Venice beach, and these last two weeks have been BRUTAL! It is so hot. Today I actually ventured east of Lincoln in to Hollywood and broke out into a sweat the second I left the card. Though summer is winding down, the heat sure as hell is kicking in. Best way to beat it….popsicles. I don’t know about you guys, but I am very fond of sweets that aren’t overly sugary, so we came up with four different popsicle flavors; two creamy, and two fruity. These are delicious, super easy, healthy, and in the matter of an hour you have yourself a cold snack to take to the beach. Just make sure you eat it before it melts!!!
*I bought a café mocha from Starbucks because I don’t drink coffee and for the life of me have no idea how to make it!

**Because there is no sugar added to these, the lime one can be very tart, so add any if you like. It is all a matter of preference.

*** Popsicle molds usually come in 4, so buy 3 to make all of these at once.

Our flavors are:

Café Mocha Raspberry Bliss
Coconut Banana Almond Milk Surprise
Mango Papaya Pineapple Fiesta in Your Mouth
Lime Orange Delight

Ingredients: makes 3 popsicles
Café Mocha Raspberry Bliss:
½ cup raspberries
Tall Café Mocha from Starbucks

Coconut Banana Almond Milk Surprise:
1 ripe banana
½ cup coconut almond milk
2 Tlb. Coconut milk

Mango Papaya Pineapple Fiesta in Your Mouth
1/3 of a really ripe mango
¼ of a papaya
3 Tlb. Crushed pineapple
¼ cup pineapple juice

Lime Orange Delight:
4 Limes
2 juicing oranges



Café Mocha Raspberry Bliss
Take the raspberries and using a fork crush them, then split them among the four molds and drop them into the mold. Next pour the café mocha until you reach the top.


Banana Almond Milk Surprise


Slice up 1/3 of the banana into slivers and set aside, take the rest of the banana and mash it up with the coconut milk, split the mix  amongst the four molds, and then line the sides with a few of the banana slivers so that when they freeze you can see the banana. Next pour in the coconut almond milk until it fills to the top, and if need be use a knife to move around the banana mix so that it seeps in.

Mango Papaya Pineapple Fiesta in Your Mouth

Mush up the mango and divide and pour into the four molds, next dice up the papaya super small and divide amongst the four. Next….place some crushed pineapple in the four and then pour pineapple juice until the top.


Lime Orange Delight
Squeeze three of the limes, and thinly slice and remove the rind from the remaining one. If you are not in to tart things, add a  Tlb. of sugar to the lime juice. Pour the juice in and line the side of the mold with the lime slices. Let freeze for about 30 minutes before squeezing the orange and pouring into the mold, so that you have a nice separation in color and flavor.
Place popsicle sticks in all of the molds. I put a piece of tape across the top of the mold and flip a little bit of the edge up to stick and hold the stick in place. Put in the freeze and freeze for about an hour or two. A trick to get them out of the mold now, is fill a bowl with hot water, and place the mold in it so that the water comes just under the top. This allows the sides to unfreeze a little, wiggle them, and pop ‘em out!! Now EAT!!! Yum.