Monday, April 13, 2015

Key West Personal Chef will Cook for the 23rd Annual NA Spiritual Retreat



WE ARE VERY PROUD AND EXCITED TO BE PART OF 

THE 23RD ANNUAL NA SPIRITUAL RETREAT. WE 

HAVE A FANTASTIC MENU PLANNED AND LOOK 

FORWARD TO MEETING ALL OF YOU. 

IT'S GOING TO BE A GREAT WEEKEND!



HERE IS A SNEAK PEAK AT THE MENU WE HAVE PLANNED FOR YOU

Thursday Night-Welcome BBQ
BBQ Pork and Chicken, Island Potato Salad, Corn on the Cob, Sweet Bahama Bread
Friday Night-Land and Sea
Seafood Paella or Arroz con Pollo (Chicken and Yellow Rice) both served with Mixed Green Salad and Cuban Bread
Saturday Night-Liz Family Secret Caja China Whole Pig Roast
Slowed Roasted Pork, Garlic infused Boiled Yucca w/ Pickled Onion, Sweet Plantains, Moros (Rice cooked in Black Beans) and Cuban Bread

Daily Lunch Specials:
Jamaican Escovitch w/ Fresh Local White Fish
Mojo Roast Pork Sandwiches
Jerk Chicken Sandwiches
Caribbean Salad w/ Kale and Black Beans
Guava Raisin Bread Pudding
Roongie Juice “Tropical Fruit Punch”
Hibiscus Tea

SEE THE FULL MENU WITH DELICIOUS DESCRIPTIONS HERE:




The 23rd Annual NA Spiritual Retreat will be held at the KOA in Sugarloaf Key, FL  from April 23rd-26th. The 4 day retreat will be full of events, guest speakers, and of course, a lot of great food by Key West Personal Chef. 

www.keywestpersonalchef.com 





https://www.smore.com/cjqhs-key-west-personal-chef-welcomes-you

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Key West Personal Chef-Catering

Having a party or event at your home or another location? Did you know that Key West Personal Chef offers drop off service of Hors D'oeuvres Platters, Appetizers, or Complete Meals? 

We also provide wait staff and bar staff for hassle free, perfect events, and you don't have to lift a finger, just enjoy your perfect party!

Here is our sample Hors D'oeuvres Menu:
Assorted Mini Sandwiches
Cuban/Turkey, arugula, truffle honey mustard/Caprese/Honey Ham and Cheddar
Grilled Chicken Skewers
Jerk w/ citrus demi Or Herb w/ Dijonaise sauce
Baby Crab Cakes
Lump Crab Cakes w/ Key Lime caper remoulade
Crab Bollitos
Fired Crab Balls with Spicy Mayo dipping sauce
Conch Fritters
Key Lime cocktail sauce
Steak Bleu
Garlic crostini topped with seared beef, buttermilk bleu and candied pecan
Spanakopita
Spinach and feta cheese in phyllo dough
Crab Rangoon
Jumbo lump Crab meat cream cheese in fried wonton skin with dipping sauce
Goat Cheese Herb Crostini
Goat cheese, herbs, and roasted red pepper on crostini
This is just a sample of some of our offerings. If you don't see anything you like, call us for a free consultation and personalized menu that suits your specific tastes and needs. 


See more  sample menus here:
http://www.keywestpersonalchef.com/sample-menus.html
888.882.3336   Call today for your consultation

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Learn to Cook with Key West Personal Chef

Sign up for ​Cooking Lessons at Isle Cook with Key West Personal Chef Martin Liz. 
Classes will be held on May 6th and May 13th at 5:30pm. Learn to cook and then enjoy eating classic Cuban dishes:
 “Mollettes” - A truly unique dish of Key West, Kobe beef picadillo stuffed in Cuban bread breaded and fried,served with a Caribbean bird pepper sauce
   • Seafood Enchilado or “Chilao” - “Ocean to Table” seafood stew with a tomato- beer base, and yellow corn grits“
   • Queen of all Pudding” - Rum-bathed guava and raisin bread pudding topped with meringue, a Key West native favorite 
Chef and culinary author Martin Liz is a 3rd generation Key West native. Born in Key West of Cuban heritage, he is a true CONCH.  He is classically French trained and specializes in preparing Key West's fresh seafood using the traditional Key West-Cuban cooking styles passed down for generations in his family.

Spearheading the 'Ocean to Table' movement, Chef Martin makes an amazing array of truly unique Key West and Caribbean delicacies. He focuses on utilizing local seafood and exotic, indigenous flora and fauna. His natural creativity coupled with classical training and a desire to preserve the largely lost culinary traditions of his heritage, meld an exotic mix of Cuban, Asian, Afro-Caribbean and French-West Indies. His pallet represents tastes that are exclusively, undeniably, Key West. 

In Chef Martin Liz’s cooking lessons you will learn about the many different types of amazing sea foods. The class will focus on locally sourced unique ingredients, exotic fruits, spices, herbs, and introduction to classic conch cuisine.

Sign up here: http://islecookkeywest.com/lessons-schedule.htm
Visit us at www.keywestpersonalchef.com 

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Cero: The Best of the Mackerels

Along with the snowbirds and the cool weather come the skipjacks and the mackerel.

The king mackerel season opens and the annual king mackerel tournament brings a crowd. Sport fishermen give it all they’ve got to bring in the best catch of all.
There are many types of mackerel but the best is the cero mackerel. The cero mackerel isn’t the biggest of the mackerels but by far the tastiest. It is a sushi grade fish that is best served as sashimi and makes an amazing ceviche.
It is a true delicacy of the Key West and the Florida Keys and often under appreciated.
My favorite way to enjoy cero mackerel is in sashimi form with a twist! Using local flavors and some Key West flair! Fresh slice the cero paper thin and eat with a key lime grain mustard vinaigrette. Slice, dip and enjoy.
Key Lime Grain Mustard Vinaigrette
  • 1 minced shallot
  • 2 tablespoons grain mustard
  • ½ cup fresh squeezed key lime juice
  • ½ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • Sea salt to taste
  • Fresh ground black pepper to taste
Add shallots, grain mustard, and key lime juice to mixing bowl. Stir with whisk and slowly add extra virgin olive oil until blended. Finish by seasoning your vinaigrette to taste with sea salt and fresh ground black pepper. Serve with your fresh catch and enjoy!

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Shoreline Snapper!

Shoreline snapper! An abundance of great seafood is a lot closer than you think.

So many fishermen go out and spend boat loads of money on rods, reels, boats with all the bells and whistles and often come home with out much of a catch. That’s why they call it fishing and don’t call it catching. There is no worse feeling than being skunked! Believe me, I know. It has happened to me more than a few times.
While you’re cruising around the Keys you will see many people fishing the shore line. You will see people fishing off bridges, sea walls, piers, and random culverts that pass threw the islands. Many times you wonder if they actually catch anything. You better believe they do! They catch a variety of snapper – like gray and lane snapper, grunts, groupers, and the occasional wassa or jewfish.
As a boy, my friend Ivan and I would fish from the seawall across from the car dealership on N. Roosevelt Blvd. We would buy some frozen heron and squid and fish from the shore line. Fishing strictly with a Cuban line, you might know it as a yoyo.
I remember on one occasion, Ivan and I were fishing late at night when it started to rain. So I said, “Ivan I think it’s starting to rain”. When I said that he began to laugh hysterically as he was swing the line from his yoyo around about to cast his line and bait juice was flying all over me. We still get a laugh out of that. None the less, we always had a few fish to take home and fry.
Fish and Grits
Snapper:
  • 1 snapper
  • 1 cup flour and 1 cup corn starch mixed together and seasoned with salt and pepper
  • 3 cups Peanut oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste
Any type of snapper or grunt is great for this dish.
Make sure to clean your fish well, gut and de-gill your fish.
By scraping the fish with a fork you can descale the snapper.
After your fish is scaled give it a rinse and wash loose scales away.
If you visit a fish market to purchase your fish you can have them clean it for you. Ask for it gutted and descaled.
Score your snapper by making cuts just through the skin.
Season your snapper heavily with salt and pepper.
Dredge in a mixture of 50% flour and 50% corn starch.
Deep fry the dredged fish at 325 degrees for about 10 – 15 minutes depending on size of the fish.
Plate it up with cheese grits and enjoy from the cheeks to the crispy crunch of the tail.
Make sure you are careful that you don’t swallow a bone. Hope you enjoy!

Cheese grits:
  • 2 cups chicken stock
  • 1 cup instant grits
  • ½ cup Machego cheese (or your favorite cheese)
  • Whole butter
  • ½ cup heavy cream
  • Salt and pepper to taste
In a medium size pot bring the chicken stock and heavy cream to a boil.
Add grits and stir. Turn heat on range down to medium high heat and let the grits simmer for about 5 minutes.
Finish by stirring in cheese and butter.
Then season to taste with salt and pepper.
If grits become too thick add chicken stock and stir until desired consistency.

Call us to schedule private cooking lessons and dinner in your home or vacation rental in Key West or the Lower Keys. www.keywestpersonalchef.com   888-882-3336