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Grocery Shopping During The CoronaVirus Pandemic in Metro Phoenix AZ – Week 4

The numbers of the infected and dead are rapidly rising and going out to grocery shop does seem more deadly. Today 4/9/2020 there are just over 3,000 people in Arizona reported with coronavirus. It’s much worst in New Jersey where there are more than 47,000 reported cases and far worst in New York where I didn’t even look. They say on the news to wear a mask or scarf when you are out so I did. I also heard to shield your eyes and to make sure that you distance yourself at least six feet from other people. It’s also important to wash your hands whenever you touch anything outside of your house and never to touch your face. I felt reasonably safe last week shopping at Costco so I went back this week hoping to load up on some stuff. Just like last week you now stand in line before they let you in and only let in so many people at a time.

This week Costco ran out of sanitizing wipes for you to use while shopping but they did disinfect your cart for you before they gave it to you.

This week they did have a selection of raw chicken at a very good price….(only 99cents a pound for chicken thighs) However they were still were out of most paper products like toilet paper (so lucky I don’t need for a while!!!!) and paper towels. I happen to be out of paper towels so I purchased a giant box of tri folded paper towels. You know the kind that you might find in rest room dispensers. They aren’t so great but they are better than no paper towels.

A few days latter my husband stopped into Fry’s Super Market. He said it looked mostly stocked except for the paper products.

I wanted to shop at more stores for more things I need but am slightly frightened to come in contact with someone with the virus. They said on the news as long as you are at a safe distance and don’t touch your face and wash up correctly that you should be fine. They also said on the news that you won’t catch coronavirus from food that you eat. They said on channel 3 news on April 3rd that even if a person has coronavirus and makes your food that you won’t catch the virus that way. …(***that is great news but I can’t say for sure that it is factual) They said on the news that you catch the virus from someone breathing, taking, coughing or sneezing….???????

I’m expecting to be doing some sort of grocery pick up or delivery next week.

Everything is subject to change and we hope it does for the better.

That was grocery shopping during the coronavirus pandemic in Metro Phoenix – Week Four

The Forking Truth

Beet Soup Recipe

This is a spin off recipe of the French Style Carrot Soup I did from the video I watched from The French Cooking Academy. I did almost the same recipe with beets. I’ve found that my beets had some fiber in them so you really have to stain beet soup or your soup might have a chunky texture depending on your beets and also depending on your blender. At the end I thought the beets needed a little adjustment with flavor too so I added a couple tablespoons of apple cider vinegar and it gave the soup more definition. I do note that my idea of a serving size may differ from your idea of a serving size. This makes around 6 medium sized bowls.

Ingredients for around 6 servings.

2 lbs beets peeled and sliced extra thin on a mandolin

1/2 large sweet onion – peeled sliced extra thin on a mandolin

1 sprig fresh thyme

1 sprig fresh tarragon

4 oz unsalted butter – (2oz for soup, 1 oz for finishing soup and 1 oz for croutons

1/2 teaspoon course sea salt

1/4 teaspoon sugar

10 oz potato – remove skin, small dice like pea sized

4 cups water

2 Tablespoons creme fraiche -OR TO TASTE (you might want more or a little less – substitutes like higher quality cream cheese, sour cream, Australian or French style yogurt can be used

1/2 a quality roll – cut in small cubes

1/4 cup canola oil – to fry croutons

2 Tablespoons tarragon (torn) or chives (snipped)

optional – pinch piment d’ espelete for finishing

Directions

Put a pot on medium heat and melt 1/2 of the butter. Add beets, onion salt, sugar, thyme and tarragon. Cover with foil and steam till beets are tender (around 8 minutes..timing may differ)

Add potatoes and water. Slow simmer for 15 minutes. NOTE it will take a while to bring to slow simmer. start timing once it starts to simmer. You will have to turn heat down slightly.

While you are waiting fry the bread cubes. Get a sauce pan on medium high heat. Melt the butter and add the oil. Fry the croutons till golden brown stirring a bit. This doesn’t take to long. Drain them on a paper towel lined pan and put to the side.

After the soup has slow simmered 15 minutes remove the thyme and tarragon sprigs. Now use a stick blender and blend till smooth. Add an ounce of butter. You will need 1-3 Tablespoons of creme fraiche (or substitutes) depending on your taste. Add one Tablespoon at a time till it’s as creamy as you want.

Strain soup. Push it threw the strainer.

SERVE!

Top with a few croutons and some fresh tarragon or chives.

Beet Soup

A Special THANKS to the French Cooking Academy for showing me how to make this kind of soup.

The Forking Truth

Bomba an Italian Calabrian Hot Chili Pepper Condiment – Forking Thoughts on Tasting – Colluccio , Italian Harvest & Trader Joes

Bomba is an Italian Calabrian Hot Chili Condiment. It’s a bomb of flavor and heat that adds dimension, flavor and heat to food. A little goes a long way. You might want to use it on bread, pasta, sandwiches, sauces, soups, pizza, eggs, fish or vegetable salads. Sometimes I add some bomba to tomato sauce and to meatballs. There are many different brands of bomba. Most grocery stores don’t carry bomba so usually I buy it on the internet. I haven’t tried them all yet but here are three that I’ve tried.

Each one is a product of Italy. Each one has a different texture and a different taste but they all have heat.

The peppers have a little funk from Trader Joe’s. I thought I tasted garlic but there is no garlic in the Trader Joe’s…..I guess I was craving garlic with this one.

Italian Harvest is almost just hot oil with crushed chili in it. This one has a nice clean bright almost fresh tasting hot chili taste.

I do note that I usually buy Coluccio Brand and it differs each and every time I buy it…Sometimes it’s extra hot and sometimes it is almost mild.

Today the Coluccio brand taste like it’s made with very good olive oil. It’s chunky with lots of olive tasting vegetables and some spices. It seems mild and tasty at first and then it builds in heat that lingers.

I like all the Bomba here. Each one had something different to it.

I tried Trader Joe’s

Italian Harvest

Coluccio

It’s better to have any jar of Bomba than to not have a jar of Bomba.

The Forking Truth

FORKING DELICIOUS Sous Vide TURKEY PASTRAMI Recipe

I’ve been working on and tweaking my pastrami recipes for years. I had a very good idea on how to do a turkey breast as pastrami. It’s different than working with beef because you don’t want to do the pastrami solution for more than 4 hours. I figured out the perfect formula and spice rub for the most delicious pastrami turkey I’ve tasted so far. I do note that I started with a dry brined turkey breast. A brine is means the meat was soaked in a salt solution. Marinades are for flavor and are usually acidic this marinade is salty but it contains the flavors for pastrami.. I skipped the brining step so you need to brine your turkey breast first or skip that step by purchasing an already brined or dry brined turkey breast. You can use this recipe for both sides of the breast or do one half and use half the brine for another time or for something else. I did half pastrami and the other half traditional with herbs. I used an average sized turkey and each half after cooking weighed around 1 1/2 pounds…I consider that around 6 or more servings for each half breast. You can make the marinade and rub the day before if you want.

Ingredients for around 12 (or more) servings

1/2 cup olive oil (that you froze in a flat square shape that’s cut in half for each Sous Vide bag)

4 Tablespoons ground coriander (rub)

! Tablespoon ground black pepper (rub)

1 Tablespoon smoked paprika (rub)

1 whole boneless skinless turkey breast – from an average sized turkey that has been brined or dry brined – pierced all over with a fork

1 cup dark brown sugar

5 oz diamond brand kosher salt – DO NOT USE ANY OTHER BRAND BECAUSE OTHER BRANDS HAVE A DIFFERENT SALT CONTENT and also PENETRATE THE MEAT DIFFERENT ****ONLY USE DIAMOND KOSHER SALT FOR THIS RECIPE

1/4 cup honey

2 teaspoons juniper berries

3 Tablespoons coriander seeds

2 teaspoons allspice berries

3 bay leaves

1 cinnamon stick

1 teaspoon whole cloves

2 teaspoons yellow mustard seeds

2 Tablespoons telicherry black peppercorns

2 teaspoons white peppercorns

1 teaspoon ground ginger powder

10 garlic cloves sliced thin

1 Tablespoon granulated garlic

2 hot dried peppers – crumbled (I used Calabrian Piri Piri peppers) (two pinches of crush red pepper will do in a pinch)

2 teaspoons smoked paprika

2 cups water

Directions

Make the marinade.

In a sauce pot add brown sugar, diamond salt, honey, juniper berries, coriander seeds, allspice berries, bay leaves, cinnamon stick, cloves, mustard seeds, black peppercorns, white peppercorns, ginger, garlics, hot pepper, smoked paprika and water. Bring to boil then let simmer about 10 minutes. Take off heat let cool to room temperature. For best results refrigerate and marinate the turkey breast tomorrow.

Make the rub.

In a small mixing bowl add the ground coriander, ground black pepper and the smoked paprika. Mix well and put in a sealed container or a ziplock bag.

Next Day

Each Turkey Breast gets pierced all over and goes in a gallon ziplock bag with 1/2 of the marinating liquid. Squeeze out the air from the bag. This needs to be refrigerated for four hours.

Add water to the sous vide and set to 140 degrees F.

After four hours take the turkey out of the bag and rinse it off and pat it dry and then apply a light amount of rub to it. Then it goes in a vacuumed sealed bag with half the frozen cube of olive oil. The sealed bag(s) go in the Sous Vide for 3-4 hours after ruching prober temperature…(incase you don’t know…once set at 140 the temperature will drop and it takes awhile to reach the 140)

After the 3-4 the four hours in the Sous Vide remove the turkey breast bags. Run them under cold water or apply an ice bath to stop the cooking process.

Just before serving Blot them off. Apply a little more rub. Sear them off in a pan or finish on your grill.

ENJOY!

You might want to serve with-

Kraut Style Slaw
Rye Rolls
Pastrami Turkey on a Rye Roll with Kraut Style Slaw
FORKING DELICIOUS TURKEY PASTRAMI

Enjoy!

The Forking Truth

Grocery Shopping during the CoronaVirus Pandemic in Metro Phoenix AZ – Week Three – Still no paper products but I’ve found eggs

This week we’ve been to Fry’s. Safeway, Walmart Grocery and Bashas supermarkets. Fry’s was reasonably well stocked except for paper products. Walmart Grocery was also reasonably stocked and out of paper products but I was lucky to find eggs this week. They were almost out of eggs but had around 6 flats in the refrigerator and I was lucky to get one with a limit on one. Last week Walmart Grocery was the only supermarket near me that had fresh raw chicken. Safeway was the least stocked of all the supermarkets with very little produce and no paper products. They didn’t have their usual brands of chicken and offered frozen raw whole chickens of a brand I never heard of. I bought one and it made Walmart Chicken seem like the best chicken in the whole wide world. This Sun something brand of Safeway Chicken had an abnormally large breast and tiny legs that were like white meat wings. It was one of the worst chickens I’ve ever tried with a weird texture and not the best taste. I don’t normally shop at Bashas because there isn’t one near me. I stopped into a Bashas because I was in the area of one and needed fresh herbs I couldn’t find near me this week. They had the herbs but this was the only supermarket that didn’t offer hand sanitizer and also didn’t offer sanitizing wipes. They still used the moving belt by the cashier without sanitizing it. I felt unsafe shopping there during this pandemic.

I don’t know if my experience is typical from other similar super markets.

That was Week 3 of Grocery Shopping during the CoronaVirus Pandemic in Metro Phoenix AZ.

Everything is subject to change and I hope it does for the better.

The Forking Truth

Rye Rolls Recipe

You have to travel far to find delicious rye bread in certain parts of metro Phoenix. I make my own and just came up with this even easier version of rye rolls. This recipe is easy but it requires a stand mixer and takes a little over five hours. It makes eight nice sized rolls.

Ingredients for 8 servings

2 cups + 2 Tablespoons bread flour (plus more for dough to rest and to knead)

1 cup + 2 Tablespoons dark rye flour

2 Tablespoons dark brown sugar

1 1/8 Tablespoon kosher salt

1 package active dry yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons)

2 Tablespoons caraway seeds (plus a few pinches for sprinkling the tops of rolls)

1 1/2 cup water

1/4 cup oil

2 Tablespoons semolina flour – to rest unbaked rolls on (can substitute corn meal)

1 egg white – beaten

small pinch French salt flakes for finishing

Set oven to 425 degrees F

In your stand mixer bowl add the flours, sugar, salt, yeast, caraway seeds, water and oil. Before you start up your mixer you need to mix this up with a fork so when the mixer mixes it your flour doesn’t fly all over the place. Once you have the batter reasonably mixed then attach your dough hook. Set it on Medium High and let it go for ten minutes. The dough should pull away from the bowl and wrap it’s self around the hook.

Get a large bowl and add some bread flour for your dough to rest on. Take the dough off the hook and knead it and roll it into a ball. Let it rest in the bowl for FOUR HOURS covered with plastic wrap.

You need either one large baking sheet or two smaller baking sheets to be covered with parchment and the parchment needs a light coating of semolina flour.

After 4 hours punch it down and divide it in quarters and divide each quarter in a half so you have eight even pieces.

Kenad each piece in a ball. Slap it around a bit. Roll it in a log and then knead it into a ball and place on semolina lined parchment. Repeat till all 8 rolls are done spewing them apart some.

Brush with egg whites twice. Be careful and don’t get too close to the parchment or you will glue the roll to the paper. Sprinkle each roll with some caraway seeds and a very light pinch of flaked salt.

These go in a preheated 425 degree F oven. When they turn brown (13-15 minutes) turn down to 350 degrees F. They only need maybe 5 more minutes in the oven. In my oven the rolls took a total of 20 minutes. The timing may differ some.

ENJOY

Rye Rolls

My husband kept raving about these rolls. I thought they were pretty darn good.

The Forking Truth

Kraut Style Slaw Recipe

I made this easy quick kraut style slaw to go on my turkey pastrami. It’s flavored like kraut but no fermentation. It’s not as harsh as some krauts are. It takes about three days to get full flavored. This recipe might make more kraut slaw than you need but it will stay good for at least two weeks. My idea of serving size will differ from yours but this makes over eight serving.

ingredients for around 8 servings

1 small cabbage – sliced very thin on a mandolin

1 red onion – sliced very thin on a mandolin (white or sweet onion is fine too)

1 cup apple cider vinegar

1 Tablespoon dark brown sugar

1 Tablespoon white sugar

1 teaspoon sea salt

8 juniper berries – ground

1 teaspoon caraway seeds

1/2 teaspoon yellow mustard seeds

Directions

Combine everything in a large bowl and mix well. Let this sit on the counter for one hour. Mix well again. Refrigerate. Mix once a day till day three.

Enjoy!

Here it is on a Forking Truth Rye Roll with Forking Truth Turkey Pastrami.

This was FORKING GOOD!

Kraut Style Slaw

Enjoy!

The Forking Truth

Take Out During The CoronaVirus Pandemic in Metro Phoenix AZ – Taco Fusion , Pita Kitchen , Confluence, Sala Thai & Popo’s Fiesta Del Sol

We are supporting local restaurants as much as we can during the pandemic.

We did take out from a newly opened casual Taco Fusion. I’ve been there a couple weeks ago and was blown away with how great the food was….(particularly the mild habanero chicken taco with pineapple salsa…)…. I also was so happy that it wasn’t too far from where I lived so I thought it was extra important to stop here and give them some business. When we made our take out order we were told that they were offering 4 of their 8 salsas today and didn’t have pineapple salsa today.

All the tacos and quesadilla was delicious. The tortillas are hand made. The flour tortilla is thinner and bigger with less flavor than the hand made corn tortilla. The asada is more flavorful and more tender than from another popular taco place in the area. The fish taco is different and is topped with sweet carrots. They are all very good tacos but I still like the mild habanero chicken taco best. It’s full of really good flavors. It’s the one taco that is even better than a chicken taco from Mexico. (I’ve actually tasted many tacos on the streets of Mexico a few times) The sauces are good..we got one I’ve never tried before anywhere. It’s a dark ultra spicy sauce that is borderline too hot for me but if I only use a drop or two is wildly delicious. Very GOOD Tacos from Taco Fusion in Glendale.

Our next take out was from Pita Kitchen in Glendale. This is small Greek Casual Mediterranean restaurant.

We packed up our dogs and did a pick up.

I got my usual chicken kabob salad. I have to say that this chicken is abundant, moist, developed with flavors, delicious with a really tasty char on it. I really think their chicken kabob is the best in town.

My husband got the gyro Greek salad with added pickles.

We also got delicious fresh pita bread that they make there.

Our friends also helped us enjoy the food on our patio.

We did get take out from the AMAZING Confluence Restaurant in Carefree.

We picked up a fresh baked fontina roll that is to die for.

Tried some delicious vegetable soup that was so light and different. It was made with the fancy cauliflower and lots of parsnips.

For dinner had that incredible FORKING DELICIOUS Fried Chicken with broccolini and buttery cooked potato.

The sweet ending was a dark chocolate brownie for dessert.

We enjoyed delicious Thai Food from Sala Thai in Peoria.

I had the spicy pumpkin basil with chicken and brown rice.

They gave us a CRAZY amount of brown rice. After we took what we wanted there was THREE EXTRA whole cups of rice that I portioned out and froze.

My husband had the spicy egg bomb with chicken and brown rice.

Then we went to Popo’s Fiesta Del Sol in Glendale.

I got my usual chicken fajita salad.

My husband got some sort of Mexican Beef Plate with rice, beans and tortillas.

We got margaritas to go. They were packed nicely and were very strong.

This week we were able to support five restaurants.

Taco Fusion in Glendale

Pita Kitchen in Glendale

Confluence in Carefree

Sala Thai in Peoria

Popo’s Fiesta Del Soll in Glendale

We are doing our best to help support small business restaurants. If you care about a small business you should give your support.

The Forking Truth

Bomba Mashed Potato Casserole with Sage and Fontina Cheese – Based on Melissa Clark’s Recipe from Food & Wine Magazine

I happened to have some potatoes, sage and fontina cheese that I had to use and came across Melissa Clark’s recipe for Mashed Potato Casserole with Sage and Fontina Cheese from Food and Wine Magazine. I did her recipe but when I tasted the potatoes they didn’t seem flavorful enough. Maybe it was a typo since her recipe didn’t include salt to boil the potatoes? I bet Mellisa Clark used better potatoes than mine. If you ever tasted potatoes from the farmers market you know that they taste a whole lot better than super market potatoes. She also maybe used a better quality fontina cheese that had more flavor so her recipe was good with better ingredients. I added additional spices and a 1/2 teaspoon of bomba (an Italian hot pepper condiment) and I thought the potatoes tasted much better. Incase you aren’t familiar with bomba it’s a delicious condiment that I highly recommend. It’s full of flavors and heat. A little bit just adds so much flavor to foods. Incase you are wondering the potatoes aren’t spicy but are very flavorful. Bomba is a secret weapon to make food delicious. I also cut her recipe in half because I didn’t need eight servings.

Ingredients for around 4 servings

1 1/2 lbs potatoes – peeled and cut in maybe 6 pieces

2 Tablespoons unsalted butter

2 oz creme fraiche (or substitut sour cream or a thick yogurt)

1 1/2 teaspoon sage – chopped

4 oz fontina cheese – shredded

1 Tablespoon parsley leaves – chopped

1/2 teaspoon bomba

1/4 teaspoon sea salt

1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper

1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper

few grates of fresh ground nutmeg

1 Tablespoon unsalted butter – grated

2 1/2 Tablespoons bread crumbs

2 1/2 Tablespoons parmigiano reggiano – grated

small handful fresh sage leaves

A little oil to fry or oven fry the sage leaves

non stick spray or butter or oil to grease a small baking dish

Directions

Set oven to 400 degrees F. Grease your smaller baking dish and set it to the side.

The potato go in a pot and get covered well with water. Bring to medium boil and boil them till tender (usually 15 minutes). drain and mash them with butter, creme fraiche, chopped sage, fontina cheese, parsley, bomba, salt, peppers, nutmeg.

Add this mixture to your greased baking dish and smooth the top.

In a small bowl mix up the remaining butter, bread crumbs and parmigiana reggiano cheese and spread it out evenly over the potatoes.

Put in oven till the crumbs are nicely browned (about 15 minutes). Then cover to stop the browning for around 5 more minutes.

Serve and enjoy!

Bomba Mashed Potato Casserole with Sage and Fontina

A special THANKS to Melissa Clark for her Mashed Potato Casserole Recipe that inspired my version.

The Forking Truth

The CoronaVirus Apocalypse in Metro Phoenix AZ – Week Two – Annoying but no Famine this week

Last week was brutal. My local Safeway super market was only filled with 20%-30% groceries. There was very little that could be purchased.

This week I went to Walmart Grocery.

I almost cried when I saw all the produce. It’s so much closer to normal.

They were also out of a lot of things like onions, potatoes, hot dogs, eggs, all paper products. A lot of things were very low or missing but at least they had fresh looking chicken so I was happy.

packaged cheeses

No eggs today.

Since I’m down to my last paper towel I stopped at CVS. They had a few paper towels left with a sign that says limit one. I grabbed a two pack of bounty paper towels. I don’t know if they priced gouged me because with tax the two rolls cost over TEN DOLlARS…dang I normally pay a little over a dollar a roll in a big multi roll pack from Costco….

A few days latter I went back to Walmart Grocery. I also had trouble buying my dog’s Blue Buffalo Food. The Dog Food Stores were out of the big bags and I was almost out but got lucky and found a couple small bags at Walmart. They still lacked paper products but there was maybe a half dozen containers of eggs with a limit of one per customer. I was lucky to get eggs this time. They only had 6 cartons and one was an extra large box of eggs so I snagged it up.

I also went to Costco. They now make you wait in a line and so many people are allowed in at a time. Many were waring masks. I’m not a fan of Costco raw chicken since they switched to Foster Farms Brand but they were still out of raw chicken and most paper products. I did notice that the empty shelves from last week now are filled with water bottles. They also had eggs this week. Now they block off the aisles and funnel you to one area with six foot spaces to check out. All cart contents stay in the cart and sneeze guards have been installed by the cashiers.

That’s how things were this week.

The CoronaVirus Apocalypse in Metro Phoenix Week Two – Annoying but no Famine this week.

Everything is subject to change and I hope it does for the better.

The Forking Truth