Another highlight of the meal was the trio of pies Kathy brought: pecan, pumpkin, and apple crumb.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Thanksgiving Wrap-Up
Another highlight of the meal was the trio of pies Kathy brought: pecan, pumpkin, and apple crumb.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Grits
Fun fact about the dead tree edition of the story (which I will send you next week, Mom): those grains on the cover aren't actually grits. Looks to me like some kind of wheat berry or other grain. Glenn Roberts of Anson Mills showed us a bunch of different grains, but I don't have notes on which grain that was, nor do I know how it got on the cover.
There's also an incorrect caption. But small embarrassments aside, the article is up and I'm happy.
Here is a dish I made last week: yellow grits topped with a very simple sauce made from pancetta, canned tomatoes, garlic, and lots of parsley and salt and pepper.
I cooked the grits in the crockpot for a day and a half with just water and salt. They were amazing.
A Breakfast Quandary
- Egg casserole
- Egg casserole (yes, TWO egg casseroles. I look forward to finding out what egg casserole is.)
- Waffle batter and waffle maker
- Fruit and whipped cream for waffles
- Grits
- Scones and biscotti
- Surprise
Monday, November 24, 2008
Tostadas, Etc.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Impromptu Sonoran Enchiladas
There was a bit of leftover tamale sauce in the fridge, a mediocre, tomato-enhanced batch I made a few weeks ago to go over the last of the 2007 Christmas tamales from the freezer. I used the rest of it to make some Sonoran enchiladas. I added some of Lawson's carrot-habanero salsa (the orange stuff) for heat and brighter flavor.
Sonoran enchiladas are a good thing to know how to make: instead of making a whole bunch of corn tortillas, or dealing with the flabby bland excuses for corn tortillas available in Columbia grocery stores, you just make a few Sonoran corn cakes and you can have homemade enchiladas.
My recipe varies. Sometimes I make them partially out of grits, which I soak first to soften; sometimes they're all cornmeal or masa harina. Here's the basic recipe, adapted from James Peyton:
1 1/2 cups masa harina or cornmeal
1/2 t baking powder
1/2 t salt
1 egg
up to 1 cup water
I don't measure very carefully. These can get too wet easily, so be careful with the water.
Form into 4 cakes. Pan fry over medium-high heat until browned. Set on paper towels. Assemble enchiladas.
This particular batch was part northern New Mexico, part southern Arizona, and part Central America: I topped the Sonoran cakes with chopped white onion, leftover Anasazi beans, a fried egg (all Four Corners/New Mexico traditions) and some white cheddar. Equal parts gringo-style red chile/tomato sauce and Belizean carrot-habanero sauce made this quite the ethnic blend. It was also a pretty good finger in the eye of the idea that there's some monolithic thing called Mexican Food.
Friday, November 21, 2008
Advance Gravy
Pot Roast
I made pot roast in the crockpot again. It took maybe ten minutes of prep work. I browned a small chunk of beef, then put it in the crockpot with chopped carrots, onions, and mushrooms. I added salt, a bay leaf, and cheap wine and turned it on low for 20 hours. I served it with egg noodles.
Pot roast feels like wartime food, food for a recession, food for hard times. It also feels like food for winter; it's going to be 20 degrees here overnight. I did not move to the South for this.
I just finished a few big projects I had going, so I should be cooking and posting more. I'll have Thanksgiving plans up soon; we're going to try to shop for ingredients early this year instead of Wednesday evening.
We're going out for fancy Thai food tonight.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Outrageous Desserts
I delivered some desserts to Grandma this morning. I announced myself as the Calorie Fairy.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Spicy Indian Kohlrabi
I bought some kohlrabi recently for the first time. I wrote to ask you about it because I remembered you and Dad used to grow it in Alaska. And while I want to try it the simple way you told me about -- boiled, with butter, salt, and pepper -- we were in the mood for something spicy. Also, it's easier to approach a new vegetable when garlic and chiles are involved.
So I was pleased to find that kohlrabi is used in Indian cooking a lot. This is a combination of several recipes I found.
***
- 3 kohlrabi (kohlrabis? sputniks?) with greens
- 2 T olive oil
- 2 bay leaves
- A few garlic cloves, minced
- 1/2 tsp turmeric
- 2 small hot chiles, fresh or dried -- I used a fresh immature tabasco and a few chiltepins
- 2 t ground coriander
- 1 t cracked black pepper
- salt to taste
- 1 cup water
- 1-2 T fresh lemon juice
Heat the oil and saute the bay leaves, garlic, turmeric, chiles, and coriander, being careful not to burn them. Add the greens and saute for a few minutes. Then add the chopped kohlrabi and salt and pepper. Saute a few minutes more.
Add water, cover, and simmer until tender. Some recipes called for as many as 40 minutes, but I think we had some very young kohlrabi, and it was extremely tender in about 15 minutes.
Let the water cook away and add the lemon juice. Serve.
***
Lawson was quite charmed, and I think he is going to grow some kohlrabi now.
In the back there is a half-invented chicken-rice dish. Lawson said it was like an Indian chicken bog. It was okay, but not perfectly balanced. It contained onions, garlic, cardamom, saffron, a cinnamon stick, ginger, almonds, yogurt, jasmine rice, chicken thighs, and some other stuff I can't recall. Nice idea, one I'll try again, but with some modifications.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Accidental Gourds and Other Garden Happenings
I apologize for the hiatus. I got busy at work. Our fridge was broken, too -- technically it still is, though it'll stay cold for a few more days until the defroster (which is burned out) ices over again and seizes everything up. The part is on order.
But Lawson fixed the oven, so things are looking up.
While Lawson and I have been working too much and eating takeout food, his small fall garden has been taking off, what with heavy rains and benign neglect. The cabbages and collards should be ready for eating soon.
And look: we think this is a gourd.
It's definitely a cucurbit of some sort. When it first came up we thought it was a rogue late-season cucumber, because of the leaves and the vine growth pattern. Then it flowered, and the flowers looked exactly like zucchini blossoms, all trumpety and orange.
But then we started looking more closely at the vegetables below the flowers, and they have this beautiful duotone thing going. A weird squash hybrid? But Lawson remembered that I bought some ornamental gourds last year from a roadside stand in North Carolina, and that when fall was over I composted them. I spread some of that compost around this year's fall garden...and hey presto, a gourd plant. I hope it lasts through the upcoming freeze.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Simple Anchovy Pasta
Monday, November 10, 2008
South American Dinner
Maybe the Republicans are right, and the country will lapse into moral decline now the Democrats are in power. Starting with us--this was the second morning in a week that we woke up to unwashed dishes and the multi-bottle litter of entertaining.
I served a South American dinner for six. The menu:
Sweet potato chips (purchased)
Basque sheep cheese
Nuts
***
Shrimp Cebiche
Vegetable Cebiche (hearts of palm, broccoli, mushrooms)
Homemade Bread
***
Chicken in a Red Chile Sauce with Peas and Olives
Quinoa Pilaf
Pickled Onions
***
Fruit Tart
The loaf of bread pictured above contained 1 cup unbleached flour, 1/2 cup spelt flour, 1 1/4 cup whole wheat flour, and 1/4 cup coarse cornmeal. I used molasses for the sweetener.
The tart was pretty with mixed berries, all on sale this week!
Remember we wondered how to make pickled onions like Santos? I found the method in The South American Table by Maria Baez Kijac.
Peel a medium red onion, cut in half, and slice into paper-thin half moons. Cover with hot water and soak 15 minutes. Drain and rinse with cold water. Add the juice of 1 lemon, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/4 teaspoon pepper to the onions, mix well, cover, and let stand at room temperature for three hours or until they turn pink. Best served the same day.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Crockpot with a View
Anchovies
Friday, November 7, 2008
Okra and Greek-Style Cod
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Spaghetti alla Carbonara
I got a pretty kitchen scale for my birthday.
I have of course read a lot about spaghetti alla carbonara, but I'd never tried it. Never knew quite what to think. But Emile was selling pancetta at the farmers market the other week, so we bought some and made spaghetti with pancetta and eggs and cheese.
I have to say, it wasn't my thing. Even with tons of parsley, which Lawson said correctly was key to the dish, it lacked any redeeming green-ness. It was too intense. Lawson, who has made it many times before, didn't like the pancetta as much as the plain old bacon he's used before.
I have used the pancetta since in other ways, and it's glorious. I cooked it with some collards last week. But maybe not so much with the eggs and parmesan and pasta.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Post Election and Post Meat
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Some Maintenance
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Election Night Eating
Patty ate one of the cat's toys, a tiny white mouse on wheels.
The cat hasn't been eating her canned food lately, so Patty ate that, too.
Lawson and I are going to eat takeout from Bangkok Restaurant, the little hole-in-the-wall Thai place by our house. It's not the greatest ever, but the semi-Americanized staples are good: pad thai, masaman curry, pad see ew. Maybe tonight I'll branch out to a red curry.
We were in the mountains this weekend. Sunday night we saw Billy Bragg in Asheville; before the show we ate at a mixed noodle joint that was pretty okay. My spicy wonton noodle soup had wonderful soft homemade wontons full of ginger and pork and sesame oil, but the broth was kind of bland.
Otherwise, we ate sandwiches and cheese and fresh North Carolin apples and things like that. And because we spent two days sawing and hauling trees and branches and cutting a new trail, we ate big breakfasts of fried eggs, bacon, and toast. Many, many calories were consumed and burned. It was fun.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Fall Dinner
I used Anne Postic's recipe from the Free Times for the tart. My dough didn't hang together because I only had whole wheat flour, so I pressed it into a tart pan instead of making a free-form shape. It smells wonderful.