Welcome to our year of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet, a new catering service out of East Thetford, Vermont. Over the years Ryon's dad, Barry (the Barefoot Gourmet himself; check him out at barefoot-gourmet.com), has given his children, along with several of their well deserving friends, many of his recipes that are now famous among their circle. After receiving the latest additions, the cookbook includes about 111 recipes! The exact number is still a little fuzzy. As a New Year adventure, we decided to make our way through the entire cookbook. Yes, we have decided to cook (well Ryon to cook, Caitlin to eat) ALL of the BFG's recipes. We will blog regularly about the successes and tragedies of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet and maybe add in a little about what is going on down here in C'Ville. Keep us posted on your attempts at the recipes...and don't forget, food tastes better when made with a wooden spoon and eaten with good company. Enjoy!

-Ryon and Caitlin

Saturday, October 16, 2010

#43 and #43.5 - Salsa Picante and Southwest Salsa

By Ryon - I wasn't sure whether I should blog about these separately and count them as two distinct recipes. I finally decided that would be cheating since this is really one recipe, the Southwest salsa having just a couple extra ingredients.

This is real salsa. Forget about whatever you buy in the store. That stuff is crap. What you end up with at the end of this recipe is salsa how it is meant to be. Simple and fresh. How fresh depends on whether or not you are able to shop at your local farm stand or farmer's market, and what time of year you are making this, of course.

I did make the salsa picante back over the 4th of July weekend when Bryon and Lindsay were visiting. We had it with a plethora of other BFG dishes at our 4th of July party and they have been sitting in my pile of catch-up blogs ever since (it was a busy summer). I thought it would be a great time to write this blog since I just recently served the Southwest salsa, as well!


The salsa picante really just requires a bunch of chopping... and access to a food processor for fine chopping the peppers and carrots. I recommend testing your peppers for heat before adding them to the salsa and adjust according to your tolerance. I've been burned (pun intended) before by assuming all jalapenos are created equal, only to find that my salsa is either too spicy or not spicy at all.

The Southwest salsa is a big leap forward from the salsa picante. Got your notebook out? Ready?... Ready?... Add corn and black beans. Ok, take a break. I know that was a lot to take in.

If you are making the Southwest salsa during the summer season, please use fresh sweet corn. It makes all the difference in the world as far as flavor. Canned corn just can't touch it. Unfortunately, good corn was very hard to come by this summer in Charlottesville and I used canned corn for this recipe. Sinner.


Rating: SECCDI

No comments:

Post a Comment