Friday, January 23, 2009

Dinner at Home - Arroz con Camarón (01/21/2009)

Wednesday night, we had our friend, Will, over for dinner. The reason was two fold - the first reason was to thank him for hosting so many awesome parties over the past six months, and the second reason was to discuss a food event that I would be hosting at his house next month.

We both knew that Will loved good food, so we decided that the menu for this dinner would be a microgreen salad with Granny Smith apples, walnuts, and gorgonzola cheese (topped with my Champagne Lemon-Lime Vinaigarette Dressing) for the first course, and Arroz con Camarón (Rice and Shrimp) - a spin on the recipe I did for the In The Kitchen/At The Grill's Puerto Rican Night.

Here is a slideshow of the food that we made for Will:



And here is the recipe, which is based on the Arroz con Pollo recipe found on El Boricua, a bilingual, cultural website for everything Puerto Rican.

Arroz Con Camarón
2 cups uncooked rice
1 lb. peeled and deveined shrimp (I used medium 26-30 count)
1 small can tomato sauce
2 tablespoons of sliced Spanish Olives, use a bit of the liquid and the red peppers too.
1 teaspoon alcaparras (spanish capers)
½ cup sofrito (see below for recipe)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon salt (I used Kosher Salt, as it's the only salt we have in our house)
½ cup vegetable oil (I used canola oil, again it's the only oil we have in the house)
4 cups of boiling water

Steps:
  1. In a large pot, brown the shrimp in the oil until it is pink and fully cooked.
  2. Remove shrimp from the pot and set aside. Don't put them on paper towels - we want any grease back in the pot.
  3. Leave the shrimp drippings inside the pot and add all the other ingredients except for the rice, water and shrimp.
  4. Mix well and cook sofrito for 5 minutes over medium heat.
  5. Add the shrimp and rice to the pot and stir.
  6. Add the boiling water until the water is about 1 inch above the rice, stir once only.
  7. Boil uncovered, over high heat, until water is absorbed.
  8. Once the water is absorbed, gently stir from bottom to top. Just a couple of turns only.
  9. Cover and continue to cook over LOW heat for another 30 minutes or until the rice is tender.

And here is the recipe for sofrito, also found on the El Boricua website:

1 large yellow onion
1 pimiento (Cubanelle) or substitute with green bell pepper
1 red bell pepper or 1sm jar roasted red peppers
1 medium head of garlic (2 tbsp. minced garlic)
1 bunch of cilantro
¼ cup Spanish olives, pitted
1 tbsp capers
2 tsps Kosher salt
1 tbsp black pepper
1 tbsp crushed orégano
½ cup olive oil

  1. Wash, peel, seed and coarsley chop everything.
  2. Put in a food processor and pureé.
  3. Store in a glass jar covered in the refrigerator for later use.

You can also freeze it in ice-cube trays and dump the frozen cubes in a freezer bag. This will be fried in achiote oil or tocino as the first step in recipes. This recipe makes about 2 large ice-cube trays. Use about 3 cubes for rice or soup that will serve a family.

Once you've made this easy recipe you will never go back to store bough sofrito. The aroma is simply intoxicating. . . .

Cubanelle peppers are the typical pepper used in the island - it is a sweet Italian pepper and not easily found everywhere. The word sofrito comes from Italian immigrants to Puerto Rico - it means the same thing except their sofrito uses a few different ingredients and they don't use it as often as we do.

Bon appetit!

Chef Susan aka Chef Jersey Girl

1 comment:

  1. Will is one lucky guy! Those dishes look great. I love the lemon-lime vinaigarette.

    Best,
    Emily
    www.justeatfood.com

    ReplyDelete

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