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Monday, December 31, 2007

My Menu Plan for the Week


As we usher in 2008, hubby and I are happily staying grounded, cozy, and very well-fed this week.

  • Monday: New Year's Eve! Rustic Potato-Leek Soup, Roasted Chicken Breasts, Arugula Salad with warm shallot vinaigrette

  • Tuesday: New Year's Day Beef Chili (light but still hearty version)

  • Wednesday: Porcini-Truffle Ravioli over Wilted Arugula

  • Thursday: Mediterranean Melts

  • Friday: Quinoa & Kale


I promise to post the Potato-Leek Soup recipe -- it is fantastic, not hard to cook, and makes the best leftovers.

What will you be cooking this week?

Eoin's New Year's Eve Dinner


One of my oldest and very dearest friends in the world, Eoin, is having people over for a New Year's Eve supper and asked me for some advice as to what to make, given that their guests are a fishophobe and a vegetarian.

Easy! I said. This is what I suggested:

Winston's Pasta Puttanesca (since I myself am also a fishophobe, I've already left out the anchovies)

And the fantastic and sure-to-please-a-crowd Mediterranean Salad from America's Test Kitchen:

3 to 4 romaine hearts, roughly chopped
1 head radicchio, cored and sliced thinly into ribbons
Feta cheese - as much or as little as you like
1 can garbanzo beans, rinsed and drained

Dressing:
This dressing really hits its stride once it has been left to stand for about an hour -- the flavors really develop wonderfully...so, make the dressing first if you can.

1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
2 garlic cloves, minced or pressed through a garlic press (or as much as you like....since I am a garlic fiend, I always double this part)
1 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon table salt
1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper

Whisk all ingredients in small bowl until blended and creamy. Or do what I do: combine all ingredients in small jar, seal tightly with lid, and shake until mixture is blended and creamy.

(Can be covered and refrigerated for up to 1 week; return to room temperature before using.)

Happy, happy new year to you and yours...stay safe and here's to a fantastic 2008 full of delicious food!

Friday, December 28, 2007

Quiche for a Rainy Day

 


Or for a sunny day! Quiche is always a lovely dinner treat -- it's so luscious and fancy-seeming, even though it's surprisingly easy to make.

One of the great things about quiche is that once you know the basic formula, you can play with the ingredients and make countless variations depending on what you're in the mood for.

Yesterday I made quiche in the morning to have for dinner with a small side salad later in the evening. I highly recommend this as a Sunday dinner! Plus you can make two just as easily as you can make one, which means you've got delicious leftovers for lunch or dinner the next day. Quiche keeps wonderfully.

 
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Dena's Mushroom-Leek Quiche
(based on and adapted from Cook's Illustrated's quiche recipe)

Note: to keep it easy, I used store-bought, pre-made frozen pie crusts. Just make sure you look at the ingredient list -- the ones I bought had only four ingredients! If you're in the mood to make pie dough, by all means, you should.*

Makes two 9-inch quiches, since most pie crusts that you buy come in pairs.

2 pre-baked pie crusts
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
2 tbsp organic butter
3 medium leeks
2 cups crimini mushrooms (or any variety you prefer)
4 large eggs plus 4 large egg yolks
2 cups organic Half & Half
1 tsp salt
1 tsp white pepper (or regular pepper, which is what I had on hand, so it's what I used!)
2 cups freshly grated Gruyere cheese

Follow the directions on the pie crust package to pre-bake them and get them ready for your quiche -- usually you'll want to bring them to room temperature by leaving them out on the counter for about 10 minutes, prick the sides and bottom with a fork, and put them in a 375-degree oven for 7-10 minutes or so. Set aside when done.

Keep the oven on.

Cut the tops and green parts off the leeks, then cut in half length-wise and then cut into 1/4-inch slices width-wise. Saute the leeks in 1 tbsp olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a skillet over medium heat til they are soft, about 5-7 minutes.

Slice the mushrooms and saute them in the remaining olive oil and butter in the same pan over medium-high heat until they are nicely browned and even slightly crispy on the edges.

Whisk all the remaining ingredients EXCEPT the cheese (eggs, half & half, salt & pepper) together in a big bowl. Add in mushrooms and leeks and stir to combine.

Spread the cheese evenly over the bottom of the warm pie shells and set the shells on a baking sheet (lined with aluminum foil for easy clean-up should any spills occur). Pour the custard mixture into the pie shells so that it just comes up to right below the rim of the crust, but no further. Carefully -- very carefully! -- move the baking sheet to the oven.

Bake until light golden brown-ish, 32-35 minutes. Test for done-ness by inserting a knife blade about 1 inch from the edge of the crust: if it comes out clean, it's done! Don't worry if the center looks slightly uncooked or set but soft. It will continue to bake and become perfectly done once you've removed it and it's cooling. Remove from oven and set on a cooling rack (like the kind you use for cookies) so that air circulates all around and prevents condensation on the bottom.

Serve warm or at room temperature and ENJOY!

Other variations you could try:
  • Bacon
  • Spinach
  • Leek and goat cheese
  • Ham and asparagus


The list is really endless!



* The Best Pie Dough
(8- or 9-inch Single Pie Shell)

When rolling out the dough, roll to a thickness of about 1/8-inch thick (about the thickness of two quarters).

1 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon table salt
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
6 tablespoons unsalted butter, cold, cut into 1/4-inch pieces
4 tablespoons vegetable shortening, chilled
3–4 tablespoons ice water

1. Mix flour, salt and sugar in food processor fitted with steel blade. Scatter butter pieces over flour mixture, tossing to coat butter with some flour. cut butter into flour with five 1-second pulses. Add shortening and continue cutting in until flour is pale yellow and resembles coarse cornmeal with butter bits no larger than small peas, about four more 1-second pulses. Turn mixture into medium bowl.

2. Sprinkle 3 tablespoons of ice water over mixture. With blade of rubber spatula, use folding motion to mix. Press down on dough with broad side of spatula until dough sticks together, adding up to 1 tablespoon more ice water if dough will not come together. Shape dough into ball with your hands, then flatten into 4-inch-wide disk. Dust lightly with flour, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate for 30 minutes before rolling.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Brining Makes It Better

It's been a while since I posted a recipe, and while this brining recipe would have been very handy to have posted before Thanksgiving, Chanukkah, and Christmas, better late than never, no? And at least it's in time for New Year's!

My husband's wonderful boss' interest and curiosity has been piqued enough (by my husband's extolling the many virtues of brining) to give brining a whirl this year. Hubby's boss is thinking of brining a duck, which I think will be lovely. Brining really does make everything (well, almost everything) better!

And who better to give us the full ins and outs on brining than the masters at Cooks Illustrated? Download a pdf for the full info on brining, or follow the simple brine formula below to make your own mouth-wateringly flavorful and juicy bird.



I know my delicious heirloom breed Thanksgiving turkey would not have been anywhere near as tender without having brined it the night before cooking.

A Basic Brine for Richard

- 1/4 cup + 2 tbsp Morton's Kosher Salt OR 1/4 table salt (if you must use the Cargill-produced Diamond Crystal kosher salt, then you'd want 1/2 cup of it)
- 1/2 cup sugar
- Any aromatics or herbs you'd like to add to marinade (ie, garlic, rosemary, etc.)
- 1 quart of water

(You want to use 1 quart of brine per pound of meat.)

Combine in a container large enough to hold the brine AND your bird, or use a brining bag/ziploc bag. Stir to dissolve salt and sugar. Make sure your bird is fully submerged and covered by brine if it's not in a brining bag. Leave it to soak up the brine and do its thing for an hour per pound -- though not less than 30 minutes!

(When I did my Thanksgiving turkey, I didn't have a container large enough so I left the turkey in breast-side down for most of the night and then flipped him when there was a quarter of the time remaining.)

Want to know why and how the heck brining works?
America's Test Kitchen/Cooks Illustrated explains it this way:

We find that soaking turkeys (as well as chicken and even pork chops) in a saltwater solution before cooking best protects delicate white meat. Whether we are roasting a turkey or grilling chicken parts, we have consistently found that brining keeps the meat juicier. Brining also gives delicate (and sometimes mushy) poultry a meatier, firmer consistency and seasons the meat down to the bone. (We also find that brining adds moisture to pork and shrimp and improves their texture and flavor when grilled.)

How does brining work? Brining promotes a change in the structure of the proteins in the muscle. The salt causes protein strands to become denatured, or unwound. This is the same process that occurs when proteins are exposed to heat, acid, or alcohol. When protein strands unwind, they get tangled up with one another, forming a matrix that traps water. Salt is commonly used to give processed meats a better texture. For example, hot dogs made without salt would be limp.

In most cases, we add sugar to the brine. Sugar has little if any effect on the texture of the meat, but it does add flavor and promotes better browning of the skin.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Organic Milk Part Deux


A quick follow-up to yesterday's post about the integrity of organic milk.

I did more research on the Cornucopia Institute's Organic Dairy Scorecard, and found a couple of interesting items:

  • Whole Foods' 365 Organic label milk got a 4-cow rating! This is great. They are also the ONLY large, private-label producer of milk who was willing to let the public know about the integrity of their milk. That's huge! As the scorecard/report put it:

    "Whole Foods Market should be applauded as the first retailer willing to be transparent with their private-label products."

  • Trader Joe's, my beloved Trader Joe's -- they didn't fare so well. 0 cows. As I was expecting. I will not be buying dairy from them any longer. Sad but oh well. I'm happy to support local family farms.

  • The fantastic Straus Dairy got a 4-cow rating, too, which is as expected of course.

  • And I learned about the only dairy in California to get a 5-out-of-5-cow rating: Organic Pastures, which produces raw milk (non-pasteurized). Which I am now enticed by and I'm going to give it a try! When your milk is coming from a source this good, you don't need it to be pasteurized! And it's so much better for you that way.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Got (Authentically Organic) Milk? Think Again.


There are a number of reasons why I switched my household over to exclusively organic dairy in the past year: the hormones (that cause cancer), the antibiotics (that cause cancer, bacterial resistance, and mutations in waterfauna and probably in us), the risk of strange things like Mad Cow, the horrible, horrible impact on the environment, the factory farming, the inhumane treatment of the animals....the list goes on and on and on, truly.

A bonus plus that I had not taken into account was that when I buy my organic dairy, I am, for the most part, supporting family farms and often, local farmers. I love that!

So you can well imagine my interest in discovering in my weekly Gourmet magazine e-news from Ruth Reichl, this little tidbit:

"The USDA claims that the Aurora Organic Dairy Corporation, one of the nation's largest producers of private-label organic milk, engaged in multiple, willful violations of federal organic law."

Now this is not wholly surprising. I mean, big companies...well, maybe I'm cynical, but this is what they do, right? But then I read this:

"The ensuing spate of class-action lawsuits has now extended to legal filings against retail partners such as Safeway, Costco, and Target. Raise a glass of eggnog to the folks at The Cornucopia Institute, without whose doggedness the USDA investigation might never have taken off."

I am now obsessed with the Cornucopia Institute (whose tagline is "Promoting Economic Justice for Family-Scale Farming") and their Organic Integrity Project. And what I am mostly obsessed with is their Dairy Report & Scorecard.



I was thrilled to find out that the local family farm dairy, Clover Stornetta, got a 4-cow rating. Moo-moo to that!

Now that I've read this, I am no longer willing to buy Trader Joe's organic milk. I am switching over to Clover Stornetta milk exclusively. Happy cows do live in California, in small numbers, on Clover farms. And I want their milk.




I was apalled at the rating that Horizons Organics, which is ubiquitous and is everywhere -- you know you've seen them in your store -- got a 0-cow rating. 0 cows! They SUCK!



I invite you to check out your dairy on their scorecard...it's fascinating! And very educational. And very enlightening. I feel so much more prepared to go into the grocery store.

Seriously: I know it's just milk, but a little milk adds up to a lot of cows adds up to a lot of impact on us, our kids, our families, our planet.

And hear hear for the Cornucopia Institute!

[Liked this post? Check out Part 2!]

Monday, December 17, 2007

2007 Food Blog Winners

ImageChef.com - Custom comment codes for MySpace, Hi5, Friendster and more

Cool! Some of my fave food blogs won:

And I've got a new food blog I'm adding to my reader...Farmgirl Fare, winner of Best Rural Food Blog.

I'm not sure why Smitten Kitchen and Pinch My Salt didn't make it, but oh well...there's always next year.



My Menu Plan for the Week


I was talking with some dear friends about menu planning last night. They were saying how they wish they could do it, and I was saying how I can't imagine not doing it. It was really nice to hear that they read my weekly menu plans and feel stirrings of inspiration towards doing their own...that was very gratifying. It gives me that funny pay-it-forward feeling. So: Kerry and Marta, you can do it! Or you could begin by trying it once and seeing how it works for you. Copy one of mine, or pick and choose from different weeks! Then the mental hassle is taken away, right?

Really though -- I can't conceive of not meal-planning weekly. My wonderful friend Robin first turned me onto it, and helped me to see that it was possible to do without being a crazy Betty Crocker type, enslaved to one's kitchen and never thinking about anything else but What To Cook.

And now, sitting down once a week, usually on the weekend, and planning my and hubby's meals is the only way I can see how to do this cooking all week thing. When I didn't do it, years ago, we ate out SO MUCH MORE. Which is not only not as healthy as eating home-cooked meals, but considerably more expensive.

And even cooking regularly but not planning it out requires going to the grocery store every day, or at least every other day, and that also ends up lightening your wallet more than you ever wanted it to. Because we all know that even when you go into the store with only two items on your list, you always end up with a couple or a few or several more extraneous goodies, like... dark chocolate caramels with sea salt, or chili-lime cashews, or a baguette and brie, or...the list is really endless, the things which catch my eye. (And which I do not buy, because I go to the store once a week and can usually exercise enough will power to avoid them once. But if I had to go more regularly? Forget about it. Those dark chocolate caramels with sea salt would be in my kitchen already.)

By planning the week's meals regularly, there's an easy routine to it, which means it's not a headache for me to do. And it takes stress out of the rest of my week: even if nothing else goes as planned or goes well during my day, at the very least I know I don't need to worry about what the heck we're going to eat for dinner. And if I plan it right, there will be leftovers, which means I also don't need to worry about what the heck we're going to eat for lunch the next day. (Another HUGE wallet-saver!)

So...with all of that said, here's what we're eating for dinner this week at Casa Dena:

  • Sunday: My Boss' Holiday Party (aka we noshed til we were full and did not need to eat dinner when we got home)
  • Monday: Warmed Ravioli (Roasted Butternut Squash & Chestnut in Pumpkin Pasta) with Balsamic-Shallot-Olive Oil Dressing on a bed of wilted Arugula, topped with Parmesan shavings
  • Tuesday: My Office Holiday Party (aka eating out at a yummy restaurant)
  • Wednesday: Quinoa with Sauteed Kale
  • Thursday: Tofu Stirfry
  • Friday: Mother-in-law's in town! (aka eating out)

So there you go. I'm taking it pretty easy this week. I hope to tackle more challenging recipes next week, actually.

What are YOU eating this week?

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Michael's Mushroom Galette


My good friend Nzinga threw a great little Chanukkah party last weekend. And her great husband, Michael, threw together this little mushroom galette for the party. It was insanely delicious. My hubby and I were so sad we couldn't eat the whole thing. And as soon as he tasted it, hubby turned to me and said, "You HAVE to get this recipe!"

And he was right; I did. So I did, and Michael graciously obliged me with the recipe below. I am definitely going to give it a whirl...and my secret is that instead of making my own dough, I'm totally going to use Trader Joe's whole wheat pizza dough. I've used it before and it's actually really tasty.

Michael's Mushroom Galette

- 3 tbsp olive oil
- 2 cloves garlic, minced/pressed
- 2-3 baskets (like strawberries come in) mushrooms, tough stems removed, sliced into 1/4-in thick strips. This will seem a like too much, but the mushrooms will cook down. (Michael's note: I used 2.5 baskets of 'ugly' shitakes from the mushroom booth at Ferry Plaza market, a bit over 2 lbs.)
- 5 sprigs fresh thyme
- salt
- 3/4 cup white wine
- 2 tbsp butter
- black pepper
- savory pastry dough (Michael's note: I used yeasted olive oil galette dough from Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone, with half whole wheat and half white flour.)
- 1/4 lb gruyere, grated
- 1 egg, beaten

Make the dough first so it can rise or rest while cooking the mushrooms. (Dena's note: or, if you're taking the quick & easy route like me, let the refrigerated dough rest at room temperature!)

Preheat oven to 400F.

Heat oil over low flame in large, heavy saute pan (e.g., cast iron). Soften garlic for 2-3 minutes. Add mushrooms and thyme. Raise temperature to medium and cook covered for ~ 15 minutes, stirring often. Salt generously. Remove cover and raise temperature, stirring as the liquid evaporates. The mushrooms will stick a little bit as they begin to brown. When they have a nice color, remove to a bowl. Return the pan to the stove and add the wine to deglaze. Stir and scrape up the yummy browned bits until the wine has reduced by ~ half. Remove from heat and stir in butter. Add the mushrooms back in, add pepper to taste, and stir to coat. Return everything to the bowl to cool and discard thyme sprigs.

Roll out the dough so it is thin and about 16 inches across (irregular shape is fine). Place on baking sheet that is at least 14 inches wide. (Dena's note: I highly recommend using parchment paper beneath the dough.) Spread thin layer of grated cheese over center of dough in ~ 12in circle, then spread mushrooms on top. Fold extra dough over in flaps to form 6-8 sided, partly covered tart. Brush exposed pastry with egg.

Bake for 25-30 minutes, until the pastry is cooked through and brown. Serve hot, room temperature, or reheated.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

My Menu Plan for the Week


Well it's that time again! Time to figure out what the heck we're going to eat this week.

Hubby and I have had a busy weekend with lots of holiday parties, so it's actually been nice to sit down and think about what I'll be cooking at home. It's very grounding.

  • Sunday: Winston's Pasta Puttanesca
  • Monday: Mushroom-Leek Quinoa
  • Tuesday: Quick & Easy Vegetable Winter Soup
  • Wednesday: Hubby's Office Holiday Party (aka eating out)
  • Thursday: Tofu Stirfry
  • Friday: Grilled Cheese Sandwiches & Creamy Tomato Bisque

Oh and stay tuned for a deeelish recipe that I got from my friends Nzinga & Michael -- they served this amazing Shiitake Mushroom Galette at their Chanukkah party and I told them I had to have the recipe for my blog. And my kitchen. So it's coming up soon.

What are you eating this week?

Happy cooking!

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

My First Chanukkah



Last night was the first night of Chanukkah. As someone studying to convert to Judaism, it was my first one that I celebrated for me. In high school, I went to a friend's house for their Chanukkah celebration a few times, which was great and I loved it, but that was for and about them. This was the first time Chanukkah felt like it was mine, too.

So to celebrate in style, I wanted to do it right, with a proper Chanukkah dinner after we lit the candles. Given that Chanukkah is a "festival of lights," a celebration of the miracle of the drop of oil that should have lasted one night but lasted eight instead, traditional Chanukkah food is all about oil. And dairy, to commemorate Judith, who got Holofernes drunk and full on wine and cheese before she beheaded him. (As a former Art History major, the subject of Judith and Holofernes was one that was done by some of my very favorite artists. And I never knew what the story was until now!)

The Menu:

  • Potato Latkes with applesauce and sour cream

  • Broccoli with Crispy Shallots

  • Garlic-Lemon Roast Chicken Breasts

So.... as you know, I was looking for recipes to make my own potato latkes. Well, friends, not only did I not receive any, the ones I found online looked great, but a little over my head to make for the first time on a school night. So I went with my standby -- you may not believe, you may cringe, you may say "oy vey" -- Trader Joe's frozen latkes. And I am not kidding, they are actually really pretty good! They're not the BEST latkes I've ever had, but they are far, far from the worst, and they are tasty if you fry them up in some oil in a skillet. They're not homemade, and they're not made by me from scratch, but they worked. I commit to working on my own potato latke recipe for next year.



I also made an adaptation of the fantastic French Green Beans with Crispy Shallots recipe I recently discovered. Since my market had no french green beans this week, I mixed it up and made it with broccoli instead. It was still delicious. I think I prefer the green beans, but I love broccoli and let's face it: crispy shallots and a dijon-lemon dressing make anything taste phenomenal.

Here are my shallots crisping up in oil, making this a perfect Chanukkah dish:



As for the chicken, I marinated boneless, skinless breasts in a garlic-lemon-herb concoction and popped them into a 400-degree oven for 40 minutes. Easy peasy. I made everything else while they were roasting.

For dessert, hubby and I shared a doughnut, as doughnuts are another traditional Chanukkah food, being fried in oil and all. We also nibbled on some delicious Gruyere cheese in honor of dear Judith, and of course, no celebratory Chanukkah table is complete without Manischewitz. For my first Chanukkah, I wanted to go classic, so I had to have the Manischewitz. Besides, it'll keep in my cupboard forever.

All around, it was a lovely first Chanukkah celebration. Hubby and I had a great time. And boy was the food yummy!

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Monday, December 3, 2007

My Menu Plan for the Week


I'm so looking forward to making my first-ever Chanukkah meal for my first-ever Chanukkah as a someday-to-be Jew. Stay tuned this week for a recipe recap!



What are you cooking this week?

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Happy Birthday Robin (and her Miso Dressing)


It was my dear, wonderful friend Robin's birthday yesterday. Yes, the same Robin who gave us the insanely addictive and deeeeeelicious School Garden Salad Dressing.

Robin was one of the first people to give me the personal confidence I needed to start cooking weekly. It was she who taught me about weekly menu plans, cooking from scratch, the very basic culinary principles and cookware I'd need, and the endless dinner possibilities available with a few good ingredients and just 30 minutes.

So Robin, Happy Birthday, and thank you for the gift of love of cooking and food that you shared with and passed on to me.

And as a birthday gift in honor of Robin for all of you readers (all 15 of you or however many you are!), I'm also sharing Robin's recipe for Miso Dressing. She mentioned it at our recent book club meeting and we were all excited about it. And if there's one thing I know by now, it's that if Robin says it's good, it is.

Robin's Miso Dressing

1/3 cup rice vinegar
2 tbsp white or yellow miso
2 garlic cloves
1 tbsp sugar
2 tsp grated fresh ginger
1/2 cup vegetable oil

Put everything except the oil in a blender & give it a whiz. Stream
in the oil while the blender is running.

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Seriously Delicious Food Giveaways for ALL of December!


Get thee to Serious Eats in December to win something seriously delicious!

Like what? Like this:

"At Serious Eats we don't think 12 days of Christmas are enough. Ditto for the eight days of Hanukkah, or the seven days of Kwanzaa. Nope, at Serious Eats we're going to be celebrating the holiday season by giving away seriously delicious stuff every day for the 33 days between now and New Year's Day, beginning today [they began on November 29th. Sorry for the late notice!].

What kind of seriously delicious stuff? Bacon of the Month Club memberships from the good folks at the Grateful Palate, steaks from carnivore kings Peter Luger, killer Elgin Smoked Sausage from the Southside Market in Texas, New York brunches from the venerable Russ & Daughters, gift certificates from my friends at the Zingerman's Catalogue, chocolates from one of the best chocolatiers in America, Garrison Confections. All supremely delicious things you'd be thrilled to give or get, for a holiday present."

www.seriouseats.com/required_eating/2007/11/our-crazy-good-holiday-giveaway.html

Today they're giving away a year's worth of chocolate! To my hubby when he reads this: don't worry, honey, I've already entered the contest.
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