
QUESADILLAS CON FRIJOLES Y POLLO
Wednesday, September 7
I love to make quesadillas. I love the idea of making an interesting filling, placing it in a tortilla, frying it, and voila!--a crispy, melt-in-your-mouth-good combination of flavors. This recipe is inspired partly by the Black Bean Enchiladas in Intercourses, which are also delish, but more labor-intensive and partly by a smoky black bean pizza that the pizza chef at the Brick-Oven used to make. For these, you just need some good salsa (I make mine with canned tomatoes, garlic, cilantro, jalapenos, lots of lemon, salt, and cumin, as a woman in Peru once taught me), leftover chicken, a can of black beans, some bacon, and some cheese. My husband really likes these, and the filling makes enough to have plenty of leftovers.
For the filling:
6 slices bacon
1/2 yellow onion
1 cup chopped green onion
4 cloves garlic, chopped finely
Chicken (I had 2 breasts leftover from grilling, so I used them, chopped, but shredded cooked chicken would also work)
1 can black beans, drained
1/2 cup salsa
Monterey Jack cheese (with peppers if you like spicy)
Tortillas (burrito-sized work well, but if you have the smaller ones, just use 2, instead of folding them in half)
In a skillet, cook the bacon slices until done. Drain off all but about a tablespoon of the grease, and sauté the onions and garlic over medium-low (be careful not to let the garlic burn). Add the diced chicken, black beans, and salsa. Cook over low for about 10 minutes, until you can begin to mash up the beans to get a good, thick consistency. Remove the filling from the skillet. Fill tortillas with the chicken mixture and top liberally with cheese. Fry the tortillas in a little bit of oil (I use the same skillet--mindful always of my sweet husband who cleans up my messes!). Serve with salsa and guacamole (Ina Garten's recipe in The Barefoot Contessa is my favorite--chunky, with lots of lemon and salt). The citrusy flavor of the guacamole works well with the smoky intensity of the quesadillas. We like to drink a spicy wine with a meal like this also--Zinfandel is our favorite. Or, of course, margaritas if we don't have school the next day. Tequila and early mornings, in my experience, are not a favorable combination, but hey, if it works for you. . .

SOUP & SALAD
Tuesday, September 6
Soup and salad is such a traditional combination--cold and hot, liquid and solid--that I like to continue the contrasts with flavors. This corn soup from Sara Foster's Fresh Everyday is divine, especially with sweet, fresh summer corn. I followed the recipe exactly, so I won't reproduce it here (if you don't have that cookbook, you really should buy it anyway), but I paired it with a salad full of contrast. I love to mix a sweet fruit with a sharp cheese on top of a salad and then top it with a sweet-and-sour dressing. In this case, the Asian pears serve as the sweet and their classic partner, blue cheese, as the sharp. If you don't like blue cheese, feta works well too. To fulfill my husband's starch needs, I also cooked some hash browns, which we really like better at night than in the morning.
Pear and Blue Cheese Salad
Salad greens of your choice (I used Romaine because that's what I had)
2 pears, diced
4 ounces blue cheese
Walnuts, chopped coarsely (I also like to toast them in the oven)
Sherry vinegar (about 1 Tablespoon per salad)
Olive oil
Kosher salt
Cracked pepper
Arrange the greens on a plate, top with the pears, cheese, and nuts. Drizzle equal parts vinegar, olive oil, and honey over each salad, and season with salt and pepper. Makes 2 servings.
Easy Hash Browns
Yukon gold potatoes (they really do make the best hash)
Yellow onions
Butter and olive oil
Salt and pepper
Dice the potatoes and onions really small. Heat the butter and oil in a skillet over medium; add the potatoes and onions. Cook in a single layer for a good 5 minutes or so to allow the bits of potato and onion to begin to brown; stir and repeat. These make a terrible mess in the skillet, but they taste so good. There are no magic proportions; if you like lots of onion, chop lots of onion. If you prefer a more potato-ey flavor, chop less onion. I usually dice as many potatoes and onions as I have on hand and save the raw leftovers for hash browns on another occasion (like with my hamburgers on Friday). The key is not to get your skillet too full; otherwise the vegetables will steam instead of sauté, which will not give you the crisp brown texture you want in hash browns.

Sans Electricity
Tuesday, September 6
Tomorrow, I will resume the menu to the left, but for now, I thought I’d share what we cooked on the grill the day our power went out. After a week of watching the harrowing coverage of the tragedy in my two home states, it seems trivial¾to say the least¾to contemplate my own inconvenience of a few day without electricity. Nevertheless, many people found themselves resorting to the grill until their refrigerators and stoves were back in action, so I thought I'd offer this recipe for what we cooked the night we lost our power.
My heart goes out to those who have lost so much, and I can only pray that the recovery efforts will help them begin to put their lives back together. In the meantime, I hope you and your family and loved ones are out of harm’s way. May all of us who have survived count our blessings and remember to reach out to those in need.
The original recipe for this antipasto, which my Aunt Prissy shared with me, comes from Angela Rhemann, a long-time friend of our family who occasionally teaches cooking classes at The Everyday Gourmet in Jackson, Mississippi. If I followed her recipe, I would bake the antipasto in the oven and serve it with crostini, which I am certain makes a divine appetizer. However, I wanted it to serve as a main dish, so I cooked it in a skillet on the grill, and then stuffed it in some grilled portabella mushroom caps and topped it with slices of fresh mozzarella.

Antipasto-stuffed Portabella Mushrooms
1 red bell pepper
1 14-oz. can artichoke hearts, chopped finely
4 cloves garlic, sliced thinly
4 oz. mixed Mediterranean olives, chopped
¼ cup olive oil
¼ cup capers
4 oz. fresh mozzarella cheese
4 large portabella mushroom caps
French bread
Over a medium flame, grill the bell pepper until it is charred on all sides. Remove from the grill and place in a shallow bowl; cover with plastic wrap to steam. While it is grilling, remove the stems from the mushroom caps, chop them finely, and mix them with the artichoke hearts, garlic, olives, capers, and olive oil in a flame-resistant skillet. Cover with aluminum foil and cook on the grill for about 20 minutes, or until the garlic is very, very soft (you should almost be able to mash the mixture to a paste). Spray the mushroom caps with cooking spray (I use the canola oil spray) and place gills-up on the grill. Cook until the mushrooms are soft. Remove the mushrooms and fill with antipasto mixture. Place each cap in a foil packet, top with mozzarella slices, and drizzle with olive oil. Cut the French bread in half length-wise, brush it with olive oil, salt, and pepper, and place it face-down on the grill. Cook until the cheese is melted and the bread is toasty.

Breakfast at Dinner
Monday, August 29
I love breakfast food. Unfortunately, I am not naturally much of a morning person. So, often when I want eggs and muffins, I have to have it at night, instead of in the morning. My mom used to fix omelets and blueberry muffins for dinner, and so serving traditional breakfast foods when it's dark outside reminds me of her. She is much better at flipping omelets and getting them to look pretty than I am; my omelets always end up looking a lot like scrambled eggs with other stuff in them. So, to use up leftovers, I like to make frittatas instead. No flipping, and finishing it under the broiler gives the cheese on top a bubbly brown texture that I really like. This one, inspired by my leftover spinach stuffing from the stuffed tomatoes last week, is quick and easy. You can make a frittata with just about anything. The basic recipe is: sauté some vegetables in a heavy oven-proof skillet, top with beaten eggs and cheese, cook until the eggs begin to set around the edges, top with more cheese, and finish under the broiler. The muffins I made to go with the frittata are sweet and crumbly, as good muffins should be. I made them with sugary, crunchy Asian pears from Miller Farms at the Red Stick Market. The frittata cooks quickly, so I prepare the muffins first, and use the time while the muffins are cooking to chop the vegetables and beat the eggs for the frittata.
Pear-Streusel Muffins
2 cups flour
1 cup sugar
1 T. baking powder
½ t. baking soda
1 t. cinnamon
½ t. allspice
2 large eggs
½ stick butter, melted
1 cup buttermilk
1 ½ cups chopped pear
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Mix all of the dry ingredients in a large bowl. Beat together the eggs, butter, and buttermilk. Fold the wet ingredients into the dry; stir until just combined. Add the chopped pears and stir to distribute evenly. Spoon the batter into a greased muffin tin.
For topping:
1 cup chopped walnuts; reserve half to sprinkle on the tops
4 T. flour
4 T. brown sugar
½ stick butter, softened
½ t. cinnamon
Mix all together with your hands until it forms a paste. Top the muffin batter with the streusel topping, and then sprinkle on the reserved walnuts. Bake for about 20 minutes, until the topping is brown and crumbly.
While the muffins are cooking, you can prep your vegetables and get everything ready for the frittata. When the muffins are done, turn the broiler on to preheat.
Spinach-Mushroom Frittata
1 clove garlic, minced
½ yellow onion, thinly sliced
1 cup sliced mushrooms
2-3 T. leftover spinach filling
1 cup fresh spinach leaves, chopped
4 eggs
½ cup milk
½ cup feta cheese, crumbled
1 cup mild grated cheese of your choice (Swiss, mozzarella, Monterey Jack, etc.)
Sauté the garlic, onion, and mushrooms over medium-high heat in an oven-proof skillet (I use a cast-iron one) until tender, about 6 minutes. Stir frequently to make sure garlic doesn’t burn. Add the spinach filling and stir to coat the vegetables; cook another minute or two. Turn the heat down to medium-low, and add the spinach leaves, cooking until wilted. Meanwhile, beat the eggs, milk, and feta cheese together; pour over mushrooms and spinach. Salt and pepper well, but don’t stir. Let the eggs cook slowly until the edges begin to set, about 12-15 minutes. Grate cheese on top, and finish under the broiler; watch carefully, as it only takes a minute or two.
One of the great things about this meal is that leftovers can be enjoyed both in the morning and at night! I like to have the muffins with my afternoon coffee, as well.