Here are the latest pictures from the 5 o’clock rush kitchen for this week’s Weekday Wrap Up.
For more pictures follow the5oclockrush on Instagram
Chef Kim
Here are the latest pictures from the 5 o’clock rush kitchen for this week’s Weekday Wrap Up.
For more pictures follow the5oclockrush on Instagram
Chef Kim
I apologize for no Weekday Wrap Up post for last week. It was a busy week with my DD returning from her trip to Italy and the rest of the week spent at the trailer. So I assumed that no one wanted to see the pictures of burgers and dogs or our trip to KFC cause the weather was so soppy!
On the holiday weekend, the smoker was hard at work. This time, it was a pork shoulder, a side of salmon and a whole chicken.
Tip: Utilize the freezer and pack individual portions of leftover smoked meat and salmon for Back-to-School lunches. Pics included.
Here are the latest pictures from the 5 o’clock rush kitchen for this week’s Weekday Wrap Up.
For more pictures follow the5oclockrush on Instagram
This weekend our trailer park is hosting its annual ‘Pasta Dinner’. All the ‘Italians’ in the park make a homemade pasta and sausage for dinner with all the fixings. YUM!
No cooking for me on Saturday 😉
Enjoy the beautiful weather this weekend.
Chef Kim
Here are the latest pictures from the 5 o’clock rush kitchen for this week’s Weekday Wrap Up.
For more pictures follow the5oclockrush on Instagram
This week’s latest recipe was Pesto 101 | the 5 o’clock rush so sign up to the 5 o’clock rush blog to receive the most recent posts and recipes via email. Or the 5 o’clock rush on Bloglovin
Have a great weekend and bring an umbrella for your outings to the local markets.
Chef Kim
I’m still struggling and eating my cold dinners as I try to get decent pictures using my DSLR. Any tips or pointers on getting better food pictures would be greatly appreciated.
It is summer. The fruit and vegetable crops are coming into the season in our gardens and farmers markets. This past weekend at the trailer in a torrential rain storm with limited TV choices, I watched a cooking show where the chef blanched the basil before making her pesto. Intrigued, I called on my Mom and Dad’s abundant basil crop to try it myself.
This potent sauce is versatile—on pasta, in an omelet, and paired with chicken—and because I can freeze it, I can make pesto when basil is at its best and then continue to enjoy it through the fall. Bonus!
Bring heavily salted water to boil in a saucepan.***
Prepare a bowl of ice water ready.
Reduce heat to low and simmer; place the garlic cloves in the simmering water. *I don’t enjoy the after taste or ‘garlic breath’ from a pungent garlic flavour in any sauce, poaching the garlic helps to reduce this.
Also add the leaves and smaller stems of the Genovese basil in the water. Do not overload the pot, if necessary blanch in 2 stages.
The basil will turn bright green and it really only needs a few seconds (about 15 secs) in the simmering water. Remove the blanched basil and immediately place in bowl of ice water. Drain immediately, squeeze out excess water.
Once the garlic has softened, remove from the simmering water, peel and slice.
Reserve approx. ¼ cup of the blanching liquid.
What I discovered from a quick blanch before blending softens the basil, and this helps it emulsify more easily to produce a smoother yet full-bodied sauce. Another great reason to blanch purely cosmetic a brighter green color that holds for several days.
A traditional pesto is about the ingredients that go into it. Use the best quality ingredients you can find and afford.
Basil, pine nuts, cheese, and extra virgin olive oil.
The manner in which these ingredients are combined tends to differ from chef to chef. As its name implies, pesto, it comes from the Italian verb pestare, which means to crush or mash that is why it is traditionally made using a-mortar and pestle.
I’ve never attempted to make pesto with that much elbow grease or time, although some swear that pounding gives you the best flavour.
I prefer to use a blender. I think the blender’s tapered shape help the ingredients get puréed more evenly as they are drawn into the blade. You’ll have to help the puréeing along by periodically stopping the motor and moving the ingredients around with a spatula or a spoon.You don’t want to just let the blender run and heat up the components of the sauce.
Another preferred method is using a food processor. I think the ingredients tend to bounce around and fly onto the sides of the bowl, resulting in an inconsistent texture.
Whatever method use choose, the result will be a great sauce.
Pesto can brighten your menu in many ways:
• Swirl a dollop into a potato, tomato, or white bean soup.
• Add a tablespoon to a simple vinaigrette for drizzling on grilled vegetables.
• Spread some on pizza dough as a base, in place of or in addition to tomato sauce. See dinner pic below.
Take advantage of this peak season for basil—you’ll get the best quality at the best price—by preparing several batches of pesto.
Refrigerate it in an airtight container, you plan to use it within a week.
Tip: Pour the pesto into ice-cube trays, freeze, and then put the cubes in a freezer bag for storage for up to three months. You can also freeze small amounts of pesto in little plastic snack bags (and then stack those in a bigger freezer bag) for when you want enough for just one portion of pasta or for a dollop in a soup or stew. If you flatten the pesto in the bag, the thin amount can be quickly defrosted by soaking the bag in tepid water.
**There was soooo much flavour in the blanching liquid and the consistency wasn’t what I was hoping for, so I decided to add it to my final sauce. You can definitely eliminate this step.
***Whenever I’m seasoning cooking water for blanching or cooking pasta, I use a ‘heavy’ hand with how much kosher salt I add. The water should have ‘the taste of the sea’. It imparts a lot of flavour.
More the 5 o’clock rush dinner dishes in the future will definitely incorporate my pesto 😀
Summer is officially in full swing.
This Weekday Wrap Up pictures are from lunches, snacks and dinners that happen at the 5 o’clock rush
For more pics follow the5oclockrush on Instagram
Have a great weekend and enjoy the heat wave in Ontario.
Chef Kim
chefkim1968@gmail.com