Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Mom's Quick Corn Salad (ready w/ pics)

There are a few things you need to know about my mom: She's not into cooking. She makes great banana bread. When she finds a recipe she likes, she makes it nonstop.
That third fact is why she is a gnocchi pro, and why I look forward to family barbecues. I love my family and all, don't get me wrong. But I really, really love her corn salad.
I have a weird memory of her getting the original recipe from something Paula Deen made, but because she's very into altering recipes, she made something better.
She always makes it with frozen corn, but because it's summer time and that means that freshly husked corn on the cob is pretty much mandatory, you can feel free to use that instead, just cut the corn off the cob instead of tossing a bag in the microwave. Other types of beans ca be subbed in too, depending on what you like and have on hand. We're a black bean family, but if you're the kidney or pinto sort, I'm sure that would be great too!
Probably would have been a better idea to take pictures before digging in. Oops

Mom's Corn Salad:
Serves an Army

6 cups frozen sweet corn (thawed, or fresh, cut off the cob and blanched for 4 minutes)
2 15oz. cans black beans, rinsed and drained
2 avocados, finely cubed
1 large red onion, chopped fine
2 medium tomatoes, chopped fine
1/4 cup olive oil
3 Tbs red wine vinegar
1/2 tsp lime zest
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp chili powder
Salt and Pepper to taste

Thaw your corn and place in a large bowl. If you're using fresh corn, cut it off the cob and blanch it in boiling water for 4 minutes. Transfer to an ice water bath tho stop the cooking and cool the kernels.
Drain your corn and toss with the beans. Gently fold in the onion, tomato, and avocado.
In a small bowl or measuring cup, mix the olive oil, vinegar, chili powder, cumin and lime zest.
Slowly mix the dressing into the salad, until the mixture is coated but not wet. Taste and season with additional cumin, chili, salt and pepper.
Chill the mixture for an hour, or until cold all the way through.
Serve and send the extras home with grandma!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Beet and Clementine Salad

Sometimes you've just got to eat dirt. Whether it's a mushroom, a beet, or almost any other root veggie, the foods that taste like dirt are oddly appealing to me.
The beet has been especially crave worthy lately, and I've been eating them like crazy.

I like that they're healthy
I really like their deep red color
I'm a fan of their versatility
Heck, I love that they taste like dirt.

I really love they they're good for you, and have been eating them like crazy for the past week or so.
Roasted, boiled, and raw beets with balsamic vinegar are great for a while, but eventually, they need something else. That's when you make a beet salad.
This is one of my favorites, with sweet citrus, creamy avocado, earthy beets, peppery arugula, and nutty sunflower seeds, this salad is almost overwhelming in that it hits every last tastebud.
It may be complex in flavor, but it's one of the easiest salads to make--perfect for a brown paper lunch bag, a summer picnic, or a more formal dinner.

Beet and Clementine Salad
Serves 4

16 cups (one large bunch) arugula, rinsed and dried
8 steamed baby beets, quartered (you can find prepared beets at Trader Joe's)
2-4 clementines, peeled and segmented
1/4 cup shelled sunflower seeds

Dressing
Makes 1.25 cups
1 ripe avocado, peeled and seeded
2/3 cup of water, divided
1 tsp lime zest
3 Tbs lime juice
2 chopped green onions
1 clove of garlic
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper (or to taste) 
Salt and Pepper to taste

In a large boll, toss the greens, beets, and clementines.
In a blender, puree the avocado, 1/2 cup of water, lime juice and zest, onions and garlic until smooth. Add more water if the mixture is too thick. 
Taste and add salt, pepper, and cayenne until seasoned to your taste (I used about 1/2 tsp of each)
Divide the salad onto 4-6 plates, top each with 1-3 Tbs of dressing and a tablespoon of sunflower seeds.
Enjoy!



Friday, August 10, 2012

Sweet Garlic Rasted Zucchini

As you may have notices, it's the time of year I like to refer to as Zuccinipocalypse. Zucchini is literally taking over the world. And I love it.
Zucchini is my absolute favorite vegetable, and when I can get it perfectly sweet and in season, I get very very excited. I know, I'm a lame.
When I say it's my favorite veggie, I don't mean I enjoy the oily grilled vegetable medley that's served at my grandparents' favorite restaurant. I actually hold this dish responsible for turning so many people against my little green friend.
No, no, no, I like my zucchini grilled until the inside is just warm but still crisp, sautéed with lemon and lots of black pepper, raw with nothing on it. Yep, I know, I'm a lame.
I'm not even going to start talking about cakes, breads, or brownies. That would just be too much.
But my favorite way of eating this favorite veggie (essentially one of my favorite vegetable dishes) is Sweet Garlic Roasted Zucchini.

The zucchini is marinated in salt and lots of grated garlic, the roasted in 2 rounds. Once without any oil, at a lower temperature, then once with just a sheen of the good stuff at a higher temperature, so it get's golden and crisp.

The salt draws out any bitterness in the zucchini, allows the garlic to cook slowly in the oven, preventing any possibility of burned bitter garlic, and makes the dish super sweet.
The second roasting makes the sweet veg golden and crisp. Yum.

Try this dish with your non-zucchini loving friends to turn them on to a lifetime of zucchini love. I promise, it will work.

Oh, and this also works wonderfully with yellow summer squash, or a combination of both if you want to get really fancy with it.

Sweet Garlic Roasted Zucchini
Serves 4

4 medium zucchini (or 30 baby zucchini)
4 cloves of garlic, grated
2 tsp sea salt, faked or ground

1 Tbs olive oil

Preheat your oven to 350ºF and line a baking sheet with parchment.
Chop the zucchini into bite sized pieces, or cut baby zucchini length wise, so you have 2 long halves.
Toss zucchini in a bowl with grated garlic and salt. Allow the mixture to marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes.
Spread the zucchini evenly on the lined baking sheet and bake at 350ºF for 10 minutes, stirring half way through.
After 10 minutes, or when the zucchini are just beginning to feel tender, remove from the oven and toss with 1 Tbs olive oil, making sure any and all garlic bits are also tossed with the oil.
Heat oven to 400º and return the zucchini to the oven for another 10-15 minutes, until golden and crisp on the cut side, turning half way through.
Serve alongside Pollo in Pomodoro, atop risotto, or tossed with spaghetti alla carbonara.
Enjoy!

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Heirloom Tomato and Peach Jam

Ketchup has to be one of my favorite things. Not just one of my favorite foods, but one of my favorite things.
It's right up there with sweaters, lipstick, and puppies.
I put it on everything from fried potatoes, to baked potatoes, to mashed potatoes, to freezer waffles.
Bet you weren't expecting that last one.

I've made berry ketchup, I've made berry jam.
And now, I've made tomato peach jam. It's essentially a way grown up version of ketchup and is amazing on everything from toast to meatloaf.
It's sweet and tart and as spicy as you want it to be.
Its healthy, with only herbs, tomatoes, peaches, vinegar, salt, pepper, chilie flakes, and 2 tbs of honey. Yep, "ketchup" with only 2 tbs of sweetener. That's what the peaches are for, kids.
This jam literally tastes like summer: ripe peaches, garden fresh tomatoes, it doesn't get any better.
It's the perfect way to use up all the weird looking tomatoes from the garden, or the ones that split in the summer heat,  because it cooks for about an hour.

Tomato and Peach Jam
Makes 1 quart of jam

1 Pound tomatoes, roughly chopped
2 large peaches, chopped slightly smaller than the tomatoes
2 Tbs honey
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1 1/2 Tbs chopped basil
1/2-1 tsp chili flakes
Salt and pepper to taste

Chop your peaches and tomatoes and toss in a medium, high sided pot. Add the vinegar, honey, and a small pinch each of salt and fresh ground pepper.
Heat the mixture on medium, stirring, until it comes to a boil.
Cover and turn down to a simmer for about 25 minutes, stirring every so often to make sure all the fruit is breaking down evenly.
After 25 minutes, mix in half of the basil and chili flakes. Taste the mixture and add more salt and pepper.
Simmer, uncovered, for about 40 minutes, or until the liquid has dissolved by half, and the fruit is broken down. Stir the mixture every 4 minutes.
Mix in the rest of the basil, cover the pot, and remove from the heat.
Allow the jam to come down to room temperature before pouring into an air tight container or jar.
The mixture will keep in the fridge for a week or so.
Enjoy!



Monday, August 6, 2012

Strawberry Rhubarb-Rhubarb Galette

Galettes are the pie world's cookie. They're free form, they're relaxing, they're whatever you want them to be.
I find galettes liberating.
Really, I do.
My mom's the kind of person who needs some liberation. A lawyer, a mom, a high stress individual who prefers birthday pie to birthday cake. Her favorite pie is strawberry rhubarb. Unfortunately, she was born in late July (the 2nd to last day) and by now, rhubarb is long out of season.
This high stress individual has an obsessive daughter. The kind of daughter who bought all the rhubarb she could get her hands on, flash cooked, and froze it in anticipation of July 30th. This daughter needs a galette.

Strawberry rhubarb pie is a taste of my childhood. Some people have memories of chocolat chip cookies and meat load, I have memories os rhubarb and spaghetti alla puttanesca. My sister, Dad, and I would hunt one down every July, always literally leaping for joy when we found one at Peterson's (the best pie in town) Now Peterson's is closed and we always get one in June from Eileen's Pies and Otherwise (If you go to Martha's Vineyard, find her, buy her warm pies, and spend the rest of your days in pastry-induced bliss)
Getting ready for a Dinner Picnic

I love the way the rhubarb cuts through the sickly sweet childhood taste of cooked strawberries,  love the way the cinnamon lends a much needed depth, and the way the honey plants the desser firmly on the ground. The nuttiness of whole wheat flour and slight tartness of Greek yogurt in the dough doesn't hut either.
This recipe works just as well with fresh rhubarb as frozen, though I don't recommend prepackaged frozen fruit because strawberry-rhubarb combinations tend to be pretty runny, and the frozen stuff gives off juice like you wouldn't believe. I know most of you will have to wait close to another year to make this exact recipe, but subbing 1 cup of rasberries, 1 cup of strawberries, and 1 cup of peaches will work just as well!

Strawberry Rhubarb Galette
Serves 6-8

2 c rhubarb, sliced thin
1 c strawberries, sliced thin
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp lemon zest
1/3 c corn starch
2/3 c turbinado or other raw sugar, plus more for sprinkling

2 c whole wheat pastry flour
1/2 tsp salt
2/3 c skim Greek yogurt
3-4 Tbs ice water
2 Tbs milk

For Crust: 
In the bowl of a food processor, pulse salt and flour until light. Add the yogurt 1/4c at a time until just combined. Add water slowly, until the dough just begins to form a rough mass. Form into a ball and chill while making filling.
For Filling:
Combine Lemon, flour, and cinnamon in a medium bowl. Add fruit and sugar and toss to thoroughly combine, making sure the fruit is evenly spread, and that the flour is not clumping.
Construction:
Transfer dough to a floured surface and roll out to a 10x15 rectangle and move to a parchment lined baking sheet.
Spoon the drained fruit filling into the middle, leaving about 2 inches around the sides.
Fold in the shorter edges, then the longer sides to overlap.
Pinch the corners closed. Brush with milk, sprinkle with the extra sugar and bake, at 350ºF for 45 minutes, cover with foil if the crust gets too golden and the fruit is not yet finished.
Cool for 20 minutes, cut and enjoy!

Friday, June 1, 2012

Not Your Kiddo's Fudgesicle

When I was little, my absolute favorite treat from the ice cream ruck was a Fudgesicle. The were 99 cents, and, in my opinion, were even better than the $2.50 ChocoTaco. I was, and still am, a purist at some levels, though when I do find a magical combination, I cling to it like my life depends on it. This recipe is one of hose combinations. The tang from the greek yogurt paired with the soft sweetness form the Dutch cocoa is amazing! It doesn't even need salt.
The simple syrup and Dutch cocoa are hugely important if you want to really simulate the flavor of the chocolatey pops from when you were a kid. The simple syrup lends a familiar iciness to the texture of the pop and the darker cocoa lacks the tang of plain cocoa powder. This type of cocoa is used in a lot of the super dark and sweet childhood favorites, like Oreos.
Feel free to adjust the sugar and chocolate amounts to suit your fancy, but if you want to make them any sweeter, I'd recommend granulated sugar to prevent the pops from getting to icy once they're frozen.
These would also be pretty darn good if you froze a strawberry at the bottom of the mold, but I made strawberry pops yesterday so I thought it might be a little overkill.

Dark Chocolate Pops
24 oz plain Greek yogurt (I used Fage 0%)
1/2 Dutch process cocoa (Hershey's Special Dark tastes the most like a Fudgesicle)
1/4 cup simple syrup (depends on your taste)


Mix yogurt, so any liquid is fully incorporated. Sift in the cocoa powder, making sure there are no lumps. Mix in thoroughly. Add simple syrup until you reach your desired sweetness.
Put a strawberry, point facing down, into the bottom of each popsicle mold or paper cup you have. Top the berry with the yogurt mix. If your molds come with sticks that fir securely to the top, fit with a lid and freeze for at least 3 hours, or until frozen solid. If you are using cups, or your own sticks, cover each mold with plastic wrap, stab a stick through the plastic, down into the pudding, so it stands straight up. Freeze until solid.
The popsicles should release from the molds when rubbed with a warm hand. If they do not, hold the plastic mold under warm water, or peel the paper cup away from the fudgesicle.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Strawberry Balsamic Popsicles

I remember the very first time I had strawberries and balsamic vinegar. I was probably eight years old and my dad had read about the new crazy combination in Bon Appetit magazine. While I have always been a lover of balsamic vinegar (The reduced stuff is by far the best ice cream topping in the world--yes, even better than fudge or caramel or both) the mix of berries, vinegar and pepper was not very attractive to my eight year old self.

But then I tried it. Oh my goodness was it amazing! My dad added some sugar and let the berries soak up the vinegar for about an hour before we dug in to the bowl of ruby colored berries.
This is still one of my favorite combinations, and even though I absolutely hate black pepper, it is very very necessary in this recipe. It perfectly balances the sharpness of the vinegar and berries. Oh, and if you can, use the ripest strawberries you can find, they balance the sweet and savory combination without the addition of too much sugar, so you get more of the pure berry and vinegar flavor.

Strawberry Balsamic Pops

1 1/2 cups ripe strawberries, hulled and stemmed
2-4 Tbs sugar
1/2 Tbs Fresh ground black pepper (finer is better)
2 1/2 Tbs good balsamic vinegar

In a blender or bowl with a hand mixer, blend the strawberries and sugar until it forms a chunky liquid (hard to explain, but the picture above is more descriptive). Add the pepper and vinegar and mix well. Portion into your popsicle molds and freeze until solid, 6 hours or overnight.