Monday, September 20, 2010

Peas and Parrano

When I was a child, I hated peas. If you wanted to set me off at the dinner table, all it took was a spoon full of peas. No way, no how.
Thankfully, I came to my senses. I think it had something to do with Molly's sinful pasta primavera. Here is a VERY loose interpretation of that dish. Enjoy! Pasta with Peas and Parrano
Heirloom Tomato Salad with Avocado

Pasta Ingredients:
pasta- cooked al dente
frozen peas- about 1.5 cups
2 cloves of garlic
olive oil- 2-3 glugs
2 tbs butter
2-3 tbs milk
lemon zest- 1/2 lemon
salt and pepper to taste
parrano cheese- it tastes similiar to parmesan

Salad Ingredients:
avocado- chopped
tomatoes- chopped ( I picked up the most beautiful heirloom tomatoes at Whole Foods, but use what you have.)
olive oil- 2 glugs or so
salt and pepper to taste

Prepare the pasta, drain and set aside. Crush garlic and throw it in a skillet with olive oil. Add peas. Cook on medium heat until peas are defrosted (maybe 2-3 minutes or so). Add milk, butter, s & p, and lemon zest. Stir for another minute. Add hot pasta and continue to cook for 2-3 minutes, until nicely combined. Add the cheese right before serving.
Serve with tomato salad and a glass of white wine.



Friday, September 17, 2010

Autumn Berry Loaf

A sign of summer’s end is definitely the ripening of the blackberries and raspberries and in Edinburgh now, there are berries abound! Often I cook them down to make a compote but I thought I’d try something different. I’ve amended a recipe for apple loaf to use up some of my plentiful berry harvest. The result is a moist berry loaf, quite tart in taste and perfect with a hot drink on a cool Autumnal afternoon.

Ingredients
225g blackberries and raspberries
250g self-raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
175g butter
175g light muscovado or plain light brown sugar
2 rounded tbsp demerara sugar or dark brown sugar
½ tsp cinnamon
1 small apple (whole - not cored or peeled)
2 large eggs, beaten
The zest of 1 orange

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 170 degrees Celsius.
2. With your fingers, rub together the flour, baking powder, butter and light brown sugar in a large bowl.
3. Measure out 5 level table spoons of this mixture place in a separate bowl. To that mix add the cinnamon and dark brown sugar. This is for the topping. Set aside for now.
4. Grate the apple down to the core. Mix it in with the beaten eggs and orange zest.
5. Lightly stir the egg/apple mix into the large bowl of rubbed mixture. Don’t over mix.
6. Gently fold in ¾ of the berries with a metal spoon.
7. Pour mixture into a silicon or greased loaf tin. Scatter the remaining berries over the mix. Sprinkle over the topping.
8. Place in oven. After 50 minutes check on loaf. If it is browning too much, place foil over it at this stage.
9. Return to oven and bake for a further 25-30minutes.
10. Remove from oven and allow cooling in the loaf tin for 30 minutes before turning out.


Thursday, September 9, 2010

Cominghome White Beans



Molly and I got back to Pass Christian at 10:30 PM Tuesday after over three weeks in New Zealand and a rainy, bumpy 24 hour series of flights back. We were beat, hungry and we knew there was no food in the house. Not good.

BUT! Win and Heather had been back before us, dropped off the car and left one of Heather’s wonderful meals for us in the ice box: a restorative bowl full of Cominghome White Beans, salad, and fresh bread. And there was red wine. After a minute of so in the microwave we ere home again. And happy to be here.

Thanks Heather........for the thoughtfulness and best beans ever.

Here’s her instructions:

1 lbs White Beans, rinsed and soaked
1 smoked ham bone with lots of meat
4 bay leaves
Black pepper- to taste
1 large onion - chopped
2 stalks of celery - chopped
3 cloves of garlic - crushed
Hot sauce du jour - a few shakes
Water
Salt- ADD AT THE END

In large pot, sauté onion, celery, and garlic in olive oil. Once the
veggies are soft, add the rinsed beans, ham bone, seasonings and bay leaves.
Stir around for a minute of two. Then add the water. It should come up 1
inch over the beans. Cover and bring to a boil. Once there, reduce heat to
LOW and simmer for 2 hours. The beans will begin to break down after 2
hours. At that time, take a wooden spoon and press some of the softened
beans against the side of the pot. This will thicken the beans. Add salt
to taste. Continue to cook for another 30 minutes or so.
Serve with rice and a crunchy salad.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Mexi - Bowl

Tuesday night's meal was made on the fly. Win had a serious case of "boat fever", so he and Charlie headed out for a sail before dinner. So that meant it was "Dinner for One!" Normally, I would have pulled out the eggs and scrambled up a tasty supper, but in light of the recent salmonella outbreak, I'm so off eggs. Instead, I pulled an organic chicken breast out of the deep freeze and scoured the fridge for inspiration. Here is what I came up with.





Chicken Burrito Bowl with Mexican Rice and Corn

(This is not a great photo...everything looks a weird shade of yellow. Sorry!)

Grilled Chicken

1 chicken breast- cut into chunks, marinated in olive oil, Mexican oregano, lime juice, S & P.


1 small onion- diced
Cherry tomatoes- a handful or so, cut in 1/2.


Mexican Rice


1 glug of olive oil
2-3 pinches of cumin powder


2-3 pinches of chili powder


2 bay leaves


S & P


1 cup of rice...I used basmati



Saute the rice in the oil and seasonings for 2-3 minutes until it "pops and snaps" a bit. Then add 2 cups of water and 1 cup of frozen corn. When the rice has come to a boil, cover and cook on LOW for 20 minutes.


Guacamole


2 ripe avocados- mashed


1 clove of garlic and a bit of onion- grated with micro plane


Lime juice


S & P


Combine and set aside. Be sure to put the seed back in the guac...it keeps it from going brown.



While the rice is cooking and after you have finished the guacamole, cook the chicken. I just threw the onions and chicken in my oiled black iron skillet. When the chicken is 75% cooked, throw in the tomatoes. (If you throw them in in the beginning, they will disintegrate before the chicken is cooked.)



Remaining ingredients:


Greek yogurt (or sour cream), salsa of your choice and a bit of shredded lettuce.


Once the chicken and rice are cooked, pile everything in a bowl and enjoy!


Ole!



Heather





Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Farmer's Market Meal

One of the many things New Orleans has going for it is its bustling Farmer's Market. We are lucky enough to have 3 amazing markets a week, but due to work schedules and budget constraints, I focus on the Saturday market. Each Saturday morning, I gather up my eco-bags and sometimes a sleepy friend or two and make the early morning pilgrimage downtown. I, along with hundreds of other NOLA foodies scour the many booths for the freshest veggies, most succulent seafood, yummiest bread and the sweetest fruits. Technically, the market is open until noon, but my market motto is the early bird gets the worm!
Grilled Shrimp Salad with Asian Pears, Gorgonzola & Walnuts
(Serves 2)
I'm happy to report that 99% of the ingredients used in this dish were purchased at the Crescent City Farmer's Market. The walnuts were from Whole Foods... :)
1 lb Shrimp- peeled and deveined
2 Asian Pears- washed and thinly sliced
Gorgonzola Cheese- small chunk
Walnuts- 2 handfuls
Salad Greens du jour- washed and spinned

So, this recipe is SUPER EASY and took about 5 minutes to make.

I "grilled" the shrimp in my black iron skillet with a little olive oil, dried herbs and S & P. Cook until pink...roughly about 2-3 minutes.

While cooking the shrimp, assemble your salad with the remaining ingredients. Drizzle with your favorite vinagerette and top with the sizzling shrimp.

Serve with a piece of grilled whole grain bread and a cold glass of Sauvignon Blanc.
Enjoy,
Heather