I Will Tell You a Story

Sunday was a 25 hour fast.  It is the second most serious fast day in Judaism.  Usually, we break the fast on an omelet with cheese.  When I asked my husband, what he felt like having, he asked if I would mind making spaghetti pie.  It sounded so right to me.  I make it without meat so it is not a heavy dish.  I was planning on using light cheeses and a plain filling.  Sounds good.

I put up the water for the noodles, cooked them, and went to drain them.  I drained them right into the soapy water.  Klutzy me.

While the pasta was cooking, I made a filling of eggplant, onion and tomatoes from the garden.  I stayed away from seasoning since we were looking for more to the bland side.  As it turned out, the tomato flavor is strong when it is a “real” tomato, just picked and ripe.  I had the filling for the spaghetti pie but no crust.  On another day, I would have very likely cooked more spaghetti but, I was grumpy, tired and hot but not hungry.  I was not in the mood to cook it again and I found a way to blame it on the good husband who wasn’t even in the room.  How do we do that?  Maybe, you don’t.  I did.

Bottom line, my filling became the main course.  We took some leftovers out of the refrigerator.  I had potato salad, Oriental spaghetti salad and a yummy egg salad.  A little bit of this and a little bit of that made for the right meal to break our fast.  That is making the best of what one has.

We had the same kind of happening on Saturday, our Sabbath.  At the last-minute, two more guests joined us for dinner.  I usually cook tons of food for the Sabbath but this week, because of the fast that began Saturday evening as the Sabbath ended, I cut way back and made just enough.  It is truly amazing, whatever food, there was, seemed to expand so that everyone had plenty to eat.  Honestly, I can’t figure it out.

I also had to feed the extra guests before the fast.  Keep in mind, we do not cook food on the Sabbath, so it had to be something ready to eat.  I don’t panic when these things happen but before a fast, I have to admit, I was concerned.  We all had to fill ourselves to get through the next 25  hours with food or drink.  Again, we had enough and I think everyone was full.

I do want to share this eggplant dish with you.  The tomato was the dominant flavor of the dish.

The Dish That Wasn’t

1/2 eggplant cut into 1/4 inch pieces

1 – 2 tablespoons olive oil

1/2 onion, chopped

1 large tomato, chopped

1/4 cup chopped cheddar

Heat olive oil in large skillet.

Put eggplant and chopped onion in skillet and keep gently mixing them around.  The eggplant browns quickly.

When onion is translucent and eggplant, slightly brown(about 6 minutes), add the chopped tomato and cheddar cheese and cook for an additional 2 minutes until tomato is hot  and cheese is melted.  If  you would like the tomato to really permeate the other ingredients, cook for another then minutes.

You could fill a taco or tortilla with this.  You could use it as a filling in a spaghetti pit.  You could use it in a sandwich.  You could use it as a sauce for rice, pasta or meat.  Feel free to spice it up.  I would have if we weren’t purposely keeping it bland….it really wasn’t.

 

As you can see, the photo, is not clear.  This is still in the skillet.  I apologize but I think, at least, this gives you an idea of what it looks like.

Creamy Cheddar Potatoes

We had our crockpot  overnight with what would have been a delicious stew type meal, called chulent.  It had beef, sausage, potatoes, kasha, brown rice, a delicious sauce and beans.  It would have been a  warming and filling for lunch on the Shabbos (Sabbath) but —- dum de dum dum.  

My husband got to the kitchen first and saw that the clock was dark.  Then, he noted the microwave was also dark.  Then, he quietly panicked and touched the crockpot which was cool.  He poked his finger into the mixture in the pot and it was cold, stone cold.  There went lunch.

Since, we do not cook on Shabbos, I put together a lunch of leftovers which did not compare to the chulent.  They were cold and while tasty, they just did not fulfill hubby’s longing for a bubbling stew.

After Shabbos……… The conversation went like this.  I am not kidding.

Me: You must be hungry, not having your chulent today.

Hubby:  I am starving.

Me:  I know.  What would you like.  Name it and I will make it.

H:  I don’t care.  Anything will do.  I am starving.

Me:  No, I want you to tell me and I will make it.

H: Anything.  I am starving.

Me: Tell me.

H:  OK, pancakes.  I am starving.

Me: Great.  You got them.

He went on  his way and I went to the kitchen to make pancakes but I did not want pancakes.  Sweet was not for me, tonight, only savory.  How could I not make the pancakes?

Continued conversation:

Me: Do you really want pancakes?

H: I don’t care. I am starving.

Me: How do potatoes sounds?

H: Fine, I don’t really like pancakes.

me: Huh?  OK, potatoes it is.

I  did make the potatoes, nice and creamy and loaded with cheddar cheese.  I did this in the microwave to cut the time.  After all, the poor man was starving or have you missed that point?

Creamy Cheddar Potatoes

Ingredients:

3 large Yukon Gold potatoes (peeled and diced)

1 1/2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese

1/4 cup low fat sour cream

1/2 cup low fat milk

salt to taste

Method:

In a medium sized mixing bowl, place potato pieces and water to cover.  Cook on high for 6 minutes or until potatoes are completely cooked.

Drain potatoes and place back in bowl.  

Add milk and sour cream to potatoes and mix well.

Top with cheddar and return to microwave.  Microwave for 2 minutes.

Remove and mix well so that potatoes are coated with the cheese and cream.

This is pure comfort food.   The man is not starving.

    Photobucket 

 

See Ya in the Gumbo    Mop it Up Mondays        Made From Scratch Monday      Inspire Me Monday         Veggie Mama’s Meatless Monday     Mealtime Monday    My Meatless Monday        Marvelous Mondays


My First Experience with a Daikon

You should be getting a picture of me as someone who is discovering lots of new tastes and textures.  It is exciting and I am discovering tastes that I really like and want to incorporate into my cooking.  Today’s treat is the Daikon radish.  I picked one up at the store, looked at it strangely, and brought it home.  ”Now what?” was my question.

I wish my one individual daikon was as clean looking and graceful as the above.

Roasted Daikon Radish

1 daikon radish

1/4 teaspoon cumin

1/8 teaspoon black pepper

olive oil

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

Peel the daikon radish and then slice into several pieces.  They pieces should be about 1/4 inch thick.

Cover a cookie sheet with aluminum foil.  Spray with olive oil.

Place slices of daikon on cookie sheet.  Bale at 450 degrees for 35 minutes.  The daikon  should be browning.  If it is not, leave in longer until it is cooked and brown.

Remove from oven and take a taste.  I think it is delicious.  I would like to use these in salads.

This is linked to Grocery Cart Challenge

Double Sesame Broccoli

This week our Power Food is broccoli.  Each week, we choose a recipe based on the power food which comes from the book, Power Foods, 150 delicious recipes with the 38 healthiest ingredients from the editors of Whole Living magazine.

Broccoli is a favorite food in our home.  It is rewarding to eat food, we enjoy and know we are getting health benefits from it.  It is high in fiber, calcium rich and has Vitamins A and C.  It is a fighter of cancer and other health hazards.  It seems to me that the vegetables from the cabbage family such as broccoli, cauliflower, bok choy are quite a variety and from all of these, broccoli wins in the benefits department.

When it came to selecting a recipe, it was difficult.  Broccoli does beautifully in a stir fry.  It is delicious plain or with a little garlic and butter.  I make a kugel out of it, sometimes mixing in cauliflower.  I think broccoli is pretty and I love to steam it and add it to a salad.  I make a mean broccoli cheese soup.  Finding a recipe meant eliminating many delicious and nutritious dishes.  I decided to make it simple although, just his week, I used broccoli in a number of dishes including a pasta dish, a salad and a stir fry.  There is something about roasting vegetables that make them better than with any sauce.

Double Sesame Broccoli    

2 – 3 cups broccoli florets
1 1/2 T. olive oil
2 T.  lemon juice
1 tsp sesame oil
2 tsp soy sauce
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1 pinch sugar
1 1/2 tbsp oil
1 tsp. sesame seeds
Preheat oven to 500 degrees.
Cut broccoli bunch in half lengthwise.
Toss with olive oil and place on cookie sheet.
Cook broccoli in oven turning occasionally with tongs – 10 to 12 minutes
Dressing: While broccoli is roasting place lemon juice, sesame oil, soy sauce, ginger,  sugar and oil in a blender or small food processor. Blend until smooth.
When the broccoli has finished roasting, transfer to a serving dish and pour the dressing over the broccoli.  Sprinkle sesame seeds on top.
The beauty of this dish is that you can serve it with anything.  Salmon, chicken  or tofu would pair beautifully with the broccoli.

Check out the other Power Food cooks and see what they did with the bell pepper.  Mireya is the originator of the group.  If you are interested in participating, please contact her.  My Healthy Eating Habits,  

Alyce - More Time at the Table                       Ansh - Spice Roots,           Casey - Bookcase Foodie  – Me           Jeanette -Jeanette’s Healthy Living          Jill - Saucy Cooks             Martha - Simple-Nourished-Living              Mireya - My Healthy Eating Habits,              Sarah - Everything in the Kitchen Sink      Pennywise Platter

Coming up – Brussels Sprouts

Yellow Pear and Cherry Tomato Salad

This is the salad, I served with yesterday’s rice and sausage dish.  It was the first time, I used the yellow pear tomato and we found it went well, in the salad.

Yellow Pear and Cherry Tomato Salad (adapted from Food.com)

2 tablespoons wine vinegar (sherry, red)
1 tablespoon shallot (minced)
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon black pepper 
1 1/2 cups pear tomatoes (yellow, halved)
1 1/2 cups cherry tomatoes (orange, halved)
1/2 cups cherry tomatoes (halved)
1 1/2 cups baby spinach, torn

To make the vinaigrette, in a small bowl, combine the vinegar and shallot and let stand for 15 minutes.

Add the olive oil, salt and pepper and whisk until well blended.

In a large serving or salad bowl, toss together all the tomatoes.

Pour the vinaigrette over the tomatoes and toss gently to mix well and coat evenly.  Add the spinach and mix a little more.

This is linked to

See Ya in the Gumbo    Mop it Up Mondays        Made From Scratch Monday      Inspire Me Monday         Veggie Mama’s Meatless Monday     Mealtime Monday    My Meatless Monday    Marvelous Mondays      Summer Salad Sunday

Patty Pan Rice with Sausage

The photo above is to show you the adorable patty pan squash in the rice dish.  The dish is a result of my independence in cooking.  There was a time that zucchini was an exotic vegetable, to me.  I stuck to green beans, yellow potatoes, carrots and other basic vegetables.  What do I mean by basic?  The vegetables my Mom used to cook as did my Mother-in-Law.

The joke in our house comes up when I make a new dish or use a new ingredient and the husband says, “My mother made it differently,” meaning he never saw that dish, in his Mom’s home.  There are times, we struggle to remember the food we ate, as kids and get stuck at the vegetables above plus corn, chicken, ground beef and salads with tomatoes and iceberg lettuce.

We come from another generation and the world was different.  I was going to say, money was tighter but it is probably not true.  My in-laws were comfortable (not at all rich – comfortable) and my parents struggled.  Dad had a small business which meant sometimes, it was easy to get what we needed and at other times, without saying a word, my parents held back.  I never felt those changes.  At the time, I had no idea that money was not flowing.  No one said a word.  When I was an adult, my Dad filled me in and I bless both of them for allowing me a normal childhood without the stress of financial concerns.

Mom was a plain and simple cook and the food was nourishing and good.  My mother-in-law was a disaster, bless her soul.  My husband remembers burnt food or raw food.  His grandmother and aunts were fabulous cooks so I don’t know what happened to the cooking gene, in his immediate family.  His sister is also a really good cook.

As a family, we also have had our ups and downs but food was never affected.  Since, I used to be a plain cook, also, I didn’t have even seasoning, in the house.  Of course, if you had seen my first kitchen in our newlywed apartment, you would understand why we had very little.  If I stood in the middle of this kitchen, I could almost touch all the walls.  When I opened the oven, it would not open, all the way and bumped into the side of the refrigerator.  I cooked in the dining room. Strangely enough, I had a large living room and dining area and worked in there.

We got to know our neighbors, above us, quite well because we could hear anything they said in the kitchen.  It came through a shared vent.  At night for years, we heard one shoe drop and could only envision  someone with a disability.  Nope, it was where a rug ended.  One shoe on and one shoe off ……….  Of course, they heard us also.

We did get to know each other and did become real friends.  When we both moved out of our apartments, within the month, we moved a few blocks from each other.  Our kids grew up together and went to the same school, for a number of years.  They moved away and then we did and we have lost contact.  My husband ran in to the other husband once when he was sent to the place mine works at , for a few days.  They caught up on life.

My cooking expanded but I never bought something, I did not know, intimately.  No butternut squash, no zucchini, no beets, no garlic………..no patty pan squash, not even fresh mushrooms.  If it came in a can, it might be on my shelf, but little fresh vegetables other than potatoes and carrots.

The big change in my life was through blogging.  After reading so many blogs and cookbooks and internet recipes and seeing certain words, over and over again, I decided to try some of them.  Now, I am open to a lot of new items but still don’t want time-consuming recipes, if I can avoid it.  I want, what I call the magic food which comes out tasty with a minimum of labor.  I use little in prepared food, despite this, and have  a refrigerator filled with fresh produce.  A trip to the supermarket usually results in a new vegetable or fruit like the patty pans in this recipe.

When, I picked up a small package of the cutest patty pan yellow squash, I did not have a clue, how to make it but I knew, I was going to find out.  For those of you, who are new to the patty pan squash, you can do almost anything to it, you do with other squash.  Of course, I purchased these tiny ones and while they could have been stuffed with the rice, I decided to turn the dish into a main course and added other vegetable and sausage.

Before Cooking Without Sausage

I was a little afraid of the squash because, I knew, it could not need much cooking and the other vegetables would take more time, but all I wanted to see was that adorable squash cooked and to taste it.  I bought a package of about a dozen and cooked five of them, cutting them in half, horizontally.  The above photo should give you an idea of the size.

I brought home another new item, yellow pear tomatoes and had to use them right away to see what they were like so I made a two-tone tomato salad to go with the rice and sausage.

As far as the rest of the dish, I had no idea what was going to be in it.  Whatever, I found in the refrigerator, was going to add to the flavor of this dish.  Actually that is how one sausage and one hot dog got added.  I found 3/4′s of a red pepper and chopped it up, four scallions (both white and green), fresh cauliflower which I broke into small pieces.

This was going to be a stir-fry with very little oil.  I used about 2 teaspoons olive oil and cooked up the food in that.  If it is moved around, it works well without a lot of fat.  I wanted some browning on the vegetables.

Patty Pan Rice with Sausage

2 cups cooked brown rice

6 small patty pan squash

1 1/2 cups cauliflower broken into small florets

4 scallions, snipped

3/4 red pepper, chopped

1/4 green pepper, chopped

2 teaspoons olive oil (more if needed)

2 tablespoons soy sauce

1 tablespoon sweet chili sauce

1 teaspoon 5 spice Chinese seasoning

up to 1 tablespoon sugar or honey

salt and pepper to taste

Heat olive oil in large skillet.  While it is heating, slice the sausage into 1/4 inch pieces.  Brown these for  few minutes, until you can see they are cooked.  I like them to slightly crisp up.  Remove from pan.

Put all the chopped vegetables into pan.  If you think, at this point, there is not enough olive oil, add some more.  The cauliflower takes longer to cook but we like it almost raw.  If you want it cooked, put that in first and cook for a few minutes, then add the other vegetables.

Add to the rice in the bowl or saucepan, soy sauce, sweet chili sauce, Chinese seasoning, honey, salt and pepper.  Mix it thoroughly through the rice and then add the rice to the vegetables, mixing so you have different vegetables throughout the rice.  Go ahead, taste that patty pan squash.  These are also called scallop squash.  Look at the pretty scallops around the outside of the squash.

If you do use patty pan, please let me know, how you like it.  We enjoyed it and I am looking forward to using the other half of the package.

This fed the two of us but by that, I mean, I ate one quarter of it and the man of the house ate three-quarters.

This is linked to  Keep it Real Thursdays      Creative Link Thursdays

Girlie Pasta

What is Girlie Pasta?  Pinkish Pasta.

This dish has red cabbage, red onion and red cranberries, so although the dish is not really pink, there is enough red intertwined with the pasta, to make certain parts look pink.  Is pink still for girls?

This is a recipe, I used to make, ten or fifteen years ago.  At that time, I remember, I could not get enough of it.  When I came across a recipe for it, in my Dining Again Cookbook, I couldn’t resist making it.  It is still good but I don’t think, I would eat as much as I used to.  Now, I am into the savory pasta and this is sweeter than most of the dishes although the sweetener can be cut back and probably should be.

This is an easy recipe if you use the shortcuts, I did.  I bought red cabbage in the bag so there was no shredding to do.  I used dried cranberries from the box.  I skipped roasting the almonds which is a loss.  Roasted nuts are better than plain.

Girlie Pasta

8 ounces gluten-free spaghetti, cooked according to directions on package

8 ounces shredded red  cabbage

4 scallions, sliced thin

1/2 cup slivered almonds (roasted if you have time – it goes quickly– I was lazy)

1/2 cup craisin (dried cranberries)

Dressing:

1/4 cup olive oil (I probably used less.  I make my dressings almost without oil, usually.)

salt to taste

1/3 cup vinegar (I used apple cider vinegar)

1/4 cup sugar

Place spaghetti, cabbage, scallions, almonds and cranberries in a bowl.  Mix well and put aside.

In a smaller bowl, combine oil, salt, vinegar and sugar (I suggest a little black pepper.)

Pour dressing over pasta and vegetables and mix to coat  everything.

I hope you like it.

This is linked to Trick or Treat Tuesdays      Kids in the Kitchen       You’re Gonna Love it Tuesdays    Hearth and Soul Hop     Slightly Indulgent Tuesday      Fat Tuesday         Naptime Creations Tasty Tuesday Link Party    Tasty Tuesdays   The Gathering Spot      Delicious Dishes      All My Bloggy Friends

 

Beets with Balsamic Glaze

This is from Simply Recipes.  Beets always look like gems to me.  The color and the shine say beauty.   I had a few, in the house, and I want

ed a simple recipe, very simple and Simply Recipes gave it to me.

Roasted Beets with Balsamic Glaze 

  • 2 pounds red beets, medium sized, scrubbed clean, green tops removed
  • Olive oil
  • Salt
  • 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 1 teaspoon grated orange zest
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Preheat oven to 400°F. Line a roasting pan with aluminum foil. Place the beets in the pan. Rub olive oil over the beets, and sprinkle with salt. Cover the beets with another sheet of aluminum foil.

Roast for 1 to 2 hours, depending on the size of the beets and how old they are. After 1 hour, test every fifteen minutes by poking a beet with the tines of a fork. Once the fork tines go in easily, the beets are tender and cooked. Remove from the oven.

While the beets are cooling, prepare the balsamic glaze. In a small, shallow sauté pan, add the balsamic vinegar and sugar. Heat on high until the vinegar has reduced to a syrup consistency. Remove from heat.

After the beets have cooled for several minutes, but are still warm to the touch, peel off the outer skins and discard. Cut the beets into quarters or more, bite-sized pieces.

Place beets in a serving bowl. Pour balsamic glaze over the beets. Stir in grated orange zest, and add salt and pepper to taste.

Garnish with a little orange zest to serve.

Italian Cauliflower Bake

I came across a recipe for an Italian Zucchini Bake and planned to make it for dinner with a main course salad.  Off I went to the kitchen and pulled out all of the ingredients and set them, on the counter.  I, then went to get out the zucchini, but the cupboard was bare.  No zucchini.  What is a woman to do?  

Substitute, of course……  Now, what to substitute?  What is like zucchini?  Nothing came to mind.  I thought onions and I knew, I would love it but I would probably  be the only one.  I jumped to tomatoes and I do want to try it but it was too far from zucchini.  Then, I noted the fresh cauliflower just sitting there, crowding the shelf and I knew, this was it.  My Zucchini Bake became an Italian Cauliflower Bake and I even used pizza cheese to keep to the theme.

The recipe came from  Jam’s Corner, a brand new blog to me and one, I want to visit often.  There is something about the spirit of the blog that speaks to me.  I bet, you would like it too.

Italian Cauliflower Bake

2 cups chopped cauliflower

1 large onion, chopped
2 cloves  garlic, minced
2 tablespoons olive oil
4 eggs
1/2 cup  grated Parmesan
1/8 cup  chopped fresh parsley
1 1/2 teaspoon chopped fresh basil
1/2 teaspoon dried tarragon
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1/2 cup  shredded  Pizza Jack cheese
2 tablespoons cream cheese
 Method:
  1. Saute garlic, onion and cauliflower in olive oil until tender
  2. Meanwhile, chop the basil and parsley.
  3. When the cauliflower mixture is done, remove from the heat.
  4. Whisk the egg, basil, parsley, tarragon, Parmesan cheese and salt together in a large mixing bowl. After mixing well, add the cauliflower mixture, cream cheese and the Pizza Jack cheese. Mix well.
  5. Add the mixture to a greased 1 quart baking dish  and bake at 350 for 25  minutes or until a knife inserted into the center comes out clean.
  6. Let it cool slightly.  Cut into wedges and enjoy.

Cauliflower Tabbouleh

The hostess of our picnic is the amazing Louise from Months of Edible Creations.  If you have not been to her site, you honestly must get over there.  It is unique and fascinating and lots of fun.  Just click here.

Join us on an annual picnic.  Each participant has a letter from A-Z and she cooks something for the picnic starting with her letter.  I chose the letter C.  C  is probably the best letter.  You have chocolate, candy, cookies, cakes, crab, carrots, cheese, ……you see what I am saying.  What do you think I chose?  CAULIFLOWER.  

I do understand you might be happier if I had brought dessert like a caramel cake or a cheese cake.  I hope you will like my cauliflower instead.  I made a cauliflower tabbouleh.

“This is a Tabbouleh (Arabic: تبولة‎ tabūlah; also tabouleh or tab(b)ouli) is a Levantine Arab salad traditionally made of bulgur, tomato,and finely chopped parsley and mint, often including onion and garlic, seasoned with olive oillemon juice and salt.] Traditionally served as part of a mezze in the Arab world, it was adopted by Cypriots, variations of it are made by Turks and Armenians, and it has become a popular ethnic food in the United States.”  Wikipedia

My first problem was — how to spell tabbouleh.  Fortunately, I found several ways so if I make a mistake, just assume, I did in purposely.  This reminds me of a girl who had great difficult spelling.  One day, she spelled the same word, in a piece of writing, 4 different ways.  I decided to discuss it with  her.  I pointed out her four different spellings.  She happily smiled and told me, “I figured if I spell it in different ways, at least one of them would be right.”  It didn’t work for her.  Not one of the words was correct.  This girl was extremely bright  and I am sharing this to disprove any thinking that weak spellers are poor students.  This woman is now a teacher and doing beautifully.

I love raw cauliflower.  It almost seems wrong to cook it.  Take a crisp bite and it is yummy.  This tabbouleh is filled with this goodness.  On our picnic, be careful not to let the little pieces fall on the ground.

Cauliflower Tabbouleh adapted from Eating Bird Food, a brand new blog to me and one, I am happy to have found.  If you have a moment, stop over and introduce yourself.

  • 1 medium head white cauliflower
  • 2 tablespoons fresh parsley
  • 1/2 red onion, diced
  • 20 cherry tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 tablespoon  olive oil
  • 1/8 cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground pepper, or to taste
  1. Cut the cauliflower to remove the stem and the chop into pieces small enough to fit into your food processor.
  2. Place the cauliflower, parsley, onion and garlic in a food processor. Pulse until the cauliflower pieces are the size of a grain (like bulgur). Place the mixture in a large bowl.
  3. Add the remaining ingredients and toss to mix. Serve chilled or room temperature. Store covered in the fridge for up to one week.