Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Grilled Salmon with Watermelon Panzanella

Watermelon is the wonder food. One of the most nutritious fruits, it is versatile in sweet and savory dishes. This was inspired by a meal at The Chart House, where Alaskan salmon was grilled and served on a bed of watermelon panzanella. I am still trying (quickly) to work through an abundance of basil (grilled corn, tomato and basil salad tomorrow, maybe?). Watermelon, cucumber, basil chiffonade, feta, garlic, balsamic vinegar and olive oil.

There was a spice in the dish that I could not place. It was reminiscent of Indian spices. Maybe cardomom? Maybe coriander? I attempted to ask but the server returned from the kitchen and stated that the salmon is simply seasoned, with only salt and pepper. No, I asked about the panzanella....I've had two glasses of wine...forget it...not very motivated to follow up.

I've tried this with both. I think I prefer the coriander. The  ground seed adds a little something without the over-the-topness of fresh cilantro. Mangia!

Grilled Salmon with Watermelon Panzanella

You could add Kalamata olives and red onion
if you'd like.
 Salmon fillets (I detest farm-raised, they are environmentally nuclear, and just not right)

3 cups cubed seedless watermelon

1 cup cubed, seeded, peeled cucumbers

2 cloves garlic

Good sized handful basil leaves, sliced into a chiffonade

2 cups croutons made from good Italian bread, toasted in oven

1/4 cup feta cheese crumbles

3 tbsp. good olive oil

2 tbsp. good balsamic vinegar

1/4 tsp. ground cardomom or coriander

Toss the salad ingredients. Grill the salmon. Place salmon on top of salad. Eat!

Monday, July 22, 2013

I Couldn't Find Icicle Radishes But Boy Was This Yummy!

Tried this out over the weekend. I only tossed the amount I planned to eat at the time with the dressing so the parsley wouldn't get soggy. It made a lovely lunch today at work. I put in extra anchovies and added a couple of cloves of garlic to the dressing as well. Lovelovelove anchovies! Mangia!

White Bean and Radish Salad

Bon Appétit  | May 2013
by The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
White Bean and Radish Salad
White Bean and Radish Salad
photo by Hirsheimer & Hamilton
This satisfying salad is great alongside broiled fish, roast chicken, or a simple steak. To turn it into a vegetarian meal, fold in sliced hard-boiled eggs.

Ingredients

  • 2 anchovy fillets packed in oil, drained
  • 3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons drained capers
  • 2 1/2 cups (packed) fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves, divided
  • 1/4 cup (or more) white wine vinegar
  • Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper
  • 1 bunch radishes, trimmed, cut into thin wedges
  • 2 scallions, thinly sliced
  • 3 15-ounce cans cannellini (white kidney) beans, rinsed
  • 3/4 cup oil-cured black olives, pitted, quartered

Preparation

Blend anchovies, oil, capers, and 1 cup parsley in a blender until a coarse purée forms. Transfer to a large bowl, mix in 1/4 cup vinegar, and season with salt, pepper, and more vinegar, if desired.
Add radishes, scallions, beans, olives, and remaining 1 1/2 cups parsley to bowl and toss to combine.

Heirloom Tomatoes Are Hard To Resist


That's one hot tomato!

Especially when they are all bumpy and green and yellow and orange-streaked, all gorgeous in their utter lack of perfection in appearance.
 I ended up with a large amount of basil left over from an ambitious plan to turn out two dishes requiring the sweet, fragrant herb. Got lazy and managed just the insalate caprese.

I was surfing the web looking for my Royal Baby update (ok, that's not really high brow, but I admit to being hooked) and wandered over to the New York Times and the Dining section.

From Martha Rose Shulman, author of several wonderful cookbooks on Mediterranean and Provecal cuisine. I sauteed shrimp, and de-glazed the pan with white wine, chopped garlic, crushed red pepper and some oregano to go with this. Mangia!


Aww, the shrimp are spooning!

Tomato and Basil Risotto

This is a luxurious summer risotto, with tomatoes both cooked along with the rice and added uncooked to the finished risotto.

7 cups well seasoned vegetable stock, garlic stock or chicken stock
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup minced onion
Salt to taste
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 pound tomatoes, grated
Pinch of sugar
1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves
1 1/2 cups Arborio rice
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1/2 cup dry white or rosé wine, such as Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc
1/2 pound additional sweet ripe tomatoes, finely diced (about ¾ cup)
1/4 cup slivered fresh basil
1/4 to 1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese (1 to 2 ounces)

1. Put your stock or broth into a saucepan and bring it to a simmer over low heat, with a ladle nearby or in the pot. Make sure that it is well seasoned.
2. Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a wide, heavy skillet or a wide, heavy saucepan. Add the onion and a generous pinch of salt, and cook gently until tender, about 5 minutes. Add the rice and garlic and cook, stirring, until the grains of rice are separate and beginning to crackle. Stir in the grated tomatoes, sugar, thyme, and salt to taste and cook, stirring often, until the tomatoes have cooked down slightly and coat the rice, 5 to 10 minutes.
3. Add the wine and stir until it has evaporated and been absorbed by the rice. Begin adding the simmering stock, a couple of ladlefuls (about 1/2 cup) at a time. The stock should just cover the rice, and should be bubbling, not too slowly but not too quickly. Cook, stirring often, until it is just about absorbed. Add another ladleful or two of the stock and continue to cook in this fashion, adding more stock and stirring when the rice is almost dry. You do not have to stir constantly, but stir often and when you do, stir vigorously. When the rice is just tender all the way through but still chewy (al dente), in 20 to 25 minutes, it is done. Taste now and adjust seasoning.
4. Add another ladleful of stock to the rice. Stir in the additional finely diced tomatoes, basil and Parmesan and remove from the heat. The mixture should be creamy (add more stock if it isn’t). Serve right away in wide soup bowls or on plates, spreading the risotto in a thin layer rather than a mound.
Yield: Serves 4 to 6

.”

Thursday, July 4, 2013

That's A Beautiful Vegetable, uh, I Mean Fruit

Pasta alla Norma is coming soon....mangia!

The Flexitarian

Meaty and Mighty

Praising the Versatile Eggplant

Sabra Krock for The New York Times
Eggplant is often called “meaty,” by which we mean what, exactly? Substantial? Versatile? Flavorful?

Sabra Krock for The New York Times
Pasta alla norma.
Sabra Krock for The New York Times
Eggplant salad with mustard-miso dressing.
Sabra Krock for The New York Times
All of the above, for sure (as well as tough and chewy on occasion; not necessarily a bad thing). But the comparison is no more fair to the aubergine than it would be to call a piece of beef “eggplanty.”
Eggplant stands alone, a vegetable like no other. Actually, because eggplant is a fruit, like the tomato, to which it’s closely related, it’s safer to label it a food like no other, beloved and appreciated worldwide and deserving of respect, not as a meat substitute but as a treasure in itself.
It isn’t a competition, but if you asked me the old desert-island question, I’d take eggplant before any meat I could think of (and, yes, that includes bacon). It would be ridiculous to claim that eggplant can outperform meat, but it’s not a stretch to see it as useful as any one cut of meat.
It can take myriad forms, as appetizer, side dish or sauce. It can fill the center of the plate as nicely as anything.
This isn’t the place to discuss health effects, but ever since people stopped believing that the nightshade family, of which it is a member, was poisonous, it’s been considered nothing but beneficial.
You can eat eggplant every day, in season at least, and all it’s going to do is make you happy.
This was reinforced for me three times this spring when I spent a little time in Sicily, where a warmer climate produces an earlier eggplant season.
On the first occasion, I had the key ingredients for a mashed eggplant dish akin to baba ghanouj (eggplant, garlic and a wood fire) but no others.
I propped those eggplants against the coals and allowed them to blister, blacken and soften; I did pretty much the same with the garlic. As I was once taught in India, where eggplant is indigenous, I held the shriveled fruits up by their stems with one hand and peeled them with the other. The flesh I mashed with that of the softened garlic, lemon and salt for a dish nothing short of glorious.
You cannot achieve the same flavor without a wood fire (even real charcoal is only second best), but roasting in a hot oven results in perfectly tender eggplant, which you can use for an ad hoc dish like the one I just described, or for classic baba ghanouj.
This treatment addresses the most common question about eggplant, which is, “Should I salt it?” There is more than one answer: If you’re slicing eggplant and you’re looking for an ultra-firm (O.K., meaty) texture, salt the slices and after 30 to 60 minutes, press them between paper towels before cooking. This technique works with many vegetables, because the salt draws out moisture.
But if you imagine that you’re salting to draw out what used to be called “the bitter principle,” don’t bother. Eggplant isn’t bitter. That mashed wood-grilled eggplant was quite sweet, needing a lot of lemon. And if you’re salting because you think the eggplant will absorb less oil when it cooks, that’s a mistaken notion also. Eggplant is a sponge, and as long as you’re using good-tasting oil, it isn’t a problem. (As for the question “Should I peel it?” I think that with the exception of that blistered black skin in Sicily, I can unequivocally answer: never.)
A couple of nights later, a friend made pasta alla Norma, a dish that is Sicilian. It’s really no more than lovingly sautéed eggplant finished in tomato sauce, tossed with pasta and topped with ricotta salata. Dry feta isn’t a bad substitute, and pecorino Romano and Parmesan are fine as well.
While frying the eggplant, one of those leisurely kitchen tasks that takes a while but is nevertheless a pleasure, I was reminded of a variety of eggplant dishes I’ve eaten and made and savored over the years.
One was a version of Parmesan made at the sadly-now-closed Shiek’s in Torrington, Conn., in which the eggplant was salted and pressed into thin, tough slices before layering with way too much mozzarella, in true Italian-American style. Also memorable were the various versions of boiled eggplant you see in Japan, one of which I’ve replicated here. (If you have never boiled eggplant, you must try this one.)
There was the incomparable dish of mostly eggplant skin, it seemed to me, along with cherry tomatoes and loads of basil and oil, highly unusual and incredibly enjoyable, at La Tavernetta, in Naples.
And there were the various “why is this so good?” Sichuan eggplant recipes (answer: they’re fried) as well as the perhaps overrated Turkish classic imam biyaldi, which translated means “the priest fainted,” and my first baingan bharta, which I made myself at home, from a Julie Sahni recipe, and in which the eggplant is roasted in precisely the same way as it is for baba ghanouj.
My final Sicilian eggplant dish was at Ardigna, a restaurant in the remote, nearly deserted hills east of Marsala, where the antipasti was varied and sensational. A friend had told me this was “the only restaurant that matters,” which was perhaps a bit extreme. But among the dishes was a caponata so inspiring that, back home, I searched for and found in Chinatown, naturally, a few of those long, slender, lavender eggplants, and made a caponata of my own.
Over fairly high heat, I softened sliced onions and green bell pepper in plenty of olive oil. As they cooked, I chopped and added the eggplant, along with crushed dried red peppers, capers, pine nuts, chopped green olives, raisins and a bit of sugar. After that had all cooked down, I stirred in tomato paste and vinegar.
I then ate a bit, packed up the rest, hit the road and proceeded to virtually live on it for two days. Show me a meat dish you can say that about.

Couscous on Steroids

Israeli Couscous Tabbouleh

That's what Israeli couscous looks like to me. Super cous! During the ongoing assault on the grain and bean inventory, this week's work will include a fava bean puree of dried beans atop sauteed broccoli rabe and a yellow split pea dish. Yesterday's offering was this yummy recipe from this month's Bon Appetit. I cooked the couscous in vegetable broth (good old Better Than Bouillon) and sauteed  chicken thighs to be cut up and toss with it. Mangia!


Bon Appétit  | July 2013
by Eric Ripert
Israeli Couscous Tabbouleh
yield
Makes 8 servings
Rinsing the cooked couscous stops the cooking and prevents it from sticking together as it cools.

Ingredients

add to shopping list
  • 1 1/2 cups Israeli couscous
  • 1 small shallot, finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons (or more) fresh lemon juice
  • 1 English hothouse cucumber, unpeeled, seeded, finely chopped
  • 3 cups cherry tomatoes, halved
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh mint
  • Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper

Preparation

Cook couscous according to package directions; drain. Rinse with cold water and drain well.
Whisk shallot, oil, and 2 tablespoons lemon juice in a large bowl. Add couscous, cucumber, tomatoes, parsley, and mint; season with salt, pepper, and more lemon juice, if desired, and toss to combine.
DO AHEAD: Israeli Couscous Tabbouleh can be made 1 day ahead (omit herbs). Cover and chill. Fold in herbs just before serving.


Read More http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Israeli-Couscous-Tabbouleh-51175480#ixzz2Y5AaxwJ7