20.8.09

Fresh Tomato-Basil Pasta

This is a simple summer dish I've been doing for a long time. I'm still amazed that years later I've yet to tire from it. Which is good, since tomatoes are an overabundance right now. The best part is, it offers such an aesthetic presentation that it makes for a great dish to prepare for guests. the proportions really are based on likes. I've estimated what I do for 2 people here.


Ingredients:

1 pint grape tomatoes or one very large heirloom tomato, room temperature
(grape or heirlooms are the best so that they have extra flavor)
2 tbsps pine nuts
1/4 cup sliced fresh basil
1 tsp olive or avocado oil
1 tsp balsamic vinegar
1 garlic clove, thinly sliced
salt and pepper to taste
Parmesan cheese to garnish
2 handfuls whole wheat penne

Directions:

Bring water to boil and cook the pasta until al dente.
While the pasta is cooking, slice the tomatoes and divide between 2 bowls.
Add garlic, basil, nuts, oil, vinegar, salt and pepper to tomatoes and toss together.
Add cooked pasta and toss together.
Serve with parmesan to taste.
It's that easy.


Raspberries with sour creme custard

Berry Heaven. I love it when berries are on sale at the store for super cheap. I can't help by buy up more than I can eat. Then I face the challenge of what do to (other than just throw them in the freezer and use them to bake in the winter). There is always breakfast with yogurt. Or a tart. But what else? I remembered my aunt once made me a nectarine and blackberry pie with slightly sweetened sour cream instead of whipped cream. I loved the extra depth of flavor the sour cream added to the berries. So, here's my attempt at a variation on a theme.


Ingredients:
8-10 oz raspberries
1/3 cup sour cream

1 egg yoke
2 tablespoons honey

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 450F.
Spread the berries evenly between 4 3-inch ramekins.
Mix together the sour cream, yoke, and honey until smooth.
Poor over top of the raspberries.
Bake for 10-15 minutes until the custard begins to delicately brown.
Serve warm.


17.8.09

Chocolate Zucchini Bread

I woke up way to early this morning after a night of poor slept. In my haze, I tried to figure out what to do with myself so that I could either jump start my system or put me back to sleep. As I stared at my fridge looking for an early morning snack to get things going, all I really could see in there were veggies. Specifically, zucchini. lots and lots of zucchini. So, to zucchini bread it was. Or, did I want chocolate zucchini cake? I couldn't decide. In the end, I decided to take the cocoa powder and add it to the bread (as well as some cocoa nibs, since I had them but no chocolate chips in my pantry).

Some of the best loaves I've ever made emerged from my oven. The zucchini was bright green specks in caramel colored loaves. The chocolate was a balancing accent to the zucchini; tastable but in no way overpowering. This recipe needed to be written down. I sure hope I can repeat it.


Ingredients:


2 cups whole wheat flour

1 cup whole wheat white flour

1 3/4 cups sugar

1/4 cup ground flax seed

1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
3 teaspoons cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ground clove
1 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt


3 cups grated zucchini


1/2-1 cup chopped walnuts (optional)

1/4 cup cocoa nibs (optional)


3 eggs

2/3 cup butter, melted

1/3 cup yogurt



Directions:


Preheat oven to 350°F.

Butter and flour 2 bread pans.

Sift together the dry ingredients.

Stir in the zucchini until it is well coated and mixed in.

Stir in the optional ingredients and mix well.

Mix together the wet ingredients and add to dry, mixing just enough to moisten everything.

Scoop into the bread pans.

Bake 50-60 minutes, until a tester comes out clean.


Morning Coffee

Sometimes, all a gray morning needs is a beautiful cup of coffee. Caffe Calabria in North Park never lets me down. They make a viennese latte that is just divine -- a normal (properly proportioned) latte which is a rarity in this town with a touch of honey and a sprinkle of cinnamon. I swear they have the best coffee in all of San Diego. Never bitter. Never acidic. Always perfect. Only problem is they often close at 3. But I guess, then, it is no longer my morning coffee, so that's OK.

12.8.09

Beet and Goat Cheese Salad

Another vegetable that I get too much of in my vegetable box in the summer are fresh beets. But roasted every so simply and paired with goat cheese, these are delicious little critters.

Ingredients:

3 beets
olive oil
salt
pepper
walnuts
honey
1 log goat cheese
lettuce (mix baby is the best)
avocado oil


Directions:

Preheat oven to 425F.

Scrub beets. Do not peel, but simply slice them into 1/4 inch thick slices. Toss with olive oil, salt and pepper. Place in a single layer on a parchment lined baking sheet. Bake for about 20 minutes, until the surfaces of the beets begin to wrinkle and absorb the oil. (make sure they are soft enough that you can slice on with a fork before you call them done). Remove and let cool.

While the beets are baking, make some candied walnuts. At least, this is the cheat that I use. In a pan, toast the walnuts on medium high heat until you begin to smell the oils. Pour just enough honey over the walnuts to lightly coat them. Stir for another couple minutes until the honey begins to harden. Put aside to let cool.

Assemble the salad with the remaining ingredients. I dressed it simply with avocado oil, but you can use any oil or very simply oil and vinegar dressing (there is enough flavor in the iingredients that you don't want to complicate the palate.

9.8.09

Summer Vegetables, French Tian Style

Summer means lots of zucchini, eggplant and tomatoes. Lots. Bags and bags of them. They make for a great challenge as I try to figure out what to do with them beyond the typical marinate and roast or zucchini bread. Here's one idea I had. This is a baked summer dish. It does require kitchen heat, sadly. I ended up baking it late at night once the day's heat had subsided. But it is worth it. The layered yumminess of vegetables flavors mixed together is good hot right out of the oven or cold the next day for lunch.

Ingredients:

1 eggplant, sliced into 1/2 inch slices
3 zucchini, sliced into 1/4 inch slices
4 medium tomatoes, sliced
1 onion or 2 leeks (including greens), sliced into very thin rounds
5 cloves garlic, peeled and smooshed
1/4 cup walnuts
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
Salt
Pepper
Grated parmesan
Herbs de provence (fresh is best, but there is enough moisture to use dried)


Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400F.

Line a baking sheet with tin foil. Lay the eggplant on it. Generously drizzle with salt and vinegar. Bake for 30 minutes.

In the meantime, heat enough oil over low heat in a thick skillet to cover the base. Slowly saute the onions with the garlic until their sugars start to turn brown. If you've got time to properly caramelize, that would be even better.

Take a bread pan and spread the onions along the base. Now, layer the eggplant, zucchini and tomatoes on top of each other. With each set of 3, sprinkle walnuts, herbs, and grated parmesan. For the top layer, alternate everything to make stripes of color. After it has baked for 25 minutes, top with a little more parmesan, herbs, and walnuts. Continue to bake until the cheese begins to become golden.

Bake for a total of 30-40 minutes.

Vegetable Smiles

I love my weekly vegetable box. Some weeks it amuses me more than others. This was one of the very amusing weeks. Look what I got. He was waiting to greet me as I pulled him out of the paper bag.

6.8.09

Nicoise Salad

It's been too long since I've posted. Somehow summer involves less cooking than normal. Especially in the heat wave we've been having here. However, what that does mean is a lot more salads and cold soups and simple foods. A favorite one of these is this simple salad. It does involve a very small amount of cooking - but not enough to either make the meal a hot meal or heat up the kitchen. So perfect for when you are sick of everything raw but still don't want to be near anything hot. And it's SO flexible.


Ingredients:

Thin slices of tuna (preferably sushi grade so you can leave the core raw) - One per person
One hard boiled egg per person
Lettuce
Grape tomatoes
Oil cured olives - both green and black
Green beans, stemmed
New potatoes, the tinier the better (if larger than an inch in diameter, cut them in half)
Fresh fava beans or edmame beans - shelled and cooked
Red onion, thinly sliced
Radishes, thinly sliced
Handful of fresh basil
Nice olive oil for cooking tuna and drizzling
Sea salt
Fresh ground black pepper

Directions:

Steam the Green Beans until just barely cooked and still a little crunchy - about 5 minutes. Since the size of green beans is so variable, I always just test and watch them rather than set a timer. Run under cold water to cool and stop the cooking.

Boil the potatoes until they can be pierced by a fork. Run under cold water to cool.

Heat olive oil in a thick pan on high heat (if you've got an iron skillet, use it!). Sprinkle Salt and Pepper onto both sides of the Tuna Sear the Tuna for one minute on both sides (2 minutes if not using sushi grade tuna).

Spread Lettuce on the plate. Place remaining salad ingredients around the plate, each in their own part. Place Tuna in center. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste.

Variations:
Play around with the ingredients as you'd like. The core is the tuna, olives, green beans, and Potatoes. Really, after that, it's all game. Add artichoke hearts or garlic cloves. use no lettuce. substitute red pepper for radishes. Just have fun with the combination of fresh, crunchy, raw, cooked, sweet, bitter, salty.