Saturday, December 25, 2010

xmas breakfast: baked egg cups

So easy... chop up yummy ingredients of your choice, place in ramekin, crack an egg on top, add a dash of cream, 11 minutes in a 350 degree oven (ramekins must be on a baking sheet)... and bingo, egg cups! These have leftovers from other meals (roasted asparagus, kielbasa, gruyere). Enjoy!
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Friday, December 24, 2010

Xmas eve dinner

S's eggplant parm. The best.
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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Monster CSA Post I

Farfalle with turnip greens and prosciutto
Sausage and lentil stuffed acorn squash

Lemon boy choy, tofu, snow pea stir fry
Beet and goat cheese ravioli

Carrot soufflé
Acorn squash pie

We mostly tried to keep things simple, because of the amount of prep that fresh farm vegetables need.  Not that it is so onerous, especially because we aren't in classes now, but we like to keep cooking a joy and not a chore.  Make agains: farfalle (love the hint of bitterness in the tender turnip greens), carrot souffle (CSA carrots are heavenly), and acorn squash pie (so sweet, it barely needed sugar).  Tweaks: wonton wrappers are not an acceptable wrapper for ravioli, it is decided, but the simple filling of pureed roasted beets with goat cheese is divine.  Bok choy was fine but unexciting.  Stuffed acorn squash - fail.  Maybe this was a not sweet or just huge acorn squash, but despite an hour in the oven it was undercooked and tasteless.  The acorn squash we used for the pie was so amazing it really barely needed sugar to be dessert.  We are squash novices so we'll have to keep testing cooking methods for it.  This isn't even half of what we've been cooking up, so many more monster CSA posts will follow....

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Obsessed with Microwave mochi

Hello, lover

Mochi has been a favorite treat since childhood.  But I had never even considered as make-able at home, as I assumed you needed an (expensive) mochi machine, not really available in the US, to make the dough.  However, whist wandering around on the interwebs as per usual, I discovered that people have been making mochi with, wait for it, their MICROWAVES.  I had to try it.

It's amazing.  Really.  Now I am obsessed.  Above you see my matcha green tea mochi filled with adzuki red bean paste. 

Here's my version of the recipe/protocol, with slightly different proportions and more tacit knowledge made explicit from this blogger's original:

1 Cup of Mochiko sweet rice flour
2 tsp Matcha powder
2 TBSP sugar
3/4 Cup of water
1 Can of adzuki bean paste
Cornstarch for dusting

Before starting anything, put the adzuki bean paste into a tupperware container and refrigerate.  When ready to make mochi, put some cornstarch onto a plate, which you will use to prep the mochi.  Have two spoons and a measuring cup with a flat bottom handy.  Put Mochiko, Matcha, sugar, and water into a microwaveable bowl and mix to form a paste.  Microwave the paste for 2 minutes, take out, stir a little, and then microwave for 2 minutes more.  Remove the hot bowl from the microwave, and let the mochi dough sit until you can touch it (it is wicked hot, but I am impatient and have a high tolerance for touching hot things so I start right away).  Dust your fingers with cornstarch to deal with the mochi dough.  Use a spoon (dipped in cornstarch) to take a heaping spoon of the dough, plop it on the cornstarch covered plate, dip the bottom of the measuring cup with mochi flour, and pound the dough into a flat circle.  Spoon the bean paste into the circle and then pinch it closed, shaping it into an oval.  Brush all sides with a light dusting of the cornstarch.  Repeat until you have used up all the dough.  You will have lots of paste left so feel free to make more dough.  Each cup of Mochiko makes about 6-8 mochis.  Happy cooking, but please do not hold me responsible if you burn your fingers with hot sticky sweet rice flour paste.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Bad blogger, good finder...

Sorry, blog.  I have been ignoring you.  But I have been eating well due to myself & Mr. O's membership in a CSA.  Mr. O in particular has been cooking up a storm.  A monster blog post about our CSA treats is coming, but in the meantime, I am happy to report that I have FINALLY found what looks to be a credible recipe for the The Counter's veggie burger, the best veggie burger I have ever had!  Unfortunately the "roasted vegetable mix" is not spelled out specifically, and the recipe makes 181 servings.  Other searching suggests that the mix is red bell peppers, carrots, and zucchini.  Must try, and will report back!