Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Maitake Mushroom Tikka Masala: Review of Shroom' imprimido.

Receta Maitake Mushroom Tikka Masala: Review of Shroom
by Laura Tabacca

Creamy, tangy, decadent tasting yet vegetarian, this wild mushroom tikka masala with peas is delightful–both innovative and authentic tasting. A copy of Shroom was provided to me by the publishers for the purposes of an honest review. All opinions are my own. Affiliate links have been used in this post to link to items I am discussing.

Never have I been so happy to see a cookbook on the list of fall releases for of a group of publicists that I work with (if you are curious, in this case The Lisa Ekus Group). The minute I read about Becky Selengut’s Shroom: Mind-bendingly Good Recipes for Cultivated and Wild Mushrooms

I knew I wanted it. You guys know how I feel about mushrooms (be still my beating heart). It is no secret I adore cookbooks and have quite the insane collection, but you also know I am a wily shopper who hits sales and used bookstores. I rarely buy full price–not because any given book is not worth its cost, but because I do not have the moolah to support my habit buying at full price. So once again I say–I love this blogging deal.

But about this book. I will get the sole negative out of the way first–and it is negligible, at least for me. This book celebrates wild mushrooms, and by that I do not really mean Crimini and Portobello, although they are covered along with Button. There are entire chapters devoted to mushrooms you have never heard of, and while Selengut does a fantastic job of always suggesting substitutes, the sad fact is that where I live you often cannot even find the substitute! So here is my advice for loving and using this book, unless you live somewhere in the mountainous west or damp northwest where mushrooms are everywhere. Just accept that you will use button or crimini mushrooms in these recipes. Do not avoid them for weeks on end because you cannot get the mushrooms in question. True story: I did just that, waiting until I was recovered from bronchitis to go down to Jungle Jim’s (Shitake is the most adventuresome my local store gets), bought every exotic mushroom I could find, except Morels, which are just too expensive, and got home and realized that the recipe I was bound and determined to make called for Maitake mushrooms–of which I had one small package. And for the substitutes (Morels or Oyster mushrooms) Selengut suggested, she also suggested you therefore use some dried Porcini mushrooms. All I had of these were some Oyster mushrooms.

Guys if I had skipped making this recipe it would have been a travesty. No joke. We licked the pan clean. I would use any mushroom in this recipe! But before I get sidetracked waxing poetic about the recipe, let me tell you some more about the book. It is gorgeous. The cover alone probably tells you that, and the photographs of the dishes are also enticing. Selengut is a great writer–just chatty enough that you feel like if you run into her in the streets somewhere you could immediately strike up a conversation with her. I love cookbook writers like that. Last but definitely not least, the recipes are a delicious hodgepodge of international influences. In other words, my kind of food.

Unsurprisingly, it is one of those international recipes that I became fixated on, Maitake Tikka Masala. Chicken Tikka Masala is one of the dishes that led me to Indian food, way back when I was living in Cleveland (if you are curious the other is Aloo Mattar), although I have not eaten it in years, preferring other dishes when we go out for Indian food these days. My kids call it Orange Chicken, and they adore it. So I knew it was a good bet for our family (it goes without saying that John loves it). I did play a little bit with the recipe. Selengut emphasizes the smokiness of Maitake mushrooms and finishes the dish with a very interesting technique requiring an outdoor grill (which we don’t keep handy) to imbue the dish with even more smokiness (see below), so instead of cayenne pepper, which Alex would not be able to handle anyway, I used smoked paprika and finished the dish with a smoked salt. I used onions instead of shallots, which I do not keep around unless I am making Thai curry paste. I used chicken stock instead of mushroom stock. I used a mix of Oyster, Maitake and Crimini mushrooms. I left the potatoes out because I was serving the dish on white rice (but don’t think I wasn’t tempted!). And last I could not help but add peas–that is my own hang-up, I prefer almost all creamy tomato-based Indian dishes with peas. I think maybe they keep the dish from being too rich.

Whether you follow my adaptations or the recipe below exactly as written, make this dish. You won’t be sorry.

Maitake Mushroom Tikka Masala

Recipe shared with permission of publisher: From Shroom: Mind-bendingly Good Recipes for Cultivated and Wild Mushrooms by Becky Selengut/Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC. From Selengut: Caramelized, smoky maitake mushrooms meet spiced, velvety tomato cream and an Indian love child is born, right in your own kitchen. When it comes to my heritage, I firmly believe there was a switch-up in the hospital. When the aroma of toasting cumin, coriander, cinnamon, and turmeric reaches my nose, I’m reminded of where my soul was actually born, and it wasn’t New Jersey. The dried fenugreek leaves that are called for (menthi) are unusual but an absolutely addictive addition to the sauce. You can find them at Indian grocers or online. Serve this dish with fragrant basmati rice, perhaps even with the shiitake dish on page 54, as well as various Indian pickles and chutneys.

Author: Becky Selengut

Recipe type: Entree

Cuisine: Indian

Ingredients

Instructions

In a medium skillet over medium-high heat, toast the coriander seeds, cumin seeds, red pepper flakes, cardamom seeds, and cinnamon stick until they darken lightly and start to smell, 1 to 2 minutes (no oil necessary). When toasted, add the ground turmeric and stir into the spices for 10 to 15 seconds. Transfer to a spice grinder, add the menthi, and grind into a fine powder.

Light the charcoal briquette outside (in your grill or other suitable place).

In a large sauté pan over medium-high heat, place 2 tablespoons of the ghee. After a moment, add the shallot and salt and sauté for 2 to 3 minutes, until translucent. Add the garlic and ginger and sauté for 1 minute, until aromatic, and then add the maitake. Increase the heat to high and sauté, allowing the mushrooms to brown around the edges, 4 to 5 minutes.

Meanwhile, in a blender, puree the tomatoes, stock, honey, yogurt, cream, and spices. Add to the sauté pan along with the potato. Simmer for 15 minutes, or until the potato is tender. Turn the heat off. Now here’s the really fun part. Open a window, turn on your kitchen fan, and place a small heatproof dish in the middle of the curry. Once the charcoal briquette is covered with white ash, carefully bring it into the kitchen, and place it in the little dish sitting in the curry. Pour the remaining 1 tablespoon of ghee over the briquette. It will smoke up, so slap the lid on the curry and let the ghee smoke infuse the curry with its magic; let it sit, undisturbed, for at least 10 minutes. Remove the bowl with the briquette before serving.

MUSHROOM STOCK:

You will not be sorry you took the time to make your own. As you cook and are busy prepping vegetables and such, e.g., carrots, celery, onions, mushrooms, parsley, and thyme, rather than toss or compost the carrot tops and peels, celery ends and leaves, onion ends and cores, shiitake and button stems, thyme and parsley stems, and any other produce bits you collect, save them. (Skip vegetables like kale, cabbage, broccoli, or anything with a dominating flavor or color that you wouldn’t want in a mushroom stock—no beets!)

To make the stock, add these vegetable scraps to a quart-size resealable plastic bag that lives in the freezer. When the bag is full, you are ready to make your stock. At the market, pick up a small onion, some dried porcini, and a handful of fresh shiitake mushrooms. Preheat the oven to 400°F. Drizzle a little high-heat oil on a rimmed baking pan. Throw the shiitakes, along with the chopped-up onion, onto the pan, and toss with the oil. Roast until caramelized, about 20 minutes. Deglaze the pan with a little wine or water, scraping up any brown bits stuck to the pan. Dump the mushrooms and onions, along with the liquid, into a stockpot along with the contents of that freezer bag (no need to thaw) and a few rehydrated pieces of dried porcini (along with the strained soaking liquid). Cover with 3 quarts water, chuck in about 5 peppercorns, bring to a boil, lower to a simmer, and cook, uncovered, for 45 minutes. Pour the contents of the pot through a fine-mesh strainer set over a large bowl, pressing on the solids to extract as much liquid as possible. You should end up with about 2 quarts mushroom stock. Want to make vegetable stock? Do the same thing, but just use fewer mushrooms and more vegetables (and a big flavor bonus if you roast some of the vegetables as you would the shiitake and onion). If you want to make mushroom stock but don’t have a full bag of trimmings in the freezer, just use an assortment of vegetables and mushrooms (equaling roughly 1 quart) and follow the same general procedure. See the video on making shroom stock at www.shroomthecookbook.com.

From Shroom: Mind-bendingly Good Recipes for Cultivated and Wild Mushrooms by Becky Selengut/Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC.

3.2.2807