Showing posts with label Salads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salads. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Touchy-Feely

The culinary theme for Sunday's Concert in the Park with The Mighty Untouchables came down to a few choices: Food you wouldn't want to touch or eat with your fingers; a dish created by playing with your food; or finger food. I offered the group a choice between the second two...

It was hot and muggy Sunday morning, with thunder, lightening and a massive 10-minute downpour. Southern California made the news because we had some weather. I wasn't in the mood to heat up the house too much with cooking, so I decided to make a go of Bon Appetit's Cook the Cover Challenge with the August cover - Tomato, Onion and Roasted Lemon Salad. The only cooking involved was roasting lemon slices tossed with sage, sugar and olive oil, and I was able to "play" with the gorgeous heirloom tomatoes, purple onions, and micro greens in my plating and photography. I wish I could say these tomatoes and herbs came from my garden. I do have a few herbs in window boxes on my patio, but I still needed to supplement with some better looking sage and micro greens. I was able to come up with a few sprigs of homegrown parsley...

Once I got into the zone, spending a good part of Sunday preparing food, styling and photographing, listening to music, hanging out with Trapper, and sipping on some wine, I was reminded of how much I enjoy all of that. I just wish I still had the motivation and time to cook, photograph and blog a few times a week.

The dressing for the salad is an interesting combination of pomegranate molasses, olive oil and allspice. I love pomegranate molasses and also used it recently in Bon Appetit's Sweet and Tangy Hummus.








Trapper just thinks he wants a tomato
***

The Mighty Untouchables played upbeat dance music, we had a good turnout, and the food was easy and fun. Jim & Carmen took the prize with their Spicy Shrimp and Forbidden Rice Wraps! The only thing missing was dessert, and I really had a sweet tooth that night!

Pam played with her food and created Mr. Salad Head

Kai modeled Spicy Grilled Shrimp, Forbidden Rice and Cabbage Wraps
prepared by Jim & Carmen

Kai & Hillari opted for finger food - Kai, you're laggin' in the ktichen! 

And, here's that Sweet & Tangy Hummus mentioned earlier...




Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Coronado Concert in the Park: Puglia, Italy


One of these days, I'll make it to Italy, and France, and Spain, and all the fabulous places that inspire our Concert in the Park themes! In the meantime, I will accept the joy in reading about regional cuisines and attempting to replicate some of the recipes in my kitchen.  I'm successful most of the time (although I get frustrated tracking down ingredients), but sometimes I crash and burn when it comes to baking. I'm not a very good baker.

The weekend started off well with my first idea...

Orecchiette alle cime di rapa is a traditional pasta dish from Puglia - ear-shaped pasta tossed with pork sausage, broccoli rabe, garlic, red pepper flakes, and grated Pecorino Romano or Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. You had me at PASTA. Actually, I've made this dish before. However, when I saw my man Tyler's version, with littleneck clams tossed into the mix, I was all over it.

I thought it would be a little tricky executing this dish tableside, at the park, especially with the clams, so I decided to do a test run on Saturday evening. I made half recipe and savored every bite. However, BFF Holli was also thinking along the same lines, and planning on making her version of orecchiette alle cime di rapa for the park, so I switched gears and decided to concentrate on my dessert...that's when it got ugly...

Pasticciotto is a mini short crust pastry/pie filled with pastry cream. I didn't have the oval-shaped molds for these little pies, so I decided to try using my mini muffin pan to make 24 mini Pasticciotto...

I even tracked down a tub of LARD to make the perfect crust. But the dough was crumbly and falling apart as I tried to press it into the muffin tin.  I became increasingly frustrated and threw in the towel before the muffin tin made it to the oven. I managed to salvage enough dough and pastry cream to throw together a few mini tarts. Surprisingly, they came out quite nice with the incredibly flaky, lardy crust and rich vanilla bean pastry cream studded with Maraschino cherries. Watch this video if you want to learn the correct method, but try to ignore the music that sounds like it should go with a porn movie...

When all was said and done, this was one of those concerts that turned out just perfect (I never know who is going to show up and what dishes will make it to the picnic table). We had the right number of people, a nice balance of dishes, great weather, fun music...it was just another beautiful, relaxing, summer evening at the park!

Saturday Night Test Run with Tyler's
Orecchiette with Broccoli Rabe, Clams and Sweet Italian Sausage

Mary and Bryan Kicking off Concert with
The Star Spangled Banner 

Holli's orecchiette alle cime di rapa

Dusting with Parmigiano-Reggiano

Kelley, Holli and Michele

Nina & Alec plating their gorgeous platter of Stracciatella di burrata,
slow-roasted roma tomatoes with garlic and thyme, and fried eggplant
breaded in panko, garnished with basil 

LOVED THIS!

Kelley's Chickpeas with Tomatoes and Carrots

Our other Kellee, who shared a lovely antipasti platter

When I decided to abandon my orecchiette alle cime di rapa with clams, and after my dessert kind of flopped, I threw together a last-minute Puglia SeaCake - one of my savory cheesecakes - with hot Italian sausage, clams, broccoli rabe, garlic, red pepper flakes, cream cheese, sour cream, and Parmesan cheese, served with toasted baguette slices. Another keeper!

Another SeaCake Flavor Combo - SeaCake Puglia!

In addition to her chickpea, tomato and carrot salad, Kelley also made this gorgeous Torta Caprese — Flourless Chocolate Almond Torte. She cracked me up when she said she was started sipping on some of the liqueur used in the torte, just before noon, as she was trying to get through all of the steps. That's when hubby Bryan wandered into the kitchen and asked what the heck she was doing?!!

Kelley was worried the torta would be too dry inside, but it was quite the opposite...very moist and decadent.

 Torta Caprese

Sonoma was proud to present her favorite orange cake from The Silver Spoon for Children: Favorite Italian Recipes. She used a gluten-free flour and it tasted incredibly yummy.

Sonoma's Orange Cake

Cute Girlie Girls

I made Kai pose with one of my Pasticciotto Tarts

Good food, wine, and friends!

We're off to another fabulous summer in Coronado! Stay tuned...



Thursday, November 14, 2013

Show Us LOCAL: California Autumn Salad


I'm taking advantage of another 'Daily Prompt' for NaBlogPoMo Post #14. This one, Non-Regional Diction, says: Write about whatever you'd like, but write using regional slang, your dialect, or in your accent. Photographers, artists, poets: show us LOCAL.

Okay, dude, this is like a gnarly autumn salad made with radical produce from one of our bitchin' LOCAL farmers' markets.
It's all organic, bro, and totally epic. Just sayin'.

That was lame! I don't talk like that or hang with anyone who does ;-)

This salad was inspired by two autumn salads I've seen in the past week. The first is a Cranberry Orange Quinoa Salad from Family Spice. I think Foodgawker promoted it one morning on my Facebook newsfeed. The second is Saveur's Fall Salad with Roasted Butternut Squash, Kale Chips, and Pomegranate Seeds. I made my own salad with bits and pieces from each recipe and used produce from one of our local farmers' markets. It was rad.


Basically, I roasted thin slices of butternut squash from a peeled and seeded 1.5 pound squash. I bought about 6 ounces of baby kale and made kale chips out of half (I don't think this adds much to the dish - I would just toss all the raw kale with the warm quinoa next time). I cooked 1 cup of quinoa (1/2 cup white and 1/2 cup red quinoa). I tossed the warm quinoa with raw baby kale. For the dressing, I used orange juice, maple syrup, Dijon mustard and a drizzle of olive oil. After adding the dressing, and some salt and pepper to taste, I folded in a handful of pomegranate seeds, scattering of toasted pumpkin seeds, orange supremes from 3 small oranges, and the roasted butternut squash. I garnished the top of the salad with the kale chips.


The colors are gorgeous and it really does utilize the best of the autumn harvest, even if it was about 85 degrees in Coronado today!

Just in case I didn't cover LOCAL with my Southern California slang and California produce, here's a photo of a local Coronado fisherman walking on the beach, in November...take note of the cigar sticking out of his mouth at 7-something a.m.


Friday, September 14, 2012

French Fridays with Dorie and Walking Away: Wine-Poached Peach, Burrata and Prosciutto Salad


This week's French Fridays with Dorie recipe is actually Spice-Poached Apples or Pears, described by Dorie as one of the "most comforting and simplest French family sweets." Dorie likes to serve the fruit and its syrup with rice pudding or French toast, but it is usually served with nothing more than crème fraîche, heavy cream or plain yogurt.

Although I would have welcomed a little sweetness and comfort in my life with open arms, someone's stubborness, pride, ego and/or fears continue to stand in the way of great make-up sex working through this together.  So, my life has been turned upside down, like a bucket of ice water dumped over my head. It's been hard to work, sleep, eat (great diet), and listen to country music.  Geez, those country music lyrics really pierce the heart and open the floodgates...

Since cooking dinner for myself hasn't been too appealing, I've been drowning my sorrows at the local bars making the rounds to a few local spots for light dinners. I do like dining at the bar rather than sitting at a table by myself, especially at the local restaurants where I know many of the chefs and people who work there. The tourists are gone, we have our island back, and the restaurants are quiet and relaxing. Last Friday I met Alex, Chez Loma's new chef, and enjoyed his Steak Frites. On Tuesday, I stopped in at Leroy's Kitchen, stuck my head in the kitchen window to say hello to Chef Gregory, and sat at the bar with a glass of wine and his poached peach, burrata and prosciutto salad. I probably wouldn't have participated in this week's FFwD recipe, but for Greg's inspiration to adapt Dorie's recipe into his wonderful salad.


Rather than poaching apples or pears in water, honey, sugar, orange and lemon juice and zest, star anise, cinnamon and vanilla, and making a dessert out of them, I poached peach halves in chardonnay, star anise, cinnamon and vanilla. Once the peaches cooled, I nestled slices of fresh mozzarella (use burrata if you can find it) up against the wine and spice poached peach slices, wrapped them in prosciutto, and placed two or three of those tasty bundles on a bed of baby arugula lightly tossed in balsamic vinaigrette. I also crisped up a little chopped prosciutto and scattered it about. 



Chez Loma Steak Frites

Take it away, Keith


***

French Fridays with Dorie is an online cooking group, dedicated to Dorie Greenspan‘s book Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours. As members of the group, we have purchased the cookbook and cook along as much as we can. There is a new recipe each week, and we post about that recipe on Friday. We are asked to refrain from posting the actual recipes on our blog. The book is filled with stunning photography, and personal stories about each recipe, which makes it that much more intriguing. I highly recommend adding it to your cookbook collection if you haven't already!

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Coronado Concert in the Park: Bean Me Up!

This week's Concert in the Park culinary theme started out as Navy beans, because the Navy Band Southwest Wind Ensemble was providing the music for the evening, but was broadened to legumes at John's request so he could incorporate a peanut sauce in his Curry and Lobster Deviled Eggs.

Peanuts, unlike other nuts, are in the legume family. Some of the more commonly recognized legumes include beans, peas, and lentils. Interestingly, licorice root, from the leafy, perennial plant, and jicama, the crispy, sweet, edible root from a native Mexican vine, are also considered legumes.

I decided on Thomas Keller's Green Bean and Potato Salad for my main course, but just had to try incorporating licorice root into a dessert. The colorful salad features haricots verts, fingerling potatoes, toasted walnuts, fresh mission figs, radishes, Iberico ham or prosciutto, shallots, and chives, lightly tossed in sherry vinaigrette. I used some purple potatoes and our favorite red walnuts from Terra Bella Ranch.

Green Bean and Potato Salad with mission figs and prosciutto

John's 'deviled eggs of the week' were perched on a bed of rice studded with peanuts. He used the method to make Chinese marbled tea eggs, infusing the whites with basil. Unfortunately, the basil color and flavor didn't steep into the whites as much as he would have liked. He flavored the yolks with curry, coconut milk, honey, and cayenne, and then topped the filled eggs with lobster, micro basil, Thai chili rings and peanut sauce. That tiny piece of Thai chili packed quite a punch!

John's Curry and Lobster Deviled Eggs with Peanut Sauce

Patrick and John

Carmen found a recipe that took her back to her days in Italy. She remembers the Italians going to the beach with a big pot, small stove, and all the ingredients to make pasta and beans, and they added clams and mussels harvested from the beach. 

Carmen preparing Pasta e fagioli con le cozze

"When the stars make you drool, just-a like pasta fazool, that's amore"

Kellee's Marinated Three Bean Salad

For dessert, Carmen adapted this recipe for White Bean Cupcakes, using her own raw vegan icing that tasted like a cross between sorbet and frosting.


Pot de crème is so simple to make, yet it is such an elegant dessert. I love making mini pots de crème in espresso cups, which also makes transport to the park a breeze. Tyler Florence's Mocha Pot de Crème is made with heavy cream, egg yolks, vanilla, coffee beans, espresso, and semi sweet chocolate. I adapted his recipe slightly and infused the cream with licorice root instead of coffee, omitted the espresso, and used milk chocolate rather than semi sweet. However, as with John's attempt to infuse his egg whites with basil, my attempt to infuse the custard with licorice was only mildly successful (licorice root tea has many health benefits, so I can only hope my dessert retained some of those). I boosted the licorice flavor of the dessert by adding a splash of Ouzo, an anise-flavored aperitif, to the whipped cream. 

Pots de crème are baked in a shallow water bath at low heat

Milk Chocolate Pots de Creme with Ouzo Whipped Cream

Rich, silky milk chocolate custard

US Navy Band Southwest performing Michael Bublé's "Home"

***


Green Bean and Potato Salad with mission figs and prosciutto
Slightly adapted from Thomas Keller's Ad Hoc at Home

Ingredients:

1 1/2 pounds thin green beans (haricots verts), stem ends trimmed
1 pound fingerling potatoes
1 sachet (1 bay leaf, 3 thyme sprigs, 10 black peppercorns, 1 smashed garlic clove, wrapped in cheesecloth)
Kosher salt
1 cup walnuts
Fleur de sel or fine sea salt
3 radishes
1/4 cup minced shallots
1 cup Sherry Vinaigrette (2 tablespoons sherry wine vinegar, 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar, 3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil)
Freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons minced chives
4 black mission figs, halved
Splash of fresh lemon juice
16 very thin slices of Iberico ham or prosciutto
Extra virgin olive oil

Preparation:

Blanch the green beans in a large pot of boiling, salted water until crisp tender, about 2-3 minutes, using Keller's big pot blanching method, plunge into an ice bath, and drain on rack lined with paper towels.

Cut the potatoes into 1/4-inch slices and discard the end slices. Put the potatoes, sachet, and 2 teaspoons salt in a large saucepan and add enough cold water to cover the potatoes. Bring to a simmer and cook until the potatoes are just tender, about 10 minutes. Drain and spread on a tray to cool. Discard the sachet.

Toast the walnuts on a baking sheet in a 375 F oven for 10 minutes, rotating the pan half way through. Remove from oven, transfer to a plate, and sprinkle with fleur de sel.

Fill a small bowl with ice water. Trim the ends from the radishes and slice the radishes very thin using a mandoline. Transfer the slices to the ice water to keep crisp. Drain and dry before adding to the salad.

To assemble the salad, transfer beans to a large bowl and add the potatoes, shallots and walnuts. Whisk the dressing and spoon it over the salad. Season with salt and pepper, sprinkle with half the chives, and toss well. Arrange about half the salad on a platter. Place half the figs over the salad. Toss the radishes with the remaining salad, and arrange over the first layer of salad. Add the remaining figs, and sprinkle with the remaining chives and a few drops of lemon juice.

Arrange the ham or prosciutto on a small plate and drizzle with olive oil. Serve alongside the salad.

***

We only have two concerts left in the season. The good news is that the kids have gone back to school and most of the zonies (J & M and S & S excluded) have returned to Arizona. This is what Trapper thinks of Arizona Iced Tea.


Our theme for Sunday is bourbon, which makes me think of the Kentucky Derby, so I hope we can also make it out to our local Del Mar track before the racing season ends.

Once we're through Concert in the Park picnics, I hope to start planning a special dinner party courtesy of Saveur and Plugrá butter. In case you missed the Facebook announcement, the editors of Saveur magazine chose There's a Newf in My Soup as the Plugrá Gourmet Club the month and will be sending us $500 and a special prize pack to help with the party! You gotta love that ;-)

The winning "dinner party" was our first Concert in the Park of this summer season, An Evening in Corsica.

Friday, August 10, 2012

French Fridays with Dorie: Warm Scallop Salad with Corn, Nectarines and Basil

I've been looking forward to this week's French Fridays with Dorie recipe, Warm Scallop Salad with Corn, Nectarines and Basil. However, with our recent wave of higher temperatures on the island, I wasn't in the mood for warm anything. I should have just grilled the scallops and nectarines as suggested as an option to standing over the stove and pan-searing, but it was still pretty toasty outside when I began preparation. All turned out well and by the time I was done photographing, as usual, our dinner was no longer warm.

Warm Scallop Salad with Kale, Corn, Nectarines and Basil

Rather than pan-searing halved nectarines, I borrowed an idea I saw somewhere and made nectarine 'carpaccio' using the mandoline. I put the slices in a bowl and covered them with some of the lime-chili vinaigrette while I finished the salad.

Nectarine 'Carpaccio'

I also decided to add a little kale after recently devouring a kale and salmon salad for lunch at Leroy's Kitchen. I tossed the corn kernels and kale with more of the vinaigrette and garnished it with a few tomatoes from the garden. The basil coulis drizzled over the nectarines and scallops added a nice flavor.

Basil Coulis drizzled over scallops and nectarines

Trapper is keeping cool with his big fan and spray-downs with the hose. We're lucky to have such a nice side patio and yard with big shady trees, and he prefers being out there in the early mornings and evenings.

Mom, quit taking my picture so much!

Ah yes, nappy time...

***

French Fridays with Dorie is an online cooking group, dedicated to Dorie Greenspan‘s book Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours. As members of the group, we have purchased the cookbook and cook along as much as we can. There is a new recipe each week, and we post about that recipe on Friday. We are asked to refrain from posting the actual recipes on our blog. The book is filled with stunning photography, and personal stories about each recipe, which makes it that much more intriguing. I highly recommend adding it to your cookbook collection if you haven't already!