Braised Lamb Shanks

   Today is probably one of the last days I can cook this kind of hearty dinner, it being so rainy and cool. Seems we’re having a Real Spring in NY!
I’ve been wary of the Lamb Shank in the past because I found the casing surrounding the shank to be weird. But I’ve cooked a variation of this dish once before and found out that with a long slow braise this casing turns tender and rather unnoticeable. Don’t fear the shank.
To braise means to cook something, usually meat, in a small amount of liquid after it’s been browned in fat in a pot with a tight fitting lid on the range or in an oven.This recipe was prepared on the range because my toaster oven couldn’t possibly accommodate a big pot.

This recipe feeds 2 and takes about 2 and a half hours from chopping board to dinner bowl.
This meal’s ingredients cost under 12 dollars,not counting the alcohol.
Ingredients:
2 big untrimmed lamb shanks,browned on both sides for 6 minutes each side or until nice and brown
3 carrots,chopped
3 ribs celery,chopped
4 cloves chopped garlic,mashed and diced
1 shallot,chopped fine
1 onion,chopped fine
2 stalks of green onion,chopped
2 sprigs of rosemary,whole
2 generous splashes of extra virgin olive oil
2 tsps strawberry preserves
salt
fresh black ground pepper
dash of paprika
1 container of chicken stock
A bit of alcohol
2 cups of red wine
1 splash dry sherry
1 splash brandy,to deglaze the browning pan

In large frying pan:
Heat, add olive oil.
Season shanks with salt and freshly ground black pepper,place in frying pan, brown on both sides, about 6 to 7 minutes each side.

in large heavy pot with tight fitting lid
Heat on medium high add olive oil, add onion, saute until sweaty.
Add celery,carrots,green onion and shallots.
Splash in dry sherry, the vegetables will absorb very fast.
Add wine and chicken stock and strawberry preserves stir well to blend in preserves,turn heat slightly higher and let reduce for about 6-7 minutes.
Submerge shanks in the liquid-it should come about halfway up the sides of the shanks.
Stir in chopped garlic.
Add rosemary sprigs.
Deglaze the pan you browned the shanks in with the splash of brandy and let a high heat burn off the alcohol.
Spoon 2 tsps of the resulting liquid over the shanks and sprinkle them with paprika.
Reduce heat to low and cover. Braise for 2 hours.
Extra meal ideas, not that I am trying to run your life or anything!
Eat with rice or some ribbons of lasagne noodles cut in half down the middle with the shanks and their sauce poured over. We’re having basmati rice because we made it a day ago and I am trying to use leftovers instead of throwing them out. You could optionaly add some peeled and cubed potatoes at the start if you don’t want to bother with rice or noodles.Or you could prepare garlic mashed potaotoes.Ohhh,garlic mashed potatoes…

A Pecan Pie That Won’t Hurt Your Teeth

pieI love pecan pie or at least I thought I loved it.I guess I grew up and my palate just can’t handle a certain level of sweet anymore.And I want a drier pie filling because a wetter one skeezes me out to the max. But I’ve got more important things to obsess over so I went online and typed in not too sweet pecan pie and found this recipe from alpineberry.blogspot.com:

1/2 cup brown sugar,packed.
1/2 cup light corn syrup.
1/3 maple syrup.
3 lg eggs.
3 tbs melted butter.About 35 seconds in a microwave should do it.
1 tsp vanilla.
1 pinch salt.
2-cup bag of chopped pecans.
1 pie shell
Pre heat oven to 350 on bake.
Whisk together in a large bowl brown sugar and the eggs.
Whisk in corn syrup and maple.
Mix in melted butter vanilla and the pinch of salt.
Mix in the pecans and pour into pie shell and bake for 35-40 minutes.

If you’ve checked out my other cooking efforts you may have picked up on the fact that I bake in a toaster oven.Lately the oven has been running hot so my pie crust burned on the bottom and singed on one section on the top of the crust.Next time I will not place the pie directly onto the wire rack and use a real pie pan instead of an aluminum one.And I will turn it every 10 minutes or so so that the crust doesn’t get singed.
Otherwise the pie was still a little too sweet for my tastes but A. loved it burnt crust and all.