Simple cooking in a complicated world

Posts from the ‘Recipes’ category

Pinca (Croatian Easter Bread)

Pinca, a Croatian Easter Bread that hails from Dalmatia – full of buttery richness and fresh citrus notes.

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Last year, I shared with you a variation of the traditional Easter bread my mom always made, Easter Bread Dolls, or Primorski Uskrsne Bebe.  It seemed fitting to choose this time-honoured recipe to share with you, for a couple of reasons.  It was the first Easter recipe I posted here on The Suburban Peasant and I wanted that recipe to communicate what Easter is to me and my family, but also because it was my first time celebrating Easter at home, in a long time.  Spending the last few years away from the traditions I grew up with made me nostalgic for those customs, and compelled me to share a recipe that truly represents Easter for me.  This year, I am hosting Easter, and since we’re breaking with tradition by having a new generation-er (me) cooking lunch, I thought I’d try my hand at a new Easter bread.

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Me, cooking Easter lunch is kind of a big deal.  I’ve cooked for my family and extended family many times before, but this is the first time I am going to cook for them for a major holiday.  In reality, it’s no different from making Sunday lunch or when I cooked for my husband’s 30th birthday, which was almost double the amount of people I am cooking for on Sunday.  However, on a more profound level, one that examines the significance of such family gatherings and how time, relationships, and plain old growing up really do change things, no matter how hard we try, it’s difficult to part with those traditions we have become so accustomed to.

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I don’t mean to get all philosophical here, but I think you know what I’m talking about.  I’m sure at one time or another, you mourned the way things use to be.  If you’re a parent of grown kids or a grandparent with grown grandchildren, letting go of your child’s youth, and the good times had that went along with it, can be a bitter pill to swallow.  Just yesterday, I called my grandmother to wish her a happy birthday and she commented on how she wishes things were like they use to be.  When we were all together, squished around the table in their basement, swapping Easter eggs and slurping soup with paper napkins tied around our necks as makeshift bibs.  Those were the days.  But those days have long since come and gone, and while I am sure there will be many more feasts around Baka’s table or my mom’s table, I am honoured to keep the tradition – as different it may turn out to be – alive.

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So, since I’m stirring things up by hosting Easter this year, I thought why not try a new Easter bread.  In reality, Pinca (peen-tza) isn’t new at all, it’s just new to me.  Also, it’s not all that different from the recipe I grew up with, except that it includes the additions of lemon and orange zest, as well as rum, and if you like, raisins.  Pinca is the Dalmatian version of my go to recipe.  Those Dalmatians with their warm climate, soothing sea, sunny dispositions and laid back attitudes, put a little spin on their Easter bread to reflect the uniqueness of their land – citrus!  The addition of flavourings to the bread make it so fragrant and really irresistible to eat.  Similar to challah, Pinca is dense and buttery, with an almost cake-like texture that makes it the perfect celebratory loaf, after a long 40 days of Lent.

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Flashback from last year: Goulash 

Pinca (Croatian Easter Bread) 

This recipe makes two loaves of bread, but it can be easily halved to make one.  Leftovers, if there are any, would make fantastic french toast.  It’s also just as delicious lightly toasted and smeared with jam for breakfast.

400 mL luke warm milk

2 packages (16 g) active dry yeast

1 teaspoon sugar

7 cups flour

1 1/2 cups sugar

1 package vanilla sugar

2 teaspoons salt

zest of 1 lemon and 1 orange

1 cup melted butter

3 egg yolks, lightly beaten (1 egg white reserved for the egg wash)

1 tablespoon rum

1 tablespoon šljivovica (plum brandy) or brandy

Proof the yeast in the luke warm milk and 1 teaspoon of sugar for 10 to 15 minutes, or until it has doubled in volume.

Meanwhile, in a stand mixer with the dough hook attachment on, combine the flour, sugar, vanilla sugar, salt and zests.  Mix on low to combine.

Create a well in the dry ingredients and pour in the milk and yeast mixture, the egg yolks, melted butter, rum and šljivovica.  Turn the mixer on to low and slowly combine.  When the ingredients begin to come together, turn the mixer up to medium high and knead for 5 minutes.  After 5 minutes check to see the progress.  Dough should be very smooth and only slightly sticky.  If it it’s still fairly wet, add a little flour, a tablespoon at a time, and continue mixing until smooth.  Remove the dough from the bowl and on a lightly floured surface, knead 10 to 15 times, just enough to make a smooth mass.  Lightly flour the dough and place in a clean bowl, covered with a tea towel, and set in a warm, draftless area of your kitchen.  Leave it to rise for 4 hours, or until it has doubled in volume.

After 4 hours, punch the dough to deflate it, and turn it out onto a lightly floured surface.  Knead briefly (4 or 5 times) and cut the dough into two equal halves.  Knead each half 3 or 4 times to make a smooth, round ball and place each on its own baking sheet, lined with parchment paper.  Allow to rise for another 2 hours before baking.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.  Brush each loaf with the egg white that has been lightly beaten with a little water.  Cut a cross on the top of the each loaf, using a small, sharp knife (I used scissors and it didn’t turn out right).  Bake the loaves one at a time, for 30 to 40 minutes, or until it is a deep brown.  Cool completely on a wire rack before cutting.

 

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Pan Roasted Salmon with Dill Sauce

Pan roasted salmon with dill sauce: a classic restaurant technique that is super easy to replicate at home and just as delicious. 

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This Friday is Good Friday, one of the most solemn days in the church calendar for all Christian denominations.  For Catholics, this is also a day of fasting, abstinence, quiet reflection, and penance.  The idea behind fasting is to imitate Jesus, to show an appreciation and a cognisance of the suffering He endured.  The notion and practice of fasting has changed over the centuries.  At one point, fasting meant only one meal for that day, a meal that abstained completely from meat, eggs, fat, dairy, alcohol and any other “luxury” ingredients.  Today, the church has adapted a more lenient interpretation that often consists of simple meals centred on fish, absent from more indulgent ingredients.  This is the tradition we observed in my family home growing up.

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My dad was pretty strict when it came to fasting.  Everyone in the house had to observe the no meat, no eggs, no sweets rule, including the kids.  The only thing that exempted you was if you hadn’t made your First Communion yet.  So by the age of 7 or 8, once you made the sacrament you were required to fast.  Today, I think most parents would classify this as an example of child negligence or something.  In reality, there is no harm in not eating meat for one day or telling your child they can’t eat chips or candy bars until Easter.

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Mango Coconut Lime Sqaures

Sweet, tart, buttery and chewy all it once.  Mango coconut lime squares, a gentle reminder of warm weather and good things to come. 

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I love finding new places to hangout in. I’m a true believer in loving the city you live in and learning about all it has to offer. That’s why I’m always on the lookout for new coffee shops, a hip and funky boutique or a fantastic new restaurant in my adopted home of Hamilton, Ontario.  It was during one of these jaunts across the Hammer, where I came across Mulberry Street Coffee House and tried the dessert that inspired the post I’m sharing with you today. This great spot and their in-house baked cranberry coconut lemon squares sent my mind a spinning and my culinary wheels a turning. It also reaffirmed my belief that Hamilton’s embarrassing “armpit” of Ontario moniker really needs to be retired.

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Many have a sordid reputation of Hamilton, especially those from the other side of the Lake Ontario.  Torontonians and other habitants of the GTA, who shall remain nameless, see Hamilton as the Golden Horseshoe’s cesspool, a place of heavy industry, low class citizens, sketchy neighborhoods and confusing one-way streets.  While some of these characterizations are true, the wheel that turns Hamilton’s economy is steel production (hence the nickname, “The Hammer”) and one-way streets do plague the downtown area, the city is so much more than what people make it out to be.  Hamilton is a diamond in the rough, a city in the middle of a cultural renaissance and on the cusp of urban renewal.  It’s those unfairly tagged, “sketchy” neighbourhoods that are being transformed into the pride of the city, and the very thing that is beckoning young professionals to live, work and play in the burgeoning arts and culture sector of the Hammer.

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Osso Buco with Risotto Milanese

 

A braised Italian classic that is sure to satisfy even the most critical dinner guests.

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Have you ever had one of those dishes at a restaurant, when the instant the fork passed your lips, entered your mouth, and your taste buds came in contact with that delicious bite of food, you knew you had to recreate that dish at home as soon as possible?  The kind of dish that made you savour every bite, meditate on the layers upon layers of complex flavours, and unabashedly lick your plate.  These are the dishes of memorable meals; meals that stick with you for years.  This is the standard that all other dishes are compared to, and the one that conjures pangs of regret following below par dining experiences.

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I had a few of these types of meals in my time and my heart just flutters when I think about it.  I think you all know I love food.  I love to cook food, but I loooovvvee to eat food, especially when it’s prepared by expert hands.  There is nothing that brings me greater pleasure than an evening spent dining at a cozy restaurant, eating sophisticated but homey, unpretentious but beautiful food, and reveling in the flavours plated in front of me.  This is why for the past few birthdays, I have spared my husband the misery of finding the perfect birthday gift, and opted for” birthday experiences” instead.  And as you might have guessed, these experiences usually centre on food; usually a dinner at a restaurant that I’ve had my eye on for quite some time.  It was at one of these birthday dinners where I had osso buco for the first time.

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Light and Lemony Ricotta Cheesecake

A light and lovely cheesecake that marries two cultures and food traditions beautifully.

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I am very excited about this recipe.  I’m excited for a few reasons; first and foremost it’s good.  I don’t mean to toot my own horn, but it’s really good.  It’s the kind of cheesecake that will make you change the way you think about this classic dessert.  If you’re the type of person that feels cheesecake needs to be rich and dense, followed by a serving of guilt and self-loathing, think again.  Cheesecake can be so many things, but it doesn’t need to be that.  In fact, it doesn’t have to be cream cheese, sour cream and graham cracker crusts either.  Light, airy, silky and smooth can be adjectives used to describe cheesecakes, without the preconceived cheesecake judgements that often accompany such characteristics, such as, “no-bake” or “Jello”.  These, people, are not cheesecakes but gelatinous imposters.  If you’re looking for a great flavour, texture and ultra smoothness, but still need that feeling you can only get when you eat a proper cheesecake, look no further.

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Enter my Light and Lemony Ricotta Cheesecake and the second reason why I’m so eager to share this recipe with you - it’s my own spin on a time-honoured Croatian  recipe.  An East meets West cheesecake - Eastern Europe that is.  I’m kind of proud of this one.  It’s not exactly my own recipe, but a conglomeration of a few recipes and techniques that marries a timeless Croatian staple with the style and flavours that North Americans expect from a cheesecake.  So what makes this cheesecake unique?  Egg whites, whipped cream and a pastry crust, to begin with.  But to get an understanding of why these components are special, I have to give you a bit of a background on the Croatian component of this recipe, and the recipe where it’s all derived from - pita od sira (cheese pie).

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