T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1438.2 | That was fun! | MYVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Fri Oct 14 1988 10:03 | 45 |
|
Well, I'll try to translate what she wants. Some words I'm
not too sure about or didn't know at all so I put them in ().
Karen
Hola,
Hi,
Yo soy ciento por ciento Colombiana, pero hace un ano
I am ( ) Columbian, but it has been a year since I
que estoy aqui , y no he probado un solo plato Colombiano.
have been here, and I have not (eaten) one single Columbian dish.
Tengo un libro de recetas de todo Colombia ,pero son muy
I have a Columbian cook book, but they (the ingredients?) are very
dificiles de seguir, y ademas , lo que yo quiero ahora, no
difficult to get, and furthermore, what I want now,
son recetas sino algo asi como , lengua, o ajiaco, o esa
is not recipes but something (else like) , ( ), or ( ), or this
sopa con todas las cosas , no se como se llama, o
soup with all (sorts of) things, I don't know what its called, or
frijoles Antioquenos .
Antioquenos beans.
O por supuesto Ayacas de las nuestras.
Si alguno de ustedes sabe como hacer algo parecido , con
If any of you know how to make something ( ) , with
ingredientes faciles de conseguir, Entonces por favor
ingredients that are easy to obtain, Then please
compielo aqui.
(comply) here.
/Blanca
/Blanche
|
1438.4 | Would you like this one? | BOOKLT::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Mon Oct 17 1988 02:19 | 15 |
| Tengo una receta que se llama "Bistec con frijoles y arroz"
en mi libro de recetas internacionales. Es una receta de
3-4 recetas - frijoles negros, bistec con tomates y cumen,
arroz con chile, y un adorno de platanos. No soy muy facil
con el espanol, porque hace muchos anos, y no puedo traducir
todo la receta. Si quieres, puedes tenerlo en ingles.
(I've got one recipe for Creole steak with beans and rice"
in my international cookbook. It's a recipe that's actually
3-4 recipes, black beans, steak with tomatoes and cumen, rice
with chili, and a garnish of green bananas. I'm not very good
with spanish, since it's been many years, and I can't translate
the whole recipe. If you want, you can have it in english.)
--Louise
|
1438.5 | Some more possibilities | BOOKLT::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Mon Oct 17 1988 02:48 | 33 |
| ps,
That was the only colombian recipe. There are some others
from other south american countries:
Argentina - Stuffed beef roll (matambre)
Bolivia - Stuffed Avocados (palta rellenos), spicy chicken
(picante de gallina)
Brazil - beans with tongue and sausage (feijoada)
Chile - Stuffed potato croquettes (patatas rellenos), marinated
chicken (escabeche de gallina)
Ecuador - tomato soup with bananas (sopa de tomates con platanos
amarillos), lamb with green beans (pierna de carnero
con habas)
Paraguay - chick-pea soup with spinach (potaje de garbanzo con
acelga), sweet-corn and meat patties (bori-bori)
Peru - potatoes with pepper sauce (papas a la huancaina), potato
with shrimp and corn (causa a la limena)
Uruguay - fifteen-minute soup (spoa de cuarto de hora) (contains
fish, peas, tomato, shrimp, oysters), steak with olives
(lomo de vaca cn aceitunas)
Venezuala - cornmeal pasties (hallacas) (contain chicken and
pork), rice with bananas (arroz con bananas) (yellow
bananas), vegetable stew with corn (lorco)
the columbian dish is called pabellon criolla.
I know some of these places are far from your home, but perhaps
a few of the dishes sound like possibilities. All are modified
for american supermarkets.
--Louise
|
1438.9 | Creole steak with beans and rice - whew! | BLURB::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Mon Oct 17 1988 21:21 | 68 |
| Beans:
1 cup dried black beans
water
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1/2 green bell pepper, finely chopped
1/2 onion, chopped
1 garlic clove, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon salt
Soak beans in cold water to cover, 12 hours. Bring beans, uncovered,
to a boil in soaking water. (I've heard you can reduce gastric distress
by discarding soaking water and use fresh water to cook the beans...)
Boil 1 to 1-1/4 hours, adding water as necessary. Heat olive oil
in a large skillet. Add pepper, onion and 1/2 the garlic. Reserve
remaining garlic for the beef. Saute until onion is transparent
and stir in the salt. Add green-pepper mixture to beans, cover,
and simmer 15 minutes.
Beef:
4 8-oz boneless beef top-loin steaks
5 medium tomatoes
3 Tbsp olive oil
2 onions coarsely chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground cumin
Preheat grill or broiler. Cook beef 4 minutes per side. Cut cooked
beef into thin strips; set aside. Peel tomatoes; remove and discard
seeds; chop tomatoes. Heat olive oil in a large skillet. Add onions
and reserved garlic; saute until onions are transparent. Stir in
chopped tomatoes, salt, cumin; simmer 30 minutes. Arrange beef
over top of vegetables. Cover and keep warm over low heat.
Rice:
1 whole green chili
3 Tbsp olive oil
1 small onion
1 cup uncooked long-grain white rice
2 cups boiling water
1 teaspoon salt
Preheat oven to 250F (120C). To peel fresh chili, cover your hands
with rubber or plastic gloves. After handling chili, do NOT touch
your face or eyes. (believe me, they mean this!) Place fresh chili
on a baking sheet; place in hot oven until surface becomes dark
brown and begins to curl away from flesh. Place browned chili in
a pan with a tight-fitting lid. Let stand 10 minutes; remove skin.
Cut chili in half lengthwise and remove seeds and pith. Heat olive
oil in a small skillet. Add whole onion and chili halves; saute
5 minutes. Stir in rice; saute 5 minutes. Add boiling water and
salt. Cover and bake 20 minutes or until rice is tender. (I assume
they mean to do this in the 250F oven? they don't say.) Remove
and discard onion and chili. Cover and keep warm.
Garnish:
4 green bananas (platanos - found in ethnic markets - are authentic)
3 Tbsp vegetable oil.
Peel bananas; cut in halves lengthwise. Cut each half crosswise
into 3 pieces. Heat oil in medium skillet; fry bananas in oil until
browned on all sides.
TO SERVE:
Spoon vegetables and beef onto half of a warmed platter. On the
other half, place alternate portions of rice and beans (so it goes,
pile of rice, pile of beans, pile of rice, pile of beans - looks
kind-of nice). Arrange banana over beef. Makes 4 servings.
|
1438.10 | | ASHBY::CASAS | | Wed Oct 19 1988 09:58 | 21 |
| Hi Karen,
You did excellent, to help you with blanks.....
" I am 100% Colombian ,but it has been a year since I have been
here, and I have not tasted one single Colombian dish.
I have a Colombian cook book, but the recipes are difficult to
follow, and furthermore what I want now is not recipes but something
like tongue, or ajiaco (mix vegetables and meat dish) or this soup
with all sort of things, I don't know what its called, or Antioquenos
beans. And of course our Hallacas.
If any of you know how to make somthing similar, with ingredients
that are easy to obtain, then please write it here.
""
As you see Karen you miss very little.
Bye
/Blanca
|
1438.11 | Friends | HEYDEN::MARCOMTAG | | Wed Oct 19 1988 12:29 | 16 |
| Blanca,
Tongue is very easy to find, it is located along with all the
other meats. I do not know where you are living right now but here
in MA we find many of our ethnic type of plate ingredients in Super
Stop and Shop. They have the green chiles, jalopenos, and many
of the fresh fruits, they also have a nice variety of your spices
both fresh and bottled. My friend cooks Spanish and finds almost
every thing she needs for her husband here. If you want I can give
you directions to one that may be close by you. I can also find
most of the ingredients as my friends are all from South America,
Send mail to Curie::Marcomtag if you need exact details, I can
read Spanish if you are not able to translate some of the ingredients.
Kim
|
1438.14 | This isn't Columbian but..... | GIDDAY::BRYDEN | | Wed Oct 26 1988 01:05 | 73 |
| Well, I went thru my recipes and the one I was thinking about
I think is european in origin. My library seems to be lacking
in South American cook books, something I guess I should address
(..8^})
When I first came to Australia, I did a series of gourmet cooking
classes and the following recipe was one of the ones we prepared.
Maybe it would be interesting to you.....
Dave
---------------------------------------------------------------------
FEIJOADA
INGREDIENTS:
1 2 1/2 - 3 lb small smoked beef tongue 1 small smoked hock
1/2 - 1 tspn seasoned pepper 1 lb piece lean chuck steak,
1 large onion peeled cut into pieces
1 clove garlic crushed 3 Polish sausages cut into
1 bay leaf 1/2 inch slices
2 lb spare ribs cut into 10-12 pieces 1 lb piece ham, ham steak is best
1 lb link sausages (thin pork sausages) cut into cubes
1 whole orange, unpeeled 1 lb kidney beans
NOTE: no extra salt is required
Method:
Scrub tongue under water and cook with seasoned pepper,onion,garlic,
bay leaf for at least 2-3 hours. Make sure the tongue is completely covered
with water. A good way to test the togue when ready is to try and peel it. If
the skin lifts easily it is cooked. When tongue is cool enough, peel and
remove the fatty portions and set aside. Arrange spareribs on a large shallow
baking pan, and bake in a hot oven for 25 minutes. Distribute link sausages
in the pan and continue baking for at least another 20 minutes, until both
meats are well browned. Drain and set aside.
Both these meats can be prepared the day before and refrigerated in foil.
The kidney beans should also be soaked overnight and can be refrigerated
wth teh meats. four hours before dinner, place in a large saucepan or a
dutch over the smoked hock, the soaked beans, the eef, polish sausage, ham
and the whole orange. cover and simmer at least 2 1/2 hours. A glass of
red wine may be added if desired. Every 15-20 minutes stir gentyly and add
boiling water if necessary. when the beans and beef are almost tender, add
the cooked tongue cut into slices (cut the larger slices in half), continue
cooking at simmering point until beans and beef are tender. Just before
dinner add to Feijoada the spare ribs cut into cubes and link sausages left
whole. Heat whole dish for a further 20 minutes or intil the whole dish
is hot. Remove the smoked hock and the orange before serving.
The dish is served with some interesting side dishes:
Sliced oranges: a plate of sliced oranges (peeled with the white membrane
removed and sliced crosswise)
Lemon Chile Sauce: Blend together 1 cup fresh lemon juice, 1 small onion
finely chopped, 2 cloves garlic, crushed, 2 tomatoes, peeled, seeded and
finely chopped and 3-3 1/2 oz green chillies, seeded and finely chopped.
cover and refrigerate up to 8 hours before serving.
Crunchy topping: Melt 3 tblspns butter in heavy fry pan over medium high
heat. Stir in 1 cup quick cooking farina or coarse wheatmeal and 1/2 tspn
salt. cook and stir for 5 minutes or until cereal is light brown
Brazilian Rice: ahead of time cook 1 1/2 cups long grained rice and set
aside. Heat 2 tblspns each of olive oil and buter in a large frying pan.
Saute 1 medium onion, finely chopped until golden. Add 2 cloves crushed
garlic and rice; cook stirring for 5 minutes. Stir in 2 tomatoes that have
been peeled, seeded and chopped. Reduce heat to warm and cover until serving
time.
|