Friday 18 May 2012

Practical BBQ ribs in the oven :)

I wrote not long ago a great recipe to do BBQ ribs in the oven. I believe that some of you have been trying them, please comment on the results!!

That recipe has a big drawback though: it takes quite lots of time. Preparing the meat, the spices, let the meat spice for 30 minutes, cook it in the oven for 1h 40m (minimum), finishing it about 30 minutes more. Easily it goes to 3 hours of preparation. And if you were successful, about 5 minutes of eating.

I bring you a solution now. You can do the big work, froze them and whenever you want, just finish them off! How does that work? Let's just add some steps to the original recipe.

If I don't add anything, just follow exactly the original one.

Just start with: 1, 2, 3 and 4. No changes there.

4.1 Freezing the ribs

Let them rest for a while so they are not hot any more. Put them in a hermetic plastic bag, juices included and to the freezer they go!

Couple of weeks go by, now you feel like having ribs!

4.2 Unfreezing the ribs

Take them out of the freezer the day before and let them unfreeze in the frige.


5. Finishing off (just minor differences here)

Preheat the oven at 150 degrees. To place the ribs you can use here folio, or just a normal oven tray. Folio is practical because you need to do less cleaning afterwards. 

All the juices are probably in jelly form (because of the cold). Don't let that disgust you. Spread them on the ribs! Add some bbq sauce as well and spread it, and to the oven they go.

Keep them there for 10 minutes at 150 degrees. Then crank it up to 200 degrees and that's it!

Remember to keep an eye on them at all times.



PS: actually, the pictures of the ribs before finishing and ready in the original post are done following this method of freezing them :)

Saturday 12 May 2012

Eating well in Helsinki: Ravintola Rafla

My birthday gift this year was a dinner in Ravintola Rafla, in Uudenmaankatu 9, Helsinki.

The place is very nice, with a relaxed feeling and it doesn't feel trying to be trendy, it just is. And then we get to the food...

The a la carte menu is really short, but believe me it's difficult to choose, all the dishes sound delicious. This time they had some special asparagus dishes and we went for those as entrées. I took the green asparagus with cold salted salmon and my better half chose the green asparagus with parma ham. Very good.

As main course she took grilled salmon salad. An example of the attention to detail: when served the salad was still fresh and the salmon warm. And then we go to the stellar choice of the evening:

Fillet of beef with pommes frites and bearnaise sauce

When I ordered it I said I wanted it medium. The reply from the waiter, in a very friendly tone, was "don't worry, it'll come as it should". And boy it did.

The meat was so tender that it could be cut with the fork. It was just so good. And the sauce was spectacular! I have to say that I had the sauce with the green beans and the frites, because I didn't want to add anything to such succulent meat. One of the best pieces of beef I have ever eaten. Bravo!

When it came the time to order desserts it was also difficult. She went for the sweet option, I went for the salty one.

Chocolate fondant, with fried white chocolate and capuccino ice-cream
I officially have chosen my favourite ice-cream: that one!

Cheese plate
Why was the cheese plate spectacular? It was about the details, and the size!

Four different cheeses: two slices of blue cheese, two slices of young manchego cheese, two slices of curated gruyére-like and a thick slice of creamy cheese (sort of mild Saint Albray). In the middle three slices of dark nut bread. And to give some contrast some-berry jam.

And the whole plate, the cheeses and bread have been warmed up a little bit so the cheeses were deliciously creamy, while the jam was fresh. Brilliant!

A must go for those that say that in Finland the food isn't so great, you'll be wowed!

BBQ ribs, in the oven

I tried first this recipe in my friend's bachelor party, and was a huge success! Few weeks ago I we cooked those again, this time in my own bachelor party: another success. I have tried to them once in an actual barbecue but they weren't that good.

So here I offer you an excellent way to have awesome BBQ ribs, done in the comfort of you kitchen in your oven.

Ingredients:

  • Racks of ribs: they should be about half kilo each rack, and that's good for one person (there's lots of bone there, don't worry).



  • Beer
  • Barbecue sauce (with honey, or hickory, or whisky, or whatever really)
  • Spices: brown sugar, thick salt, black pepper, red paprika, coriander, cumin (and chili powder, if you like it hot).
There are several tricks in this recipe which make huge difference!

1. Preparing the meat

You need to remove the membrane behind the ribs. Turn the ribs around and make a cut to the membrane (if you do the cut on top of bone is much easier). Then you just need to grab the membrane and pull; tip: use kitchen paper to do that, it helps a lot!

Once that's ready, put each rack on top of some aluminium foil. There should be enough to wrap the whole rack afterwards. I recommend two layers of the foil.

2. Spice mix and meat rubbing

The proportions are easy to remember, in one hand you have the brown sugar, in the other hand you have the rest!

5 measures of sugar, one measure of each one of the other spices.
From top to down: salt, black pepper, coriander, cumin, red paprika.
If you got the cumin and coriander seeds instead of powder you'll need to bang them a bit and make them smaller. Tip: don't substitute black pepper for white one, and don't use them in thin powder form. If you want to add some heat, add a little bit of chili powder (by a little bit I mean less than 1/2 a measure).

Once the coriander and cumin have been smashed, mix them all  together. I usually shake them in an empty jar (with the lid closed!).

For example, for two racks (800 gr - 1 kg) use table spoons as measures and you'll get enough spice mix. Once that's ready rub the ribs with the spice mix, both sides! Once they are well massaged, close the folio with the bones down.

Let that rest for 20-30 minutes. Start pre-heating the oven at 150 degrees.

3. Preparing the cooking sauce

Mix some beer with some barbecue sauce. Done! About half and half is a good proportion to work with.

4. Cooking the ribs

Open the folio where the ribs were resting. At this point they probably started sucking the spices and getting nicely moist. Then add some of the sauce. They don't need to swim in it, but make sure that there's some liquid inside.

Close the folio again, and to the oven they go! Oven at 150 degrees (we had it ready already) and they need to be there 1 hour and 40 minutes.

Tip: take a look at them every 25-30 minutes or so, open the folio and move them around. If they've dried up, add some more sauce. Shake them a little so that the liquid spreads under them. If you don't do that, some bone may stick-&-burn to the folio and that isn't nice.

Tip: how to know if they're done enough? When the meat starts pulling away from the bone, or if when shaking them they almost break down because they're so tender... you're ready!

If they feel stiff and are hard at the touch, let them be for a while. When cooking 6 racks of ribs at once, I needed a little over 2 hours instead of 1h 40m.


5. Finishing off!

Take the ribs out of the oven, and crank it up to 200 degrees. Open the folio; I bet they look delicious already and you just want to eat them. A little patience my friend!

Paint them with barbecue sauce (just the top side) and if they sucked al the beer sauce, add a little (just beer will work fine also). Then back to the oven they go! 20 to 30 minutes will do.



Tip: keep an eye on them all the time! If you have so many racks that they are in several layers, move them around. If your oven has grill, you can use it, but don't burn them, you just want them glazed.

6. Enjoy :)




Monday 7 May 2012

So, how much was it?

I wanted to buy a camcorder. After two weeks of browsing the interweb, reading reviews and all that geeky non-sense that G.A.S. affected people do, I knew exactly what I wanted.

I also knew that I wanted to buy it in person and try it, because they are so tiny nowadays! And if you have big hands, you might need a toothpick to operate some cameras...



Then the trouble started. Some general knowledge:  Gigantti  is more expensive than Verkkokauppa; Musta Pörssi you never know; Stockmann is the most expensive and Konebox.fi relies on a dancing yellow robot. And as far as this experience goes, Vertaa.fi can't be trusted either.

Then let's see what happens when I check the camera I want in those websites:

  • Vertaa.fi: hinnat alkaen (prices start) at 638,30
  • Gigantti: they don't have it in their website
  • Verkkokauppa: 506,90
  • Musta Pörssi: they don't have it in their website
  • Stockmann: 429,00
  • Konebox: 499,00 €, but the picture is from a different product...

So I went to Tapiola Stockmann and asked for the camera, the price in the store was 399,00 €. Fantastic! Except that they were sold out, also in Stockmann Helsinki (figuring this out took half an hour and a great deal of patience). I didn't trust the information about Helsinki Stockmann because the guy was using the bar code from a different camera model to find out about stock (which took 20 minutes of very slow typing).

So I went to Helsinki Stockmann wishing for the best. In Kamppi though, I made a pit stop in Musta Pörssi, just in case... and there they had the camera! With a special Vappu offer for 399,00 €! That expired the day before...

I anyway looked closely at the offer price and it said: "now 399,00 €, before 599,00 €, so you save 33%!!". I asked for it, and since the price was still in display the sales man, very politely, offered me the "offer" price. They had only one left, in a special package which contained an SD card and a camera bag, for the same Vappu hinta! Fantastic!

Then he did put the real price in display, which was 499,00 €. Bazinga.


I'm still confused.

Tuesday 1 May 2012

My first Vappu! (4 years ago)

I moved to Finland in March 2008.

Finland was snowed, cold, wet, dark, grey (brown at best), silent and empty (of people that is). And those people who were in the streets were shy, silent, minding their own business, not getting any close, respecting their personal space and not very lively.

Lappeenranta, February 2012

Anyway, that's the picture I gave to my sister who came to visit me in April. To be precise in the last day of April, vappuaatto (May day's eve). I kind of knew about the Vappu celebration but not really, so we went to Esplanadi in Helsinki.

The sun was shining, the air was warm, the streets were full, people were having fun, students with their colorful overalls, people wearing the student caps (or not wearing them yet if they are teekkarit as they wait until midnight), everybody smiling, bottles of sparking in hand (lots of cava!, Codorniu and Freixenet are definitely happy with the celebration) and you can feel the joy and fun!

To me Vappu, in addition of being a reminder of credibility lost with my sister, marks the beginning of the summer season. And if you're lucky enough, it starts with self made munkki! I recommend drinking sima with them.

Self made munkki by family. I'm happy to eat them! :)


And for those who didn't know, summers in Finland are perfect!