Making a Memory

P3011878My kids were all born here in Southern California. My husband is also a native Californian. So the only kind of churros they've ever known have come from a cart at Disneyland.

But those are Mexican-style. They are hard and crunchy with lots of brown sugar. They are tasty enough, but I am used to light and fluffy Cuban-style churros. 
Oh, yeah!

The kind you can have for breakfast with Café con Leche, or on a cold night with Chocolaté Caliente.

It was unseasonably cold here yesterday, which seemed like a perfect time to make churros.

Jonathan, especially gets such a kick out of this.  Some foods, he believes, can only be made in restaurants or found in grocery stores.
So, when I get an urge to make home-made potato chips or something that usually comes packaged, he responds with:  "Mom, that's so . . . pro."
When I served the "Vaca Frita" for dinner. Eric said, "Honey, this is a gourmet meal."
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I take the compliments and refrain from the lecture about how important the entire process is.  My own childhood was filled with memories of food and family and the kitchen and conversation.  It is part of my very Cuban DNA.  It's not just about getting food on the table. It's not about convenience and speed, (although, this particular recipe is super simple and only takes a few minutes) but about the pleasure of working side by side.  It's about the aromas and tastes that affect memory.  It's about laughing together.  It's about making the memory.

But I know that this is something that is more "caught, than taught."  And I continue to feed them in my "pro and gourmet" way, because later in life I know they will say, "My mom made the BEST churros!"

And I know they won't be able to remember which was really better: the churros themselves, or the fun we had preparing them. 

And it really won't matter. =D

Marta's Homemade Churros

Churros
1 cup (all-purpose) flour
1 cup water with 1/8 tsp. of salt
vegetable oil
Plate of granulated or powdered sugar

1) Sift the flour in a mixing bowl, while bringing the salted water to a boil.

2) Pour the boiling water over the flour, stirring lightly until the dough forms into a ball - about 30 seconds. The dough should be compact, but not runny or too soft.

3) If you have a churrera or a cookie press, load it up with the dough. If not, a big freezer zip lock or a pastry bag with a corner cut off works, too.  Use a star shaped tip, if you have it.

4) Squeeze dough onto waxed paper in about 6 inch strips.

5) Heat the oil until very hot.

6) Fry the dough in the super-hot oil, turning once when you see the edges barely begin to pick up color. (think pancakes) Fry for about 5 minutes total.

7) Remove with a slotted spoon, draining as much oil as possible and place on the sugar plate and roll in the sugar.

Deep_frySugar_coated8) The churros will be ready to eat almost immediately.

9) The memory will last forever. ;-)

Crusty Pan Cubano Recipe In My Test Kitchen

Simple logic:

I'm Cuban.  I like to eat Cuban food. Therefore I cook.

Since I've started posting my recipes over at Babalú  I have been cooking like a mad Cuban woman.

(Much to my family's delight.)

They are all loving that I'm playing Test Kitchen here.

The buzz starts the night before as I'm pulling out something to defrost for the next day.

My sister will call to say that my Tamal en Cazuela Recipe is good, but has too much tomato sauce for her taste.  My mom wants me to let her know if I'm going to be making Lechón so that she can bring over some casabe to have with it.

Eric likes the Picadillo Recipe made with ground turkey.

The kids just want to know:  Are you cooking Cuban tonight??

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But one thing they all agree on:

Make. the. Cuban. Bread.

I have two things in my Cuban American kitchen I cannot live without:

1) my crockpot

2) my bread machine (I love it almost as much as I love my camera & that's saying a lot.)

I have a super simplified recipe for Crusty Cuban Bread that I developed for my bread machine.

My mom calls it Pan de Agua. It has zero fat, has a nice texture and gets a pretty thick crust on it. If you can get over the bread machine shape, you'll find it's close enough to the real thing to enjoy with your crockpotted Cuban food. 

There is one small problem - there are never any leftovers for Pan con Lechón Recipe the next day.

So I just have to make another loaf.  And another.  And another.  (sigh)  ;-)

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Crusty Pan Cubano Recipe

(for bread machines)

1 and 1/8 cup Water

3 cups Bread Flour ( Gold Medal - Better for Bread)

1 tsp. Salt

1 and 1/2 tsp. Yeast

Mix the ingredients in bread machine according to manufacturer's instructions. Choose the Rapid Cycle.

Serve Hot.

Repeat as often as necessary. =D

Salon Hair and Rum

There are certain rules that I live by as a Cuban woman.
One very important one is that if I spend a Saturday morning at the Hair Salon (thanks, Kate!), I will not be cooking for anyone on Saturday night. And in fact, Husband should be prepared to actually take me out on a date.  Seriously,  Salon Hair should NOT be wasted.
He's been married to me for almost 15 years now. He knows and is careful to abide by the Salon Hair rule.
But here is what separates the (happily married) Men from the (casually dating) Boys....

HE FOUND A NEW CUBAN RESTAURANT IN ORANGE COUNTY.
(insert wild cheering and applause here.)

It's called Havana Mania and it's in Brea.

P3242503 A mere 30 minutes from Mission Viejo. (distance is measured in time here)

Havana MANIA?

Helpful definitions:

in English:
mania - [mey - nee - uh] noun. 1.excessive excitement or enthusiasm.

in Spanish (translation):
manía - [mah-nee-ah] noun.
1.a compulsive habit.

Cool. I'm bilingually covered. =D

WARNING: SERIOUS EXCESSIVE EXCITEMENT AND ENTHUSIASM COMING UP...

We were so impressed with the atmosphere, service and especially the food. Fabulous. Cuban. Food. (let's have a moment of silence and show the proper respect, shall we?)
I ordered a combo of Ropa Vieja and Lechon Asado. Eric had a beautiful Bistec a la Criolla. All this with the mandatory black beans, white rice & maduros.
0324072008 We got to meet Stefan, one of the owners and after we finished gushing about how delighted we were to be there, etc, he brought over a couple of shots of 15 year old Guatemalan rum.P3242498


"We don't get it that often, and it's too expensive to sell,"
he told us, "so when we get it, I give it away." 
Well, ok. If we must. We'd hate to be impolite. =D
I confess that in spite of being Cuban I have never acquired a taste for rum. But this stuff was smooth and easy to sip.  Just ask Eric how wonderful it was as a chaser to his mojitos. ;-)

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So... ok... maybe the rum went to his head just a little...
but remember...
technically he was celebrating a Salon Hair Day victory. =D

Good job, Honey! High fives all around.

P.S. there's also a location in Redondo Beach, Ziva. (hint, hint)

Lindbergh and Pepin - a random tale

Playa_manati2Here is my mom with her dog, Lindbergh, circa 1930's.  He was the terror of their tiny Cuban town of Manati.
Yesterday, Val posted this cool picture of his father'slittle schoolhouse also in Manati, Cuba.

I knew that my mom's family lived in Manati for years. So, I began asking her if she recognized the name “Prieto.”

“Well, there was a kid they called Pepin Prieto.  We had a large German Shepherd named Lindbergh (pronounced Leem-Berr) who bit a large chunk out of his ... rear end.”

Then she started rattling off names of people who lived there. Perez-Puelles (was her family), Suris, Acuña, El Bolo, Lechuga, Lopez.

So, I sent an email to Val asking him if he was related to Pepin Prieto and did he recognize the names....Perez-Puelles, Suris, Acuña, El Bolo, Lechuga, Lopez.

First email:

“Pepin is my uncle.”

Shut. Up.

Second email:

"Perez-Puelles had a dog who bit Pepin in the nalga."

 
I start laughing uncontrollably as I report this information to her (she's 93) and she starts sounding a little apologetic... “That kid must still have the scar,” she says. “It was a terrible bite.”

So I promised her I'd check up and see if Pepin Prieto has a scar from the dog bite. Waiting on pins and needles for Val's answer....

Val and I have never met face to face, but apparently our ancestry is from the same little port town of Manati, Cuba yet we have already managed to be a pain in the butt to the Prietos. =D

How random is that!

So today at Babalu, I dedicated the recipe to this random story of Lindbergh and Pepin.

"Quick and Tasty Lechon - Estilo Pepin"

It's KILLER! ;-)

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UPDATE 3/15/07: comment posted at Babalu by Pepin's daughter via Amanda D. : ". . .he still has a hole. He is 86 years old and he does not have any grudge against Lindberg and he is looking forward to see the photo." 

I love a story with a happy ending...

We'll call it:  "Babalu and the Picadillo"

I have a gnarly sinus infection that is causing one of the lymph nodes in the back of my neck to swell up like a golf ball.

Okay. So that was so NOT how you pictured the beginning of this story and it is kind of an overshare, but you need this information to follow along with the rest of the story.
Because of the infection, I have been on antibiotics for the past week. But they really irritate my stomach and make me kind of stupid. Or maybe it's the fishbowl effect from the sinus thing.

P3072104 Either way,  I was feeling kind of clumsy and dopey...and I kind of fell and hit my head on the kitchen counter on the way to the ground.  (I swear)

So then, I was dizzy and nauseous all day. And when the shaking and vomiting started (I know. I know. T.M.I.) and I fell over again - I sort of ended up in the E.R.
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But you see, I had already sent an email to Val at Babalu telling him I was ready to post my awesome recipe for Picadillo.

So as they are wheeling me in the gurney to get the CAT SCAN,  I'm kind of babbling about "Babalu and the Picadillo."   Which was probably sounding like some kind of children's story to the nurse, who thought I was completely delusional.

I've been teaching my 20 year old to follow a recipe and we've been playing "Marta's Cuban American TEST Kitchen" for the past few weeks (more on that in a later post). And I guess Adam thought it was my last request or something, because when I got home after 5 hours and all the testing and stuff,  (by the way, I'm ok, except for the bloody sinus infection....) he had made me some Picadillo. Ah, I love that. That should be a law: You must have Picadillo after a CAT Scan. I'm going to start a movement. Very soon. But right now I think I just need to rest.

The recipe for "Papi's Favorite Picadillo"  is now posted over at Babalu.
And, if I do say so myself . . .  it. is.  KILLER! =D

I think I might have to take a few days off to recover. But this is a truly happy ending after all.

The End.

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Guava-licious

P21914071Okay, folks.

Especially you Cubans stuck in far away places (like Northern California or Tennessee or New Jersey =D) without pastelitos.

If you're having a craving like mine and you absolutely have to make your own...

Here is the official recipe for "Masa Real."

I totally understand a serious pastelito de guayaba "jones."

So I will give you my secret family recipe because I feel your pain...

Pastelitos de Guayaba

3/4 cup vegetable shortening (solid stuff, like Crisco)

4 Tbls. (1/2 stick) salted butter

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 cup sugar

3 large eggs

1 large egg yolk

3 tsp. baking powder

1 tsp. salt

3 Tbls. dry sherry

1 & 1/2 pounds guava paste, cut into 1/4 inch slices

1) Preheat the oven to 350° F. In a medium saucepan, over medium heat, melt the shortening and butter together.

2) In a large bowl, combine the remaining ingredients, except the sherry and guava paste.
Add the shortening and butter and, using your hands, mix well.
Add the sherry and mix until well blended.

3) Divide the dough into 2 equal parts, and place one in a 9X12 inch baking pan, patting down evenly to form a bottom crust.  Cover with the guava slices, and place the remaining dough on top, patting down evenly to form a top crust.
Bake until lightly browned, about 40 minutes.  Allow to cool at room temperature, and cut into 2- inch squares. (I know. I know. 2 inches?? who am I kidding?)

Personally, I deviate from the baking pan, and use a round cookie cutter to create circles and put the guava on one side and flip the other over it to create half-moons.

or...

move over, Rachael Ray...

I just cheat.   ;-)

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Desperate times call for desperate measures

P2100805I made pastelitos de guayaba. (guava pastries)

I had to.

It has been about 6 weeks (6 weeks, people!!) since we've had them.
(since our road trip to Porto's in Glendale - see album to the left)

And I would have to travel through quite a few area codes to get good ones.
So I broke down and baked.

And being a bit greedy for guava, I think I put too much guava paste into them.  I made 12 with just guava and 12 with guava and cream cheese - "refugiados."

And they kind of exploded (or maybe they were supposed to?)

My mom declared them to be "feo." (ugly)

I guess I'll just have to save myself some embarrassment...

and hide them.  ;-)