Sunday, November 11, 2018
Butterbeer!
Here's the result of someone tackling the question of what the "Harry Potter" wizards' butterbeer would be like. Just the thing for cozying up by the fire. Or enjoying the latest fan flurry over a Dramione selfie.
Butterbeer
Adapted from "Eat What You Watch: A Cookbook for Movie Lovers" by Andrew Rea
Ingredients
1 large egg white (3 tablespoons if you're using pasteurized)
3 ounces butterscotch schnapps
1 tablespoon simple syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 tablespoons heavy cream
1/2 cup ice
2 cups cream soda, chilled
Method
Combine egg white, schnapps, simple syrup, vanilla and cream in a cocktail shaker without ice. Shake well for 20 seconds. Add ice and shake briefly to chill. Fill 2 pint glasses or mugs three-quarters full of cream soda. Strain schnapps mixture over the top. Best not to be too vigorous in pouring, because between the cream soda carbonation and the egg whites, you've got a serious head to contend with.
Rating: Comfort booze. Dessert-ish, but not cloyingly sweet. Somewhat reminiscent of beer nog. Probably not something you'd indulge in every day, as it's very filling, but it could be holiday-ish.
Saturday, November 10, 2018
Slow cooker chicken bacon ragu
It was 9 degrees this morning, a tad nippy for early November. Time for comfort food simmering on the stove or in the crockpot. This recipe definitely qualifies.
Slow cooker chicken bacon ragu
From Kitchn.com
Ingredients
6 ounces thick-cut bacon, chopped small
1 small fennel bulb, chopped small (reserve fronds for
optional garnish)
1 cup diced onion
8 garlic cloves, minced
½ teaspoon coarse salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons flour
½ cup white wine
2 pounds boneless skinless chicken thighs (or you can use bone-in, which is what I had on hand, but be prepared to fish out the bones before serving)
1¼ cup chicken broth
2 tablespoons tomato paste
Method
Brown bacon in a large skillet. Leave in the pan and add olive oil if needed to
make 2 tablespoons worth of total fat before adding fennel, onion, garlic, salt
and pepper. Cook for 2 minutes. Sprinkle with flour and cook for a minute or so. Add wine to deglaze the pan. Cook for a minute and transfer mixture to a
slow cooker.
In the same pan, add a drizzle of a bit more olive oil, then
brown chicken pieces lightly. Transfer to a slow cooker. In the same pan, heat
broth and tomato paste and then pour over chicken and vegetables.
Cook for 4½ to 5½ hours on low, until tender enough to
shred. Shred chicken in the slow cooker, removing bones as you go if you use bone-in. Season to
taste with salt and pepper and serve over something starchy that will soak up
the sauce like potatoes, noodles or rice.
Rating: The bacon really comes through and makes this quite
tasty. The fennel pretty much disappears, but that didn’t hurt my feelings
since I worried it might overwhelm things. A dish definitely worth putting in
the rotation. A minimal amount of front-end prep results in a really nice
winter comfort food meal. Actually, make that meals, since this hearty dish
easily serves 8. We had it over potatoes the first time, but preferred the
leftovers over wide noodles since that was less overly filling. The ragu can
freeze and reheat well, so it’s a good make-ahead dish.
Sunday, October 28, 2018
Baked pasta with golden cauliflower and sage
The print headline on Rick Nelson's article on the Taste page in this morning's Sunday paper was "How Great Is Ina?" Having just made this Ina Garten recipe for summer last night, I'd say pretty great.
Ina Garten has always had my vote for food celebrity whose house you'd most like to be invited to for a weekend visit. She makes tasty food, and unlike my longtime inspiration, Martha Stewart, she always seems very relaxed.
This dish takes advantage of the golden cauliflower I bought at the last regular farmers market of the year. (Thanks, Julie!) Yesterday we wished our farmer/vendor friends a good winter, congratulated them on making it to the finish line of another season, and thanked them for the many, many good meals we had courtesy of their efforts. Every meal I cook with farmers market produce brings a face to mind as I cook. Next year's market is going to be displaced due to construction, but we'll track them down somehow. (And once again we wonder why the heck can't we have market plazas like Europe?)
The dish also plays on the current love of cauliflower, although not in its trendy usage as a lower carb stand-in, since here it's paired with pasta.
Crusty baked shells and cauliflower
Adapted from “Cooking for Jeffrey” by Ina Garten as
published in Food and Wine November 2016. If you can find golden cauliflower, it
adds color to the dish and helps break up that white on white effect.
Ingredients
¾ pound medium pasta shells
7 tablespoons olive oil, divided
1 large head cauliflower, cut into small florets
3 tablespoons chopped fresh sage leaves
2 tablespoons capers, drained
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
¼ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
2 cups grated Fontina cheese
1 cup fresh ricotta
½ cup panko bread crumbs
6 tablespoons grated Pecorino cheese
2 tablespoons minced fresh parsley leaves
Method
Cook pasta in boiling salted water just until barely tender.
You’ll be baking this later, so don’t overcook it. Drain into a large bowl.
Heat 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet over
medium-high heat. Add half of the cauliflower in a single layer across the
bottom of the pan; you want all the cauliflower to make contact with the pan so
you can brown it, which takes about 5 to 6 minutes, stirring occasionally. Pour
contents of pan on top of the pasta in the bowl, scrapping out any little bits.
Add another 3 tablespoons of oil to the pan and repeat
browning. Transfer cauliflower to the bowl but retain some oil in the pan. Add
sage, capers, garlic, lemon zest and red pepper flakes and saute about 1 minute
to flavor the oil. Pour mixture into the bowl with pasta and cauliflower. Stir
in salt, pepper, and grated Fontina.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease a 10- by 13-inch baking
pan with olive oil. Put half of pasta mixture in pan to form the bottom layer. Top with
ricotta, and then spread remaining pasta mixture on top.
In a small bowl, mix panko, Pecorino, parsley and 1
tablespoon olive oil. Sprinkle mixture over the top of pasta in the pan. Bake for 35 to
30 minutes or until browned and crusty.
Rating: Ina's husband Jeffrey
really is a lucky guy. I might add just a touch more garlic next time because I’m
that way, but it’s a perfectly fine dish as is. She notes that you can assemble
the dish the day before for make-ahead purposes. Like on a long weekend with guests.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Carrot soup with thyme and fennel seed
I have limited space for growing vegetables, so I usually use it for items I can't get at the farmers market, like heirloom varieties, or things of which want a constant fresh supply, like herbs, tomatoes and lettuce.
This year I devoted a little precious space to growing Parisian carrots. They're little orange globes, perfect for my comparatively shallow raised beds, and something you don't usually see in most stores or markets.
All fine and good, except the part where, ahem, I did a fairly random job of thinning the seedlings. So some of them turned out to be the correct size (about the size of a large radish), but some of the ones I harvested at frost were teensy orange orbs packed in too tightly on top of each other to get much size. Those went into the stock pot, but their larger counterparts went into this soup, still my favorite among carrot soup recipes.
Now I just have to cook my way through the mound of carrot tops.
Carrot soup with thyme and fennel
Ingredients
¼ cup butter
4 medium carrots, chopped small
¾ cup chopped onion
¾ cup chopped leeks, white and green parts only (about 2
small)
2 garlic cloves, chopped
½ teaspoon fresh thyme leaves
¼ teaspoon fennel seeds
5 cups broth
Salt
¼ teaspoon ground white pepper
Method
Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium low heat. Add
carrots, onions, leeks, garlic, thyme and fennel, stirring to coat. Cover and
cook until onion is translucent, stirring as needed.
Add broth and partially cover. Simmer until carrots are very
tender, about 45 minutes. Cool slightly and then puree in batches. (For this
soup you’ll be happier with the texture if you actually haul out the food
processor instead of the stick blender, unless you’ve got a professional
model.) Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Rating: Just lovely. Nicely balanced, with very subtle fennel flavor. It's mellow, smooth and tastes, well, warm, if warm was a flavor. The perfect fall soup.
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Potato tomato gratin
We reach a sad point all too soon in Minnesota's short growing season, where the only tomatoes at the farmers market post-frost are best roasted. This dish makes good use of these tomatoes we bought at last week's market, where we saw snow flakes icing the mounds of purple kale.
The regular Saturday markets are nearly over; this coming weekend is the last one for our usual farmers market. It's a bittersweet day where we thank the few remaining hardy souls for all the good food they've given us, wish them a good, relaxing winter, but also are secretly relieved that there will be no more produce to strain the bounds of our refrigerator, waiting to be turned into soups and sauces in the freezer.
This weekend we wrestled a new freezer into our basement to replace the one that took a dive last winter, to our deep chagrin. This one is a small upright, which is slightly less efficient use of overall freezer capacity because of the shelves, but makes the food so much more accessible and less of an Antarctic archeological dig to find the soup you're pretty sure was in there, maybe, still.
Potato tomato gratin
Adapted from a Beth Dooley recipe in the Star Tribune Taste section. Post-market season, some decent-looking hot house tomatoes would do; just make sure you get ones that look juicy, since that's key to this dish.
Ingredients
¼ cup olive oil, divided
1 large clove of garlic, finely chopped
Lemon zest, optional
1½ pounds fresh potatoes, thinly sliced
1 pound tomatoes, sliced into ¼-inch rounds
Kosher salt and ground pepper
½ tablespoon fresh thyme leaves, divided
3 ounces soft goat cheese
Method
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9- by 13-inch baking
dish with some of the oil.
Put remaining oil in a small saucepan with chopped garlic and lemon zest
and heat oil just until fragrant. Remove from heat and set aside.
Place potato and tomato slices in overlapping layers in the
prepared baking dish, sprinkling with salt, pepper and thyme and drizzling with
some of the garlic-infused olive oil as you build the layers. Reserve some of the oil and thyme
leaves for a final garnish later on.
Cover with foil and bake for 40 minutes until potatoes are
softened. Remove foil and dot with cheese. Drizzle with remaining olive oil and
sprinkle on remaining thyme and some more pepper. Bake for 15 minutes until
cheese is melting and starting to pick up a tinge of color.
Rating: The first time I made this, I made the recipe as written, and it was just fine, so if garlic isn't your thing, leave it out and it's still a nice enough dish. The second time, I added the garlic and heated the oil, and that made it into a quite lovely, repeatable dish. Both times I used lemon thyme, since I've got a pot on hand, now settled into the basement for what part of the winter it will survive. The lemon was a really nice touch, so if you're just using regular thyme leaves, I might consider adding some lemon zest to the oil at the beginning.
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Pumpkin pie coffee cake
Pumpkin spice gets a bad rap when misapplied to all manner of foods in the name of selling us products in October. But one place where it really has its place is the place it started: in baked goods.
This cake marries two good things (pumpkin pie filling and a streusel sour cream coffee cake) quite successfully.
If you mix up the dry ingredients, pumpkin filling and streusel, and set the butter out in a bowl the night before, you can get this into and out of the oven in 77 minutes. So it actually can work as a take-to-work morning treat. (Happy birthday, Cindy.)
Sour cream pumpkin coffee cake
From Jennifer Maloney's Seasons & Suppers blog, a source of many things I've pinned to my comfort food board.
Ingredients
Streusel
1 cup light brown sugar, packed
2 teaspoons cinnamon
⅓ cup butter, cut into cold pieces
1 cup chopped pecans
Filling
1 ¾ cup pumpkin puree (1 15-ounce can)
⅓ cup granulated sugar
1 egg, slightly beaten
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
¼ teaspoon ginger
Pinch of salt
Cake batter
½ cup butter at room temperature
¾ cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 eggs
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
1 cup sour cream
Glaze
½ cup powdered sugar, sifted
1 to 2 tablespoons milk
¼ teaspoon vanilla
Method
Preheat oven to 325. Grease a 9-by-13 cake pan.
For streusel, mix together 1
cup brown sugar and 2 teaspoons cinnamon in a medium bowl. Cut in the ⅓ cup
cold butter with a pastry blender or two forks. Stir in chopped pecans.
Refrigerate until ready to use.
For pumpkin filling, mix pumpkin, ⅓ cup granulated sugar, 1
egg, ½ teaspoon cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and pinch of salt in a medium bowl
until combined. (Can be mixed up and stored, covered in the refrigerator, overnight.)
For batter, in a medium bowl whisk together the flour,
baking soda and powder and ¼ teaspoon salt.
In a large bowl, beat ½ cup butter and ¾ cup granulated sugar until
light and fluffy, about 2 to 3 minutes. Mix in vanilla. Add eggs one a time,
beating after each addition. Add dry ingredients, alternating with sour cream
and mix to combine.
Spoon half the cake batter into the prepared baking pan.
Sprinkle half the streusel mixture on top. Cover with all the pumpkin filling.
Then spread the rest of the cake batter over the top. (Start with small
spoonfuls because it’s hard to spread big globs of batter over the tacky
pumpkin mixture.) Sprinkle remaining streusel mixture on top.
Bake for 45 to 55 minutes or until set and golden. Cool slightly
in pan before icing.
For glaze, mix powdered sugar, ¼ teaspoon vanilla and milk
(or half and half) as needed to make a thin glaze. Drizzle over cake.
Note: if you want
the glaze to be quite noticeable, you’ll want to spread it on a completely
cooled cake. I didn’t go that route, because for me warm coffee cakes in the
morning outweigh immaculately decorated coffee cakes. This cake is quite moist,
so if you’re not going to be able to eat all of it in a day, I’d refrigerate or
freeze it. The filling is essentially pumpkin pie, and you wouldn’t leave that
out at room temperature for multiple days.
Rating: Not super sweet, with nice subtle autumn flavors, what pumpkin spice was meant to be. I was afraid this might turn out to be a big mush, but I really think this works. And it makes me ponder what other fillings I might try inside this batter combo. Almond-apple filling perhaps?
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