
Thursday, September 10, 2009
A Surprise Dinner Guest...

Wednesday, September 9, 2009
What is That? A French Breakfast Radish!
I will definitely be making this before the weekend! I don't know if I'll get the ricotta salata as I have a lot of feta on hand. (Always.) Whole Foods is so close thought so I might break down and get it.
Swiss Chard That I Almost Put in the "Share Box"!
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Cooking for This Week
Lettuce Wraps!
I always love the wraps at that branded Asian food store. They serve them as an appetizer but I prefer them as my complete dinner. Turned out they were the perfect dish to 'absorb' my dandelion greens as I don't really like the 'scrubbier' greens for salads as they get a bit bitter. But sliced up they make a good counter to the sweeter sesame oils and hoisin sauce in lettuce wraps.
Ice berg lettuce leaves
1 lb ground beef
1 TBS olive oil for frying
1 large onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves
2 TBS soy sauce
3 TBS hoisin sauce
2 TBS rice vinegar
Asian chili pepper sauce to taste. (I put in 3 TBS and that was good for me.)
1 can water chestnuts (drained and chopped)
1 bunch green onions chopped (reserving some chopped greens for garnish)
1/2 bunch dandelion greens
2 TBS dark sesame oil.
Heat a medium skillet to high heat, add 1 tbs oil and brown ground beef. Break into small pieces and when completely cooked through, remove from heat and sit aside to drain on paper towels. While the meat is cooling, add the onions to the pan and stir for 1 minute to begin cooking. Add garlic, soy sauce, hoisin sauce, vinegar and chili pepper sauce to the onions. Stir to mix well. Add water chestnuts, green onions and sesame oil. Stir in chopped dandelion greens. When all is heated through add sauce to ground beef and mix well in bowl. Garnish bowl with reserved green onion and let your guests make their own wraps using the lettuce cups.
Don't have dandelion greens? I don't blame you. Sub in anything you want. Shredded carrot would work well too!
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Make Sauce!
Adapted from Cook's Illustrated:
1/2 cup slivered almonds, toasted
12 oz cherry tomatoes
1/2 packed fresh basil
1 medium garlic clove, minced
1 small peperoncini, minced
salt
pinch red pepper flakes
1/2 extra virgin olive oil.
1/2 cup parmesan cheese
1/2 cup oven dried tomatoes (substitute reconstituted sun dried or oil packed sundried.)
Process all ingredients except cheese and olive oil for one minute until smooth, about one minute. Add olive oil in steady stream. Finish by lightly processing cheese. I was after a richer flavor and remembered my brothers oven dried tomatoes so I processed those in as well along with an extra handful of basil. This pesto will be good whipped into a nice creamy pasta sauce later or spread on crusty french bread. In the meantime, it goes into the freezer!
Next up, an old fashioned red sauce recipe from Julia Child that I found on the net. It is not your modern style at all but very easy and worth the extra simmering time. This recipe tastes just like the spaghetti sauce my mother used to make. In fact, I'll have to find hers to see if she actually got hers from Julia. Red sauces are very receptive to any 'extras' you have unused in the crisper and this one took the 4 remaining tomatoes that weren't going to make it another day.
Everything in the pot then simmer for at least two hours:
And look what you get! This goes into freezer containers as well and will be used as a pasta sauce, chicken simmer sauce, and with a few extra herbs, pizza sauce this weekend. Crisper empty and ready for tomorrow!
FreshMint - Keep It That Way!

Recently I learned a couple of tips to keep the leaves fresh and flavorful for more than a day or so. It’s not very time consuming but these techniques go a long way for preservation.
Fresh Mint in the Fridge
1) Rinse your mint as soon as you get it home and lay it out on a towel to dry.
2) Separate the leaves.
3) With another towel or paper towel blot the mint to really get the excess water off the leaves.
4) Then pinch off the individual leaves and layer them in an airtight container. Store these in your refrigerator.
Fresh Mint in your Freezer
Follow the same steps above up to step 3. Once you’ve blotted away the excess moisture, lay the springs of mint on one side of a paper towel and fold the other side over. Put the folded paper towel in a Ziplock and squeeze out the excess air. Fold the bag over and place it flat in the freezer. You will have fresh mint whenever you need it.

