Friday, March 25, 2011

Smoked "Buff-a-que" Wings

Some things are just made to be together.  Peanut butter and jelly, wine and cheese, Ernie and Bert, and most importantly, sports and food.  Right now, there is no better time of year to watch sports and eat food.  For eons, people have been having parties that revolve around sporting events and food.  I'm certain that they even tailgated at the Colosseum in Rome (NSFW) before big battles.

One of my favorite times of year is March/April due to the NCAA basketball tournament, the Masters and the start of baseball season!   This is a recipe for perhaps the most common of sports foods, the chicken wing.  Chicken wings are arguably the most perfect "sports food" ever created.  You can completely eat them with one had, leaving the other hand for beer consumption, high fives and flipping channels.  This recipe is one that I've honed over the years.  I smoke my wings and sauce them several times with a mixture of bbq sauce and traditional wing sauce (hence the name "buff-a-que").  If you do not have a smoker you can achieve great results using the indirect method of grilling on your grill.

Ingredients:

1 "Family Pack" of chicken wings (remove the wing tips from the wings and discard.  Also remove the drumstick from the wing and cut away extra fat and skin)
1/2 cup of bbq seasoning
1/4 cup of olive oil
1 bottle of your favorite bbq sauce
1 bottle of your favorite spicy wing sauce (I use Texas Pete)
2 handfulls of wood chips, soaked in water for 30 minutes (I prefer apple wood)

Season with chicken wings with the dry bbq seasoning then coat the wings in olive oil.  I like to do this step in a 1 gallon ziplock freezer bag.  Next combine the bbq sauce, with the spicy wing sauce and set aside.  I prefer a mix of 60% spicy wing sauce to 40% BBQ sauce.  You can adjust the mix to your own taste. 

Saucy Wings
If you are using a smoker, prepare the smoker for cooking between 300 and 350 degrees.  If you have a water pan in your smoker, cover the pan with aluminum foil but do not put any water in it.  If you are using a grill, set up the grill for indirect grilling.  Place the wood chips or chunks on the grill or smoker directly over the coals.  If you are using a gas grill, place the wood chips in a smoker box or wrap them in heavy duty aluminum foil and put them over the burner. 

Place the chicken skin side down on the smoker or grill away from the flame.  Cook for about 40 minutes (60 to 90 minutes on a smoker), turning the wings about half way through cooking.  Start basting the wings with the sauce every 10 minutes or so during the last 20 minutes of cooking.  When the wings are cooked through, remove from the grill and serve with blue cheese dressing for dipping.  If you like your wings extra saucy, pour the remaining bbq sauce over the wings after they have been removed from the grill.  Turn on the game, invite your friends over, get out lots of paper towels and enjoy!

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Mussell and Shrimp Paella

A couple of years ago, I was on the receiving end of a wonderful Christmas present, an authentic Spanish Paella pan! I've always been fond of Paella. My Dad made paella every summer at the beach so eating it, always triggers great memories.

I love the versatility and range of Paella. There are so many variations of Paella that you can seemingly eat it forever and not have the same dish twice. You can always add any ingredients to the dish to make it your own. One of the things that I have learned about Paella, is that the dish is all about the rice. That should be the focus of the dish and the ingredients should complement the rice not overtake it.

Ever since I received my own paella pan, I've been experimenting with different kinds of paella.  It's a very fun dish to make.  There is lots of sauteing and it smells amazing as you are cooking.  It's a great dish for entertaining, just be sure to do your prep work before the company comes over.  You don't want to be stuck in the kitchen chopping while everyone else is having fun! 

This recipe is an all seafood paella.  Mussels are one of my favorite things in the world!  I remember going to Cape Cod as a kid and picking them right off of the rocks by the canal that we took walks by.  Use fresh mussels not frozen (yuck) and if you can find it, use Bomba Rice imported from Spain.  If you can't find it, arborio rice (short grain) works well.  This recipe really highlights the flavor of the mussels and it blends perfectly with the sweetness of the rice.

One day, I will make it to Spain and eat my way across the country! Until then I will keep on trying out recipes from Penelope Casas. I have two cook books from her that I've had great luck with. This dish was based of a dish from her book Paella! Spectacular Dishes from Spain.  Now, mix up some sangria, and cook up this delicious paella.

Ingredients:

2 pounds of mussels in their shells washed and cleaned of their beards
1/2 cup of dry white wine
2 1/2 cups of clam juice or seafood stock
Check out my mussells!
1/3 teaspoon of crumbled saffron threads
1 hard boiled egg, peeled and chopped
1/4 cup of olive oil
1/2 pound of shrimp, peeled and deveined
2 cloves of garlic, chopped
1 Spanish onion chopped
1 green bell pepper chopped
1 tablespoons of chopped fresh rosemary
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1/4 teaspoon of smoked Spanish hot smoked paprika (if you can't find it regular paprika will do)
1 1/2 of bomba rice or arborio short grain rice
around 14 Sugar Snap Peas
1 small can of pimento strips

Directions:
Reserve around 14 mussels and place aside.  Place the wine into a large skillet with a tight fitting lid add the remaining mussels, cover and cook over high heat for about 5 minutes or until most of the mussels have opened.  Discard all of the mussels that did not open.  Reserve all of the fluid that the mussels cooked in and strain into a large liquid measuring cup.  Top off the reserved broth with enough clam juice to make 4 cups of liquid.  Return the broth mixture to the pan, place over medium low heat and add the saffron.  Keep the liquid mixture warm but do not bring it to a boil.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
Remove the cooked mussels from the shells and chop the mussels coarsely.  In a large paella pan or skillet, add the olive oil and place over medium high heat.  Add the shrimp and cook for about one minute, stirring constantly.  Using a slotted spoon, remove the shrimp from the pan.  Add the bell pepper, garlic, onion, rosemary, salt.  Lower the pan to medium heat and cook for about 4 minutes.

Stir in the paprika and rice and mix until the rice is well coated with oil.  Add the broth to the pan and bring to a boil.  Boil the mixture for about 2 minutes and then add the chopped egg and shrimp.  Continue to cook over medium heat until the mixture is not soupy but so there is enough liquid left to cook the rice.  If your burner is not large enough to cover the entire bottom of the pan, rotate the pan occasionally while cooking.


Top the rice mixture with the uncooked mussels, peas and sliced pimentos and place in the oven.  Cook for 10 to 15 minutes or until the rice is cooked through. 

Remove the pan from the oven and place on a burner over high heat rotating the pan constantly for 1 to 3 minutes.  This will crisp the bottom layer of rice and form the soccarat, which is the most coveted part of the paella in Spain.  Be careful not to burn the rice.  You want the rice to be a nice golden brown.  This step is optional.  A nice way to serve this dish is family style, right out of the paella pan.

Invite over your friends, mix up a pitcher of sangria and enjoy!