Top Secret Restaurant Recipes 2 (27 page)

BOOK: Top Secret Restaurant Recipes 2
10.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
ISLANDS TORTILLA SOUP
The entire process for making this soup, which Islands serves in “bottomless bowls,” takes as long as 3 hours, but don’t let that discourage you. Most of that time is spent waiting for the chicken to roast (up to 90 minutes—although you can save time by using a precooked chicken, see Tidbits) and letting the soup simmer (1 hour). The actual work involved is minimal—most of your time is spent chopping the vegetable ingredients. This recipe produces soup with an awesome flavor and texture since you’ll be making fresh chicken stock from the carcass of the roasted chicken. As for the fried tortilla strip garnish that tops the soup, you can go the hard way or the easy way on that step. The hard way makes the very best clone and it’s really not that hard: Simply slice corn tortillas into strips, fry the strips real quick, then toss the fried strips with a custom seasoning blend. The easy way is to grab a bag of the new habanero-flavored Doritos, which happen to be similar in spiciness to the strips used at the restaurant. Simply crumble a few of these chips over the top of your bowl of soup, and dig in.
4 to 5 pound whole roasting
chicken
2 tablespoons butter, melted
16 cups (1 gallon) water
1 medium Spanish onion, diced
(2 cups)
1 medium red bell pepper, diced
(I cup)
2 medium carrots, diced
(1 cup)
2 Anaheim peppers, diced
(¾ cup)
2 cloves garlic, minced
(I tablespoon)
4 6-inch yellow corn tortillas, diced
(I ½ cups)
juice of 2 large limes
(3 tablespoons)
I tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon chili powder
1 teaspoon ground cayenne
pepper
2 tablespoons minced fresh
cilantro
TORTILLA STRIPS
2 cups vegetable oil
6 6-inch yellow corn tortillas
1 teaspoon chili powder
I teaspoon paprika
¾ teaspoon ground cayenne
pepper
½ teaspoon salt
GARNISH
1 cup shredded Monterey Jack
cheese
2 avocados, diced
1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
2. Rub the chicken with melted butter and sprinkle with salt and pepper Place your clucker breast-side-up on a rack in a roasting pan. Roast chicken for 70 to 90 minutes or until the temperature in the center of the breast is 160 degrees. Remove chicken from the oven to cool, but don’t get rid of the drippings in the roasting pan.
3. When chicken has cooled enough to handle, tear the meat off the bone. Throw away the skin, but keep all the bones. Add the bones to 16 cups of water in a soup pot. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to a rapid simmer and find something to keep you busy for 30 minutes. This is a good time to finish chopping the veggies.
4. Spoon a tablespoon of fat from the roasting pan into a large skillet over medium heat. When the pan is hot, saute onion, peppers, carrot and garlic for 10 minutes over medium/low heat.
5. After 30 to 45 minutes of simmering, remove chicken bones from the water, and add the sautéed vegetables, plus the chicken meat, lime juice, salt, chili powder and cayenne pepper. Simmer soup for I hour, adding the cilantro to the pot about 30 minutes in.
6. As your soup simmers, heat up 2 cups of vegetable oil in a medium saucepan. Make your spicy tortilla strips by cutting a pile of 6 small corn tortillas in half. Slice the stacks into ¼-inch strips. Test the oil by dropping in one strip. If it bubbles rapidly, it’s hot enough. Wait 4 minutes, then take out the sample and make sure it’s crunchy. If your oil is ready, fry half of the strips at a time for 4 to 5 minutes or until they all come out crispy. Drain on paper towels. Combine the seasonings for the strips (chili powder, paprika, cayenne and salt) in a small bowl. Toss the tortilla strips with the seasoning in a large bowl until the strips are coated.
7. Serve each bowl of soup topped with a couple tablespoons of shredded Jack cheese, a couple tablespoons of diced avocado (one-quarter of an avocado), and handful of tortilla strips on top.
• MAKES 8 SERVINGS (1½ CUPS EACH).
 
TIDBITS
 
Home-roasting a chicken is easy, but if you want to save a little time you can just as well use one of the precooked whole chickens usually found in the deli section of your market. If you go that route, just pick up the recipe from step #3.
ISLANDS YAKI SOFT TACOS
MENU DESCRIPTION:
“Three flour tortillas stuffed wlmarinated chicken, teriyaki sauce, Jack cheese, pineapple, lettuce, tomatoes & scallions.”
 
If you love the sweet taste of teriyaki-marinated chicken, you’ll dig the Yaki Soft Tacos at this Hawaiian-themed burger chain. Sure, Islands is famous for its burgers, but many also go for the several choices of soft tacos—and the one I’ve cloned here is the top-seller. After testing all popular brands of teriyaki sauce on the market, I found that none have the heavy ginger notes of the chain’s version, so you’ll want to make the sauce from scratch. Which is really no big deal, since it’s an easy process and you’ll end up with a teriyaki sauce/marinade that’s better than any store version, and you can use it in all sorts of recipes. When you buy the canned pineapple, go for the 20-ounce can or get two 8-ounces cans. You’ll need that much since you’ll use the pineapple chunks in both the sauce and on the tacos (and you’ll even use some of the juice from the can in your teriyaki sauce). When chopping the chunks, take the time to slice each chunk into quarters (lengthwise, with the grain) so you get thin pineapple pieces that are the exact size of the stuff they use in the restaurant. Or you can find smaller pineapple chunks in some stores (see Tidbits).
TERIYAKI SAUCE
1¾ cups water
1 tablespoon cornstarch
¾ cup light brown sugar
½ cup soy sauce
½ cup canned pineapple chunks
(chunks sliced into quarters)
¼ cup juice from can of pineapple
chunks
½ teaspoon garlic powder
¼ teaspoon onion powder
2 teaspoons minced fresh ginger
12 chicken tenderloins
12 7-inch flour tortillas
2 cups shredded Monterey Jock
cheese
4 cups iceberg lettuce, chopped
very thin or shredded
1½ cups canned pineapple
chunks, (chunks sliced into
quarters)
1½ cups diced tomatoes (about
2 medium tomatoes)
½ cup chopped green onion
(green part only)
1. Make the teriyaki sauce by whisking cornstarch into the water in a medium saucepan. Add remaining ingredients, then bring mixture to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 7 to 10 minutes or until thicker. Let sauce cool before you use it for marinating.
2. When the sauce is cool, measure out I cup of sauce and set it aside. Use the remaining sauce to pour over chicken tenders in a medium bowl, Cover chicken and let it marinate for at least 6 hours. Overnight is even better.
3. When chicken has marinated, preheat a large skillet over medium/low heat. Wipe the pan with a little oil. Remove the chicken from the marinade (and toss out the marinade) and saute chicken in the pan for 8 to 10 or until chicken is cooked through and browned on both sides. Slice each chicken filet into 3 or 4 pieces and spoon all the chicken into a medium bowl. Microwave the leftover I cup of teriyaki sauce in the oven for 30 to 60 seconds or until it’s hot. Pour the sauce over the sliced chicken in the bowl.
4. When you’re ready to build the tacos, preheat another skillet over medium heat. Toss a tortilla into the pan for a minute, then flip it over and add 2 to 3 tablespoons of shredded cheese across the center of the tortilla. Let the tortilla sit in the pan for about a minute or so (until the cheese starts melting) then remove the tortilla and immediately spoon the equivalent of one chicken tender into the tortilla (3 or 4 chunks of chicken). Spoon about 1½ tablespoons teriyaki sauce from the cooked chicken bowl over the chicken in each taco.
5. Arrange about
cup shredded lettuce over the chicken in each taco. Follow that up with 1 to 2 tablespoons of pineapple chunks, 1 to 2 tablespoons diced tomato, and a couple pinches of chopped green onion. Repeat process for remaining tacos. The restaurant serves 3 tacos with each order.
• MAKES 12 TACOS (4 SERVINGS).
 
TIDBITS
 
If you can find them, Del Monte offers canned pineapple that’s pre-cut into the perfect size for this recipe. And I love the name: They’re called “Tidbits.”
JOE’S CRAB SHACK BLUE CRAB DIP
The number one appetizer on Joe’s menu is called Blue Crab Dip, but you don’t need blue crab to clone it. You don’t even need to use fresh crab, I used some delicious lump crabmeat from Phillips Seafood that comes in 16-ounce cans (you’ll find it at Costco, Sam’s Club, Wal-Mart, and Von’s) and the dip came out amazing. You could also use crabmeat that comes in 6-ounce cans found at practically every supermarket—you’ll need two of them. Just be sure to get the kind that includes leg meat, and don’t forget to drain off the liquid before you toss it in.
BOOK: Top Secret Restaurant Recipes 2
10.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Thrown a Curve by Sara Griffiths
The Wild Boys by William S. Burroughs
Down the Garden Path by Dorothy Cannell
Begin to Begin by Brown,A.S.
Goddess of the Night by Lynne Ewing
Fireball by Tyler Keevil