Thursday, 15 November 2007

Biksemad with sunchoke salad (Sunchokes ][)

Biksemad is Danish and translates roughly as "fiddled food" - I guess in America the term 'home fries' would cover the concept most accurately - and it's a typical left-overs dish. In my family we would traditionally get it when there were too many left over potatoes that needed to be used [1]. Other ingredients include any of the following: onions, carrots, green beans, bacon, meat balls, roast and so on.

In my cooking I rely somewhat less on boiled potatoes, and also often don't boil so many that I find myself with that excuse for making biksemad. Fortunately I've found that if you're willing to give it some extra cooking time the potatoes don't actually need to have been boiled and cooled first: fresh potatoes can be diced and fried just as well (particularly with a non-stick pan).

Biksemad tends to be a rather heavy dish, so adding a some salad on the side makes for a nice combination - and since recently I promised to use sunchokes, it will be a sunchoke salad.

Ingredients:
(biksemad)
- 4 medium-large potatoes
- 4 slices bacon
- 1 small onion
- 300 g (2/3 lb) frozen corn
- 2 eggs
(sunchoke salad)
- 6 leaves lettuce
- 6 sunchokes

Cut the bacon in small pieces and fry till crisp in a large non-stick pan, then add medium-finely chopped onion and stir till the onion is translucent. Then add diced (cubes 6 mm (1/4") to the side) potatoes and cook till the potatoes are cooked through. This takes a while and requires stirring relatively oftenly [2]. Then add the frozen corn and cook for a few minutes more. Make eggs however you like them. Serve with ketchup.[3]

The salad is really simple - coarsely cut the lettuce, add thinly sliced sunchokes and serve with a vinaigrette.

[1] Since boiled potatoes were the staple food of my upbringing this would not happen all too seldomly.
[2] If not using a non-stick pan this should be almost constant stirring.
[3] Of course this dish goes extremely well with beer.

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