Cook Like a Rock Star - Anne Burrell [17]
Start by using your dry hand to coat whatever ingredient you plan to fry in flour and shake off the excess. Then, still using your dry hand, pick up the ingredient and drop it into the egg wash without letting your dry hand get wet. Then, using your wet hand, pick up your ingredient and drop it into the bread crumbs. Switch back to your dry hand to pack on the bread crumbs for a firm, even coating. By following this simple dry-wet-dry-hand approach, your ingredients will be properly breaded AND there will be no clumpage on the ends of your fingers. Ta-da!
Cipolline Tempura with Aïoli
SERVES: 6 TO 8 • TIME: ABOUT 30 MINUTES
Cipolline are flat, sweet Italian onions that look like little flying saucers. I love these guys because they’re like onion rings with no holes. Perfectly fried baby onions and garlic mayonnaise to dip them in—they’re out of this world!
MISE EN PLACE
FOR THE CIPOLLINE TEMPURA
Kosher salt
1 pound small cipolline onions
1 cup cake or rice flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ to ¾ cup ice-cold sparkling water
2 cups peanut or other neutral-flavored oil
FOR THE AÏOLI
2 egg yolks
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 cloves garlic, smashed
Pinch of crushed red pepper, or to taste
Peanut or other neutral-flavored oil
Kosher salt
FOR THE TEMPURA
1 Bring a medium pot of well-salted water to a boil. Toss in the cipolline and cook for 5 to 7 minutes or until tender. Drain and let cool. (While these are cooling, I suggest you save time and whip up your aïoli. BTW, this is multitasking!)
2 When the onions are cool enough to handle, use a paring knife to peel off the outer skin and trim the hairy root end; reserve.
3 To make the tempura batter, combine the flour, baking powder, and ½ teaspoon salt in a large bowl. Add the cold (seriously—ice-cold!) sparkling water and mix until a loose batter forms; don’t worry about the lumps.
4 When you’re ready to cook, pour the peanut oil into a large saucepan over medium-high heat; the oil should come 1½ to 2 inches up the sides of the pan. To see if it’s hot enough, drop a couple of little batter balls into it. If they sizzle and float quickly, you’re good to go. If the batter burns or the oil begins to smoke, it’s too hot, so reduce the heat.
5 While the oil heats, set up your drying situation next to the stove by putting a couple layers of paper towels on a baking sheet. Dip and coat each of the onions in the tempura batter, then add them one at a time to the oil. Work in batches—you don’t want to overcrowd the pan—and fry them until the batter is crisp but still pale and golden. Remove the onions from the oil and salt these puppies immediately.
FOR THE AÏOLI
In the bowl of a food processor, combine the egg yolks, vinegar, garlic, and red pepper and process until combined. Then, with the machine running, begin to add the oil a drop at a time—you want to do this slowly in the beginning until the mixture begins to thicken and look homogeneous. Once this happens, add the remaining oil in a thin stream until it is all combined; taste and season with salt. Serve the garlicky mayonnaise with the crispy sweet onions.
Take THAT, onion rings!
SERVES: 6 TO 8 • TIME: ABOUT 2 HOURS, MOSTLY UNATTENDED
This is not your ordinary bean dip. A lovely combo of beans, veggies, rosemary, and prosciutto makes this a simple but sophisticated twist on an old standby—and, while I recommend cooking your own beans, popping open a can instead is totally acceptable in a pinch.
MISE EN PLACE
½ pound cannellini beans, soaked overnight
3 onions, 1 peeled and cut in half, 2 cut into ¼-inch dice
1 celery rib, trimmed
1 carrot
2 cloves garlic, smashed
2 bay leaves
1 thyme bundle, tied with butcher’s twine
Kosher salt
Extra virgin olive oil
Pinch of