Cooking tips, tricks, and advice from professional kitchens
Posts tagged food processor
Making great double chocolate chip cookies
Nov 24th
I don’t love the taste of cocoa powder, as I find it distinctively different from chocolate, so I thought I’d give a couple of tips about double chocolate cookies that use it differently or not at all.
1.) Replace it. But with what you say? Place your chocolate chips or chunks in a food processor and pulse until there are still chunks left but you have some dust in the bowl. Alternatively blitz some extra chips to dust. Use this to replace the cocoa powder in your recipe and the result will not have the cocoa powder colour, but it will have a more chocolately taste.
2.) If you want to use cocoa powder, try creaming it into the butter with the sugar. This will sort of make chocolate as the cocoa powder is chocolate with the cocoa butter removed and then ground to a dust. Mixing it with fat will give a more chocolatey taste and still give the dark colour people associate with double chocolate cookies.
Mise en Place – Chopped Ginger ready in your freezer
Sep 15th
If your kitchen and pantry are well stocked, you’ll never have a need for Rachel Ray and her 30 Minute Meals. Plus, you’ll save a load of cash by not buying preprepared food [not always a bad thing], and probably be a lot healthier for it.
Today’s tip is about ginger; one of my favourite ingredients. Ginger is relatively cheap, packs both heat and aromatics, and can be used for many, many dishes. Candy it for desserts, make a healthful tea, add fresh to make spectacular gingerbread, curries, soups, or pretty much anything. If you want to know more about ginger, well, there’s always Wikipedia.
If you’ve never picked up a fresh ginger root before, there’s not a whole lot to know. Fresh, it may keep unrefrigerated for a week, two in the crisper drawer of your fridge. In both cases you’ll notice it drying out, slowly losing flavour, turning brown, and even going moldy. To preserve ginger, and always on hand, prechop and freeze it.
Ginger is fibrous, and has a thin brown skin which is easily peeled off with the side of a spoon.
Since ginger is quite fibrous, cut it into manageable pieces. If you don’t, the ‘hairs’ may be long, and tangle around the blades of your food processor. They also don’t break down very easily when cooked, so may be mistaken for human hairs in your finished dish [eek!]. Throw the peeled and chopped ginger it into your trusty food processor. If you don’t have one, chop like mad. But then seriously consider getting a cheap food processor. Both Cuisinart and Black and Decker make reliable, miniature models that retail for around $25.
Your chopped ginger can be packaged in an airtight container and refrigerated for about a week, or frozen for 6 months or more. Ginger freezes very well. If you make a lot of Indian dishes, you can always let the food processor go longer and save ginger paste instead.
Small, 150g packages of frozen chopped ginger are starting to appear in supermarkets here in Vancouver. I really don’t understand who the market for these convienience products is. Ginger is around $0.85 a pound, and less than 10 minutes of work to process several pounds at once. Do it yourself, and you’ll save a bundle.
Moroccan inspired roast boneless lamb shoulder marinated in chermoula
Jul 14th
I’m not the biggest fan of lamb in general, but I think my favourite cut of any meat has to be lamb shoulder. It is a rather tough cut of meat with a lot of connective tissue, but can be boned out and rolled into a roast if you carve around or remove some of the tendons beforehand. Also, if you get quality young Australian or New Zealand lamb, you won’t have to worry about that gamey scent that lamb usually has.
This recipe is inspired by something that I did at work a few days ago, Moroccan spiced roasted boneless lamb shoulder.
The spices come in the form of chermoula [also spelled shermoola, and charmoula]. Chermoula is a spice paste used in north African cooking [Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia), and while recipes vary considerably, some common ingredients are: garlic, ginger, onion, coriander leaves and stems, chilies, lemon juice and zest, and oil.
Spices used may include fennel seed, coriander seed, cumin, paprika, cinnamon, turmeric.
Chermoula recipe:
- 4 cloves garlic
- 1/2 small onion, red, white, yellow, whatever you like.
- 1 tbsp sambal oelek [or ground red chilies, sambal was a shortcut]
- 1 tbsp paprika
- 2 tsp cumin
- 1 tbsp ginger or 1 inch or so fresh ginger chopped
- 2 tsp coriander seed, crushed whole or ground
- 4 tbsp coriander (cilantro) leaves and stems.
- 1 tsp turmeric (optional).
- 3 tbsp lemon juice
- Zest of 1 lemon
- 1 tsp fennel seed
- 1/2 to 1 tsp cinnamon depending on taste
- Oil
- Salt to taste

Finished chermoula, ground into a paste with a morter and pestle. Feel free to use a food processor.
Yeah, I know that is a lot of spices and ingredients, and if you don’t have them all on hand this can be an expensive thing to make. Feel free to omit anything listed, and I recommend you eyeball the quantities as well because everyone’s spices have different potencies. Mix your chermoula and let it sit for a few minutes, then taste it. Adjust the flavour if you need to, after all, eating is a very individual thing.
I couldn’t be bothered to find my fennel seed today, so I threw in 1 tsp of Chinese 5 spice powder. Five spice contains ginger, cinnamon, star anise, fennel seed, and Sichuan peppercorns [yours may have different ingredients, however]. Cinnamon, ginger and fennel seed are all ingredients in todays recipe, and the cloves go nicely as well, so if you have 5 spice, feel free to experiment and use it. I should also mention that I only had a bundle of coriander stalks left over, without any leaves. The stems pack even more flavour than the leaves do, so you may want to hold onto them next time you grow or buy some cilantro.
If you bought vacuum packed lamb, open the cryovac bag and rinse the lamb under the tap, then let it sit to let the smell dissipate. When things sit in cryovac bags they tend to start to stink, even when the meat is perfectly fresh. The smell will go away in a couple minutes, and the meat will return to its natural vibrant red colour.
Preheat the oven to 325F/160C. Coat your lamb shoulder inside with some of the chermoula.
Then roll it up and tie with butchers knots. Coat the outside with the remaining chermoula and let it sit as the oven heats up. You can also coat and roll the lamb the night before to let the flavours infuse.
Roast the lamb at 325F for about an hour, or more, or less. Now is the time to break out that meat thermometer, because the cooking time depends on the thickness of the meat, and every roast is going to have a different cooking time. Cook the roast until the internal temperature reaches 140F, or 60C. This will be rare. Then remove it from the oven, and tent with foil and let it rest for 10-15 minutes. The carryover cooking should give you a medium-rare roast. If you prefer your lamb medium to well, remove it at 150F or 65C and let rest. If you like your lamb charcoal and dry, cook it well done to 170F or 70C. If you cook it well done, it’ll likely be dry and inedible.
Let the lamb rest for 10-15 minutes, remove the ties, then slice. You may need to cut cleverly if you’ve left some thick tendons in there.
This lamb goes nicely with minted yogurt, a rice pilaf, and some zucchini and carrots.









