Tag Archives: #cooking

2 for Tuesday

There is a radio station I listened to when I was younger that, on Tuesdays, would play two songs by an artist.  The disc jockey would announce “two songs coming up from your favorite artist.”  Even though my musical tastes have, shall we say, evolved tremendously since those days (Despite what my teenage daughter might think!), I’m offering my version of the “2fer”…acorn squash.  Roasted and prepared two ways-one sweet, one savory.

It seems that when I make the roasted squash bread, sometimes it’s more orange and has a stronger, richer squash taste.  Not sure what to attribute this to, since I’m uncertain how to judge if the squash is ripe or not.  Nevertheless, it’s still delicious every time.  The raw sugar on the top gives it a nice, sweet (but not too much) crunch.

Just as when I bake zucchini bread, I freeze individual slices on a parchment lined cookie sheet, then wrap them individually.  This makes it so easy to pop one in the toaster oven for a minute or two.  So delicious with a bit of cream cheese or apple butter.

penne with acorn squash

2 acorn squash

1/2 cup leeks, washed and sliced thinly

1 pound penne

4 teaspoons olive oil

6 ounces pancetta, diced to 1/4 inch thickness

1/2 cup chicken stock or broth, preferably homemade

2 teaspoons chopped fresh rosemary

1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese

1/2 cup light cream

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Slice the squash in half lengthwise and remove the seeds with a spoon.  Cut each half crosswise into wedges, about 1/2 inch thick.  Lay the slices on a baking sheet and spray with organic olive oil cooking spray.  season with salt and pepper.  flip the squash and do the same to the other side.  Bake about 30 minutes, turning the slices over halfway through baking, until soft and slightly carmelized.

Meanwhile, cook the pasta according to directions.  Drain pasta, reserving approximately 1/2-1 cup of the pasta cooking water.  Let pasta sit in colander for now.  Peel squash and cut into chunks.

Heat 2 tsp olive oil over medium heat in large pot (you can use the same one you cooked the pasta in).  Saute the pancetta and leeks together until pancetta is slightly crispy and leeks are transparent and tender.  Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside.  Add the chicken broth/stock and scrape up any brown bits in the pan.  Stir in the rosemary.  Add pancetta, leeks and squash to the pan.  Stir in penne.  Add cream to the mixture and stir gently to coat.  This is where you can add a bit of the reserved pasta water if it’s too dry.  Stir in Parmesan cheese.  Serve with additional parmesan on top.

roasted acorn squash bread

1 1/3 cup all-purpose flour

1 cup whole-wheat pastry flour

1 tsp baking powder

1/2 tsp baking soda

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1 tsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp salt

1/4 tsp allspice

1/4 tsp ground cloves

1 1/4 cup squash puree

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup honey

1/2 cup canola oil

2 large eggs

2 large egg whites

1/4 cup raw sugar

1 cup chopped walnuts

To make squash puree:  Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Cut one large acorn squash in half and scoop out seeds with a spoon.   Place each half on a cookie sheet coated with nonstick cooking spray.  Bake in oven approximately 50 minutes or until fork tender.  Remove from oven and let cool.  Scrape squash into bowl with spoon.

Lower oven temperature 350 degrees.  Lightly oil and flour a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan.

Whisk all-purpose flour, whole-wheat flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, salt, allspice and cloves in a medium bowl until combined.

Beat squash puree, sugar, honey and oil in a large mixing bowl with electric mixer or a stand mixer until smooth, about 1 minute.  Beat in eggs and egg whites.  Reduce speed to low and add dry ingredients until combined.  Fold in chopped walnuts.

Pour into prepared loaf pan.  Sprinkle with raw sugar.  Bake approximately 75 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean.  Start checking for doneness at around one hour.  Cool in pan for 10 minutes after removing from oven, then turn out onto a wire rack and let cool.

*What radio station did you listen to when you were younger?

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fiercely fresh apple pie

 

I posted this as my status on Facebook a couple of days ago:

“While I like pumpkin lattes as much as the next person, ordering one is like admitting that summer is over”.

It’s no secret to those who know me that I can’t stand tolerate winter.  I suffer through until the days get longer, things can be touched without a jolt of static electricity, and I don’t have to wait 15 minutes for the car windows to defrost.  Meanwhile, my poor husband suffers through me asking him every other week to move to a more temperate climate.

Just as pumpkin lattes have arrived, so have the apples. While I’m looking forward to this in the coming weeks, in these early days of fall I’m enjoying a simple apple pie.

There several variations, but I prefer a straightforward pie without a lot of added ingredients.  This recipe calls for little more than the apples, a little sugar and some spices.

Have you ever purchased packaged pie crust from the grocery store?  Er, me neither.  I make my own crust, using this recipe for pate brisee from Martha Stewart.  It’s so simple, and I’m drawn to anything that can be whipped up in the food processor.  Make a few batches and freeze the discs.  You’ll be glad you did when it’s time to make a fruit or pot pies.

If you want to add a little “wow” factor to your pies with no effort at all, invest in these. They’re a little different from mine but will do the trick.  Sometimes, if I roll my dough out as thin as I should and I have enough extra, I cut enough to line the whole outer rim of the crust.

 

fiercely fresh apple pie

6 cups firm, tart apples, peeled and and thinly sliced

3/4 cup sugar

1/4 cup all-purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

2 tablespoons butter

pastry crust for 9-inch pie (2 crusts)

Heat oven to 425 degrees.  Mix sugar, flour, nutmeg and cinnamon.  Stir in apples.  Spoon into pastry-lined pie plate; dot the top with small pieces of the butter.  Cover with the top crust.  Cut slits in crust to allow steam to escape.  Seal top and bottom crusts, fluting the edges.  Cover edge with strip of aluminum foil to prevent burning.  Bake until crust is brown and juice begins to bubble through slits in crust, about 40 to 50 minutes.  Remove foil from pie crust for last 15 minutes of baking.

Another Eggplant and Another Guest Post

Hi there, Lauren again. This week my Mom is at the beach, that lucky devil! I however make out when she goes on vacation because I get her CSA bounty! As some of you might remember , last time she was away I got two eggplants and made a delicious eggplant parmesan that my kids devoured. This dish had the same effects and I highly recommend it.

Rigatoni with Eggplant Puree
Adapted from Giada DeLaurentis

1 small eggplant, cut into 1-inch cubes
1 pint cherry tomatoes
3 cloves garlic, whole
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 pound ground beef
1 pound rigatoni pasta
1/4 cup torn fresh mint leaves
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 cup grated Parmesan
Glug of balsamic or red wine vinegar or freshly-squeezed lemon juice (optional)

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

In a large bowl combine the eggplant, cherry tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes. Spread the vegetables out in an even layer on the baking sheet. Roast in the oven until the vegetables are tender and the eggplant is golden, about 35 minutes.

While the vegetables are roasting, brown your ground beef. Set aside, but keep warm.

Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Add the pasta and cook until tender but still firm to the bite, stirring occasionally, about 8 to 10 minutes. Drain pasta into a large bowl and reserve (at least) 2 cups of the cooking liquid.

Transfer the roasted vegetables to a food processor. Add the torn mint leaves and extra-virgin olive oil. Puree the vegetables.

Transfer the pureed vegetables and beef to the bowl with the pasta and add the Parmesan. Stir to combine, adding the pasta cooking liquid 1/2 cup at a time until the pasta is saucy, as well as a glug of vinegar (optional). Sprinkle the pine nuts over the top and serve.

grilled stuffed peppers

Have you been grilling much this summer?

Even though we purchased a brand new gas grill this year, I have to admit that I have not. Sure, the usual stuff makes it on there during a cookout-burgers, a beautiful piece of salmon, the occasional hotdog; but even that happens more infrequent since I’ve joined the farm co-op.  I’m only just starting to venture into the world of grilling things other than meat.  This recipe combines the best of both worlds.  Beautiful green peppers, charred slightly tender and flavorful from the grill with a meat stuffing.

Both my sausage and my beef were from my local farmer.

grilled stuffed peppers

1/2 pound breakfast sausage, ground or links with casing removed

1/2 pound ground beef

1 cup cooked brown rice

2 eggs, beaten

1/2 cup minced fresh parsley leaves

1/2 cup minced onion

1/2 tsp salt

1/4 tsp ground black pepper

1/8 tsp cayenne pepper

3 green peppers

Combine the sausage, ground beef, rice, eggs, onion, parsley and spices together in a bowl.  Cut the peppers in half through the stem and remove seeds and membranes.  Fill each pepper with meat mixture.  Mound the meat no more than 1/2 inch over the top edge of each pepper.

If you own a gas grill, turn burner(s) on medium only on one side of the grill.  If you use charcoal, build a fire off to one side.  Cook pepper side down on the cooler side of the grill until the pepper is charred and soft, about 15 minutes.  Turn the stuffed peppers over and cook on the hotter side of the grill for about 5-10 minutes until browned and cooked through.

give beets a chance

I’m not sure if all CSA’s do this, but at mine you can change out something you don’t want.  You put what you don’t want in a bin and you can take something else, but only from that same bin.  This week, the “reject bin” had nothing but beets in it.  Wow! I thought, OK, I’m going to make this work.  It’s only three beets.  And so I brought them home and got to work searching recipes.  I have had two beet experiences in my life:  one positive and one negative.

The negative is a memory I have of eating beets as a child, offered to me by my parents, that were pickled to death.  They were so vinegar-y and sour!  Yuck!

The positive is a salad at my local Houlihan’s, the “prime steak and lettuce wedge”.  It is  was undeniably my favorite because of the mixtures of tastes and textures.  It’s got a lettuce wedge with ranch dressing, golden beets, polenta crouton, asparagus, cherry tomatoes, a slice of some sort of delicious cheese and the juiciest petite fillet.

One day, I checked the nutritional facts for this salad and (although I probably knew this in the deep recesses of my brain) found out that it is one of the most unhealthiest salads you can order out anywhere.  At more than 1300 calories and 114 grams of fat (yes, there’s no decimal in there-it’s 114, not 11.4!), I couldn’t bring myself to order it again.  Ever.  I guess that really makes it a positive, then a negative memory.  So make that two negative beet experiences, although it wasn’t the beets that made this salad unhealthy.

Beets, besides being naturally sweet and dense, are high in magnesium, vitamin C, and fiber.  One web site I visited wondered if “beet juice would be the craze of the future”.  That post was written in 2009 so… no, I would have to say that here in 2011 it is not the juice craze of the present.  This recipe is light and tasty.  I believe it would be good with a bit of chopped sweet onion added, as well.  It was wonderful on the greens from the CSA, and I have sooooo many greens each week that even if I had a salad every day I couldn’t finish them up (but I’m trying!).  Also, I found that if I managed a beet, some lettuce and a bit of cheese on the fork each bite, it was truly delicious combination!

Roasted Beet Salad

3 beets

3 Tbsp. olive oil

1 1/2 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar (sherry or tarragon would also be nice)

3 tsp. fresh chopped lemon basil and/or thyme (I have some growing in a pot on my deck, which I used)

pinch of sea salt

pinch of cracked black pepper

salad greens, wash and dried

one wedge garlic and herb Laughing Cow cheese (goat cheese or feta would be tasty, as well)

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.  Remove stems and greens from beets.  Wash and scrub them.  Place beets in a small baking dish.  Fill the dish with about 1/2 inch water.  Cover and roast for about an hour or until beets are easy to pierce with a fork.  Remove from oven and when cool enough to handle, rub off the skins or peel with a small paring knife.  Chop the beets into 1/2 inch cubes.

Prepare vinaigrette by placing the vinegar and herbs in a small bowl.  Whisk in the olive oil.  Pour over beets, place in refrigerator and allow to marinate for at least 30 minutes.  Divide greens onto four serving plates.  Top each with equal portions of marinated beets (it is a good idea to gently stir the beets to mix the marinade that may have settled to the bottom of the bowl)  Cut wedges of Laughing Cow cheese , one per serving, into small dollops and place on top of greens and beets.

Serious Strawberries

I don’t know what came over me, but I had made up my mind that I was going to make strawberry preserves.  It could have been the preemptive email from the farm that is hosting my CSA saying that members would not be getting any fruit this week in our box because “strawberry season has ended and we are waiting for the blackberries and blueberries to ripen.”

Wait….what?  strawberry season has already ended?

The pick-your-own farm that I have frequented on many field trips with my kids didn’t even open until May 25th, so how can that be so?  I visited their web site and was delighted to see that strawberry picking was, at present, fair.  The web site also stated that strawberry picking was expected to end next week.  My mother and I used to make strawberry preserves together when I was growing up.  I have memories of picking berries together in our younger years.  In later years, I would do the picking and we would make the jam in her kitchen together.  A labor intensive affair of constant cleaning, hulling, and stirring at the stove top-all which must be done within 24 hours or so of picking so that the berries don’t go bad.  The last time I picked strawberries to make preserves, my mother was sick with cancer.  I kept my oldest daughter out of school to help me and we picked two large boxes, only to have them rot when my mother passed away later that same day.  After twelve years, I decided this was the year to continue the tradition.

I headed out to the farm as soon as I put my youngest on the bus.  It was already 83 degrees on a day that promised to reach 95 degrees.  I started picking, an elderly man in the next row moving much more efficiently than I since he scooted directly on the ground up the row whereas I was afraid of  bugs (I saw not one, not even a bumblebee!) and bent down on haunches.  I lost steam quickly this way, in the heat, but managed to pick 5 1/2 pounds.  My car smelled heavenly on the drive home from the farm.

You don’t have a strawberry huller from Williams Sonoma?  Well, good grief, you must have one if you love strawberries and make lots with them.  This inexpensive tool grabs the stem and pulls it out in three seconds.  I hated hulling the berries when I was younger, but I always chose that job versus stirring the cooking preserves because I could sit down to hull.  Yep, I was am lazy.

I used a lower sugar pectin to make the preserves, and followed the recipe on the box.  I had some thought about eliminating the sugar altogether and using something else, such as agave nectar, but apparently the sugar is necessarily to the whole “jelling” process so I felt that if I could at least cut some of it…well, that was something.  I used a paraffin seal on top of the preserves-a process my mother taught me.  This eliminates the need to boil the jars or use a pressure cooker.