Houston has an outstanding food scene. It is up there with the nation's greatest foodie cities. I have developed this blog in my quest to learn more about Houston's cuisine and to share it with others. Originally, it wasn't my intention for this blog to be about food but my posts have consistently revolved around food so that's what it has become.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
New Recipe: Bulgogi Korean BBQ Tacos
I made Bulgogi Korean BBQ Tacos today. It was tasty!
Ingredients:
Korean BBQ marinade
3 chicken breasts
Corn Tortillas
2 garlic cloves
1 avocado
scallions
cilantro
Spicy Bulgogi sauce
Pinch of Salt
Pinch of pepper
Splash of lime juice
Step 1)
Tenderize the chicken by perforating the breasts with a fork.
Step 2)
Place the chicken breasts in a bowl with the marinade and let them soak for at least 1 hour. Several hours or overnight is even better.
Step 3)
Chop the 2 cloves of garlic and place in the marinade when you are ready to cook the chicken.
Step 4)
Cook the chicken breasts in the marinade on medium-low to medium heat with the lid on. Once the chicken is cooked through, pull them out and cut them up. Leave the chicken breasts out.
Step 5)
Let the marinade simmer on medium to medium-high heat to thicken.
Step 6)
While the marinade is simmering, start chopping the scallions & cilantro. Cut the avocado in half and slice the avocados (both halves) length-wise while still in the skin. Use a spoon to dig the avocado slices out of the skin. Pinch some salt, pepper, and splash some lime juice onto the avocados.
Step 7)
Once the marinade is nice and thick, turn off the heat, and place the chicken back into the marinade. Make sure to toss the chicken so that the marinade coats it.
Step 8)
Briefly warm up the corn tortillas in a pan on low-medium heat.
Step 9)
Place the chicken, avocados, cilantro, & scallions on the tortillas (in that order). Then put the desired amount of Spicy Bulgogi sauce on top of each taco.
Step 10)
Enjoy!
Saturday, August 18, 2012
New Recipe: Coconut Sticky Rice & Mango
This is a Thai dessert. I had it at a Thai restaurant in Kemah, Texas called Mer Lion and wanted to recreate it at home.
Ingredients:
Serves 6-8
2 cups Japanese sweet rice (regular white rice will not work)
2 1/8 cups of water
1 can of unsweetened Thai coconut milk
4 Tablespoons sugar
4 pinches of salt
optional pinch of Saffron
Step 1)
Combine the rice and water in a glass bowl and soak for 1 hour.
Step 2)
After the rice and water have soaked for at least an hour, put a plate on top of the bowl and microwave on high heat for 7 minutes. Mix the rice and make sure it's nice and soft. Let the rice sit with the plate on top while you work on Step 3.
Step 3)
Simmer the coconut milk, sugar, & salt on medium heat until it thickens up a bit. Make sure you stir the coconut milk often so that it doesn't curdle. This is where I added the saffron. You can see little pieces of it in this picture.
The recipe didn't call for saffron but I've always wanted to try saffron in a recipe and I figured it would work in a recipe like this. I can't say that it tasted any different with the saffron than without it. I'm not sure what saffron tastes like. I just know it's rare and expensive. This tiny little jar cost $17.49.
Saffron is so rare and expensive because each flower's stigmas need to be collected by hand and there are only a few stigmas per flower.

Step 4)
Get a nice, ripe mango. Mangos should be a little soft to the touch but not too much. This mango is perfectly ripe. Start slicing the mango while the coconut milk is simmering. But make sure to keep stirring the coconut milk about every minute or so.
Step 5)
The coconut milk should have thickened up some after simmering. Pour it onto the sweet rice and mix it in.
Step 6)
Scoop a half cup of coconut sticky rice onto a plate and place the sliced mangos on top.
Ingredients:
Serves 6-8
2 cups Japanese sweet rice (regular white rice will not work)
2 1/8 cups of water
1 can of unsweetened Thai coconut milk
4 Tablespoons sugar
4 pinches of salt
optional pinch of Saffron
Step 1)
Combine the rice and water in a glass bowl and soak for 1 hour.
Step 2)
After the rice and water have soaked for at least an hour, put a plate on top of the bowl and microwave on high heat for 7 minutes. Mix the rice and make sure it's nice and soft. Let the rice sit with the plate on top while you work on Step 3.
See the plate on top? |
The is rice cooked perfectly |
Step 3)
Simmer the coconut milk, sugar, & salt on medium heat until it thickens up a bit. Make sure you stir the coconut milk often so that it doesn't curdle. This is where I added the saffron. You can see little pieces of it in this picture.
The recipe didn't call for saffron but I've always wanted to try saffron in a recipe and I figured it would work in a recipe like this. I can't say that it tasted any different with the saffron than without it. I'm not sure what saffron tastes like. I just know it's rare and expensive. This tiny little jar cost $17.49.
Saffron is so rare and expensive because each flower's stigmas need to be collected by hand and there are only a few stigmas per flower.
Step 4)
Get a nice, ripe mango. Mangos should be a little soft to the touch but not too much. This mango is perfectly ripe. Start slicing the mango while the coconut milk is simmering. But make sure to keep stirring the coconut milk about every minute or so.
Step 5)
The coconut milk should have thickened up some after simmering. Pour it onto the sweet rice and mix it in.
Step 6)
Scoop a half cup of coconut sticky rice onto a plate and place the sliced mangos on top.
Rice Epicurean Cooking School
I found out about the Rice Epicurean Cooking School from Houston Restaurant Weeks. This particular cooking class ("Dinner Party") coincided with our son's daycare having a Parent's Night Out so that is why we chose it. Normally, we don't eat beef or pork but we made an exception in this case for the sake of a fun night out with friends & to learn something new. Thanks go to Matt, Lauren, Kelly, & Laura for making memories with us. :)
Our executive chef was Chef Chip Hight. (Pictured below on left) He is the former executive chef at *17. He now owns a cigar company called Hight Cigar and even created his own brand of cigar. He said he teaches cooking classes at Rice Epicurean Markets in August just to help out for Houston Restaurant Weeks. I spoke to him briefly and asked him where he was trained and he said HTC (honestly not sure what that stands for, though). He also said he worked in the first Michelin-starred restaurant in Europe. He said he is about to be named Executive Chef in a Houston restaurant in about a week. I asked him which restaurant and he said he couldn't tell me but it would be big news in the press. I can't wait to find out.
Having trouble figuring out how to open my apron. (I wasn't the only one, thankfully) |
I finally got my apron on |
Our first task was to make the ceasar's salad.
After we ate the salad, our next task was to make the Mushroom Duxelle. It was to be the filling in the Beef Wellington between the steak and the pastry.
The butane gas for our burner was empty. Chef Chip replaced it for us. |
|
Chopping the mushrooms and thyme |
Stirring the mushrooms |
A little bit of private tutorials |
Food brings people together. The mood was cheery throughout the entire classroom. |
Next, we needed to roll out the pastry dough and spread on the Mushroom Duxelle.
The final product: Beef Wellington
Dinner is served |
Now, it's time to make dessert; Chocolate Lava Cake.
You pour in a bottom layer of cake mix. Then drop in a chocolate ganache ball. And finally pour in the rest of the cake mix.
Laura & I goofing around with the demonstration mirror |
Melted chocolate ganache in the middle. |
Graduation photo Left to right (front row): me (Lea), Kelly, Lauren, & Laura Left to right (back row): my hubby (Erik) & Lauren's hubby (Matt) |
I definitely want to try this again. It was a ton of fun & a great bonding experience. Classes are $35 per person (cheaper than a Pinot's Palette night & includes dinner).
Khon's Wine Darts Coffee Art
Khon's bar is now up there with my top three favorite Houston bars. I really enjoyed the vibe of this bar. The music selection in the jukebox is mostly indie rock with a few classics. The art on the walls features contemporary paintings for sale by local artists. The bartender, Greg Dean, whose daytime job is performing in plays and teaching acting classes at The Catastrophic Theatre, says the wall art changes periodically so there is always something new to mull over in your mind.
The beer is a fine selection of popular microbrews, the most popular of which is Abita. I've had the Abita Strawberry, which is what I asked for, but they were all out of it yesterday. That's how popular it is. Greg recommended the Abita Purple Haze instead. It was delicious. I was trying to figure out what flavor I was tasting but I couldn't quite figure it out. So I asked my husband. He said he thought it was grape. I tasted it again and figured he was right, but I asked Greg to be sure. Greg said the flavor I was tasting was raspberry. He said it was one of those beers where you can tell there's some sort of berry flavor but you can't quite pin it down until someone tells you what it is and then you can totally taste the raspberry. I would say he hit it right on the nose.
Greg seemed like a really intelligent and knowledgeable bartender so I asked him to recommend a beer for me. I told him I don't like hoppy beer. He recommended an Alaskan Amber. This was another hit because it's the best beer I've had in a long time.
I would've liked to stay longer but we had a cooking class to attend at the Rice Epicurean Cooking School and we needed to meet our friends. We will most certainly return and we'll bring fellow beer drinkers next time. This bar is too cool not to share.
The beer is a fine selection of popular microbrews, the most popular of which is Abita. I've had the Abita Strawberry, which is what I asked for, but they were all out of it yesterday. That's how popular it is. Greg recommended the Abita Purple Haze instead. It was delicious. I was trying to figure out what flavor I was tasting but I couldn't quite figure it out. So I asked my husband. He said he thought it was grape. I tasted it again and figured he was right, but I asked Greg to be sure. Greg said the flavor I was tasting was raspberry. He said it was one of those beers where you can tell there's some sort of berry flavor but you can't quite pin it down until someone tells you what it is and then you can totally taste the raspberry. I would say he hit it right on the nose.
I would've liked to stay longer but we had a cooking class to attend at the Rice Epicurean Cooking School and we needed to meet our friends. We will most certainly return and we'll bring fellow beer drinkers next time. This bar is too cool not to share.
Lunch at Ouisie's
Today, my husband and I went to lunch at Ouisie's Table for Houston Restaurant Weeks. I would describe the decor of this restaurant as similar to a country club with "old money" patrons. There were six large dining rooms. We were sat in The Khaki Club. My husband and I had a little chuckle about this because he was wearing jeans. I only saw one other customer wearing jeans. Everyone else was dressed the way country club members would dress.
The Houston Restaurant Weeks menu is as follows. My husband's choices were in yellow. My choices were in pink.
1st
Crispy Little Crab Cakes
With corn relish & our house jalapeno tartar & cocktail sauces
Pecan Salad
Mixed greens with caramelized pecans and a goat cheese crostini
Soup du Jour
2nd
Seared Chicken with Poblano Cream Sauce
Filled with brie cheese, spinach, toasted almonds with sautéed broccoli & cauliflower and grilled asparagus
Shrimp and Cheese Grits
A spicy sauté of gulf shrimp, mushrooms, bacon & scallions over cheese grits
Ouisies Original Meat Loaf
With chipotle ketchup, mashed potatoes and glazed carrots
Salad, Soup & Sandwich
Roasted beets and celery salad with mixed greens, red onions, cherry tomatoes, oranges sections, toasted almonds tossed with poppy seed dressing, and two little pimiento cheese sandwiches, and a cup of soup du jour
These were so delicious. The lump crab meat inside was delectable. It was soft and plump. The crispy outer casing was the crunchy opposite and the perfect complement to the inside. The sauce was a combination of jalapeno tartar and traditional cocktail sauces. The corn relish tasted fresh and buttery.
The Houston Restaurant Weeks menu is as follows. My husband's choices were in yellow. My choices were in pink.
1st
Crispy Little Crab Cakes
With corn relish & our house jalapeno tartar & cocktail sauces
Pecan Salad
Mixed greens with caramelized pecans and a goat cheese crostini
Soup du Jour
2nd
Seared Chicken with Poblano Cream Sauce
Filled with brie cheese, spinach, toasted almonds with sautéed broccoli & cauliflower and grilled asparagus
Shrimp and Cheese Grits
A spicy sauté of gulf shrimp, mushrooms, bacon & scallions over cheese grits
Ouisies Original Meat Loaf
With chipotle ketchup, mashed potatoes and glazed carrots
Salad, Soup & Sandwich
Roasted beets and celery salad with mixed greens, red onions, cherry tomatoes, oranges sections, toasted almonds tossed with poppy seed dressing, and two little pimiento cheese sandwiches, and a cup of soup du jour
Crispy Crab Cakes
These were so delicious. The lump crab meat inside was delectable. It was soft and plump. The crispy outer casing was the crunchy opposite and the perfect complement to the inside. The sauce was a combination of jalapeno tartar and traditional cocktail sauces. The corn relish tasted fresh and buttery.
The mixed baby greens had a light coating of balsamic vinaigrette. The pecans were coated with a hard caramelized sugar. There was a slice of pear and apple each. And a piece of crostini (toast) with a goat cheese spread on top. There was enough goat cheese to spread on the apple and pear slices. It added a refined saltiness and soft texture to the crisp and grainy fruit.
Along with our appetizers, we ordered drinks. My husband ordered the Rusty Nail cocktail. I ordered a glass of Argentinian red wine off of the list "Red Wines for the Adventurous." It was dry and smooth. My husband's cocktail had a distinct licorice flavor, which was from the Drambuie Scotch Liqueur. We both delightedly sipped on our drinks for the duration of the lunch.
Right before our entrees were served, we each received a small plate of muffins. Pictured below: On the top left was a jalapeno bread. On the top right was a ginger bread (our favorite). It was very sweet and could almost pass as a dessert. On the bottom was a corn bread. It came with softened butter for spreading.
Shrimp and Cheese Grits
The shrimp was very tender. I hate when you get shrimp that's rubbery from being overcooked. The grits were so fine that they looked like a bed of mashed potatoes. And the sauce was amazing.
Seared Chicken with Poblano Cream Sauce
I absolutely loved the crispy fried outer layer of the chicken. I could hear the crunch inside my mouth. The chicken was stuffed with spinach, toasted almonds, and brie cheese. And it was smothered with a poblano cream sauce. It was savory and flawless.
I may have mentioned before that I hate cauliflower. But this cauliflower was buttery and herby. This is the best cauliflower I've ever tasted. The broccoli and asparagus were perfectly seasoned and I ate every bite.
Although dessert was not on the Houston Restaurant Weeks menu, my husband and I decided to splurge and ordered the Lemon Ice Box Pie. Our waiter told us it was his favorite.
Lemon Ice Box Pie
The graham cracker crust was obviously freshly made and superbly toasted. It crumbled on my spoon and crunched inside my mouth. The lemon zest added a lively tang on the last few bites of our pie.
This was the end result of our pie. We devoured it.
I highly recommend Ouisie's. The service was impeccable and the food was titillating.
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