Showing posts with label Rau Rum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rau Rum. Show all posts

Gimme the #4 -- With Some Extra Rooster's Beak Please!!!

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Fresh Pico De Gallo
Today's entry children? Fun With Translations!!!

That lip-smacking entry to your immediate right is the result of what we've been pulling out of the garden lately. Yes -- we always wait until it's far too late to pull out the last of the tomato and pepper plants -- which means we wear four layers of clothing to do the job because it's the DEAD of WINTER.

But there are some advantages to this little game of ours -- as evidenced by the garden fresh bowl of Pico (Peek-Oh) De (Day) Gallo (Guy-Yo). What is Pico De Gallo? Good question. Also known as "Salsa Fresca," this is a close cousin to the normal canned salsas you will find on your supermarket shelf -- except it's fresh and made with fresh ingredients.

Tomatoes & Jalapeno Peppers from the garden
The best Pico De Gallo -- by the way - comes straight from what you can whip up from the old backyard garden. Our Pico De Gallo contains fresh tomatoes, cilantro, rau rum (Vietnamese Corriander), green onions, chopped yellow onion, garlic chives and most importantly: a sliced, diced and very-well chopped up Jalapeno pepper. Finish the dish off with a sprinkling of salt and some freshly squeezed lime juice -- and VOILA!!! You have fresh condiment that spices up just about any meal or snack.

Venus and I have been making this dish quite a bit recently in response to three Jalapeno pepper plants that are still producing during this cold and wet fall weather plus a hidden tomato or two plucked from the still producing -- but slowly dying -- backyard tomato garden.

Rau Rum (Vietnamese Corriander)
While creating this dish the other night for a meal of Chicken Fajitas (also utilizing bell peppers and onions from the backyard garden) -- the wonderful wife that is Venus casually mentioned: "do you know what Pico De Gallo means?"

I thought for a minute. Fresh tomato salsa maybe? That was a stab in the dark. I really didn't know. The bi-lingual wife had stumped me again. I had no idea.

"It means Rooster's Beak," she said.

"It does not," I retorted! I had a hard time believing that --and for good reason. The lovely wife may be lovely indeed -- but she also loves to tease. She did -- after all -- tell me once that the word "Menso" meant "helpful."

Pico De Gallo & Radishes for Dinner!
I thought she was just calling me "helpful" for all of these years...

Still not trusting the wife -- I hopped on the computer to check the always handy and always dandy Google Translator. Sure enough! The wife wasn't telling me another story. Pico De Gallo translates directly to "Rooster's Beak." Why? I don't know!

I only know that this Rooster's Beak is some good stuff! It's even better when you can pull everything you need for this signature dish straight from the backyard garden. I've come to discover that the key ingredient for this dish is the pepper that gives it its signature kick: The Jalapeno pepper.

Venus and I have grown a wide variety of hot peppers through the years -- ranging from the mighty Habanero to the Thai Red peppers. They have either been far too hot for our needs -- or haven't delivered enough of a kick to keep us coming back for more.

Rooster's Beak? Really?
But the used and abused Jalapeno? It's perfect for just about any signature dish. Scads of them have found their way into our canned salsa creations and Venus wound up canning a few jars of peppers with carrots utlizing a recipe that came straight from the trusted Ball Book of Home Preserving.

Fresh or canned -- nothing beats the Jalapeno pepper. It has found its way into numerous dishes. A bowl of Vietnamese Chicken Pho -- for example -- isn't complete without four five slices of Jalapeno. And -- if you find yourself ordering any Subway Sandwich with "everything," you'll find a few slices there was well. It delivers just the right bite -- without burning your lips off.

That's a plus!

Our recipe for fresh Rooster's Beak -- ahem -- Pico De Gallo (it just sounds so much better that way) is printed below.

Bill & Venus' Fresh Rooster's Beak:

2-3 tomatoes
1/2 yellow or red onion
1 green onion
Garlic Chives (if you have them)
2-3 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro or rau rum
2-3 cloves of garlic
1 Jalapeno Pepper
Juice of 1 lime (or lime juice)
Salt to taste

Directions:

You can use a food processor for some of the chopping -- but the tomatoes must be cut with a knife. I use an ordinary bread knife for this job because the serrated edge allows you to cut the tomato into thick slices without bruising. I use a "three slice" method when chopping tomatoes for Pico De Gallo. I first cut normal slices -- similar to what you might place on a hamburger. I stack these slices and slice carefully again -- then rotate for a third slice. This will produce small, bite sized pieces of tomato without bruising.

I will also defer to a food processor for the onion -- garlic, cilantro and Jalapeno pepper (because I'm lazy). You want the onion chopped into small pieces -- but not mutilated (which a food processor can do). I also use the processor to cut the garlic, cilantro and jalapeno into small bits. Cut the top off the pepper before processing -- but don't get rid of the seeds. It adds to the KICK!

Venus uses a pair of kitchen shears to cut the green onion and chives directly into the bowl holding the Pico De Gallo creation. If shears aren't available? A butcher knife will do the job just fine. Again -- the end result should be small, bite-sized pieces.

Every yard in America should have a Bearss Lime Tree. This should almost be a law. This dish is SO MUCH BETTER with the juice of one fresh lime. But -- if you can't get fresh -- ordinary lime juice will do. 2-3 tablespoons will do the trick.

Sprinkle your creation with salt and do a final taste test. It might be a tad too hot to start out with -- but give the mixture five to ten minutes to incorporate the myriad of flavors. It will cool down nicely.

Trust me on this. Remember, I'm "helpful." The wife says it is so.

A Little Off the Top Barber!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Bird Herb Garden
Ah September! A change of seasons! A change of garden plans. Time to think about putting the summer garden to bed -- and perhaps start thinking about the offerings you want in the Fall Garden? Farmer Fred Hoffman has some pretty good ideas here -- and Angela Pratt's Vegetable Planting Calendar is just loaded with great ideas.

As for us? September is a time to "assess" and start cutting back on summer's rather explosive gardening growth -- as evidenced by the photo located above and to your right. That's what the Bird Herb Garden looks like after the wife that is Venus has given it a rather extensive "haircut."

More than a little off the top I'd say.

Field Bindweed (BLECH!)
Venus got to the "Big Whack Job" a little early this year for a couple of very good reasons. First and foremost? An invasive little weed -- known as Field Bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis) -- is popping up just about everywhere in North Natomas. It was here long before our new Cookie Cutter subdivision rose from the clay dirt riverbottom -- and will probably outlive the cockroach.

Quite simply -- it's everywhere. It's also getting into some of the raised gardening beds -- which causes quite the problem. It's nearly impossible to kill unless you drown it in a vat of Roundup -- which we're not going put anywhere close to our little herb garden. It's also impossible to pull it out as the root systems are extensive -- extending to a depth of 20-to-30 feet.

I ran across some of these root systems while I was digging post holes last February for our little Table Grape Trellis. There -- at the bottom of that two foot hole -- was a unmistakable bright white sign of a bindweed root system.

There really is no way that I know of to completely eradicate bindweed -- so the next best option is to control it and attack it before it has chance to get started and then flourish. Despite bunching our herb plants tightly together -- bindweed managed to come up in the middle of our Lemon Thyme -- and since the leaf structures are somewhat similar in shape, size and color -- attacking it wasn't easy.

Thus -- the whack job. Venus was able to cut back the herbs enough to start removing every last trace of bindweed -- digging two to three feet down in some cases to dig out as much of the root system as possible. Did she get all of it? Probably not. You never do. But you can knock it down and knock it back to the point where it won't be a problem.

Herbs Headed for Compost Pile
I must admit -- it was a sad sign to see all of these fresh herbs hit the compost pile -- but it's a job that had to be done. While we are taking steps to dry some of them in the GarageMahal -- bindweed had become so intertwined in a lot of it that it couldn't be saved. Therefore -- into the Green Waste can it went.

Despite my pledge to live organically as possible -- the weedkiller RoundUp will come into play. We won't use it in the beds of course -- but left uncontrolled -- bindweed will surface everywhere -- and yes that includes a four-to-five inch layer of mulch. While it's true that mulch is great weed control -- bindweed overcomes.

Vietnamese Corriander (Rau Rum)
Cutting back the herb garden also gave Venus a chance to plant some new entries into the always growing herb garden -- including some starter plants that we purchased from Morningsun Herb Farm at the Harvest Festival held earlier this summer at the Fair Oaks Community Garden. The new entries include Rau Ram -- also known as Vietnamese Corriander. It is described as having a lemon and coriander-cilantro aroma -- and is supposed to serve as a replacement for cilantro after it wilts in our famous Sacramento Valley heat.

We'll see about that. Time will tell.

San Francisco Chronicle Food & Wine Section
Of course -- while Venus and I had the best of intentions in preparing our herb garden for the upcoming fall and winter season (it will grow back -- trust me) -- we always seem to choose the EXACT wrong time to accomplish these tasks. Case in point? The Food and Wine section of the San Francisco Chronicle -- which arrived this week at our North Natomas home -- with the title "Herbal Heaven."

To put it short and sweet? The accompanying article described all the wonderful fresh herbs that can be used in fresh drink concoctions. These carry wonderful names like "Old Thyme Collins" and "Green and White Tarragon Collins" that can be mixed with only the finest gin that comes in a plastic bottle (our favorite).

Yes -- we cut back the herb garden just in time to miss out on all those fresh and fruity drinks. Excuse me for a moment. I feel a Homer Simpson moment coming on.



There -- that feels better.

Sorta. Kinda. OK -- no. But we'll survive.

The good wife didn't cut back everything.