Seared Foie Gras with Seville Orange and Balsamic Reduction

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If you don’t like seared foie gras, then I can’t help you.  If you’ve never tried it and think it’s too luxurious, please know it is ridiculously easy to make at home and far cheaper than at any restaurant.  People will cry it’s so good.  Cry I tell you.

Foie gras is simply the fattened liver of a duck or goose.  The force feeding of these geese is well documented and we won’t go into that here.  But like everything, you should know the sacrifices your food makes from farm to mouth, and give thanks appropriately.

The first step is finding fresh foie gras.  You want to buy it raw, off the lobe, if possible (a whole lobe is 1 entire liver).  A whole lobe, should you be so bold, is about 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 lbs. and runs about $75-$100.  Most of us will buy either half lobes or pre-cut slices.  The wimpy little number above is a 2 oz. piece.  A 4 oz. piece would be much nicer for you or your guests.

Once sliced, simply season with salt and sear the raw foie gras in a hot skillet over medium high heat.  The foie will immediately smoke and hiss and spit grease.  This means you’re doing it right.  It’ll also shrink a lot which will depress you seeing how much you paid for it.  Unfortunately, that’s how it goes.  The first side will probably be done in 30 seconds or less.  Flip and repeat using color as your guide.  Don’t overcook or the whole thing will just melt into a panful of very expensive oil.

Remove the foie as quickly as possible and drain on a paper towel.  Pour off about half of the fat and make a quick sauce.  I used a spoonful of orange marmalade and a splash of balsamic.  The sweet/sour really balances the fatty foie gras, but you can use anything — cherries, plums, sweet corn puree, port.  There are hundreds of variations.  I made a second serving with sauteed apples and it was a big hit.

Foie gras is an easy luxury that you can make tonight.  Go for it!

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Apritada Fried Rice

The Finished Product:  Apritada Fried RiceHoobear’s adobo fried rice inspired me to make apritada fried rice for dinner. Apritada is a Spanish-influenced Filipino stew of garlic, tomatoes, potatoes, bell peppers, fish sauce and chiles, and we had some leftover from Sunday.  This one used beef, but chicken is also good.  If I had used goat, the dish would be very similar to kaldereta, another tomato-based stew from the Philippines.

Leftover ApritadaLeftover apritada (sorry, our camera had a tough time getting the colors right)Leftover RiceLeftover riceSoft Scrambled EggsSoft-scrambled eggsYummy Yummy SpamYummy yummy Spam (we didn’t have any Chinese sausage.  Well, not in the fridge, anyway.)Adding the EggsAdding the eggsThe Finished Product:  Apritada Fried RiceThe finished dishLee Kum Kee SrirachaFinal addition: Lee Kum Kee sriracha.  Tastier than Huy Fong’s.Hot Jufran Banana SauceHot Jufran banana sauce.  Sweet and spicy, tastes nothing like bananas.

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11

Mo-Bama: Inaugural Luncheon Recipes Online

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We originally started this post with, “What recession?  Break out your lobsters!”  However, today is a celebration.  And at celebrations, we always make things a little special, even in tough times.  It’s a nod to past hard work and future success.  It’s a way of saying, we may not have much now, but we will.  And when we do, we’ll invite everyone over and have a great feast…together.

Or, it’s fatcats getting fatter on our dime.  Your call!Â

via Lifehacker

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