Billionaire Blend (A Coffeehouse Mystery) (9 page)

BOOK: Billionaire Blend (A Coffeehouse Mystery)
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2 cups light rum

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract (or 1 vanilla bean, split)

1½ tablespoons chocolate liqueur

Step 1—Mix and simmer for 1 hour:
In a large saucepan, mix together the coffee, sugars, and espresso powder. Do not add any other ingredients at this time or the cooking process may destroy their flavors. Bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally for at least 1 full hour until mixture thickens slightly. (Again, you should not be boiling the mixture. It should be cooking at a simmer and thickening.)

Step 2—Add final ingredients:
Take the mixture off the heat and cool for 5 minutes. Stir in rum, vanilla extract, and chocolate liqueur. You are adding these ingredients off the heat to preserve their flavor.

Step 3—Store and age:
Pour your homemade Kahlúa into a glass storage container. You may sample it now, but for the best flavor, it should be aged about 3 to 4 weeks. Keep the container in a cool, dark place and stir every week or so. (If using vanilla bean, remove after the storage period. Mix with sugar for additional flavor in your coffee.)

ESPRESSO POWDER:
Espresso powder is made from roasted espresso beans that have been ground, brewed, and freeze-dried. Espresso powder dissolves in water to create instant espresso. While Clare would never drink espresso made from freeze-dried powder, she highly recommends using good-quality espresso powder (rather than freeze-dried instant coffee) to add coffee flavor to your baking and cooking. Look for espresso powder in the instant coffee section of your store. Popular brands include Medaglia D’Oro Instant Espresso Coffee and Ferrara Instant Espresso Coffee.

GIFT IDEA:
Clare often gives small, decorative bottles of her homemade Kahlúa to friends and customers. If you don’t have time to age your Kahlúa before giving it as a gift, simply transfer the finished liqueur to decorative bottles, seal them, and tie on a pretty tag that asks recipients to age the newly made liqueur 3 to 4 weeks before drinking.

Matteo Allegro’s Espressotini

An espressotini is an espresso martini. Given Matt’s lifelong relationship with coffee, this is one of his favorite cocktails. He fixed a double for Clare (and himself) on the night of the Source Club dinner. Enjoy this recipe for a
single.

Yield:
1 espresso martini

1½ ounces vodka (Matt prefers vanilla-flavored)

1½ ounces Kahlúa (Matt uses Clare’s homemade)

1 ounce espresso (chilled to room temperature)

1 ounce white crème de cacao (or Baileys Irish Cream)

Fill a cocktail shaker with ice. Pour all ingredients over the ice. Shake well. Strain into a martini glass rimmed with a mixture of cocoa and sugar or fine shavings of chocolate.

FYI: 1 ounce of liquid measure equals 2 tablespoons or 6 teaspoons.

Matt Allegro’s Ugandan Chicken Stew with “Groundnuts” (Peanut Butter)

Matt introduced billionaire Eric Thorner to this fragrant, one-pot stew in Uganda, the first stop of their world coffee tour. Because this East African nation is landlocked with limited livestock and fisheries, groundnuts (aka peanuts) have become an important source of protein for Ugandans. It is the women who traditionally gather and sort the legumes, and many of their recipes contain these nuts. Guests are also served the nuts as a welcome food.

During his early years traveling the continent of Africa, Matt learned to prepare a version of this simple, hearty stew while staying in the home of a Ugandan friend. He especially enjoyed preparing it for Clare during the early years of their marriage, exciting his young wife’s taste buds with savory flavors while entertaining her with equally savory tales of his African travels.

Serves 6

2–3 pounds chicken

½ tablespoon salt

½ tablespoon black pepper

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter

1 cup onion, chopped

5 cloves garlic, chopped

2½ cups chicken stock

2
/
3
cup peanut butter

2 egg yolks

3 tablespoons chopped parsley (for garnish)

Step 1—Prep the chicken:
Cut the chicken into 2-to 3-inch pieces. Discard the small bones (ribs, wings, and neck bones) but leave the larger bones in the stew for richness. Rub the chicken pieces with salt and pepper and set aside.

Step 2—Start the simmer:
Melt butter over medium heat in a large, heavy skillet or stew pot, and add the chicken and onion. Add a small amount of stock and cover. Reduce heat and simmer over lowest heat possible for 20 minutes, periodically adding chicken stock until it is all used.

Step 3—Add the peanut butter:
Remove ½ cup liquid from the pot and add it to the peanut butter. Mix to create a paste. Return the peanut butter paste to the pot and bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for five minutes.

Step 4

Thicken with egg yolk:
Further reduce heat and remove ½ cup cooking liquid and set aside to cool for a minute or so. Break the eggs and separate the yolks. Whisk the slightly cool liquid into the egg yolks, and then add the egg mixture to the pot and mix into the stew.

Step 5—Finish the stew:
Simmer gently until chicken is done, about 15 minutes. Do not heat the stew above a simmer from this point or the eggs will clump instead of thicken. Garnish with parsley and serve over white, brown, or basmati rice.

Cleo Coyle’s Queso Fundido

(Mexican Cheese Dip)

Clare faced a dilemma while catering the Appland party. Some staff members had issues with eating dairy or gluten. Others were junk food junkies, still hooked on college computer-lab fare of 24/7 candy bars, pizza, and nachos. When Clare spied Doritos on Eric Thorner’s Gulfstream jet, she knew he and his gang would be up for this gooey, delicious Mexican-American dip.

Because eating fundido is a whole lot of fun, one might get the impression that that’s where the name originated. In truth, queso fundido means “melted cheese” in Spanish. The dish, which combines the bubbly flavor of warm cheese with the bright, malty flavor of Mexican beer, originated along the borders of Northern Mexico and the Southwestern United States.

Serves 4

1 plum tomato, chopped

1 yellow onion, chopped

1 jalapeño pepper, seeded and chopped

1 tablespoon dried oregano

¼ teaspoon sea salt

Dash black pepper

½ cup Corona or other pale lager beer

6 ounces Monterey Jack cheese, cut into 1-inch chunks

6 ounces extra-sharp Cheddar cheese, cut into 1-inch chunks

Tortilla chips

Chorizo, your favorite sausage, or bacon bits (optional, for topping)

Step 1—Roughly chop the cheeses:
Break block cheeses into 1-inch pieces, and set aside.

Step 2—Prep the veggies:
Chop tomato, onion, and jalapeño pepper. I recommend using only the green part of the jalapeño, discarding the seeds and the white membrane, which hold more heat than flavor. (For tips on working with jalapeños, and suggestions for other peppers to use in this dish, see note at the end of the recipe.)

Step 3—Cook the veggies:
Heat a nonstick, oven-safe saucepan, or a well-oiled, cast iron saucepan over medium heat (if you do not have a nonstick, oven-safe saucepan, see note in Step 6). Sauté veggies until the onions are soft and translucent, about 6 minutes
.

Step 4—Simmer:
When the veggies are soft, add the oregano, salt, and pepper to the saucepan. Add and heat the mixture to simmering, stirring occasionally and scraping browned bits that may stick to the pan. Let simmer 3 to 5 minutes, or until the liquid is reduced by half.

Step 5—Add the cheese:
Add cheese chunks, a handful at a time, while stirring vigorously. Allow each addition to melt and the mixture to become blended and smooth before adding more. When all the cheese is added and mixture is smooth, you’re ready to finish. You can serve now or save it for a few hours before service. Add chorizo, sausage, or bacon bits, if using (for directions on how, see note at the end of recipe).

Step 6—Finish under the broiler:
With the cheese melted and blended, you can now finish by broiling and serving in the same pan in which you cooked it.
If your pan is not oven-safe, transfer the dip to a casserole, pie plate, or another ovenproof container before placing it under a broiler and serving. Be sure to grease the new pan with oil to prevent the cheese from sticking.
Broil until the top just turns golden brown, about 2 to 5 minutes. Serve immediately, while mixture is bubbly and hot.

Beer Measuring Tip
: Never measure the foamy white head when using beer in a recipe. Allow the beer to settle first.

Variation:
For white Cheddar dip, replace extra sharp Cheddar with 6 ounces of
queso blanco
(or white Cheddar).

Serving tips and chorizo topping:
Use tortilla chips for dipping. You may also garnish the finished
fundido
with cooked chorizo, sausage, or bacon bits. For the chorizo or sausage, slice open the casings, and cook the meat inside, mashing with a fork until it resembles ground meat. Drain the meat and sprinkle it over
queso fundido
before it goes under the broiler.

How to reheat:
Simply warm the
fundido
over medium heat; stirring until melted and bubbly once again.

Pepper options:
Jalapeño is traditional for this dip, but if you’d like zero heat, go for a bell pepper. For milder heat than a jalapeño, use a banana, cherry, or poblano pepper. For more heat than a jalapeño, try a fresh Serrano, or sprinkle in some dried cayenne. Suicidal heat? Try a Thai chili, Scotch bonnet, or habanero.

Pepper safety:
Take care when cutting jalapeños or any hot pepper. The capsaicin in the peppers can burn skin. If you have a tiny scratch or winter-chapped skin, the burn can be painful. Should you absently touch your nose, lips, or your eyes while cutting hot peppers, you will surely regret it (ask me how I know). Use latex gloves to protect chapped hands; otherwise, work with care.

Clare Cosi’s Italian Beignets

The Appland crew missed out on this treat, but you can enjoy them by following this recipe. Clare’s grandmother used this basic dough to make a sweet treat and also a very traditional recipe—a savory Italian snack called anchovy fritters. While Clare’s father loved the fritters, Clare was not a fan. She preferred the sweet, fried dough treats that her nonna made from this dough. They taste like donuts but crispier. They puff up like a French beignet and are finished with confectioners’ sugar, but they’re not exactly that, either. Whatever you want to name them, once you taste them, you’ll call them delicious.

Yield:
About 1 dozen fried dough treats (depending on size)

Easy yeast proofing:

¼ ounce dry instant yeast

¼ cup warm (not hot) water

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