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Fire-Roasted Green Chile Stuffed with Mushroom Duxelles in Garlic Chèvre Sauce

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Acclaimed Chef John Sedlar elevates traditional chile rellenos with French inspiration.

The striking green chile dish that acclaimed Chef John Sedlar made TABLE comes from his 1980s restaurant Saint Estephe. John fills New Mexican pods with a French-style reduction of mushrooms, then blankets them with a velvety goat cheese sauce. Sweet peas were in season when the meal was served, so John scattered some over the plates. Feel free to add a handful of lightly cooked peas, if you wish. The original recipe appeared in John Sedlar’s Modern Southwest Cuisine (Simon & Schuster, 1986).

For the Mushroom Duxelles:

  • 1 tbsp unsalted butter

  • 2 lb button mushrooms, rinsed, patted dry, and finely chopped

  • ½ cup whipping cream

  • ½ tsp table salt

  • ½ tsp white pepper

 Instructions

Melt the butter in a large saucepan over moderate heat. Add the mushrooms and sauté them until all of their liquid evaporates, about 20 minutes. Stir in the cream, salt, and pepper. Continue cooking the mushrooms, stirring occasionally, until they have absorbed all of the cream and the mixture is thick, about 20 minutes more.

For the Garlic Chèvre Sauce:

  • ½ cup dry white wine

  • 3 garlic cloves, finely chopped

  • ½ tsp table salt

  • 2 cups whipping cream

  • 5 oz creamy goat cheese, such as Montrachet, crumbled

  • 6 plump, fresh New Mexican green chiles, roasted, peeled, and seeded (see note below)

  • ½ tsp table salt

 Instructions

  • Put the wine, garlic, and salt in a medium saucepan over moderate-to-high heat. Bring to a boil, and reduce by about one-half, about 5 minutes. Stir in the cream and goat cheese with a wire whisk, then pass the sauce through a sieve. Set it aside and keep warm.

  • While the sauce is cooking, spread the chiles open on a work surface. Lightly salt their insides and spoon 3 tablespoons of the duxelles along the length of each. Fold the chiles closed and place them, seam-side down, on a greased baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

  • When the sauce is ready, cover the rellenos with a damp kitchen towel and bake them until heated through, about 10 minutes.

  • Spoon equal portions of sauce on the middle of warmed plates. Place a chile on each plate and serve.

Note: Chiles can be roasted in several ways, or purchased already roasted, from a New Mexico farmers’ market or supermarket, in season. The easiest way to roast just a handful of pods, as needed here, is to hold each chile over a gas burner with a high flame. (Alternately, use a gas or charcoal grill to blister the pods.) Use tongs or a large fork to turn. Sear and blacken the chile’s skin on all sides. Transfer the pod to a covered dish or plastic bag, to steam briefly. Repeat with the remaining pods. When cool, strip off the peel, using a paper towel to help remove any stubborn bits of skin. Slice down one side of the chile lengthwise, and gently cut out the seed pod at the chile’s stem end.

Styling by Keith Recker / Photography by Gabriella Marks

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Wild Caught Alaskan Salmon

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Chef Nath’s Khmer (ethnic Cambodian) recipe for salmon is a collision of culture and flavor. She shares the recipe with TABLE readers as a preview of the dish she will prepare for the 2022 Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta.

While Khmer cuisine may not be as well-known as other Southeast Asian traditions, it contains a multitude of intriguing flavors and combinations. Chef Nath’s recipe for Wild-Caught Alaskan Salmon blooms with colors and aromas. Its unexpected notes of lemongrass, lime leaves, turmeric, and more, launch you on a remarkable journey. You’ll want to linger where it takes you.

Instructions

  • 3 stalks lemongrass, thinly sliced (use only the bottom 3 inches of the stalk)
    ½-inch piece galangal (blue ginger), peeled and finely chopped

  • 10 kaffir lime leaves, finely sliced with the hard center ribs removed

  • 4 oz turmeric, chopped

  • 12 garlic cloves, finely chopped
    5 shallots, finely chopped

  • Chili flakes or fresh chilies

  • 1/2 tsp salt
    1 1/2 spoonful palm or coconut sugar

  • 4 6-oz salmon fillets, skin-on

  • Sesame oil

  • Sprouts

Instructions

For the marinade:
First, pound or blend together the lemongrass, galangal, lime leaves, and turmeric. Then, put garlic, shallots, chili flakes, salt, and sugar together and pound with pestle (can also be done with robot coupe machine) until the mixture forms a thick paste.

For the salmon:

Marinate the salmon with lemongrass paste  and sesame oil (or your preferred oil) for 30 minutes. Pan-fry or broil salmon until just done. Serve with white or brown rice, sautéed vegetables, and sprouts.

Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling and Photography Douglas Merriam

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Prime Steak Tartare

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Chef Kathleen Crook’s recipe for Prime Steak Tartare is a classic, beautifully executed interpretation of a perennial steakhouse favorite. She shares it with TABLE readers as a preview of the dish she will prepare for the 2022 Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta.

Chef Kathleen Crook’s recipe for Prime Steak Tartare is a master class in restraint and a valuable reminder that the best ingredients are best handled simply. Her dish is a classic, beautifully executed interpretation of a perennial steakhouse favorite. marketsteersteakhouse.com

Ingredients

  • 1 shallot, minced

  • 2 tsp ketchup

  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce

  • 2 tsp Dijon mustard

  • 2 dashes hot sauce

  • 2 tsp brandy

  • 1 gherkin, minced

  • 1 tbsp flat-leaf parsley

  • Sea salt as needed

  • 3 oz beef filet

Instructions

  1. Mix all ingredients together. Toss with the meat and serve cold.

Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling and Photography Douglas Merriam

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

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Panna Cotta, Strawberries, Basil Sorbet & Strawberry Pop Rocks

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Coyote Café’s Chef Dakota Weiss's recipe for buttermilk panna cotta is rich, subtle, and smooth as velvet with a literal “pop” at the end.

American author Thomas Wolfe suggested, wistfully, that you can never go home again––that the experiences that serve as brick and mortar to our memories are sometimes best left in the past.

Think then about the faces and lives in a restaurant kitchen. About a chef who came alive to the food world through endless prep work, marathon doubles, and an avalanche of brunch rushes. Consider that those repetitive acts led to jobs in esteemed restaurants across the country, appearances in national cooking shows, ownership of a restaurant empire across California, and accolades too numerous to count.

Think about Dakota Weiss, executive chef at Coyote Café, the storied Santa Fe restaurant where she staged after culinary school and now leads through its latest iteration of Southwestern cuisine? Just this once, Thomas Wolfe may have gotten it wrong. She’s come home again––with fresh, imaginative and palate-tingling results.

Because Dakota’s signature voice brings worldly nuance to our local food scene, we asked her to choose local ingredients and present us with three recipes. On one recent early morning, we watched her in the calm and quiet of Coyote’s kitchen as she brought these ingredients to life in ways that are as grounded in memories (does anyone remember the youthful thrill of 1970s Pop Rocks candy?) as they are alive and relevant in the present. coyotecafe.com

Buttermilk Vanilla Panna Cotta, Local Honey-Macerated Strawberries, Basil Sorbet & Strawberry Pop Rocks

Serves 4

For the Buttermilk Vanilla Panna Cotta:

  • 2 tsp gelatin powder

  • 3 tbsp cold water

  • 2 cups heavy cream

  • ½ cup sugar

  • 1 tbsp vanilla bean puree

  • 1 tsp kosher salt

  • 1 ¼ cup buttermilk

Instructions

1.     Bloom the gelatin in the cold water and set aside.

2.     Add the cream, sugar, vanilla, and salt and heat just until the sugar is melted fully.

3.     Slowly whisk in the gelatin, making sure all of it melts.

4.     Take off the heat and whisk in the buttermilk.

5.     Pour into ramekins or bowls that you plan to serve it in.

6.     Chill until set, about 2 hours.

For the Basil Sorbet:

  • 2 oz basil leaves

  • 1/3 cup lemon juice

  • 1 cup sugar

  • 2 ½ cups water

Instructions

1.     Puree the basil with the lemon juice.

2.     In a saucepan, add the sugar and water and cook until the sugar is fully melted.

3.     Remove from the heat and add the basil lemon juice.

4.     Pour into an ice cream maker and spin until the mixture becomes frozen and creamy-looking.

For the Honey-Macerated Strawberries:

  • 1 pt strawberries, sliced thinly

  • 4 tbsp honey (local wildflower is my fave)

  • Pinch of salt

Instructions

  1. Add all ingredients together and stir well.

Building the plate:

Add the strawberries on top of the panna cotta. Scoop on some basil sorbet and sprinkle it with 1 package of Strawberry Pop Rocks.

 

Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling by Keith Recker / Photography Gabriella Marks

Try Chef Weiss’s other locavore recipes:

Grilled Asparagus

Grilled Quail

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine New Mexico here!

Grilled Quail with Truffled-Balsamic Reduction, Mesilla Pecan-Fig Crumble & Aji Amarillo

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Coyote Café’s Chef Dakota Weiss's grilled quail with balsamic reduction sings New Mexico pecans and figs.

American author Thomas Wolfe suggested, wistfully, that you can never go home again––that the experiences that serve as brick and mortar to our memories are sometimes best left in the past.

Think then about the faces and lives in a restaurant kitchen. About a chef who came alive to the food world through endless prep work, marathon doubles, and an avalanche of brunch rushes. Consider that those repetitive acts led to jobs in esteemed restaurants across the country, appearances in national cooking shows, ownership of a restaurant empire across California, and accolades too numerous to count.

Think about Dakota Weiss, executive chef at Coyote Café, the storied Santa Fe restaurant where she staged after culinary school and now leads through its latest iteration of Southwestern cuisine? Just this once, Thomas Wolfe may have gotten it wrong. She’s come home again––with fresh, imaginative and palate-tingling results.

Because Dakota’s signature voice brings worldly nuance to our local food scene, we asked her to choose local ingredients and present us with three recipes. On one recent early morning, we watched her in the calm and quiet of Coyote’s kitchen as she brought these ingredients to life in ways that are as grounded in memories (does anyone remember the youthful thrill of 1970s Pop Rocks candy?) as they are alive and relevant in the present. coyotecafe.com

Grilled Quail with Truffled-Balsamic Reduction, Mesilla Pecan-Fig Crumble & Aji Amarillo

Serves 4

For the quail:

  • 4 quails

  • 2 rosemary sprigs

  • 2 thyme sprigs

  • Salt to taste

  • Black pepper to taste

  • 2 garlic cloves

  • ¼ cup blended oil

Instructions

1.     Clip the wings off the quail. Poke a tiny hole in one of the legs and pull the tip of the other leg through that so it looks like the legs are naturally crossed.

2.     Add the herbs, garlic, and oil in a blender and mix well.

3.     Rub the herb puree all over the quail and allow them to marinate for an hour or so.

For the Truffle-Balsamic Reduction:

  • 1 cup balsamic vinegar

  • ¼ cup white truffle oil

  • ¼ cup soy sauce

  • 1 ½ tbsp cornstarch

  • 1 tbsp cold water

Instructions

1.     Add the balsamic vinegar, truffle oil, and soy into a pot and bring it to a boil, reducing the mixture by a quarter.

2.     Whisk together the cornstarch and water.

3.     Slowly add that mixture to the reduction and cook out the starch. The sauce should thicken until it coats a spoon.

For the Mesilla Pecan-Fig Crumble:

  • 6 oz Mesilla pecans, toasted

  • 4 oz dried Mission figs

  • 1 tsp Urfa Biber chili flakes

  • 1 tsp cumin

  • 1 tsp hibiscus, dried

  • 1 tsp juniper berry

  • Kosher salt to taste

Instructions

Take all ingredients and add to a Robot-Coupe food processor. Mix until you have a crumble-like consistency.

Building the Plate:

1.     Grill the quail for about 2 ½ minutes on each side getting nice grill marks.

2.     Using a spoon, make a circle (1 ½ times larger than the quail) with the truffle balsamic. Place the grilled quail right on top of that.

3.     Put the pecan crumble on top of the quail breast.

4.     Add a dollop of Aji Amarillo paste to the plate.

5.     Garnish with any herbal microgreens.

 Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling by Keith Recker / Photography Gabriella Marks

Try Chef Weiss’s other locavore recipes:

Grilled Asparagus

Buttermilk Vanilla Panna Cotta with Strawberry Pop Rocks

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine New Mexico here!

Chilled Popcorn Balls

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A weekend snack that’s fun for kids to make…and delicious, too! These popcorn balls are great afternoon project for the littles.

Every kid pines away for fun and friendly snacks…while parents long for something that’s vaguely healthy. These popcorn balls feature healthy ingredients, and your kids are sure to love eating as well as making them. Using natural honey and sunflower butter as binders does take a little extra work to pack the balls, but that’s a perfect excuse for kids to get their hands sticky and have some fun! Each recipe makes about 18 popcorn balls.

PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE POPCORN BALLS RECIPE

Ingredients

1/3 cup popcorn kernels or 9 cups popped popcorn

1/3 cup Huckle Bee Farms Plain Wildflower Raw Unfiltered Honey

3 tbsp natural organic sunflower butter or creamy peanut butter

1 pinch fine sea salt

2/3 cup dark chocolate chips, divided in halves

¼ cup dark chocolate chips, for topping

1 tbsp extra-virgin organic coconut oil, for topping

Instructions

1.     Pop kernels in a stovetop or microwavable air popper; you can bypass the popping completely and buy pre-popped corn, too.

2.     Combine honey, sunflower or peanut butter, sea salt, and 1/3 cup of chocolate chips into a small saucepan and whisk on medium-low heat until ingredients are well combined and bubbling.

3.     Remove from the heat and slowly pour over the popcorn. Stir gently until popcorn is well-coated. Fold in the remaining 1/3 cup of chocolate chips.

4.     Place bowl in the refrigerator for 3-5 minutes.

5.     Using an ice cream scooper, form the mixture into balls. Once the scoop forms the initial ball, pass them along to the kids to firmly shape before placing them onto wax paper-lined baking sheets.

6.     Combine dark chocolate chips for topping and coconut oil in a bowl and microwave, stopping every 15 seconds to stir mixture until melted. Allow kids to carefully splatter dark chocolate over the balls.

7.     Place baking sheets back into the refrigerator for a minimum of 30 minutes. After this, either serve them or place them into an airtight container and store in refrigerator until ready to eat.

TRAIL MIX POPCORN BALLS RECIPE

Ingredients

1/3 cup popcorn kernels or 9 cups popped popcorn

1/3 cup Country Barn Honey

3 tbsp extra-virgin organic coconut oil

3 tbsp natural organic sunflower butter

1/2 cup dark chocolate chips, divided in halves

1/4 cup chopped almonds

1/4 cup chopped cashews

1/4 cup chopped dried cherries

River Road Hand Dyed “Right As Rainbow” Sprinkles, for topping

Instructions

1.     Pop kernels in a stovetop or microwavable air popper; you can bypass the popping completely and buy pre-popped corn, too.

2.     Combine honey, coconut oil, sunflower butter, and ¼ cup chocolate chips into a saucepan and whisk on medium-low heat until ingredients are well combined and bubbling.

3.     Remove from the heat and slowly pour over the popcorn. Stir gently until popcorn is well-coated. Fold in chopped nuts, dried cherries, and remaining ¼ cup chocolate chips.

4.     Place bowl in the refrigerator for 3-5 minutes.

5.     Using an ice cream scooper, form the mixture into balls. Once the scoop forms the initial ball, pass them along to the kids to firmly shape before placing them onto wax paper-lined baking sheets.

6.     Allow kids to sprinkle top of balls with River Road Hand Dyed “Right As Rainbow” Sprinkles for that classic trail mix pop of color.

7.     Place baking sheets back into the refrigerator for a minimum of 30 minutes. After this, either serve them or place them into an airtight container and store in refrigerator until ready to eat.

PEPITA POPCORN BALLS RECIPE

Ingredients

1/3 cup popcorn kernels or 9 cups popped popcorn

1/3 cup Triple Bee Farms Clover Honey

2 tbsp extra-virgin organic coconut oil

½ tsp Penzeys Vietnamese Ground Cinnamon

3 tbsp natural organic sunflower butter

1/2 cup white chocolate chips, divided into halves

1 tsp Penzeys Mexican Vanilla Extract

1/2 cup pepitas, toasted and roughly ground, divided into halves

¼ cup white chocolate chips, for topping

1 tbsp extra-virgin organic coconut oil, for topping

Instructions

1.     Pop kernels in a stovetop or microwavable air popper; you can bypass the popping completely and buy pre-popped corn, too.

2.     Combine honey, coconut oil, ground cinnamon, sunflower butter, ¼ cup of chocolate chips, and vanilla extract into a saucepan and whisk on medium-low heat until ingredients are well combined and bubbling.

3.     Remove from the heat and slowly pour over the popcorn. Stir gently until popcorn is well-coated. Fold in ¼ cup ground pepitas and ¼ cup white chocolate chips.

4.     Place bowl in the refrigerator for 3-5 minutes.

5.     Using an ice cream scooper, form the mixture into balls. Once the scoop forms the initial ball, pass them along to the kids to firmly shape before placing them onto wax paper-lined baking sheets. Sprinkle each ball with some ground pepitas.

6.     Combine white chocolate chips and coconut oil in a bowl and microwave, stopping every 15 seconds to stir mixture until melted. Allow kids to carefully splatter white chocolate over balls. Dust with a little cinnamon to finish.

7.     Place baking sheets back into the refrigerator for a minimum of 30 minutes. After this, either serve them or place them into an airtight container and store in refrigerator until ready to eat.

Note: If the popcorn balls aren’t holding shape, wet hands with cold water when forming them.

STORY AND RECIPES BY ELAINE ZEDACK / PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE BRYCE

Try some of TABLE’s other kid-friendly recipes:

S’mores Empanadas

Strawberry Pineapple Agua Fresca

Homemade Marshmallows

Quesadilla with Guacamole and Pico de Gallo

Chicken Satay with Cucumber Salad

Peach and Corn Salsa with Tortilla Chips

Chili-Lime Popcorn

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine here!

Grilled Asparagus with Hatch Green Chile Ricotta

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Coyote Café’s Chef Dakota Weiss takes grilled asparagus to the next level with handmade green chile ricotta.

American author Thomas Wolfe suggested, wistfully, that you can never go home again––that the experiences that serve as brick and mortar to our memories are sometimes best left in the past.

Think then about the faces and lives in a restaurant kitchen. About a chef who came alive to the food world through endless prep work, marathon doubles, and an avalanche of brunch rushes. Consider that those repetitive acts led to jobs in esteemed restaurants across the country, appearances in national cooking shows, ownership of a restaurant empire across California, and accolades too numerous to count.

Think about Dakota Weiss, executive chef at Coyote Café, the storied Santa Fe restaurant where she staged after culinary school and now leads through its latest iteration of Southwestern cuisine? Just this once, Thomas Wolfe may have gotten it wrong. She’s come home again––with fresh, imaginative and palate-tingling results.

Because Dakota’s signature voice brings worldly nuance to our local food scene, we asked her to choose local ingredients and present us with three recipes. On one recent early morning, we watched her in the calm and quiet of Coyote’s kitchen as she brought these ingredients to life in ways that are as grounded in memories (does anyone remember the youthful thrill of 1970s Pop Rocks candy?) as they are alive and relevant in the present. coyotecafe.com

Grilled Asparagus, Hatch Green Chile Ricotta, Bitter Greens, Truffled Mustard Vinaigrette, Brioche Croutons

Serves 4

For the asparagus:

  • 1 bunch extra-large asparagus

  • Pinch sea salt

  • Pinch black pepper

  • 2 tbsp EVOO

Instructions

  1. Cut the bottoms of the asparagus to get rid of the woody stems.

  2. Toss the asparagus with the salt, pepper, and olive oil

  3. Grill on high heat until lightly charred. The asparagus should still be crunchy.

For the Hatch Green Chile Ricotta Cheese:

  • 1 gal whole milk

  • 2 cups heavy cream

  • ½ cup lemon juice

  • 2 tbsp distilled vinegar

  • 2 cups hatch green chile, roasted, peeled, and diced

  • ½ tbsp kosher salt

Instructions

  1. Add the milk and cream into a heavy-bottomed pot. Bring to a boil.

  2. Turn off the heat and add the lemon juice and vinegar.

  3. Stir a few times until you see the milk start to curdle.

  4. Slowly pour the contents of the pot into a bowl that is lined with cheesecloth. Let the whey completely drain out of the curds.

  5. Gently scrape the curds off the cheese cloth and put into a bowl.

  6. Chop the green chile finely and stir into the curds.

  7. Season the cheese with salt to taste.

For the Truffled Mustard Vinaigrette:

  • 2 shallots

  • 2 garlic cloves

  • 2 tbsp whole grain mustard

  • ½ cup lemon juice

  • ½ cup rice vinegar

  • 1 cup EVOO

  • ½ cup white truffle oil

  • Kosher salt to taste

Instructions

Using a hand blender, add the shallots, garlic, mustard, lemon juice, and rice vinegar into a large jar and mix well. Slowly add the two oils to emulsify and then season with salt.

For the Brioche Croutons:

  • 1 cup brioche, cut into micro-small dices

  • ¼ cup EVOO

  • Kosher salt to taste

Instructions

  1. Sauté the brioche in the oil until golden brown and season with salt. Pour onto a sheet tray lined with paper towels to soak up extra oil.

For the salad:

2 red endives

2 yellow endives

2 tbsp chives, chopped

Kosher salt to taste

Black pepper to taste

Toss the endives with the truffled vinaigrette, chives, salt, and pepper.

Building the plate:

Pipe the Hatch Green Chile Ricotta Cheese into a long rectangular shape. Carefully place the endive, alternating the red and yellow, into the ricotta at an angle. Place about 5 grilled asparagus lying next to the endive. Sprinkle the croutons all over. Drizzle a little of the truffled vinaigrette over the whole dish.

 Story by Gabe Gomez/ Styling by Keith Recker / Photography Gabriella Marks

Try Chef Weiss’s other locavore recipes:

Grilled Quail

Buttermilk Vanilla Panna Cotta with Strawberry Pop Rocks

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine New Mexico here!

Summertime Souvlaki and Tzatziki

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Fresh, summery flavors come forward in this easy-to-make dish.

Are you looking for an easy to make lunch or dinner that will also be a crowd-pleaser? Look to the simple, straightforward Greek tradition of souvlaki and tzatziki. Their freshness and appealing flavor will be a surefire hit!

SIMPLE SUMMER SOUVLAKI RECIPE

1/3 cup olive oil

2 lemons, juiced and zested

1 ½ tsp salt

¼ tsp black pepper

1 tsp oregano, dried or fresh

1 tsp dill

10 cloves garlic, chopped

1-1 ½ lb  fresh chicken tenders

1.     In a nonreactive mixing bowl, whisk together all ingredients except the fresh chicken tenders.

2.     Add fresh chicken tenders and toss until coated. Cover and marinate overnight in refrigerator.

3.     Remove from refrigerator about an hour before grilling. As soon as they have reached room temperature, space them generously on the grill over medium flame.

4.     Cook for 4 minutes on each side and check for doneness.

5.     Once cooked through, serve immediately with grilled pita bread, chopped tomatoes, fresh cucumbers and peppers, fresh herbs, olives, and homemade tzatziki.

SUMMER TZATZIKI RECIPE

2 cups grated cucumber, skin on

2 cups full-fat Greek yogurt

3 tbsp olive oil

2 tbsp fresh mint, chopped

1 tbsp fresh lemon juice

Zest of 1 lemon

3 fresh garlic cloves, minced

1 tsp sea salt

¼ tsp black pepper

1 pinch of ground cumin

1.     Grate the cucumbers by hand on a box grater. Using your hands, squeeze as much liquid as you can out of the grated cucumber, and place in a mixing bowl.

2.     Add all remaining ingredients to the bowl and stir well to combine.

3.     Cover and refrigerate for at least an hour, but preferably overnight. Stir again just prior to serving, and garnish with additional chopped mint.

4.     Serve as a condiment to souvlaki, grilled lamb or grilled pork, or as a dip for fresh crudites.

STORY BY KEITH RECKER / PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE BRYCE

Try some of TABLE’s other grilled treats:

Grilled Porch Chops with Grilled Pineapple

Skirt Steak and Scallion Salsa

Faith in BBQ

Don’t miss a single delicious thing:

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine here!

Campo Lamb Birria

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The Lamb Birria at Los Poblanos’ restaurant Campo is a classic.

This campo lamb birria recipe is very much measured by handfuls and feelings. The tortillas are the Sonoran wheat tortillas from Los Poblanos with the rendered lamb fat from the braise. The lamb itself comes from the Manzanares family’s Shepherd’s Lamb label, which raises the only certified-organic lamb in the state.

What is Birria?

Birria is a traditional Mexican dish, originally from the state of Jalisco. It typically consists of tender meat, often goat or beef, marinated in a flavorful blend of spices and chilies. The meat is usually stewed until it’s very tender, often served in a rich, savory broth. You can enjoy birria in various ways: as a soup, in tacos, or even as quesabirria, where you make the tacos with cheese and serve them with the broth for dipping. Birria has complex, deep flavors and is often enjoyed at celebrations and gatherings.

Print
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The Lamb Birria at Los Poblanos’ restaurant Campo is a classic.

Campo Lamb Birria


  • Author: Los Poblanos

Description

A hearty Southwest meal.


Ingredients

Scale

For the birria: 

  • 300 g sifted Sonoran flour from Southwest Grain Collaborative
  • 300 g AP flour
  • 15 g baking powder
  • 25 g salt
  • 50 g lamb fat (We use the heavily spiced and flavorful lamb fat that comes from the lamb braise for this dish. You can use any fat you choose.)
  • 400 g warm water
  • Spice Mix (See below)

For the spice mix: 

  • Guajillo, árbol, Pequin, NM red, and cascabel chiles
  • White, green, pink, and black pepper
  • Allspice, clove, bay leaf
  • Oregano, garlic, coriander
  • A little bit of cinnamon
  • Fresh garlic


Instructions

For the birria: 

  1. Mix the dry ingredients together, cut the fat in with fingertips, add warm water and gently combine using a spoon. The mix will be sticky so try not to get too much on your hands. Let rest for 30 minutes or so, then portion to desired weight. We use 75-gram portions at the restaurant. Let rest for anywhere from 15 minutes to overnight. They are best rolled out 12-36 hours after being portioned. We roll them out about 2 mm thick and grill them directly over the grill here at Campo.
  2. The hominy is processed here from New Mexico blue corn out of Tamaya and Mexican June white corn from the Schneiders in Santa Fe (Southwest Grain Collaborative). We nixtamalize the corn the night before we need it. We rinse and cook in fresh water with garlic, bay leaf, and salt until tender.
  3. The vegetables are seasonal, but usually include turnips cooked in butter along with the hominy, and a grilled vegetable such as asparagus.
  4. Our team butchers the lamb into portions that can carefully braise and stay as one chunk for the final dish, instead of shredded like most birria-style dishes. The lamb is marinated in chiles and spices, seared, and braised in other aromatics and stock (lamb, chicken and/or beef)

For the spice mix: 

  1. Pulverize all of these spices and fresh garlic into a fine spice mix
  2. Then, use it to marinate the lamb before roasting, searing, and braising gently.

Try a Delicious Southwest Cocktail, Too! 

Recipe by Los Poblanos
Photography by Mary West

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine’s print edition.

Summer Outdoor Dining Guide

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Dining al fresco near the ‘Burgh. Photo Biergarten - Photo credit: Laura Petrilla

It’s the height of patio season here in Pittsburgh. As if al fresco dining wasn’t already an enjoyable experience, we’ve fallen even more deeply in love with eating in the open air over these last couple of years.

While many local establishments already offered outdoor dining as an option, the pandemic restrictions forced others to pivot in order to keep themselves in the food and beverage arena. New expanded models came into play and are here to stay. Many operations were granted permission to use sidewalks and curbside spaces to serve their patrons, and they have since chosen to make these options permanent — and Pittsburghers are loving it!

We’ve put together an outdoor dining guide of a few places around the ‘Burgh to experience. Now, go enjoy a meal outside. Not because you have to, but because you want to.

Girasole

An authentic Pittsburgh Italian restaurant tradition, Girasole is located in the quaint neighborhood of Shadyside. Dine Italian style surrounded by rustic stone walls as if you are in the wine cellar of a villa, or sip and savor delicious offerings on the deck or front walk.

Farmer X Baker

This picturesque cafe is outdoor seating only. Located along the Allegheny River in Aspinwall’s Allegheny Riverfront Park, Farmer X Baker offers a veggie forward menu with several gluten-free options. Owner Jen Urich sources many of the café’s ingredients from her own local farm, Root and Heart, as well as other farms in the area.

Bigham Tavern

Classic pub food with a twist! Known locally for their award winning wings (available in over 30 flavors), Bigham is a neighborhood pub that prides itself on being an extension of home within the community. The staff aim to consistently serve top-notch food and drink, a tradition that has taken place from this same location for over a century. Feel the breeze on the tented patio at this Mt. Washington watering hole.

Hal’s Bar and Grill

Hal’s Bar & Grill is a local family-owned and operated bar and restaurant with a comfortable “down home” feel located in the North Hills of Pittsburgh. Whether you’re looking for a casual date night, a meal with the family, or the perfect hang out with friends, Hal’s outdoor patio space is a neighborhood favorite you’re sure to enjoy. They take pride in featuring a wide variety of local beers and breweries as well as a vast menu with everything from fried pickles and nachos to ahi tuna and pork ossa buco.

Libations Winery

Welcome to Libations Winery, a festive experience you cannot miss. Libations Winery is a destination winery located one minute from the Grove City Outlet Mall. They offer a complete variety of delicious wines produced and made from their own local vineyard/orchards. Enjoy signature house-made menu items such as wood-fired pizzas. They feature weekly live entertainment and have three venue options available. Stop in and enjoy over 25 varieties of wine, a cold craft beer, or one of their signature specialty drinks. There’s a beverage for everyone. Pets are welcome on both of their patios and expansive grounds!

Luke and Mike’s Frontporch Grille

A charming restaurant located in Aspinwall, Luke and Mike’s Frontporch Grille welcomes its patrons to sit — you guessed it — on the front porch. They offer a dog-friendly side porch, too. The beautiful atmosphere and all-American menu will make you feel right at home. Sip a refreshing summer cocktail and enjoy a satisfying meal at this quaint spot. You’ll settle in so well that you’ll need to remind yourself not to overstay your welcome.

Biergarten

Located on the 9th floor of downtown Pittsburgh’s trendy Kimpton Hotel Monaco, is an open-air space perfect for an evening of cocktails and small plates with friends. Their menu offers German-influenced bar bites like the BG Pretzel, a giant soft pretzel served with beer cheese, as well as a smoked & aged cheddar cheese spread, bar nuts flavored with rosemary, cayenne and brown sugar, and a handful of other tasty bites. In addition to refreshing cocktails they offer an exhaustive list of European beer. Sit and enjoy the breeze or play a supersized game of Jenga with a view.

Vivo Kitchen

Casual dining in the heart of the Sewickley village, Vivo Kitchen is nestled among the boutiques, art galleries, and specialty shops that line Beaver Street. A seasonal menu of eclectic American cuisine is presented in a modern, airy venue with a contemporary vibe that flows outside into the charming courtyard.

Poulet Bleu

Poulet Bleu is a French inspired, American bistro by chef/owner Richard DeShantz located on Butler Street in Lawrenceville. Menu items like steak frites, French onion soup, and soufflés are among some of the more popular selections with regular visitors. They have recently expanded outdoor dining to include a rooftop space. While the outdoor patio at the restaurant’s entrance is by reservation, the rooftop is seated first-come, first-served.

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STORY BY STAR LALIBERTE /PHOTOGRAPHY LAURA PETRILLA