Wednesday, October 28, 2009

HASH... sauteed not smoked





HASH… sauteed not smoked




I’ve had a love affair with hash since I was a kid (the kind you eat, not smoke – though that hash and I did have an affair to remember some years ago). Hash was my favorite ‘leftover’ meal. Well, I did like those leftover cold eggplant parmesan sandwiches my mom put in my lunch box, but I digress.

Using one of those old meat grinders you screw to a counter top, Mom would grind up leftover lamb or roast beef, add potatoes and peas and I don’t know what else and sauté it all in a skillet on the stove. Then she’d poach some eggs, plop them on top and serve. She always cooked the eggs just right… firm whites and runny yolks. I’d pop that yolk with a fork and let it run into the hash, mix it all up, add a little salt and I was in hash heaven.

After my dad died mom went back to work in advertising on Madison Avenue (my very own Peggy in “Mad Men”).



Commuting from Bayside, Queens, Long Island into Manhattan didn’t allow her time to cook as much, so I took over making our basic week day dinners for our little family – my brother, my mom and me. I broiled steaks, baked frozen French fries and heated up Campbell’s Pork & Beans. I fried or boiled hot dogs and heated up Campbell’s Pork & Beans, broiled ham steaks or swordfish and heated up Campbell’s Pork & Beans… a favorite of mine was broiled lamb chops, frozen spinach or peas, and heated up Campbell’s Pork & Beans… Have you caught the theme here? My brother pleaded with my mother to stop buying Campbell’s Pork & Beans. But the one meal he did love was my hash and eggs. Not my mother’s hash, but Broadcast’s canned corned beef hash (I can still sing the jingle – those Mad Men were good!). What did we know?



When I got out of college and moved into Manhattan, I still made that canned hash and eggs. For years I worked at “Black Rock,” CBS’ headquarters on 6th Avenue and on the ground floor was a wonderful restaurant named “Ground Floor” where I would often go to lunch. Not just because it was convenient, but because it had hash and eggs on the menu. So whenever I would crave this ‘leftover’ marvel, I didn’t have to wait til I could open a can to heat up for dinner. I could have it mid-day!

Sometimes I still crave hash and eggs, but Richard won’t touch it (dog food, he says), so I’d wait until he was on the road with some TV show he was working on and I’d run to the market and buy a can of hash (I’d also buy skirt steaks for alternate dinners because he won’t eat those either, but I digress yet again). On those nights, I’d heat up that canned hash and plop that poached egg on top, light a little candle on the coffee table and dig in while I watched Peter Jennings deliver the day’s news. Again, hash heaven.

Recently I was browsing through one of my many design magazines (my other life) and saw an article about chefs who surf in Coastal Living (www.coastalliving.com). One of these chefs was Micah Fields of the Venice California restaurant named… HASH! It was a sign! A real chef making hash! If a gourmet chef named his restaurant ‘Hash’ – then maybe Richard would pay attention to this delectable delicacy. I gave him the article which included a recipe for “Day-After-Thanksgiving Hash” and last night Richard indulged my hash habit.

Of course, it’s wasn’t the day-after Thanksgiving, but I was so excited he was willing to do all that slicing, dicing and chopping, I agreed to bake a boneless, skinless chicken breast for him to use instead of leftover turkey.

The recipe also called for fried eggs instead of poached. Fine with me. Over easy, please!



Did Richard like the results of his slicing, dicing, chopping, sautéing, frying labor? Yup, he did. Hash is no longer ‘dog food.’

And after dinner, I was in such hash heaven afterglow, I craved a cigarette. Ha. Just kidding.

So, if you’re wondering what to do with your Thanksgiving leftover turkey besides making turkey soup, we both recommend a little hash, sautéed not smoked (well, unless you have smoked turkey).



CHEF MICAH FIELDS’
DAY-AFTER-THANKSGIVING HASH

Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 16 minutes

Ingredients:
2 cups chicken broth
1 cup diced sweet potato
1 cup green beans, cut into 1/4 –inch pieces
2 Tablespoons butter
1 small onion
1 Granny Smith apple, diced
1 Washington apple, diced
1 Gala apple, diced
1 pound smoked turkey breast, diced (or my ingredient: whatever leftover turkey meat)
2 Tablespoons chopped fresh sage or
         2 teaspoons dried sage
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
12 large eggs, cooked to desired doneness



Directions:
Bring chicken broth to a boil in a medium saucepan; add sweet potato, and cook 3 minutes. Add green beans; cook 2 minutes or until sweet potato is barely tender and beans are crisp-tender. Drain.

Melt butter in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add onion and apples, and cook, stirring often, 6 minutes or until apples begin to soften. Add potato mixture, turkey, and next 3 ingredients; cook stirring often, 5 minutes or until apples are lightly browned and turkey is heated through.

Divide hash among 6 plates; top each with 2 fried eggs, and serve immediately.
Makes 6 servings.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ahh...another hash and egg afficionado! For me to have a real "mom's cooking" moment, I pair it with sliced cooked beets. It's one of those meals I indulge in only occasionally now, although if we go out to breakfast and hash is on the menu, I usually opt for that.
I used to love grinding my own hash with leftover beef and potatoes when I had a family to feed. Now I pick up Mary Kitchen roast beef hash, or corned beef just for variety. Hmmmm..I need to go to Publix today...........

Andrea

ilona saari said...

Mary Kitchen is what I'd buy when Richard was on the road... I can't find Broadcast hash in LA... Gotta say, chicken hash was just as good as the beef hashes (corned or roast) - and homemade the way Richard made it - it's also damn healthy. Maybe it's the yolk thing... ;o)

kdmask said...

YUM..and I LOVE THE PHOTOS!! Your mom is totally Peggy LOL

ilona saari said...

Yes, she was kd... So glad you like my "hash" story. ;o)