
about weekly dish
•
about the culinary bookworm
•
contact •
home
PIZZA POCKET
Friday, September 30, 2005
Alright, enough already of all of that vegan stuff. You can see
that I wouldn't last very long as a vegan. Meat I could do without, but dairy?
No way. I love cheese too much. But it was fun to try. Now, back to my regular
cooking routine: I used up the last of my marinara sauce and made a very
delicious calzone with all my favorite pizza toppings. When David and I were
dating, we used to have dinner sometimes with
Jessie and Jerrod in their tiny on-campus apartment, and this is one of the
dishes I remember Jessie making. It's pretty quick, and so versatile--you can
throw whatever you like in the middle of the crust, and it will cook up to a
nice gooey flavor medley. For this one, ham and olives are the things I love, so
they take center stage. Here's how the rest of it shakes out:
Ham and Vegetable Calzone
1 cup warm water
1 package yeast
3 cups flour
1 T. sugar
1 t. pesto (optional--sub other herbs if you wish)
2 T. olive oil
Marinara sauce (if you're
running low, add a can of crushed tomatoes or half a jar of Ragu to make it
last)
Several slices ham, cut into slivers
Mixed vegetables: I used pepperoncini, green and black olives,
chopped artichoke hearts, and slivers of garlic
Mozzarella cheese, shredded (about 8 ounces for 4 calzone)
Mix water, yeast, flour, sugar, pesto, and olive oil with the
dough hook in your mixer until a ball forms. Let it rise, covered, for about an
hour. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Coat with oil and divide into fourths.
Let it rest while you prepare the toppings. Roll out the dough into an oblong
shape (see below) and cover one half of each calzone with sauce, then
vegetables, then ham, then cheese. Fold over and seal with a fork. Pierce the
top also with the fork, and brush with olive oil. Bake for about 20 minutes
until the crust is nice and golden. Serve with extra sauce, warmed, and a rich
red wine like Chianti.
ENJOY!
MY FIRST BLOGGING EVENT: IMBB #19
Thursday, September 29, 2005
What is a blogging event and what does IMBB stand for? Well, dear
readers, I'll tell you. See, out there in the big world of the wide web, there's
this whole community of
people who write blogs about food and cooking. They hold events every so often where
everyone writes about the same thing during the same time period. IMBB stands for
Is My Blog Burning? You can read about the event's origins here.
I have only read about these events until now, and for some reason, I decided it
was a good time to join in (you know, because school really isn't keeping me
busy enough).
For this IMBB, the 19th in the series, Sam of
Becks & Posh instructed all
of the participants to make a vegan meal and serve it to some unsuspecting
guest. (See my unsuspecting guests above--my fellow PhD student Casey and her
sister Christy). I was all excited about sharing my very first blogging event
with my new friends. Casey's birthday was a few weeks ago, so I did some
research and figured out how to make her a vegan birthday cake. Before I tell you about the meal I prepared,
though,
I might as well go ahead and confess. I tried really hard to stick to this whole
vegan thing, but on inspecting my recipes later, I discovered that I was foiled.
Vegans avoid animal products of any kind, and, well, apparently that's more
difficult than I thought.
I had planned to make Eggplant Parmesan for Casey and Christy
before I found out about IMBB. So, I thought, I'll just omit
the cheese; what's so hard about that? And, I had made marinara sauce earlier in the
week that was vegan--perfect for the eggplant--and some fresh pesto without the parmesan cheese
to flavor the coating. I
even found a way to get the coating to stick to the eggplant without using eggs.
What I did not think about was whether my bread crumbs had dairy products in
them, and, as it turns out, they did. And the pasta I served the eggplant and
marinara on was made with egg whites.
BUT, just in case you are wondering why I
posted this in the first place since I seem to have failed the challenge so
miserably, I am happy to report that the cake I made was vegan, and
Casey, Christy, and my husband, David, all gave it good reviews. So here's the
recipe for it, along with my recipe for the eggplant, even though it's not quite
vegan. Thanks for reading my very first event post!! Come again soon.
Chocolate Mocha Cake with a Kick
1 1/2 cups flour
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 t. cinnamon
1/2 t. cayenne pepper
1/4 t. salt
3/4 cup strong coffee
1/2 cup margarine (100% vegetable oil)
1 T. balsamic vinegar
1 T. vanilla
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Mix the dry ingredients together
in the bowl of a mixer. Add the coffee with the mixer running on low, then add
the vinegar and vanilla. Add the margarine last, turning the mixer up to high
speed and beating until smooth. Pour into a greased 9x9 cake pan and bake for
about 30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
For the glaze:
1 cup powdered sugar
1/2 cup cocoa
1/4 cup strong coffee
Whisk together until smooth and shiny. Pour over warm cake,
spreading to coat the top and sides. Sprinkle with cinnamon to serve.
Eggplant Not Parmesan
1 small to medium eggplant
Kosher salt
1/2 cup flour
1 cup olive oil
1 tablespoon
pesto (for vegan, I made it without the cheese, and substituted 1 t. Kosher
salt)
1 cup bread crumbs
Canola oil
Slice the eggplant into thin slices, and lay in one layer inside
a colander. Sprinkle with Kosher salt. If your slices won't all fit in the
colander (as mine didn't), cover the first layer with paper towels and lay
another layer on top. Allow to drain for about an hour.
Dry the slices and wipe off any excess salt; then dip in flour to
coat on both sides. Lay on a baking sheet. Mix olive oil and pesto together in a
shallow baking dish; pour the bread crumbs into another. Dip each slice in oil,
then in breadcrumbs. If you have time to let the slices refrigerate for a
half-hour or so, the coating will do a better job of sticking when you fry them.
Heat a half-inch of canola oil in a large skillet. Fry the slices
until brown and crispy on both sides, about 6 minutes per side. Decrease the
heat if they bread crumbs brown too quickly. Drain on paper towels.
Serve with angel hair pasta and
marinara sauce. Make
sure your pasta is egg-free if you want it to be vegan. If you don't care about
making this meal vegan, you can add some fresh mozzarella slices to the top of
the eggplant, and melt under the broiler before serving (this is usually how I
make it).
THE OTHER NEW ORLEANS SANDWICH
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
I have lived in Louisiana for almost three months now. In the
course of the last one, my new state has been hit by two hurricanes. The
response from the American community on the whole has been overwhelming; so much
money has been given to the Red Cross, and
so many people have turned their outrage into positive energy through the act of
giving. In the food blogger world, as a matter of fact,
Adam of The Amateur Gourmet is
hosting a cook-off of sorts to raise money for the hurricane victims. The
contestants have been cooking New Orleans-style food, and it all looks fabulous
(you should check out the beignets and vote for your favorite).
Although I am not an official part of the festivities, this
sandwich is the one that comes to my mind when I think of New Orleans. My
mother, a Louisiana native, has a particular affinity for muffalattas (I have no
idea whether I'm spelling that correctly--don't tell my students!), so I think
of her when I make them. You can buy olive salad in the grocery store, but I
really like to mix up my own. The best muffalattas I've had are crunchy on the
outside and warm and gooey on the inside, so I attempted to recreate that
texture with this one.
If you haven't ever eaten in New Orleans, please put it on your
list of things to do when the city is rebuilt--it is a culinary city like no
other. In the meantime, perhaps you can bring a little of the Crescent City into
your kitchen with these sandwiches (or with the po'boys and beignets cooked up
by the contestants and their coaches on Adam's site--go
William,
Melissa,
and
Jason!).
Muffalattas and Oven Fries
1 potato per person (fries don't keep well)
Rosemary, minced
3 cloves garlic, minced
Olive oil
Kosher salt
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Wash and dry the potatoes; slice
them into fry-like wedges. Place them on a baking sheet and toss with oil, so
that the wedges are coated on both sides. Sprinkle with rosemary and garlic.
Bake for 20 minutes; then flip the potatoes and bake for 10-15 minutes more.
Meanwhile, prepare the sandwiches.
1 loaf crusty French bread
Genoa salami
Ham
Provolone cheese
1 cup green olives
1/2 cup black olives
3 cloves garlic
Fresh oregano, a few sprigs
Olive oil Combine the olives,
garlic, and oregano in the food processor until very finely minced. Drizzle with
a little olive oil (about a teaspoon) to bind, and pulse a few times. Carve out
the top of the bread loaf, leaving the sides in tact (so that the filling
doesn't spill out). Remove the top and fill with the olive mixture. Line with
Provolone slices, salami, and ham, and then drizzle the inside with a little
more olive oil. Replace the top of the sandwich and wrap in foil. Bake in the
oven with the potatoes for about 10-12 minutes, until the cheese is melted and
the outside is crunchy. Cut into sandwich portions and serve with the fries,
which should be crispy on the outside by now. Sprinkle them with Kosher salt.
And, if you're so inclined, this meal works nicely with
Abita beer, bottled right here in Louisiana.
Eat, drink, and think of New Orleans.
TOMATOES AND CARROTS AND PASTA, OH MY!
Tuesday, September 27, 2005
When the tomatoes are nice and fresh and summery, I like to serve
the first version of the oven-roasted sauce (see below) right over pasta with no
accoutrements at all. But now that the summer tomatoes are on their way out
(even though summer appears to still be going strong--it hit 100 degrees here in
Baton Rouge last week!!), I am trying different methods to make the sauce go
further without sacrificing freshness or variety. I have an old, old Italian
cookbook that my husband gave me eons ago when we were dating that recommends
adding carrots to tomato-based sauces. So, I thought, I roast the tomatoes to
enhance their flavor, why not give the carrots the same treatment? The result is
a sweet, chunky, delightfully bright orangey sauce that retains traditional
Italian flavors without being boring. As a bonus, the velvety texture that the
carrots take on when roasted makes the sauce adhere nicely to the linguine. If
you have the base sauce leftover, dinner can be on the table in about 30
minutes...and it's good for you too!
Linguine Marinara with Roasted Carrots
6-8 whole carrots, peeled and cut into thick chunks
Olive oil
Kosher salt
Cracked pepper
1 - 1 1/2 cups tomato sauce (see recipe below)
1/2 pound linguine
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Toss the carrots with enough olive
oil to coat, and season liberally with salt and pepper. Roast for about 15-20
minutes, until beginning to shrivel. Meanwhile, cook the pasta, and heat the
tomato sauce over low. When the carrots are done, place them in the bowl of a
food processor and process until paste-like (think baby food texture). Add the
carrot puree to the tomato sauce and stir to combine. Taste and adjust
seasonings if necessary (it may be too sweet and need salt). Serve over
linguine, and top with fresh Parmesan.
For the bread:
Hollow out a half-loaf of French bread and fill it with a mixture
of chopped Roma tomatoes, garlic, basil leaves, and olive oil, all salted
nicely. Wrap in foil and bake at 350 for about 10 minutes. The bread will soak
up the juices from the tomatoes--yum! The filling is even better if you make it
a few hours early and let it sit for a bit. Slice into rounds and serve with the
pasta. This is a terrific meal to serve to your vegetarian friends!
ITALIAN WEEK
Monday, September 26, 2005
When I was making my first attempts at meal planning, I often
ended up buying lots of ingredients that I used only a little of, and then I
wouldn't know what to do with the rest before it went bad. This resulted in
expensive grocery bills and a crowded fridge. One of the ways that I learned to
compensate for such excess was to plan a week's worth of meals using similar
ingredients and flavors. Planning this way also allowed me to become comfortable
with one method of regional cooking by practicing on it for a whole week.
Italian week was one of my earliest themed endeavors, and it has stuck around.
Tomato-based sauce is so versatile, and so I make a ton of it at the beginning
of the week, and use it for different dishes as the week goes on. This week's
menu also serves to prove that I can, indeed, go at least one week without
cooking chicken!
Here's the basic sauce recipe, and then, as the week continues,
I'll tell you how I modify it:
Oven-Roasted Tomato Sauce
3-4 large tomatoes, chopped
Olive oil
Kosher salt
Cracked black pepper
1 large yellow onion, chopped
4-5 cloves garlic, chopped
1 28-ounce can crushed tomatoes (I like the Contadina roasted
garlic ones)
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Arrange the tomatoes on foil-lined baking sheets in a single
layer. Drizzle olive oil onto the sheets, and then toss with your hands to make
sure all the pieces are coated with oil. Sprinkle liberally with salt and
pepper. Roast for about 45 minutes, until beginning to blacken around the edges
and fall apart. Meanwhile, heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a large saucepan (this
will hold all of the sauce, so use a big one). Add the chopped onion and garlic
and cook over medium-low heat until very soft, but not brown--about 20 minutes.
Season with salt and pepper. If they soften before the tomatoes are done, turn
the heat off. When the tomatoes are done, scrape them and all their juices
into the pan with the onion and garlic. Turn the heat back up to
medium-low, and stir, pressing the tomatoes with the back of your spoon to crush
them. Add the canned tomatoes, and simmer this mixture for about 20 minutes.
This sauce will serve as the foundation for all the other
mixtures this week. For the lasagna, you will need about 1 1/2 to 2 cups of
sauce:
Italian Sausage Lasagna
1 1/2 pounds Italian sausage links (I buy a package of 5 links
and use 2 1/2 of them)
2 cups oven-roasted tomato sauce
9-12 uncooked lasagna noodles
1 cup ricotta cheese
1 pkg. sliced provolone (6-8 ounces)
2 cups shredded mozzarella
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Remove the sausage links from their casings, and cook in a large
skillet over medium heat until brown, breaking them into small pieces as you
cook. Drain off all but about a teaspoon of the grease from the sausage, and add
the tomato sauce to the skillet. Cook and stir for about 5 minutes, so that the
flavors are combined.
Cover the bottom of a rectangular baking dish with 1/4 of the
sausage-sauce mixture. Lay 3-4 noodles directly into the sauce, pressing a bit
to make sure they are nestled down nicely in the liquid. Onto each noodle, spoon
a few dollops of ricotta cheese. Lay Provolone slices on top of the ricotta,
pressing to flatten it. Cover the Provolone with sauce, and start the layers
over again. End with the ricotta, and cover the whole dish with the shredded
mozzarella. Cover tightly with foil and bake for about an hour, until the cheese
is beginning to brown around the edges and bubble.
This is an easy recipe to double and either freeze or take to a
neighbor or friend. If we were in Jackson, I'd take the second one to Jessie and
Jerrod, but we aren't, so I took it over to my next-door neighbors who have been
housing refugees from New Orleans. I usually make it in a disposable aluminum
pan, cover with foil, and write the cooking directions on the foil. That way,
the recipient can cook it whenever she feels like it, or freeze it for another
occasion.
Reserve the rest of the sauce for the linguine marinara, calzone,
and eggplant parmesan.
HERE HE IS!!
Sunday, September 25, 2005
Ren William Partridge, 9 pounds, 12 ounces, 21 1/2 inches, born
Thursday, September 22.
How cute is he?
Here he is again with his mom and dad:
Don't they look proud? David and I can't wait
to get to Jackson to see Ren in person. In the meantime, I wanted everyone else
to see how cute he is. They came home from the hospital yesterday morning, and
Jerrod reports that all is well. Congrats you guys!!!
Roast Chicken
with Minted Orange Rice Pilaf
Pesto Pizza with
Sun-dried Tomatoes
ARCHIVES: MY FAVORITE COOKBOOKS: The Aunts' Recipe Book
by Cindy, Prissy,
Jennifer, and Emily
This is the cookbook
my aunts gave me when I got married. It is a 3-ring binder compilation of all
their favorite recipes and some hilarious photos of me as a kid. It is by far my
favorite book to cook with because it reminds me of people who love me. And,
boy, do they know their food! by Ina Garten Ina Garten's
philosophy on food suits me so well. She believes in simplicity and fresh
ingredients, and everything I have made of hers has been both easy and
delicious. Barefoot Contessa Family Style by Ina Garten I gave my
sister-in-law, Hannah, this cookbook for her birthday last year, and we recently
traded. She has the original Contessa, while I'm trying recipes from this one.
So far, Ina's record with me is impeccable. by Sara Foster I love this cookbook
for its sheer variety; if ever I am in a creativity slump, I can count on this
book to inspire me. Fresh Everyday by Sara Foster with
Carolynn Carreno I just got this one,
and so far I love it. Lots of good basic recipe templates with ideas for
innovation. Come On In! Junior League of
Jackson, MS This cookbook is a
staple in the kitchens where I come from, and whenever I need a southern food
fix, I turn to it. Intercourses by Martha Hopkins and
Randall Lockridge Based on ingredients
that have aphrodisiac qualities, this is a cookbook to hide when your mother
comes over. The food and the photography are fabulous, but as for its
aphrodisiac powers, well, you'll have to be the judge of that (my mother might
read this, after all). The food really is good, though; I've made almost
everything in it. Hot, Sour, Salty, Sweet by Jeffrey Alford and
Naomi Duguid I love Asian food, and
this cookbook is valuable as much for its narrative and photography as for its
recipes. Often, it calls for ingredients I can't find, but I have had fun trying
my own substitutions nonetheless. SYNDICATION, ETC.
(look at me--i'm learning about technology!)
















Recently Dished:

|
WEEKLY MENU Monday Italian Sausage Lasagna
Tuesday Linguine Marinara
Wednesday Muffalattas with Oven Fries
Thursday Eggplant Parmesan
Friday Ham and Vegetable Calzone COMMENTS
|