Recession Recipes .Net

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Category : Cooking Tips

Homemade Tortillas With An Electric Tortilla Maker

TortillaRecently, I purchased one of the best small kitchen appliances I ever got: an electric tortilla maker.  Making tortillas at home used to be an hours long operation, and this was especially tough in the summer.  Now, I can churn out 20 tortillas in less than an hour.

If you eat tortillas often, then it’s definitely worth it to get a tortilla maker.  If you live in Europe, Africa, or Asia, it may be called a roti or chapati maker.  It’s basically a press grill with a handle opposing the angle of the grill, that you can  push to make sure your tortillas are thin without having to push the top down directly.

Choosing A Tortilla Maker

There are a couple of kinds of tortilla makers on the market for kitchen use.  There are large ones that restaurants that make their own tortillas use, and the small ones that make tortillas between 6″ and 8″.  You definitely want to get one that has an anodized aluminum coating or cast iron plates.

How to Use Your Tortilla Maker

If you get one with cast iron plates, they may take some time to season.  Before you use it, wipe it down with a bit of oil, and let it heat until the oil burns.  Then do it again a few times.  Don’t ever clean it with soap.  If something gets stuck to it, wipe it down with a damp cloth, and heat it until all of the water is completely evaporated.

The directions say to just put a ball of dough in the center of the bottom, put the top down and press, but it’s actually not that simple.  If you do it that way it’s harder to control.  So pat down the balls a bit so that you have a kind of a disk shape.  Place them a bit off center, about 1-2″ away from the back edge, and then press.  You may have to look to see how flat you’re pressing it, until you get the hang of it.  If you press them too thin, the tortilla will basically “explode” outward, or come out with holes.

If it doesn’t have a thickness control, which most small ones don’t, then you’ll have to take care about that.  They will be thinner on one side than the other, but this isn’t something to worry over.  Even on the thick side, they’ll be quite thin enough to do the job.

Tortilla Recipe

The recipes that normally come with tortilla makers often have oil in them.  This ends up making tortillas that are too flaky to hold anything.  So here’s my recipe for taco worthy flour tortillas.

  • 3 cups white flour (You can use whole wheat, oat, barley, rye, or millet flour for up to half of the flour.) 
  • 1.5 teaspoons salt (preferably crushed gray salt)
  • 1.5 teaspoons baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
  • 1 teaspoon citric acid or cream of tartar  (you can also use baking powder instead of the soda and acid combination)
  • about 1.5 cups water
  • extra flour for kneading
  1. Mix the dry ingredients together in a large bowl.
  2. Slowly add water while stirring with your fingers or a spoon until you have a somewhat soggy dough.
  3. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface.
  4. Knead the dough until it is fully combined, and then for another 5 minutes or so.  You may need to add a little more flour at a time until you have a firm but elastic dough.
  5. Put the ball of dough into a plastic bag, or in a covered bowl, and let it set for half an hour to two hours.  I recommend at least an hour because this gives the organic acids time to break down the gluten in the flour and make it more digestible.
  6. Heat up your tortilla maker.
  7. Pull off some chunks of dough, and roll them into approximately 1.5″ balls.  Then flatten them a bit.  Have them waiting on a floured surface.
  8. One at a time, brush off the flour, and then place them into your tortilla maker, and press until you hear the “screaming”.  Then release the pressure.
  9. When each one is done, place it in a covered but not air tight dish, lined with a few paper towels at the bottom.  It’s important to keep them like this so that they get soft and flexible but not soggy.

These tortillas will stand up to beans, meat, or whatever else you like to put in them or use them to dip.

To make crispy chips out of them, brush them with a little butter and seasonings and bake them for about 15 minutes in the oven.

Onigiri (Rice Balls)

Onigiri are basically Japanese style rice balls.  They can be really fancy and expensive in restaurants, but the home version is one of the most inexpensive dishes on the planet.  You can make rice balls with just about anything in the middle.  So it’s a good way to get rid of leftover meat or fish.  You can even put chicken nuggets in a ball of rice.

Contrary to popular trends, you don’t need special “sushi rice” to make sushi or onigiri.  Any quality short grain rice will do.  Short grain rice is the type with rounder grains as opposed to the long skinny grains of Persian or Jasmine rice.  See this page on how to cook rice for sushi or onigiri.

One really inexpensive but very nice thing to put into rice balls is tamago.  Tamago is basically an omelette that is mildly sweetened with honey, sugar, or syrup.  For a savory version, you can use a little salt and pepper and tuna instead.

You can make a Tex-Mex onigiri by putting in some cheese, a dollop of pinto beans, and a slice of jalapeno pepper.  Be creative with it!

For more ideas on Japanese style box lunches, see ModernTraditional.com’s page on Bento.

How to Make Potato Flakes Taste Better

Mashed Potatoes Here are a few tricks to make instant mashed potato flakes or buds taste better.

Sour Cream

Use sour cream and water instead of the milk that the recipes on the boxes or bag normally ask for.  For every quarter cup of milk, you’ll use about a tablespoon of cour cream.  Make up the rest of the needed moisture with water.

Eastern European “Vegetable Condiment”

Vegetable condiment is sort of like a combination soup stock and seasoning that is popular throughout eastern Europe.  It’s basically dried chopped and powdered vegetables, seasoning, and salt.  It is usually very inexpensive, and comes in many flavors, and is made by a few different companies.  Pick the types that don’t contain any MSG.  Use a half teaspoon of vegetable condiment for every cup of finished mashed potatoes.  If you can’t find vegetable condiment, try chicken soup powder.

Mayonnaise

Adding about a teaspoon of mayonnaise to every cup of finished mashed potatoes is said to make them taste more like fresh potatoes.  I don’t agree, but it does make them more flavorful than plain.  Use real mayonnaise, not the “salad spread” that hardly has any eggs in it.

How to Cook Beans

Dried Pinto Beans     Beans are an excellent way to get more protein into your diet inexpensively.  Many people avoid them though, because of their infamous side effects.  These problems can be easily avoided with proper preparation and cooking.

There are three main rules when cooking beans:

  • All types of beans must be soaked for at least 8 hours before cooking.
  • Beans must be boiling well throughout the cooking process.
  • Beans must be eaten with some sort of starchy grain or vegetable.

The Basic Steps for Cooking Beans

  1. Check the beans and remove and discard any stones or off-color or bad looking beans.  If a bunch of moths fly out or there are any weevils, the beans are infested, so throw them out.  If not, then they’re good.
  2. Rinse the beans to remove any sand, soil, or mill dust that might be lingering.
  3. Soak the beans for 8 hours in a large pot of water.  Keep in mind that they will likely double in volume during the soaking, so you want to make sure there’s enough water to cover them even after they expand.
  4. Pour out the water, and rinse the beans again.
  5. Put enough fresh water into the pot to cover the beans plus twice over.  That means that if the beans go up to 2 cm. in the pot, there should be 5-6 cm. of water in the pot.  DO NOT ADD SALT at this point.  Adding salt now will make the skins tough, and cause the beans to take much longer to cook.
  6. Cover, and bring it to a boil on high heat.
  7. If there is any froth on the top, remove it with a slotted spoon and discard it.
  8. Reduce the heat to the point where it is boiling slowly, but not too slowly.  You want more than one bubble per second.
  9. Continue boiling until the beans are soft.  This should take an hour or two.
  10. At this point, you may add salt or whatever other seasonings and additions you like.

Beans FAQ

Frequently asked questions about cooking beans.

Question:  Why do beans need to be soaked?

Answer:  Beans of all sorts including peas, chickpeas, and lentils, and even peanuts that will be boiled rather than roasted, should be soaked for 8 hours to leech out the excess phytic acid and break down the sugars.  Phytic acid can be good for you in reasonable amounts, but too much will give you gas.

Beans also have sugars that are, like the sugars in grains, harder to digest if they are not broken down by fermentation.  Soaking beans leeches out the excess ogliosaccharides (a type of simple sugar) that lead to gas, and makes the other carbohydrates easier for the body to use as energy.

Question:  What if I’m making cholent or cassoulet, and have to put salt or acidic ingredients in before cooking?

Answer:  The beans should still be soaked for 8 hours, and rinsed well.  Because they are going to be slow cooked for more than 6 hours or so, the salt and/or acidic ingredients won’t lead to tougher beans.  However, to make sure the beans won’t lead to gassiness, they must be boiling for at least an hour during the cooking process.  So make sure your oven or slow cooker is cooking them at 218 degrees Farenheit or more.  You can check this by using a cooking thermometer or by simply looking at it to make sure it is boiling.

If you have any more questions, feel free to contact us.