Tag Archives: cooking

Not Crazy About Cardoons

Lots of work. Really woody tasting. Don’t know if it was my method or the cardoons themselves. Oh well, at least the wine was excellent. And, so was the sausage with my tomato sauce.

2010 Boxwood Trellis

The wine was a blend of Malbec, Merlot and Petit Verdot. These grapes generally don’t star in Bordeaux blends, with Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc being chosen as more dominant grapes. I like the fruit forward aspect of this wine, easy to drink while it is young. It went very well with Italian sausages baked with my chunky tomato sauce.

Sausages with sauce, and cardoons

The cardoons. Who knows? I may not have simmered them long enough, but they were in the pot for an hour and were “fork tender”. I baked them for 45 minutes, with the bechamel sauce, cheese and bread crumbs on top.

Classic cardoons in bechamel

They looked good. And the sauce was good to eat. The cardoons were definitely chewy. Not something I will make again. This is one item that will go into the swap box if I ever get it again from the CSA.

Sometimes you win with the CSA. And sometimes you don’t. Like last year, when I discovered how great salsify was.

Still waiting for the horned melon to ripen. That is another new exciting item in last week’s basket. It is sitting on the windowsill getting yellow in places. CSA baskets can be intimidating or interesting. It is all about how you approach things.

African horned melon, not yet ripe

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Eating Locally: A Tasty Brunch

It is a holiday weekend. A lazy morning. Late brunch. Using mostly local ingredients. Somewhere we picked up a bottle of locally produced Bloody Mary Mix. VA made. We made Virgin Mary’s. At our age, vodka at 10 am means a nap not long afterwards. This is a spicy thick rich Bloody Mary Mix. Anchovies and clam juice. The sea in a glass.

Sting Ray Bloody Mary Mix

Besides that, we made our favorite eggs with toast. The eggs. TLV Tree Farm. Bought at the Howard County Market at the hospital. The butter. Trickling Springs, bought at England Acres Farm. The bread, from Roots.

I love making eggs from free range chickens. Look at the yolk on these eggs.

This brunch counts as one of my local meals for our Southern Sole Food Challenge. Ten of us from south of the Mason Dixon Line are cooking a local meal every week and blogging about it. Today for me, it is brunch. Check out what the others make at their sites, listed here.

Do your own local meals. Buy at the Howard County Farmers Markets. Or, at the local farms. Check out my local resources page to see where I buy local good foods.

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Processed Foods

I think I spent all day today processing fresh veggies. I now have a greater appreciation for what my mom and grandmom did, with all that work associated with freezing (and canning) foods. I haven’t done much canning. Mostly freezing, after blanching or preparing the veggies from the CSA and farmer’s markets.

Roasted Beets

The beets were dry roasted, to put in salads this week. Besides the beets, I had jalapenos in the oven. These are destined to become the base for chili oil, once they age in the fridge.

Roasted Jalapenos

I also made ajvar, using eggplant and red peppers.

Add a little roasted garlic, and make this wonderful spread.

Roasted Garlic

The finished product. So flavorful. Not that hard to make. Roast eggplant and peppers. When done, throw a head of garlic cloves in the oven, after turning it off. Puree all of it in the blender. Add olive oil, salt, pepper and balsamic to make it taste the way you want it.

Ajvar

I finished all this by blanching and freezing the roma tomatoes from the CSA. These were peeled and bagged, after blanching, and will be added to crock pot dinners this winter.

Tomorrow, if I am ambitious, the peaches will be blanched, peeled and frozen, to use in vinaigrettes and sauces all winter.

I made a mess of the kitchen, using the blender and the food processor, both of them twice. I swear, I spend all my time doing dishes. Oh, I forgot, I did process two peaches, with yogurt, peach nectar and honey, to make peach pops.

Peach yogurt pops

What did you do this weekend?

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Cardoons, Horned Melon and Soy! Oh My!

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Week 17 of the CSA. Three new and exciting items. Twelve goodies overall. The haul.

Sandy Spring CSA Week 17

The list.

1 Bunch Lacinato Kale
1 Bunch Cardoons
1 Stalk Edamame (soy beans)
1 Bag Orange Carrots
1 Huge Head of Bok Choy
A Three pound bag of Roma Tomatoes
2 leeks (I swapped cayenne peppers to get these)
1 Butternut Squash
1 African Horned Melon
1 Bag Gold Beets
1 Bunch Italian Parsley
1 Bag Shallots

The horned melon is weird. But, I will try anything once. Here is a picture from our weekly email, of one that is ripe and cut open. Ours isn’t ripe yet.

Horned Melon, Ripe and Cut Open

Cardoons are also new. I found a dozen Mario Batali recipes on the internet, to try. They look like they are related to artichokes. Should be interesting.

Cardoons

I am not even going to attempt to price this out. I have no idea what edamame, horned melon and cardoons cost, if you can find them. The beets, tomatoes and carrots, all organic, make the cost worth it. Stay tuned this week to see what I cook with this basket.

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Home Made Tomato Sauce

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One of the pleasures of growing tomatoes. Home made sauces to savor months from now.

Chunky tomato sauce

If you don’t grow tomatoes, you can pick them at Larriland. If you have never tried making tomato sauce, you really need to do it, if only to know how amazingly good a home made sauce will taste. Those of us who grew up in the 50s and 60s are used to smelling that intoxicating mixture of onions and garlic. Our parents made sauce, or gravy for those with Italian roots. Spaghetti with home made sauce was on our plates at least once a week in the summer, when tomatoes were abundant and cheap.

Sauce is easy, just a bit time consuming to get the flavors to develop. Start with the base. In this batch, I used carrots, onions, garlic, red pepper and olive oil. One carrot. One onion. Two cloves garlic. Half a large red pepper. Olive oil to cover the bottom of the pan.

Sauce base

The tomatoes were blanched in another pot. I used about five pounds of tomatoes for this sauce. After blanching, pull off the skins, and squeeze out the seeds. Cool water makes it easier to handle them.

I put them in the sauce one by one and mash them up to get the sauce the way I like it. Add Italian seasoning using herbs like oregano, basil and thyme.

Keep adding tomatoes, then simmer for at least 30 minutes. I then put the sauce in freezer containers, except for a small batch which goes in the refrigerator to use as soon as possible. The rest will be a welcome reminder of summer in the dead of winter.

Oh yeah, I think we are getting more tomatoes tomorrow in the CSA. Time to make more sauce.

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“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.

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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@@@

Summer CSA Week Sixteen

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Sixteen down. Nine to go. Then, eight more weeks in the fall. All told, we spend 33 weeks with this CSA. They were piloting a winter pantry program but I don’t know if they will expand it to our area. What did we get this week?

Sandy Spring CSA Week Sixteen 2012

The list includes:

1 Bag Jalapeno Peppers
1 Bag Red/Yellow Tomatoes
1 Bunch Purple Carrots
1 Bag French Green Beans
1 Bag Mixed Onions
2 Red Bell Peppers
1 Bag Red Roma Tomatoes
1 Bag Mixed Garlic
1 Bag Purple Majesty Potatoes
1 Sweet Dumpling Squash
1 Bunch Italian Parsley

You will notice I again swapped herbs for tomatoes. Interesting, while talking to our host at the house, she told me lots of people swapped the romas, as they don’t can or freeze them. But then, six members took advantage of the $25 box of romas for 25 pounds. There were six big boxes of tomatoes there with names on them.

I stopped at David’s on the way home to get greens, particularly arugula to use in the green tomato pasta I linked to a few posts back. I made it last night, with almost but not quite ripe tomatoes from my garden. It is a keeper and I will be doing it again, now that I have the arugula.

Looks good, doesn’t it?

Cooking slightly underripe tomatoes for Mario’s pasta

The tomatoes were sliced and sauteed in olive oil with a clove of garlic, thinly sliced. The pesto was made with a cup of mixed herbs and greens, equal parts of mint, basil, parsley and I used scallion tops because yesterday I didn’t have arugula. Added a 1/4 cup of parmesan, a garlic clove, and a 1/4 cup pine nuts, and drizzled in olive oil. Salt and pepper. I didn’t follow the recipe because I was missing arugula, and had some pine nuts left in the fridge. Any simple pesto will work here, but the mint really kicks up the flavor.

Pesto for green tomato pasta

The finished product looked like this. Add the pesto and the cooked spaghetti to the pan, then dish it out. Add a little parmesan on top.

Pesto spagehetti with underripe tomatoes (Can be made with large green tomatoes as well)

Since we got some slightly underripe tomatoes today, and I have all the necessary ingredients here, this will be on the menu again, it is that good.

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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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Fall Plann(t)ing

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Planning on planting for the fall? It is time to get started. I was looking at Victoria’s great garden pictures over on The Soffrito. Planting in containers for the fall is a great way to extend the season. These were my spring greens. I will do the same for fall. I plant them in a protected corner and put netting over them to deter the bunnies.

Mixed greens

I also saw an awesome recipe while watching The Chew today. I was in the midst of helping my husband with a filing project and had the TV on after the noon news. What to do with green tomatoes? We will soon be at that stage of harvesting the last of the summer goodies. My planning includes creative ways of using up some of the ones that don’t ripen, before ripping out the plants and putting in kale and arugula. I will be freezing slices of the large ones to make fried green tomatoes, and freezing any little ones to make this spaghetti recipe.

Besides all that, I need to get a few more heads of garlic from the CSA that can go in the containers once I remove the flowers from the summer. After planting in October, I will heavily mulch them to survive the winter.

Organic garlic, perfect for planting this fall

The CSA has announced that Columbia will be a location for the fall extension of the CSA, so we will have fresh veggies in November and December. Check out the Sandy Spring site to see if you want to join us. Fall veggies like carrots, potatoes, greens, pumpkins and other squash varieties are great to use in stews, soups and crock pot dinners. What could be better than this in December?

CSA basket from last December

Sounds like I need to check on my topsoil supply and get a few more bags of mulch to mulch the garlic. And, run out to some of the nurseries to see what they have for fall planting. Maybe fennel?

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