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Get a glimpse into celebrity chef Rob Feenie's family kitchen with a roundup of his favourite recipes featured in his latest cookbook
“As a wise woman, my mother, once told me, the most important ingredient in food is love. Without it, food means nothing,” says Rob Feenie, in the introduction to his latest cookbook, Rob Feenie’s Casual Classics.
The fit father of three and Cactus Club executive chef is clearly passionate about cooking fresh, healthy meals for his family – even after a long day of work.
And cooking is a family affair. “My daughter sent me an e-mail this morning just to remind me what to bring home tonight,” says Feenie, who, along with his wife, prefers to stay home most nights for family food and fun.
“I don’t go out very much and when I do I pick my spots, because we just like being at home – it’s very soothing,” he says, “especially for the kids because I know what to make them. Pretty much everything in the book is everything that I cook at home for my kids.”
He hums and chuckles about his family’s favourites, unable to narrow it down, rattling off a long list that includes broccoli with pecorino cheese and lemon juice for his kids – “it’s the easiest recipe in the book to make” and “it’s very basic but it’s very good for you and on top of it, it’s a great way for me to get my kids to eat broccoli.” He also lists the quinoa, green bean and tomato salad (see recipe below) for his wife, “a health nut,” and for him the marinated barbecued steelhead salmon – “it’s really simple and healthy – and the cheddar cheese apple pie, “which is my mother’s,” he says.
His friend, celebrity chef Mario Batali, praises Feenie’s approach to cooking with his emphasis on fresh ingredients: “In Casual Classics, Rob Feenie hits the nail on the head: the recipes and the stories are the perfect building blocks to delightful and delicious family meals. Letting the ingredients shine is the best advice of all,” he wrote on the back of the book.
Feenie, who says, “I’ve always been a big fan of supporting local,” has a few favourites when it comes to selecting ingredients.
He likes Superstore’s large organic section, which he says offers value on a grander scale across the country, and Costco for its offering of affordable Ocean Wise Lois Lake steelhead, a sustainable omega-rich fish harvested in Powell River on the Sunshine Coast.
Locally, he says, “Thrifty supermarkets are fantastic” and “Granville Island’s always been a place that’s near and dear to my heart.” A standout at the Granville Island Market, he says, is Oyama Sausage Company – “one of my favourite places on the planet. They make everything from scratch, it’s all organically done, and just fantastic products.”
Putting it all together is cherished family time. “They all participate in terms of what they want to eat,” says Feenie, about his three young children pitching in at dinnertime, “and that’s something that’s really important for my wife and I, is to have them involved. It’s a big part of who I am, but more importantly, it’s a big part of who my family is.”
Slowing down is one of the highlights of cooking, says Feenie. “We tend to go a bit too quick and we tend to eat too quick and we eat too much fast food, and I think you just need to slow down a bit.”
“What I think this book is all about is to spend some time with your family, spend some time with your loved ones, and enjoy it.”
Flipping through recipes like ahi tuna tartare, quinoa jambalaya and rabbit in tarragon mustard sauce, it’s evident Feenie believes in exposing children to a diverse range of foods. “I cook the kind of things I like to eat and my kids have been surrounded by that since they were born so they’ve been around sushi, they’ve been around soy, they’ve been around shitake mushrooms, they’ve been around everything.”
Feenie is a huge advocate of brining. “When you brine something with the salt/sugar mixture”, he says, whether it’s pork, chicken or turkey, “it helps break down some of the enzymes in the meat and actually tenderizes it. It protects it and it seals in all the juices.”
The brine recipe (a combination of salt, sugar and seasonings) from the brined, grilled pork chops in the cookbook (see recipe below) can be used for poultry as well, and Feenie encourages experimentation like the bourbon/maple syrup brine he once used for pork chops.
When it comes to cooking seafood, take a cue from the Japanese, says Feenie, who eat much of their seafood raw (be sure to check which types are safe to eat raw first). “The closer you can keep it to that, the better,” he says. “Scallops are an item that you can cook medium-rare. They’re better at medium-rare because when you overcook them they get chewy.”
To help keep fish, like halibut or salmon, moist, always cook it with the skin on, says Feenie. “It’s important to keep the skin on because there’s a small layer of fat between the skin and flesh and that keeps the fish moist.” Also, cooking with larger cuts, like leaving the fillet whole instead of cutting it into smaller pieces, will help prevent it from drying out as much.
The bottom line for cooking success, says Feenie, is to keep the recipes simple and start with the right products. “If you start with an incredible product it’s very rare in the end you’re going to get a poor result,” he says.
Serves 4 to 6
Ingredients
Instructions
Serves 6 to 8
Cabbage-Cilantro Slaw Ingredients
Sloppy Joes Ingredients
Cabbage-Cilantro Slaw Instructions
Sloppy Joes Instructions
Serves 4
Pork Chops Ingredients
Apple-Pineapple Relish Ingredients
Braised Brussels Sprouts Ingredients
Pork Chops Instructions
Apple-Pineapple Relish Instructions
Braised Brussels Sprouts Instructions
Serving Instructions
Recipes courtesy Douglas & McIntyre