Easter Dinner (Yes, I know this is late)

I am well aware that Easter was a few weeks ago. I am also aware that I never posted the pictures of Easter dinner. I meant to – several times – but somehow I never got to posting. So here it is …

  

A while back I decided I wanted Shepard’s Pie. I’ve never made a real Shepard’s Pie, and this may not count either. I did go with ground beef instead of a vegetarian version or lamb. We were having guests, including Dad, for Easter, so I wanted more traditional. Lamb is hard to find and I do, generally, have a hard time eating lamb since they fall under the cute category of animals. Cows are cute too, but not in the same way as sheep. So it was a compromise, but it worked. 

 

I started with the basic carrot and onion mix. To that I added the ground beef and let it all cook. Once the meat and onions were cooked through, I added peas, tomato paste, beef broth, soy sauce (as a substitute for Worcestershire sauce, which contains anchovies, which I can’t have) and spices. I let this cook for a while and made the mashed potatoes to go on top. I did use really good English Cheddar for the top.   

  

It looked great. It tasted fine. Everyone else thought it was really good, but I wanted more tomato taste. I wanted more depth to the dish and this just wasn’t what I was looking for. It was fine, but that really is all I can say about it.

Now dessert on the other hand …. Dessert. 

 I went with cheesecake for dessert because it had been a long time since I made one and I really wanted cheesecake. I went with Dulche de leche cheesecake because it gave me an excuse to try and make my own Dulche de leche sauce. Did you know it is terribally easy to make? I didn’t. Can of condensed milk, salt and an oven. That really is it. The cheesecake was a combination of several recipes, but I thought it came out really well. 

 But crust, caramel cheesecake with Dulche de leche glaze on top. 

Hopefully I won’t get so far behind on the updates. Happy Spring! 

For Erin

I’ve been bad about posting lately and this is a recipe I’ve said I’m going to post a few times (in my head) but kept forgetting, or was too tired or any number of things that came up. Val gave me her Jerusalem cookbook and this was one of the first recipes I tried from it. I added the egg noodlges to make it more of a dinner, and I have to say, it will be a make again.

Roasted Butternut Squash & Red Onion with Tahini and Za’atar

  • 1 butternut squash cut into wedges
  • 1 red onion, cut into wedges
  • olive oil
  • 3 tablespoons tahihi paste
  • 1.5 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoonswater 
  • 1 clove garlic, chopped/crushed
  • 1 tablespoon za’atar
  • parsley, chopped for garnish
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • pine nuts, pecans or walnuts as desired
  • Noodles (egg noodles work well here) if desired

Cook noodles according to package directions.

Preheat the oven to 475 (or in your oven is like mine and runs hot, 450)

Place the squash on a sheet pan and mix with olive oil, salt and pepper. Spread out on pan and roast for about 20 minutes. 

Coat the onion with a little oil and add it to the pan with the squash, turn the squash here. Roast both for an additional 10-15 minutes.

While the squash and onion are roasting, mix tahini, lemon juice, garlic and water. Combine to make a thin, honey consistency, sauce.

Make a bed with the noodles, top with squash and onion; sprinkle nuts if using then add the tahini sauce. Sprinkle on za’atar and parsley. Serve hot or warm.

  

Erin, it really was the prefect dish.

*Adapted from Jerusalem by Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi

Swiss Chard Tacos

I debated posting this. Seriously debated. Not because I wasn’t incredibly happy with the results, but because of how I came across this recipe. At the risk of being mocked for being a left leaning bleeding heart liberal, here it is.



Normally I scour my cookbooks, make my recipe lists and then go shopping. This week, I went to the farmer’s market without a plan. I decided to look at the vegetables and figure out what to make from there. Since I was home today (Bob gave me his plague) I had lots of time to peruse recipes (not much I could do so I read a lot of recipes). I had picked up corn, chard and onion and was intrigued by a recipe from the NY Times. Yes, this is a vegetarian taco recipe from the NY Times cooking section. If you leave out the cheese, it’s a vegan taco recipe from the NY Times. Yes, I read the NY Times. I read the cooking section. I like to read recipes.



I started with my bunch of rainbow chard and two ears of corn. Removing the kernels from the cob is actually easier than it seems – detstemmed the chard and removed the corn kernels before the water boiled. And cut up the garlic and onion. Can’t forget the garlic and onion. 



I blanched the chard in boiling water for a minute then transferred it to an ice water bath. While this cooled, I heated oil in a pan and added the onions. While the onions cooked I made the salsa, but I’ll get to that. Add firm and garlic to the onions and cook for a few minutes. 



While this cooked, I drained, squeezed and chopped the chard. Once the corn and onion was cooked, I added the chard and seasoned everything with salt and pepper. A minute or two later, it is all done. 



Salsa. I wanted to use a Rick Bayless cooked salsa recipe, but I didn’t have the chills. So … One plum tomato, a chunk of red onion, a bit of red jalapeño (no seeds) and some cilantro leaves. Todd everything with salt and a squeeze of lime juice and let marinade in the fridge until everything is done. 



The original recipe calls for corn tortillas, but honestly, I prefer the flour ones. I know they are not as good for you, but I just really don’t like the texture of corn tortillas. 

So … tortillas (warmed in a 260 oven), chard mix, salsa and feta cheese. Dinner. 



Bob liked these way better than my quinoa experiment yesterday and I have to admit, I did too. It was colorful, flavorful, had great texture and was filling. So yes, the NY Times Cooking section had a great recipe. A vegetarian taco recipe. You may mock, but you should try these. 

Sweet Potato with Spiced Chickpeas

I’m not sure why, but I’ve been exhausted lately. I fell asleep on the couch at 8 one night and don’t remember much except Bob waking me up to go to bed around ten. The other days I haven’t stayed up much later and this is before the time change happened. 



But this is about food. We are still going with our Hello Fresh boxes – it makes thinking about dinner easier for a good portion of the week. (Did skip this week, so I will hopefully have an experiment or two to post.) I generally don’t include the box dinners, but this one I had to. It was that good and I am putting it in the rotation. 

I use to hate sweet potatoes. Or at least I thought I did. Even for me, the candy, cookie and cake loving me, they were too sweet and had a weird …. something. Turns out it isn’t the potato I dislike, it’s the toppings they are generally cooked with. Sweet potatoes are sweet. They don’t need more sweet in the form of brown sugar, maple syrup or marshmallows. 

The recipe: (makes 2 servings)

  • 2 sweet potatoes 
  • 1/4 cup hummus
  • 1can chickpeas, drained, rinsed and dried
  • 1/2 lemon, juiced
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon coriander 
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • Handful grape or cherry tomatoes
  • 2 oz arugula
  • Few parsley leaves, chopped
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 400 degrees

Cut sweet potato lengthwise. Brush with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Place cut side down on baking sheet (leave room for chickpeas) and roast for about 30-35 minutes. 

Toss the chick peas in a teaspoon olive oil, cumin, coriander and paprika. When the potatoes have been cooking for ten minutes, add the chickpeas.  Spread to a single layer. Cook for 20-25 minutes, tossing once during cooking.

Mix hummus, lemon juice and a little salt and pepper. Add about 1 teaspoon water and mix to a thin-ish consistency. 

Once the potatoes are cooked, scoop out the insides and mash with a fork. Add a touch of salt and pepper if desired. Scoop into the middle of a plate and ring with arugula and tomatoes. Top with chickpeas and the hummus dressing. I started with the dressing just in the potato, but ended up using it as a dressing on the arugula too. Top with parsley. 



I wasn’t sure if this would fill me up, but it did. There is a lot going on and between the potato and the chickpeas it is pretty filling. And the lemon- hummus dressing may be my new favorite. It may replace the cilantro tahini sauce. 



Spoiled

In general I think I’m pretty lucky. I’m pretty smart, have a good job that lets me support myself, have a nice home complete with the wonderful husband and adorable furry creatures. I have an amazing family, from parents to sister to extended family and in-laws. I kind of hit the jackpot in all of it. So while I don’t take first class vacations or fly on private jets, I wouldn’t trade what I do have for that lifestyle. 



With all of this in mind, I do have to say I was spoiled for my birthday. I’m not a huge celebrate my birthday person and use it more of an excuse for a nice dinner out but this year everyone went out of their way to make turning 40 special.



We decided to head up to Disney with the thought of wandering around Epcot then doing dinner at Ohana. We are slowly working our way through all the restaurants in the hotels at Disney And Ohana is one of the last we need to do.  We changed the wandering plans when I learned that the carriage from the Cinderella movie was at Hollywood Studios. Bob braved the rain with me so I could see it in person. It was incredible. We couldn’t go inside it because of the rain, but we were able to get some good views and pictures of it without and one around. One definite advantage to the rain. 

We decided to eat lunch in Hollywood Stuidos since dinner wasn’t until late we found a great  Italain place inside the park.  Bob had pasta  and I had a great pesto flatbread. 



I also got to see an extended preview of Cinderella. It looks fun. And true to the original story, so I’m excited about it. After the preview we headed back to the hotel to thaw before dinner. 

Val and Bill drove up to have dinner with us . It was so great to see them.  Val even made me Hello Kitty rice crispie treats and Ed and Erin sent along the cutest cake .

This was my second birthday cake since the girls at work did up a cake for me the day before . 

Yes, it is well known that I love Cinderella. 

So I was able to go away for the weekend because Mom watched the pets and Bob indulged my six year old self. I work with awesome people and have the best family and friends out there. I am truest spoiled. … Oh and Dad, thank you for the flowers  they are one of my favorites.



Stuffing

I’ve been having issues with my app for posting lately. I can’t get some pictures to upload and the whole thing freezes/crashes after I hit publish, so I’m not sure if anything gets posted. It’s been frustrating, in large part, because I never remember my password so I have to reset it after ever crash. Sigh. Hopefully this can get fixed soon.

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My rosemary bush has taken over the garden. It has just about half the garden space now and it has successfully moved out the oregano and almost killed the sage. I’ve been searching for recipes to use the rosemary, but most involve chicken or lamb, so not things I’m in a hurry to cook. But I did find a a stuffing recipe that looked interesting, filling and tasty. It also happened to use rosemary and since Florida has felt like winter the last few weeks (yes, heat on, sweater weather cold in the mornings and at night) I decided to go for it.

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We had our cheese box yesterday so I had Bob cut up the rest of the bread and let it sit out over night. I had a combination of French bread and some homemade beer bread. I liked the idea if mixing the breads.

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I cut up a good amount of Brussels sprouts and butternut squash. I chopped an apple and added that to the mix. Coat it all in a little oil, salt and pepper and into the 400 degree oven it went.

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Next was three ribs of celery and half a very large onion, both chopped. I cooked them down a little in oil then added the stale bread. Coat everything and let it crisp up. Pour in vegetable broth and let it sit while the vegetables finish roasting.

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Mix everything together, add some pecans and dried cranberries and Todd back into the oven (set lower at this point) for about twenty minutes. The results were good. Really, really good. A make again good. And despite stuffing usually served as a side, this worked as a main dish. Lots of flavor, different textures and enough character that neither of us felt like we were missing anything. It also paired very well with a cider we picked up last week.

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This was sweeter than I usually go for, but it was also a rounder and fuller cider than normal. It had enough character to pair with the stuffing without getting overshadowed, but it was subtle enough to blend with, not mask, the dish.

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I also made french toast this morning. Beet bread french toast to be exact. Left over beer bread it good for so many things.

Lent us coming up this week and I thought about giving up coffee for lent this year. Bob asked me not to. He is pretty sure it would be bad all around if I did, hence why I think it would be good. But I’m going with chocolate instead. No mochas at work, no chocolate granola bars or trail mix with chocolate in them and no brownies. Still not as much of a sacrifice as coffee, but it will do.

A Week In Review

I have to say, I’m not sure where the last two weeks went. I had every intention of cooking up something new and different (and hopefully fabulous) and posting it, but that didn’t happen. That isn’t to say I didn’t cook, but I stuck with old favorites and quick meals.

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Super Bowl Sunday is, theoretically, the least attended day at Disney/The Magic Kingdom. Given this and my lack of enthusiasm for the game recently, Bob and I decided to go up Sunday and make a day of it. We didn’t rush, but we got there early enough to do a few things we had not fine before. Or at least that I had not done before. Somehow, in all the times we have been to Disney in the last few years, I have managed to skip Tom Sawyer’s Island and the Pirates of the Caribbean ride. How? Not sure, but we corrected this. The island was ok. I am not a fan of tight enclosed spaces, so we did have to skip the ‘cool’ parts of the island, but it was pretty and quiet and a slower pace than the rest of the park. … Which does bring me back to Super Bowl Sunday. No difference. None. If anything, it felt more crowded than most days we go. It wasn’t holiday rush time, but there were not any fewer people either.

We did have dinner with John while we were there. Sanna proved another great experience that almost rivals the California Grill. I loved watching the animals wander around outside, but I have to admit, the castle is still my favorite view.

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As for the rest of the week … My Bougainville is blooming. A lot. But it has lost almost all of the leaves on one side. I’m not sure if this is due to the cold nights or my forgetting to water it on a regular basis. But it is still pretty and alive so hopefully it will bounce back.

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Bob was in Miami for work this past week and he sent me the above picture followed by this next one while he was there.

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That is a pork, kale and fried tomato sandwich. I know Bob got it for the pork, but I’m impressed with the amount of kale on it. This is also much more impressive than the dinner he had at home the following night.

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Cheddar and chive buttermilk biscuits. I made scrambled eggs to go with them, and they were good, but I think his sandwich was way more interesting.

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The cats have been cute. Really cute. Although I think Leia and Tigger had a little too much togetherness. Leia wanted to play; Tigger, not so much. The only saving grace here is that Leia gives it as good as Tigger does so they do end up playing and then he walk away. Unlike with Gracie who he just pounces on.

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Nothing much exciting on the horizon. I am trying to figure out what to do with all of the rosemary that has taken over. I know I could go chicken or pork, but I’m still not that into meat these days so I’m trying to find a good vegetarian dish to use it in. If I find it, that will definitely be a post.

Pop Up Dinner

Time keeps getting away from me. Bob and I have finally gotten over being sick and the made midterm rush at work is over, so things are slowing down a bit. I’m still not sure where the days go sometimes.

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Our favorite cheese shop has a resident chef interning there this winter. He is learning all about craft and artisanal cheeses and Louise made the smart decision to have him also so what he he does best – cook. They started a monthly pop up dinner at the shop. What is a pop up dinner? We’ll … It’s a restaurant dinner that happens for a very short period of time. In this case the dinner is one night only.

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We were not sure exactly what to expect, but whatever it was exceeded our expectations. The dinners are limited to 20 people so you can actually talk to people around you and Louise does a great job of seating you next to people you want to have a conversation with. Bob and I got to talk with a local chef and his wife (who happens to work at one of our favorite restaurants in the area). It was great and since the chef if opening a limited run dinner service at a local restaurant soon, we have a new place to explore.

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This is a cheese shop, but this wasn’t just a cheese dinner. This was regular, but extremely well done, food. We had a perfect cheese bite in between each course and they really were perfect bites. The goat cheese with lemon dust and candied fennel was probably my favorite, but I also loved the Louise gave me cheddar instead of blue in the last cheese bite. It worked perfectly, but I didn’t feel like I was missing anything. To tell you how good everything was let me sum it up this way – I was so enamored by the food and the company and the experience I only remembered to take a picture of one dish. One. The roasted tomato and poblano soup was amazing – as was the gnocchi I had for the main course (Bob has fish) and the play on a hot toddy for dessert.

It was a great experience, and something that you don’t get to do very often. I also think I need to keep an eye out for what Derek does next – he really is a very, very good chef. Given that Bob and I have no problem making travel plans around food and eating, we might just end up with an unexpected location in a year or two.

Hopefully I will have more frequent posts as we settle into the year and the semester.

How much is a ‘clove,’ exactly?

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I browse recipes. I get bored and I search for interesting recipes or something different that I might actually be able to make. While doing this I’ve come across the instruction for “a clove of garlic” or “two cloves of garlic, crushed,” etc. What I’ve also noticed from using a lot of garlic in my cooking is that the size of a clove of garlic varies greatly. A head of garlic is fairly straight forward.

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A clove of garlic, however, is not so uniform. Generally I try to go with the medium size clove and adjust from there. But is that right? Is my guess at the size of a clove correct? Does it really matter? Probably not, but for some reason it bugged me today.

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That said, I did make a rather odd experiment today. I have been craving pulled pork for about a week now. I haven’t cooked much meat in recent months, but I think the cold front (and yes, it did get cold here, just not freezing) put me in the mood for comfort food, and pulled pork is one of my all time favorites. Usually I make this with my version of Grandmom’s BBQ sauce, but today I wanted something a little different.
My sauce cookbook had a recipe for Korean BBQ sauce in it, but I was missing sesame seeds, so I scoured the Internet for another version. I found one recipe that used ingredients I had on hand. This recipe, calling for five cloves of garlic, combined with my wildly varying sizes of cloves today, prompted the above question. No satisfactory answer has been found. But, I digress. I skipped the thickening part of this recipe and left out the cornstarch. I also blended it in a blender just a bit to get everything smooth since I don’t have a garlic press and the mortar and pestle didn’t exactly get everything to a paste. Anyway, I made up the sauce as the pork was cooking.
I also made corn bread.

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This probably counts as Northern Cornbread or Yankee Cornbread since it has sugar in it, but I happen to like that version of cornbread, so I’m going with it.

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I also found this incredible Brussels Sprout Salad that I just had to try. It looked so fresh, so bright and just so good that I wanted this for the crunch with my pulled pork. I actually used my Ninja with the disk to shave the Brussels sprouts. Way easier than hand chopping.

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So for dinner tonight we had a pulled pork with a Korean BBQ sauce, Yankee Cornbread and a Brussels Sprout Salad with an Italian cheese. This should not have worked. The flavors should have clashed. Instead, the savory pork went exceedingly well with the salty sauce, which was cut by the brightness of the salad and tamed by the semi-sweetness of the cornbread. The South American wine I had with it was ok. Well, the wine was very good, but it only paired ok with the meal. As a bonus, Bob loved all of it and we have leftovers for a few days.

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Gracie tried to help. She likes helping, but really, I think she just wanted the cheese.

At Home Vacation

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I really should not be allowed two weeks at home with no project. I really, really should not be allowed at home for two weeks with no project and two colds. Not feeling up to leaving the house combined with the verge of boredom means I have lots of time to peruse cookbooks, blogs and websites for cooking/baking inspiration. I end up wanting comfort food, but not a lot of it, and sweets even though my stomach will rebel. So far I’ve managed:
Brownies
Coffee Cake Muffins
Coffee Chiffon Cake (with mocha icing)
Beer Bread Muffins
Caramel Corn (aka crack corn)

This does not include the actual food experiments.

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Sobs noodles with a Kung Pow sauce. I also managed the butternut squash and noodles in the Buerre Blanc sauce and an Asian tofu dish I was desperate to try.

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My cookbook calls it Mapo Doufu. I call it tasty looking so I had to try it. This did require acquiring Szechuan Peppercorns which look a lot like regular pepper, but taste nothing like pepper. Apparently they are a staple in Chinese cooking and related to citrus. Or so says my cookbook.

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After picking up a jar at the local spice store on the one day that I didn’t feel sick, I started the dish. Into a hot pan (with sesame oil) went leek and scallion – the white parts of each – with garlic and ginger. Cook until soft then add tofu cut into chunks that has been marinating in soy sauce, garlic and ginger.

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I cheated here and bought the diced tofu instead of the regular block. Same amount, same cost, less work for me. To this I added a teaspoon of the peppercorns, ground with a mortar and pestle and strained so as not to get the hard casing.

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Stiff and let cook a few seconds then add one cup vegetable broth, one teaspoon chili garlic sauce and two teaspoons of black bean sauce. (The last two ingredients are in the Ethnic aisle of most grocery stores.) I let that cook for about ten minutes, letting the sauce reduce and thicken just a little.

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I played that over rice and topped it with some peanut and the green parts of the scallions. It was a pretty dish, a tad spicy and really good. Bob liked it – didn’t mind it was tofu – and we put it on the make again list since it was fairly quick and easy.

Recipe
12 ounces tofu, diced
2 tablespoons soy sauce (for the marinade)
3 scallions – keep white and green parts separate
2 cloves garlic, diced and divided – half for tofu, half for tofu, half for sauce
1 inch chunk ginger, diced fund and divided – half for tofu, half for sauce
1 leek, white parts only
1 teaspoon Szechuan peppercorns, ground fine
1 cup vegetable broth
2 teaspoons black bean sauce
1 teaspoon chili garlic sauce
Sesame oil
Peanuts
Rice for serving

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