Category Archives: Real Food

“The Chew” Inspired Dinner

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OK, now that I am retired, I tend to watch the noon news. A while back, I started watching The Chew, or at least I had the TV on while I was doing other things. It is The Chew that inspired this dinner.

Green Tomato Pasta and Prosciutto and Melon with Arugula

Pasta based on a Mario Batali recipe, as well as the melon salad, based on an MB carpacchio. Oh, let’s not forget the cocktail. A Michael Symon inspired Meyer Lemon Basil Fizz.

A few days ago I made the green tomato spaghetti. I still have lots of greens, and quite a few tomatoes that fall off the vines before they are fully ripe. They ended up in this dish. I did substitute some organic basil and cheese ravioli tonight, and my pesto is one of those mutt varieties. All sorts of greens. Leftovers, so to speak.

This pesto was made with carrot tops, radish greens, mint, basil, parsley, pistachios, pine nuts, parmesan and garlic. Olive oil drizzled in. I didn’t measure anything. It was all done by taste. Sometimes winging it gives you awesome food.

Then, I took those tomatoes that fell off the vines in the storms Sunday night. Sauteed them in olive oil with scallions. Added only salt and pepper.

The pasta was from David’s. A basil based organic ravioli. The salad. Made with arugula, melon and prosciutto. Mario Batali had a melon carpacchio the other day. I don’t have salami around, but had prosciutto. Clean and fresh. You can build layers of flavors using four simple ingredients. Cantaloupe. Prosciutto. Arugula. Pepper.

Melon prosciutto salad

The wine. One of our favorite New Zealand style Sauvignon Blancs from Glen Manor in Virginia. Cuts through that richness of the pesto. I had enough pesto left to keep for another meal. There will be more green tomatoes.

hocofood@@@

Markets and Farms

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I had intended to do a mid summer look at what is happening at local markets and farms, but somehow the month of August got away from me. We are two thirds of the way through the Howard County market season, which will wind down the end of October. I have visited three of the five producer only markets in the county, with most of my visits to Miller Library and HCGH. The other location is Glenwood on Saturdays. Not living near East Columbia, I haven’t been to Cradlerock or Oakland Mills. Many of the vendors go to multiple markets, so with the exception of only five, I have seen the rest.

I like our markets, even though they aren’t huge. They are producer only, and you can get a good assortment of veggies and fruits, bread, meat, coffee, cheese, baked goods, flowers and plants, by visiting them. Their prices are reasonable as well. I try to hit one of them each week, for the things I don’t get in the CSA. Our CSA is almost exclusively veggies, so I have lots of other goodies to buy at the markets. Things like bread from The Breadery.

The Breadery’s lemon rosemary loaf

And, flowers from Greenway Farms.

Celosia

Plus, for me, eggs and meat are an important purchase. Currently, only TLV farm sells meat at our markets, and they sell eggs. Breezy willow also has eggs.

TLV smoked bacon

The markets aren’t my only source of farm fresh goodness. I have been going to England Acres regularly for chicken, eggs, dairy and cheese. When I am there, I do find other bargains like I did today. Peaches, roma tomatoes, gala apples, all $1 a pound. Check out the white peaches. Four peaches. They weighed 3.7 pounds total. One of them weighed a pound. The others just a bit under. One of these lovely peaches will be grilled Monday night, and served with balsamic.

huge white peaches

England Acres is fun, for families there is lots to do. Feed the chickens. Check out the goats. Today, you could pick corn, or dig potatoes. They are five miles west of Mt. Airy, so if you live in West County, they aren’t far at all. I take a cooler and buy meat and dairy. I also hand pick my eggs, still with hay on them, from the basket. This week I got all large eggs. I will be saving them for a week or so, to use for some deviled eggs.

fresh eggs from England Acres chickens

Besides England Acres, we also head out to Larriland when they have new UPick items. We have done blackberries. Blueberries. Strawberries. I will be heading out to get peaches and apples this week. In the fall I will harvest greens to blanch and freeze.

strawberry picking at Larriland

I haven’t made it to Gorman yet, but I hope to get there. For me, this time of year is awesome. All these wonderful good veggies and fruits there for us to enjoy. In the fall I also will go out to Sharp’s Farm for some specialty pumpkins and fall squash. TLV farms also allows you to pick your own pumpkins.

Don’t let the summer and fall get by without experiencing our local farmers. Hit a local farm stand, one where they grow it themselves. Come to the markets. Take the family out to a farm to see the animals and see food right out of the ground. The goats at England Acres would love to see them.

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Essential CSA Items

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A CSA is only a great deal when you can use the items without them going bad before you eat them. Having read lots of comments across the internet about a reason not to join a CSA, the “I don’t eat enough produce to make it worth it”, I can see where it doesn’t work due to lack of time, space or family food preferences.

I just read a few posts on the I Want the Columbia MD Wegmans Facebook page about produce going bad quickly when bought in stores. The freshest produce is obviously just picked produce. The CSAs get you produce within one or two days of harvest. Anything trucked to stores is subject to storage variation, transportation problems and who knows what else. That is why so much is packaged, processed and full of preservatives.

Organic eliminates some of that, but is costly. A CSA with organic produce is a bargain. But not if the produce sits too long and goes bad. I have a few essential items that help me prolong the life of the produce, and use up my CSA.

One essential item is a salad spinner. Two, if you have room for them. I will be getting a second one before the fall CSA and the deluge of greens begins again.

No greens in it then. It had radishes and the last of a month old red cabbage, still crisp and still good to use in salads. Last night the arugula from David’s joined it. The arugula will be used in that pesto, and in a melon carpacchio recipe I want to try.

The second essential item in my storage drawer is my cache of “green” bags. They are indispensable when the crisper drawers are full. These you do need to change occasionally, since some really fresh veggies continue to give off moisture even if they look dry when they go into the bags. I keep beans for up to two weeks without them going bad or getting slimy. It extends my useful period for veggies when one week you don’t get something you like to use with others.

The other cute little gimmicky items that work well are my citrus and onion keepers. I use so much citrus in dressings and marinades, and always seem to need part of an onion. These really do keep the onion smell out of the fridge, and keep lemons or limes fresh after you only used half, or had zested them.

My most indispensable CSA saving item is the new chest freezer. A good deal at Costco. Seven cubic feet. It is already half full of simple frozen items to be used all winter long. Even if you are canning challenged, blanching, peeling and freezing tomatoes, charring and peeling peppers, making frozen berries for smoothies, or using ice cube trays to make syrups or pestos, you can use up excess fruits and veggies and herbs and have good food all winter.

It makes the cost of the CSA definitely worth it, with taking the time to pack and store it. Also worth it to go to local UPick farms, like Larriland. Some of my projects this summer are here. We picked six pounds of strawberries, froze some whole, some sliced and some pureed.

Frozen pureed strawberries

Garlic scape pesto is another great ice cube tray project. About ten minutes to throw everything in the blender, then pour and freeze. I no longer follow a recipe, I just use up the scapes I have, adding nuts, parm, and olive oil. Salt and pepper.

Garlic scape pesto

Oven drying tomatoes. I make tiny plastic containers of these all summer. They are heaven on pasta in February. Cut them in half. Sometimes I seed them, sometimes I don’t. Sprinkle a little sugar, salt and pepper on them. Drizzle olive oil. Bake at a low temp, like 200 degrees, for a few hours. I usually do this on a day I am doing laundry or a home project and can ignore them.

Oven dried cherry tomatoes

My final essential item is my crock pot. My use up the CSA stews give us two or three meals, and sometimes I do freeze one portion of what I made, since leftovers get tiring after the second dinner. A layer of sauce, a layer of veggies, some sausage or chicken or beef. Easy to throw in, even with frozen meat, and come home hours later to dinner. Like chicken soup. I added frozen stock and a frozen chicken to these veggies and had three meals from it.

Vegetable base for chicken soup

If you aren’t a CSA type person, try the farmers markets and look for bargains, like slightly bruised peaches. They can be cut up and frozen, for smoothies all winter. Or, apples. Or, like right now. Blackberries at Larriland. I froze whole berries and made syrup.

Now, excuse me while I go blanch a boatload of tomatoes to freeze. Eight pounds of canning tomatoes yesterday.

hocofood@@@

Simple Pleasures

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Like simple lunch recipes. Three items, and seasoning. Not fresh, but things right out of the pantry.

Tuna, cannellini bean and onion salad

Served with a side of my tomatoes. Olives and feta to garnish. I found this recipe years ago in one of my Williams Sonoma cookbooks.

I love the description used as an introduction. If you want an excellent source for Tuscan recipes, this is the book for you.

Description of this recipe – credit to Williams Sonoma Savoring Tuscany

I made it with the canned tuna and the canned beans. Use organic beans if you can find them. Drain and rinse. Use a can of good tuna packed in olive oil. Dice a small sweet onion. I used Vidalia. Salt, pepper, olive oil to taste.

Tuscany on a plate.

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Eating Locally: Mexican Style

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Last night I made my Southern SOLE Food Challenge, SSFC, meal with a Mexican influence, compliments of our CSA basket that had lovely poblano peppers in it. Most of the meal was local, with just a few exceptions, like the black beans and the mozzarella.

Chicken, black beans and stuffed poblanos

The picture doesn’t do it justice. The poblano got soft, silky and it was filled with creamy mozzarella that countered the heat. The chicken came from our winter CSA, one of the last deliveries from Zahradka. I simply seasoned it with garlic powder, cinnamon, salt and pepper. The black beans did come from a can. A can of organic beans, drained and rinsed, then placed in the pan with grapeseed oil, and covered with my rhubarb sauce. A one dish oven baked meal.

Really good with a Yuengling, the local beer from my husband’s home county in PA.

I got the rhubarb recipe by reading one of the posts in our inlinkz party. I didn’t use it on pizza, but it has been used often. Tangy, rich and so delicious.

Rhubar-b-cue sauce

Besides Sunday night, we also used up some of our local meats the other day. I slow cooked a brisket from Woodcamp Farms. It has been used three times since Thursday. I used the rhubarb sauce on it, after dry rubbing it with the Rub Joe Meat coffee rub.

Slow cooked barbecue brisket

Finding locally raised beef, lamb, pork and poultry is pretty easy in the county. My local resource page shows quite a few of the places where I buy meats.

Veggies are easy. Fruit is easy. Meat is easy. Seafood is easy. Herbs are easy. The hardest part of eating locally is finding grains and beans. Still, having the bulk of the meal come right from local farmers is better than having it shipped halfway around the world.

hocofood@@@

The Ultimate Fifteen Minute Gourmet Dinner …

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… courtesy of Wegmans and my garden. Scallops. I love them and Wegmans has great day boat scallops.

Pan searing sea scallops

Add to that my tomatoes and basil, and my green beans mixed with some romano beans from the CSA, you too could have a killer dinner in 15 minutes.

Fifteen minute local based dinner

The potatoes were microwaved. They came from my CSA. The beans were steamed, then finished in the pan with butter and the scallops. The mozzarella came from Roots. The chocolate stripes tomatoes were from my garden, as was the blue basil.

The wine, Linden, of course. Local, and beyond words. 2009 was a banner year in the area. Hot, dry, and conditions were perfect to make big wines. This Boisseau Chardonnay had the characteristics of a good California chardonnay. Big, bold, a perfect match to the creaminess of the scallops. From start to finish, this dinner was fifteen minutes to make.

Linden VA chardonnay from a great vintage

Dinner cost less than $45, including wine. $25 for wine. $12 for scallops. A few dollars for vegetables, olive oil, marinade and butter. Why go out for dinner when a few minutes with a frying pan will reward you with a dinner this good?

hocofood@@@

What Do You Do with a Boatload of Basil?

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Or, should I say bouquet?

African Blue Basil

I have so much basil in the garden. Far more than I ever had before. The weather is definitely conducive to growing basil this year. I harvested half of it yesterday. Six cups of basil into the food processor. It is pesto making time.

I dry toasted a cup of pine nuts in a skillet to add to the basil. I then added 1 1/2 cups of parmesan and drizzled olive oil into the processor. Salt and pepper to taste and five cloves of garlic.

Toasted pine nuts for the pesto

I ended up with three containers to freeze and a little one to use to make pizza with shrimp and bacon this weekend.

Basil Pesto

The garden is giving me lots of good herbs and tomatoes this year. Hopefully the little green tomatoes out there will continue to ripen and give me tomatoes to marry with the basil, far into the fall.

hocofood@@@

Recipes, and Why I am Bad at Them

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Many times for my SSFC posts I have posted pictures of dinners made to use local foods for the food challenge. Since our current challenge to use local foods for one meal is heading into the season of tons of squashes, I have been trying to find ways to use them creatively.

Last week I made two dinners using almost completely local items, with a few additions. One was my eggplant parm, and another a baked chicken dinner.

Eggplant Parm

Baked chicken thighs with Amish egg noodles and roasted veggies

If I needed to document what exactly went into these two dinners, I would be in deep trouble, because when I cook, I don’t measure. When I bake, yes, when I cook, it is just whatever seems to look and taste good, and whatever I have around the kitchen.

These dinners were from Monday and Wednesday last week, mainly using up CSA items before I got my Thursday pick up. The eggplant Parmesan recipe started out from a web search that went into a half dozen places, including Martha Stewart. I think I used parts of hers but improvised because I had no mozzarella in the house.

The eggplants were a mix of Italian and Japanese. Sliced, salted and allowed to drain out moisture. The sauce was made by mixing all my overripe tomatoes with half a jar of Wegmans organic sauce and a squeeze of tomato paste from the tube in my fridge. See what I mean about measuring? I have no idea how much went into that base.

I didn’t have mozzarella so I mixed grated domestic parmesan from Roots with all the Firefly Farm chevre I had left in the fridge and the last of the Bowling Green Feta, grated. Added a little milk to make it creamier.

Dredged the eggplant in beaten egg, Panko bread crumbs and Parm, added a little salt and lots of pepper.

Coated the bottom of the baking dish (a small deep dish) with olive oil, added sauce, eggplant, cheese, sauce, eggplant, cheese, sauce and topped with the last of the Parm. Baked it for over two hours on a slow cook setting on my oven until it was dinner time.

As for the chicken thighs, same sort of thing. Put olive oil, tomatoes, onions, peppers and chicken in a casserole, Covered the chicken in herbs, salt and pepper. Put it all in the oven on slow cook setting for three hours while doing chores around the house.

Served it with Amish egg noodles. The noodles were homemade by a vendor that sells at the Briggs Chaney farmers market. The chicken came from them also. The egg noodles were quickly boiled at the last minute.

Accompanied this SSFC meal with a local wine. We belong to a cellar club at Breaux. This wine is wonderful with chicken and with seafood. I love the blend.

Breaux Wine served with Chicken

Getting back to recipes. We got a huge eggplant this week. Along with lots of lovely tomatoes, garlic, white peppers. This week’s eggplant dish may actually be a stacked version using the tomatoes and mozzarella I bought at Roots.

Veggies inspiring a variation on Eggplant Parm

Who knows what I will cook next? And, if I will remember what I did put in it? That’s the fun of being in a CSA, getting creative with What’s in the Box.

hocofood@@@

Eating Locally Recap

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A week and two days. Dedicated to eating at least one item a day from MD farms. We did it. It is easy with the goodness from Howard County Farmers Markets, and from a few local farms like England Acres, and from the case at Atwater’s Bakery in Catonsville.

Some of the items I used:

Corn, from England Acres and from TLV Farm, bought at the market

Chevre, from Firefly Farms

Eggs, from TLV and England Acres

Add to that watermelon, cantaloupe, spring mix, feta, smoked cheddar, ground lamb, ground beef patties, onions, and such a variety available here in MD.

Good meals like this one, from Saturday night. Breezy Willow spring mix and Firefly Farms chevre with my tomatoes and basil. Yes, the sockeye came from Alaska, not a local fish, but a great dinner.

Buy Local Week may be over, but the markets are still here. If you want to see great foods available for you in the future, it always helps to buy from our local farmers.

This weekend is the start of the Howard County Fair. There will be local produce and local cheese at the Fair. Support your local farmers and buy from them, if not at the fair, at the county markets.

See you at the Fair. We will be there at least four of the days. A season pass is a bargain if you want to enjoy all the entertainment and just absorb the atmosphere.

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Three More Days into Buying Locally

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The nine days will be finished tomorrow. The other two posts for how I started have shown it is simple to find good food from around the Howard County area, by shopping at farm stands and the markets.

Here is the update for Wednesday through Friday. Does farming include crabs?

We did get a few to have as an appetizer Friday night. This is with local lamb from England Acres, served with chocolate stripes tomatoes from my garden coated with a gooey smoked cheddar from Eve’s Cheese.

And yes, I did char the lamb while searing it, but the inside remained a lovely pink. That was dinner Friday night, after the crab appetizer.

Thursday we grazed on homemade salads. Cucumber salad from the garden, with onions from Butler’s Orchard. Ratatouille also included one of their candy onions. The watermelon is from Catonsville market, and feta from Bowling Green Farms.

The colorful potato salad included CSA potatoes and green beans, and was finished with hard boiled eggs from TLV Farms.

In my CSA post prior to this one I talked of making gazpacho on Wednesday which showed up for dinner that night, along with the other two burgers from England Acres farm, and corn from their farm.

Three days. Three dinners. Lots of local foods. Here it is Saturday night and there will be local salad and maybe a dessert if I get the peaches done. The peaches were bought this morning from Lewis Orchards at the Glenwood market, along with some just picked spring mix from Breezy Willow. Both will serve in some way in dinner tonight.

It is one of the pleasures of living here. Hitting the market to see what looks good, and bringing it home to have for dinner the same day.

hocofood@@@