Justin Dunham

's journal about making things

Rosemary-lemon chicken, cheese plate with homemade crackers and jams, and tres leches cake

Lemon chicken in the top of the oven, and sprouts roasting below.

From right to left: parrano, stilton with lemon peel, gorgonzola, and a goat cheese with pepper. Accompaniments of homemade crackers, beet jam, and cucumber jelly.

I didn't know this is how brussels sprouts grow!

The roasted sprouts.

I recently had a couple of friends over for a Sunday night dinner. Being somewhat short on time, I had to make dishes that led to good results in a time-efficient way.

So I chose (a) a cheese plate with some cucumber jelly and beet jam, (b) rosemary-lemon chicken, and (c) tres leches cake, which I served with a raspberry sauce and maple-glazed almonds.

Everything came out really well. For the cheese plate, I tried to focus on picking a variety of cheeses that would go well with the accompaniments. In this case, I was serving another dinner the next day, so I’ll write about the cheese plate in more detail when I write about that dinner. The beet jam and cucumber jelly I’ve made before, as well as the crackers, though for different purposes.

The chicken was pretty easy to make, and searing and then putting in the oven ensures that it gets nice and crispy on the outside without too much risk of overdone-ness. I’m not sure that baking it with the lemons and rosemary on top actually does anything for the flavor, though it was speculated that the rosemary and lemon might release some of their essential oils into the sauce. Not convinced.

I realize now that I’ve never written an entry about tres leches cake before, though it’s a recipe I make relatively often since it’s straightforward, and a crowdpleaser. Next time I make it, I promise a proper entry on the topic. In the meantime, if you haven’t had it, it’s basically a very light sponge cake that is soaked overnight in a mixture of evaporated and condensed milk, served with whipped cream (hence “three milks”). The result is a very satisfying, sweet, and obviously incredibly moist cake. The accompaniments, especially the fruit sauce, work really well with its sweetness.

I served the chicken together with some brussels sprouts, by the way. I had never seen this before, but at Trader Joe’s they were selling them on the stalk! I actually preferred this since the sprouts stay fresher longer, and they’re a lot cheaper this way.  I roasted the sprouts until they were crispy and then served them with a bunch of salt, sort of like healthy french fries.

Beet Salad, Fried Chicken etc., Polenta Cake

Filed under: Cooking Journal — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Justin Dunham on April 6, 2010

The main course.

Beet salad.

Polenta cake, with raspberry and grapefruit mousses.

Last week I made my first three-course meal in a while. First course: Beet salad with candied walnuts and goat cheese. Second course: Fried chicken with macaroni and cheese and beet greens. Third course: Polenta cake.

The beet salad was great. Building on my lessons with canned beets, I bought fresh beets and roasted them myself. The orange juice concentrate in the dressing really does give it a great, syrupy flavor.

Actual beets also often come with free beet greens, which I steamed and then sauteed until they were almost distintegrated. Pretty good.

The polenta cake was in some ways the highlight of the meal. I served it along with some of the mousses I made. Polenta and olive oil are major components of the dish, which results in an extremely moist cake that also has a difficult-to-identify, but wonderful, almost flowery aroma.

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