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Heat wave series part 3: Quinoa

July 19, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized 2 Comments

SW_Quinoa_IMG_8602For part 3 of our unofficial heat wave dinner series, we bring you Southwestern Quinoa Salad, from food52.com. I loved this dish and will make it again and again, if I remember.

The heatwave dinners have all required minimal cooking, and consist of dishes that are served cold, cool, or barely warm. To appease my carnivorous daughter and husband, each meal been accompanied by a plate of prosciutto.

Evidently, prosciutto is not enough meat. Shane sat down to dinner tonight and immediately started fantasizing about being able to drive again, so he could get himself to the Empire Market for some (other types of) pork products.

The quinoa was really great, despite it’s meatlesness. It’s made with a lot of my favorite ingredients, black beans, roasted corn, toasted cumin seeds, smoked paprika, tomatoes & lime juice. And it most certainly qualifies as a one-dish meal, always a plus.

Because my peeps over here don’t like feta, I used grated cheddar, which we put on top instead of mixing in. I figured if we mixed it in, the cheese would be soggy and undesireable when we had the leftovers for lunch.

I used roasted jalapenos instead of poblanos, because I couldn’t get my knocked-up self farther than the corner store in this heat. The hot peppers were on the side as well, to keep the dish kid-friendly.

Because it’s Friday, I let loose and drank half a beer. Happy weekend!

• Southwestern Quinoa Salad •
from food52.com original recipe here
reproduced with our notes below, for your convenience

1 1/2 cups quinoa
1 cup corn (or two ears of corn, with the kernels sliced off)
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 1/2 cups black beans, cooked
1 pint cherry tomatoes, halved
1 cup feta, crumbled (or grated cheddar, if you use cheddar, top with the cheese at the table rather than mixing it in)
3 green onions, sliced (the whites and the greens – optional, we didn’t use them)
1/2  teaspoon smoked paprika
2 poblano chiles (or jalapenos, keep on the side to make the dish kid-friendly)
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons lime juice
1/4 cup orange juice

Bring three cups of salted water to boil in a large saucepan. While it warms, rinse the quinoa well under cold water. When the water boils, add the quinoa and stir. Cover the pot, reduce to a simmer, and cook for about 15 minutes — the quinoa should still have a slight bite. (You want it well before mushy.) Then drain it well and add to a large salad bowl.

While the quinoa cooks, heat a cast-iron skillet or wok on high, without adding oil. When the pan is hot, toss in the corn, stirring occasionally, until the kernels are singed. It should take at least five minutes, possibly as much as ten. When they are almost done, add the cumin seeds to the skillet and toast briefly. Then add both to the large salad bowl.

To the same salad bowl, add the halved cherry tomatoes, the cooked beans (drained and rinsed, if using canned), the feta, the sliced green onions, and the smoked paprika.
Roast the poblano peppers until blackened. (I use the open flame on the stove.) Let cool, then peel, seed, and chop roughly. Add these to the bowl too.

Toss the salad together and add salt to taste. Then whisk together the oil, lime juice, and orange juice. Toss the salad with the dressing. Taste. You may want more oil or more lime juice. Adjust as desired. Taste again. Serve.

Pasta salad & wet heads

July 18, 2013 By Nina Max in quick

PastaSalad_IMG_8581It seemed like pasta salad would be a good thing to have for dinner tonight on this 4th (or 5th?) day of swampy, oppressive, heat. The thing is, I really don’t like most pasta salad. I don’t like cold pasta, mushy pasta, mayonnaise with pasta, or vinegar on pasta*.

I posted my thoughts on pasta salad, as well as some of the contents of today’s CSA box, to The Steady Table’s facebook page. Readers replied with some lovely suggestions, which I compiled into something good: warm macaroni salad with zucchini, corn & goat cheese (recipe below).

After dinner, Rose got a big bowl of cold water, dissolved some scented bath confetti into it, and proceeded to massage it into Shane’s hair while he sat by the A/C. Shane then reciprocated by pouring the entire bowl of scented water over Rose’s head (in the tub). Not a bad way to cool down after a dinner. Here’s a video that you may or may not find amusing.

*The vinegar exception is this meal, which I wish I had remembered earlier in the day.

KeepingCool_IMG_8586

• Warm Macaroni Salad with Zucchini, Corn and Goat Cheese •

olive oil
1 small, sweet onion, chopped (I used a walla walla onion, use whatever you can get)
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 cup fresh or frozen sweet corn kernels
a pinch of red pepper flakes
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
2 small zucchini, quartered lengthwise and chopped into ¼ to ½ inch pieces
1/4 cup chopped,  flat-leaf parsley
1/2 lb elbow macaroni
additional salt, and pepper to taste
a 4oz log soft goat cheese
1/4 cup grated pecorino or parmesan, plus more for sprinkling

Put a pot of water on to boil for the pasta. Pour some olive oil into a 12” saute pan. Add the onion and cook over medium-low heat until soft and translucent. Add the garlic and cook for another minute. Add the red pepper flakes, corn and salt, stir to coat with oil and add zucchini. Cook until the zucchini is bright and cooked through, but still has some crunch and isn’t soggy or translucent at all. Remove to a large bowl and add the parsley.

Cook the macaroni in salted water, when it’s done, rinse it under cold water until it’s warm. Add macaroni to the bowl with the zucchini and stir to combine, add more olive oil as needed and season with salt and pepper to taste. Pull the goat cheese apart into small chunks and toss with the pasta and zucchini. Add the pecorino or parmesan and stir to combine. Serve while warm with additional cheese for sprinkling.

How hot is it?

July 17, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized

CoolStuff_IMG_8576Last night, when I was changing the sheets, I stacked the pillows up against an exterior wall. When I picked them up to put them back on the bed, they were hot. That’s how hot it was yesterday. It’s hotter today.

We had cool stuff for dinner. Mozzarella, prosciutto, bread, tomato salad, egg salad, and swiss chard. I realized that I love any leafy green when it is cooked in olive oil with a cipollini onion, and topped with gorgonzola, as I did with the swiss chard tonight.

My sister still does not have an air conditioner. This fact has nothing to do with dinner, but it’s on my mind, so there you have it.

Favorite fish dish

July 16, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized

Adriatic_Flounder_IMG_8572We love Fish Cooked the Adriatic Way around here. And if you really must cook on a night as hot as this, it’s a good one since it only takes a few minutes in the broiler.

We had it with rice and a CSA romaine salad with Decadent Pale Green Dressing. Stay cool!

Radicchio forever

July 15, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized 1 Comment

RadicchioPasta_IMG_8569As I was cooking Radicchio with Penne Pasta, I thought: my family’s going to hate this meal. And then I tasted it.

I don’t ever want to prepare radicchio another way again. This is my radicchio dish, forever. It was so good that I think next time I’m going to skip the pasta and make it as a vegetable side dish.

I think this dish could make a convert of you if you don’t consider yourself to be a radicchio person. I don’t mind the bitterness, but if you do, the cooking, cream and other stuff removes it.

There are three main reasons that the dish is so good. 1. pork fat, 2. heavy cream, 3. salt. Add to that other things that I love, namely: radicchio, parsley, butter, cipollini onions, and pecorino cheese, and you really can’t go wrong.

We also had a raw zucchini and chick pea salad that would have been good if it hadn’t been totally eclipsed by the pasta.

• Radicchio Pasta •
adapted from The Educated Palate, original recipe here

2 small cipollini onions
3 tablespoons butter
A 1/2″ to 3/4″ thick round of pancetta, chopped into approx 1/4″ pieces
1 head radicchio
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup chopped, fresh, flat leaf parsley
1 pound penne
3/4 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup grated freshly grated pecorino plus more for sprinkling.

Put a large pot of water on to boil for the pasta. Finely chop the onion.  Put the butter inn a 12” skillet and place over medium high heat.  When the butter begins to melt, add the onion and sauté until soft and translucent, about 5 minutes.

While the onion is sautéing, cut the pancetta into narrow strips about 1/4″ by 1” long. Cut  the radicchio in half lengthwise and remove the root and core. Chop into 1/2″ strips.

When the onion is done, add the pancetta and cook for about 1-2 minutes.  Add the radicchio and season with salt and pepper.  Add about 1/2 cup water, lower the heat to medium, and cover the pan.  Cook until the radicchio is very tender, about 15 minutes.  Check it periodically and add more water if the liquid evaporates before the radicchio is tender.

While the radicchio is cooking, chop the parsley.

When the radicchio has been cooking for about 10 minutes, salt the boiling pasta water, add the penne, and stir well.  Cook until done.

When the radicchio is tender, uncover the pan, raise the heat and let any remaining moisture evaporate, there will be some sauce remaining at the bottom of the pan, don’t worry about that, just make sure it’s not watery.  Add the cream and parsley and cook until the cream has thickened and reduced by about one third.

When the pasta is done, drain well, toss with the sauce and the grated pecorino. Serve immediately with additional cheese for sprinkling.

Vietnamese noodle salad with shrimp – CSA style

July 14, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized

Vietnamese_CSA_IMG_8566Vietnamese Noodle Salad with Shrimp sounded like the best thing in the world to me, but I couldn’t justify buying the veggies it called for when I already had a fridge full of CSA veggies. I decided to make it using the vegetables on hand, most of which were from my CSA box.

Carrots, zucchini, purple-ish romaine & cilantro replaced the usual suspects. It came out great! Just goes to show you how wonderfully versatile the recipe is. The leftovers are going to be great during this heat wave too.

Nick’s Pizza

July 13, 2013 By Nina Max in dining out 4 Comments

photo (2)I’ve been feeling crampy all day. It kind of feels like the baby is biting me, though I know that can’t be the case. It’s not so bad as to warrant a call to the doctor (because that might lead to a trip to the ER -nooooo! never again!), but enough that I want to take it easy.

Shane suggested a “mom’s night out.” Although he was a bit unclear on what a mom’s night out traditionally entails, I really appreciated that he recognized that I wasn’t in the best of shape for making dinner.

We decided to try Nick’s Pizza in Forest Hills. We’ve been meaning to go there for years. I remembered being told to get there early, so we arrived promptly at 5:15 to a half-empty restaurant. Perfect!

The pizza was very good, thin-crusted and super-fresh, good quality fresh mozzarella. It didn’t quite meet my expectations, but that tends to happen when you’ve been told something is amazing for years. The house salad was excellent.

We had gelato for dessert, back in the ‘hood at Lety’s.

Citrus, herbs & steak

July 12, 2013 By Nina Max in uncategorized 2 Comments

Citrus_Herb_Steak_IMG_8557I usually leave the steak-making to Shane, but he’s been coming home late, after physical therapy 3x a week, so I decided to tackle it myself. We had a nice, local, humanely raised, shell steak in the fridge which Shane requested I marinate.

The Weber Grill site had a good-sounding recipe for Rosemary-Marinated Rib Eye. I figured the Weber folks should know their steak, and went with it.

While the steak marinated I made kohlrabi slaw with roasted corn, lime juice, mayo and cilantro. The steak recipe calls for a lemon-pepper butter which sounded so good that I decided to put it on the potatoes. After doing so it occurred to me that  this might make the meal altogether way too citrusy & herby.

In the end we left the butter off the steak. Shane and Rose agreed it was a great steak, and I was happy to be able to enjoy the lemon butter on my potatoes.

• Kohlrabi Slaw •
3 kohlrabi bulbs peeled and cut into matchsticks
1/4 cup mayonnaise
the juice of 1 lime
a big handful of fresh cilantro leaves, chopped
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1 cup corn kernels
olive oil
salt to taste

Heat olive oil in a cast iron skillet and add the corn kernels with a pinch or two of salt. Cook over medium heat, stirring frequently, until the kernels are slightly brown and shriveled. Remove from pan and set aside to cool.

Peel kohlrabi bulbs and cut into matchsticks. Combine kohlrabi, mayo, lime juice, cilantro, cumin and corn and stir to combine. Season with salt, and refrigerate until ready to eat.

 

• Rosemary-Marinated Rib-Eye Steak with Lemon-Pepper Butter •
with slight alterations from this recipe from weber.com

For the Marinade
½ cup extra-virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons roughly chopped fresh rosemary leaves
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 teaspoons dijon mustard
¼ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
½ teaspoon kosher salt

For the Butter (optional)
½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest
4 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
¾ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
1 tablespoon chopped fresh Italian parsley leaves
½ teaspoon salt, more to taste

2 shell steaks, each 16 to 18 ounces, and about 1.5 inch thick, trimmed of excess fat.

In a medium bowl whisk the marinade ingredients. Place the steaks in a glass pie plate or similar shallow dish. Poke steaks on both sides with a fork and smear marinade onto both sides. Cover steaks with the rest of the marinade and let sit at room temperature for up to 3 hours. Alternatively, you can refrigerate for longer.

In a small bowl blend the butter ingredients. Scrape the butter up into a patty shape and refrigerate or freeze until hard.

If you refrigerated your steaks, bring them to room temperature before cooking. Heat a grilling pan over high heat and grease lightly with oil. When pan is hot, scrape off most of the marinade and add the steaks. Cook for 5 minutes per side for medium rare. 

Top steak with butter patty (if using butter), let rest, covered with foil, for 5 minutes, then slice and serve.

Weeknight pasta

July 11, 2013 By Nina Max in quick

SimplePasta_IMG_8533Thursdays are a bit tricky around here because of CSA pickup, which messes with our dinner timing. Since I’m back to working from home, I did a little bit of advance planning and made Marcella Hazan’s famous tomato sauce during the afternoon. It’s a delicious sauce and couldn’t be easier to make, but it does take 45 minutes (mostly hands-off) to cook.

When we got home from Farm Spot, I made some penne and tossed it with the tomato sauce and little cubes of fresh mozzarella. With a simple salad, it was perfect for a quick, weeknight meal. Rose chose to have only salad and cheese, which I thought was a very mature choice. Perhaps it has something to do with today’s outfit.

• Marcella Hazan’s Famous Tomato Sauce •
from Marcella Hazan via Smitten Kitchen

A 28oz can whole peeled San Marzano tomatoes, I like this brand
5 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 medium yellow onion, peeled and halved
Salt to taste (pepper too, if you like)

Put the tomatoes, onion and butter in a heavy saucepan over medium heat. You don’t need to cut the butter into pieces, just cut 5 tablespoons of butter off of a stick and bung it in the pot. Bring the sauce to a simmer then lower the heat to keep the sauce at a slow, steady simmer for about 45 minutes. Stir occasionally, crushing the tomatoes against the side of the pot with a wooden spoon. Remove from heat, discard the onion, add salt to taste. That’s it! 

If you want, you can toss with about a cup of little cubes of fresh mozzarella and top with some grated pecorino or parmesan too.

It’s a… comedy of errors & a gender reveal cake

July 10, 2013 By Nina Max in cakes, pregnancy, quick 4 Comments

GenderCake_IMG_8527I made this cake (which Rose decorated) because I was pretty sure we’d be hearing about the gender of our baby today. It’s a weird, lumpy—albeit delicious—little cake. I wanted to make a small, 2-layer cake, but I knew I’d have to leave home for the day, before the results were due to be in.

Instead of two small layers of the same color, I made one small pink layer, one small blue layer, and some frosting. Then I left for the day, with a rather nervous stomach and my phone ringer set on maximum volume.

The plan had been to surprise Rose and Shane with my gender reveal cake* after dinner. Things went awry however, when I got the results and then found myself unable to lie to Rose when she asked if the doctor had called yet.

Things went further awry when Shane found out the gender, from someone who wasn’t one of the three people I’d told when I couldn’t reach him immediately.** Fortunately, Shane doesn’t give a shit about that kind of thing, and neither do I.

For dinner we had chicken and rice, beans, guacamole and a pepper salad. Followed by the cake surprise which surprised no one.
ChickenRice_Beans_IMG_8526

Oh wait, do you want to know what we’re having? Nah, you want to hear more about chicken and rice, right? Here goes. It’s a…
GenderCake_IMG_8530That’s right folks, a boy. A healthy, wiggly boy, with a penis. (Trucks sold separately.)

*My friend Britta, who coined the phrase “gender reveal cake” actually guessed that that’s how I intended to make the announcement.
**Note to expectant parents. Do not be a stupid blabbermouth like me. Don’t tell anyone the gender of your child, before you tell your husband or partner!

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