Projects
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Lamb Burgers With Mint, Cumin, And Port
Yes, it sounds strange, but it really did turn out well. I've always thought lamb did better with cumin than any other spice. I skipped making a chutney to go with it because I had the dried fruit buns to serve the burgers on. With a bit of blueberry/mint jelly the dinner really came together.
The small cup of tomatoes is a simple salad of ripe tomatoes, basil, marjoram, parsley, red onion, olives, Parmesan cheese and olive oil/red vinegar. Hard to go wrong with that on a warm spring day.
You could also do this as small balls to serve over cous cous, or even noodles.
1 1/2 lbs. ground lamb
1 small red onion, chopped
1/2 cup fresh mint, chopped
1 tablespoon ground cumin
salt and pepper
3-4 tablespoons ruby port
Mix everything but the port together. Add the port slowly so that you do not over-wet the meat. If it begins feeling too wet, you can always toss in a few breadcrumbs.
Form the lamb into patties and fry over medium/high heat until done to your liking.
Stuffed Mushrooms With Spinach And Chervil
This recipe comes from The Best Of Food And Wine, 1993. I made a half recipe and it worked well. I'll post the original but keep in mind smaller batches will work just as well.
I should mention that these were met with delight by both husband and son. We didn't have any leftovers.
You Will Need:
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 small onion, chopped
1 1/2 cups cooked, chopped spinach (I used frozen) well drained of liquid
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoons fresh chopped chervil
3/4 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
3/4 cup grated cheddar cheese
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 pounds medium or large fresh mushroom caps (I had some large-ish baby bellas (yeah, I know how "baby" could they be?)
Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F.
In a medium saucepan, melt the butter and cook the onion until softened-about ten minutes. Add the spinach and the cream. Cook until cream thickens-about three minutes. Remove mixture to a bowl and add 1/4 cup of the chervil, salt, pepper, lemon juice, and 1/2 cup of the grated cheese. Mix well and set aside.
In a large frying pan with a cover, heat the olive oil and 1 tablespoon water over high heat. Add the mushrooms and cover. Cook until they become softened and glazed looking-about three minutes.
Using a slotted spoon, remove the mushrooms to a baking dish that can withstand high heat. Top the caps generously with the spinach. Add remaining cheese to tops and sprinkle with remaining chervil. Bake until heated through and cheese melts-about five minutes. Remove to a dish and serve immediately.
Lentil/Barley Casserole
I liked the last lentil loaf fine, but I thought it might be interesting to use barley instead of rice with it and add a few more vegetables. Here's the result.
You Will Need:
4 cups cooked lentils, drained
2 cups cooked barley, drained
2 cups grated carrots, squeezed dry
4 stalks celery, chopped
1 large onion, chopped
1 large clove garlic, chopped
10 small, fresh sage leaves
2 teaspoons dried thyme
¼ cup fresh parsley, chopped
Olive oil for frying
Salt and pepper to taste
3 eggs
Breadcrumbs, dry-about ½ cup
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a large casserole dish.
Cook celery, garlic and onion in olive oil in a large pot or pan. When soft, add herbs and carrots, adding more oil if needed. Add salt and pepper being careful not to over salt if using store-bought breadcrumbs. Cook a few minutes longer. Mix-in the barley and lentils. Mix well with the eggs and breadcrumbs adding slowly just until it holds together as a "glop" (that's a technical term). Pour into casserole dish and bake about 45 minutes, checking frequently after the first half hour.
Blueberry/Mint Syrup And Jelly
I started out to make a blueberry/mint syrup. I ended up with a ½ pint of syrup and ½ pint jelly. As I watched it reduce, I could tell it was going to gel easily, which it did. This was perfect, as I'm serving lamb over the next couple days-a great accompaniment. I did not use canning tested recipes and as the jelly did not go in a water bath (for a single half pint? I couldn't be bothered) it really should be eaten within a week and kept in the fridge.
I couldn't place the smell at first, but it dawned on me that it smells very much like the Celestial Seasonings berry flavoured tea. I haven't bought that tea in at least twenty years, but the smell was so memorable, eventually I remembered where I'd encountered it before.
To make ½ pint syrup and ½ pint jelly (or just keep cooking it all down to make a full pint of jelly)
2 cups sugar
¾ cup water
1 large bunch mint, torn in pieces
a handful of blueberries (about fifteen)
Dissolve the sugar in the water with a whisk until it comes to a boil. Reduce heat to medium and add the blueberries and mint. Switch to a wooden spoon, which you will use to mash the berries against the side of the pot here and there. Keep an eye on it so that the mixture does not boil over (it should simmer rapidly, but not at a full boil) and let it go for about ten minutes or until the syrup has reduced by about 1/3 and it coats a spoon ever so slightly. Remove from heat, strain through a fine mesh sieve into a measuring cup, and then strain again into a clean, heated jar. Reserve the rest for the jelly. Let cool before storing in the fridge.
To make the jelly, return the rest of the syrup to the pan and continue cooking until it reaches the gelling point (if it sticks to a cold spoon, you're there). Strain again into a heated jar. Skin any foam, and let sit until cooled. Then cover and store in the fridge. Use within a week.
Dried Fruit Buns
I wasn't really sure what to call these. They aren't exactly Bath Buns, and they aren't Scotch Buns either. I guess "Mama's Big Fruity Buns" will have to do. I don't look forward to the Google hits from that one.
I took my basic white bread recipe and replaced all-purpose flour with bread flour. The addition of fruits, peel and ½ teaspoon mace gave it the sweetness I was looking for without adding extra sugar. The recipe makes 12 large buns, or 18 medium.
You Will Need:
¼ cup warm water
2-¼ teaspoons regular (not instant) yeast
2 cups milk, scalded
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons salt
1-cup raisins
1-cup sultanas
¼ cup crystalised ginger, chopped
Grated peel of 1 lemon
½ teaspoon ground mace
5-6 cups bread flour
Glaze:
1-tablespoon heavy cream
1 egg yolk
Dissolve the yeast in the warm water in a small bowl. Let proof.
In a large bowl, place the butter, sugar and salt. Pour the hot milk over it and let cool to lukewarm.
In a bowl, pour hot water over the fruits and peel and let plump while the yeast proofs and milk cools. Drain through a fine mesh sieve before using (you want to keep the bits of peel).
Add the yeast to the cooled milk and add three cups of the flour. Mix in the fruits and mace. Continue adding flour until dough is no longer sticky. Knead-in extra flour as you go. The dough should be elastic but not overly dry. Knead about ten minutes.
Place in a buttered bowl and let rise until doubled-a couple hours.
Gently deflate dough and let rest 30 minutes.
Grease a baking sheet. Shape the buns and let rise, covered with a towel for another 20-30 minutes.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
Brush the buns and bake 10 minutes. Rotate pan and bake another 10-15 or until golden and sound hollow when rapped. I baked mine to an internal temperature of 190 degrees F.
Cool on racks.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Blueberry Roll
Sadly, the blueberries aren't from Nova Scotia (much too early). They're from my freezer. Anyway, I had the placemats and thought it would be an appropriate background, if not wholly accurate.
The recipe is from The New York Times Heritage Cookbook. It really isn't all that special-it reminds me of a cross between blueberry muffins and a buckle. It could have used lemon zest-maybe even a bit of vanilla. The dough was easy enough to make but difficult to handle and mine did split in two coming off the pan. My husband liked it, and in the right mood, I probably would too-but today it struck me as terribly ho-hum.
You Will Need:
1 cup blueberries
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1/4 cup sugar plus 2 tablespoons for sprinkling the berries
2 cups flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup butter
2 eggs
1/2 cup milk (aprox)
Place the blueberries in a bowl. Sprinkle with lemon and sugar.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Butter a baking sheet.
Sift together the flour, baking powder, salt and 2 cups of sugar
Cut in the butter with a pastry cutter or your fingers until it is a fine meal. Beat the eggs in a measuring cup and add enough milk to total 3/4 cup. You probably won't need all of it.
Stir the liquid slowly into the flour to make a soft (not wet) dough. You will need to be able to roll it out, so keep this in mind as you add.
Roll out the dough to 1/2 inch thickness in an oblong approximately 10x15 inches. Spread with blueberries and roll-up from the wide end. Place seam side down on a greased baking sheet and bake 40-45 minutes or until golden. Cool ten minutes on pan, then transfer to a rack. Dust with powdered sugar and serve slightly warm.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Marmite/Cheddar Bread And Tornado!
I'll keep this brief as there are tornadoes touching down not far from here and reports of semi trailers strewn all over the Interstate. Right now it is calm in my town but we all know (from the other night) how fast this can change. Kearney, I heard has been hit pretty hard tonight.
You Will Need:
1 cup fed sourdough starter
2 cups water
3 cups all purpose flour
2 1/2 cups grated cheddar cheese 2 heaping tablespoons Marmite
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons salt
3-4 cups all purpose flour
In a large bowl, soften the starter with the water. Mix in the three cups of flour and cover with plastic. Let stand three hours.
Stir in the sugar, salt, marmite, cheese and flour a cup at a time until the dough is no longer sticky. Knead well, about ten minutes. Place in a greased bowl, cover and let rise until doubled-about three hours.
Punch down, divide in two and shape. Place on cornmeal dusted pan and dust lightly with flour. Cover with a towel and let rise until nearly doubled-about two hours.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Slash loaves. Using whatever method you prefer to create steam, do so and load the loaves. Bake 20 minutes, then rotate the pans-take care opening the oven as there may be steam.
Bake until they reach an internal temperature of about 200 degrees F. The loaves should sound hollow and have a deep golden colour.
OK-gotta go, the weather is getting scary. Stay safe everyone.
Cornmeal Pizzas
I over-bought mushrooms this week (Baby Bellas were on a major sale) so I've been looking for interesting ways to use them. You may prefer to forgo the half stick of butter to cook the mushrooms and onions and go for olive oil instead. The crust takes about an hour to prepare which is about how long it will take to make the toppings.
You Will Need:
For The Crust:
1 cup lukewarm water
2 teaspoons sugar
2 1/4 teaspoons regular yeast
1/4 cup olive oil
2 1/2 cups all purpose flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
1 teaspoon salt
Disolve the yeast and sugar in the warm water and let sit five minutes. Add the olive oil.
Sift together the flour, cornmeal and salt. Slowly add the liquid and mix well. Knead on a board about five minutes until smooth. Place in an oiled bowl and let rise until doubled-about an hour.
For the Topping:
1 lb. mushrooms, chopped
2 large sweet onions, sliced
4 tablespoons (or more) butter
salt and pepper
1 tablespoon fresh rosemary
4 tablespoons fresh parsley, half reserved
1 teaspoon dried thyme
5 fresh sage leaves
1 teaspoon dried marjoram
Splash of sherry
3 small ripe tomatoes, sliced
1 cup Swiss cheese
1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
In a large frying pan melt the butter over medium heat and add the onions and mushrooms
Cover and cook until the onions and mushrooms are soft, stirring occasionaly. This should take about 30-40 minutes. Add the herbs and cook a few minutes longer, uncovered until some of the liquid evaporates. Toss on the sherry, turn the heat to high and burn off most of the remaining liquid and alcohol. Set aside and cover until ready to use.
Preheat the oven to 475 degrees F. Place one rack in the lowest position and another in the centre. Toss some cornmeal on baking sheets.
Divide the dough into 4 pieces and roll out into thin rounds. You should be able to fit two to a sheet.
Place the mushroom/onion mixture on the bottom of the rounds. Top with cheeses, then tomatoes and a few bits of parsley for colour. Bake 5 minutes on the low rack and another 3-5 in the middle. Keep an eye on them as they tend to burn quickly once they go. Let stand a few minutes before slicing.
Barbecued Lima Beans
I'd been curious to try these after I saw the recipe in The Women's Day Encyclopedia Of Cookery, 1960. Danny really enjoys lima beans tossed with butter and salt, so I knew I had half the battle won. He ended up really enjoying these.
The recipe couldn't be easier, though I made a few changes (organic ketchup and double the amount of mustard). It certainly made me think you could prepare these with any sauce you prefer. I get into such a rut preparing the same vegetables the same way day after day. This recipe is a keeper. If I can get my three year old to eat lima beans, a sweet potato, and spinach for lunch I feel less guilty about letting him have pudding ice cream two days in a row. He did request the oddest combination of fruit for a salad tonight (tinned plums, fresh nectarines and maraschino cherries). I guess I'll let him have it-he did eat all his lima beans.
You Will Need:
1/4 cup molasses (mild)
2 tablespoons prepared mustard
1 tablespoon cider vinegar
1/2 cup ketchup
Dash of Worcestershire sauce
6 cups cooked lima beans (frozen works fine)
Cook and drain the beans. Mix everything else in a bowl and transfer to a large skillet. Cook over medium heat until well blended. Mix in the beans and cook a few more minutes until warmed through. Let stand a few minutes before serving. Reheats well.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Stop With The Faces Already
"Marmite and cheese on toast would be excellent right now."
Yeah, me too. But I'll bet you don't try to incorporate it into bread. OK, maybe you do-but I couldn't find anyone on-line that had actually done it. I found an odd old reference to it, but the rest of the recipe sounded so messed-up I was sure it would be a waste of Marmite and good cheddar. OK, not good cheddar because I can't afford that...but a reasonably priced block of store-brand extra sharp cheddar from Hy-Vee that is (much to my continual shock), actually pretty darn good. Really, I couldn't believe it either.
So yeah, I'm refreshing the sourdough starter overnight and we'll just have to wait and see if this was genius or not. Stop making faces. The taste of a decomposing compost heap and sharp cheddar is really quite the delicious snack.
Stop with the faces already. Just wait, you'll see. 24 hours from now I'll be enjoying a slice of Marmite and cheese sourdough bread and you'll be eating...well I don't know what you'll be eating but I'm pretty certain it won't be Marmite and cheese sourdough bread.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Pea Smoothie
A nice way to enjoy peas on a hot day.
You Will Need:
1 cup cooked peas
1/2 cup plain yoghurt (or more if desired)
Water to thin (you could use vegetable broth if you have it)
1 teaspoon dried mint, crumbled
Salt to taste
Puree in a blender and let sit half an hour before serving to chill and let the mint soften. Serves four.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Ice Cream From Leftover Pudding
This ice cream was completely improvised. I had about half a cup of heavy cream and a cup of whole milk to use up. I combined them with 1 cup of chocolate pudding I'd made the day before and enough chocolate syrup to sweeten the mixture-about three tablespoons. Ice cream is a custard-based thing anyway, right? You know how I hate to waste. I must admit to a feeling of great satisfaction when I tossed away that empty carton of heavy cream. Every last drop put to use. Because mama hates waste. She does. She really hates it.
No picture because we all know what chocolate ice cream looks like and the kid isn't patient enough to wait for his ice cream while I drag out the camera. Use your imagination.Sourdough Bread With Ancho Pepper And Corn
This bread has the most wonderful colour from the addition of 1 teaspoon of Ancho chili powder. Ancho chilies have a sweet, smoky flavour and only a mild heat, making them perfect for a sandwich loaf. I suspect this bread will be excellent toasted with the corn meal in the recipe to provide texture.
You Will Need:
For The Sponge:
1 cup fed starter
3 cups all purpose flour
2 cups water-room temp
For The Dough:
All of starter
1-cup cornmeal
1-teaspoon ancho chili powder
1-tablespoon salt
1-tablespoon sugar
2-3 cups all-purpose flour (or more)
3 cups fresh cut corn (just take a knife and scrape it off the cobs)
Egg Wash:
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons heavy cream
Combine fed starter with two cups water and stir to break it up. Add the flour and mix quickly. The dough will be shaggy. Cover and let soak 2-6 hours (I did three and a half). The longer the soak, the more sour flavour it will develop.
To the starter add the sugar, salt and chili powder. Mix in half of the corn. Begin adding the flour a cup at a time, alternating with remaining corn. You will want to work in most of the corn, don't worry about the flour. If it is too sticky to knead, add more. The dough will feel tacky (due to the cornmeal) and slightly "squishy" but it shouldn't stick. Knead it a good ten minutes, poking the corn kernels back in when they pop out. Don't use a mixer for this or you'll break up all the corn.
When your dough is kneaded, place it in an oiled bowl, cover and let rise until doubled. Sourdough takes longer and even on a hot day here, it took three hours. Be patient; let it do what sourdough does. When your dough is doubled, punch it down and let it rest for 30 minutes. This would be a good time to wash the dishes and butter your baking pans.
Divide dough in two, shape and place in buttered pans. Cover with a towel (plastic will stick too much) and let rise until almost doubled-about another 2 hours. Halfway through second rise, begin preheating oven to 400 degrees F.
Brush loaves generously with egg wash and bake twenty minutes. Rotate and continue baking another 10-20 minutes or until a deep golden colour and sounds hollow when rapped. For loaves of this type I like them to test to an internal temperature of at least 180 degrees F. but use your sense too. If the loaves seem done and sound hollow, pull them out. Generally, a few extra minutes in the oven is better than too few.
Cool completely before slicing (resist the temptation as sourdough really needs to settle a bit before fully developing the sour flavour and desired texture. Just be patient-go do the rest of the dishes while you wait.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Severe Weather
Cherry Freezer Jam
Easy Pickled Onions
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Cherry Strudel
Such a bloody chore. It certainly wasn't any more convenient than just making my own, though it did free up the dining room table where I normally roll out strudel dough. In the end, it came together (amazing how much patching you can do with melted butter) but it does pain me that I didn't follow my gut and make my own pastry.
I couldn't find a suitable cherry strudel recipe anywhere. What I found were fillings with cheese, or chocolate(?) or all three, or large amounts of cornstarch. One even suggested drying out a few sheets of Phylo and crumbling it up in place of breadcrumbs. I wouldn't recommend that. I finally thought to look in Paula Peck's The Art Of Fine Baking, and there was a cherry strudel recipe pretty close to what I had in mind. I made a number of changes (like using Phylo dough) and you should feel free to adapt it as well this isn't an exacting type of recipe. I probably overfilled mine a bit, but the overflow wasn't disastrous. Remember to roll loosely and not to overstuff your strudel and it should be fine. Strudel is best served slightly warm.
You Will Need:
½ package Phylo dough, thawed (or use my pastry recipe HERE)
Filling:
1 cup melted butter
2 cups fresh white breadcrumbs, sautéed lightly in butter
4 cups cherries, stones removed
1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
½ cup cinnamon sugar
On a flexible cutting board or a lightly floured sheet, layer five sheets of Phylo dough brushing each layer lightly with melted butter. Spread the surface with breadcrumbs (you may not need them all). Leaving about an inch at the edge, place the cherries in a line across at the bottom length of the dough. Carefully lift the edge of the board or the towel and flip the dough over itself. Butter top and continue until the strudel is rolled-up. Place on a buttered baking sheet seam side down. Brush top with butter and cut five or six slits in the top. Bake in a preheated 350-degree F. oven for about 40 minutes or until golden brown, basting at least twice in that time. Remove, let cool a few minutes on sheet then transfer carefully to a rack to cool. Dust with powdered sugar before serving still slightly warm.
Cherries kind of stain your hands. If you care about that sort of thing, wear gloves to remove the stones.
Sourdough Pizza With Cherries, Sage, and Shallots
Friday, May 23, 2008
Like Crack, For Teetotalers
"It's like winter in my mouth mama!"
I then had a three year old blow in my face so I could smell his fresh breath. It was quite fresh. I'm glad he liked it because I grew up with a sister that would become ill just being in the same room with someone eating mint, and I didn't want to spend my declining years being considerate of another mint-hating freak's hang-ups. Fresh. Quite fresh.
Thankfully, the little fondant patties covered in (real) chocolate made by Pearsons are low in calories and fat...because I cannot stop eating them. I don't want to sound like I'm trivialising drug addiction when I tell you these little disks are crack. Sure, after three I was ready to throw-up, but I kept eating them anyway. I'm at something like five. Hey, that's only 2.5 grams of fat. See, this is health food. Crack. The stuff is crack.
Like winter in my mouth.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Polenta With White Beans, Basil and Tomato
Raisin Bread
I kneaded this batch by hand and added the raisins in after the first three cups of flour. If you're using a mixer with a dough hook, it will break the raisins up a bit leaving flecks in the dough. I don't mind that look, but some people do-if this disturbs you, simply knead the raisins into the dough after the initial kneading. I do think it is easier to do it before.
You Will Need:
2-¼ teaspoons regular (not instant) yeast
¼ cup lukewarm water
2 cups whole milk
¼ cup unsalted butter
1 ½ cups raisins, plumped in hot water and well drained
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons salt
5-6 cups bread flour
Wash:
1 egg yolk beaten with 2 tablespoons heavy cream
In a small bowl, proof the yeast in the warm water.
In a saucepan, scald the milk and then pour over the butter, sugar and salt in a large bowl. When cooled to lukewarm, add the yeast. Mix in three cups of the flour and add the raisins. Add the rest of the flour half a cup at a time until you have stiff, not sticky dough. Knead until smooth-about fifteen minutes. Don't worry if the raisins pop out-just tuck them back into the dough.
Place in a buttered bowl, turn once and cover. Let rise 1 ½ -2 hours or until doubled in volume. Punch down, let rest 30 minutes.
Generously butter two bread pans. Divide the dough in two and shape into loaves. Cover with a towel and let rise until nearly doubled-about 30-40 minutes. Preheat the oven to 400 Degrees F.
Mix the wash and brush over loaves. Sprinkle a bit of sugar if you like on top.
Bake 25-35 minutes, checking after 20 minutes.
Cool on racks.
Vietnamese Style Vegetarian Salad
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Spinach Parmesan Sourdough Bagels -UPDATED
Chocolate Syrup II
You Will Need:
1 cup water
1/2 cup sugar
2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Bring water and sugar to a boil whisking until sugar dissolves. Whisk in cocoa and salt. Reduce heat to simmer and cook a few minutes until thickened. If it seems too thick, add a bit of water keeping in mind the mixture will continue to thicken as it cools. Remove from heat, whisk in vanilla and cool. Store in jars in the fridge. Makes 1 pint.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Goat Tamales-I Kid You Not!
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Sourdough Strawberry/Cheese Coffeecake
You Will Need:
1 cup fed sourdough starter
3-4 cups all-purpose flour
¾ cup whole milk
1-teaspoon salt
¼ cup unsalted butter
1-tablespoon sugar
1-tablespoon honey
2 eggs
For The topping:
1-cup strawberry preserves+ 1-tablespoon cornstarch
12 ounces cream cheese, softened
½ cup cottage cheese
½ cup powdered sugar
1 large egg yolk
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 egg with 1-tablespoon water for wash
Glaze:
1 cup powdered sugar
Enough water to make a thick, but pourable glaze
Heat milk, butter, sugar, and honey in a saucepan until warmed and butter is just melted. Cool to lukewarm
In a large bowl, dissolve the starter in the milk mixture and beat in two eggs. Add 2 cups of the flour and beat at low speed with a mixer for half a minute, scraping sides. Then, beat on high for three minutes. By hand, mix in the rest of the flour until you have moderately stiff dough. Place in a buttered bowl and let rise until doubled. This can take anywhere from 2-3 hours as sourdough rises slower than yeast.
When doubled, punch down and let rest ten minutes. Lightly butter a large baking sheet. Roll the dough into a rectangle and transfer to the sheet. Make the filling as follows:
In a small bowl, mix the preserves with 1-tablespoon cornstarch and mix until smooth. In another bowl, mix the cream cheese, cottage cheese, powdered sugar, eggs and cornstarch. Mix until smooth and light.
Top the dough with alternating stripes of cheese and preserves. Cover lightly with waxed paper and let rise again-30-40 minutes or until light.
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Before baking, brush the edges of dough with egg wash for colour. With rack in centre position, bake the coffeecake for 20 minutes and then rotate pan. Bake another 10-20 minutes or until cheese is baked through and centre of cake seems done.
Remove from pan and place on a large cooling rack. Place rack over a baking sheet. Pour glaze over still warm cake and then cool completely before serving.
Feeds, many, many, hungry coffee-klatchers.
Onion Flats
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Chow Chow-With Update
Grilled Bagels
Friday, May 16, 2008
Meatless Lasagna
I've probably made four lasagnas in my entire life. I don't know why-we enjoy it, and having leftovers is always nice.
One of the things I dislike about meatless lasagna is the tendency people have to fill it with watery vegetables like courgettes that just slide about in too little sauce and cheese. If I want tomatoes, courgettes and onion-I'll make ratatouille-not lasagna. I've tackled this problem by making a very vegetable-heavy spaghetti sauce. As a bonus, you get extra sauce for the freezer (why cook more often than you have to?).
I made the sauce a day ahead when I had time and tossed the lasagna together when I got home tonight. If you're really planning ahead, the cheese can be grated the day before as well.
This recipe makes a lot of food. We'll be eating it all week. I used whole milk ricotta because it was on sale at our market but normally, I wouldn't buy it. Part skim is fine. Cheese is a matter of taste, I guess. I had provolone and Parmesan on hand, so I used them. Mozzarella is traditional, but then, so is a layer of meat. Regular readers know I'm not a stickler for adhering to the recipe unless it is pastry. I call for whole tomatoes in a tin because that is what I buy-they are more versatile than chopped or stewed. If I need chopped, I chop them. I take this approach with pineapple rings too, as it is a simple enough matter to crush them. You can certainly substitute a tin of crushed tomatoes if that is what you have at home.
For The Sauce:
4 medium onions, chopped
4-5 cloves garlic, chopped
2 large sprigs rosemary, stripped and chopped
2-3 bay leaves
1 tablespoon dried thyme
1 tablespoon dried basil
1 teaspoon marjoram
6-8 medium carrots, sliced in thin rounds
12 oil cured olives, pitted and chopped
4 stalks celery, stripped and chopped
A good hearty grinding of fresh black pepper
4 tablespoons olive oil (plus more is needed)
2 4 ounce tins mushroom pieces, drained
1 large tin (28 oz.) of whole, Italian tomatoes, chopped, liquid reserved.
32 ounces of tomato sauce (I had 4 small tins)
2 6 ounce tins tomato paste
In a large, heavy pot heat the oil over medium heat. Add the onions, garlic, carrots, celery and olives. Cook until carrots and onions are softened. Add the spices and cook a few minutes until fragrant. Add everything else, bring to a boil and then cover. Reduce to a very slow simmer and cook the daylights out of it for five hours or so. Check it once in a while to make sure it isn't burning to the bottom of the pot, but basically, leave it alone.
For The Lasagna Filling:
4 cups whole milk ricotta
1 cup provolone cheese, shredded
1 cup Parmesan, finely shredded
1/2 cup chopped parsley
3 eggs
Pepper to taste
Reserve 1/8 cup of Parmesan and 1/8 cup provolone for topping. Mix everything else together in a bowl.
For The Pasta:
Cook according to directions and drain well. Use tongs to lift it in place because burning your fingers isn't fun.
In a 9x13 pan, cover the bottom with sauce. Layer sheets of pasta and then more sauce. Top with cheese mixture. Repeat until you reach the top ending with sauce. Cover with reserved cheese and cover with foil. Bake 45 minutes. Remove foil, bake 10 minutes more. Let stand 10 minutes at room temperature before cutting and serving.
Warning: Objects on the internet may appear larger than in real life. Lasagna is quite slimming.