Posts tagged ‘Garlic’

September 20, 2012

Chimichurri over portobello and pearl couscous

Summer has decided we need less fruit landing on the pavement in an end-of-season downpour and more blue-stained cuticles and lips. My son and I acquiesced and set out for some blackberry bushes that are a few blocks from our house. It was a surprise: my husband got home a little early, my daughter decided to stay home.

The two of us made our way along the sidewalk in our short-sleeved shirts, bypassed the wooden stairs that lead down to the trail that runs through a park in our neighborhood. The berries, bordering the backside of the park, grow on unruly plants that have been chopped back to hedge-like proportions along the edge of someone’s front lawn. Our plastic containers and shopping bag on the ground, we hovered at its edge, surprised there were still some to be had.

July 5, 2012

Creamy garden greens

This week I grabbed two giant bunches of kale grown by Sunbreak Farm from a shelf in the produce aisle. A little further down I found a bin full of snow peas from the same grower. I snatched those up too and decided to include them in a recipe for vegan creamed kale.

Ever since my husband and I watched Forks Over Knives, he’s been avoiding eggs for breakfast, animal milks in his oatmeal and baked goods if they contain milk or butter (around here, that would be all of them).

It’s funny. I’ve been a pescatarian for over 15 years and all that time my husband, who makes his own sausage and spent weeks researching before buying the perfect smoker, has been embracing vegetarian food at home, for my sake. Now I’m the one researching alternatives to animal-based products and trying new combinations of ingredients to come up with meals we can all share. A creamed kale recipe using ground cashews as a thickener sounded like a winner.

I gathered my ingredients and made the dish. With the peas cut on the bias and the whole concoction nestled into one of my favorite baking dishes, it looked like something we’d repeat, especially with all the greens sprouting up in the garden.

Turned out it only looked good. Maybe it was because I used an unfamiliar ingredient, sunflower milk, as a base. Or maybe the combination of flavors didn’t work for us. At any rate, it tasted vile. I couldn’t even finish the modest portion on my plate. All that produce! Sigh.

So on Monday I started again. This time I decided to use whatever I had on hand. I pulled out the few leaves of the kale I hadn’t used for the above disaster and a repeat of raw kale salad. I filled a basket with greens from the garden and gathered classic ingredients for creamed spinach: milk, shallot, butter. This is something I know how to cook and it was a perfect solo lunch. As for a vegan version? I’ll keep looking.


Creamy garden greens

adapted from Smitten Kitchen

large colander full of garden greens, whatever you have on hand
(I used kale, broccoli raab, spinach and mizuna)
1 cup whole milk
1 shallot, finely chopped
¼ clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon white whole wheat flour
a dusting of freshly grated nutmeg
Celtic sea salt
freshly ground pepper
raw cashew pieces, lightly toasted

Makes one satisfying serving

Wash greens by plunging them into a sink full of cold water
and swooshing them around until all the grit is released from
the leaves and settles on the bottom. Do not pat or spin dry.

Place hearty greens (kale, raab) in a large skillet with water
still clinging to the leaves. Cook over medium heat, stirring
occasionally and splashing extra water in when necessary to keep
the pan from going completely dry. After 4 or 5 minutes, when
the leaves are almost wilted, add the tender greens (spinach,
mizuna) and stir until all leaves are wilted, 2-3 more minutes.

Place leaves in a strainer and press excess water out into the
sink using the back of a spoon. Place greens on a cutting board
and roughly chop. Wipe out the skillet.

Gently heat milk in a small saucepan on a back burner and keep warm.

Meanwhile, re-heat your large skillet over medium heat and melt
butter. Add shallots and cook for 3 minutes or just until they begin
to show some color. Add garlic and cook for 30 seconds, stirring
constantly.

Sprinkle flour over the top and whisk to combine thoroughly.

Whisk warmed milk into the shallots and butter, adding in a
steady stream and stirring continuously to avoid lumps. Continue
stirring with the whisk until cream sauce is lightly thickened, about
3 minutes. If the sauce becomes gloppy, warm another ¼ – ½ cup
of milk and add as before, whisking just until it reaches a creamy
consistency.

Turn the heat off, taste and season with sea salt and pepper.
Add a dusting of nutmeg (not too much, the flavor is very strong).

Place in a bowl, garnish with cashews and a few more flecks
of nutmeg, if desired.

May 31, 2012

Crispy arugula salad with citrus and walnuts

My boy, with the galaxy of freckles across his nose and cheeks, is almost big enough to go off to school by himself all day.

Even though this won’t happen until fall, I thought about it a lot last week. With all the rain, I felt glad for a chance to nestle in with him at home for a couple of days, without much to do other than working together on his Storm Trooper mask. Soon those kinds of days will be more limited, and nearly never the result of something so unremarkable as a playmate getting sick or the weather turning.

He’s been drawing a lot lately and during the past week he worked for long periods of time at the art table. This gave me extra time to work around the house or sneak in a few minutes on my own projects. He’d always call me in after awhile, to help him draw Boba Fett or add to one of his blueprints for a trap (to catch the bad guys). Once we took a walk. More than once, between cloudbursts, we went out back where he poked a stick in the pond and I ran my fingers over some mosses growing on the rocks.

When time is moving slowly like that, I feel okay about getting less done. It’s simple to be together, in parallel spaces, piddling around.

Later, when my daughter is home and the afternoon light hits the floor in the family room a certain way, that’s when I get back into the swing of things. That’s when I first think about dinner. I pull produce out of the fridge and jars out of the pantry.

I let my kids sample bits of ingredients while I’m prepping the meal. Unless, of course, I’m making kale chips. When that happens, I have to shoo away little hands so the serving dish makes it to the dinner table. I mean, the kids devour them. So do the grown-ups.

And I love that. But it often means the rest of the meal sits forgotten while olive oil-covered fingers scrape the salty remnants off the bottom of the dish. What about the soup? The buttered toast? The oranges, cut into pretty discs?

So today’s recipe incorporates crispy greens into the meal. Think of it as a salad and snack combined, salty arugula with citrus and a comforting vinaigrette.

I’d never made chips out of arugula leaves before so I tried it two ways, in the oven and on a stovetop grill. The baked leaves tasted better, probably because I remembered to dash in some sea salt as I was rubbing oil into the leaves. (Salt them, by all means, but do so sparingly. The salty flavor jumps out.) The grilled leaves looked nicer, keeping some of their bright green color and acquiring those pretty horizontal lines. In the future I’ll grill them and remember the salt.

I kept the long stems on the leaves, figuring they’d be nice handles for turning and would eventually crisp, like Chinese noodles. They were nice for grabbing with the tongs but they didn’t crisp, still soggy when the leaves were perfectly done. I ended up trimming the stems off before placing in the salad bowl. Next time I’ll crisp the leaves alone.


Crispy Arugula Salad with Citrus and Walnuts
adapted from The Reluctant Gourmet

1 large bunch of arugula, washed and dried well
olive oil, for coating leaves
sea salt
1-3 pieces of your favorite citrus fruit such as navel oranges or tangerines
1/2 cup walnuts, chopped
2-3 garlic cloves, minced
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon walnut oil
½-1  T sherry vinegar or white balsamic
½-1 tsp maple syrup
sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
goat cheese or another soft cheese

Heat a griddle to medium or preheat the oven to 350°. Wash arugula
leaves and dry thoroughly with a dish towel. Toss leaves with olive oil
and a good pinch of sea salt, rubbing into any edges of leaves that don’t
get coated during the stirring by coating with your fingers.

Place in a glass baking dish or on a griddle, making sure leaves
are separated. You’ll need two glass baking dishes. On the griddle,
cook leaves in batches. Turn leaves every 3-4 minutes, until crispy,
10-12 minutes. Set aside.

Peel orange and cut into discs. Set aside.

For the vinaigrette, sauté the garlic and walnuts in the oil over
medium heat until the garlic starts to turn golden. Place in a bowl
and add walnut oil, sherry vinegar and maple syrup.

Whisk and adjust seasoning with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Arrange arugula leaves on serving plates, top with orange slices
and vinaigrette, mounding walnuts in the center. Top with bits of
cheese and serve.

May 24, 2012

Collard greens stuffed with mixed mushrooms

I confess that I’m still distracted by last week’s mushrooms. I love to photograph mushrooms of any stripe – and eat them – so anything that has to follow is at a disadvantage. Big green leaves just aren’t as exciting as something you can mistake for a piece of ocean coral, as another blogger put it.

That’s where I am today. But I can get excited about anything, even collards. They’re lush, yes? And grown right here in the Northwest, so that’s good. At least, that’s what the label on the shelving said in the produce department. But when I got home, I read the label on the giant twist-tie around the stems: “Product of California.” Darn. Sorry for my inattention. But they’ll be harvested from local soil soon enough.

Collards blanch to a zingy green color and keep their shape so making a filling and rolling it up in a neat little packet is, voila!, not so hard and awfully pretty after all. Not as pretty as the oyster mushrooms, mind you, but I’ll take it.

So here’s what I did. I figured I could combine obsession with necessity and include mushrooms again. When I found this recipe over at Smitten Kitchen, I was excited to make it into a hearty veggie meal with mixed mushrooms instead of the requisite ground beef. And, boy, was it good.

I love the bones of this recipe, especially the addition of parsnip to the mirepoix. If you’re making this in real time with me, go ahead and core your parsnip. It was likely harvested late and has been cellared for quite awhile by now so it has a stringy, wood-like core that won’t soften in the sauté pan, something I learned from Denis Cotter in Wild Garlic, Gooseberries…and Me. If you eat parsnips in the fall, right at the beginning of the harvest, you can disregard this advice – the cores will still be tender as a carrot. (As the ellipsis suggests, this is a dreamy cookbook, its author meandering over the English countryside collecting seasonal produce and incorporating into unbelievable sounding dishes such as Cabbage Timbale of Celeriac and Chestnuts with Porcini and Oyster Mushroom Sauce. I received a copy a couple of years ago and it has increased my fresh produce vocabulary – puffball, anyone? –  and expanded our kitchen repertoire.)

Before we jump in and stuff some greens, I’m going to lament the passing of spring with you for a moment. I’ve had these photos saved up to include in a post sometime soon and now I’m finding that the photos I took just a couple of weeks ago are passé: the flowers shown here are now in various states of shriveling. The lilac is past its prime; the bleeding hearts don’t hang so dewy and plump anymore. But anyway they were beautiful and other flowers are blooming so all’s well. And the dandelions’ unabating cycle will be with us until the frost.

Now, back to the collards.

They are one of the scary greens, one I never thought I’d like because of an aversion to produce that’s cooked and cooked until the color seeps into the cooking water. Oh, and tossed with something I no longer eat: bacon. No thanks.

But there’s more than one way to cook a giant leaf. These were tender after blanching in the saltwater and kept their shape and mild flavor, though they lost the bright green color,  after cooking for quite a long time in the tomato sauce  you won’t cook yours as long – see my note below the recipe).

They were a hit three-quarters of the way around our table, a unanimous vote quashed only by my increasingly green-phobic son. Though, for the record, he will now eat a green smoothie if I assure him it is so because it contains kiwi and honeydew – never mind the parsley – and call it, as a friend said she does with her own boys, a Hulk smoothie. Brilliant woman!

Enjoy this one, friends.

Collard greens stuffed with mixed mushrooms

2 bunches collard greens (about 15 large leaves)
1 pound of your favorite fresh mushrooms, chopped fine in a food
processor (do not process so long that it turns into a paste – you may
need to remove and hand chop a few stragglers)
½ oz. dried mushrooms such as maitake, black trumpet or morels,
rehydrated and chopped
2 cloves garlic, smashed flat and minced
1 medium onion, small dice
2 tablespoons olive or grapeseed oil
1 carrot, shredded
2 celery stalks, thinly sliced
1 parsnip, cored and shredded
1 cup cooked brown rice or ½ cup uncooked white rice (see *)
1 to 2 T tomato paste
3 to 4 c tomato sauce or tomato juice

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Prepare a large bowl of ice
water and place near the stove top.

Wash and stem collards and blanch in batches in the boiling water for 2
minutes. Remove and immediately plunge into the ice water. When cooled,
remove to a plate and set aside.

Heat the oil in a sauté pan or pot. Cook the onions until they are soft then
add the carrot, celery and parsnip and sauté until slightly softened. Add fresh
mushrooms and several grindings of salt. Sauté until mushrooms have reduced.

Add rehydrated dried mushrooms and cook for another few minutes.

Push ingredients to one side, add a small pool of oil to the empty side of
the pan and sauté garlic in the oil for 30 seconds, until fragrant. Stir to
incorporate with the other ingredients and season with more salt and pepper.
Transfer the mixture to a bowl to let it cool a bit. Mix in the rice and tomato
paste. Taste and adjust seasonings.

Dry a collard leaf and place on a work surface. Cut out the thickest part of the
vein and pull the ends together to overlap at the bottom. Roll about ¼ to ⅓ cup
of filling in each leaf (depending on the size of your leaf) and arrange in a large,
wide pot, layering if necessary. Pour in enough sauce or juice to cover the rolls.

Bring to a boil and reduce the heat, letting them simmer covered on the
stove on low for about 45 minutes.*

Serve immediately. If sauce has thinned a bit, you can heat up any additional
sauce you didn’t use and pour it over as you serve the rolls.

*If you’re using uncooked white rice, you’ll need about this much time to ensure
the rice cooks. I used uncooked brown rice and ended up simmering the rolls
for over an hour and a half before the rice was done. If you opt for uncooked rice,
especially brown, be sure you have plenty of sauce (I didn’t) to keep them hydrated
and less prone to burning. If you use cooked rice, you’ll just need to cook enough
to heat through, for 20-30 minutes.

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