A collection of recipes from a range of sources that inspired the Smoke & Vapour recipes
Celery potato dumplings
steamed celery & potato, then boiled: http://www.yummly.com/recipe/external/Celery-root-potato-dumplings-filled-with-spring-onions-and-bacon-328748
Kroppkakor
via https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cookbook:Kroppkakor
Tiramisu recipe
Mushroom soil
Chestnut Puree
Cheese Dumplings Version 1
via http://tortatorta.blogspot.be/2011/03/knedle-sa-sirom-cheese-dumplings.html
Cheese Dumplins Version 2
via http://www.coolinarika.com/recept/769208/
Smoked butter emulsion
Heat the water in a medium pan, cut the butter into pieces and whisk it in to emulsify. Burn the hay with the smoke gun or a hand-held food smoker, fill the pan with the smoke and cover it with a lid. Let it infuse for a few minutes until the smoke has disappeared. repeat a few times until a smoky aroma emanates from the emulsion.
Ash Puree
Wash and dry the leek tops and grill them on the barbecue until completely dried and burned. Sieve the ashes, weigh out 45g and mix with the oil.
Hazelnut puree
Smoked potatoes
Preheat the oven to 160C. Rinse the unpeeled potatoes and put them in a gastro. Cover completely with hay and bake in the oven for 20 minutes. After cooking cover the potatoes with a damp cloth and let them rest with the hay. When cold cut them in 1/2 and scoop out the middles. Toast the applewood chips in a pan to release the aromas and pour water over them. Let it infuse for 7-8 minutes then strain discarding the wood. Heat the liquid and whisk in the butter to emulsify it.
Mushroom buillon
750g white champignons 1/2 onion 1/2 leek 1/2 carrot butter for sauteing 750g light chicken stock (or veg?) 2.25kg water 6 eggwhites 100 birch wine, reduced by 2/3 20g applewood chips chop all the vegetables roughly. Saute in butter in small batches, add the stock and boil for 1 hour. Strain the buillon, reduce by half and cool. Lightly whisk the egg whites, add to the buillon and heat slowly to clarify. Strain through a cloth and reduce to a quarter. Toast the wood chips in a pan to release the aromas and pour the buillon over them. Let it infuse for 5-8 minutes, then strain the buillon and add the birch wine to taste. Heat the potatoes in the butter emulsion.
Celeriac in salt crust
Preheat the oven to 220c. Peel the celeriac and cover with icelandic moss. Mix the salt, flour and water into a dough, roll it out and use it to cover the celeriac. Bake in the oven for 20 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 160c and cook for another 35-45min, depending on the size. Cut the crust open and scoop out 4 pieces with a spoon.
Poached egg and dulse
Blend the dulse into a fine powder and keep dry. Poach the eggs in a water bath for 32 minutes. Crack them open and discard the shells and the whites. Roll the egg yolks in the seaweed powder and season with salt.
Smoked quail eggs
Blanch the eggs for 1m30sec and cool them in ice water. Blanch them again for 50sec, cool and peel them. Take care not to break them - eggs cooked for such a short time are very soft and fragile. Finally, smoke the eggs for around 20 minutes on a slotted gastro tray in a smoker, by heating it slowly with the hay and chips. Mix the water and vinegar, pickle the eggs in this mixture in a vacuum-pack bag for 10 minutes. Keep warm until they are ready to serve. Cut the hay into short lengths and use it to fill the base of an oval serving dish. Make a small incision in the bottom of each egg and lay them on the hay. WIth a hand held wood smoker burn hay into the serving dish and cover quickly, trapping the smoke into the dish.
Steamed & smoked egg whites
Crack the eggs and separate the whites from the yolks. Line a plastic container with clingfilm, pour the eggwhites and close with a lid. Steam at 100C for 45m, then cool. Cut into cubes of 2.5-2.5cm and smoke for 15 mins in the smoker.
Hay oil
Preheat the oven to 200C. Toast the hay in the oven for 1 hour, then while still warm, combine it with the oil and a pinch of salt and vacuum pack it together. Leave it to macerate for 24hrs. (in Noma book served with with jerusalem artichokes, hazelnut puree, truffles and yoghurt)
Spinach steamed in tea
Remove the butter from the fridge and let it warm to room temperature. Boil the water and whisk in the butter, infuse this mixture with the dried herbs and tea for 4 minutes, then strain.
Rinse the spinach and leaves thoroughly to remove all the dirt. Pull of the stems and discard. Steam the herbs for 1 minute in 4 tablespoons of tea emulsion. Then add the spinach and another spoonful of emulsion, steam for a further 20 seconds and season to taste. Spread the mixture on a small sheet of baking (parchment) paper inside round cutters of approximately 80mm diameter.
Vegetable field
Vegetables: Peel the carrots, leaving 1cm of the tops behind to use later, then cut them in hald and keep the tops and bottoms separately. Wipe the radishes and the leeks free of dirt and cut them in the same way as the carrots. Scrape the celeriac and the artichoke and quarter them. Cut the tops off the parsley roots off, rinse them in water and then halve them. Blanche all the vegetables in salt water until tender. Heat the water and whisk in the butter to make an emulsion.
Puree: Boil the potatoes and crush them with the fork. Add the rest of the ingredients while the potatoes are still warm.
Malt Soil, Day 1: preheat the oven to 90c. Mix all the dry ingredients in a bowl and pour into a food processor. Process 3 times in short bursts while adding the beer. Spread on a tray and dry in the oven for 3-6 hours. Push through a coarse sieve to remove the thickest lumps
Malt Soil, Day 2: repeat the mixing procedure from day 1 with the remaining malt soil ingredients, then mix the 2 batches together by hand, ensuring that no moist lumps are left in the mixture.
Serving: Heat the vegetables in the butter emulsion. In a separate pan heat the puree, seasoning it with a little horseradish juice. Place a small spoonful on a stone and arrange the vegetables to make them look as though they are sticking up from the ground. sprinkle the malt soil on top. Pick and rinse the leaves and sprinkle them on top of everything.
Via Noma Cookbook
Jus van groene kruiden
Mix alle ingredienten behalve de guargom en zeef de mengsel. Voeg de guargom toe.
Selder sorbet
Mix alle ingredienten, doe het mengsel in bekers en laat het invriezen
Gele biet
Voor de saus:
Was de biet maar schil ze niet. Meng alle ingredienten voor het zoutdeeg in de keukenrobot voor 8 minuten (met deeghaken). Laat het deeg 24u rusten op een koele plaats. Rol het deeg uit tot een vierkand van 30x30cm en een halve cm hoogte. Pak de piet in met get zoutdeeg en laat ze 80 minuten bakken in de oven op 220c. Laat de gebakken biet 1 nacht rusten in de koelkast en breek dan de zoutkorst. Spoel de biet in koud water en snijd de schil dun weg (cca 3mm) snijd de biet in de snijmachine in zo dun mogelijke plakken.
Saus: Laat de gele biet in de sapcentrifuge draaien en vang de sap op. Laat 20cl sap inkoken tot 5cl. Meng de sapreductie met appelazijn en fijngesnipperde sjalot. Voeg vlak voor het serveren dungesneden bieslook en lavas toe. Oversaus de dungesneden biet.
Zuurdesemcrumble
Droog de plakken zuurdesembrood en vermaal ze tot broodkruim. Bak het kruim krokant in geklaarde boter en bewaar het luchtdicht op keukenpapier. (goed met gerookte paling - of andere gerookte dingen, of knedle sa sirom
Aardappelen in algenpoeder
Snijd de aardappelen in schijfjes van ongeveer 3mm en laat ze zachtjes konfijten ein warme boter tot ze beetgaar zijn. Bestrooi ze met algenpoeder.
Kruidenmayonnaise
Mix alles in de blender en voeg de zonnebloem olie geleidelijk toe om de mayonaise te binden.
Gestoomde eidooier
Spoel de eidooiers in koud water tot alle eiwit eraf is. smeer de vormpjes of kophes in met geklaarde boter. leg per kop 1 eidooier en dek die af met plastic folie. Verwarm de steamer voor tot 85c en laat de dooiers 4-5 minuten stomen. Leg ze daarna meteen voorzichtig op de borden.
(via 'In de Wulf' cookbook)
Bax Beet Pinot
Shake over ice, strain into a wine glass.
Ode to Bax Beet Pinot
Mix everything in a shaker with ice, shake and strain into martini glass.
(A variation from http://www.ginhound.com/2013/04/beet-beet-mixology-monday.html )