Saturday, October 25, 2008
Frittata!
I can't sleep. Perhaps it's because I'm still excited about the frittata I made for dinner.
Let me start off by saying that this is my first frittata and I was a bit worried. I mean, think of all the things that could go wrong (eggs that don't set, uneven cooking - well, okay, those are the only two I can think of). But I was pleased with the results! I mostly made this as a way to use up some of the summer sausage I got in my meat bag from natural farms, but it might become a staple around here.
Ingredients:
1/2 pound beef summer sausage, chopped
1 cup diced potatoes (I had a couple little purple ones), partially baked and seasoned with salt and pepper
about 5 cups spinach (mine was from Bootstrap Farm)
1 medium onion, chopped
1 fat shallot, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 tbsp butter
4 ounces cheese (I had munster)
12 eggs (or the equivalent in egg substitute, or a mix of both)
3 tablespoons milk
Steps:
1.) Turn on broiler and set to 425 degrees. In a 12-inch nonstick oven-safe skillet cook the sausage over medium heat until it coats the pan with a bit o' grease.
2.) Add onion, shallot and garlic and cook until the onions are soft. Add potatoes and cook another few minutes.
3.) Tear up the spinach and place on top of the onions/sausage/potatoes along with the butter. Season with salt, cover and cook a few minutes (until wilted).4.) Whisk together the eggs, milk and season with salt and pepper. Turn the heat down to low and add the eggs to the pan. Cook, stirring the eggs, until about half done.
5.) Once the eggs are half done, smooth out the surface of the eggs and cook about 2 minutes so the bottom of the frittata can firm up (don't stir!).
6.) Sprinkle cheese over top of frittata (or stick the slices on there, like I did) and stick it under the broiler. Cook until the top of the frittata is nice and golden brown. Slice and eat!
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Pecan Caramel Rolls
Today I made these:Ain't they purdy?
I used the sweet dough recipe from Danielle's Tangerine Rolls (found here). I made a half-batch and used whole wheat flour and upped the cinnamon.
Other ingredients:
brown sugar
butter
half n half (or cream or milk, I guess)
pecans
vanilla
cinnamon
nutmeg
Of course for caramel rolls you need caramel! I wanted to get that caramel-covered effect on top of the rolls. This step was dangerous because I now know how easy it is to make delicious caramel sauce in just a few minutes. This was about 2 tablespoons butter + 4ish tablespoons brown sugar (maybe more) + salt + a little vanilla and then a bit of half and half to thin it out.
I'm not gonna lie, I cut up an apple just so I had an excuse to eat some of this delicious, delicious caramel.
I was worried about the caramel sticking to the pan, so I devised this elaborate method for prepping my little 6-inch cake pan (waxed paper circle and strips along the sides - I coated the pan with butter first for good measure).
After rolling the dough out, I sprinkled it with about 3 tablespoons of butter in small cubes, a hefty amount of brown sugar (1/4-1/3 cup or so?), about the same amount of pecans, maybe at tablespoon of cinnamon and a little nutmeg. It was super easy to roll up and slice (a knife worked fine).
I covered the bottom of the pan with pecans and poured the caramel sauce over top. Then I stuck the rolls on top and let them rise again (they got big!). Then I cooked them for about 25 minutes at 375 degrees. I was glad that the pan liner extended beyond the pan because the rolls got quite tall.They were easy to flip out of the pan and clean up was simple - just peel off the paper!
I used the sweet dough recipe from Danielle's Tangerine Rolls (found here). I made a half-batch and used whole wheat flour and upped the cinnamon.
Other ingredients:
brown sugar
butter
half n half (or cream or milk, I guess)
pecans
vanilla
cinnamon
nutmeg
Of course for caramel rolls you need caramel! I wanted to get that caramel-covered effect on top of the rolls. This step was dangerous because I now know how easy it is to make delicious caramel sauce in just a few minutes. This was about 2 tablespoons butter + 4ish tablespoons brown sugar (maybe more) + salt + a little vanilla and then a bit of half and half to thin it out.
I'm not gonna lie, I cut up an apple just so I had an excuse to eat some of this delicious, delicious caramel.
I was worried about the caramel sticking to the pan, so I devised this elaborate method for prepping my little 6-inch cake pan (waxed paper circle and strips along the sides - I coated the pan with butter first for good measure).
After rolling the dough out, I sprinkled it with about 3 tablespoons of butter in small cubes, a hefty amount of brown sugar (1/4-1/3 cup or so?), about the same amount of pecans, maybe at tablespoon of cinnamon and a little nutmeg. It was super easy to roll up and slice (a knife worked fine).
I covered the bottom of the pan with pecans and poured the caramel sauce over top. Then I stuck the rolls on top and let them rise again (they got big!). Then I cooked them for about 25 minutes at 375 degrees. I was glad that the pan liner extended beyond the pan because the rolls got quite tall.They were easy to flip out of the pan and clean up was simple - just peel off the paper!
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Roasted Chicken
I make a lot of whole chickens because they are relatively cheap and always tasty.
Here is a method (adapted from Cook's Illustrated) that is fool-proof.
You need:
-A whole chicken (around 3 pounds)
-Salt
-Pepper
-2 tbsp olive oil
-A deep skillet that can go stove top to oven
-Some good kitchen shears
-a small knife
Steps:
1.) Wash the chicken and pat dry. Pre-heat oven to 375.
2.) Remove backbone using kitchen shears (use your strength!).
3.) Remove the ribs with a knife (if you want).
4.) Press down to flatten the bird.
5.) Season bird liberally with salt and pepper.
5.) Heat olive oil in skillet over medium/medium-high heat.
6.) Stick the chicken in the skillet, skin side down and brown for 5-10 minutes (until the skin is golden brown). Stick the backbone in there too, and reserve for stock.
7.) Stick the skillet in the oven.
8.) After 20 minutes, flip bird over (so it is skin side up).
9.) Cook about 20 more minutes, or until the temp is right.
10.) Let rest at least 5 minutes before serving
Of course, there tons of ways to fancy this up. But really, you don't need to.
Cran-Apple Crisp
Apple crisp is the ultimate fall dessert. It's warm and full of apples - what says fall more clearly than that? Best of all, this dessert is so easy to make (good for those too lazy to make pie crust!). I had some apples in the fridge that were a bit too mealy to eat as-is (now that it is Honeycrisp season I have little patience for mealy apples), so I felt the time was "ripe"!
Cran-Apple Crisp
So, this one was easy to wing. I had some dried cranberries leftover so I threw some in to make the filling more interesting. The "crisp" for this recipe is more crumby than crispy, but I like it that way. It makes a small batch, 4 small servings worth.
Ingredients:
For the filling-
4 small apples, cored and sliced
1 heaping tablespoon brown sugar
1/4 cup dried cranberries
1/2 tbsp butter
cinnamon
nutmeg
For the topping-
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/4 cup white sugar
3/4 cup oats
2 1/2 tbsp butter (very cold, cut in small cubes)
cinnamon
nutmeg
nuts
Steps:
1.) Butter a 6-inch round cake pan (or similarly sized dish). Toss apples and cranberries with brown sugar in the pan.
2.) Cut butter into small pieces and mix in. Season with cinnamon and nutmeg (like 1/4 tspn of nutmeg and 1/2 tspn of cinnamon?)
3.) In a medium-sized bowl combine flour, sugar and oats and mix well. Season with cinnamon/nutmeg if desired.
4.) Cut in butter until mixture is crumbly.
5.) Top apples with crumb topping. Sort of push it down into the apples. Sprinkle with nuts (I used pecans) if desired (alternatively you could mix nuts into the filling or topping itself).
6.) Bake in a 350 degree oven about 25-30 minutes or until the apples are tender and the topping is lightly browned.
7.) Serve with ice cream (this is a required step!)
Cran-Apple Crisp
So, this one was easy to wing. I had some dried cranberries leftover so I threw some in to make the filling more interesting. The "crisp" for this recipe is more crumby than crispy, but I like it that way. It makes a small batch, 4 small servings worth.
Ingredients:
For the filling-
4 small apples, cored and sliced
1 heaping tablespoon brown sugar
1/4 cup dried cranberries
1/2 tbsp butter
cinnamon
nutmeg
For the topping-
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/4 cup white sugar
3/4 cup oats
2 1/2 tbsp butter (very cold, cut in small cubes)
cinnamon
nutmeg
nuts
Steps:
1.) Butter a 6-inch round cake pan (or similarly sized dish). Toss apples and cranberries with brown sugar in the pan.
2.) Cut butter into small pieces and mix in. Season with cinnamon and nutmeg (like 1/4 tspn of nutmeg and 1/2 tspn of cinnamon?)
3.) In a medium-sized bowl combine flour, sugar and oats and mix well. Season with cinnamon/nutmeg if desired.
4.) Cut in butter until mixture is crumbly.
5.) Top apples with crumb topping. Sort of push it down into the apples. Sprinkle with nuts (I used pecans) if desired (alternatively you could mix nuts into the filling or topping itself).
6.) Bake in a 350 degree oven about 25-30 minutes or until the apples are tender and the topping is lightly browned.
7.) Serve with ice cream (this is a required step!)
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Post #4 for Today...
So, I guess Sunday is for food blog posting. I made one of my favorites for dinner, though, so I thought I should post it while I had time!
Lamb with Spicy Tomato Gravy
I guess that's a proper name for this dish. We haven't had lamb in awhile because the people we usually buy it from were showing their lambs at the fair. Well, now that the fair is over...that's no longer a problem. She didn't have much yesterday, so we got kabob meat instead of the ground lamb or stew meat we usually get. It was a little bit fattier than the other cuts but we dealt.
Ingredients:
1 pound lamb kabob meat
1 large onion, cut in half and sliced
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 medium tomatoes (2 large), halved and sliced
2 tbsps flour (whole wheat is fine)
1 cup chicken (or veggie) stock
1-2 tbsps cream
salt, pepper and cayenne
Steps:
1.) Toss chunks of lamb with flour seasoned with salt and pepper. Brown over high heat (it doesn't need to cook through yet), remove from pan.
2.) Add onion and garlic and cook until browned but still firm.
3.) Add tomatoes. Cook about 2 minutes.
4.) Add meat back to the pan, cover with stock and cover pan. Simmer until tomatoes completely break down and meat is tender. About 20 minutes.
5.) Uncover and allow some of the liquid to evaporate (until it is a nice sauce consistency).
6.) Add cayenne to taste.
7.) Add a splash of cream (1-2 tablespoons)
8.) Cook a little longer until desired consistency.
I usually serve this over mashed potatoes. Oh man, so good! But, you should probably eat a salad with it...
Lamb with Spicy Tomato Gravy
I guess that's a proper name for this dish. We haven't had lamb in awhile because the people we usually buy it from were showing their lambs at the fair. Well, now that the fair is over...that's no longer a problem. She didn't have much yesterday, so we got kabob meat instead of the ground lamb or stew meat we usually get. It was a little bit fattier than the other cuts but we dealt.
Ingredients:
1 pound lamb kabob meat
1 large onion, cut in half and sliced
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 medium tomatoes (2 large), halved and sliced
2 tbsps flour (whole wheat is fine)
1 cup chicken (or veggie) stock
1-2 tbsps cream
salt, pepper and cayenne
Steps:
1.) Toss chunks of lamb with flour seasoned with salt and pepper. Brown over high heat (it doesn't need to cook through yet), remove from pan.
2.) Add onion and garlic and cook until browned but still firm.
3.) Add tomatoes. Cook about 2 minutes.
4.) Add meat back to the pan, cover with stock and cover pan. Simmer until tomatoes completely break down and meat is tender. About 20 minutes.
5.) Uncover and allow some of the liquid to evaporate (until it is a nice sauce consistency).
6.) Add cayenne to taste.
7.) Add a splash of cream (1-2 tablespoons)
8.) Cook a little longer until desired consistency.
I usually serve this over mashed potatoes. Oh man, so good! But, you should probably eat a salad with it...
Something lighter...
I do get stuck in cooking ruts. I do the same stuff over and over: curry, lasagna, roasted chicken, stir fry, repeat. Well, a few weeks ago Arlo went solo to the farmer's market and came back with some tuna steaks (so not local). I thought these offered the perfect opportunity to do something a little different so I decided to go for a tropical feel and make some honey-soy tuna steaks with mango salsa and tostones.
Tostones are popular in Cuban cooking and are twice-fried plantains. I had one yellow plantain and one green plantain so decided to use both to explore the contrast between the sweeter, banana-like yellow fruit and its starchy, green companion.
Honey-Soy Tuna Steaks
2 Tuna steaks
3 Tablespoons honey
3 Tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon fresh ginger
Steps:
1.) Marinate the steaks in the other ingredients for at least 30 minutes.
2) Grill/cook steaks until desired done-ness. I went for pretty rare because that's what Arlo likes.
Mango Salsa
I guess mango salsa is kind of boring, but it went quite well with the tuna and the tostones.
Ingredients:
1 ripe mango
1 red tomato
1 orange tomato
1 red bell pepper
1 white bell pepper
3 green onions (whites only)
juice of 1 orange
1 spicy red/orange/yellow pepper (habanero works, I used a citrus-y pepper that was EXTREMELY hot. yikes)Don't let this pepper's friendly appearance fool you...
Steps:
1.) Chop everything (make sure the spicy pepper is finely chopped!) and mix together all ingredients. Salt to taste.
Tostones
Peeling the green plantain was kind of a pain, so be prepared. You kind of need to cut it off because it sticks to the flesh.
Ingredients:
olive oil
plantains
salt
Steps:
1.) Cut plantains in about 1 inch slices
2.) Fry in olive oil until slightly brown(These are the green plantains pre-smashing and the yellow plantains post-smashing)
3.) Remove from oil and smash flat with a fork (or press if you have one)
4.) Re-fry until crispy. Season with salt.
The green plantains were very good. Nice and crisp texture with a potato-chip/banana-like taste. The yellow plantains stayed pretty mushy (not enough starch in them, I guess) but were still pretty tasty. These were also fun to make! Keep in mind that the green plantains (with their high starch content) take longer to cook.
My camera ran out of batteries at this point so no pictures of it all together!
Tostones are popular in Cuban cooking and are twice-fried plantains. I had one yellow plantain and one green plantain so decided to use both to explore the contrast between the sweeter, banana-like yellow fruit and its starchy, green companion.
Honey-Soy Tuna Steaks
2 Tuna steaks
3 Tablespoons honey
3 Tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon fresh ginger
Steps:
1.) Marinate the steaks in the other ingredients for at least 30 minutes.
2) Grill/cook steaks until desired done-ness. I went for pretty rare because that's what Arlo likes.
Mango Salsa
I guess mango salsa is kind of boring, but it went quite well with the tuna and the tostones.
Ingredients:
1 ripe mango
1 red tomato
1 orange tomato
1 red bell pepper
1 white bell pepper
3 green onions (whites only)
juice of 1 orange
1 spicy red/orange/yellow pepper (habanero works, I used a citrus-y pepper that was EXTREMELY hot. yikes)Don't let this pepper's friendly appearance fool you...
Steps:
1.) Chop everything (make sure the spicy pepper is finely chopped!) and mix together all ingredients. Salt to taste.
Tostones
Peeling the green plantain was kind of a pain, so be prepared. You kind of need to cut it off because it sticks to the flesh.
Ingredients:
olive oil
plantains
salt
Steps:
1.) Cut plantains in about 1 inch slices
2.) Fry in olive oil until slightly brown(These are the green plantains pre-smashing and the yellow plantains post-smashing)
3.) Remove from oil and smash flat with a fork (or press if you have one)
4.) Re-fry until crispy. Season with salt.
The green plantains were very good. Nice and crisp texture with a potato-chip/banana-like taste. The yellow plantains stayed pretty mushy (not enough starch in them, I guess) but were still pretty tasty. These were also fun to make! Keep in mind that the green plantains (with their high starch content) take longer to cook.
My camera ran out of batteries at this point so no pictures of it all together!
Pasta+Cheese, Another Variety
So I realize my last post was about alfredo. This will be the Amer'kin version: Mac and Cheese.
I made this a few weeks ago with leftover cheese from our "Wine and (Grilled) Cheese" party.
Mac 'n Cheese with a Kick!
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour (whole wheat is fine)
1 1/2 cup skim milk (or whole, or - heaven forbid - cream, if that is how you roll).
1 1/2 cups cheese (I used white and yellow cheddar and some gouda)
4 cups cooked rotini (or whatever chunky pasta you like - whole wheat is good)
1 standard piece of bread worth of bread crumbs, toasted
cayenne pepper, salt and black pepper to taste
Steps:
1.) Make a roux by melting the butter and whisking in the flour. Keep the heat on low. You want the roux to brown but not burn - this deepens the flavor of the sauce and helps it thicken.
2.) Whisk in the milk and heat through.
3.) Whisk in cheese a little at a time (reserving 1/2 cup) until melted.
4.) Simmer sauce until it thickly coats the back of a spoon.
5.) Season sauce with salt, pepper, and a little cayenne pepper. Season bread crumbs with the same.6.) Pour pasta into baking dish (I think mine was about 2 quarts round). Add sauce and stir. Stir in reserved cheese and top with bread crumbs.
7.) Bake at 350ish until the top is brown and sides are getting crunchy!
Possible additions: This would be good with chicken or veggies mixed in so be creative.
I made this a few weeks ago with leftover cheese from our "Wine and (Grilled) Cheese" party.
Mac 'n Cheese with a Kick!
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour (whole wheat is fine)
1 1/2 cup skim milk (or whole, or - heaven forbid - cream, if that is how you roll).
1 1/2 cups cheese (I used white and yellow cheddar and some gouda)
4 cups cooked rotini (or whatever chunky pasta you like - whole wheat is good)
1 standard piece of bread worth of bread crumbs, toasted
cayenne pepper, salt and black pepper to taste
Steps:
1.) Make a roux by melting the butter and whisking in the flour. Keep the heat on low. You want the roux to brown but not burn - this deepens the flavor of the sauce and helps it thicken.
2.) Whisk in the milk and heat through.
3.) Whisk in cheese a little at a time (reserving 1/2 cup) until melted.
4.) Simmer sauce until it thickly coats the back of a spoon.
5.) Season sauce with salt, pepper, and a little cayenne pepper. Season bread crumbs with the same.6.) Pour pasta into baking dish (I think mine was about 2 quarts round). Add sauce and stir. Stir in reserved cheese and top with bread crumbs.
7.) Bake at 350ish until the top is brown and sides are getting crunchy!
Possible additions: This would be good with chicken or veggies mixed in so be creative.
Pasta Party
It's funny how when you cook something yourself there is no denying what's in it. At a restaurant you can order alfredo and not really consider what it's made of. Well, time to face the truth everyone! Last night Arlo and I had a dinner party. There were a cup of butter and a quart of cream involved in this meal, so be forewarned!
Simple Alfredo Sauce
Ingredients:
1 part butter (use 1 cup for 8 meal-size servings)
2 parts cream (2 cups for 8 servings)
2 parts good parmigiano-reggiano, grated (2 cup for 8 servings)
Because there are only a few ingredients in this recipe, quality is so important. This is not the time to use kraft cheese, people.
Steps:
1.) Warm butter in a saucier or saute pan. Heat gently over medium heat until all butter is liquid.
(Yes, this much butter)
2.) Slowly whisk in cream. Keep the heat on medium-low. We don't want any curdling going on.
3.)Slowly whisk in cheese. Only put in a little at a time to prevent cheese clumps.
4.) Lightly simmer, whisking constantly, until the sauce thickly coats the back of a wooden spoon (or a piece of farfalle :) ).
Toss this sauce with a chunky pasta (farfalle, penne, fettuccine) and watch it disappear.
Pesto!
To me, pesto is one of the most flexible things you can make. I mean think about it - nuts, olive oil, garlic, basil and cheese in a food processor, what could go wrong?
Ingredients:
2 cloves garlic
1/3 cup toasted almonds. Pine nuts are traditional, I hear walnuts also work.
1/3 cup pecarino (or parm) cheese
2 packed cups basil (more to taste)
olive oil
Steps:
Add the first four ingredients (in order) to a food processor, blending after each addition. Use olive oil to bring the pesto together, as needed. In the end, the pesto should be fairly thick, think hummus more than marinara. Lemon juice is also good in there but I forgot to buy lemons.
Add the pesto to hot pasta, vegetables, meat, etc. A little goes a long way! At the party I served the pesto with spinach fettuccine and baby tomatoes.
Tiramisu
This dessert seems easy enough. Ladyfingers, coffee, cream - couldn't be too hard, right? Well...while tiramisu may be easy conceptually, it takes some work to execute. This is especially true because I resolved to whip everything by hand. I thought that if I was going to make something so caloric I should at least use my own muscles to make it.
Ingredients:
(For the zabaglione)
5 egg yolks
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup marsala wine
(for the tiramisu)
1 batch zabaglione
About 42 ladyfingers I like these
2 cups heavy whipping cream
16 ounces cream cheese
4 tablespoons ricotta
2 1/2 cups strong coffee
Vanilla
6 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons Irish whisky, brandy or some other caramel-y booze
Steps:
1.) Make the zabaglione by whipping the egg yolks and sugar in the top part of a double boiler (off heat) until pale yellow in color. Put the mixture over simmering water and whisk in marsala, a little at a time. Continue whisking until the consistency is similar to moderately thick pudding. Refrigerate zabaglione until cool.
2.) Whip 1 cup cream with 2 tablespoons sugar(look at them peaks!)
3.) Combine cream cheese, 1/2 cup heavy cream and ricotta and mix until smooth.
4.) Fold cream cheese mixture and zabaglione into whipped cream. Mix with a spatula until well-blended, refrigerate 1 hour.
5.) Arrange one layer of lady fingers on the bottom of a 9 by 13 pan (glass is nice). Stir together coffee, 1/2 cup cream, 4 tablespoons sugar, vanilla to taste (1-2 tablespoons) and booze. Spoon about 1 tablespoon of the coffee mixture over each ladyfinger, until they are soaked but not mushy. There shouldn't be any extra liquid on the bottom of the pan.
6.) Spread 1/2 of the whipped cream/zabaglione mixture over the lady fingers.
7.) Repeat layering one more time.
8.) Sift cocoa powder on top of tiramisu.
9.) Refrigerate several hours before serving (so the cookies get all nice and mushy).There are lots of great variations possible for this recipe. The coffee mixture could be replaced with chocolate milk for a more kid-friendly dessert. Hmm, how about peanut butter in with the cream/cream cheese?
I also made some delish salad dressing (nice balsamic, olive oil, garlic and sugar), spaghetti squash and roasted squash and cubanelles.
Simple Alfredo Sauce
Ingredients:
1 part butter (use 1 cup for 8 meal-size servings)
2 parts cream (2 cups for 8 servings)
2 parts good parmigiano-reggiano, grated (2 cup for 8 servings)
Because there are only a few ingredients in this recipe, quality is so important. This is not the time to use kraft cheese, people.
Steps:
1.) Warm butter in a saucier or saute pan. Heat gently over medium heat until all butter is liquid.
(Yes, this much butter)
2.) Slowly whisk in cream. Keep the heat on medium-low. We don't want any curdling going on.
3.)Slowly whisk in cheese. Only put in a little at a time to prevent cheese clumps.
4.) Lightly simmer, whisking constantly, until the sauce thickly coats the back of a wooden spoon (or a piece of farfalle :) ).
Toss this sauce with a chunky pasta (farfalle, penne, fettuccine) and watch it disappear.
Pesto!
To me, pesto is one of the most flexible things you can make. I mean think about it - nuts, olive oil, garlic, basil and cheese in a food processor, what could go wrong?
Ingredients:
2 cloves garlic
1/3 cup toasted almonds. Pine nuts are traditional, I hear walnuts also work.
1/3 cup pecarino (or parm) cheese
2 packed cups basil (more to taste)
olive oil
Steps:
Add the first four ingredients (in order) to a food processor, blending after each addition. Use olive oil to bring the pesto together, as needed. In the end, the pesto should be fairly thick, think hummus more than marinara. Lemon juice is also good in there but I forgot to buy lemons.
Add the pesto to hot pasta, vegetables, meat, etc. A little goes a long way! At the party I served the pesto with spinach fettuccine and baby tomatoes.
Tiramisu
This dessert seems easy enough. Ladyfingers, coffee, cream - couldn't be too hard, right? Well...while tiramisu may be easy conceptually, it takes some work to execute. This is especially true because I resolved to whip everything by hand. I thought that if I was going to make something so caloric I should at least use my own muscles to make it.
Ingredients:
(For the zabaglione)
5 egg yolks
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup marsala wine
(for the tiramisu)
1 batch zabaglione
About 42 ladyfingers I like these
2 cups heavy whipping cream
16 ounces cream cheese
4 tablespoons ricotta
2 1/2 cups strong coffee
Vanilla
6 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons Irish whisky, brandy or some other caramel-y booze
Steps:
1.) Make the zabaglione by whipping the egg yolks and sugar in the top part of a double boiler (off heat) until pale yellow in color. Put the mixture over simmering water and whisk in marsala, a little at a time. Continue whisking until the consistency is similar to moderately thick pudding. Refrigerate zabaglione until cool.
2.) Whip 1 cup cream with 2 tablespoons sugar(look at them peaks!)
3.) Combine cream cheese, 1/2 cup heavy cream and ricotta and mix until smooth.
4.) Fold cream cheese mixture and zabaglione into whipped cream. Mix with a spatula until well-blended, refrigerate 1 hour.
5.) Arrange one layer of lady fingers on the bottom of a 9 by 13 pan (glass is nice). Stir together coffee, 1/2 cup cream, 4 tablespoons sugar, vanilla to taste (1-2 tablespoons) and booze. Spoon about 1 tablespoon of the coffee mixture over each ladyfinger, until they are soaked but not mushy. There shouldn't be any extra liquid on the bottom of the pan.
6.) Spread 1/2 of the whipped cream/zabaglione mixture over the lady fingers.
7.) Repeat layering one more time.
8.) Sift cocoa powder on top of tiramisu.
9.) Refrigerate several hours before serving (so the cookies get all nice and mushy).There are lots of great variations possible for this recipe. The coffee mixture could be replaced with chocolate milk for a more kid-friendly dessert. Hmm, how about peanut butter in with the cream/cream cheese?
I also made some delish salad dressing (nice balsamic, olive oil, garlic and sugar), spaghetti squash and roasted squash and cubanelles.
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Pesto Perfect!
At the farm mar this weekend I got a big bunch of basil (for the party last night). I had so much leftover that I decided (to Arlo's delight) to make some pesto. I just kind of winged (wung?) it.
First I toasted some sliced almonds (handful - 1/2 cup?) and then blended them in the food processor with 3 or 4 cloves of garlic. I then added a big handful (3/4 cup?) of leftover pecorino cheese and blended it, adding olive oil to help in the process. Afterword it looked like this:
Then I added several handfuls of basil (maybe 3 packed cups?), some lemon juice (from about 1/3 of a lemon) and more olive oil.This is what it looked like when it was done. Not the prettiest thing but yummy!I had oatmeal for dinner but Arlo enjoyed the pesto with some spinach/Jerusalem artichoke pasta.
First I toasted some sliced almonds (handful - 1/2 cup?) and then blended them in the food processor with 3 or 4 cloves of garlic. I then added a big handful (3/4 cup?) of leftover pecorino cheese and blended it, adding olive oil to help in the process. Afterword it looked like this:
Then I added several handfuls of basil (maybe 3 packed cups?), some lemon juice (from about 1/3 of a lemon) and more olive oil.This is what it looked like when it was done. Not the prettiest thing but yummy!I had oatmeal for dinner but Arlo enjoyed the pesto with some spinach/Jerusalem artichoke pasta.
Wine and (Grilled) Cheese Party
I like having dinner parties. They allow me to cook all day and make stuff I usually wouldn't for just Arlo (my fiance) and I. I wanted to fancy-up some ordinary food and thought grilled cheese sandwiches would be perfect.
Planning started earlier this week. I had several pounds of tomatoes and thought tomato soup was a good idea, so I peeled and seeded the tomatoes and packed them in juice for later. The soup was a simple recipe from Cook's Illustrated "Soups and Stews." I roasted the tomatoes with some brown sugar to bring out their flavor (per CI's advice). The soup is based on butter, shallots, tomato paste (from my awesome tube paste!) and flour and rounded out with broth, tomato juice, the roasted tomatoes and some cream. I've never actually had tomato soup before but I think it tasted pretty good! Nice and...tomato-y. It had a nice red color too, despite the broth and cream.
For the sandwiches Arlo and I picked up a variety of cheeses (mozzarella, pecarino, gouda, fontina, two types of cheddar, monteray and a cheese with habanero in it). I shredded and separated them all (except the mozzarella which I just pulled apart as I went) for ease of melting.
For bread we got some sourdough and this great "tuscan-style" bread made by this bakery (yummy). We also picked up some pumpernickel bread because Arlo wanted some.
Of course, all you need for a tasty grilled cheese sandwich is good bread and cheese (and maybe some butter) but I wanted to go further so we got some granny smith apples, basil, red and yellow tomato, cilantro, onion and (what else?) bacon.
Cheddar, green apple and bacon sammies were popular as were pecarino, mozzarella, basil and tomato. Yummy!
Dinner was complete with a salad (romaine, toasted almonds, feta, dried cranberries and a homemade dressing of orange and lemon juice, apple cider vinegar, honey, garlic, basil, salt and olive oil), some iced green tea with honey, cookies (with oats, cranberries, white and dark chocolate, almonds and almond butter) and wine (everyone brought a bottle to share). Oh, and a cake that Rachel brought (yellow with chocolate icing) and homemade chocolate ice cream and grape/tequila sorbet.
It was fun, but now I have to do the dishes :/.
Planning started earlier this week. I had several pounds of tomatoes and thought tomato soup was a good idea, so I peeled and seeded the tomatoes and packed them in juice for later. The soup was a simple recipe from Cook's Illustrated "Soups and Stews." I roasted the tomatoes with some brown sugar to bring out their flavor (per CI's advice). The soup is based on butter, shallots, tomato paste (from my awesome tube paste!) and flour and rounded out with broth, tomato juice, the roasted tomatoes and some cream. I've never actually had tomato soup before but I think it tasted pretty good! Nice and...tomato-y. It had a nice red color too, despite the broth and cream.
For the sandwiches Arlo and I picked up a variety of cheeses (mozzarella, pecarino, gouda, fontina, two types of cheddar, monteray and a cheese with habanero in it). I shredded and separated them all (except the mozzarella which I just pulled apart as I went) for ease of melting.
For bread we got some sourdough and this great "tuscan-style" bread made by this bakery (yummy). We also picked up some pumpernickel bread because Arlo wanted some.
Of course, all you need for a tasty grilled cheese sandwich is good bread and cheese (and maybe some butter) but I wanted to go further so we got some granny smith apples, basil, red and yellow tomato, cilantro, onion and (what else?) bacon.
Cheddar, green apple and bacon sammies were popular as were pecarino, mozzarella, basil and tomato. Yummy!
Dinner was complete with a salad (romaine, toasted almonds, feta, dried cranberries and a homemade dressing of orange and lemon juice, apple cider vinegar, honey, garlic, basil, salt and olive oil), some iced green tea with honey, cookies (with oats, cranberries, white and dark chocolate, almonds and almond butter) and wine (everyone brought a bottle to share). Oh, and a cake that Rachel brought (yellow with chocolate icing) and homemade chocolate ice cream and grape/tequila sorbet.
It was fun, but now I have to do the dishes :/.
Camera catch-up/My first post
Oh man, excuse the formatting. This is my first effort.
My camera is full of food pictures so I figured I should get this blog up to speed before diving in.
Awhile ago I made some "buffaloaf" with meat from the farm market. Yesterday the guy we buy meat from called us "very regular customers" (his wife was trying to sell us all sorts of stuff and he was explaining that we knew what they had to offer). This was a very simple meatloaf with zucchini included. The mashed potatoes were small red potatoes cooked in homemade broth. Instead of covering the potatoes completely with the broth I just put a little in there and steam them and then use the remaining broth too mash, no waste!
I also made an experimental bread. I was really wanting some chocolate so I made this decadent zucchini bread with cocoa, nuts, coconut (had some leftover) and 60% dark chocolate chips (so fabulous for baking). It was so wonderfully moist and delicious.
Thats all for now!
My camera is full of food pictures so I figured I should get this blog up to speed before diving in.
Awhile ago I made some "buffaloaf" with meat from the farm market. Yesterday the guy we buy meat from called us "very regular customers" (his wife was trying to sell us all sorts of stuff and he was explaining that we knew what they had to offer). This was a very simple meatloaf with zucchini included. The mashed potatoes were small red potatoes cooked in homemade broth. Instead of covering the potatoes completely with the broth I just put a little in there and steam them and then use the remaining broth too mash, no waste!
My ice cream maker has also been busy. One of my favorite things to make is watermelon sorbet is because it is so easy and cheap (one watermelon makes a LOT of sorbet). A month or so ago some ladies started selling grapes at the farm mar so I have been experimenting with grape sorbet. It doesn't have an intense grape-y flavor, but it tastes good and the color is so amazing! Peach and chocolate ice cream (not together) have also become staples.
Sausage and peppers have also made appearances at dinner. My dad used to make this dish for me on my birthday because it was my favorite. This is basically onions and bell peppers (which have been plentiful the past few weeks) cooked with italian sausage and covered with a simple tomato sauce (just tomatoes, garlic, olive oil and salt).
Yummy and pretty!
Sausage and peppers have also made appearances at dinner. My dad used to make this dish for me on my birthday because it was my favorite. This is basically onions and bell peppers (which have been plentiful the past few weeks) cooked with italian sausage and covered with a simple tomato sauce (just tomatoes, garlic, olive oil and salt).
Yummy and pretty!
I also made an experimental bread. I was really wanting some chocolate so I made this decadent zucchini bread with cocoa, nuts, coconut (had some leftover) and 60% dark chocolate chips (so fabulous for baking). It was so wonderfully moist and delicious.
Thats all for now!
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