Thursday, June 7, 2012

Sage-Flavored Gratin Dauphinois with Potato, Sweet Potato and Pink Turnips



Sage-Flavored Gratin Dauphinois with Potato, Sweet Potato and Pink Turnips
Serves 4 to 6 people

Ingredients
  • 2 garlic cloves, peeled and halved
  • unsalted butter, for the baking dish
  • 1 cup (240 ml) whole milk
  • 1 cup (240 ml) heavy cream
  • 1 twig of thyme
  • 1 lb and 9 oz (700 g) Yukon gold potatoes, peeled and sliced finely with a mandolin
  • 1 large sweet potato, peeled and sliced finely with a mandolin
  • 5 small pink turnips, peeled and sliced finely with a mandolin
  • 6 sage leaves, chopped finely
  • sea salt and pepper
  • pinch of nutmeg
  • 1 oz finely grated ComtĂ© cheese



Instructions
1. Rub a 12 x 8.5-inch baking dish with two halves of one garlic clove. Butter the dish generously. Slice the halves of garlic and place them at the bottom of the dish. Set aside.
2. Preheat the oven to 400 F.
3. In a pot, heat the milk and heavy cream with the remaining garlic halves and the thyme. Bring to a simmer and then stop the heat. Cover and let infuse for 30 minutes. Strain, discarding the garlic and thyme, and reheat.
4. Tightly arrange the slices of vegetables at the bottom of the dish, alternating between one layer of potato slices, one layer of sweet potatoes and one layer of turnips. Repeat until you run out of ingredients.
5. Add the sage and then pour the milk/cream batter over the vegetables — the milk should cover the vegetables. Season with salt and pepper and sprinkle with the nutmeg. Top with the grated cheese.
6. Bake the gratin for 50 minutes to 1 hour, or until the top has a nice golden color. Serve warm as a side dish.


post from design sponge

Saturday, June 2, 2012

salad king




salad king is one of all time favourite places for many thai lovers in toronto. it has been serving hungry ryerson university students for years. i used to eat here often back when it was located on gould street before the fire. it's awesome for three reasons: fast, cheap and customizable spiciness. 20 chillies may cause stomach upset. i want to try this one day... sooooooon!



the menu or your placemat is comprised of variety of dishes to choose from. you might want to check if vegetarian dishes are truly vegetarian, because i've been told that some dishes use fish sauce. we decided to go with popular choices.



left: pattaya chicken ($8.75)
breaded chicken breast slices with thyme, onion, bell pepper, carrot, honey and lime chili sauce, served with steamed rice.

right: phud thai veggie ($8.25) -medium spicy
rice noodle, carrot, peanut, tofu, green onion, bean sprout, coriander, egg, fish sauce and tamarind sauce.



the pattaya chicken was tangy, sweet and spicy. i didn't think it was going to be drenched in watery sauce. the crispy deep fried goodness soon became soggy deep fried flour. overall, the chicken was chewy and the sauce was delicious. the phud thai (isn't it pad thai?) was average. nothing really special. similar to thai express's pad thai. the medium spicy is probably spicy enough for those who break into sweat when eating spicy food.



expect to be seated next to strangers on a long communal table. this reminded me of cafeteria back in high school. aaaahhhhh...... high school cafeteria. lots of memories there. anyways, surely if you live in toronto, you've been here or you will be soon. not the best of best but it is awesome for what it can offer.


Salad King
340 Yonge Street
Toronto
416.593.0333
saladking.com


posted by rin