Saturday, April 30, 2011

Crisp chicken skin w/ smoked milk, shitake and grilled asparagus

My fascination with the Nordic Cuisine doesn’t seem to dimmer. Living in Atlanta makes it very difficult to just go out in the woods without it’s a daylong event. I’m settling for my local Kroger supermarket. This does not necessary mean that making Nordic Cuisine inspired dishes is not an option.
I presented this to my wife and step daughter today. Let me put it mildly and say they a both very curious about food and loves to taste whatever I cook up. This however was pushing their boundaries as neither of them likes chicken skin, milk skin or likes the smoked flavor. This was a test… and they loved it!


The smoked flavored notes of the fresh shitake and milk skin in the after taste, the baconish undertones of the grilled green asparagus combined with the crisp chicken skin gives a long lasting and changing bite in both texture and taste changes even after.
For one appetizer size presentation ingredients:
3 pieces of chicken skin from breast of thigh.
3 fresh grilled asparagus
3 chives
3 shitake mushrooms
1½ cups of whole milk
Plenty of rosemary (at least 20 twigs)
This is how you do it.
Salt the chicken skin and fry them on a pan for a few minutes in a bit of oil. Then move them to a grill and grill them, turning them often until crisp. Grill the asparagus with them.
Heat up the milk in the microwave. Let it cool off until skin forms on top. Cup the stems from the mushrooms and dip the top of the mushrooms in the milk so they get covered in the milk skin. Place on a bed of rosemary. Tie some butchers string around rosemary and mushrooms to keep it together. Grill until the rosemary is black.
Chop up chives and the grilled asparagus. If you like a good tip would be blending the chives and asparagus with a bit of water to create a green sauce to go with it. It makes a nice presentation too.
APPETIZER – by Dad is served

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Baked ’Cognac Béarnaise’ with Veal and Tomatoes

For a long time I have been complaining that I can’t get a good béarnaise in any restaurant in the US; well I haven't been able to fint it. I have a recipe from a Michelin Star chef – and what do I do. I change a perfect recipe for béarnaise and bake it!
When you bake a real béarnaise it becomes almost like a soufflé but the taste and texture is different.
This recipe is perhaps over doing some things, but the result was pretty good.
Ingredients:  2 appetizers
6 oz of veal
1 stick of butter (4 oz)
3 egg yolks
1 chopped charlot
2 table spoons of cognac + ¼ cup of cognac
1 table spoon of cooking sherry
1 table spoon of water
1 tea spoon of fresh chopped oregano
1 table spoon of fresh finely chopped chives
Melt the butter slowly, add the yolks and keep whisking. Add cognac, sherry, water, charlot and herbs and keep whisking while slowly heating up. Do NOT let it boil. Remove form stove.
Cut the veal thinly. Melt a piece of goats butter (or regular butter) on a skillet and brown the veal. Add the cognac and keep frying until the cognac is virtually gone.
Take two ramaquins (Little bowls that can go in the oven). Put the veal into the bowls and pour over the sauce. Put three fresh grape tomatoes on top.
Preheat the oven to 435F and bake for 20 minutes.
TIPS: Try and double the portion and put cold, cooked elbow pasta in the bottom of the deep dish pan, the veal on to and pour over the sauce. Then it becomes a dinner.
APPETIZER – by Dad is served

Restaurant Noma: Asparagus and spruce

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Crab filled mozarella w/ mint

When having company over it's nice to be prepared so you don't spend the time in the kitchen. Here is a great appetizer that is easy to make. The preparation time is about 10 minutes and can be done a little in advance.

Unfortunately i forgot  to measure things out when making this, so I'm going by memory. I hope you can forgive me for. This is based on one plate serving.

Ingredients:
2½-3 oz of fresh king crab meat
1½ inch piece of fresh mozzarella
1 teaspoon finely chopped mint
2 teaspoons finely chopped chives
Juice of one lemon
½ cup of olive oil
1 handful of cut lettuce of your choice
Salt and pepper if desired

Here is how you go about it:

Mince the crab meat in a bowl. In another bowl squeeze in the lemon juice and add the oil. Whisk it until is becomes 'creamy' and the oil and lemon mixes. Take two table spoons of the dressing and mix with the crab meat and add the mint.

Cut out the center out of the mozzarella. Take out a plate and put the luttuce on. Place the mozarella on the lettuce. Fill the crab mixture in the mozzarella and well over the top. Chop up the chives finely and add to the remaining mixture of oil and lemon juice. Whisk it up a bit and drissle the dressing over the crab and mozzarella.

APPETIZER - by Dad is ready!

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Vanilla Ice Cream w/ plum and tangerine sauce & spun caramel

This is a simple dessert that doesn’t require much. The Ice cream can be bought, the sauce requires 10-15 minutes and so does the spun caramel. The best part is that all can be made the night before. So if you’re planning to have guests over and maybe you’re just in charge of dessert, this is what you need.
Ingredients:  4 four plates
Vanilla bean ice cream (ex. Haagen Dasz)
8 seedless tangerines
4 plumbs
2 cup of sugar + 3 table spoons of sugar
1 lemon
3 table spoons of cognac (if you have it)
½ table spoon vanilla extract
2 cups of water
Here is how you go about it:
Cut the plumbs in small ‘boats’ and remove the skin. Cut the peel off the tangerines and make little tangerine ‘filets’. Make sure no skin or white is on them. Pour the water and 3 table spoons of sugar in a pot and start heating up while you dissolve the sugar. Then the sugar is dissolved add the plumbs and tangerine. Squeeze the lemon and add the lemon juice. Add cognac and vanilla extract and let it cook down. Take it off the burner and let it cool.
Melt a cup of sugar on a skillet under low heat. Cover two broom sticks in tin foil and put them up between two chairs. Cover the floor with old news papers because you’re going to make a mess.  When the sugar is melted let it cool down for a bit so it starts to thicken. Take a spoon full of caramel and make a ‘whipping’ motion over the broom sticks. Long threats of caramel should form from the broom sticks. If not, let the caramel cool a little more. But you have only so much time to do this so you got to hurry up. Roll up the caramel strings in little nests.
Remember to sprinkle the sauce over the fruits and ice cream when serving.
See picture for suggestion to present the dessert.
DESSERT – by Dad is ready!

Saltado de Pollo by Chef Angela Harbauer, Peru.

Looking out around the world of food in the search of a great meal DINNER – by Dad is proud to present Chef Angela Harbauer of Peru, South America.

Chef Angela Harbauer combines her passion for archeology, gastronomy and the origins of the social and cultural evolution and development of our gastronomic roots. Integrating various cultures around the world and sharing with users through “El Universal” in Venezuela Archaeology Blog dining.

China Fusion Peruvian Cuisine is called “Chifa”
Chifa is the word referred to in Peru for the Chinese cuisine adapted to Peruvian cuisine since the late nineteenth century. Most of the Chinese immigrants were Cantonese. “Chifa” is known as a unique restaurant concept.
This is an easy and economic recipe. We hope you enjoy it and share it in good company!

Ingredients: (serves 2 persons)

2 shallow cups cooked white rice with salt
 ½ kg (1.1 lb) of boneless chicken breast cut into thin strips
1 medium purple onion, peeled, cut in 8 equal pieces
1 yellow Peruvian peppers, washed, seeded, cut into very thin strips. Optional
2 red tomatoes cut into 8 (I cut each tomato into 8 equal parts)
1 medium red pepper diced medium assume taste.
¼ cup flat-leaf parsley leaves finely chopped
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
4 tablespoons soy quality
¼ teaspoon ground cumin
2 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
¼ cup vegetable oil of your choice
Salt to taste
Black pepper to taste freshly ground.

Preparation:

Marinate the chicken in a bowl, add the cumin, soy, red vinegar, minced garlic and mix to incorporate the flavors, covering and reserve in refrigerator for an hour. (Chef Harbauer suggests marinating the chicken 24 hours in advance to get better flavor).

Cook the white rice to your taste, this will be the base or bed of the chicken sauté.

In a hot pan or wok add vegetable oil to lightly cover the bottom, heat and carefully add the marinated chicken, proceed to fry chicken strips until cooked through. If you know how to flambé with care this will add a delicious smoky flavor to the chicken.

Add the coarsely chopped onions over the chicken and sauté golden, lightly cooked to get the same, add the red pepper sauté, tomatoes, then finely chopped Italian parsley and Peruvian yellow pepper and stir fry. Integrate all the ingredients and flavors evenly and remove from heat.

Adjust flavors with salt and pepper to taste.

Serve over white rice.

DINNER – by Chef Angela Harbauer is ready!

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

From Restaurant NOMA: 'The Hen and The Egg'

Molecular Cooking: Mango 'sunny side up'

This molecular gastronomy recipe is another creation of Ferran Adria and El Bulli team. This is one of the first dishes spherification That Was Introduced at El Bulli in 2003. This is one of the first spherification dishes that was introduced at El Bulli in 2003. The spherical mango ravioli is made ​​with the basic spherification technique and is based on a simple mango puree.

The spherical mango ravioli is made with the basic spherification technique and is based on a simple mango puree. This is an easy recipe to follow even if you have not yet experimented with spherification. This is an easy to follow recipe even if you haven't experimented with spherification yet.

 
Ravioli Ingredients:

- 250 g (8.8 oz) of water - 250 g ( 8.8 oz) of water
- 1.3 g sodium citrate - 1.3 g sodium citrate
- 1.8 g sodium alginate (0.36%) - 1.8 g sodium alginate (0.36%)
- 250 g mango puree - 250 g mango puree

Calcium BathCalcium Bath

- 1000 g (35 oz) of water - 1000 g (35 oz) of water
- 5 g calcium chloride - 5 g calcium chloride

Preparation:

Start by preparing the calcium bath.Start by preparing the calcium bath. Dissolve the calcium chloride in the water and keep it in the fridge while you prepare the mango puree for the ravioli. Dissolve the calcium chloride in the water and keep it in the fridge while you prepare the mango puree for the ravioli.

To prepare the mango filling, start by Creating the mango puree using fresh or frozen mangos.To prepare the mango filling, start by creating the mango puree using fresh or frozen mangos. Add the desired sugar. Add sugar as desired.

Mix the sodium citrate with the 250 g of water.Mix the sodium citrate with the 250 g of water. Then mix the sodium alginate in the water using an immersion blender sodium alginate is Until The Completely dissolved. Then mix the sodium alginate in the water using an immersion blender until the sodium alginate is completely dissolved. If this is your first time doing this, be aware That this May take longer than expected. If this is your first time doing this, be aware that this may take longer than expected.

Once the sodium alginate is dissolved, bring to a boil over high heat, stirring Constantly.Once the sodium alginate is dissolved, bring to a boil over high heat, stirring constantly. Remove from heat and let it cool at room temperature. Remove from heat and let it cool at room temperature. Once it is cold, mix with the mango puree. Once it is cold, mix with the mango puree. Let it rest for an hour to Eliminate some of the air bubbles created by the immersion blender. Let it rest for an hour to eliminate some of the air bubbles created by the immersion blender.

You are now ready to start Creating the spheres!You are now ready to start creating the spheres! Remove the bath calcium from the fridge. Remove the calcium bath from the fridge. Scoop the mango mixture with a tablespoon measure and half sphere. Carefully pour it into the calcium bath.

Scoop the mango mixture with a half sphere tablespoon measure and carefully pour it into the calcium bath. Leave the ravioli "cooking" for about 2 minutes in the bath and then calcium Carefully remove using a slotted spoon it.

Leave the ravioli "cooking" for about 2 minutes in the calcium bath and then carefully remove it using a slotted spoon. Then rinse it very gently with water to remove the calcium.

Immediately serve the jellification as the process continues even after removing the sphere from the calcium bath and will eventually convert into a solid gel in the magical sphere with liquid inside.

Serving suggestions:

- Sprinkle chopped pecans, coconut flakes if you like spicy or with some chopped chili peppers on top - Sprinkle chopped pecans, coconut flakes or if you like spicy with some chopped chili peppers on top
- Serve with coconut foam - Serve with coconut foam
- Serve on appetizer spoons or Chinese soup spoons - Serve on appetizer spoons or Chinese soup spoons
- Play with the egg yolk shape and serves it on the coconut coulis to resemble the sunny side up egg - Play with the egg yolk shape and serve it on a coconut coulis to resemble a sunny side up egg
- Serve with sticky rice - Serve with sticky rice

Molecular cooking: Caviar Cointreau – A seriously advanced party trick

Featuring Brazilian Chef, Kaka Silva, on Molecular Cooking, a fairly new and very different from of cooking originated about 10 years ago. Chef Silva studied at Le Cordon Bleu in London and is currently living and working in Brazil.

The very famous Spanish restaurant El Bulli was the front runner in this field. Many of the world’s best chefs have worked at this three Michelin Star Catalan restaurant; among others Rene Redzepi, owner of Noma – Worlds Best Restaurant second year running.

What is molecular cooking? Essentially it can be described as making produce act differently and look like something else while still preserving the flavors making it a mind boggling dining experience.

The Cointreau caviar is a great way to bring molecular mixology to your drinks.  The Cointreau caviar can be added to champagne, cosmopolitans, margaritas and many other traditional cocktails to make them more interesting.  This caviar is made using Basic Spherification.

Cointreau caviar was first launched in Paris in 2008 where it was presented to the greatest bartenders.  After almost a year of research, the Cointreau team came up with the best formula to create the caviar and developed a caviar kit for bar tenders to be able to produce enough caviar really fast.  The kit includes a magnetic agitator to mix the alginate without air bubbles in eight minutes instead of using an immersion blender and having to wait several hours for the air bubbles to disappear.  The kit also includes a laboratory-quality precision scale, a pot of edible gold flakes and a caviar dispenser.

Chef Silva told me he doesn’t know what's special about their formula but after a few tests he came up with this recipe that worked very well for him.  He didn't use gold flakes but you can add them to the alginate solution to make the caviar prettier.

Caviar Ingredients:


140 g (5oz) Cointreau
60 g (2oz) water (filtered water or with low calcium content)
1.6 g sodium alginate (0.8%)

Calcium Bath
500 g (18 oz) water
2.5 g calcium chloride


Preparation:

Start by preparing the calcium bath.  Dissolve the calcium chloride in the water and keep it in the fridge while you prepare the Cointreau mix for the caviar.
Mix the sodium alginate in the water using an immersion blender until the sodium alginate is completely dissolved.  If this is your first time doing this, be aware that this may take longer than expected.

Once the sodium alginate is dissolved, mix with the Cointreau.  Pass it through a sieve to eliminate some of the air bubbles created by the immersion blender.  If you have gold flakes, this is when you should add them to the mix.

You are now ready to start creating the caviar!  Remove the calcium bath from the fridge.  Fill a syringe with the Cointreau mixture and expel it drop by drop into the calcium bath.  The syringe needs to be high enough for the drops to sink when they get in contact with the bath but not too high or the drops may break into smaller drops creating “baby” spheres. 

Leave the caviar "cooking" for about 1 minute in the calcium bath and then carefully remove it using a sieve.  Then rinse it very gently with water to remove the calcium.
Consume immediately since the jellification process continues even after removing the caviar from the calcium bath and will eventually convert into a solid gel sphere with no magical liquid inside.

Serving suggestions

 - Add it to champagne, cosmopolitans, margaritas, sidecar
 - Serve the cocktail with a side of Cointreau caviar by itself
 - Use in desserts with chocolate, vanilla, orange or cranberries

Molecular Caviar Cointreau by Chef Silva is served

Monday, April 18, 2011

Return to Mom’s marinara sauce w/beef Parmesan.

As promised we will revisit Mom’s amazing pasta sauce.  This time we will use it with beef Parmesan, baked in the oven.
Ingredients:
4 lbs London Broil
2 cups of bread crumbs
½ cup of Parmesan
1 stick of butter
½ container of sour cream
Salt and Pepper
How to go about it.
Trim the broil from fat and slice it one inch thick. Cut the slice in half. Pound the meat with a tenderizer so it’s about ¼ inch thick. Marinade the meat in the sour cream in the fridge for at least 3 hours. Best if over night as the acids in the meat makes the meat more tender.
Put a thin layer of Mom’s marinara sauce in a pan made for oven.
Mix bread crumbs, Parmesan, salt and pepper in a bowl. Heat up a skillet and divide the stick of butter in 4. Keep the butter nearby. Turn the meat in the butter and brown them on the skillet.
Place the browned, breaded meat side by side (don’t let them cover each other) in the pan. Cover with Mom’s marinara sauce. Sprinkle some Parmesan cheese on top and bake it for 25-30 minutes.
Serve with pasta, a nice loaf of Italian bread or as is.
DINNER – by Mom is served.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

20 minute dinner Kids would love! Chicken in sherry w/ grilled apple

This is another chicken dish that in many ways has the same approach as a chicken marsala. The flavors cannot compare as this is a naturally sweet dish utilizing only the natural sugars from the bell peppers, onion and apples. The balsamic vinegar is countering the sweetness in a balanced manor.
Here is a dish that is easy to make for an everyday meal (20 minutes cooking time and 10 minutes prep time) that kids will love as much as adults.
Ingredients:
2 green apples
2 chicken breasts
1 red bell pepper
1 large onion
1 cup of chicken broth
¼ cup of balsamic vinegar
¼ cup of sherry (cooking cherry)
4 tbsp butter
1 tbsp chopped fresh thyme
Salt and Pepper
Quarter the apples and peel them. Remove the core.  Melt 2 tbsp butter and baste the apples before broiling them in a preheated oven for 20-25 minutes at 500F. The finished apples will have a texture of bakes mash.
Cut bell peppers and onions in 1 inch sticks. Melt 2 tbsp butter in a sauté pan under high heat. But the chicken in dices ½ inch by ½ inch. Put the onion, bell peppers and chicken into the pan and let it brown and sear for 5-6 minutes so all the chicken has a nice light brown color.
Add the balsamic and sherry. Add the chicken broth a little at the time making sure that it keeps boiling. Let it reduce until you have a rich sauce to only approximately half cup remaining.  Adjust flavor with salt and pepper.
Serve on a plate and stack 4 pieces of apple on top of each other. Save a spoonful of sauce to pour over the apples.
DINNER - by Dad is served!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

DINNER - by Mom: Home made pasta sauce w/ spicy italian sausage; and more...

My wife is a brilliant cook and understands how to economize food, think ahead and create tasty tasty meal after meal.

This particular pasta sauce (marinara) is great. There are so many more options how to use this sauce. The recipe here is made for stretching 3 entire meals as a base.

A regular Spaghetti Marinara w/ spicy Italian sausage
A Chicken/Veal Parmesan
A 'Gangster Grub' Italian style meatloaf

The two other recipes will follow soon. We suggest that you eat what you can and freeze 2 x 4 cups of the sauce for later.

Preparation is fast and easy but the cook time takes a while - and the longer the better. If you have a crock pot it will do the work for you during the day.

Ingredients

5 spicy Italian sausages (6 inches each)
1 tbsp course sea salt,
1/4 cup olive oil
2 large sweet onions finely chopped
6 16 oz crushed tomatoes
3 tbs fennel seed
1/4 cup dried basil
1/4 cup parsley
1/4 cup olive oil
1/2 cup store bought minced garlic
1 tbs celery seed

This is how you go about it:

Brown the onion in a large sauce pan with the olive oil and salt.   Once it's light golden, add the sausage to brown.   Then add the garlic and spices.  Stir on low heat for a few minutes until the garlic changes color a little.

Now add the 6 large cans of tomatoes and two cans of water.  Turn up the heat to medium until it comes to a boil.   Stir and turn the heat down to low stirring frequently.

The sauce is best if it cooks for at least 5 hours.

DINNER - by Mom is served!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Saturday Night Feast: Roasted duck w/ sugar browned potatoes and red cabbage

I know, I know. It’s out of season for a traditional Danish Christmas dinner. No matter how it’s still a beautiful meal and I can be served year round. It is one of my favorite dishes. Granted; it’s some work and takes a little preparation.
Here in the US this probably falls under an ‘exotic’ category. Never the less the flavors come very close to a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. If you’re into that, this may be a very good alternative as it is not as hard to do, takes less time in cooking and preparation.
Ingredients:
The Duck:
6 lbs duck
½ lb seedless prunes
½ lb green apples
4-6 cups of water
Salt and pepper
Red cabbage:
One red cabbage
5-6 table spoons current jelly
2-3 table spoons balsamic vinegar
Salt and pepper
The Potatoes:
4 lbs small round potatoes
Sugar
3 table spoons of butter
Sauce:
1 bottle of red wine
1 onion
1 fennel
3-4 carrots
3 table spoons of butter
Neck and heart from the duck
15-20 black pepper corn (not ground)
How to go about it:
The Duck:
Remove neck and any insides from the duk. Rinse it under cold water. Cut the apples in bite size pieces and stuff the duck with the apples and prunes.  Rub the duck with salt and ground pepper. Close the gap with meat needles.
Preheat the oven to 480F and put the duck on a rack on the roasting pan. The duck brown for 20 minutes breast down.  Turn the duck around and reduce temperature to 320F and add 2 cups of water. Add more water if the pan is drying out during roasting. Let the duck roast for about 2 hours. If the thigh loosens easy and the juice from the duck is clear, its done. Baste the duck every 20 minutes alternating with melted butter and drippings from the roasting pan.
The Sauce:
Brown the neck and heart in butter with the rough cut vegetables. Pour in a 2 cups of red wine and 2 cups of water. Let it boil down for a couple of hours. If it reduces too much add more wine and water. Your final result should be about 2½-3 cups. Strain the reduction into a casserole. Thicken with a bit of corn starch and adjust flavor with salt and pepper. Add a tablespoon or two of currant jelly. Let it simmer while the potatoes are roasting.
The Red Cabbage:
Quarter the red cabbage. Slice the quarters thinly. Put 2-3 tablespoons of butter in a pot large enough to hold all the cabbage. When the butter is melted put in the cabbage. Add the current jelly and balsamic vinegar. Adjust flavor with salt and pepper and maybe balsamic vinegar and currant jelly. Let it simmer for 20-30 minutes until it has the texture you prefer.
The Potatoes:
Boil the potatoes with the skin on and let them cool. Peel the potatoes. Take a large skillet and pour sugar in a thin layer so it covers the bottom of the skillet. Melt the sugar on the skillet. Let it get a little color but don’t let it turn black. Melt 3 tablespoons of butter on the melted sugar and stir it up gently before pouring the potatoes on the skillet. Stir the potatoes gently for about 15 minutes until they have a nice brown color.
TIP: If you prefer you can avoid browning the potatoes. Or maybe just brown half of them.
DINNER – by Dad is ready

Monday, April 4, 2011

'The Meadow' - A recipe inspired from 'The Nordic Cuisine'

So I entered a recipe competition on Food Network in the category of “Exotic Food”. Being Danish the latest thing in the food world is known as the 'Nordic Cuisine’ fashion.
This recipe is inspired by ‘The Nordic Cuisine’. Many people don’t understand it yet. Perhaps it’s just the fact that I see my Scandinavian roots so much more clearly after settling in the United States.
The recipe is seeking back to the ‘forgotten’ and commonly used ingredients that we now know Vikings would eat as a part of their meal – herbs, flowers, spices, meats and marrow that were all a vital part for them.
It is vital to the philosophy behind this recipe to use ingredients of what’s around us; in the meadow. The garnish (everything is eatable) acts as spices and sweeteners to compliment the marrow and meat. Even the mead is made from honey from a variety of flowers from the meadows and was a favored drink of the Vikings.
The use of uncooked, fresh garnish preserves the natural flavors and nutrients in the dish allowing for each piece of food to play their own part, rather than ‘spicing it up’ where every bite tastes the same or cooked to bits. As you eat you can combine the flavors to your liking so every bite is different making dining an experience.
Ingredients:
Marrow
Veal marrow ½ lb.
2 oz Goat butter
Smoked salt
Sauce
3 cups of Mead; a Honey based wine (750ml bottle)
3 cups of water
2 lbs veal osso buco
3 pieces of marrow
Salt and pepper
1 large white onion
½ table spoon Dijon mustard
1 table spoon sweet mustard
½ table spoon honey
2 oz goats butter
2 red beets
Eatable greens:
8 Dandelion leaves
Daisy pedals of 2 daisies
4 Tulip stalks (preferably not in bloom) 
This is how you go about it:
Brown the osso buco in goat’s butter. Peel and cut onion and beet in large dices and brown a bit with the meat. Add mead and water. Let it boil for 1½ hour under a lid. Remember to remove foam from the mix during the first hour of boiling. Strain into a smaller pot. Set aside 10 pieces of beet for the plates. Keep the meat warm until the sauce is ready by wrapping in tin foil and place under a heating lamp.
Add ½ tablespoon of Dijon, 1 tablespoon of sweet mustard and ½ table spoon of honey. Reduce sauce to a 'jellyish' texture.
Push out the marrow of the bone gently. Cut the marrow in quarter inch slices. Freeze for 45-60 minutes. Cook marrow on very hot skillet in goats butter for 1-2 minutes on each side. Sprinkle with smoked salt.
Cut the tulip stalks to remove the outer tough ‘skin’ on the tulip. Rinse the dandelion leaves and pick the pedals from the daisies.
Leave garnish raw and crisp.
DINNER - by Dad is served