Archive for the ‘Side Dish’ Category

Pat’s Marinated Carrots

Monday, May 26th, 2008

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This recipe comes from my grandmother Pat, my dad’s mom. I think of these marinated carrots as one of her specialties. They’re great because they don’t take too long to make, and they will keep for a couple weeks in the fridge. Pat always seems to keep them on hand, and they often appear as a side dish at lunchtime. I especially think of eating them at my grandparents’ house in Blowing Rock, NC, so they remind me of summer. The perfect accompaniment to a Memorial Day hot dog to kick off the start of the season!

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Marinated Carrots

I keep these in a jar in the fridge, just like my grandmother. But we don’t actually preserve them or anything, so they do need to be refrigerated. They’ll keep for a couple weeks.

2 lbs sliced carrots
1 onion sliced thin
1 c chopped celery
1 can tomato soup
1 t prepared mustard
1 t Worcestershire sauce
1 c sugar
1/2 c salad oil
3/4 c vinegar
salt and pepper

Boil carrots until almost done but they still have a nice crunch (less than 5 minutes). Drain and cool. Mix in onion and celery.

Combine remaining ingredients and pour over carrot mixture. Mix well. Cover and refrigerate at least 12 hours. Drain to serve.

Spring Tabbouleh

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

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Heidi at 101cookbooks recently made this beautiful spring tabbouleh, which Matt and I copied the other night. We changed it up a little — Heidi had used mostly chives instead of the traditional parsley, but I love parsley, so I decided to use it instead. Also, we have this crazy jungle of mint growing outside our kitchen window, and it needs to be tamed a bit, so we we chopped up some of that to add to the mix as well. We also replaced the walnuts with pine nuts.

I had never tried bulgur before, but I keep thinking I should branch out and try different whole grains, so here’s a first step in that direction. This was a wonderful, quick, healthy but fulfilling one dish meal — the perfect thing when we got home from the gym Tuesday night. And so pretty, too!

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Spring Tabbouleh

adapted from Heidi Swanson

1 cup fine bulgur
1 bunch of asparagus, cut in 1″ pieces

1 garlic clove, crushed with a couple pinches of salt
1 lemon
1/3 c extra virgin olive oil

1/2 bunch parsley, finely chopped
handful of mint, finely chopped
handful of chives, finely chopped

1 c of pine nuts, toasted
2 hardboiled eggs, chopped

Boil some water (~4 c or so). Put the bulgur in a medium bowl and pour water up to the top of the grains. Let sit until just tender (Heidi says 15 minutes, but it took a little longer before it was tender enough for my taste).

Return the water to the stove, salt it, add the asparagus, and blanch for about a minute, just enough to take the edge off their bite. Or, do what I did, and put the asparagus in a microwave safe dish, pour the water over them, cover them, and microwave for about a minute.

Once the bulgur is done, press out any remaining water and add the asparagus to the bulgur.

Meanwhile, whisk together the garlic, lemon juice, and olive oil. Taste the dressing, and season more as necessary.

Add the herbs, half the pine nuts, and a generous splash of dressing. Toss, add more dressing as needed, and adjust the seasoning. (I ended up using not quite all the dressing, and adding a bit more olive oil.) Garnish with remaining nuts and chopped egg.

Eat with Your Hands: Mussels and Artichokes

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

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Matt and I had a delicious, though perhaps not all that balanced or healthy, meal of steamed mussels and artichokes the other night. We first started eating mussels while we were studying abroad in France, where they are often served with French fries as “Moules Frites.” There, mussels are eaten not with one of those silly little shellfish forks as I’ve seen them served here, but by using one of the shells as little tongs to pull the meat from the other shells. (Sorry for the blurriness in the picture, but I thought it was worth including for purposes of instruction.)

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We’ve cooked them a couple times since then, and they are very easy to prepare. A recipe in this months Cooking Light inspired us to make them again. This time, we simply steamed them with chicken broth, lemon juice, and some spices, and served them with some butter for dipping.

We also steamed an artichoke, which was originally planned as an appetizer but ended up being finished about the same time as the mussels. We also had some dipping sauce for the artichoke — as I said, not very healthy, but certainly delicious! If you’ve never eaten whole artichokes before, as we hadn’t until moving to California, they may require some eating instructions too. Basically, you pull off the petals, dip them in the sauce, and scrape the little bit of pulp off with your teeth. I didn’t take pictures of that part, but Elise has a nice tutorial. Also, you want to stop eating the petals when you get to the purplish ones in the center. This part is called the “choke.” It should be scraped out, leaving the delicious “heart” of the artichoke underneath.

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Stuffed Tomatoes

Monday, March 17th, 2008

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Sorry for the long hiatus, but the quarter is finally over and I should have a chance to blog a bit at least for the next couple weeks when things get geared up again. Everything has been so busy I’ve hardly even been cooking, much less taking pictures and writing something up. Matt’s been taking care of me very generously though, so I have been fed some pretty good meals in between working problem sets, exams, and grading. But I’m looking forward to getting back in the kitchen!

Here’s an easy side dish that always seems to impress despite its simplicity. We learned this from a friend when we were studying abroad in France a few years ago. I don’t have a real recipe and I always change it around a bit, but here’s the gist of it.

Stuffed Tomatoes

  • small, round tomatoes, one for every two servings
  • coarse breadcrumbs, preferably homemade, ~1/2 c per tomato
  • fresh Parmigiano-Regianno, grated, a few tablespoons per tomato
  • fresh chopped herbs, a tablespoon or so per tomato (rosemary, parsley, thyme, etc. … I use whatever I have on hand)
  • minced garlic, about a clove per tomato
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • olive oil

Preheat oven to 400 F. Cut tomatoes in half. Place cut side up on a baking sheet. (You may need to cut a little bit off the rounded side so they will sit flat.) In a bowl, mix together breadcrumbs, cheese, herbs, garlic, salt, and pepper. Add enough olive oil so the filling can be barely held together when squished. Drizzle a little olive oil over the tomatoes. Mound the filling on top of each tomato half. Bake at 400 F for 20 minutes or so, until the top is a little browned and the tomatoes are cooked through.

A (mostly) Alice Waters Dinner Party

Monday, March 3rd, 2008


In case you were wondering what I made for dinner to go with my French Bread — wonder no longer! Matt and I had Mom and Dad over for dinner so I could cook out of my new Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook that I got for Christmas. I chose one of her so-called “uncomplicated menus”, with a few changes. This is the original menu:

  • Baked Goat Cheese with Garden Salad
  • Carrot and Shallot Soup with Chervil Cream
  • Charcoal-Grilled Chicken with Garlic Puree
  • Cherries and Almond Cookies

We decided to change things around from this a bit. We had planned to make this menu back in January, and we bought ingredients and everything before Matt and I both got sick and had to cancel. We made the carrot soup then (I always like soup when I’m sick), and it was good but I wasn’t quite ready to have it again yet, so we decided to make our friend Kelly Branson’s butternut squash soup instead. Also, I’d been wanting to try the CBGB (cherries, biscuits, ginger, and butterscotch, oh my!) dessert Habeas Brulee posted a while back. But, we decided we didn’t need something quite so rich or complicated, and so we made just the almond biscuits and cherry sauce instead.

I’m not going to copy whole recipes out of this book, but I do have permission to share Kelly’s recipe for butternut squash soup which I highly recommend. I’ll give a summary of the other recipes though, and if you want more details, you can buy the book. Which, by the way, I highly recommend. I basically read the whole cookbook cover-to-cover between Christmas and New Year’s this year. It’s so beautifully written, and she includes interesting details about the origins of each recipe. Now, I just need to find an excuse to go eat at Chez Panisse!

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Baked Goat Cheese with Garden Salad

I marinated the goat cheese rounds in olive oil and rosemary for a day. (It was supposed to be thyme, but I think Alice Waters would approve of using what I grow instead of having to buy something at the store.) Then I dipped the goat cheese in bread crumbs and baked it for a few minutes. I served this over mixed greens tossed in a light vinaigrette of olive oil and red wine vinegar.

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Butternut Squash Soup
Recipe from Kelly Branson
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Charcoal-Grilled Chicken with Garlic Puree

I marinated a whole chicken (cut into pieces) in garlic, red wine, and rosemary (again, it was supposed to be thyme, but I had rosemary so I used it). Matt grilled the chicken on a low charcoal fire. We also roasted garlic, and made a puree of that which we rubbed on the chicken after it came off the grill. We served this over roasted potatoes, and garnished with lemons.

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Almond Biscuits with Cherry Sauce

Danielle at Habeas Brulee posted this gorgeous dessert a few months ago. She named it CBGB, for Cherries, Biscuits, Ginger and Butterscotch. The original version was almond biscuits, with a sauce made from sour cherries, garnished with candied, pickled ginger, and accompanied by butterscotch sauce. Some dessert, huh?! I’d still like to try the whole thing sometime, but for this meal, I wanted something not quite so rich and sweet. So I made the almond buttermilk biscuits and made a sauce of (frozen) black cherries, since I couldn’t find sour ones. I thought this was a perfect close to this meal. The cherry sauce was pretty sweet, but I added lemon juice for a nice tart flavor, and the biscuits were nice and crumbly but not too sweet. I definitely think I will at least make the biscuits again, and I might add some more almond extract next time, or maybe press some slivered almonds into the tops, as I wanted a little more almond flavor.