Very healthy and yummy soup - and my kids will even eat it! This is my slightly modified version after making this many, many times.
1 cup dry lentils
3/4 cup chopped onion
3/4 cup chopped celery
3/4 cup chopped carrots
3 Tbs. fresh parsley chopped (or 1 Tbs. dried)
1 clove garlic, minced
1 1/2 tsp. salt
pinch crushed red pepper flakes
1/2 tsp. dried oregano
2 cups chopped tomatoes with juices (fresh or canned)
Rinse lentils; drain and place in soup kettle. Add 4 cups of water. Simmer covered until tender but not mushy (about 30-45 minutes). Meanwhile, saute all vegetables (except tomatoes) and herbs in 1-2 TBS. olive oil until tender (appx. 20 minutes). Add sauted vegetables and tomatoes to the undrained lentils. Simmer covered about 30 minutes longer. Season to taste.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Ponzonella
Yummm...We are a part of a food co-op now and we got 3 pints of cherry tomatoes this past week. I thought, "great, nobody likes tomatoes except Nate and I. How are we going to eat all these?" I pulled out a recipe I had written down a while ago and VOILA! instant success! Jake, at first glance upon sitting at the table said, "Augh! What did you do to that wonderful baquette!" Within seconds of the first bite..."Mom! You have to add this to our favorites list!" Abby, "tomatoes, at first taste are yucky but by the end they're delicious!" So, here goes, hopefully this will be as successful at your home.
5 C day old bread, cubed (or fresh baguette works too)
6 med sz tomatoes, cut in bite size pieces
1 red onion thinly sliced
1/2 C basil, chopped or shredded
1/4 C olives, kalamata or green & black or any combination
Wisk the following ingredients together, pour over the top of the salad, and toss:
1/2 C olive oil
1/4 C red wine vinegar
1/4 C lemon juice
1/4 C parsley
1/2 tsp. kosher salt
Shave parmesan cheese over the top!
If you like it soggier let it sit for an hour before serving.
5 C day old bread, cubed (or fresh baguette works too)
6 med sz tomatoes, cut in bite size pieces
1 red onion thinly sliced
1/2 C basil, chopped or shredded
1/4 C olives, kalamata or green & black or any combination
Wisk the following ingredients together, pour over the top of the salad, and toss:
1/2 C olive oil
1/4 C red wine vinegar
1/4 C lemon juice
1/4 C parsley
1/2 tsp. kosher salt
Shave parmesan cheese over the top!
If you like it soggier let it sit for an hour before serving.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Lemon-Luscious Ice Cream
I've had a nice ice cream maker for over a year now, but never found an ice cream recipe that I found perfectly satisfying. Until now. The source is--oddly enough--Rose Levy Beranbaum's Pie & Pastry Bible. If you have that cookbook, nearly all the recipes in it are reasonably complicated, but also consistently excellent.
The ice cream, however, is relatively easy, as far as Beranbaum's recipe's go. Here 'tis:
4 large egg yolks
1 cup sugar, divided (I used raw sugar)
2 tsp finely grated lemon zest (focus on getting just the yellow as the white is bitter)
6 Tb freshly squeezed lemon juice (roughly 3 lemons)
4 Tb unsalted butter, softened
1 and 1/2 cups heavy cream + 1/2 cup milk (I substituted 2 cups half and half)
optional: 4 tsp vodka and 1/2 tsp cobasan (an emulsifier)
Have a strainer ready suspended over a medium bowl.
In a heavy saucepan, beat the yolks and 3/4 of the sugar with a wooden spoon until well blended. Stir in the lemon zest, juice, butter and salt. Cook over medium low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens to roughly the consistency of hollandaise sauce; it should thickly coat the wooden spoon but still be liquid enough to pour (mixture will change from translucent to opaque and begin to take on a yellow color on the back of the spoon). The mixture must not be allowed to boil or it will curdle, so, if it starts to steam or boil, remove from the heat briefly and keep stirring.
When it's thickened (and it took awhile for me--5-7 minutes), pour it immediately into the strainer and push it through the strainer with the wooden spoon until only a coarse residue remains. (The residue and left over good is yummy in and of itself--it's a classic lemon curd.)
In a medium bowol, combine the cream and milk. Whisk in the sugar until dissolved. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or until well chilled.
Stir in option vodka and/or cobasan and freeze in an ice cream maker.
She recommends letting the ice cream, once frozen, "ripen" in the freezer for at least two hours before serving, but if you're like me and can't wait that long, the stuff is awesome right out of the ice cream maker, though it holds its consistency wonderfully even after extended time in the freezer.
I know it sounds strange, but the best term to describe this ice cream is "lovely": lovely color, taste, and texture.
I did not add cobasan (I think it's tough to find), though I did use the vodka. (Kamchatka vodka: $3.25 a bottle at the state liquor store.) Vodka is tasteless in a recipe so the point isn't to add flavor or even to add an on-the-sly Davidson-style "kick"; rather, the alcohol lowers the freezing point of the mixture, meaning that it takes longer to freeze and the ice crystals, when they form, are smaller = better consistency, and, like I said, the consistency is divine. I'll have to try it w/o the vodka to see how it compares. I've been obsessed with consistency and this is far and away the best result yet.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Garden Delights
Here's a complicated recipe:
Take one cherry tomato (still warm, preferably)
combine with one leaf fresh basil
stuff in mouth
chew
swallow
Mmmm. The summer garden.
Love,
Tim
Thursday, September 3, 2009
National sneak a zuccini on your neighbor's porch day
Hey family gardeners: looks like we missed the big day this year. Mark your calendars for next!
http://www.gone-ta-pott.com/sneaksomezucchiniontoyourneighborsporchday.html
http://www.gone-ta-pott.com/sneaksomezucchiniontoyourneighborsporchday.html
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