Southwestern Vegetable and Pasta Salad

We barbequed some Memphis style baby back ribs the other week and decided to pair them with a southwestern vegetable and pasta salad. The flavors of the southwest are actually pretty complimentary to some southern style meals as well. It is a pretty simple salad and can be done with a variety of pastas that catch the dressing like orecchiette (little ears), bowtie, or small shells. It is also a great vehicle for a variety of vegetables, so feel free to mix it up and make it your own.

Southwestern Vegetables

INGREDIENTS

  • 1/2 lb Orecchiette Paste – cooked to the package directions
  • 1 Yellow Pepper – grilled, skins removed, and julienned
  • 1/2 Red Onion – sliced
  • 3 Tomatillos – diced into bite-sized pieces
  • 1 cup Corn Kernels – fresh or frozen that has been thawed
  • 1/4 cup White Wine Vinegar
  • 1 canned Chipotle Pepper
  • 1/2 cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Salt and Pepper to taste
Vegetable and Pasta Salad Paired with Ribs

INSTRUCTIONS

In a large bowl, combine the pasta, yellow pepper, onion, tomatillos, and corn. Place the vinegar, chipotle pepper, and olive oil in a blender and blend until smooth. Season with salt and pepper. This recipe creates more dressing than is needed, so slowly add the dressing to the pasta, being sure to toss the pasta and vegetables until coated.

Chipotle Dressing
Charring the Yellow Pepper
Large Bowl of Pasta Salad
Wonderful Side Dish

Buying Ingredients at a Local Market in Hanoi

We decided to take a cooking class during our trip to Hanoi, Vietnam where our chef took us to a local market to buy all of the ingredients needed for our dinner. Obviously we wouldn’t have been able to navigate the market without the help of our chef and there were plenty of ingredients that we can’t necessarily find at home. We were told that the local people of Hanoi, like in a lot of cities, go to the market every day or at least every other day in order to buy fresh ingredients for their meals.

Our Chef Showing Us Banana Leaves

Plethora of Vegetables

Dragon Fruit

Fresh Noodles

We needed both beef and pork for our recipes, so the butchers trimmed the fat for us as we waited. There were stalls that specialized in vegetables, spices, fruit, as well as different meats. You could find live chickens as well as fresh fish swimming in buckets of water. It was very colorful as well as very busy as people navigated their motorcycles through the stalls picking up items.

Dry Goods and the Rice Paper We Needed

Kumquats and Other Fruit

Beef Tenderloin

Different Types of Rice

Getting fresh ingredients to create local dishes was definitely an incredible experience and we are looking forward to trying our best to create some of the meals in the near future. Picking out all of our vegetables, meats, and other items was as interesting as the experience that we had actually preparing the meals afterwards. Taking a cooking class in a foreign country is definitely an experience that we would recommend and getting to go to the market truly enhances the experience. It was as close as we could get to preparing a meal like a local.

Trimming Our Pork

Spicy Peppers

Looking Down the Market Street

Fruit is Very Popular in Vietnam

 

Tilapia with a Lemon-Tarragon Cream Sauce

When we’re traveling, we love eating at restaurants that use a lot of fresh herbs with an abundance of taste. People don’t often use fresh herbs as much as they should at home, but we try to as often as possible. We grow several different herbs and enjoy using them in many of the recipes that we prepare. One of the herbs that we have been growing is Mexican tarragon and we wanted to find a way to incorporate that into one of our meals. We decided to make a cream sauce and have it with some breaded tilapia. It was a very light and refreshing dish.

INGREDIENTS

  •  3 Tilapia Filets
  •  1 cup All-Purpose Flour
  •  1 cup Panko Bread Crumbs
  •  1 Large Egg – whisked
  •  1 tbsp Whole Milk
  •  1 tbsp Garlic Powder
  •  1 clove Fresh Garlic – minced
  •  2 to 3 sprigs of Fresh Tarragon
  •  Juice of 1 Lemon
  •  3 tbsp Unsalted Butter
  •  1/2 pint Heavy Cream
  •  1/4 cup Chicken Stock
  •  1 tbsp Vegetable Oil
  •  Salt and Pepper to taste

Fresh Ingredients

INSTRUCTIONS

Strip the tarragon off of the stems and chop the leaves. Combine the cream, butter, lemon juice, chicken stock, minced garlic, salt and pepper, and 2 sprigs of chopped tarragon in a small sauce pan and heat just to a simmer and then reduce the heat to low. Cook until the sauce reduces and thickens. Create a dredging station with three shallow bowls.  Put the flour on the first bowl, whisk the egg and milk together on the second bowl, and mix the panko with one of the sprigs of tarragon, the garlic powder, and salt and pepper in the third bowl. Heat the oil and 1 tablespoon of butter in a large skillet to medium-high heat. Dredge the tilapia through the dredging station, coating with flour first, then the egg wash, and finally coating them with bread crumbs. Sauté the fish in the skillet until the breading browns and the fish is fully cooked, about 3 to 4 minutes per side. Serve with the cream sauce and your favorite side dishes.

Tarragon Cream Sauce

Breaded Tilapia

Tilapia with Tarragon Cream Sauce and Roasted Beets