Sunday, January 23, 2011

Empanadas (whole wheat)



It has been a very very long time since I've last posted something, but here is an update again after several people asked me for a recipe.

This time no Dutch food, but Chilean Empanadas!! A delicious pasty that can have a variety of fillings, meat, cheese, seafood, etc. In this post I will give you the recipe of the meat one and a Greek inspired vegetarian version.

In the meat Empanada the filling is called 'Pino' and consists of:
- 400-500 grams of ground beef
- 4 big finely chopped onions
- 2 finely chopped garlic cloves
- 1 tablespoon of flour
- 2 teaspoons of cumin
- 2 teaspoons of paprika powder
- 2 tablespoons of oregano
- half a teaspoon of cayenne pepper
- 1 cup of raisins
- 2 cups of beef stock
- 3 boiled eggs
- season with salt and pepper to taste

Preparations:
First of all boil 3 eggs and leave them to cool. Soften the onions in a pan with a butter and oil mixture or manteca/vegetable shortening for about 5 to 10 minutes. They should not brown. Add the meat and brown it all over. Add the spices and let it simmer for 1 more minute. Sprinkle over the flour and stir. Add all the spices and the stock (1 or 2 cups depending on the consistency, it should be nice and moist, not dry). Leave it to simmer for 15 minutes adding a little water/stock if necessary). Taste and add more salt or pepper if needed. Leave it to cool down, now it should be nice and gooey, perfect to fill the empanadas.

The Greek inspired vegetarian version has:
- 2 finely chopped big onions
- 4 aubergines chopped in small cubes
- 2 finely chopped garlic cloves
- 2 tablespoons of oregano
- 6 finely chopped big sun-dried tomatoes
- 1 bunch of parsley finely chopped
- 250 grams of feta into small cubes
- salt and pepper (be easy on the salt as the feta is salty)

Preparation for the Greek inspired filling.
First of all soften the onions in a large pan with some oil, remember they should not brown, just get translucent this should take around 5 to 10 minutes. After 5 minutes the garlic can be added. Then add the cubed aubergines and let them shrink, this should take around 30minutes as also most of the juices should be gone. Add all the herbs for the last 5 minutes. Turn off the fire and add the feta. Leave to cool down. The filling should have more or less the same consistency as the meat filling.

The above fillings should make you 30 empanadas each, but you can also make 15 meat and 15 vegetarian empanadas and from the left over halfs make a nice pie in the oven by filling a low dish with the filling and then adding potato mash on top. Brush some milk over the top and toss it in the oven for about 25 minutes on 190 degreese. The last few minutes one could put on the grill to get a nice golden brown look.

For the dough:
- 4 cups of spelt flour (or some other whole wheat flour)
- 4 cups of plain all purpose flour
- 4 spoons of manteca (I used vegetable shortening), but you can also use lard (animal fat)
- 4 spoons of butter
- 2 cups of salter lukewarm water (1 tablespoon of salt)









Assembling the empanadas:
- kneed the dough till it forms a nice ball, don't work it too much though
- leave it to rest in a cool place so the greasy elements can settle again
- cut pieces off and roll them out using some extra flour to prevent them from sticking
- cut the boiled eggs in small pieces

Make small circles (if you want perfect circles, use a small plate and cut them out) and fill them with 1 to 1.5 spoons of filling. For the meat version here you add 2 pieces of the boiled egg. Then brush some water on half of the edges (half a circle) and fold it over to close it holding the filling back with your finger tops and push gently. Try not to wet the working surface when you brush the water on as otherwise the empanada will get stuck, also make sure to do this step on a lightly floured work top to prevent sticking. Fold the edge over in any way you want as long as it remains closed (I folded it over my thumb each time and then pressed it down a bit as you can see in the pictures). Finish it by pushing the back of a fork on the edge to make sure it stays close and to make it look nice. Pinch 2 holes on the top with a knife (not all the way through the bottom, just the top, we don't want all the nice juices to run out of the bottom), or pinch ones with the fork. Our meat empandas were pinched with a knife, our vegetarian versions with a fork. One can also fold the empandas in a different form the distinguish them, which they do in Chile.

Lay the empanadas on a floured oven tray or on a sheet of baking paper to prevent sticking. Finally brush a beaten egg on the top to provide them with a nice golden brown colour. Toss them in a pre-heated oven (205C) for 20 minutes and eat them warm with pebre, a Chilean salsa showed on the first picture below.








How to make pebre:
- 5 very finely chopped ripe tomatoes
- 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
- 1 onion, finely chopped
- 1 bunch of coriander leafs, finely chopped
- 2 tablespoons of red wine vinegar
- 1 flat tablespoon of coarse sea salt
- half cup of olive oil (Chileans don't do it with olive oil, they just use oil)
Stir everything together and leave it in a cool place for at least 30 minutes so that the flavours can get to know each other.

Open a bottle of nice Chilean red wine and ENJOY!!

Friday, August 22, 2008

Shanghai complete post Part I

Shanghai impressions

The old centre of Shanghai



Yuyuan Garden's in Shanghai from 1577 Ming Dynasty (re-done several times afterwards)



Foodcourt in the basement of the Jing Mao Tower and a view on the Oriental Pearl Tower from the promenade


View from 88th floor of the Jing Mao Tower


Centre of Shanghia where people always want to sell you shoes and/or watches.The use of umbrella's against the blazing sun.


Maglev fast magnetic train that can reach speeds up to 420km/h but with us it got stuck at 300km/h

China 2008 trip

Good day to you all,

As you have noticed before keeping my blog going during the China trip didn't really work out due to either a lack of internet or an abundance of errors in Chinese Characters so both prevented me from updating my blog. However now that I just came back yesterday night and I have decided to make a nice summary of every location that we visited illustrated by photo's as they always say so much more than words.

Below you find a list of locations that we've visited in the past 20 days:
- Shanghai,
- Suzhou,
- Huang Shan,
- Wuhan,
- Xi'An,
- Pingyao,
- Taiyuan,
- Beijing.

The coming days I will sort pics etc. and you will see the updates appear along the week.

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Shanghai Report


As you might have noticed, my blog didn't really take off as I wanted. Internet has been a hassle in the hostels, always busy and when it was free the blog gave a chinese error which I could not read and my posts were lost....I'll try to post a few things here and there but forgive me if it doesn't work out....otherwise I will make up for it once I'm back home.

Please enjoy a few of the Shanghai pictures.

Kindest regards,
Jody

- Food
- Foggy view on Pudong
- Circus act that we sort of got into by accident (will explain more later)
- Pudong
- Garden with Pudong on the background




Monday, July 28, 2008

Upcoming China Trip



The Excuse
There has been a silence.....a looooooong silence, but we are back again!! It is not that I have not been active or anything, on the contrary, but I just never really sat down to actually post things. There are still things that 'need' to be reported, such as the follow up of our Chile visit (already a year ago, but I cannot keep those beautiful landscapes unused on my harddisc), more cooking stories (where I've taken pictures of nearly every dish that I prepared over the past year), but first we are going to China!!

The Promise
Coming weekend we will travel to China to enjoy 3 weeks of beautiful food, landscapes, people, etc. Really looking forward to that and I have to be thankful to an old promise me and a friend made already like 6 years ago. When we visited China for the first time with a studytrip we were in Beijing that at that time was an official Candidate City. While they were painting the grass in town green (it was summer and we had a heatwave so not much green happening to impress the committee) we promised to return to Beijing if they were elected to organise the 2008 Olympics. Well now you all know the story and there we go, to Beijing again!!

The Trip
We plan to fly to Shanghai and spend a few days in that cosmopolitan city to enjoy its splendor. After that we more or less want to travel to Xi'An making a few stops along the way such as in Suzhou (many many historic gardens (UNESCO)), Huang Shan (Holy mountain and UNESCO landscape), Xi'An (Terracotta Army again UNESCO monument and some nice things in town), Pingyao (Preserved Ming time walled city where the first bank in the world was stood, guess what? it is an UNESCO site), another stop that is still open, and finally ending in Beijing where we will see what has changed over the past few years and visit some of the olympic events such as athletics, diving, synchronised swimming and BMX bikes.

The Issue
I cannot say how much I am looking forward to returning to one of my favourite Asian countries!! Of course people always remember me that it is the same country that supresses Tibet, etc. but I am not going there for the government or anything, I am going there to enjoy the people, the food, the landscape, etc. And in China, just like in the rest of the world unfortunatly, the government and the people are not the same thing. I also visited San Francisco and not because I agreed with the war in Iraq.

Well I will keep you posted and hopefully will be able to post some pics every once in a while from China.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Holidays in Chile - The first days, Santiago

Hi there to you all!!

I am back again!! Sorry for not posting anything for such a long time, but I here I am again at least for another few hopefully interesting posts. The reason why I am back is that I am on the road again. This time with my gf and my parents on our journey through big parts of Chile (her home soil) and a small part of Argentina. This is my second visit to Chile and my first to Argentina from where I am reporting now. The idea of this journey is to travel in one month from Santiago to the north and then back to Santiago over Argentinian territory with a xmas stop in Tucapel (600km south of Santiago) and perhaps Pucon (beginning of Vulcano and lake district) before we had back to Santiago and The Netherlands. So far we have already had our temperary homes in Santiago, Totoralillo (near La Serena and Coquimbo), Elqui Valley (near Pisco), San Pedro de Atacama (driest desert in the world) then we went into Argentina through the Paso de Jama (+4000mtr above sealevel) where we´d spend the night in Pumamarca. The next day we drove to La EstancĂ­a in ColomĂ© (where we are now, a beautiful vineyard in the middle of nowhere) and had a stopover for a few hours in beautiful Salta. Our next stop will most likely be San Juan with a dinner stop in La Rioja after which we will continue our road the next day back to Chilean soil to spend one night in Santiago in order to be able to spend x'mas in Tucapel where her parents now live 600 km south of Santiago. In there we might have some time to visit for instance Pucon-Villarica (more to the south in the district of lakes and vulcanos) before we fly home again. So far we are just over half of the holiday and I must say it has been pretty amazing!! I have seen landscapes I could never have imagened before eventhough I already saw pictures of it....to really experience the landscapes is something very different. So far we drove more than 4000 km and to see the landscapes change so dramatically within sometimes just a few hours is superb and leaves you with a capacity shortage to process all the new impressions!!

However before I go into all of that I want to structure my coming blog by chronology and location. So first of all this first post will be about our days in Santiago (de Chile)!!

We had a smooth flight untill Brasil where we experienced severe turbulence for a few minutes...enough to make my mom go rather sick. On the Airport in Santiago they had an extremely amazing free service, namely she went to the airport clinic where they checked her, gave her drip as she was dehydrated, recipe for pills and observed her for an hour to see if she improved. Luckily she did and the next day she was up an running again!! A big thumbs up and thank you to Santiago Airport!! The parents of my gf came to the airport to pick us all up, supernice to see them again!!

The first real day in Santiago we used a pilot project, the bus turistik. We bought a ticked and you could get on and off the bus at like 17 stops, on the bus there were guides and a audio tour.

Bohemian Barrio Bellavista Mercado Central

Plz. de Armas Salvador Allenda near La Moneda
First impression of Santiago, wooow how green and I mean that even the balconies of buildings are very green!!) We made several stops under such as in bohemian Barrio Bellavista where we stayed for some nice drinks after which we continued our road to the old centre and the Moneda Palace (where the bombs were dropped on Allenda´s office and Pinochet took control to establish his violent dictorial reign). The nice walk lead us from the Museo de Bellas Artes, Park, Marked (where we had the most delicious meal!!) Cathedral - plz. de Armas, etc. Excellent!! In the afternoon we made a nice walk through the neighbourhood of our guesthouse hihihi, the appartement of Nata´s parents, where we see more and more offices being build in a beautiful light style. After our first dinner in a restaurant (coco loco, very nice food again!!) it was time for us to pick up the car and to leave the next day. Instead of a Toyota we got a very nice 4wd Mitsubishi that would accompany us the next month. One thing that also has to be mentioned is that the hospitality in many ways and the nice lunches and dinners at nata´s parents house was beautiful again. A big thanks to them for making our first days really welcoming and homish.
Green Balconies Office Buildings near home

End of Santiago Part.